The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible

Exodus31:1–11

Bezalel and Oholiab

Generated by AI. It can be wrong, and it has no authority. Every note here is fallible commentary — never the Word itself. Public-domain sources are quoted and named; machine synthesis is marked and meant to be checked. Weigh all of it against Scripture. “They received the word with all readiness… and searched the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” — Acts 17:11
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Exodus 31:1–11 — Bezalel and Oholiab. 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“Then the LORD said to Moses,”+

1Then the LORD said to Moses,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And-spoke YHWH to Moses, saying:

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַיְדַבֵּ֥ר BSB's flat "said" understates way·ḏab·bêr (H1696, Piel) — the intensive stem of dâbar, formal, deliberate speech-act; this is a divine pronouncement, not casual remark.
  • יְהוָ֖ה The Hebrew fronts the subject — literally "YHWH spoke" — putting the covenant Name first; "the LORD" is the conventional reverential substitution for the unspoken Tetragrammaton.
  • לֵּאמֹֽר׃ lê·mōr (H559, "to say") is an untranslatable quotation-marker left as ". . ." — Hebrew's way of opening direct speech; English supplies a comma where Hebrew supplies a verb.
Word by word5 · parsed+
יְהוָ֖הYah·wehThen the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
YHWH (H3068), the Tetragrammaton — the personal, covenant name revealed at the bush (Exodus 3:14–15). Its placement first in the clause signals that the entire appointment of craftsmen issues from the covenant God, not from Moses.
וַיְדַבֵּ֥רway·ḏab·bêrsaidH1696
√ dâbar — perhaps properly, to arrangeConjunctive wawVerbPielConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
way·ḏab·bêr — waw-consecutive Piel of dâbar, the standard formula opening a divine address. The Piel adds weight: ordered, authoritative speech.
אֶל־’el-toH413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongPreposition
מֹשֶׁ֥הmō·šehMosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
mō·šeh (H4872), Moses — the mediator who receives the words but, as the voices note, is himself no artisan; the speech that follows hands the manual work to others.
לֵּאמֹֽר׃lê·mōr. . .H559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Preposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
lê·mōr — Qal infinitive construct of ’âmar, "saying," a formulaic colon introducing the quoted oracle of vv. 2–11.
The Voices✦ public domain+
But Moses was not himself an artist. Among the branches of knowledge comprised in his Egyptian education the skill of the artistic constructor had not been included.
After having given directions for the construction of the sanctuary, and all the things required for the worship, Jehovah pointed out the builders, whom He had called to carry out the work, and had filled with His Spirit for that purpose.
he acquaints him that he had provided artificers for this service; which would prevent doubts and objections that might rise up in the mind of Moses, how and by whom all this should be done
the Spirit who gave the apostles utterance in divers tongues, miraculously gave Bezaleel and Aholiab the skill that was wanting. The honour which comes from God, is always attended with a work to be done; to be employed for God is high honour. Those whom God calls to any service, he will find or make fit for it.
Henry's note runs over the whole unit (31:1–11); his Pentecost analogy frames the entire passage.
2““See, I have called by name Bezalel son of Uri, the son of Hur, …”+

2“See, I have called by name Bezalel son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

rə·’êh qā·rā·ṯî ḇə·šêm bə·ṣal·’êl ben- ’ū·rî ḇen- ḥūr lə·maṭ·ṭêh yə·hū·ḏāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

See, I-have-called by name Bezalel son-of-Uri, son-of-Hur, of-the-tribe of-Judah.

Where the English smooths the original

  • רְאֵ֖ה rə·’êh (H7200, imperative of râʼâh, "to see") is a vivid "Look!" — BSB keeps "See," but it is a summons to attend, the same verb used of perception, not merely a discourse-particle.
  • קָרָ֣אתִֽי בְשֵׁ֑ם "I have called by name" renders the idiom qārā’ṯî ḇə·šêm — to summon a specific person to a specific office; English "called by name" can sound like mere naming, but the Hebrew is sovereign, personal appointment.
  • בְּצַלְאֵ֛ל The proper name Bᵉtsalʼêl (H1212) is left untranslated; the voices recover its meaning — "in the shadow / protection of God" — which the English surface entirely hides.
Word by word10 · parsed+
רְאֵ֖הrə·’êhSeeH7200
√ râʼâh — to see, literally or figuratively (in numerous applications, direct and implied, transitive, intransitive and causative)VerbQalImperativemasculine singular
rə·’êh — Qal imperative, "see, behold." An attention-fixing call before the naming.
קָרָ֣אתִֽיqā·rā·ṯîI have calledH7121
√ qârâʼ — to call out to (iVerbQalPerfectfirst person common singular
qā·rā·ṯî (H7121, qârâ’, perfect) — "I have called." The perfect tense presents the appointment as already accomplished in God's purpose before Moses hears of it.
בְשֵׁ֑םḇə·šêmby nameH8034
√ shêm — an appellation, as amark or memorial of individualityPreposition-bNounmasculine singular
ḇə·šêm (H8034, shêm, "name") — to call "by name" is the formula of election to a great task, used of Moses, Cyrus (Isaiah 45:3–4), and here Bezalel; it marks the man as personally and singularly chosen.
בְּצַלְאֵ֛לbə·ṣal·’êlBezalelH1212
√ Bᵉtsalʼêl — Betsalel, the name of two IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
Bᵉtsalʼêl — "in the shadow of God" (bᵉtsal-’êl). The first artisan named in Scripture as Spirit-filled bears a name confessing he works under God's overshadowing protection.
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
אוּרִ֥י’ū·rîof UriH221
√ ʼÛwrîy — Uri, the name of three IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
בֶן־ḇen-the sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
ח֖וּרḥūrof HurH2354
√ Chûwr — Chur, the name of four Israelites and one MidianiteNounpropermasculine singular
ḥūr (H2354), Hur — by tradition the same Hur who held up Moses' hands at Rephidim (Exodus 17:12) and shared the regency with Aaron (Exodus 24:14); Josephus even makes him Miriam's husband, which would make Bezalel kin to Moses. But the link rests only on the shared name — Ellicott admits there is "no evidence of this beyond the identity of the name," and Cambridge denies any "sufficient grounds" for the identification. Presented as tradition, not fact.
לְמַטֵּ֥הlə·maṭ·ṭêhof the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Preposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
יְהוּדָֽה׃yə·hū·ḏāhof JudahH3063
√ Yᵉhûwdâh — Jehudah (or Judah), the name of five IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
yə·hū·ḏāh (H3063), Judah — the royal, Messianic tribe (Genesis 49:10). That the chief builder of God's dwelling comes from the line that will produce the King is not lost on the older expositors; the lineage Hur → Uri → Bezalel reappears in the Caleb clan of Judah (1 Chronicles 2:19–20), though Cambridge cautions that even in David's day the Caleb-clan's incorporation into Judah was not yet complete.
The Voices✦ public domain+
by name Bezaleel—signifying "in the shadow or protection of God"; and, as called to discharge a duty of great magnitude—to execute a confidential trust in the ancient Church of God, he has his family and lineage recorded with marked distinction.
God "calls by name" only those whom he appoints to some high office, as Moses ( Exodus 3:4 ; Exodus 33:12 ), Cyrus ( Isaiah 45:3, 4 ), and here Bezaleel and Aholiab. He honours us highly in even condescending to "know us by name," still more in "calling" us.
There are no sufficient grounds for identifying the Ḥur here with the Ḥur of Exodus 17:10 , Exodus 24:14 .
Cambridge dissents from the common identification of Hur; the harmonizing tradition (JFB, Pulpit, Barnes) is widely held but disputed.
He seems to be the same mentioned 1 Chronicles 2:20
Poole on Hur, terse — the same identification the Chronicler's genealogy (thread below) makes by name.
3“And I have filled him with the Spirit of God, with skill, abilit…”+

3And I have filled him with the Spirit of God, with skill, ability, and knowledge in all kinds of craftsmanship,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wā·’ă·mal·lê ’ō·ṯōw rū·aḥ ’ĕ·lō·hîm bə·ḥā·ḵə·māh ū·ḇiṯ·ḇū·nāh ū·ḇə·ḏa·‘aṯ ū·ḇə·ḵāl mə·lā·ḵāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And-I-have-filled him with-the-Spirit of-God, with-wisdom and-with-understanding and-with-knowledge, and-in-all-kinds of-craftsmanship;

Where the English smooths the original

  • וָאֲמַלֵּ֥א "I have filled" renders wā·’ă·mal·lê (H4390, Piel of mâlê’) — the same root used in v. 5 for "setting" stones; God fills the man as a craftsman fills a setting. The intensive Piel makes it a deliberate, complete in-filling, not a sprinkling of talent.
  • ר֣וּחַ אֱלֹהִ֑ים "the Spirit of God" is rū·aḥ ’ĕlōhîm — articleless in Hebrew, the very phrase of Genesis 1:2; the Pulpit notes it needs no article since God has but one Spirit. The first man Scripture says is "filled with the Spirit" is filled for art and craft.
  • בְּחָכְמָ֛ה "with skill" flattens ḥā·ḵə·māh (H2451, chokmâh, "wisdom") — the same word for the wisdom of Proverbs and Solomon; here that wisdom is hands-on artistry. BSB's "skill" loses the theological weight the Hebrew carries.
Word by word9 · parsed+
וָאֲמַלֵּ֥אwā·’ă·mal·lêAnd I have filledH4390
√ mâlêʼ — to fill or (intransitively) be full of, in a wide application (literally and figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbPielConsecutive imperfectfirst person common singular
wā·’ă·mal·lê — "and I filled." The Piel of mâlê’ denotes a full, intentional filling; the agent is God, the verb first-person — divine empowerment, not native genius alone.
אֹת֖וֹ’ō·ṯōwhimH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object markerthird person masculine singular
ר֣וּחַrū·aḥwith the SpiritH7307
√ rûwach — windNouncommon singular construct
rū·aḥ (H7307) — "breath, wind, spirit." Construct with the next word: "Spirit of God." This is the same divine rûaḥ that empowers prophets and judges, here turned to the workbench.
אֱלֹהִ֑ים’ĕ·lō·hîmof GodH430
√ ʼĕlôhîym — gods in the ordinary senseNounmasculine plural
’ĕ·lō·hîm (H430) — the generic-plural divine name; with rûaḥ it names the indwelling power that qualifies Bezalel beyond what Egypt could teach.
בְּחָכְמָ֛הbə·ḥā·ḵə·māhwith skillH2451
√ chokmâh — wisdom (in a good sense)Preposition-bNounfeminine singular
ḥā·ḵə·māh (H2451), wisdom — the same noun that heads Proverbs and crowns Solomon (1 Kings 4:29), here bent to the workbench; it leads a triad (wisdom / understanding / knowledge). Ellicott and Pulpit alike read it as "the power to invent and originate" artistic form. The Geneva annotator draws the rule the triad implies: handicrafts are gifts of God's Spirit and therefore are to be esteemed.
וּבִתְבוּנָ֥הū·ḇiṯ·ḇū·nāhabilityH8394
√ tâbûwn — intelligenceConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounfeminine singular
ū·ḇiṯ·ḇū·nāh (H8394, tâbûwn, "understanding") — the discerning faculty; Pulpit defines it precisely as "ability to receive and appreciate directions and suggestions," the power to grasp and apply a design conceived. The middle term of the triad.
וּבְדַ֖עַתū·ḇə·ḏa·‘aṯand knowledgeH1847
√ daʻath — knowledgeConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounfeminine singular
ū·ḇə·ḏa·‘aṯ (H1847, da‘ath, "knowledge") — practical, experiential know-how: Pulpit, "such information as is acquired by experience and acquaintance with facts." The third term completes wisdom's range from conception (wisdom) through discernment (understanding) to execution (knowledge).
וּבְכָל־ū·ḇə·ḵālin all kindsH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounmasculine singular construct
מְלָאכָֽה׃mə·lā·ḵāhof craftsmanshipH4399
√ mᵉlâʼkâh — properly, deputyship, iNounfeminine singular
mə·lā·ḵāh (H4399) — "work, craftsmanship," properly "deputyship"; the labor done on another's behalf. Fitting: these craftsmen execute, by commission, what God designed.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Artistic ability is a Divine gift, a very precious gift, best employed in God’s direct service, and always to be employed in subordination to His will, as an improving, elevating, and refining—not as a corrupting—influence.
Skill in common employments is the gift of God; it is he that puts even this wisdom into the inward parts, Job 38:36 . He teacheth the husbandman discretion, Isaiah 28:26 ; and the tradesman too, and he must have the praise of it.
This shows that handicrafts are the gifts of God's spirit, and therefore ought to be esteemed.
There is no article in the Hebrew, any more than in Genesis 1:1 ; and some would therefore translate "a Divine Spirit"; but no change is needed. Ruakh elohim contains in itself the idea of singularity, since God has but one Spirit.
Filling with the Spirit of God signifies the communication of an extraordinary and supernatural endowment and qualification, "in wisdom," etc., i.e., consisting of wisdom, understanding, knowledge, and every kind of workmanship, that is to say, for the performance of every kind of work. This did not preclude either natural capacity or acquired skill, but rather presupposed them
The hinge of the unit: the Spirit's filling does not erase Bezalel's Egyptian training and native gift — it commandeers them.
4“to design artistic works in gold, silver, and bronze,”+

4to design artistic works in gold, silver, and bronze,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

laḥ·šōḇ ma·ḥă·šā·ḇōṯ la·‘ă·śō·wṯ baz·zā·hāḇ ū·ḇak·ke·sep̄ ū·ḇan·nə·ḥō·šeṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

to-devise designs, to-make in-the-gold and-in-the-silver and-in-the-bronze;

Where the English smooths the original

  • לַחְשֹׁ֖ב מַחֲשָׁבֹ֑ת BSB's "to design artistic works" compresses the cognate figure laḥ·šōḇ ma·ḥă·šā·ḇōṯ — literally "to think thoughts / devise devices." The root châshab (H2803) means properly "to plait, interpenetrate," then "to plan"; the same word for human and divine scheming. Bezalel's art is conceptual invention, not mere copying.
  • מַחֲשָׁבֹ֑ת ma·ḥă·šā·ḇōṯ (H4284) is the noun "designs, contrivances, plans" — elsewhere God's "thoughts" toward His people (Jeremiah 29:11). "Artistic" is an adjectival gloss that loses the noun's force as deliberate, original conception.
  • בַּזָּהָ֥ב "in gold" — but the Hebrew has the article, baz·zā·hāḇ, "in the gold," pointing to the specific precious metals already designated for the sanctuary (Exodus 25), not metal in the abstract.
Word by word6 · parsed+
לַחְשֹׁ֖בlaḥ·šōḇto designH2803
√ châshab — properly, to plait or interpenetrate, iPreposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
laḥ·šōḇ (H2803, châshab) — Qal infinitive, "to devise, plan, reckon." The root's base sense is to interweave or plait; planning is weaving thought. Cognate with the noun that follows.
מַחֲשָׁבֹ֑תma·ḥă·šā·ḇōṯartisticH4284
√ machăshâbâh — a contrivance, iNounfeminine plural
ma·ḥă·šā·ḇōṯ (H4284) — "designs, inventions." Barnes corrects the older "cunning works" to "works of skill"; Cambridge compares the mechanical "devices" of 2 Chronicles 26:15. The phrase asserts genuine creative invention within the God-given pattern.
לַעֲשׂ֛וֹתla·‘ă·śō·wṯworksH6213
√ ʻâsâh — to do or make, in the broadest sense and widest applicationPreposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
la·‘ă·śō·wṯ (H6213, ‘âsâh, "to make, do") — the great verb of fabrication; design (châshab) issues in execution (‘âsâh).
בַּזָּהָ֥בbaz·zā·hāḇin goldH2091
√ zâhâb — gold, figuratively, something gold-colored (iPreposition-b, ArticleNounmasculine singular
baz·zā·hāḇ (H2091), "in the gold" — the most precious of the three metals, used for the ark, mercy seat, lampstand, and table.
וּבַכֶּ֖סֶףū·ḇak·ke·sep̄silverH3701
√ keçeph — silver (from its pale color)Conjunctive waw, Preposition-b, ArticleNounmasculine singular
וּבַנְּחֹֽשֶׁת׃ū·ḇan·nə·ḥō·šeṯand bronzeH5178
√ nᵉchôsheth — copper, hence, something made of that metal, iConjunctive waw, Preposition-b, ArticleNounfeminine singular
ū·ḇan·nə·ḥō·šeṯ (H5178), bronze/copper — the metal of the altar and laver, the outer court; the metals descend in value from gold (Most Holy) outward, mirroring graded holiness.
The Voices✦ public domain+
To devise cunning works - Rather, to devise works of skill. The Hebrew phrase is not the same as that rendered "cunning work" in respect to textile fabrics in Exodus 26:1 .
It is a characteristic of early art that it eschews specialism, and it is as nearly universal as possible. Theodore of Samos (ab. B.C. 600-560) was an architect, a worker in bronze, and an engraver of hard stones. Michael Angelo was an architect, painter, and sculptor.
here of skill in contriving and executing works of art, as in 2 Chronicles 26:15 mechanical contrivances
5“to cut gemstones for settings, and to carve wood, so that he may…”+

5to cut gemstones for settings, and to carve wood, so that he may be a master of every craft.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ḇa·ḥă·rō·šeṯ ’e·ḇen lə·mal·lōṯ ū·ḇa·ḥă·rō·šeṯ ‘êṣ la·‘ă·śō·wṯ bə·ḵāl mə·lā·ḵāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and-in-cutting of-stone for-setting, and-in-cutting of-wood, to-make in-all-kinds of-craft.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּבַחֲרֹ֥שֶׁת "to cut" renders ba·ḥă·rō·šeṯ (H2799, chărôsheth, "mechanical work, engraving") — the same word used twice, for stone and for wood. BSB varies it as "cut" / "carve," but Pulpit and Benson note the Hebrew is identical and the wood was plain, not carved: it should read "cutting" both times.
  • לְמַלֹּ֖את "for settings" is lə·mal·lōṯ (H4390, mâlê’) — literally "to fill," the very verb of v. 3 ("I have filled him"). The gem is "filled" into its mounting as the artisan is "filled" with the Spirit; the English "settings" severs that wordplay.
  • מְלָאכָֽה׃ "craft" (mə·lā·ḵāh, H4399) repeats the term from v. 3, forming an inclusio around the gifts: the unit opens and closes the description of Bezalel's endowment with "every kind of work."
Word by word8 · parsed+
וּבַחֲרֹ֥שֶׁתū·ḇa·ḥă·rō·šeṯto cutH2799
√ chărôsheth — mechanical workConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounfeminine singular construct
ba·ḥă·rō·šeṯ (H2799) — "engraving, cutting, mechanical craft." Of stone here = gem-engraving, needed to cut the tribal names into the onyx and the twelve breastplate stones (Exodus 28:9–21).
אֶ֛בֶן’e·ḇengemstonesH68
√ ʼeben — a stoneNounfeminine singular
’e·ḇen (H68), stone — the precious gemstones of the high-priestly vestments, not building stone; the tabernacle had none.
לְמַלֹּ֖אתlə·mal·lōṯfor settingsH4390
√ mâlêʼ — to fill or (intransitively) be full of, in a wide application (literally and figuratively)Preposition-lVerbPielInfinitive construct
lə·mal·lōṯ (H4390, mâlê’ Piel) — "to fill," i.e., to set a stone in its bezel. The echo of v. 3's "I have filled him" is exact in the consonants and theologically pointed: the filled man fills the settings.
וּבַחֲרֹ֣שֶׁתū·ḇa·ḥă·rō·šeṯand to carveH2799
√ chărôsheth — mechanical workConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounfeminine singular construct
עֵ֑ץ‘êṣwoodH6086
√ ʻêts — a tree (from its firmness)Nounmasculine singular
לַעֲשׂ֖וֹתla·‘ă·śō·wṯso that he may be a masterH6213
√ ʻâsâh — to do or make, in the broadest sense and widest applicationPreposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
la·‘ă·śō·wṯ (H6213) — "to make"; BSB expands to "so that he may be a master," interpreting the infinitive's summarizing force over the whole list.
בְּכָל־bə·ḵālof everyH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholePreposition-bNounmasculine singular construct
מְלָאכָֽה׃mə·lā·ḵāhcraftH4399
√ mᵉlâʼkâh — properly, deputyship, iNounfeminine singular
mə·lā·ḵāh (H4399), "work, craft" — closes the catalogue of skills opened in v. 3, the bracket around Bezalel's Spirit-given competence.
The Voices✦ public domain+
In carving of timber — Rather in cutting of timber, as the same word is rendered in the beginning of the verse; for we do not read of any carved work about the tabernacle.
Bezaleel was taught by the Spirit of God the art of jewelling, and instructed others in it
In carving of timber . Rather "cutting." The word is the same as that used of the stones. And no ornamental "carving" of the woodwork was prescribed.
6“Moreover, I have selected Oholiab son of Ahisamach, of the tribe…”+

6Moreover, I have selected Oholiab son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan, as his assistant. I have also given skill to all the craftsmen, that they may fashion all that I have commanded you:

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wa·’ă·nî hin·nêh nā·ṯat·tî ’ā·ho·lî·’āḇ ben- ’ă·ḥî·sā·māḵ lə·maṭ·ṭêh- ḏān ’it·tōw ’êṯ nā·ṯat·tî ḥāḵ·māh kāl- ḥă·ḵam- lêḇ ū·ḇə·lêḇ wə·‘ā·śū ’êṯ kāl- ’ă·šer ṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵā

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And-I, behold, I-have-given with-him Oholiab son-of-Ahisamach, of-the-tribe of-Dan; and-in-the-heart of-every wise-of-heart I-have-put wisdom, that-they-may-make all that I-have-commanded-you:

Where the English smooths the original

  • הִנֵּ֧ה "Moreover" smooths over the emphatic hin·nêh (H2009, "Behold! Lo!") doubled with wa·’ă·nî ("And I!"). The Hebrew is emphatic divine self-assertion — "And I, behold, I myself..." — stressing that the appointment is God's own act.
  • נָתַ֣תִּי "I have selected" interprets nā·ṯat·tî (H5414, nâthan, "to give"); the verb literally means "I have given," used again in the same verse for putting wisdom "in the heart." God gives the helper and gives the skill — one verb, one Giver.
  • חֲכַם־לֵ֖ב "the craftsmen" renders ḥă·ḵam-lêḇ — literally "wise of heart." In Hebrew the lêḇ (heart) is the seat of skill and will, not emotion; the artisan's craft is a wisdom of the heart, and BSB's "craftsmen" loses that interior, God-shaped faculty.
Word by word21 · parsed+
וַאֲנִ֞יwa·’ă·nîMoreover, IH589
√ ʼănîy — IConjunctive wawPronounfirst person common singular
wa·’ă·nî (H589) — the independent pronoun "and I," emphatic; God personally underwrites the partnership.
הִנֵּ֧הhin·nêh. . .H2009
√ hinnêh — lo!Interjection
hin·nêh (H2009) — "behold!" the interjection of arresting attention; left as ". . ." in the gloss because English has no equivalent particle.
נָתַ֣תִּיnā·ṯat·tîhave selectedH5414
√ nâthan — to give, used with greatest latitude of application (put, make, etcVerbQalPerfectfirst person common singular
nā·ṯat·tî (H5414, nâthan) — "I have given." The same perfect recurs at i:10 for putting wisdom in hearts; giver and gift alike are God's.
אָהֳלִיאָ֞ב’ā·ho·lî·’āḇOholiabH171
√ ʼOhŏlîyʼâb — Oholiab, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
’ā·ho·lî·’āḇ (H171), Oholiab — "the Father (God) is my tent." A fitting name for the man charged with the textile work of the tent of meeting. Gill reads him, with Bezalel, as a type of the true tabernacle.
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
אֲחִֽיסָמָךְ֙’ă·ḥî·sā·māḵof AhisamachH294
√ ʼĂchîyçâmâk — Achisamak, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
לְמַטֵּה־lə·maṭ·ṭêh-of the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Preposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
דָ֔ןḏānof DanH1835
√ Dân — Dan, one of the sons of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
ḏān (H1835), Dan — among the least distinguished tribes (JFB calls it "inferior"); that God draws the co-laborer from a lowly tribe shows the body needs every member (cf. 1 Corinthians 12:14–25, the cross-reference in JFB's own note). The choice is doubly pointed: the Danites were, as Pulpit observes, "in general rather warlike and rude than artistic" (Genesis 49:17), yet Dan, Ellicott notes, "produced two great artists" — Oholiab here and the temple's Hiram (2 Chronicles 2:14), so that both tents of God, wilderness and Jerusalem, owe their fabric to this unlikely tribe.
אִתּ֗וֹ’it·tōwas his assistantH854
√ ʼêth — properly, nearness (used only as a preposition or an adverb), nearPrepositionthird person masculine singular
אֵ֣ת’êṯH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
נָתַ֣תִּיnā·ṯat·tîI have also givenH5414
√ nâthan — to give, used with greatest latitude of application (put, make, etcVerbQalPerfectfirst person common singular
חָכְמָ֑הḥāḵ·māhskillH2451
√ chokmâh — wisdom (in a good sense)Nounfeminine singular
ḥāḵ·māh (H2451), wisdom — the same gift given to Bezalel (v. 3) now multiplied to all the helpers.
כָּל־kāl-to allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
חֲכַם־ḥă·ḵam-the craftsmenH2450
√ châkâm — wise, (iAdjectivemasculine singular construct
ḥă·ḵam-lêḇ (H2450 + H3820) — "wise of heart." The construct binds skill to the heart; Pulpit's gloss is apt: "unto him that hath shall be given" — God gives further wisdom to those already wise-hearted.
לֵ֖בlêḇ. . .H3820
√ lêb — the heartNounmasculine singular
וּבְלֵ֥בū·ḇə·lêḇ. . .H3820
√ lêb — the heartConjunctive waw, Preposition-bNounmasculine singular construct
וְעָשׂ֕וּwə·‘ā·śūthat they may fashionH6213
√ ʻâsâh — to do or make, in the broadest sense and widest applicationConjunctive wawVerbQalConjunctive perfectthird person common plural
אֵ֖ת’êṯH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
כָּל־kāl-allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
אֲשֶׁ֥ר’ă·šerthatH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
צִוִּיתִֽךָ׃ṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵāI have commanded youH6680
√ tsâvâh — (intensively) to constitute, enjoinVerbPielPerfectfirst person common singularsecond person masculine singular
ṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵā (H6680, tsâvâh Piel) — "I have commanded you." The craftsmen's freedom operates strictly within what God commanded Moses; invention serves obedience.
The Voices✦ public domain+
He belonged to the tribe of Dan, one of the least influential and honorable in Israel; and here, too, we can trace the evidence of wise and paternal design, in choosing the colleague or assistant of Bezaleel from an inferior tribe (compare 1Co 12:14-25; also Mr 6:7).
Aholiab, whose name signifies "the Father's tent" or "tabernacle"; he being concerned in the oversight of the tabernacle of God and the building of it
those who are already wise-hearted , i.e. (cf. on Exodus 28:3 ) possess artistic aptitudes, are to be further endowed by God with wisdom , i.e. with the requisite skill to assist Bĕẓal’çl and Oholiab in their work.
Those who were already "wise hearted - possessed, that is, of artistic power - were selected by God to receive extraordinary gifts of the same kind.
The Lord gives different gifts to different persons; let each mind his proper work, diligently remembering that whatever wisdom any one possesses, the Lord put it in the heart, to do his commandments.
7“the Tent of Meeting, the ark of the Testimony and the mercy seat…”+

7the Tent of Meeting, the ark of the Testimony and the mercy seat upon it, and all the other furnishings of the tent—

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

’êṯ ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ wə·’eṯ- hā·’ā·rōn lā·‘ê·ḏuṯ wə·’eṯ- hak·kap·pō·reṯ ’ă·šer ‘ā·lāw wə·’êṯ kāl- kə·lê hā·’ō·hel

Literal — word-for-word from the original

the Tent of-Meeting, and the ark for-the-Testimony, and the mercy-seat which is-upon-it, and all the vessels of-the-tent;

Where the English smooths the original

  • אֹ֣הֶל מוֹעֵ֗ד "the Tent of Meeting" renders ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ — literally "tent of appointed meeting / appointment." mō‘êḏ (H4150) is properly a fixed appointment in time or place; the tent is where God keeps His appointment with Israel, not merely a "meeting" in the casual sense.
  • הַכַּפֹּ֖רֶת "the mercy seat" translates hak·kap·pō·reṯ (H3727) — the gold lid of the ark, from the root meaning "to cover / atone" (kâphar). "Mercy seat" is interpretive (following Tyndale/Luther); the Hebrew names the place of atonement-covering, the very point where blood was sprinkled.
  • כְּלֵ֥י הָאֹֽהֶל "the other furnishings of the tent" — kə·lê hā·’ō·hel, literally "vessels / implements of the tent." kᵉlîy (H3627) means anything "prepared" for use; "furnishings" is a fair but soft rendering of a word that covers every fashioned utensil.
Word by word14 · parsed+
אֵ֣ת׀’êṯH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
אֹ֣הֶל’ō·helthe TentH168
√ ʼôhel — a tent (as clearly conspicuous from a distance)Nounmasculine singular construct
’ō·hel (H168), tent — "clearly conspicuous from a distance"; the dwelling-place is named first in the building list, before its contents.
מוֹעֵ֗דmō·w·‘êḏof MeetingH4150
√ môwʻêd — properly, an appointment, iNounmasculine singular
mō·w·‘êḏ (H4150) — "appointed time/place of meeting." The tent is the locus of God's covenanted rendezvous with His people.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הָֽאָרֹן֙hā·’ā·rōnthe arkH727
√ ʼârôwn — a boxArticleNouncommon singular
hā·’ā·rōn (H727), the ark — "a box," the chest housing the Testimony; the innermost and holiest object, mentioned alone by Bezalel's own hand in Exodus 37:1.
לָֽעֵדֻ֔תlā·‘ê·ḏuṯof the TestimonyH5715
√ ʻêdûwth — testimonyPreposition-l, ArticleNounfeminine singular
lā·‘ê·ḏuṯ (H5715), the Testimony — the two tablets of the covenant law deposited in the ark; the ark exists to hold the covenant word.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-andH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַכַּפֹּ֖רֶתhak·kap·pō·reṯthe mercy seatH3727
√ kappôreth — a lid (used only of the cover of the sacred Ark)ArticleNounfeminine singular
hak·kap·pō·reṯ (H3727), the kapporeth — the atonement-cover, root kâphar, "to cover / make atonement"; the throne of the unseen God above the cherubim and the place of the Day-of-Atonement blood.
אֲשֶׁ֣ר’ă·šerH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
עָלָ֑יו‘ā·lāwupon itH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPrepositionthird person masculine singular
וְאֵ֖תwə·’êṯH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
כָּל־kāl-and allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
כְּלֵ֥יkə·lêthe other furnishingsH3627
√ kᵉlîy — something prepared, iNounmasculine plural construct
הָאֹֽהֶל׃hā·’ō·helof the tentH168
√ ʼôhel — a tent (as clearly conspicuous from a distance)ArticleNounmasculine singular
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The enumeration of the holy objects follows the order of the instructions given concerning them (Exodus 25-30), except that the tabernacle itself is placed first, and the altar of incense mentioned in its natural position
the ark, the mercy seat over that, and the cherubim overshadowing that, where was the seat of the divine Majesty; this was properly his apartment
8“the table with its utensils, the pure gold lampstand with all it…”+

8the table with its utensils, the pure gold lampstand with all its utensils, the altar of incense,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·’eṯ- haš·šul·ḥān wə·’eṯ- kê·lāw wə·’eṯ- haṭ·ṭə·hō·rāh wə·’eṯ- ham·mə·nō·rāh kāl- kê·le·hā wə·’êṯ miz·baḥ haq·qə·ṭō·reṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and the table and its-vessels, and the pure lampstand with-all its-vessels, and the altar of-incense,

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַשֻּׁלְחָן֙ "the table" (haš·šul·ḥān, H7979) is bare in BSB but is the table of the Presence-bread (Exodus 25:23–30); the surface "table" hides its liturgical identity as the bread-table set perpetually before the LORD.
  • הַטְּהֹרָ֖ה "the pure gold lampstand" attaches "pure" to the gold, but the Hebrew adjective haṭ·ṭə·hō·rāh (H2889, ṭâhôwr) is feminine, agreeing with the lampstand (also feminine), and carries ceremonial purity — Poole says it reminds the priests to keep it neat and clean; "pure" is as much ritual as material.
  • מִזְבַּ֥ח הַקְּטֹֽרֶת׃ "the altar of incense" — miz·baḥ haq·qə·ṭō·reṯ, literally "altar of the fumigation." qᵉṭôreth (H7004) is "that which goes up in smoke"; the prayers-as-incense image (Psalm 141:2; Revelation 5:8) rides on this root.
Word by word13 · parsed+
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַשֻּׁלְחָן֙haš·šul·ḥānthe tableH7979
√ shulchân — a table (as spread out)ArticleNounmasculine singular
haš·šul·ḥān (H7979), the table — "as spread out"; the table of showbread/Presence-bread that stood in the Holy Place.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
כֵּלָ֔יוkê·lāwwith its utensilsH3627
√ kᵉlîy — something prepared, iNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
kê·lāw (H3627), its utensils — the dishes, pans, and bowls of the table (Exodus 25:29).
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַטְּהֹרָ֖הhaṭ·ṭə·hō·rāhthe pureH2889
√ ṭâhôwr — pure (in a physical, chemical, ceremonial or moral sense)ArticleAdjectivefeminine singular
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַמְּנֹרָ֥הham·mə·nō·rāhgold lampstandH4501
√ mᵉnôwrâh — a chandelierArticleNounfeminine singular
ham·mə·nō·rāh (H4501), the lampstand — "a chandelier"; the seven-branched menorah of beaten pure gold, the only light in the Holy Place.
כָּל־kāl-with allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
haṭ·ṭə·hō·rāh (H2889), "the pure" — feminine, modifying the lampstand: pure both in material (all of one piece of pure gold) and in the purity the priests must maintain (Geneva, Poole).
כֵּלֶ֑יהָkê·le·hāits utensilsH3627
√ kᵉlîy — something prepared, iNounmasculine plural constructthird person feminine singular
וְאֵ֖תwə·’êṯH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
מִזְבַּ֥חmiz·baḥthe altarH4196
√ mizbêach — an altarNounmasculine singular construct
miz·baḥ (H4196), altar — construct "altar of"; the golden incense altar standing before the veil.
הַקְּטֹֽרֶת׃haq·qə·ṭō·reṯof incenseH7004
√ qᵉṭôreth — a fumigationArticleNounfeminine singular
haq·qə·ṭō·reṯ (H7004), the incense — "a fumigation," the sweet smoke offered morning and evening, a standing image of ascending prayer.
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The pure candlestick — Bright, resplendent, being of pure gold, and always kept clean and bright, Exodus 29:37 ; Leviticus 24:4 . The same original word occurs Exodus 24:10 , where the divine glory is compared to the body of heaven in its clearness or splendour.
so called by way of eminency, notonly because it was made of pure gold, and was not defiled with blood, for so some other things were, but especially to mind the priests of their duty in keeping it neat and clean
So called, because of the cunning and art used in them, or because the whole was beaten out of the piece.
9“the altar of burnt offering with all its utensils, and the basin…”+

9the altar of burnt offering with all its utensils, and the basin with its stand—

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·’eṯ- miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh wə·’eṯ- kāl- kê·lāw wə·’eṯ- hak·kî·yō·wr wə·’eṯ- kan·nōw

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and the altar of-the-burnt-offering with-all its-vessels, and the basin and its-stand;

Where the English smooths the original

  • מִזְבַּ֥ח הָעֹלָ֖ה "the altar of burnt offering" — miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh; ‘ōlāh (H5930) derives from a root meaning "to ascend" ("a step, that which goes up"). The burnt offering is the offering that wholly "goes up" in smoke to God; the English names the rite, the Hebrew names the ascent.
  • הַכִּיּ֖וֹר "the basin" renders hak·kî·yō·wr (H3595), "something round, excavated" — the bronze laver for the priests' washing (Exodus 30:18). "Basin" is accurate but generic; the Hebrew stresses its hollowed, rounded form.
  • כַּנּֽוֹ׃ "its stand" is kan·nōw (H3653), "a base, pedestal" — the laver's foot. The pairing of laver-and-base is a fixed unit; BSB's "with its stand" rightly keeps them together as a single fashioned object.
Word by word10 · parsed+
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
מִזְבַּ֥חmiz·baḥthe altarH4196
√ mizbêach — an altarNounmasculine singular construct
miz·baḥ (H4196), altar — here the great bronze altar of the outer court, distinct from the golden incense altar of v. 8.
הָעֹלָ֖הhā·‘ō·lāhof burnt offeringH5930
√ ʻôlâh — a step or (collectively, stairs, as ascending)ArticleNounfeminine singular
hā·‘ō·lāh (H5930), the burnt offering — "that which ascends"; the whole-burnt sacrifice consumed entirely on the altar, ascending to God.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
כָּל־kāl-with allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
כֵּלָ֑יוkê·lāwits utensilsH3627
√ kᵉlîy — something prepared, iNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
kê·lāw (H3627), its utensils — the pans, shovels, basins, fleshhooks, and firepans of the altar (Exodus 27:3).
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-andH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַכִּיּ֖וֹרhak·kî·yō·wrthe basinH3595
√ kîyôwr — properly, something round (as excavated or bored), iArticleNounmasculine singular
hak·kî·yō·wr (H3595), the basin/laver — the bronze washing-vessel between the tent and the altar; priests washed hands and feet before service, on pain of death.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
כַּנּֽוֹ׃kan·nōwwith its standH3653
√ kên — a stand, iNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
kan·nōw (H3653), its stand — the laver's pedestal; cast from the bronze mirrors of the ministering women (Exodus 38:8).
The Voices✦ public domain+
Which was made of shittim wood covered with brass; its furniture were its pans, shovels, basins, &c. Exodus 27:1 . and the laver and his foot; for the priests to wash their hands and feet at, Exodus 30:18 .
To devise cunning works - Rather, to devise works of skill. The Hebrew phrase is not the same as that rendered "cunning work" in respect to textile fabrics in Exodus 26:1 .
Barnes' note here is a stock cross-reference to v. 4's idiom, not a fresh comment on v. 9; included to show the public-domain apparatus on this verse is sparse.
10“as well as the woven garments, both the holy garments for Aaron …”+

10as well as the woven garments, both the holy garments for Aaron the priest and the garments for his sons to serve as priests,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·’êṯ haś·śə·rāḏ wə·’eṯ- biḡ·ḏê haq·qō·ḏeš biḡ·ḏê lə·’a·hă·rōn hak·kō·hên wə·’eṯ- biḡ·ḏê ḇā·nāw lə·ḵa·hên

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and the woven garments — both the garments of-the-holy-place for-Aaron the priest and the garments of-his-sons to-serve-as-priests;

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַשְּׂרָ֑ד "the woven garments" renders haś·śə·rāḏ (H8278), a word of uncertain meaning occurring only four times. Strong's offers "stitching, as pierced with a needle"; Cambridge confesses it "of most uncertain meaning," possibly "plaited work." BSB's confident "woven" papers over a genuine lexical crux.
  • בִּגְדֵ֣י הַקֹּ֙דֶשׁ֙ "the holy garments" is biḡ·ḏê haq·qō·ḏeš — literally "garments of the holiness / the holy thing." qōdesh (H6944) is a noun ("holiness, a sacred thing"), so the construct reads "garments of holiness"; "holy garments" turns the noun into an adjective and slightly thins it.
  • לְכַהֵֽן׃ "to serve as priests" renders the denominative verb lə·ḵa·hên (H3547, kâhan, "to act as priest"), built from kōhên ("priest"); Hebrew has a verb "to priest," which English must paraphrase as "serve as priests."
Word by word12 · parsed+
וְאֵ֖תwə·’êṯas well asH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַשְּׂרָ֑דhaś·śə·rāḏthe wovenH8278
√ sᵉrâd — stitching (as pierced with a needle)ArticleNounmasculine singular
haś·śə·rāḏ (H8278) — a hapax-rare term (4 occurrences) for finely worked priestly cloth; ancient versions (LXX stolai leitourgikai) read "garments of ministry," but the exact sense is lost. The honest note: scholars from the Rabbins to Keil to Cambridge openly disagree.
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
בִּגְדֵ֣יbiḡ·ḏêgarmentsH899
√ beged — a covering, iNounmasculine plural construct
biḡ·ḏê (H899, beged), garments — "a covering"; the recurring word for the priestly vestments throughout this verse.
הַקֹּ֙דֶשׁ֙haq·qō·ḏešboth the holyH6944
√ qôdesh — a sacred place or thingArticleNounmasculine singular
haq·qō·ḏeš (H6944), holiness/the holy — the garments that set Aaron apart for sacred service; the same root names the Holy Place these garments serve in.
בִּגְדֵ֤יbiḡ·ḏêgarmentsH899
√ beged — a covering, iNounmasculine plural construct
לְאַהֲרֹ֣ןlə·’a·hă·rōnfor AaronH175
√ ʼAhărôwn — Aharon, the brother of MosesPreposition-lNounpropermasculine singular
lə·’a·hă·rōn (H175), for Aaron — the high priest, recipient of the unique state-robes (the ephod, breastplate, robe).
הַכֹּהֵ֔ןhak·kō·hênthe priestH3548
√ kôhên — literally one officiating, a priestArticleNounmasculine singular
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
בִּגְדֵ֥יbiḡ·ḏêand the garmentsH899
√ beged — a covering, iNounmasculine plural construct
בָנָ֖יוḇā·nāwfor his sonsH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
ḇā·nāw (H1121), his sons — the ordinary priests, with their own plainer linen vestments (Exodus 28:40).
לְכַהֵֽן׃lə·ḵa·hênto serve as priestsH3547
√ kâhan — to officiate as a priestPreposition-lVerbPielInfinitive construct
lə·ḵa·hên (H3547, kâhan) — "to officiate as priest"; the purpose-clause: the garments exist for the act of priestly service.
The Voices✦ public domain+
And the cloths of service - Rather, And the garments of office; that is, the distinguishing official garments of the high priest.
The meaning of the word serad, which only occurs in these passages, is quite uncertain.
in the Heb. a peculiar expression, of most uncertain meaning, not found before
Cambridge, Keil, Barnes and the Rabbins all diverge on serad (H8278); the renderings range from priestly vestments to wrapping-cloths to plaited work.
Perhaps the true explanation is, that under the words “cloths of service” ( bigdey sĕrâd, or bigdeh hassĕrâd ) are included both the garments of Aaron and also those of his sons, the two later clauses of the verse being exegetical of the first clause.
11“in addition to the anointing oil and fragrant incense for the Ho…”+

11in addition to the anointing oil and fragrant incense for the Holy Place. They are to make them according to all that I have commanded you.”

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·’êṯ ham·miš·ḥāh wə·’eṯ- še·men has·sam·mîm qə·ṭō·reṯ laq·qō·ḏeš ya·‘ă·śū kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer- ṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵā

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and the anointing-oil, and the incense of-fragrant-spices for-the-holy-place: according-to-all that I-have-commanded-you they-shall-do.

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַמִּשְׁחָ֛ה "the anointing oil" — ham·miš·ḥāh (H4888), "unction, the act of anointing." The word names the consecrating action, not the substance; the oil takes its name from what it does — it makes holy by anointing (Exodus 30:23–25).
  • קְטֹ֥רֶת הַסַּמִּ֖ים "fragrant incense" is qᵉṭōreth has·sam·mîm — literally "incense of the spices / aromas." Cambridge prefers "fragrant powders." The doubling (smoke-offering + aromatics) names the holy compound of Exodus 30:34, which was forbidden for common use.
  • יַעֲשֽׂוּ׃ "They are to make them" renders ya·‘ă·śū (H6213), an imperfect of ‘âsâh — "they shall do/make." The clause closes the whole speech by binding the doing to the divine command (ṣiwwîṯikā), exactly as v. 6 did: invention hemmed by obedience.
Word by word11 · parsed+
וְאֵ֨תwə·’êṯin addition toH853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
הַמִּשְׁחָ֛הham·miš·ḥāhthe anointingH4888
√ mishchâh — unction (the act)ArticleNounfeminine singular
ham·miš·ḥāh (H4888), the anointing — the holy oil that consecrated priests and furnishings, compounded by a sacred recipe and not to be imitated (Exodus 30:32–33).
וְאֶת־wə·’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Conjunctive wawDirect object marker
שֶׁ֧מֶןše·menoilH8081
√ shemen — grease, especially liquid (as from the olive, often perfumed)Nounmasculine singular construct
še·men (H8081), oil — "grease, especially liquid," the olive-oil base of the anointing compound.
הַסַּמִּ֖יםhas·sam·mîmand fragrantH5561
√ çam — an aromaArticleNounmasculine plural
has·sam·mîm (H5561, çam, "aroma") — the sweet spices; Cambridge: "fragrant powders."
קְטֹ֥רֶתqə·ṭō·reṯincenseH7004
√ qᵉṭôreth — a fumigationNounfeminine singular construct
qə·ṭō·reṯ (H7004), incense — the fumigation-offering, here the special perfumed compound for the sanctuary.
לַקֹּ֑דֶשׁlaq·qō·ḏešfor the Holy PlaceH6944
√ qôdesh — a sacred place or thingPreposition-l, ArticleNounmasculine singular
laq·qō·ḏeš (H6944), for the Holy Place — these consecrated compounds belong to the sacred sphere alone.
יַעֲשֽׂוּ׃פya·‘ă·śūThey are to make themH6213
√ ʻâsâh — to do or make, in the broadest sense and widest applicationVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
ya·‘ă·śū (H6213, ‘âsâh) — "they shall make/do." The imperfect with the closing relative clause echoes v. 6: all is done "according to all that I have commanded."
כְּכֹ֥לkə·ḵōlaccording to allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholePreposition-kNounmasculine singular
אֲשֶׁר־’ă·šer-thatH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
צִוִּיתִ֖ךָṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵāI have commanded youH6680
√ tsâvâh — (intensively) to constitute, enjoinVerbPielPerfectfirst person common singularsecond person masculine singular
ṣiw·wî·ṯi·ḵā (H6680, tsâvâh) — "I have commanded you." The same verb closed v. 6; it brackets the whole catalogue of works in obedience to the divine pattern.
The Voices✦ public domain+
not only make all the said things, but make them exactly according to the form and pattern given to Moses, communicated to Bezaleel and Aholiab, whose business it was to see that all things were done by the workmen agreeably to it.
Which was only to anoint the Priests and the instruments of the tabernacle, not to burn.
sweet spices ] fragrant powders

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.

Grand Commentary — the unit, read wholesynthesis · verify+

AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.

i. The Spirit, first, for craft — 1–5

The first man in all Scripture of whom it is written that God "filled him with the Spirit" (wā·’ă·mal·lê ’ōṯōw rū·aḥ ’ĕlōhîm, v. 3) is not a prophet or a priest but an artisan. Keil & Delitzsch name the order exactly: only after "having given directions for the construction of the sanctuary" does Jehovah "point out the builders, whom He had called to carry out the work, and had filled with His Spirit for that purpose." The endowment is a triad — chokmâh (wisdom), tᵉbûnâh (understanding), da‘ath (knowledge) — and Ellicott, glossing it, insists "Artistic ability is a Divine gift, a very precious gift, best employed in God's direct service." The Geneva annotator draws the doctrine without flinching: "handicrafts are the gifts of God's spirit, and therefore ought to be esteemed." Benson presses it into the everyday: "Skill in common employments is the gift of God; it is he that puts even this wisdom into the inward parts." The verbs themselves preach: the man filled (mâlê’, v. 3) is the man who will fill the gemstones into their settings (lᵉmallōṯ, v. 5) — the same root — and he will devise designs (laḥšōḇ maḥăšāḇōṯ, v. 4), the cognate figure Barnes rightly recovers as "works of skill," not the older "cunning works."

ii. Two named men, and a name that confesses God — 1–2, 6

God "calls by name" (qārā’ṯî ḇᵉšêm, v. 2). The Pulpit Commentary observes that He does so "only those whom he appoints to some high office, as Moses, Cyrus, and here Bezaleel and Aholiab." Both names confess theology. Bᵉtsalʼêl means, as Jamieson-Fausset-Brown render it, "in the shadow or protection of God"; the chief craftsman of God's dwelling labors under God's own overshadowing. ’Ohŏlîyʼâb, Gill notes, "signifies 'the Father's tent' or 'tabernacle'" — the man set over the textile work of the tent of meeting carries the tent in his very name. Bezalel is of Judah, the royal tribe; Oholiab of Dan, which JFB frankly calls "one of the least influential and honorable in Israel," so that the partnership itself preaches that God's house is built by the high tribe and the low together (the apparatus points to 1 Corinthians 12). And the gifting widens past the two: into "all that are wise-hearted" (ḥăḵam-lêḇ, v. 6) God puts wisdom — Pulpit catching the grace of it, "unto him that hath shall be given."

iii. A list with a leash: invention under command — 6–11

The catalogue of vv. 7–11 walks back through the instructions of Exodus 25–30 — Ellicott notes it "follows the order of the instructions given concerning them... except that the tabernacle itself is placed first." Tent, ark, kapporeth, table, lampstand, both altars, laver, vestments, oil, incense: the whole sanctuary handed to human hands. Yet the same sentence that frees the craftsman to devise (v. 4) clamps the leash twice — "all that I have commanded you" (ṣiwwîṯikā) closes both v. 6 and v. 11. Gill states the balance precisely: they were "not only [to] make all the said things, but make them exactly according to the form and pattern given to Moses." Two honest cruxes mark the close. The garments of v. 10 are called bigdê haśśᵉrāḏ, and the word śᵉrāḏ (a 4-occurrence rarity) is, Keil concedes outright, "quite uncertain"; Cambridge agrees it is "of most uncertain meaning" — BSB's confident "woven" is a reasonable guess over a real gap. And the "pure" lampstand of v. 8: Poole hears in the adjective not only the gold but a charge "to mind the priests of their duty in keeping it neat and clean."

Read under Sola Scriptura — this tool’s own fallible reading (⚙)

Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things in this passage ask to be tested, not trusted on my word. First, the Spirit's filling is here, before anything else, a filling for work with the hands. Long before Pentecost, the formula "filled with the Spirit of God" lands on a metalworker and a weaver. Whatever else Spirit-fullness becomes in the canon, it does not despise the workbench; the text refuses the divorce between sacred and secular labor that the church has so often assumed. Second, the gift is sovereignly given and personally named — and yet it presupposes, rather than replaces, what the man already is. Keil's careful reading holds: the filling "did not preclude either natural capacity or acquired skill, but rather presupposed them." Bezalel's Egyptian training and native aptitude are not erased by grace; they are commandeered by it. Third, creative freedom and exact obedience are not rivals here but partners. The craftsman genuinely devises (v. 4) — there is real invention, real artistry — but always inside "all that I have commanded" (vv. 6, 11). The pattern is given; the execution is free; and the freedom serves the pattern. That is a word about how a redeemed people may work: with everything they have, and under everything He has said.

The first Spirit-filled man in the Bible is an artist — and his name means he works in the shadow of God.

Canonical Threads — out to the whole of Scripturecross-refs · verify+

AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.

The call and the building → the execution (Exodus 35–38) verbal / quotation — confirmed

The whole commission of ch. 31 is carried out, almost verbatim, in the building narrative of Exodus 35–38, where Bezalel and Oholiab actually do the work the LORD here describes. The Verifier finds the appointment of Oholiab repeated with the rarest possible verbal markers — the personal name ’Ăchîysâmâk (Ahisamach) occurs in only 3 verses of the whole Hebrew Bible, the name ’Ohŏlîyʼâb in only 5 — so the link to Exodus 35:34 is a true verbal repetition, not a coincidence of common words.

Exodus 31:6 · Exodus 35:34 · Exodus 36:1 · Exodus 38:23

basis: Verifier (Exodus 31:6 ↔ 35:34): shared rare lexemes H294 ʼĂchîysâmâk (3 vv), H171 ʼOhŏlîyʼâb (5 vv), with H1835 Dân, H4294 maṭṭeh, H3820 lêb, H5414 nâthan — same Hebrew↔Hebrew naming repeated in the build account.

Bezalel's lineage → the Chronicler's genealogy (1 Chr 2:20; 2 Chr 1:5) verbal / quotation — confirmed

The chain Hur → Uri → Bezalel recurs in the Chronicler's record of the clan of Judah (1 Chronicles 2:19–20), and at 2 Chronicles 1:5 the bronze altar Bezalel made is remembered as still standing before the tabernacle in Solomon's day. The Verifier ties Exodus 31:2 to 2 Chronicles 1:5 by three rare proper names sharing Strong's numbers: Bᵉtsalʼêl (H1212, only 9 vv), Chûwr (H2354, 15 vv), ʼÛwrîy (H221, 7 vv). Because all three are the identical Hebrew names, this is a genuine verbal/onomastic link — the craftsman of the wilderness sanctuary is the same man the temple-builders' own history looks back to. One honest caveat on the genealogy itself: Cambridge notes the Hur–Uri–Bezalel series sits in the Caleb clan, whose full incorporation into Judah "the relation of the two series of names to each other is uncertain" — the verbal identity of the names is firm; the precise tribal genealogy behind them is less so.

Exodus 31:2 · 1 Chronicles 2:20 · 2 Chronicles 1:5

basis: Verifier (Exodus 31:2 ↔ 2 Chronicles 1:5): shared rare names H1212 Bᵉtsalʼêl (9 vv), H2354 Chûwr (15 vv), H221 ʼÛwrîy (7 vv) — identical Hebrew lexemes, an onomastic identification.

The 'uncertain' garments → Exodus 39:1 (the śᵉrāḏ crux) flagged — verify source

The rare term bigdê haśśᵉrāḏ ("garments of the śᵉrāḏ," v. 10) returns only at Exodus 35:19; 39:1; 39:41 — four occurrences in all. The Verifier links Exodus 31:10 to Exodus 39:1 on H8278 sᵉrâd (a 4-verse rarity), with H899 beged and H6944 qôdesh. The shared lexeme is verbally rare and so confirms a real verbal connection; but the meaning of that very word is disputed — Keil calls it "quite uncertain," Cambridge "of most uncertain meaning," the Rabbins, LXX, and modern critics all differ. The link between the verses is firm; what the word denotes is flagged.

Exodus 31:10 · Exodus 35:19 · Exodus 39:1 · Exodus 39:41

basis: Verifier confirms the verbal link on rare H8278 sᵉrâd (4 vv) + H899 beged + H6944 qôdesh; flagged because the denotation of śᵉrâḏ itself is lexically contested across Keil, Cambridge, LXX, and the Rabbins — the cross-reference is sound, the gloss is not settled.

Filling and the work of the sanctuary → Exodus 35:33 structural / thematic — confirmed

The language of being "filled" (mâlê’) for "every kind of work" (mᵉlâ’kâh) recurs as Bezalel is described doing the very crafts of v. 4. The Verifier rates this structural / thematic, not verbal: the shared lexemes H4399 mᵉlâ’kâh (149 vv) and H4390 mâlê’ (239 vv) are common words, so the connection is a shared pattern of Spirit-empowered craftsmanship rather than a rare quotation. The motif binds the two chapters even where no rare word does.

Exodus 31:3 · Exodus 35:33 · Exodus 36:2

basis: Verifier (Exodus 31:3 ↔ 35:33): shared lexemes H4399 mᵉlâ’kâh (149 vv) and H4390 mâlê’ (239 vv) are high-frequency, so tiered structural/thematic — a shared craft-empowerment pattern, not a verbal quotation.

Every good gift is from above → James 1:17 (cross-Testament) structural / thematic — confirmed

Ellicott reads v. 3 straight into James: "Every good gift and every perfect gift (intellectual power no less than others) is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights." The claim of Exodus 31 — that artistic skill is a Spirit-given endowment — is the same theology James states as a general law. This is a Greek↔Hebrew link, so it cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers (the lexicons are different languages); it is tiered structural/thematic on the shared doctrine of gifts descending from God, named by Ellicott himself, not on any verbal quotation.

Exodus 31:3 · James 1:17

basis: Cross-Testament (Greek NT ↔ Hebrew OT): no shared Strong's possible across languages; basis is the shared doctrine that every good gift descends from God, the connection drawn explicitly by Ellicott on Exodus 31:3 citing James 1:17. Thematic, not verbal.

The earthly pattern → the true tent (Hebrews 8:5; 9:11) structural / thematic — confirmed

Every object in the catalogue of vv. 7–11 — tent, ark, kapporeth, lampstand, altars — is made "according to all that I have commanded you" (vv. 6, 11), the very command Hebrews reads as proof that the wilderness sanctuary was "a copy and shadow of the heavenly things." Because this is a Greek↔Hebrew link, no Strong's overlap is possible; the basis is the structural pattern-and-copy relationship Hebrews builds upon the Exodus "pattern" texts. Tiered structural, with the typological force noted below in Christ-in-the-Unit.

Exodus 31:7 · Exodus 31:11 · Hebrews 8:5 · Hebrews 9:11

basis: Cross-Testament (Greek ↔ Hebrew): no shared Strong's across languages; basis is the copy/pattern structure — Hebrews 8:5 explicitly reads the tabernacle made by command (Exodus 31:6,11) as shadow of the heavenly. Structural, not verbal.

Christ in the Unittypology · verify+

AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.

Bezalel — the Spirit-filled builder, a figure of Christ widely-held

The older expositors read Bezalel as a type of Christ, and they read it from the text, not into it. Gill: "in all this Bezaleel was a type of Christ, who was filled with the Holy Spirit without measure; and on whom rested the spirit of wisdom and of counsel, and in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge." The chief builder is filled with God's Spirit (v. 3) to raise God's dwelling among His people; the true Builder is the one of whom Hebrews says "he who built all things is God," and on whom the Spirit rested without measure (Isaiah 11:2; John 3:34). The name Bᵉtsalʼêl, "in the shadow of God," itself prefigures the Son who dwells eternally in the bosom of the Father.

Exodus 31:2 · Exodus 31:3 · Isaiah 11:2 · John 3:34 · Colossians 2:3 · Hebrews 3:3-4

Oholiab, "the Father's tent" — and the true tabernacle novel

Gill presses the second name into the same figural reading he gives the first. Oholiab, set over the textile work of the tent of meeting, bears a name that "signifies 'the Father's tent' or 'tabernacle'"; and Gill takes the man whose father-name confesses a divine dwelling as a figure of the One "whose human nature is the true tabernacle God pitched, and not man, and who, as Mediator, is Jehovah's servant, whom he upholds." The reading leans on John 1:14 ("the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us") and Hebrews 8:2 (the "true tabernacle, which the Lord pitched, and not man"). This is the more strained of the figural readings — it hangs on the meaning of a personal name — so it is marked novel, drawn out by Gill but not the common reading of the verse.

Exodus 31:6 · John 1:14 · Hebrews 8:2

The mercy seat — where atonement is made (kapporeth → hilastērion) ancient

Among the works Bezalel is to make is "the mercy seat" (hak·kapporeth, v. 7), the gold cover of the ark from the root kâphar, "to cover, atone" — the one place in the sanctuary where blood was sprinkled for the sins of the people on the Day of Atonement. Paul names Christ Himself the hilastērion, the propitiation/mercy seat, "whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood" (Romans 3:25; cf. Hebrews 9:5). The object the wilderness craftsman fashioned in gold points to the Person on whom God's wrath is covered and His mercy met. The link from kapporeth to hilastērion is cross-Testament and so structural/typological, not verbal — but it is ancient and central.

Exodus 31:7 · Leviticus 16:14-15 · Romans 3:25 · Hebrews 9:5

Apparatus & Provenance

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 Hebrew throughout; every cross-reference within the Old Testament that the Verifier marks "verbal" rests on shared Hebrew Strong's numbers, and I have reported the actual frequencies it returned so the rarity claim can be checked (e.g., H294 ʼĂchîysâmâk in 3 verses, H8278 sᵉrâd in 4, H1212 Bᵉtsalʼêl in 9). Two New-Testament links (James 1:17; Hebrews 8:5/9:11) are Greek↔Hebrew and therefore cannot carry a verbal/Strong's basis at all; I have tiered them structural/thematic and said why on each badge. The most honest difficulty in the passage is the word śᵉrāḏ (v. 10): the verbal cross-reference to Exodus 35:19; 39:1, 41 is firm (the same rare lexeme), but the meaning of the word is genuinely unsettled — Keil "quite uncertain," Cambridge "of most uncertain meaning," with the Rabbins, LXX, and modern critics divided between priestly vestments, wrapping-cloths, and "plaited work"; BSB's "woven garments" is a defensible choice over an open lexical gap, and the thread is flagged accordingly. The Hur=Hur-of-Rephidim identification (v. 2) is widely held (JFB, Pulpit, Barnes) but Cambridge denies there are "sufficient grounds" for it; I have presented it as tradition, not fact. On v. 9 the public-domain apparatus is thin (Barnes merely repeats his v. 4 note), and I have flagged that in its editorial_note rather than dress the page in borrowed weight. The three Christ readings are labeled by attestation: the Bezalel-as-type reading is widely held among the Reformed expositors (Gill states it expressly); the Oholiab/"Father's tent" reading is marked novel, since it hangs on the meaning of a personal name and is drawn out chiefly by Gill rather than being the common reading of v. 6; the mercy-seat→propitiation reading is ancient and grounded in Romans 3:25, though the lexical bridge is cross-Testament and so typological rather than a verbal quotation.

= 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)