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When David was king, he asked God if he could build a temple (1 Chronicles 17:1-15). God told him no, but he could gather materials for his son, Solomon, to build (1 Chronicles 22:2-5). This temple...
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In John 2:20, the Jewish leaders misunderstood Jesus when He said, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up,” John 2:19. He was speaking of His own body, and that after His death, He would be raised from the dead. They were thinking instead of Herod's temple where they were, which for 46 years had been in the process of being built. In about 19 BC, Herod the Great, the king of Judea, who had already built theaters, palaces, aqueducts, fortresses, cities, and many public buildings, decided in his 18th year of reign to win the Jews’ favor by building and renovating the temple. This was the third major building project of the temple recorded in the Bible. There were no second or third temples but the same temple. There was always one temple even though it was rebuilt several times. (This is like the White House in Washington D.C., which has undergone many changes and renovations, some of them major, and yet has remained to be the White House.) Solomon originally erected the temple, I Kings 6:1. Centuries later, it was destroyed by Babylon. But seventy years after that, Cyrus’s edict gave permission for the Jews to rebuild the temple, II Chronicles 36:23, on the same site, Ezra 5:15. According to Josephus, the Jewish historian, when Herod worked on the temple project, he enlarged the temple and built it higher. The walls at the bottom of the valley were reinforced, the rocks bound to each other with lead and iron. The area was filled in for a smooth level platform that expanded the temple area. In the courts, he built colonnades with rows of huge columns. He overlaid the walls with gold plates and a large golden vine spreading on the wall. He adorned the temple with the best workmanship to be beautiful and grand. Josephus wrote, “To approaching strangers it appeared from a distance like a snow-clad mountain; for all that was not overlaid with gold was of purest white.” The temple was so impressive that the disciples made it a point to show Jesus the buildings of the temple, Matthew 24:1. Jesus astonished them with the prediction of its destruction, Matthew 24:2. Even after Herod’s death, the temple continued to be worked on until about AD 63. But in AD 70, the Roman army, led by general Titus, destroyed the city of Jerusalem including the temple. Because it was set on fire, the gold melted and the soldiers turned over every stone to recover the gold, fulfilling the very words of Jesus. Because of this there is nothing left of the temple. (The temple mount is not the remains of the temple, but of a Roman camp. The location of the temple site is elsewhere, likely near the Pool of Siloam, although there is no evidence of it, having been completely destroyed.) Herod’s temple was one of several temple renovations. Even though it was a grand building, it had a relatively short history.
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