Posted on 01/18/2002 12:45:29 PM PST by Pericles
Friday January 18 3:39 PM ET
Ethiopia Christians Celebrate Near Ark
By MATTHEW J. ROSENBERG, Associated Press Writer
AXUM, Ethiopia (AP) - In Axum, there's no mystery about what's become of the lost biblical Ark of the Covenant.
Like the vast majority of Ethiopian Orthodox Christians, nearly everyone in this dusty, windswept town believes the ark is tucked neatly away in a stone chapel on the grounds of Axum's biggest church, safeguarding Ethiopia as it has for nearly 3,000 years.
Fueled by faith, thousands flocked to churches in Axum and throughout Ethiopia on Friday for Timkat, an Ethiopian celebration of the baptism of Jesus Christ. At the center of the festivities are ``tabots'' - tablets kept in every Ethiopian Orthodox church that symbolize the ark.
It is an annual reaffirmation of Ethiopia's 1,700-year-old Christian tradition, with its unique focus on the ark.
``I can understand that outsiders are skeptical'' about the ark, said Mersa Belay, head priest of Axum, 370 miles north of the capital, Addis Ababa. ``They do not have our faith.''
``God knew Ethiopians were the people most willing to accept his religion so he placed the ark here,'' said Mersa, before launching into the tale of how Moses' ark came to this northern Ethiopian town of ramshackle stone houses set on arid plains and rocky hills.
The details differ with each telling, but the basic account remains: The Queen of Sheba and King Solomon of Israel had a son named Menelik who was raised in Ethiopia, his mother's home. As a man, Menelik I visited his father in Jerusalem, stole the ark and returned to Ethiopia with an entourage of Israelite aristocrats and founded a kingdom based in Axum.
That was about 3,000 years ago. Ethiopians converted to Christianity about 1,300 years later. The dynasty they believe Menelik founded ruled Ethiopia until 1974, when Emperor Haile Selassie was deposed.
Historians agree Ethiopia was converted to Christianity around A.D. 330. The rest of the story is dismissed as propaganda dreamed up in the 12th century to support a new line of Ethiopian kings who hoped to gain legitimacy by tracing their roots to King Solomon.
``The story of the ark ... cannot be documented, although many have tried,'' says historian Richard Pankhurst, founder of Institute of Ethiopian Studies in Addis Ababa.
Scholars are not sure where the Queen of Sheba lived, although modern Yemen - not Ethiopia - is cited as the most likely spot. Outside Ethiopian chronicles there is no mention of the ark's leaving Jerusalem. And the first Ethiopian kingdom didn't appear until about 800 to 900 years after Solomon was believed to have lived.
Despite the skepticism of outsiders, belief in the ark's powers runs deep in Ethiopia, where about half the 63 million people are Christian.
``The ark protects us in all ways,'' said Haile Mersa, a 57-year-old farmer, adding that its powers are not limited to protection. ``If we don't respect (the ark) our belief is that we may lose our lives or become disabled.''
The ark has helped keep Ethiopia - the only African country never colonized - independent throughout most of its history, said Belai Giday, an Ethiopian historian.
``Ethiopia has been invaded, but has never been subjugated by a foreign power,'' said Belai, citing Ethiopian resistance to Italian occupation between 1936 and 1941. ``The Italians tried ... but they never ruled because we never lost faith in the ark and kept fighting.''
That faith was on display Friday as Axumites gathered at the chapel they believe houses the ark.
Draped in white linen sheets, they watched as robed priests removed a tabot covered by richly embroidered green and red velvet cloths from the stone building and began a solemn procession to a tent a half-mile away.
At the front was the tabot, accompanied by priests and an honor guard of soldiers with assault weapons. Men marching behind sang haunting Ethiopian Orthodox Church music. At the rear, women quietly wailed.
Solemnity gave way to riotous celebration as the tabot reached the tent. Men and women mingled, singing and dancing, clapping to the beat of drums.
Timkat reaches its climax in the morning with a mass baptism. With believers outside, the tabot representing the ark remains in the tent through the night, a symbol to the faithful that God is present.
The lone priest who now guards the ark - Gebrelebanos Teklemariam - rarely, if ever, speaks with outsiders. He refused to be interviewed.
Some priests in Axum said they have seen the ark but were not supposed to talk about it.
Patriarch Abune Paulos of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church said he had seen the ark and described it as the one whose construction is recounted in the Bible. It is a wooden box covered in gold and topped with two winged cherubim, he said, and inside are two mirrorlike tablets with Hebrew inscriptions.
The description differed from others given by priests in recent years. But on Friday, there was no debate among believers.
``If it were nothing ... we would take it out and walk with it,'' said Merha Godega as he waited for the priests to remove the tabot.
``But the ark is too powerful,'' he whispered. ``If we took it out, it would destroy us.''
The ark has helped keep Ethiopia - the only African country never colonized - independent throughout most of its history, said Belai Giday, an Ethiopian historian.Never colonized. An achievement to be proud of, surely. Box or no box.
Solomon of course had a replica of the Ark made and sent back with the Queen of Sheba. Whether it served as a communications device--a direct hot line between Jerusalem and Axum, as it were--I do not know, but of course the original did so serve, as God kept in touch by calling up frequently...
The original is still in Jerusalem, but it is interesting from the size and shape and all that these folks have kept this alive all this time.
Check out Wyatt Archeological Research.
I believe his account.
BTW I have a new thread up, VaB. On Daniel 9 again.
But of course the Ark, the table of Shewbread, the altar of incense, the big ole mohair Tabernacle, who knows what all else, is there with the Ark in Jerusalem. If only it had its old powers back, just for a day, to strike the Pallies from the Land.
They say the ark has been used in battle by Ethiopia and is one reason why foreign invasions have not succeeded. It was not used against Italy for reasons unknown. Even Moses was badly injured in a bout with the ark, so the story goes.
They don't worship the ark. They believe that if somebody opens it without proper training and protection, it will kill that person. They might show proper respect, but they don't pray to it. Not idolatry.
And some say that a group of Irish monks took it to an island fortress... and some say that Knights were guarding it in France....and some say that that it was brought to North America.
We're not talking about Noah's Ark -- we're talking about the Ark of the Covenant -- a box that housed the stone tablets that Moses received from God with the 10 Commandments carved on them.
I know a lot of Ethiopians and am constantly astounded at the deep faith in God that so many of them have. Most believe that they have been chosen to keep the ark until the day it is returned safely to Israel. They don't worship it or attach superstitious powers to it, but rather treat it as reverently as it was treated by the Jews in the time of King David.
Ha! That's what happens when typing and talking on the phone at the same time. Having been inside the Dome, I somehow switched Arks and envisioned Noahs sitting there, when I meant the Ark of the Covenant. Thanks!
Man does not live by bread alone.
Why would that happen?
The Sign and the Seal : The Quest for the Lost Ark of the Covenant by Graham Hancock
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