Chavin de Huantar – the lost temple of Ezekiel?

In today’s post I want to check whether the temple to which the prophet Ezekiel was taken exists, or did exist, and whether it could be Chavin de Huantar in present-day Peru. The temple at Chavin de Huantar lies southeast of Huaraz in the western part of central Peru, near the hamlet of Machac at an altitude of 3180 m above sea level, and archaeologists have found the remains of an urban settlement nearby.

A few months ago I tried to prove that the Glory of the Lord seen by Ezekiel is nothing more than a kind of transporter or shuttle bringing aliens from extraterrestrial orbit to Earth.

Then I decided to take a closer look at the temple itself described by Ezekiel.

In the third entry continuing the Ezekiel thread, with the help of the works of engineer Josefe F. Blumrich and engineer Hans Herbert Beier, I came to the conclusion that the Glory of the Lord is in fact a flying vehicle, and the temple is a ground service station for these aliens.

Ezekiel 40,1-2

1 In the five and twentieth year of our captivity, in the beginning of the year, the tenth day of the month, the fourteenth year after the city was destroyed: in the selfsame day the hand of the Lord was upon me, and he brought me thither.
2 In the visions of God he brought me into the land of Israel, and set me upon a very high mountain: upon which there was as the building of a city, bending towards the south.

– Ezekiel knew Jerusalem, and it definitely wasn’t Jerusalem.
– There is no very high mountain near Jerusalem, and no city directly across from the temple.

What Ezekiel further transmitted:
– The main facade of Ezekiel’s temple and the main gate faced east
– The temple had three gates to all cardinal directions except west
– The inner court was square, and its side was 50 meters long
– Four rows of stairs led out from the inner court, leading to all cardinal directions
– The walls outside and inside were decorated with images of winged angels
– A stream flowed by the southern wall of the temple, which turned into a river

Ezekiel 47:1

1 And he brought me again to the gate of the house, and behold waters issued out from under the threshold of the house toward the east: for the forefront of the house looked toward the east: but the waters came down to the right side of the temple to the south part of the altar.

Most of the details match Chavin de Huantar, even the spring in the southeast corner that becomes (or is) the Mosnam River, flowing east to the town of Huyaycabamba, then flowing into the Rio Maranon.

Ezekiel 47:7-9

7 And when I had turned myself, behold on the bank of the torrent were very many trees on both sides.
8 And he said to me: These waters that issue forth toward the hillocks of sand to the east, and go down to the plains of the desert, shall go into the sea, and shall go out, and the waters shall be healed.
9 And every living creature that creepeth whithersoever the torrent shall come, shall live: and there shall be fishes in abundance after these waters shall come thither, and they shall be healed, and all things shall live to which the torrent shall come.

The above information from Ezekiel does not fit Jerusalem in any way, the terrain is dry, there are no “many trees”, and the stream, changed into a river and flowing east, can only flow into the Dead Sea, where there are certainly no “innumerable fish”.

According to estimated calculations, Ezekiel was taken by the Glory of the Lord to the temple around 573-572 BCE, and archaeologists have determined the heyday of Chavin de Hunatar to be between 1000 and 300 BCE. The time of Ezekiel’s visit to the temple fits the prophet’s years.

So, considering that Ezekiel was taken by a flying vehicle, which was operated by beings not from Earth, and was transported to Peru to tell Ezekiel the exact architectural details of the temple, i.e. the docking/ground service station for the Earth-Space shuttles, the question is: why?

The simplest answer is always the right one: to build the same temple – a service station at his living place.

And the most important question today is: in light of the evidence cited, is the temple to which Ezekiel was taken Chavin de Hunatar in Peru?

As always, I leave the answer to each individual.

Image “Chavin de Huntar” from Wikipedia; author: Sharon odb; License: GNU FDL/Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0.

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