
THE TEMPLE AND THE ARK OF THE COVENANT
The following analysis contains extracts from the Study
Booklet: The Temple and the Rock,
THE ARK OF THE COVENANT
The Ark of the Covenant was undoubtedly the most holy piece of furniture
ever made, if it can be referred to as such. It consisted of a rectangular
chest made of shittim wood and covered over with gold (see Fig. 1). The
word Ark, Aron in Hebrew, means merely a chest and has been translated as
'coffin' in Gen. 50.26. God had commanded Moses to make the Ark of the Covenant
(Ex. 25.10-22) and inside it Moses placed the two tables of the law. Later
on, Aaron's rod that budded was placed in it (Num. 17.10), together with
the golden pot that had the manna (Ex. 16.33, Heb. 9.4).
The mercy seat was a kind of lid which closed the chest from above. It was
made of pure gold and was held in place by a golden ridge or crown. Beaten
out of this mercy seat were two cherubim, which with their wings overshadowed
the mercy seat. They were beaten out of the same piece of pure gold as the
mercy seat.

A representation of the Ark of the Covenant
The Ark was made in Sinai by Bezaleel ben Uri, whose name appropriately
means, "In the Shadow of El (God), the Son of my Light". After
a long journey it was placed eventually in the Holy of Holies of Solomon's
Temple. It was this former location of the Ark of the Covenant which I believe
to have found.
So many researchers have proposed different locations for the Temple and/or
for the Ark of the Covenant without having followed a suitable methodology
to substantiate their conclusions. This researcher believes that the location
of the Temple can only be found when the historical and archaeological development
of the present-day Temple Mount has first been analysed. It is always best
to begin with the known elements, which in this case are the outer walls
of the Temple Mount . Relying on the archaeological data and the information
contained in the historical sources, the research then began looking at
remains within the Temple area itself.
After having established the location of the pre-Herodian square Temple
Mount , the historical sources, notably the Mishnah, led us to look for
the location of the Temple on or near es-Sakhra, the rocky mountain top
which is visible inside the Dome of the Rock. This rock has never been properly
examined and so the analysis of this prime piece of archaeological evidence
had to be carried out. Not only were the negative impressions of the Temple
walls discovered, but also the former location of the Ark of the Covenant.
As the measurements given in Middot were found to be very accurate, the
location of the Temple Courts and the Altar could also be accurately calculated.
But let us begin at the beginning and briefly go over the stages of the
research which led to our latest conclusions.
THE 500 CUBIT SQUARE TEMPLE MOUNT
The two descriptions of the Temple Mount, one by Josephus and the other
in the Mishnaic tractate Middot appear to contradict each other. According
to Josephus, the Solomonic Temple Mount was a square "having a circumference
of four stades, each side taking up the length of a stade" (Ant. 15.400).
After Herod had enlarged the Temple Mount, the circumference measured six
stadia (War 5.192). Middot 2.1 states that "the Temple Mount (Har habbayit)
measured five hundred cubits by five hundred cubits".
The problem with this statement is that Middot was written after the Roman
destruction of 70 A.D., i.e. after the destruction of Herod's Temple Mount.
We know from archaeology that the Temple Mount is not now square in shape,
but rather oblong. Both records agree, however, that the Temple Mount was
square at one stage of its development. Other discrepancies in the texts
complicate matters further. Middot for example, records only one gate in
the western wall, while Josephus describes four gates. In the Western Wall
of the Temple Mount, four gates have indeed been found, and therefore it
has been assumed up until now that the description by Josephus is more reliable
than that of Middot.
However, a solution to this problem has been provided by my research, which
has located the original 500 cubit square Har habbayit, as described in
Middot. It appears that the two sources actually do not contradict, but
rather compliment each other. It also became clear that only the pre-Herodian
square Temple Mount was considered worthy of the title of Har habbayit in
Middot, while Herod's addition was grandly ignored. Josephus acknowledges
that the Temple Mount was once square, although his measurement of one stadium
(365 cubits) falls short of the Mishnaic 500 cubits, which has proved to
be the correct measurement. In short, Josephus concentrates on the Herodian
Temple Mount, although he knew that the pre-Herodian Temple Mount was square,
while Middot concentrates on the smaller square Temple Mount, as only this
part was considered holy.

Plan showing the archaeological evidence for the location of the 500 cubit
square Temple Mount
THE STEP
The starting point of the research was the odd angle of the step at the
north-west corner of the raised Moslem platform. Eight flight of steps topped
by arcades lead up to the platform of the Dome of the Rock. The steps near
the Qubbat el-Khadr are the only ones not built parallel to the walls of
the platform, their direction being derived from the angle of the bottom
step. This step is made up of a line of single ashlars, in contrast to the
other steps of this flight, which are made up of many smaller stones. It
appears therefore that this step, which is virtually parallel to the eastern
wall of the Temple Mount, is, in effect, the remains of an early wall. The
central part of the eastern wall near the Golden Gate, as will be seen below,
also contains masonry which pre-dates the Herodian period. As the style
of masonry used in this step/wall resembles that found in the central section
of the eastern wall, we have therefore identified it as the western wall
of the pre-Herodian Temple Mount.
FOSSE
In order to determine how far north the original western wall extended,
we turn to the records of Warren, who describes an "excavated ditch",
which he found 52 feet (15.85 m.) north of this stairway. Strabo, the Greek
geographer and historian, describes this moat or "fosse" and gives
its measurements as 60 feet (18.30 m.) deep and 250 feet (76.20 m.) broad.
From a defensive point of view, the importance of the fosse is obvious,
as it completes the natural boundary to the north of the pre-Herodian Temple
Mount, linking the Tyropoeon Valley on the west with the Bethesda Valley,
which is a branch of St. Anne's Valley, flowing eastward into the Kedron
Valley. The approach to the Temple Mount from the north was thus effectively
cut off.
The same fosse, together with the Bethesda Valley, is recorded by Josephus
as having been filled in by Pompey's soldiers in 63 B.C., thereby enabling
them to storm the defensive towers built at the north-western corner of
the square Temple Mount. These towers stood apparently in the space of 52
feet between the stairway and the fosse. The western step/wall could therefore
not have continued far in a northerly direction.
NORTHERN ROCKSCARP
Turning to the east, we noticed in the records of Warren that he found along
the northern wall of the raised platform, in Cistern 29, the remains of
a quarried rockscarp. Further remains of this scarp can be seen near the
north-east corner of this platform. Continuing the line of the northern
rockscarp westwards and eastwards, we find the northern wall of the square
platform. The northernmost stone of the step actually fits exactly in the
right-angled corner with the northern wall.
Continuing the line of the rockscarp eastward, we find the north-east corner
of the pre-Herodian Temple Mount at the point where it meets the eastern
wall, just north of the Golden Gate, at 1,101 feet (335.60 m.) north of
the Herodian south-east corner. Some 38 feet (11.60 m.) to the north of
this north-east corner of the square Temple Mount, an offset can be seen,
which probably was part of a projecting tower.
500 CUBITS
The length of the northern wall, measured between the step and the eastern
wall, is 861 feet (262.50 m.) This distance turns out to be exactly 500
cubits according to the Royal Cubit of 20.67 inches (0.525 m.). Many tombs
around Jerusalem have been cut in the rock, using the length of this cubit
as the unit of measurement. This cubit originated in Egypt and is recorded
in the Hebrew Bible as "the cubit of the first measure" (2 Chron.
3.3). It is the same measurement as the "cubit and a handbreadth"
of Ezekiel 40.5, which shows that a smaller cubit was in use also.
BEND
From the south-east corner of the present-day Temple Mount, the eastern
wall shows Herodian masonry for some 106 feet. At that point a seam, or
straight joint, is visible, to the north of which Hasmonean masonry appears.
Warren noted that 240 feet (73.40 m.) north of the south-east corner, the
eastern wall changes its direction slightly. Standing at this corner and
looking northwards, this change can be seen with the naked eye. This bend
is located at the point where a pillar sticks out from the wall, which is
known as Mohammed's Pillar. As this bend is located exactly 861 feet or
500 cubits south of the projected north-east corner of the square Temple
Mount, it provides archaeological evidence for the existence of the south-east
corner of the square platform, which is probably preserved deep below ground.
SOUTHERN WALL
The southern wall of the square Temple Mount should be parallel to its northern
wall. The intersection of the southern wall with the southern continuation
of the line of the step would form the south-west corner of the square Temple
Mount.
Further support for the location of the southern boundary of the early square
Temple Mount can be obtained from the location of the Akra (see pp. 19-20)
and the Herodian underground passageways of the Double, Triple and Barclay's
Gates.
The southern passageways are approximately 240 feet (73 m.) long and terminate
at the line of the proposed early southern wall. They thus reflect in their
length the size of the southern extension of the square Temple Mount.
The underground passage of Barclay's Gate is L-shaped. The reason for this
is, that Herod's builders built the southern part of the stairway alongside
the later Hasmonean extension of the earlier western wall, instead of piercing
through it. The distance from the turn of the passageway to the eastern
wall is 500 cubits, which again confirms our location of the 500 cubit square
Temple Mount.

The Location of the Holy of Holies and the Ark of the Covenant on the Sakhra
The problem with locating the Holy of Holies over the Sakhra is that
the Sakhra is larger than the Holy of Holies. A solution to this problem
would be if at least one of the walls of the Holy of Holies were built over
the Rock. Indeed, in the summer of '94, the research I was engaged in led
to the discovery of the foundation trench of the southern wall of the Holy
of Holies. Certain areas on the Rock, to the west of the opening in the
ceiling of the cave, are flat receptacles for rectangular ashlars (see Fig.
1). Two are clearly visible and there are some other areas to the south
of these, just before the rock slopes down steeply to the south. When viewed
from the east, looking west over the opening, the two flat areas look like
a channel cut across the Sakhra from east to west. The total width of all
these areas is about 10 feet which corresponds, according to the cubit of
20'8'' which was used in the building of the Temple, with 6 cubits - the
width of the original Temple wall.
The distance between this foundation trench and the northernmost rockscarp
is exactly 10.50 m. or 20 cubits (see Fig. 2). This rockscarp then, which
continues below the floor for another meter, was the place of the northern
wall of the Holy of Holies.
The western wall would have stood at the foot of the natural western scarp.
As the direction of the scarp is virtually identical to that of the step
and of the eastern wall of the Temple Mount, the Temples of both the First
and Second Temple periods would have had the same orientation, i.e. the
longitudinal axis of the Temple would have been at right angles to the eastern
wall. As the western scarp is a natural one and therefore never changed
its direction, there are no grounds to believe that the axis of the First
Temple would have been different to that of the Second Temple period. The
continuation of this axis, which is at right angles to the eastern wall
of the Temple Mount, is aligned with the top of the Mount of Olives, where
the Red Heifer was sacrificed (see Fig. 3). According to Middot 2.4, "the
[High] Priest, that burns the [Red] Heifer and stands on the top of the
Mount of Olives should be able to look directly into the entrance of the
Sanctuary when the blood is sprinkled". This then is another confirmation
of our location and orientation of the Temple.
There never was a stone wall between the Holy of Holies (Kodesh haKodashim
or Dvir) and the Holy (also called Heichal) and therefore no signs of such
a partition would have been visible on the sloping surface in the east of
the Sakhra. In Solomon's Temple there was a wooden partition and in the
Second Temple a veil separating the two chambers. After I had set out on
plan this dividing line, together with the location of the Holy of Holies,
I was struck by the location of a depression right in the middle of this
square.
THE FORMER LOCATION OF THE ARK OF THE COVENANT IN SOLOMON'S TEMPLE
The last time the Ark of the Covenant is mentioned in Scripture was when
King Josiah (in 623 B.C.) ordered the Ark to be put back in the Temple (2
Chron. 35.3). From this we understand that during the reign of wicked kings,
the priests would have taken the Ark out of the Temple and hidden it away
somewhere. There is no further mention of the Ark in the Biblical record
after this, but it does not seem likely that the Ark was destroyed by the
Babylonians in 586 B.C., as such a calamity would certainly have been mentioned.
When the Second Temple was rebuilt in the time of Ezra, the Ark was not
returned to the Temple. The Holy of Holies presumably remained empty until
the destruction of Herod's Temple in 70 A.D. Indeed, according to Josephus,
the inner chamber of the Temple was completely empty, "In this stood
nothing whatever: unapproachable, inviolable, invisible to all, it was called
the Holy of Holy" (War 5.219). He was apparently unaware of the existence
of this most interesting feature. According to my plan, it falls exactly
in the centre of the Holy of Holies. The dimensions of this level basin
agree with those of the Ark of the Covenant which were 1.5 x 2.5 cubits
(2'7" x 4'4" or 79 cm. x 131 cm.), with the longitudinal axis
coinciding with that of the Temple. Its location is rather unique, as it
could only have been the place where the Ark of the Covenant once stood.
It appears to me therefore that during the First Temple period, an emplacement
was prepared for the Ark by cutting this flat basin in the rock, for it
is clear that without such a flat area, the Ark would have wobbled about
in a most undignified manner, which would have been inconceivable.
Several texts in 1 Kings 6 and 8 may actually refer to a specially prepared
place for the Ark. In 1 K. 6.19 it says that Solomon prepared the Oracle
(Dvir) in the midst of the house from within "to place there the Ark
of the Covenant of Yahweh" and in 1 Kings 8.6, "the priests brought
in the Ark of the Covenant of Yahweh unto his (or its) place, into the Dvir
of the house, to the most holy (Kodesh haKodashim), under the wings of the
Cherubim." This means that a special place was prepared or assigned
to the Ark. This is further emphasised in vss. 20,21 of the same chapter,
where Solomon says that he has "built an house for the name of Yahweh
God of Israel. And I have set there a place for the Ark ... ". The
Hebrew verb "seem" (sin-yod-mem) which is translated here as 'set',
can also mean 'put' or 'make'. In the light of this discovery, I suggest
to translate this verse as "I have made there a place for the Ark".
This small basin which Solomon had made has been preserved up to today.
Of course, its orientation mystified me at first, as most representations
show the Ark standing in the Tabernacle or in the Temple with its longer
side facing the partition, while now it is clear that it was the shorter
side that was first seen by the High Priest when he entered the Holy of
Holies. Contemplating this, it became obvious that this was, of course,
the only way it could have stood, as otherwise the priests would not have
been able to take out the staves (1 Kings 8.8). This would have been impossible
regarding the position of the two large cherubim under whose wings the Ark
was placed, and also, as the staves were supposed to be 10 cubits long according
to the Talmud Yoma 54a, they would have hit, on their removal, the walls
of the Holy of Holies, which was only 20 cubits square. Sometimes the staves
are represented as having been fixed along the two shorter sides of the
Ark. Not only is this an unnatural way of carrying long objects, but also
it would be impossible to place the Ark in its receptacle, as the staves
would have touched the two large cherubim first.
In the Temple of Solomon and in the later reconstructions, the eastern slope
would have served as a ramp for the High Priest to ascend once a year, on
the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), to the Holy of Holies. Later, Herod created
a six cubit high foundation for his Temple, which almost completely buried
the Rock. This would agree with Yoma 5.2: "After the Ark was taken
away a stone remained there from the time of the early Prophets, and it
was called 'Shetiyah'. It was higher than the ground by three finger breadths.
On this he used to put [the fire-pan]". From this record it appears
that only the very top of the Sakhra remained visible inside the Holy of
Holies. Instead of the ramp inside the Solomonic Temple, the Herodian Temple
floor was reached by a 12 stepped staircase, which was located outside the
Temple, in front of the Porch. The new floor was apparently a little (three
finger breadths) lower than the top of the Sakhra which was the floor of
the Holy of Holies.
We believe that during the Second Temple period, the High Priest on Yom
Kippur placed his censer or fire-pan in this depression, which was the same
place where, during the First Temple period, the Ark of the Covenant stood.
ARAUNAH'S THRESHING FLOOR AND THE LOCATION OF THE ALTAR
Another Biblical description had to fit in with the location of the Holy
of Holies on the Sakhra and that is the location of the Altar and the connection
with the threshing floor of Araunah. The location of the First Temple is,
of course, closely related to the threshing floor of Araunah, the Jebusite
King, of whom David bought it to build an altar to the Yahweh his God (1K.
24. 18-25). It is generally believed to have been built in the same place
where Isaac was bound, as related in Gen. 22.
However, we would like to be more precise about the relationship between
the Sakhra and the location of Araunah's threshing floor and the altars
erected by Abraham and David and the place of Solomon's Temple. First of
all therefore we have to examine the historical information as preserved
in the Hebrew Bible.
It is interesting to note that in both cases Abraham and David were shown
the place where they were to build the altar by divine instruction. Abraham
was sent to the land of Moriah to "offer him [Isaac] there for a burnt
offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of" (Gen.
22. 2). After Abraham was withheld by the angel from sacrificing Isaac,
he called the name of the place "YHWH yiraeh" as it is said this
day "beHar YHWH yiraeh". This latter phrase can be translated
"in the mountain Yahweh will provide", or "in the mountain
the Yahweh shall be seen". Both translations have, of course, a prophetic
impact. But where was the exact spot where Abraham built the altar? We are
not told in Genesis, but the prophetic meaning of the words of Abraham would
indicate the establishment of a continuous sanctity of this place as an
altar.
Next we read about events which occurred towards the end of David's life
and which are recorded in 2 Sam. 24 and 1 Chron. 21. God was going to punish
Israel, because David had ordered Joab to count Israel and Judah, apparently
having forgotten the injunction recorded in Ex. 30.12 to make provision
for paying a ransom per head. When an angel was sent by God to bring a pestilence
upon Israel, he was stopped when he stretched out his hand over Jerusalem
(2 Sam. 24.15,16). It is instructive to note where David saw the angel "And
the angel of the Yahweh stood by the threshing floor of Ornan [Araunah]
the Jebusite. And David having lifted up his eyes, and saw the angel of
the Yahweh stand between the earth and the heaven, having a drawn sword
in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem" (1 Chron. 21. 15,16).
Two things should be noted here, first of all that the angel did not stand
on the threshing floor, but beside it (etsel in Hebrew), and secondly that
the angel must have stood on higher ground. Now, threshing floors are not
usually located on the top of a mountain but a little below it, so that
the wind will carry away the chaff only and not the grains as well. The
prevailing wind in Israel is from the west, so that we would expect Araunah's
threshing floor to be located below and to the east of the Sakhra.
The position of the angel, beside the floor, is called "between the
earth and the heaven". He was standing evidently higher than David,
so that it seems most likely that the angel stood on top of the Sakhra,
as it were between heaven and earth, as he also had direct communication
with God in heaven, although he was standing on the ground.
David subsequently bought the threshing floor from Araunah. He paid first
50 silver shekels for the threshing floor (2 Sam. 24. 24) and later 600
shekels of gold for the whole mountain (1 Chron. 21. 25), establishing his
ownership of the Temple Mount. He then built an altar, not on top of the
mountain, where the angel stood, i.e. the Sakhra, but on the threshing floor,
which was lower down (2 Sam. 24.24,25), in a location which is now 20 feet
east of the Dome of the Chain (see Fig. 4).
From the text then, it is therefore obvious that the Sakhra could not have
been the place of the Altar. The Sakhra would also have been too small for
a threshing floor as the oxen would be in continuous danger of falling over
the steep edge. An additional difficulty would be that if the Temple was
built to the west of the Sakhra it would have needed very deep foundations,
much deeper than the 6 cubits mentioned, as the rock there slopes away quite
rapidly.
There is further historical evidence in the Scriptures showing that the
Holy of Holies was located in the highest point of the Temple. In Isa. 6,1
the prophet sees a vision of the Lord sitting in the Temple, "high
and lifted up". The place reserved for the Deity was undoubtedly the
Holy of Holies, where only the High Priest once a year was allowed to enter
on Yom Kippur (Lev. 16. 29,30), i.e. on the tenth day of the seventh month.
The vision, which is also referred to in John 12.41, occurred during the
year that King Uzziah died, presumably of the leprosy which he contracted
when offering incense in the Temple, which he was not allowed to do (2 Chron.
26. 16-21). It appears therefore that the Holy of Holies was higher than
any other part of the Temple. The angel, which David saw, was therefore
standing in the place which later became the Holy of Holies, possibly on
the very spot where the Ark was later placed in the centre of the inner
chamber. After all, that was the oracle of God from where he spoke, "And
when Moses was gone into the tabernacle of the congregation to speak with
him, then he heard the voice of one speaking unto him from off the mercy
seat that was upon the ark of the testimony, from between the two cherubim:
and he spake unto him" (Num. 7.89).
THE ARK AND THE FUTURE
To have found the former location of the Ark of the Covenant, so wonderfully
preserved, was a totally unexpected conclusion to my 22 years of research
on the Temple Mount. In recent years there has been a surge of interest
in finding the actual Ark of the Covenant. According to the Book of Maccabees
, Jeremiah hid the Ark on Mount Nebo in Jordan. A recent theory places the
Ark in Ethiopia, while many rabbis believe that it is still hidden somewhere
under the Temple Mount . This belief is mainly based on 1 Kings 8.8 "and
they drew out the staves, that the end of the staves were seen out in the
holy before the oracle, and they were not seen without: and they are there
unto this day". "Unto this day" are supposed to be the key
words which indicate that the Ark is still hidden today somewhere under
the Temple Mount. A few years ago a group of rabbis did some illegal digging
under the Temple Mount, which, not surprisingly caused considerable disturbance
among the local Arab population.
Despite all the claims and expectations, however, nobody knows where the
Ark of the Covenant actually is. Recently, while rereading the account in
Numbers 3 concerning the responsibilities of the various Levitical families
vis-a-vis the Tabernacle, we noticed in verse 30 of this chapter, that the
name of the chief of the Kohathites, who was the first person to have the
charge of the Ark of the Covenant, was called Elizaphan ben Uzziel. His
name means "My God (El) has hidden" and he was the son of "My
Strength is El". It is a comforting thought that if the Ark still exists
and has a future role to play, then it must have been hidden with the knowledge
of God himself and that it will be found only when it is in His purpose.