Buildings Built To Last

Buildings Built To Last

Dale Pollard

BUILDINGS BUILT TO LAST 

The winged sphinxes of Ain Dara, in Syria, are strikingly similar to the description of the cherubim that decorated Solomon’s temple. Even the layout of both sites appears to be similar, sharing 33 of 65 architectural elements. Over the last past 3,000 years the ancient shrine has been caught in the middle of several battles; destroying the already fragile structures. 

The most curious aspect of the site however, are the giant engraved footprints on the  temple floor. The (assumed) Aramean-speaking creators chiseled the mysterious prints that are speculated to represent the “presence” of some god worshipped there long ago.

In 2015, the terrorist group known as “ISIS” demolished the Bel Temple (Baalath) after filling it with explosives. They likely did this, not to destroy remnants of ancient Baal worship, but because the temple site had been a church building since the mid-5th century. This slice of Syrian land had once been a town of the tribe of Dan (Josh.19.14) that was later fortified for Solomon’s own purposes (2 Chron. 8.6, 1 Kgs. 19.18). 

We know the church is made of God’s people built up on the foundation of Christ (Matt. 16.18). His family is eternal and if the building we worship in is burned down, blown up, or falls apart— the church still remains. 

Like Solomon, we can also “repurpose” our homes. We can transform a “pagan site” into one that serves the Lord. We chose what we do with our homes. In our homes we can glorify (or worship) ourselves, or we can dedicate our homes to God.

“…as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” 

  • Josh. 24.15 

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.