Symbolic Interpretations
References
to the construction of King Solomon's temple at Jerusalem have been included in
the rituals of the operative freemasons since ancient times. In operative lodges
the layout of the lodge room in each of the several degrees symbolises either a
stoneyard or the temple building at one of the various stages of construction.
As he participates in each of the several degrees, the candidate progressively
represents the various types of stone used in the building, until ultimately he
represents the plan of the temple. The ceremonial for each degree is based on
the preparation and usage of the relevant stone during construction and
ultimately on the application of the plan to achieve completion of the temple.
The way in which a stone is prepared by a stonemason in the stoneyard and
utilised by fitters and erectors on the building site, in conjunction with the
application of the plans and gauges, is used to illustrate how an individual
should prepare himself for the life hereafter. The moral lessons imparted are
also illustrated by the application of the various working tools used at the
various stages of the work, not only in the shaping, testing, fitting and
marking of the stones, but also during erection on the site. Many aspects of the
operative ceremonials and catechisms have been included in the rituals of
speculative freemasonry, though in a very abbreviated form.
One
of the most learned and distinguished of the early English Freemasons was the
Rev Dr George Oliver DD, who studied and wrote extensively on ecclesiastical
antiquities and all aspects of speculative Freemasonry. He was descended from an
ancient Scottish family of that name, some of who moved to England in the time
of King James I. In 1801 he was initiated in St Peter's Lodge in the city of
Peterborough, by his father the Rev Samuel Oliver. In his renowned work, the Revelations
of the Square, Dr Oliver says:
"The
Society adopted the Temple of Solomon for its symbol, because it was the most
stable and the most magnificent structure that ever existed, whether we consider
its foundation or superstructure; so that of all the societies men have invented,
no one was ever more firmly united, or better planned, than the Masons . . . The
edifices which Freemasons build are nothing more than virtues or vices to be
erected or destroyed; and in this case heaven only occupies their minds, which
soar above the corrupted world. The Temple of Solomon denotes reason and
intelligence."
This
must be one of the most succinct yet comprehensive explanations ever given in
respect of the foundation, purpose and symbolism of Freemasonry. It also
typifies all aspects of the operative craft from which speculative Freemasonry
is derived.
Historical Background
Since
the earliest times, man has built temples or shrines where he could worship his
own god in his “house”. The Tower of Babel is the first such
structure mentioned in the Bible, Babel being the name of one of the chief
cities founded by Nimrod in the land of Sumer, or ancient Babylon. Nimrod was a
prodigious builder and was King of Babylon at the time of the Tower of Babel.
Although as yet there is no archaeological evidence to confirm the existence of
a city and tower of Babylon before about 1800 BCE, a text of Sharkalisharri,
who was King of Agade in about 2250 BCE, mentions his restoration of the
temple-tower or ziggurat at Babylon, which implies the existence
of an earlier sacred city on the site. It is now believed that when Ur-Nammur,
the King of Ur, built a ziggurat in about 2100 BCE, it
replaced the first Tower of Babel that probably was constructed prior to 4000 BCE.
The ziggurat was a series of superimposed platforms ranging from
about 10 to 20 metres in height, which progressively diminished in area and were
accessed by ramps or stairways. The structure was surmounted by a temple, to
which it was believed that God would descend and communicate with mankind. The
traditional history of the Masons' Guilds stated that their trade secrets were
first given to the trade by Nimrod. The ritual of the operative Free Masons
still includes the old “Charges of Nimrod”, in which the first
charge requires that all Free Masons shall be true to their God, their King,
their Lord and their Masters.
Abram,
who was born in Ur of the Chaldees in about 2160 BCE, received a Divine
call when he was 70 years old and told to search for a land where he could build
an Israelitish nation free from idolatry. To fulfil his mission, Abram began his
journed by moving to Harran on the Balikh River, a tributary of the Euphrates
1,000 kilometres northwest of Ur, where he stayed until his father died about
five years later. Thence he travelled southwards in stages to the vale of Moreh,
between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim in Canaan, where Yahweh
promised Abram that he would possess the whole of the land southwest from the
Euphrates River. Abram “built an altar to the Lord, who appeared unto
him” to express his thanks for the Lord’s promise. As the Canaanites
were jealous of Abram, he soon moved south to the mountainous district between
Beth-el and Ai, where he also built an altar to Jehovah. Abram continued to move
southwards until driven by famine from the Negeb into Egypt, but he later
returned to the mountainous district as a wealthy man and again established the
worship of Jehovah. God reiterated his promise to Abram, who then moved to Mamre
near Hebron, where he built another altar.
In
about 2080 BC, after Abram had rescued his nephew Lot by defeating a
confederation of four Babylonian kings under the leadership of Chedorlaomer the
despotic King of Elam, Melchizedeck the King of Salem, referred to in the Bible
as the “priest of the most high God”, blessed Abram in the
name of God. Melchizedeck is said to have prefigured Christ by offering bread
and wine as memorials of sacrifice. Because Abram saw in this sacrament a
messianic revelation of the “most high God” El Elyon,
Abram paid tithes to Melchizedek in token of this recognition. God then renewed
his promise to Abram, but said that his people would spend 400 years in a
foreign land before they should inherit Canaan. God also revealed himself to
Abram as the “all powerful God” El Shaddai,
who could consummate his promise of a coming Redeemer. At this
juncture Abram, which signifies “eminent father”, changed his
name to Abraham signifying “father of a multitude”, as a token
in recognition of what El Shaddai would do in his redemptive
power. This renewal of the covenant was sealed by the introduction of the
ceremony of circumcision, as a spiritual symbol of the purification of life at
its very source and also signifying the messianic hope for a Redeemer
and Covenant-Fulfiller. Abraham was 175 years old when he died,
115 years before Jacob and his family migrated to Egypt. As Jacob passed out of
Canaan in about 1870 BCE, God gave him an assurance that his descendants
would return to the Promised Land.
The Tabernacle of Israel
As
the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were semi-nomadic, they could not build
a permanent shrine for worship, as was the custom in the cities of Mesopotamia
when Abraham left Ur. After a sojourn of 430 years in Egypt, the Israelitish
nation came into being with the institution of the Feast of the Passover and the
beginning of the Exodus under the leadership of Moses in about 1440 BCE,
guided by the Pillar of Cloud by day and the Pillar of Fire
by night. During the second year of the Exodus, Moses made the most zealous
intercessions on behalf of his people, spending two periods of forty days and
nights on Mount Sinai. Moses was rewarded when the glory of the Lord was
revealed to him, the tables of the law were renewed and a new covenant was made
with Israel. In recognition of the new covenant and in accordance with
directions Jehovah gave to Moses, a Tabernacle or “tent of
congregation” was erected as a portable sanctuary. The Tabernacle was
30 cubits long and 10 cubits wide oriented from east to west. It was placed
within and near the western end of a court 100 cubits long and 50 cubits wide,
enclosed by a fence of shittim or acacia wood pillars 5 cubits high and braced
by stay ropes. The structure supported “fine twined linen”
sheets hung from rods. A “brazen altar”, or “altar of
burnt offering” was placed just inside the court, near the entrance
gate at the eastern end. A bronze “laver”, in which the
officiating priests washed, was placed midway between the brazen altar and the
entrance to the Tabernacle at its eastern end. The Tabernacle was composed of
two parts, the “mishkan” or tabernacle proper and the “ohel”,
or tent.
In
its strictest sense “tabernacle” refers to the ten linen
curtains that were hung inside the tabernacle proper, along the narrower western
wall and the longer northern and southern walls. These walls consisted of planks
of shittim or acacia wood plated on both sides with sheets of gold. The curtains
had figures of cherubim woven into the blue, purple and scarlet tapestry work.
The interior of the mishkan was divided into two compartments by a veil of
similar material, colour and design as the curtains. The larger of these
compartments, 20 cubits long and 10 cubits wide, was at the eastern end and
called the “hekhal”, which is the “Holy Place”.
The western compartment was a perfect cube of 10 cubits called the “debir”,
which is the “Holy of Holies” where the Ark of the
Covenant rested under the protective wings of two huge cherubim. The
whole was covered by the “ohel”, a fly roof of foxy black or
brownish canvas made of goats'-hair called camelot, which is still used by
nomadic Arabs. The Tabernacle was used as the provisional meeting place between
God and the “chosen people” until long after their entry into
Canaan. Under the Judges it was at Shiloh and in Saul's reign it was at Nob and
later at Gibeon. Although David erected another Tabernacle at Jerusalem for the
reception of the Ark of the Covenant, the original Tabernacle of
Israel remained at Gibeon until the days of King Solomon, together with the
brazen altar used for sacrificial offerings.
The
Hebrews naturally attached a great deal of symbolism to various aspects of the
Tabernacle and also to the related ceremonials. The “tent of
congregation” typified God dwelling with his people and the Ark
of the Covenant was a constant reminder of God's presence and forgiving
love. The twelve cakes of shewbread, placed on a table midway along the north
wall in the Holy Place, signified the dedication of the Twelve
Tribes of Israel to divine service. The menorah, a seven branched
candlestick of pure gold that was 3 cubits or more high, was placed midway along
the south wall to represent Israel as a people called to be the “children
of light”. The incense ascending from the golden altar of incense that
was placed in the middle of the space on the eastern side of the inner veil,
near to and in front of it, symbolised the act of prayer. The early Christian
evangelists interpreted the two compartments of the Tabernacle as being
characteristic of the earthly and heavenly aspects of Christ's ministry, saying
that by the symbolism of the rent veil Christ had opened up for everyone a way
into the Holy of Holies. The layout and furnishings of the
Tabernacle and its surrounding court were replicated in lavish detail and
supplemented in the temple constructed by King Solomon at Jerusalem.
Other Prototypes for the Temple at Jerusalem
Because
of the important role Egypt played in the history of the Hebrew people, as well
as the strong intellectual and cultural influence of the pharaonic civilisation
throughout the Mediterranean region and the close links then existing between
the two peoples, it was believed until recently that Egypt had provided the
model for King Solomon's temple in Jerusalem, even though it did not resemble
any temple in Egypt. Archaeological excavations in northern Syria in the 1930s
were the first to throw doubt on the belief of its Egyptian heritage.
Excavations at Hazor in northern Palestine, during the 1950s, reinforced these
doubts. However it was the salvage excavations carried out from 1970 to 1976 in
a bend of the Euphrates River, on the site of what is now Lake el-Assad, which
confirmed beyond doubt that King Solomon’s temple was built to a Phoenician
pattern conforming to the traditions of a religious system that had been
followed for 2,000 years or more. At least 3,200 years ago, about the time when
Moses was on Mount Sinai, the Phoenicians became the greatest developers and
builders around the Mediterranean. Their pre-eminence in building continued
until the conquest of the region by Alexander the Great in 333 BC. The
Phoenicians were more advanced culturally than the Hebrews and they played a
significant role in the design and construction of King Solomon's temple, their
long experience in temple building undoubtedly having a significant influence.
The
religious traditions that developed in the countries in the “fertile
crescent” of the Near East and in the Levant were bringing about
significant changes in human attitudes to the divinity as long ago as 5,000
years. These attitudes were reflected in the designs of temples that became the
pattern for those constructed by the Phoenicians. The temples were elongated
about 3:1 in plan, had a single entrance at the narrower eastern end and were
subdivided into compartments that provided a progressive transition from the
profane outside world to the inner and most holy sanctuary. The deep
significance of this progression of priests and worshippers, commencing from the
profane outside world and leading to the sacred precincts, is reflected in the
names of the compartments in the Tabernacle and later in King Solomon's temple.
This arrangement was typified in the temple of King Solomon at Jerusaslem, which
had a porch or anteroom, the ulam, at the eastern end flanked by
two great pillars called Jachin and Boaz. The porch opened into the main hall of
worship, the Holy Place or hekal, which had a table
of offering and other furnishings and was the place for divine service and the
performance of ritual. At the western end was the Holy of Holies
or debir, called the place “where God dwelt” and
where the “Ark of the Covenant” was kept, which was accessible
only to the priesthood on specific occasions.
The
many temples that have been excavated are not identical in design, but they are
sufficiently alike to prove beyond doubt that they had a common religious theme.
The oldest known temples or sanctuaries of this type were three found at Tell
Shouera on the eastern branch of the headwaters of the Euphrates River in the
foothills of northern Syria. In comparison with King Solomon’s temple, they
range from about the size of its Holy of Holies to a little larger
than its overall size including the storage chambers surrounding it on the
northern, western and southern sides. They are about 4,500 years old and were
built sequentially over several generations. A Canaanite temple of the same
general description and about 4,000 years old was discovered during the 1950s
while excavating the ancient lower city of Hazor in northern Palestine. Hazor
was only occupied for about 500 years, when it was destroyed and burnt, but
never reoccupied. Another temple excavated at Ebla, 300 kilometres to the
southwest of Tell Chouera and built about 3,800 years ago, is almost identical
in size to King Solomon’s temple, although the Holy of Holies is
significantly shorter. In King Solomon’s temple the Holy of Holies
was on a podium, but at Ebla it was augmented by a substantial niche in the
western wall, which allowed a small room to be placed between its porch and the
main hall of worship which is about the same size as it was in King Solomon’s
temple.
The
greatest volume of evidence comes from the salvage excavations on the site of
Lake el-Assad during the 1970s, where seven temples were unearthed all built
several hundred years before the first temple at Jerusalem. Of these temples,
four at Emar range from about half to two-thirds the size of King Solomon’s
temple and are from 3,400 to 3,200 years old, corresponding with the brief
period during which a Hittite city existed there. The two larger temples at Emar
were built parallel and close together to form a double sanctuary. A road
between them gave access to a common terrace for sacrificial offering that was
located behind them, instead of in front as at Jerusalem. A similar temple
excavated at Moumbaqat, midway between Emar and Ebla and intermediate in age, is
even larger than the largest at Tell Chouera. The first Syrian temple discovered,
which is that at Tell Ta'Yinat, is almost identical in size to King Solomon’s
temple and probably was constructed a little later. Some of the Syrian
excavations also show evidence of stub walls near the western ends of the
temples, which are thought to have been the locations of internal timber walls,
similar to the one that screened the Holy of Holies in King
Solomon’s temple. The foregoing archaeological evidence clearly shows that
King Solomon’s temple and also its precursor, the Tabernacle of Israel, were
both of the form originally established by the Canaanites and subsequently
developed by the Phoenicians.
King Solomon's Temple
When
Saul died in about 1010 BCE, David became the King of Judah and seven or
eight years later he was anointed King over all Israel. After David had
consolidated his power and built a permanent residence for himself, the lack of
a shrine of Yahweh seemed invidious to him. He said: “I dwell in a house
of cedar, but the Ark of God dwelleth within curtains”. Because his
hands were stained with the blood of his enemies, David was precluded from
building a temple to the Lord, but he collected materials, gathered treasure and
purchased a site for the construction. The site chosen was the threshing-floor
of Araunah the Jebusite, within the area now called Haram esh-Sherif on Mount
Moriah on the east side of the “Old City” of Jerusalem. Whilst
the precise location of the first temple is not known it is believed that the
highest part of the rock, now covered by the mosque known as the “Dome
of the Rock”, almost certainly was the position of the Holy of
Holies. Jewish tradition relates that a secret vault was constructed
beneath the temple, in which confidential meetings could be held and all sacred
treasures and documents could be stored. Such a vault also features in masonic
tradition and is a key element in several of its ceremonies. The construction of
such a vault under ecclesiastical and other buildings of importance was common
in ancient times and virtually became an essential element in medieval times.
Recent seismological surveys indicate that there probably is a cavern beneath
the mosque, but excavations to confirm the existence of the traditional vault
are precluded at present.
King
Solomon commenced construction of the temple in the fourth year of his reign and
completed it seven years later, in about 950 BCE. To facilitate the work he
entered into a treaty with Hiram, King of Tyre, whereby Hiram would permit
Solomon to obtain cedar and cypress wood and blocks of stone from Lebanon.
Furthermore, Solomon's workmen would be permitted to fell the timber and to
quarry and hew the stones under the direction of Hiram's skilled workmen. In
addition, Solomon was provided with the services of a skilful Tyrian artisan
named Huram, to take charge of the castings and of the fabrication of the more
valuable furniture and furnishings of the temple. In return for all of the
services to be provided by Hiram, Solomon agreed to send to him every year
4,400,000 litres of crushed wheat and 4,400,000 litres of barley, as well as
440,000 litres of wine and 440,000 litres of oil. Solomon raised a levy of
forced labour out of all Israel, totalling 30,000 men, which he sent to Lebanon
in relays of 10,000 a month. Adoniram, who had been an officer of King David in
charge of labour gangs, continued under King Solomon and was placed in charge of
the levy working in Lebanon. King Solomon also employed 70,000 burden bearers
and 80,000 hewers of stone in the hill country, as well as 3,300 officers in
charge of the men carrying out the work. Some thirty years after the completion
of the temple, when Rehoboam sent Adoniram to enforce the collection of taxes,
the exasperated populace rebelled and stoned Adoniram to death.
King
Solomon’s temple was a prefabricated building oriented due east to west. It
was constructed of accurately shaped blocks of limestone that were quarried and
dressed in or near Jerusalem and assembled without mortar. The temple had a
single entrance at the eastern end, accessed through an uncovered porch. The
porch or ulam was 10 cubits in length along the axis of the temple
and 20 cubits wide. Looking towards the east from inside, the porch was fronted
by two great pillars or columns. The pillar on the right or south side was
called “Jachin” and the pillar on the left or north side was
called “Boaz”. All of the timber used in the temple came from
the forests of Lebanon. The temple had olive wood doors and was lined with cedar
wood, ornately carved and inlaid with gold. The compartments of the Tabernacle
were replicated in King Solomon's temple, but they were twice as large. The
porch gave entrance into the Holy Place or hekhal,
which was 40 cubits long, 20 cubits wide and 30 cubits high, lit by latticed
windows near the ceiling. This hall was accessible only to priests and was used
for daily worship, for religious ritual and for the presentation of offerings.
The Holy of Holies or debir was at western end of
the building. It was a perfect cube of 20 cubits and set on a podium to maintain
the same ceiling line as that in the Holy Place. There were no
windows in the Holy of Holies, which received its light only
through the doorway from the Holy Place when the curtains were
open. The Holy of Holies was accessible only to the high priest,
probably only once a year for the atonement ceremony.
The
temple was surrounded on the north, west and south by store chambers three
stories high. Among these, on the southern side, was the “Middle
Chamber” to which access was gained by a winding stair in the
southeast corner of the building. The whole structure was on a platform about 2
metres higher than the upper or inner court that surrounded it, which was
reached by ascending ten steps. This inner court was raised above the
surrounding great or outer court, which was reached by ascending eight steps.
The outer court was raised above the surroundings and was reached by ascending
seven steps Each of these courts was enclosed by walls comprising three rows of
hewn stone, surmounted by a row of cedar beams. In the upper or inner court, as
in the court of the Tabernacle, there was a brazen altar of burnt offering, a
brazen sea and ten brazen lavers for use by the priests in their ablutions and
for ceremonial purification.
Although
smaller than any Egyptian temple, King Solomon’s temple was a magnificent
edifice that surpassed any preceding temples. King Solomon’s temple was noted
for the lavish beauty of its detail and opulence of its furnishings, rather than
for its size. No stonework was visible inside, because the compartments were
ceiled and panelled with cedar wood and the floors were planked with cypress.
The Holy Place was accessed at the eastern end through double
folding doors of cypress wood, each divided into upper and lower sections. At
the western end of the Holy Place double doors of olive wood gave
access to the Holy of Holies. Both sets of doors were usually left
open, but they were screened with veils ornamented like those in the Tabernacle.
The walls and doors were carved with palm trees, garlands, opening flowers and
cherubim, all richly inlaid with gold. The ceiling and floor of the Holy Place
and the whole of the interior of the Holy of Holies were overlaid
with gold plate.
The
furnishings of the Holy Place included an altar of incense and
twelve tables for the loaves of shewbread, as well as ten “menorah”
or golden seven-branched lampstands, often called lampsticks. Inside the Holy
of Holies two cherubim that stood 10 cubits high, were carved from olive
wood and overlaid with gold to symbolise the majestic presence of God. Research
has revealed that the cherubim would have been winged sphinxes, each with the
body of a lion and a human head. This hybrid was extremely common in the
iconography of western Asia between 1800 BCE and 600 BCE. The cherubim
stood in a brooding attitude with outstretched wings, so that the tips of their
adjacent wings touched above the Ark of the Covenant in the middle
of the apartment and the tips of the two outer wings touched the north and south
walls. The Ark of the Covenant was made of shittim or acacia wood,
overlaid with pure gold inside and outside. It contained the two tables of stone
on which the Ten Commandments were engraved, defining the terms of
God's covenant with Israel.
The Two Great Pillars
The
two great pillars at the porch or entrance to King Solomon's temple were hollow
and cast of bronze 12 cubits in circumference and four fingers thick, standing
18 cubits high. Double capitals surmounted the pillars and were 5 cubits in
their combined height, probably having been cast in two separate parts. The
chapiter or lower part was of lotus work and comprised four open and everted
petals each 4 cubits wide. The capital or upper part was a bowl, not a sphere as
is often said. The Tyrrians cast the hollow columns in moulds dug in the ground,
using what is called the “lost wax” method that was developed
by the Assyrians in the Bronze Age, probably in about 1200 BCE. In this
method the mould is formed around a wax core that melts away during casting.
With large castings like the pillars, the core is formed with sand or earth and
coated with thick wax. The columns of King Solomon’s temple were common in
Syria, Phoenicia and Cyprus at the time and the Tyrrians were experienced in
this method of casting.
Modern
research indicates that the upper bowl probably was a vessel to contain oil,
which could be lit at night. It is known that similar decorated pillars were
used at shrines in Palestine and Cyprus during the period 1000 BCE to 900 BCE,
when King Solomon’s temple was built. The Greek historian Herodotus, writing
in about 450 BCE, described two large pillars that stood near the temple of
Hercules at Tyre, which “shone at night”. Like the Phoenician
models, the two immense incense stands at the porch of King Solomon's temple
would have illuminated the facade of the temple on Mount Moriah at night, whilst
also catching the first glint of the sunrise at Jerusalem. They have been
interpreted as sacred obelisks, their blazing smoking wicks recalling to
worshippers the pillars of fire and cloud that led the Israelites of old through
the wilderness.
The
pillars were completed and named before the temple was dedicated. Although it
has often been said that the names of the pillars were to enshrine the memory of
David's ancestry, it is now known that this was not their purpose and
interpretation. It has been shown convincingly that the names of the two great
pillars inscribed on the columns stood for the initial, or key words, spoken by
oracles. In seeking to endow the Davidic dynasty with power and also to express
King Solomon's gratitude to the Almighty for his support, the oracles would have
used invocations such as: “Yahweh will establish (jachin) thy throne
forever” and “The king's strength (boaz) is in Yahweh”.
Contrary to views sometimes expressed, the bowls were not representations of the
then known terrestrial and celestial globes, nor did the pillars serve as
archives for the constitutional rolls.
The Captivity and Ezekiel's Temple
Ancient
temples usually served as state treasuries, which were filled with the booty of
conquests or emptied to pay tribute to overlords, as the power of the land waxed
and waned. King Solomon's temple was no exception. Shishak, the Libyan prince
who founded Egypt’s XXIInd Dynasty as the Pharaoh Sheshonq I and reigned from
945-924 BCE, raided the temple when King Solomon’s son Rehoboam was in
power, taking all the treasure King Solomon had accumulated. Later kings,
including even Hezekiah who adorned the temple, used the treasures to purchase
the favour of allies or to pay tribute and buy off invaders. Then followed
idolatrous kings who desecrated the temple and allowed it to fall into decay. By
the time of Josiah, three centuries after it was built, the temple was in need
of considerable repair, which had to be financed by contributions from the
worshippers. Finally Nebuchadnezzar sacked and looted the temple in 587 BCE,
when he destred Jerusalem. The deportation of the Hebrews into Babylonish
captivity began in 722 BCE, when the Assyrian King Tiglath-pileser captured
Damascus, abolished the monarchy and detached the northern and eastern regions
of Israel, which he made into Assyrian provinces. It continued when
Tiglath-pileser imprisoned the last king of Israel, Hoshea, in 721 BCE
after a three-year siege of his capital Samaria. Assyrian records say that
27,290 people were then taken captive. The captivity continued spasmodically
until completed by Nebuchadnezzar a few years after he had destroyed Jerusalem.
Ezekiel, who was captured in 597 BCE and deported to Babylon with
Jehoiachin, became an important Hebrew prophet during the Exile.
Ezekiel's
special mission was to comfort the captives in Babylon, which comprised “all
the house of Israel’. His prophesies were numerous, including many
concerning the surrounding nations, all of which were fulfilled. He made many
prophesies of Israel's final restoration, including his messianic prophesy
concerning the coming of Christ, when he said that the false shepherds would
give way to the True Shepherd. He also spoke of the restoration of
the land and of the people and gave his vision of the restored nation and their
worship in the new kingdom. The exiles were heartened in their grief by
Ezekiel's vision of a new temple, which he said would be erected during their
restoration. Ezekiel's description related to a temple that was similar to King
Solomon's temple, but he gave additional and specific information that helps to
establish details that are missing from the Biblical description of the first
temple. However Ezekiel's temple was never built, even when Zerubbabel
constructed the second temple at Jerusalem after the release from captivity.
The Decree of Cyrus and the Second Temple
Cyrus
came to the throne of Anshan, an Elamite region, in about 559 BCE and
clashed with a Median king. Cyrus captured the walled city of Ecbatana (the
modern Hamadan) when the Median army rebelled, as a result of which the Persians
were then in the ascendancy. Cyrus rapidly extended his conquests, defeating
Croesus the king of Lydia about 546 BCE and conquering Babylon in 539 BCE.
Thus Cyrus established the vast Persian Empire, which held dominion over Judea
as a province for the next two centuries. Cyrus established his capital at
Pasargadae in the land of Parsa, from where he ruled until his death in 530 BCE.
In 538 BCE Cyrus issued the following decree, releasing the Jews who were
in exile in Babylon:
“Thus
saith Cyrus King of Persia, all the kingdoms of the earth hath Jehovah, the God
of heaven, given me; and he hath charged me to build him a house in Jerusalem,
which is in Judah. Whosoever there is among you of all his people, his God be
with him and let him go to Jerusalem . . . and build the house of Jehovah . .
.”
In
total about 42,360 Israelites returned progressively to Jerusalem, under the
leadership of Sheshbazzar or Zerubbabel in 535 BCE, under Ezra in 458 BCE
and under Nehemiah in 445 BCE.
The
first small band that returned to Jerusalem soon began rebuilding the temple,
under Jeshua as the high priest and Zerubbabel as the governor. Their meagre
resources and the many difficulties they encountered delayed completion of the
temple until 515 BCE, almost twenty years after the first group left
Babylon, but long before all the exiles had returned from captivity. Indeed, the
temple was only completed then because of the efforts of the prophets Haggai and
Zechariah, who urged the work on in the later stages. No accurate description of
the second temple exists, but the layout appears to have been similar to that of
the first temple with the height increased to 60 cubits. However it was much
less ornate than King Solomon’s temple, lacking the sumptuous finishes and
only scantily furnished. A lack of resources probably was the reason why the
second temple was not built to Ezekial's grand plan. So far as is known the
second temple, like the tabernacle of Israel, had only a curtain at the entrance
to the Holy Place, one menorah, one table of
shewbread and a golden altar of incense. Another curtain screened the entrance
to the Holy of Holies, which was empty. When Nebuchadnezzar sacked
Jerusalem in 587 BCE the Ark of the Covenant was destroyed.
Nevertheless the second temple, usually referred to as Zerubbabel's temple,
survived for almost 500 years, which was much longer than any other temple at
Jerusalem. The Roman general Pompey took the temple when he captured Jerusalem
in 63 BCE, but did not harm it. However the Roman consul Crassus plundered
the temple of all its gold and other valuables nine years later. The second
temple was the focus point of the lavish reconstruction and expansion carried
out in later years by King Herod.
Herod's temple
A
discussion of the temples at Jerusalem would not be complete without mentioning
King Herod's temple. Our principal source of information is Josephus, the Jewish
historian and priest who flourished in about 70 AD. Herod the tetrarch of
Galilee, known as Herod the Great, came from the Negeb between the Dead Sea and
the Mediterranean Sea. He was of Idumaean blood and Edomite stock, descended
from Esau. King Herod was an indefatigable builder, who wished to show his own
grandeur by restoring the temple as a larger, more complex and much more
beautiful building. He took great pains to carry out the reconstruction
piecemeal, without interrupting the ritual observances, even to the extent of
training 1,000 priests as masons to build the shrine. The work began in about 20 BCE
and the main structure was finished in ten years, but the whole complex was not
completed until 64 AD. The temple area was twice the size of Zerubbabel's
temple and the total area of development more than ten hectares. King Herod’s
temple was burned when Jerusalem fell to the Roman armies in 70 AD. The
golden candalabrum, the golden table of shewbread and other valuables were
carried off to Rome. The bas reliefs carved on the triumphal arch of Titus in
Rome depict Roman soldiers carrying off the looted temple furniture.
Orientation
It
is worth noting that the orientation of the temples at Jerusalem was the reverse
of the present orientation of Christian churches. A worshipper in the Holy
Place of the temple looked west to the Holy of Holies or
east through the entrance to see the rising sun. Christian churches usually have
their main entrance in the west and the altar in the east. Lodges of operative
Free Masons have always adopted the orientation of the temples at Jerusalem,
with the entrance in the east and the master in the west. The orientation of
lodges of speculative Freemasons is the reverse, probably because the compiler
and editor of the original “Constitutions of the Freemasons”
published by order of the Grand Lodge of England in 1723, the Rev Dr James
Anderson DD, was an influential Presbyterian clergymen who as a matter of course
would have adopted the orientation then in use in Christian churches. Another
possible reason is that early speculative ritualists may have been influenced by
an essential doctrine of that particular school of the Cabala that says: “His
Majesty . . . sits on a throne in the east, as the actual representative of
God”. Whatever its origin, the reversal of the orientation in lodges
of speculative Freemasons has caused confusion in the interpretation of their
symbolism, because the words of the ritual were adapted from Operative usage
based on the orientation of the temple. In conclusion it is worth quoting Dr
Oliver, to whom we have already referred, who said in his lectures on Signs
and Symbols: “The principal entrance to the lodge room ought to
face the east, because the east is a place of light both physical and moral; and
therefore the brethren have access to the lodge by that entrance, as a symbol of
mental illumination.”