Tis_Bearself
Patron
It seems like a continuing problem faced by the Kings of Judah and Israel involved Jewish people who would set up altars for sacrifice local to their area instead of coming all the way in to Jerusalem to do it at the Temple where the law said they had to do it.
I understand the Jewish people were used to walking and traveling distances, but at the same time it strikes me as a little unfair that if you were in the Jewish tribe assigned land at a distance from Jerusalem, you were still expected to come into town on a very regular basis to do sacrifices at the Temple. This was likely not a small undertaking for you, as opposed to the guy who lived in Jerusalem itself or in the “inner ring suburb”. Moreover, it seemed from the Jewish law that the number of circumstances that called for a sacrifice would mean you’d be going to the Temple quite regularly to stay in compliance with the law, so it wasn’t just a “once a year for the feast day” sort of trip.
I understand that God was actually present in the Temple and not elsewhere; also that the Temple was a unifier for the Jewish people, but I’m also not surprised that those at a distance would want to be having places of worship closer and more convenient to themselves.
Am I missing something here? Was this less of a big issue than I am seeing it as?
I understand the Jewish people were used to walking and traveling distances, but at the same time it strikes me as a little unfair that if you were in the Jewish tribe assigned land at a distance from Jerusalem, you were still expected to come into town on a very regular basis to do sacrifices at the Temple. This was likely not a small undertaking for you, as opposed to the guy who lived in Jerusalem itself or in the “inner ring suburb”. Moreover, it seemed from the Jewish law that the number of circumstances that called for a sacrifice would mean you’d be going to the Temple quite regularly to stay in compliance with the law, so it wasn’t just a “once a year for the feast day” sort of trip.
I understand that God was actually present in the Temple and not elsewhere; also that the Temple was a unifier for the Jewish people, but I’m also not surprised that those at a distance would want to be having places of worship closer and more convenient to themselves.
Am I missing something here? Was this less of a big issue than I am seeing it as?