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Some
of the earliest structures built by man were temples or
shrines where he could worship God in God's ‘house.' The oldest
archaeological
temple sites in the Middle East are called
"House of the Most High." (George, 1993) Christ called the Temple his
‘Father's House.' Temples were in existence in every
dispensation from Adam to the present. But the infamous Tower
of Babel is the first structure mentioned
in the Bible which implies the existence of a Temple. (Gen
11:4) Enoch and his people were translated along
with their city and it included a temple. (McConkie p. 191)
This is the same temple in which the three
Nephites who were translated received their temple endowments.
(McConkie p. 191)
The temple is a place for one to go to communicate with God, receive
instructions, make covenants with God, participate in ordinances
required by
God, and intended to be a place where man might meet God.
History and the general world lost track of
temple building and their importance, even their necessity. So
completed was
this loss that it took revelation to restore it.
So ingrained was the idea of a temple that from the
beginning most cities had a temple; if not dedicated to the true God at
least
to the patron God. One of the earliest
mentions of temples other than in Mormon Scriptures, is the Temple at
Eridu
during the Ubaid Period, and the three temples at Tepe Gawra in the
drainage of
the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, before 3000 BC (Hunt p.15) Eridu in
fact, upon
excavation revealed 18 levels of temples one on top of the other. (Hunt
p. 17)
One of "the first great Dynasties [of Mesopotamia] is said to have been
founded
at Kish ...Kish and Uruk, together
with a similar ruling elite at Mari, were contemporary." (Hunt p. 22)
The
ancient City of Kish
covered more than ten square miles [with 40 mounds] ...[two of the most
important] mounds are called Uhaimir and Ingharra [both temple
mounds]." (‘Hunt
p. 23) "Recognition of kings of Nippur at the Temple of Enlil [the
‘father' god, and creator]
chief god of the Mesopotamian pantheon, was a prerequisite to rule,
that [even
the Great Early King] Sargon apparently felt unable to challenge."
(Hunt p.
50). No doubt as archaeological work
continues earlier temples will be found.
In Egypt,
excavations in 1897-98 identified the ancient city of Nekhen
[with its ceremonial centers] on the west bank of the Nile north of
Aswan and dedicated to
the falcon-headed god Horus, from whence came the myth of the
Wedjat-eye
[see Weights & Barley
in this series]. (Clayton pp.
16-17). Elephantine was on an Island in the middle of the Nile
River just west of Aswan. The ancient city of Nekhen would have all
been before the flood
and during the last years of Adam.
How important temples were and how anciently they were
constructed and utilized can be obtained from Section 109 of the
Doctrine and
Covenants. (Nibley, 1994, p. 29-47) Nibley also elucidates Abraham's
Temple Drama
stretching back to Adam, for all the Ancients had the Ordinances and a
"place"
in which to participate in them. (Nibley, 1999, p.1-42) After the
"sojourn" in Egypt, Israel first had a
Tabernacle as a prototype of the physical temple that
served as a place of serious worship and ordinances. It was called the
‘Tabernacle
of the Congregation' in Ex. 33:7 and the ‘tent of meeting' and it had
other
names as well: (Ex 23:19, 26:9, 39:32, l
Chron 6:48, 9:23, 17:5 and 11 Chron 24:6). The description and
specifications
are in Ex. 26, 27, 35-38. Smaller recognized
temple shrines during the time of the Judges utilized this pattern,
(Miller p.
722) for their particular needs, that included the Temple
at Elephantine. (see Rosenberg p. 10) The Temple of Solomon
greatly enlarged and sophisticated the Tabernacle pattern. Wherever the
pattern
was employed they were all characterized by the presence of an
Altar for the performances of varied
animal sacrifices.
ALTARS:
Temples of the Last
Dispensation, now being built, do not have a sacrificial Altar, but the
temple
to be rebuilt in Jerusalem and some of the Temples to be built in
Jackson County, Missouri will have Altars,
how else would the Levites offer up again a sacrifice in
righteousness? (D&C 13, Dyer pp. 104-109, DHC Vol. 1, pp.
359-362) Often time sacred obligations
were fulfilled by the simplest accommodation such as where those who
sought the
lord... or where Moses could retire for meditation (Ex 33:7-10)...
[which] is identified
as coming from an Ephraimite source. (Miller p. 722) Ephraim
had taken on a major role and it was
Joshua the Ephramite who was custodian of the first "tent of meeting"
(Ex
33:11) and it is Ephraimites now in office in these last days, they and
others are
now officiating in all the temples now being built. (D&C 84:31:34,
Vermes
p. 161)
An Altar not often referred to is the one
mentioned in the DHC at Adam-Ondi-Ahman. "On the brow of the hill stood
the old
stone Altar ....sixteen feet long, by nine
or ten feet wide...the height of the altar at each end was some two and
half feet...
rising higher to the center...such was the
Altar
at ‘Diahman' when the Prophet's [Joseph Smith] party visited it."
(Smith pp.
38-40) More details are provided by Wittorf. This was the
Altar of Adam, where "Adam and his
company, assembled to worship
their God."(Wittorf pp. 1-8) Since this
was nearly 85 miles north of the site of the Garden of Eden where Adam
may have
first built an altar, the ‘Diahman
altar' would have been constructed
later and used over a longer period of time. "The Lord gave a
revelation to the
Prophet Joseph Smith, at Hiram, Ohio, concerning the ‘foundation
of Adam-ondi-Ahman,' at which place Michael, or Adam received the ‘keys
of
salvation.'" (Dyer p. 172, D&C 78:15-17) "The Prophet,
upon first visiting the site,
called the bluff, ‘Tower Hill' (a name I [H.C. Kimball] gave the place)
in consequence of the remains of an old
Nephite altar
or tower that stood there. (DHC Vol. 111, p. 40) The
Prophet...called... ‘Brethren [BrighamYoung and others] come, go along
with me, and
I will show you something.' He led....to a place where [there] were
ruins of three
altars...built of stone, one above the
other... representing the three
orders of priesthood; ‘There,' said Joseph, ‘is the place where Adam
offered up
sacrifice..." (Life of Heber C. Kimball
quoted in Dyer, pp. 176-77)
ALTARS IN ISRAEL:
The smaller recognized ‘temple' shrines include those at
Shiloh, Nob, Bethel, Mt. Gerizim, Schechem and possibly Gibeon, most of
these
had some kind of permanent structure; most had proscribed
Altars. (Ex 27:1-2, Jos. 8:30) It was at
Shiloh where the Ark had been kept. (1
Sam 1:3, 9, 3:3, 2 Sam 7:2, 22:7) Ophrah, about 10 miles from
the ancient site
of Shiloh, was the first Jewish settlement
after the Six Day War. Doron Nir-Zevi, a second generation settler,
found a
horned Altar just one mile from the
ruins of Shiloh. He and his College professor
friend, Yoel Elitzur, reported the discovery in the Biblical
Archaeology Review
for May/June 2004. (Elitzur p. 35).
They may yet find more at the site of Nob and Bethel. The
bible relates
that the land was full of Altars, ‘on every high hill and under every
leafy
tree'" (Elitzur p. 35) but most of these
were Canaanite ceremonial spots. Israel
was accustomed to offering sacrifices on ‘high places' before the
temple of Solomon. The prophet Samuel was "on his
way up to the high place." (1 Samuel 9:14).
Didn't Solomon himself
‘sacrifice' and burn incense at the high places? (l Kings 3:3) Gideon
offered sacrifices and built an altar on the site where an angel
appeared to
him (Judges 6:19-24, 13:19, l Samuel 6:14) An
Altar has also been described at Samaria.
(Elitzur p. 39)
The altar
mentioned in Joshua 8:30 is stated to have [now ] been found on Mt.
Ebal.
Another altar was found on the slope
below ancient Zorah and is nicknamed Manoah's altar... "Manoah was
Samson's
father [he lived at Zorah]... In Judges 13, an angel appeared to Manoah
...and
assured him of a son; Manoah then offered sacrifices on ...an
altar." (Elitzur p. 38) ... "and the
course of stones found at Tel Shechem [near where Jacob offered up
sacrifices] ...
has been identified as the ‘temple of Baal-Berit' from
Judges 9." (Elitzur p. 38)
SOLOMON'S TEMPLE:
But all these shrines and areas called "temples" and perhaps
others were insignificant compared to what developed at Jerusalem.
There the Great Temple
was distinguished from all other Near Eastern temples because it
contained no
idol. (Miller p. 730) Information concerning
the Great Temple of Solomon in the era of the Hebrew United Monarchy is
in l
Kings and 11 Chronicles, along with some scanty outside sources and now
recently,
abundant archaeological data is available. Solomon began to build his
Temple in his fourth year
as King, (1 Kings 5) and it took seven years to complete. (Tyndale p.
1522) It had a varied history, often
pilfered and often abused by Idolatrous Kings, (I Kings 14:26, 15:18,
16:8, 2
Kings 21:4, 23:1-12), by 640 BC it was in need of considerable repair.
Worshippers
helped a little, but finally the Temple was
looted, sacked, destroyed and burned by Nebuchadnezzar's General
Nebuzaradan,
having lain siege to Jerusalem during the summer
of 587, eleven years after he had carried captives to Babylon. (Miller
p. 732) This would have been about thirteen years
after Lehi had left for safety to a new Promised Land. Solomon's Temple
had stood for
about 400 years. Lehi and his family carried in their hearts a deep
desire for
their own temple when they reached the new land.
THE JERUSALEM
TEMPLES:
There were three
successive Jerusalem
temples, all on approximately the same site. These were Solomon's,
Zerubbabel's, and Herod's. (Miller p.
731) The Temple of Solomon
is mentioned in l Kings and 11 Chronicles.
Archaeology has greatly enriched our knowledge of these ancient
temples.
Except for the Wailing Wall, there is not much tangible evidence above
ground
left of the three Jerusalem Temples. They were all situated on Temple
Hill, the eastern hill, at an elevation of 2,470 feet. The temple
looked east
to the point where the sun rose over the Mount of Olives
which was 200 feet higher, or at 2670 feet. (Miller p. 731) No wonder
that
Jesus' Disciples exclaimed as they beheld the Temple Area
from that slope, "Look, Teacher, what wonderful stones and what
wonderful
buildings!" (Mark 13:1) Part of the response was that not one stone on
another
would be preserved. (Math 24:2) ) The
view from the Mt. of Olives is different
today, for the mount is now occupied by the "Hara mesh-Sherif,' the
Moslem Dome
of the Rock, covering the location of the Altar
where Abraham had tied and bound Isaac for sacrifice.
Perhaps the Holy of
Holies of the three previous temples stood there.
THE PROPHETIC TEMPLES
YET TO BE BUILT:
But there will soon be a new temple built in Jerusalem as
described in Ezek 40-43, where work for the living and the dead both
for Jew
and Moslem will be performed, as it states: "For it is ordained that in
Zion,
and in her Stakes and in Jerusalem, those
places which I have appointed for refuge, shall be the places for your
baptism
for your dead." (D&C
124:36) And a New Temple
will also be built soon in New Jerusalem where "His Servants ...shall
see his
face." (John 23:2, Is. 25:6) A Dead Sea
Scroll states: "The court is surrounded by a wall built of white stone
6.6, the
wall contains twelve gates 6.3." (Chyutin p. 37) This
description
seems to fit and suggest that of the architecture of the New
Jerusalem
Temple the LDS expect to build. The
New
Jerusalem
Scroll
describes in detail the sacrificial preparations, requirements and
procedures,
somewhat like those expected to be restored again for one or more of
the coming
temples of the last days. The New
Jerusalem
Scroll from Qumran is only recently being
evaluated, (Chyutin) as is the temple described in the
Temple Scroll
published by Yigael Yadin, the longest of the Dead Sea
Scrolls, that described a temple different from that in Ezek 40-43.
That "scroll deals with fundamental issues ...in
a manner different from that revealed to all Israel in the ‘Canonical
Pentateuch." (Yadin p. 226) Work on the
Temple Scroll (TS) has continued, and is now best represented by the
detailed
study published by Wise "in an attempt to provide an answer to the
purpose of
the TS." (Wise p. 33) But without the
knowledge of temples held by the LDS no scholar will know what the
Temples were
really for.
Zerubbabel's Temple, or as it is also called, The Second
Temple, was built at the insistence of the prophets Haggai and
Zechariah, a son
of Iddo, also a prophet, they had come from Susa in Persia to rebuild
the
temple, (Miller p. 734) and it stood for almost 500 years; longer than
either
the first or Solomon's Temple or even the third temple built by Herod.
When the
Jews returned with the sanction of the Persian King Cyrus, they rebuilt
the
ruined temple, completing it in 515 BC (Alexander p. 254),
but it was inferior to the Temple of Solomon
(Ezra l, 3:2-3, 8:10) It had a sordid
history, but the triumphant Maccabees cleansed the Temple from
pollution and
desecration in 164 BC . (l Macc. 4:36-59) Then they turned the
enclosure into a
fortress so strong that it resisted the siege of Pompey for three
months in 63
BC when the Romans took over. Then under
Herod the Great, the Temple
was rebuilt, commencing early in 19 BC. This magnificent structure of
cream
stone and gold was barely finished in 64 AD. (Tyndale p. 1525) It was
still
under construction when Christ walked daily in the temple and was
available to
all who desired to question him. (Mark 11:27, John 10:23) The impending
doom of
the Temple and the Holy City
caused him to weep. (Luke 19:41) Herod's
Temple was the Temple of the New Testament. It was destroyed
by Titus of the Roman Tenth Legion in 70 AD six years after it had been
completed. (Tyndale p. 1525) And was followed by the Diaspora of the
Jews which
lasted until their return in May 14, 1948. (Gilbert pp.
19-20, 106-106) The fourth temple that will be built on the
site of the first three will be built just before the Second Coming of
the
Christ and will last into the Millennium, and will revolve around the
life of a
righteous man called David. (Isaiah 19:20, Skousen p. 322) But, doesn't
Section
124 state, it will be a Mormon Temple to do Mormon
ordinances, for the living and the dead, Jew and Moslem, and all
others?
OTHER TEMPLES:
With the departure of the Ten Tribes, [c.722 BC] Samaria
became a military colony peopled by the remnant of
Jews who had not been deported by Sargon II, and of colonists brought
in from
Babylonia and North Syria. Interest in a
center to worship was acute. The offer of certain Samaritans to help
rebuild
the Jerusalem Temple under Zerubbabel's leadership
sanctioned by Cyrus (c. 538 BC) was rejected (Ezra 4:1-6). The rift
became very
great when Nehemiah expelled a member of the high priestly family for
marrying
a Samaritan girl. (Neh 13:28). This led
to the erection by the Samartans of their own temple on the summit of
Mt. Gerizim, where god's chosen people had originally
received the blessing (Deut 11:29). So, for a time a Temple
other than at Jerusalem
was being used. The Mt. Gerizim Temple was destroyed by
104 BC during the political disorders in the time of the Maccabeans.
(Miller p.
735). A vanishing colony of Samaritans still worship on the site to the
present,
still retaining their unique version of the scriptures, copies of which
were
found among the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Samaritan language as part of
the
Library of Qumran. (Cross pp. 137-139) Archaeology
has much to contribute towards the understanding of the ancient
Israelite
religion; sacred time and sacred places. (Gittlen)
A Jewish temple was also built in Egypt at Leontopolis. It was
excavated [at Tell el-Yahudiya in Egypt]
by Sir Flinders Petrie in 1906, it seems to have duplicated the
dimensions of
the Jerusalem Temple. "In 162 BC Antiochus V. of Syria appointed
...Alkimus as
High Priest in Jerusalem,
although he was not of the priestly family. Alkimus was regarded as an
usurper
by many pious Jews...Onias lV, the son of the High Priest Onias III,
who had
earlier been disposed by Antiochus IV, fled to Egypt with the hope of
establishing a center of true worship there. ...Onias [requested from]
the
Egyptian ruler, Ptolemy VI ...and Cleopatra...for permission to built
in Egypt a
temple similar to that in Jerusalem, with Levites and priests serving
as
ministrants. (see Josephus, Antiquities xiii. 62-64) The reply was
brief and
favorable." (Pfeiffer p. 360) The Temple
was built, though smaller and poorer.
Petrie reported that "the whole site was formed in imitation of the
shape of the Temple hill of the Holy City. It was, in short,
a
copy [of Old ] Jerusalem, in Egypt." (Pfeiffer p. 360) By the
time the temple in Leontopolis was
built the temple at Elephantine had been in ruins for nearly 200 years,
and the
temples built on the American continent by the Nephites had multiplied
and had
been long in use, some had been in use for 300 years, such as the
Temple in the
City of Nephi built about 570 BC. (2 Ne 5:6, also see Welch)
THE TEMPLES
OF THE BOOK OF MORMON:
Lehi was numbered among "many prophets prophesying unto the
people that they must repent, or the great city of Jerusalem must be
destroyed." (l Nephi
1:4) Being a prophet, it only follows
that Lehi must have held the priesthood. Joseph Smith
testified of the Nephites that
they "had the same order, the same priesthood, the same ordinances,
gifts,
power, and blessings as were enjoyed in the eastern continent." (Smith
p.
538) Since he lived so near to Jerusalem, could Lehi have
officiated in the temple there? His son
Nephi recognized the significance of the temple for he records, "And I
did
teach my people to build buildings, and to work all manner of wood, and
of
iron, and of copper, and of brass, and of steel, and of gold, and of
silver,
and of precious ores, which were in great abundance. And I,
Nephi, did build a
temple; and I
did construct it after the manner of
the Temple of Solomon save it were
not built of so many precious things; for they were not to be found
upon the
land, wherefore, it could not be built like unto Solomon's
Temple. But the manner
of the construction as like
unto
the temple of Solomon; and the workmanship thereof was
exceeding fine." (2 Nephi 5:15-16) One of the missing precious items
may well
have been cedar. What does this tell us about the environment where
Lehi lived?
Certainly in a more semi-tropical area. Lebanon
had long been a source for temple timbers throughout the Mesopotamian
area for
3000 years (Ezek 27:5) The temple of Solomon had obtained
the cedar from the Mountains of Lebanon. (11 Samuel 5:11, l Kings 5:8)
Nephi's temple was the first temple built in
the Promised Land in the Western Hemisphere; it was built in the City
of Nephi. (2 Ne 5:16) Cedar seems to have not been available.
Nephi's younger brother, Jacob, was
the next to mention the Temple, (Jacob
l:17) "Wherefore I, Jacob, gave unto them these words as I have taught
them in
the temple, having first obtained
mine errand from the Lord."
Over three hundred years later, King Benjamin delivered his
deeply
spiritual testimony from a
temple. "And it came to pass that after
Mosiah had done as his father had commanded him, and had made a
proclamation
throughout all the land that the people gathered themselves together
throughout
all the land, that they might go up to the
temple
to hear the words which King Benjamin should speak unto them." (Mos
2:1) The remainder of his discourse is found in
Mos. 2-4. Although it cannot be proven whether this was the
same temple
built by Nephi, it was a temple and we
suppose temple
rites and ordinances were performed
in it as in all the others.
Approximately two hundred years after King Benjamin, the
people were gathered around a temple
when the Savior appeared to them.(3 Ne 8:2, 10:18) In 3
Nephi
11:l, it states, "And now it came to pass that there were a
great multitude gathered together, of the people of Nephi, round about
the temple which was in the land
Bountiful; (3 Ne 11:1, 17:25, see also
Brown
p. 129) and they were marveling and wondering one with another, and
were
showing one to another the great marvelous change which had taken
place." This
appearance of Christ at the Bountiful Temple was about eleven
months after his resurrection. (3 Ne 8:2, 11:18,) "Months had passed
perhaps
even a year, since the volcanoes had erupted..." (Brown p.
130)
There were at least "Temples
at the Cities of Nephi, Zarahemla, and Bountiful [and are] discussed by
Welch" (Largey p.754, see Welch p. 12). Lamanite Temples are
also
mentioned in Alma 23:2, 26:29, and other Temples in the land of
Zarahemla (Alma 16:13, also See Largey p. 754). Apparently
altars were utilized in the temples, (
Mosiah
2:1-3, 2 Ne 5:10, Alma
30:3) because sacrifices were performed. At the time the Book
of Mormon was published these ideas of
altars and temples
outside of Jerusalem where
totally unacceptable.
THE UNKNOWN TEMPLE NEAR DEDAN, ARABIA:
But there is
another temple, though not built by the Nephites they were
responsible
for it. Some researchers indicates that Lehi and his family
made converts during their passage through
the wilderness, and that these converts continued faithful
eventually
forming a populace that developed a culture and in and near the
City at Dedan. Their name, "Lihyan,
means in English ‘the People of Lehi.'...This group just possibly
could have been the children of Nephi's converts (Hilton pp
73-101, D&C 38:8-13)whom he left
behind as he traveled through Arabia to America." (Hilton p.
74). Archaeologists
and those doing research on the Trail of Lehi, have found in "the
Lihyan ruins at al-Eis (Yanbu,
Saudi Arabia)...an Ancient Lihyan Temple
and Font.(Hilton p.
91)...patterned after Solomon's temple Font ...the ancient Lihyans
were a large and
powerful family, who might be the children of Nephi's converts
(D&C
38:8... they must have prospered and spread over a wide area
of country in process of time." (Hilton
pp. 93-99) They date back to the time when Lehi and Nephi would
have passed thorough the western part of the Arabian
Wilderness. "They
rose to political
prominence in the fifth century BC...[leaving behind] a temple and
font, statue, and
inscriptions [one with the name of Nephi
on it]." (Hilton p. 75) near a place called Dedan,
(also known as Egra, and el, Ela), which
is located east of the Red Sea and is shown on maps in (Kraeling p. 249
and Alexander p.
12-13). Dedan was the brother
of Sheba, the Son of Raamah,
the fourth son of Cush,
who was the
first son of Ham. (Gen 10:6-8) Representatives from Dedan
were among those who
visited Christ at his birth. (Erickson p. 30). This
representation could be explained by
the Nephites having made converts who prospered and built a
temple about which
little is known. This is an area for further research.
A TEMPLE ANYWHERE BUT IN JERUSALEM:
Temples,
then, were built and utilized by the descendants of Lehi for at least
900 years,
from 570 BC to at least 350 AD. After 421 AD the Lamanites, having
destroyed
the bulk of the Nephites may have taken over their temples and modified
them
for their apostate needs. This is evidence for the significance placed
on such
a holy structure. There is only one problem: In 1829, it was totally
against
current scholarly thought to believe that Jews would have constructed
any
temple on foreign soil outside of Jerusalem, let
alone outside of Palestine.
Scholars have used the twelfth chapter of Deuteronomy to support this
poplar
belief, especially verses 13-14 which reads: "Take head to thyself that
thou
offer not thy burnt offerings in every place that thou seest: But in
the place
which the Lord shall choose in one
of thy tribes, there thou shalt do all that I command thee."
"Although proponents of the Critical School
earlier concluded that the Tabernacle was a ‘pious fiction.'" (Cross
203) and
Wellhausen stated categorically that "The truth is that the Tabernacle
is the
copy, not the prototype, of the Temple of Jerusalem" (Wellhausen
p. 37), "later opinion has seen the biblical description as one based
on
earlier models. In particular ...Cross considers it to have been based
on the
ceremonial tent of David, as mentioned briefly in 2 Sam
6:17." (Rosenberg
p. 10) Others have taken this even
further: "The basic idea of a portable pavilion [tabernacle or temple]
is
attested in Egypt
from before 2000 BC. Surviving examples
have a framework of wooden beams and rods, plated with precious metal
and made
with joints and sockets for easy erection. Ancient pictures show how
they were
once hung with curtains." (Alexander pp. 167, 253) The
implication being that Moses got his idea
for the tabernacle from the Egyptian model. "Not long ago,
learned divines were fond of
pointing out that Nephi's idea of building a temple in the new World
was quite
sufficient in itself to prove once and for all the fraudulence of the
Book of
Mormon, since it was argued, no real Jew would ever dream of having a
temple
anywhere but in Jerusalem. So the Elephantine Papyri score another
point for
the Book of Mormon." (Nibley 3, p. 59)
The detractors continue to have their scaffolding of
explanations other than that of revelation and direction from diety
washed away
by new discovery after new discovery. So, many have their
opinions and most of those opinions have now been proven wrong by the
continuing discoveries being made. For whatever unjustified reason, the
academics could
not accept
that Temples were
built outside of Jerusalem after the
destruction of Solomon's
temple. Then came Elephantine, and
of course the ruins and records of Elephantine were discovered nearly
fifty
years after a totally functional Temple
was constructed at Nauvoo, and more than sixty years after the
publication of
the Book of Mormon that described temples
being built in the Western Hemisphere. From now on credence will have
to be
given to the claims of the Book of Mormon.
It was a very significant find then, when Elephantine papyri
revealed evidence of a Jewish temple to Jehovah built in southern Egypt
by sixth century
BC Jews. This is significant evidence to support the premise that Jews
were building
temples outside of Jerusalem, a practice followed by Lehi and his
colony at
nearly the same
time a half world away.
THE TEMPLE
AT ELEPNANTINE:
The name Elephantine, called Yeb locally, seems to have been
derived from the smooth, black granite outcroppings near the water
level of the
Island, eroded to what looked like bathing elephants at the water's
edge,
surrounding the Island. The Island was also
the center of the luxury trade in Ivory between Nubia,
to the south of Egypt.
(Kraeling p. 129).
As has been noted in a previous study included on this web
site, (Discoveries at Elephantine),
during the Saite Dynasty, sometime after 650 BC, a contingent of Jewish
mercenaries garrisoned at the Island had sought for permission from
Jerusalem to build a
temple. With their families they formed a colony on the Island
that was to persist for more than three hundred years.
"The American journalist-turned-archaeologist, C.E. Wilbour
(in 1893) traveled extensively in the area and acquired a hoard of
papyri from
the locals, which he stored in a trunk without much examination [though
he
suspected they might be in Aramaic]. At his death in 1896, the trunk
passed to
his daughter, who bequeathed the documents to the Brooklyn Art Museum
in 1947." (Rosenberg
p. 6) "Only then were they examined and found to be the family archive
of
Ananiah, a kind of Levite or ‘servitor' of the Temple
of Heaven on Elephantine." (Kraeling p. 137) "The documents
were written
in cursive Aramaic..[and dated] to the fifth century BC, and eventually
"were
published by Emil Kraeling in 1953." (Rosenberg
p. 6) "A.H. Sayce acquired papyri from Elephantine in 1901, which he
presented
to the Bodleian Library [in England]. In 1903, Lady William
Cecil and R. L. Mond
acquired more rolls, which went to the Cairo Museum
(and one section to the Bodleian). ...in that year a German
archaeologist team
found a number of additional papyri relating to the Jewish temple.
Later they
found others, relating to family documents, contracts and inscriptions
of the
Persian Emperor, Darius II....this material found by the Germans, was
promptly
published by E. Sachau in 1911...all the legible Aramaic papyri found
up to 1920
were...published by A. Cowley in 1923....and later, together with
others, by
Bezalel Porten in 1968." (Rosenberg
p. 6). The book by Porten is the one referred to the most, and one we
have used
extensively.
The Brooklyn papyri refers
to the temple more frequently than
does the Sayce-Cowly papyri. Kraeling writes:
"We have already mentioned the surprise
experienced by students of the Old Testament when the Sayce-Cowley
papyri first
revealed the existence of a Jewish sanctuary on the Island of
Elephantine. The work used to describe it was
‘egora.' Many were reluctant to believe
that the Jews at this time would have erected a
real temple
on foreign
soil and argued that the word must refer to what was essentially a
synagogue.
But this possibility was dispelled by the publication of Sachau's first
three
papyri, revealing the story of the destruction of the building. These
papyri
made it clear that the edifice was used for sacrifices.
Sacrifices imply an altar and that there
was an altar
shown by the substitute expression ‘altar house.' The presence of an
altar of sacrifice makes it certain
that the building was a temple" (Kraeling, p. 100)
"The temple is described in the ... documents as an egora
(shrine), which implies an altar in the open air, [like the ancient
tabernacle]
or a plain shrine, roofed and entered by several doorways. The building
was
dedicated to Jahweh, [Jehovah], to whom animal sacrifices were offered,
and
served a local community of Jewish militia. A papyri dated to 407 BC
claims
that it had stood from before the Persian conquest of Egypt by Cambyses
(in 525 BC), and
that he had destroyed many temples but spared the Jewish one... The
papyri gave
detailed descriptions of some of the houses of the Jewish
colony...handed down
from parents to wives and children....their location in a ...tight knit
complex
around the temple." (Rosenberg
p. 6) Some aspects of this are discussed in another study in this
series on PAPONYOMY.
The measurements were reminiscent of Solomon's temple (l Kgs 6:2),
though the
building was probably smaller. Porten gives more details of the
structure. (Porten
p. 110)
EXCAVATIONS AT ELEPHANTINE:
Expeditions were mounted by German, French and Italian teams
before and after the First World War, but they did not find the temple
at that
time. "In 1967 a German team started work at the southern end of
Elephantine Island....identified the town, its
Egyptian temples over the centuries from the earliest times to the
Roman era.
Their excavations uncovered an ‘Aramaic quarter' of the
27th
dynasty, the early Persian period, [Cambyses II, 510 BC], (Clayton p.
125), which
equates to that of the Jewish Colony. Eventually in 1997, at the heart
of this
village, they found a piece of tiled flooring much superior to that
found in
the mud brick houses around. ...[they concluded it was] the floor of
the Jewish
temple, confirmed by documents researched by Porten...parts of the
walls of the
temple and surrounding courtyard were identified." (Rosenberg p.
6) Some parts of the city and the temple had
subsided and fallen away. Rosenberg, using the
accumulated documents and the work of Cornelius
von Pilgram, the leader of the German team doing the latest work, was
able to
reconstruct and describe the temple and its environs in his study.
(Rosenberg pp. 7-12)
What an astonishing discovery! For latter-day Saints, the
published Book of Mormon had been on record since 1829, sixty years
before the
discovery of the Elephantine papyri telling about a fifth century
Jewish group
constructing a temple on foreign soil. But it had taken more than 140
years
before archaeologists confirmed it for certain. Some day the ancient
temples of
the Nephites will be found and excavated.
Recall that Nephi not only built a temple on foreign soil,
but he built it like
unto
Solomon's temple. (2 Ne 5:16) Porten gives
us insight concerning
the actual structure erected on the Island of Elephantine. "An
apparently unique feature of the Elephantine Jewish community was the
existence
of a Temple to
YAH. It was oriented toward Jerusalem and the size of the
temple complex resembled
that of
Solomon's Temple." (Porten p.
299) Thus, not only did both groups
build temples outside of Jerusalem, they also
followed the architectural design of Solomon's Temple.
Porten and others suggest that "in the middle of the seventh
century (about 650 BC), during the reign of Manasseh in Judah, [Jewish
mercenaries came] to the aid of
Psammetichus l in his campaigns against Nubia
and in an attempt to dislodge the overarching power of Assyria."
(Rosenberg p.
7) They would have garrisoned at
Elephantine and stayed there to guard the southern reaches of
Egypt. Cyrus eventually conquered Egypt in 525 BC
and apparently retained the Jewish mercenaries after that for the same
purposes
they had been there before.
THE TRECHEROUS PRIESTS OF KHNUM AT ELEPPHANTINE:
In 410 BC, the priests of the adjoining temple of Khnum [the
ram-headed God] solicited the aid of a corrupt Persian official
Waidrang, who
sent his son
Nephayan
[note the prefix name root of the
name Neph-i
in
Neph-a-y-an.
Nephi is an Egyptian name] with
Egyptian troops from Syene (Aswan) [just across the Nile River to the
east] to
destroy the Jewish temple." (Rosenberg
p. 7) The papyri tells of this
destruction, the doors and roof were destroyed and set on fire, the
gold and
silver vessels were looted (Cowley p. 30)
"The priests of the Khnum temple were outraged to see the Jews
sacrifice
animals, some of which were sacred to their God Khnum." (Rosenberg p 8)
The German team found a
cemetery of rams, the animal sacred to Khnum.
The Ram Headed God Khnum is credited with directing the annual
inundation of the Nile... controlled from the
first cataract. The priests had reason
to resent the Jewish sacrifices, particularly the sacrifice of sheep at
the Passover
festival, which the garrison observed. A papyrus of Darius II, dated to
418/19
BC, reminds them [the garrison], to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
But why
destroy the temple that had been there for more than 200
years? There was another reason for the destruction
uncovered by the recent German excavations.
In 410 BC, the "Priests of Khnum were in the process of
extending their Temple
northwards where it would be directly across from the courtyard wall of
the
Jewish temple. Between the two temples lay the main thoroughfare across
the
island, called the ‘street of the king' and it would have been
dangerously
constricted if not actually blocked. When the Jewish Temple was built,
part of
the road had already been diverted to the north. With the building of
their
extension, the Khnum priests presumably got permission to restore the
street by
removing the Jewish temple courtyard wall, and they took the
opportunity to
destroy the temple as well." (von Pilgrim, quoted by Rosenberg p.
8) The priests had chosen an appropriate moment
to attack the Jewish temple—when the Persian Governor Arsames was
abroad paying
homage to the Emperor, Darius II.
After three years and some difficulty, the Jews of
Elephantine, especially one Jedaniah, who lived across the street
northwest of
the temple, appealed to the authorities "in Jerusalem for help, without
success. But they
did receive permission from the Persian governor of Yehud (Judah) to
reconstruct the
temple, and it was rebuilt shortly
afterwards, on condition that
animal sacrifices would not be conducted there, only ‘meal offerings
and
incense.'" (Porten p. 292) A second condition required that the
courtyard wall
of the rebuilt temple had to be clear of the ‘street of the
king.' The temple
rebuilt before 402 BC was asymmetrically placed within its new
courtyard. The last date of the recovered papyri
documents from Elephantine ended in 399 BC, the
temple was still standing when the
Persians were expelled from Egypt shortly
there after. The new rulers of Egypt
apparently no longer needed the services of the mercenaries; perhaps
sometime
later they left Elephantine. The reconstructed
temple was not destroyed. For a "time it was used as a stable,
presumably as an
act of deliberate desecration." (Rosenberg
p. 9) The German excavators concluded
that the Elephantine temple bore a close resemblance to the Mishkan, or
Wilderness Tabernacle, perhaps even the shrine at Shiloh which was the
covenant
sanctuary central to the twelve-tribe amphictony and the place from
which the Ark was taken to fight
the Philistines. (l Sam 4:4) Excavations
at Shiloh, however, have never found a
structure, though there was evidence of the Shrine. Later the
Altar already mentioned was found a
mile from the city ruins. It is likely
that prior excavational activities dug in the wrong place.
THE TEMPLE OF ELEPHANTINE REBUILT:
It is evident that the Garrison had obtained permission to
build the temple at Elephantine
before the first invasion of Jerusalem by the Babylonians, (c. 597 BC)
and then
when the Babylonians returned eleven years later and destroyed the
Jerusalem
temple, it may have been "then that large numbers fled to Egypt taking
the
prophet Jeremiah with them." (Jer 43:5-7) There is no evidence that
Jeremiah
ever went to Elephantine, but some of the Jews
may have and gone on to join the Jewish garrison there.
An exact date when the temple had been constructed is not
known, but Kraeling suggested that it may have been soon after the
destruction
of Solomon's temple during the early sixth century BC by
Nebuchadrezzar's
army. He remarks, "It would be
comprehensible, too, that a temple should be established in Egypt for
the Jewish God after the one at Jerusalem had fallen."
(Kraeling p. 145) The temple lasted
until 410 BC when it was destroyed, (Porten p. 122) then was rebuilt
before
402, and while not deliberately destroyed during the next century BC,
it was
desecrated and for a time used as a cattle barn, and finally like most
other
things on the Island time and the elements reduced
it to ruins. The Elephantine temple
therefore,
survived nearly three hundred years indicating its significance to the
Elephantine
Jews.
So what happened to the Jewish garrison at
Elephantine? "Some of those [Jews] in the rest of the country
[Egypt and the remnants of
the garrison] may have been ancestors of the Jewish population of
Alexandria." (Banes, p.
51) This great city became a popular place for Jews within a century
after the demise
of the temple at Elephantine. So many Jews accumulated in
Alexandria, Egypt,
that by 250 BC there was a call for a translation into Greek of the
Hebrew
tests for their use, and this led to the translation known as the
Septuagint, named after the 70 Elders
of Jerusalem sent to do the translating.
In some ways it is more accurate than the Hebrew Bible currently
available. For example it mentions the place where the meeting of
Joseph and
his family took place at Heroonpolis, when the family of Jacob came
into Egypt.
(Kraeling 3, pp. 93, 104) "The
Septuagint was the Bible of the Greek-speaking world in the times of
Christ,
and the apostles." Miller p. 662) Many
of the Jews in Alexandria
converted to Christianity.
It may be asked what justification did the Elephantine
Jews have in constructing a temple to Jehovah and how does it resolve
Deuteronomy
12? As mentioned in the Introduction to
this series, the Jewish community at Elephantine
may have originated during the reign of Manasseh of the Ten
Tribes. He entertained many pagan ideas among which
included the erection of pagan altars in the courts of Solomon's
Temple. It is likely that these acts were opposed by
officiating
temple priests. Some of these priests
fled to Egypt and joined the
Jewish garrison at Elephantine. (Porten p.
119) Since they probably viewed
Manasseh's acts as a desecration of Solomon's temple, they were
instrumental in
the construction or maintaining a new
temple acceptable to Jehovah. Since
the discovery of the Elephantine temple and other Jewish temples on
lands
outside Jerusalem, scholars have begun to question the interpretation
of
Deuteronomy 12 that only one temple in Palestine could be in existence.
One
explanation is that with the religious reformation of King Josiah, as
recorded in
2 Kings 22, Deuteronomy's promulgation was no longer valid. (Kraeling
p. 83)
THE CRISIS IN JERUSALEM:
Construction of the Nephite's temples may have been justified
by a number of reasons. First since they were in a different land
without
access to a temple, they were constructed to perform the ordinances in
America as had been performed in the Old World. Secondly, Nephi knew
that the temple in Jerusalem would be
destroyed, indicating a
need for a new holy edifice. Thirdly, and probably more importantly,
Nephi, had
committed himself to "go and do the things that the Lord had
commanded." It is likely that God would have commanded
temples to be built by the Nephites.
The Elephantine priests feared for their lives just as Lehi
did. The Book of Mormon gives us an example of this fear: "And when the
Jews
heard these things, they were angry with him [Lehi]; yea, even as with
the prophets
of old, whom they had cast out, and stoned, and slain; and they also
sought his
life." (1 Ne 1:20) "From the Lachish Letters [found in a destroyed
fortress 30
miles south of Jerusalem] it is clear that
informed parties in Jerusalem were quite aware
of the critical state of things in Jerusalem."
(Nibley p. 113)
This fear was justified. The Old Testament describes an
incident that must have been fresh on the minds of Lehi and the
Elephantine
priests. Before Zedekiah became king, "Jehoiachin, son and successor of
King
Jehoiakim of Judah, mounted the throne in 598 BC, at the age of 18, but
he only
reigned for three months and ten days when he was taken captive by
Nebuchadnezzar, and along with thousands of ‘men of might,' and the
precious
vessels of the Temple." (11 Kings 24:12-16; 11 Chron 36:10, Miller p.
305) During
the reign pf Jehoiachin, the following occurred. "And there
was also a man that prophesied in
the name of the Lord, Urijah the sons of Shemaiah of Kirjathjearim, who
prophesied against this city and against this land according to all the
words
of Jeremiah. And when Jehoiachin the king, with all his mighty men, and
all the
princes heard his words, the king sought to put him to death: but when
Urijah
heard it, he was afraid, and fled, and went to Egypt;
And Jehoiachin the King sent men into Egypt,
mainly, Elnathan the son of Achbor, and certain men with him into
Egypt. And they
fetched forth Urijah out of Egypt
and brought him unto Jehoiachin the King; who slew him with the sword,
and cast
his dead body into the grave of the common people." (Jer
26:20-23)
Imagine for a
moment Lehi's feelings! He really had no
where to go. At least one Contemporary
prophet had already been extradited out of Egypt and
murdered. How greateful Lehi
must have been when the Lord told him that he would be going to a
promised land,
unknown to the political powers of the day.
OTHER TEMPLES
AND ALTARS OUTSIDE JERUSALEM:
It is now
accepted and can be documented that a number of Jewish temples
existednull outside Jerusalem. (Porten 2,
p. 6) One had been found at Leontopolis in Egypt,
built under the
direction of Onias IV c. 162 BC. When
the Maccabees regained control of the Jerusalem temple, they deposed
Onias IV, son of Onias 11, an earlierhigh priest, of his Temple
Officiating
duties. He fled Jerusalem to Egypt where he was granted permission by
Egyptian authorities to construct a temple
for a Jewish military colony at Leontopolis
where in priest and Levites officiated. (Porten p. 118) A second
temple was discovered in Samaria. In the
fourth
century BC, Nikaso, daughter of Sanballat III,
governor of Samaria, married Manasseh, brother
of the Jerusalem
high priest
Jaddau. This marriage was objected too
by Jerusalem
authorities and an ultimatum was
issued to Manasseh: choose between this marriage or temple
responsibilities. Love prevailed. He chose the former and
accepted an offer to be high priest for a
Jewish temple which was later built on Mount
Gerizim in Samaria (Porten p. 116)
It was first excavated in 1904 by H.C. Butler, and described in his;
Publication of the Princeton
University Archaeological Expeditions
to Syria
in 1904-05 and 1909, Leiden,
1919.
Altars of
sacrifice have been found at Tel-Arad and Beer-Sheba in Palestine. Ty
had the opportunity of seeing
these horned alters in 1975 while in Israel on a BYU semester abroad. I
visited
the ruins of Tel Arad earlier in 1974 on
a visit to the Holy Land. A photo of the four-horned
altar was on the front of the
Biblical Archaeologist 1974, and a photo
of the Beer-Sheba altar was on page
3. Arad was an outpost and important city in the
eastern Negev on the border of Judah
at the southern end of the Dead Sea. It usually
is associated with Hobab, the son of Jethro, who gave Moses the
Priesthood and
endowments.(D&C 84:6) Hobab, coming from a family holding the keys
of
Priesthood, may have had a reason for having a
temple and an
altar at Arad. "The distinction of
being the first Israelite temple to
be found in an archaeological context belongs to Arad
in Israel,
where such a structure was excavated in 1963." (Rosenberg p.
11) "Z. Herzog suggested that a
temple with a similar plan and
orientation as at Tell Arad was found west of there at Beer-Sheba, and
was used
during the same time period as that at Arad. ...[also there was a]
small miner's
temple at Timna, discovered by Rothenberg in 1966 ...resembling in
design the
Wilderness Tabernacle, the only known ancient shrine with a tented
covering."
(Herzog, Z. pp. 120-22) Aharoni also
described the horned altar found at
Beer-Sheba. "Until now, the
Altar of the Arad Temple was the only
altar for burnt offerings of the First
Temple period discovered by archaeologists; it was [first] described in
...1968."
(Aharoni p. 2-6) He goes on to give
details along with a photo of the horned altar. "The beautiful
altar indicates that the temple [at
Beer-Sheba] must have been a far more elaborate structure [than] ...at
Arad." (Aharoni p. 5) He
did not draw attention to the fact that at Beer-Sheba Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob
had spent considerable time. Why shouldn't there have been a temple in
that
area?
The so-called Solar
Shrine at Lachish, first uncovered by Starkey in
1930's and reinvestigated by Aharoni in 1966, also bears comparison,
showing an
earlier cult center at Lachish
associated with Israelite worship. "Aharoni [also] mentions the
contemporary
Jewish Temple of Onias at
Leontopolis... the only other Jewish temple in Egypt besides
Elephantine...well
known from Josephus [The Jewish Wars] who describes it as modeled on
the Temple of Jerusalem....[saying later]
it
is a fortress and temple...[there is] a similar possibility at the
earlier shrine
of Dan." (Rosenberg pp. 10-12) There
seems to have been a persistence of the Wilderness Tabernacle model for
many
temple shrines. Thus it is evident that Jews were constructing sacred
structures
and temples outside of
Jerusalem. Why not in America?
THE NAME OF THE TEMPLE:
The temple at Elephantine
was called the "house of YHW" or the "House of the Lord." (Porten p.
109-201) This is very similar to what
the LDS call their temples today. Though
this phrase is not found in the Book of Mormon, it is a common one used
today
to designate temples used by Latter-Day Saints.
But, often at Elephantine the being
whose house the temple was has been referred to as
"God of
Heaven" or
"Lord of
Heaven." (Porten p. 108)
"God
of Heaven" is
also found in the Book of Mormon (Ether 8:14). The Jaredites
must also have had a temple.
"Father of
Heaven" is found eight times (l Ne 22:9,
2 Ne 25:12, Mos 32:8, Mos 15:4, Alma 11:39,
Hel 14:12, Hel 16:18, and Mor 6:22).
Thus the Elephantine Archives support not only the
concept of a
temple
outside Jerusalem
but also the very name for the
structure and a specific phrase used to designate He who dwells
therein.
The exciting conclusion is that in 1830, when the Book of
Mormon was published, it made the unique claim that Jews had built holy
temples
on foreign soil outside of Palestine in America, especially as far away
as America. This
is the first such claim. Skeptics may
have criticized such a statement then, but now the evidence coming
forth form
the dust of the earth supports the Book of Mormon as agreeing in
perfect harmony
with Jewish History and contemporary Mid-East Jewish colonies who were
disenchanted with Jerusalem and built
temples on "foreign
soil." In fact
"It might also suit them to build a shrine in Egypt in defiance of the
centralizing reforms of 622 BC by Josiah, which obviously caused much
dismay
among the remaining peoples of the northern kingdom." (Rosenberg p.
12)
The Book of Mormon is very rich in internal and external
evidences and is a ‘correct' book and most edifying to research.
And there is much, much more!
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