The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Courtyard
Exodus 38:9–20 — The Courtyard. 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.
9Then he constructed the courtyard. The south side of the courtyard was a hundred cubits long and had curtains of finely spun linen,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- he·ḥā·ṣêr ne·ḡeḇ tê·mā·nāh lip̄·’aṯ he·ḥā·ṣêr mê·’āh bā·’am·māh qal·‘ê mā·šə·zār šêš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he made the courtyard: for the south side, southward, the hangings of the courtyard (were) a hundred by the cubit, of fine-twisted linen.
Where the English smooths the original
This court represented the state of the Old Testament church; it was a garden enclosed; the worshippers were then confined to a little compass. But the enclosure being of curtains only, intimated that that confinement of the church to one particular nation was not to be perpetual.
It occupied a space of one hundred and fifty feet by seventy-five, and it was enclosed by curtains of fine linen about eight feet high, suspended on brazen or copper pillars. Those curtains were secured by rods fastened to the top, and kept extended by being fastened to pins stuck in the ground.JFB converts the cubits of vv. 9–13 into feet, and notes the rods and ground-pins that v. 20 will name.
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 rest, by being expressly mentioned as the work of Bezaleel, the chief architect of the whole.
The construction of the court follows upon that of the furniture which it contained. The passage runs parallel with Exodus 27:9-19 .
10with twenty posts and twenty bronze bases, and with silver hooks and bands on the posts.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘eś·rîm ‘am·mū·ḏê·hem ‘eś·rîm nə·ḥō·šeṯ wə·’aḏ·nê·hem kā·sep̄ wā·wê wa·ḥă·šu·qê·hem hā·‘am·mu·ḏîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Their pillars (were) twenty and their bases twenty, bronze; the hooks of the pillars and their bands, silver.
Where the English smooths the original
The hooks of the pillars in the court were for hanging up the carcasses of the sacrificial beasts—those on the pillars at the entry of the tabernacle were for hanging the sacerdotal robes and other things used in the service.
Upon the hooks they hanged the beasts to be sacrificed, as the Jews affirm.
fillets ] i.e. bands , or binding-rings ; see on Exodus 27:10 .
Their fillets . Rather, "their connecting-rods," as in Exodus 27:10 .
11The north side was also a hundred cubits long, with twenty posts and twenty bronze bases. The hooks and bands of the posts were silver.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ṣā·p̄ō·wn wə·lip̄·’aṯ mê·’āh ḇā·’am·māh ‘eś·rîm ‘am·mū·ḏê·hem ‘eś·rîm nə·ḥō·šeṯ wə·’aḏ·nê·hem wā·wê wa·ḥă·šu·qê·hem hā·‘am·mū·ḏîm kā·sep̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And for the north side, a hundred by the cubit; their pillars twenty and their bases twenty, bronze; the hooks of the pillars and their bands, silver.
Where the English smooths the original
sockets—mortices or holes in which the end of the pillars stood.
And for the north side the hangings were an hundred cubits, their pillars were twenty, and their sockets of brass twenty; the hooks of the pillars and their fillets of silver.The Geneva note here simply reproduces the verse in its 1599 wording (“brass” for bronze, “fillets” for bands).
The walls of the court being of curtains only, intimated that the state of the Jewish church itself was movable and changeable; and in due time to be taken down and folded up, when the place of the tent should be enlarged, and its cords lengthened, to make room for the Gentile world.Henry's single note covers the whole block 38:9–20.
12The west side was fifty cubits long and had curtains, with ten posts and ten bases. The hooks and bands of the posts were silver.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yām wə·lip̄·’aṯ- ḥă·miš·šîm bā·’am·māh qə·lā·‘îm ‘ă·śā·rāh ‘am·mū·ḏê·hem ‘ă·śā·rāh wə·’aḏ·nê·hem wā·wê wa·ḥă·šū·qê·hem hā·‘am·mu·ḏîm kā·sep̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And for the west side (seaward), hangings of fifty by the cubit; their pillars ten and their bases ten; the hooks of the pillars and their bands, silver.
Where the English smooths the original
And for the west side were hangings of fifty cubits, their pillars ten, and their sockets ten; the hooks of the pillars and their fillets of silver.
The open court of the tabernacle, where the people met, of which, its pillars, sockets, hangings, hooks, and pins, an account is givenGill repeats one note across vv. 9–20, cross-referencing the parallel instructions in Exodus 27.
13And the east side, toward the sunrise, was also fifty cubits long.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
qê·ḏə·māh wə·lip̄·’aṯ miz·rā·ḥāh ḥă·miš·šîm ’am·māh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And for the east side, toward the sunrise, fifty by the cubit.
Where the English smooths the original
14The curtains on one side of the entrance were fifteen cubits long, with three posts and three bases.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
qə·lā·‘îm ’el- hak·kā·ṯêp̄ ḥă·mêš- ‘eś·rêh ’am·māh šə·lō·šāh ‘am·mū·ḏê·hem šə·lō·šāh wə·’aḏ·nê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Hangings of fifteen by the cubit toward the one shoulder; their pillars three and their bases three.
Where the English smooths the original
The hangings of the one side of the gate were fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three.
in due time to be taken down and folded up, when the place of the tent should be enlarged, and its cords lengthened, to make room for the Gentile world.Henry reads the temporary curtain-walls as a sign of the Sinai covenant's impermanence.
15And the curtains on the other side were also fifteen cubits long, with three posts and three bases as well.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
qə·lā·‘îm haš·šê·nîṯ wə·lak·kā·ṯêp̄ ḥă·mêš ‘eś·rêh ’am·māh šə·lō·šāh ‘am·mu·ḏê·hem šə·lō·šāh wə·’aḏ·nê·hem miz·zeh ū·miz·zeh he·ḥā·ṣêr lə·ša·‘ar
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And toward the second shoulder — on this side and on that, (at) the gate of the courtyard — hangings of fifteen by the cubit; their pillars three and their bases three.
Where the English smooths the original
as Di. points out, a misplaced gloss (there is no ‘so’ in the Heb. at the beginning of the verse): read therefore (for and so, &c.), and for the other side were hangings of fifteen cubits .Dillmann (“Di.”) treats the extra clause as intrusive; a frank textual-critical note.
And for the other side of the court gate, on this hand and that hand, were hangings of fifteen cubits; their pillars three, and their sockets three.
16All the curtains around the courtyard were made of finely spun linen.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
kāl- qal·‘ê sā·ḇîḇ he·ḥā·ṣêr mā·šə·zār šêš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
All the hangings of the courtyard round about (were) fine-twisted linen.
Where the English smooths the original
17The bases for the posts were bronze, the hooks and bands were silver, and the plating for the tops of the posts was silver. So all the posts of the courtyard were banded with silver.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hā·’ă·ḏā·nîm lā·‘am·mu·ḏîm nə·ḥō·šeṯ wā·wê wa·ḥă·šū·qê·hem hā·‘am·mū·ḏîm ke·sep̄ wə·ṣip·pui rā·šê·hem kā·sep̄ wə·hêm kōl ‘am·mu·ḏê he·ḥā·ṣêr mə·ḥuš·šā·qîm ke·sep̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the bases for the pillars (were) bronze; the hooks of the pillars and their bands, silver, and the overlay of their heads, silver; and they themselves — all the pillars of the courtyard — banded with silver.
Where the English smooths the original
Just as in Exodus 36:38 , we are informed that Moses, travelling beyond the letter of his instructions, overlaid the capitals of the pillars at the door of the Tabernacle itself with gold, so now we find that, without any express orders, he overlaid those at the door of the court with silver. In each case he was probably following his remembrance of the pattern seen in the mount ( Exodus 25:9 ; Exodus 25:40 ).Excerpt begins mid-sentence in Ellicott (after a comma); fully verbatim and contiguous. Ellicott reads the 'extra' silverwork not as improvisation but as fidelity to the heavenly pattern of Exodus 25:9, 40.
The overlaying of their chapiters of silver . This is additional to what is recorded in ch. 27, and is parallel to what we find related of the tabernacle pillars in Exodus 36:38 .
chapiters—or capitals of the pillars, were wooden posts which ran along their top, to which were attached the hooks for the hangings.
Expanded from Exodus 27:17 . the hooks of the pillars and their fillets of silver ] Sam. their hooks of silver ( Exodus 27:17 ), relieving the tautology with the last clause of the verse.Cambridge records the Samaritan Pentateuch's shorter reading.
18The curtain for the entrance to the courtyard was embroidered with blue, purple, and scarlet yarn, and finely spun linen. It was twenty cubits long and, like the curtains of the courtyard, five cubits high,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·mā·saḵ ša·‘ar he·ḥā·ṣêr ma·‘ă·śêh rō·qêm tə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî mā·šə·zār wə·šêš wə·‘eś·rîm ’am·māh ’ō·reḵ lə·‘um·maṯ qal·‘ê he·ḥā·ṣêr ḥā·mêš ’am·mō·wṯ wə·qō·w·māh ḇə·rō·ḥaḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the screen for the gate of the courtyard (was) work of an embroiderer — blue and purple and crimson-worm-scarlet and twisted linen; and twenty by the cubit (was its) length, and height, in the breadth, five cubits, matching the hangings of the courtyard.
Where the English smooths the original
The sense is that the hangings of the court gate, which was twenty cubits wide, were of the same height as the hangings all round the court
The height relates to its standing or hanging upright, and the breadth relates to the hanging itself, and the height of the hanging was taken in the breadth.
The height of the hangings all round the court was required to be five cubits, or seven and a half feet ( Exodus 27:18 ). It appears by the expression here used - "in the breadth" - that the material was woven of exactly this width.
And the hanging for the gate of the court was needlework, of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen
The screen for the gate of the Court. V. 18a= Exodus 27:16 a; v. 18b (‘the height,’ &c.) inferred from Exodus 27:18 (‘answerable to’ = corresponding toCambridge dissects the verse into what is copied verbatim from the 27:16 commission (18a) and what is inferred from 27:18 (the height clause) — a candid map of source and inference.
19with four posts and four bronze bases. Their hooks were silver, as well as the bands and the plating of their tops.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ar·bā·‘āh wə·‘am·mu·ḏê·hem ’ar·bā·‘āh nə·ḥō·šeṯ wə·’aḏ·nê·hem wā·wê·hem ke·sep̄ wa·ḥă·šu·qê·hem wə·ṣip·pui rā·šê·hem kā·sep̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And their pillars four, and their bases four, bronze; their hooks silver, and the overlay of their heads and their bands, silver.
Where the English smooths the original
20All the tent pegs for the tabernacle and for the surrounding courtyard were bronze.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ḵāl hay·ṯê·ḏōṯ lam·miš·kān sā·ḇîḇ wə·le·ḥā·ṣêr nə·ḥō·šeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And all the pegs for the dwelling and for the courtyard round about (were) bronze.
Where the English smooths the original
And all the pins of the tabernacle, and of the court round about, were of brass.
As Exodus 27:19 b.The whole verse simply re-executes the closing instruction of Exodus 27:19.
The open court of the tabernacle, where the people metGill's defining phrase for the court: the place of the people's meeting.
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.
Before any worshipper meets a priest or an altar, he meets a wall — a hundred cubits of fine-twisted linen (mā·šə·zār šêš, H7806 + H8336) slung between bronze pillars on every side (vv. 9, 16). The fabric is named twice as a frame: it opens the south side (v. 9) and sums up the whole circuit (v. 16, kāl… sā·ḇîḇ, “all… round about”). Joseph Benson reads the enclosure morally: “it was a garden enclosed; the worshippers were then confined to a little compass” — yet, he adds, “the enclosure being of curtains only, intimated that that confinement of the church to one particular nation was not to be perpetual.” Matthew Henry, in the note that covers this whole block, presses the same point: “The walls of the court being of curtains only, intimated that the state of the Jewish church itself was movable and changeable.” The white linen wall is, on this ancient reading, two truths at once: holiness has a boundary, and that boundary is temporary cloth, not eternal stone.
Every pillar tells the same story from the ground up: bronze bases (nə·ḥō·šeṯ, H5178) socketed into the earth, silver hooks, bands, and capitals (kā·sep̄, H3701) above (vv. 10–12). Verse 17 gathers it into a summary clause — mə·ḥuš·šā·qîm kā·sep̄, “all the pillars of the courtyard banded with silver” — the Pual participle of châshaq, a root that elsewhere means to cling in love (Deut. 7:7). The literal reading offered here notes that the columns are personified: their tops are rā·šê·hem, “their heads” (H7218), crowned with silver. Charles Ellicott catches a quiet generosity in the record: just as Moses, “travelling beyond the letter of his instructions,” overlaid the sanctuary capitals with gold (36:38), “so now we find that, without any express orders, he overlaid those at the door of the court with silver.” The Pulpit Commentary confirms the silver plating “is additional to what is recorded in ch. 27.” The builders gave more than was commanded — bronze where feet stand, silver where heads are lifted. And the silver is named for what it is later in the chapter: the census atonement money (38:25–28; 30:11–16), the half-shekel ransom of each life, beaten into the very hooks and capitals that crown the pillars. The redemption-metal is not a symbol read into the wall but its stated substance.
The fourth, eastern side breaks the plain white pattern. Two fifteen-cubit screens reach from the shoulders (kâthêph, H3802, vv. 14–15) toward a single twenty-cubit opening, and across that opening hangs not a wall but a screen (ū·mā·saḵ, H4539) — “work of an embroiderer” (ma·‘ă·śêh rō·qêm, H4639 + H7551) blazing with blue, purple, crimson-worm-scarlet, and white (v. 18). Jamieson, Fausset & Brown note its height was set so that the gate “were of the same height as the hangings all round the court,” a matching the Hebrew marks with lə·‘um·maṯ (H5980, “corresponding to”). There is exactly one way into the holy enclosure, and it is the most beautiful thing in the wall. The Cambridge Bible, with characteristic honesty, even flags a clause in v. 15 (“to the gate”) as, following Dillmann, “a misplaced gloss” — the text itself bears the marks of its own transmission. The gate is glorious, singular, and humanly handled all at once.
The section that could have ended on the embroidered gate instead ends in the dust: “And all the pegs (hay·ṯê·ḏōṯ, H3489) for the dwelling and for the courtyard round about were bronze.” John Gill defines the space simply: “The open court of the tabernacle, where the people met,” and the Cambridge Bible notes the verse is merely “As Exodus 27:19 b” — the obedient re-execution of the last instruction. Keil & Delitzsch set the whole within its frame: the order of fabrication “corresponds on the whole to the list of the separate articles in Exodus 35:11-19,” with the ark alone exalted as “expressly mentioned as the work of Bezaleel.” The court ends at ground level. The same God who is named in gold on the mercy-seat is here pegged to the earth in bronze — and Scripture counts the pegs.
Read under Sola Scriptura, and tested as fallible: the courtyard is the gospel’s shape laid out in fabric and metal. A wall of white linen says holiness is bounded — no one strolls into God’s presence; there is a perimeter, and it is woven righteousness. Yet the wall is only five cubits high and made of cloth: the boundary is real but not impassable, and (as Benson and Henry both saw) not permanent. The metals teach a downward grace: bronze at the feet that touch cursed ground, silver — which Exodus 38:25–28 names as the very atonement-money of 30:11–16, the ransom paid per life — clasping every head above. And there is one gate, never two; not a gap in the wall but a screen of blue, purple, scarlet, and white, the only coloured thing in the whole enclosure, set exactly to the height of the wall it pierces. One way in, and that way is the most beautiful work of human hands in the court. I take this as a deliberate pattern, not a coincidence of carpentry: the God who walls Himself off also weaves a door — singular, glorious, sized to match — and finally pegs His dwelling to the very earth He means to redeem. The claim is mine and stands to be corrected by the text itself; the bronze pegs of v. 20 keep it humble.
The same God named in gold on the mercy-seat is, at the courtyard’s edge, pegged to the earth in bronze — and Scripture counts the pegs. (a fallible reading, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The execution-account of the court (Exodus 38) deliberately re-voices the instruction-account (Exodus 27). The opening of the south side reproduces the rarest words of its prototype: the slung hangings, the parched-south, the twisted linen. The Verifier records the shared lexemes as the basis of a verbal link.
Exodus 38:9 · Exodus 27:9
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Rare shared lexemes computed by the Verifier: H7806 shâzar (twisted; only 21 vv), H8486 têymân (south; 22 vv), H7050 qelaʻ (hangings; 22 vv), H8336 shêsh (linen; 37 vv). The clustering of four low-frequency tabernacle words is verbal quotation, not coincidence.
The summary of the whole white wall (v. 16) quotes the closing fabric-clause of the instructions (27:18, “towards the end,” as Cambridge notes). The Hofal participle mā·šə·zār (“twisted”) over šêš (“linen”) recurs verbatim.
Exodus 38:16 · Exodus 27:18
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H7806 shâzar (twisted; only 21 vv) and H8336 shêsh (linen; 37 vv), with the common H520 ʼammâh for the matching dimension. The rare textile word shâzar shared verbatim is the verbal anchor — quotation of the chapter-27 spec, not coincidence.
The embroidered gate-screen (v. 18) re-executes the screen of 27:16, and its colour-and-fabric clause echoes 27:18. The screen-word, the embroiderer's craft, and the twisted linen are all shared.
Exodus 38:18 · Exodus 27:16
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier-computed rare shared lexemes: H7551 râqam (embroiderer's work; only 9 vv), H7806 shâzar (twisted; 21 vv), H4539 mâçâk (screen; 25 vv), H8336 shêsh (37 vv). The very low-frequency H7551 and H4539 make this verbal quotation; Cambridge independently labels v. 18a a reproduction of Exodus 27:16a.
The single embroidered screen across the court gate (v. 18) is woven in the very same words as the screen mâsâk for the door of the tent itself (26:36): both are “work of an embroiderer,” blue-purple-scarlet-and-white. The outer gate and the inner door of God's house wear one and the same garment — a structural-verbal rhyme that nests the courtyard's lone entrance inside the larger pattern of single, beautiful doors leading inward to God.
Exodus 38:18 · Exodus 26:36
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier-computed rare shared lexemes: H7551 râqam (embroiderer; only 9 vv), H7806 shâzar (21 vv), H4539 mâçâk (screen; 25 vv), H8336 shêsh (37 vv), plus the colour-triad H713/H8144/H8438/H8504. The same rare textile-and-craft cluster appears in both — a deliberate verbal match between court-gate and tent-door.
The silver-overlaid capitals of the court pillars (v. 17) are not in the chapter-27 instructions; Ellicott and the Pulpit Commentary both tie this addition to the gold-overlaid capitals of the tabernacle’s own pillars in 36:38. The shared hardware-vocabulary is dense.
Exodus 38:17 · Exodus 36:38
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier-computed rare shared lexemes: H2838 châshuq (bands; only 8 vv), H2053 vâv (hooks; 13 vv), H134 ʼeden (sockets; 39 vv), H5982 ʻammûwd (pillars; 84 vv). H2838 and H2053 are very low-frequency — a strong verbal cluster, corroborated by Ellicott's cross-reference.
This is the thread that grounds the whole metal-symbolism of the wall. The silver hooks, bands, and capitals of the courtyard pillars (v. 17) are not generic bullion: the inventory at the end of this same chapter states where the silver came from — the census kôpher, the half-shekel “atonement money” each Israelite paid to ransom his life (38:25–28; Exodus 30:11–16). Verse 28 says the 1,775 shekels left after the sockets were used “to make hooks for the pillars, to overlay their tops, and to make bands for them.” The same banding-verb (châshaq) and hook-word (vâv) tie v. 17 to v. 28. So the redemption-reading of the silver is not imposed from outside the text — Exodus itself says the metal clasping every pillar-head was bought with ransom-price.
Exodus 38:17 · Exodus 38:28
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier-computed rare shared lexemes: H2836 châshaq (band/clasp; only 11 vv), H2053 vâv (hooks; 13 vv), H5982 ʻammûwd (84 vv), H7218 rôʼsh (heads). Two very low-frequency words (châshaq, vâv) shared between v. 17 and the atonement-silver of v. 28 — a verbal link internal to the chapter, not inference.
The whole court — its hangings, pillars, and gate — is itemized again in the great summary of the finished tabernacle (39:40) and in the earlier offering-list (35:17). These are structural inventories sharing common terms rather than rare quotations.
Exodus 38:16 · Exodus 39:40 · Exodus 35:17
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier returns only commoner shared lexemes — H7050 qelaʻ (hangings; 22 vv) and H2691 châtsêr (courtyard; 163 vv) — so the link is a shared inventory pattern (the same furniture listed), not a rare-word quotation. Tiered down accordingly.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The courtyard has a single entrance — never two — and across it hangs the one coloured screen (mâsâk) in a wall of plain white. The text itself nests this single gate inside a larger pattern: the very same embroidered screen guards the door of the tent (26:36) and, in coarser cloth, the way into the Most Holy Place — one beautiful door after another, each the only way in, leading the worshipper inward toward God. The ancient and widely-held figural reading hears in this the Lord’s “I am the door; by Me if any man enter in, he shall be saved” (John 10:9) and “I am the way… no man cometh unto the Father, but by Me” (John 14:6). The gate is the only access through the wall of holiness, and it is the most beautiful work in the court — as Christ is the one and lovely way to God. This is figural, not a verbal claim: no Strong's number bridges the Hebrew mâsâk to the Greek thura; the connection is typological.
Exodus 38:18 · John 10:9 · John 14:6
The pillars stand on bronze at the ground and are clasped and crowned with silver above (vv. 10–12, 17). The silver is no generic ornament: Exodus 38:25–28 records that it was the census kôpher — the half-shekel “atonement money” by which each Israelite ransomed his own life (30:11–16) — beaten into the hooks, bands, and capitals that crown every pillar. So the redemption-meaning of the silver is anchored in the text, not merely inferred. In the figural tradition bronze is then the metal of judgment endured (the bronze altar, the bronze serpent of Num. 21:9, lifted up as Christ would be, John 3:14). The wall thus images judgment borne at the foot and ransom-money crowning the head — a pattern the church has long read toward the Cross. The metals and the atonement-source are sourced facts; the step from Israel's ransom-silver to Christ's ransom (“the precious blood of Christ… not redeemed with… silver,” 1 Pet. 1:18–19) is the fallible typological synthesis offered here.
Exodus 38:17 · Exodus 38:28 · Numbers 21:9 · John 3:14
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:
This unit (Exodus 38:9–20) is an execution-account: it re-performs the courtyard instructions of Exodus 27:9–19. Because both texts are Hebrew, the cross-references are genuine intra-book verbal quotations, and the Verifier confirms them through clusters of rare shared lexemes (e.g. H7806 shâzar, 21 occurrences; H7551 râqam, 9 occurrences; H2838 châshuq, 8 occurrences; H2836 châshaq, 11 occurrences). Where only common words are shared (H2691 châtsêr, H7050 qelaʻ), the link is tiered down to structural / thematic — the master-inventory thread (38:16 / 39:40 / 35:17). Two basis-claims in the draft were corrected after re-running the Verifier: the 38:16↔27:18 basis dropped an unverified H6967/H7341 dimension claim (the tool returns only H7806, H8336, H520), and the 38:18↔27:16 basis was re-anchored on the genuinely rare H7551 râqam and H4539 mâçâk rather than the high-frequency H520 ʼammâh.
Two threads added on Verifier evidence sharpen the reading. (1) The court's one gate-screen (v. 18) is woven in the identical rare vocabulary as the tabernacle's own door-screen (26:36) — H7551 râqam, H4539 mâçâk, the colour-triad — nesting the lone gate inside the pattern of single doors leading inward. (2) The silver of the pillar hooks, bands, and capitals (v. 17) is verbally linked to v. 28, where the inventory states that this silver was the census atonement money of 30:11–16 (shared H2836 châshaq, 11 vv; H2053 vâv, 13 vv). That moves the redemption-meaning of the silver from inference to sourced fact, which is why the Christ-note now cites 38:28 directly.
Several PD commentators here are block-notes: Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, and John Gill each repeat a single comment across all of vv. 9–20, so their excerpts recur by source design, not by my stitching. Barnes' note actually concerns the bronze laver and the women's mirrors (38:8) and is only loosely attached to these verses by the commentary's verse-blocking; I have therefore not featured it. The Cambridge Bible preserves several candid text-critical observations adopted into the notes and voices: a misplaced-gloss flag at v. 15 (following Dillmann), the Samaritan Pentateuch's shorter reading at v. 17, and a clause-by-clause source-map at v. 18 distinguishing what is copied from 27:16 from what is inferred from 27:18. Keil & Delitzsch's framing note carries an apparent typographic slip ("Exodus 37:9-20" for 38:9-20), preserved verbatim with a bracketed correction in the editorial_note.
The Christ-readings are typological, never verbal: no Strong's link can bridge Hebrew to the Greek New Testament. The "one gate / one door" reading is ancient and widely held; the bronze-below/silver-above reading is marked novel as a fuller synthesis, though its silver-as-ransom premise is now anchored in 38:28 rather than merely assumed. All voices are verbatim contiguous excerpts from the supplied voices_raw; trimming is to the ends only, with no alteration of any word or letter (the Ellicott v. 17 excerpt simply begins mid-sentence after a comma; the Gill phrase is quoted with its original capital "The").
✦ = 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)