The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Veil
Exodus 36:35–36 — The Veil. 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.
35Next, he made the veil of blue, purple, and scarlet yarn, and finely spun linen, with cherubim skillfully worked into it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- hap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ tə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî mā·šə·zār wə·šêš ‘ā·śāh ’ō·ṯāh kə·ru·ḇîm ḥō·šêḇ ma·‘ă·śêh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made the-veil: blue, and-purple, and-worm-of scarlet, and-twisted linen; — cherubim, the-work-of a-designer, he-made it.”
Where the English smooths the original
he made a veil of blue—the second or inner veil, which separated the holy from the most holy place, embroidered with cherubim and of great size and thickness.
the second veil, which separated between the holy place and the holy of holies, because the first veil is describedPoole distinguishes the two curtains: this inner pōreḵeṯ (v. 35) from the outer screen described in v. 37.
The veil, made for a partition between the holy place and the most holy, signified the darkness and distance of that dispensation compared with the New Testament, which shows us the glory of God more clearly, and invites us to draw near, to it; and the darkness and distance of our present state in comparison with heaven, where we shall be ever with the Lord, and see him as he is.
And this love was shown by Christ's taking up his abode on earth; by the Word being made flesh, Joh 1:14, wherein, as the original expresses it, he did tabernacle among us.Henry treats the whole chapter at once; this clause turns from the woven tent to the deeper one — John 1:14’s “dwelt” (ἐσκήνωσεν, “tabernacled”) among us.
From the walls which enclosed the Tabernacle the transition is easy to the vail which divided it into two parts.Ellicott marks the structure of the chapter: from the enclosing walls (vv. 20–34) to the inner divider, the veil.
cunning workman ] designer , or pattern-weaver ( Exodus 26:31 ).Cambridge corrects the KJV’s “cunning work” to the trade-term behind H2803 — the designer/pattern-weaver.
Which was between the sanctuary and the holiest of holies.
36He also made four posts of acacia wood for it and overlaid them with gold, along with gold hooks; and he cast four silver bases for the posts.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’ar·bā·‘āh ‘am·mū·ḏê šiṭ·ṭîm lāh way·ṣap·pêm zā·hāḇ zā·hāḇ wā·wê·hem way·yi·ṣōq ’ar·bā·‘āh ḵā·sep̄ ’aḏ·nê- lā·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made for-it four pillars of-acacia, and-overlaid-them with-gold — their-hooks gold — and-he-cast for-them four bases-of silver.”
Where the English smooths the original
And he made thereunto four pillars of shittim wood, and overlaid them with gold: their hooks were of gold; and he cast for them four sockets of silver.Geneva preserves the older “shittim” (acacia) and “sockets” for the bases of H134.
the two curtains, with the pillars, hooks, and rods that supported them ( Exodus 36:35-38 , as in Exodus 26:31-37 ). As these have all been already explained, the only thing remaining to be noticed here is, that the verbs עשׂה in Exodus 36:8 , ויחבּר in Exodus 36:10 , etc., are in the third person singular with an indefinite subject, corresponding to the German man (the French on).Keil notes the grammatical point our v. 35–36 literals preserve: the “he made” verbs have an indefinite subject (“one made”).
it is all along said "he" did this and the other; either referring to Moses, by whose orders they were done, or to Bezaleel, the chief director of the work, or to each and everyone of the artificers severally concerned.
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 account does not call this cloth merely “the veil” — the Hebrew names its office: hap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ, the separatrix, the thing that shuts off. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown locate it precisely: “the second or inner veil, which separated the holy from the most holy place, embroidered with cherubim and of great size and thickness.” This is the curtain over the Most Holy Place, where the ark stood and where no one but the high priest came, and he only once a year with blood. The fourfold cord — tᵉḵêleṯ (blue), ’argāmān (purple), the worm of scarlet, and twisted (māšᵉzār) linen — is the costliest weave in the tent. And the cherubim are not stitched on as decoration: the Cambridge Bible corrects the older “cunning work” to the true trade-term — “designer, or pattern-weaver” — so that the guardian figures are woven into the barrier itself by the master craftsman’s art (ḥōšêḇ).
Joseph Benson reads the partition theologically, and reads it well: the veil “signified the darkness and distance of that dispensation compared with the New Testament, which shows us the glory of God more clearly, and invites us to draw near.” That is the whole point of a pōreḵeṯ — it says not yet, not here, not you. And the cherubim woven across it are the same sentinels God stationed at Eden’s exit “to guard the way to the tree of life” (Genesis 3:24, sharing the lexeme kᵉruḇîm, H3742). The veil is the closed gate of Eden, hung in cloth: paradise barred, the presence of God screened behind embroidered guardians.
The barrier hangs on four ‘ammūḏê — standing pillars — of acacia, “the part assigned” (Gill) sheathed in gold (way·ṣap·pêm), fitted with gold hooks, and seated on four silver sockets poured (way·yi·ṣōq) as cast foundations. The Geneva Study Bible keeps the old plain inventory: “four pillars of shittim wood, and overlaid them with gold: their hooks were of gold; and he cast for them four sockets of silver.” Humble desert wood, clothed in glory, standing on silver — and that silver, by Exodus 38:27, is the atonement-money of the census. The veil that bars the way is itself raised on ransom.
Both verses begin way·ya·‘aś, “and he made” — but the subject is left open. Gill notes the account “is all along said ‘he’ did this and the other; either referring to Moses… or to Bezaleel, the chief director of the work, or to each and everyone of the artificers severally concerned.” Keil & Delitzsch sharpen it grammatically: the verbs are “in the third person singular with an indefinite subject, corresponding to the German man (the French on).” The text is content to say it was made — the obedient community as one hand, the named craftsman and the nameless together, each doing “what he was fittest for, and most skilful in” (Gill).
Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things in this small inventory stand out — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted.
The barrier is the message. The verse spends its whole vocabulary on a thing whose function is to keep out: a pōreḵeṯ, woven with the guardian cherubim of Eden’s shut gate. Scripture itself reads the curtain this way — the Holy Spirit “signifying that the way into the Most Holy Place had not yet been disclosed as long as the first tabernacle was still standing” (Hebrews 9:8). Benson sees it plainly: the veil preaches “darkness and distance.” The Word does not let us admire the embroidery without hearing the verdict it carries.
The whole sanctuary stands on ransom. The four pillars of the veil are seated on poured silver, and that silver is the atonement-money of every numbered Israelite (Exodus 30:16; 38:25–28). Even before the curtain is torn, the structure confesses its foundation: access to God rests on a price already paid.
The maker is left unnamed on purpose. “He made” — Moses, Bezalel, or any willing-hearted worker; the text effaces the craftsman so that the work, made exactly as commanded, stands forward. The glory belongs to the design, not the designer.
“The veil was not the wall of a prison but the seam of a promise — woven to be torn.”
That last line is this tool’s reading, not a verse. Weigh it against the text; keep only what the Word supports.
The veil was not the wall of a prison but the seam of a promise — woven to be torn.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Exodus 26 issues the blueprint; Exodus 36 records its execution. The two passages share the rarest cluster of sanctuary vocabulary in the unit — the verb šāzar (“twist/twine,” H7806, in only 21 verses) and the very noun pōreḵeṯ (“veil,” H6532, 23 verses), with šêš (linen) and ’argāmān (purple) alongside. Keil & Delitzsch note the chapter is the “Execution of the Work… as in Exodus 26:31–37”: command and obedience set side by side, almost word for word. Held honestly: this is verbal correspondence — the same writer narrating the carrying-out of a command he earlier recorded — not one text quoting another; the shared rare lexemes are real, which is why the Verifier tiers it verbal.
Exodus 36:35 · Exodus 26:31
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes incl. rare H7806 šâzar (21 vv) and H6532 pôreketh (23 vv); also H8336 šêš, H713 ʼargâmân — Verifier-computed
The four gilded pillars on silver sockets of v. 36 execute the command of Exodus 26:32. The Verifier records an even rarer overlap here: vāv (“hook,” H2053, in just 13 verses), with shiṭṭâh (acacia, H7848, 28 vv), ’eden (base/socket, H134, 39 vv), and tsāphāh (overlay, H6823, 40 vv). The hardware vocabulary is too specific and too rare to be coincidence — this is the same furniture, commanded and then made.
Exodus 36:36 · Exodus 26:32 · Exodus 26:37
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes incl. rare H2053 vâv (13 vv) and H7848 shiṭṭâh (28 vv), H134 ʼeden, H6823 tsâphâh — Verifier-computed
When the tent became a temple, the veil came with it. Solomon “made the veil of blue, purple, crimson, and fine linen, and worked cherubim into it” (2 Chronicles 3:14) — the same object, the same materials, the same cherubim. The Verifier records a genuinely verbal overlap: the rare noun pōreḵeṯ itself (“veil,” H6532, in only 23 verses) plus kᵉrûḇ (cherub, H3742), ’argāmān (purple), and tᵉḵêleṯ (blue). The permanent house deliberately reproduces the wilderness pattern — the barrier before the Most Holy Place persists from Sinai to Zion, all the way down to the curtain torn at the cross.
Exodus 36:35 · 2 Chronicles 3:14
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes incl. the rare veil-noun H6532 pôreketh (23 vv) and H3742 kᵉrûwb, with H713 ʼargâmân, H8504 tᵉkêleth — Verifier-computed; the temple veil reproduces the tabernacle veil
The cherubim worked into the veil (kᵉruḇîm, H3742) reprise the cherubim God placed at Eden “to guard the way to the tree of life.” The link is the shared noun itself, but it is a motif, not a quotation — the word is common enough (66 verses) that the connection lives in the shared image of guardian figures barring access to God’s presence, not in any borrowed phrase. Downgraded accordingly to structural/thematic.
Exodus 36:35 · Genesis 3:24
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexeme H3742 kᵉrûwḇ (cherub, 66 vv) — not rare; the link is the shared guardian-barrier motif, not a verbal quotation
The four silver sockets cast for the veil’s pillars (way·yi·ṣōq…kāsep̄ ’aḏnê) are made of the very silver Exodus 38:27 accounts for: “the hundred talents of silver were used to cast the bases for the sanctuary.” The Verifier confirms the verbal tie — the base-noun ’eden (H134), the casting-verb yāṣaq (H3332), and keseph (silver) are shared. And that silver, by Exodus 30:11–16, is the atonement-money each Israelite paid “as a ransom for his life.” The barrier that bars the way thus stands — quite literally — on poured ransom.
Exodus 36:36 · Exodus 38:27 · Exodus 30:11-16
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes H134 ʼeden, H3332 yâtsaq (cast/pour), H3701 keçeph — Verifier-computed; v. 36 casts the bases, 38:27 names the ransom-silver they are cast from
At the death of Jesus, “the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom” (Matthew 27:51). The Synoptic curtain is the descendant of this pōreḵeṯ — the barrier before the Most Holy Place. Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek Gospel ↔ Hebrew Exodus), so it cannot rest on a shared Strong’s number; there is none. The Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme. The connection is structural and theological — same object, same function — and must be argued, not asserted as verbal. Flagged for that reason.
Exodus 36:35 · Matthew 27:51 · Mark 15:38
basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): Verifier finds no shared lexeme. The Gospel καταπέτασμα corresponds to this pôreketh by function, not by quotation — a structural/typological claim that must be argued
Hebrews reads this very curtain christologically — the second veil before “the Most Holy Place” (Hebrews 9:3) is the barrier through which believers now enter “by a new and living way that he has opened for us through the curtain, that is, his body” (Hebrews 10:20). Held honestly: again Greek ↔ Hebrew, no shared Strong’s lexeme; the Verifier returns none. This is an inspired typological reading within the New Testament itself, but as a cross-reference it is tiered typological/structural, never verbal.
Exodus 36:35 · Hebrews 9:3 · Hebrews 10:19-20
basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): no shared lexeme possible. Hebrews 10:20 makes the figural identification of the pôreketh with Christ’s flesh explicit — ancient/apostolic typology, argued not asserted
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The whole theology of this curtain is exclusion: a woven separatrix guarded by cherubim, saying not yet to all but the high priest, and to him only with blood, once a year. Hebrews names what the curtain confessed — “the way into the Most Holy Place had not yet been disclosed as long as the first tabernacle was still standing” (Hebrews 9:8). Then at the cross “the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom” (Matthew 27:51) — torn downward, from God’s side, not man’s. Benson’s reading of the veil’s “darkness and distance” that “invites us to draw near” finds its hinge here: the barrier is removed so that we may “draw near with confidence” (Hebrews 10:22).
Exodus 36:35 · Matthew 27:51 · Hebrews 9:8 · Hebrews 10:19-22
Hebrews makes the boldest identification: we enter the holy places “by a new and living way that he has opened for us through the curtain, that is, his body” (Hebrews 10:20). The veil — blue, purple, scarlet, twined linen, the very weave of v. 35 — is read as the flesh of the incarnate Son: the same flesh that veiled His glory and that, broken, opened the way in. Matthew Henry, reading the whole chapter, hears in the tabernacle the deeper one: God’s love “was shown by Christ’s taking up his abode on earth; by the Word being made flesh, Joh 1:14, wherein, as the original expresses it, he did tabernacle among us” — John’s ἐσκήνωσεν, “He pitched His tent.” The scarlet worm hidden in the royal cloth (the tô·la·‘aṯ šānî of this verse) is, in older Christian reading, the lowliness of the One who said “I am a worm and no man” (Psalm 22:6) yet wore the purple of a king.
Exodus 36:35 · Hebrews 10:20 · John 1:14
The guardian cherubim woven into the veil (kᵉruḇîm) are the sentinels of Genesis 3:24, set to bar the way back to the tree of life. From the Fall onward, access to God’s presence is a guarded gate. In Christ the guardians stand down: the curtain with its cherubim is opened, and the way to the tree of life is reopened — the redeemed at last given the right “to the tree of life” (Revelation 22:14). The veil is Eden’s shut door; the cross is its reopening.
Exodus 36:35 · Genesis 3:24 · Revelation 22:14
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 on Exodus 36:35–36 (Jamieson–Fausset–Brown, 1871; Matthew Poole, 1685; Joseph Benson, 1810s; Matthew Henry, 1706; Charles Ellicott, 1878; Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, 1880s; Geneva Study Bible, 1599; Keil & Delitzsch, 1860s; John Gill, 1746–63), attributed in place from BibleHub; each excerpt is a contiguous substring of the sourced text. Spurgeon is intentionally absent: he wrote no verse-by-verse work on Exodus (his commentary corpus is the Psalms, the Treasury of David), and no Spurgeon text appears in the sourced voices for this unit, so none is invented.
The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; transliterations, parsings, the literal renderings, and the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” notes are this tool’s own work (⚙) — careful but fallible; check against BDB/HALOT. On the cross-references: the four intra-OT threads (→ Exodus 26:31; → 26:32/37; → 2 Chronicles 3:14; → Exodus 38:27) are verbal, confirmed by the Verifier on rare shared lexemes (pôreketh H6532, šâzar H7806, vâv H2053, ’eden H134) — though the 26:31/32 ties are command-and-execution correspondence within Exodus, not one text citing another. The cherubim/Eden link is downgraded to structural because the shared word is common. The two New-Testament links (Matthew 27:51 torn veil; Hebrews 10:20 the curtain-as-flesh) are cross-Testament: Greek cannot share a Hebrew Strong’s number, so the Verifier returns no shared lexeme and these are tiered flagged and typological rather than verbal — the connection is real and, in Hebrews, apostolic, but it is argued from function and figure, not asserted from quotation. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified; ✦ = a named, public-domain human voice. “Search the Scriptures… 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)