The Temple Menorah Where Is It? By Steven Fine

Similar documents
Exedrae- semi-circular niche

John 2:13-22 The 3 rd or Herod s Temple Buildings in the Bible Series Sunday March 18 th, 2018

ART OF THE HIGH ROMAN EMPIRE ROMAN ART

The Tabernacle and the Believer's Prayer Life

T rumah. תרומה Contribution. Torah Together. Parashah 19. Exodus 25:1 27:19

Here is a closer up picture of the arch that I downloaded:

Old Testament Pictures. New Testament Realities

The Return from Exile BC

Lesson Two: Israel s Rise and Fall

Judaism: Judaism over the Centuries Notes**

Secrets of the Christmas Story in Matthew. William Loader 2017

The Ancient Hebrews. The Origins and Struggles to Preserve Ancient Judaism

Bellringer-Write on your paper

The Romans. Chapter 6 Etruscan and Roman Art AP Art History

Text 2: The Ancient Israelites. Topic 2: The Ancient Middle East and Egypt Lesson 3: The Hebrews and the Origins of Judaism

Origins of Judaism. By Ramez Naguib and Marwan Fawzy

Archaeologists Uncover Life of Luxury in 2,000-year-old Priestly Quarters of Jerusalem

THE SEVENTY WEEKS OF DANIEL

Chapter 12 Learning About World Religions: Judaism. What are the central teachings of Judaism, and why did they survive to modern day?

C ass s s 3 C a h pt p e t r e r 4 M r o e r e D ig i s s T ha h t t Ma M de e a Dif i f f e f r e e r n e c n e c e Pg P s. s.

Tents, Temples, and Palaces

Jewish History. בין המצרים This past Tuesday began a three week period in the Jewish calendar known as

CHRONOLOGICAL BIBLE STUDY LESSON 598. Revelation

Judaism First of the Abrahamic Faiths

Torchlight. The House of the Lord 3ABN. Daily Devotional 44. This week we will study about the Temple that Solomon built for the Ark of the Covenant.

City of Jerusalem. Copyright 2007 UpToJerusalem.com May be used only for teaching if the the above source is acknowledged.

One thousand years ago the nations and peoples of Europe,

Fourth Division of History

JESUS CRUCIFIXION & RESURRECTION 4/23/17

TIMELINE NOTES. The aim of the Bible is to introduce us to God's plan of salvation, not to explain how he created the universe.

The Great Day of God s Wrath. Who Is Able to Stand?

Frankincense: Gift for the High Priest

Survey of Old Testament History

3: The Gospel. The Gospels. Study Guide THE GOSPEL ACCORDING LESSON THREE TO MARK by Third Millennium Ministries

Spring Bible Word Search Books King James New & Old Testament On-Line Catalogue

EXODUS Lesson 16: Chapter 24:9-18

A PLANET IN UPHEAVAL. appearing.org LESSON ONE

The Last Days: 5 The Seventy Weeks of Daniel. The Last Days. An In-Depth Study of Biblical Eschatology. The Seventy Weeks of Daniel

Chapter 2 Lesson 2 Peoples in the Eastern Mediterranean

Exodus. In His Presence ~ Part 4 Chapter 30:22-31:18

4 To what extent is the divide between public and private life reflected in evidence for public worship in Roman Italy?

Palm Sunday: Two Parades

SIDE-BY-SIDE COMPARISION OF THE 7 TRUMPETS & THE 7 BOWLS

The Seventy Sevens Scripture Text: Daniel 9:24 27

live Gen 12: 15: the woman was taken into Pharaoh s household Ex 1:11: they put taskmasters over the Israelites to wear them down by forced labor

History of Ancient Israel

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

Chapter 5 Political, Religious and Social Unrest in Palestine: 63 BCE to 73 CE

Revelation The Seven Last Plagues. Becoming Closer

Section 1: The Early Hebrews

The Zohar, (a Hebrew collection of commentaries on the Torah), describes this mystical stone:

2 Jehovah gave Daniel and John several visions of wild. 3 The prophecies of Daniel and John reveal information

Prophetic Feasts of Israel - Fall

Here I am, living in a palace of cedar,

Serpents in Art and Religion

Last Seven Days of the Life of Christ

Judaism. Adherents: Smallest major world religion, making up 0.2 % human race

Name Class Date. Vocabulary Builder. 1. Constantinople was at the center of the Eastern Roman Empire for more than a thousand years.

The. Temple Mount. Sifting Project. Anything that happens on the. resonates throughout the world.

The First Century Church - Lesson 1

Revelation. Recap of Chapters 1-10 and Chapter 11

techelet,,תכלת the same word which is used in Numbers 15:37ff. White

FALL OF ROME, RISE OF THE BYZANTINES

Packing for Israel. Lesson 7 and 8

LINE UPON LINE GOD'S PROPHETIC TIMETABLE. ("The Battle Between Antiochus IV and the Kingdom of Egypt")

Biblical Archaeology

Reclaiming Jerusalem s History

Mt. Zion dig reveals possible second temple period priestly mansion 17 September 2013

Silver coin; left, front,, head of Alexander the Great wearing the horns of Zeus Ammon; right, back, seated Athena. Image credit: British Museum

Historical Overview. Ancient Israel is the birthplace of the 3 great monotheistic religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity and Islam

Appendix - Types of the Temple

Series Immanuel, God With Us. This Message #2 His Love Kept On Reaching Out

Tetzaveh (You shall Command) Exodus 27:20 30:10

Jewish Historical Connection to Jerusalem

Proof God Exists Archaeology

Daniel. The four main teachings of the Book of Daniel are:

Holy Land: The Rise of Three Faiths

THE STONE WITH A NEW NAME. Sunday, January 8, 2017 Cayey, Puerto Rico

Splitting Apart the Heavens A Sermon on Mark 1:4-11 Baptism of the Lord January 7, 2018

Assessment: The Origins of Judaism


THE BOOK OF EXODUS - COMMENTARY By Rev. Paul J. Niemann, D.Min. Lesson 20 - Exodus 40:16-38

Luke 19:29-44 The Old Jerusalem Buildings In the Bible Series Palm Sunday March 25 th, 2018

Priestly Duties in the Holy Place

Middle Ages: The Reign of Religion. The Dark Ages-truly anything but dark!!

Tisha B Av. by Michael Rudolph Delivered to Ohev Yisrael August 9, 2008

Jesus is resurrected (Rev 12:5). Jesus' work of salvation establishes His authority to disbar Satan and His followers from heaven (Rev 12:7-12).

The Prophecies of Isaiah 94 Lesson 38

David s Coronation 2 Samuel 5 I. INTRO

Press Release Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Day 1. Herods Summer Palace in Caesarea. Elijahs Cavein Mount Carmel. Tiberias on the North of Israel

GOD'S PROMISES TO ISRAEL THE CHURCH

Text 5: The Crusades. Topic 7: Medieval Christian Europe ( ) Lesson 4: Economic Expansion and Change: The Crusades and After

When the Kingdom of this World Becomes the Kingdom of Our Lord

Only a tiny portion of Jews participated in worshipping the golden calf. So why does God seem to blame the whole nation? by Rabbi Ken Spiro

The Wise Men s Gospel Message Matthew 2:1-11

The Gospel is the Good News is that God both forgives and restores! Our characters and attitudes are included in this restoration, we become a new

The Church of the Servant King

Israel and Jerusalem - in history and prophecy - Part I The Temples of Yahweh

How God Dwells with His People

Transcription:

Biblical Archaeology Review 30, no. 4 (2005) The Temple Menorah Where Is It? By Steven Fine What is history and what is myth? What is true and what is legendary? Reporting on his 1996 meeting with Pope John Paul II (1978 2005), Israel s Minister of Religious Affairs Shimon Shetreet reported, according to the Jerusalem Post, that he had asked for Vatican cooperation in locating the gold menorah from the Second Temple that was brought to Rome by Titus in 70 C.E. Shetreet claimed that recent research at the University of Florence indicated the Menorah might be among the hidden treasures in the Vatican s storerooms. I don t say it s there for sure, he said, but I asked the Pope to help in the search as a goodwill gesture in recognition of the improved relations between Catholics and Jews. 1 Witnesses to this conversation tell that a tense silence hovered over the room after Shetreet s request was heard. 2 I tried to follow up on Shetreet s reference to research at the University of Florence, but no one I contacted there had ever heard of it. This story has repeated itself a number of times since. One of the two chief rabbis of Israel, on their historic visit to the Vatican in 2004, asked about the Menorah, as did the President of Israel, Moshe Katzav, on another occasion. Asked for an

official response, this is what I received from the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs via e mail: The requests by Shetreet, the president, and the chief rabbis reflect the long held belief that the Catholic Church, as the inheritor of Rome, took possession of the empire s booty as documented by the Arch of Titus. It is thus assumed that, among other treasures looted from the Jewish people, the Temple menorah is stashed away someplace in the storerooms of the Vatican. This is not to say that 2,000 years or so have been enough time for the Foreign Ministry to formulate a policy on the matter. Unofficially at least, we look forward to the restoration of the treasures of the Jewish people to their rightful homeland, but do not anticipate this will occur before the coming of the Messiah. These requests of the Church are a fascinating extension of the Jewish hope that the Temple Menorah taken by Titus would be returned home. The legends of the Menorah at the Vatican have considerable currency. I have heard them from many Jews who take it as historical fact. In one version, a certain American rabbi entered the Vatican and saw the Menorah. 3 In another version, it was an Israeli Moroccan rabbi known as Rabbi Pinto who saw it. In a third version, when former Chief Rabbi of Israel Isaac Herzog went to rescue Jewish children in Europe, he visited Pope Pius XII (1939 1958) at the Vatican. 4 According to this story, the Pope showed Rabbi Herzog the Menorah, but refused to return it. Father Leonard Boyle, former director of the Vatican Libraries, tells of Jewish tourists from the United States entering the library and, with all naiveté, telling Father Boyle that their rabbis had instructed them to find

the Menorah during their visit. 5 Folklorist Dov Noy tells me that the myth of the Menorah at the Vatican is not a part of traditional Jewish folklore. It is not recorded by the researchers of the Israel Folklore Archive. Apparently, it is a distinctly American Jewish urban myth. How this myth arose we have no idea. But it is interesting to compare it to the ancient sources regarding the Menorah following the Roman destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E. The best known evidence for the Temple Menorah in Rome is, of course, the monumental victory arch of Titus. This arch, completed in 81 C.E. after Titus s death, was just one of the many triumphal arches and monuments that once graced the center of Rome. While large, more than 50 feet tall, it was a rather average sized memorial two thousand years ago. The interior of the arch is carved with bas reliefs of Titus s triumphal entry into Jerusalem on one side, the parading of the sacred vessels of the Jerusalem Temple into Rome on the other. These include the Table for Showbread, trumpets and, most prominently, the seven branched Menorah of the Temple. But the Arch of Titus isn t the earliest reference to the Temple Menorah in Rome. The Jewish historian Josephus was in Rome and saw the triumphal celebration of Jerusalem s defeat in Rome in 70 C.E. At the beginning of the revolt, Josephus had been the Jewish general in charge of the Galilee. In a famous turn about, he surrendered and joined the Roman side, writing books under Imperial patronage about the Jewish War and, at the same time, defending Jewish tradition. In general,

Josephus s descriptions of the architecture of ancient Judea have been found to be extremely accurate; his discussions of Jerusalem and of Masada are two examples. His work written in the mode of Roman historiography is always colored by his apologetic approach to both the Flavian emperors (Vespasian, Titus and Domitian) and on behalf of the Jews. In the Jewish War 6 Josephus describes how a certain Jewish priest named Phineas handed over to the Romans some of the sacred treasures : Two menorot similar to those deposited in the sanctuary, along with tables, bowls, and platters, all of solid gold and very massive. He further delivered up veils, the high priests vestments, including the precious stones, and many other articles for public worship and a mass of cinnamon and cassia and a multitude of other spices, which they mixed and burned daily as incense to God. Josephus concludes his description by noting that Those services procure[ed] for him [Phineas], although a prisoner of war, the pardon accorded to the refugees. Josephus also describes the Temple trophies in his account of the triumphal procession on Titus s return to Rome from his successful campaign in Judea: The spoils in general were borne in promiscuous heaps; but conspicuous above all stood those captured in the Temple at Jerusalem. These consisted of a golden table, many talents in weight, and a Menorah, likewise made of gold... After these, and last of all the spoils, was carried a copy of the Jewish Law. They followed a large party carrying images of victory, all made of ivory and gold. Behind them drove Vespasian [who initially led the Roman forces before he was proclaimed emperor in 69

C.E.], followed by Titus [who finally suppressed the rebellion]; while Domitian [his brother and future emperor] rode beside them, in magnificent apparel and mounted on a steed that was in itself a sight. There is no reason to doubt the historicity of these descriptions and images, which are so close in content to the official visual portrayal of these events on the Arch of Titus. Note Josephus s mention of the Showbread table (the Biblical bread of the presence [Exodus 25], which he refers to as the golden table. While in the service of the Temple, this table contained 12 loaves of unleavened bread, as an offering to God) immediately followed by mention of the Menorah. This pairing of the Menorah and the Showbread table, which follows the order in which these artifacts are described in Exodus 25 and elsewhere, is no doubt based on their adjacent locations within the Temple, as well as their physical impressiveness (each was manufactured using large quantities of gold). The Menorah and table were paired as early as 39 B.C.E. on a lepton coin of Mattathias Antigonos as an apparent propaganda tool to ward off the Roman backed usurper Herod. 7 The juxtaposition of the table and the Menorah is also found in a graffito on a plaster fragment discovered in excavations in the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem dating to just before the Roman destruction of the city in 70 C.E. a Josephus writes that the Temple trophies were displayed in Rome after the procession. According to him, they were exhibited in the magnificent Temple of Peace. Begun in 71 and completed in 75 C.E., this temple was built by Vespasian to commemorate the Roman defeat of Judea and was later rebuilt by Domitian. Pliny the Elder includes the Temple of Peace among Rome s noble buildings, describing it as one of the most beautiful [buildings] the world has ever seen. 8 It was built on the southern side of the Argilentum a major road connecting the Subura (Suburb) to the Forum. The complex included a pleasure garden and a library. A model in the Museum of the City of Rome (shown opposite) suggests what the Temple of Peace might have looked like.

Here is how Josephus describes it: The triumphal ceremonies being concluded and the empire of the Romans established on the firmest foundation, Vespasian decided to erect a Temple of Peace. This was very speedily completed and in a style surpassing all human conception. For, besides having prodigious resources of wealth on which to draw, he also embellished it with ancient masterworks of painting and sculpture; indeed, into that shrine were accumulated and stored all objects for the sight of which men had once wandered over the whole world, eager to see them severally while they lay in various countries. Here, too, he laid up the vessels of gold from the temple of the Jews, on which he prided himself. 9 Jews, both natives of Rome and visitors, no doubt came to the Temple of Peace to view the Temple items as Jews to this day still flock to the Arch of Titus. The temple was a partially public space, as the White House is in the United States. As the great Roman architect Vitruvius notes, in homes of the powerful the common rooms are those into which, though uninvited, persons of the people can come by right, such as vestibules, courtyards, peristyles and other apartments of similar uses. 10 Thus it seems that the sacred vessels were deposited and on view within Vespasian s palace during the latter first century. The traditions of the earliest Rabbis (the Tannaim [second century C.E.]), preserves several accounts of sightings of the holy vessels in Rome. For example, one mid second century Rabbi claims to have seen the parokhet, or veil covering the Ark of the Covenant:

Rabbi Lazer son of Rabbi Jose said, I saw it [the parokhet] in Rome and there were drops of blood on it. And they told me: 11 These are from the drops of blood of the Day of Atonement. 12 The enigmatic concluding sentence of this quotation seems to suggest that many had seen the veil and that there was some sort of local tradition about it. One can almost imagine Rabbi Lazar going to see the parokhet and discussing the bloody spots with local Jews. In another tradition, this same rabbi is said to have seen the priestly breastplate worn in the Temple: I saw it [the priestly breastplate of gold] in Rome, and the name was written on it in a single line, Holy to the Lord. 13 Still another rabbi saw the Menorah itself: Rabbi Simeon said, When I went to Rome there I saw the Menorah. 14 These sightings have a reasonable chance of recording reliable history. The items mentioned could well have been viewed in Rome by these second century rabbis. Even if we are inclined to dismiss these Rabbinic sources as mere literary devices or as folklore, the external evidence from Josephus and from the Arch of Titus lend strong support for their historicity. It is interesting to compare the evidence for these sightings with other less reliable accounts, accounts that we must regard as literary and not as historical. For example, a midrash b known as Esther Rabba tells how the throne of Solomon was taken to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar when he destroyed the First Temple in 586 B.C.E. From there it went to Medea, then to Greece, then to Edom and, the text continues, Rabbi Eleazar son of Rabbi Jose said: I saw its fragments in Rome. Another sighting in Rome involved the brain of the hated Titus, who commanded the Roman troops that destroyed Jerusalem. According to this story, Titus s brain was enlarged by mosquito bites so that it was as large as a two pound dove. It is a marvelous story (printed in the box), but of course it is not to be taken as an historical account (though it does provide a powerful narrative response, returning God and his enduring covenant to center stage). By contrast, the other stories previously cited, involving the Temple treasures from the Second Temple, do have the ring of authenticity.

A Byzantine period rabbinic collection notes that Temple artifacts had been taken to Rome and were hidden away. The objects include the [Showbread] table, the Menorah, the veil of the Ark and the vestments of the anointed priest. 15 In the second half of the 12th century a Spanish Jew known as Benjamin of Tudela made a tour of the then known world (he went as far east as Mesopotamia) and kept a travel diary in which he claims to have seen a church with two columns from Solomon s Temple in Rome. More pertinent to the present discussion, he was apparently told by Rome s Jews that the Temple vessels that had been brought to Rome were hidden in a cave in the church: In the church of St. John in the Lateran there are two copper columns that were in the Temple, the handiwork of King Solomon, peace be upon him. Upon each column is inscribed Solomon son of David. The Jews of Rome said that each year on the Ninth of Av [the traditional date on which both the First and Second Temples were destroyed, first by the Babylonians and then by the Romans] they found moisture running down them like water. There also is the cave where Titus the son of Vespasian hid away the Temple vessels which he brought from Jerusalem. 16 If nothing else, this suggests that medieval Roman Jews had a tradition that the Temple vessels were in Christian hands. A century later Christians made the same claim. A mosaic in an apse in Saint John in the Lateran from 1291 contained an inscription proclaiming the presence not only of the Ark of the Covenant but of the Menorah and columns: Titus and Vespasian had this ark and the candelabrum and... the four columns here present taken from the Jews in Jerusalem and brought to Rome. By the end of the 13th century, then, the Lateran was claiming to have the Temple booty of the Solomonic Temple, taken anachronistically

by Titus and Vespasian and on display (or in a reliquary). Though neither Christians nor Jews could actually see the Menorah, its presence was intense. 17 When contemporary Jews go to Rome, the Menorah is no less present yet non present. They know that their holy vessels were brought to Rome, as commemorated in that open sore known as the Arch of Titus. They can also see the Menorah in the remains of the fourth century Jewish catacombs of Rome, most of which are safely stored and displayed in the Vatican. If the Vatican did have the actual Menorah and other vessels, there is no reason to think that in our more ecumenical age they would not display them, just as they do so many fine Jewish manuscripts and artifacts. I could imagine the Menorah under a huge cupola resting on a base, surrounded by a velvet cord with an Italian guard on either side. Alas, this is not the case. As long as Jews believe that the Menorah will someday be returned to Jerusalem, however, the eternal Jewish hope of messianic restoration is not yet lost. Seen in Rome: Titus s Brain Sidebar to: The Temple Menorah Where Is It? The wicked Titus entered the Holy of Holies, his sword drawn in his hand, and slashed the two veils. He brought two whores and performed sex on them on the altar, and his sword came out full of blood. There are those who say that it was from the blood of the sacrifices, and there are others who say that it was from the blood of the he goat of Yom Kippur.

He cursed and blasphemed and took all the Temple vessels and made them like a single net and began to curse and blaspheme Heaven, saying: One who makes war with a king in the desert and vanquishes him cannot be compared with one who makes war against a king in his own palace and vanquishes him. He then embarked on a ship. As soon as he had embarked, a storm smote the sea. Said he: It appears that the power of the God of this nation is only on the sea. He punished the Generation of Enosh by water. He only exacted retribution from the generation of Enosh through water. He only exacted retribution from the generation of the Flood through water. He exacted retribution from Pharaoh and his army through water. When I was in His house and His own domain he could not stand against me, but now I am beginning to think that he will kill me with water. The Holy One, blessed be He, said to him: Villain! By your life, I will inflict punishment upon this villain using the most insignificant creature that I created during the six days of creation. Immediately the Holy One, blessed be He, beckoned to his guardian angel of the sea and he ceased from his fury. When he [Titus] reached Rome all the dignitaries of Rome came out and lauded him. When he arrived in Rome, he entered to the bath house, and when he left they brought him a vial of spiced wine to drink. A mosquito entered his nose and gnawed his brain until it became as big as a two pound dove. He screamed, saying: Let them (the doctors) split open the brain of that man (that is, his own brain). Immediately the doctors were called. They split his brain and removed it, being the size of a two pound dove. Rabbi Eleazar son of Rabbi Jose said: I saw it in Rome. There were two pounds on one side [of the scale] and the dove on the other, and the one weighed exactly the same as the other. They took it [the pigeon] and placed it in one bowl. As the bird changed so did he [Titus] change, and when the mosquito fled, the soul of the wicked Titus fled. Genesis Rabbah, 10, 7