Temple locations

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Kris
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Temple locations

Post by Kris »

Not sure if this is the correct forum to post this, but I was looking at the internet today, and ran across a couple of different temple location ideas. Most seem to indicate that both the first and second temples of Jerusalem were built upon the Temple Mount, where the Dome of the Rock is sitting. However, there are a few other theories floating around that it was not on the Temple Mount but to the south, or even other locations. One big proponent of the southern location is a lady named Norma Robertson. She has an entire website, videos and even a small book dedicated to her theory. She also uses some of the work of Eliat Mazar to support her ideas. However, I am not able to find any information on her credentials. Has anyone heard of her? I included her link below for reference. Do most people feel that the Temple Mount is the correct location? Is Eliat Mazar wrong on her thoughts regarding Solomonic walls, etc? It seems like there is a lot of hype from certain groups but not wide support. I am also including an article that I found on Eliat Mazar promoting her "discoveries" in Jerusalem. I think that Israel Finkelstein has questioned a number of her finds--but she seems to have an agenda. Just curious what others in this forum think about these kinds of things.

I know that I am not the most prolific writer, nor am I a biblical expert so my posts may be rather sophomoric, but I really appreciate having somewhere to ask questions like this-- thanks so much for your time and consideration!


http://templemountlocation.com/

https://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/israel/201 ... ew-heights
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Peter Kirby
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Re: Temple locations

Post by Peter Kirby »

Yeah, this is a good place to ask. And it's a good question.

I've moved this over to the Jewish subforum (with a link back from the Christian) so that it can have better visibility.
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Kris
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Re: Temple locations

Post by Kris »

Thanks Peter!
outhouse
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Re: Temple locations

Post by outhouse »

Kris wrote: She also uses some of the work of Eliat Mazar to support her ideas.
That alone qualifies her as nutty, Mazar is a biased nutjob.

Finkelstein rips her pretty hard and rightfully so. He is the only one with the correct hypothesis and conclusions that are not biased. His agenda is throwing out the trash.

If you look at Normas work it is based on guesses from photos and little else. Pass.
According to Mazar herself,


I work with the Bible in one hand and the tools of excavation in the other, and I try to consider everything.[13]
Kris
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Re: Temple locations

Post by Kris »

But, is the general consensus that the temples were located on the Temple Mount? Isn't this what Josephus stated? Isn't this what most Jews believe? Why are there any disputes to the location?
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DCHindley
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Re: Temple locations

Post by DCHindley »

Kris wrote:But, is the general consensus that the temples were located on the Temple Mount? Isn't this what Josephus stated? Isn't this what most Jews believe? Why are there any disputes to the location?
Pious legends arise over time, asserting things as fact because local legend said so. In Constantine's time, all sorts of things were claimed to be Jesus' manger, or the Upper Room, or Golgotha, etc. and since the area had been leveled to the foundations after 70 CE, the places would no longer be discernible, so landmarks built between 70 CE and the beginnings of the 4th century CE, were chosen arbitrarily to serve as substitutes.

"Solomon's Stables" were not built by Solomon, but by Crusaders. Why not also the "temple mount?" I think that a flat paved area was found outside of the Medieval boundaries of the City of Jerusalem and it has been suggested that this was the actual temple. I don't know. Unfortunately, we don't have a historian of Judaic matters like Josephus to describe in detail the events in Judea and Jerusalem from 74 CE to the mid 2nd century.

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austendw
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Re: Temple locations

Post by austendw »

DCHindley wrote:Why not also the "temple mount?" I think that a flat paved area was found outside of the Medieval boundaries of the City of Jerusalem and it has been suggested that this was the actual temple. I don't know. Unfortunately, we don't have a historian of Judaic matters like Josephus to describe in detail the events in Judea and Jerusalem from 74 CE to the mid 2nd century.
Well we don't have a historian like Josephus to describe the topography of the area after 74CE, but we do have Josephus, and the architectural/archaeological evidence to hand, and can make reasonable assumptions on the basis of that evidence. And all of that suggests that traditional reconstructions of Herod's temple, placing the sanctuary on or to the west of the rock enclosed within the Qubbat as-Sakhra are the right ones. Recent revisionistic relocations of the sanctuary to the north or south, and even further south of the Haram, fail to account for all this literary, archaeological, architectural and topographical evidence, so they can surely be dismissed.
Last edited by austendw on Sat May 13, 2017 12:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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austendw
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Re: Temple locations

Post by austendw »

Kris wrote:But, is the general consensus that the temples were located on the Temple Mount? Isn't this what Josephus stated? Isn't this what most Jews believe? Why are there any disputes to the location?
Up until recently no-one doubted that either the Holy of Holies or the altar of the Herodian temple (and by extrapolation, the earlier temples on the site) were sited on the sakhra rock.

I suspect that, more recently, a desire to make millenial notions of a rebuilt "Third" Temple compatible with the existing Islamic structures - especially the Dome of the Rock - has encouraged newer theories, placing the Herodian sanctuary further north or south of this site. In other words, believers could envisage a rebuilt temple that didn't involved knocking down the Dome of the Rock. Whether that sort of desire does inform these theories is, in the end, irrelevant, however. What matters is the validity of the arguments they adduce, and in this area I think they are all deficient.

The particular example you link to is archaeogically nonsensical and entirely wrong-headed. Whether it relies on the excavations of Eilat Mazar (herself not beyond criticism) or not really doesn't change this.
Last edited by austendw on Sun May 14, 2017 2:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Kris
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Re: Temple locations

Post by Kris »

Thanks so much for your input. It is very much appreciated.
Kris
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Re: Temple locations

Post by Kris »

Austendw-- I hadn't heard of any theories of rhe temple being west of the rock-- who's theory is that? Would it require removal of the Islamic edifices to be built there? I was just curious.
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