We’re told that the third Beit Hamikdash will be the best of
all three. It may even be a time where god is so clear in the world that there
will no longer be sin. We may return to how the world was in Gan Edan. But why?
What makes the third Beit Hamikdash so qualitatively better? What enables the
generation to live such an ideal life? We see this dynamic of three periods of ideal
living surrounding two periods of disaster in the Wizarding World. Up until
Voldemort’s first rise to power, the Wizarding World was happy. There were
bumps along the way like Grindelwald, but Dumbledore took care of him before he
did too much serious damage. They were living in an ideal, peaceful time- one
when they did not have to worry about death eaters, dark marks, or coming home
to find their loved ones dead. What more could someone ask for? However,
despite their blissful life style, they were not happy; they were normal. They
didn’t know how it felt to be expelled from a care free life style and plunged
into fear with no sanctuary. They were completely under-appreciative of their
freedom.
Then came the first rise. An experience so mortifying that
it tore families apart, massacred a generation, and left those who experienced
it terrified even of the name of the man involved. They were begging for freedom,
and, finally, it came. This generation now knew how to appreciate the lives
that used to be taken for granted. But their bliss just wasn’t as sweet as it
was the last time. The name Voldemort caused fear when he, himself, was not
there to do so. Death eaters who kept themselves out of Azkaban were living
amongst innocent and scared people. Worst of all, they knew it would come to an
end, and freedom with an end in sight can hardly be called freedom. Dumbledore,
Snape, Black, plenty knew that Voldemort was not completely defeated even if
some couldn’t come to terms with it. Even fudge knew he would one day return.
There was even prophecy that foretold his return, they were “free”, but not like
the last time.
Then Voldemort returned to start a reign far worse than the
last one. He took over the ministry, he killed hundreds, and this time there
was no Dumbledore to rely on. When things looked darkest, and nearly all hope
was lost, Voldemort was defeated and the Wizarding World was, yet again, free.
This freedom was a complete one, all the feelings of the first time came back;
it wasn’t missing a detail. And this time the perfect bliss they had, was the
one they so desperately craved for so long. There was no under-appreciation. In
addition to the state of life being exactly how it was in the beginning, and in
addition to the fact that it was, this time, being experienced by those who
felt suffering, and in addition to the fact that this time they knew it would
last, it came after the worst, most desperate period of suffering. They lived
in a complete feeling of happiness and comfort that the world had never known
before.
This is the experience of the third Beit Hamikdash that
awaits us. The Jews in the time of the first Beit Hamikdash had it all, but
they never lost it. They never had their walls surrounded and were never starved
to death. They were never stripped of their freedom, and they never had the
most precious thing in their lives taken away. They had the Beit Hamikdash, but
they never wanted it as much as we do now. The second generation knew how it
felt to long so desperately for its rebuilding, but they didn’t have the same Beit
Hamikdash. The open miracles that the first one had were not seen by the
second. Even worse, they knew it would come
to an end; there was even prophecy that foretold it. The second would be
destroyed, but the third would be eternal. How could they take true pleasure in
a Mikdash centered life that would soon end?
Then comes the third generation. We don’t know it exactly
what the world will be like, but we can expect a happiness and ideal life the
likes of which the world had never seen… because it’s logical. We’re promised
the restoration of the miracles that hadn’t been seen since the first. This
time we won’t dread the end; its forever. This time it’s in a generation that
knows how to appreciate it because we’ve fasted and mourned for it for 2000
years! This time it comes after a suffering so much longer and harder than had
ever been seen before. There is no past comparison to what awaits us, and it
does await us. This is among the last prophecies that have yet be fulfilled in
a long line that was foretold thousands of years ago. Right now we’re in the
suffering period, but its length and hardship is building the greatness of the
event soon to come. An event so great that it should be physically painful that
it has not happened yet.
No comments:
Post a Comment