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THE THIRD TEMPLE: WHO WILL
BUILD IT?
© By Chaim Clorfene
Chanukah is the time of the re-dedication of the
Holy Temple. The festival commemorates the Maccabees' restoring
the Second Temple to its original sanctity after it had been ransacked
and defiled (but not destroyed) by the Greeks. It is, therefore,
worth dedicating a few minutes to consider how the Temple relates
to us today. By this, we mean, of course, the Third Temple, whose
re-building and long-awaited presence will usher in the Messianic
Era.
Before we can delve into the intricacies of the Third
Temple, how it will look and how it will ultimately be built,
some sketchy background is necessary, particularly for those who
know little or nothing about the Holy Temple.
Three structures have borne the name Mikdash,
or Holy Temple. The first was the Mishkan, the Tabernacle,
built by Moses in the Wilderness of Sinai as atonement for the
sin of the golden calf. It was portable and stood for an aggregate
of 440 years. The second structure bearing the name Mikdash,
was King Solomon's Temple. It was built on Mount Moriah in Jerusalem,
upon foundations laid by Solomon's father, King David. This is
known as the First Temple. It stood for 410 years and was destroyed
by Nebuchadnezzar, as prelude to the Babylonian Exile of the Jewish
people. 70 years later, King Cyrus of Persia gave permission to
the Jews to rebuild the Holy Temple, which was accomplished through
the leadership of Ezra, the Scribe. This, the Second Temple, was
later beautified by King Herod, and stood for a total of 420 years.
Titus and the armies of the Rome destroyed Herod's Temple in the
year 70 of the Common Era. Since then, the Holy Temple has stood
in ruins. The Torah teaches that the Temple will again be rebuilt
in Jerusalem on Mount Moriah, and this Third Temple will stand
forever. It is about this future Temple, that we now address ourselves.
We learn about the future Temple from the Book of
Ezekial, chapters 40-42, wherein the prophet, a kohen (priest),
is mystically transported from Babylon to Jerusalem, and shown
every detail and measurement of the Holy Temple by an angel of
G-d.
The Prophecy of Ezekial came during the Babylonian
Exile, between the First and Second Temples. However, the sages
who built the Second Temple, did not completely follow Ezekial's
prophetic design, for they knew that the Second Temple would eventually
be destroyed, and that Ezekial was prophesying about the future,
eternal Temple.
We can now approach the primary question about the
Third Temple. How will it be built? This is an issue that few
people are willing to address because of obvious political implications.
But, like it or not, the Third Temple is going to be built one
day. So we may as well look at the question now.
There is an essential disagreement among authorities
as to how the Third Temple will be built. According to the Rambam
(Maimonides), in his work, the Laws of the Chosen House,
(chapter one, law number one), the Jewish people are commanded
to construct a House for G-d. The Rambam lists this as
one of the 613 eternal commandments of the Torah, relevant and
obligatory whenever the Temple is not standing. He derives this
from the verse (Exodus 25:8), "And they shall make for Me
a sanctuary, and I will dwell among them." According to the
Rambam, the Jewish people must build the Third Temple any way
they can, at any time they can accomplish the task. In the Laws
of Kings, (chapter eleven, law number four), the Rambam
states that the Messiah, an earthly, Jewish king, will build the
Third Temple. And, in fact, he states that the only conclusive
proof of the identity of the Messiah is that he will be
the one to build the Temple.
The other view on the subject is derived from Medrash
Rabba, (a book of homiletic expositions from the time of the
Talmud) . Here, the Medrash teaches that G-d Himself will
build the Third Temple, and it will descend out of the fire from
Heaven, onto its appointed place on earth, the Temple Mount. Rashi
(the chief and classical bible commentator, circa 1200 C.E.) and
Tosefos, (an academy of European scholars circa 1300C.E.) and
many other authorities subscribe to this view, and this has become
the popular view of the Jewish people. As to the verse, "They
shall make for Me a Sanctuary," this opposing view teaches
that the directive was already fulfilled with the building of
the Mishkan and the first two Temples, and is no longer
applicable. They cite as the source for the Third Temple the verse
(Exodus 15:17), "You shall bring them in and plant them
in the mountain of Your inheritance, in the establishment of Your
residence which You have made, O Eternal, the Sanctuary, G-d,
which Your hands have established."
Although the two views appear to be contradictory,
both are the words of the Living G-d, and there is no contradiction
here at all. Among the many explanations which resolve the argument
is the teaching that the redemption (and therefore the Third
Temple) can come in one of two ways, b'itoh (in its
time) or achishenah (suddenly, at any moment). B'itoh
is the end of the fifth milennia, the Jewish year 6000 (as of
this writing we are in the year 5759). If final redemption does
not come till then, the Jewish people, led by the Messiah, who
will be anointed as king by a prophet of G-d, will build the Third
Temple. This goes according to the Rambam. But if the redemption
comes achishenah, that is, immediately if not sooner,
it will be replete with manifold miracles, incomparably greater
than during the Exodus from Egypt some 3309 years ago, and the
Holy Temple will suddenly appear out of the fire of Heaven atop
Mount Moriah in Jerusalem. This is the opinion of Rashi
and Tosefos, and the hope and dream and yearning of the
Jewish people.
This explains the contradiction, but it does
not resolve it. And one does not push away the Rambam with a toothpick.
For the Rambam could tell you, "Is that so? Well, the commandments
are eternal and G-d has no right to take one of them away from
us. So don't give me this 'appearing out of the fire of Heaven'
stuff."
The question then becomes, "How can G-d send
the Temple down from Heaven already built, yet have it built on
earth by the Jewish people?"
In Ohr HaMikdash (Light of the Holy Temple),
Rabbi Raphael Moshe Luria resolves the paradox a number of ways.
He cites the principle of a hechsher mitzvah, that is,
an act that causes a mitzvah to be fulfilled. For example,
the last commandment of the Torah (number 613) commands us to
write our own Torah scroll. This is an extraordinary task that
few people are capable of performing. It takes years of training
to become a scribe, and a trained scribe will spend a year or longer
writing a Torah, which must be copied letter by letter from an
existing Torah. If one letter is missing or written incorrectly,
the Torah is invalid, and considered as no Torah at all.
So how does the average Jew fulfill the mitzvah of
writing a Torah? When a newly written Torah is about to be completed,
a great ceremony takes place. The members of a community or congregation
gather together and, aided by the scribe, each person writes
one letter of the last verses in the scroll. Each person who participates
is credited with the mitzvah of writing a Torah. Why? Because
if that person's particular letter had been omitted or written
incorrectly, it would have been no Torah at all. Each person's
writing brought this particular Torah scroll into existence. This
is called a hechsher mitzvah, an act that causes a mitzvah
to be fulfilled.
Let us now apply the principle to building the Third
Temple. When the G-d of Israel is going to bring the Holy Temple
down from heaven, He is going to do it in answer to the prayers
of the Jewish people. As we say in our daily prayers, "May
it be Your will, L-rd our G-d, and G-d of our fathers, that the
Holy Temple be speedily rebuilt in our days." This is
our hechsher mitzvah. Our prayers and yearning for the
Temple, will arouse the Will of G-d. Without this, the
Temple would surely never be rebuilt. And the AriZal, Rabbi
Isaac Luria Ashkenazi, teaches that, according to Kabbalah, our prayers
create the spiritual channel of light by which the Temple will descend.
In the same light, we find a fascinating teaching
in the Medrash, Yalkut Shimoni. The Prophet Ezekial addresses
G-d by saying "Master of the Universe, You instructed me
to teach the form and laws of the Third Temple to the Jewish people
when they shall do them [build the Temple]. Are they doing
them now that I should teach it to them?" And G-d answered
that a person studying the design of the Holy Temple according
to the Book of Ezekial, would be regarded as if he were actually
building it.
The author, Chaim Clorfene, has published many books including "Confessions of a Cult-buster and "The Path of the Righteous Gentile." You may write to the author at: ohradio@actcom.co.il
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