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Showing posts with label Binyamin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Binyamin. Show all posts

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Primordial Reality of Zion!


Abstract

Kabbalistic philosophy is not a later interpretation of Tanach; it is the supernal root and central vein from which the entire revealed Torah emerges. As affirmed across Lurianic, Chassidic, and Ramchal traditions, the sefirotic structure, covenants, and psycho-spiritual realities precede and animate the written text. “Zion” is first and foremost the sefirah of Yesod (Foundation), the precise psycho-spiritual locus where the inner covenant (periya) unites with outer Kingdom (Malchut/Jerusalem). Drawing directly on the Zohar, Sefer Yetzirah, Kedushat Levi, and the gematria of Tzion = Yosef = 156, the physical site of Zion, on the lower southern slope of Mount Moriah directly above the Gihon Spring (En Shemesh/En Rogel) must converge exactly with this supernal reality. Joshua’s immutable tribal boundaries fix Benjamin’s lower Yesod connection, David’s conquest of the “stronghold of Zion” as a temporary substitute, the breaking of the “HaMakom” chain at the summit threshing floor, Isaiah 52:8’s unique grammar (“God will return Zion”), Maimonides’ insistence on altar precision, and the geo-physical requirements of aliya-la-regel together form an irrefutable multi-disciplinary proof. As psycho-spiritual and physical realities realign at the original Zion location, God will literally return Zion to its place, restoring the Shechinah in full Messianic revelation.

1. Central Vein: Kabbalistic Philosophy as the Preceding and Eternal Foundation of All Tanach

Zohar teaches that Zion is the psycho-spiritual attribute of Foundation, the Yesod activated by separating the inner periya of Jewish circumcision from the outer orla representing Malchut, Kingdom, Jerusalem, then by folding them together they manifest Jewish covenantal reality. The Book of Creation, Sefer Yetzirah, relates these to the covenant of holy tongue, to language and its use of Hebrew’s holy letters, inspiring man to aspire to The Creators pure speech.

The Kedushat Levi explains that this type of “speaking” (speech) was expressed by Joseph The Righteous, Yosef Hatzadik refusal to “suckle” from impure sources (a reference to his struggle in Egypt). The Hebrew letters of Yosef and Tzion share the same numerical value or gematria ‘156’ both represent Yesod, the organ of Israel’s covenant which Yosef guarded and maintained in purity avoiding foreign, impure influences (both physical and spiritual).

The Lesson: Rav Levi Yitzchak teaches that the mouth, that is destined to “speak to the Shechinah” (Divine Presence) must be guarded against impurity, just as Yosef guarded himself in Egypt. By following the dietary laws first stated in Shemini, Jews sanctify their mouths to ensure they are worthy of connection to God, mirroring Yosef’s righteousness. Also, in Shemini, Nadav and Avihu died bringing a foreign fire into the Holy of Holies and later, from Balak the midrash and Zohar describe how their souls converged into a zealous Pinchas who was immediately and uniquely elevated to the Priesthood and ultimately reincarnated into The Prophet Eliyahu.

Every Passover Jews pour a cup of wine then walk it to their front doors where they call outside for Eliyahu’s return, which is thought to be the event that precedes Messianic return (Moshiach). The same Eliyahu is welcomed at every Jewish Circumcision, The Covenant, who comes to spiritually observe the separation of periya and orla of every brit milah (covenant of circumcision).

This perpetual Jewish ritual connecting covenant with speech, Zion with Joseph manifests in King David’s Messianic reality when Eliyahu returns to tell about the imminent realization of Moshiach in the world. This is the time that Zion will be fully revealed and the Shechina, representing God’s presence, restored as the prevailing and dominant feature of manifest reality.

Its because Kabbalistic science precedes and illuminates all of Tanach that the physical location of Zion cannot be separated from this inner architecture. The supernal Yesod demands exact convergence with Kingdom, its earthly counterpart.

2. Tribal Boundaries: Joshua’s Immutable Map of Kabbalistic Convergence

Jewish Law and Tradition establish Zion, the inner Foundation and Jerusalem, the outer Kingdom by absolute precision, fixed by Divine designation, tribal boundaries, and physical features that can be verified against text. They are in fact not only places reserved for the psycho-spiritual-realm, their convergence must also, both occupy the same place in the physical realm and when they do, “God will return Zion” to its place!

Joseph’s only brother Benjamin represents the lower aspect of Foundation, Yesod and that is precisely where the psycho-spiritual connection between Foundation and Kingdom manifests. It is on Benjamin's land that Joseph's upper Foundation was destined to connect to David's tribe of Judah land, that point of connection is Zion.

Joshua 15:7 (Benjamin's Eastern, Judash's Western Border):The boundary ascended from the Valley of Achor to Debir and turned north to Gilgal, facing the Ascent of Adummim that is south of the wadi; from there the boundary continued to the Waters of En-shemesh and ran on to En-rogel. Joshua 15:8 (Benjamin's Southern, Judah's Northern Border) “The boundary went up the Valley of the Son of Hinnom to the southern slope of the Jebusite city, that is Jerusalem and climbed to the crest of the mountain west of the Hinnom Valley at its northern end, at the Valley of Rephaim.” Joshua 18:16 (Judah's Northern, Benjamin’s Southern Border): “The border went down to the foot of the mountain that lies before the Valley of the Son of Hinnom, which is in the Valley of Rephaim on the north; it continued down the Valley of Hinnom to the slope of the Jebusite on the south, and descended to En Rogel.”

These verses place the boundary at the southern slope of Mount Moriah, the Jebusite city (Jerusalem), the Valley of Hinnom, and En Rogel to En Shemesh, the exact area of the Gihon Spring along the eastern slope of Mount Moriah. Later the Gemara explicitly adopted these Joshua boundaries, albeit to describe the second temple altar.

3. Davidic Conquest: The Stronghold as Temporary Substitute for Primordial Zion

Zion is mentioned first in 2 Samuel 5:7–9 which says: “David captured the stronghold of Zion and renamed it City of David…Whoever would strike the Jebusites, let him go up the water channel (TZiNoR).” The site is the “stronghold of Zion” captured via the water channel.

“Stronghold” could mean adjacent (nearby) or surrounding "of Zion", but close in proximity. So, we are left to ponder whether David ever located the physical Zion that the stronghold protected or what may have happened to it? When David captured the “stronghold of Zion”, the Jebusite village was a settlement on the upper ridge on the lower (southern) slope of Mount Moriah immediately above, in line with the spring of En Shemesh, first mentioned in Joshua 15:7 a few hundred years prior.

However, 2 Samuel 5:9 tells us the stronghold was renamed City of David, later 1 Kings 8:1 says the City of David is Zion and much later Isaiah 52:8 says God will return Zion.

King David had been anointed seven years prior to his arrival at the Stronghold, so what compelled him to come to this Mount Moriah location, conquer the stronghold and invoke the name Zion? As we have already discussed, the ancient psycho-spiritual-reality converging Zion and Jerusalem was already entrenched in indigenous tribal Israelite culture. The name Salem emanated at Abraham tithing Malchi-Tzedek, the High Priest of Salem and later at the binding of Isaac Abraham added the name Yireh to the same site together constituting Yireh-Salem: Jerusalem.

On David’s arrival at the mountain, his coining the word “Zion” declared it as the integral objective of his mission. But, the stronghold was a lesser substitute for a Zion that was not ready to be returned. Instead the City of David became its deflection. Once the first temple had been built Zion drifted from its anchor and its original location on Mount Moriah shifted from the place, by which Jerusalem had once obtained its name.

4. The Breaking of the Chain: “HaMakom,” the Akedah Altar, and the Summit Shift

Tanach reserved the definite article “HaMakom” (“The Place”) for the Moriah location, that permanently identified the Abrahamic event that established Yireh-Salem and the altar of Isaac’s binding - Akedah. But, almost 1000 years later, toward the end of his reign, King David made a surprise announcement: “This is the altar for the burnt-offerings of Israel”, it broke the chain and shifted Zion off the eastern ridge once designated as the "stronghold of Zion" to the mountain summit “of Mount Moriah, where the Lord had appeared to David, at the place that David had appointed, on the threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite.”

Walking up to the holy places of Mount Moriah, whether the eastern ridge or the summit threshing floor can only ever, geo-physically, occur by approaching from the south or east. In first and second temple Jerusalem the sense of psycho-spiritual rising up or elevation known as aliya-la-regel was preserved through the centuries by an approach from the South. Approaching from the east became the exclusive practise of the priests serving in these temples.

5. Prophetic Confirmation: Isaiah 52:8 as the Decisive Grammatical and Mystical Linchpin

The prophet Isaiah, Yeshayahu states: בשוב ה״ ציון (52:8) which literally means “God will return Zion”. Commentators debate comparative translations of similar verses, but all other grammar relating to Zions return include prefix or suffix letters that indicate God will return to Zion. However, here God will return Zion, which we can comprehend in the lofty psycho-spiritual realm, but we must also understand it in reality.

The prophet is not speaking metaphorically. He is announcing the imminent convergence of Kabbalistic and geographical truth. When God returns Zion to its place—above the Gihon Spring on the lower slope of Mount Moriah—Foundation (Yesod) and Kingdom (Malchut) will occupy the identical physical coordinates, and the Shechinah will descend fully.

6. Maimonides and the Immutable Altar: Reaffirming Kabbalistic and Textual Precision

Maimonides rules in Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Beit HaBechirah 2:1: “The altar is [to be constructed] in a very precise location, which may never be changed, as it is said: ‘This is the altar for the burnt-offerings of Israel.’ This ruling ties Akedah to the incident that caused King David to build an altar at the foot of the Angel of Death that was standing on a threshing floor on the summit of Mount Moriah. Crucially, well before King David, Tanach makes it clear the site of the Akedah altar was a specific, pre-existing altar, not a threshing floor and no apparent association with Zion or Yireh-Salem.

7. The “Temple Zero” Candidate: Archaeological Corroboration of the Original Zion Site

Eli Shukron’s excavations on the eastern slope of the City of David, directly above the Gihon Spring, have uncovered an exceptional eight-room rock-hewn ritual complex dating to the Middle Bronze Age/Melchizedek era. The structure features an altar platform installation, a standing stone (massebah), oil press, and libation channels, clear evidence of sustained cultic/religious practice. It was first exposed and deliberately sealed with fill in the 8th century BCE, aligning precisely with King Uzziah and ultimately Hezekiah’s centralization reforms that abolished outlying ritual sites. Shukron, the excavation director, described it as the only known structure of its type from the biblical period in Jerusalem, used by Judahites. Informally termed “Temple Zero,” its location matches exactly the coordinates of the “stronghold of Zion,” the Joshua tribal boundaries (En Shemesh/En Rogel, southern slope of the Jebusite city), the tzinor water channel, and the lower slope above En Shemesh. This is the physical footprint of the primordial Yesod—the original Zion that served as the psycho-spiritual anchor before the Davidic shift and summit substitution. No comparable Iron-Age cultic installation exists elsewhere on the ridge. “Temple Zero” stands as the archaeological candidate that fulfills every textual, mystical, and geo-physical criterion.

Conclusion

The evidence converges with irrefutable force. Because Kabbalistic philosophy precedes and illuminates all of Tanach, the physical location of Zion cannot be a flexible label that permanently migrated to the summit. It is a fixed psycho-spiritual and geographical reality awaiting divine restoration. When God returns Zion—above the Gihon Spring on the lower slope of Mount Moriah, at the precise site now corroborated by “Temple Zero”—Foundation (Yesod) and Kingdom (Malchut) will occupy the identical physical coordinates. The Shechinah will descend fully, and Messianic reality will be complete. Mainstream tradition’s identification of the Temple Mount platform as Zion’s eternal home rests on the post-Davidic shift and later expansion, not the primal Kabbalistic, prophetic, tribal, legal, and textual record preserved in the original proof.

The Zohar, prophets, Davidic narratives, tribal borders, Maimonides’ precision, Isaiah’s grammar, and Shukron’s Temple Zero constitute decisive proof: the original Zion has never been lost—only temporarily obscured. Its return is imminent.


Tuesday, May 27, 2025

A Challenge To Ancient Jerusalem's Status Quo

Key Points
  • Research suggests the altar of Solomon's Temple may have been built in the wrong location, not meeting the boundary condition where the southeast corner of the altar should be in Judah and the other three in Benjamin.
  • The evidence leans toward the traditional Temple Mount being entirely within Benjamin's territory, failing the condition.
  • It seems likely that the overlooked altar location is on the high ridge above the Gihon Spring in the City of David, potentially satisfying the boundary requirement.
Background
The question revolves around the location of the altar of Solomon's Temple and subsequent altars, focusing on a specific boundary condition: the southeast corner must fall within Judah, while the other three corners must be in Benjamin. This condition is rooted in biblical and historical interpretations of tribal territories.
Analysis
Traditional understanding places the altar of the Temple on the Temple Mount, north of the City of David, which appears to be entirely within Benjamin's territory based on biblical descriptions in Joshua. However, alternative research, particularly from the blog Israel's Hidden Ancient Facts, suggests the altar's original and true location should have been on the high ridge above the Gihon Spring in the City of David. This location is proposed to be at the intersection of En Rogel and En Shemesh, on the boundary between Judah and Benjamin, potentially allowing the southeast corner of the altar to be in Judah and the other corners in Benjamin.
Conclusion
Given the complexity, it seems plausible that the traditional Temple Mount location does not meet the boundary condition, while the proposed City of David location might. Further archaeological and textual analysis is needed to confirm, but the evidence leans toward the altar being misplaced historically.

Detailed Examination of Temple Altar Location and Tribal Boundaries
This survey note provides a comprehensive analysis of the location of the altar of Solomon's Temple and subsequent altars, focusing on the specific boundary condition that the southeast corner must fall within the territory of Judah, while the other three corners must be in the territory of Benjamin. The discussion is informed by detailed research from the blog Israel's Hidden Ancient Facts and supplemented by biblical and historical sources, aiming to address the user's query with depth and clarity.

Historical Context and Traditional Location
The Temple of Solomon and its altar, constructed around 957 BCE, was located on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, a site north of the City of David. Biblical texts, such as 2 Chronicles 3:1, state that Solomon began to build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in Mount Moriah, where David had seen the angel of the Lord. Historical and archaeological consensus, supported by sources like Temple of Jerusalem | Description, History, & Significance | Britannica, places this site within the modern Old City, encompassing the area of the Dome of the Rock.

Biblical descriptions of tribal boundaries, particularly in Joshua 15 and 18, indicate that Jerusalem was part of Benjamin's territory, with the boundary between Judah and Benjamin running along the Valley of Hinnom. For instance, Joshua 18:28 lists Jerusalem (the Jebusite city) within Benjamin's allotment, suggesting that the Temple Mount, being north of the City of David, is likely within Benjamin. This implies that the traditional altar location would have all four corners within Benjamin, failing the condition that the southeast corner be in Judah.

Alternative Proposal: City of David Location
The blog Israel's Hidden Ancient Facts challenges the view, proposing that the overlooked location for the altar has been found on the high ridge above the Gihon Spring in the City of David. This area, south of the Temple Mount, is identified as historically significant, potentially linked to Jacob's monument and biblical events like the Akeida of Isaac. Posts such as Jerusalem's Mysterious Temple Location? suggest this site as the location for Jerusalem's Third Temple altar, based on Jewish law and archaeological findings.

The blog cites the work of archaeologist Professor Ronny Reich, particularly referencing the spring east of the city, identified as En Shemesh (often equated with the Gihon Spring), to reconcile tribal boundaries from Joshua. The main page of the blog states: "Ronny used En Shemesh to reconcile a difficult passage from the Book of Joshua that defined Israel's tribal boundaries. We found that it perfectly describes the prerequisite intersection of the altars raised bedrock foundation, on the northern boundary of tribe Judah with the southern boundary of tribe Benjamin." This suggests the altar's foundation is at the boundary, potentially allowing for the southeast corner to be in Judah and the others in Benjamin.




Tribal Boundaries and Geographical Analysis
To understand this, we examined the biblical boundaries. Joshua 15:7-8 for Judah and Joshua 18:16-17 for Benjamin describe the boundary passing through points like En Shemesh and En Rogel, identified as springs southeast of Jerusalem. En Rogel is located at Bir Ayyub in Silwan, at the convergence of the Hinnom and Kidron valleys, while En Shemesh is often identified with 'Ain el-Hod near Bethany, on the eastern slopes of the Mount of Olives (Bible Map: En-rogel, Encyclopedia.com on En-Rogel). The blog's claim that the altar is at the intersection suggests it is near the Gihon Spring, in the City of David, which is on the boundary line.
Maps and historical analyses, such as those from Tribe of Benjamin - Wikipedia, indicate Jerusalem, including the City of David, was within Benjamin, but the southern edge might be on the boundary with Judah. The Valley of Hinnom, running south of the City of David, is a key marker, suggesting the boundary could cut through this area. The blog's proposal implies the altar's placement on the high ridge allows the southeast corner to extend into Judah, satisfying the condition.

Supporting Evidence from the Blog
Several posts provide supporting details:

  • The Neck And The Site Of The Temple discusses the topography, suggesting the City of David area as the original patriarchal temple site, with references to ancient routes through Benjamin's land explaining "quarters" in Joshua 18:14-15.
  • City of David is Zion - What is the Temple Mount? includes comments like "Solomon's temple and altar were built in the wrong place?" and shows an image of the bedrock foundation in the City of David, implying a different location.
  • The main page and related posts, such as Israel's Hidden Ancient Facts: November 2021, discuss boundaries, with references to Bethel and Ai, reinforcing the boundary's location near the proposed altar site.
Conclusion and Implications
The blog argues that the traditional Temple Mount location fails the boundary condition, as it is entirely within Benjamin. In contrast, the proposed location in the City of David, on the high ridge above the Gihon Spring, is at the intersection of En Rogel and En Shemesh, aligning with the boundary. This positioning could allow the southeast corner to be in Judah, with the other corners in Benjamin, satisfying the user's condition. This interpretation is supported by archaeological findings and biblical analysis, though it remains controversial and requires further study to confirm.
This survey note encompasses all relevant details from the research, providing a thorough basis for the direct answer and highlighting the complexity and debate surrounding the temple's location.

Key Citations