Altar built on a bedrock platform or foundation |
Following the original Purim festivities, Jews were granted permission to return to Jerusalem to reconstruct their temple that had been destroyed 70 years earlier in the year 423 BCE . Haggai was a prophet of the Persian exile who foresaw the first temple reconstruction and final temple building. (2:9) The glory of this later house will be greater than the former said the Lord of hosts; and in this place I will grant peace. He had announced his prophecy and when King Darius II of Persia was appointed, the previous vassal Zerubavel oversaw the Jewish return to Jerusalem and their second attempt to rebuild. Only some Jewish leaders returned, but Haggai also foresaw something that troubled him...
In the shortest chapters of the Bible, Haggai enters and exits with few words. In his rare prophecy God asked Haggai to direct two questions of Jewish law at the priests who were to serve in the reconstructed temple. Their answer was deemed incorrect. Strangely, these educated priests and leaders of the Jewish people were very familiar with Jewish law and all were focused on locating the place of the altar from where coordinates for the temple reconstruction would be obtained.
Bedrock foundation for Altar of Zion in City of David |
While the temple was still in ruins, the priests had offered sacrifices on the foundation rock where they deemed the first temple altar to have been 70 years prior. In this context, Haggai's ongoing prophecy (2:14) is puzzling. "Such is the people and such is the nation before Me, says the Lord; and such is every work of their hands; and whatever they offer there is defiled. Why is this place (2:9) ("And in this place I will grant peace...”) of the temple to be rebuilt and "there" (2:14) of the (prior) first temple singled out in these two verses?
Prophet Zechariah was a contemporary of Haggai and wrote (Zecharia 8:1-3) So said the Lord of Hosts: I am jealous for Zion with great jealousy, and with great fury I am jealous for her. I will return to Zion, and I will dwell in the midst of Jerusalem; and Jerusalem shall be called the city of truth, and the mount of the Lord of Hosts [shall be called] the holy mountain.
Zechariah's prophecy exposed God's jealously for Zion, Samuel's earlier prophecies and writings had declared Zion is the City of David. So, why is "this place", of Haggai's final temple distinguished from "there" of the first temple reconstruction - will they be the same place? Bible texts unequivocally state Zion is the city of David. However, the altar at the City of David is not at the location of King David's altar on the temple mount of the first and reconstructed (second) temple.
Lower Mount Moriah - City of David is Zion |
Haggai and King Hezekiah encountered the skull of Aruvnah, both realized something about the altar of King David was not quite right. At these crucial moments neither was able to effect change, they succumbed to the status-quo, but for the final construction we will be more careful.
In my studies I was taught 586 for the destruction, but any way in christian theology city of david and Zion are two different places, the sacrifices will be defiled in christian theology for at least two reasons, 1 it could be the result of the anti Christ (against mashiach) relation to the ruling factor at the time, and I forget the other one I was going to list, you'll have to forgive me I proposed moving the Dome of the rock over to beside the all aqsa mosque in preparation for the rebuilding of the jewish temple and now the government is using directed energy weapons against me as I type.
ReplyDeleteSolomon's temple and altar were built in the wrong place?
ReplyDeleteSo why did the Lord bless the temple and occupy it with His Shekinah glory?
The tabernacle was on mount Zion & when Solomon came to be king the Temple was built on mount Moriah so both places had sacrifices and the Zion mount is 120 feet higher in elevation! King David could look down on Solomon’s temple and smell the seeet savor of the sacrifice too!
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