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May 31, 2005

ark of covenant almost found?

Ark_of_the_Covenant.jpg

[From WorldNetDaily.com]

"Raiders of the Lost Ark" is one of my all-time favorite movies, filled with mystery and adventure. It focuses on the search for a biblical artifact and treasure called The Ark of the Covenant. What makes the movie particularly exciting is how closely it mimics (with some added Hollywood flair) the real life hunt for the lost Ark.

History has it that the original Ark was where God manifested His presence on earth beginning in the days of Moses. The Ark was designed as a chest made of acacia wood overlaid with gold. It had four golden rings. Each one attached to a corner. These rings provided a means to carry the Ark by inserting two wooden bars (also overlaid with gold) on either side. Atop the Ark were two golden cherubim spreading their wings over the Ark's cover also known as the mercy seat.

The Ark itself contained the Ten Commandments and was housed in the innermost room of the Jewish Temple called the Holy of Holies. Here it was the center of worship, although actual access to the Ark was permitted only once a year on the Day of Atonement called Yom Kippur. On that day, the high priest would enter the Holy of Holies with the blood of a goat to make atonement for the sins of the Israelites.

Other contents of the Ark included Aaron's rod and a golden pot of manna. Additionally, the Ark is renowned for its mysterious powers. According to the Bible, when the Ark was carried by the people of Israel into battle, it protected the Israelites, supernaturally defeating any adversaries that came before them.

This explains why in the movie "Raiders of the Lost Ark" the Nazis were intent on obtaining it. Their theory (as the story line goes) was that they would be unbeatable if they possessed the Ark and could harness its mysterious powers. Of course, as both the movie and history would have it, things didn't quite work out for the Nazis.

But what of the Ark?

It is believed to have disappeared with the destruction of the First Temple by King Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon in 586 B.C. The exact whereabouts of the Ark have remained a mystery ever since.

One theory is that the Ark was taken from ancient Jerusalem by Prince Menelik of Ethiopia. Menelik was the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. Menelik purportedly brought the Ark to his country for safekeeping where it currently remains housed in a church in Axum.

Another theory is that the Ark was hidden in a secret chamber housed beneath Jerusalem's Temple Mount. The alleged secret chamber was created by either King Solomon, who built the First Temple, or a subsequent king before the temple was plundered by Nebuchadnezzar.

One version of this theory suggests that in the early 12th century a group of nine Frenchmen known as the original Knights Templars excavated beneath the site of the old Temple of Jerusalem. They retrieved the true Ark of the Covenant and secreted it away.

A second more popular version suggests the Ark is still located in a vault somewhere in the miles of tunnels carved beneath the city of Jerusalem. It is believed the location of the Ark will be revealed when the time is right for the Jewish Temple to be built for the third time.

One famous adherent to this theory is Dr. Vendyl Jones. He is a modern-day explorer and teacher and the true inspiration for the Indiana Jones series. Startling the world, he announced last week on Israel National Radio that he actually knows the location of the Ark.

He says according to ancient documents the Ark is hidden in a secret passage that runs 18 miles south of the Temple Mount into the Judean Desert. Before dismissing his claim as a lark, it is worth noting that Jones published a book in 1959 predicting the precise outbreak of the Six Day War.

He calculated the war in 1967 by analyzing the sequence of events in the First Temple period and transposing them on the Third Temple period. The First Temple period began with its original construction in the days of King Solomon. The Third Temple period began according to Jones with the Jews founding an independent state in the land of Israel in 1948.

Now Jones is convinced that with the help of ancient documents found in Qumran, he has pinpointed the location of the Ark. And armed with the blessing of religious leaders, Jones hopes to reveal the location of the Ark by Aug. 14, which marks the Fast of Tisha B'Av. This holy day commemorates repeated tragedy in Jewish history including the destruction of both the First and the Second Holy Temples.

Jones' plan is simple. It is to drill a borehole into the chamber containing the Ark, drop a pin-camera in and reveal the historic treasure to a watching world.

If Jones is right, many predict this event will turn the world upside down. Jones says this will bring an end to the government's plan to uproot Jews of Gaza and northern Samaria. It also will bring the very idea of any Palestinian state to a screeching halt. In fact, Jones predicts quite the opposite will occur. With the discovery of the Ark, the Jewish people will have the greatest motivation of all time to return to Israel from around the world and rebuild the Temple to house this holy treasure.

Of course, whether Jones actually uncovers the Ark is not the sole issue. Equally compelling is proving once more through science that the Bible is more than just a collection of parables. Are you ready for this?

[Link]

p/s: wiki's brief overview on the ark of covenant

posted by nyx at May 31, 2005 9:54 AM

Comments

Excellent article..!!!!!!!!!
The best eva in the history of EatingChaos..!!!!!

Posted by: -?- at June 1, 2005 10:53 AM

grumble grumble grumble
is it because you instigated its appearance?
grumble grumble

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 10:56 AM

cant we comment on the post rather than talking about me all the time
me me me me me me me me
the world revolves around me isit?

Posted by: -?- at June 1, 2005 11:14 AM

BLINK BLINK

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 11:19 AM

actually i cud comment a few , but i lazy
u remember that there was an article about this one n the noah's ark on NGEO?

eh u wont remember , britney's new pop clip in MTV u mite know mah kan?
cis

anyway , these two did appear in NGEO , modern search for this illusive two. I remember seeing the 'remains' of what cud have been Noah's ark , the historical argument of it as well.

The temple in ethiopia had appeared numerous times in NGEO as well.

Posted by: -?- at June 1, 2005 11:22 AM

remains of noah's ark? hmm. they showed what they thought were actual remains?

i shud google this out.

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 11:34 AM

I remember something else , there's a folk song or is it actually in one of the churches mural paintings, i cant remember

but it depicts the entire story of how sheeba had gone to seduce solomon , how they had a son n how he was entrusted to bring the arc over to ethiopia n the adventures that happened in the journey back as well.

The jewish or the christian community doesnt really like this story coz sheeba was a black african , ngahahahaha
but she was pretty apparently.

Posted by: -?- at June 1, 2005 11:38 AM

flood myths:

Flood stories are widespread in world mythology, with examples found in European, African, Native American, Middle Eastern, Chinese, and other societies.

Noah's counterpart in Greek mythology was Deucalion and Pyrrha, found in Apollodorus's Bibliotheke and Ovid's Metamorphoses, among other sources.

In Indian texts, a terrible flood was supposed to have left only one survivor—a saint named Manu, who was saved by Vishnu in the form of a fish.

The Sumerian story of Utnapishtim, dating to the third millenium BC and found in the Epic of Gilgamesh, has broadly the same structure and plot as the Genesis account. The Sumerian story was later translated into Akkadian, Hittite and—through the fragments Berossus's Babyloniaka—Greek.

The story of Yima in Zoroastrian mythology also contains a very similar account, although in this case it is ice, not water, that threatens life.

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 11:45 AM

more here. i so have to make time to read up on this.

whoa. even more here.

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 11:47 AM

aiyo aiyo aiyo
how la did u change the discussion from arc of covenant to the flood
haiyoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

open a separate thread laaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
haiyo haiyo haiyo

Posted by: -?- at June 1, 2005 2:26 PM

ark of covenant - christianity - noah's ark - flood

there.
so easy.

giggles.

i wanna, wait la, have to research then post up findings no.

aiyahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
those two links counted laaaaaaaaaa

Posted by: nyx at June 1, 2005 2:29 PM

always interesting posts and comment threads too. even at 1am.

Posted by: thisguy at June 2, 2005 7:55 AM

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