Temples, Old and New

No video this week, but I am talking about butterflies and time travel. Yes, they are related.
on Aug 15, 2012 · No comments

Sorry, folks, no video this time around. The writing life has hit me a little hard and the time I needed to put a video together just wasn’t available this time around. That doesn’t mean I won’t ever put a video together again. It just means that I have to do it the “old fashioned” way this time around.

A few years ago, I was learning how to teach a Bible study curriculum called Crossways (which is awesome, BTW). Dr. Harry Wendt, the study’s author, brought out a souvenir he had purchased in Jerusalem a number of years ago. It was a picture of the Jerusalem skyline with a small alteration. Someone had photoshopped out the Dome of the Rock and replaced with a new Temple. It was one of the scariest things I had ever seen (but more on that in two weeks. Who says cliffhangers always have to come at the end of something?).

While it may have frightened me, it’s also the hope of many Jews and also many Christians, especially if they’re dispensational premillennialists. For those who hold to that particular eschatological tilt, it’s something they expect to see happen at some point. A Third Temple will be built on the site of the previous two.

But is that really what needs to happen? Do we need a Third Temple? Or has God fulfilled the concept of the Temple with something far greater? Now obviously, I’m speaking from an amillennialist viewpoint, but I would say that the answer to those three questions are, “No, no, and yes.” Let me explain.

Let’s start by talking about butterflies. For the past several years, I’ve been toying around with something I like to call “Butterfly Theology.” I’ve noticed that several concepts in the Bible go through a transformation of sorts, and they all follow the pattern of a butterfly’s life cycle (which, for those of you who have forgotten their life sciences, is egg, caterpillar, cocoon/chrysalis, butterfly). One such instance occurs with the concept of Temple:

THE EGG: This concept starts out as the Tabernacle that God commands Moses to make after the Exodus. It was a tent that will house God’s Presence, one set up in the middle of Israel (Exodus 25-31, 35-40). When Israel camped somewhere, the Tabernacle was at the heart of the camp, reminding God’s people that God dwelt in their midst.

THE CATERPILLAR: Eventually, King Solomon built a Temple in Jerusalem. When the Temple was dedicated, God’s Presence filled it with His glory (2 Chronicles 7:1-3). But because of Israel’s sin, the glory was eventually driven out (Ezekiel 10:4-5, 18-22) and the Temple itself was destroyed and God’s people were taken into exile (2 Kings 25:1-21). When they returned from exile, they rebuilt the Temple (Ezra 3). Interestingly, when they finished, the glory didn’t show up again (Ezra 6:16-18). The same thing is true when King Herod the Great renovates the exile’s Temple and makes it much larger and grander (that’s based on the writings of Flavius Josephus, who notes a number of apparent supernatural happenings before Herod’s Temple is destroyed but makes no mention of anything happening when it’s dedicated).

So it’s time for the cocoon, the time when the caterpillar is transformed in a radical way and is still the same organism somehow. When it comes to butterfly theology, the cocoon is always the same thing: Christ.

THE COCOON: In many ways, Jesus fulfills, transcends, and transforms the concept of the Temple. Think John 1:14, which uses Temple terminology to talk about how Christ dwelt in our midst (the same way the Tabernacle did). Think John 1:51, where He implies that He has replaced the Foundation Stone with Himself. Think John 2:13-22, where He refers to Himself as the Temple (a charge that would later be repeated at His trial before the Sanhedrin). In Jesus, the Glory of God (the same glory that never returned to the Jerusalem Temple) dwelt among us. He became a new and better Temple.

THE BUTTERFLY: And stemming out from Jesus, a new Temple has been built upon the foundation of the prophets and apostles, one built out of living stones with Christ as the cornerstone. The Church is the new Temple. That’s usually what St. Paul is talking about when he uses the term. That’s how St. Peter uses the term when he talks about Christians being built together as living stones. In its present form, the Temple is so much greater than a stone building in one city. It’s a way for God’s presence to be among His people all over the world, hearkening to what Jesus told the Samaritan woman in John 4:21-24.

The question I have is this: why rip the wings off a butterfly to make it a caterpillar again?

That seems to be a question that the author of Hebrews asks as well. The entire book of Hebrews, apparently written to Jewish Christians thinking of dropping the latter part. The author points out that the New Covenant supersedes the Old in every way. He makes the argument that the trappings of the Old Covenant were mere shadows of a greater reality to come. The question he asks is why would we want to go back to the shadows when we’ve seen the greater reality?

It’s a valid question, and one we have to ask about building a Third Temple. Do we really need one? The Temple was the place where sacrifices were made so sins could be forgiven. If Christ’s death is all sufficient, why do we need a place for more sacrifices? The Temple was the place where God dwelt among His people. He does that now through the Church. Why go backwards?

“But John,” some of you may be saying, “what about Ezekiel’s vision of a new temple in Ezekiel 40-43? The exile’s Temple and Herod’s Temple don’t match the dimensions Ezekiel describes. Doesn’t that mean there’s a Third Temple that needs to be built?”

It’s true, Ezekiel does seem to see a vision of a future Temple. But there’s something that’s always struck me as odd about that vision is this: where are the height measurements? While Ezekiel records the length and width of the rooms in this supposed Third Temple, he doesn’t give us many measurements of how tall the rooms are supposed to be. There are a few, but not nearly enough. If this Temple were really going to be built, wouldn’t we need full measurements in every direction to make it happen?

So what is this Temple vision? I believe it’s God’s way of trying to communicate a concept to Ezekiel in terms he can understand.

The best example I can think of is this: suppose I were to go back in time to . . . say, Martin Luther’s time. Naturally, I’d be cautious about revealing too much information about the future. But then, let’s say that something happens to my time machine and I wind up stranded in 16th century Germany. Marty takes me out drinking and I wind up spilling my guts. Er . . . bad choice of metaphor. I wind up telling him that I’m from the future. So Marty asks what the future is like, and I respond with, “Oh, it’s awesome. There are cars and planes and computers . . .”

Would he have any idea what I’m talking about? Of course not. So he asks what cars and planes and computers are. If I want him to understand, I’d have to use terminology he knows. So I explain that in the future, we’ll have horseless carriages and giant metal birds that fly around with people inside them and boxes that sit on desks and . . . well, I’m not sure how to explain computers in a 16th century way.

Those examples would help communicate the concept, but not the specifics. For example, when thinking of an airplane, Marty may think of this:

Not exactly what I had in mind, right?

I think something similar is happening here. God wanted to communicate a very specific idea to Ezekiel: a time was coming when His presence would once again be in the midst of His people (notice in Ezekiel 48, the Temple is in the center of the city, which is partitioned for the tribes). But because Ezekiel couldn’t quite grasp the exact nature of this return, God used ideas that he could grasp.

So what was that specific idea? Well, can you think of a time when water flowed out of a Temple (Ezekiel 47)? Here’s a hint: John 19:34.

My theory is that God was trying to tell Ezekiel about Jesus. The problem is that now, people are assuming He was talking about a giant metal chicken.

Wait, I’m mixing my metaphors there, aren’t I?

The point remains: from where I’m sitting, the earthly Temple has been transformed, through Christ, into something far greater than it ever could have been as a stone building. To go back to that single edifice would be like ripping the wings off a butterfly.

Now that doesn’t mean that I don’t think a Temple might never be rebuilt in Jerusalem. There’s a big difference between will and should be. Will it? I have no idea. Should it be? This amillennialist says, “No.” We haven’t needed it for two thousand years and we won’t need it in the future.

This may seem like a lot of dithering over a minor point, but in two weeks, I’ll talk about why this is actually fairly important. When theological rubber hits the road, all sorts of things can happen and sometimes, they’re not that good. So I’ll see you in two weeks. Maybe in video form.

John W. Otte leads a double life. By day, he’s a Lutheran minister, husband, and father of two. He graduated from Concordia University in St. Paul, Minnesota, with a theatre major, and then from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri. By night, he writes unusual stories of geeky grace. He lives in Blue Springs, Missouri, with his wife and two boys. Keep up with him at JohnWOtte.com.
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  1. Kessie says:

    I don’t know, I always thought there were enough Jews in Judaism who want a temple so they can start up the old sacrifice system again. In order to rebuild it, they need all the temple implements, the priests’ robes, and the big major ingredient, the ashes of the red heifer for temple dedication. That’s one reason they threw Vindel Jones out of Israel, because he knows where the ashes are. (He’s an archeologist, one of the inspirations for Indiana Jones.) But if they do turn up the ashes, there’ll be open war between the Jews and the Muslims about a new temple verses the dome of the rock, and nobody wants that. So it keeps getting put off. Not to mention a few other problems, like how true north has shifted, so they’d have to build it slightly different than the old foundations. (All this is quoted verbatim from Jones’s book and website, alas!)
     
    Sure, we don’t need a temple anymore because we have Jesus. But there are people out there who really want one. Fortunately, there are some roadblocks in their way.

  2. Bainespal says:

    What do you think about the modern nation of Israel?  I’m neither a theologian nor a die-hard prophecy nut, but it does seem like prophecy that Israel was reestablished after all those centuries, that Hebrew is a living language again.  I know that we don’t need another temple, but I would be afraid to side against the Jews if they decided to build a new temple.  The Jews have more of a right to have their temple on that spot than the Muslims have.  Should we join the chorus of Israel’s accusers?  That doesn’t bode well with me.

    • John Otte says:

      I’m almost hesitant to answer this question, because I worry that I’ll be accused of anti-Semitism. But I believe that the identity of God’s people has been transformed, just as the concept of the Temple has as well. More butterfly theology. The promise to Abraham in Genesis is the egg. The Old Testament nation of Israel was the caterpillar. The cocoon is always Jesus (Matthew’s gospel especially presents Jesus as Israel reduced to and/or fulfilled by one person). The butterfly is once again the Church, as evidenced by 1 Peter 2 and Romans 9-11 (along with a lot of other New Testament passages). What it means to be God’s chosen people was redefined by Jesus’ work.

      To me, the modern state of Israel is not a restoration of anything Biblical. It’s not a tribal league or a theocratic monarchy.  It’s a modern, secular democracy with a very strong religious segment to its government.

      Let me put it this way: suppose something were to happen to the United States of America. The whole thing gets destroyed and falls apart, its citizens scattered. Two thousand years from now, some of our descendants return to the land and set up an dystopian monarchical empire with no real human rights to speak of. Would they be right in saying that the United States of America had been restored?

      Now I’m not saying that we shouldn’t support the modern state of Israel. Far from it. Israel is the only stable democracy in the region and the U.S.’s historic ally. We should take that commitment seriously. But at the same time, I don’t believe that it’s a fulfillment of any prophecy.

      Consider this: Amos 9:11-12 seems to point to a “restoration of Israel,” And yet, in Acts 15:12-21, St. James says that the inclusion of Gentiles into the Church is the fulfillment of that prophecy.

      There is one other point that I wonder about: if Israel needs to have a Temple again, does that somehow imply that Jesus’ death and resurrection wasn’t sufficient for them for some reason? Just food for thought.

      • Bainespal says:

        I’m sorry to bring up this can of worms, but it seemed relevant to me. Maybe I don’t have enough faith to stand only on Scripture without considering what is going on in today’s world in questions of doctrine. But I don’t really trust any theological system to be correct enough, so I have to trust what I see. I think it would be a blindness not to look at what is happening in the world.

        Let me put it this way: suppose something were to happen to the United States of America. The whole thing gets destroyed and falls apart, its citizens scattered. Two thousand years from now, some of our descendants return to the land and set up an dystopian monarchical empire with no real human rights to speak of.

        By this analogy, I think that you are claiming that the worldview or values of the modern nation of Israel is not the same as that of Ancient Israel. Maybe that is true, but I think it would probably be true for any modern country compared to any ancient country. Beyond this, the analogy seems thin. It’s highly unlikely that the descendants of Americans would cling to an American identity for two thousand years after the devastation of the United States. The probability that an ethnic identity would exist for a scattered and defeated people for so long, and that the memory of ancient Israel remained so strong and so influential as to inspire the founding of the modern nation, do seem to point to the hand of Providence. Maybe I’m seeing more to current events than is really there, like the lousy literary critic who sees allegory when none was intended. But to me, this seems like Deeper Meaning.
         
        I don’t know how the Temple could literally be restored physically without contradicting the fulfillment of God’s fellowship with man in the person of Christ. However, your interpretation of the passage from Ezekiel just isn’t good enough for me. Despite the fact that not enough information for the Temple to actually be built is given in the text, the fact remains that a lot of specific details are there, more details than are necessary if the whole vision was a simple analogy pointing to Christ. Even if the Temple were rebuilt in Israel, it would still be a symbol of Christ, I think.
         
        Again, I’m sorry for raising this troubling topic.

        • John Otte says:

          No worries on my end.

          My analogy with the United States isn’t perfect, and it wasn’t so much about a difference in morality. It was more about the difference in governance. In the “golden age” of King David and King Solomon, Israel was a theocratic monarchy, where God was seen as the true ruler and the “king” acted as His regent. (As a side note, in the Hebrew, whenever the actual term for “king” is used in relation to the royalty of Israel, it always has a negative connotation. When they speak of royalty in a positive light, they call them “princes”). From where I’m sitting, a true restoration of Israel would be a restoration of that political structure. Hence my admittedly imperfect analogy. A true restoration of the U.S. would have to be a democracy, not an imperial monarchy.

          I’ll also concede that my explanation of the Temple vision isn’t perfect also. I have some questions about it as well. But, in my not-so-humble opinion, the weight of Scripture points to the fact that a Temple in Jerusalem is no longer needed. I wonder why God would want us to go back to shadows when we have a greater reality, that’s all.

      • Thomas says:

        I do not mean to sound offensive or impolite. I am a dispensational premillenialist, and I have studied prophecy and logic somewhat. I am not going to contend with the Temple (it will be rebuilt). My problem is with your butterfly theology. I think it’s clever, and I think it has some merit. But, constantly referring to Jesus Christ as a cocoon is incorrect. If you remember, He said he had not come to destroy the law (He didn’t say transform either), He said He had come to fulfill it. To fulfill it means to complete it. He did not complete the law with the church. He completed it within Himself. He was the completion of the Old Testament practice. He did not inaugurate a completion. Just my thoughts.

What do you think?