Connections - LDS and Jewish Theology - Series
Ancient Temples and Their Functions
Sidney B. Sperry, “Ancient Temples and Their Functions,” Ensign, Jan. 1972, pg 67
One has only to read the scriptures carefully, particularly the modern scriptures, to
discover that temples must have been built and used in antiquity, even in the days of the
antediluvian patriarchs. In Doctrine and Covenants 124:39, the Lord speaks of his holy
house “… which my people are always commanded to build unto my holy name.”
[D&C 124:39] (Italics added.) And why should not temples be as necessary for the
giving of holy endowments to the living in the days of the ancient patriarchs as now?
Surely the Lord’s requirements for the exaltation of men in antiquity would be
essentially the same.
When one thinks of Enoch and his people who walked with God and were received
into his bosom (Moses 7:69), it seems incredible that they should be so received
without the endowments usually given to men in holy temples only. Much is said in
Doctrine and Covenants 132:29-37 [D&C 132:29-37] about the blessings Abraham
received as a result of his faith in God. The Lord says that he “hath entered into his
exaltation and sitteth upon his throne.” (D&C 132:39.) The same may be said of Isaac
and Jacob. (D&C 132:37.) Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob must have had sealed upon
them all of the blessings of the gospel, including all of the holy endowments given to the
faithful in mortality.
Some may ask where the temples were in which they could receive their endowments.
It is true that scripture says little directly about temples in the days of the ancient
patriarchs, but that does not prove they did not exist. The church existed in Abraham’s
day; in fact, the great Melchizedek seems to have been the head of it, and it was to him
that the father of the faithful paid tithes. (Gen. 14:20.) Abraham also received his
priesthood from Melchizedek. (D&C 84:14.) The fact that tithes were paid in
Abraham’s time would lead us to believe that such income would be used in part for
erecting houses of worship and for building or maintaining a temple “which my people
are always commanded to build unto my holy name.”
The explanations given to certain figures contained in Facsimile No. 2 in the Book of
Abraham must convince the thoughtful Latter-day Saint reader that Abraham was
acquainted with the sacred endowments and hence a temple or its equivalent in which
they would be administered. The further fact that the gospel was extensively preached
in Palestine prior to the advent of the Israelites under Joshua must open our minds to
the possibility of a fully manned church organization in the Holy Land in ancient times.
(1 Ne. 17:35.) Such a church would doubtless have the spiritual benefits of a temple.
When Moses brought Israel out of Egypt, one of the first things that he did was to try
to get the people to accept the higher priesthood and receive the ordinance wherein
“the power of godliness is manifest.” (D&C 84:19-20.)
“And without the ordinances thereof, and the authority of the priesthood, the power of
godliness is not manifest unto men in the flesh;
“For without this no man can see the face of God, even the Father, and live.
“Now this Moses plainly taught to the children of Israel in the wilderness, and sought
diligently to sanctify his people that they might behold the face of God.” (D&C
84:21-23.)
Such a program as Moses envisaged required the holy endowments; and, although the
great lawgiver could not build a temple in the wilderness, he could fashion an
acceptable tabernacle wherein they could be administered.
“And again, verily I say unto you, how shall your washings be acceptable unto me,
except ye perform them in a house which you have built to my name?
“For, for this cause I commanded Moses that he should build a tabernacle, that they
should bear it with them in the wilderness, and to build a house in the land of promise,
that those ordinances might be revealed which had been hid from before the world
was.” (D&C 124:37-38.)
We do not know the extent to which ordinances pertaining to the Melchizedek
Priesthood were performed in the tabernacle while in the wilderness and in Palestine up
to the time of the building of Solomon’s Temple, but that such ordinances were
performed seems certain in the light of such statements as this:
“David’s wives and concubines were given unto him of me, by the hand of Nathan, my
servant, and others of the prophets who had the keys of this power. …” (D&C
132:39.)
It seems more reasonable to believe that Nathan and the other prophets would seal
David’s wives and concubines to him in a holy place such as the tabernacle than in any
other structure.
There may have been long periods during the days of the Judges when the ordinances
pertaining to the Melchizedek Priesthood would not be performed in the tabernacle,
considering the history found in chapters 17-21 of the book of Judges. In those days,
“every man did that which was right in his own eyes.” (Judg. 17: 6; Judg. 21:25.) The
ordinances pertaining to the Aaronic Priesthood may have been more extensively
performed during this period, but even on this score we have little information.
Within chapters 25-40 of the book of Exodus one will find accounts of the building of
the tabernacle and the various restrictions concerning it. First of all we notice that the
Lord said to his people, “And let them make me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among
them.” (Ex. 25:8.) Hence the structure was to be commonly known as the “house of
the Lord.” (Ex. 34:26; Josh. 6:24.) The tabernacle was constructed of the finest
materials that the people had or could obtain while in the wilderness. There were the
hair and skins of the flocks, the acacia wood of the wilderness, and the skin of the
tachash, possibly a porpoise or similar creature from the Red Sea. The people gave
liberally of their ornaments and gold, silver, brass, and linen in abundance to go into this
movable sanctuary in the form of a tent.
The tabernacle proper was in the form of a rectangle, thirty cubits long by ten broad,
with the entrance at the east end. It was also ten cubits high. Translated into modern
units, the dimensions were forty-five feet by fifteen feet by fifteen feet. The interior of
the structure was divided into two main parts: the one on the extreme west, which was
fifteen feet square, was known as the Holy of Holies; and the other on the east, which
was known as the sanctuary or holy place, was thirty feet long and fifteen feet wide. A
kind of vestibule was on the extreme eastern end of the holy place where the entrance
to the structure was located.
The tabernacle was located in the west end of an outer court that was about
seventy-five feet wide and one hundred fifty feet long. The white linen curtain about the
outer court was held in position by sixty posts with silver caps and brass sockets. In the
eastern half of the outer court, in front of the tabernacle, was located the laver (Ex.
30:17-21) for washing feet and hands, and the altar of burnt offering, which was made
of acacia or shittim wood overlaid with brass. The altar was hollow to facilitate its
removal during the journeys of the Israelites; whenever they pitched it, it was filled with
earth, and sacrifices were burned thereon. (See cuts of Dr. Schick’s reconstructions of
the tabernacle and court.)
Just how endowment ceremonies were arranged for in the tabernacle as described we
can only conjecture. But within the Holy of Holies, where the ark of the covenant was
located, the Lord made provision to commune with the leaders of his people. The Lord
said to Moses:
“… I will commune with thee from above the mercy seat, from between the two
cherubims which are upon the ark of the testimony, of all things which I will give thee in
commandment unto the children of Israel.” (Ex. 25:22.)
We know that the dedication of the tabernacle took place on the first day of the second
year after the departure of the Israelites from Egypt. (Ex. 40:17.) A cloud rested upon
the sacred structure by day and a pillar of fire by night during all the period of
wandering. Whenever the camp moved, the Levites took the tabernacle to pieces and
put it together again at the new camping place. (Ex. 40:34-38.)
When the Israelites were settled in Canaan, Joshua stationed the tabernacle in Shiloh,
where it remained during the period of the judges. (Josh. 18:1.) During Saul’s reign, it
was at Nob. (Compare 1 Sam. 21:1; Mark 2:26.) During most of David’s reign and
that of Solomon until the building of the temple, the tabernacle was set up at the high
place of Gibeon. (1 Chr. 16:39; 1 Chr. 21:29.) Eventually Solomon laid it up in the
temple (1 Kgs. 8:4; 2 Chr. 5:5), which was constructed on the same model but was in
every part at least twice as large.
The materials for the permanent house of the Lord, known as Solomon’s Temple, were
accumulated mostly by David. (2 Sam. 7; 1 Chr. 28:11; 1 Chr. 29:9.) It is estimated
that he gathered a total of 108,000 talents of gold, 10,000 darics of gold, and
1,017,000 talents of silver for the prospective structure and its furnishings. With these
metals and other materials for which Solomon made arrangements, the king built a most
lavish temple to the Lord. It was completed in seven and one-half years.
As to the ordinances conducted in this and succeeding temples in Israel, we need say
little. They would probably be the same as those performed in the tabernacle.
The appearance of the temple of Solomon may be approximately that of the Stevens’s
reconstruction shown in the cut accompanying this article.
A word should be said about the “moulten sea” or font supported by twelve oxen
which some have mistakenly supposed was beneath Solomon’s temple, symbolizing
baptism for the dead. In 2 Chronicles we find this said about it:
“… the sea was for the priests to wash in … and he [Solomon] set the sea on the right
side of the east end, over against the south [i.e. southeast of the temple].” (2 Chr. 4:6;
2 Chr. 10; compare 1 Kgs. 7:39.)
In the reign of Ahaz (736-721 B.C.), that ruler took down the sea from off the brazen
oxen and stood it upon a stone pavement. (2 Kgs. 16:17.) When Nebuchadnezzar
captured Jerusalem in 590 B.C. (Book of Mormon chronology), he broke the font into
pieces. (2 Kgs. 25:13; Jer. 27:19-22.)
It is of considerable interest to us that scholars affirm the fact that seas were built for
Babylonian temples. 1
Following the Babylonian captivity, Cyrus the Persian king authorized the Jews to build
a temple 60 cubits (90 feet) in height and breadth (Ezra 6:3; Josephus, Antiquities XI.
4, 6; cf. XV. 11, 1), in place of the one destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 500 B.C. The
temple was probably begun about the second year after their return from captivity (537
B.C.?), but the Jews met difficulties, including much opposition from the Samaritans, and
discontinued building. But in the second year of Darius the king (520 B.C.), the Lord
gave word to the Jews to finish the sacred structure. The whole prophecy of Haggai is
in relation to this project. The plan of Solomon’s temple was followed in general, but
due to the poverty of the people, not on such a lavish scale. Many of the vessels used
in the former temple were restored. (Ezra 1:7-11.) The Holy of Holies was empty, for
the Ark of the Covenant disappeared when Nebuchadnezzar’s forces invaded
Palestine.
This temple, called after Zerubbabel, and sometimes known as the Second Temple,
was completed in the sixth year of Darius, 515 B.C. (Ezra 3:8; Ezra 6:15.)
Not too many years after the dedication of the Second Temple, the Jews grew worldly
and unworthy of administering sacred rites therein. The book of Malachi (Mal. 1:2;
Mal. 2:17; Mal. 3:5-18) is the protest of a great prophet against the corruption and
unworthiness of the people. We are in no position to say how long the Lord was willing
to accept the ordinances performed in this temple following its dedication, but it cannot
have been many years. It would be interesting to know the details concerning the
administration of the temple following the disappearance of prophets from Israel, a
period of about four hundred years.
It is of interest to know that certain groups of Jews built a temple on the island of Yeb,
later Elephantine, on the Nile River. These Jews, originally mercenaries, spoke and
wrote Aramaic. Papyri found on the island show that they retained their own customs
and enjoyed self-government. In apparent disobedience to the law and to the practice
of other Jews of the dispersion, they maintained a temple dedicated to Yahu. At this
temple they offered food, incense, and burnt offerings. The papyri make reference also
to the feasts of the Passover and Unleavened Bread. When Cambyses the Persian
conquered Egypt in 525 B.C., he destroyed the Egyptian temples but spared the temple
of Yahu.
Much later, during the absence of the Persian governor in 411 B.C., the enraged
Egyptians, instigated by priests serving the ram-headed Chnum, destroyed the Jewish
temple. We possess papyri that indicate that the Jews immediately petitioned Bagoas,
the governor of Judea, the high priest Johanan, and other Judeans to come to their
assistance. No answer was forthcoming. In 408 B.C. the colony again petitioned their
Judean brethren, accompanying their letter with gifts. This time permission was granted
to rebuild the temple and to offer food and incense sacrifices. Until recently it was
considered doubtful that the temple was actually rebuilt. Now the Brooklyn Aramaic
Papyri, edited by Dr. Emil G. Kraeling, indicate that it was. 2
Latter-day Saints will be sufficiently apprised of the spiritual condition of these temple
builders on Yeb when they are informed that they not only worshiped Yahu but other
divinities of Canaan, e.g., Ashim-bethel, Anath-bethel, and Cherem. At Elephantine,
Anath was Yahu’s consort under the name of Anath-Yahu. The spiritual condition of
the Judean Jews who wrote the letter to Yeb may also be deduced from these facts.
Zerubbabel’s temple was finally superseded by that of Herod. We are indebted to the
Jewish historian Josephus for rather full descriptions of the sanctuary, 3 and also to the
Mishnah. The older temple was not taken down until much of the material for the new
had been assembled.
Work on the new temple began in the eighteenth year of Herod’s reign, 20-19 B.C. And
the great complex of courts and buildings associated with Herod’s temple was not
completed until the procuratorship of Albinus, A.D. 62-64. 4 The old temple area was
enlarged to twice its former dimensions. The temple proper was constructed of great
blocks of white stone; its interior had the length and breadth of Solomon’s Temple, but
its height was 40 cubits (60 feet), not counting an upper chamber, instead of 30 cubits
(45 feet). The Temple of Herod was divided into the Holy of Holies and the sanctuary
or holy place as in the earlier temples, but the appointments were much more lavish.
The Holy of Holies was empty and was separated from the holy place by means of a
veil. The reader is referred to Josephus for a more detailed description of the great
temple structure.
The Book of Mormon makes clear that the Nephites, another branch of Hebrew
people, knew the uses of temples and built a number of them upon this continent.
Apparently the first temple was that constructed by Nephi after he and his followers
had separated themselves from their unrighteous brethren. It was built after the plan of
Solomon’s Temple, the details of which could be learned from the brass plates. Here
are Nephi’s words:
“And I, Nephi, did build a temple; and I did construct it after the manner of the temple
of Solomon save it were not built of so many precious things; for they were not to be
found upon the land, wherefore, it could not be built like unto Solomon’s temple. But
the manner of the construction was like unto the temple of Solomon; and the
workmanship thereof was exceeding fine.” (2 Ne. 5:16.)
It is very unlikely that Nephi would build a temple without an express revelation from
the Lord authorizing it. Furthermore, all the ordinances pertaining to the temple would
have to be revealed. The Nephites kept the Law of Moses, but it does not follow that
ordinance work for the living within the limits of the Aaronic Priesthood only would be
permitted within the sacred structure. Nephi and his followers kept the law of the
gospel and it is probable that all of the ordinances for the living according to the
Melchizedek Priesthood would be performed. Nephi seems to have had certain sealing
powers of the priesthood, as did another Nephi mentioned in the book of Helaman. (2
Ne. 33:15; Hel. 10:7.) As long as prophets like these were around, a full endowment
could be given the righteous; otherwise a limited endowment within the Aaronic
Priesthood would probably be administered.
It is probable that Nephi’s brother Jacob taught within this identical temple, but King
Benjamin’s sermon must have been delivered in another temple located in the land of
Zarahemla. (Mosiah 1:1, 18.)
The people of Zeniff may well have repaired the old temple of Nephi when they
returned to the land of their father’s inheritance or may have built a new one. (Mosiah
7:17.) Some interesting questions arise as to the use of a temple by Zeniff’s people.
Did they have proper authority to administer the ordinances therein or did they use it
simply as a meeting place? The question of proper authority arises especially during the
wicked reign of King Noah.
An interesting reference to an incident that took place in a Nephite temple—where or
when we are not told—is related by Amulek:
“I am Amulek; I am the son of Giddonah, who was the son of Ishmael, who was a
descendant of Aminadi; and it was the same Aminadi who interpreted the writing which
was upon the wall of the temple, which was written by the finger of God.
“And Aminadi was a descendant of Nephi, who was the son of Lehi. …” (Alma
10:2-3.)
When the risen, glorified Savior appeared to the Nephites for three successive days, he
did so “round about the temple which was in the land Bountiful. …” (3 Ne. 11:1.)
Before the resurrection of our Lord, ordinance work for the dead could not be carried
out either in the temples in Palestine or on this continent. But after his resurrection, he
fully explained such work to the Nephites. This is shown by the fact that he quoted in
full chapters 3 and 4 of Malachi and “expounded them unto the multitude.” (3 Ne.
24:1; 3 Ne. 26:1.) Thus, the sealing powers of Elijah as applied to ordinance work for
the dead became known to the Nephites. We may presume that such work was
carried out in their temples during the period of their righteousness, for four generations.
Mormon was not permitted to quote the Savior’s explanations of Malachi’s references
to Elijah because the keys of such knowledge in our dispensation were to come to
Joseph Smith, who would explain their proper functions.
Following the Savior’s resurrection, ordinance work for the dead must have been
carried on in sacred structures erected in the Mediterranean world. Paul’s reference to
baptism for the dead (1 Cor. 15:29) seems proof of that fact. At any rate the
Corinthians seem to have had access to a temple acceptable for such work. It was
probably very small, and we have no information concerning it. The same is true of any
other similar structure erected by the early saints to the Lord during the first century A.D.
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