Outlaw temple

by Fadeaway1962 6 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Fadeaway1962
    Fadeaway1962

    Ancient 'outlaw temple' discovered in Israel

    The famous First Temple was not alone.

    A bird's-eye view of the temple, taken at the end of the 2013 excavation season.
    A bird's-eye view of the temple, taken at the end of the 2013 excavation season.
    (Image: © P. Partouche/SkyView)

    The discovery of an Iron Age temple near Jerusalem has upended the idea that the ancient Kingdom of Judah, located in what is now southern Israel, had just one temple: the First Temple, also known as Solomon's Temple, a holy place of worship in Jerusalem that stood from the 10th century B.C. until its destruction, in 586 B.C.

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    The newfound temple — whose roughly 150 congregants worshiped Yahweh but also used idols to communicate with the divine — was in use during the same period as the First Temple. Its discovery shows that, despite what the Jewish Bible says, there were other contemporary temples besides the First Temple in the kingdom.

    "If a group of people living so close to Jerusalem had their own temple, maybe the rule of the Jerusalem elite was not so strong and the kingdom was not so well established as described in the Bible?" study co-researcher Shua Kisilevitz, a doctoral student of archaeology at Tel Aviv University in Israel and an archaeologist with the Israel Antiquities Authority, told Live Science.

    Related: Photos: Israel's largest Neolithic excavation

    Archaeologists have known about the Iron Age site at Tel Motza, located less than 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) outside Jerusalem, since the early 1990s. However, it wasn't until 2012 that researchers discovered the remains of a temple there, and it wasn't until just last year that they excavated it further, ahead of a highway project.

    This temple was likely built around 900 B.C. and operated for a few hundred years, until its demise in the early sixth century B.C., according to Kisilevitz and her co-researcher, who wrote about it in the January/February issue of the Biblical Archaeology Review magazine.

    This timing of the temple's existence dumbfounded archaeologists. "The Bible details the religious reforms of King Hezekiah and King Josiah, who assertedly consolidated worship practices to Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem and eliminated all cultic activity beyond its boundaries," Kisilevitz and review co-author Oded Lipschits, the director of the Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University, wrote in the magazine.

    These reforms likely happened between the late eighth and the late seventh centuries B.C. In other words, they occurred at the same time that the Tel Motza synagogue was operating, the researchers said.

    Was it daring for such a temple to seemingly defy the kings' orders and operate so close to Jerusalem? The only other known temple from this time period in the kingdom, besides the First Temple, "is a small temple in the southern border fort of Arad, which served the local garrison," Kisilevitz said.

    However, it appears that there were sanctioned temples in the kingdom whose continued existence was permitted, despite Hezekiah's and Josiah's reforms, Kisilevitz and Lipschits said. Here's how that may have happened.

    Image 1 of 6
    One of the two human-shaped figurines. (Image credit: C. Amit)
    These idols were likely used to communicate with the devine. (Image credit: C. Amit)
    A horse figurine unearthed at the site. (Image credit: C. Amit)
    The two horse figurines are the oldest known depictions of horses from the Iron Age in the Kingdom of Judah. (Image credit: C. Amit)
    One of the two human-shaped figurines. (Image credit: C. Amit)
    (Image credit: S. Kisilevitz)

    Ancient granary

    The site was home not just to the temple, but also to dozens of silos for grain storage and redistribution. In fact, the granary appears to have thrived as time went on, and it even had buildings that likely served administrative and religious purposes.

    It appears that Tel Motza became such a successful granary that it catered to Jerusalem and became an economic powerhouse. "It seems that the construction of the temple — and the worship conducted in it — were related to [the granary's] economic significance," the researchers wrote in the magazine piece.

    So, perhaps the temple was allowed to exist because it was tied to the granary and didn't seem to threaten the kingdom in any way, the researchers said.

    Broken idols

    The temple itself was a rectangular building with an open courtyard in front. This courtyard "served as a focal point for the cultic activity, as the general population was not allowed into the temple itself," Kisilevitz told Live Science.

    "Cultic finds in the courtyard include a stone-built altar on which animals were sacrificed and their remains discarded into a pit dug nearby," Kisilevitz said. In addition, four clay figurines — two human-like and two horse-like — had been broken and buried in the courtyard, likely as part of a cultic ritual.

    The horse-like figurines may be the oldest known depictions of horses from the Iron Age of Judah, the researchers added.

    Related: Photos: The ancient ruins of Shivta in southern Israel

    But the ancient people probably weren't worshipping the clay idols, Kisilevitz noted. Rather, these idols were "a medium through which the people could communicate with the god [or gods]," likely to ask for good rainfall, fertility and harvest, Kisilevitz told Live Science.

    It's not surprising that people in the ancient Kingdom of Judah used idols, the archaeologists noted.

    "Evidence of cultic activity throughout the Kingdom of Judah exists both in the biblical texts (depicted as royally sanctioned, with the notable exception of Hezekiah and Josiah who conducted cultic reform) and in the archaeological finds," Kisilevitz told Live Science.

    Moreover, during this time, new political groups were emerging in the Levant, the region that includes Israel and its neighboring countries today. Given these tumultuous changes, people tended to stick with their old religious practices, the researchers said. Even the Tel Motza temple's architecture and its artifacts were reminiscent of religious traditions from the ancient Near East that had been practiced since the third millennium B.C., the researchers said.

    In all, the discovery of this temple sheds light on state formation during this period, the researchers said. When the Kingdom of Judah first emerged, it wasn't as strong and centralized as it was later on, but it built relationships with local nearby rulers, including one at Tel Motza, the researchers said

  • Phizzy
    Phizzy

    Just another piece of Archaeological proof that the Bible is not accurate, or truthful, when it deals with History.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    Its an interesting discovery that leads to more questions. Many reports of this discovery state that its believed that this 'new' temple must have been 'sanctioned' (approved) by the religious elite associated with the kingship in Jerusalem. But an alternative view, is that rather than being "authorised" by the religious elite in Jerusalem, the religious elite did not have the authority (power) to prevent people worshiping in that temple.

    Another interesting side point, is that both that temple and the Jerusalem temple were laid out in a pattern that existed in other non-Jewish areas. And, another question arises, who designed and built this newly discovered temple? Were the designers/builders from outside Israel? If they were Israelites then why did Solomon need to get designers/builders from non-Israelites?

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    Archaeology Magazine's account of this discovery says that the archaeologists involved actually found two temple.

    Here's that account.

    TEL AVIV, ISRAEL—According to a statement released by Tel Aviv University, researchers including Shua Kisilevitz and Oded Lipschits of the university’s Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology and Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists have found traces of two temples about four miles from Jerusalem, in the ancient city of Motza, which has been identified as an Iron Age administrative center where grain was stored and redistributed. The first temple on the site has been tentatively dated to the tenth century B.C., while the monumental temple complex built on top of it has been dated to the late tenth century to early ninth century B.C. Kisilevitz said the temple complex at Motza conformed to religious conventions in the Kingdom of Judah at the time, but according to biblical texts, King Hezekiah and King Josiah restricted worship to the structure known as Jerusalem’s First Temple. The presence of the temple complex in Motza, she added, therefore suggests that other temples continued to operate outside of Jerusalem. Motza’s local leaders may have built the temple complex to increase their control over the region and bolster the success of the growing grain distribution business, she explained. Cultic artifacts including human-shaped and horse figurines, a cult stand decorated with lions or sphinxes, a stone altar, a stone offering table, and a pit filled with ash and bones have been uncovered at the site. To read about ceramic figurines unearthed in Motza's temple complex, go to "Artifact."
    Wednesday, February 12, 2020
  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    These artifacts that were discovered (as below) also raise questions. The official line seems to be that they were some kind of 'mediators,' that transmitted the worshipper's pleas to the supreme deity (assumed to be YHWH). If that is true, it opens up a very controversial line of thinking.

    Below is Archaeology Magazine's description of the artifacts.

    Artifact


    Ceramic figurines were part of a cache of objects found at an Iron Age temple uncovered at the site of Tel Motza outside Jerusalem

    May/June 2013

    artifact-tel-motza-figurines
    (Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority)
    What is it?
    Figurines

    Date
    ca. 9th century B.C.

    Material
    Pottery

    Found
    Tel Motza, 3 miles west of Jerusalem, Israel

    Dimensions
    Shown approximately twice actual size

    Sometimes it is the smallest artifacts that surprise archaeologists the most. Inside the recently uncovered remains of a massive Iron Age building at Tel Motza in Israel, archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) uncovered a cache of pottery, and this particular assemblage surprised and intrigued them. The collection included decorated chalices and pedestals, as well as a number of tiny figurines in both animal and human form. These artifacts resembled similar objects found previously that were known to have been used in domestic rituals. But the structure at Tel Motza was clearly much too large to be a house. Instead, they believed, it was actually a temple with an east-facing entrance typical of the ancient Near East, and an altar in the courtyard, next to which they found the pottery cache. According to the IAA archaeologists, the discovery of the temple itself was striking. “There are hardly any remains of ritual buildings in Judea from this period,” they said. But the discovery of the sacred objects inside the temple was especially surprising because there is scant evidence for ritual practices, particularly so close to Jerusalem, at this time. At some point during the later Iron Age, ritual sites outside of Jerusalem were abolished and religious practices were concentrated solely at the temple in the capital city.

  • sir82
    sir82

    I often fantasize about time travel being somehow possible, then kidnapping GB members and various other obnoxious "Bethel heavies", and taking them back to Israel in, say, 1000 BC, or 500 BC, or 30 AD, just to watch their horrified expressions when they realize that the perfectly preposterous ideas they espouse about "pure worship" and what life was like in "ancient Israel" whatnot was all a bunch of complete & utter hooey.

    I need to work on developing better fantasies, I know.

  • Half banana
    Half banana

    Quite right Sir 82, "a bunch of complete and utter hooey". I like Gore Vidal's comment that "the Bible being little more than the collected holy books of a semi-nomadic Bronze Age tribe; heavens, I thought, I had no idea it was as interesting as that."

    The Hebrew speaking inhabitants of Canaan at the time of this recently found temple were polytheists and polytheism remained as a presence in Judea and Samaria, according to the scholarly authority Thomas L Thompson, until the coming of the Helenistic period around the 3rd century BCE. Jehovah was originally just one of the the many tribal deities.

    To have an outlawed temple at that time is absurd. There was no law to deny freedom of religious worship. History only meets Biblical accounts with any semblance of historical reality beginning with the mention of King Hezekiah who ruled at the end of the 8th century and into the 7th BCE.

    The first great temple at Jerusalem, called the temple of David is a fiction. No one has found evidence for a sumptuous colonnaded construction of this date (10th cent. BCE). The Hebrews were a peasant people without the means or power or even sufficient population to create it at that time. The Bible was written as fictional stories and they remain so albeit with passing mentions of real people and real locations.

    Both Jewish writers and Christian interpreters view the fictional past as divine history. They have made their own myths sacred but this is a gross and deliberate misleading of their audience driven by religious leaders in their quest for power.

    It is just as well that today we have scientific evidence to back up the archaeological finds and the ability to give a disinterested scrutiny of the ancient texts and inscriptions. Notable in this endeavour is the already mentioned Thomas L Thompson whose scholarly work I heartily recommend to explain the Jewish and Christian fables.

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