Jerusalem Day: The Temple Mount-Muslim And Christian Scripture Claim It’s Jewish

Facebook Twitter Flipboard For Jerusalem Day, the below covers the history of the Temple Mount.  Muslim and Christian scripture Instead of preparing its people for peace, the supposedly moderate Palestinian Authority (PA) continues to incite the Palestinians to hate Israel and all Jews. Their propaganda continues to deny Jewish history in the Holy Land, especially […]

By Dunetz שמואל בן נח

May 30, 2022 at 12:09 pm

For Jerusalem Day, the below covers the history of the Temple Mount.  Muslim and Christian scripture

Instead of preparing its people for peace, the supposedly moderate Palestinian Authority (PA) continues to incite the Palestinians to hate Israel and all Jews. Their propaganda continues to deny Jewish history in the Holy Land, especially the Jewish heritage of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. The PA uses words to incite Muslim Palestinians and renounce Muslim and Christian scripture and history. The European nations such as Britain and France, which claim to be allies of Israel, cowardly abstain when there is a UN vote claiming Mount Moriah is occupied territory

An example of Palestinian propaganda is a report by Palestinian Media Watch (PMW) reveals some recent quotes from Palestinian President Abbas and others said by TV hosts on the PA-run TV station.

The 2015  broadcast exemplified the PA fabrications about the history of Jerusalem.

"The story of the Temple is nothing but a collection of legends and myths for political reasons. They [Jews] have set Palestine and Jerusalem as their goal, and have used the myths in the service of their declared goals of occupation and imperialism. In the spirit of the delusions and legends, they try to get rid of the Al-Aqsa [Mosque] and establish their so-called 'Temple' - the greatest crime and forgery in history."

[Official PA TV, Aug. 1, 2015

There are many more examples at PMW.

Let's start out with the basics. Jerusalem was NEVER part of a Palestinian State as there was never an independent state of Palestine. After the Bar Kochba revolt in 135 CE, the Romans punished the Judeans (Jews) for revolting a second time in sixty years. They changed the name of the Judean's country from Judea to Syria Palaestina (after the ancient enemy of the Jews, the Philistines. The Philistines were destroyed about a thousand years before Rome changed Judea's name. At the same time, the Romans changed the name of the holy city and Judea's capital from Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina (literally Capitoline Hill of the House of Aelius).

After Rome fell,  the holy land was ruled by the Byzantine Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and finally, the British mandate before it once again became a Jewish State in 1948.

During the period of 135 CE through 1948 (when Jordan began to occupy Jerusalem), there were large populations of Jews in Jerusalem. In fact, starting with the earliest information available (1844), there were more Jews in Jerusalem than people of any other faith.

To the ancient Muslim, Greek, and Roman pagan authors, Jerusalem was a Jewish city. Their text indicates the unanimous agreement that Jerusalem was Jewish because its inhabitants were Jews, it was founded by Jews, and the Temple in Jerusalem was the center of the Jewish religion. That's a critical point, as we know from history, the highest part of an ancient capital city is where its holiest site was built.   In ancient Athens, the Parthenon, a temple to Athena, the goddess to who the city is named, is on the city's high point. The Jewish Temple was built in Jerusalem on Mount Moriah, the highest spot in Jerusalem.

Ancient texts disprove the attempts by the PA and others to deny the historical connection of the Jewish people to Jerusalem, as well as the location of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem. Below are just some of the examples from Greek and Roman times published initially in a November 2008 Report issued by the JCPA:

It is noteworthy that an earlier capture of Jerusalem by the Greek-Egyptian King Ptolemy, son of Lagus, provided an opportunity for the obscure Agatharchides of Cnidus (second century BCE) to remark about the fact that "the people known as Jews, who inhabited the most strongly fortified of cities, called by the natives Jerusalem" lost their city because they would not defend it on the Sabbath.

Josephus includes this selection in Against Apion as one of the early pagan critiques of the Jewish Sabbath, which Agatharchides deemed as "folly," "dreams," and "traditional fancies about the law."

The Palestinians point to the fact that there is little archeological evidence that either Temple existed, which ignores the very convenient fact that there is no digging allowed on the Temple Mount in respect of its holiness to the Muslims. But when the Muslims dug up part of the Temple Mount to add to their Mosque, they dumped the tons of dirt with artifacts outside the holy city.

The Jerusalem Islamic Waqf, the institution overseeing the al-Aqsa Mosque compound, carried out excavations on the Temple Mount between 1996 and 1999 as part of the construction of a subterranean mosque in an area known as Solomon’s Stables. Tens of thousands of tons of dirt — roughly 400 truckloads — were excavated by heavy machinery, without the supervision of archaeologists, and were dumped outside the Old City.

Archeologists have been sifting through the dirt for years (the project's called the Temple Mount Sifting Project) and have found artifacts from the Holy Temples. For example, in 2005, an archaeologist found what is now known as the Gaalyahu Seal, which in Hebrew says belonging to Gaalyahu, son of Imer. The house of Imer was a well-known priestly family at the end of the First Temple period, roughly from around the 7th – 6th Centuries BCE.

Despite what the PA says about the Jewish Temples, There are references to the Temples in texts the Muslims consider sacred.

The Qur’an refers to the existence of both temples in verse 17:7. In this passage, the Qur’an deals with God’s punishment of the Children of Israel for their transgressions:

(We permitted your enemies)

To disfigure your faces,

And to enter your Temple

As they had entered it before,

And to visit with destruction

All that fell into their power.

The word translated as “Temple” by Abdullah Yusuf Ali (and by the influential translator Marmaduke Pickthall before him) is masjid. This word, which is usually translated as mosque, has the meaning of a sanctuary wherever it appears in a pre-Islamic context. The usual Muslim exegesis of this verse (including that of Abdullah Yusuf Ali) holds that it refers to the destruction of the First and Second Temples.

Muslim tradition is especially adamant about the existence of the First Temple, built by Solomon, who appears in the Qur’an as a prophet and a paragon of wisdom. Verse 34:13 is an account of how Solomon summoned jinn (spirits) to build the Temple:

They worked for him

As he desired, (making) Arches,

Images, Basons

As large as wells,

And (cooking) Cauldrons fixed

(In their places)

The very verse in the Quran that supposedly makes the Temple Mount holy to Muslims also proves that the spot was occupied by the Jewish Temple:

The Islamic sanctity of the Haram al-Sharif [what the Muslims call the Temple Mount] is based upon verse 17:1

Glory to (Allah)

Who did take His Servant

For a Journey by night

From the Sacred Mosque

To the Farthest Mosque

This is the textual proof of the israel, the earthly segment of the Night Journey of the Prophet Muhammad: overnight, Muhammad was miraculously transported, round-trip, from “the Sacred Mosque” (al-Masjid al-Haram)-that is, the Ka’ba (or its vicinity) in Mecca-to “the Farthest Mosque” (al-Masjid al-Aqsa). Later Muslim tradition came to identify “the Farthest Mosque” with Jerusalem. But during Muhammad’s lifetime, no mosque stood in Jerusalem; the Muslims conquered the city only several years after his death. Abdullah Yusuf Ali’s commentary on this verse summarizes the traditional explanation: “The Farthest Mosque,” he writes, “must refer to the site of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem on the hill of Moriah.“

When Muslims did build a mosque on this hill, Muslim tradition holds that it was built deliberately on the verified site of earlier sanctuaries. According to Muslim tradition, when the Caliph Umar visited Jerusalem after its conquest, he searched for David’s sanctuary or prayer niche (mihrab Dawud), which is mentioned in the Qur’an (38:21). (David was believed to have chosen the site on which Solomon built.) When Umar was satisfied he had located it, he ordered a place of prayer (musalla) to be established there. This evolved into a mosque-precursor of the later Aksa Mosque. Thus began the Islamization of the complex that later came to be known as the Haram al-Sharif. It became the tradition of Islam that Muslims restored the site to its earlier function as a place of supplication venerated by all the prophets, including Abraham, David and Solomon.

Then there is Koran, Sura 2:145, "The Cow."

“…They would not follow thy direction of prayer (qiblah), nor art thou to follow their direction of prayer; nor indeed will they follow each other’s direction of prayer…”

Commentators explain that “thy qiblah” (direction of prayer for Muslims) clearly refers the Ka’bah of Mecca, while “their qiblah” (direction of prayer for Jews) refers to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

This Koranic passage shows that Jerusalem's holiness is a Jewish concept and should not be confused with an Islamic concept, as the 13th-century Arab biographer and geographer Yakut noted: "Mecca is holy to Muslims, and Jerusalem to the Jews."

The Official 1925 Supreme Moslem Council (Wakf) Guide Book To Al-Ḥaram Al-Sarif (Temple Mount) recognized the presence of the Jewish Temples atop the Mount. Below is paragraph two, which appears on page four, which says, "It's [the Temple Mount] identity with the site of Solomon's Temple is beyond dispute." After Israel became a state in 1948, the Waqf removed all references to King Solomon's Temple from its guidebooks, whose location at the site it had previously said was "beyond dispute."

And let's not forget that the Jewish Temple is mentioned in the Christian Gospels, which pre-date Islam. For example, in Mark 12:40 and Luke 20:47, Jesus accused the Temple authorities of thieving and this time names poor widows as their victims, going on to provide evidence of this in Mark 12:42 and Luke 21:2. Dove sellers were selling doves sacrificed by the poor who could not afford grander sacrifices, specifically by women.

According to Mark 11:16, Jesus then put an embargo on people carrying any merchandise through the Temple—a sanction that would have disrupted all commerce. In the Gospel of John 2:15-16, Jesus refers to the Jerusalem Temple as "my Father's house," thus claiming to be the Son of God.

He poured out the coins of the money changers and overturned their tables; and to those who were selling the doves He said, “Take these things away; stop making My Father’s house a place of business.”

What does this all mean? Ancient, Muslim, and Christian texts all agree with the Jewish scriptures that there was a Jewish holy temple on top of Mount Moriah in Jerusalem.   No amount of lies from the Palestinians, the UN, or any country–--no one except the Lord God himself can take Jerusalem away from the Jewish people.  

The United States finally recognized this fact, thanks to President Trump. Now it is time for the leadership of the PA  and cowardly allies in Europe to read Christian, Muslim, and Jewish scripture, all of which understand that Jerusalem is the capital of the Jewish people and Mount Moriah was the site of two Jewish temples to God.

PA propaganda denies Muslim scripture.

PA propaganda denies Muslim scripture.

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