Hypermikdash

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WHAT'S IN A NAME

     Mizbach hachitzona (outer altar); mizbach adamah (earthen altar); mizbach hagedola (large altar); mizbach ha'olah (burnt offering altar).  These are the names used to describe the mizbayach in the main courtyard.
     But let us not forget that there was another mizbayach inside the heichal.  Its name was...
     Mizbach hazahav (golden altar); mizbach hap'nimi (inner altar); mizbach haketoros (incense altar).
     There were only two altars in the Temple, but the variety of names attached to each could lead to confusion.
     So now you know.
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE RAMPS

     The main ramp to the top of the mizbayach (altar) was as long as the mizbayach itself (thirty-two amos). Since the height to which it rose was ten amos, the ratio of elevation must have been about one to three.  Not such a steep climb.
     And it couldn't have taken much time to walk up either (let's say, thirty seconds).  Nevertheless, to the west of the main ramp, was a smaller ramp leading down to the south west corner of the mizbayach.
     Why?  For no other reason than to speed up a priest's trip from the top.  If, while carrying a vessel of blood in his hands, he could walk more directly to the bottom corner, he would save around thirty seconds.
     Why should we care?  Because the blood he was carrying had to be poured over the corner of the mizbayach before it
coagulated (dried).  Apparently, blood, when exposed to air, will coagulate quite quickly.  Hence, the concern for speed.

     Besides the main ramp and its small companion, there were two others leading from the top of the sovev (ledge) to mid-way down the main ramp on either side of the mizbayach.  Why?  So that a priest who had to walk around the ledge to place blood on the required keronos (corners) wouldn't have to turn around and retrace his steps in such a narrow space; he could keep going and descend on the other side.
     Just think of it:  these priests had to walk at considerable heights (six to ten amos) along ledges less than two feet wide -all while balancing vessels filled with blood.  It must have taken some skill - and nerve.
     As you might have noticed from the picture, at the point where the main ramp met the top of the mizbayach, there was a wide gap.  The gap (according to some opinions) was eight amos long (from north to south), more than one amah wide (east to west) and quite deep.  What a place to stick a trench!
     Its real purpose, we are told, was to allow a priest to throw sacrificial limbs from the ramp onto the (top) of the mizbayach.  "Throwing" requires empty space above which to throw.  The empty space had to fall all the way to the yesod. If the gap was any narrower, the ledge of the sovev would get in the way.
     According to Tosafos (Pesachim 77a) the gap was not actually needed to fulfil the mitzva of "throwing" the sacrifices, but as a reminder to throw...
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE ROOF

     Even though the yesod (base) of the mizbayach was thirty-two by thirty-two amos, the actual distance from one side of the roof to the other was twenty-eight by twenty-eight (this, because the sovev was one amah smaller in every direction, and the top portion - maracha - another amah again).
     The outer two amos on each side were taken up by a slightly depressed walkway for the priests and one-amah cubes at each corner (the keronos).  That left twenty-four by twenty-four amos for real business.  In that  space were (under normal circumstances) three wood piles.  One, the biggest, was for the actual burning of sacrifices.  Coals from the second maracha were used for the incense and the third was an eternal flame.
     In the center of the maracha, rising above the woodpiles, was the huge tapuach - a smooth hemisphere of ash.  The ashes from burnt offerings were packed into this round shape after a day's service; the size of the pile giving witness to the willingness  of the Jewish people to give of themselves and their possessions for their G-d.
     It was from this tapuach, that the kohen would take a small shovel-full of ash every morning as part of the mitzva of "trumos hadeshen."  He would dig into the pile, choosing ash from its center, then take his now-full shovel to deposit its contents on the floor next to the main ramp.
     This mitzva, in all its detail, is the will of G-d. As to its reasons, we can only guess, but the fact remains that our Creator wants us to do it.  How fortunate we are that we can serve G-d for no reason other than that He wills it!
     On Hashana Raba (the last day of the festival of Succos), giant aravos (willow branches like you never saw!) were brought into the courtyard and placed on the ground next to the mizbayach, their heads draped over the top of the maracha.  These branches (after just a little math...) had to have measured close to thirty feet long!
     Our custom of buying (for inflated prices), and later carrying, bunches of aravos on Hoshana Raba is a reflection of this most ancient Temple custom.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

FIRE-PROOF PLASTER

     We are told that the altar was given two coats of white lime yearly (one before Passover and one before Succos).  thus, the marachos (wood piles) must have been sitting on a roof of stone, covered by a thin layer of plaster.
     The woodpiles were burning pretty much constantly for years (as long as four hundred years, in fact).  The temperature of the fires must have been quite high - as at least one of them was called upon to incinerate whole animals...and you need more than a pair of Shabbos candles to do that!
     Now think about this:  The tremendous heat of the fires never caused a crack in the stone (nor, presumably, in the plaster with which it was coated).  It couldn't have; because a crack would have flawed the whole structure - making it unfit for use.
     This, some commentators point out, must have been one of the greatest miracles of the Temple!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

DEADLY ESROGIM

     The altar (mizbayach - described by the sages as G-d's instrument for prolonging men's lives) was once the scene of a bizarre execution...
     In the last years of the Second Temple, the position of high priest was a political appointment rather than the office of the most capable and G-d fearing man available. The priest with the best connections in Rome was the one who
could beg, bribe and steal his way into the job.  More often than not, in those chaotic final years, the high priest was a member of the heretical (and doomed) sect called the Tzaddukim (Sadduces).
     The Tzaddukim had their own twisted way of performing many of the Temple practices.  Some mitzvos they denied altogether.  Among the more famous was the mitzva of nissuch hamayim (water libation - performed during the festival of Succos).
     To show his contempt for this mitzva, one particular high priest poured the water over his feet, rather than into the drains located at the south-west corner of the altar's top.
     To show their contempt for a Saduducee high priest, the people pelted him with their esrogim (citrons), killing him.
      It was a great idea.  Only one problem:  the thousands of esrogim (and perhaps stones as well) raining down on the
altar actually wore down the sharpness of the corner - making the whole structure halachically unfit for use. (see Yoma 48b)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE TZADDUKIM

     Like the Karaites of a thousand years ago, the Tzaddukim (Sadduces) claimed a belief in only the written half of the Torah (the Tanach).  Rejecting the inseparable explanation of the Oral Torah (now known as the Talmud; the Mishna and its  commentary, the Gemara), the Tzaddukim strove to draw a body of religious law from the sparse words of Pentateuch alone.
     This brought them to such curious practices as literal "justice" - one who had poked out another's eye would lose his in "exchange."
     But it was neither dogma nor faith that drove the Tzaddukim.  While one might argue that the movement's founders (students of Tzaddok - see Rashi on the Mishna, Avos 1, 3) had some sort of ideological agenda, the group's rank and file were of a different sort.
     Before the death of the Hellenist movement (coinciding, as it did, with the Maccabees' victory over the Greeks), Tzaddukim could claim neither influence, power, nor any great following.  Suddenly, seemingly out of nowhere, sprang a powerful class of committed, card-carrying Tzaddukim.  Where on earth did they come from?
     Let's ask another question:  What happened to the masses of hellenized (Greek loving) Jews when the Greek empire fell before the miraculous Maccabee army? The odds are that your average Hellenist on the street would have had to reassess his lifestyle and beliefs (much like the Russian Communists in recent years).
     "Maybe there's something false about a man-centered universe," he might think.  "Maybe the Torah is true..."

     But this would-be repentant had two strikes against him:
     *One, he had no real knowledge of Judaism (as a third-generation Hellenist, he probably couldn't even read Hebrew)
and there was no one to teach him - as Torah Jews had long since learned to stay away from these dangerous and unpredictable people.  It literally wasn't even safe for a "Pharasee" to live in the same neighborhood as a Hellenist.
    *Two, he didn't really want to become more religious. Deep down inside, he probably still liked the Greek lifestyle.  He knew  he had to make some change in his religious life, but he also had a need to keep the religion "within bounds;" so that it wouldn't interfere too much with "the real world."
     So along come the Tzaddukim like knights in shining armor.  With them, you could be outwardly religious (even annoyingly so, in a whining, missionary sort of way) yet still enjoy all the pleasures of this world.
     It is very possible that out of the masses of Jewish Hellenists, many attached themselves to the Tzaddukim after the end of Greece.
 
 
 
 

THE ORAL LAW

     So why can't you take the written text of the Bible literally - after all, wasn't the Torah meant to be understood?  Would G-d have given us a book that misleads the casual reader?
     The answer to both questions is - yes.
     Yes, the Torah was meant to be understood - but not by the casual reader.
     The casual reader will read, for example, the story of Shimshon (Samson - see Shoftim, ch. 13) and form a picture of a headstrong, lustful fool who can't keep himself out of trouble.  By luck, he manages to bring down a whole crowd of the bad guys as his last act...
     The casual reader will read about "an eye for an eye" and draw some obvious conclusions.
     The Oral Torah (Torah Sheba'al Peh) however, portrays Shimshon as a careful, calculating (though perhaps imperfect) Torah scholar who did just what he had to in order to save his people - both physically and spiritually (for much more on the subject, see Rabbi G. Weiss' "Samson's Struggle").
     The Oral Torah shows us how the Torah could not possibly have wanted us to take "an eye for an eye."
     But it's not only that the Oral Law sometimes provides deeper understanding: the truth is that many parts of Pentateuch and the Prophets are inexplicable without it.
     Take for example the mitzva of kosher slaughter.  The written Torah tells us to slaughter animals "the way I commanded you"  (Deut. 12, 21).  The problem is, that if you go through the entire book from front to back there is absolutely no further reference to the laws of slaughter.  Where, then, did "I command you"?
     Just look at the verses concerning tefilin, tzitzis or esrogim and see if it makes any sense at all without the Oral Torah to guide you.      Now you have a choice: either the Torah was written by some fool (G-d forbid) who couldn't remember what he'd written just a few pages ago, or that the written Torah is simply a table of contents to some greater, more comprehensive, work.  Which do you think is more likely?
     Why, however, did G-d leave the real meat of His Torah out of its written text?  I don't claim to have the last word on the subject (who am I to put words in the mouth of the Creator of the universe?), but the following possibility comes to mind:
     Whatever was written down eventually became the "property" of anyone, anywhere who could read.  Tanach became the "Bible."  So that the central part of the Torah should remain solely in the hands of the Jews (our treasure), it was kept oral - in effect, its mastery was limited to those who had contact with a teacher. (see Droshos Bais Halevy 18)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE STAIRS TO THE ULAM (ANTECHAMBER)

Between the western edge of the altar and the door to the Ulam (the antechamber to the heichal) lay a flight of stairs stretching 22 amos from east to west and rising six amos from the floor.  According to the Tiferes Yisroel, these stairs covered the whole eastern face of the heichal. (Sound confusing?  Why don't you just take a look at the picture?  Do you think I made them just to take up disk space?)
     In fact, there was only one amah of level floor to the west of the altar (the largest space was the slaughterhouse to the north).  After that amah, the first of the twelve stairs rose its half amah and pushed west a full amah.  All the stairs in the  Temple, the Mishna tells us, were one half an amah high and half an amah deep except for these.
    Here, there were four flights of three stairs each with a landing of either three or four amos between each flight.  Built into one of the landings was the ciur .
    On the top landing (which was level with the floor of the heichal), on each side of the huge door to the Ulam, was an eighteen-amah high column.  One was called Yachin and the other, Boaz.  Yachin, after the Davidic dynasty which is constantly "prepared" (muchan) to return, and Boaz, after David's great-grandfather, Ruth's husband.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE SLAUGHTERHOUSE

     Stretching from the northern wall of the altar to within a few amos of the northern wall of the courtyard, was an open area known as the bais hamitbachayaim (slaughterhouse).  This was the main (for want of a better expression) meat processing center of the Temple.
     It was here that most of the animals destined for the altar were slaughtered (kodshei kedoshim - the sacrifices with the highest level of sanctity - were required to be slaughtered only in this area).  And it was in this open space that most animals were skinned and prepared for their actual being offered.
     There were twenty-four metal rings anchored in the floor through which the heads of live animals were drawn in order to secure them for slaughter.  Beyond the rings were eight marble tables on which carcasses were opened and their fats and entrails removed.  Beyond these tables were eight marble pillars with cubes of wood on top.  Protruding from the cubes were nine pegs used for hanging carcasses while working on particularly busy days (this was for the overflow from the tables).
     The Mishna in Avos (5, 5) mentions one of the miracles of the Temple:  Despite the raw meat getting older in the hot, Israeli sun and the gallons of blood spilled all over the floor, no fly was ever seen in the area of the slaughterhouse.  This, we are told, was in honor of the holy work of the altar!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE CIUR

     The ciur (urn) was the water vessel from which the priests washed their hands and feet before any work.  You might remember where Rashi in Chumash (Exod. 38, 8) tells us how the ciur in the tabernacle was made of the mirrors used by our holy mothers while enslaved in Egypt.
     Originally, the ciur in the Temple was built with two spigots - one from the top half and one from the bottom (for use later in the day when the water level was lower).   As the demand grew, ten more spigots were added on the bottom.
     Predictably, at the end of an average day, there would be some water left over.  If it was left out in the ciur overnight, this water would become unfit for its use.  It therefore would have to be thrown out.
     As that would have involved a perceived indignity, a man named Ben Katin (Yoma 37a) invented the muchani (water
well) into which the ciur was lowered nightly.  Being submerged overnight in a "living" well, the water in the ciur was just as fit for use the next morning as it had been the day before.