Construction and description , Paris). According to the
Book of Exodus, God instructed
Moses to build the Ark during his 40-day stay upon
Mount Sinai. He was shown the pattern for the
tabernacle and furnishings of the Ark, and told that it would be made of
shittim wood (also known as acacia wood) to house the
Tablets of Stone. The Book of Exodus gives detailed instructions on how the Ark is to be constructed. It is to be
cubits in length, cubits breadth, and cubits height (approximately ) of
acacia wood. Then it is to be gilded entirely with gold, and a crown or molding of gold is to be put around it. Four rings of gold are to be attached to its four corners, two on each side—and through these rings staves of shittim wood overlaid with gold for carrying the Ark are to be inserted; and these are not to be removed.
Mobile vanguard The biblical account continues that, after its creation by Moses, the Ark was carried by the
Israelites during their 40 years of wandering in the desert. Whenever the Israelites camped, the Ark was placed in the tent of meeting, inside the
Tabernacle. When the Israelites, led by
Joshua toward the
Promised Land, arrived at the banks of the
River Jordan, the Ark was carried in the lead, preceding the people, and was the signal for their advance. During the crossing, the river grew dry as soon as the feet of the priests carrying the Ark touched its waters, and remained so until the priests—with the Ark—left the river after the people had passed over. As memorials,
twelve stones were taken from the Jordan at the place where the priests had stood. During the
Battle of Jericho, the Ark was carried around the city once a day for six days, preceded by the armed men and seven priests sounding seven
trumpets of rams' horns. On the seventh day, the seven priests sounding the seven trumpets of rams' horns before the Ark compassed the city seven times, and, with a great shout, Jericho's wall fell down flat and the people took the city. After the defeat at
Ai, Joshua lamented before the Ark. When Joshua read the Law to the people between
Mount Gerizim and
Mount Ebal, they stood on each side of the Ark. The Ark was then kept at
Shiloh after the Israelites finished their conquest of Canaan. We next hear of the Ark in
Bethel, where it was being cared for by the priest
Phinehas, the grandson of
Aaron. According to this verse, it was consulted by the people of Israel when they were planning to attack the Benjaminites at the
Battle of Gibeah. Later the Ark was kept at Shiloh again, where it was cared for by
Hophni and Phinehas, two sons of
Eli.
Capture by the Philistines depicted in the
Dura-Europos synagogue According to the biblical narrative, a few years later the elders of Israel decided to take the Ark onto the battlefield to assist them against the
Philistines, having recently been defeated at the battle of
Eben-Ezer. They were again heavily defeated, with the loss of 30,000 men. The Ark was captured by the Philistines, and Hophni and Phinehas were killed. The news of its capture was at once taken to Shiloh by a messenger "with his clothes rent, and with earth upon his head". The old priest, Eli, fell dead when he heard it, and his daughter-in-law, bearing a son at the time the news of the Ark's capture was received, named him
Ichabod—explained as "The glory has departed Israel" in reference to the loss of the Ark. Ichabod's mother died at his birth. The Philistines took the Ark to several places in their country, and at each place misfortune befell them. At
Ashdod it was placed in the temple of
Dagon. The next morning Dagon was found prostrate, bowed down, before it; and on being restored to his place, he was on the following morning again found prostrate and broken. The people of Ashdod were smitten with tumors; a plague of rodents was sent over the land. This may have been the
bubonic plague. The affliction of tumours was also visited upon the people of
Gath and of
Ekron, whither the Ark was successively removed.
Return of the Ark to the Israelites , 1800 After the Ark had been among them for seven months, the Philistines, on the advice of their diviners, returned it to the Israelites, accompanying its return with an offering consisting of golden images of the tumors and mice wherewith they had been afflicted. The Ark was set up in the field of Joshua of
Beit Shemesh, and the people of Beit Shemesh offered sacrifices and burnt offerings according to the first five verses of
1 Samuel 6. Verse 19, 1 Samuel 6 states that out of curiosity, the people of Beit Shemesh gazed at the Ark, and as a punishment, God struck down seventy of them (fifty thousand and seventy in some translations). The men of Beit Shemesh sent to
Kiriath-Jearim to have the Ark removed in verse 21, and it was taken to the house of
Abinadab, whose
son Eleazar was sanctified to keep it. Kiriath-Jearim remained the abode of the Ark for twenty years, according to
1 Samuel 7. Under Saul, the Ark was with the army before he first met the
Philistines, but the king was too impatient to consult it before engaging in battle. In
1 Chronicles 13, it is stated that the people were not accustomed to consulting the Ark in the days of
Saul.
During the reign of King David of David bringing the Ark into Jerusalem (2 Samuel 6) In the biblical narrative, at the beginning of his reign over the
United Monarchy, King
David removed the Ark from
Kirjath-jearim amid great rejoicing. On the way to
Zion,
Uzzah, one of the drivers of the cart that carried the Ark, put out his hand to steady the Ark, and was struck dead by God for touching it. The place was subsequently named "
Perez-Uzzah", literally , as a result. David, in fear, carried the Ark aside into the house of
Obed-edom the
Gittite, instead of carrying it on to Zion, and it stayed there for three months. On hearing that God had blessed Obed-edom because of the presence of the Ark in his house, David had the Ark brought to Zion by the Levites, while he himself, "girded with a linen
ephod[...] danced before the Lord with all his might" and in the sight of all the public gathered in Jerusalem, a performance which caused him to be scornfully rebuked by his first wife, Saul's daughter
Michal. In Zion, David put the Ark in the tent he had prepared for it, offered sacrifices, distributed food, and blessed the people and his own household. David used the tent as a personal place of prayer. The Levites were appointed to minister before the Ark. David's plan of building a temple for the Ark was stopped on the advice of the
prophet Nathan. The Ark was with the army during the siege of
Rabbah; and when David fled from Jerusalem at the time of
Absalom's conspiracy, the Ark was carried along with him until he ordered
Zadok the priest to return it to Jerusalem.
The Temple of King Solomon According to the Biblical narrative, when
Abiathar was dismissed from the priesthood by King
Solomon for having taken part in
Adonijah's
conspiracy against David, his life was spared because he had formerly borne the Ark. Solomon worshipped before the Ark after his dream in which God promised him wisdom. During the construction of
Solomon's Temple, a special inner room, named ('
Holy of Holies'), was prepared to receive and house the Ark; and when the Temple was dedicated, the Ark—containing the original
tablets of the
Ten Commandments—was placed therein. When the priests emerged from the holy place after placing the Ark there, the Temple was filled with a cloud, "for the glory of the Lord had filled the house of the Lord". When Solomon married Pharaoh's daughter, he caused her to dwell in a house outside
Zion, as Zion was consecrated because it contained the Ark. King Josiah also had the Ark returned to the Temple, from which it appears to have been removed by one of his predecessors (cf. 2 Chronicles 33–34 and 2 Kings 21–23).
During the reign of King Hezekiah In a noncanonical text known as the Treatise of the Vessels,
Hezekiah is identified as one of the kings who had the Ark and the other treasures of
Solomon's Temple hidden during a time of crisis. This text lists the following hiding places, which it says were recorded on a bronze tablet: (1) a spring named Kohel or Kahal with pure water in a valley with a stopped-up gate; (2) a spring named Kotel (or "wall" in Hebrew); (3) a spring named Zedekiah; (4) an unidentified cistern; (5) Mount Carmel; and (6) locations in Babylon. To many scholars,
Hezekiah is also credited as having written all or some of the Book of Kohelet (
Ecclesiastes in the Christian tradition), in particular the famously enigmatic epilogue. Notably, the epilogue appears to refer to the Ark story with references to almond blossoms (i.e., Aaron's rod), locusts, silver, and gold. The epilogue then cryptically refers to a pitcher broken at a fountain and a wheel broken at a cistern. Although scholars disagree on whether the Pool of Siloam's pure spring waters were used by pilgrims for ritual purification, many scholars agree that a stepped pilgrimage road between the pool and the Temple had been built in the first century CE. This roadway has been partially excavated, but the west side of the Pool of Siloam remained unexcavated, as of 2016.
The invasion of the Kingdom of Babylon In 587 BC, when the
Babylonians
destroyed Jerusalem, an ancient Greek version of the biblical third Book of Ezra,
1 Esdras, suggests that Babylonians took away the vessels of the ark of God, but does not mention taking away the Ark: In
Rabbinic literature, the final disposition of the Ark is disputed. Some rabbis hold that it must have been carried off to Babylon, while others hold that it must have been hidden lest it be carried off into Babylon and never brought back. A late 2nd-century rabbinic work known as the states the opinions of these rabbis that
Josiah, the king of Judah, stored away the Ark, along with the jar of
manna, and a jar containing the holy anointing oil, the rod of Aaron which budded and a chest given to Israel by the Philistines.
Service of the Kohathites The
Kohathites were one of the
Levite houses from the
Book of Numbers. They had the responsibility to care for "the most holy things" in the
tabernacle. When the camp, then wandering the Wilderness, set out the Kohathites would enter the tabernacle with Aaron and cover the ark with the screening curtain and "then they shall put on it a covering of fine leather, and spread over that a cloth all of blue, and shall put its poles in place." The ark was one of the items of the
tent of meeting that the Kohathites were responsible for carrying. ==Jewish tradition on location today==