If You’re Gonna Walk The Walk (2 Samuel 5.1-16)

TEXT: 2 SAMUEL 5.1-16

TOPIC: THE JEBUSITES AND KING DAVID TRADE TAUNTS AS THE ISRAELITES DETERMINE TO CONQUER JERUSALEM

TITLE: IF YOU’RE GONNA WALK THE WALK, YOU’VE GOT TO TRASH THE TALK

SERIES: TOTAL INCLINE OF THE HEART

Introduction

In sports it’s called trash talk.  One of the greatest trash-talking moments occurred in the 1997 NBA Finals between the Chicago Bulls and the Utah Jazz.  Game one was tied at 82.  The game was played on a Sunday.  As Karl Malone stepped to the free-throw line Scottie Pippen walked behind The Mailman, Karl Malone, and muttered, “The Mailman doesn’t deliver on Sunday.”

It seemed to work!  The Mailman choked by throwing up two bricks.  On the ensuing play one of basketball’s greatest trash talkers, Michael Jordan, won the game with a buzzer-beater.

We encounter some trash talk in our text.  David was now king of a untied nation of Israel.  His first order of business was to capture Jerusalem from the Jebusites.

When David’s men approached Jerusalem it prompted some high-level trash talking from both sides.

The Jebusites, confident in their impregnability, looked down upon the Israelites and said, “You shall not come in here; but the blind and the lame shall repel you.”
David turned their taunt back on them and after Jerusalem was taken by his army it became a motivational saying in Israel.

Conquering Jerusalem was both a strategic and a symbolic victory for David.  You see, in their entire history the Jews had never been able to overcome the inhabitants of Jerusalem, never had they driven them out.  It was as if even lame and blind Jebusites could repel the best soldiers of Israel.

What you see in this text is that the moment Israel recognized their rightful king, the conquest that had eluded them for so long became easy.

I’m going to suggest a correlation in our spiritual lives as believers in Jesus Christ.  It’s simply this: In our lives there are things we struggle against that are essentially powerless because of the Cross of Jesus yet they continue to hold sway over us.  If we will yield to the lordship of Christ we can, we will, overcome those strongholds.

I’ll organize my thoughts around two points: #1 The ‘Lame and the Blind’ Will Repel You Until You Settle The Issue Of Lordship, and #2 The ‘Lame and the Blind’ Will Repulse You Once You Settle The Issue Of Lordship.

#1    The ‘Lame and the Blind’ Will Repel You
Until You Settle The Issue Of Lordship
(v1-7)

I should spend a few moments defining what we mean by ‘lordship.’  A few years ago there was a big debate among evangelical believers over what was called Lordship Salvation.  Its proponents emphasized that submitting to Christ as Lord over your life goes hand-in-hand with trusting in Christ to be saved.  You can summarize their position with this saying – “If He’s not Lord of all, He’s not Lord at all.”

Of course Jesus is Lord!  But spiritual growth is a process.  The Bible calls this process sanctification.  Some people grow more quickly than others and even in our individual lives there can be circumstances and situations that affect sanctification.

Submitting to the lordship of Jesus is an issue of our sanctification, not our salvation.  To quote one source,

A person does not have to submit to God in every area of his or her life in order to be saved.  A person simply has to recognize that he or she is a sinner, in need of Jesus Christ for salvation, and place trust in Him.  Jesus is Lord.  Christians absolutely should submit to Him.  [But] a changed life and submission to Christ’s lordship are the result of salvation, not a requirement for salvation.

For our purposes this morning, in talking about the lordship of Jesus we mean a Christian resolving issues of spiritual growth, deciding who is really in control of their life.

As soon as Israel recognized David as king, something that had eluded them for centuries – the capture of the stronghold of Jerusalem – was achieved.

2 Samuel 5:1  Then all the tribes of Israel came to David at Hebron and spoke, saying, “Indeed we are your bone and your flesh.
2 Samuel 5:2  Also, in time past, when Saul was king over us, you were the one who led Israel out and brought them in; and the Lord said to you, ‘You shall shepherd My people Israel, and be ruler over Israel.’ ”
2 Samuel 5:3  Therefore all the elders of Israel came to the king at Hebron, and King David made a covenant with them at Hebron before the Lord. And they anointed David king over Israel.

After the death of Saul the men of Judah recognized David as king.  The northern tribes did not.  David ruled the south from Hebron while a descendant of Saul’s, Ishbosheth, ruled the north.  This went on for some seven years until the murder of Ishbosheth by two of his own military captains.

The thing to notice is that the northerners knew all along that David was God’s choice to be king.  Even while Saul was alive it was David whose military exploits brought glory to God and defended Israel.  Still they followed Saul and, afterward, his son.  They therefore willfully refused to acknowledge what they knew and believed to be true – that David was their king, to shepherd them.

We can relate to this on a personal level.  If we are Christians we know and believe that Jesus is Lord and means to shepherd us.  But in one or more areas of our lives we may cling to some other ‘ruler.’  It may be self, or some idol that we have set up.  We may struggle against it or we may grow comfortable with it.  It may be a habit we’ve chosen or an addiction that has us in chains.  We may find ourselves making the excuse, “That’s just the way I am.”

The encouragement of God’s Word for us today is that overcoming that kind of stronghold in our lives, no matter how fiercely held or for how long, is possible if we will yield to the lordship of Jesus Christ in that area.

The “elders of Israel,” representing the people, anointed David king.  God had already anointed him some fifteen or more years earlier, while he was yet a teenager.  They were just getting around to fully acknowledging what God had already done for them.

So much of our growing in Christ is fully acknowledging what He has already done for us.  On the Cross Jesus defeated the devil.  He conquered death and Hell.  We’re told that as we identify with Him on the Cross and in His resurrection that we are dead to sin and alive to Him – meaning we have power to not sin and to walk in victory over it.

Some areas of our lives can prove more resistant to this acknowledging than others.  Or we might make the foolish mistake of returning to a stronghold that Jesus overcame for us.  Either way the solution is the same: Acknowledge He is Lord and yield your members to Him.

2 Samuel 5:4  David was thirty years old when he began to reign, and he reigned forty years.
2 Samuel 5:5  In Hebron he reigned over Judah seven years and six months, and in Jerusalem he reigned thirty-three years over all Israel and Judah.

In this historical note we see that the northern tribes suffered under the wrong lordship for some seven years.  Stubborn to hold-out against David, it created a kind of stalemate in which their growth was on hold.  And it affected the development of the entire nation as they remained unable to overcome the Jebusites and take their rightful capital city.

I say they “suffered” but it was mostly spiritual.  Their lives went on.  They got up, went to work, went to worship.  But there was something missing; someone, actually.  They did not have their shepherd-king to lead them to new glories.

The Christian life can be sort of stunted as well when we allow strongholds to continue.  We go through the motions but we’re not really making any progress.

2 Samuel 5:6  And the king and his men went to Jerusalem against the Jebusites, the inhabitants of the land, who spoke to David, saying, “You shall not come in here; but the blind and the lame will repel you,” thinking, “David cannot come in here.”

Jerusalem, because of the way it was situated and fortified, was one of those seemingly impregnable fortresses.  The Jebusites were so confident in its defensibility that they could taunt David by saying even the blind and the lame could successfully defend it against the Israelites.

In a sense, the blind and the lame had repelled the Israelites until now.  Commentators point out that in addition to referring to actual blind and lame individuals this could be a reference to the gods of the Jebusites.  Probably they would set-up the images of their gods on the walls when an army approached; it was common practice in those days.

It was also commonly known that the God of Israel had attitude about idols.  Listen to this excerpt from Psalm 135.

Psalms 135:15  The idols of the nations are silver and gold, The work of men’s hands.
Psalms 135:16  They have mouths, but they do not speak; Eyes they have, but they do not see;
Psalms 135:17  They have ears, but they do not hear; Nor is there any breath in their mouths.
Psalms 135:18  Those who make them are like them; So is everyone who trusts in them.

Part of the taunt of the Jebusites, then, was that the God of Israel was no match for their supposedly blind and lame idols.

If we are allowing some stronghold to exist unconquered it’s as if we are being dominated by things that are essentially blind and lame – powerless in the aftermath of the Cross and resurrection of our Lord.

2 Samuel 5:7  Nevertheless David took the stronghold of Zion (that is, the City of David).

We’ll see how in a moment.  The point the writer seems to be making is that victory was certain and even easy once they acknowledged the rightful king.

Is there an area in your life you continually struggle against?  It may be a sincere struggle, or it may be something you desire to hold on to.  Either way the Lord has already overcome it.  Victory may be as easy as acknowledging it is, in fact, an enemy stronghold that needs to be overthrown.

#2    The ‘Lame and the Blind’ Will Repulse You
Once You Settle The Issue Of Lordship
(v8-15)

David engaged in some trash talking of his own to motivate his men.

2 Samuel 5:8  Now David said on that day, “Whoever climbs up by way of the water shaft and defeats the Jebusites (the lame and the blind, who are hated by David’s soul), he shall be chief and captain.” Therefore they say, “The blind and the lame shall not come into the house.”

Before we look at his strategy, notice the phrase, “the lame and the blind, who are hated by David’s soul.”  Who or what was David referring to?

Certainly he was referring to the so-called ‘gods’ of the Jebusites.  By extension he was referring to the Jebusites themselves who had put their trust in dead idols of their own making instead of turning to the living God Who had made them.

Then we read, “Therefore they say, ‘The blind and the lame shall not come into the house.’ ”  This apparently became a saying in Israel, something soldiers would say to one another as motivation before a battle.  They’d come upon a fortified enemy and say to one another, “The blind and the lame shall not come into the house,” and it would remind them of their great victory over the seemingly impregnable stronghold of Jerusalem.  It would remind them that the gods of the pagans were blind and lame and no match at all for the living God.

We’re told David “hated” the blind and the lame.  He was repulsed by them.

It’s been my experience over the years that once Jesus has taken over an area of my life, the thing or things I used to be drawn to are shown to be repulsive.  I see the damage they can create, the ruin they instigate.  They’re just plain ugly when compared to the beauty of Christ.

Jerusalem seemed secure in her defenses.  David identified the one weakness.  There was a “water shaft” that supplied the city its fresh water.  The soldiers could enter there and attack and defeat the Jebusites.

Water is a common symbol in the Bible for the cleansing and the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives.  Everything we are talking about depends upon the cleansing and the power of the Holy Spirit.  We cannot overcome strongholds on our own, in our own strength.

The words “he shall be chief and captain” in verse eight are in italics.  That means they were added by translators to give you a better sense of the history of this event.  You find them in the text of a parallel account of this event in First Chronicles 11:6.  There you read that Joab went up first and claimed the command of David’s army.

But I thought Joab was already David’s military commander?  He was, but he had recently murdered Abner and was on the outs with David.  Still Joab was an amazing warrior.  By issuing this kind of challenge it gave Joab opportunity to prove himself to David and before all of Israel – especially those in the northern tribes whose general Joab had killed.

The thing I get from this personally is that I cannot rest in former victories or some current position or office.  My Christian life is to be a daily overcoming of sin, routing the enemies of my God, in the power of the Holy Spirit.

One of the things that leads me to ignore or establish or reestablish enemy strongholds in my life is thinking I’ve somehow arrived.  I won’t arrive until I awake in Heaven and am in the presence of my Lord and Savior.  Until then I strive in His power against those things that ought to repulse me.

The remaining verses of this section read like a footnote.  They give us a glimpse of life under the rightful king.

2 Samuel 5:9  Then David dwelt in the stronghold, and called it the City of David. And David built all around from the Millo and inward.

David fortified the already fortified city.  If God has given you a victory, if you’ve overcome a stronghold in your life, then seek to fortify your position.

2 Samuel 5:10  So David went on and became great, and the Lord God of hosts was with him.
2 Samuel 5:11  Then Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David, and cedar trees, and carpenters and masons. And they built David a house.
2 Samuel 5:12  So David knew that the Lord had established him as king over Israel, and that He had exalted His kingdom for the sake of His people Israel.

Other nations began to recognize God was doing something in Israel through David.  In other words, his testimony increased.  So does ours when we settle the issue of lordship because we are hearing from the Lord with greater confidence.

For his part David was encouraged in his walk and work.  It doesn’t mean things were smooth, or that there were no discouragements.  It means that he knew he was where he was supposed to be, doing what he was supposed to be doing.  He was looking past people and circumstances and unto the Lord.
2 Samuel 5:13  And David took more concubines and wives from Jerusalem, after he had come from Hebron. Also more sons and daughters were born to David.
2 Samuel 5:14  Now these are the names of those who were born to him in Jerusalem: Shammua, Shobab, Nathan, Solomon,
2 Samuel 5:15  Ibhar, Elishua, Nepheg, Japhia,
2 Samuel 5:16  Elishama, Eliada, and Eliphelet.

We’re not too excited about this.  God had instructed His kings in the Book of Deuteronomy to not multiply wives to themselves.  David totally ignored this from the very beginning of his adult life.

It was customary in those days for a king to have many wives.  A lot of them were the daughters of foreign rulers and helped cement treaties and such.  But God wanted His kings to be separate from that pagan practice.

What you have here, then, is an enemy stronghold under construction in David’s life.  It would eventually be his undoing as he would take not just another wife but another man’s wife.  The adultery he would commit with Bathsheeba would lead to the murder of her husband.

It sort of illustrates what we’ve been talking about.  Even in the midst of a Christian’s life there can be evil or enemy strongholds.  Jesus is Lord… But He may not be lord of all.

God’s Word is a mirror.  We look into it, see ourselves as He sees us, with the understanding that we want to ‘look’ more like Jesus when we’re done.

If the Lord has revealed to you some area in which you are being repelled by the blind and the lame, see them as they really are, become repulsed by them, and walk in the power of the Cross and resurrection of Jesus.

Disregarders Of The Lost Ark (Ezekiel 41)

TITLE: DISREGARDERS OF THE LOST ARK

TEXT: EZEKIEL 41.1-26

SERIES: HARD TO HEART

The 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan prompted President Jimmy Carter to issue an ultimatum that the United States would boycott the Moscow Olympics if Soviet troops did not withdraw from the country by 12:01am Eastern Standard Time on February 20, 1980.

The United States was joined in the boycott by a few other countries – including Japan, West Germany, China, the Philippines and Canada.  The United Kingdom and France supported the boycott but allowed their athletes to participate if they wished.

Regardless your opinion on the effectiveness of the boycott, and regarding patriotism in general, many athletes missed the only opportunity they’d ever have to compete for something they’d trained for all their lives.

Ezekiel had missed an opportunity.  At the start of our studies we noted that although Ezekiel was a priest, he was exiled to Babylon before he was of age to actually serve in the Temple at Jerusalem.

To say it was a disappointment would be an understatement.  But now, as his visions are concluding and his book is nearing its end, Ezekiel is getting a glimpse of the future Temple, the Millennial Temple.  He saw it before any other Israelite, priest or otherwise.  Not only that, he was guided on his tour by the Lord Himself.

I think it more than made up for his missed opportunity in the sixth century!
What is it you and I may ‘miss’ as we are called upon to serve the Lord?  Seriously, there are sacrifices to be made if you are going to live for Jesus.

But rather than stew over them, get depressed by them, determine to look ahead to what the Lord has promised you.

As we follow Ezekiel on his tour I can’t help but think of the day I will be led by the Lord to the door of the mansion He’s been away preparing for me in a city He’s building for us, made of all the finest and most precious materials in all creation.

It’s a thought that has motivated saints for centuries.  In the famous Hall of Faith chapter (Hebrews 11), Abraham is described as going “out to the place which he would receive as an inheritance… And he went out, not knowing where he was going.  By faith he dwelt in the land of promise as in a foreign country, dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise; for he waited for the city which has foundations, whose builder and maker is God (v8-10).

Later in the chapter saints are described who “wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented – of whom the world was not worthy.  They wandered in deserts and mountains, in dens and caves of the earth” (v37-38).

If you’re slightly discouraged about your situation, think of Ezekiel’s sneak-peak as an example of what is waiting for you.

In verses one through four Ezekiel was shown the holy of holies and the Most Holy Place.

Ezekiel 41:1  Then he brought me into the sanctuary and measured the doorposts, six cubits wide on one side and six cubits wide on the other side – the width of the tabernacle.
Ezekiel 41:2  The width of the entryway was ten cubits, and the side walls of the entrance were five cubits on this side and five cubits on the other side; and he measured its length, forty cubits, and its width, twenty cubits.
Ezekiel 41:3  Also he went inside and measured the doorposts, two cubits; and the entrance, six cubits high; and the width of the entrance, seven cubits.
Ezekiel 41:4  He measured the length, twenty cubits; and the width, twenty cubits, beyond the sanctuary; and he said to me, “This is the Most Holy Place.”

In the Old Testament Tabernacle and, later, Temple, the Most Holy Place was God’s special dwelling place in the midst of His people.  The Most Holy Place was a perfect cube — its length, width and height were all equal to 15 feet.  During the Israelites’ wanderings in the wilderness, God appeared as a pillar of cloud or fire in and above this chamber.

A thick curtain separated the holy of holies from the Most Holy Place. This curtain, known as the “veil,” was made of fine linen and blue, purple and scarlet yarn.  There were figures of cherubim (angels) embroidered onto it. These cherubim were also on the innermost layer of covering of the tent. If one looked upward, they would see the cherubim figures.

The word “veil” in Hebrew means a screen, divider or separator that hides. What was this curtain hiding?  It was shielding a holy God from sinful man. Whoever entered into the Holy of Holies was entering the very presence of God.  In fact, anyone except the high priest who entered the Holy of Holies would die.  Even the high priest, God’s chosen mediator with His people, could only pass through the veil and enter this sacred dwelling once a year, on a prescribed day called the Day of Atonement.

When Jesus died the veil in the Temple was torn from top to bottom.  It signified that the way into the presence of God was open to all through the mediation of Jesus.

The Lord takes Ezekiel into the holy place, the outer room, but not into the “Most Holy Place.”  He alone enters that chamber.

There’s no veil, signifying that access to the Lord is always available.  But there remains a separation to communicate to nonbelievers that God is holy.

The fact this Person guiding Ezekiel’s tour freely enters the Most Holy Place is perhaps the strongest evidence it is Jesus and not an angel.

Next Ezekiel was shown the rooms surrounding the Tabernacle rooms.

Ezekiel 41:5  Next, he measured the wall of the temple, six cubits. The width of each side chamber all around the temple was four cubits on every side.
Ezekiel 41:6  The side chambers were in three stories, one above the other, thirty chambers in each story; they rested on ledges which were for the side chambers all around, that they might be supported, but not fastened to the wall of the temple.
Ezekiel 41:7  As one went up from story to story, the side chambers became wider all around, because their supporting ledges in the wall of the temple ascended like steps; therefore the width of the structure increased as one went up from the lowest story to the highest by way of the middle one.
Ezekiel 41:8  I also saw an elevation all around the temple; it was the foundation of the side chambers, a full rod, that is, six cubits high.
Ezekiel 41:9  The thickness of the outer wall of the side chambers was five cubits, and so also the remaining terrace by the place of the side chambers of the temple.
Ezekiel 41:10  And between it and the wall chambers was a width of twenty cubits all around the temple on every side.
Ezekiel 41:11  The doors of the side chambers opened on the terrace, one door toward the north and another toward the south; and the width of the terrace was five cubits all around.

Surrounding the temple will be three levels, three stories, of side rooms, one above another, thirty on each level.  In Solomon’s Temple these rooms were storerooms for the temple equipment and storage chambers for the people’s tithes and offerings.

Will there be tithes and offerings in the Millennium?  Apparently there will.

What does that suggest to you?  Mind you, it’s the Millennium and the Lord is on the earth and streams are breaking out in the desert.  God really doesn’t need anything.  He’s not broke.

It suggests that giving is important from the perspective of the giver. It’s good for you and I to give to God.

For one thing, giving is good because it causes you to get alone with God and take a look at how He’s blessed you, how He is caring for you.  Gratitude toward God will develop into generosity towards His people as you are encouraged to give to His work on earth.

Ezekiel next sees a building whose purpose and use remains undisclosed.

Ezekiel 41:12  The building that faced the separating courtyard at its western end was seventy cubits wide; the wall of the building was five cubits thick all around, and its length ninety cubits.
Ezekiel 41:13  So he measured the temple, one hundred cubits long; and the separating courtyard with the building and its walls was one hundred cubits long;
Ezekiel 41:14  also the width of the eastern face of the temple, including the separating courtyard, was one hundred cubits.

There is conjecture that this building will be where animal parts that are not part of the sacrifices will be taken in order to be disposed of.  They get that from the use of the word “separating.”  But really we’re not told exactly what it’s purpose will be.

Jesus did not feel the need to make a full disclosure of this building to Ezekiel.  It reminds me that I will not always be privileged to everything the Lord is doing as He builds in my life.  Some things will remain a mystery to me.

At many points I’m going to have to walk by faith, trusting that the Lord knows best for me.  Indeed, if He explained some things ahead of time, I’d probably refuse them!  Then I’d miss the lessons, the opportunities, the maturing that He deems needful along my journey home to Heaven.

Ezekiel next saw some “galleries.”

Ezekiel 41:15  He measured the length of the building behind it, facing the separating courtyard, with its galleries on the one side and on the other side, one hundred cubits, as well as the inner temple and the porches of the court,
Ezekiel 41:16  their doorposts and the beveled window frames. And the galleries all around their three stories opposite the threshold were paneled with wood from the ground to the windows – the windows were covered –
Ezekiel 41:17  from the space above the door, even to the inner room, as well as outside, and on every wall all around, inside and outside, by measure.
Ezekiel 41:18  And it was made with cherubim and palm trees, a palm tree between cherub and cherub. Each cherub had two faces,
Ezekiel 41:19  so that the face of a man was toward a palm tree on one side, and the face of a young lion toward a palm tree on the other side; thus it was made throughout the temple all around.
Ezekiel 41:20  From the floor to the space above the door, and on the wall of the sanctuary, cherubim and palm trees were carved.

These “galleries” are something like terraced lofts.  I admit I’m having a hard time visualizing all this.  I’m not good at understanding things from a description.

What I would note in this section is the carvings.  We talked about this in our last study in Ezekiel but it bears repeating.  God is concerned with both function and form.  He likes beautiful things and He likes making things beautiful.

It is not automatically more spiritual to be a minimalist, or to do the very least in order to get by, or to be as plain as possible.  If you don’t have much to work with, you can still do your best, make it as nice as it can be.  If nothing else it can be clean, neat, picked-up.

Some people who assume less is better are really just lazy.

Your mansion, and the New Jerusalem, are going to be top-drawer, first rate.  No detail will be overlooked.  Until we get there we should be no less interested in details.

Finally, at least with regard to chapter forty-one, Ezekiel saw an altar.

Ezekiel 41:21  The doorposts of the temple were square, as was the front of the sanctuary; their appearance was similar.
Ezekiel 41:22  The altar was of wood, three cubits high, and its length two cubits. Its corners, its length, and its sides were of wood; and he said to me, “This is the table that is before the Lord.”
Ezekiel 41:23  The temple and the sanctuary had two doors.
Ezekiel 41:24  The doors had two panels apiece, two folding panels: two panels for one door and two panels for the other door.
Ezekiel 41:25  Cherubim and palm trees were carved on the doors of the temple just as they were carved on the walls. A wooden canopy was on the front of the vestibule outside.
Ezekiel 41:26  There were beveled window frames and palm trees on one side and on the other, on the sides of the vestibule – also on the side chambers of the temple and on the canopies.
This altar corresponds to the altar of incense in the Old Testament Temple.

We need to be careful to make arguments from silence, but it is interesting to note that a lot of familiar items of Temple furniture are not listed.

Most notably you don’t see the Ark of the Covenant.  The Ark of the Covenant is first mentioned in the Bible in Exodus 25.  Following Israel’s deliverance from slavery in Egypt, God instructs Moses to build the Tabernacle (or tent) in which the Israelites will worship God.  Placed in the Most Holy Place the Ark of the Covenant was the most sacred object in the Tabernacle.

Detailed instructions were given by God to construct the Ark.  It was to be made with acacia wood and overlaid with gold. Dimensionally, the Ark was to be 2.5 cubits long and 1.5 cubits wide and high.  Atop the Ark were two gold cherubs that stood with their wings covering an area of the Ark known as the “Mercy Seat.”

The Ark of the Covenant contained three items of extreme significance to the Israelites.

The first was two stone tablets bearing the divine inscription of the Ten Commandments.
The second item in the Ark was the rod of Aaron.  God miraculously caused Aaron’s rod to bud with blossoms to show the rest of the tribes of Israel that it was God’s will for Aaron to be in charge of the Priesthood (Numbers 17).
The last item was a golden pot of manna. Manna was the food God miraculously provided for the Israelites during their 40 years of desert wanderings (Exodus 16).

The Ark of the Covenant disappeared from the Jewish Temple somewhere before or during the Babylonian invasion of Jerusalem in 586BC.

There are lots of theories as to where the Ark might be.  The Ethiopians claim that they have it.  In Israel the Temple Institute is the group replicating articles for the restoration of Temple sacrifice.  Here is what they say about the Ark.

Tradition records that even as King Solomon built the First Temple, he already knew, through Divine inspiration, that eventually it would be destroyed.  Thus Solomon, the wisest of all men, oversaw the construction of a vast system of labyrinths, mazes, chambers and corridors underneath the Temple Mount complex.  He commanded that a special place be built in the bowels of the earth, where the sacred vessels of the Temple could be hidden in case of approaching danger… tradition teaches that King Josiah of Israel, who lived about forty years before the destruction of the First Temple, commanded the Levites to hide the Ark, together with the original menorah and several other items, in this secret hiding place which Solomon had prepared.

This location is recorded in our sources, and today, there are those who know exactly where this chamber is.  And we know that the ark is still there, undisturbed, and waiting for the day when it will be revealed.

An attempt was made some few years ago to excavate towards the direction of this chamber.  This resulted in widespread Moslem unrest and rioting. They stand a great deal to lose if the Ark is revealed – for it will prove to the whole world that there really was a Holy Temple, and thus, that the Jews really do have a claim to the Temple Mount.

Quite honestly, I don’t think the Ark exists on earth anymore.  The Ark was probably lost or destroyed when the Babylonians sacked Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple.  If Jews had hidden it, the Ark would surely have been used in the Second Temple, which the historian Josephus says it wasn’t.

Furthermore, there is this passage from Jeremiah:

Jeremiah 3:16  “Then it shall come to pass, when you are multiplied and increased in the land in those days,” says the Lord, “that they will say no more, ‘The ark of the covenant of the Lord.’ It shall not come to mind, nor shall they remember it, nor shall they visit it, nor shall it be made anymore.

This verse comes as quite a shock to some Christians who have assumed that the Ark must be found before the Tribulation Temple can be built and animal sacrifice reinstituted.  Others have simply assumed that the Ark would be replaced in the Holy of Holies when the Lord’s Millennial Temple is built.
I don’t expect the Ark to be found.  At any rate, it won’t be in the final Temple that is on the future earth because Jesus, the mediator of the new and better covenant, will be there.

Conceivably, the Ark could be discovered.  The context of this Jeremiah passage is the Millennial reign of Jesus so it does not rule out the possibility of a discovery prior to that time.  The important point to keep in mind here is that the rediscovery of the Ark is not essential to the rebuilding of the Temple.  After all, the Temple was rebuilt by Zerubbabel following the Babylonian captivity and the Ark had already been lost by that time.  There was no Ark in the Holy of Holies during the time when Jesus worshiped in the Temple.

In the detailed descriptions and measurements of Ezekiel’s vision we can be reminded of the glories to come for all who belong to God – a temple not made with hands, eternal in the heavens, which we shall not merely visit in a vision, but shall dwell in forever.