The First Temple: United Monarchical Period

Similar documents
2014 History Gal. All rights reserved.

Made in his image, but fallen from grace

Tents, Temples, and Palaces

The First Century Church - Lesson 1

Week 1. (January 1 January 7) Old Testament Begins. Featured Book: Genesis, and a few passages from 1 Chronicles Chapter 1

2 Samuel 7:1-17 King James Version October 22, 2017

2) These books were written by Moses (between BC)

Panorama of the Bible

1 Kings 8:1-66 Dedication of the Temple. The Ark Brought into the Temple (2 Chron 5:2-6:2) Solomon's Speech at Completion of the Work (2 Chron 6:3-11)

1 Samuel. Lesson 1. From a Family to a Nation. in turn had a son, Jacob, to whom the promise was given.

Concerning God s Covenants & The Land Promise By Pastor Scott Markle (

39 Books of the Old Testament. Wisdom, Poetry & Praise. Job Psalms Proverbs Ecclesiastes Song of Solomon

HISTORY 303: HANDOUT 3: THE LEVANT Dr. Robert L. Cleve

xl;v. Sh lach Numbers Reconnaissance: NAU

Significant Lessons From The Seemingly Insignificant #8 God s Sabbath Rest

Judges & Ruth Lesson 1

Numbers 25:10-13 & 1 Samuel 2:30-36 King James Version November 5, 2017

a Grace Notes course Foundations 200 by Rev. Drue Freeman Foundations 202 Old Testament Survey: Genesis to Deuteronomy Grace Notes

(b) The pattern of the tabernacle symbolizes the eternal throne of Yahweh among his people. 1. What is the pattern of the tabernacle?

Series: the End Times Bible prophecy about future events and periods. The significance of the Abrahamic covenant for Eschatology (end times)

lesson five Israel s past election

SERMON NOTES By Pastor John Paul Miller David A Man After God s Own Heart Character Studies on the Life of David

Welcome to Rehoboth New Life Center. Tuesday Study July 14 th 2015

Exodus 23:20 33 (See chart on page 9)

The Story of a Kingdom Chapter 20

History of Redemption

The Heart of the Series

Torah Studies Statutes #

INTERNATIONAL TRAINING AND EQUIPPING MINISTRIES Institute in the Foundations of Church Leadership Dr. Steve Van Horn

GOD'S PROMISES TO ISRAEL THE CHURCH

Supporting Cast. Moses

Genesis 6:9-22 King James Version October 7, 2018

Genesis 15:1-6 & King James Version October 1, 2017 International Bible Lesson Sunday October 1, 2017 Genesis 15:1-6 & 17-21

17-18 Bible Study #24

June 25, 2017 AM Passage-Exodus 32:1-34:7; PM-No Worship Exodus 32:1-34:7 NIV

LESSON FOURTEEN HEBREWS 7:20-28

LECTURE 10 FEBRUARY 1, 2017 WHO WROTE THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES?

Abraham s Permanent Land Inheritance By Tim Warner, Copyright

Messianic Prophecy. Messiah in Pentateuch, Part 3. CA314 LESSON 09 of 24. Louis Goldberg, ThD

Joshua Chapter (Page 796)

UBC Bible Study. In the book of Genesis all the major themes of the Bible have their origin.

Promises Made to the Fathers Reading Assignment No. 15 Kingdom of Israel and King David

PEOPLE OF TSION. ..."Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is Liberty" CORINTHIANS 3: 17

BEGINNING OF THE TABERNACLE

TORAH, GOD'S INSTRUCTIONS DEUTERONOMY 34 MOSES DIES

The year at Mount Sinai

Sacred Spaces: Eden & Altars

Blessed Be Your Name Travis Cottrell Alive Forever. So Will I (100 Billion X) Hillsong Music Wonder

LORD YESHUA. KING of Heaven HIGH PRIEST of Heaven

Salvation History in the Old Testament 1 = Test question on Diocesan Religion Test

EZEKIEL PART 1 THE MILLENNIAL TEMPLE

~ Hark! Heaven s Angels Sing ~

International Sunday School Lesson Study Notes. Lesson Text: Jeremiah 30:1-3, Lesson Title: A Vision of the Future.

MEMORY VERSE WEEK #1. Why Genesis 2:3?

Circumcision, Baptism, and Christianity

Yahweh: A Present God

Hebrews Chapter 9 Second Continued

CONTENTS. Introduction... iv Teaching Guidelines... iv Books of the Old Testament... vi UNIT 4 REVIEW (LESSONS 16-20) 70

Great Chapters from the Old Testament

EXODVS LEVITICUS S\x\h-cen\urv mosaic oi the ark oí the covenant EXODUS 1

1 Chronicles Chapter 22!

The Deeper Truths in Bible Stories

Bless the Lord Psalm 100:1-5

Before the Flood The Flood Scattering of the People The Patriarchs The Exodus

Exodus Chapter Thirty-One

Pentateuch Exodus 19-40: The Covenant at Sinai

Genesis 28:10-22 King James Version November 18, 2018

International Bible Lesson Commentary Genesis 15:7-21 International Bible Lessons Sunday, October 6, 2013 L.G. Parkhurst, Jr.

We Believe in Jesus. Lesson Guide THE PRIEST LESSON FOUR. We Believe in Jesus by Third Millennium Ministries

MOSES Lesson 12. FIRST DAY: Read the notes and the references. THIRD DAY: SECOND DAY: Read Exodus 33: Read Exodus 33:7-11

GOLDEN TEXT: Thine house and thy kingdom shall be established forever before thee: thy throne shall be established forever (2 Samuel 7:16).

Series: the End Times Bible prophecy about future events and periods

HEBREWS 23 (Hebrews 7:1-18) JESUS, A PRIEST AFTER THE ORDER OF MELCHISEDEC By Ron Harvey (March 7, 2012)

Unit 1 - The Word Became Flesh John 1:1-42

COMPASSION Compiled by Lewis A. Armstrong

It Happened 40 Times

Exodus The Revealing of God s Glory and His Design for the Chosen

TORAH, GOD'S INSTRUCTIONS NUMBERS 8 SETTING UP THE CANDLESTICK

Let s Talk About Jesus: The Theophanies of Jesus

DEDICATIONS OF FIRSTBORN MINISTRY INVOCATION My God: We give thanks to You for the manifold blessings to us. We shall remain eternally grateful. Amen.

Version 1.0 Oct. 5, School of Discipleship

Sunday School Lesson Summary for March 9, 2008 Released on March 5, "God's Covenant with David"

Chapter 14 & 15 Study Guide

Promises for the Journey Study SIX: PROMISES under Yahweh s Rule (Theocracy)

THE PRIESTLY CALLING OF MESSIANIC JUDAISM A Biblical Case for Retaining a New Covenant Messianic Jewish Distinctive

Learn to Read Genesis Effectively

The Gospel in the Old Testament

(2 Samuel 7:1) After the king [King David] was settled in his palace and the LORD had given him rest from all his enemies around him,

The period addressed in the book of Judges is a period of time defined by lawlessness, rebellion and moral failure among the people of Israel.

WEEK 34 OUTLINE. The Compound Spirit. Scripture Reading: Exo. 30:22-25; Rom. 8:16, 23, 26-27; Gal. 3:14; 5:16-18, 22, 25; Rev.

Joshua Chapter of 6 M. K. Scanlan. Joshua Chapter 12

The Dawn of Self-Consciousness

EXODUS CHAPTER THE LAW FOR THE MESSIANIC NATION LESSON # 14

THE SIN OF THE GOLDEN CALF (continued) THE PRESENCE OF THE LORD EXODUS 33:1-23

THE PENTATEUCH BACK TO THE BEGINNING. Lesson 1: God the Creator Treasure Story: Genesis 1:1-2:3 Treasure Point: God is the creator of all things.

JEWISH OUTREACH Lesson 9 Jewish Objections to Yeshua Part III: Theological Objections

Man After God - Moses

God s People Worship in the Temple

VI. Sacred Scripture

Sunday Morning. Study 13. The New Covenant

Transcription:

Published by Worldview Publications November 2001 The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Reprise About 12,000 years ago God endowed mankind with god-consciousness. 1 Human beings were instructed by auditory and visual commands that facilitated common development, migration and enculturation. This gift enabled mankind to move from hunting-gathering to sedentary cultures with advancing technology, population density, and interaction among human beings. Then, about 6,000 years ago, God bestowed a conscious awareness of otherness of distinctions among peoples. However, the pre-existing god-consciousness, characterized by command, possession and domination, led to a general suspicion of the new relationality introduced by other -consciousness. And this suspicion, in turn, led to the development of oppressive power structures designed to counter otherness and to preserve authoritative god-consciousness. Ancient civilizations then emerged that were determined to subjugate or exterminate all others. Only the natural catastrophes that marked the Great Dark Age (1200-1000 BCE) were able to temporarily break this violent cycle of grand domestication. It was at this critical juncture that God acted to universally terminate god-consciousness and to inaugurate human self-consciousness the I and the Thou. The Judean tribal chieftain, David (ca. 1000 BCE), was the first recorded human being to exhibit genuine self-consciousness. Thus, the Psalms... are filled with I s: the I of repentance, the I of anger and vengeance, the I of self-pity and self-doubt, the I of despair, the I of The Judean tribal chieftain, David, was the first recorded human being to exhibit genuine self-consciousness. delight, the I of ecstasy. 2 In this setting, mounting evidence indicates that David gathered a team of scholars to assemble existing records, oral traditions and legends in the very first effort to address relational self-consciousness. The result The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 1 of 9

was the Tetrateuch Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers. This document was designed to show that God had granted mankind self-consciousness in order that humanity might mutually relate to each other as God intended to relate to mankind. In this context, David understood that the divine I preceded the human I. So in the Tetrateuch God employs the I whenever he enters into relationship with mankind the Thou : [Unto Abraham, God said,]... [A]nd I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing: and I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed. Genesis 12:2, 3. [Unto Isaac, God said,]... [A]nd I will make thy seed to multiply as the stars of heaven, and will give unto thy seed all these countries; and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed... Genesis 26:4. [Unto Jacob, God said,] And, behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest, and will bring thee again into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I have done that which I em>have spoken to thee of. Genesis 28:15. [To the Chosen People, God said,] I am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Exodus 20:2. The Davidic scholars employed the phrase land of Egypt as a metaphor for the original created order, based on command, possession and control. The Exodus from Egypt was therefore a metaphor for the liberation of all mankind from possessive bondage. It also was the symbolic promise of a new created order, with true relationality among all others I s and Thou s. Thus, whenever God entered into The Davidic scholars employed the phrase land of Egypt as a metaphor for the original created order, based on command, possession and control. external relationship, he referred to himself as I and reciprocally stated or inferred the other the Thou. Since God was establishing a relationship with mankind as his own image, mankind also was an I. Furthermore, God was an I only because God had chosen an other. And mankind was an I only because mankind accepted an other. Through God s inauguration of relationality with mankind, therefore, God could now define himself as I and could also allow mankind to consciously define itself as an I. But God knew that the mere existence of the twofold I and Thou was insufficient to establish relationality. Thus, in his encounter with Moses in the wilderness, God had already declared his name YHWH as eheyeh asher eheyeh (Exodus 3:14). As a derivative of the Hebrew verb hayah, the term eheyeh has the triune meaning, to be, to become and to effect. And asher conveys the sense of acting on behalf of and because of. 3 In this enunciation, therefore, God uses his name to define a nature and character that constitute action for mankind. Moreover, since his name indicates on behalf of, God himself is kenosis The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 2 of 9

self-emptying, self-limiting, self-giving. God is compassion! And since his name indicates because of, God himself is, becomes and effects as mankind s authoritative Other. God is our reference and standard our Third Voice. God himself is the creative bridge between the I and the Thou. It was in this historic context that David led a heroic effort toward the worship of YHWH the One God, who was committed to the creation and development of mutual otherness. YHWH alone had promised to be, to become and to effect on behalf of mankind. YHWH had pledged to provide the Knowing Bridge between the I and the Thou. In their God is our reference and standard our Third Voice. God himself is the creative bridge between the I and the Thou. reception of YHWH s presence, the Chosen People also promised to love the Lord with all their hearts and their neighbors as themselves (Exodus 19:8; Leviticus 19:18; Deuteronomy 6:5). They pledged themselves to mutual relationality with God and with their neighbors wholly apart from all falsely divinized power structures. 4 Journey to the Promised Land David s scholars then showed that Moses adopted a model of the warrior tent, in which YHWH could dwell with his people. This portable Tabernacle was virtually identical to the tent that Rameses II occupied during his encounter with the Hittite king, Muwatallis, in the Battle of Kadesh (ca. 1,275 BCE). 5,6 However, from his tent YHWH did not embark on violence and the destruction of community but on the liberation of mankind to community. The Davidic scholars further recounted the wilderness journeys of the Habiru subsequent to their encounter with YHWH at Sinai. After Moses died on Mount Nebo, the Habiru entered the Promised Land in two principal groups. One group, under Joshua, settled the eastern and northern areas of Canaan, while a second group, under Caleb, settled the southern and western areas (Joshua 3; Judges 1). 7 The two groups dwelled largely apart until the coming of an anointed one messiah or christ who was David himself (1 Samuel 16:12, 13)! David s scholars also employed another fundamental symbol the Garden of Eden (Gan- Edhen = Protected Place of Pleasure). The Garden was the center of the universe, where heaven and earth were united and where God would finish his Creation. In the Genesis account, God had fashioned the first Adam from the From his tent YHWH did not embark on violence and the destruction of community but on the liberation of mankind to community. The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 3 of 9

earth (adamah) in Eden. Upon Adam s death, YHWH had Seth bury Adam in Eden at the exact site where he had been formed. 8 Then, in Habiru tradition, the entire earth was inundated by Noah s flood except for the Garden of Eden. 9 Later, after giving gifts to the priest-king, Melchizedek of Salem, Abraham went to offer his son, Isaac, on Mount Moriah, in Eden (Genesis 14:18-20; 22:1-19). Still later, standing on the summit of Mount Nebo, Moses received a vision of the Promised Edenic Land (Deuteronomy 34:1-4). The Deuteronomistic accounts record that, after David was anointed, he captured the city of Jebus (Jerusalem) from the Jebusites (2 Samuel 5:6-10). Jerusalem was located at the center of Eden on the site of the spring, Gihon (Genesis 2:13; 1 Kings 1:33; see also 2 Chronicles 32:30). Jerusalem also was situated between the northern tribes, originally led by Joshua, and the southern tribes, originally led by Caleb. The Levitical priesthood lived in the north, at Shiloh, and were responsible for YHWH s throne the Ark of the Covenant. The Aaronic (Zadokite) priesthood lived in the south, at Hebron, and held YHWH s Tabernacle (see 2 Samuel 8:16, 17). David s move to Jerusalem therefore consolidated the priesthood those who spoke to God for the people at the center of the universe, at the place of Creation, at the axis of history in the Garden of Eden. 10-12 King David s anointed mission thus reunited YHWH and the Chosen People in the Garden of Eden, with its center at Gihon in Jerusalem, its northern border extending to the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in Mesopotamia, and its southern border reaching the Nile River in Egypt (Genesis 15:18). David also repented at the threshing floor of Araunah (Ornan), on the Edenic Mount Moriah. The destroying angel then ceased from further punishing YHWH s people (2 Samuel 24:16-25). In a metaphoric sense, David succeeded where the first Adam had failed. It remained only for David to build a Temple in which YHWH could be present at the center of heaven and earth and of the universe, where Creation takes place. Upon YHWH s intervention, however, the prophet, Nathan, told David that Solomon should build the Temple. David then had Solomon crowned as co-regent at Gihon, in Eden (1 Kings 1:32-48). Solomon s Temple (ca. 968-586 BCE) Upon David s death (ca. 969 BCE), Solomon took the throne of the United Kingdom of Israel (ca. 969-931 BCE). Soon thereafter, Solomon negotiated with Hiram, king of Tyre, for the architects, artisans and essential materials needed to erect YHWH s Temple. Although the Scriptures [Fortunately, a] stunning parallel to Solomon s Temple has been discovered in northern Syria. provide an extensive description of the Temple, many architectural terms remain vague (1 Kings 6, 7; 2 Chronicles 3, 4).... [Fortunately, a] stunning parallel to The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 4 of 9

Solomon s Temple has been discovered in northern Syria. The temple at Ain Dara has far more in common with the Jerusalem Temple described in the Book of Kings than any other known building. Yet the newly excavated temple has received almost no attention in [the U.S.]..., at least partially because the impressive excavation report, published a decade ago, was written in German by a Syrian scholar and archaeologist. 13,14 The archeological evidence strongly suggests that the Ain Dara temple was erected and dedicated to the pagan goddess, Ishtar, about the same time that Solomon s Temple was built and probably by the same Phoenicians! Explicit mythological evidence indicates that Ishtar took a mountain god, Ba al-hadad, as her lover. The Ain Dara pavement contains engraved footprints of this god standing before, and also entering, Ishtar s temple. Each footprint is three feet long, with a distance of 30 feet between single footprints. A stride of 30 feet would belong to an individual about 65 feet tall! 15 By comparing the biblical description of Solomon s Temple with the excavated remains of the Ain Dara temple, scholars have reached some stunning conclusions regarding the symbolic nature of Solomon s project. However, in order to appreciate the metaphor of Solomon s Temple, it is helpful to recall that, after creating the first Adam in Eden, God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept [reclined]: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof; and the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man (Genesis 2:21, 22). Reminiscent of this Edenic story, Solomon s Temple represented a reclining human form. The Holy of Holies symbolized the head. The staircase represented the neck. The Holy Place symbolized aspects of the chest/abdomen. The bronze pillars portrayed the legs. The priestly side chambers represented the two arms. The five lavers on either side represented the fingers. The two pillars at the entrance symbolized and bordered the genital opening. 16,17 However, unlike the Edenic story of a sleeping Adam, Solomon s Temple was not a metaphor for a reclining Adamic male. Rather, it was the metaphor for an androgynous parent (father/mother) awaiting the birth of their Adamic child as the human manifestation of God. 18-21 This triune metaphor father, mother, child symbolized God s promised inaugural fillment of the covenant and God s self-creation as human. This triune metaphor further implied that the totality of the Godhead participated in the human manifestation of God! The Temple, as a metaphor for an androgynous individual in pregnancy, has profound implications in Hebrew thought.... [Thus, i]n Hebrew (as well as Aramaic), the word [racham or rechem] usually translated as compassion is the plural of a noun that in its singular form means womb.... To say that God is compassionate is The Temple, as a metaphor for an androgynous individual in pregnancy, has profound implications in Hebrew thought. The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 5 of 9

to say that God is like a womb,... In its sense of like a womb, compassionate has nuances of giving life, nourishing, caring, perhaps embracing and encompassing.... [T]his is what God is like. 22 As early as his epiphany at Sinai, YHWH himself declared to Moses:... I will make all my goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the name of the Lord before thee; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will shew mercy [racham = compassion = womblikeness ] on whom I will shew mercy [racham]. Exodus 33:19. And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, The Lord, The Lord God, merciful [rachum] and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth... Exodus 34:6. Then, in the Psalms, David said: But thou, O Lord, art a God full of compassion [rachum], and gracious, longsuffering, and plenteous in mercy and truth. Psalm 86:15. Bless the Lord, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy name.... who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies [rachamim]... Psalm 103:1, 4. He hath made his wonderful works to be remembered: the Lord is gracious and full of compassion [rachum]. Psalm 111:4. Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness: he is gracious, and full of compassion [rachum], and righteous. Psalm 112:4. Great are thy tender mercies [rachamim], O Lord: quicken me according to thy judgments. Psalm 119:156. The Lord is gracious, and full of compassion [rachum]; slow to anger, and of great mercy. Psalm 145:8. And in his prayer at the dedication of the Temple, Solomon said:... and forgive thy people that have sinned against thee, and all their transgressions wherein they have transgressed against thee, and give them compassion [rachamim] before them who carried them captive, that they may have compassion [racham] on them... 1 Kings 8:50. It is profoundly counterintuitive to attribute the female womb explicitly to God as Father. Yet the biblical scholars deliberately used this metaphor, since the term womb symbolizes the creative relationality out of which living entities are born. It is only out of divinely ordained relationality that human beings constitute selves that they are then persons, that they are then I s and Thou s. It is profoundly counterintuitive to attribute the female womb explicitly to God as Father. Yet the biblical scholars deliberately used this metaphor. The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 6 of 9

Monarchical Struggles Nevertheless, because Solomon did not truly appreciate what he was commissioned to do, he reverted to reliance on power structures. He therefore banished the Levitical priest, Abiathar, who had a pedagogical role in upholding the Mosaic Law which promised human equality in opposition to all coercive power structures. Also, Solomon oppressed the northern tribal peoples with taxation and forced labor. He relinquished Edenic territory to the Phoenicians. He was lascivious in his life and person. He endorsed pagan gods and temples. And he reverted to the pagan idea that the Temple revealed the power of possession rather than the self-emptying (kenotic) power of powerlessness that constitutes mutual relationality. Conclusion The First Temple symbols were meant to convey that YHWH himself is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory (Matthew 6:13). YHWH is the ultimate Actor on behalf of mankind. YHWH is ultimate kenosis self-emptying, self-limiting, self-giving. YHWH is the ultimate relational authority the Third Voice. YHWH determined to be humanly embodied and born as the Logos (Word), then to become anointed as the messianic Human One and to effect a transformed Creation. Thus, the sanctuary was designed to reveal YHWH s irrevocable promise, to anticipate his human disclosure, and to celebrate this epic historical event. While conveying the promise of YHWH s action for mankind, the Temple symbols also conveyed a reciprocal promise for mankind s future. The sacrificial services of the sanctuary symbolized a future creation of a transformed humanity apart from all imagined power structures. It was essential to employ Temple symbols, since the reality had not arrived. And even now, though inaugurated in the Christ event YHWH become human as Jesus Christ the reality of a fully human future for YHWH and his people is not yet fully manifest (1 John 3:2). Like the Temple The Christ event itself is a promise, anticipating a fully human future for both YHWH and mankind. symbols that received their inaugural fillment in Jesus Christ, so the Christ event itself is a promise, anticipating a fully human future for both YHWH and mankind. By its very nature, human relationality means that YHWH himself cannot be a fully manifest I without the fully human manifestation of his other. Reciprocally, neither can God s people become a fully manifest I without the full disclosure of YHWH as their human Other. And finally, there cannot be either a fully manifest I or Thou without the full disclosure of the mediatorial Bridge the relational presence of the human YHWH as the Third Voice. Thus, the full manifestation of this threefold, reciprocal otherness is essential to the full realization of the human goal of mutual relationality. The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 7 of 9

Notes and References 1. See The Dawn of Self-Consciousness, Outlook (Oct. 2001). 2. Thomas Cahill, The Gifts of the Jews: How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels (New York: Doubleday, 1998), p. 93. 3. See Thorlief Boman, Hebrew Thought Compared with Greek (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1960), pp. 38-49. 4. See note 1. 5. See Kenneth A. Kitchen, The Desert Tabernacle: Pure Fiction or Plausible Account? Bible Review 16, no. 6 (Dec. 2000): 14-21. 6. See Michael M. Homan, The Divine Warrior: A Military Model for Yahweh s Tabernacle, Bible Review 16, no. 6 (Dec. 2000): 22-33, 55. 7. See John W. Miller, The Origins of the Bible: Rethinking Canon History (New York: Paulist Press, 1994), pp. 44-45. 8. See The Cave of Treasures (pre-medieval apocrypha), at jefferson.village.virginia.edu/ anderson/retellings/cave.html. 9. See Mircea Eliade, The Myth of the Eternal Return: Or, Cosmos and History (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1954), p. 14. 10. While it is clear that David brought the Levitical priest, Abiathar, from Shiloh to minister in Jerusalem, there remains a debate about whether he brought an Aaronite priest named Zadok from Hebron (2 Samuel 8:17; 1 Chronicles 12:23-29) or appointed a Canaanite priest named Zadok, the presumed descendant of Melchizedek (zedek = zadok) (Genesis 14:18; Psalm 110:4). 11. See Lawrence E. Stager, Jerusalem as Eden, Biblical Archaeology Review 26, no. 3 (May/June 2000): 36-47, 66. 12. See Victor Horowitz, Inside Solomon s Temple, Bible Review 29, no. 3 (March/April 1994). 13. John Monson, The New Ain Dara Temple: Closest Solomonic Parallel, Biblical Archaeology Review 26, no. 3 (May/June 2000): 20-35, 67. 14. See Ali Abu Assaf, Der Tempel von Ain Dara, Damaszener Forschungen 3 (Mainz: Philipp von Zabern, 1990). 15. See Monson, The New Ain Dara Temple, pp. 27-28. 16. See Tony Badillo, The Floor Plan Does It Reveal a Temple with a Human Form? at www.templesecrets.info. 17. In ancient times the created order was believed to be constituted by just four fundamental elements air, earth, fire and water. These were represented in the Temple by the incense (air), bread (earth), lamps (fire) and laver (water). 18. See John M. Allegro, The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross, at www.metareligion.com/new_religious_groups/ Groups/Christian/sacred_mushroom.htm. 19. See Laurence Gardner, Bloodline of the Holy Grail, at www.karenlyster.com/body_bookish1.html. 20. See David H. Stern, Jewish New Testament Commentary (Clarksville, MD: Jewish New Testament Publications, 1996), p. 104. 21. There are numerous recorded examples of God s womblikeness (racham, rachamim) throughout the Old Testament. See also Revelation 12 for an allusion to the Temple symbol of a mother in childbirth. For earlier, parallel allusions, see Isaiah 26:17; 66:6-10; Micah 4:10. Furthermore, note that the child becomes a symbol of The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 8 of 9

salvation for Israel (Isa. 7:14, 9:6, 11:6).... [Indeed,] the child becomes a universal image of salvation and reconciliation with God (David S. Cunningham, These Three Are One: The Practice of Trinitarian Theology [Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 1998], p. 289). 22. Marcus J. Borg, Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time: The Historical Jesus and the Heart of Contemporary Faith (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1994), pp. 47-49. Copyright 2001 Worldview Publications The First Temple: United Monarchical Period Page 9 of 9