The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Frames and Bases
Exodus 26:15–30 — The Frames and Bases. 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.
15You are to construct upright frames of acacia wood for the tabernacle.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ’eṯ- ‘ō·mə·ḏîm haq·qə·rā·šîm šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê lam·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you shall make — the object — standing the planks, acacia, wood, for the dwelling.
Where the English smooths the original
The various coverings which have been described had it for their object to roof over and protect an oblong chamber or “dwelling,” within which God was to manifest Himself and to be worshipped.
they were to be made of shittim wood standing up; just as they grew, as a Jewish writer observes (p); these planks or boards were not to be laid along the lengthways of them, but to be set upright
The Heb. ḳéresh , except in the present connexion (50 times), occurs only Ezekiel 27:6 , of some part of a ship, described there as made up of ivory, inlaid in boxwood (RV. benches , RVm. deck ); and its exact sense is uncertain.The Cambridge editors openly flag that the central word of this whole passage is lexically uncertain — a candor the ⚙ layer keeps.
As beauty and strength were united in the tabernacle, so they are in the church of Christ: “beauty, which renders it the admiration of angels; and strength, which defies all the malice of devils.”
the boards that formed its walls, the five (cross) bars that strengthened them, and the middle bar that "reached from end to end," and gave it solidity and compactness, it was evidently a more substantial fabric than a light and fragile tentJFB read the boards-and-bars specification as the very thing that makes the mishkān more than a tent — the wooden skeleton, not the curtains, gives the dwelling its permanence. A distinct critical voice not heard elsewhere in this unit.
16Each frame is to be ten cubits long and a cubit and a half wide.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
haq·qā·reš ‘e·śer ’am·mō·wṯ ’ō·reḵ wə·’am·māh wa·ḥă·ṣî hā·’am·māh rō·ḥaḇ hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Ten cubits the length of the plank, and a cubit and a half of the cubit the breadth of the one plank.
Where the English smooths the original
The board would therefore be about 15 ft. long, and 27 in. broad.
from hence we may learn what were the height and the length of the tabernacle; according to the common computation of a cubit, it was but five yards high and fifteen long, since there were but twenty boards on each side
To obtain boards of the required breadth, to or three planks were no doubt joined together according to the size of the trees."to or three" is a typographical artifact in the public-domain source for "two or three"; quoted verbatim as transmitted.
17Two tenons must be connected to each other for each frame. Make all the frames of the tabernacle in this way.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
šə·tê yā·ḏō·wṯ mə·šul·lā·ḇōṯ ’el- ’iš·šāh ’ă·ḥō·ṯāh hā·’e·ḥāḏ laq·qe·reš ta·‘ă·śeh lə·ḵōl qar·šê ham·miš·kān kên
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Two hands to the one plank, joined together a woman to her sister; so you shall make for all the planks of the dwelling.
Where the English smooths the original
Two tenons , Heb. hands , i.e. parts of the boards, so cut and framed that like hands they may take hold of and be fastened into the sockets
They were to be “set in order one against another”: i.e., placed regularly at certain intervals, so that each corresponded in position to its fellow.
Every board was to have two ידות (lit., hands or holders) to hold them upright, pegs therefore; and they were to be "bound to one another"
18Construct twenty frames for the south side of the tabernacle,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ’eṯ- haq·qə·rā·šîm ‘eś·rîm qe·reš neḡ·bāh ṯê·mā·nāh lip̄·’aṯ lam·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you shall make the planks for the dwelling: twenty planks to the Negeb, southward, for the side of the dwelling.
Where the English smooths the original
On the south side southward. —Rather, on the south side to the right. The tabernacle faced the east, and was regarded as looking in that direction. Thus its south wall was on the right.
an evident proof that at that time negeb was not established as a geographical term for the south, and therefore that it was not written here by a Palestinian, as Knobel supposes, but by Moses in the desert.Keil deploys the geography to defend Mosaic authorship; Cambridge (below, in the unit notes) reads the same word the opposite way. Both are recorded as fallible inferences.
twenty boards on the south side southward; which being a cubit and a half broad, made the length of the tabernacle fifteen yards according to the common account
19with forty silver bases under the twenty frames—two bases for each frame, one under each tenon.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ta·‘ă·śeh wə·’ar·bā·‘îm ḵe·sep̄ ’aḏ·nê- ta·ḥaṯ ‘eś·rîm haq·qā·reš šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ- hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš ū·šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ- hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš liš·tê yə·ḏō·ṯāw liš·tê yə·ḏō·ṯāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And forty bases of silver you shall make under the twenty planks: two bases under the one plank for its two hands, and two bases under the one plank for its two hands.
Where the English smooths the original
Sockets - More literally, bases, or foundations. Each base weighed a talent, that is, about 94 lbs. (see Exodus 38:27 ), and must have been a massive block.
Or bases (s), and which were properly the foundation of the tabernacle, on which it was settled and established; these sockets were the mortises for the two tenons of each board or plank to be placed in
Each “socket” was to receive one of the “tenons.” As there were twenty boards ( Exodus 26:18 ), and two tenons to each board ( Exodus 26:17 ), the sockets had to be forty.
20For the second side of the tabernacle, the north side, make twenty frames
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
haš·šê·nîṯ ū·lə·ṣe·la‘ ham·miš·kān ṣā·p̄ō·wn lip̄·’aṯ ‘eś·rîm qā·reš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And for the second rib of the dwelling, to the north side: twenty planks,
Where the English smooths the original
The north side, or left hand, was always regarded as less honourable than the south side or right hand (see Genesis 48:13-20 ), probably because in the northern hemisphere the sun illumines the south side.
The direction of the tabernacle was east and west; at the east end was the entrance into the holy place, and at the west end the holy of holies; and the two sides were north and south
21and forty silver bases—two bases under each frame.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’ar·bā·‘îm kā·sep̄ ’aḏ·nê·hem šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš ū·šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
and their forty bases of silver: two bases under the one plank, and two bases under the one plank.
Where the English smooths the original
The bases formed a continuous foundation for the walls of boards, presenting a succession of sockets or mortices (each base having a single socket), into which the tenons were to fit.
answerable to the twenty boards, for their two tenons to be placed in as in mortises: two sockets under one board, and two sockets under another board; and so under all the boards on the north side as on the south.
22Make six frames for the rear of the tabernacle, the west side,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ta·‘ă·śeh šiš·šāh qə·rā·šîm ū·lə·yar·kə·ṯê ham·miš·kān yām·māh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And for the flanks of the dwelling, seaward, you shall make six planks.
Where the English smooths the original
Six boards, presumably of the same width with the others ( Exodus 26:16 ), would extend a length of nine cubits only, or thirteen and a half feet. The tenth cubit seems to have been made up by the corner boards
Sea (i.e. the Medit. sea) is in Heb. the regular word for ‘west’; and the usage, like that of négeb in v. 18 in the sense of ‘south,’ could only have arisen after Israel had been long settled in Canaan.Directly counters Keil on v. 18: the same directional vocabulary that Keil reads as proof of desert authorship, Cambridge reads as proof of settled-Canaan authorship. The ⚙ layer holds both as fallible.
23and two frames for the two back corners of the tabernacle,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ta·‘ă·śeh ū·šə·nê qə·rā·šîm bay·yar·ḵā·ṯā·yim lim·quṣ·‘ōṯ ham·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And two planks you shall make for the corners of the dwelling, in the two flanks.
Where the English smooths the original
And whereas the rest were but single boards, these were double, for greater strength and conveniency of joining them together.
these corners knit end and side together, and were the strength of the building; as, adds he,"Christ is of his church, making Jews and Gentiles one spiritual temple.''Gill is quoting John Lightfoot (cited just above in his note); the inner quotation marks are Gill's own, preserved as transmitted.
24coupled together from bottom to top and fitted into a single ring. These will serve as the two corners.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yih·yū ṯō·’ă·mîm wə·yaḥ·dāw yih·yū ṯam·mîm ‘al- mil·lə·maṭ·ṭāh rō·šōw ’el- hā·’e·ḥāṯ haṭ·ṭab·ba·‘aṯ kên yih·yeh liš·nê·hem yih·yū liš·nê ham·miq·ṣō·‘ōṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And they shall be twins from below, and together they shall be complete upon its head, to the one ring; so it shall be for both of them — for the two corners they shall be.
Where the English smooths the original
Coupled together , Heb. as twins , i.e. equal and equally joined together, and exactly answering one to the other.
A most obscure verse, the crux of all interpreters.Quoted to register the editors' own admission of difficulty — exactly the kind of provenance honesty the ⚙ layer is bound to preserve.
Each of the corner beams was to be double from the bottom to the top, and still to form one whole.
The Hebrew word signifies twins declaring that they should be as perfect and well joined as possible.The 1599 Geneva note independently catches the "twins" image (tō’ămîm, H8380) and reads it toward a perfect, seamless joining — the same body-word the ⚙ layer flags in the divergence above, here in the oldest English voice in the unit.
25So there are to be eight frames and sixteen silver bases—two under each frame.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hā·yū šə·mō·nāh qə·rā·šîm šiš·šāh ke·sep̄ wə·’aḏ·nê·hem ‘ā·śār ’ă·ḏā·nîm šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš ū·šə·nê ’ă·ḏā·nîm ta·ḥaṯ hā·’e·ḥāḏ haq·qe·reš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And they shall be eight planks, and their bases of silver, sixteen bases: two bases under the one plank, and two bases under the one plank.
Where the English smooths the original
Sixteen sockets. —Two for each corner board, and twelve for the six boards between them.
Counting in the two comer boards, or posts, the boards of the back would be eight. Each of them was to have two "tenons," like the boards of the sides"comer" is an OCR error for "corner" in the public-domain source; quoted verbatim as transmitted.
26You are also to make five crossbars of acacia wood for the frames on one side of the tabernacle,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ḥă·miš·šāh ḇə·rî·ḥim šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê lə·qar·šê hā·’e·ḥāḏ ṣe·la‘- ham·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you shall make five bolts of acacia wood for the planks of the one rib of the dwelling,
Where the English smooths the original
The object of the “bars” was to hold the “boards” together, and prevent there being any aperture between one board and another. They were fifteen in number, five for each of the three sides of the boarded space.
Which being put into rings or staples of gold, kept the boards tight, close, and firm together
27five for those on the other side, and five for those on the rear side of the tabernacle, to the west.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wa·ḥă·miš·šāh ḇə·rî·ḥim lə·qar·šê haš·šê·nîṯ ṣe·la‘- ham·miš·kān wa·ḥă·miš·šāh ḇə·rî·ḥim lə·qar·šê lay·yar·ḵā·ṯa·yim ṣe·la‘ ham·miš·kān yām·māh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
and five bolts for the planks of the second rib of the dwelling, and five bolts for the planks of the rib of the dwelling, for the flanks, seaward.
Where the English smooths the original
28The central crossbar in the middle of the frames shall extend from one end to the other.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hat·tî·ḵōn wə·hab·bə·rî·aḥ bə·ṯō·wḵ haq·qə·rā·šîm maḇ·ri·aḥ min- haq·qā·ṣeh ’el- haq·qā·ṣeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the middle bolt, in the midst of the planks, bolting through from the one end to the other end.
Where the English smooths the original
In the midst of the boards. —Rather, midway in the boards —equi-distant, i.e., from the bottom and the top.
In the midst of the boards ; not within the thickness of the boards, as the Jews conceive, but in the length of them; as appears, 1. Because this bar, as well as the rest, was gilded, Exodus 26:29 , which was frivolous if it were never seen
"And the middle bar in the midst of the boards (i.e., at an equal distance from both top and bottom) shall be fastening (מבריח) from one end to the other."
29Overlay the frames with gold and make gold rings to hold the crossbars. Also overlay the crossbars with gold.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’eṯ- tə·ṣap·peh haq·qə·rā·šîm zā·hāḇ wə·’eṯ- ta·‘ă·śeh zā·hāḇ ṭab·bə·‘ō·ṯê·hem bāt·tîm lab·bə·rî·ḥim wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’eṯ- hab·bə·rî·ḥim zā·hāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the planks you shall overlay with gold, and their rings you shall make of gold, houses for the bolts; and you shall overlay the bolts with gold.
Where the English smooths the original
Not merely gild them, but cover them with thin plates of gold; and which, because it would take up a great quantity of gold, and make the boards very heavy, unless the plates were very thin
The rings were to be of solid gold; the boards and the bars of acacia wood overlaid with gold.
In every pair of these sockets, a strong board of shittim-wood, covered with plates of gold, was fitted by mortises and tenons.
30So you are to set up the tabernacle according to the pattern shown you on the mountain.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wa·hă·qê·mō·ṯā ’eṯ- ham·miš·kān kə·miš·pā·ṭōw ’ă·šer hā·rə·’ê·ṯā bā·hār
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you shall raise up the dwelling according to its judgment, which you were shown on the mountain.
Where the English smooths the original
fashion ] more exactly, prescribed norm : cf. 1 Kings 6:38 , Ezekiel 42:11
Even the setting up and position of the dwelling were not left to human judgment, but were to be carried out כּמשׁפּטו
However minute—even tediously minute—the description, there would necessarily have been a multitude of particulars, not to be described in words
Either by visible representation to his eye, or rather by mental vision or impression of it upon his imagination.
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 unit opens with a verb of command — wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā, "and you shall make" (v. 15) — and a noun so rare the scholars cannot agree on it. Ellicott grasps the purpose plainly: the planks are "to roof over and protect an oblong chamber or 'dwelling,' within which God was to manifest Himself and to be worshipped" (1878). But the Cambridge editors flag the central word's uncertainty: "The Heb. ḳéresh, except in the present connexion (50 times), occurs only Ezekiel 27:6... and its exact sense is uncertain" (1880s) — board, beam, or open frame, the Hebrew will not say. What the Hebrew does say is that the planks are ‘ō·mə·ḏîm, standing (v. 15), and that each reaches down with two yā·ḏō·wṯ — literally hands. Poole keeps the image: the tenons are "Heb. hands... so cut and framed that like hands they may take hold of and be fastened into the sockets" (1685). Those sockets, Barnes insists, are "More literally, bases, or foundations. Each base weighed a talent... and must have been a massive block" (1834). A standing wall, then, that stands only because its hands are seated in silver foundations cast — Scripture later tells us — from the redemption-money of the census (Exodus 38:25–27).
The walls are laid out by the four winds, and the Hebrew names them not by abstract bearing but by image: south is negbāh, "the dry"; north is tsâphôn, "the hidden"; west is yāmmāh, "seaward." Here the commentators openly divide. Keil reads the doubled south-word as proof of antiquity: "an evident proof that at that time negeb was not established as a geographical term for the south... not written here by a Palestinian, as Knobel supposes, but by Moses in the desert" (1860s). The Cambridge editors read the very same vocabulary the opposite way: "Sea... is in Heb. the regular word for 'west'; and the usage, like that of négeb in v. 18..., could only have arisen after Israel had been long settled in Canaan" (1880s). The ⚙ layer does not adjudicate; it records that one fine point of geography carries two contradictory datings, each held by careful men. At the corners the language turns tender: the rear angle-boards are ṯō·’ă·mîm, twins — Poole, "Heb. as twins, i.e. equal and equally joined together, and exactly answering one to the other" (1685) — and tāmîm, whole; Keil reads them "double from the bottom to the top, and still to form one whole." Yet even he bows to the difficulty Cambridge names: v. 24 is "A most obscure verse, the crux of all interpreters."
Five bᵉrîḥim — bolts, not loose bars — lock each wall, and one of them, hat·tî·ḵōn, the central bolt (v. 28), runs the full length. The pun is in the Hebrew: the bolt (bᵉrîyach) is the thing that maḇrîaḥ — bolts through. Keil keeps the active force against the BSB's mild "extend": the middle bar "shall be fastening (מבריח) from one end to the other." Poole argues from the gilding that this bar must run along the length, visible — "this bar, as well as the rest, was gilded... which was frivolous if it were never seen" (1685). Then comes the gold (v. 29), threefold: planks, rings, and bolts all sheeted in it, the rings called the bolts' bāttîm, their houses — a house for every bolt inside the house for God. And the unit ends where it must: "raise up the dwelling according to its mishpat... which you were shown on the mountain" (v. 30). Cambridge: "more exactly, prescribed norm." Keil: "not left to human judgment, but to be carried out כּמשׁפּטו." The verb hā·rə·’ê·ṯā is passive — Moses was shown. Nothing in the wall was invented; all of it was copied.
Read under Sola Scriptura, and tested as fallible: this passage is a doctrine of derivation. Twice the wall's whole stability is borrowed — the planks stand (v. 15) only because their hands are seated in foundations of silver (v. 19), and the whole dwelling is raised (v. 30) only according to a pattern shown, in a verb (hā·rə·’ê·ṯā) that makes Moses the passive recipient of a vision he did not design. The tabernacle's authority is wholly external to itself: foundation-money from a ransom, blueprint from a mountain. The most spiritually loaded word in the unit may be the least likely — mishpat (v. 30), normally a courtroom verdict, here meaning the binding specification: the place where God dwells is built to a decree, not to taste. The older voices reach instinctively for the church-as-building (Benson, Henry, Gill, citing Ephesians 2:20–21 and 1 Timothy 3:15); that move is sound but secondary. The primary claim of the Hebrew is narrower and harder: a holy dwelling is legitimate only insofar as it is received, not contrived — standing on a given foundation, raised to a given pattern. Where the commentators themselves confess obscurity (the twin corners of v. 24, the word-order of v. 27, the very meaning of qeresh), Scripture is content to leave the joinery unsolved while making the theology unmistakable: the dwelling is not ours to invent.
The wall stands only on a foundation it was given, and rises only to a pattern it was shown — nothing in the dwelling of God is contrived; all of it is received.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Every plank, base, and bolt commanded here (Exodus 26:15–29) is built in the construction record of Exodus 36:20–34, often word for word. The Verifier finds the link carried by the rare structural noun qeresh (H7175, only ~34 verses in all Scripture, virtually all of them these two passages) together with mishkān (H4908) and, in vv. 15/36:20, shiṭṭâh (H7848, 28 vv) and ʻâts (H6086). For the obedience pattern "as the LORD commanded Moses, so they did," this near-verbatim repetition is the literary spine of the tabernacle account — command and fulfillment set side by side.
Exodus 36:20 · Exodus 36:22 · Exodus 36:31
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared rare lexemes: H7175 qeresh (in 34 vv), H7848 shiṭṭâh (in 28 vv), plus H4908 mishkân and H6086 ʻêts — the command (ch. 26) repeated as execution (ch. 36); Verifier-confirmed on Exodus 26:15 ↔ Exodus 36:20.
The single most distinctive sentence of the unit — the central bolt that bolts "from one end to the other" (Exodus 26:28) — recurs almost verbatim in the construction account (Exodus 36:33). The Verifier confirms the link by the genuinely rare adjective tîykôwn (H8484, central — only 9 verses in Scripture) together with bᵉrîyach (H1280, bolt, 36 vv) and the root bârach (H1272). A rare shared lexeme plus a near-identical clause meets the bar for a verbal link.
Exodus 36:33
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew rare shared lexemes: H8484 tîykôwn (only 9 vv) + H1280 bᵉrîyach (36 vv) + H1272 bârach; Verifier-confirmed on Exodus 26:28 ↔ Exodus 36:33 — near-verbatim repetition of the middle-bar clause.
The word qeresh (H7175) is so rare that, outside the tabernacle texts, it appears once in all Scripture: of the "deck" or "benches" of the merchant ship of Tyre (Ezekiel 27:6), as the Cambridge Bible notes verbatim in v. 15. The one feature the two share is the construction itself — paneled plank-work named by this single technical noun; the contexts could hardly differ more, a holy dwelling versus a doomed trading vessel, and no thematic, typological, or redemptive link is claimed between them. The tier is held at the very floor of "structural," resting on the shared building-term alone; the value of the link is chiefly lexical, fixing how narrow the word's range is.
Ezekiel 27:6
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew single rare shared lexeme: H7175 qeresh (in 34 vv), the only non-tabernacle use; Verifier-confirmed on Exodus 26:15 ↔ Ezekiel 27:6. The shared feature is the construction-term (paneled plankwork) only — no quotation, no theme, no typology; held at the floor of the structural tier and deliberately under-claimed.
The unit's closing command — "so you are to set up the tabernacle according to the pattern" (Exodus 26:30) — is itself fulfilled at Exodus 40:18, where Moses "reared up the tabernacle, and fastened his sockets, and set up the boards." The Verifier ties the two by mishkān (H4908) and the verb qûm (H6965, to rise/raise up). Common vocabulary across the command-and-fulfillment frame; no quotation is claimed, so the link is held at the structural tier.
Exodus 40:18 · Exodus 25:9
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes: H4908 mishkān + H6965 qûwm (to raise up); Verifier-confirmed on Exodus 26:30 ↔ Exodus 40:18 — command to rear the dwelling fulfilled. Common (non-rare) lexemes, hence structural, not verbal.
The forty-plus-forty-plus-sixteen silver bases (’eden, H134) commanded here (Exodus 26:19, 21, 25) are accounted for at Exodus 38:27, where "the hundred talents of silver were for casting the bases of the sanctuary" — one talent per base — and that silver is, in turn, the census ransom collected from every man numbered (Exodus 38:25; cf. 30:11–16, the half-shekel "atonement money"). The Verifier ties v. 19 to 38:27 by ’eden (H134, base) with keseph (H3701, silver). The link is structural, not verbal — the shared words are the building-vocabulary common to both passages — but the theological weight is real and on the surface of the text: the entire upright dwelling literally stands on the silver of redemption. Barnes measures the mass ("Each base weighed a talent... and must have been a massive block"); Scripture names its source.
Exodus 38:27 · Exodus 38:25 · Exodus 30:12
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes: H134 ʼeden (base, 39 vv) + H3701 keseph (silver, 343 vv); Verifier-confirmed on Exodus 26:19 ↔ Exodus 38:27. Common building-vocabulary, hence structural not verbal; the redemption-money theme is drawn from the narrative context (38:25; 30:11–16), not asserted as a lexical quotation.
The thrice-repeated charge to build "according to the pattern shown you on the mountain" (Exodus 26:30; cf. 25:9, 40) is taken up by the writer of Hebrews, who argues that the priests "serve a copy and shadow of the heavenly things" and quotes Moses being warned, "See that you make everything according to the pattern shown you on the mountain" (Hebrews 8:5). This is a cross-Testament link: it runs Greek (Hebrews, typos) to Hebrew (Exodus, tabnît / mishpat) and therefore cannot rest on a shared Strong's number — the lexicons are different languages. It is tiered as a quotation only at the level of the New Testament's own explicit citation; here it is flagged because the precise Old Testament source and wording of the Hebrews citation are debated (the LXX typos against the Hebrew of Exodus 25:40 versus 26:30), and provenance of a debated NT quotation must be flagged.
Hebrews 8:5 · Exodus 25:40 · Exodus 25:9
basis: Cross-Testament Greek↔Hebrew: cannot use shared Strong's numbers. Hebrews 8:5 explicitly cites the "pattern on the mountain" charge, but its exact OT source (Exodus 25:40 vs. 26:30) and its dependence on LXX typos vs. the Hebrew are debated; flagged for source verification rather than asserted verbal.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Each plank is incorruptible desert acacia (v. 15) wholly sheeted in gold (v. 29) — durable wood within, divine glory without, made one structure. The ancient and widely-held reading of the tabernacle's gilded acacia (developed across the Fathers and the Reformers on the ark and the boards alike) sees a figure of the incarnate Christ: true humanity (the wood of earth) and true deity (the gold of heaven) joined without confusion in a single person who is himself God's dwelling among us (John 1:14, "the Word... tabernacled among us"). Henry's own "strong board of shittim-wood, covered with plates of gold" carries the image without yet naming it.
Exodus 26:29 · John 1:14 · Colossians 2:9
The closing command to build only "according to the pattern shown on the mountain" (v. 30) is read by the New Testament itself as pointing beyond the earthly tent: the writer of Hebrews calls the whole structure "a copy and shadow of the heavenly things" and grounds that in this very charge (Hebrews 8:5; cf. 9:24, where Christ enters "not... a holy place made with hands... but into heaven itself"). On this widely-held reading the tabernacle was never an end but a shadow whose substance is Christ's heavenly ministry — the true dwelling of God with man, raised not by human contrivance but received from above.
Exodus 26:30 · Hebrews 8:5 · Hebrews 9:24
The corner-boards are twins (v. 24), "doubled from below and whole at the head," the pieces that bind the rear wall to the two long ribs into one structure. Gill, citing Lightfoot, draws the figure verbatim: "these corners knit end and side together, and were the strength of the building; as... 'Christ is of his church, making Jews and Gentiles one spiritual temple.'" This reads the corner as a type of Christ the binding cornerstone (Ephesians 2:20–22) who joins two into one whole — an old and widely-held application, here novel only in pressing the specific twin-corner detail rather than the general cornerstone motif.
Exodus 26:24 · Ephesians 2:20 · Ephesians 2:22
The whole dwelling stands on silver bases (vv. 19, 21, 25) cast from the census ransom — the half-shekel "atonement money" of every man numbered (Exodus 38:25–27; 30:11–16). Gill reads the silver sockets verbatim as "the basis and foundation of the tabernacle, and was a figure of Christ, the only foundation of his church and people." The redemptive-historical line is direct and on the surface of the text: a holy dwelling can rise only on a foundation of redemption-price, and the New Testament names that one foundation — "no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 3:11) — who gave himself "as a ransom for all" (1 Timothy 2:6). The application is old and widely-held; the ⚙ layer adds only the precise grammatical-historical link (ransom-silver, Exodus 38:25–27) that grounds it, and presses it no further than the text and the ancient reading allow.
Exodus 26:19 · 1 Corinthians 3:11 · 1 Timothy 2:6
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 is a building specification, and its honesty must match its register. (1) The central noun qeresh (H7175) is lexically uncertain — "board," "beam," or open "frame" — and the Cambridge editors say so plainly; the literal renderings above choose "plank" as a neutral middle and flag the dispute rather than resolving it. (2) Verse 24 is, in Cambridge's own words, "the crux of all interpreters"; the literal there follows the words as closely as possible without pretending the architecture is settled. (3) The direction-words negbāh (south, v. 18) and yāmmāh (west, v. 22) are read by Keil as evidence of Mosaic, desert authorship and by Cambridge as evidence of late, settled-Canaan composition — a genuine, unresolved scholarly contradiction recorded on both verses and in Movement ii, with no adjudication by the ⚙ layer. (4) All cross-references in the threads are Hebrew↔Hebrew and rest on Verifier-computed shared Strong's lexemes — including the redemption-silver thread (Exodus 26:19 ↔ 38:27, on H134 ʼeden + H3701 keseph), whose theological weight is drawn from the narrative context (the census-ransom of 38:25; 30:11–16) and so is held at the structural, not verbal, tier — except the Hebrews 8:5 link, which is cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew), cannot use shared Strong's numbers, and is therefore flagged for source verification rather than asserted as verbal. The Ezekiel 27:6 thread rests on a single shared building-term (qeresh) with no theme or typology and is deliberately held at the floor of the structural tier. (5) Two voices contain artifacts of their public-domain transmission — Keil's "to or three" (for "two or three") and the Pulpit Commentary's "comer" (for "corner") — quoted verbatim as required, with editorial notes; and Keil's negeb/desert observation (v. 18) is quoted as two separate contiguous fragments, never stitched across his intervening clause about "a Palestinian." (6) The Christ readings are marked widely-held, not novel: they are the historic typological tradition (gilded acacia, heavenly pattern, binding corner, and the ransom-silver foundation read by Gill as "a figure of Christ"), tested here against the grammar and offered as fallible synthesis, never as the authority of the text itself. (7) Note: the Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flagging rule does not apply to this unit, which lies in Exodus 26 and contains no 1:5.
✦ = 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)