Red cows, gaza and the end of the world

15 min read

MIDDLE EAST

As the Israel-Hamas war rages on, the Third Temple movement is ramping up its bid to reclaim a contested holy site in Jerusalem currently home to ancient Islamic shrines

DISPUTED TERRITORY Muslims pray during Ramadan outside the Dome of the Rock—an ancient Islamic shrine built on Judaism’s holiest site and Islam’s third holiest, where two ancient Jewish temples are believed to have stood—in Jerusalem on March 29, 2024.
ANADOLU/GETTY

IT IS SAID THAT THIS IS WHERE THE WORLD BEGAN—and perhaps where it will end. 

The true epicenter of the war in the Holy Land is not the devastated Gaza Strip, under Israeli assault since Hamas’ bloody raid last October sparked the region’s deadliest conflict in decades. It is a few dozen miles away in Jerusalem, at the holiest and most fiercely contested hilltop on Earth.

The war has increased religious tensions and given new impetus to a group of Jews and their evangelical Christian allies who are set on rebuilding an ancient temple where millennium-old Islamic shrines now stand—a suggestion that arouses the horror not only of Palestinians and Muslims worldwide, but of many Jews in Israel and around the globe as well as that of would-be Middle East peacemakers.

Third Temple advocates have been preparing for the day when the temple can be rebuilt, complete with rabbinically- certified red cows shipped from Texas for use in sacrificial purification rituals. The architectural designs are all ready, along the lines of the detailed Biblical descriptions. Robes have been woven and utensils assembled to Biblical specifications for ceremonies at the planned temple.

Messianic Jewish supporters believe the rebuilding of the temple, rather than being divisive, would fulfill Biblical prophecy to bring an era of peace with the temple as “a house of prayer for all nations.” Christian backers, meanwhile, believe it would be an important step toward the Second Coming of Jesus and an apocalyptic last battle with the Antichrist.

“Our holy warriors who are fighting in Gaza are actually fighting for the building of the Temple,” one Jewish prayer leader pronounced recently on a controversial visit to the believed site of two previous Jewish temples in Jerusalem.

Standing before the Dome of the Rock, the gleaming Islamic shrine that has sat for more than 1,300 years on the same contested spot, Marina Sokol, an Israeli mother whose son was killed fighting Hamas in Gaza, proclaimed: “ The war we are waging is a war for the Temple Mount.”

In their war to destroy Israel and replace it with an Islamic state, Hamas leaders also readily draw on the symbolism of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount, known to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary). It is the third holiest site in Islam with its Al-Aqsa Mosque as well as being the holiest site in

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