Archaeologists recreate tiles of temple where Jesus walked
Such is the understanding of Israeli archaeologists and masons who, drawing on relics and historical texts, have recreated the sacred flooring so it can be experienced today.
By Reuters, December 21, 2020
A wheelbarrow filled with stones that were
recovered near Jerusalem's Old City is seen during a demonstration for
Reuters in Jerusalem (photo credit: REUTERS) |
Such
is the understanding of Israeli archaeologists and masons who, drawing
on relics and historical texts, have recreated the sacred flooring, so
it can be experienced today.
"We even made the scratches and all kind of marks that created the
same appearance as it used to look like at the time," archaeologist
Assaf Avraham told Reuters near the one- meter square, ankle-high
replica on the Mount of Olives, overlooking Jerusalem's Old City and
holy sites.
According to the New Testament, Jesus
went to the temple as a boy for pilgrimage and study and, as an older
preacher, cast out its money-changers in anger. The Gospel of John
describes him "walking in the temple in the portico of Solomon."
The
temple was designed by King Herod, as were other grand structures in
Roman-era Judea. Surviving tiles from those ruins told the
archaeologists what materials had been used - hand-tooled limestone and
Dead Sea stone, as well as imported marble - and that the inlay had been
the ornate "Opus Sectile" style.
Josephus
Flavius, a Jewish historian of the period, wrote that temple courts
were "laid with stones of all sorts," another indication the tiles were
of various colors and textures.
Recreating the floor was "very tough work" that took seven months, said Avi Tavisal, manager of the team of artisans.
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