3 Days Until Israel! - AWESOME TEMPLE Model in ISRAEL MUSEUM - Jesus Clears Out the Temple!

ONLY 3 DAYS UNTIL ISRAEL! - The TEMPLE MODEL in ISRAEL MUSEUM! - The second temple was enlarged by King Herod, who took the original mountain that the temple was on, built it up with dirt, and built retaining walls to enlarge the area into a huge platform--24 football fields worth, making it the largest man made platform the world has ever seen. Then he enlarged the temple itself, and covered it with gold, making it one of the great architectural wonders of the ancient world. A fantastic 1:50 scale model of the Second Temple is found today in the Israel Museum, which we will film.


Note this article on King Herod's Temple and its massive scale:

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Why did [King Herod] make the Temple Mount so large?

There's no question that Herod had a huge ego and liked to impress people with grandiose building projects. But there is also another more practical reason. Historians estimate that there were about 6-7 million Jews living in the Roman Empire (plus another 1 million in Persia), many of whom would come to Jerusalem for the three pilgrimage festivals: Passover, Shavuot and Sukkot. So you had to have a huge space to accommodate such a huge number of people. Hence the size of the platform.

When it came to building the Temple itself on top of this platform, Herod truly outdid himself, and even the Talmud acknowledges that the end-result was spectacular. "He who has not seen Herod's building, has never in his life seen a truly grand building." (Talmud-Bava Basra 4a)

The Holy of Holies was covered in gold; the walls and columns of the other buildings were of white marble; the floors were of carrara marble, its blue tinge giving the impression of a moving sea of water; the curtains were tapestries of blue, white, scarlet and purple thread, depicting, according to Josephus, "the whole vista of the heavens."

Josephus describes how incredible it looked:

 Viewed from without, the Sanctuary had everything that could amaze either mind or eyes. Overlaid all round with stout plates of gold, the first rays of the sun it reflected so fierce a blaze of fire that those who endeavored to look at it were forced to turn away as if they had looked straight at the sun. To strangers as they approached it seemed in the distance like a mountain covered with snow; for any part not covered with gold was dazzling white... (The Jewish War, p. 304)

 

Herod saw fit however, to place at the main entrance a huge Roman eagle, which the pious Jews saw as a sacrilege. A group of Torah students promptly smashed this emblem of idolatry and oppression, but Herod had them hunted down, dragged in chains to his residence in Jericho, where they were burned alive.

Having built the Temple, Herod took pains to make sure it would be run without future problems of this kind. He appointed his own High Priest, having by then put to death forty-six leading members of the Sanhedrin, the rabbinical court.

When the Romans came in to destroy Jerusalem in 70 C.E., they totally destroyed the temple, as Jesus had predicted (Mt. 24:2). However, part of the retaining wall remained, which is the Western Wall, or Wailing where Jews still gather around to pray today.

The Western Wall

JESUS GOES TO THE TEMPLE.
Upon entering Jerusalem in the "Triumphant Entry" (Mt. 21), Jesus goes to the temple. As the Messiah, he was a priest as well as a king, and the temple was the dwelling place of his heavenly father. This entrance would mark the beginning of a dramatic confrontation with the religious authorities who ran the temple. Jesus does the following:

  1. Jesus cleanses the temple (Mt. 21:12-13). The temple was where people came to offer sacrifices for their sins. They would give an animal to the priest, and he would sacrifice the animal and offer it up to God. If a person did not have an animal, he would purchase one. For those who came to the temple from out of town, they would have to change money first to buy the animal. Jesus was upset that this business was being conducted in the temple itself, which was supposed to be a place of prayer, not a “den of thieves.” He drove out everyone who was buying and selling in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the moneychangers.

  2. Jesus heals in the temple (Mt. 21:14-17). After cleansing the temple, all of the blind and lame come to Jesus to be healed. By caring for these unfortunate people, Jesus turns the temple into what it was supposed to be—a place of healing. How would the religious authorities respond? 15 But when the chief priests and the teachers of the law saw the wonderful things he did and the children shouting in the temple courts, “Hosanna to the Son of David,” they were indignant (Mt. 21:15).

  3. Jesus teaches in the temple (Mt. 21:23-27). In the past, Jesus had spent most of his time teaching out in the countryside and in villages. Now he was claiming his right as the Son of God to teach in the temple itself—the domain of the religious leaders. They try to challenge his authority, but they cannot answer any of the religious questions that he asks them.

  4. Jesus pronounces judgment in the temple (Mt. 21:33-46). Jesus tells a parable about a vineyard owner who rented out his land and went away on a long journey. When the harvest time came, the owner sent his servants to collect the fruit, but the tenants killed each servant that he sent. Finally, he sent his son, but they killed him too. The point of the parable was that religious leaders did not own the temple—they were tenants. They and their forefathers had killed God’s servants that he had sent. Now they would kill God’s son too. Jesus concluded the parable by saying, 43“Therefore I tell you that the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit” (Mt. 21:43).

Matthew says that "45 When the chief priests and the Pharisees heard Jesus’ parables, they knew he was talking about them. 46 They looked for a way to arrest him, but they were afraid of the crowd because the people held that he was a prophet" (Mt. 21:45-46). Hostilities would just grow.

All of the religious leaders come after Jesus, trying to trip him up with questions. The Pharisees and the Herodians ask him whether they ought to pay taxes--never a popular subject, and something that funded all of Herod's building projects. The Pharisees ask tricky hypothetical questions about the resurrection. The experts in the law asked him what the greatest command was. And in every case, Jesus had an answer. And then he asked them questions that they could not answer, making them look foolish and showing Jesus to be the superior teacher so that "no one dared to ask him anymore questions" (Mt. 22:46).

Then Jesus just goes off on the teachers of the law and the Pharisees, calling them hypocrites and a "brood of vipers"--a bunch of snakes--doing his best John the Baptist imitation (Mt. 23). Then feeling particularly prophetic, he said to his disciples, who were gawking at the buildings, “Do you see all these things?” he asked. “Truly I tell you, not one stone here will be left on another; every one will be thrown down" (Mt. 25:2).

Now this must have been shocking, because these stones were absolutely huge and went up 9 stories high! 
They had taken years to build, and Jesus said that they would all be torn down. The disciples, of course, want to know when this would be. And Jesus tells them several things to watch for in the destruction of Jerusalem that would happen in 70 C.E. It would be a destruction so bad that it was as if the world were ending. But Jesus said the actual time of the end of the world and his second coming, no one knows--not even himself--but only God the father. He just says, be ready for this ready. 

Then Matthew records,

When Jesus had finished saying all these things, he said to his disciples, “As you know, the Passover is two days away—and the Son of Man will be handed over to be crucified.”

Then the chief priests and the elders of the people assembled in the palace of the high priest, whose name was Caiaphas, and they schemed to arrest Jesus secretly and kill him" (Mt. 26:1-3).

They would soon have a chance to arrest and kill Jesus due to the betrayal by one of Jesus' own disciples (Mt. 26:14f).

The events at the temple all led up to Jesus' death. 

Which of the above actions by Jesus do you think would have most angered the religious leaders? What can we learn about God's values from Jesus' actions in the temple?

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