IS TEMPLE MOUNT NOT THE LOCATION OF THE TEMPLE? IS THE ARK IN ETHIOPIA?
Author Robert Cornuke wrote in the Introduction to this 2014 book, “The Temple Mount is considered to be the most holy site of the Jews… Even though the Temple Mount is in the middle of Israel it is also solely in the administrative control of Muslims due to some complex political posturing. This is the awkward quandary for the Jews who desperately want to take control, as well as rebuild their temple there… It may be surprising to some, but in the fourth century, people were trying to find the lost sites of the former temples of Solomon and Herod. They simply did not know where the temple sites were placed. In 70 AD the temple was completely and utterly uprooted by the Romans… so much so that no one could even tell that the building had ever existed. So, in the next 300 years… people were not sure where the correct location of the temple was… I have always thought that the location of the temple of Solomon had been proven… But, I began to become doubtful of the traditional view after Dr. Paul Feinberg alerted me to the revolutionary work of the late archaeologist … Dr. Ernest L. Martin.” (Pg. 9-10)
He states, “in the fourth century people did not even know for sure where the temples were located. Today… we THINK we know with absolute surety… But do we really know for sure?... I have come to believe that the greatest archaeological blunder of all time has occurred in Jerusalem, and that this error is the mistaken placement of the temple location on the Temple Mount.” (Pg. 35)
He notes “In the case of the famed Jewish historian Flavius Josephus… he has been accused of being … a poor historian concerning his writings as to where the temple is located… I believe the reason he is criticized concerning the temple location is because he goes against the traditional placement of the Dome of the Rock/Temple Mount… So, is Josephus wrong, or are we… Are we being guided by tradition as opposed to an actual eyewitness (Josephus) who was there at the time of the temple destruction?... I believe Josephus was speaking of a completely different area than the Haram/Temple Mount platform…” (Pg. 46)
He asks, “Today, Jews face strict opposition by the Muslims to rebuild the temple on their sacred place of the Dome of the Rock. But what if the Jews were free to build their temple at another location?” (Pg. 63)
He reports, “The idea of the Temple Mount (traditional site that we have today) was not unanimously accepted as the final designation of the temple placement until around 1169. It was then that Benjamin Tudela proclaimed emphatically that … the traditional Temple Mount platform was to be forevermore the proper placement of Solomon’s temple.” (Pg. 71)
He argues, “The question has been raised over and over again: how was it possible to forget the location of the temple? Well, we did. And here are the reasons. The Jews were removed from the land of Israel for very long periods of time… For 725 long years there were no scholars to speak of and no religious authorities having open access to the temple area. Any serious investigation was abandoned and, in time, anything that stagnates dies and is eventually erases from memory. In addition, far too many eyewitnesses worthy of notation were slaughtered by the \Romans leaving untold messages from the past precariously forgotten.” (Pg. 103)
He notes, “This is no blemish on Jews who bow and pray daily at the Western Wailing Wall… And since I am an imperfect man trying to find truth in an imperfect world, maybe it is I who has erred in my opinions. But, when I use the perfect source of the Bible, and it is telling me over and over again that the temple has to be in the City of David, and that it has to be in the stronghold of Zion, then astute and committed attention needs to be adhered to and the distracting pull of traditions inherently ignored.” (Pg. 138)
He recounts, “What I am about to share is a synopsis of my many years of research in Ethiopia searching for the ark. If it has somehow survived to this day, I feel the Ark of the Covenant is of incalculable importance for what lies ahead. I believe that beyond all counterintuitive reasoning that the ark/mercy seat may be intact, and that it could be a cornerstone of prophetic relevancy including how it fits into the new temple location. The research on the theory presented here is that the Ark of the Covenant has possibly survived and is in Ethiopia…” (Pg. 157)
He continues, “Ethiopians maintain that no one will ever see what they insist is the Ark of the Covenant. They say that what is in their care is so holy that only one man---the Guardian of the Ark---0is worthy of even seeing it. The guardian is… assigned to spend his entire like in worshipful solitude, worshiping and protecting the ark.” (Pg. 177)
He concludes, “So, is the ark in Ethiopia, do we have the real proof? The end of the matter is simply this: if what lies in Axum is the true ark, then God’s protective hand is upon it. It will not be moved, seen, or touched before its time. God will do what God will do, directing events for His own pleasure, at His own discretion, to His own ends---sometimes in cooperation with, but usually in spite of, what humans think or do.” (Pg. 179)
This book will interest Christians studying such speculative topics.