Codes by Fab

The Third Temple

« Third Temple »

« Netanyahu » (Is Netanyahu going to be involved one way or another in the rebuilding of the Temple ?)

Curse of the Third Temple.

“Curse/malediction of the Third Temple”

« For the place on which you stand is holy ground » (blue surrounding)

« A heap forever, a desolation to this day » (green surrounding)

 

Temple in Jerusalem

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Jerusalem Temple (Hebrew: beit ha-mikdash) was the center of Israelite and Jewish worship, primarily for the offering of sacrifices known as the korbanot. It was located on Jerusalem's Temple Mount.

According to the Bible, the First Temple was built by Solomon. It replaced the Tabernacle of Moses. Solomon's Temple was destroyed centuries later by the Babylonians. The Second Temple was rebuilt decades later at the same location. It too was eventually destroyed, this time by the Romans.

The dual destruction of the two temples, five hundred years apart, marks two central eras in Jewish history: the first marks the beginning of the Babylonian Exile; the second marks the beginning of the Jewish diaspora.

Contents show

1 Etymology

2 First and Second Temples

3 Julian's Third Temple

4 Rebuilding the Temple today

4.1 Rebuilding the Temple in Jewish prayerbooks

5 External links

Etymology

The word Temple is derived not from the Hebrew but from the Latin word for place of worship, templum. The name given in Scripture for the building was Beit Adonai or "House of Adonai" (although this name was also often used for other temples, or metaphorically). Because of the prohibition against pronouncing the holy name, the common Hebrew name for the Temple is Beit ha-Mikdash or "The Holy House", and only the Temple in Jerusalem is referred to by this name.

First and Second Temples

Two distinct temples stood in succession on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem:

Julian's Third Temple

There was an aborted project by the Roman emperor Julian (331-363 CE) to allow the Jews to build a Third Temple. There is reason to believe that Julian wanted the rebuilt Third Temple to be for the purpose of his own apotheosis, rather than the worship of the Jewish God. Rabbi Hilkiyah, one of the leading Rabbis of the time spurned Julian's money, arguing that Gentiles should play no part in the rebuilding of the temple. [1] (http://www.gibsoncondo.com/~david/convert/history.html).

Rebuilding the Temple today

Standing today in what Jews believe is the historical location of the first two temples, is the Dome of the Rock, a Muslim shrine. The Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest site in Islam, is located just to its south. To recognize the Dome of the Rock as the only possible rebuilt Temple, or to seriously attempt to tear it down to replace it, both constitute seemingly unresolvable religious and political problems. Nonetheless, the idea of rebuilding some Temple somewhere is difficult to abandon entirely:

For the last 1900 years, Jews have prayed that God would allow for the rebuilding of the Temple. This prayer is a formal part of the thrice daily Jewish prayer services.

However, not all rabbis agree on what would happen in a rebuilt Temple. It has traditionally been assumed that some sort of animal sacrifices would be reinstituted, in accord with the rules in Leviticus and the Talmud. However there is another opinion, beginning with Maimonides, that God deliberately has moved Jews away from sacrifices towards prayer, as prayer is a higher form of worship. Thus, some rabbis hold that sacrifices would not take place in a rebuilt Temple. Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the first chief rabbi of the Jewish community in pre-state Israel, holds that sacrifices will not be reinstituted.

A few, very small, Jewish groups support constructing a Third Temple today, but most Jews oppose this, for a variety of reasons. Most religious Jews feel that the Temple should only be rebuilt in the messianic era, and that it would presumptuous of people to force God's hand, as it were. Furthermore, there are many ritual impurity constrictions that are difficult to resolve, making the building's construction a practical impossibility.

Additionally, many Jews are against rebuilding the Temple due to the enormously hostile reaction from all Arab and Muslim nations that would likely result— even were the building to be complementary to those holy to Islam, there would be high suspicion that such a building project would ultimately end with the destruction of these and the rebuilding of the Temple on its original spot.

Some fundamentalist and evangelical Christian groups, especially those who follow a dispensationalist theology, believe that the Jewish people will build the Third Temple shortly before, or perhaps after, "true" Christians have been raptured.

Rebuilding the Temple in Jewish prayerbooks

Later monuments :

See also : Western Wall

External links

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_in_Jerusalem"

 

 

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