The Life Of Jesus Christ In Its Historical Connexion

By Augustus Neander

Section 118. The Saying of Christ, |Destroy this Temple,| &c.--Additional Exposition of it given by John.

Some of the priests asked Christ by what signs he could prove his authority to act thus. He gave them an answer, at once reproof and prophecy, "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up."

The most natural and apparent interpretation of these words, according to the circumstances under which they were uttered, laying no particular stress upon the specification of "three days," would be the following: "When you, by your ungodliness, which desecrates all that is holy, have brought about the destruction of the Temple, then will I build it up again;" alluding (according to the mode of conception every where prevalent in the New Testament) to the relation between Christianity and Judaism. The kingdom of God had a common basis in both; the new spiritual Temple which Christ is to erect among men is, therefore, represented as the Temple at Jerusalem, rebuilt after its destruction; the latter being a symbol of the destruction of the entire Jewish worship, which was identified with the Temple itself. The Temple and the kingdom of God are identical in Judaism and in Christianity: [268] there, in a form particular and typical; here, in a form corresponding to its essence, and intended for all men and all ages. As Christ is conscious that the desecrated and ruined Temple will be raised up by him in greater splendour, he acts upon this consciousness, as reformer of the old Temple, in the very beginning of those labours which are to lay the foundation of the new and spiritual one.

But what a glance into futurity was required in him thus to foretell not only the ruin of the Temple by the guilt of the Jews -- the dissolution of their worship being necessarily identified therewith -- but also the erection of the spiritual Edifice that was to take its place; to predict in himself the mightiest achievement in the history of humanity, at a time when but a few apparently insignificant men had joined him, and even they had but a distant dawning idea of what he intended to accomplish! So vast a meaning was involved in those dark words -- dark, as all prophecies are dark! An analogous meaning was contained in his expression on another occasion, "Here is something greater than the Temple;" [269] showing, perhaps, that he was accustomed thus to point from the temporary Temple to the higher one which had already appeared, and which would still further reveal itself in the course of his labours.

Among the accusations brought against Christ by the false witnesses, at a later period, was this, that he had said, "I am able to destroy the Temple of God, and to build it in three days." [270] Some may suppose that the editor of our Greek Matthew may have been ignorant of the occasion and the true sense on which the words were uttered by Christ, and therefore attributed them entirely to the invention of the witnesses. It is likely, however, that the testimony was called false by Matthew, because the witnesses perverted, and put a false construction on Christ's real words; he had not said that "he would destroy the Temple," but (what is very different) that its destruction would be brought about by the guilt of the Jews. The priests might very naturally have falsely reported the words, in order to put a sense upon them that would not bear against themselves so closely, and which, at the same time, would appear more obnoxious to the people. In Mark, xiv., 58, the words are still more perverted by the false witnesses: "I will destroy this Temple that is made with hands, and within three days I will build another." [271] Not that they understood Christ that he would build a spiritual temple instead of the visible one; but, probably, that he could, after destroying the latter, replace it in greater glory by magic (after the visionary representations of the Chiliasts), or cause one to descend from heaven. Even one of the thieves on the cross malevolently quoted these words against Christ. All this shows that, whatever amazement the words excited, they had made a great and general impression. [272]

The faithfulness of John is strikingly shown by the way in which he distinguishes his own interpretation of these words of Christ from the words themselves. [273] Christ, in uttering them (according to John's explanation), pointed to his own body [referring to the resurrection].

Although this does not appear to bear so directly upon the aim of Christ at the time, and upon the question of the Jews, as the view given above, it yet may involve the following deeper import, viz.: "The Temple at Jerusalem is only a temporary place consecrated to God; but Christ, in his human nature, shall build up the everlasting Temple of God for man. The former shall be destroyed, and not rebuilt; but the body of Christ, the temple of the indwelling Divine Nature, shall rise triumphant out of death." [274]

The first interpretation seems to us more simple, and to connect itself snore naturally with Christ's intention; but the latter has the advantage in giving a more intelligible bearing to the "three days." [275]