返回总目录
The Temple, The Ka'aba, and The Christ
The Temple, The Ka'aba, and The Christ
by John Gilchrist
There are three great monotheistic religions in the world,
namely Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Each of these not only
recognises the existence of one sovereign God who rules the
universe but has sources and roots common to the other two. All
three admit that human history began when God created Adam and
Eve and continue to agree on the immediate course of this
history after the creation.
The initial temptation and fall of Adam and Eve, the great flood
of the time of Noah, and the calling of prophets such as
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, are admitted by all three religions.
Nevertheless the distinctions between these three religions are
far more significant than their points of agreement. Each one of
these three claims to possess the ultimate revelation of God and
while Christianity and Islam acknowledge divine influence in the
monotheistic religions which preceded them, they both make
exclusive claims to have superseded the earlier faiths and to be
in this age the final revelation of God to man. At the same time
Judaism and Christianity have conceded nothing to the religions
which have followed them, holding firmly to their claims to be
God's only true religion in the world.
One of these religions is indeed the true religion of God. All
three may trace their religious histories to the same sources
but, by virtue of the sharp divergences between them, they
cannot all be true religions in this age. If there is indeed
only one God, there can only be one true religion - one faith
that alone can give men access to the presence, knowledge and
favour of God. It is unthinkable that he could be the author of
three religions which differ so radically in this age. In this
booklet we intend to examine the focal points of these three
religions and to compare then with one another to discover which
religion really offers mankind access to God in this age.
Judaism claims that Moses was its real founder but the focal
point of the Jewish religion was not its prophet hut the Holy of
Ho-lies - a shrine which contained a manifestation of the divine
glory which was initially a portable edifice but which, from the
time of Solomon, became a permanent structure and central
feature in the Temple of the Jews. This Temple stood in
Jerusalem until forty years after the ascension of Jesus Christ
to heaven and is known in Islam as baitul-muqaddas (the "holy
house"). It is spoken of in the Qur'an as al-masjid ("the
Temple") in Surah 17.8.
In Islam it is another structure which is the focal point of
identification for the Muslim with God, namely the Ka'aba (known
in Islam as baitullah the "house of Allah"). All Muslims face
this house when they pray and are obliged to make a proper
pilgrimage to it at least once in their lifetimes if they can
afford it. Like Moses, Muhammad is only considered to be a
prophet and while his name will appear over a photograph or
poster of his tomb in Medina, it is always the name of Allah
that appears over the Ka'aba. Hence the Ka'aba has become for
the Muslim world its source of identification with God.
For the Christian Jesus Christ himself is the focal point of the
Christian faith and the meeting-place of God with man. Therefore
the Christian has no "house of God" on earth to perform the
function of identification with God but looks to Jesus in heaven
to perform this office. Accordingly he has become the qiblah of
the Christian Church and all prayers to God are therefore
offered in his name.
We shall proceed to compare these three to discover which one
really offers men access to God in heaven.
The Temple of Judaism
When the Jews were first delivered out of Egypt during the time
of Moses, God chose to move and dwell among them in a special
way. He ordered Moses to arrange the construction of a
tabernacle in these words;
"Let them make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell in their midst.
According to all that I show you concerning the pattern of the
tabernacle and of all its furniture, so you shall make it".
Exodus 25.8-9.
In the very heart of the tabernacle there was a small ark with a
wooden mercy-seat on top of it. This portion was the holiest
part of the tabernacle and was to be separated from the rest of
the tabernacle by a veil. God commanded Moses to construct it as
such in these words:
"The veil shall separate for you the holy place from the most
holy. You shall put the mercy-seat upon the ark of the testimony
in the most holy place". Exodus 28.33-34.
God's transcendent holiness demanded that no access of any form
should be allowed to man in the Holy of Holies. A visible cloud
of glory by day and fire by night rested over the mercy-seat. On
only one occasion a year, on the Day of Atonement, the Jewish
high priest was allowed into the Holy of Holies to offer the
blood of a sacrifice for his own sins and the sins of his
people. (Aaron, the brother of Moses, was the first high priest.
He is named in the Qur'an Harun). It was only the blood of the
sacrifice, a symbol of atonement, which allowed the high priest
into the holiest portion. On all other occasions men were to
stay outside the Holy of Holies because men are sinners and no
sinner was allowed to stand before the presence of the Holy God
of Israel. The veil before the holiest place was a frank and
abiding reminder of the gulf and separation between God and his
people. Nevertheless it pleased God to reveal his glory among
his people in the centre of this shrine. God spoke of this holy
place as follows:
"There I will meet with the people of Israel, and it shall he
sanctified by my glory; I will consecrate the tent of meeting
and the altar; Aaron also and his sons I will consecrate, to
serve me as priests. And I will dwell among the people of
Israel, and will be their God". Exodus 29.43-45.
1. THE ORIGINAL TEMPLE OF SOLOMON.
When the Israelites came to Canaan (later known as Israel and
Palestine), this shrine remained with them and was at all times
the holiest place for the nation. During the succeeding
centuries it was housed in a tent at various places but the
prophet David, during his reign as King of Israel, decided to
ensure that a permanent structure would he built to house the
ark and the mercy-seat. God prevented him from building such a
shrine during his lifetime but promised that it would be built
by his son Solomon:
"When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your
fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, who shall
come forth from your body, and I will establish his kingdom. He
shall build a house for my name". 2 Samuel 7.12-13.
As soon as David died, Solomon became King of Israel. At the
beginning of his reign he declared:
"I purpose to build a house for the name of the Lord my God, as
the Lord said to David my father, 'Your son, whom I will set
upon your throne in your place, shall build the house for my
name'." 1 Kings 5.5 Solomon built a great Temple to house the
ark and mercy-seat. God promised that his divine presence would
continue to remain with the people of Israel in the Holy of
Holies which now became a cubic structure in the centre of the
Temple. This building was a magnificent edifice and was built
with gold, hewn stones and cedars from as far afield as Lebanon.
When it was completed Solomon ordered the chief priests to bring
the ark of the covenant to the Temple and it was, at his
command, placed in the most holy place in the centre of the
building (1 Kings 8.6). When the priests came out of this holy
place in the middle of the Temple,
"A cloud filled the house of the Lord, so that the priests could
not stand to minister because of the cloud; for the glory of the
Lord filled the house of the Lord." 1 Kings 8.10-11.
With great joy Solomon blessed God and praised him that his
divine presence was to be manifested henceforth in the Temple he
had built. He declared his joy in these words:
"I have built the house for the name of the Lord, the God of
Israel. And there I have provided a place for the ark, in which
is the covenant of the Lord which he made with our fathers when
he brought them out of the land of Egypt". 1 Kings 8. 20-21.
Immediately, conscious of the fact that however splendid his
Temple was, it could not possibly reflect the glory of God or
contain his eternal being, Solomon added this prayer:
"But will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven and the
highest heaven cannot contain thee; how much less this house
which I have built! Yet have regard to the prayer of thy servant
and to his supplication, 0 Lord my God, hearkening to the cry
and to the prayer which thy servant prays before thee this day;
that thy eyes may be open night and day toward this house, the
place of which thou hast said, 'My name shall be there', that
thou mayest hearken to the prayer which thy servant offers
toward this place. And hearken thou to the supplication of thy
servant and of thy people Israel, when they pray toward this
place; yea, hear thou in heaven thy dwelling place; and when
thou hearest, for give". 1 Kings 8.27-30.
In acknowledging God's omnipresence, Solomon nevertheless
expressed his desire that God should be honoured at this place
and that every Israelite, no matter where he might be, should
face toward the Temple when he prayed. In time the Temple became
not only the qiblah of the Jews but the centre of all their
major festivals as well. Sacrifices had previously been offered
only at the tabernacle and now could only be offered at the
Temple. Accordingly Jews flocked to Jerusalem at the major
feasts to offer the necessary sacrifices and draw near to God in
communal worship. God's presence was manifested in the Temple
and so it was proper for the Jews to face the building
containing his presence whenever they prayed to him.
Solomon's Temple lasted about three hundred and fifty years and
was finally destroyed when Jerusalem was sacked by the armies of
the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar (the incident is referred to
in the Qur'an in Surah 17.7). Judaism was no longer the
religion it had been in Solomon's time. Israel had turned her
back on the Lord and the people had opposed and rejected the
prophets he had sent to them. As a result of this tragic
national apostasy, God withdrew his presence from the Temple and
gave it over to the hands of Israel's enemies.
2. THE TEMPLE AT THE TIME OF CHRIST.
Even though Israel proved faithless, God remained faithful and
sixty years later the Temple was rebuilt. It probably did not
possess the grandeur of Solomon's Temple but was nevertheless
built on the same lines. Once again the Holy of Holies - a
cube-like structure -was constructed in the centre of the
Temple. God continued to show his favours to the nation of
Israel at this time and his presence remained in the Temple.
At this stage it will be useful to point out that God favoured
no other nation as he favoured this one. From the time of
Abraham, and especially from the tine of Moses until the time of
Jesus, the Jews alone were the recipients of his particular
providential favours. Therefore the Temple rightly became the
focal point of Judaism and no other nation on earth had a "house
of God" for it was here, and here alone, that the divine glory
was manifested. The Bible and the Qur'an have the following to
say about God's favours to this nation:
"To them belong the sonship, the glory, the covenants, the
giving of the law, the worship, and the promises; to them belong
the patriarchs, and of their race, according to the flesh, is
the Christ. Romans 9.4-5.
And verily We gave the Children of Israel the Scripture and the
Command and the Prophethood, and provided them with good things
and favoured them above all peoples. Surah 45.16
Accordingly the Temple was the only true "house of God" in the
world. The second Temple stood for nearly five hundred years.
Gradually, however, Israel forsook the path of God and apostasy
again infected the nation. On this occasion they did not turn to
idols hut abandoned spiritual worship and substituted it with
numerous religious formalities which had the form of godliness
but denied the spiritual power which these formalities were
intended to represent. They had their sacrifices, ablutions,
times of prayer, festival days, Temple worship and the like, but
true godliness - holiness, love, truth, humility and honesty in
the heart, had departed from them.
Shortly afterwards Herod, the King of Judea, decided to rebuild
the Temple. This new building took at least forty-six years to
complete and rivalled Solomon's in material splendour, but that
is as far as the comparison goes. No cloud of divine glory
filled this Temple. Once again the Holy of Holies with its veil
was erected and once again it stood as a testimony to the wide
separation that existed between the Holy God of the universe and
sinful men on earth.
But whereas the religion of Moses had been like a rich,
multi-coloured garment, being endowed with spiritual splendour,
the garment had by now become worn out. It had lost its colour
and Judaism had become a lifeless and colourless religion of
petty religious rituals and formalities. The covenant God had
made with Moses was practically obsolete and the Temple was
ready to pass away. Significantly this Temple was not built by a
faithful prophet of God but by a Gentile overlord who ruled over
the Jewish race.
About this time Jesus was born in Bethlehem which is near
Jerusalem. He lived for thirty-three years and the Temple had
much significance in his life and ministry as we shall see
shortly. Forty years after his ascension to heaven, however, the
Temple of the Jews was destroyed by the armies of the Roman
governor Titus. Not one stone was left standing upon another.
Although nineteen centuries have passed since then the Temple
has never been rebuilt. It never will be. It will never again be
a symbol of God's presence among men on earth. Something greater
has come (Matthew 12.6). By the mercy of God men have obtained a
better form of access to the divine presence and this access is
now available to all nations. Judaism lost its true nature and
is no longer the religion of God on earth. Both Islam and
Christianity claim to possess that which has superseded it. But
these two religions are so different in character and emphasis
that they cannot both be the possessors of the new covenant
Which one is in this age the final revelation of God to men? Let
us begin by examining the equivalent of the Temple in Islam,
namely the Ka'aba in Mecca, to see whether Islam offers that
final, complete form of access to God which replaced the Temple
of Judaism.
The Ka'aba of Islam
Anyone who has studied comparative religion cannot fail to be
struck by the similarities between the Temple of Judaism and the
Ka'aba of Islam. The photographs in this booklet show very
clearly the resemblances between them. Just as the Temple had a
large courtyard which was surrounded by porticoes, so the Haram
in Mecca has the same features. And in each case we find a cubic
structure in the centre (the very word "Ka'aba" means cube)
which in both religions appears as the holiest place on earth.
Furthermore, just as Jews came from all over the world to
worship at the Temple in Jerusalem, so Muslims come on
pilgrimage to Mecca to pray and worship in the Great Mosque in
the centre of the city.
Likewise, as Jews turned towards Jerusalem when they prayed (1
Kings 8.30) to unite in worship of the one true God, so all
Muslims face the Ka'aba in Mecca when they pray in accordance
with the teaching of the Qur'an (Surah 2.150). The function and
design of the Ka'aba in Mecca is so remarkably similar to the
Temple in Jerusalem that one cannot help but conclude that this
is not a coincidental phenomenon. Clearly there is a link
between them. Furthermore the forms of prayer and the fact of
pilgrimage in Islam today are practically a perpetuation of the
Jewish forms in pro-Christian times (though the actual rituals
of the pilgrimage resemble the pro-Islamic rites of the pagan
Meccans rather than the forms of worship at the Temple in
Jerusalem) .
1. ITS RELEVANCE TO SOLOMON'S TEMPLE.
The issue which we have to consider here is whether the Ka'aba
has in fact become, by God's appointment, the replacement of the
Temple in this age. The obvious similarities between them can
lead one initially to conclude that such a substitution has
indeed taken place, and to speculate whether God has, perhaps,
taken the true form of worship from the sons of Israel and
delivered it to the sons of Ishmael. Certainly the resemblances
between the two appear, at first sight, to give some support to
this contention.
Nevertheless, when the issue is considered in detail, and when
all the facts are carefully compared with one another, the only
possible conclusion that can be arrived at is that the Ka'aba,
on the contrary, is definitely not that which God has provided
as a better means of access to his presence than the Temple of
the Jews which stood in Jerusalem.
Firstly, the Qur'an does not claim that the Ka'aba, at the time
of the destruction of the Temple, became the centre of true
worship. It claims in fact that the Ka'aba was built before the
Temple by Abraham and his son Ishmael as a house of worship for
God (Surah 2.125-127). The Qur'an, in fact, alleges that from
the time of Abraham the Ka'aba became, by God's command, the
holiest place of worship on earth:
We made the house (at Mecca) a resort for mankind and a
sanctuary, (saying): Take as your place of worship the place
where Abraham stood (to pray). Surah 2.125
Nowhere in the Qur'an is it suggested that the Ka'aba replaced
the Temple as the true house of worship. While the Qur'an
acknowledges that the Temple was in fact the house of worship
for the Jews while God favoured them above all nations (Surah
17.7), it nevertheless claims that the Ka'aba was built before
it as the first sanctuary for mankind (Surah 3.96). Therefore it
cannot be claimed that at the time of the destruction of the
Temple God instituted the Ka'aba as the true place of worship on
earth. Such a sequence of preference is precluded by the
Qur'an's claim that the Ka'aba was in fact built before the
Temple. In fact we saw in the last chapter that the Temple,
during its history, was the only "house of God" on earth and
this fact seriously undermines the Qur'an's claim that the
Ka'aba was built by Abraham long before the first Temple was
ever built by his descendant Solomon.
Secondly, we find that when Muhammad first prayed in Medina his
qiblah was Jerusalem and not Mecca. He faced the site of the
Temple rather than the Ka'aba. (In addition to the mihrab
facing Mecca there is also a mihrab in one of the mosques in
Medina to this day giving Jerusalem as the qiblah in
commemoration of this fact). Indeed the Qur'an itself alleges
that Muhammad's decision to face Jerusalem was a result of God's
express command to this effect:
We appointed the qiblah which ye formerly observed. Surah 2.143
It was only as a result of the opposition in Medina from the
Jews that Muhammad changed his qiblah to Mecca. What is most
significant about this incident is that the Prophet of Islam
himself, nearly six hundred years after the destruction of the
Temple in Jerusalem, chose this place as his initial qiblah -
and that, according to the Qur'an, at God's command.
Furthermore he faced a place where no shrine stood. A bare piece
of ground which had supported the Temple centuries earlier was,
according to the Qur'an, preferred by God to the Ka'aba in
Mecca. This incident also seriously undermines the Qur'an's
suggestion that the Ka'aba was built by Abraham - if it was, why
did God command Muhammad to face Jerusalem? It also most
certainly shows that the Ka'aba did not replace the Temple. Even
though the Temple site had been derelict for centuries, the very
Prophet of Islam was commanded to prefer this place to the
Ka'aba in Mecca. If the Ka'aba had replaced the Temple,
assuredly no such command would have been given. The simple
answer would have been to face it right from the beginning as
the qiblah It cannot be suggested that God chose Jerusalem in
preference to Mecca simply because the Ka'aba was, at that
particular time, a shrine of idol-worship. For the command to
change the qiblah to Mecca in the Qur'an predates by many years
the conquest of Mecca. During all those years when Muhammad
faced Mecca, the Ka'aba remained a shrine of idol-worship.
Thirdly, secular history in no way supports the Qur'an's claim
that the Ka'aba was ever a place of monotheistic, non-idolatrous
worship. The first mention of the Ka'aba is found in the
writings of Diodorus Siculus who, about 60 BC, described it as a
"temple greatly revered by the Arabs". Accordingly the Ka'aba
dates back at least to before the time of Christ. But this fact
only helps to support the final conclusion we shall draw in this
chapter. It certainly does not in any way suggest that the
Ka'aba existed before the Jewish Temple. On the contrary, before
the time of Muhammad, the Ka'aba was only known as the principal
shrine of pagan idolatry of the Arab world in and around Mecca.
We do have clear evidence, however, that the Ka'aba is not of
monotheistic origin. We refer to the black stone built into its
east corner known as al-hajarul-aswad. Before Muhammad's time
the Arabs worshiped stones and the black stone was one of these
objects of worship. Not only was the kissing of this stone
incorporated into Islam, but the whole form of the Hajj
Pilgrimage today is fundamentally that of the Arabs before
Islam. Muhammad only changed the meaning of the formalities - he
made no attempt to change the forms and rites of the pilgrimage
themselves.
Some have suggested that stone-worship among the Arabs arose out
of veneration of the black stone, but this is highly improbable.
Any form of veneration of a dead stone - especially to the
extent of bowing down and kissing the stone - can only be
identified with pagan idolatry rather than pure monotheistic
worship. Even Umar was reluctant to imitate the pagan Arabs by
kissing the stone and only did so because he saw Muhammad do it.
But in our view Muhammad likewise was only perpetuating one of
the forms of Meccan idolatry and we cannot possibly see how
veneration of a form of idol-worship can be reconciled with the
worship of the one true God.
Secular history knows of only one form of pre-Islamic veneration
of the Ka'aba and that is the idolatry of the pagan Arabs. There
is no corroborative evidence whatsoever for the Qur'an's claim
that the Ka'aba was initially a house of monotheistic worship.
Instead there certainly is evidence as far back as history can
trace the origins and worship of the Ka'aba that it was
thoroughly pagan and idolatrous in content and emphasis.
Certainly in the six hundred-odd years between the destruction
of the Temple and the final conquest of Mecca the Ka'aba was
purely a shrine of thriving pagan idolatry. Therefore the
Ka'aba cannot have become the form and place of true worship in
God's providence when the Temple of the Jews was destroyed.
Fourthly, and most importantly, far from becoming a house of
greater spiritual worship than the Temple, the Ka'aba in fact,
and all the forms of worship around it, are positively of lessor
import and effect than those of the Temple. Within the Holy of
Holies the living, abiding presence of God was visibly
manifested, but no such claim has ever been made for the Ka'aba.
It is only a symbol of worship and has never been a place where
God's definite presence has been literally revealed. A
supernatural cloud overshadowed the Holy of Holies when it was
first built as a sign of God's living presence in the Temple,
but the Ka'aba can make no such claim for itself. Accordingly
its importance in Islam is decidedly loss than the Temple was in
Judaism. While the Ka'aba is called the "House of Allah"
(baitullah), the divine presence has never filled it as it did
the Temple. Pilgrims are in fact allowed into the Ka'aba when
the doors of the shrine are opened to them. Nevertheless we
have admitted that the form of worship around the Ka'aba is
linked to that of the Temple. But far from this being proof of
the divine origin of the Ka'aba, the only reasonable conclusion
that can be drawn is that the Ka'aba is in fact derived from the
Jewish Temple. It has never compared with the splendour of the
Temple but is remarkably similar to it in design and size. The
form is repeated but not the splendour - this argues strongly
for imitation. It is extremely likely that Arab proselytes to
Judaism (there were many) spoke intensely favourably of the
Temple when it existed and that the sons of Ishmael in Arabia
felt it would be appropriate to construct a similar shrine to
that ordained by God for the sons of Israel. This suggestion is
strongly supported by the evidence that the Ka'aba existed
before the Temple was destroyed in 70 AD.
Similar shrines existed all over Arabia at the time of Muhammad.
One still stands at the al-Kabir mosque in Yemen. It is
strikingly similar to the Ka'aba in Mecca.
In considering the chronology of God's dealings with mankind,
one can only conclude that the worship which centres around the
Ka'aba is at best merely an imitation of that which focused on
the Temple. But although this worship resembles some of the
forms of Jewish worship (for example, facing the shrine in
prayer), it has far more similarities with the pagan rituals of
the Quraish prior to Islam. In any event what it does not have
is a manifestation of the divine glory confirming the presence
of God himself as the Temple had. Therefore, far from being a
replacement or substitution, it in fact lacks the very thing
that gave the Temple its marvelous significance. The divine
presence - a living reality - is not there. Accordingly we must
reject the suggestion that the Ka'aba, and with it Islam,
provides the fulfilment of that which the Temple foreshadowed.
Instead of providing a superior and bettor form of access to
God, it in fact provides no access to him at all and is inferior
to the structure which stood in Jerusalem. The former shrine had
at least a manifestation of God's presence among the people,
oven though they could not obtain access to him within the Holy
of Holies, but the Ka'aba has never enjoyed a revelation of the
actual presence of God within its walls.
It was at the time of Jesus Christ that the divine presence left
the Temple in Jerusalem. Judaism lost its exclusive
identification with God but the whole of mankind - Israel
included - gained a better form of access to God. Lot us now
proceed to examine the life of Jesus, particularly those events
and sayings of his which affected the Temple, to discover
precisely how and where the whole human race has, in this age,
gained this far greater access to the presence of God himself.
The Christ of God
Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea in the days of Herod the
King. At the time of his birth the new Temple was being built in
Jerusalem. Although it was being constructed under the auspices
of a foreign ruler, it nevertheless conformed to the pattern of
the original Temple and was accordingly a proper representation
of the House of God in Israel. No prophet of God could
disassociate himself and his ministry from the Temple of God and
therefore we must expect to find some connection between Jesus
and the Temple during his life on earth.
1. JESUS AND THE TEMPLE.
Shortly after Jesus was born he was brought to the Temple by his
mother Mary and her husband Joseph to be dedicated in accordance
with the law of the Lord (Luke 2.22). Every year thereafter his
family visited the Temple in Jerusalem to observe the annual
Passover festival (Luke 2.41). Nothing unusual happened at these
feasts until Jesus was twelve years old. On this occasion ho
stayed behind in Jerusalem when the feast was ended. It was
customary for all the children to mix freely in the company of
those who wont up to the feast and it was only after a day's
journey that Joseph and Mary discovered ho was missing. They
returned to Jerusalem and after three days they found him in
discussion with the Jewish teachers and scribes in the Temple.
Those men marcelled at his knowledge of the law of God for it
was not to be expected that a young boy would have such an
intimate knowledge of the law.
His mother, however, was distraught after searching for him for
three days and she said to him:
"Son, why have you treated us so? Behold, your father and I have
been looking for you anxiously". Luke 2.48.
Joseph, however, was not really the father of Jesus and his
mother Mary knew only too well that she had conceived her son
while she was still a virgin. Accordingly Jesus met this
ill-considered reproof of his action with those words:
"How is it that you sought me? Did you not know that I must be
in my Father's house?" Luke 2.49
He expressed his wonder that Joseph and Mary had not sought for
him right from the start in the Temple of God for it was, in his
own words, "my Father's house". Mary should have remembered what
the angel said to her when she first conceived him, namely:
"He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High ...
therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son
of God". Luke 1. 32,35.
Two things, however, must be noticed in this incident. Firstly,
Jesus identified himself with the Temple at a very young ago and
identified it as the "House of God". Secondly, he described it
as "my Father's house" - something he was to do again twenty
years later (John 2.16). By this we must of necessity conclude
that God was, in a very real and eternal sense, the true Father
of Jesus Christ.
The next connection that Jesus had with the Temple was during
the forty days that he fasted in the wilderness of Judea after
he was baptised. At the end of this period Satan tempted him no
less than three times to turn away from the path God has chosen
for him. One of those three temptations related directly to the
Temple in Jerusalem:
Then the devil took him to the holy city, and sot him on the
pinnacle of the Temple, and said to him, "If you are the Son of
God, throw yourself down; for it is written, 'He will give his
angels charge of you' and 'On their hands they will bear you up,
lest you strike your foot against a stone'." Jesus said to him,
"Again it is written, 'You shall not tempt the Lord your
God'." Matthew 4.5-7.
Satan knew who Jesus was. Having heard Jesus describe the Temple
as "my Father's house" and having also heard God describe him as
"my beloved Son" at his recent baptism (Matthew 3.17), ho now
tempted him to prove to all the Jews gathered at the Temple that
God was indeed his Father. Satan tried to persuade him to stand
on the Holy of Holies and jump down in the sight of all Israel;
for surely, if God was his Father, he would send his angels to
save him lest he injured himself in the fall. If this were to
happen, surely all the Jews would fall at his feet and
acknowledge, in the very precincts of the Temple of God, that he
was indeed the Son of God.
Jesus resisted the temptation and refused to yield to Satan's
suggestion. This incident tells us much about the condition of
the Temple at the time of Jesus. There must have been something
radically wrong with the worship around it for the devil to
incite Jesus to obtain by spectacular means the honour and
obeisance of the Jews who were gathered there in that worship.
If the people had been drawn to the Temple through a deep
spiritual desire to worship God in spirit and in truth and to
have fellowship with one another in the knowledge of God, the
last thing Satan would have wanted was the discovery by the Jews
that Jesus was indeed the Messiah they had long awaited. On the
contrary we must presume, from the fact that Satan did
everything in his power to persuade Jesus to reveal himself
publicly as the Messiah in the Temple precincts, that the
religion of Judaism had largely become false and that their
worship at the Temple no longer focused spiritually on God but
in fact had become contrary to the purpose of God which was to
draw all men in true worship to himself. Quite obviously the
Jews had turned away from him even though they outwardly still
conformed to the prescribed pattern of the Temple worship.
That this was indeed the case is clear from an event that took
place on the very next occasion that the Passover feast took
place in Jerusalem. Jesus went up to the feast and immediately
reacted to the rituals and practices taking place in the
Temple:
In the temple he found those who were selling oxen and sheep and
pigeons and the money-changers at their business. And making a
whip of cords, he drove them all, with the sheep and the oxen,
out of the temple; and he poured out the coins of the
money-changers and overturned their tables. And ho told those
who sold the pigeons, "Take these things away; you shall not
make my Father's house a house of trade". John 2.14-16.
Far from approving of the worship at the Temple, ho displayed
his utter opposition to what was taking place. God's house was
meant to be a house of worship but they had made it a market for
secular trading. The chief priests had transformed the Temple
into a place of mercantile objectives. They sought only to
obtain wealth at the expense of the many pilgrims who came
regularly to Jerusalem to worship and observe the feasts.
Jesus cleansed the Temple as a sign that the true worship of God
in future was to be revealed in his ministry. We can see now why
he resisted Satan's temptation. When he finally came to the
Temple, far from seeking to draw the honour and praises of the
Jews to himself, he in fact opposed them to their faces and, by
his actions, showed that he disapproved entirely of what was
passing for the worship of God in its precincts.
Once again he described the Temple as "my Father's house". While
he reverenced it as such, he displayed an open abhorrence of the
affairs of the Temple which were supposedly being conducted in
the name of God. A few years later, when he repeated this
action, ho accused the Jews of making the Temple "a den of
robbers" (Matthew 21.13).
As was to be expected the Jews took strong exception to this
action. On the first occasion they asked him what sign ho had to
show them that ho acted on authority from God in entering the
Temple and behaving as if he were the Lord of it. Jesus answered
then:
"Destroy this Temple and in three days I will raise it up". John 2.19
The Jews marcelled at this statement. They declared that it had
taken forty-six years to build the Temple and were amazed at his
suggestion that ho could rebuild it within three days. But Jesus
had not spoken of the Temple building. One of his disciples,
who records this incident, tells us:
He spoke of the temple of his body. John 2.21
Yet, by describing it as "this temple" immediately after ho had
driven the money-changers out of the Temple building, it is no
wonder that the Jews took his statement to refer to the building
itself. This identification of his body with the Temple building
was not coincidental, however, but was deliberately implied in
his reply to the Jews. Henceforth the true Temple of God was no
longer to be the building in Jerusalem but the person of Christ
himself. From this moment onwards Jesus drew a clear distinction
between himself and the Temple and many incidents in his life
show that Jesus himself had become the new focus of true worship
and had replaced the Temple as the meeting-place of God with
men.
When Jesus left Judea to return to Galilee he passed by Jacob's
well in Samaria which was not far from a town called Sychar (in
what is known as the "west bank" of the Jordan river today). In
this province lived a people who had a mixed ancestry, part of
which was Jewish. They held that as the prophet Jacob had
worshipped on Mount Gerizim, and not at the site of the Temple
in Jerusalem, so they should do likewise. When a Samaritan woman
asked Jesus which of the two was indeed the true place of
worship, he replied:
"Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this
mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father. You
worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for
salvation is from the Jews. But the hour is coming, and now is,
when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and
truth, for such the Father seeks to worship him. God is spirit,
and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth".
John 4. 21-24.
Be plainly told her that the hour had now come when the Temple
in Jerusalem would no longer be the focus of worship. In his
answer ho clearly implied that no place on earth would fulfil
this function. Now that Jesus had come, the situation was to be
changed. His advent at this time heralded the new age when
worship was to be directed not towards a place on earth (for
example, Gerizim, Jerusalem or Mecca) but spiritually towards
God in heaven.
On another occasion, when Jesus was reproved by the Jewish
leaders for allowing his disciples to pluck heads of grain in
his presence on the Sabbath, he replied:
"Have you not read in the law how on the sabbath the priests in
the temple profane the sabbath, and are guiltless? I tell you,
something greater than the temple is hero". Matthew 12.5-6.
If God allowed the priests to perform functions on the sabbath
which appeared to profane the day, and were not censured by God
even when this was done right in his presence in the Temple, so
likewise the disciples were free from blame before God when they
plucked these heads of grain on the sabbath in the presence of
Jesus and were not reproved by him. Clearly Jesus was portraying
himself as the replacement of the Temple and as the centre of
the abiding presence of God among men. Something greater than
the Temple was now here in the person of Jesus and we shall
shortly see why this was indeed the case and how it came to
pass.
A climax was reached when Jesus took his three closest disciples
up a high mountain and was transfigured before them. His
garments became white as light and his face shone like the sun.
A bright cloud overshadowed him and a voice from heaven said:
"This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased;
listen to him". Matthew 17.5
Centuries earlier this bright cloud of glory had settled in the
Holy of Holies in the tabernacle (Surah 2.57) and then in the
same chamber in the Temple as a sign of God's real presence in
the shrine. Now it settled above the person of Jesus as a
manifestation of God's presence in him and as a proof of the
fact that from henceforth God's presence and favour were only to
be found in Jesus. All prayers and worship were from this time
forth to be offered in his name and he had therefore become the
"qiblah" rather than the Temple.
As he stood in the Temple for the last time at the end of his
ministry, Jesus was deeply moved in spirit and foresaw the
demise of this great building as the place where God was to be
identified with his people on earth. Jesus declared to the
multitude:
"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killing the prophets and stoning those
who are sent to you! How often would I have gathered your
children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings,
and you would not! Behold, your house is forsaken and desolate.
For I tell you, you will not see me again, until you say,
'Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord'."
Matthew 23.37-39.
Immediately afterwards, as he withdrew from the Temple for the
last time, he said to his disciples of the buildings in the
Temple:
"Truly I say to you, there will not be left here one stone upon
another". Matthew 24.2
With these words Jesus pronounced God's judgement on the Temple.
It was forsaken and desolate. For centuries the Jews had opposed
the prophets God had sent to them and had practised a false
worship around the Temple. Forty years later the Temple was duly
destroyed by the Roman armies under Titus and so it no longer
represented the presence of God among men.
2. THE ONE MEDIATOR BETWEEN GOD AND MEN.
Jesus had become instead, in his own person, the centre of true
religion on earth. The Temple had merely foreshadowed and
anticipated his coming but he, ultimately, is the identification
and focus of worship between God and men. The purpose of praying
towards the Temple and of pilgrimages to its feasts within its
precincts was a way by which God through Christ had sought to
draw the worship of the Jews towards himself. But even when
Jesus himself stood among them in human form they opposed and
rejected him. Their religion centred on the Temple but not on
him. In distinguishing between Christ and the Temple, and by
preferring the latter to him, the Jews lost the knowledge of God
for it is in Jesus alone that the divine presence is ultimately
revealed to men and through him alone that men can obtain access
to God. Therefore he told them that their Temple was forsaken
and that they would not in any way rediscover the path of access
to God until they found it in him and admitted that he was
indeed their Messiah and that the divine presence was henceforth
to be manifested in him alone.
But how is this access obtained through Jesus to God? We must
return to his saying, "Destroy this Temple and in three days I
will raise it up" to find the answer to this vital question. Two
days after Jesus pronounced God's judgement on the Temple he was
arrested and put on trial before the Jewish leaders. Of all his
sayings this one remained foremost in their minds. Two witnesses
came forward and said:
"This follow said, 'I am able to destroy the Temple of God and
to build it in three days'." Matthew 26.61
But Jesus had said nothing of destroying the Temple himself.
What he did say was that when they destroyed it ho would raise
it in three days - and by this he meant his own body as we have
already seen. When they sentenced him to death and obtained
permission to crucify him the following day, the sign Jesus had
promised them was about to be fulfilled before their very own
eyes. By having him crucified they were themselves destroying
the temple of his body. Nevertheless, even as he hung on the
cross others said:
"You who would destroy the temple and build it in three days,
save yourself! If you are the Son of God, come down from the
cross". Matthew 27.40
Jesus, however, intended to fulfil this prophecy in a far
greater way than by coming down from the cross. He hung on the
cross for reasons unknown to these scorners. Without realising
it, by their efforts to have him put to death they were helping
to fulfil his prediction. As ho died on the cross a remarkable
thing happened:
The curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom.
Matthew 27.51
The veil in the Temple which had for centuries signified that a sharp
separation existed between God and mankind was torn from the top as
an earthquake shook Jerusalem, signifying that God, from above, had
torn down the barrier between men and himself through the death
of his Son Jesus Christ on the cross. Jesus had died on the
cross not because ho could not save himself but to save others
from their sins. Three days later God raised him from the dead
to fulfil the prophecy and sign ho had given to the Jews. He
had overcome death and had conquered the power of sin. He had
bridged the separation between God and men and forty days later
ho ascended to the very presence of his Father in heaven above.
Ten days later the Holy Spirit descended from heaven in visible
form, not into the Temple, hut into the very hearts of the
disciples who had gathered in Jerusalem to wait for this event.
Something greater than the Temple was indeed hero. By faith in
Jesus his disciples gained direct access to God by the fact that
the Holy Spirit came, not into a forbidden part of the Temple,
hut right into their very own hearts. Until Jesus comes again
men will only be saved and obtain access to God through faith in
him. It is God's plan to unite all things in him - things in
heaven and things on earth (Ephesians 1.10). This indeed was
that which motivated Jesus to endure the cross far by this means
he ensured that the last prayer he offered for his disciples
would be answered:
"I do not pray for those only, but also for those who believe in
me through their word, that they may all be one; even as thou,
Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they may also be in us,
so that the world may believe that thou hast sent me."
John 17.20-21.
Instead of facing the Temple and making pilgrimages to
Jerusalem, Jesus desired, by his abiding presence in heaven, to
draw men through himself directly to God in true spiritual
worship. The Christian has no Temple or Ka'aba, no holy place on
earth. Instead ho has in heaven one who has gone before him
right into the presence of God; and a holy city in the heavens
ready to be revealed at the last time. The Christian has within
himself, through the Holy Spirit which is given to him, direct
access to God in heaven. Christ is in him and ho is in Christ.
By this profound mystery, ho is actually represented in Christ
who beholds and shares the glory of his Father without measure -
and who has promised that that glory will be ours as well when
he returns to earth at the end of time (John 17.24).
The torn veil was an everlasting sign that the death and
resurrection of Jesus had broken down the barrier between God
and men. Although the Temple had been a sign of God's presence
in Israel, its stone walls and veil were really a reminder of
God's absence from man. Only the High Priest could enter the
Holy of Holies once a year and then only with the blood of a
sacrifice as a symbol of atonement. That symbol was fulfilled
through the death of Jesus on the cross. Through him all true
Christians have access beyond the veil to God himself.
For Christ has entered, not into a sanctuary made with hands, a
copy of the true one, but into heaven itself, now to appear in
the presence of God on our behalf. Hebrews 9.24
When the Temple was destroyed it was a permanent proof of the
fact that the barrier between God and man was forever broken
down. The Jew could travel all the way to Jerusalem on
pilgrimage but he could only touch the stones of the building.
He could not obtain direct access to God. But in Jesus, no
matter where he may be, the Christian has this access right into
the presence of God's temple in heaven.
For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father.
Ephesians 2.18.
Therefore Christianity indeed possesses that which replaced the
Temple. This shrine was laid low at the time of Jesus to allow for
a far better form of access to God. We look not to a house of stone
made with hands but to a living person like ourselves who is seated
on our behalf at the right hand of the very presence of God in heaven.
Jesus, in heaven, is indeed our "qiblah" All we do or pray is
done in his name.
This shows that the Ka'aba is not relevant to God's dealings
with man in this age. The Ka'aba, in its resemblances to the
Temple, is only a symbol of the barrier that once existed
between God and man - and also a symbol, perhaps, of the gulf
that still exists between God and those that have not
experienced renewal and access to him through faith in Jesus.
Like the Jews before them, the Muslims can only touch stones;
but in Jesus Christ we have access, through the Spirit he has
given us, directly to God our Father in heaven. No cloud of
glory filled or settled on the Ka'aba when Muhammad had all its
idols destroyed after the conquest of Mecca.
The glory of God had settled on the Temple when Solomon
dedicated it to God and later upon Jesus himself when he was
transfigured but no such thing happened when Muhammad
consecrated the Ka'aba for the worship of Islam. The glory of
God, instead, will forever be vested in Jesus Christ and will be
manifested again when Jesus returns at the end of time. This
glory is also available to all who turn to God through faith in
him. When he is revealed in all his glory, then the righteous
too will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father
(Matthew 13.43). For this reason Jesus declared in the Temple
itself on the great day of the Feast of Tabernacles:
"If any one thirst, let him come to me and drink". John 7.37
We look, not to buildings made with stone on earth, but to the
best of qiblahs, a living Saviour who has given us direct access
to God, Jesus Christ himself. In the words of Peter, one of the
closest disciples of Jesus, we appeal to all Muslims:
Come to him, to that living stone, rejected by men but in God's
sight chosen and precious. 1 Peter 2.4-5.
In him, Jesus our Lord, salvation, forgiveness of sins, the
knowledge of God, the assured hope of glory and the
indescribable anticipation of eternal life are vested. He alone
is the "living" stone, in him alone will men ever find access to
the living God of heaven.
There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name
under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.
Acts 4.12.
Will you not forsake vain things which cannot profit or save by
turning away from rites and ceremonies which concentrate on
stones and other lifeless objects and turn instead to the living
way which brings eternal life? Will you not turn to him, to
Jesus Christ, and so become a partaker of the glory that is to
be revealed? Will you not submit your whole life to him and
follow him as your Lord and Saviour? He is alive in heaven and
is ready to receive you now. Will you not commit yourself to him
and receive the living Spirit of God which he is willing to pour
into your heart?
Books by John Gilchrist
Answering Islam Home Page