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The Untold Truth Of The Ark Of The Covenant - YouTube
Channel: Grunge
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The Ark of the Covenant is one of the holiest
artifacts of the Hebrew Bible.
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So holy that looking at or touching it could
be deadly.
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But what actually is it, and what is it for?
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Here’s the untold truth of the Ark of the
Covenant.
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The Ark of the Covenant, also sometimes called
the Ark of the Testimony or the Ark of God,
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is not to be confused with the other famous
ark in the Bible, which was a boat.
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The word "ark" comes from the Latin word arca,
meaning "big box."
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Just as Noah's Ark was a big floating box
for him to put animals in, the Ark of the
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Covenant was apparently a big box full of
things important to God that would represent
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his presence among the people of Israel as
they wandered through the desert after escaping
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slavery in Egypt.
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The Jewish Encyclopedia describes the Ark
as a movable sanctuary for the Israelites,
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a place for God to sit until they arrived
in the promised land and could establish a
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temple there.
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The Ark was not to be touched or looked at
when uncovered.
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On the move, the Ark was always covered by
skins and cloths, hidden even from the priests
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who carried it.
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When stationary, it was held up by poles so
it wouldn't touch the ground.
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Even the high priest was forbidden from being
in the place of the Ark except when it necessary
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to perform certain rituals and ceremonies.
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And as the Christian Apologetics and Research
Ministry explained, the top of the Ark was
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known as the mercy seat, a lid of pure gold
placed on the Ark and put within the Holy
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of Holies behind the veil of the Tabernacle,
where God himself actually showed up and the
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High Priest would go once a year to sprinkle
blood as a sacrifice to calm God down for
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another year.
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“Yeah, the Ark of the Covenant, the chest
the Hebrews used to carry around the Ten Commandments.”
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In Exodus Chapter 25, after God has given
Moses the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai,
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he gives him detailed instructions about building
the Ark of the Covenant and the Tabernacle
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to house it in.
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The whole thing is covered in gold, with a
gold ring at each corner for acacia wood rods
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to be placed through for carrying and holding
the Ark off the ground.
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But what goes inside it?
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In various places in the Hebrew Bible, the
Ark is said to hold the tablets on which the
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Ten Commandments were carved, and a pot full
of manna, the miraculous food God provided
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for the Israelites to eat as they wandered
the wilderness.
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The Christian Epistle to the Hebrews, however,
also mentions it contained a staff belonging
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to Moses's brother Aaron, which miraculously
grew flowers and almonds in the Book of Numbers.
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While the Israelites marched through the desert,
the Ark usually led the way, but whenever
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they set up camp, it was placed within a temporary
shelter known as the Tabernacle.
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According to Exodus, the Tabernacle was basically
a tent made up of layers of curtains, veils,
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and skins.
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Nobody really knows what animal those skins
come from, though.
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The Hebrew word is tachash, but comparison
of different translations of Exodus shows
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tachash is variously rendered as goat, porpoise,
badger, manatee, dolphin, or seal skin.
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However, another theory suggests that the
tachash was actually an enormous wild animal
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with a single horn, that was covered with
skin of six colors.
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Does this mean that the special tent for the
Ark of the Covenant was made of the skin of
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an enormous rainbow unicorn?
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We can only hope.
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The Ark of the Covenant was no ordinary box.
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The Bible shows it to possess a great power
to destroy the enemies of God or remove obstacles
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that stand in the way of his chosen people.
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In the Book of Joshua, when Moses's successor
Joshua led the Israelites into the Promised
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Land, the Ark parted the waters of the Jordan
River so that they could cross.
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And when the Ark was carried around the city
walls of Jericho, the walls came tumbling
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down.
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The sacred nature of the Ark is no joke, either.
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The Book of Samuel records that somewhere
between 50 to 70 thousand people died immediately
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having just looked at the Ark out of curiosity.
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Even those with good intentions weren't spared,
as 2 Samuel tells the story of a guy who reached
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out to steady the Ark when it was about to
topple off of an ox cart.
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Despite trying to be helpful, he was struck
immediately dead by divine fire.
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The Jewish Encyclopedia also reports that
the Ark not only protected the Israelites
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from their human enemies within the Promised
Lands, but from natural obstructions found
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within the desert on their way there.
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The story goes, sparks would form in between
the two cherubim of the mercy seat and basically
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fire lasers that cleared the path of snakes,
scorpions, and thorn bushes.
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Furthermore, the smoke produced by these lasers
reportedly smelled like sweet perfume that
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alerted people to the presence of God's chair.
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The Ark is also mentioned in the Quran, and
other Islamic sources discuss it as well,
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including one that adds to the contents of
the Ark Moses's hat, robes, and shoes.
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Perhaps most interestingly, however, comes
the story recorded in the book Sudanese Memoirs,
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which tells of how the Ark contained a ruby
statue that looked like the head of a cat
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with two wings.
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The cat, despite being a statue, was vocal,
and meowed like the roaring of the wind.
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When it cried out, it caused the Ark to rush
toward God's enemies and assured victory for
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the Israelites.
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The Ark of the Covenant features heavily in
the Hebrew Bible from the time of Moses through
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the eras of King David and Solomon, and even
into the time of the Divided Kingdom, but
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it basically disappears from the record around
the time of the prophet Jeremiah.
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What happened at that time that might account
for such an important artifact disappearing
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from history altogether?
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"Where is the Ark?"
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Well, Jeremiah lived at the end of what is
known as the First Temple period.
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The First Temple was constructed by King Solomon,
possibly with the assistance of a horde of
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enslaved demons, based on the plans of his
father, David.
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After seven years of work, the great temple
was completed and the Ark of the Covenant
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placed inside, in a new, more permanent Holy
of Holies that was not made of rainbow unicorn
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skin.
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The end of the First Temple period came several
centuries later after Israel split into two
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nations.
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The Northern Kingdom of Israel fell in 722
BCE, and the Southern Kingdom of Judah, where
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the temple was, was conquered by the Babylonian
Empire in 587 BCE, the temple was destroyed,
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and the people of Judah were sent into exile.
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So what actually happened to the Ark?
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Was it taken to Babylon or hidden in ruins?
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No one really knows.
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But there are some pretty fascinating theories
about where it might be.
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One proposed location of the Ark of the Covenant
comes from the book Second Maccabees, one
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of a group of Greek Jewish texts thought by
Christians to take place between the Old and
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New Testaments, and often referred to as the
Apocrypha.
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The books of the Maccabees describe the conflicts
of the Jewish people with the Greek successors
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of Alexander the Great and how a great military
leader named Judah Maccabee, also known as
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"the Hammer", and his brothers led a successful
revolt that led to the restoration of the
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Second Temple, and ultimately to the Jewish
people enjoying autonomous rule until the
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Romans showed up.
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The Maccabees are pretty great reads, full
of armies of ghosts and a dude so mad at the
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Greeks he literally threw his own intestines
at them.
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Anyway, chapter two of Second Maccabees is
a flashback to the time of the Babylonian
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siege, and tells how the prophet Jeremiah,
applying the kind of foresight unique to prophets,
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grabbed the Ark, the Tent of Meeting, and
the temple altar, and absconded with them
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to Mount Nebo, currently in the country of
Jordan, to be hidden there until such time
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as God decides to reveal it.
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Not everyone agrees with the theories claiming
that the Ark was taken to Babylon, or hidden
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in Jerusalem, or sealed in a cave on Mount
Nebo.
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Namely, Ethiopian Christians have claimed
for centuries that the Ark of the Covenant
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is, in fact, in the Ethiopian city of Aksum.
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Per Smithsonian, the Christians of Ethiopia
claim the Ark came to Aksum nearly three millennia
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ago and has been fiercely guarded by a succession
of virgin monks ever since, who dedicate their
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lives to keeping watch over the Ark in the
chapel and are forbidden to step foot outside
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once anointed to this duty.
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The Ethiopian chronicle known as Kebra Nagas,
or "The Glory of Kings", records when the
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Queen of Sheba went to visit Solomon to consult
his fabled wisdom, she got pregnant with his
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son, named Menelik.
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When Menelik later visited his father, some
Israelite nobles accompanied him on his return
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trip.
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Unknown to Menelik, these nobles had stolen
the Ark and replaced it with a fake.
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Since Menelik had borne the Ark all the way
to Ethiopia without being destroyed, he knew
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it had to have been God's will.
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And allegedly, the Ark has been in Aksum's
Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion more or less
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ever since.
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Since no one but the Ark's guardian is allowed
to see it, who can dispute this version of
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events?
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There's no biblical artifact so famous someone
won't claim it was recovered by the Knights
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Templar and taken from the Holy Land back
to Europe somewhere.
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"The Holy Grail."
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As Crusader History explains, the Templars,
not satisfied with having attained the Holy
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Grail, apparently removed the Ark of the Covenant
from the ruins of Solomon's temple and took
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it back to the French Cathedral of Our Lady
of Chartres.
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The theory is that the Templars, in their
roles as master stonemasons, on top of being
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bodyguards for Crusaders, were the ones to
rebuild Chartres Cathedral as an exquisitely
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carved Gothic cathedral after it had burnt
down, the intention being that it would be
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a great storehouse for holy relics and wisdom.
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The evidence of this can be found in reliefs
depicting the transportation of the Ark.
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However, The Leamington Courier reports that
British author Graham Phillips writes that
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the Templars took the Ark not to France, but
to Britain.
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In Phillips's reconstruction of events, the
Templar leader Ralph de Sudeley found the
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Ark among the hidden stash on Mount Nebo and
carried it back to his estate in Warwickshire
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meaning that it's now somewhere in England.
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Anything is possible, right?
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One of the most recent claimants to being
the location of the Ark of the Covenant is
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the alleged tomb of Alexander the Great on
the Greek island of Thasos.
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According to the Huffington Post, in 2012
an amazingly sketchy archaeological outfit
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announced they'd uncovered the final resting
place of one of history's greatest conquerors,
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and they allegedly found the Ark of the Covenant
inside as well.
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Thasos, which is near Macedonia, where Alexander
was from, has long been rumored to be where
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The Great One was buried, so the announcement
of finding his tomb there was not entirely
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unexpected.
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But why would the Ark of the Covenant be buried
with him?
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Well, according to Jewish historians, Alexander
did in fact go to Jerusalem, where he was
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shown a copy of the Book of Daniel, which
prophesied that a great Greek leader would
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conquer the Persians.
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Seeing this, he was apparently satisfied and
left Jerusalem alone.
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However, there was no mention of Alexander
the Great taking one of the holiest items
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of all time, which had been missing for centuries
since the destruction of the First Temple.
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Whether or not this really happened is anyone's
guess.
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But it goes without saying that the Ark of
the Covenant remains one of the world's most
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interesting mysteries.
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