Nothwithstanding how beautiful this area must have been, Jesus seemed to speak in no uncertain terms as to what would happen to this Second Temple.
āDo you see all these great buildings?ā replied Jesus. āNot one stone here will be left on another; every one will be thrown down.ā
True to his word, in AD 70 this Second Temple was razed to the ground, stone by stone-- the Roman soldiers literally separated the stones to get at the gold that had melted between the great stones during the fires that destroyed the Second Temple.
Many Christians see a foreshdowing in the timeframe between the period
between the First and Second Temple and
Jesusās birth and the destruction of the Second Templeā both of which were approximately
70 years.
Interestingly, when one also compares the lives of Moses to that of Jesus, one will note that both generations that rebelled against these two men sent from God died due to their lack of faith within a generation of 40 years-- one generation died lost in the wilderness of Sanai whereas the other generation died lost in the seige of Jerusalem in A.D. 70.
Even Jesus himself had alluded to himself as the Temple of God when he said thisā¦
John 2:19:
Jesus answered them, āDestroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.ā
Many misinterpreted Jesusā words to mean that he was going to destroy the Second Temple-- but thatās not what he implied. Jesus was speaking of his own body as he explains furtherā¦
But the temple he had spoken of was his body. After he was raised from the dead, his disciples recalled what he had said. Then they believed the Scripture and the words that Jesus had spoken.
Consequently, this comes back to another passage which is used to address Jesusā death and resurrectionā¦
Hosea 6:2:
After two days he will revive us; on the third day he will restore us, that we may live in his presence.
Many have interpreted these words to also imply, using the analogy of
a day with the Lord is as a thousand years, that after around 2000 years the Israelites would return home to rebuild their Third Temple. Consequnetly, he we are after about 2000 years, and there is finally the real possibility of a Third Temple being built too.
In light of this, it is suspected by some that John 2:19 and Hosea 6:2 not only refer to
Jesusās death and resurrection, but that these passages also refer to the entire nation of Israelās
Diaspora and Rebirth as a nation over a longer span of time where each ādayā equal a āthousand yearsā.
All in all, I think many Christians have a good right to believe that the life of Jesus fits well within the timeframes of Judaism. Certainly many Jews throughout history have believed this too and have converted to Christianity-- Jesus and his own apostles and disciples were themselves Jewish for that matter.
Nonetheless, if this is merely a coincidence, then it must me one of the most remarkable coincidences in history.
It does leave me to wonder why exactly God is believed to have allowed the Second Temple to be destroyed when he did within Jewish theology?
Indeed, if the First Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BC due to Israelās sin against God, then why was the Second Temple destroyed by the Romans in A.D. 70?
Again, I donāt think that ricmat is wondering about the fact that prayer was part worship. We all agree that prayer with an integral part of Judaism. This part is not being debated at all.
Rather, according to Judaism, what sin did the Israelites commit prior to the destruction of the Second Temple?
I think this is what ricmat is wondering. I am too.
