The Temple in Jerusalem or Holy Temple (Hebrew: בית המקדש,
transliterated Bet HaMikdash and meaning literally "The Holy House") was located
on the Temple Mount (Har HaBayit) in the old city of Jerusalem. According to classical Jewish belief, it was the
figurative "footstool" of God's presence (Heb. "shechina") in the physical world.
The First Temple was built by King Solomon in seven
years during the 10th century BCE in 957 BCE. It was the center of ancient
Judaism and has remained a focal point for Jewish
services over the millennia.[1] The Temple replaced
the Tabernacle of Moses and the Tabernacles at
Shiloh, Nov, and Givon as the central focus of Jewish faith. This First Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BCE, and
was rebuilt seventy years later by Cyrus the Great in 516 BCE. Centuries later, it was
renovated by Herod in about 20 BCE, and this Second
Temple was subsequently destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. All of the outer walls
still stand, although the Temple itself has long since been destroyed, and for many years it was believed that the
western wall of the complex was the only wall standing.
An Islamic shrine, the Dome of the Rock, has stood on the site of the Temple since
the late 7th Century CE, and the al-Aqsa Mosque, from roughly the same period, also
stands on the Temple courtyard.
Jewish eschatology envisions the construction of The Third
Temple in Jerusalem prior to the coming of The Messiah, and thus,
adherents of Orthodox and Conservative
Judaism anticipate a Third Temple.
On August 30th 2007, what appears to be the remains of the Second Temple were discovered during the installation of pipes in
the compound [2].
Etymology
The Hebrew name given in Scripture for the building is Beit HaMikdash or "The Holy House", and only the Temple in
Jerusalem is referred to by this name. The temple is also called by a variety of other names in the Hebrew Bible, such as Beit Adonai (House of God) or simply Beiti (My house) or
Beitechah (Your House).
The temple of Solomon was constructed based on specific plans given to King David, by God. David had hoped to build it, but
was told by God that his son would be the one to assemble the first temple. During his reign, David began to collect most of the
raw materials used in the construction, from the wood, to the huge foundation stones, to the gold, silver, bronze and other
metals used. The temple was designed to house the Ark of the Covenant, and to serve
all nations, particularly the Hebrew nation of Israel, as a place where any man could worship their God. It would be a mistake to
assign this temple, or the second temple to Judaism, which was not formalized until a few hundred years later, in ancient
Babylon, modern day Iraq. The first mention of the term Jew, which related to the citizenry of the Kingdom of Judah, was not
mentioned in the Bible until the reign of King Zedekiah, who was ruler over the nearly dismantled Kingdom of Judah, just prior to
the destruction of the first temple.This occurred approximately 590 BCE.
The first temple, referred to as the Temple of Solomon, was likely constructed by members of all 12 tribes of Israel, since
all the tribes were united under David and then Solomon. Following Solomon's reign, his son Rehoboam, due to his arrogance, caused 10 of the tribes of Israel split off to form the Northern Kingdom of
Israel, while the tribes of Judah, Benjamin and much of Levi, remained in what was known as the Kingdom of Judah. The second
temple was subsequently built by the remnant of Judah only who were taken in exile by Nebuchadnezzar in the 6th century BCE The
other 10 tribes had already been dispersed a few centuries earlier, when their kingdom was torn apart by the Kingdom of
Assyria.
First and Second Temples
-
A model of
Herod's Temple adjacent to the Shrine of the Book exhibit at the Israel
Museum, Jerusalem.
Two distinct Temples stood in succession on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem:
Solomon's Temple was built in the 10th century BCE (approximately 960 BCE) to replace the Tabernacle. It was destroyed by the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BCE, and thus stood for about 375 years;
Talmudic tradition gives the number as 410 years. The building of the Temple of Solomon plays a
prominent role in Masonic tradition, as well.
The Second Temple was built after Cyrus allowed the Jews to return from the
Babylonian captivity. The return took place around 535
BCE, and, after a number of delays, the Temple was completed in 516 BCE. The dimensions
of the Temple Mount were then 150 metres x 50 metres [3].
The Second Temple was destroyed by Roman Empire troops under general Titus in 70 CE. This second Temple had been desecrated by Pompey, when he entered it after taking Jerusalem in 63 BCE. According to Josephus
(living at the Court of the Roman Emperor), Pompey did not remove anything from the Temple or its treasury. He did, however,
massacre the Priests who attempted to block his entry to the sanctuary. Pompey subsequently lost all his power and died as a
hunted fugitive. This is seen by many Jewish people as Divine punishment. (See article on Pompey in the Encyclopaedia
Judaica). Around 19 BCE, King Herod began a
renovation of the Temple Complex. In order to build a completely new Temple in a larger and grander version, and before beginning
the building of it, the Second Temple was completely destroyed (including its foundations) by Romans[4]
During the last revolt of the Jews against the Romans in 132-135,
Simon bar Kokhba and Rabbi Akiva wanted to
rebuild the Temple, but bar Kokhba's revolt failed and the Jews were removed from Jerusalem.
A further effort at rebuilding the Temple took place in 363 CE when Julian the Apostate ordered the restoration of the Jewish sanctuary in Jerusalem, but this project
failed.
Rebuilding the Third Temple
-
Ever since the Second Temple's destruction, a prayer for the construction of a new Third Temple has been a formal part of the
thrice daily Jewish prayer services. However, the question of
whether and when to construct the Third Temple is disputed both within the Jewish community and without; groups within Judaism
argue both for and against construction of a new Temple, while the expansion of Abrahamic
religion since the 1st century AD has made the issue contentious within Christian and
Islamic thought, as well. Furthermore, the complicated political status of Jerusalem makes initiation of reconstruction presently difficult, while the
physical location of the historic Temple is believed to be occupied by the Al-Aqsa Mosque
and the Dome of the Rock.
Physical layout
According to the Talmud, the Temple had an Ezrat Nashim (Women's Court) to the east and
main area to the west. The main area contained the butchering area for the sacrifices and the Mizbaeach (Outer Altar) on
which portions of most offerings were burned and blood was poured or dashed. An edifice contained the Ulam (antechamber),
the Heichal, and the Kodesh Kodashim (Holy of
Holies). The Heichal and the Kodesh Kodashim were separated by a wall in the First Temple and by two curtains in the
Second Temple. The Heichal contained the Menorah, the table of Showbread and the Incense Altar.
The main courtyard had thirteen gates. On the south side, beginning with the southwest corner, there were four gates:
- Shaar Ha'Elyon (the Upper Gate)
- Shaar HaDelek (the Kindling Gate); where wood was brought in
- Shaar HaBechorot (the Gate of Firstborn); where people with first-born animal offerings entered and fathers and
children entered for the Pidyon HaBen ceremony
- Shaar HaMayim (the Water Gate); where the Water Libation entered on Sukkot).
On the north side, beginning with the northwest corner, there were four gates:
- Shaar Yechonyah (The Gate of Yechonyah), where kings of the Davidic line enter and Yechonyah/Yehoyachin left for the last time to captivity
- Shaar HaKorban (The gate of the Offering, where priests entered with kodshei
kodashim offerings
- Shaar HaNashim (The Women's Gate), where women entered into the
Azaryah or main courtyard to perform offerings[5])
- Shaar Hashir (The Gate of Song), where the Levites entered with their musical
instruments.
On the east side was Shaar Nikanor, between the Women's Courtyard and the main Temple Courtyard, which had two minor
doorways, one on its right and one on its left. On the western wall, which was relatively unimportant, there were two gates that
did not have any name.
The Temple in the writings of the Prophets
The Biblical prophets describe visions of a mysterious presence of God occupying the
Temple.
Isaiah wrote "I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne high and lifted up, and his train filled
the Temple." (Isaiah 6:1). Jeremiah implored "Do not dishonor the throne of your glory"
(Jeremiah 14:21) and referred to "Thou throne of glory, on high from the beginning, Thou place of our sanctuary" (Jeremiah
17:12). Ezekiel spoke of "the glory of the God of Israel was there [in the Sanctuary],
according to the vision that I saw in the plain."
Isaiah spoke of the importance of prayer as well as sacrifice in Temple, and of a universal purpose:
- Even them will I bring to my My holy mountain, and make joyful in My house of prayer,
- Their burnt-offerings and their sacrifices shall be acceptable upon Mine alter
- For my house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples. (Isaiah 56:7, JPS translation).
- "My House shall be a house of prayer for all peoples." (Isaiah 56:7)
Temple services
The Temple was the place where offerings described in the course of the Hebrew Bible were carried out, including daily morning and afternoon offerings and special offerings on
Shabbat and Jewish holidays. Levites recited Psalms at appropriate moments during the offerings, including the
Psalm of the Day, special psalms for the new month, and other occasions, the
Hallel during major Jewish holidays, and psalms for special sacrifices such as the "Psalm for the
Thanksgiving Offering" (Psalm 100).
As part of the daily offering, a prayer service was performed in the Temple which was used as the basis of the traditional
Jewish (morning) service recited to this day, including well-known prayers such as the
Barchu, the Shema, and the Priestly Blessing.
The Mishna describes it as follows:
| “ |
The superintendent said to them, recite the Barchu, and they read the Ten Commandments, and the Shema, "And it shall come to pass if
you will hearken", and "And [God] spoke...". They pronounced three benedictions with the people present: "True and firm", and the
"Avodah" {"Accept, Lord our God, the service of your people Israel, and the fire-offerings of Israel and their prayer receive
with favor. Blessed is He who receives the service of His people Israel with favor" (similar to what is today the 17th blessing
of the Amidah), and the Priestly Blessing, and on the
Sabbath they recited one blessing; "May He who causes His name to dwell in this House, cause to dwell among you love and brotherliness, peace and friendship" on behalf of the
weekly Priestly Guard that departed. |
” |
|
—Mishna Tamid 5:1
|
The Temple as the Garden of Eden
The Temple courtyards were full of trees, flowers, and fountains, because the Temple was meant to be a model and re-creation
of the Garden of Eden. (See "Jerusalem as Eden," by Lawrence Stager, Biblical
Archaeology Review, May/June 2000).
Role in Jewish services
-
As noted above, the heart of the traditional Jewish morning service, the part
surrounding the Shema prayer, is essentially unchanged from the daily worship service
performed in the Temple. In addition, recitation of the Amidah prayer, which traditionally
replaces the Temple's daily tamid and special-occasion Mussaf (additional) offerings, must be recited today during
the times that the offerings they substitute for were performed in the days of the Temple, in both Orthodox and Conservative Judaism.
The Temple is mentioned extensively in Orthodox services, and, to a lesser degree, in Conservative ones as well.
Orthodox Judaism
Mentions in Orthodox Jewish services include:
- A daily study session of biblical and talmudic passages related to the korbanot (sacrifices)
performed in the Temple. (See korbanot in siddur).
- References to the restoration of the Temple and sacrificial worships in the daily Amidah
prayer, the central prayer in Judaism.
- A traditional personal plea for the restoration of the Temple at the end of private recitation of the Amidah.
- A prayer for the restoration of the "house of our lives" and the shekhinah (divine
presence) "to dwell among us" is recited during the Amidah prayer.
- Recitation of the Psalm of the day; the psalm sung by the Levites in the Temple for that day) during the daily morning service.
- Numerous psalms sung as part of the ordinary service make extensive references to the Temple and Temple worship.
- Recitation of the special Jewish holiday sacrifices, and prayers for the restoration
of the Temple and their offering, during the Mussaf services on Jewish holidays.
- An extensive recitation of the special Temple service for Yom Kippur during the service
for that holiday.
- Special services for Sukkot (Hakafot) contain extensive (but generally obscure) references to
the special Temple service performed on that day.
The destruction of the Temple is mourned on the Jewish fast day of Tisha B'Av. Three other
minor fasts (Tenth of Tevet, 17th of Tammuz, and Third of Tishrei), also mourn events leading to or following the destruction of
the Temple.
Conservative Judaism
Conservative Judaism retains mentions of the Temple but removes references to the restoration of sacrifices. The study session of Temple sacrifices is removed or replaced, the passages in the daily
Amidah, the weekday Torah service, and elsewhere referring to restoration of the Temple are
retained but references to sacrifices are removed. References to sacrifices on holidays are retained, but made in the past tense,
and petitions for their restoration are removed. Special holiday services, such as special prayers at Yom kippur and Sukkot, are
retained in Conservative prayer books, but are often abbreviated or omitted by Conservative congregations. Some Conservative
Congregations omit all references to sacrifices, and the Conservative Sim Shalom prayer book has
alternate versions of the Amidah prayer, a version mentioning sacrifices in the past tense and
one without reference to sacrifices at all.
Conservative Judaism has retained the four fasts relating to the destruction of the Temple, although only Tisha B'Av is widely observed.
Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism
Reform and Reconstructionist
Judaism have removed all direct references to the Temple, although some indirect or ambiguous references (e.g. "Happy are
those who dwell in your House", Psalm 84:5) are retained.
The Reform movement in the United States has taken to calling its places of worship not synagogues or shuls but temples. This is due to the belief that prayer
replaced sacrifice as the main mode of Jewish worship, and that in a world where that is the case, there is no need for The
Temple, only temples.
Archaeological evidence
A stone (2.43×1
m) with
Hebrew writing
"To the
Trumpeting Place" excavated by
Benjamin Mazar at the southern foot of the Temple
Mount is believed to be a part of the Second Temple.
Archaeological excavations have found one hundred mikvaot (ritual immersion pools) surrounding
the Temple Mount or Har HaBayit. This is strong evidence that this area was considered of
the utmost holiness in ancient times and could not possibly have been a secular area. However, it does not establish where
exactly within the area was the Temple located.[citation needed] There are basically three theories:
- The Temple was where the Dome of the Rock is now located.
- The Temple was located a little to the north of the Dome of the Rock (Professor Asher
Kaufman).
- The Temple was located a little to the east of the Dome of the Rock (Professor Joseph Patrich of the Hebrew University. See article in the World Jewish Digest, April 2007).
Other theories have the Temple either to the north or to the south of the Temple Mount. Scholars generally reject more
outlandish theories that claim the Temple was located somewhere else than Jerusalem or even outside the Land of Israel.
2004 artifact controversy
On December 27, 2004, it was reported in the
Toronto-based The Globe and Mail that the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem concluded
that the ivory pomegranate that everyone believed had once adorned a scepter used by the
high priest in Solomon's Temple was a fake. This artifact was the most important item of biblical antiquities in its collection.
It had been part of a traveling exhibition at the Canadian Museum of
Civilization in 2003. Experts fear that this discovery is part of an international fraud in
antiquities. The thumb-sized pomegranate, which is a mere 44 mm in height, bears an inscription incised around the shoulder of
the pomegranate in small paleo-Hebrew script. Only 9 characters remained complete, and were incomplete – if any sense were to be
made of the inscription, it seemed likely that several more were missing. The surviving part of the inscription was transcribed
לבי...ה קדש כהנם (Only the lower horizontal stroke of the yod and the upper horizontal stroke of
the ה he remain.)
The following restoration of missing letters was proposed: לבית יהוה קדש כהנם
This reconstruction resulted in the following transliteration, now accepted by the vast majority of scholars: lby[t yhw]h qdš
khnm, which led to the translation: "Belonging to the Temp[le of Yahw]eh, holy to the priests."
The notion that the artifact is fake derives from the conclusion that it belongs to the Bronze
Age rather than the Iron Age. However, there are theories that the Temple of Solomon was
built in the Bronze Age. If this is correct, there is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the ivory pomegranate.
The Temple in Islam
The Prophet Muhammad ordered muslims to pray and prostate toward the Temple
mount in Jersualem. It was named in Quran "Beit Al-Maqdes" or "Al-Masjid Al-Aqsa" meaning ( The Furthest Mosque), while Jerusalem
was referred to as "Al-Quds". When Khalif Omar ibn al-Khattāb (Umar)
came to Jerusalem he asked the Patriach of Jerusalem to lead him to the site of
the Temple. The area was filled with debris because it was considered the quarry and the dump site of the city during Christian
times. A Jewish Rabbi turned muslim was with Umar: "Ka'ab al-Ahbar". He, armed with his
religious knowledge, led Umar first to the site of the Temple (The area where Israelites used to pray) where indeed Umar
discovered the foundations ruins where Umar built a Mosque made of reed on the example of The
Mosque of the Prophet in Medina (roof was also made of reed). Umar prayed with 10,000 people for the first time since the fall of
the temple in 70 AD. Umar prohibited offering sacrifices in the temple. Then while Umar was searching for "the Rock" that
The Prophet ascended atop it with Angel Gabriel to Heaven in his night journey to Heaven "Isra and Mi'raj" just
less than 20 years ago (as the prophet related), Kaab was also searching for the site of the Holy of Holies. While removing the
debris from the expected site of the Holy of Holies, to everybody's amazement, a large rock was revealed, that more of it was
exposed by more cleaning. Umar built a fence around the rock because he saw Ka'ab walking on it barefoot ("to see how it felt,"
as Kaab related later). A later Khalif built The Dome of the Rock over the Rock. The Dome was a monumental engineering that
lasted decades in construction and by hiring the best architects and master masons in the world (from Byzantium) because the
Umayyad Khalif and muslims in his territories were unable to go to Mecca for pilgrimage because
another anti-Umayyad Khalif declared himself in Mecca for decades "Abd-Allah ibn
al-Zubayr", and they needed an alternative pilgrimage destination so his subjects don't riot if he does not allow them to
go to Mecca where his rival Khalif resided.
See also
References
External links
Further reading
- Biblical Archaeology Review, issues: July/August 1983,
November/December 1989, March/April 1992, July/August 1999, September/October 1999, March/April 2000, September/October 2005
- Ritmeyer, Leen. The Quest: Revealing the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Jerusalem: Carta, 2006. ISBN 965-220-628-8
- Hamblin, William and David Seely, Solomon's Temple: Myth and History (Thames and Hudson, 2007) ISBN 0500251339
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