Myth of the Lost Ark fuels pride of a nation on brink of war

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An international boundary commission ruled three years ago that Ethiopia must relinquish to Eritrea some isolated patches of arid land. But Ethiopia spurned the verdict. If the two countries go to war, Ethiopia’s national pride will be the cause.

The supposed presence in Axum of Christendom’s holiest relic helps to explain the country’s resolve. Beside the high, 17th-century walls of St Mary’s church, local priests point to a small, suspiciously modern side chapel where, they say, the Ark lies behind seven red curtains. Only one priest - the Guardian of the Ark - is allowed to see it. This grey-haired figure, clutching an Orthodox cross, permanently inhabits the Ark’s chapel and is forbidden to talk to strangers. Amha Taklamaryam, 20, a deacon of St Mary’s, has been his assistant since the age of 10. But he has never felt tempted to look upon the Ark. He said: "If you see the Ark and you are not the guardian, you go blind and terrible things happen to your body."Yet he does not doubt the presence of something he has never seen. “Of course the Ark is here. I believe it because that is what everyone here believes. That is what my father and mother taught me to believe,” he said.

According to Ethiopia’s national epic, the Kebra Negast, which describes how the country’s emperors were descended from King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, their son, Menelik I, travelled from Ethiopia to visit Solomon in Jerusalem. His aides supposedly stole the Ark, which then made its way to Axum, then Ethiopia’s royal capital.

Despite the questions over whether Sheba and Menelik actually existed and the chronological problems of the story, some western scholars believe the Ark probably is in Axum…"

news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/12/29/wethiopia29.xml
 
2Mac.2

1
] One finds in the records that Jeremiah the prophet ordered those who were being deported to take some of the fire, as has been told,
2] and that the prophet after giving them the law instructed those who were being deported not to forget the commandments of the Lord, nor to be led astray in their thoughts upon seeing the gold and silver statues and their adornment.
3] And with other similar words he exhorted them that the law should not depart from their hearts.
4] It was also in the writing that the prophet, having received an oracle, ordered that the tent and the ark should follow with him, and that he went out to the mountain where Moses had gone up and had seen the inheritance of God.
5] And Jeremiah came and found a cave, and he brought there the tent and the ark and the altar of incense, and he sealed up the entrance.
6] Some of those who followed him came up to mark the way, but could not find it.
7] When Jeremiah learned of it, he rebuked them and declared: “The place shall be unknown until God gathers his people together again and shows his mercy.
8] And then the Lord will disclose these things, and the glory of the Lord and the cloud will appear, as they were shown in the case of Moses, and as Solomon asked that the place should be specially consecrated.”
 
The ark of the covenant is “Christendom’s holiest relic”!?

:confused:
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The ark of the covenant is “Christendom’s holiest relic”!?

:confused:
tee
And here I thought (based on what the History Channel said) it was the Shroud of Turin.http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon12.gif
 
And I thought it was the True Cross, or the Holy Grail.
 
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