Thanks for your question. In the first Temple there was a wall dividing the holy and the holy of holies. This wall was approximately half a meter thick, a curtain covered the wall. In the second Temple there was no wall but two curtains separating between the holy and the holy of holies. Each curtain was 10 centimeters (4in') thick with the height of 20 meters (22 yds)by the length of 10 meters(11 yds).
The Temple curtain situated between the holy and the holy of holies was 10 meters by 20. Its thickness was approximately 8 centimeters. That would make the weight approximately between 4 to 6 tons depending on the materiel used. In fact the Talmud teaches us that it took some 300 priest to carry it to its place.
The curtain was a physical curtain. And was replaced or repaired.
The duration of Torn Curtain is 2.13 hours.
Torn Curtain was released on 07/16/1966.
The Production Budget for Torn Curtain was $3,000,000.
Torn Curtain was created on 1966-07-14.
Torn Curtain grossed $13,000,000 worldwide.
Torn Curtain grossed $13,000,000 in the domestic market.
'Torn Curtain' Rising - 2000 V is rated/received certificates of: Finland:K-15
The temple curtain ripped in two. The temple curtain separated God from man. The curtain ripping in two symbolizes that we can now be friends with God and have a relationship with him.
A:The gospels say that at the very moment Jesus died, the veil, or curtain, at the entrance to the Holy of Holies was rent from top to bottom ("And the curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn in two, from top to bottom." - Mark 15:38). There has to be some doubt about this account, as Josephus, who would have been familiar with the Temple veil before the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE, describes the curtain and its images and colours in considerable detail (Wars of the Jews, Book 5), but makes no mention of any damage to it, or any repairs.
A:You would find a description of the curtain written after the time of Jesus by someone who would have been familiar with the curtain. Such a person was the former priest at the temple, Josephus. He describes the curtain and its images and colours in considerable detail (Wars of the Jews, Book 5), but makes no mention of any damage to it, or any repairs. We can rule out any possibility that he was biased against the Christians because the only mention he actually makes of Jesus, in the famous Testamonium Flavinium passage, is favourable even allowing for later Christian alterations. So we are actually left with proof that the curtain was not torn at all.
Torn Curtain.