Posts Tagged Israelite

Was Abraham A Jew?


Abraham is one of the best-known people of the Bible. He’s a key figure in the history of both the Jewish and Arab people. He was the great-grandfather of Judah, whose descendants became known as the Jews, and he was also the father of Ishmael, from whom many of the Arab people are descended. Abraham […]

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Life Of King David Part 5 His Early Experiences


1 Samuel 18 Had we sought a topical title for this chapter, “The Price of Popularity” might well have been selected. The seventeenth chapter of 1 Samuel closes by recounting the memorable victory of David over Goliath the Philistine giant; the eighteenth chapter informs us of a number of things which formed the sequel to […]

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List of Artefacts significant to the Bible


Detail from the Arch of Titus showing spoils from the Sack of Jerusalem. Depicted are the menorah and trumpets, as well as what might be the Table of Showbread. Black Obelisk 841 BCE. Earliest known picture of an Israelite: possibly Jehu son of Omri, or Jehu’s ambassador, kneeling at the feet of Shalmaneser III. Lachish […]

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Life of King David – Part 1 David As a Youth


1 Samuel 16 and 17 The life of David marked an important epoch in the unfolding of God’s purpose and plan of redemption. Here a little and there a little God made known the grand goal toward which all His dealings tended. At sundry times and in divers’ manners God spake in times past. In […]

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Are You Ready?


I pray that by the power of the Holy Spirit I can burn just two words into your consciousness: Be ready. Be ready for the return of the Lord. Be ready for the catching away of the Church. Be ready for the Marriage Supper of the Lamb because its appointed time is very near. Some […]

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Is Your Mind in the Desert?


The people of the nation of Israel wandered around in the desert for forty years making what was actually an eleven-day journey. Why? Was it their enemies, their circumstances, or the trials along the way? Or was something entirely different preventing them from arriving at their destination? I pray that you receive the life in […]

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The Temple – Its Ministry and Services as they were at the time of Christ – Part 2


  The Chambers In  each  of  the  four  corners  of  the  Court  of  the  Women  were  chambers,  or  rather unroofed courts, each said to have been 60 feet long. In that at the right hand (on the north-east),  the  priests  who  were  unfit  for  other  than  menial  services  on  account  of bodily  blemishes,  picked  the  worm-eaten wood from that destined for the altar.  In the court  at  the  farther  angle  (north-west)  the  purified  lepers  washed  before  presenting themselves to the priests at the Gate of Nicanor. At the left (south-east) the Nazarites polled their hair, and cooked their peace-offerings; while in a fourth court (at the south- west) the oil and wine were kept for the drink-offerings. The musical instruments used by the Levites were deposited in two rooms under the Court of the Israelites, to which the access was from the Court of the Women. Of course the western colonnade of this court was open. Thence fifteen easy steps led through  the  so-called  Gate  of  Nicanor  into  the  Court  of  Israel.  On  these  steps  the Levites were wont on the Feast of Tabernacles to sing the fifteen ’Psalms of Degrees,’ or ascent (Psalms 120 to 134), whence some have derived their name. Here, or, rather, in the Gate of Nicanor, all that was ordered to be done ’before the Lord’ took place. There the cleansed  leper  and  the  women  coming  for  purification  presented  themselves  to  the priests, and there also the ’water of jealousy’ was given to the suspected wife. Court of Israel Perhaps it will be most convenient for practical purposes to regard the two Courts of Israel and of the Priests as in reality forming only one, divided into two parts by a low balustrade  1  1/2  feet  high.  Thus  viewed,  this  large  double  court,  inclusive  of  the Sanctuary itself, would measure 280 1/2 feet in length by 202 1/2 feet in breadth. Of this a narrow strip, 16 1/2 feet long, formed the Court of Israel. Two steps led up from it to the Court of the Priests. Here you mounted again by three low semicircular steps to a kind of pulpit or platform, where, as well as on the ’fifteen steps,’ the Levites sang and played during   the   ordinary   service.   The   priests,   on   the   other   hand,   occupied,   while pronouncing the blessing, the steps at the other end of the court which led up to the Temple porch. A similar arrangement existed in the great court as in that of the Women. Right and left of the Nicanor Gate were receptacles for the priestly vestments (one for each of the four kinds, and for the twenty-four courses of priests: 4 x 24 = 96). Next came the chamber of the high-priest’s meat-offering (Lev 6:20), where each morning before going to their duties the officiating priesthood gathered from the so-called ’Beth-ha-Moked,’ or ’house of stoves.’ The latter was built on arches, and contained a large dining-hall  that  communicated  with  four  other  chambers.  One  of  these  was  a  large apartment where fires were continually burning for the use of the priests who ministered barefoot. There also the heads of the ministering courses slept, and here, in a special receptacle under the pavement, the keys of the Temple were hung up at night. Of the other   three   chambers   of   the   Beth-Moked,   one   was   appropriated   to   the   various counterfoils given as a warrant when a person had paid his due for a drink-offering. In another the shewbread was prepared, while yet a third served for the lambs (at least six in number) that were always kept ready for the regular sacrifice. Here also a passage led to the well-lit subterranean bath for the use of the priests. Besides the Beth-Moked there were, north and south of the court, rooms for storing the salt for the altar, for salting the skins  of  sacrifices,  for  washing  ’their  inwards,’  for  storing  the  ’clean’  wood,  for  the machinery by which the laver was supplied with water, and finally the chamber ’Gazith,’ or Hall of Hewn Stones, where the Sanhedrin was wont to meet. Above some of these chambers were other apartments, such as those in which the high-priest spent the week before the Day of Atonement in study and meditation. The Chambers The account which Jewish tradition gives of these gates and chambers around the Court of the Priests is somewhat conflicting, perhaps because the same chambers and gates may  have  borne  different  names.  It  may,  however,  be  thus  summarised.  Entering  the Great Court by the Nicanor Gate, there was at the right hand the Chamber of Phinehas with  its  96  receptacles  for  priests’  vestments,  and  at the left the place where the high- priest’s daily meat-offering was prepared, and where every morning before daybreak all the ministering priests met, after their inspection of the Temple and before being told off to duty. Along the southern side of the court were the Water-gate, through which at the Feast of Tabernacles the pitcher with water was brought from the Pool of Siloam, with a chamber above it, called Abtinas, where the priests kept guard at night; then the Gate of the  Firstlings,  through  which  the  firstlings  fit  to  be  offered  were  brought;  and  the Wood-gate,  through  which  the  altar-wood  was  carried.  Alongside  these  gates  were Gazith, the hall of square polished stones, where the Sanhedrim sat; the chamber Golah, for  the  water  apparatus  which  emptied  and  filled  the  laver;  and  the  wood-chamber. Above and beyond it were the apartments of the high-priest and the council-chamber of the  ’honourable  councillors,’  or  priestly  council  for  affairs  strictly  connected  with  the Temple.  On  the  northern  side  of  the Priests’ Court were the gate Nitzutz (Spark Gate), with  a  guard-chamber above for the priests, the Gate of Sacrifices, and the Gate of the Beth-Moked. Alongside these gates were the chamber for salting the sacrifices; that for salting  the  skins  (named  Parvah  from  its  builder),  with  bathrooms  for  the  high-priest above  it;  and  finally  the  Beth-Moked  with  its  apartments.  The  two  largest  of  these buildings—the council-chamber of the Sanhedrim at the south-eastern,  13 and the Beth-Moked  at  the  north-western  angle  of  the  court—were  partly  built  into  the  court  and partly out on ’the terrace.’ This, because none other than a prince of the house of David might sit down within the sacred enclosure of the Priests’ Court. Probably there was a similar arrangement for the high-priest’s  apartments  and  the  priests’  council-chamber,  as  well  as  for  the  guard- chambers of the priests, so that at each of the four corners of the court the apartments would abut upon ’the terrace.’  14 All along the colonnades, both around the Court of the Gentiles and that of the Women, there were seats and benches for the accommodation of the worshippers. The Altar The most prominent object in the Court of the Priests was the immense altar of unhewn stones,   15 a square of not less than 48 feet, and, inclusive of ’the horns,’ 15 feet high. All around it a ’circuit’ ran for the use of the ministering priests, who, as a rule, always passed round by the right, and retired by the left.  16 As this ’circuit’ was raised 9 feet from the ground, and 1 1/2 feet high, while the ’horns’ measured 1 1/2 feet in height, the priests would have only to reach 3 feet to the top of the altar, and 4 1/2 feet to that of each ’horn.’ An inclined plane, 48 feet long by 24 wide, into which about the middle two smaller ’descents’ merged, led up to the ’circuit’ from the south. Close by was the great heap of salt, from which every sacrifice must be salted with salt.  17 On the altar, which at the top was only 36 feet wide, three fires burned, one (east) for the offerings, the second (south) for the incense, the third (north) to supply the means for kindling  the  other  two.  The  four  ’horns’  of  the  altar  were  straight,  square,  hollow prominences,  that  at  the  south-west with two openings, into whose silver funnels the drink-offerings, and, at the Feast of Tabernacles, the water from the Pool of Siloam, were poured. A red line all round the middle of the altar marked that above it the blood of sacrifices intended to be eaten, below it that of sacrifices wholly consumed, was to be sprinkled. The system of drainage into chambers below and canals, all of which could be flushed  at  will,  was  perfect;  the  blood  and  refuse  being  swept  down  into  Kedron  and towards   the   royal   gardens.   Finally,   north   of   the   altar   were   all   requisites   for   the sacrifices—six  rows,  with  four  rings  each,  of  ingenious  mechanism,  for  fastening  the sacrifices; eight marble tables for the flesh, fat, and cleaned ’inwards’; eight low columns, each with three hooks, for hanging up the pieces; a marble table for laying them out, and one of silver for the gold and silver vessels of the service. The Laver Between  the  altar  and  porch  of  the  Temple,  but  placed  towards  the  south,  was  the immense  laver  of  brass,  supported  by  twelve  colossal  lions,  which  was  drained  every evening, and filled every morning by machinery, and where twelve priests could wash at the same time. Indeed, the water supply to the Sanctuary is among the most wonderful of  its  arrangements.  That  of  the  Temple  is  designated  by  Captain  Wilson  as  the  ’low-level supply,’ in contradistinction to the ’high-level aqueduct,’ which collected the water in a rock-hewn tunnel four miles long, on the road to Hebron, and then wound along so as  to  deliver  water  to  the  upper  portion  of  the  city.  The  ’low-level’  aqueduct,  which supplied  the  Temple,  derived  its  waters  from  three  sources—from  the  hills  about […]

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The Error of Balaam


  Suggested Reading: Numbers 22, 23, 24, 25, 31 Dear Friend At first glance it might seem that the story of Balaam, the soothsayer, recorded in Numbers 22-25 has no relevance for today’s Christians. However, the writers of the New Testament refer to Balaam in three separate passages – always with a note of warning. […]

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Slaughter of the Canaanites


  Question:- I have heard you justify Old Testament violence on the basis that God had used Israelite army to judge the Canaanites and their elimination by Israelites is morally right as they were obeying God’s command (it would be wrong if they did not obey God in eliminating the Canaanites) . This resembles a bit on how […]

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The Nations of the Bible: Moab and Ammon


  John David Clark, Sr. – January, 1995 Location:God gave to Moab and Ammon the territory called in ancient times, “Ar” (Dt.2:9), the area east of Jordan and southward from the Jabbok River to the southern tip of the Salt Sea. To Moab belonged the land nearest to Canaan, and to Ammon belonged the region […]

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