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What Does the Bible Say About Rebuilding The
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By
Gary
DeMar
http://www.americanvision.org/
Dispensational Premillennialists need a future “tribulation temple” so
their idea of antichrist can take his seat (2 Thessalonians.
2:4), place a statue for people to worship (Rev. 13:14-15), and proclaim
himself to be god (2 Thessalonians. 2:4). But what the
dispensationalists really need is a verse that states that there will be another
rebuilt temple since there’s already been one. Rebuilt-temple advocates Tommy
Ice and Randall Price admit that “There are no Bible verses that say, ‘There is
going to be a third temple.’1 Having made this revealing concession, they go on
to claim “that there will be a Jewish Temple in Jerusalem at least by the
midpoint of the seven-year tribulation period.”2 As we will see, the Bible says
no such thing. Does the Bible predict that a third temple will be built, one
following Solomon’s temple and the post-exile temple that was still standing in
Jesus’ day? Don Stewart and Chuck Missler insist that
the “The crucial issue boils down to how we interpret prophecy. There are two
basic ways to interpret Bible prophecy. Either you understand it literally or
you do not. If a person rejects the literal interpretation then they [sic]
are left to their own imagination as to what the Scripture means. . . . We
believe it makes sense to understand the Scriptures as literally requiring the
eventual construction and desecration of a Third Temple.”3 The authors are
careful to say only that another rebuilt temple is required. A third
temple is required only if you’re a dispensationalist.
Jesus’ completed redemptive
work makes the need for a rebuilt temple unnecessary. His ministry begins with
the declaration that He is our tabernacle (John
The original temple was a
shadow of things to come. It was designed to be a temporary edifice looking
forward to the completed work of Jesus Christ. For dispensationalists to insist
that another temple is needed to complete some type of covenantal obligation
with the Jews goes against the entire NT and makes the “first covenant . . .
faultless,” with “no occasion sought for a second” (Heb. 8:7). Let the Bible
settle the issue:
Now
the main point in what has been said is this: we have such a high priest, who
has taken His seat at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the
heavens, a minister in the sanctuary, and in the true tabernacle, which
the Lord pitched, not man. For every high priest is appointed to offer both
gifts and sacrifices; hence it is necessary that this high priest also have
something to offer. Now if He were on earth, He would not be a priest at all,
since there are those who offer the gifts according to the Law; who serve a
copy and shadow of the heavenly things, just as Moses was warned by God when he
was about to erect the tabernacle; for, “See,” He says, “that you make all
things according to the pattern which was shown you on the mountain.” But now
He has obtained a more excellent ministry, by as much as He is also the
mediator of a better covenant, which has been enacted on better promises (Heb.
8:1-6).
The writer of Hebrews
declares that Jesus entered “through the greater and more perfect tabernacle,
not made with hands, that is to say, not of this creation” (9:11). Since Jesus
completed His redemptive work, any new temple “made with hands” is not much
different from a pagan temple that has no inherent life or redemptive value
(cf. Acts 17:24; 19:26; 2 Corinthians. 5:1). “[T]he
description of the
Stewart and Missler have made it very simple for us to determine
whether the Bible addresses the issue of another rebuilt temple. If the Bible
is interpreted literally, the need for a third temple should be explicitly
stated. What biblical evidence do they offer to support their claim that “the
Bible, in both testaments, speaks of a
Since Daniel was written after
Solomon’s temple had been destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 B.C. (2 Kings
25:8-9; Dan. 1:1-2) and before the second temple had been built
by the returning exiles (Ezra 6:13-15), it stands to reason that the
“sanctuary” whose “end will come with a flood” (Dan. 9:26) must refer to the
second temple that had not been built at the time the prophecy was given. It
was this post-exile rebuilt temple that was desecrated by Antiochus Epiphanes around 165 B.C. but not destroyed. After a period
of misuse and disuse, Herod the Great restored and enlarged the second temple.
The project started around 20 B.C. and was completed just a few years before it
was destroyed in A.D. 70 by the Romans, just as Jesus had predicted (Matt.
24:1-34). It was this same temple that Zacharias
served in (Luke 1:9), that Jesus was taken to as an infant (2:27), that had
been under construction for forty-six years when Jesus prophesied that He would
be its permanent replacement (John 2:20), that Jesus cleansed of the money
changers (Matt. 21:12), that He predicted would be left desolate (Matt. 23:38;
24:2), whose veil was “torn in two from top to bottom” (Matt. 27:51), and that
was finally destroyed by Titus in A.D. 70.
Is there any indication in
the three passages from Daniel that we are to skip over what we know was a
rebuilt temple, the very temple that was standing in Jesus’ day, and look for
another unmentioned third temple? Would Jews living in the first century have
made the historical leap over the temple that was standing before them and
suppose Jesus was describing yet another temple? As Ice and Price admit, the
Bible does not say anything directly about another temple. The passages
from Daniel cited by Stewart and Missler and Ice and
Price can easily find their fulfillment in the rebuilt temple that was standing
during the reign of Antiochus (Dan.
The
abomination of desolation was something that took place the first time through
Antiochus Epiphanes in the second century B.C. when
he stopped the sacrifices and desecrated the second
Daniel only mentions one
sanctuary (
Now we are left with Daniel
9:27 as the only verse from the OT that Ice and Price contend supports the need
for a third temple. But there is a problem with their reasoning. They argue
that “the city and sanctuary” in Daniel
Ice and Price argue that
“the apostle Paul gives us perhaps the clearest passage relating to the third
Third-temple advocates try
to muster support for their position by referencing Revelation 11:1-2. They
begin by assuming that Revelation was written nearly three decades after the
temple was destroyed.16 From this unproven assumption,
they conclude that John must be measuring a rebuilt temple. The passage
says nothing about a rebuilt temple. The words “shortly” and “near” (Rev. 1:1,
3) are used to describe the time when the events outlined in Revelation were to
take place. These words are meaningless if the events have not taken place. The
fact that John is told to “rise and measure the
Ezekiel’s Temple
This brings us to the
visionary temple described in Ezekiel. While John is told to measure the temple
in Revelation 11:1, Ezekiel sees a vision of “a man . . . with a measuring rod
in his hand” (40:3). Ezekiel cannot measure the temple because it’s a vision.
John can measure the temple because it’s still standing in
Like the plans that were
given to Moses to build the tabernacle (Ex. 25:9, 40; Num. 8:4), Ezekiel is
given plans to rebuild the altar. This makes perfect sense since rebuilding the
altar takes place during a time when there is a levitical
priesthood (Ezek. 40:19) and the need for animal sacrifices since “the lamb of
God who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29, 36) has not been born. The
altar is to be built but not the visionary temple: “And He said to me, ‘Son of
man, thus says the Lord GOD, “These are the statutes for the altar on the
day it is built, to offer burnt offerings on it and to sprinkle blood on
it”’” (40:18). The words “build” and “built” are not found anywhere in Ezekiel 40-43:1-12
in relation to the visionary temple. The words apply only to the altar, an old
covenant shadow.
Why, according to
dispensationalists, is the visionary
Dispensationalists believe
that Ezekiel’s temple is a “millennial temple.” If this is true, then why is
there no mention of a temple in Revelation 20? In fact, Revelation 20 says
nothing about Jesus reigning on the earth, the city of
Conclusion
The burden of proof is on
rebuilt-temple advocates to come up with just one verse that unequivocally
states that there will be a rebuilt temple. Since they admit that “There are no
Bible verses that say, ‘There is going to be a third temple,’” we must conclude
that dispensationalism’s preoccupation with a rebuilt
temple is misguided.
Notes
1. Thomas Ice and Randall
Price, Ready to Rebuild: The Imminent Plan to Rebuild the
2. Ice and Price, Ready
to Rebuild, 198.
3. Don Stewart and Chuck Missler, The
4. Timothy J. Geddert, Watchwords: Mark 13 in Markan
Eschatology (Sheffield, England: JSOT, 1989). Quoted in
Peter W. L. Walker, Jesus and the
5. Walker, Jesus and the
6. Walker, Jesus and the
7. Walker, Jesus and the
8. Stewart and Missler, The
9. Ice and Price, Ready
to Rebuild, 200B201. Emphasis added.
10. Ice and Price, Ready
to Rebuild, 68.
11. For
an exposition of Daniel 9:24B27, see Gary DeMar, Last
Days Madness: Obsession of the Modern Church, 4th ed. (Powder Springs, GA: American
Vision, 1999), chap. 25.
12. Stewart and Missler, The
13. Stewart and Missler, The
14. Ice and Price, Ready
to Rebuild, 199.
15. For a verse-by-verse
exposition of 2 Thessalonians 2, see DeMar, Last
Days Madness, chaps.22 and 23.
16. For a defense of a
pre-A.D. 70 date of composition for Revelation, see Kenneth L. Gentry, Jr., Before
Jerusalem Fell: Dating the Book of Revelation, 2nd ed. (Powder Springs, GA:
American Vision, 1999).
17. Ice and Price, Ready
to Rebuild, 200.
18. A thousand years is only a “millennium” in the sense that mille means “thousand” in Latin. When we hear the word “millennium” today and as dispensationalists describe it, we think of a golden age. Revelation 20 says nothing of these things.