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Good_Fella
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Two temples have been built on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The first one was built about 3,000 years ago by King Solomon and was destroyed by the armies of Nebuchadnezzar in 586 B.C… The second temple was built by Zerubbabel in the years 520-516 B.C., and was destroyed by the Romans in 70 A.D… The Ark of the Covenant was God’s sacred dwelling place and the physical point where God visibly manifested himself to his people. The temple on the mount was also God’s sacred dwelling place, although it hadn’t permanently been. The point where God first became visible in the world in the flesh - not a physical cloud - was Mary’s womb the moment she conceived Jesus by the Holy Spirit. Her womb was no less a holy and personal dwelling place for God than the temple was. So it really makes no difference how long God dwelled in the temple or Mary’s womb with respect to the ark. Both places held God’s presence just as the ark had. But unlike the temple, Mary held the presence of God in the flesh: the divine Word, High Priest in the order of Melchizedek, and the true manna and bread of life come down from heaven, so that physically God could manifest himself to his people.In one case the Word is carried for but a short time (9 months) and in the other case the few words of God are to be carried permanently. …
Exodus 24:1-4 relates how before Moses had ascended Mount Sinai a second time he went up a first time where he was enlightened by God. After he descended he taught the people what he had learned and instructed them (the oral Torah). It was afterwards that he received the Ten Commandments from God which were written by Him (Exodus 24:12-13). Moses then wrote the first Torah scroll in parts during the 40 years the Jews had wandered in the desert. Here we mean Torah in its broadest sense as the entire body of Jewish law and teachings. What is known as the Book of the Law was placed by the side of the ark as a testimony against the people (Deut 31:26). While the original 10 commandments were kept inside the ark, what was written on the stone tablets was also written and placed beside the ark to accompany the 613 laws of the Torah which the priest needed access to for instructing the people. God commanded Moses to write everything down - laws, statutes, ordinances, and commands - together with what He himself would write in the form of the 10 commands to be given to Israel as divine commandments in a single body as a covenant between God and his chosen people. They were all kept in the Holy of Holies in the temple. And even today all the Torah scrolls are kept in the Holy Ark (Aron Kodesh) with the Ten Commandments - the holiest place in the synagogue, situated at the front and facing Jerusalem.Why not observe that the ark of the Old Covenant contained some words of God written in stone and Christ was the Word of God?..so as to make the Ark/Jesus connection.
Jesus is not speaking metaphorically when he says:In one case actual manna/bread was contained (permanently) and in the other case only metaphorical bread was involved (temporarily) …Why not observe that the ark of the Old Covenant contained manna and Christ was the bread of life so as to make the Ark/Jesus connection.
“I am the bread of life,” “I am the living bread that came down from heaven,” “Whoever eats of this bread will live forever,” “The Bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh,” “Very truly, I tell you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you,” “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life,” “For my flesh is true food, and my blood true drink.”
If we are going with this type of forced connection, why not use: Jesus was like us in all things but sin as David was.in one case a wood rod was contained and in the other case a future priest was contained…if we are going with this type of forced connection, then why not use: The ark was carried on two wood poles and Jesus was hung on two wood poles …which would make Christ the ark.
Jesus and the Father are one. The same can’t be said for the ark. Paul of Samosata might agree with you, because he taught an advanced form of Dynamic Monarchianism. He believed Jesus was a mere man born of the Virgin Mary by the Holy Spirit; the Logos or wisdom of God was an impersonal quality of God that formed and dwelled within Jesus, but remained distinct in essence.The ark also had a gold cover and between the angels on that cover is where God would meet with Moses. Jesus, the Word made flesh is how God met with people to establish his new covenant. If anything, these connections IMHO make a better case for Jesus being the new ark rather than Mary.
PAX