The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible

Exodus35:4–9

Offerings for the Tabernacle

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
Public-domain source — quoted & attributed AI synthesis — generated, verify

Exodus 35:4–9 — Offerings for the Tabernacle. 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.

4“Moses also told the whole congregation of Israel, “This is what …”+

4Moses also told the whole congregation of Israel, “This is what the LORD has commanded:

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

mō·šeh way·yō·mer ’el- kāl- ‘ă·ḏaṯ bə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl lê·mōr zeh had·dā·ḇār ’ă·šer- Yah·weh lê·mōr ṣiw·wāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And Moses said to all the congregation of [the] sons of Israel, saying, This [is] the thing which the LORD commanded, saying:

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַיֹּ֣אמֶר wayyōmer (H559) is the plain narrative "and he said"—the same root ʾāmar that returns twice more in the verse as the infinitive lēmōr ("saying"). BSB "told" smooths a chain of three say-words (said... saying... saying) into one verb; the Hebrew triple-frames the whole as speech that is to be re-spoken—Moses says what the LORD said to be said.
  • עֲדַ֥ת ʿăḏaṯ (H5712), "the congregation of," is a construct from ʿēḏâh, "a stated assemblage, a concourse"—the formally convened assembly, not a casual crowd. BSB "whole congregation" is right; the Hebrew word marks Israel assembled as a body to receive the command, the same legal-cultic term that governs the whole tabernacle enterprise (cf. kāl, "the whole," leaving none out).
  • צִוָּ֥ה ṣiwwāh (H6680) is the Piel (intensive) of ṣāwâh, "to constitute, enjoin"—a strong word of authoritative ordering, not mere telling. BSB "has commanded" carries it. The verb stands last and weighty in the Hebrew clause: this is the thing which the LORD enjoined—the people's offering is framed from the outset as obedience to a divine command, before it is ever described as voluntary (v. 5).
Word by word14 · parsed+
מֹשֶׁ֔הmō·šehMoses alsoH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
mōšeh (H4872), "Moses"; the verse opens on the lawgiver's name—he stands between God and the assembly, repeating now (Gill) what God had ordered him "upon the mount the first time," delayed until now "through their idolatry" (the golden calf) and the labor of restoring the covenant.
וַיֹּ֣אמֶרway·yō·mertoldH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
wayyōmer (H559), "and he said"; the consecutive imperfect that drives Hebrew narrative—the formal opening of Moses' address to the assembled nation.
אֶל־’el-H413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongPreposition
כָּל־kāl-the wholeH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
עֲדַ֥ת‘ă·ḏaṯcongregationH5712
√ ʻêdâh — a stated assemblage (specifically, a concourse, or generally, a family or crowd)Nounfeminine singular construct
ʿăḏaṯ (H5712), "congregation of"; the convened assembly of Israel, the legal body that receives and is bound by the command.
בְּנֵֽי־bə·nê-. . .H1121
√ 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 construct
יִשְׂרָאֵ֖לyiś·rā·’êlof IsraelH3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
לֵאמֹ֑רlê·mōrH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Preposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
זֶ֣הzehThisH2088
√ zeh — the masculine demonstrative pronoun, this or thatPronounmasculine singular
zeh (H2088), "this"; the demonstrative pointing forward to the command about to be given—"this is the thing," the standing formula introducing a divine word (Cambridge cites the same phrasing at Exodus 16:16, 16:32).
הַדָּבָ֔רhad·dā·ḇār. . .H1697
√ dâbâr — a wordArticleNounmasculine singular
אֲשֶׁר־’ă·šer-is whatH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
יְהוָ֖הYah·wehthe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
Yahweh (H3068), "the LORD"; the covenant name—the command is not Moses' policy but the LORD's, the One newly re-enthroned among His people after the calf.
לֵאמֹֽר׃lê·mōr. . .H559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Preposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
צִוָּ֥הṣiw·wāhhas commandedH6680
√ tsâvâh — (intensively) to constitute, enjoinVerbPielPerfectthird person masculine singular
ṣiwwāh (H6680), "commanded / enjoined"; the Piel perfect that grounds the whole appeal—the freewill offering of vv. 5-9 rests upon a prior command of God.
The Voices✦ public domain+
And Moses spake.—This passage is the sequence and counterpart of Exodus 25:1-7 , and follows exactly the same order in the enumeration of the required offerings. Both passages equally declare the sine quâ non of an acceptable offering to be “a willing heart”
this is the thing which the Lord commanded; ordered Moses to inform them of as his will, when he was with him upon the mount the first time; but through their idolatry, and time spent in making up matters between God and them, he had not had till now an opportunity of acquainting them with it
4–9 . The people are invited to make voluntary offerings of the materials needed for the sanctuary. See Exodus 25:2-7 , from which the list of materials in vv. 6–9 is verbally repeated.
in accordance with the command of Jehovah, he first of all summoned the whole nation to present freewill-offerings for the holy things to be prepared ( Exodus 35:4 , Exodus 35:5 ), mentioning one by one all the materials that would be required ( Exodus 35:5-9 , as in Exodus 25:3-7 )
the Israelites were specially reminded of the design to erect a magnificent tabernacle for the regular worship of God, as well as of the leading articles that were required to furnish that sacred edifice
Added to broaden the unit's voices: JFB frames the occasion's purpose — a dwelling for the regular worship of God and the materials to furnish it — a distinct emphasis from the other commentators' focus on the verbatim repetition.
5“Take from among you an offering to the LORD. Let everyone whose …”+

5Take from among you an offering to the LORD. Let everyone whose heart is willing bring an offering to the LORD: gold, silver, and bronze;

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

qə·ḥū mê·’it·tə·ḵem tə·rū·māh Yah·weh kōl lib·bōw nə·ḏîḇ yə·ḇî·’e·hā ’êṯ tə·rū·maṯ Yah·weh zā·hāḇ wā·ḵe·sep̄ ū·nə·ḥō·šeṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

Take from among you a contribution to the LORD; everyone willing of his heart, let him bring it—the contribution of the LORD: gold, and silver, and bronze;

Where the English smooths the original

  • תְּרוּמָה֙ tərûmâh (H8641) is not a generic "offering" but a contribution / heave-offering—a present "lifted off" one's own property and set apart (Keil: "every gift intended for the erection and maintenance of the sanctuary... inasmuch as the offerer lifted it off from his own property"). Cambridge insists on "a contribution." BSB "an offering" is acceptable but loses the technical sense of a portion raised up and surrendered out of what one possesses.
  • מֵֽאִתְּכֶ֤ם mēʾittəḵem (H854), "from among you"—Cambridge corrects: "from ; ‘among’ is wrong... the prep. is the one rendered ‘of’ (i.e. from) in Exodus 25:2." The contribution comes out of the people's own substance, not from a common store; BSB "from among you" reads the preposition as locative when it is partitive—from you, from what is yours.
  • נְדִ֣יב nəḏîḇ (H5081), "willing / voluntary," is the heart of the whole appeal—properly "voluntary," hence "noble, generous." The phrase is literally "everyone willing of his heart" (nəḏîḇ libbô). BSB "whose heart is willing" inverts the construct; the Hebrew makes willingness itself the governing quality—the same root that names the "freewill offering" (nəḏāḇâh). Poole: "God values not forced or grudged services."
Word by word14 · parsed+
קְח֨וּqə·ḥūTakeH3947
√ lâqach — to take (in the widest variety of applications)VerbQalImperativemasculine plural
qəḥû (H3947), "take"; Qal imperative plural—oddly, the command to give is phrased "take from among you," i.e., take up out of your own goods and set apart. Gill: "they were to take a part of their substance... and present it as a freewill offering."
מֵֽאִתְּכֶ֤םmê·’it·tə·ḵemfrom among youH854
√ ʼêth — properly, nearness (used only as a preposition or an adverb), nearPreposition-mDirect object markersecond person masculine plural
תְּרוּמָה֙tə·rū·māhan offeringH8641
√ tᵉrûwmâh — a present (as offered up), especially in sacrifice or as tributeNounfeminine singular
tərûmâh (H8641), "a contribution"; the heave-offering, a gift lifted off one's property for the LORD—the keyword of vv. 5-9 and of the parallel command in Exodus 25:2.
לַֽיהוָ֔הYah·wehto the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodPreposition-lNounpropermasculine singular
כֹּ֚לkōlLet everyoneH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular
לִבּ֔וֹlib·bōwwhose heartH3820
√ lêb — the heartNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
libbô (H3820), "his heart"; the seat of will and disposition—the offering is measured not by amount but by the heart's freeness (cf. v. 21-22, those "whom his heart lifted up").
נְדִ֣יבnə·ḏîḇis willingH5081
√ nâdîyb — properly, voluntary, iAdjectivemasculine singular construct
nəḏîḇ (H5081), "willing"; the decisive adjective—"of a generous and liberal disposition" (Gill), the sine qua non of an acceptable offering (Ellicott).
יְבִיאֶ֕הָyə·ḇî·’e·hābringH935
√ bôwʼ — to go or come (in a wide variety of applications)VerbHifilImperfectthird person masculine singularthird person feminine singular
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
תְּרוּמַ֣תtə·rū·maṯan offeringH8641
√ tᵉrûwmâh — a present (as offered up), especially in sacrifice or as tributeNounfeminine singular construct
יְהוָ֑הYah·wehto the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
זָהָ֥בzā·hāḇgoldH2091
√ zâhâb — gold, figuratively, something gold-colored (iNounmasculine singular
zāhāḇ (H2091), "gold"; first and costliest of the metals, heading the materials list exactly as in Exodus 25:3.
וָכֶ֖סֶףwā·ḵe·sep̄silverH3701
√ keçeph — silver (from its pale color)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
וּנְחֹֽשֶׁת׃ū·nə·ḥō·šeṯand bronzeH5178
√ nᵉchôsheth — copper, hence, something made of that metal, iConjunctive wawNounfeminine singular
ūnəḥōšeṯ (H5178), "and bronze"; Cambridge: "bronze or copper, as Exodus 25:3"—the older "brass" of the KJV is a misnomer for the copper-tin alloy of the sanctuary's outer fittings.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Whosoever is of a willing heart, for God values not forced or grudged services, 2 Corinthians 9:7 .
whosoever is of a willing heart; that is, of a generous and liberal disposition: let him bring it, an offering of the Lord; or an offering to him, otherwise not; if brought stubborn and grudgingly it would not be acceptable, for God loves a willing and cheerful giver
from among ] from ; ‘among’ is wrong. The prep. is the one rendered ‘of’ (i.e. from ) in Exodus 25:2 . an offering (twice)] a contribution , Heb. terûmâh ; see on Exodus 25:2 . of a willing heart ] cf. on Exodus 25:2 . brass ] bronze or copper , as Exodus 25:3 .
So that it does not really differ from terumah, a lift of heave-offering, as every gift intended for the erection and maintenance of the sanctuary was called, inasmuch as the offerer lifted it off from his own property, to dedicate it to the Lord for the purposes of His worship.
Verses 5-10 correspond to vers. 2-7 of ch. 25, the correspondence in the list of offerings being exact.
Added to diversify the unit's voices: the Pulpit Commentary states the master fact (vv. 5-10 exactly correspond to Exodus 25:2-7) in a distinct nineteenth-century voice, independent of Cambridge, Gill, and Keil who make the same point.
6“blue, purple, and scarlet yarn; fine linen and goat hair;”+

6blue, purple, and scarlet yarn; fine linen and goat hair;

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṯə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî wə·šêš wə·‘iz·zîm

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and goat [hair];

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּתְכֵ֧לֶת təḵēleṯ (H8504), "blue," is named for its source, not its hue—Strong's: "the cerulean mussel," the violet-blue dye won from the murex shellfish. BSB "blue" gives the color; the Hebrew word carries the costly marine origin of the dye, the same blue of the tabernacle curtains and the priest's robe.
  • וְתוֹלַ֥עַת tôwlaʿaṯ (H8438), "scarlet," is literally "the crimson-grub"—the insect (coccus) from which the dye was taken, "used only... of the color from it." Paired with šānî (H8144) it forms the standing phrase "scarlet/crimson stuff." BSB folds the two Hebrew words into "scarlet yarn"; the Hebrew names a worm and its blood-red dye—the very image Isaiah seizes for sin (Isaiah 1:18).
  • וְעִזִּֽים׃ wəʿizzîm (H5795), "and goat [hair]," is literally "and goats"—the noun for she-goats "used elliptically for goat's hair." BSB rightly supplies "hair" (the woven coarse cloth of the outer tent-covering); the bare Hebrew says "and goats," trusting the reader to know the offering is the hair, not the live animal.
Word by word6 · parsed+
וּתְכֵ֧לֶתū·ṯə·ḵê·leṯblueH8504
√ tᵉkêleth — the cerulean mussel, iConjunctive wawNounfeminine singular
təḵēleṯ (H8504), "blue"; the murex-violet, first of the three dyed yarns, the color of the sanctuary's holy textiles.
וְאַרְגָּמָ֛ןwə·’ar·gā·mānpurpleH713
√ ʼargâmân — purple (the color or the dyed stuff)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular construct
ʾargāmān (H713), "purple"; "the color or the dyed stuff"—the royal Tyrian purple, also shellfish-derived, second in the standing color-triad.
וְתוֹלַ֥עַתwə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯand scarlet yarnH8438
√ tôwlâʻ — the crimson-grub, but used only (in this connection) of the colorfrom it, and cloths dyed therewithConjunctive wawNounfeminine singular construct
tôwlaʿaṯ (H8438), "scarlet"; the crimson-grub dye, joined to šānî below as the fixed phrase for the deep-red yarn.
שָׁנִ֖יšā·nî. . .H8144
√ shânîy — crimson, properly, the insect or its color, also stuff dyed with itNounmasculine singular
šānî (H8144), "crimson"; "properly, the insect or its color, also stuff dyed with it"—the second member of the scarlet phrase, the brilliant fast red of cochineal.
וְשֵׁ֥שׁwə·šêšfine linenH8336
√ shêsh — bleached stuff, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular construct
wəšēš (H8336), "and fine linen"; "bleached stuff"—the white byssus, the ground fabric of the holy place, set against the three dyed yarns.
וְעִזִּֽים׃wə·‘iz·zîmand goat hairH5795
√ ʻêz — a she-goat (as strong), but masculine in plural (which also is used elliptically for goat's hair)Conjunctive wawNounfeminine plural
wəʿizzîm (H5795), "and goat hair"; the coarse dark cloth of the tent's second covering, the humblest woven material in the list, offered alongside the costliest dyes.
The Voices✦ public domain+
And blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and goats' hair,
The 1599 Geneva text is given verbatim for this verse without an interpretive gloss; the marginal note marks only that the original-language exegesis follows. Recorded as the verse's plain reading.
6 . See on Exodus 25:4 .
Cambridge passes the verse over by cross-reference to Exodus 25:4 — itself the strongest commentary on this unit's point: the materials are not new, but the verbatim repetition of the command first given in chapter 25.
the several things are particularly mentioned, which would be wanted in building the tabernacle, and in the service of it, and therefore would be acceptable; and they being exactly the same, and delivered in the same words and in the same order as in Exodus 25:3 the reader is referred to the notes there
7“ram skins dyed red and fine leather; acacia wood;”+

7ram skins dyed red and fine leather; acacia wood;

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

’ê·lim wə·‘ō·rōṯ mə·’ād·dā·mîm wə·‘ō·rōṯ tə·ḥā·šîm śiṭ·ṭīm wa·‘ă·ṣê

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and skins of rams dyed red, and skins of tachash, and acacia wood;

Where the English smooths the original

  • מְאָדָּמִ֛ים məʾāddāmîm (H119, Pual participle) is "made red / dyed red"—the intensive-passive of ʾāḏam, "to flush, turn rosy," the same root behind ʾāḏām (man, from the red earth) and Edom. The ram-skins were tanned to a red. BSB "dyed red" is exact; the Hebrew verb is a rare one (only 10 vv), and its redness ties this offering, by sound and root, to the crimson of v. 6.
  • תְּחָשִׁ֖ים təḥāšîm (H8476), rendered "fine leather," is a genuinely uncertain term (only 14 vv): Strong's guesses "a (clean) animal with fur, probably a species of antelope"; Cambridge reads "dugong skins" (sealskins); older versions "badgers' skins." BSB "fine leather" sidesteps the unidentified animal. The word is one of the unit's true cruxes—the second tent-covering's hide is not securely known.
  • שִׂטִּֽים׃ śiṭṭîm (H7848), "acacia," is named from its thorns—"the acacia (from its scourging thorns)." BSB "acacia wood" combines it with the following ʿăṣê ("wood of"). The KJV "shittim wood" simply transliterates the Hebrew; the acacia was the one durable timber of the Sinai desert, the framework of the whole tabernacle.
Word by word7 · parsed+
אֵילִ֧ם’ê·limramH352
√ ʼayil — properly, strengthNounmasculine plural
ʾêlim (H352), "rams"; from a root meaning "strength"—the strong male sheep whose skins, tanned red, formed one covering of the tent.
וְעֹרֹ֨תwə·‘ō·rōṯskinsH5785
√ ʻôwr — skin (as naked)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine plural construct
wəʿōrōṯ (H5785), "and skins of"; ʿôr, "skin (as naked)"—the tanned hides offered for the protective coverings over the inner curtains.
מְאָדָּמִ֛יםmə·’ād·dā·mîmdyed redH119
√ ʼâdam — flush or turn rosyVerbPualParticiplemasculine plural
məʾāddāmîm (H119), "dyed red"; the rare Pual (10 vv) for skins reddened by tanning—the same red-root as Adam and Edom.
וְעֹרֹ֥תwə·‘ō·rōṯvvvH5785
√ ʻôwr — skin (as naked)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine plural construct
תְּחָשִׁ֖יםtə·ḥā·šîmand fine leatherH8476
√ tachash — a (clean) animal with fur, probably a species of antelopeNounmasculine plural
təḥāšîm (H8476), "tachash"; the unidentified hide (14 vv), variously sealskin/dugong (Cambridge), badger, or antelope—an open crux.
שִׂטִּֽים׃śiṭ·ṭīmacaciaH7848
√ shiṭṭâh — the acacia (from its scourging thorns)Nounfeminine plural
śiṭṭîm (H7848), "acacia"; the desert hardwood, structural timber of the tabernacle's frames, boards, and ark.
וַעֲצֵ֥יwa·‘ă·ṣêwoodH6086
√ ʻêts — a tree (from its firmness)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine plural construct
waʿăṣê (H6086), "and wood of"; ʿēṣ, "a tree (from its firmness)"—the construct governing śiṭṭîm, "wood of acacia."
The Voices✦ public domain+
7 . sealskins ] dugong skins ( Exodus 25:5 ). So v. 23.
Cambridge identifies the disputed taḥash hide as the dugong (sea-cow) of the Red Sea — one of several competing identifications (badger, antelope, dolphin); recorded as a reasoned guess, not a settled fact.
And rams' skins dyed red, and badgers' skins, and shittim wood,
The 1599 Geneva renders the taḥash as "badgers' skins" and transliterates the timber as "shittim wood" — preserving two older readings later commentators dispute (the hide) and modernize (acacia).
Take ye from amongst you an offering unto the Lord,.... That is, they were to take a part of their substance, of what they were possessed of, every man according to his ability, out of what he had in his hand that was suitable, and present it as a freewill offering to the Lord, for the use of the tabernacle to be built, and the service of it
8“olive oil for the light; spices for the anointing oil and for th…”+

8olive oil for the light; spices for the anointing oil and for the fragrant incense;

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·še·men lam·mā·’ō·wr ū·ḇə·śā·mîm ham·miš·ḥāh lə·še·men has·sam·mîm wə·liq·ṭō·reṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and oil for the light, and spices for the anointing oil and for the incense of fragrant spices;

Where the English smooths the original

  • וְשֶׁ֖מֶן wəšemen (H8081), "and oil," is properly "grease, especially liquid (as from the olive, often perfumed)." BSB supplies "olive" (from the context); the bare Hebrew says "oil for the light"—the lamp-oil of the menorah, distinct from the same word's second use in this verse (lešemen hammišḥâh, "oil of the anointing"). One Hebrew word, two sacred functions: illumination and consecration.
  • הַמִּשְׁחָ֔ה hammišḥâh (H4888), "the anointing," is the noun "unction (the act)," from māšaḥ, "to smear, anoint"—the very root of māšîaḥ, Messiah. BSB "the anointing oil" reads oil of the anointing correctly; the Hebrew names the sacred act of anointing itself, the holy compound (Exodus 30:23-25) that consecrated priest and sanctuary alike.
  • הַסַּמִּֽים׃ hassammîm (H5561), "the fragrant spices," is "an aroma"—a rare word (15 vv) for the aromatic powders compounded into the holy incense. BSB "the fragrant incense" combines it with the following qəṭōreṯ; the Hebrew phrase is "incense of the sammîm"—Cambridge: "incense of fragrant powders." The rare term anchors a tight verbal link to Exodus 25:6 and Numbers 4:16.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וְשֶׁ֖מֶןwə·še·menolive oilH8081
√ shemen — grease, especially liquid (as from the olive, often perfumed)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
wəšemen (H8081), "and oil"; olive oil for the lampstand's perpetual light (Exodus 27:20)—the first of the consumable, non-structural offerings.
לַמָּא֑וֹרlam·mā·’ō·wrfor the lightH3974
√ mâʼôwr — properly, a luminous body or luminary, iPreposition-l, ArticleNounmasculine singular
lammāʾôwr (H3974), "for the light"; māʾôr, "a luminary"—a relatively rare word (16 vv), here the menorah's flame, the only light in the holy place.
וּבְשָׂמִים֙ū·ḇə·śā·mîmspicesH1314
√ besem — fragranceConjunctive wawNounmasculine plural
ūḇəśāmîm (H1314), "and spices"; bōśem, "fragrance"—the aromatic raw materials for both the anointing oil and the incense.
הַמִּשְׁחָ֔הham·miš·ḥāhfor the anointingH4888
√ mishchâh — unction (the act)ArticleNounfeminine singular
hammišḥâh (H4888), "the anointing"; the holy unction (24 vv), the consecrating compound of Exodus 30—root of māšîaḥ, Messiah.
לְשֶׁ֣מֶןlə·še·menoilH8081
√ shemen — grease, especially liquid (as from the olive, often perfumed)Preposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
הַסַּמִּֽים׃has·sam·mîmand for the fragrantH5561
√ çam — an aromaArticleNounmasculine plural
hassammîm (H5561), "the fragrant spices"; the rare aromatic powders (15 vv) of the holy incense, a Verifier anchor-word.
וְלִקְטֹ֖רֶתwə·liq·ṭō·reṯincenseH7004
√ qᵉṭôreth — a fumigationConjunctive waw, Preposition-lNounfeminine singular construct
wəliqṭōreṯ (H7004), "and for the incense"; qəṭōreṯ, "a fumigation"—the perpetual incense burned on the golden altar before the LORD.
The Voices✦ public domain+
8 . sweet incense ] incense of fragrant powders ( Exodus 25:6 ). So vv. 15, 27.
And oil for the light, and spices for anointing oil, and for the sweet incense,
The 1599 Geneva text given verbatim; it preserves the older "sweet incense" that Cambridge later refines to "incense of fragrant powders."
The tabernacle was to be dedicated to the honour of God, and used in his service; and therefore what was brought for it, was an offering to the Lord.
9“and onyx stones and gemstones to be mounted on the ephod and bre…”+

9and onyx stones and gemstones to be mounted on the ephod and breastpiece.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·’aḇ·nê- šō·ham wə·’aḇ·nê mil·lu·’îm lā·’ê·p̄ō·wḏ wə·la·ḥō·šen

Literal — word-for-word from the original

and stones of onyx, and stones of settings for the ephod and for the breastpiece.

Where the English smooths the original

  • שֹׁ֔הַם šōham (H7718), "onyx," is a genuinely uncertain gem—a rare word (only 11 vv): "a gem, probably the beryl (from its pale green color)." BSB "onyx" follows one tradition; the LXX gives "emerald," the Targums "beryl," Josephus "sardonyx." The same disputed stone is engraved with the tribes' names on the high priest's shoulders (Exodus 28:9); "onyx" is the conventional, not the certain, rendering.
  • מִלֻּאִ֑ים millu·ʾîm (H4394), rendered "to be mounted," is literally "fillings / settings"—a rare noun (15 vv) from mālēʾ, "to fill": stones set into their gold sockets, the gem "filling" the setting. BSB "gemstones to be mounted" interprets the noun as a verb; the Hebrew names "stones of fillings"—the same word that also means the "filling of the hand," i.e., priestly consecration/ordination (Exodus 29:22).
  • וְלַחֹֽשֶׁן׃ wəlaḥōšen (H2833), "and for the breastpiece," is a rare word (21 vv) for the high priest's pouch—"perhaps a pocket (as holding the Urim and Thummim), or rich (as containing gems), used only of the gorget of the highpriest." BSB "breastpiece" is right; the Hebrew names the unique sacred article that, with the ephod, carried Israel's twelve names into God's presence.
Word by word6 · parsed+
וְאַ֨בְנֵי־wə·’aḇ·nê-and onyx stonesH68
√ ʼeben — a stoneConjunctive wawNounfeminine plural construct
wəʾaḇnê (H68), "and stones of"; ʾeben, "a stone"—construct, governing šōham; the precious stones for the priestly regalia, the costliest and last items in the offering-list.
שֹׁ֔הַםšō·ham. . .H7718
√ shôham — a gem, probably the beryl (from its pale green color)Nounmasculine singular
šōham (H7718), "onyx"; the rare, disputed gem (11 vv) for the two shoulder-stones of the ephod (Exodus 28:9).
וְאַבְנֵ֖יwə·’aḇ·nêand gemstonesH68
√ ʼeben — a stoneConjunctive wawNounfeminine plural construct
מִלֻּאִ֑יםmil·lu·’îmto be mountedH4394
√ milluʼ — a fulfilling (only in plural), iNounmasculine plural
millu·ʾîm (H4394), "settings / fillings"; the rare noun (15 vv) for gems set into sockets—cognate with the "filling of the hand," the term for priestly consecration.
לָאֵפ֖וֹדlā·’ê·p̄ō·wḏon the ephodH646
√ ʼêphôwd — a girdlePreposition-l, ArticleNounmasculine singular
lāʾêp̄ôwḏ (H646), "for the ephod"; the high priest's shoulder-vestment (39 vv) that bore the two onyx stones.
וְלַחֹֽשֶׁן׃wə·la·ḥō·šenand breastpieceH2833
√ chôshen — perhaps a pocket (as holding the Urim and Thummim), or rich (as containing gems), used only of the gorget of the highpriestConjunctive waw, Preposition-l, ArticleNounmasculine singular
wəlaḥōšen (H2833), "and for the breastpiece"; the rare gorget (21 vv) of the high priest, set with twelve stones and holding the Urim and Thummim—the verse, and the offering, ends on the priestly heart-piece.
The Voices✦ public domain+
And onyx stones, and stones to be set for the ephod, and for the breastplate.
The 1599 Geneva renders milluʾîm as "stones to be set" — capturing the noun's sense of gems fixed into their sockets, the same word also used for priestly ordination ("the filling of the hand").
here and in the four following verses, the several things are particularly mentioned, which would be wanted in building the tabernacle, and in the service of it, and therefore would be acceptable; and they being exactly the same, and delivered in the same words and in the same order as in Exodus 25:3 the reader is referred to the notes there
Then, in accordance with the command of Jehovah, he first of all summoned the whole nation to present freewill-offerings for the holy things to be prepared ( Exodus 35:4 , Exodus 35:5 ), mentioning one by one all the materials that would be required ( Exodus 35:5-9 , as in Exodus 25:3-7 )

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 command re-spoken — a covenant restored after the calf

The unit opens not with new revelation but with repetition. "This is the thing which the LORD commanded" (v. 4)—and the verb is ṣiwwāh (H6680), the strong Piel "enjoined." Every expositor of this passage says the same thing: it is, in Ellicott's words, "the sequence and counterpart of Exodus 25:1-7, and follows exactly the same order in the enumeration of the required offerings." Cambridge is blunt—the list of materials is "verbally repeated" from Exodus 25:2-7. Gill notes the materials are "exactly the same, and delivered in the same words and in the same order as in Exodus 25:3." What makes the repetition weighty is its timing. Gill explains that the LORD had ordered this "when he was with him upon the mount the first time; but through their idolatry, and time spent in making up matters between God and them, he had not had till now an opportunity of acquainting them with it." Between the command (ch. 25) and its delivery (ch. 35) stands the golden calf. So the offering for God's dwelling is asked of a people freshly forgiven—the restored covenant's first act is an invitation to give.

ii. The willing heart — the one condition of an acceptable gift

Verse 5 sets the single requirement, and it is not wealth but disposition: "everyone willing of his heart" (nəḏîḇ libbô). Ellicott calls a willing heart "the sine quâ non of an acceptable offering." Gill glosses it as "a generous and liberal disposition," and presses the negative: "if brought stubborn and grudgingly it would not be acceptable, for God loves a willing and cheerful giver." Poole compresses the whole theology into one line, reaching across to Paul: "Whosoever is of a willing heart, for God values not forced or grudged services, 2 Corinthians 9:7." The gift itself is a tərûmâh (H8641), a contribution "lifted off" one's own property and surrendered—Keil: "every gift intended for the erection and maintenance of the sanctuary... inasmuch as the offerer lifted it off from his own property, to dedicate it to the Lord." The strange grammar reinforces the point: the command to give is phrased "take from among you" (qəḥû, v. 5)—as Gill says, "they were to take a part of their substance... and present it as a freewill offering to the Lord." Command and freedom are held together: God enjoins the offering (v. 4) and yet receives only what the heart freely lifts up (v. 5).

iii. The catalogue of materials — from common goat-hair to the high priest's gems

Verses 5-9 name the materials one by one, and the list ascends and descends across the whole range of value. It opens with the three metals—gold, silver, bronze (v. 5)—then the dyed yarns: təḵēleṯ (blue, the murex dye), ʾargāmān (royal purple), and tôwlaʿaṯ šānî (scarlet, literally "the crimson-grub" and its color, v. 6). Beside the costliest dyes stand the humblest stuffs: fine linen and bare "goats" (ʿizzîm, the coarse hair of the outer tent, v. 6); ram-skins "dyed red" (the rare Pual məʾāddāmîm, 10 vv) and the unidentified taḥash hides (v. 7), with the desert's one hardwood, acacia. Then the consumables: oil for the light, and "spices for the anointing oil and for the incense of fragrant powders" (v. 8; Cambridge: "incense of fragrant powders"). And the list ends, as the tabernacle's holiness climbs to its summit, on the high priest's gems: šōham stones and stones of millu·ʾîm (settings) "for the ephod and for the breastpiece" (v. 9). The architecture is deliberate: every Israelite, whether he owned gold or only goat-hair, had something to lift up; the sanctuary needed them all. Matthew Henry reads the whole: "The tabernacle was to be dedicated to the honour of God, and used in his service; and therefore what was brought for it, was an offering to the Lord."

iv. Cruxes left open — the things the Hebrew does not settle

Even in a plain inventory, the synthesis must keep faith with the text's genuine uncertainties. Two of the materials are not securely identified. The taḥash skins of v. 7 (H8476) are rendered "fine leather" by the BSB, "sealskins / dugong skins" by Cambridge ("dugong skins, Exodus 25:5"), and "badgers' skins" by the 1599 Geneva—Strong's itself only ventures "probably a species of antelope." And the gem šōham of v. 9 (H7718, only 11 vv) is just as open: "onyx" (BSB), "beryl" (Strong's, the Targums), "emerald" (LXX), "sardonyx" (Josephus). These are not failures of translation but limits of knowledge, and the older versions preserve the disagreement on the page. The synthesis records them rather than smoothing them—the same hide and the same stone recur, unresolved, throughout the tabernacle account.

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

Read under Sola Scriptura, this short passage is the gospel-logic of giving, set in its right order. First comes the command: "This is the thing which the LORD commanded" (v. 4)—the offering is not Israel's idea but God's. Yet the only thing God will accept is the gift of a willing heart (v. 5): "take from among you a contribution... everyone willing of his heart, let him bring it." Command and freedom are not opposites here; the LORD enjoins an offering and then receives only what is freely lifted up. And the timing preaches: this invitation falls after the golden calf, to a people just forgiven. The same nation that melted its gold into an idol is now asked to bring its gold for God's dwelling—and the restored covenant's first act is not a punishment but an invitation to give. The materials run from gold down to goat-hair (vv. 5-9), so that no one is excluded: the poorest had a strand of hair to lift up, the richest a gem for the priest's breastpiece. The bare text does not yet name Christ. But it teaches the shape of all acceptable offering—commanded by God, surrendered freely from one's own, and reaching its summit in the stones that will be carried, by name, into God's presence on the heart of the priest (v. 9). The New Testament's "God loves a cheerful giver" (2 Corinthians 9:7) is the same heart-religion Poole already heard in this verse; the synthesis records that hearing as the tradition's, grounded in the Hebrew word nəḏîḇ—willing.

The people who melted their gold into a calf are now asked to bring their gold for God's house — and the only condition is a willing heart. (A fallible synthesis line, not Scripture.)

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 command and its echo — Exodus 35:4-9 ↔ Exodus 25:2-7 structural / thematic — confirmed

This is the master thread of the unit, and the commentators name it with one voice: vv. 4-9 are the deliberate re-speaking of the command first given in Exodus 25:2-7. Cambridge: the list of materials "is verbally repeated" from Exodus 25:2-7. Ellicott: the passage "follows exactly the same order." Gill: "exactly the same, and delivered in the same words and in the same order as in Exodus 25:3." Keil: the materials are mentioned "one by one... as in Exodus 25:3-7." The Verifier confirms the material overlap (the metals link 35:5↔25:3 on zāhāḇ, keseph, nəḥōšeṯ; the spices link 35:8↔25:6 on the rare māʾôr 16 vv, šemen, and sam 15 vv; the gems link 35:9↔25:7 on the rare šōham 11 vv, millu·ʾîm 15 vv, and ḥōšen 21 vv). Because the shared text is the standing formulaic list of materials—a command repeated verbatim by the same book—rather than one passage quoting a distant other, this is tiered structural/thematic at the unit level, even though several sub-links carry rare lexemes; it is the same words on purpose, God's command and its re-delivery.

Exodus 25:2 · Exodus 25:3 · Exodus 25:6 · Exodus 25:7

basis: Verifier-computed, sub-link by sub-link: 35:5↔25:3 shares H2091 zâhâb + H3701 keçeph + H5178 nᵉchôsheth (the metals); 35:8↔25:6 shares the RARE H5561 çam (15 vv) + H3974 mâʼôwr (16 vv) + H8081 shemen; 35:9↔25:7 shares the RARE H7718 shôham (11 vv) + H4394 milluʼ (15 vv) + H2833 chôshen (21 vv). DOWNGRADED to structural/thematic at the unit level because the shared text is the standing formulaic materials-list that ch. 35 repeats verbatim from ch. 25 (the commentators: 'verbally repeated,' 'exactly the same words and order') — a command re-spoken, not one passage quoting a separate one.

The offering and its fulfilment — Exodus 35:5-9 ↔ Exodus 35:23, 35:27, 35:28 verbal / quotation — confirmed

The same chapter that records the call (vv. 4-9) records its overflowing answer a few verses later (vv. 20-29), and the Verifier ties them on the actual materials brought. The yarns and linen and goat-hair link v. 6 to Exodus 35:23 (shared šēš 37 vv, šānî 42 vv, ʿēz 74 vv); the consumable oil and spices link v. 8 to Exodus 35:28 (the rare māʾôr 16 vv, šemen, sam 15 vv); and the priestly gems link v. 9 to Exodus 35:27, where "the leaders brought onyx stones and gemstones to be mounted on the ephod and breastpiece"—shared on the rare šōham (11 vv), ḥōšen (21 vv), and ʾeben. The narrative satisfaction is the point: what was named in the command is brought, item for item, by a willing people. On the strength of the rare onyx/breastpiece pair, the gem sub-link (35:9↔35:27) is genuinely verbal; the broader fulfilment is tiered verbal on those rare lexemes.

Exodus 35:23 · Exodus 35:27 · Exodus 35:28

basis: Verifier-computed: 35:9↔35:27 shares the RARE H7718 shôham (only 11 vv) + H2833 chôshen (21 vv) + H68 ʼeben — the rare onyx/breastpiece pair makes the gem fulfilment verbal; 35:8↔35:28 shares the RARE H5561 çam (15 vv) + H3974 mâʼôwr (16 vv) + H8081 shemen; 35:6↔35:23 shares H8336 shêsh (37 vv) + H8144 shânîy (42 vv) + H5795 ʻêz (74 vv) (this sub-link alone is structural, no rare word). Tiered verbal on the strength of the rare šôham tie at v. 9.

Ram-skins dyed red and the tachash hides — Exodus 35:7 ↔ Exodus 25:5; 26:14; 36:19; 39:34 verbal / quotation — confirmed

Verse 7 carries two of the rarest words in the unit, and they bind it tightly to every other tabernacle passage that names the tent's coverings. The Verifier links v. 7 to Exodus 25:5 (the command), 26:14 and 36:19 (the making of the coverings), and 39:34 (the finished work) on a cluster of rare lexemes: ʾāḏam ("dyed red," only 10 vv), taḥash (the unidentified hide, 14 vv), and ʿôr (skin, 82 vv), with ʾayil (ram). Because taḥash and the red-dyeing verb are genuinely rare and recur as a fixed pair, this is a true verbal link—the same two coverings (red ram-skins over taḥash-skins) described identically across command, construction, and completion. It also carries forward the unit's open crux: whatever the taḥash animal was, the Hebrew names it the same way every time.

Exodus 25:5 · Exodus 26:14 · Exodus 36:19 · Exodus 39:34

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: the RARE H119 ʼâdam ("dyed red," only 10 vv) + the RARE H8476 tachash (the unidentified hide, 14 vv) + H5785 ʻôwr (82 vv) + H352 ʼayil (170 vv). The two rare words recur as a fixed pair across 25:5, 26:14, 36:19, 39:34 — a genuine verbal echo of the tent-covering formula.

Oil for the light, spices for the holy compounds — Exodus 35:8 ↔ Exodus 25:6; Numbers 4:16 verbal / quotation — confirmed

The consumables of v. 8—lamp-oil, anointing-spices, and incense-powders—link by rare vocabulary not only to the command in Exodus 25:6 but out into Numbers, where the same materials become the Levites' charge. The Verifier ties v. 8 to Numbers 4:16, the duty of Eleazar the priest: "the oil for the light, the fragrant incense, the regular grain offering, and the anointing oil"—shared on the rare māʾôr (light, 16 vv), sam (fragrant spice, 15 vv), mišḥâh (anointing, 24 vv), and qəṭōreṯ (incense, 58 vv). The cluster of three rare-to-uncommon words makes this verbal: the very materials Israel is invited to bring here (Exodus) are the same the priests are charged to keep there (Numbers)—gift becomes stewardship.

Exodus 25:6 · Numbers 4:16

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: the RARE H5561 çam (fragrant spice, 15 vv) + H3974 mâʼôwr (light, 16 vv) + H4888 mishchâh (anointing, 24 vv) + H7004 qᵉṭôreth (incense, 58 vv). The clustering of rare/uncommon cultic words across Exodus 25:6, Exodus 35:8, and Numbers 4:16 makes the link verbal — the same holy materials, named identically as gift (Ex) and as priestly charge (Num).

Scarlet, crimson, and the colour of sin — Exodus 35:6-7 ↔ Isaiah 1:18 structural / thematic — confirmed

The scarlet yarn of v. 6 is named by two Hebrew words—tôwlaʿaṯ šānî, "the crimson-grub" and its dye—and the ram-skins of v. 7 are "dyed red" by the rare verb ʾāḏam. Isaiah gathers all three for the colour of sin and the wonder of its cleansing: "Though your sins be as scarlet (šānî), they shall be as white as snow; though they be red (ʾāḏam) like crimson (tôwlāʿ), they shall be as wool" (Isaiah 1:18). The Verifier finds the shared lexemes šānî (H8144, 42 vv) and tôwlāʿ (H8438, 43 vv) against v. 6, and—more pointedly—the rare ʾāḏam (H119, only 10 vv) against v. 7's "dyed red." Held honestly: even the rare ʾāḏam is the ordinary Hebrew verb for "turn red," and šānî/tôwlāʿ are simply the standing terms for deep-red dye; Isaiah is not quoting or alluding to the tabernacle list. This is therefore a connection of shared vocabulary and image, not a verbal quotation—so it is tiered structural/thematic, deliberately under-claimed below the Verifier's mechanical "verbal" output. The resonance is nonetheless real and worth weighing: the very colours Israel offers freely for God's dwelling (scarlet yarn, red-dyed skins) are the colours the prophet names for crimson guilt that God alone can wash white. Recorded as the synthesis's observation of a shared image, not as an intended cross-reference.

Isaiah 1:18

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: vs 35:6 — H8144 shânîy (42 vv) + H8438 tôwlâʻ (43 vv); vs 35:7 — the RARE H119 ʼâdam ("red," 10 vv). DOWNGRADED from the Verifier's mechanical 'verbal' tier to structural/thematic: although ʼâdam is low-frequency, all three words are the ordinary/standing Hebrew terms for red dye and reddening, and there is no quotation or deliberate allusion of the Exodus list by Isaiah. The link is a shared deep-red image carried by shared dye-vocabulary — a synthesis observation to be weighed, not a verbal cross-reference.

A later king's offering for the house of God — Exodus 35:5 ↔ 1 Chronicles 29:2 structural / thematic — confirmed

The pattern of this passage—freewill gifts of gold, silver, and bronze for God's dwelling—is consciously taken up by David as he gathers materials for the Temple: "With all my resources I have provided for the house of my God—gold for the gold... silver for the silver, bronze for the bronze" (1 Chronicles 29:2), and the people then "offered willingly" (29:9), the very disposition of Exodus 35:5. The Verifier links the two on the metals zāhāḇ (336 vv), keseph (343 vv), and nəḥōšeṯ (119 vv)—all common words, so the basis is structural/thematic, not verbal. The connection is one of institution and motive: the willing-hearted offering for the tabernacle is the template for the willing-hearted offering for the Temple, two generations of Israel building God a dwelling from gifts freely lifted up.

1 Chronicles 29:2

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H2091 zâhâb (336 vv) + H3701 keçeph (343 vv) + H5178 nᵉchôsheth (119 vv) — all common metals, none rare, so NOT verbal; tiered structural/thematic. The link is the recurring institution of willing-hearted gifts of gold/silver/bronze for God's house (tabernacle → temple), a shared pattern and motive, not a quotation.

Christ in the Unittypology · verify+

AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.

The cheerful giver — the willing heart fulfilled in the gospel widely-held

The one condition of this offering—"everyone willing of his heart" (v. 5)—is the seed of the New Testament's whole theology of grace-giving. Matthew Poole (1685) reads it straight across the testaments at this very verse: "Whosoever is of a willing heart, for God values not forced or grudged services, 2 Corinthians 9:7." Paul's words there—"God loves a cheerful giver"—are the gospel form of the Hebrew nəḏîḇ, the freely-willing heart. The correspondence is figural and thematic, not a verbal Hebrew↔Greek link (no shared Strong's number can cross the testaments); the same heart-religion that made Israel's tabernacle-gifts acceptable makes the Church's gifts acceptable in Christ, who "though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor" (2 Corinthians 8:9), the supreme willing offering. Recorded as the tradition's reading, grounded in Poole's own cross-reference, to be weighed against the bare text—which asks only for a willing heart.

Exodus 35:5 · 2 Corinthians 9:7

The materials of a dwelling for God — fulfilled in the body of Christ ancient/widely-held

The catalogue of vv. 5-9 exists for one purpose: to build God a place to dwell among His people (Exodus 25:8, "that I may dwell among them"). Matthew Henry (1706) frames the whole offering by its end: "The tabernacle was to be dedicated to the honour of God, and used in his service." The New Testament locates that indwelling first in the incarnate Christ—"the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us" (John 1:14)—and then in His body the Church, "built together for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit" (Ephesians 2:22). The figure is typological and crosses Hebrew to Greek (it rests on the shared image of God dwelling among His people, never on a shared lexeme): the freewill materials gathered here prefigure the living stones brought, willingly, into the temple that is Christ's body. Offered as the ancient pattern-reading, to be weighed; the Hebrew itself describes only a tent of skins, gold, and gems.

Exodus 35:9 · John 1:14 · Ephesians 2:22

The anointing oil — the spices that name the Messiah widely-held

Among the offered materials is "oil... for the anointing" (v. 8), the noun mišḥâh (H4888) from the root māšaḥ, "to anoint"—the very root of māšîaḥ, Messiah, the Anointed One. The holy compound of Exodus 30:23-25 consecrated priest, altar, and sanctuary; the New Testament names the reality it pointed to in "Jesus of Nazareth, whom God anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power" (Acts 10:38), the Christ (Christos, "anointed") on whom the Spirit rests "without measure" (John 3:34). The link is figural and crosses Hebrew to Greek—it rests on the shared concept of anointing carried in the title itself, not on a shared Strong's number. The spices freely brought for the anointing oil (v. 8) thus reach, in the tradition's hearing, toward the One whom they could only consecrate in symbol and whom the Spirit would anoint in truth. Recorded as the typological reading, to be weighed; the bare text names only fragrant spices for a holy oil.

Exodus 35:8 · Acts 10:38

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 Exodus 35:4-9 — Moses' invitation to the assembled congregation to bring freewill offerings of the materials for the tabernacle: the metals, the dyed yarns and fabrics, the skins and acacia wood, the oil and spices, and the priestly gems. All base text is the Berean Standard Bible with Berean/Strong's parses; the ⚙ layer adds only synthesis and never overrides a parse. The unit's defining fact is that vv. 4-9 are the verbatim re-speaking of the command first given in Exodus 25:2-7, delayed in the narrative by the golden calf and the covenant's restoration — a point made identically by Ellicott ("the same order"), Cambridge ("verbally repeated"), Gill ("the same words and... order as in Exodus 25:3"), and Keil ("as in Exodus 25:3-7"). Genuine cruxes recorded, not smoothed: (1) the hide taḥash of v. 7 (H8476, only 14 vv) is unidentified — "fine leather" (BSB), "sealskins / dugong skins" (Cambridge), "badgers' skins" (1599 Geneva, KJV), "probably a species of antelope" (Strong's); the synthesis leaves it open. (2) The gem šōham of v. 9 (H7718, only 11 vv) is just as disputed — "onyx" (BSB, KJV), "beryl" (Strong's, Targums), "emerald" (LXX), "sardonyx" (Josephus). The older versions preserve the disagreement on the page rather than resolving it. On the cross-references: all Hebrew↔Hebrew thread bases are the Verifier's computed shared Strong's lexemes. The master thread — the command's echo (Exodus 25:2-7) — is tiered structural/thematic by deliberate under-claiming: although several sub-links carry rare lexemes (the rare šōham 11 vv and millu·ʾîm 15 vv at 35:9↔25:7, the rare sam 15 vv and māʾôr 16 vv at 35:8↔25:6), the shared text is the standing formulaic materials-list that chapter 35 repeats verbatim from chapter 25, which the commentators themselves call "verbally repeated" — a command re-spoken by the same book, not a pointed quotation of a separate passage. The fulfilment thread (35:23, 35:27, 35:28) IS tiered verbal, on the strength of the rare šōham (11 vv) + ḥōšen (21 vv) pair at 35:9↔35:27. The tent-covering thread (25:5, 26:14, 36:19, 39:34) is verbal on the rare pair ʾāḏam ("dyed red," 10 vv) + taḥash (14 vv), a fixed formula across command, making, and completion. The holy-materials thread (25:6; Numbers 4:16) is verbal on the cluster of rare/uncommon cultic words sam (15 vv) + māʾôr (16 vv) + mišḥâh (24 vv) + qəṭōreṯ (58 vv). The Isaiah 1:18 link is deliberately downgraded: the Verifier mechanically outputs verbal because Exodus 35:6 and Isaiah 1:18 share šānî (H8144, 42 vv) and tôwlāʿ (H8438, 43 vv), and Exodus 35:7 shares with it the rare ʾāḏam (H119, 10 vv, "dyed red" ↔ "red like crimson"). But all three are the ordinary/standing Hebrew terms for red dye and reddening, and there is no quotation or allusion of the Exodus list by Isaiah — so the badge is tiered structural/thematic, under the Verifier's automatic verbal label, and the body states plainly that this is a shared deep-red image carried by shared dye-vocabulary, a synthesis observation to be weighed, not an intended cross-reference. The 1 Chronicles 29:2 link is tiered structural/thematic — its shared metals (zāhāḇ 336 vv, keseph 343 vv, nəḥōšeṯ 119 vv) are all common, so the connection is a shared institution and motive (willing-hearted gifts for God's house, tabernacle → temple), not a verbal echo. All Christ-section links cross Hebrew to Greek (2 Corinthians 9:7; John 1:14; Ephesians 2:22; Acts 10:38) and are therefore figural / typological, never "verbal" — they rest on shared themes and images (the cheerful giver, God tabernacling among His people, the anointing that names the Messiah), not on any shared Strong's number, which is impossible across the Testaments. The 2 Corinthians 9:7 reading is grounded in Poole's own cross-reference at v. 5; the mišḥâh/māšîaḥ reading rests on the shared anointing-root carried in the Messiah title itself. The Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 rule does not apply to this unit (it is not Joshua and contains no verse 1:5). Every voice excerpt is a verbatim contiguous substring of the sourced public-domain commentary in voices_raw; trimming to a pointed excerpt is the only editing performed.

= 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)