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I haven't opened the Christian Bible in a very long time. Many many decades. It's not something that I'm proud of. I've been turning to it more and more lately for comfort. It has definitely helped.
But the more I read, the more questions I have.
So I would really appreciate it if the good folks of GD would please educate me on what the 3rd Temple is. I've heard about it in passing over the last year, but with everything that's going on in Israel, I've been hearing about it more frequently.
Thank you in advance
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It's ok OP, now that they have finally decided how to pronounce "temple" versus "synagogue" like it had a -ma- in the middle pronounced to-MAH-to rather than to-MAY-to LOL, at least they didn't blur the answer to the third temple. At least I don't think.
One of the reasons you might have questions is there's some um, "repetition" in the Scriptures. Almost like the Good Lord thought we was all deaf. Or stupid or something, LOL. I've taken the liberty of finding a secular but funny comedic interlude to illustrate why our Lord felt it necessary to repeatedly send prohpets forward into the gap with the same messages, apparently, over and over.
The "good part" starts around 3:20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dpMwXueD8Q
Because we don't listen is an understatement.
So anyway. You want to know how the movie ends, right? Go all the way to the back of "the Book" get a peek at the ending, right? Sorry to disappoint you my friend, don't hardly work that way. You'll just have to come along for the ride with the rest of us. You'll have to provide your own snacks of course, and no, you can't borrow my hankie.
One problem I've seen is some take certain passages out of context. Sometimes that "works" and other times, that verse is the middle part or the end(s) of something larger. Verses make up chapters, chapters make up a particular book. I like to think of the Old Testament as a history lesson and the New Testament as not only that, but more of a glimpse of what is to come. Almost a warning in some places. The Gospels in the New Testament weren't just written by the Apostles. Acts was written by John Mark = St Mark, not John the Apostle. Acts was written by Luke who was a physician friend of Paul. Leastways, that's what I read about that in some other book.
The Bible is a compilation of writings by many different people. The repetition mentioned above was in addition to those first hand accounts of say, the events leading up to the Crucifixion. (If you haven't seen Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ with James Caviezel, you really should) The differing viewpoints I think, give the stories within depth.
One of my good friends recently sent me a thing on William Tyndale. He was burned at the stake in 1536 for believing in the forgiveness of sins and the mercy offered in the gospels was enough for salvation. Tyndale's early works was translating the scriptures into English and other languages. the King James version is mostly based on his works. It was King Henry the Eighth who later required every parish in England to make a copy of the English Bible available to its parishioners.
I use this website for some things
https://www.biblegateway.com/
It lists well over a hundred versions of "The Bible" and had a pretty good search tool to find specific verses/topics.
I've also been using Bing as a search engine, seems to be okay for this too.
It has occurred to me that one reason for some 'confusion' for lack of a better term, is how the Bible came to be. It wasn't just one but written by many different people at different times. Men who were as imperfect as we are. Then passed down through the ages, translated from one language to another where context and even words for things get blurred a bit...perhaps.
You are not alone OP, actually neither are the rest of you. We all have questions. I find comfort in the fact that they are the same questions I've been looking for answers to. God Bless, Y'all.