The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Bronze Altar
Exodus 38:1–7 — The Bronze Altar. 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 constructed the altar of burnt offering from acacia wood. It was square, five cubits long, five cubits wide, and three cubits high.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê rā·ḇū·a‘ ḥā·mêš ’am·mō·wṯ ’ā·rə·kōw wə·ḥā·mêš- ’am·mō·wṯ rā·ḥə·bōw wə·šā·lōš ’am·mō·wṯ qō·mā·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made [ʼeṯ] the-altar-of the-ascent-offering, acacia woods; square — five cubits its-length, and-five cubits its-breadth, and-three cubits its-height.”
Where the English smooths the original
From the furniture of the sanctuary, the transition is natural to the furniture of the court in which it stood. This is now is now described. It consisted of the brazen altar, or altar of burnt-offering, and the great brazen laver.Ellicott’s doubled “is now is now” is preserved verbatim from the source.
Christ was himself the altar to his own sacrifice of atonement, and so he is to all our sacrifices of acknowledgment. We must have an eye to him in offering them, as God hath in accepting them.
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.
the altar of burnt offering ] for distinction from the altar of incenseCambridge supplies the disambiguating sense of the full name: this is the bronze altar of the court, named in distinction from the gold altar of incense within (37:25–28).
2He made a horn at each of its four corners, so that the horns and altar were of one piece, and he overlaid the altar with bronze.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś qar·nō·ṯāw ‘al ’ar·ba‘ pin·nō·ṯāw qar·nō·ṯāw hā·yū mim·men·nū way·ṣap̄ ’ō·ṯōw nə·ḥō·šeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made its-horns upon its-four corners; from-it were its-horns; and-he-overlaid it bronze.”
Where the English smooths the original
overlaid it with bronze ] According to Numbers 16:38-39 (where ‘a covering’ is properly ‘an overlaying ,’ as here), this was not done till a later time.Cited as a flagged tension within the text’s own chronology, not as a contradiction of the verse.
And he made the horns thereof on the four corners of it; the horns thereof were of the same: and he overlaid it with brass.The 1599 Geneva rendering, preserved as a witness to the verse’s early English phrasing.
The repetitions are continued, in which may be traced the exact conformity of the execution to the order.
3He made all the altar’s utensils of bronze—its pots, shovels, sprinkling bowls, meat forks, and firepans.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- kāl- ham·miz·bê·aḥ ’eṯ- kə·lê nə·ḥō·šeṯ has·sî·rōṯ wə·’eṯ- hay·yā·‘îm wə·’eṯ- ham·miz·rā·qōṯ ’eṯ- ham·miz·lā·ḡōṯ wə·’eṯ- ham·maḥ·tōṯ ‘ā·śāh kāl- kê·lāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made [ʼeṯ] all the-vessels-of the-altar — the-pots, and-the-shovels, and-the-sprinkling-bowls, the-forks, and-the-firepans; all its-vessels he-made bronze.”
Where the English smooths the original
Exodus 27 has “his pans”; but the word used in the original is the same. It designates probably the scuttles in which the ashes were placed for removal from the sanctuary.
The pots . This translation is better than that of Exodus 27:3 , which is "pans." Buckets or scuttles to convey the ashes from the altar to the ash-heap ( Leviticus 1:16 ) are intended.
And he made all the vessels of the altar, the pots, and the shovels, and the basins, and the fleshhooks, and the firepans: all the vessels thereof made he of brass.
4He made a grate of bronze mesh for the altar under its ledge, halfway up from the bottom.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś miḵ·bār nə·ḥō·šeṯ re·šeṯ lam·miz·bê·aḥ ma·‘ă·śêh ta·ḥaṯ kar·kub·bōw ḥeṣ·yōw mil·lə·maṭ·ṭāh ‘aḏ-
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made for-the-altar a-grate, work-of bronze net, under its-ledge from-below, unto its-half.”
Where the English smooths the original
And he made for the altar a brasen grate of network under the compass thereof beneath unto the {a} midst of it. (a) So that the gridiron or grate was half as high as the altar and stood within it.The Geneva gloss (a) is the earliest English attempt to place the grate within the altar’s height.
In all ages of the church there have been some persons more devoted to God, more constant in their attendance upon his ordinances, and more willing to part even with lawful things, for his sake, than others.Henry’s note treats the whole pericope (38:1–8) as one; the comment bears on the devotion behind the materials, not the grate alone.
The repetitions are continued, in which may be traced the exact conformity of the execution to the order.
5At the four corners of the bronze grate he cast four rings as holders for the poles.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ar·ba‘ haq·qə·ṣā·wōṯ han·nə·ḥō·šeṯ lə·miḵ·bar way·yi·ṣōq bə·’ar·ba‘ ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ bāt·tîm lab·bad·dîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-cast four rings on the-four ends of the-grate of-bronze — houses for-the-poles.”
Where the English smooths the original
a distinct statement is made, which was not contained in the instructims, that the rings were “for places for the staves.”Drawn from Ellicott’s unit-opening note on 38:1, which addresses the change in vv. 4–5; “instructims” is his source’s typo, preserved verbatim.
And he cast four rings for the four ends of the grate of brass, to be places for the staves.
The repetitions are continued, in which may be traced the exact conformity of the execution to the order.
6And he made the poles of acacia wood and overlaid them with bronze.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm šiṭ·ṭîm ‘ă·ṣê way·ṣap̄ ’ō·ṯām nə·ḥō·šeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-made [ʼeṯ] the-poles, acacia woods, and-he-overlaid them bronze.”
Where the English smooths the original
And he made the staves of shittim wood, and overlaid them with brass.
In all ages of the church there have been some persons more devoted to God, more constant in their attendance upon his ordinances, and more willing to part even with lawful things, for his sake, than others.Henry’s single note covers the whole pericope (38:1–8); it speaks to the devotion of the people behind the offered materials — here the acacia and bronze of the poles — not to v. 6 alone.
Bezaleel made it, or it was made by his direction, he having the care and oversight of it, wherefore the making of it is ascribed to himGill’s comment, repeated on each verse of the unit, supplies the unnamed “he” of the poles: Bezalel, by direction and oversight.
7Then he inserted the poles into the rings on the sides of the altar for carrying it. He made the altar with boards so that it was hollow.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·ḇê ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm baṭ·ṭab·bā·‘ōṯ ‘al ṣal·‘ōṯ ham·miz·bê·aḥ lā·śêṯ ’ō·ṯōw bā·hem ‘ā·śāh ’ō·ṯōw lu·ḥōṯ nə·ḇūḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-he-brought [ʼeṯ] the-poles into the-rings, on the-ribs of the-altar, to-lift it with-them; hollow of boards he-made it.”
Where the English smooths the original
And he put the staves into the rings on the sides of the altar, to bear it withal; he made the altar hollow with boards.
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 sanctuaryK&D place the finished altar within the ordered sequence of the whole sanctuary’s making.
the account of this, its horns, vessels, rings, and staves, is carried onGill’s summary names the altar’s parts in the very order the unit builds them: horns, vessels, rings, staves — closing here at v. 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.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
Read the Hebrew aloud and one word beats like a hammer: וַיַּעַשׂ, “and he made.” It opens vv. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6, and the plain perfect עָשָׂה closes the catalogue in vv. 3 and 7. The chapter is a record of making — and the maker is unnamed in this unit, supplied only from 37:1. John Gill closes the gap: the work “was made by his direction, he having the care and oversight of it, wherefore the making of it is ascribed to him” — Bezalel. Keil & Delitzsch set this within the whole: only “the holy chest (the ark), as being the most holy thing of all, is… expressly mentioned as the work of Bezaleel, the chief architect of the whole”; from the ark forward, his name rides silently on every way·yaʻaś. This is ⚙ synthesis built on their sourced observation: the grammar itself preaches that worship is obedient construction — exactly what was commanded, brought into being.
The materials carry the theology. The frame is שִׁטִּים acacia — the wilderness’s one durable timber — and over it goes נְחֹשֶׁת, bronze (vv. 1–2). Gold is the metal of the inner sanctum; bronze is the metal of the court, the metal that can stand in the fire (Lev 6:13) without being consumed. ⚙ Note the engineering as parable: wood that would burn is sealed in metal that endures, so the altar can hold perpetual fire and not fail. The interior רֶשֶׁת — a hunter’s net (v. 4) — bears the coals halfway up the altar’s height, air feeding the flame from beneath. Cambridge flags an honest wrinkle in the bronze: per Numbers 16:38–39, “‘a covering’ is properly ‘an overlaying,’ as here,” and “this was not done till a later time.” We do not resolve the chronology; we record the tension as the text’s own.
The altar is the מִזְבַּח — from zābaḥ, the place of slaughter — and specifically the altar of the עֹלָה, the ascending offering, the one sacrifice burned whole. From its four corners rise the קַרְנֹת, the horns, and the verse insists they are מִמֶּנּוּ — “of one piece” with the altar (v. 2). ⚙ The horn is the Bible’s emblem of power; that the points of power grow out of the place of slaughter is the gospel-shape of the altar: strength and mercy are one substance. On these horns the blood was daubed (Lev 4:7); to these horns the desperate fled for asylum (1 Kgs 1:50). Joseph Benson draws the line the text invites: “Christ was himself the altar to his own sacrifice of atonement, and so he is to all our sacrifices of acknowledgment.” That is Benson’s reading; the cross-reference to the horns of refuge is ⚙, argued below.
The unit ends in motion. Cast rings — טַבָּעֹת, “houses” (בָּתִּים) for the poles (v. 5) — receive acacia staves sheathed in bronze (v. 6), and the poles are brought in along the altar’s צַלְעֹת, its ribs, לָשֵׂאת, “to lift it” (v. 7). Ellicott notes the chronicler adds “a distinct statement… which was not contained in the instructims, that the rings were ‘for places for the staves.’” The closing word is נְבוּב — hollow, a four-occurrence rarity: the altar is an empty box of boards, filled with earth where it stood, emptied to move. ⚙ The whole apparatus says God’s court is mobile — holiness that travels with a pilgrim people, the place of atonement built to go wherever they go.
⚙ A fallible reading, offered to be tested by the Word. Strip the chapter of its ⚙ overlay and the bare text says something deceptively simple: God’s people made exactly what God said, and the record bothers to say so item by item — pots, shovels, bowls, forks, firepans, grate, rings, poles. J.F.B. hears in the repetitions “the exact conformity of the execution to the order.” That conformity is the message. Sola Scriptura reads here not first a type of Christ (though Benson’s instinct is sound) but a doctrine of worship: God is to be served on God’s terms, in God’s materials, to God’s measure — even the ash-pots are inventoried, because in true worship there is no detail too small for obedience. The altar is bronze where the law demands bronze, four-square where the law demands square, hollow where the law demands hollow. Before we make the altar mean Christ, we must let it mean what it plainly is: a monument to a people who did what they were told, and a God worth that exactness. The typology is real; it is built on this foundation, not instead of it.
Even the ash-pots are inventoried — for in true worship no detail is too small for obedience. (⚙ a reading, not a verse)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The whole unit is the deliberate fulfillment of the building command given in Exodus 27:1–8. The Verifier confirms a dense verbal overlap between 38:1 and 27:1 — the rare quadrate verb רָבוּעַ H7251 rābaʻ (only 12 vv), plus שִׁטִּים H7848 šiṭṭāh (28 vv), קֹמָה H6967 qômāh, and רֹחַב H7341 rōḥab — and an even tighter match between 38:2 and 27:2 (פִּנָּה H6438 pinnāh, צָפָה H6823 ṣāpāh, קֶרֶן H7161 qeren, נְחֹשֶׁת H5178). This is the command repeated as deed. Cambridge, Keil & Delitzsch, the Pulpit Commentary, and J.F.B. all note the correspondence; J.F.B. names the point — the repetitions trace “the exact conformity of the execution to the order.”
Exodus 27:1 · Exodus 27:2 · Exodus 27:8
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared rare lexemes (Verifier): 38:1↔27:1 share H7251 rābaʻ (rare, 12 vv), H7848 šiṭṭāh (28 vv), H6967 qômāh, H7341 rōḥab; 38:2↔27:2 share H6438 pinnāh, H6823 ṣāpāh, H7161 qeren, H5178 nᵉḥōšeṯ — the execution-account quoting the command-account.
Exodus 38:7 ends with נְבוּב לֻחֹת, “hollow of boards.” The participle נְבוּב H5014 nāḇaḇ is genuinely rare — it occurs in only four verses in the entire Hebrew Bible. The Verifier finds it shared between 38:7 and the command in Exodus 27:8 (“hollow with boards shalt thou make it”), together with לוּחַ H3871 lûaḥ, “board” (33 vv). A rare lexeme shared across a command/execution pair is a high-confidence verbal link, not a coincidence of common words. The same root surfaces, with quite different sense, in Job 11:12 — a hollow (empty-headed) man — a semantic neighbor worth noting but not a thematic thread.
Exodus 27:8 · Job 11:12
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared RARE lexeme (Verifier): H5014 nāḇaḇ occurs in only 4 verses total; shared by 38:7 and 27:8 along with H3871 lûaḥ (33 vv). Rarity makes the 38:7↔27:8 link verbal/quotation-grade; the Job 11:12 occurrence shares only nāḇaḇ and is a semantic neighbor, not a thematic link.
The four horns made “of one piece” with the altar (38:2) become, in Israel’s later story, the place a man clings to when his life is forfeit: Adonijah “caught hold on the horns of the altar” (1 Kgs 1:50), and so did Joab (1 Kgs 2:28). The shared term is קֶרֶן H7161 qeren, “horn” (69 vv) — a verbal link, but to a common word, so it is tiered structural/thematic rather than verbal-quotation. The motif is what carries weight: the strength (horn) of the place of slaughter is offered as sanctuary. ⚙ This is the altar’s own logic — that atonement and asylum meet at the same four corners — and it is a synthesis, not a claim the text of Exodus makes explicitly.
1 Kings 1:50 · Leviticus 4:7
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexeme (Verifier): H7161 qeren (horn) links 38:2 ↔ 1 Kgs 1:50; qeren is common (69 vv), so the connection is tiered thematic/structural (the horns-as-refuge motif), not verbal/quotation.
The altar of burnt offering and “all the vessels” (38:1–3) are the tabernacle prototype of what Solomon’s temple would cast in bronze on a vast scale. The Verifier links 38:3 to 1 Kings 7:45, 2 Chronicles 4:16, and Jeremiah 52:18 through the cluster נְחֹשֶׁת H5178 nᵉḥōšeṯ (119 vv), the rare יָע H3257 yāʻ, “shovel” (only 9 vv), and כְּלִי H3627 kᵉlî, “vessel” (276 vv). The rare shovel-word in particular ties the tabernacle’s ash-tending tools to the temple’s and to the inventory carried off to Babylon (Jer 52). One continuous service of God, from tent to temple to exile’s loss.
1 Kings 7:45 · 2 Chronicles 4:16 · Jeremiah 52:18
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes (Verifier): 38:3 shares with 1 Kgs 7:45 / 2 Chr 4:16 / Jer 52:18 the cluster H5178 nᵉḥōšeṯ (119 vv), H3257 yāʻ (rare, 9 vv), H3627 kᵉlî (276 vv). The shared vocabulary is the bronze-service register, not a quotation; tiered structural/thematic, with the rare H3257 strengthening the link.
The catalogue of v. 3 — pots, shovels, sprinkling-bowls, forks, firepans — recurs almost word for word in Numbers 4:14, the marching order for the sons of Kohath: when Israel breaks camp they are to gather upon the altar “the firepans, the fleshhooks, and the shovels, and the basons, all the vessels of the altar.” The Verifier finds an unusually dense shared cluster — four uncommon altar-words at once: מִזְלָג H4207 mazlêg, fork (only 7 vv); יָע H3257 yāʻ, shovel (9 vv); מַחְתָּה H4289 maḥtāh, firepan (19 vv); מִזְרָק H4219 mizrāq, sprinkling-bowl (32 vv). The concentration of rare cult-terms makes this near-quotation, but Numbers describes a different act (the carrying) using the same inventory, so it is tiered high structural rather than verbal. ⚙ The thread binds the two halves of this unit together: the very vessels made here (vv. 1–3) are the load the “built-to-be-carried” altar (vv. 5–7) was framed to bear on the march.
Numbers 4:14 · Exodus 35:16
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew shared lexemes (Verifier): 38:3 ↔ Num 4:14 share a dense cluster of rare cult-words — H4207 mazlêg (7 vv), H3257 yāʻ (9 vv), H4289 maḥtāh (19 vv), H4219 mizrāq (32 vv), plus H3627 kᵉlî and H4196 mizbêaḥ. The rarity-cluster is near-quotation-strength, but Numbers reuses the inventory for a different act (transport), so it is tiered high structural/thematic, not verbal-quotation.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Joseph Benson writes on this very passage: “Christ was himself the altar to his own sacrifice of atonement, and so he is to all our sacrifices of acknowledgment. We must have an eye to him in offering them, as God hath in accepting them.” The bronze altar holds the fire and is not consumed; it bears the עֹלָה, the offering that ascends whole to God. ⚙ The New Testament names a Christian altar the old priests could not share: “We have an altar, whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle” (Heb 13:10), and Christ both offers and is the offering (Heb 9:14; 10:10). This reading is widely held in the tradition (Benson, and the older typology generally); the Hebrews link is cross-Testament and thematic — there is no shared Hebrew/Greek lexeme — so it is argued, not asserted from the original.
Hebrews 13:10 · Hebrews 9:14
The horns rising “of one piece” from the place of slaughter (38:2) gather the man under sentence of death (1 Kgs 1:50). ⚙ The figure runs forward: the strength of the cross — the place where judgment fell — becomes the one refuge for the condemned, “a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us” (Heb 6:18). Scripture itself sings of God as “the horn of my salvation” (Ps 18:2), a title Zechariah lifts onto Christ — God “hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David” (Lk 1:69). The horn-of-the-altar-as-asylum reading is older and held by many; the specific application to Christ’s cross as refuge is ⚙ synthesis, offered to be tested, and built on a common-word (qeren) thematic link, not a verbal quotation.
Luke 1:69 · Hebrews 6:18 · Psalm 18:2
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
This unit (Exodus 38:1–7) is the execution half of a command/execution pair; its closest matches are by design the building instructions of Exodus 27:1–8, and the strongest verbal threads run there. All cross-references in this unit are Hebrew↔Hebrew; the Verifier’s shared-Strong’s bases are therefore valid for tiering. Two command/execution links rest on genuinely rare lexemes — H5014 nāḇaḇ (“hollow,” 4 vv) and H7251 rābaʻ (“four-square,” 12 vv) — and are tiered verbal/quotation accordingly. One further link, 38:3 ↔ Numbers 4:14 (the Kohathites’ load), rests on a cluster of rare cult-words (H4207 mazlêg 7 vv, H3257 yāʻ 9 vv, H4289 maḥtāh 19 vv, H4219 mizrāq 32 vv); the Verifier’s raw label was verbal/quotation, but because Numbers reuses the inventory for a different act rather than quoting the construction, the badge is deliberately held at high structural/thematic. Links resting on common words (H7161 qeren, H4196 mizbêaḥ, H5178 nᵉḥōšeṯ) are likewise downgraded to structural/thematic even where the Verifier’s raw label was higher. The two Christ readings are cross-Testament (Hebrews, Luke): no shared original-language lexeme exists between Hebrew and Greek, so per the rules they are argued as thematic/typological, never verbal — the Verifier returns “flagged — verify source / no shared lexeme” for 38:1↔Hebrews 13:10, and that honesty is carried into the badge. One genuine textual tension is recorded, not resolved: Cambridge observes that, per Numbers 16:38–39, the bronze overlaying of the altar (38:2) “was not done till a later time.” Several voices in this passage are general-pericope comments (Henry, Barnes, J.F.B., Gill repeat across all seven verses); where used — e.g. Henry’s devotion note carried onto v. 6 — they are flagged as whole-unit comments rather than as glosses on a word they do not address. To keep the chapter’s narrow witness from collapsing into J.F.B.’s single repeated line, sharper verse-specific voices are preferred where the sources offer them: Cambridge’s disambiguation of the altar’s full name on v. 1, Ellicott and the Pulpit Commentary on the ash-pots of v. 3, and the Geneva marginalist’s architectural guesses on the grate (v. 4) and rings (v. 5). Every voice quoted is a verbatim contiguous substring of the sourced public-domain commentary in voices_raw, including the source typos preserved as noted (Ellicott’s “is now is now” and “instructims”).
✦ = 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)