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In the spring of 1989, a Pentecostal preacher named Clyde Lott was thumbing
through the Bible, looking up all the references to cows. This wasn't so odd,
given that Lott is one of the leading cattle breeders in the Southeast. At the
time, he specialized in raising show cattle for youngsters involved in 4-H
clubs and the Future Farmers of America. His office, in Canton, Mississippi,
contains many ribbons, plaques, and trophies, including awards for two
national championships in judging and showmanship. As it happens, the Old
Testament is full of references to cows and cattle; it is, after all, a history
of an agricultural people. When Lott turned to Numbers 19, he read one of the
many conversations that God had with Moses and his brother Aaron as they led
the Jews through the desert toward the Promised Land. "Speak unto the children
of Israel," the Lord commanded, "that they bring thee a red heifer without
spot, wherein is no blemish, and upon which never came a yoke." The cow will be
given to a priest to slay, the Lord continued, and burned on a pyre of cedar,
hyssop, and a strand of scarlet thread. Then the ashes of the heifer will be
mixed with water and used to purify those who have been exposed to death.
Anyone who fails to be purified "shall be cut off from among the congregation,
because he hath defiled the sanctuary of the Lord."
This is one of the most mysterious injunctions in the Bible. Even King Solomon,
who was said to understand the meaning of all things, could not explain the
reason for the red heifer. Clyde Lott didn't understand it, either. He also
wondered where the children of Israel could have obtained a red cow. From his
own reading, he had concluded that the Old Testament herd was descended from
the cattle that Jacob, the son of Isaac, had received in wages from his uncle
Laban. Those animals--as described in the King James Bible--were speckled,
spotted, and brown. "Your speckled and spotted cattle basically are recognized
as a purebred cow, like a holstein," Lott says. So where did the spotless red
heifer come from? Genetically, it didn't add up. And yet the Lord had specified
that this was the only way for the Israelites to cleanse themselves and
participate in the worship of God. "I didn't realize then that God always sent
to Israel, at the time she needed it, the man with the red heifer."
Lott, who is forty-two, is a soft-spoken Southern gentleman, squarely built,
with a full, fleshy face and curly brown hair that is beginning to gray.
Although he is ordained in the ministry of the National Pentecostal Assemblies
of Jesus Christ, he does not pastor his own church. "I would fit more in the
category of evangelist--going on the road and preaching or teaching," he says.
Like all fundamentalist Christians, Lott believes that the Messiah will come
again. His view of the End Time is that Jesus' return will usher in a thousand
years of peace and harmony. Before that, however, there will be seven years of
tribulation: the Antichrist will appear, and the forces of good and evil will
wage a cataclysmic struggle, culminating in Jesus' defeat of the false Messiah.
Many Evangelicals believe that Jews and other non-Christians will suffer for
accepting the Antichrist as their messiah--that most of them will perish in the
coming struggle, but those who survive will finally acknowledge Christ as their
savior. True Christians will be spared these catastrophes, because they will
have been raptured--snatched directly into Heaven--before the troubles begin.
They will return to act as priests during Christ's millennial reign. At the end
of that time, Satan will rally the forces of evil for a final confrontation
with Jesus and the saints of the Church at the battle of Armageddon. The
satanic warriors, led by a prince named Gog, will come from the north, from a
land called Magog (which Lott believes could be a satellite republic of the
former Soviet Union); God will destroy them, however. The dead will rise for
their day of judgment, and a New Jerusalem will descend from the sky. Once
again, God will dwell among his people.
A longing for the rapture and the return of Jesus on Earth is at the core of
Evangelicalism. The fact that we are coincidentally approaching a millennial
milestone in the human calendar certainly adds to this yearning and to the
sense of anticipation felt by believers of all faiths. Most fundamentalists
assume that we are living on the edge of human history in any case, and that
modern events in the Middle East are fulfillments of prophecies made some two
thousand years ago by Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Isaiah, and John, among others. These
prophecies require three great events before the Messiah can return: the nation
of Israel must be restored; Jerusalem must be a Jewish city; and the Temple,
the center of worship and sacrifice in the ancient Jewish world, which was last
destroyed by the Romans in 70 A.D., must be rebuilt. Two of these conditions
have been met in the last fifty years.
As Lott read the Bible that day, he realized that the Second Coming and the
fate of humankind now depended on the red heifer. In order for the Jews to
rebuild the Temple and prepare the way for the return of the Messiah they must
be purified with the ashes of a red heifer.
A qualified red heifer has not been found in Israel in almost two thousand
years. And yet red cattle are not really so unusual in the United States. A
breed known as the Red Angus is as red as an Irish setter. It occurred to Lott
that God, who he believed had directed the evangelist's own success in the
showring, was now guiding his hand in a much larger matter. Where was the red
heifer to come from? "That was the question we couldn't answer," says Lott, who
sometimes uses the first-person plural when referring to himself. "It plagued
us day in and day out for months." Finally, in the latter part of the summer of
1990, as he was baling hay, a piece of equipment broke, and he started to drive
into town to get a spare part. But then he found himself driving to Jackson,
the state capital, and walking into the office of Roy D. Manning, the director
of international trade for the Mississippi Department of Agriculture and
Commerce. "I will never forget as long as I live walking into Mr. Manning's
office that day and just the cold shock on his face of seeing someone coming
out of the hayfield--bluejeans, tennis shoes, baseball cap, dirty and
smelly--and walking into his office unannounced and saying,'I have read the
Bible and the Bible says Israel has to have a red heifer,"' Lott said later in
one of many testimonials to Evangelical congregations in the South. "For some
reason, he didn't kick me out of his office." Instead, Manning wrote a letter
to an attaché at the American Embassy in Athens who was in charge of
agricultural exports to the Middle East. "We have been approached by a producer
and seller of cattle from the state of Mississippi and I am quoting him in the
following," Manning wrote, and the letter went on:
"Red Angus cattle suitable for Old Testament Biblical sacrifices, will have no
blemish or off color hair, genetically red will reproduce red, eye, nose
pigmentation will be dark, heifers at a year old will weigh approximately 600
to 700 pounds. These cattle will adapt quickly to Middle Eastern climate, also
excellent beef quality."
Manning's letter was bounced to a State Department official, who rerouted it to
the American Embassy in Tel Aviv, where it was forwarded to the Israeli
Ministry of Religious Affairs. Someone there eventually thought to send it to
the Temple Institute, a private organization of religious Jews in Jerusalem who
suspect--like Lott--that the End Time may be near and are dedicated to
rebuilding the Temple. The letter arrived on the desk of Rabbi Chaim Richman,
ninety days after Manning posted it.
The Temple Institute operates a small museum in the Jewish Quarter of the Old
City. A visitor steps down into a basement room that houses the collection and
a bookstore; one of the books on display is "The Mystery of the Red Heifer:
Divine Promise of Purity," by Rabbi Richman. Also on display is a scale model
of the sacrificial altar and replicas of the decanters and lavers used in the
Temple service. The flaxen robes of the priests have been carefully reproduced,
along with the trumpets, harps, and lyres that the Levites are said to have
played in the courtyard of the Temple. "You woke up in the morning to the sound
of music from the Temple. You went to bed to the sound of music from the
Temple," a guide tells visitors. "Any beautiful building you ever saw cannot
compare with the beauty of the Temple."
The goal of the institute is not only to restore the Temple itself but to
reinstate the priestly castes, clerical rule, and animal sacrifice that
characterized the nation of Israel at the dawn of the Iron Age. To secular
Israelis, this sounds like a Jewish version of the Taliban. And yet the
construction of a third Temple is essential to the view that many Orthodox Jews
have of salvation and the coming of the Messiah. Without the Temple, there is
no way to fulfill many of the religious obligations, such as ritual sacrifices,
that the Torah requires. In Orthodox theology, that means that all Jews are
stuck in a state of impurity, and are therefore unable to be in the presence of
God. When a glass is broken at a Jewish wedding, it is done in memory of the
destruction of the Temple. "The Holy Temple in Judaism is so important
and primary that it can really be said that Judaism as it is practiced today is
not the vehicle that God intended it to be," Richman says. "The Prophets of
Israel emphasize the fact that the Temple is really much more than just a
synagogue.... The Temple is actually the device through which God manifests His
presence to mankind."
Naturally, the name Lott caught the attention of the rabbis at the institute--
and not just because another Lott from Mississippi happens to be the United
States Senate Majority Leader. Genesis recounts the story of Abraham's nephew
Lot, whose wife became a pillar of salt when she disobeyed the Lord and turned
to look back on Sodom as it was being destroyed. "Rabbi Richman told me that
Lot was a Gentile and he was a very, very good cattle breeder," Clyde Lott has
said. The rabbis thought that the coincidence was a good sign. After an excited
exchange of letters and telephone calls between Jerusalem and Canton, Lott went
to Jerusalem to meet with the rabbis. "I really didn't know what to expect," he
told me. "I came out of a religious background that taught that Jewish people
were ignorant and lost, and this kind of thing." He was dazzled by the Temple
artifacts that the members of the institute had reconstructed. "You can just
imagine, having read all your adult life about the Temple and the Tabernacle
and the vessels, and seeing them firsthand--that was amazing to me. It was a
life-changing experience."
Lott tried to explain his own beliefs to his hosts. "We talked about Jesus and
the Holy Spirit, and speaking in tongues. They knew where we were coming from."
The rabbis were impressed by Lott's sincerity. "This is a person without
guile," Richman, who was born in America and immigrated to Israel in 1982,
concluded. Richman took Lott on a tour of the Western Wall and the Temple
Mount. Over the next several days, he gave the Pentecostal evangelist an
education in the Jewish oral tradition and the voluminous commentaries on the
enigmatic commandment of the red heifer. Jewish law, which is called Halakah,
maintains that all Jews today are impure because of their direct or indirect
contact with the dead. For that reason, observant Jews may not go to parts of
the Temple Mount, lest they step on the Holy of Holies, the spot where the Ark
of the Covenant holding the fragments of the stone tablets containing the Ten
Commandments resided until it was supposedly lost during the Babylonians'
destruction of the First Temple, in 586 B.C. According to the rabbis, the only
way that Jews could become pure again was by being sprinkled with the ashes of
a red heifer that has been mixed with water traditionally drawn from the pool
of Siloam. According to the Mishnah, the written version of the oral tradition,
the ceremony of the red heifer sacrifice has only been performed nine times in
the history of the Jewish people. When the tenth heifer appears, the Messiah
will finally come.
The rabbis, for their part, learned something about cattle. Lott interpreted
the reference, in Numbers 19, to a cow without spot or blemish to mean a
good-milking, sweetly disposed, handsomely constructed animal--"basically; a
twenty-first-century, high-tech cow." Lott could see for himself that the
entire Israeli ranching industry was depressed and behind the times. It
occurred to him that with modern breeding techniques and champion Red Angus
stock he could produce not just one red heifer but an entire herd.
As Lott likes to tell Evangelical audiences, one of the rabbis wanted to know
how many red cows it would take to produce, in Israel, the kind of heifer
described by Numbers 19.
"Approximately two hundred cows." Lott said.
"How much per cow?"
"Of this extremely high quality, about two thousand dollars a head."
When Richman translated the figure into Hebrew, it caused a heated response
among the other rabbis. Lott asked what was wrong.
"Twenty thousand a head is a lot of money," Richman said.
"We didn't say twenty thousand, we said two thousand," Lott replied. ''We're
not trying to take advantage of you as you seek to turn back to God."
This response brought expressions of amazement to the faces of the rabbis.
Richman explained to Lott that in the time of the Second Temple a jewel from
the breastplate of the high priest had fallen off. A delegation of priests
journeyed to the town of Ashkelon, to the house of a well-known jeweler named
Dama ben Netina. He agreed to replace the jewel for a hundred shekels, but he
said he could not do it immediately, because the replacement was in a box that
was under the bed where his father was sleeping. The priests thought this was
merely a bargaining ploy and doubled the price. The jeweler again refused. The
priests continued to offer more money, and reached the sum of a thousand
shekels. But when the jeweler remained adamant the delegation angrily started
off on the road back to the Temple. At last, the jeweler's father awakened.
Dama ben Netina got the jewel and raced after the delegation, catching up with
it in a grove. When a priest handed him a thousand shekels, the jeweler would
accept only the hundred that he had agreed to. I am not trying to take
advantage of you as you are seeking to turn to God," he said.
When Lott heard this story, he was deeply moved. "It was word for word the same
thing we said twenty-five hundred years later," he later recalled. "Right there
in that grove, they prayed a blessing over Dama ben Netina, a Gentile, and the
blessing was that out of your Gentile lineage, one day when Israel needs it,
will come the producer of the red heifer."
In the fall of 1994, Richman went to Mississippi to examine four freshly washed
and groomed heifers that Lott had produced for his inspection. The Talmud
states that even two hairs that are not red would be enough to disqualify a
candidate. One of the cows immediately caught Richman's eye. "He didn't even
look at the three others," Lott recalls. "He walked into that pen with that
heifer tied to the back of that stall, and he just stopped for a few minutes to
appraise her from one end to the other. Then he walked right up to that heifer
within a matter of inches, and he looked down at her, then he went back four or
five feet and just stared at her." Finally, Richman placed his hand on the
animal, which Lott's daughter, who was then six, had named Dixie. "This is the
heifer that will change the world," Richman said.
On June 7, 1967, Israeli paratroopers dashed down the Via Dolorosa in the Old
City of Jerusalem. It was the third day of the Six-Day War. Jerusalem had been
until then a divided city, with Jordan in control of the eastern half,
including the Old City, and Israel in control of the western half. This had
been the status quo for nearly twenty years. The 55th Parachute Brigade was
about to change that.
And yet there was a strange ambivalence on the part of many Israelis regarding
the taking of the Old City. Moshe Dayan, the Defense Minister, had ordered
General Uzi Narkiss to surround the Old City but not to enter it. Dayan was
worried not only about heavy casualties but also about the political
consequences of seizing the Temple Mount. The rest of the Israeli Cabinet
overruled him, however, and ordered the retaking of the Old City.
The day before the final battle, Israeli troops captured Mt. Scopus, the
highest point in the city. Dayan rode to the summit and lunched there with
General Narkiss. Dayan, who wore a black eye patch that covered a wound he'd
received fighting against the Vichy French in Syria, personified Israeli
military bravado. Before him were the honey- colored limestone walls of the Old
City. "What a divine view!" Dayan, an avowedly secular man, declared. All
around him, he could see the hills of Golgotha, the Mount of Olives, Mt.
Zion--names that ring with meaning to believers of all three of the great
monotheistic religions. And in the middle of a bowl formed by limestone ridges
was the smaller elevation of Mt. Moriah, which Jews and Christians call the
Temple Mount, and which Muslims call Haram al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary): It
was here that King Solomon built the First Temple, nearly a thousand years
before the birth of Jesus. After it was destroyed by Nebuchadrezzar, the Second
Temple was built, and was later expanded by King Herod into one of the greatest
monuments of the ancient world. The Romans destroyed it during their sacking of
Jerusalem. As Dayan looked down on the Temple Mount he realized that the
following morning it would be back in Jewish hands for the first time in nearly
two thousand years.
But what Dayan also saw below him was a colossal political problem. The sacred
precinct was now occupied by two mosques: the venerable Al-Aqsa, which was
built in the eighth century, and the thirteen-hundred-year-old Dome of the
Rock. Its golden dome--the most recognizable symbol of the city--enshrines the
craggy peak of Mt. Moriah, which Jews call the Foundation Stone and Muslims
call es-Sakhra (the Rock). It figures prominently in the legend of all
three religions. It is said to be the first place God created--the perch He
stood on when He formed the rest of the world. It is also said to be the spot
where Adam was made, and where Cain killed Abel. Jews believe that it is where
Abraham brought his son Isaac to be sacrificed. For Muslims, it was
Ishmael--Abraham's other son, and their ancestor -- who was intended to be
sacrificed. For Jews, the Mount is the holiest place in the world, the focus of
their prayers, the place where they believe God lived. Muslims believe that
this was the place from which the prophet Muhammad ascended into Heaven on the
back of a winged horse. Jerusalem was the original direction of Muslim prayers,
before Mecca, and is still a destination for pilgrims. They count it as the
third holiest place in Islam, after Mecca and Medina.
Many conquering armies have entered the Temple grounds. In Jerusalem's bloody
history, the city has been contested by Assyrians, Babylonians, Egyptians,
Greeks, Romans, Persians, Mongols, Mamluks, Ottomans, Jordanians, and the
British--to name only some of the major invaders and occupiers. Dayan and his
generals were mindful of the shadows they were casting on history as
they broke through the gates of the Haram al-Sharif to inspect the grounds.
They found a typical Arab garden, liberally planted with trees and flowers and
surrounded by religious offices and schools--a vivid contrast to the stony city
outside the walls. At the southern end of the sanctuary, which covers
thirty-five acres, lies the vast and airy Al-Aqsa mosque, where pigeons fly
freely in a forest of marble columns. Near the center of the Haram, rising
above the trees like a blue-and-gold crown, is the Dome of the Rock, the oldest
building in Islam and perhaps the most beautiful. Here the Arab love of
mystical geometry and intricate ornament has been given its greatest
expression. The structure, which is eight-sided, may be imagined as three
rectangles encompassing a circle. Hushed, sombre, but almost overwhelmingly
sensual, the chamber imbues one with a sense of religious awe that few holy
places in the world can match. A dozen pillars of marble and porphyry support
the great inner dome. Below it, a wooden balustrade surrounds the Rock. There
is an oblong imprint in the Rock which is said to be the footprint made by
Muhammad when he leaped onto his winged steed, al-Burg, and went up into Heaven
with the angel Gabriel.
After inspecting the Haram, Dayan descended to the Western Wall, where he stood
with his soldiers, many of whom were openly sobbing. As long as the Old
City had been in Jordanian hands, Jews were not allowed to pray at the
Wall; and now Dayan himself wrote a prayer and stuck it into crevices between
the great stones, as Jews had done for centuries after the destruction of the
Temple. It read, "May peace descend on the whole house of Israel." As the
first step in achieving that peace, Dayan ordered the Israeli flag to be taken
down from the Dome.
The capture of the Old City came at a great price--hundreds of casualties among
the Israeli troops, and many more among the Arabs--but it proved to be a
decisive turning point in relations between Israel and its neighbors. The
political consequences are still being debated, and will be addressed in the
Final Status talks that are yet to begin with the Palestinians, who want to
share Jerusalem as the capital of two countries. Dayan believed that the
capture of the West Bank and the Sinai were useful only insofar as they could
be traded for peace. Jerusalem, however, was a more complicated issue. Within
days of the conquest, an Arab neighborhood was leveled to make a plaza in front
of the Western Wall. Despite this action, Dayan sought to preserve some of the
Arab character of the Old City. Ten days after the capture of the Temple Mount,
Dayan returned to Al-Aqsa and sat on the carpet in his stocking feet with the
Waqf, the charitable trust in charge of managing the Mount. There, on his own
authority, Dayan made a momentous gesture. He told the Waqf directors that,
while all of Jerusalem now belonged to Israel, day-to-day control over the
Haram al-Sharif would remain in their hands. Jews would be allowed to visit the
Mount but forbidden to pray. Since then, the Temple Mount has been an Islamic
island in an increasingly Jewish, and increasingly Orthodox, city-- and, as
such, it has become a flashpoint for religious extremists of both faiths.
The taking of Jerusalem had an electrifying effect in another realm, one that
few of Israel's secular leaders had anticipated. From the moment that footage
of weeping Israeli paratroopers standing at the Western Wall was televised
around the world, millions of Jews and fundamentalist Christians saw the
victory as the divine fulfillment of prophecy, one that had been expected since
the establishment of the State of Israel, in 1948. For them, the Jewish
possession of the Temple Mount meant that the clock of the apocalypse had begun
to tick.
Gershon Salomon, who as a young officer was partially crippled in 1958 when an
Israeli tank rolled over him during a battle on the Golan Heights, has become
one of the most well-known advocates of removing the mosques in order to
rebuild the Temple right away. He recalls being on the Mount on liberation day
in 1967 and thinking, "God brought us back onto the Temple Mount to say to all
the world, Not only do I continue my relationship with Israel, and Jews
continue to be my Chosen People, but I now open up to the fulfillment of my End
Time plans." That is why Dayan's order to strike the Israeli flag from the Dome
of the Rock came as a stunning betrayal. "I cried tears of pain and sorrow and
sadness," recalls Salomon, who thereupon founded the Temple Mount and Land of
Israel Faithful Movement, which is based in Jerusalem and boasts a worldwide
membership of more than fifteen thousand. "I decided I had to start a godly
campaign for the reliberation of the Temple Mount. I would give the rest of my
life to correct that sinful, terrible mistake and act which was done by Moshe
Dayan."
Forces had been let loose in the religious world that would prove difficult to
contain. Galvanized by the Israeli victory, Jewish immigrants flooded into
Israel. This influx seemed to be another sign that the Messiah was soon to
come, since the "ingathering" of Jews in the Land of Israel was a precondition
of redemption, according to the Scripture. New voices of prophecy drew
thousands of Jews, even those who had been quite secular, into messianic cults
of the ultra-Orthodox.
The Six-Day War spurred a rise of fundamentalism in the Arab world as well.
Radical Islam had a ready explanation for its sudden, crushing defeat: the
moral decay of modern, secular Arab society. The confusion and despair caused
by the loss of Jerusalem fueled a new religious extremism, and Haram al-Sharif
became a symbol of Islamic religious and political aspirations. Yasir Arafat
began to employ images of the Dome almost as if it were the capitol building of
the future Palestinian state.
In 1967 the Knesset passed a law guaranteeing each religion access to its holy
sites, but the law said nothing about the conflict posed by sites that are
sacred to more than one religion. The following year the Israeli Supreme Court,
in a ruling that has been upheld several times, decreed that Jews do have the
right to pray on the Mount, leaving the government in the uncomfortable
position of enforcing a ban based only on its need to maintain public order. To
this day, Jews and Christians can go on the Mount as tourists, but if they
appear to be praying they are subject to removal or arrest.
After the war, the Israeli Minister for Religious Affairs, Zerah Wahrhaftig,
said that the Temple Mount had been the property of Israel ever since King
David purchased the site from Araunah the Jebusite in 1000 B.C., but that Jews
should not take any steps to reclaim it, because only the Messiah could build
the Third Temple. This position was endorsed by many Jews, particularly the
ultra-Orthodox, many of whom even opposed the establishment of the State of
Israel. In their theology, the rebuilding of the nation, the ingathering of
Jews from exile, and the re-establishment of the Temple were all matters for
the Messiah to handle. For mankind to undertake such things amounted to
"forcing the End." That was the work of Satan.
There were many prominent Jews, however, who believed that they were already
living in the End Time--the recapture of Jerusalem was evidence enough-- and
that Jews must now do their part to prepare the way for the appearance of the
Messiah. Soon after the Six-Day War was over, Shlomo Goren, who later became
the Chief Rabbi of Israel, led a group of fifty followers onto the Mount, where
they fought off Muslim guards and Israeli police and conducted a prayer
service. A week later, the Chief Rabbinate ordered that signs be placed in
front of the gates saying that no Jews should set foot on the Temple Mount. The
reasoning was that, because Jews are ritually impure, they might accidentally
step on the place where the Holy of Holies once stood. Such a desecration is
punishable by death at the hand of God. This was supposed to put the Temple
Mount theologically off limits--at least, until the advent of the red
heifer.
Despite this proscription, there have been several serious attempts to blow up
the Muslim holy places. Both Israeli and Islamic authorities are so concerned
about the intentions of Gershon Salomon and other Temple fanatics that every
confrontation has the potential to rage out of control. In 1990, Salomon led a
group of his followers to the Mount in order to lay a "cornerstone" for the
Third Temple. As many as five thousand Muslims, many of them schoolchildren,
gathered to defend the site. The Israeli authorities, which had failed to
reinforce a police garrison on the Mount, dispatched paramilitary border guards
to control the situation. An armed assault by the guards left at least
seventeen Muslims dead and hundreds wounded. In September, 1996, the government
of the Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyabu, authorized the opening of a tunnel
that runs beside the Mount, so that tourists could view the monumental Herodian
walls at the base. Ensuing riots by Muslims and a forceful response by Israeli
troops left eighty people dead. The toll from these incidents and others is
just one measure of the cost of fundamentalism in a region that increasingly
finds itself drawn and quartered by religious extremists. The mystical concept
of sacred space that shrouds the Temple Mount--and, beyond that, Jerusalem and
Israel itself--has for centuries served as an impenetrable barrier to peace.
Nadav Shragai, a reporter for the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz and the
author of a 1995 book, "The Temple Mount Conflict,'' estimates that there are
about a thousand active supporters of the most radical Temple Mount movements.
No doubt they are heavily infiltrated by Israeli intelligence, which has long
worried that a successful strike at the mosques would spark a holy war. These
activists are a feature of a larger upheaval in Israeli society, caused by a
stunning rise of religious conservatism and a muscular political involvement of
religious Jews in Israeli politics. "Jewish fundamentalism of the nationalist
branch is mostly the product of the Six Day War," Emmanuel Sivan, a professor of
Islamic Studies at Hebrew University, says. "The fact is that until '67 the
national religious camp was a very moderate Zionist movement. It has turned
extremist because of this apocalyptic vision."
Among Christians, there was a similar burst of fundamentalist fervor following
the Six-Day War, and unexpected alliances were made between Evangelical
Christians and Jews. Many Americans (forty-six per cent, according to one poll)
believe that the establishment of the nation of Israel is the fulfillment of
prophecy, and this accounts in part for the unshakable support that Israel has
received from the Christian right. "I know people who fell on their
knees and cried out to God when they heard that Jerusalem was back in Jewish
hands," says David Parsons, who is an attorney with the International Christian
Embassy, in Jerusalem. "It forced Christians to rethink their views toward
Israel, toward Jerusalem, toward prophecy." The "embassy" is actually an
organization that promotes Jewish causes and raises money for such things as
helping Jews immigrate to Israel. Christians have also helped to fund some of
the radical Temple activists, including Gershon Salomon.
In Christian theology, the holiness of the Temple was supposed to have been
replaced by the divinity of Christ. Jesus directly challenged Temple life by
overthrowing the money changers' tables and driving out the venders of
sacrificial animals. In doing so, he committed an offense against the status
quo that may have led to his crucifixion. Many Christians believe that
the Jews killed Christ, and that God then allowed the Temple to be destroyed as
a judgment against them.
The motives behind the modern embrace of Israel by the Christian right are not
always clear. In Genesis 15:18, God gives the land of Israel to the Jews,
and for most fundamentalist Christians that settles the matter. But Jews
also play a tragic role in Evangelical eschatology. When Jews speak of their
Messiah, Evangelicals interpret that to mean the false Messiah, or the
Antichrist. It is the Antichrist, Evangelicals believe, who will occupy the
Third Temple. The Prophet Jeremiah foretold the tribulation, or "time of
Jacob's trouble," by which he meant the devastation of Israel. The nation will
be finished off in the apocalyptic meeting between Christ and the Antichrist at
Armageddon, which is also known as Megiddo, an archeological ruin in
northern Israel. Those Jews who survive this catastrophe--only a hundred and
forty-four thousand, according to some interpretations of the Scripture--will
finally turn to Jesus as the true Messiah. Such refrains are frequently heard
in Evangelical churches and on religious television channels, where Temple
fever burns.
Most Evangelicals believe that the establishment of the State of Israel and the
capture of Jerusalem have cleared the way for these final events. "I am one of
those who believe that the next event on God's calendar is the rapture of the
Church--the coming of Christ to take the Church to itself," the Reverend Jerry
Falwell, another notable defender of the nation of Israel, says. "I believe
there will be a seven-year tribulation period. It is during that time that the
new Temple will be built. And I believe that, at the end of the seven years of
tribulation, the battle of Armageddon will transpire and the establishment of
the one-thousand year reign of Christ on Earth will begin." However, Christians,
like Jews, disagree among themselves about what role they should play in this
scenario. Falwell does not endorse attempts to force the End. "I am not one who
believes, as some Christian Zionists do, that we are here to help usher in the
Kingdom, build the Temple, bring in the red heifer, et cetera, et cetera, et
cetera," he says. Although Falwell maintains that "God is under no obligation
to rapture the Church today," he believes that "all the prophecies are
fulfilled"--including the ability, through Cable News Network, to communicate
instantly throughout the world. "That is all necessary during the tribulation,"
he says. "For example, two witnesses will be slain on the streets of
Jerusalem-- some believe Moses and Elijah, but no one knows--and the Scripture
says that every eye shall behold. And three days I later they shall rise from
the dead, rise up from the streets of Jerusalem. While all the enemies of
these witnesses are | rejoicing, in a huge global party, the whole world will
watch as they stand up alive, resurrected from the dead. That couldn't have
happened when I was a child." Because of these portents, Falwell believes that
the Antichrist may be alive now. "He will portray himself as Christ and that
will necessitate his being a Jew."
According to Clyde Lott, the intent of many Evangelical Christians who are
helping Israel today is to speed along the time when they will be raptured into
Heaven, leaving behind a world in chaos and flames. "It's very sad, but I would
say the interest in the Christian world is to see the Temple rebuilt from the
Anti-christ perspective, for the rapture of the Church, and that's a very
selfish point of view," Lott says. "The very people that are advocating this
are the ones that are very anti-Semitic in their feelings." Although
Evangelical theology forecasts the destruction of the Jews in the Last Days,
Lott believes that Jews are God's Chosen People and that the Bible clearly
states that God favors those who help Israel. |
The Christian right in the United States has proved to be both a powerful
political lobby for Israel and a substantial source of financial support.
Earlier this year, when Prime Minister Netanyahu came to this country, Jerry
Falwel1 received him, while the White House did not. Most Israelis understand
the subtext of this alliance, but they are loath to disclaim it. "Basically,
we're a doormat for them to get to their own eschatological culmination," Rabbi
Richman says. "It's a pretty, scary thing, because the whole rapture thing that
is popular in some Evangelical circles, which calls for a fulfillment of the
hard times for Jacob, is essentially an invitation to genocide."
Richman and Lott disavow any association with Salomon or with other extremists
who would destroy the mosques. They say they don't know how the Temple will be
built, or when. Lott sees his own mission as part of a divine promise God made
to Israel (in Isaiah 30:23) that one day its land would be restored and cattle
would graze "in large pastures" there. "In God's timing, we know that all Bible
prophecy will be fulfilled, and, if God chooses to use the Numbers 19 red
heifer from that standpoint, that's up to God," Lott says. "Our calling is
simply to begin the actual bringing in of the red cow, and at the same time
begin to work, as much as Christian people possibly can, with the Jewish people
for this restoration."
Richman spent his childhood in Massachusetts, and he knew very little about the
Deep South or Pentecostalism. On Richman's first trip to Mississippi, in 1994,
Lott booked the community center in Canton for a town meeting about the red
heifer. Richman was nervous. More than three hundred people showed up, filling
all the available chairs and standing against the back wall and the sides of
the room. Many of them had never seen an Orthodox Jew. "I look the part,"
Richman admits. He wears a curly beard and rose-tinted oval glasses. Dangling
below the hem of his suit jacket are blue zizith--the ritual fringes that are
meant to remind Orthodox Jews of the Lord's commandments. One man in the
audience pointed to the knitted kipa on Richman's head and asked, in
apparent seriousness, if he wore it to hide his horns.
Richman found the audience surprisingly warm and well versed in the Bible,
however, even in obscure passages that had to do with the building of the
Temple. Soon after that, he and Lott began the first of a series of
barnstorming tours through EvangelicaI churches, mainly in the Deep South. Lott
would introduce Richman, who would speak about the Temple, and then an offering
would be taken up to support their work."The services are--shall I say--
interactive'" Richman says. "It's not like someone gives an address and
everyone sits there like statues. People call out and say 'Amen.' Sometimes the
preacher would try to quiet them down, and I'd say, 'No, let everyone be
themselves.' The people are a lot warmer and less jaded than people in the
North. I found a lot of openness and interest in what I had to say. I found
that we share many of the same values--the family, and what they call
'holiness,' and a mode of worship that emphasizes joy."
For Christians, building the Temple is important only in that it raises the
curtain on the apocalypse. Richman explains that the Temple is critical to
Jews: "We have this concept that we have six hundred and thirteen commandments
to fulfill, and one-third of those commandments are dependent in some way on
the Temple for their fulfillment." Many of these Temple laws involve the
sacrifice of animals. For Jews in the ancient world, animal sacrifice was a
means of achieving the purity that was essential in relating to God. A person
can be defiled by even indirect contact with death--for instance, through the
ground itself, which harbors the dead. Therefore, no one who walks on the
ground is sufficiently holy to enter the Temple precincts. So the absence of a
red heifer made the rebuilding of the Temple a moot point for Orthodox
Jews--and therefore for Christians as well.
For as long as there have been archeologists, there has been a hunger to
excavate the Mount in order to establish the exact location of the First
Temple, and also to find some of the treasures it is supposed to harbor. The
subsurface of the Mount is interlaced with tunnels and cisterns and legendary
secret chambers, which may hide the Ark of the Covenant with the tablets of the
Ten Commandments, which have been lost since the destruction of the First
Temple. (Lott says that Richman told him that these objects were never actually
lost--that they have been stored under the Mount, awaiting the reconstruction
of the Temple.) On several occasions, archeologists and Jewish religious
leaders have conducted unauthorized digs under the Mount, which have
been met with outraged responses on the part of Islamic authorities.
Because no one can say definitively where on the Mount the Temple stood, most
observant Jews have obeyed the rabbinical proscription against going onto the
Mount; however,it is well known that Herod built up the periphery of
the Mount when he enlarged the Temple, and for that reason it is thought by
many Jews to be safe to walk on.
Every Tuesday, just as the Al-Aqsa mosque is emptying of worshippers for the
noon prayers, Rabbi Yosef Elboim arrives at the Maghariba Gate. A small, wiry
man with a white beard and scraggly earlocks, he wears a black frock coat, and
a homburg rides insecurely on the back of his head. As Elboim changes from his
street shoes into a pair of slippers, guards begin to talk nervously on their
walkie-talkies. "Make it quick," one tells him.
"When I was thirteen, the Six-Day War took place," Elboim said, as he began his
weekly stroll around the perimeter of the Haram al-Sharif. "I heard on the
radio that the Temple Mount had been captured, and I was very excited. I was
sure that all the government bodies were gathered together with the rabbis,
planning how and when to build the Temple. A year later, I woke up to the
reality of betrayal. I set about trying to find other people who were
interested and who cared." The Rabbi walked inside a small cordon of security
police. Some Arab children in school uniform coming out of an Islamic school
looked at him in amazement. There are several groups of Jews who make a point
of defying the rabbinical ban against Jews walking on the Temple Mount, but,
unlike Elboim, they are not ultra-Orthodox, so his presence here is all the
more jarring.
For a while, Elboim continued, he joined forces with Gershon Salomon, but then
he formed his own organization, Tnua Lechinun Hamikdash (Movement for
Establishment of the Temple). "We started by making holy vessels and ritual
garments worn by the priests, so that we could have all this ready for when the
time comes," Elboim said. Now his organization has announced a controversial
new project: a home for boys who will become cohanim -- members of the
priestly caste who ran the Temple. "During the time of the Temple, the ashes of
the red heifer were kept in containers, so when the priests saw they were
running out of ashes they would use up the old ones and make some more. But
today we don't have any 'Leftovers.' So it's important to take children, even
before they are born, and bring them up in a place where there is no chance for
them to come into contact with the dead." During the era of the Second Temple,
boy priests were raised in compounds built on solid bedrock, out of the range
of any possible gravesites.
Elboim claims that he has already received offers from four families to donate
their future children to his effort, but he expects to need at least nineteen,
in part so that the boys will have companionship, but also because there are
more than seventy blemishes that can disqualify a boy from becoming a priest.
He says that a Jewish settlement near Jerusalem is willing to build a special
enclosure for the priestly boys so that they will never have to set foot on the
ground. There will be an elevated courtyard where they can play. According to
Ha'aretz, some of the other people involved with Elboim's plan are
former members of Kach, an outlawed far-right religious party. The boys will
not be permitted to leave the compound until their bar mitzvah, at the age of
thirteen, at which time, according to tradition, they will become adults and
are old enough to slaughter and prepare the ashes of a red heifer. In response
to the suggestions that have appeared in the press that such treatment
constitutes child abuse, Elboim points out that the boys will not be
unattended--they will be able to receive family and visitors, who have
undergone purification in a mikvah, or ritual bath, and put on special
clothing, and they will be educated and allowed to play with computers. Their
lives would be no worse than that of Christian or Buddhist monks, or certain
child athletes, Elboim contends. There would be no point in having a red
heifer, Elboim believes, without a priestly caste to prepare the sacrifice.
In August, 1996, a surprising development occurred: another red calf was born,
this time in Israel, on a farm outside Haifa run by a religious high school. "I
had some doubts about it from the very beginning," says Rabbi Shmaria Shore,
whose son came running to him with the news of the birth. "But I saw that she
was very red, and I couldn't see hairs of any other color, so I ended up
contacting some rabbinical authorities, and some people from Jerusalem
eventually came." The rabbis examined the calf, which Shore had named Tslil, a
name that means a musical note, but which he translated as Melody.
To Shore's amazement, the rabbis pronounced Melody a qualified red heifer,
despite the fact that he had begun to notice a few stray white hairs around her
tail and udder, and her eyebrows, which had started out red, had turned black.
Also, the calf would not qualify as a heifer for two years, and by then many
other imperfections might come to light. "I decided to play along, in order to
downplay it," he says now. The rabbis carried the news of the miraculous birth
back to Jerusalem, and soon a pilgrimage of Orthodox Jews and international
press seeking "the Holy Heifer from Haifa" began turning up in the small
religious community of Kfar Hasidim, where Melody now resided under armed
guard. No red heifer, it was said, had been born in Israel since the
destruction of the Temple. "It is written that it is the tenth red heifer that
the Messiah will discover, and here we have the tenth heifer," one of the
rabbis said on Israel Radio.
Muslims and a majority of Jews reacted in alarm. A columnist for Ha'aretz
called for the cow to be shot immediately and "every molecule" destroyed.
"The potential harm from this heifer is far greater than the destructive
properties of a regular terrorist bomb," David Landau wrote. Even Rabbi Shore
cautioned that the time had not come to rebuild the Temple. But Melody was
creating her own reality. Jewish longing for the Temple, Christian hopes for
the rapture, and Muslim paranoia about the destruction of the mosques were
being stirred to an apocalyptic boil.
"In any case, she solved the problem herself by growing a white tail," Rabbi
Shore says now. No longer kosher, Melody has rejoined the herd, but she is
pregnant, Shore says, by a "reddish" bull.
The Reverend Lott had been suspicious of Melody's qualifications, but the
episode alerted him and Rabbi Richman to the sensational political consequences
of their project. Nevertheless, on the eve of the ninth day of the Hebrew month
of Av, in 1997--coincidentally, the day on which the destruction of both the
First and Second Temples is commemorated--Lott, Richman, and a group of West
Bank settlers reached an agreement to provide land to raise red cattle. Lott
and Richman are partners, but, in the event that Lott is raptured with the
Church, Richman and the settlers will assume entire control of the operation.
This December, they are planning to ship five hundred pregnant cows to the
Jordan Valley. The cattle are being bred in Nebraska, on a three-thousand acre
spread devoted to Red Angus. There seems little doubt that a red heifer that
meets all the Halakic criteria will soon be born in Israel, possibly early next
year. Land that Lott has found is in the occupied West Bank--"some of the most
hotly contested land in the world," he admitted recently to a revival audience
in Gulf Shores, Alabama. "It's going to require feedlots, slaughter-houses -- a
whole new economy." He will also ship frozen embryos from Dixie and other donor
cows, along with select sperm, to be held in safekeeping until after the
tribulation. According to Lott, his efforts will ensure that "in the first one
or two or three decades of the millennial reign Israel will be able to go into
the tanks, pull out those frozen embryos, and place them in cows. And in one
generation, whatever they lost in he tribulation, they will have the very best
cows on the face of the earth....She will be able to get the rest of the world
back on its feet again, agriculturally, from a livestock point of view."
Jerusalem makes a cult of holiness, one that fuels the passion and yearning of
millions for a personal encounter with God. "In the Old Testament, time and time
again it says this is God's house, this is where God dwells," says Father
Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, a professor of New Testament at the Ecole Biblique et
Ecole Archeologique Francaise, in Jerusalem. "The assumption was that God's
power and protection were most efficacious in this place. Hence the importance
of pilgrimage to Jerusalem, pilgrimage to the Temple." For centuries, believers
have streamed into the city in order to bathe in this sense of divinity and to
marvel at the site that all three religions believe will be the place of the
Last Judgment. On that day, both Evangelical Christians and Orthodox Jews
expect their Messiah to stride down from the Mount of Olives and burst through
the Golden Gate. Many Muslims believe that the Ka'aba--the holiest place in
Mecca--will be transported to Jerusalem, and that all the dead will meet again
in the streets of the city. As long as such mythologies are taken literally,
the struggle for Jerusalem and the Temple Mount will never end. The religious
carnage that has marked every era of this maddened city will continue, because
whoever controls Jerusalem controls access to the sacred places. It is a way of
owning God.
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