Tonight, Chronicles in the Storm brings you not a headline, but a threshold. We step into the thunder of Sinai and follow the Ark of the Covenant, acacia and gold, testimony and terror, not as cinema’s prop, but as Torah’s command, the throne of meeting where Heaven stoops toward earth. We trace the Ark through the Tanakh, through the Jordan’s yielding waters, through the catastrophe of treating holiness like a shortcut, through the Philistines’ dread, through Uzzah’s fatal impulse, and into the hidden heart of Solomon’s Temple, where sacred space teaches Israel what the center is, and what it is not. Then the text grows quiet, Jerusalem burns, exile swallows the horizon, and the question becomes a storm that will not die, where did the Ark go. With discipline and reverence, we weigh what Scripture signals, what rabbinic tradition guards, what history hints, and why the world’s theories endure, concealed vaults beneath the Temple precincts, plunder and exile, Jeremiah’s sealed wilderness hiding place recorded in a tradition not canonical for Judaism, and the living Ethiopian claim of a guarded Ark in Axum, honored with respect, held with restraint. This is not treasure hunting, it is a summons. The Ark’s greatest danger is not spectacle, it is arrogance, and its greatest power is not what it does to enemies, but what it demands of the human soul: awe, humility, obedience, and faithfulness in an age that mocks reverence. This is Moshe David, and this is The Roar of Judah: Chronicles in the Storm. Follow the show on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and step back into the storm with your spine straight and your heart clean. Sources for this episode, with active links, listed and organized. Torah and Tanakh. 1. Exodus 25, the Ark’s design, purpose, and the place of meeting, including Exodus 25:22. Sefaria, Exodus 25 and Sefaria, Exodus 25:22 2. Exodus 40, the filling of the Tabernacle with Divine glory, including Exodus 40:34. Sefaria, Exodus 40:34 3. Joshua 3, the Ark and the Jordan crossing. Sefaria, Joshua 3 4. 1 Samuel 4 through 6, the Ark’s capture and return. Sefaria, 1 Samuel 4 to 6 5. 2 Samuel 6, the account of Uzzah. Sefaria, 2 Samuel 6:6 6. 1 Kings 8, the Ark’s placement in Solomon’s Temple. Sefaria, 1 Kings 8 7. 2 Chronicles 35:3, Josiah’s reference to placing the Ark. Sefaria, 2 Chronicles 35:3 8. Jeremiah 3:16, prophetic framing of the Ark’s remembrance. Sefaria, Jeremiah 3:16 9. Deuteronomy 29:29, the closing epigraph, shown in Sefaria as Deuteronomy 29:28 due to verse numbering. Sefaria, Deuteronomy 29:28 Rabbinic tradition. 10. Talmud Yoma, traditions concerning the Ark’s concealment, including the discussion spanning Yoma 53b to 54a. Sefaria, Yoma 53b to 54a 11. Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Beit HaBechirah, tradition of the Ark’s concealed vault, presented here in Beit Habechirah, Chapter 4. Chabad.org, Beit Habechirah, Chapter 4 Historical testimony. 12. Josephus, The Jewish War, description of the Holy of Holies as empty, referenced here at War 5.219. Josephus, War 5.219, University of Chicago Ancient tradition outside the Jewish canon, noted in the episode as non canonical for Judaism. 13. 2 Maccabees 2, the Jeremiah cave tradition. BibleGateway, 2 Maccabees 2, NRSVCE