The Palm Beach Post

Lesson on temple history

- God Squad

Rabbi Marc Gellman

Question: Why do we speak only of the First and Second Temples? During the Roman era Herod completely rebuilt the Temple, making it the largest temple in the world of its time. It was this Temple that the Romans destroyed, so why do we not speak of it as the Third Temple? Thank you. — from P

Answer: Let’s count the Temples!

King Solomon built the First Temple in Jerusalem in the year 957 BCE (Before Common Era). The first Temple was destroyed by the Babylonian army of Nebuchadne­zzar in the year 586 BCE. However, the real blow to the Israelite empire had already occurred in 722 BCE, when the northern part of the empire was destroyed by the Assyrians. The northern kingdom destroyed by the Assyrians encompasse­d the land of 10 of the 12 tribes, leaving only the tribes of Judah and Benjamin in control of Jerusa- lem and the Temple. The destructio­n of the First Temple ended what we can call the First Commonweal­th of Judaism. The ancient Jews were given some hope, if not political power, when the Temple in Jerusalem was rebuilt under the permission of Cyrus the Great of Persia in roughly the year 515 BCE. This begins the period known as the Second Commonweal­th of Judaism. King Herod refurbishe­d and greatly expanded the Temple in the year 20 BCE making it, as you correctly observed, the largest temple in the world.

It was Herod’s temple that was destroyed in the year 70 CE by the Romans, and this destructio­n ended the Second Commonweal­th. We are technicall­y in the Third Commonweal­th but not really because the Temple has not been rebuilt, and according to Jewish law and Christian hopes it can only be rebuilt by the Messiah. To absolutely prevent the rebuilding of the Temple, in 691CE the caliph Abd al-Malik constructe­d the golden Dome of the Rock shrine on the exact spot where the holiest part of the Temple once stood and soon thereafter he built the AlAqsa Mosque nearby. He knew that Jewish law prohibited the destructio­n of a church or a mosque, so the location of the Temple is forever occupied by another faith. Islam believes that the Temple Mount is where Muhammad ascended into Heaven on his steed Buraq.

Q: I was wondering why God chose circumcisi­on as the outward symbol of God’s chosen people. How did people know if a man was circumcise­d or not? — from S

A: Circumcisi­on is commanded of Abraham by God.

The reason for this rite, beyond its being a sign of the covenant, is not explained. Perhaps it is a way of saying that we mark the organ of procreatio­n for a man to indicate that the most wonderful thing we can create — a baby — is nothing compared to what God has created.

That is the thing about rituals. What to do is clear but why we are commanded to do it is never explained. In a way the very point of a ritual, any ritual, is to do something you do not fully understand in order to express obedience and love for God.

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