The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Altar of Incense
Exodus 30:1–10 — The Altar of Incense. 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.
1“You are also to make an altar of acacia wood for the burning of incense.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā miz·bê·aḥ ta·‘ă·śeh ’ō·ṯōw šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê miq·ṭar qə·ṭō·reṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-make an-altar, a-place-of-incensing of-incense; of-acacia woods you-shall-make it.
Where the English smooths the original
Ceremonies are embodied thoughts. Religious ceremonies are moulded by, and seek to express, the worshipper’s conception of his God, and his own relation to Him; his aspirations and his need.
as this altar was a type of Christ, the shittim wood may respect his human nature; which wood, though it sprung out of the earth, was not common, but choice and excellent, and very strong durable, and incorruptible
incense ] Heb. ḳeṭôreth , ‘sweet smoke’ (see on Exodus 29:13 ), which may denote, according to the context, either the ‘sweet smoke’ rising from animal sacrificesThe Hebrew underlying "incense" is the same root that elsewhere names sacrificial smoke; Cambridge flags the ambiguity the English hides.
Moses was directed to make an altar of burning of incense (lit., incensing of incense), of acacia-wood, one cubit long and one broad, four-cornered, two cubits high, furnished with horns like the altar of burnt-offering
2It is to be square, a cubit long, a cubit wide, and two cubits high. Its horns must be of one piece.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yih·yeh rā·ḇū·a‘ ’am·māh ’ā·rə·kōw wə·’am·māh rā·ḥə·bōw wə·’am·mā·ṯa·yim qō·mā·ṯōw qar·nō·ṯāw mim·men·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
A-cubit its-length and-a-cubit its-breadth — squared it-shall-be — and-two-cubits its-height; from-it [shall be] its-horns.
Where the English smooths the original
Shall be of the same — i.e., of one piece with the altar, not made separately, and then attached to it.
Though these horns, as they were for another use, so they seem to be here of another form, and for ornament more than for service.
these were a sort of spires that rose up at the four corners of the altarTrimmed before Gill's embedded Targum citation.
the meaning of which is not that it was to be entirely of a cubical form, but that upon its upper and under surface, it showed four equal sides. It was twice as high as it was broad
3Overlay with pure gold the top and all the sides and horns, and make a molding of gold around it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’ō·ṯōw ṭā·hō·wr ’eṯ- zā·hāḇ gag·gōw wə·’eṯ- sā·ḇîḇ wə·’eṯ- qî·rō·ṯāw qar·nō·ṯāw wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā lōw zêr zā·hāḇ sā·ḇîḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-overlay it [with] pure gold, its-roof and-its-walls all-around, and-its-horns; and-you-shall-make for-it a-molding of-gold all-around.
Where the English smooths the original
this may figure the deity of Christ, whose head is as the most fine gold, and is in the divine nature, in the form of God, and is the brightness of his glory
The crown was a border which encompassed the altar, that the things laid on it might not fall off.
in later times, when the worship was to be more spiritual, the altar of incense is prophetically described as not of gold but of wood, and double the size of that in the tabernacle, because the church should be vastly extended (Mal 1:11).JFB reads Ezekiel's wood incense-altar typologically; the claim is theirs, offered as their inference.
sides ] Heb. walls : so of the Bronze altar, Leviticus 1:15 ; Leviticus 5:9 . a crown ] a rim or moulding
4And make two gold rings below the molding on opposite sides to hold the poles used to carry it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ta·‘ă·śeh- lōw ū·šə·tê zā·hāḇ ṭab·bə·‘ōṯ mit·ta·ḥaṯ lə·zê·rōw ‘al šə·tê ṣal·‘ō·ṯāw ta·‘ă·śeh ‘al- šə·nê ṣid·dāw wə·hā·yāh lə·ḇāt·tîm lə·ḇad·dîm lā·śêṯ ’ō·ṯōw bā·hêm·māh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-two rings of-gold you-shall-make for-it under its-molding, on its-two ribs you-shall-make [them], on its-two sides; and-they-shall-be for-houses for-poles to-carry it by-them.
Where the English smooths the original
The golden altar was so much smaller and lighter than the brazen one that two rings only were required for carrying it, instead of the “four rings” needed by the brazen altar ( Exodus 27:4 ). By the two corners thereof. —Rather, on the two sides thereof. The word used means, literally, “ribs,”
The sense appears to be: And two gold rings shalt thou make for it under its moulding; on its two sides shalt thou make them (i. e. one ring on each side).
this signifies that Christ never leaves his people; when they are in the wilderness he is with them, interceding for them, providing all things necessary for their food, safety, and protection
5Make the poles of acacia wood and overlay them with gold.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê wə·ṣip·pî·ṯā ’ō·ṯām zā·hāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-make the-poles [of] woods [of] acacia, and-you-shall-overlay them [with] gold.
Where the English smooths the original
these rings and staves may be an emblem of the precious ordinances of Christ, in which he grants his presence; and where he is held forth in different ages and places as the interceding high priest of his people
The staves were to be of acacia wood, overlaid with gold, like those used for carrying the ark ( Exodus 25:13 ) and the table of shew-bread
And thou shalt make the staves of shittim wood, and overlay them with gold.Geneva supplies no gloss here beyond the verse; included as the period's plainest witness to the text.
6Place the altar in front of the veil that is before the ark of the Testimony—before the mercy seat that is over the Testimony—where I will meet with you.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·nā·ṯat·tāh ’ō·ṯōw lip̄·nê hap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ ’ă·šer ‘al- ’ă·rōn hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ lip̄·nê hak·kap·pō·reṯ ’ă·šer ‘al- hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ ’ă·šer ’iw·wā·‘êḏ lə·ḵā šām·māh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-set it before the-veil that-[is] over the-ark of-the-Testimony, before the-mercy-seat that-[is] over the-Testimony, where I-will-meet with-you there.
Where the English smooths the original
The altar bore a close relation to the mercy seat. It was the instrument by which the “mercy” there enthroned was made available to the penitent sinner.
though we cannot with the eye of sense, see the throne of grace, we must "direct our prayer to it and look up"
having that in view for the acceptance of the people's prayers to God through Christ, which they were making while he was burning the incense: where ITrimmed mid-sentence; Gill's point is the priest's incense-burning toward the unseen mercy-seat as the people pray.
before the second veil, in the holy place, and near to the holy of holies, and consequently to the ark and mercy-seat.
A straight line drawn from the altar of sacrifice would have bisected the altar of incense as it passed into the mercy-seat and the glory.Maclaren preaches the whole chapter from 30:1; this line draws out the geometry of v. 6 — the prayer-altar lies on the axis between the altar of sacrifice and the unseen glory.
7And Aaron is to burn fragrant incense on it every morning when he tends the lamps.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·hă·rōn wə·hiq·ṭîr sam·mîm qə·ṭō·reṯ ‘ā·lāw yaq·ṭî·ren·nāh bab·bō·qer bab·bō·qer bə·hê·ṭî·ḇōw ’eṯ- han·nê·rōṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-shall-burn-as-smoke upon-it Aaron incense of-spices; every-morning, morning, when-he-tends the-lamps he-shall-make-it-smoke.
Where the English smooths the original
That it was symbolical of prayer may be gathered both from those passages and also from Revelation 5:8 ; Revelation 8:3-4 .
which was intended not only to take away the ill smell of the flesh that was burned daily on the brazen altar, but for the honour of God, and to show the acceptableness of his people’s services to him.
the incense was an emblem of the prayers of sincere worshippers ascending to heaven in the cloud of perfume; and, accordingly, the priest who officiated at this altar typified the intercessory office of Christ (Lu 1:10; Heb 7:25).
our intercessor and lamplighter is one and the same; he that was seen amidst the golden candlesticks dressing the lamps of them, appears at the golden altar with a golden censer, to offer up the prayers of his saints, Revelation 1:13
8When Aaron sets up the lamps at twilight, he must burn the incense perpetually before the LORD for the generations to come.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·hă·rōn ’eṯ- ū·ḇə·ha·‘ă·lōṯ han·nê·rōṯ bên hā·‘ăr·ba·yim yaq·ṭî·ren·nāh qə·ṭō·reṯ tā·mîḏ lip̄·nê Yah·weh lə·ḏō·rō·ṯê·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-when-Aaron sets-up the-lamps between the-two-evenings, he-shall-burn-it-as-smoke — incense of-continuity before YHWH for-your-generations.
Where the English smooths the original
as his sacrifice continually takes away the sin of the world, in which it was the antitype of the daily sacrifice; so his blood continually speaks for peace and pardon
The offering of incense by the high priest twice a day, at the time of the morning and evening sacrifice, indicated that prayer was needed as constantly as expiation, and that neither might for a single day be intermitted.
at even ] between the two evenings , as Exodus 29:39 : see on Exodus 12:6 . perpetual ] better, continual : the expression is a standing one
in the incense-offering its prayer was embodied as the exaltation of the spiritual man to God (cf. Psalm 141:2 ; Revelation 5:8 ; Revelation 8:3-4 )
9On this altar you must not offer unauthorized incense or a burnt offering or grain offering; nor are you to pour a drink offering on it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘ā·lāw lō- ṯa·‘ă·lū zā·rāh qə·ṭō·reṯ wə·‘ō·lāh ū·min·ḥāh lō ṯis·sə·ḵū wə·nê·seḵ ‘ā·lāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
You-shall-not offer-up upon-it strange incense, or-a-burnt-offering or-a-grain-offering; and-a-drink-offering you-shall-not pour upon-it.
Where the English smooths the original
atonement was made by means of the victim on the brazen altar in the court ontside; the prayers of the reconciled worshippers had their type within the tabernacle."ontside" is the Biblehub source's typo for "outside," preserved verbatim.
strange ] i.e. strange to the law, unauthorized; cf. ‘ strange fire,’ Leviticus 10:1 , Numbers 3:4 ; Numbers 26:61 .
to make use of other mediators than Christ, whether angels or men, or to put up prayer to God for the sake of our own righteousness, pleading the merits of our works, and not the blood, righteousness, and sacrifice of Christ, is to offer strange incense
the burning of fragrant incense is shown to be a sacrifice, by the fact that it was offered upon a place of sacrifice, or altarKeil's exegetical ground for the prohibition: because the incense rite is itself a sacrifice on a true altar, what may be offered on it must be fenced as strictly as any altar.
10Once a year Aaron shall make atonement on the horns of the altar. Throughout your generations he shall make atonement on it annually with the blood of the sin offering of atonement. The altar is most holy to the LORD.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·ḥaṯ baš·šā·nāh ’a·hă·rōn wə·ḵip·per ‘al- qar·nō·ṯāw lə·ḏō·rō·ṯê·ḵem yə·ḵap·pêr ‘ā·lāw ’a·ḥaṯ baš·šā·nāh mid·dam ḥaṭ·ṭaṯ hak·kip·pu·rîm hū qō·ḏeš- qā·ḏā·šîm Yah·weh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-shall-make-atonement Aaron upon its-horns once in-the-year; with the-blood of-the-sin-offering of-the-atonements once in-the-year he-shall-make-atonement upon-it for-your-generations: holy-of-holies it [is] to-YHWH.
Where the English smooths the original
the brazen altar in the court was a type of Christ dying on earth; the golden altar in the sanctuary was a type of Christ interceding in heaven.
the prayers of the saints are acceptable to God no otherwise but through the blood of Christ, who was offered for the expiation of our sins.
make propitiation would be a better rend. of kipper , and propitiation , &c., of its derivativesFrom Cambridge's extended philological note; the same root underlies both OT "atonement" and NT "propitiation."
Whoever touched a most holy thing was sanctified thereby (compare Exodus 30:29 with Exodus 29:37 ).
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.
Every careful reader of this chapter trips on the same stone: the altar of incense is the crowning furniture of the holy place, yet its blueprint arrives after the priests' ordination, when the ark, table, and lampstand were all described back in chapter 25. Ellicott concedes "it is impossible to say" why, but insists "there is certainly no reason to suspect a dislocation of the text," and notes the tell-tale clue that the "mode in which Aaron is spoken of in Exodus 30:7-10 implies a previous mention of his consecration." The Pulpit Commentary is franker — the chapter "has the appearance of being one in which accidental omissions are supplied" — while Keil & Delitzsch read the seam as design, the altar of incense and its offering "bring the directions concerning the sanctuary to a close," with everything after marked off as supplementary by the refrain "and Jehovah spake unto Moses." ⚙ Whether scribal repair or deliberate climax, the placement throws the spotlight on the object itself: the last thing built, set nearest the veil, named with the doubled cognate מִקְטַר קְטֹרֶת — "an incensing of incense" — a thing made for one rising purpose.
The commentators are nearly unanimous, and the warrant is Scripture's own. Maclaren, preaching the whole chapter, asks of the curling smoke, "What could that rising cloud of sweet odours signify but the ascent of the soul towards God?" and grounds it not in fancy but in the texts that say so — "Let my prayer come before Thee as incense" (Ps. 141:2) and the Apocalypse's "golden bowls full of odours, which are the prayers of saints." Jamieson, Fausset & Brown agree the incense "was an emblem of the prayers of sincere worshippers ascending to heaven in the cloud of perfume," and Barnes finds in the twice-daily rite "the spirit of man reaching after communion with Yahweh, both in act and utterance." Benson adds the homely original purpose — to "take away the ill smell of the flesh that was burned daily on the brazen altar" — "but for the honour of God" chiefly. ⚙ The Hebrew underwrites the symbol: the verb is הִקְטִיר, "to make go up in smoke," the same word that lifts the burnt offering, and the timing is fixed to "morning by morning" (the doubled בַּבֹּקֶר בַּבֹּקֶר) and "between the two evenings." Prayer, the rite says, is the soul going up — appointed, perfumed, and never a day omitted.
Maclaren refuses to let the symbol go soft. First, "the prayer that soars must be kindled. There is no fragrance in a stick of incense lying there." Cold incense is no incense; the fire that frees the odour is, for him, "a heart kindled into love and thankfulness by the great sacrifice of Jesus Christ." Second, the altar's place preaches. It stands second, not first: there was an altar of sacrifice in the outer court, and the "altar of incense is not approached until we have been to the altar of sacrifice." Benson sharpens the geography into theology — though the priest "could not see the mercy-seat, the veil interposing, yet he must look toward it, and direct his incense that way"; JFB draw the lesson that "though we cannot with the eye of sense, see the throne of grace, we must 'direct our prayer to it and look up.'" ⚙ The Hebrew seats the lesson: the altar is "given" (נָתַן) its station "before the veil," before the kappōreth, the atonement-cover, "where I will meet (אִוָּעֵד, by appointment) with you." Prayer ascends toward a covenant rendezvous it cannot see, kindled by a sacrifice already made.
The unit ends with a fence and a cleansing. No "strange incense" (זָרָה, the same root as the "strange fire" of Lev. 10:1), no burnt, grain, or drink offering — Barnes sees the rule keeping the altar's "symbolism... free from ambiguity": expiation belongs to the bronze altar outside, "the prayers of the reconciled worshippers had their type within." Then, once a year, atoning blood is daubed on the horns. Poole states the freight: "the prayers of the saints are acceptable to God no otherwise but through the blood of Christ, who was offered for the expiation of our sins." Cambridge's long note observes that the very verb here, kipper, would be "better rend[ered]" "make propitiation," the same word the New Testament uses of Christ (Rom. 3:25; 1 John 2:2; Heb. 2:17) — "an important link of connexion between OT. and NT." ⚙ So even the altar where prayer rises must itself be covered by blood. The altar is "holy of holies" (קֹדֶשׁ קָדָשִׁים), yet not self-sufficient: intercession leans wholly on expiation, and the Pulpit Commentary reads the altar's near-supreme rank as a measure of "the extreme value which God sets upon prayer."
Held to the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority — and offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted — three things press out of this gold box of smoke.
Prayer is a built thing, and its building is grace. God does not merely permit prayer; He commissions an altar for it, gilds it, gives it horns, and sets it nearer the veil than any other furniture but the ark. The text treats the soul's ascent to God as serious architecture — and yet the same text fences it: only the appointed incense, only at the appointed hours, only in the appointed place. Liberty to pray is not license to invent; "strange incense" is still strange, and self-made approach is refused.
The smoke goes up because blood was shed below. The incense altar stands inside; the slaughter altar stands outside; you cannot reach the first without passing the second. And once a year even the prayer-altar is washed in the blood of the sin-offering. The Hebrew binds them by sound — kappōreth (the cover where atonement is made), kipper (to atone), kippurîm (the atonements) — so that the place of prayer, the act of atoning, and the Day of Atonement all ring with one root. Read under Scripture, this is no allegory imposed from outside: the ritual itself declares that acceptable prayer rests on accomplished propitiation, which is exactly the order the New Testament keeps when it sets one High Priest, who "ever lives to make intercession," upon the ground of his own once-for-all blood.
The last thing built, set nearest the veil — a gold box made for one purpose: to send the soul up in smoke toward a face it cannot yet see. (A reading to be weighed, not a verse.)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The command of Exodus 30:1–5 is executed almost word-for-word in the construction account, Bezalel's building of "the altar of incense of acacia wood" (37:25). The Verifier records the link on shared lexemes including the rare shiṭṭâh ("acacia," 28 vv) and qᵉṭôreth ("incense," 58 vv), plus ‘êṣ and mizbêaḥ — the gold molding's rare zêr (10 vv) likewise binds 30:3 to 37:27. This is the command-and-fulfillment doublet that frames the whole tabernacle: God speaks the blueprint to Moses, and the obedient craftsman repeats it in deed.
Exodus 30:1 · Exodus 37:25 · Exodus 37:26 · Exodus 37:27
basis: Verifier: shared lexemes H7848 shiṭṭâh (rare, 28 vv), H7004 qᵉṭôreth (58 vv), H6086 ʻêts, H4196 mizbêach for 30:1↔37:25; and H2213 zêr (rare, 10 vv) + H2091 zâhâb for 30:3↔37:27 — repeated wording across the build-account doublet
The rare word זֵר (zêr, "molding / wreath-crown") occurs in only ten verses of the Hebrew Bible, and they cluster: the ark (25:11), the table (25:24–25), and here the incense altar (30:3). Keil & Delitzsch note the altar was "ornamented with a golden wreath... as the ark of the covenant and the table of shew-bread were." The shared rarity is the recorded basis — one distinctive lexeme stitching the three gilded pieces of the holy place into a single suite, every one bearing the same crowning rim.
Exodus 30:3 · Exodus 25:11 · Exodus 25:24 · Exodus 25:25
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H2213 zêr (only 10 vv in the canon), with H2889 ṭâhôwr / H2091 zâhâb — a distinctive shared word, not a common motif
Exodus 30:6 plants the altar "before the mercy seat... where I will meet with you," reaching back to the ark instructions of 25:22, "there I will meet with you... from above the mercy seat." The Verifier confirms the tie on rare shared lexemes kappōreth ("mercy seat," 22 vv) and yā‘aḏ ("to meet by appointment," 29 vv), with ‘êḏûṯ and ’ārôn. The same covenant-rendezvous formula is reused, fixing the place of prayer at the appointed place of meeting.
Exodus 30:6 · Exodus 25:22 · Exodus 29:42
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexemes H3727 kappôreth (22 vv) + H3259 yâʻad (29 vv), with H5715 ʻêdûwth, H727 ʼârôwn — the 'I will meet with you' formula repeated from 25:22
The prohibition of "strange incense" (זָרָה ... קְטֹרֶת) in 30:9 anticipates the disaster of Leviticus 10:1, where Nadab and Abihu "offered strange fire before the LORD, which He had not commanded." The Verifier records the link on shared lexemes qᵉṭôreth ("incense," 58 vv) and zûr ("to be strange/alien," 76 vv); Cambridge expressly cross-references "'strange fire,' Leviticus 10:1." No quotation is claimed — this is a shared legal-cultic motif (unauthorized worship), so it is tiered structural/thematic.
Exodus 30:9 · Leviticus 10:1
basis: Verifier: shared lexemes H7004 qᵉṭôreth (58 vv) + H2114 zûwr (76 vv) — shared 'strange/unauthorized worship' motif, no quotation claimed
Exodus 30:10's annual rite — "Aaron shall make atonement on the horns of the altar... with the blood of the sin offering" — is enacted in the Day-of-Atonement ritual of Leviticus 16:18 and parallels the sin-offering blood applied to the same horns in Leviticus 4:7. The Verifier records the basis on shared lexemes qeren ("horn," 69 vv), kāphar ("atone," 94 vv), and dām ("blood," 295 vv). Cambridge notes 30:10 "presupposes Leviticus 16" and "supplies the deficiency" left there. A shared ritual structure, not a quotation — tiered structural/thematic.
Exodus 30:10 · Leviticus 16:18 · Leviticus 4:7
basis: Verifier: shared lexemes H7161 qeren (69 vv), H3722 kâphar (94 vv), H1818 dâm (295 vv) — common atonement-ritual vocabulary, shared rite not verbal quotation
The settled biblical equation of incense with prayer, which every commentator here invokes, has its anchor in Psalm 141:2: "Let my prayer be set before You as incense, the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice." The Verifier confirms a genuine shared Hebrew lexeme, qᵉṭôreth ("incense," 58 vv), with ‘ereb ("evening") and pānîm ("before/face") — the psalm consciously borrows the tabernacle's evening incense. Both are Hebrew, so the verbal lexeme is real; but the psalm interprets rather than quotes the law, so the link is tiered structural/thematic.
Exodus 30:8 · Psalm 141:2
basis: Verifier: shared lexeme H7004 qᵉṭôreth (58 vv), with H6153 ʻereb + H6440 pânîym — the psalm appropriates the incense rite as a figure of prayer; interpretive, not a quotation
The twin daily duties commanded here — burning "fragrant incense" (סַמִּים) morning and evening (vv. 7–8) and tending the lamps — are named together centuries later in Abijah's boast over the faithful priesthood: "every morning and every evening they burn to the LORD burnt offerings and fragrant incense... and the gold lampstand with its lamps to burn every evening" (2 Chronicles 13:11). The Verifier records a strong verbal basis: the rare çam ("spice," only 15 vv) together with nîyr ("lamp"), qāṭar ("to burn incense"), and ‘ereb ("evening"). The Chronicler is not quoting a source but describing temple practice in the very vocabulary of the tabernacle law — the rite survived the move from tent to temple intact.
Exodus 30:7 · Exodus 30:8 · 2 Chronicles 13:11
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H5561 çam (spice, only 15 vv) with H5216 nîyr (lamp), H6999 qâṭar (burn incense), H6153 ʻereb (evening) — the tabernacle's morning/evening incense-and-lamp pairing reused in the temple-era description
The altar of incense stands "before the veil" (הַפָּרֹכֶת, v. 6); once a year, on the Day of Atonement, the high priest carries incense through that veil: "he shall take... his hands full of sweet incense beaten small, and bring it within the veil" (Leviticus 16:12). The Verifier records the link on the rare shared lexeme pōreketh ("veil," only 23 vv), with qᵉṭôreth and mizbêaḥ in the surrounding context. No quotation is claimed — the same incense and the same dividing curtain bind two rites, the daily ascent outside the veil and the yearly entrance behind it; the connection is a shared cultic structure, so it is tiered structural/thematic.
Exodus 30:6 · Exodus 30:7 · Leviticus 16:12
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H6532 pôreketh (veil, 23 vv) for 30:6↔16:12; with H7004 qᵉṭôreth + H4196 mizbêaḥ in context — same incense and same veil, daily rite outside / yearly rite behind; shared structure, not a quotation
Exodus 30:6 sets the incense altar in the holy place yet "before the mercy seat," so close to the inner sanctuary that Keil & Delitzsch note Hebrews 9:4 "reckon[s]" the golden altar "as part of the furniture of the most holy place." Hebrews lists "the golden altar of incense" (thymiatērion) with the ark behind the second veil — a placement debated since antiquity (the altar physically stood outside the veil), which the writer evidently draws from its functional nearness to the kappōreth, exactly the relation 30:6 establishes. ⚙ Because Hebrews is Greek and Exodus Hebrew, the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme; the tie is structural-typological and the Hebrews placement is itself contested, so it is flagged for the reader to weigh, not asserted as verbal.
Exodus 30:6 · Hebrews 9:4
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme. Hebrews 9:4's reckoning of the golden altar with the Most Holy Place is a contested placement (the altar stood outside the veil); the link is functional/structural and must be argued, and the provenance flagged
Christian readers from JFB to Keil & Delitzsch hear this golden altar again in Revelation 8:3–4, where an angel at "the golden altar" offers "much incense... with the prayers of all the saints," and the smoke ascends "before God." Because the New Testament is Greek and Exodus is Hebrew, no shared Strong's number can be claimed — the Verifier returns "no shared original-language lexeme." The connection is figural and is argued, not asserted: the heavenly altar takes up the earthly one as image. ⚙ A real and ancient reading, but cross-Testament and so flagged for the careful reader to weigh.
Exodus 30:1 · Exodus 30:8 · Revelation 8:3
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme; the golden-altar / rising-incense link is thematic-typological and must be argued, not asserted as verbal
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The oldest and broadest Christian reading takes the incense altar as a figure of Christ's intercession. Matthew Henry: "The altar of incense represented the Son of God in his human nature, and the incense burned thereon typified his pleading for his people." Benson draws the two altars together: "the brazen altar in the court was a type of Christ dying on earth; the golden altar in the sanctuary was a type of Christ interceding in heaven." JFB: the officiating priest "typified the intercessory office of Christ (Lu 1:10; Heb 7:25)." ⚙ The New Testament's own warrant is Hebrews 7:25 — he "ever lives to make intercession" — read figurally back onto the daily rising smoke.
Exodus 30:1 · Exodus 30:7 · Exodus 30:10 · Hebrews 7:25 · Romans 8:34
That the prayer-altar stands inside while the sacrifice-altar stands outside, and that the incense-altar itself is cleansed once a year by atoning blood (30:10), preaches the gospel order to these readers. Henry: the intercession of Christ "has all its virtue from his sufferings on earth, and... we need no other sacrifice or intercessor but Christ alone." Poole: "the prayers of the saints are acceptable to God no otherwise but through the blood of Christ." ⚙ The same logic stands in Hebrews 9–10 and 1 John 2:1–2, where the Advocate's intercession rests on his propitiation; the Hebrew root kipper (here "atonement") is the very stem the NT renders "propitiation."
Exodus 30:9 · Exodus 30:10 · Hebrews 9:24 · 1 John 2:1
Gill reads the materials christologically: the acacia ("though it sprung out of the earth, was not common, but choice and excellent, and very strong durable, and incorruptible") figures Christ's true humanity, and the pure-gold casing "the deity of Christ, whose head is as the most fine gold," or "the glorification of his human nature in heaven." ⚙ This is the older typological reading of incorruptible-wood-cased-in-gold, applied across the ark and altars alike; it is a figural inference the fathers and the Reformed expositors share, not a claim the text makes of itself, and the wood/gold-as-two-natures schema is the more developed (and so more cautiously held) end of it.
Exodus 30:1 · Exodus 30:3 · Exodus 30:5
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:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (public domain). The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries on Biblehub (Ellicott, Maclaren, Benson, Henry, Barnes, Jamieson–Fausset–Brown, Poole, Gill, Geneva, Cambridge, the Pulpit Commentary, Keil & Delitzsch); each excerpt is a contiguous substring of the sourced text, trimmed only at its ends and never altered. One typo is preserved as-found: Barnes' "ontside" on 30:9 is the Biblehub source's spelling of "outside."
The literal renderings, the "where the English smooths the Hebrew" divergences, the per-word notes, the grand commentary's ⚙ synthesis, and the sola reading are this tool's own work (⚙) — careful, but fallible; test them against a lexicon (BDB, HALOT) and a standard grammar. The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition as carried in the Berean interlinear data; parsings and Strong's numbers are sourced, not invented, and the synthesis does not contradict them.
On the threads: every badge cites the Verifier's computed basis. Hebrew↔Hebrew verbal links rest on shared rare lexemes (e.g. zêr, 10 vv; çam, 15 vv; pōreketh, 23 vv; shiṭṭâh, 28 vv; kappôreth, 22 vv; yā‘aḏ, 29 vv); thematic/structural links rest on shared rite or motif. Two links are cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew), where no shared Strong's number is possible: Revelation 8:3 (the golden altar and rising incense in the Apocalypse) and Hebrews 9:4 (which reckons the golden altar with the Most Holy Place, a placement contested since antiquity because the altar stood outside the veil). Both are tiered typological/structural and flagged — offered for the reader to weigh, not asserted as verbal quotations. The christological readings are likewise figural; they are labeled by attestation and should be received as the church's interpretation, distinct from the plain sense of the Hebrew.
✦ = 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)