Throughout history. The Ark of the Covenant has been one of the most sacred artifacts in the Judeo-Christian tradition. But just what exactly is the ark? Well, the Ark of the Covenant is fascinating because it's the most important ritual object the Judaism has ever had. The Ark is first introduced scripturally in the Book of Exodus, where God gives Moses instruction to build an arc for carrying the tenin. It has very detailed instructions.
It should be 2 and 1 / 2 cubits long, but 1 and 1 / 2 cubits tall, and 1 and 1 / 2 cubits wide, and it's plated with gold inside. Now, the Ark of the Covenant for a time was the center of the Israelite religion. Hebrew, god, yahweh on Earth, meaning if there was a question that needed to be answered, the Ark was the place that you would go and petition God.
If you went into battle, the Ark would be taken, marched into battle, as long as the presence of god, represented by the ark was with Israel, they couldn't be conquered. The Ark of the Covenant was God in the midst of the Israelites. It was an extremely powerful thing.
When the Israelites were wandering through the desert for 40 years, they not only carried the ark with them, the Ark kind of led the way, it was their ancient navigational device, the Israelites, ancient GPS that showed them where to go. And the legend says it would zoom up into the sky, move 3 days ahead, and then the people would follow along behind it.
When, what's interesting is that there's this great debate, was the Ark of the Covenant, real, or was it just made up? I actually think it was very real. And the reason I think it's real is that it's such a central part of the Israelite religion. Did the Ark of the Covenant actually exist? Perhaps the answer can be found by examining an archaological discovery that was made in the heart of the Holy Land.
Central Israel, 15 mi west of Jerusalem. Here, on a small rocky mound, lie the ruins of an ancient Hebrew city known as B. Shamesh. According to archaeologist, bet Shemesh has a profound connection to the Ark of the Covenant, be-Shemesh has a long history of being a religious center, according to the story that we have in the Bible when the Ark of the Covenant was taken to be Chemes, the israelites take the ark and they put it on a stone table. The understanding was that it was venerated by all israelites. We have this one object, the Ark of the Covenant.
That represents God on earth. Could the Ark of the Covenant have actually been kept at Bmesh? Well, recently, archae have uncovered evidence, which suggests that the biblical story is, in fact true. In 2019, a team led by archaeologists from Tel Aviv University, made a startling discovery. They found a room in which it seems to have evidence of where the Ark of the Covenant was kept.
When it was brought here at Bish, there's a big flat flab of stone-that is exactly the same dimensions proportions as the Ark of the Covenant. This laab of stone is not some column that fell on its side. It was deliberately placed here, and its dimensions, its dimensions fit What? The Book of Exodus tells us where the dimensions of the Ark of the Covenant, it says it was a cubit and a half on cubits.
And a half. A cubit is the size of a human arm. Watch, a cubit, and a half on two cubits, and a half, just a bit bigger, maybe by 10-20%. The arc would be placed on it in the most possible stable way. And everything dates to the time frame of when the Ark was placed at Bish, everything falls into place.
Not only did this discovery indicate that the ark was kept here, it's much more, it actually indicates the Ark existed. This discovery is possibly the most significant find ever made in the context of the quest of the Ark of the Covenant.