The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Sign of the Sabbath
Exodus 31:12–17 — The Sign of the Sabbath. 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.
12And the LORD said to Moses,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yō·mer ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-spoke the-LORD unto Moses, saying—
Where the English smooths the original
It seems likely that the penal edict was especially introduced as a caution in reference to the construction of the tabernacle, lest the people, in their zeal to carry on the work, should be tempted to break the divine law for the observance of the day.
Hitherto the Sabbath had been, in the main, a positive enactment intended to test obedience ( Exodus 16:4 ); now it was elevated into a sacramental sign between God and His people ( Exodus 31:13 ). Having become such a sign, it required to be guarded by a new sanctionEllicott names the two innovations of this passage: the Sabbath becomes a sign, and gains a death-penalty sanction.
It is to be observed, however, that the present passage is not a mere repetition. It adds to former notices ( Exodus 20:8-11 ; Exodus 23:12 ) two new points: - 1. That the sabbath was to be a sign between God and Israel, a "distinguishing badge," a "sacramental bond" (Cook); and 2. That its desecration was to be punished with death (ver. 15).
the great ardor and eagerness, with which all classes betook themselves to the construction of the tabernacle, exposed them to the temptation of encroaching on the sanctity of the appointed day of restJFB gives the most concrete form of the "why here" reading: the very zeal for God's house tempted them to break God's rest.
The repetition and further development of this command, which was included already in the decalogue, is quite in its proper place here, inasmuch as the thought might easily have occurred, that it was allowable to omit the keeping of the Sabbath, when the execution of so great a work in honour of Jehovah had been commanded
13“Tell the Israelites, ‘Surely you must keep My Sabbaths, for this will be a sign between Me and you for the generations to come, so that you may know that I am the LORD who sanctifies you.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’at·tāh dab·bêr ’el- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl lê·mōr ’aḵ ’eṯ- tiš·mō·rū šab·bə·ṯō·ṯay kî hî ’ō·wṯ ū·ḇê·nê·ḵem bê·nî lə·ḏō·rō·ṯê·ḵem lā·ḏa·‘aṯ kî ’ă·nî Yah·weh mə·qad·diš·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you, speak unto sons-of Israel, saying: Surely My-Sabbaths you-shall-keep, for she [is] a-sign between-Me and-between-you for-your-generations, to-know that I [am] the-LORD who-sanctifies-you.
Where the English smooths the original
The sabbath is a fivefold sign: 1. Commemorative, of God’s creation of and dominion over them and all other things, to whom they do hereby profess their subjection. 2. Indicative, showing that they were made to be holy, and that their sanctification can be had from none but from GodPoole's classic five-fold reading of the Sabbath sign: commemorative, indicative, distinctive, prefigurative, confirmative.
Circumcision had been given as a covenant sign to Abraham and his descendants ( Genesis 17:9-13 ); but its adoption by many of the heathen nations had rendered it no longer a distinguishing mark by which God’s people could be certainly known from others. Thus a new “sign” was needed.
that all the world may recognize, by means of the sabbath, that it is Jehovah who ‘sanctifies’ Israel, or provides it with the means of becoming a holy people.
God, by sanctifying this day among them, let them know that he sanctified them, and set them apart for his service, otherwise he would not have revealed to them his holy sabbaths, to be the support of religion among them.
"My Sabbaths:" by these we are to understand the weekly Sabbaths, not the other sabbatical festivals, since the words which follow apply to the weekly Sabbath aloneKeil narrows the plural "My Sabbaths" to the recurring weekly day, against any reading that folds in the festival-sabbaths.
14Keep the Sabbath, for it is holy to you. Anyone who profanes it must surely be put to death. Whoever does any work on that day must be cut off from among his people.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·šə·mar·tem ’eṯ- haš·šab·bāṯ kî hî qō·ḏeš lā·ḵem mə·ḥal·le·hā mō·wṯ yū·māṯ kî kāl- hā·‘ō·śeh mə·lā·ḵāh ḇāh ha·hi·w han·ne·p̄eš wə·niḵ·rə·ṯāh miq·qe·reḇ ‘am·me·hā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-keep the-Sabbath, for holy [is] she to-you; the-one-profaning-her, dying he-shall-be-put-to-death; for everyone doing in-her work, that soul shall-be-cut-off from-the-midst-of her-peoples.
Where the English smooths the original
The Sabbath-breaker now threw himself out of covenant with God, and not only so, but did what in him lay to throw the whole people out of covenant. His guilt was therefore great, and the assignment to it of the death-penalty is in no way surprising
He who was cut off from the people had, by his offence, put himself out of the terms of the covenant, and was an outlaw. On such, and on such alone, when the offence was one which affected the well-being of the nation, as it was in this case, death could be inflicted by the public authority.Barnes parses the difference between the two phrases — "cut off" (loss of covenant standing) and "put to death" (civil execution).
God repeats this point because the whole keeping of the law stands in the true use of the sabbath, which is to stop working and so obey the will of God.
The man who broke the sabbath destroyed, so far as in him lay, the entire covenant between God and his people - not only broke it, but annulled it, and threw Israel out of covenant.
15For six days work may be done, but the seventh day is a Sabbath of complete rest, holy to the LORD. Whoever does any work on the Sabbath day must surely be put to death.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
šê·šeṯ yā·mîm mə·lā·ḵāh yê·‘ā·śeh haš·šə·ḇî·‘î ū·ḇay·yō·wm šab·baṯ šab·bā·ṯō·wn qō·ḏeš Yah·weh kāl- hā·‘ō·śeh mə·lā·ḵāh haš·šab·bāṯ bə·yō·wm mō·wṯ yū·māṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Six days work shall-be-done, but-on-the-day the-seventh [is] a-Sabbath of-complete-rest, holy to-the-LORD; everyone doing work on-the-day-of the-Sabbath, dying he-shall-be-put-to-death.
Where the English smooths the original
the sabbath of sabbaths , or, of sabbaths , i.e. the great and chief sabbath, as the song of songs is the most excellent song, the holy of holies is the most holy
The sabbath of rest .—Rather, a sabbath of rest, or a complete rest. The repetition ( sabbath sabbâthôn ) gives an idea of completeness.
Six days may work be done;.... Allowed to be done by an Israelite, if he would; for this is not a command to work, but a permission or grant to do it; and therefore, seeing they had so many days granted them for their use, it could not be thought hard and unreasonable that God should claim one day in seven for his own use and serviceGill reads the six days as grant, not command — six for man, one claimed by God.
By the expression, "a sabbath of rest" - literally, "a rest of resting" - the idea of completeness is given. Perhaps the best translation would be - "in the seventh is complete rest."
16The Israelites must keep the Sabbath, celebrating it as a permanent covenant for the generations to come.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl ’eṯ- wə·šā·mə·rū haš·šab·bāṯ la·‘ă·śō·wṯ ’eṯ- haš·šab·bāṯ ‘ō·w·lām bə·rîṯ lə·ḏō·rō·ṯām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-shall-keep sons-of Israel the-Sabbath, to-make the-Sabbath for-their-generations [as] a-perpetual covenant.
Where the English smooths the original
And this word perpetual , as also the word for ever , being added to it in the next verse, may intimate that this hath a longer perpetuity than the ceremonies, to which this phrase is sometimes ascribed, the rather because the reason of this perpetuity given in the next verse is such as hath its force not only till Christ, but even till the end of the worldPoole argues the Sabbath's "perpetual" reaches further than the ceremonial law — grounded as it is in creation, not in the tabernacle's shadows.
a perpetual (or, as the same Heb. is rendered elsewhere, everlasting ) covenant ] An expression frequent in P: Genesis 9:16 (of the rainbow), Genesis 17:7 ; Genesis 17:13 ; Genesis 17:19 (of circumcision)
The sabbath is itself a covenant - i.e. , a part of the covenant between God and Israel ( Exodus 24:4 ) - and it is, also, a sign of covenant - i.e. , a perceptible indication that the nation has entered into a special agreement with God
17It is a sign between Me and the Israelites forever; for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, but on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed.’”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hî ’ō·wṯ bê·nî ū·ḇên bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl lə·‘ō·lām kî- šê·šeṯ yā·mîm Yah·weh ’eṯ- ‘ā·śāh haš·šā·ma·yim wə·’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ haš·šə·ḇî·‘î ū·ḇay·yō·wm šā·ḇaṯ way·yin·nā·p̄aš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Between-Me and-between sons-of Israel a-sign she [is] forever; for-in-six days made the-LORD the-heavens and-the-earth, and-on-the-day the-seventh He-rested and-was-refreshed.
Where the English smooths the original
Was refreshed - Literally, "he took breath". Compare Exodus 23:12 ; 2 Samuel 16:14 . The application of the word to the Creator, which occurs nowhere else, is remarkable.Barnes pins the rare verb nâphash and its startling use of God.
The expression, was refreshed, is spoken after the manner of men. It seems to signify that delight and complacency with which God surveyed all his works, and pronounced them good, Genesis 1:31 .
not as if he had been weary with working, which surely he could not be with speaking a few words, nor can God be weary with any thing, Isaiah 40:28 ; but it notes the pleasure or delight God took in reflecting upon his works, beholding that every thing he had made was very good
And was refreshed . Literally," and took breath." The metaphor is a bold one, but not bolder than others which occur in holy scripture ( Psalm 44:23 ; Psalm 78:65 ). It does but carry out a little further the idea implied in God's "resting."
which is to be understood figuratively after the manner of men, who ceasing from toil and labour find rest and refreshment; but not really and properly, for as not labour, and weariness, and fatigue, so neither rest nor refreshment can be properly said of God; but this denotes his cessation from the works of creation, though not of providence, and of the delight and pleasure he takes in a view of themGill, like Poole and Benson, reads "refreshed" as accommodated speech — God's delight in His finished work, not recovery from fatigue.
The thing signified by the sabbath is that rest in glory which remains for the people of God; therefore the moral obligation of the sabbath must continue, till time is swallowed up in eternity.Henry reads the creational rest forward to its eschatological term (cf. Hebrews 4:9) — the sign points past every seventh day to the rest that remains.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit interrupts the tabernacle blueprints — and every voice asks why. Three answers stand on the table. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown read it as a guard against zeal: "the great ardor and eagerness, with which all classes betook themselves to the construction of the tabernacle, exposed them to the temptation of encroaching on the sanctity of the appointed day of rest." Barnes agrees the penal edict was "a caution in reference to the construction of the tabernacle, lest the people, in their zeal to carry on the work, should be tempted to break the divine law." But the Pulpit Commentary insists the passage is no "mere repetition" — it "adds to former notices two new points," the Sabbath as "a sacramental bond" and its desecration as a capital crime. Ellicott frames the whole shift: hitherto the Sabbath "had been, in the main, a positive enactment intended to test obedience"; now "it was elevated into a sacramental sign between God and His people." The structural reading is sound: even God's house must not be built by breaking God's rest.
The Hebrew word at the center is ’ō·wṯ, "sign" — and the older expositors mined it deep. Matthew Poole set out the famous "fivefold sign": commemorative (of creation), indicative ("that their sanctification can be had from none but from God"), distinctive (Israel's badge among the nations), prefigurative ("of that rest which Christ should purchase"), and confirmative. Ellicott grounds the "distinctive" note historically: circumcision "had been given as a covenant sign to Abraham," but its adoption "by many of the heathen nations had rendered it no longer a distinguishing mark... Thus a new 'sign' was needed." And the goal is knowledge — lā·ḏa·‘aṯ, "to know." Cambridge reads it outward: "that all the world may recognize, by means of the sabbath, that it is Jehovah who 'sanctifies' Israel." The day is a lesson God writes into time itself.
Then the sanction: mōwṯ yūmāṯ, the doubled verb of death (vv. 14, 15), and the covenant-curse kareth, "cut off." Barnes distinguishes the two with care — to be "cut off" is to be put "out of the terms of the covenant," an outlaw; death by "public authority" follows only "when the offence was one which affected the well-being of the nation." Ellicott and the Pulpit Commentary agree on why the penalty is so grave: the Sabbath-breaker "did what in him lay to throw the whole people out of covenant" — he "annulled" the bond, not merely his own part in it. At the heart of v. 15 lies the superlative šabbaṯ šabbāṯôwn; Poole reads it "the great and chief sabbath, as the song of songs is the most excellent song," and Ellicott notes the repetition "gives an idea of completeness." Gill tempers the severity with grace: the six days are "not a command to work, but a permission" — six for man, one claimed by God.
The unit closes on duration and ground. The Sabbath is a bᵉrîyth ‘ōwlām, a "perpetual covenant" (v. 16). Cambridge sets the phrase in its family: it is used of the rainbow (Genesis 9:16) and of circumcision (Genesis 17). Poole presses that this perpetuity is "a longer perpetuity than the ceremonies," reaching "not only till Christ, but even till the end of the world" — because its reason is creation, not the tabernacle. That reason arrives in v. 17, "verbatim as Exodus 20:11" (Cambridge): in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, and on the seventh šāḇaṯ — He ceased — way·yin·nā·p̄aš, "and took breath." Barnes calls this last word, applied to the Creator, "remarkable... it occurs nowhere else" of God. Poole and Benson rush to guard it: not weariness but "the pleasure or delight God took in reflecting upon his works." Matthew Henry draws the line forward: "The thing signified by the sabbath is that rest in glory which remains for the people of God; therefore the moral obligation of the sabbath must continue, till time is swallowed up in eternity."
Read under the rule that Scripture interprets Scripture, three things rise from this unit — offered as a reading to be weighed, not a verdict to be trusted. First, the Sabbath is a sign, and a sign points beyond itself. The text says plainly the day exists "to know that I am the LORD who sanctifies you" (v. 13). It is not the resting that sanctifies; the LORD does. The day is the finger; God is the thing pointed at. Second, its ground is creation, not ceremony. Verse 17 reaches back past Sinai to Genesis — "for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth." That is why Poole could argue its perpetuity outlasts the shadow-laws of the tabernacle it interrupts: a commandment rooted in the world's making is bound to the world's whole life. Third, the rest is unfinished. God ceased and "took breath" on the seventh day, but Scripture itself later insists the true rest still lay ahead (Psalm 95; Hebrews 4) — that Israel's Sabbath was a weekly rehearsal of a rest not yet entered. Where the New Testament treats the Mosaic Sabbath as "a shadow of the things to come, but the body belongs to Christ" (Colossians 2:16–17), the believer is left to test, not assume, how the sign now reads. What the text will bear is this: the One who rested invites His people into His rest, and the sign was always His seal upon that promise.
The Sabbath is God's signature in time — the cease and the breath of the Maker, written weekly over a people, pointing past every seventh day to the rest that remains.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Ezekiel restates this very verse in his rehearsal of Israel's history: "I gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign between me and them, that they might know that I am the LORD who sanctifies them" (Ezekiel 20:12, cf. 20:20). The Verifier records a whole cluster shared across the sentence — ’ôwth ("sign," H226, in 77 verses), shabbâth (H7676), qâdash ("sanctify," H6942), bêyn ("between," H996), the pronoun "I" (’ănî), and the verb "know" (yâda‘). Held honestly: none of these lexemes is individually rare enough (the rarest, ’ôwth, still spans 77 verses) to certify a quotation on Strong's grounds alone, so the Verifier tiers it structural/thematic rather than "verbal" — and we follow it down. What makes the dependence look like deliberate citation is not any one rare word but the reproduction of the entire formula (sign · sabbath · between · know · sanctify), a recognized mark of Ezekiel's reliance on the Holiness/Priestly Sabbath language. Cambridge and Keil & Delitzsch both note the link in place; the claim is offered as a strong structural restatement, not a lexically-proven quotation.
Exodus 31:13 · Ezekiel 20:12 · Ezekiel 20:20
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared H226 ʼôwth (77 vv), H7676 shabbâth (89 vv), H6942 qâdash (152 vv), H996 bêyn (247 vv) + ʼănî/yâda‘ — no single rare lexeme (lowest freq is ʼôwth at 77 vv), so the Verifier tiers it structural, not verbal; the near-verbatim feel comes from the whole reproduced formula, an argued inner-biblical dependence rather than a Strong's-proven quotation
The closing word of the unit, way·yin·nā·p̄aš ("and He was refreshed / took breath," H5314), is among the rarest verbs in the Hebrew Bible — it appears in just three verses. The other two describe weary creatures: the people and beasts of the household resting on the seventh day (Exodus 23:12), and David and his exhausted company resting on the flight from Absalom (2 Samuel 16:14). That God should be the subject is, as Barnes says, "remarkable... it occurs nowhere else" of the Creator. The shared rare lexeme makes this a genuine verbal link, not a thematic one — and the contrast is the point: the breath weary men take, God takes in delight, not exhaustion (so Poole, Benson).
Exodus 31:17 · Exodus 23:12 · 2 Samuel 16:14
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared rare lexeme H5314 nâphash (only 3 vv in the OT) — the very rarity is what makes the link verbal rather than thematic
Verse 17's rationale — "for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, but on the seventh day He rested" — is, Cambridge notes, "verbatim as Exodus 20:11," the Decalogue's own ground for the Sabbath. Behind both stands Genesis 2:2–3, the seventh-day cessation of creation. The links sort out precisely: with Genesis 2:2 the Verifier finds the shared verb šâbath ("cease/rest," H7673, 67 vv) together with shᵉbîy‘î ("seventh," H7637) and yôwm ("day," H3117) — the creation-rest spine. With Exodus 20:11 the shared words are shᵉbîy‘î, shêsh ("six," H8337), shâmayim ("heavens," H8064) and yôwm — but not šâbath, because Exodus 20:11 uses a different verb for God's resting (nûaḥ, "settled / rested," not šâbath); the "verbatim" Cambridge means is the sense and clause-order, not the underlying lexis. The same six/seventh cluster ties this unit to the near-context of Exodus 23:12. The Sabbath law is thus stitched into creation itself — but on common-frequency words, so the link is structural, not a rare-word quotation.
Exodus 31:15 · Exodus 31:17 · Exodus 20:8-11 · Genesis 2:2-3 · Exodus 23:12
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; with Genesis 2:2 shared H7673 shâbath (67 vv), H7637 shᵉbîy‘î, H3117 yôwm; with Exodus 20:11 shared H7637 shᵉbîy‘î, H8337 shêsh, H8064 shâmayim, H3117 yôwm — note Exodus 20:11 does NOT share H7673 (it uses nûaḥ), so Cambridge's "verbatim" is sense/clause-order, not lexis; all common-frequency, hence structural not verbal
The doubled phrase šabbaṯ šabbāṯôwn (v. 15) recurs at the high points of the calendar: the weekly Sabbath again (Exodus 35:2; Leviticus 23:3), the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16:31; 23:32), and the sabbatical year of the land (Leviticus 25:4). The Verifier confirms the link to Leviticus 23:32 on the strength of shabbâthôwn (H7677) — a word found in only ten verses — together with shabbâth. The rare shabbâthôwn marks the most absolute rests in Israel's law; this unit places the weekly seventh day in that highest company.
Exodus 31:15 · Leviticus 23:32 · Leviticus 16:31 · Leviticus 23:3 · Leviticus 25:4
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared rare lexeme H7677 shabbâthôwn (only 10 vv) + H7676 shabbâth — the low-frequency H7677 makes the verbal link to Leviticus 23:32 secure
Verse 16 names the Sabbath a bᵉrîyth ‘ōwlām, an "everlasting covenant" — and Gill says it is so "in just the same sense as circumcision was" (Genesis 17:13). Cambridge confirms the formula is shared with the Genesis covenant-signs: the rainbow (Genesis 9:16) and circumcision (Genesis 17:7, 13). The Verifier records the shared lexemes bᵉrîyth ("covenant," H1285) and ‘ōwlâm ("everlasting," H5769). Because both lexemes are common, this is a structural/thematic link, not a rare-word quotation — but the connection is real: the Sabbath is set deliberately into the same class of perpetual covenant-signs as the flesh-cut of Abraham and the bow in the cloud.
Exodus 31:16 · Genesis 17:13 · Genesis 9:16 · Genesis 17:7
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared H1285 bᵉrîyth + H5769 ‘ōwlâm with Genesis 17:13 — both lexemes common (264 and 414 vv), so the link is the shared covenant-sign motif, not a rare quotation
God "rested" on the seventh day (v. 17), yet Scripture later treats that rest as unfinished. Hebrews quotes Genesis 2:2 — "And God rested on the seventh day from all his works" — only to argue that "there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God" (Hebrews 4:4, 9), entered by faith in Christ rather than by the calendar. Paul calls the Sabbath "a shadow of the things to come, but the body belongs to Christ" (Colossians 2:16–17). Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek New Testament ↔ Hebrew), so it cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers — the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme and flags it. The connection is theological and is argued by the NT writers themselves; it is not a verbal quotation of this verse. Left flagged so the claim is weighed, not asserted.
Exodus 31:17 · Genesis 2:2-3 · Hebrews 4:4-9 · Colossians 2:16-17
basis: cross-Testament (Greek NT ↔ Hebrew) — no shared original-language lexeme; Hebrews quotes Genesis 2:2 (LXX), not Exodus 31:17, and the rest-typology is an argued NT reading, not a quotation of this verse
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The unit ends with God ceasing and "taking breath" on the seventh day — yet the New Testament insists that rest was never fully entered. Hebrews presses exactly this: "if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken later of another day... there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God" (Hebrews 4:8–9). The weekly Sabbath of Exodus 31 was a sign and a rehearsal; the true rest is found in Christ, who says "Come to me, all you who are weary... and I will give you rest" (Matthew 11:28). Matthew Henry read the day's very meaning this way — "the thing signified by the sabbath is that rest in glory which remains for the people of God."
Exodus 31:17 · Hebrews 4:8-10 · Matthew 11:28
The Sabbath was given "that you may know that I am the LORD who sanctifies you" (v. 13) — and the Gospels place that sanctifying LORD in the person of Christ, who declares "the Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath" (Mark 2:28). The One who instituted the day, claimed it as "My Sabbaths," and made it the sign of His sanctifying work is, on the New Testament's reading, the same Lord who now stands over it as its Master and its meaning. Poole's "prefigurative" sign — "that rest which Christ should purchase for them" — finds its object here.
Exodus 31:13 · Mark 2:27-28 · Colossians 2:16-17
Verse 17 grounds the Sabbath in creation: "for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth." The New Testament names the agent of that making: "all things were made through him" (John 1:3), "by him all things were created... and in him all things hold together" (Colossians 1:16–17). The LORD who made heaven and earth and then ceased is, in the apostolic reading, the same through whom they were made — so that the Creator who "took breath" on the seventh day is no less than the eternal Son. Held honestly: the verse itself names only YHWH; this identification is the New Testament's, read back upon it.
Exodus 31:17 · John 1:1-3 · Colossians 1:16-17 · Hebrews 1:2
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 (BSB), public domain (CC0). The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries via Biblehub — Ellicott, Matthew Henry, Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Poole, Gill, Geneva Study Bible, Cambridge Bible, Pulpit Commentary, Keil & Delitzsch, and Benson. The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; transliterations, parsings, literal renderings, and the "where the English smooths the Hebrew" notes are this tool's own work (⚙), fallible — check against BDB/HALOT and a standard grammar.
On the threads: only two cross-references rest on genuinely rare lexemes and are tiered "verbal": nâphash (H5314, "was refreshed," only 3 verses) linking v. 17 to Exodus 23:12 and 2 Samuel 16:14; and shabbâthôwn (H7677, only 10 verses) linking v. 15's "Sabbath of Sabbaths" to Leviticus 23:32. The Ezekiel 20:12 link — though Ezekiel plainly reproduces the whole formula of v. 13 (sign, Sabbath, sanctify, between, I, know) — is tiered structural/thematic, not verbal: its rarest shared word, ’ôwth, still spans 77 verses, so the near-verbatim feel rests on the reproduced formula (an argued inner-biblical dependence), not on any single rare lexeme. Likewise the creation-ground link runs on common words (šâbath 67 vv, shêsh, shᵉbîy‘î, yôwm) and on bᵉrîyth/‘ōwlâm for the covenant-sign link to Genesis 17 — all structural/thematic, not rare-word quotations. One caution recorded in place: Exodus 20:11 does not share the verb šâbath with v. 17 (it uses nûaḥ), so the commentators' "verbatim as Exodus 20:11" describes sense and clause-order, not the Hebrew lexis.
One link is left flagged on purpose: the "remaining Sabbath rest" of Hebrews 4. It is a cross-Testament connection (Greek NT ↔ Hebrew), so it cannot use shared Strong's numbers — and Hebrews in fact quotes Genesis 2:2 (in the Greek), not Exodus 31:17. The rest-typology is argued by the NT writers themselves and is theologically sound, but it is not a verbal quotation of this verse; the flag shows the Verifier doing its work in the open rather than claiming more certainty than the evidence carries. "Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so" (Acts 17:11).
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)