The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Ark of the Covenant
Exodus 25:10–16 — The Ark of the Covenant. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
10And they are to construct an ark of acacia wood, two and a half cubits long, a cubit and a half wide, and a cubit and a half high.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śū ’ă·rō·wn šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê ’am·mā·ṯa·yim wā·ḥê·ṣî ’ā·rə·kōw wə·’am·māh wā·ḥê·ṣî rā·ḥə·bōw wə·’am·māh wā·ḥê·ṣî qō·mā·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-shall-make an-ark of-acacia-wood: two-cubits and-a-half its-length, and-a-cubit and-a-half its-breadth, and-a-cubit and-a-half its-height.
Where the English smooths the original
Arôn, the word here rendered “ark,” is an entirely different word from that previously so translated in Genesis 6:14 ; Exodus 2:3 , which is tebah. Arôn is properly a chest or coffer of small dimensions, used to contain money or other valuablesEllicott pins the lexical point the English loses: this "ark" (arôn) is not the tēḇâh of Noah and Moses.
The ark of the covenant was the central point of the sanctuary. It was designed to contain the testimony Exodus 25:16 ; Exodus 40:20 ; Deuteronomy 31:26 , that is, the tables of the divine law, the terms of the covenant between Yahweh and His people: and it was to support the mercy-seat with its cherubim, from between which He was to hold communion with themBarnes states the ark's twofold purpose: to house the law and to bear the mercy-seat of meeting.
its being made of "shittim wood", which is an incorruptible wood, a wood that rots not, by which the Septuagint version here, and in Exodus 25:5 and elsewhere render it, may denote the duration of Christ in his person, and the natures united in itGill follows the Septuagint's "incorruptible wood" into a typology of Christ's enduring person.
Arks were an ordinary part of the religious furniture of temples in Egypt, and were greatly venerated. They usually contained a figure or emblem, of some deity. Occasionally they were in the shape of boats; but the most ordinary form was that of a cupboard or chest. They were especially constructed for the purpose of being carried about in a procession, and had commonly rings at the sideThe Pulpit notes the Egyptian parallel in form — while later voices (Barnes, v. 16) sharpen the deep contrast in content.
11Overlay it with pure gold both inside and out, and make a gold molding around it.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’ō·ṯōw ṭā·hō·wr zā·hāḇ tə·ṣap·pen·nū mib·ba·yiṯ ū·mi·ḥūṣ wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ‘ā·lāw zā·hāḇ zêr sā·ḇîḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-overlay-it with-pure gold: from-within and-from-without thou-shalt-overlay-it; and-thou-shalt-make upon-it a-border of-gold round-about.
Where the English smooths the original
But it is a process requiring much apparatus, and less likely to have been practised in the desert than the far simpler one of overlaying with gold plates. Gold plate would also have been regarded as more suitable, because more valuable. It is the Jewish tradition that gold plates were employed.Ellicott weighs gilding against beaten plates and follows the Jewish tradition toward plates.
Heb. zçr , the Syr. zîr means a collar or necklace . What is meant is prob. an ornamental moulding , running in relief round the ark—whether at the top of its four sides, or in the middle, is not stated—and worked perhaps in the shape of a bead or ropeCambridge documents the rare word zêr and admits the shape and placement are simply not stated.
a border , raised up above the rest of the ark, as a crown is above that which it is applied to, only a crown is round, and this was square. This was both for ornament, and for the fastening of the covering of the ark to it.Poole reasons the rim was square (not a true round crown) and served to fasten the mercy-seat.
Not gild it, but put a plate of pure gold over it: within and without shalt thou overlay it; so that nothing of the wood could be seen: this may denote the glory of Christ in both his natures, divine and human, the riches of his person and office, which are unsearchable and durableGill reads the gold within and without as the unsearchable riches of Christ in both natures.
12Cast four gold rings for it and fasten them to its four feet, two rings on one side and two on the other.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yā·ṣaq·tā ’ar·ba‘ zā·hāḇ ṭab·bə·‘ōṯ lōw wə·nā·ṯat·tāh ‘al ’ar·ba‘ pa·‘ă·mō·ṯāw ū·šə·tê ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al- hā·’e·ḥāṯ ṣal·‘ōw ū·šə·tê ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al- haš·šê·nîṯ ṣal·‘ōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-cast for-it four rings of-gold, and-put-them upon its-four feet: and-two rings upon its-one side, and-two rings upon its-other side.
Where the English smooths the original
Literally, at the four feet thereof. The rings were to be affixed, not at the four upper corners of the chest, but at the four bottom corners, in order that the ark, when carried on men’s shoulders, might be elevated above them, and so be in no danger of coming in contact with the bearers’ persons.Ellicott reads paʻamoth as "feet" at the bottom corners — engineered so the ark rode clear of the bearers.
Rather, its four bases, or feet. It is not unlikely that there were low blocks, or plinths, placed under the corners to which the rings were attached (see Exodus 25:26 ), and that it is to them the word is here applied. The ark, when it was carried, must thus have been raised above the shoulders of the bearers.Barnes prefers "bases / plinths," reaching the same practical end as Ellicott.
but as the word used so signifies always, it is more probable it had feet; and the rather, that it might not stand upon the ground, but on feet, as chests and coffers usually doGill describes the casting process and argues, against Jarchi, that the ark really had feet.
rings—staples for the poles, with which it was to be carried from place to place.JFB give the plain function: the rings are staples to receive the carrying-poles.
13And make poles of acacia wood and overlay them with gold.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ḇad·dê šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’ō·ṯām zā·hāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-make poles of-acacia-wood, and-overlay them with-gold.
Where the English smooths the original
Of the same, wood the ark was made of, see Exodus 25:5 and overlay them with gold; cover them with plates of gold, so that they appeared to be all of gold, the wood being not to be seen.Gill notes the poles share the ark's very substance — acacia, wholly sheathed in gold.
The word ( bad ), except in these connexions, is rare. Egyptian shrines, and sacred ‘arks,’ were carried in procession similarlyCambridge flags the rarity of bad and the Egyptian parallel in mode of transport.
Similar staves, or poles, are to be seen in the Egyptian sculptures, attached to arks, thrones, and litters, and resting on the shoulders of the men who carry such objects.The Pulpit corroborates the shoulder-borne form from Egyptian sculpture.
to cut four poles of acacia-wood and plate them with gold, and put them through the rings for carrying the arkKeil sets the poles in their function — acacia, gold-plated, made to pass through the rings and bear the ark.
14Insert the poles into the rings on the sides of the ark, in order to carry it.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hê·ḇê·ṯā ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm baṭ·ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al ṣal·‘ōṯ hā·’ā·rōn lā·śêṯ ’eṯ- hā·’ā·rōn bā·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-bring the-poles into-the-rings upon the-sides of-the-ark, to-bear the-ark with-them.
Where the English smooths the original
The Hebrew ark was not made, like the Egyptian arks, for processions, and was never exhibited in the way of display, as they were. The need of carrying it arose from the fact, that the Israelites had not yet obtained a permanent abode.The Pulpit draws the sharp line: the ark was carried out of necessity, never paraded.
which staves overlaid with gold, and put into golden rings, figured the ministers of Christ, enriched with the gifts and graces of his Spirit, and possessed of the truths of the Gospel, more precious than gold and silver; who bear the name of Christ, and carry his Gospel into the several parts of the world.Gill turns the carrying-poles into a figure of Christ's ministers bearing the gospel abroad.
to cut four poles of acacia-wood and plate them with gold, and put them through the rings for carrying the ark. The poles were to remain in the rings, without moving from them, i.e., without being drawn out, that the bearers might not touch the ark itself ( Numbers 4:15 ).Keil ties the carrying-arrangement to the prohibition on touching the ark (Num 4:15).
15The poles are to remain in the rings of the ark; they must not be removed.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hab·bad·dîm yih·yū bə·ṭab·bə·‘ōṯ hā·’ā·rōn lō yā·su·rū mim·men·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
In-the-rings of-the-ark shall-be the-poles: they-shall-not be-removed from-it.
Where the English smooths the original
The staves were to remain always in the rings, whether the ark was in motion or at rest, that there might never at any time be a necessity for touching the ark itself, or even the rings. He who touched the ark imperilled his life. (See 2Samuel 6:6-7 .)Ellicott grounds the permanent poles in the lethal holiness of the ark — Uzzah's warning.
staves shall be in the rings of the ark—that is, always remain in the rings, whether the ark be at rest or in motion.JFB give the plain rule: the poles are never drawn, in motion or at rest.
Not only be put into them, but remain in them, yea, always: they shall not be taken from it; or, as the Septuagint version is, be immovableGill records the Septuagint's reading "immovable" for the fixed poles.
They shall not be taken from it - This direction was probably given in order that the ark might not be touched by the hand (compare 2 Samuel 6:6 ).Barnes gives the bare reason for the standing poles: the ark was never to be touched by hand.
16And place inside the ark the Testimony, which I will give you.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·nā·ṯa·tā ’el- hā·’ā·rōn ’êṯ hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ ’ă·šer ’et·tên ’ê·le·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-put into the-ark the-Testimony which I-shall-give to-thee.
Where the English smooths the original
As regards the ark of the covenant, the absence of any symbol of God was one of its great characteristics. It was never carried in a ceremonial procession: when it was moved from one place to another, it was closely packed up, concealed from the eyes even of the Levites who bore it.Barnes names the decisive contrast with Egypt: no idol, no parade — the ark hidden, not displayed.
The superb and elaborate style of the ark that contained "the testimony" was emblematic of the great treasure it held; in other words, the incomparable value and excellence of the Word of God, while its being placed in this chest further showed the great care which God has ever taken for preserving it.JFB read the gold chest as a parable of the worth of, and God's care over, His written Word.
the attestation , or (cf. the cognate verb in Psalm 50:7 ‘testify,’ Jeremiah 11:7 ‘protest’) affirmation, averment , viz. of God’s will, and man’s duty, expressed in the DecalogueCambridge fixes the sense of ʻêdûth as "attestation" of God's will and man's duty in the Decalogue.
which may signify that the law was in the heart of Christ, and which he undertook to fulfil, and with pleasure did it; that he is become the fulfilling end of the law for righteousness to them that believe in himGill reads the law treasured in the ark as the law treasured in the heart of Christ (cf. Ps 40:8).
These tables are called the testimony; God in them testified his will. This law was a testimony to the Israelites, to direct them in their duty, and would be a testimony against them, if they transgressed.Henry holds the double edge of the word: the law within the ark both directs Israel and witnesses against them.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The instructions for the sanctuary begin not with the tent but with what the tent is to hold. Barnes notes the oddity: the ark "is named first of all the parts," though Exodus 37:1 records it built only after the tabernacle. The order is theological — "the receptacle should be first provided to receive… the most sacred of the contents." And the very first word is a careful one. Ellicott insists that ’ărôwn here "is an entirely different word" from the tēḇâh of Noah and the infant Moses; this is "a chest or coffer of small dimensions," the word for a money-coffer (2 Kgs 12:9–10) and even a mummy-case (so Cambridge, on Gen 50:26). The most glorious object in Israel is, lexically, a strongbox. Its wood is shiṭṭîm, acacia — and Gill, following the Septuagint's "incorruptible wood," hears in it "the duration of Christ in his person." Small, plain, incorruptible: the frame is set before a single ounce of gold is laid on it.
The acacia is then wholly clothed. Gill stresses the word the English keeps quiet: not gilded but plated, "within and without… so that nothing of the wood could be seen" — and Ellicott, with the Jewish tradition, argues that gold plates (not gilding) were used, "more suitable, because more valuable," and likelier in a desert. The gold is ṭāhôwr, "clean" — the same adjective the priests use for ceremonial purity, not merely the chemist's "unmixed." Around the top runs a zêr, a word so rare (ten verses in all) that the commentators frankly disagree on its shape: Cambridge cites the Syriac "collar or necklace" and a "rope-like" relief; Poole reasons it was square, not a round crown; Keil settles for "a golden rim… like an ornamental wreath" whose purpose was probably to seat the mercy-seat. Here the honest reading is to under-claim: Scripture gives the word, not the design.
Now the chest is made portable, and the care is striking. Four rings are cast (yâtsaq, poured molten) and fixed — most voices agree — at the bottom corners. Ellicott explains the engineering: set at "the four feet," not the upper corners, "in order that the ark, when carried on men's shoulders, might be elevated above them," out of contact with the bearers. The word for those feet, paʻam, is genuinely uncertain (KJV "corners," Keil "walking feet," Barnes "bases"), and the commentators say so. Acacia poles, also gold-clad, are brought in through the rings — and then comes the one command that turns logistics into liturgy: the poles "shall not be removed." Ellicott names the reason without flinching: "He who touched the ark imperilled his life" (2 Sam 6:6–7). The Egyptian shrines, Cambridge and the Pulpit observe, were carried just so — yet the Pulpit insists on the difference: the Hebrew ark "was never exhibited in the way of display." Same poles; opposite spirit. Gill, reaching for the gospel in it, sees the unmoving gold poles as Christ's ministers who "bear his name, and carry his Gospel" and "never depart."
At last the purpose of the whole construction is stated: "thou shalt put into the ark the Testimony." ʻÊdûth, says Barnes, is literally "something spoken again and again"; Cambridge, "attestation… of God's will, and man's duty." It is the two tables — God's standing witness against sin (Deut 31:26). And here Barnes draws the contrast that has been waiting since verse 10: the Egyptian arks held "the material symbol of a deity" and were paraded "to make a show in the eyes of the people"; this ark held no image at all, was "never carried in a ceremonial procession," was "closely packed up, concealed from the eyes even of the Levites who bore it," and was "constructed to contain the plain text of the Ten Commandments… intelligible to all." JFB reads the lavish gold as a parable: "the incomparable value and excellence of the Word of God," and "the great care which God has ever taken for preserving it." Benson hears the lesson for the reader — "to make much of the word of God, and to hide it in our inmost thoughts, as the ark was placed in the holy of holies."
Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, this passage is almost a parable of that rule, and four things stand out — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted.
The Word is the treasure the gold was made for. Every craftsman's instruction — acacia, clean gold within and without, the rim, the rings, the unremovable poles — exists to protect and bear one thing: "the Testimony… which I will give you," the plain written commandments. JFB names it outright: the gold chest is "emblematic of the great treasure it held… the incomparable value and excellence of the Word of God." The form serves the text; the box exists for the Book.
No image, only the Word. Barnes' contrast with Egypt is the heart of it: the pagan arks carried an idol and were paraded for show; this ark carried no symbol of God, was hidden from sight, and held "the plain text of the Ten Commandments… in words that were intelligible to all." At the center of Israel's worship is not a picture to be seen but a word to be obeyed — and a word given to be understood by all, not hoarded by a priesthood.
The receptacle is made before the gift arrives. The ark is commanded (v. 10) before the tables exist — "the Testimony which I shall give thee" (v. 16, future). God prepares His people to receive His word before He hands it down. The posture commended is readiness: build the place that will treasure what God is about to speak.
Reverence guards the holy without earning it. The poles that never leave the rings keep the holiest object untouched by human hands — grace approached on God's terms, not man's. The same God who gives His word freely (the chest is open to receive it) is the God whose holiness is not to be handled casually (2 Sam 6:6–7).
These readings are this tool's own and fallible. Weigh them against the text; keep only what the Word itself will bear.
“The gold was never the point. It was a strongbox built around a sentence — the place where God's people learned to keep, and carry, and not lay careless hands upon, His word.”
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
What God dictates here is reproduced, almost word for word, in the record of the work actually done. Exodus 37:1–5 narrates Bezalel making the ark to these exact specifications — the same acacia, the same dimensions, the same cast rings and gold-clad poles. Revelation precedes construction: "see that thou make all things according to the pattern" (25:40). The Verifier confirms a dense verbal overlap between 25:10 and 37:1.
Exodus 25:10 · Exodus 25:13 · Exodus 37:1 · Exodus 37:5
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (25:10 ↔ 37:1) gives shared lexemes incl. the rare H7848 shiṭṭâh (acacia, in 28 vv) plus H6967 qôwmâh (height, 43 vv), H7341 rôchab (breadth, 89 vv), H753 ʼôrek (length, 90 vv); (25:14 ↔ 37:5) adds H6763 tsêlâʻ (31 vv), H2885 ṭabbaʻath (38 vv), H727 ʼârôwn. The rare shiṭṭâh anchors the verbal tier.
The rim of gold round the ark (v. 11, zêr) is not unique to it: the same ornamental moulding is commanded for the table of the Presence-bread and for the golden altar of incense. The word zêr is a near-fingerprint — it occurs in only ten verses, all of these three vessels — knitting the holy furniture into one gilded family. Cambridge ties them together explicitly ("the table of Presence-bread, and the altar of incense, had similar decorations").
Exodus 25:11 · Exodus 25:24 · Exodus 30:3 · Exodus 37:11 · Exodus 37:26
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (25:11 ↔ 25:24, 30:3, 37:11/26) gives shared H2213 zêr (RARE — only 10 vv), with H6823 tsâphâh, H2889 ṭâhôwr, H5439 çâbîyb. The rarity of zêr makes the verbal link strong.
The carrying-system of the ark — rings fixed on its tsêlâʻ ("ribs / sides") to receive baddîm ("poles") for bearing (nâsâʼ) — is repeated for the altar of burnt-offering and reappears in the record of its making. The verbal weld is firmest between 25:14 and 38:7 (rings on the tsêlâʻ, with ṭabbaʻath, bad, nâsâʼ all shared); the link out to the altar's first command in 27:7 carries the same template by motif, sharing the concrete word bad. Together they mark a single, deliberate scheme for transporting every holy thing through the wilderness on shoulder-poles.
Exodus 25:12 · Exodus 25:14 · Exodus 27:7 · Exodus 38:7
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. The verbal tier rests on 25:14 ↔ 38:7: Verifier gives shared H6763 tsêlâʻ (31 vv), H2885 ṭabbaʻath (38 vv), H905 bad (178 vv), H5375 nâsâʼ (612 vv) — three moderately-rare structural words together carry it (nâsâʼ alone would be too common). The 25:13 ↔ 27:7 pair, by contrast, shares only the common H905 bad (178 vv) — NOT tsêlâʻ — so that link is structural; it is included as the same carrying-template by motif. Downgraded from an earlier claim that 27:7 shared tsêlâʻ with 25:13, which the Verifier does not confirm.
The thing placed inside (v. 16, ʻêdûth, "the Testimony") gives the ark its standing name and its function as covenant witness. Moses orders the book of the law set "by the side of the ark" as a witness, and the ark itself is the "ark of the testimony." This is a thematic, not a quotation, link: the only shared lexeme the Verifier finds is the common word for the ark itself, so the connection rests on the shared idea of the ark as God's standing witness, argued from the texts rather than asserted from rare vocabulary.
Exodus 25:16 · Exodus 25:22 · Deuteronomy 31:26
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (25:16 ↔ Deut 31:26) finds only H727 ʼârôwn (174 vv) — too common to claim a verbal/quotation link. Tiered structural: shared motif of the ark-as-witness, not a shared rare lexeme.
Hebrews 9:4 recalls the ark of the covenant "in which were the golden jar of manna, and Aaron's rod that budded, and the tablets of the covenant" — gathering this verse (the tables) together with the later relics (Ex 16:33–34; Num 17:10). The Geneva note here already reads the Testimony as "the stone tables, the rod of Aaron and manna." Because this is a Greek↔Hebrew link, it cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers — none exist across the Testaments — so it is tiered structural, on the shared subject-matter (what the ark held), argued and not asserted.
Exodus 25:16 · Exodus 16:33 · Numbers 17:10 · Hebrews 9:4
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) — no shared Strong's lexeme is possible, and the Verifier returns none. Tiered structural on shared content (the ark's contents), never verbal: NT Greek and OT Hebrew lexicons do not overlap by number.
The defining composition of the ark — acacia (shiṭṭâh) core, gold (zâhâb) overlay (tsâphâh) — is the same for the poles of the altar of incense and reappears across the tabernacle's woodwork. The verbal weld runs through the poles: 25:13 shares the rare shiṭṭâh with 30:5 and 37:4. The pillar-overlay of 36:36 belongs to the same two-substance signature but shares only zâhâb and tsâphâh, not shiṭṭâh, so it joins by motif rather than rare vocabulary. The build — incorruptible wood within, clean gold without — is the shared mark of the holy place's furniture, which the older voices read figurally and which the Verifier confirms lexically on the poles-pairs.
Exodus 25:11 · Exodus 25:13 · Exodus 30:5 · Exodus 36:36 · Exodus 37:4
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. The verbal tier rests on the poles-pairs: Verifier (25:13 ↔ 30:5, 37:4) gives shared rare H7848 shiṭṭâh (28 vv) with H6086 ʻêts (288 vv) and H2091 zâhâb (336 vv). The 25:11 ↔ 36:36 pair, however, shares only H6823 tsâphâh (40 vv) and H2091 zâhâb — NOT shiṭṭâh — so that pairing is structural, not verbal; it rides on the verbal pairs as part of the same two-substance signature. Downgraded from an earlier claim that 36:36 shared shiṭṭâh, which the Verifier does not bear out.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The oldest Christian reading of the ark, voiced here by Gill and Matthew Henry, sees in its very materials a figure of Christ. The acacia is "incorruptible wood, a wood that rots not" (Gill, following the Septuagint) — "his sinless nature, which saw no corruption" (Henry) — overlaid "within and without" with clean gold, "his Divine nature" (Henry), "the glory of Christ in both his natures" (Gill). The wood that does not decay, wholly clad in clean gold, is read as the incorruptible humanity united to the divine glory. This figural reading is ancient and widely held among the Reformation and Puritan commentators; it is offered to be weighed, not as proof.
Exodus 25:10 · Exodus 25:11 · Acts 2:27 · John 1:14
Gill draws the line from the Testimony hidden in the ark to the law treasured in the Messiah: "the law was in the heart of Christ, and which he undertook to fulfil, and with pleasure did it; that he is become the fulfilling end of the law for righteousness." The figure answers the words of Psalm 40:8, taken up in Hebrews 10:7 — "I delight to do Your will, O My God; Your law is within My heart." The ark that carried the unbroken tables foreshadows the One in whom the law was kept whole. This typology is widely held; test it against the texts named.
Exodus 25:16 · Psalm 40:8 · Hebrews 10:7 · Romans 10:4
Matthew Henry already looks past this verse to the cover that crowns it: the ark held the law that testifies against sin, but "above it appeared the visible glory," and over it "the blood of the sacrifices was sprinkled" — "a type of Christ in his sinless nature… atoning for our sins." The law accuses from within the chest; the mercy-seat (the kappōreth, next unit, 25:17–22) covers it. Paul's word for Christ "set forth as a propitiation" (Romans 3:25, Greek hilastērion — the Septuagint's very word for the mercy-seat) makes the figure explicit: judgment underneath, mercy on top, met in Christ. This reading is ancient and widely held; weigh it against the passages cited.
Exodus 25:16 · Exodus 25:21 · Romans 3:25 · Hebrews 9:5
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
This unit (Exodus 25:10–16) is Hebrew throughout. Every cross-reference within the Old Testament below is Hebrew↔Hebrew, and each verbal or structural tier rests on the Verifier's computed shared Strong's lexemes, named in the badge. Two cross-references reach into the New Testament (Hebrews 9:4; and the Christ-section's Greek texts): these are Greek↔Hebrew and therefore cannot use shared Strong's numbers — the lexicons do not overlap by number — so they are tiered structural/thematic and argued from shared content, never asserted as "verbal."
Honest cautions specific to this passage: (1) The dimensions are uncertain in modern units — the cubit is variously estimated at ~17.6 in. (JFB, Barnes) or ~20.5–21 in. (Gill, Cambridge citing Cumberland) — so the figures given ("about 3¾ ft long") are approximate, and the voices themselves disagree. (2) The shape of the zêr (v. 11, "crown / molding / rim") is genuinely unknown; the commentators offer collar, rope-relief, square border, and wreath — Scripture gives the word, not the design, and this synthesis under-claims accordingly. (3) The word paʻam (v. 12, "feet / corners / bases") is contested even among the rabbis (Aben Ezra vs. Jarchi, per Gill); the placement of the rings low on the chest is the reasoned consensus of the Christian voices, not an explicit statement of the text. (4) The figural/Christ readings (acacia + gold; law within; mercy-seat above) are marked widely-held: they are the historic Reformation and Puritan reading, offered to be tested against Scripture, not as the plain sense of the verses. Two marks govern everything: ✦ a human, public-domain source, quoted and named; ⚙ machine-generated synthesis, to be verified. "Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so." (Acts 17:11)
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)