Soā¦it could have been stolen. Simple greed. A master heist that occurred 2600 years ago.
FWIW the face of the Second Temple- the inner sanctuary building- was gold-plated. To be taken off when needed.
The statue of Athena in the Parthenon was also gold-plated with removable plates should the city need the extra cash.
I donāt know. Even if we suppose that the Ark was destroyed to get the gold out of it (it was a wooden box overlaid with gold, supposedly - it is the lid that is pure gold), Iād doubt the motivation would be mere greed - somebody just wanted to have some extra cash.
See, Davidās legitimacy was bound up with his role as caretaker of the Ark: the Ark was apparently seen as conferring the divine seal of approval to the Davidic dynasty. The reason why David and Solomon were too keen about the box is that they used it to legitimize their reign. (It was especially necessary for them: David, because he could be seen as an usurper who sneakily took the kingship from Saulās line, and Solomon, because he was not the eldest son, and David had other sons who normally would have taken precedence.) Under normal circumstances I doubt the king of Judah would have allowed anyone, even the priests, to do anything to the Ark, because itās the symbol of their divine right to rule.
2 Chronicles claims that the Ark still existed during the time of King Josiah (c. 649-609 BC), because the book claims that Josiah ordered the Ark to be returned to the temple. (35:3: āAnd he said to the Levites who taught all Israel and who were holy to the Lord, āPut the holy ark in the house which Solomon the son of David, king of Israel, built; you need no longer carry it upon your shoulders. Now serve the Lord your God and his people Israel.āā)
If thatās historical, that would mean that the possible time for the Ark to be lost would be limited to the last four kings of Judah: Jehoahaz (609 BC), Jehoiakim (609-598 BC), Jeconiah, Zedekiah.
I suggested the Ark being used to pay a foreign debt idea in a tongue-in-cheek way, but supposing that weāre gonna take that seriously, you could make some case for it. (Note: Iām not claiming this is what really happened, or even that this is what I think happened. This is just a āwhat ifā-type of exercise.) For example, Jehoiakim. Jehoiakim ruled originally as a vassal of the Egyptians and paid a heavy tribute (one talent of gold and one hundred talents of silver): āHe exacted the silver and the gold from the people of the land, from all according to their assessment, to give it to Pharaoh Neco.ā (2 Kings 23:33-35)
But then, the Egyptians were defeated by the Babylonians at Carchemish in 605 BC and Nebuchadnezzar II laid siege to Jerusalem (604 BC). So Jehoiakim quickly changed sides and redirected his payment of tribute from Egypt to Babylon. He was a vassal of the Babylonians for three years; then, when their control of the area weakened (due to the Babyloniansā failure to conquer Egypt), Jehoiakim sided with the Egyptians again in 601 BC. This time, Nebuchadnezzar laid siege to Jerusalem again (598 BC). Jehoiakim died during the siege (his body was thrown outside the city walls); he was succeeded by his son Jeconiah (aka Jehoiachin, December 9, 598-March 15/16, 597 BC), but Nebuchadnezzar deposed Jeconiah and installed Zedekiah (597-587/6 BC), Jehoiakimās younger brother, as king in his place, again levying a tax on the city before leaving.
In the accession year Nebuchadnezzar went back again to the Hatti-land and until the month of Å abatunote [early 604] marched unopposed through the Hatti-land; in the month of Å abatu he took the heavy tribute of the Hatti-territory to Babylon.
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In the first year of Nebuchadnezzar [604/603] in the month of Simanunote he mustered his army and went to the Hatti-territory, he marched about unopposed in the Hatti-territory until the month of Kislîmu [end of 604]. All the kings of the Hatti-land came before him and he received their heavy tribute. He marched to the city of AŔkelon and captured it in the month of Kislîmu. He captured its king and plundered it and carried off spoil from it. He turned the city into a mound and heaps of ruins and then in the month of Šabatunote he marched back to Babylon.
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In the seventh year [598/597], the month of KislƮmu, the king of Akkad mustered his troops, marched to the Hatti-land, and besieged the city of Judah and on the second day of the month of Addarunote he seized the city and captured the king = Jehoiachin]. He appointed there a king of his own choice = Zedekiah], received its heavy tribute and sent to Babylon. (
Nebuchadnezzar Chronicle, Obv. 12-13, 15-20; Rev. 11-13)
Zedekiah would the last king of Judah before Jerusalem was destroyed for good in 587/6 BC.
So if youāre going to ask me, the Ark may have been lost, if not during one of the Babylonian sieges (used as payment for the tax imposed by Nebuchadnezzar?), then probably somewhere in Jehoiakimās reign. Who knows? Maybe he
did use the Ark for his payments of tribute to Egypt and Babylon. One guess is as good as another.
