The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Constructing the Ark
Exodus 37:1–5 — Constructing the Ark. 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.
1Bezalel went on to construct the ark of acacia wood, two and a half cubits long, a cubit and a half wide, and a cubit and a half high.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bə·ṣal·’êl ’eṯ- way·ya·‘aś hā·’ā·rōn šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê ’am·mā·ṯa·yim wā·ḥê·ṣî ’ā·rə·kōw wə·’am·māh wā·ḥê·ṣî rā·ḥə·bōw wə·’am·māh wā·ḥê·ṣî qō·mā·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-made Bezalel the-ark of-acacia wood: two-cubits and-a-half its-length, and-a-cubit and-a-half its-breadth, and-a-cubit and-a-half its-height.
Where the English smooths the original
The particular maker of the various parts and contents of the tabernacle is not elsewhere pointed out. Thus this mention of Bezaleel is emphatic, and seems intended to mark the employment of the highest artistic skill on that which was the most precious of all objects connected with the new construction.The Pulpit Commentary explains why the maker is named only here: the highest skill set to the most precious object.
the holy chest (the ark), as being the most holy thing of all, is distinguished above all the rest, by being expressly mentioned as the work of Bezaleel, the chief architect of the whole.Keil reads the naming of Bezalel as a mark of the ark's pre-eminence among all the furniture.
The ark, with its glorious appurtenances, the mercy-seat and the cherubim, was the principal part of the furniture of the tabernacle. It was placed in the most sacred apartment of the house, and was the great symbol of the divine presence and protection.Benson sets the ark at the center: the chief furnishing, in the holiest room, the symbol of God's presence.
Aholiab had no part in the construction of the furniture of the Tabernacle, but only in the coverings, the veil, the curtains, and the priests’ dresses.Ellicott distinguishes the two craftsmen: Bezalel made the furniture, Aholiab the fabrics and vestments.
2He overlaid it with pure gold, both inside and out, and made a gold molding around it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ṣap·pê·hū ṭā·hō·wr zā·hāḇ mib·ba·yiṯ ū·mi·ḥūṣ way·ya·‘aś lōw zā·hāḇ zêr sā·ḇîḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-overlaid-it with-pure gold, from-inside and-from-outside; and-he-made for-it a-molding of-gold round-about.
Where the English smooths the original
And he overlaid it with pure gold within and without, and made a {a} crown of gold to it round about. (a) Like battlements.Geneva preserves the early gloss on the zêr: a crown of gold, "like battlements," running round the ark.
a crown ] a rim or moulding ( Exodus 25:11 ). See on Exodus 25:11 .Cambridge corrects "crown" to a plain rim or moulding, and points back to the command in Exodus 25:11.
The description here given of the things within the sacred edifice is almost word for word the same as that contained in Ex 25:1-40. It is not on that account to be regarded as a useless repetition of minute particulars; for by the enumeration of these details, it can be seen how exactly everything was fashioned according to the "pattern shown on the mount" [Ex 25:40]JFB names the governing fact of the whole chapter: the construction repeats the command almost word for word, proving exact obedience to the pattern.
3And he cast four gold rings for its four feet, two rings on one side and two on the other.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yi·ṣōq lōw ’ar·ba‘ zā·hāḇ ṭab·bə·‘ōṯ ‘al ’ar·ba‘ pa·‘ă·mō·ṯāw ū·šə·tê ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al- hā·’e·ḥāṯ ṣal·‘ōw ū·šə·tê ṭab·bā·‘ō·wṯ ‘al- haš·šê·nîṯ ṣal·‘ōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-cast for-it four rings of-gold upon its-four feet: two rings on its-one side, and-two rings on its-other side.
Where the English smooths the original
side ] Heb. rib . See on Exodus 25:12 .Cambridge exposes the buried image: the Hebrew for "side" is "rib," pointing back to the command in Exodus 25:12.
And he cast for it four rings of gold, to be set by the four corners of it; even two rings upon the one side of it, and two rings upon the other side of it.Geneva's plain rendering lays out the symmetry: four rings, the four corners, two to a side.
other things are equally ascribed to him in this and the following chapter, as the mercy seat with the cherubim, the shewbread table, the candlestick of pure gold, the two altars, the laver of brass, with other things, which are only said to be made by him, because they were made by his direction, and he having the oversight of them while makingGill weighs the rabbinic claim that Bezalel worked alone, and judges the better sense: the works are his because made under his direction and oversight.
4Then he made poles of acacia wood and overlaid them with gold.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś bad·dê šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê way·ṣap̄ ’ō·ṯām zā·hāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-made poles of-acacia wood, and-he-overlaid them with-gold.
Where the English smooths the original
And he made staves of shittim wood, and overlaid them with gold.Geneva renders the verse plainly: staves of shittim, overlaid with gold — the bearers of the ark sharing its wood and its plating.
for by the enumeration of these details, it can be seen how exactly everything was fashioned according to the "pattern shown on the mount" [Ex 25:40]; and the knowledge of this exact correspondence between the prescription and the execution was essential to the purposes of the fabric.JFB names the purpose of the repetition: to show the exact correspondence of execution to prescription, itself essential to the fabric.
The exactness of the workmen to their rule, should be followed by us; seeking for the influences of the Holy Spirit, that we may rejoice in and glorify God while in this world, and at length be with him for ever.Henry turns the workmen's exactness into a rule for the reader: conform to God's pattern, by the Spirit's help.
5He inserted the poles into the rings on the sides of the ark in order to carry it.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·ḇê ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm baṭ·ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al ṣal·‘ōṯ hā·’ā·rōn lā·śêṯ ’eṯ- hā·’ā·rōn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-brought the-poles into the-rings upon the-sides of-the-ark, to-carry the-ark.
Where the English smooths the original
And he put the staves into the rings by the sides of the ark, to bear the ark.Geneva states the act and its end plainly: the staves set in the rings, that the ark might be borne.
In the furniture of the tabernacle were emblems of a spiritual and acceptable service. The incense represented the prayers of the saints. The sacrifice of the alter represented the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world.Henry reads the whole furniture, the ark included, as emblems of spiritual service — prayer, sacrifice, the Lamb.
The order corresponds on the whole to the list of the separate articles in Exodus 35:11-19 , and to the construction of the entire sanctuary; but the holy chest (the ark), as being the most holy thing of all, is distinguished above all the restKeil notes the ordered sequence of the furniture and, again, the ark's pre-eminence as the most holy of all.
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 passage opens with a name thrust to the front: bᵉtsalʼêl, "Bezalel made the ark of acacia wood" (v. 1). Across the whole construction account (chs. 36–39) the workman is almost always anonymous — "and he made," "and they made" — but here, on the most precious object of all, the maker is named first and emphatically. The Pulpit Commentary catches it exactly: "the particular maker of the various parts… is not elsewhere pointed out. Thus this mention of Bezaleel is emphatic, and seems intended to mark the employment of the highest artistic skill on that which was the most precious of all objects." Keil agrees: "the holy chest (the ark), as being the most holy thing of all, is distinguished above all the rest, by being expressly mentioned as the work of Bezaleel." And from the first word the whole chapter announces itself as obedience in narrative form. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown state the governing fact: "the description here given… is almost word for word the same as that contained in Ex 25:1-40," and this is no "useless repetition," for "by the enumeration of these details, it can be seen how exactly everything was fashioned according to the 'pattern shown on the mount.'" Where ch. 25 said "so shall you make it," ch. 37 says, in the same words, "and he made it." The dimensions match to the half-cubit; the acacia, the gold, the rings, the poles are reproduced verbatim. The command (the provenance of every detail) is Exodus 25:10–15; the execution is here.
"He overlaid it with pure gold, both inside and out, and made a gold molding (zêr) around it" (v. 2). Three things press out of the Hebrew. First, the verb tsâphâh (H6823) means to sheet over with metal: the thorn-wood acacia disappears entirely beneath a skin of beaten gold. Second, the gold is ṭâhôwr (H2889), ceremonially pure — the same word used of clean animals and clean hearts; the holiest object is made of the cleanest substance. Third, and most arresting, it is plated "from inside and from outside" (mibbayith ūmiḥūts) — the interior, which no worshiper would ever see, is made of the same pure gold as the visible exterior. Integrity all the way through, done for God and not for the eye. The zêr, the crowning rim, is a genuinely rare word (only 10 verses canon-wide); Cambridge identifies it as "a rim or moulding" and points straight back to the command, "see on Exodus 25:11," while Geneva preserves the old picture of "a crown of gold… like battlements." The same crown runs round the table and the altar of incense — a mark of royal dignity set on the things nearest the King.
"He cast (yâtsaq, poured molten) four gold rings for its four feet" (v. 3). The vocabulary is quietly bodily. The rings sit on the ark's paʻam — its "feet," the word for the foot that strikes the ground in walking — and they are set into its tsêlâʻ, its "ribs." Cambridge flags the buried image bluntly: "side ] Heb. rib." The ark is described almost as a living frame: ribs to hold the rings, feet to stand and to step. Then the poles: "he made poles (bad, lit. bars that stand apart) of acacia wood and overlaid them with gold" (v. 4) — the same plating verb, tsâphâh, used of the ark itself. Even the carrying-bars, gripped by human hands and laid on human shoulders, are sheathed in gold. Nothing that touches the ark is left bare. And the rings and poles are reproduced from the command word for word: the Verifier confirms Exodus 37:4 shares with Exodus 25:13 the rare acacia (shiṭṭâh, 28 vv), the plating verb tsâphâh (40 vv), the poles bad, and the wood ʻêts — command and deed fused in a single sacred vocabulary.
The unit ends with the act that makes the ark mobile: "he brought (bôwʼ, caused to come in) the poles into the rings on the ribs of the ark, to carry it" (v. 5). The final, governing word is the infinitive lāśêth, from nâsâʼ (H5375) — "to lift, to bear, to carry away," the verb of enormous range that elsewhere bears sin and so means to forgive. Here it states the ark's whole logic: it is built to be borne. Matthew Henry, surveying all the furniture, reads it as "emblems of a spiritual and acceptable service," and presses the workmen's example on the reader — "the exactness of the workmen to their rule, should be followed by us." The God who has just asked for a dwelling (Exodus 25:8) asks for a portable one: His presence does not stay fixed on a mountain but travels on the shoulders of His people through the wilderness. Once the poles are brought in, the command was that they never be removed (Exodus 25:15) — the ark stands perpetually ready to move. The Dwelling is, by design, a pilgrim.
Read under Sola Scriptura, this little passage is one long act of obedience, and that is its sermon. Almost nothing here is new: it is the command of Exodus 25 turned into deed, repeated "almost word for word" (JFB), down to the half-cubit. The point is precisely that nothing is improvised — the house of God is built to God's pattern, not man's invention (Exodus 25:9), and the proof of a heart that loves God is the unglamorous exactness of doing what He said, the way He said. Two details carry the whole weight. First, the gold runs inside and out (v. 2): the unseen interior is as pure as the visible surface. The holiest thing is made with integrity in the place no eye can check — a parable of the worship God actually wants, which is not performance but truth in the inward parts. Second, the ark is built to be carried (nâsâʼ, v. 5): the God who agrees to dwell among a wandering people will not be anchored to one spot; His presence goes where they go, borne on their shoulders. My fallible reading: this chapter is the answer to the longing of Exodus 25. There God said, "that I may dwell in their midst"; here Bezalel, in the shadow of God (his name), makes the very box that will hold the testimony and bear the mercy-seat where that dwelling is met. Thorn-wood plated in pure gold, crowned, and slung on poles — the costliest possible casing for the cheapest desert timber, made portable so the Presence can travel. It preaches the gospel sideways: God hides incorruptible glory in lowly material, and carries it out to where His people are.
The gold runs inside and out where no eye will ever look — holiness made with integrity for an audience of One, then slung on poles so the Presence can travel.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
This whole unit is the fulfillment of the ark-command of Exodus 25. The construction reproduces the prescription so closely that the rarest words recur verbatim. Exodus 37:1 ("Bezalel made the ark of acacia wood, two and a half cubits long…") answers Exodus 25:10 ("They shall make an ark of acacia wood — two and a half cubits long…"), the two verses sharing the rare desert wood shiṭṭâh (acacia, only 28 verses canon-wide) together with the dimension-words ʼôrek (length), rôchab (breadth), qôwmâh (height), and ʼârôwn (ark) itself. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown name the principle exactly: "the description here given… is almost word for word the same as that contained in Ex 25:1-40… it can be seen how exactly everything was fashioned according to the 'pattern shown on the mount.'" The rarity of shiṭṭâh makes this a genuine verbal dependence, not a generic theme: command and deed share one specialized vocabulary.
Exodus 37:1 · Exodus 25:10
basis: Verifier: Ex 37:1↔25:10 share H7848 shiṭṭâh (acacia, 28 vv — rare), plus H727 ʼârôwn (ark), H753 ʼôrek, H7341 rôchab, H6967 qôwmâh, H520 ʼammâh. The low-frequency shiṭṭâh anchors a near-verbatim re-use of the command text in the execution narrative — verbal.
The "gold molding" (zêr) Bezalel makes round the ark (Exodus 37:2) is described in the very words of the command, Exodus 25:11 ("overlay it with pure gold inside and out, and make a gold molding around it"). The two verses share the rare word zêr (crown/rim, only 10 verses canon-wide), the plating verb implied, and the ceremonial-purity adjective ṭâhôwr (pure, 87 vv) and chûwts (outside, 158 vv). Because zêr is so uncommon, its appearance in both command and execution is strong verbal evidence. The same crowning rim runs round only the three holiest gold objects — the ark, the table of shewbread (Exodus 25:24; 37:11), and the altar of incense (Exodus 30:3; 37:26) — a mark of royal dignity reserved for what stands nearest YHWH.
Exodus 37:2 · Exodus 25:11 · Exodus 37:11
basis: Verifier: Ex 37:2↔25:11 share H2213 zêr (crown/rim, 10 vv — rare), H6823 tsâphâh (overlay, 40 vv), H2889 ṭâhôwr (pure, 87 vv), H2351 chûwts (outside, 158 vv). The rare zêr (also at 37:11) anchors the verbal tie between command and execution — verbal.
The cast rings and the gold-plated acacia poles of Exodus 37:3–5 reproduce the carrying-apparatus commanded in Exodus 25:12–13. Exodus 37:5 ("he brought the poles into the rings on the sides of the ark, to carry it") shares with Exodus 25:12 the rib-word tsêlâʻ (side/rib, 31 vv) and the ring-word ṭabbaʻath (38 vv); Exodus 37:4 (the poles) shares with Exodus 25:13 four words at once — the rare acacia shiṭṭâh (28 vv), the plating verb tsâphâh (40 vv), the pole-word bad, and the wood ʻêts. The clustering of moderately rare cultic terms across command and deed marks deliberate verbal re-use, not coincidence. Cambridge keeps the buried bodily image alive on this very verse: "side ] Heb. rib."
Exodus 37:4 · Exodus 25:13 · Exodus 25:12
basis: Verifier: Ex 37:4↔25:13 share H7848 shiṭṭâh (acacia, 28 vv — rare), H6823 tsâphâh (40 vv), H905 bad (poles), H6086 ʻêts; Ex 37:5↔25:12 share H6763 tsêlâʻ (rib, 31 vv) and H2885 ṭabbaʻath (38 vv). Multiple low-/mid-frequency cultic lexemes shared between command and execution — verbal.
The same molding and side-construction appear on the altar of incense made later in this chapter and in the command of Exodus 30. Exodus 37:2–3 shares with Exodus 37:27 (and its command, Exodus 30:4) the rare crown zêr (10 vv), the rib-word tsêlâʻ (31 vv), and gold zâhâb. This is not the command-fulfillment tie of the previous threads but a structural link within the sanctuary's design: the gold crown and the ribbed sides recur across the holiest furniture, knitting ark and golden altar into one family of objects marked for the Presence. Because the connection here is a shared design-pattern across different objects rather than a single re-quoted dimension-list, it is tiered structural, not verbal.
Exodus 37:2 · Exodus 37:27 · Exodus 30:4
basis: Verifier: Ex 37:2↔37:27 and Ex 37:3↔30:4 share H2091 zâhâb (gold, 336 vv), H2213 zêr (crown, 10 vv), H6763 tsêlâʻ (rib, 31 vv). The rare zêr/tsêlâʻ recur, but across different objects (ark vs. altar of incense) — a shared design-pattern, not a re-quoted text, so tiered structural/thematic rather than verbal.
The poles are set "to carry" the ark (lāśêth, from nâsâʼ, Exodus 37:5), and that purpose is taken up when the tabernacle is on the march: the sons of Kohath "shall bear (nâsâʼ) the holy things" of the sanctuary, and "to the sons of Kohath he gave none [carts], because the service of the holy things belonged to them; they bore them on their shoulders" (Numbers 7:9). The shared verb is nâsâʼ — but it is one of the most common verbs in Hebrew (612 verses), so this is no rare verbal quotation. The link is thematic: the ark of 37:5 is built portable precisely so that it can be the traveling throne of the wilderness God, carried (never carted) on consecrated shoulders. A genuine motif of the borne Presence, argued from the function the poles serve, not asserted from a rare word.
Exodus 37:5 · Numbers 7:9
basis: Verifier: Ex 37:5↔Num 7:9 share only H5375 nâsâʼ (to bear/carry), a very high-frequency verb (612 vv). No rare lexeme and no quotation — the tie is the shared motif of the ark carried on shoulders, so tiered structural/thematic and argued from function.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The ark of acacia and gold (Exodus 37:1) is, in the writer to the Hebrews, part of the "copy and shadow of the heavenly things" — he lists "the ark of the covenant overlaid on all sides with gold" among the furnishings of "the first covenant" (Hebrews 9:1–4), then argues that Christ has entered "not into a holy place made with hands, which is a figure of the true, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us" (Hebrews 9:24). The gold-plated chest in the Holy of Holies thus stands as a shadow whose substance is Christ's entry into the heavenly sanctuary. As a cross-Testament link (Greek↔Hebrew) it shares no Strong's lexeme — the Verifier returns no shared word for Exodus 37:1↔Hebrews 9:4 — so it cannot be tiered verbal; it rests on the apostle's own typological argument about the earthly sanctuary's furniture, hence typological. The reading is the writer of Hebrews' own, and so ancient and widely held.
Exodus 37:1 · Hebrews 9:4 · Hebrews 9:24
The ark's making — thorn-wood acacia, the wilderness's lowliest timber, encased "inside and out" in pure gold (Exodus 37:2) — was read in the Christian tradition as a figure of the incarnation: the corruptible humanity and the incorruptible deity joined in one Person, the hidden wood and the manifest glory inseparable. Matthew Henry already moves this way on the chapter, taking the furniture as "emblems of a spiritual and acceptable service" pointing to "the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world"; and Benson on v. 1 reads the ark as the place where, "By Jesus Christ, the great propitiation, there is reconciliation made, and a communion settled between us and God." The figure is widely held in the older expositors and rests on the typology of the ark's materials, not on any verbal citation; it is offered as a traditional reading, not a novelty. The lowliest wood, plated in unseen purity and crowned, carries the glory it conceals — and the link, being figural across the Testaments, is typological, never verbal.
Exodus 37:1 · Exodus 37:2
The ark is fitted with poles "to carry it" — the verb nâsâʼ, "to lift, to bear" (Exodus 37:5), the same word that elsewhere names the bearing of sin. The Servant of Isaiah "has borne (nâsâʼ) our griefs" (Isaiah 53:4), and Christian reading has long heard in the ark-borne-on-shoulders a figure of the One who carries what only God can carry. This is offered cautiously: the verbal overlap (nâsâʼ, 612 vv) is far too common to ground a claim, and Exodus 37:5 makes no statement about sin — the connection is a thematic resonance, not a verbal one, and within the Old Testament only. Yet the deeper figure is real and widely sensed: the Presence does not anchor itself but is borne out to where the people are, as the gospel's God comes to bear His people's burden. Tiered as a careful, mostly novel typological resonance, the burden of proof kept on the reader.
Exodus 37:5 · Isaiah 53:4
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
This unit is Hebrew throughout (Exodus 37:1–5), so every inner-Old-Testament cross-reference is Hebrew↔Hebrew and rests on the Verifier's computed shared Strong's lexemes (run with verifier.py pair). The dominant fact of the passage, stated by Jamieson, Fausset & Brown, is that "the description here given… is almost word for word the same as that contained in Ex 25:1-40" — and the Verifier bears this out: three threads earn the verbal tier because the construction reproduces the command on genuinely rare words. Exodus 37:1↔25:10 shares shiṭṭâh (acacia, 28 vv); Exodus 37:2↔25:11 shares zêr (gold crown/rim, only 10 vv); Exodus 37:4↔25:13 shares a cluster — shiṭṭâh, tsâphâh (40 vv), bad, ʻêts — and 37:5↔25:12 shares tsêlâʻ (rib, 31 vv) and ṭabbaʻath (38 vv). In each case command and execution share a specialized vocabulary, the rarity making the verbal dependence near-certain rather than coincidental. Two links are tiered structural/thematic rather than verbal, on purpose. (1) The ark↔altar-of-incense tie (Exodus 37:2–3↔37:27↔30:4) shares the rare zêr and tsêlâʻ, but across different objects; it is a shared design-pattern within the sanctuary, not a re-quoted dimension-list, so it is held at structural even though the words are rare. (2) The carrying thread (Exodus 37:5↔Numbers 7:9) shares only nâsâʼ, one of the highest-frequency verbs in Hebrew (612 vv); it carries no quotation claim and is argued from the function the poles serve. The Christ-ward links are all cross-Testament or figural and therefore carry no computed verbal basis. Exodus 37:1↔Hebrews 9:4 returns no shared lexeme (Greek↔Hebrew, as expected) and is tiered typological on the strength of the writer of Hebrews' own argument that the ark is a "copy and shadow" (Heb 9:1–4, 24). The incarnation-figure (pure gold over acacia) is a widely-held traditional typology resting on the ark's materials, not a citation. The third Christ-link (the ark borne, Exodus 37:5↔Isaiah 53:4 via nâsâʼ) is flagged as a careful novel resonance: the verb is far too common to prove anything, Exodus 37:5 says nothing of sin, and the connection — real and ancient as a devotional theme — is offered with the burden of proof left squarely on the reader. The parses are sourced from Berean/Strong's and are not contradicted here.
✦ = 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)