The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Curtain for the Entrance
Exodus 26:36–37 — The Curtain for the Entrance. 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.
36For the entrance to the tent, you are to make a curtain embroidered with blue, purple, and scarlet yarn, and finely spun linen.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
lə·p̄e·ṯaḥ hā·’ō·hel wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā mā·sāḵ rō·qêm tə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî mā·šə·zār ma·‘ă·śêh wə·šêš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-for-the-entrance of-the-tent thou-shalt-make a-screen: blue and-purple and-scarlet-of-worm and-fine-twisted-linen, the-work of-an-embroiderer.
Where the English smooths the original
The “hanging” spoken of appears to have been a beautifully embroidered curtain, which could be either drawn up or let down, and which was attached by golden “hooks” to five pillars plated with gold, thus dividing the entrance into four equal spaces.Ellicott reconstructs the screen as a curtain raised and lowered on five gold-hooked pillars — the holy place opened or closed, not a fixed door.
this was instead of a door to the tabernacle, and divided the holy place, into which only the priests might enter, from the place where the people stood and worshippedGill marks the screen's social function: it is the boundary line between priest and people, holy place and outer court.
This was of the same materials as the veil ( v. 31), but, as it was further from the shrine, of less elaborate workmanship, the ‘work of the variegator,’ or ‘embroiderer’ (not of the ‘designer’ or pattern-weaver see on v. 1), and without cherubim.Cambridge fixes the graded distinction roqem vs. chosheb: same dyes, lesser craft, no cherubim — distance from the shrine measured in workmanship.
For the entrance to the tent they were also to make a curtain (מסך, lit., a covering, from סכך to cover) of the same material as the inner curtain, but of work in mixed colours, i.e., not woven with figures upon it, but simply in stripes or checks.Keil reads the rare verb against itself: not figured needlework but woven mixed colour — "stripes or checks" — a lexical case the English "embroidered" cannot show.
Before the entrance then of the first tabernacle, or the holy place, was the curtain here spoken of to be hung, which may be called the first veil, as that mentioned Exodus 26:31 , which divided the holy place from the most holy, is called the second veil, Hebrews 9:2-3 .Benson supplies the label the New Testament thread rests on: this outer screen is "the first veil," the inner pārōketh of v. 31 "the second" — a numbering he draws from the apostle's two-tent description in Hebrews 9:2-3. The identification is a commentator's harmonisation, not the wording of either text (see the flagged thread).
37Make five posts of acacia wood for the curtain, overlay them with gold, use hooks of gold, and cast five bronze bases for them.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ḥă·miš·šāh ‘am·mū·ḏê šiṭ·ṭîm lam·mā·sāḵ wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’ō·ṯām zā·hāḇ wā·wê·hem zā·hāḇ wə·yā·ṣaq·tā ḥă·miš·šāh nə·ḥō·šeṯ ’aḏ·nê lā·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-thou-shalt-make for-the-screen five posts of-acacia, and-overlay-them with-gold — their-hooks of-gold — and-cast for-them five sockets of-bronze.
Where the English smooths the original
Five pillars. —The odd number is surprising, especially compared with the “four pillars” of the interior ( Exodus 26:32 ), until we remember that a tent such as that described must have a pillar, or tent-pole, in the middle of its gable-end, and an equal number of supports on either side.Ellicott turns an oddity into evidence: the fifth, central post is the tent-pole — the count itself argues that the sanctuary was genuinely tent-shaped.
Their bases (see Exodus 26:19 ) were of bronze (like the taches of the tentcloth, Exodus 26:11 ), not of silver, to mark the inferiority of the tent to the tabernacle.Barnes reads the metals as a gradient of holiness — bronze at the tent-front, silver reserved for the inner veil's feet.
This is to be understood not of the whole pillars, but of the chapiters, heads, tops, or knobs of them, and of their fillets or girdles; in some parts of them the wood appearing, as is plain from Exodus 36:38Gill curbs the English "overlay them with gold": only the tops and bands were gilt, the acacia still visible below — confirmed by the execution record.
The central pillar was, no doubt, as Mr. Fergusson long ago pointed out, one of two tent-poles, which supported between them a ridge-pole, over which were thrown the coverings that formed the roof of the tent.The Pulpit develops Fergusson's reconstruction: the graded posts and ridge-pole give the tabernacle the working profile of an actual tent, not a flat-fronted hall.
This vail was all the defence the tabernacle had. God takes care of his church on earth. A curtain shall be, if God please to make it so, as strong a defence to his house, as gates of brass and bars of iron.Henry presses the screen's lesson home: a hanging a hand could lift was the sanctuary's only outer wall, and it held because God held it — the strength was in the Keeper, never the cloth.
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 sanctuary's front is closed not by a door but by a hanging. The Hebrew names it mâsâk (H4539), which Keil glosses bluntly as "lit., a covering, from סכך to cover" — and Gill, citing the Latin versions and Rashi, prefers "rather a "covering"… Jarchi calls it a vail." The structure has no hinged delet; it is, Ellicott explains, "a beautifully embroidered curtain, which could be either drawn up or let down," and the Pulpit agrees: "A curtain which could draw up and. down, seems to be intended. When let down, it probably covered the entire eastern side, or front of the tabernacle. When raised, it allowed the eye to penetrate into the holy place." The very word for its place, pethach (H6607), is the bare opening — a gap in a tent, not an architectural doorway. The screen, then, is a threshold that breathes: the holy place can be sealed or, for the priest's service, laid open.
The screen wears the sanctuary's fixed palette — blue, purple, scarlet-of-worm, and fine twined linen — "of the same material as the inner curtain," Keil notes. But the craft is deliberately graded down. The inner veil of v. 31 is chōshēb, the designer-weaver's work, figured with cherubim; this screen is rōqēm (H7551), the embroiderer's, and the Hebrew makes the rank-distinction the English "embroidered" cannot. Cambridge states it cleanly: "of less elaborate workmanship, the ‘work of the variegator,’ or ‘embroiderer’… and without cherubim." Gill, following Ben Melech and Maimonides, fixes the technical difference: ""Rokem" is the work of a needle, and therefore but one face… is seen… but "Chosheb" is the work of a weaver, and therefore two faces… are seen." Keil dissents on the technique itself — reading râqam as "work in mixed colours… in stripes or checks," not figured needlework — but all agree the screen is the simpler thing. Distance from the Most Holy is measured in needlework: same colours, lesser glory, no angels.
Where this screen hangs is itself a sermon. From the placement of the ark in the west, both Benson and Jamieson-Fausset-Brown infer that "the door or entrance fronted the east, so that the Israelites in worshipping Jehovah, turned their faces towards the west" (JFB). The reasoning, traced by JFB to Hewlett and by Benson to Theodoret, is striking: the rising sun's "first rays" fall through the opened screen into the sanctuary, so that the great idol of the nations is made, figuratively, to bow toward Israel's God — "that they might be thus figuratively taught to turn from the worship of that luminary which was the great idol of the nations, and to adore the God who made it and them" (JFB). The screen is also the line between peoples: it "divided the holy place, into which only the priests might enter, from the place where the people stood and worshipped" (Gill); the Geneva Bible places it "between the holy place, and there where the people were." One curtain marks both the boundary of access and the orientation of worship.
The frame that bears the screen quietly confirms what kind of building this is. Five posts — an odd number against the inner veil's four (v. 32) — puzzled readers until Fergusson's reconstruction, now adopted by Ellicott, Barnes, and the Pulpit: "a tent such as that described must have a pillar, or tent-pole, in the middle of its gable-end, and an equal number of supports on either side" (Ellicott). The Pulpit fills in the engineering: the central pillar is one of two tent-poles bearing a ridge-pole, the posts graded in height "so as to give a due slope to the roof." The metals descend by holiness: the posts gilt only at the capitals and fillets (Gill, Keil, from the execution record of Ex 36:38), their hooks of gold, but their cast sockets of bronze — "not of silver, to mark the inferiority of the tent to the tabernacle" (Barnes). Gold within, silver at the veil, bronze at the threshold: the whole structure is a graded approach, and even its building-materials map the nearness of God.
The ancient readers all heard this outer screen in the key of Hebrews. Benson calls it "the first veil, as that mentioned Exodus 26:31… is called the second veil, Hebrews 9:2-3" — a designation he draws straight from the apostle's two-tent description. Matthew Henry presses the inner veil's meaning ("The apostle tells what was the meaning of this vail, Heb 9:8… the way into the holiest of all was not made manifest, while the first tabernacle was standing"), then reads the whole front of the sanctuary christologically: "This vail was all the defence the tabernacle had. God takes care of his church on earth. A curtain shall be, if God please to make it so, as strong a defence to his house, as gates of brass and bars of iron." Henry's application is unguarded: "Do we see any glory in the person of Christ?… any wisdom in the doctrine of the cross?" The cloth that a man's hand could lift is set forth as the strongest wall God's house could want — because the strength was never in the cloth.
Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, two threads in these two verses are worth following — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted.
The screen is a graded mercy. Everything about this hanging is calibrated to distance. It wears the sanctuary's colours but in the embroiderer's lesser craft (rōqēm, not chōshēb); it has no cherubim, unlike the veil within; its posts are gilt only at the top, its hooks gold but its sockets bronze — "not of silver, to mark the inferiority of the tent to the tabernacle" (Barnes). And yet it is a true opening (pethach), a covering that can be drawn up. The text is teaching access by degrees: the people may come this far and no farther, the priest may part this curtain, the high priest alone the next. The whole architecture says both come near and not yet — a door that is also a wall.
The strength was never in the cloth. Matthew Henry's instinct is sound: a hanging that a hand could lift was "all the defence the tabernacle had," and it held because God held it — "as strong a defence to his house, as gates of brass and bars of iron." The same God who graded the metals from gold to bronze guarded His dwelling with a curtain. The lesson of the screen is not its fabric but its Keeper: the boundary between God and man is exactly as open, and exactly as closed, as He appoints — until, the New Testament will say, another veil is torn (Mt 27:51) and the way is made manifest.
“A hanging a child could lift was all the wall God's house ever had — because the strength was never in the cloth, but in the One who hung it.”
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The construction account re-narrates this very command almost word for word. Exodus 36:37 makes the screen for the entrance of the tent — the same four dyes on twined linen, the same embroiderer's work — and 36:38 supplies its five posts, gold hooks, and bronze sockets: the dictated pattern carried out (cf. Ex 25:40). Revelation precedes construction; nothing is improvised.
Exodus 26:36 · Exodus 26:37 · Exodus 36:37 · Exodus 36:38
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (26:36 ↔ 36:37) gives shared lexemes incl. the RARE H7551 râqam (embroiderer, only 9 vv) and H4539 mâçâk (screen, 25 vv), plus the full colour formula (H7806 shâzar 21 vv, H8336 shêsh 37 vv, H713/H8144/H8438/H8504). Verifier (26:37 ↔ 36:38) gives shared RARE H2053 vâv (hook, 13 vv), H134 ʼeden (39 vv), H6823 tsâphâh (40 vv), H5982 ʻammûwd (84 vv). The command and execution are the same text twice.
The same construction language governs the only other mâsâk made maʻăseh rōqēm, an embroiderer's work: the screen for the gate of the court (Ex 27:16; built in 38:18). Same noun for the hanging, same rare craft-word, same four dyes on twined linen. Two screens, one technique — the threshold of the holy place and the threshold of the whole enclosure are matched in language.
Exodus 26:36 · Exodus 27:16 · Exodus 38:18
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (26:36 ↔ 27:16) gives shared RARE H7551 râqam (embroiderer, 9 vv) and H4539 mâçâk (screen, 25 vv), plus H7806 shâzar (21 vv), H8336 shêsh, H713, H8144, H8438, H8504. The pairing of the two rare words (mâçâk + râqam) is the verbal fingerprint shared only by the entrance-screen and the court-gate screen.
The screen and the inner veil (v. 31) share the sanctuary's fixed palette, but the Hebrew grades them apart: the veil is chōshēb (the designer-weaver's work, with cherubim), this screen rōqēm (the embroiderer's, without). The shared lexemes are the recurring liturgical colour-formula, not a rare quotation — so this is a thematic kinship of materials, deliberately distinguished in craft. Cambridge: "of less elaborate workmanship… and without cherubim."
Exodus 26:36 · Exodus 26:31 · Exodus 36:35
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. The Verifier mechanically returns "verbal / quotation — confirmed" for 26:36 ↔ 26:31, because six shared lexemes fall under its freq≤60 threshold — H7806 shâzar (21 vv), H8336 shêsh (37 vv), H713 ʼargâmân (38 vv), H8144 shânîy (42 vv), H8438 tôwlâʻ (43 vv), H8504 tᵉkêleth (49 vv). The editor DOWNGRADES that verdict: all six are the standard sanctuary colour-and-linen formula, repeated dozens of times within these very building-chapters, not a rare quotation. Critically, the shared set does NOT include the rare râqam (this screen is rōqēm, the veil is chōshēb), so what binds the two verses is shared materials, not shared craft-vocabulary. A formula clustered in one building-account cannot bear a "quotation" claim; the honest tier is structural/thematic.
The screen's posts echo the inner veil's posts (v. 32) in construction — acacia, gold-plated, gold hooks, cast sockets — but the text marks two contrasts: five posts here against the veil's four (the odd middle one a tent-pole, per Fergusson/Ellicott), and bronze sockets here against the veil's silver. The same building grammar, graded down by one rank of holiness (Barnes).
Exodus 26:37 · Exodus 26:32 · Exodus 36:36
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier (26:37 ↔ 26:32) gives shared RARE H2053 vâv (hook, 13 vv) and H7848 shiṭṭâh (acacia, 28 vv), plus H134 ʼeden (39 vv), H6823 tsâphâh (40 vv), H5982 ʻammûwd (84 vv). Verifier (26:37 ↔ 36:36) repeats the same set plus H3332 yâtsaq. The pairing of the rare vâv + shiṭṭâh is the verbal link; the differences (five/four, bronze/silver) are the point the text makes within that shared language.
Benson names this entrance screen "the first veil," and the inner veil of v. 31 "the second veil," drawing the designation from Hebrews 9:2-3, where the writer describes the outer and inner sanctuaries divided by curtains. Matthew Henry presses Hebrews 9:8: while "the first tabernacle was standing," "the way into the holiest of all was not made manifest." The link is interpretive, argued from the apostle's own use of the tabernacle plan — not a verbal one, since the lexicons do not overlap.
Exodus 26:36 · Hebrews 9:2 · Hebrews 9:3 · Hebrews 9:8
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): Verifier (26:36 ↔ Heb 9:3) returns NO shared original-language lexeme — the lexicons cannot overlap by Strong's number, so a verbal tier is impossible. The "first veil / second veil" labels are a commentator's harmonisation (Benson) of the Hebrew screen-and-veil with the apostle's Greek two-tent description; whether the BSB's outer mâsâk is precisely the πρῶτον/δεύτερον καταπέτασμα of Hebrews is a matter of the commentators' construal, not the text's wording. Flagged for provenance: the identification is argued, not stated by either passage.
Keil himself reads the whole construction forward, beyond the curtain to the consummation it shadows. The portable tent exists because "so long as the people were wandering about and dwelt in tents, the dwelling of their God in the midst of them must be a tent also" — a divine accommodation to a pilgrim people. But its very form, he argues, points past itself: the cherubim woven into these fabrics make the dwelling "a symbolical representation of the kingdom of glory… the heavenly Jerusalem with its myriads of angels, the city of the living God, to which the people of God will come" (Heb 12:22-23), and the cube of the Most Holy is fulfilled in John's vision of the city whose "length, and the breadth, and the height of it were equal," needing no temple, for "the Lord God of Hosts and the Lamb are the temple of it" (Rev 21:16, 22). The screened tent of Exodus and the unscreened City of Revelation are the same trajectory: God dwelling with man, first behind a curtain, finally face to face.
Exodus 26:36 · Exodus 26:37 · Hebrews 12:22 · Revelation 21:22
basis: Cross-Testament (Hebrew↔Greek): no shared Strong's number is possible across the language barrier, so this is never tiered verbal. The link is figural and explicitly drawn by a sourced voice — Keil reads the tabernacle's tent-form and woven cherubim as a type whose antitype is the heavenly Jerusalem of Hebrews 12:22-23 and Revelation 21. Marked typological/widely-held: the tabernacle-as-shadow-of-the-heavenly-dwelling reading is ancient (it is the express argument of Hebrews 8:5; 9:23-24), not a novelty of this page.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Matthew Henry reads the rending of the sanctuary's veil at Christ's death (Mt 27:51) as the unveiling of the way to God: "We have now boldness to enter into the holiest… by the blood of Jesus." The screen of v. 36 is the outer member of the same graded barrier — a covering that says this far, not yet; the New Testament announces that the barrier, at every rank, is opened in Christ. The ancient and widely-held figure: the cloth that closed the holy place foreshadows the flesh torn to open the heavenly one (Heb 10:19-20).
Exodus 26:36 · Matthew 27:51 · Hebrews 9:8 · Hebrews 10:19
Benson and JFB hand down the old reading that the east-facing entrance taught Israel to "turn from the worship of that luminary which was the great idol of the nations, and to adore the God who made it" (JFB) — the sun made to bow at the sanctuary's door. Read forward, the figure deepens: the screen the morning sun could only touch is opened, in the gospel, to the True Light that the sun itself served — the Sun of Righteousness who would rise with healing (Mal 4:2), the true Light coming into the world (Jn 1:9). A novel extension of the ancient sun-and-sanctuary reading, offered to be tested, not trusted.
Exodus 26:36 · Malachi 4:2 · John 1:9
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 26:36–37) 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. The verbal links lean on genuinely rare words: H7551 râqam (embroiderer, 9 verses), H4539 mâçâk (screen, 25 verses), H2053 vâv (hook, 13 verses), H7848 shiṭṭâh (acacia, 28 verses). Where the only shared words are the recurring sanctuary colour-formula (blue/purple/scarlet/linen, all freq 37–49 and clustered in these very chapters), the link is downgraded to structural/thematic, since a formula repeated dozens of times in the same building-account cannot bear a "quotation" claim. One downgrade is a conscious override of the machine: for the screen↔inner-veil link (26:36 ↔ 26:31) the Verifier mechanically returns "verbal" (six colour-formula lexemes fall under its freq≤60 cut-off), but the editor has demoted it to structural/thematic because that whole set is formulaic and the rare craft-word râqam is precisely not shared — the verses agree in materials, not in vocabulary that would mark a quotation.
Two threads and both Christ-section links reach into the New Testament (Hebrews 9; Hebrews 12; Revelation 21; Matthew 27; John 1; Malachi 4). These are Greek↔Hebrew (or Hebrew prophet ↔ Greek gospel) and therefore cannot use shared Strong's numbers — the lexicons do not overlap by number — so they are tiered structural, typological, or flagged, never verbal. The "first veil / second veil" identification with Hebrews 9:2-3 is a commentator's harmonisation (Benson, Henry); it is flagged for provenance because the equivalence is argued from the tabernacle plan, not asserted by the wording of either passage. The earthly-tent → heavenly-city thread is tiered typological: it is the express figural argument of Hebrews 8:5 and 9:23-24, and Keil himself carries Exodus 26 forward to Hebrews 12:22-23 and Revelation 21, so the type-reading is ancient and widely-held rather than this page's invention. The Christ-section's first reading (torn veil → access) is ancient and widely-held; the second (the screen the dawn could not pass → the True Light) is marked novel — a forward extension of the old sun-and-sanctuary reading, offered to be tested, not trusted. The technique of the screen itself remains genuinely contested in the sources: Gill and the Rabbis read rōqēm as one-faced needlework, while Keil argues from Psalm 139:15 and the Arabic that the root means woven "mixed colours… stripes or checks" — a disagreement the notes preserve rather than resolve.
✦ = 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)