The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Additional Priestly Garments
Exodus 39:22–31 — Additional Priestly Garments. 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.
22They made the robe of the ephod entirely of blue cloth, the work of a weaver,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘aś ’eṯ- mə·‘îl hā·’ê·p̄ōḏ kə·lîl tə·ḵê·leṯ ma·‘ă·śêh ’ō·rêḡ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-made the-robe of-the-ephod, work of-a-weaver, wholly blue.
Where the English smooths the original
The priests' garments were rich and splendid. The church in its infancy was thus taught by shadows of good things to come; but the substance is Christ, and the grace of the gospel. Christ is our great High Priest.Henry's running note on the whole section (39:1–31); excerpted at its head.
woven work ] the work of the weaver ; see on Exodus 26:1 . Not mentioned in Exodus 28:31Notes that the “work of the weaver” specification is new here, beyond the command in Exodus 28:31.
The robes consisted of the ephod ( Exodus 39:2-7 , as in Exodus 28:6-12 ), the choshen or breastplate ( Exodus 39:8-21 , as in Exodus 28:15-29 ), the mel or over-coat ( Exodus 39:22-26 , as in Exodus 28:31-34 ); the body-coats, turbans, drawers, and girdles, for Aaron and his sons ( Exodus 39:27-29 , as in Exodus 28:39-40 , and Exodus 28:42 ).Maps the execution-account of ch. 39 onto the command-account of ch. 28, item by item.
For just as all the other things are there placed between the holy ark and the golden altar as the two poles, so here all the rest of the priests' robes are included between the shoulder-dress, the principal part of the official robes of the high priest, and the golden frontlet, the inscription upon which rendered it the most striking sign of the dignity of his officeKeil quotes Baumgarten: the priestly robes are framed between the ephod (shoulder-dress) and the golden frontlet, just as the sanctuary's furnishings stand between the ark and the altar — a deliberate structural polarity.
23with an opening in the center of the robe like that of a garment, with a collar around the opening so that it would not tear.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·p̄î- bə·ṯō·w·ḵōw ham·mə·‘îl kə·p̄î ṯaḥ·rā śā·p̄āh sā·ḇîḇ lə·p̄îw lō yiq·qā·rê·a‘
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-an-opening-of the-robe in-its-midst like-the-opening-of a-corslet, a-lip for-its-opening round-about, that-it-not be-torn.
Where the English smooths the original
And {f} there was an hole in the midst of the robe, as the hole of an habergeon, with a band round about the hole, that it should not rend. (f) Where he could put his head through.“Habergeon” is the older English for the corslet/coat-of-mail named by the rare Hebrew taḥărā’.
the substance is Christ, and the grace of the gospel. Christ is our great High Priest. When he undertook the work of our redemption, he put on the clothes of serviceHenry reads the priestly vesting as Christ putting on the “clothes of service.”
24They made pomegranates of blue, purple, and scarlet yarn and finely spun linen on the lower hem of the robe.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·śū rim·mō·w·nê tə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî mā·šə·zār ‘al- šū·lê ham·mə·‘îl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-made on the-hems-of the-robe pomegranates [of] blue and-purple and-scarlet-of crimson, twisted.
Where the English smooths the original
Pomegranates of blue . . . and twined linen. —Rather, of blue, and purple, and scarlet, twisted together. (Comp. Exodus 28:33 .)Corrects the rendering: the Hebrew says only “twisted,” not “twined linen.”
And twined linen . Rather "twined," i.e. , twisted together. There was no direction to use "fine twined linen" in making the pomegranates. See Exodus 28:33 .Independently confirms Ellicott: the word “linen” is not in the Hebrew of this verse.
and twined linen] Sam. LXX. and fine twined linen , the usual expression. Not prescribed in the Heb. text of Exodus 28:33 , but read there in Sam. LXX.Notes the Samaritan Pentateuch and Septuagint add “fine twined linen” here; the Masoretic Hebrew does not.
25They also made bells of pure gold and attached them around the hem between the pomegranates,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·śū p̄a·‘ă·mō·nê ṭā·hō·wr zā·hāḇ way·yit·tə·nū ’eṯ- hap·pa·‘ă·mō·nîm bə·ṯō·wḵ hā·rim·mō·nîm ‘al- sā·ḇîḇ šū·lê ham·mə·‘îl bə·ṯō·wḵ hā·rim·mō·nîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-made bells [of] pure gold, and-they-gave the-bells in-the-midst-of the-pomegranates upon the-hems-of the-robe round-about, in-the-midst-of the-pomegranates.
Where the English smooths the original
Bells of pure gold. —On the object of the bells, see Note on Exodus 28:35 .Points to Exodus 28:35, where the bells' purpose is given: the priest's sound is to be heard going in and coming out, in the words of that verse, “that he die not.”
And they made bells of pure gold, and put the bells between the pomegranates upon the hem of the robe, round about between the pomegranates;Preserves the Hebrew's doubled “between the pomegranates… between the pomegranates.”
26alternating the bells and pomegranates around the lower hem of the robe to be worn for ministry, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
sā·ḇîḇ pa·‘ă·mōn wə·rim·mōn pa·‘ă·mōn wə·rim·mōn ‘al- šū·lê ham·mə·‘îl lə·šā·rêṯ ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
A-bell and-a-pomegranate, a-bell and-a-pomegranate, upon the-hems-of the-robe round-about, to-minister, just-as YHWH had-commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
A bell and a pomegranate, a bell and a pomegranate, round about the hem of the robe to minister in; as the LORD commanded Moses.Keeps the Hebrew's literal doubling that the BSB renders as “alternating.”
took charge of all God's spiritual Israel, laid them near his heart, engraved them on the palms of his hands, and presented them to his Father.Reads the ministering garment as the High Priest bearing the people near His heart.
27For Aaron and his sons they made tunics of fine linen, the work of a weaver,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
lə·’a·hă·rōn ū·lə·ḇā·nāw way·ya·‘ă·śū ’eṯ- hak·kā·ṯə·nōṯ šêš ma·‘ă·śêh ’ō·rêḡ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-for-Aaron and-for-his-sons they-made the-tunics [of] fine-linen, work of-a-weaver.
Where the English smooths the original
They made coats. —Rather, tunics or shirts. See Note on Exodus 28:40 .Corrects “coats” to “tunics”; the garment is the body-shirt worn by all the priests.
what the coats for the common priests were made of is expressed, which is not before, which was linen; expressive of their purity and holiness, and in which they ought always to appear before God and manNotes that this verse first specifies the common priests' material — linen, read as a sign of purity.
coats ] tunics : see on Exodus 28:39 . woven work ] the work of the weaver ; see on Exodus 26:1 .Confirms both renderings: “tunics” and “the work of the weaver.”
28as well as the turban of fine linen, the ornate headbands and undergarments of finely spun linen,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’êṯ ham·miṣ·ne·p̄eṯ šêš wə·’eṯ- pa·’ă·rê ham·miḡ·bā·‘ōṯ šêš wə·’eṯ- miḵ·nə·sê hab·bāḏ mā·šə·zār šêš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the-turban [of] fine-linen, and the-ornaments-of the-caps [of] fine-linen, and the-undergarments-of linen, twisted fine-linen.
Where the English smooths the original
The “mitre,” or rather “turban,” was for Aaron, the “goodly bonnets,” or rather “caps,” for his sons.Distinguishes Aaron's single turban from the sons' caps — two different headdresses in one verse.
the goodly headtires ] the ornamental caps (for ‘caps,’ see on Exodus 28:40 ); lit. the ornaments of (i.e. consisting in ; G.-K. § 128m) caps . Pe’çr , ‘ornament,’ is however itself also specialized in the sense of ornamental capParses the construct “ornaments of caps” and the special sense of pə’ēr.
The head-dresses of the ordinary priests, which are simply called "bonnets" in Exodus 28:40 , are called "goodly bonnets" or "ornamental caps" in Exodus 39:28 of this chapterNotes the chapter elevates the plain “bonnets” of the command to “ornamental caps” in the execution.
29and the sash of finely spun linen, embroidered with blue, purple, and scarlet yarn, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’eṯ- hā·’aḇ·nêṭ mā·šə·zār šêš rō·qêm ū·ṯə·ḵê·leṯ wə·’ar·gā·mān wə·ṯō·w·la·‘aṯ šā·nî ma·‘ă·śêh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the-sash [of] twisted fine-linen, and-blue and-purple and-scarlet-of crimson, work of-an-embroiderer, just-as YHWH had-commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
The girdle was for Aaron. It is described much more fully here than in the “instructions,” where it is called simply a “girdle of needlework” ( Exodus 28:39 ).Notes the fuller description here than in the command of Exodus 28:39.
And a girdle of fine twined linen, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, of needlework; as the LORD commanded Moses.Renders rōqēm as “needlework,” the embroiderer's craft.
the girdle ] the sash ; see on Exodus 28:39 . But no doubt the sashes should be read with LXX.: see Exodus 28:40 .Argues with the Septuagint for the plural “sashes,” supporting the collective reading.
30They also made the plate of the holy crown of pure gold, and they engraved on it, like an inscription on a seal: HOLY TO THE LORD.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·śū ’eṯ- ṣîṣ haq·qō·ḏeš nê·zer- ṭā·hō·wr zā·hāḇ way·yiḵ·tə·ḇū ‘ā·lāw miḵ·taḇ pit·tū·ḥê ḥō·w·ṯām qō·ḏeš Yah·weh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-made the-plate-of the-holy crown [of] pure gold, and-they-wrote upon-it the-writing-of engravings-of a-seal: HOLY TO-YHWH.
Where the English smooths the original
And they made the plate of the holy crown of pure gold, and wrote upon it a writing, like to the engravings of a signet, HOLINESS TO THE LORD.Renders the inscription “HOLINESS TO THE LORD.”
The seal-ring worn both by ancient and modern Egyptians on the little finger of the right hand, contained, inscribed on a cornelian or other precious stone, along with the owner's name, a religious sentiment or sacred symbol, intimating that he was the servant of God, or expressive of trust in Him. And it was to this practice the inscription on the high priest alludesReads the seal-engraving against the Egyptian signet practice the craftsmen knew.
the holy crown ] the holy diadem ; see on Exodus 29:6 . Not mentioned in Exodus 28:36 .Renders nēzer as “diadem” and notes the term is fresh here versus the command.
31Then they fastened to it a blue cord to mount it on the turban, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yit·tə·nū ‘ā·lāw tə·ḵê·leṯ pə·ṯîl lā·ṯêṯ ‘al- ham·miṣ·ne·p̄eṯ mil·mā·‘ə·lāh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-gave upon-it a-cord-of blue to-set [it] upon the-turban from-above, just-as YHWH had-commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
And they tied unto it a lace of blue, to fasten it on high upon the mitre; as the LORD commanded Moses.“A lace of blue” preserves the sense of pəṯîl as a slender blue thread.
upon the turban above ] Comp. on Exodus 28:37 .Confirms “upon the turban above,” pointing back to the command in Exodus 28:37.
intimating that he was the servant of God, or expressive of trust in Him. And it was to this practice the inscription on the high priest alludesJFB's signet note (carried at v. 31); the engraving marks the priest as God's servant.
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 unit opens with a single garment of a single color: the מְעִיל (mə‘îl), the robe of the ephod, woven כְּלִיל תְּכֵלֶת — “a perfection of blue,” one seamless heaven-colored field, “the work of a weaver.” Matthew Henry reads the whole vesting as figure: “the substance is Christ, and the grace of the gospel. Christ is our great High Priest.” The robe's most pointed detail is structural: its neck-hole is bound “like the opening of a corslet” — the rare word תַחְרָא (taḥărā’), which the Verifier flags as occurring in only two verses in all Scripture, so that the Geneva Bible's old word “habergeon” (a coat of mail) is exactly right — “that it should not rend.” The Hebrew verb is יִקָּרֵעַ (qāra‘), the verb of torn garments in grief. The robe of the one who bears Israel is built, deliberately, not to tear.
Around the trailing שׁוּלֵי (šûlê, “hems”) the craftsmen worked pomegranates “of blue, and purple, and scarlet, twisted together” — and here both Ellicott and The Pulpit Commentary sharpen the text against the translation: “There was no direction to use ‘fine twined linen’ in making the pomegranates” — the Hebrew says only מָשְׁזָר, “twisted.” Between the fruit hung bells of pure gold, פַּעֲמֹנִים (pa‘ămōnîm), a word built from the sound of striking. Ellicott sends the reader to Exodus 28:35 for their purpose, where the command itself gives the reason: the priest's sound “shall be heard when he goeth in unto the holy place… that he die not” (Exodus 28:35) — the priest must be heard entering and leaving the holy place. The Geneva Bible keeps the Hebrew's own rhythm — “a bell and a pomegranate, a bell and a pomegranate” — fruit (silent fruitfulness) and bell (audible witness) alternating round the entire hem, the garment לְשָׁרֵת, “to minister.” The movement closes on the refrain that governs the chapter: “just as YHWH had commanded Moses.”
The camera widens from the high priest alone to לְאַהֲרֹן וּלְבָנָיו, “for Aaron and for his sons.” They made tunics of שֵׁשׁ (šēš), bleached Egyptian linen — and Gill notes this is the first place the common priests' material is named, “expressive of their purity and holiness.” Keil & Delitzsch catch a quiet elevation: the head-dresses called plain “bonnets” in the command of ch. 28 are here “goodly bonnets,” פַּאֲרֵי הַמִּגְבָּעֹת, “ornaments of caps” — beauty added to the working garments. The sash is the embroiderer's craft (רֹקֵם, rōqēm), and Ellicott observes it is “described much more fully here than in the instructions,” where Exodus 28:39 called it merely “a girdle of needlework.” Across this movement the execution outstrips the command — the actual making is richer than the blueprint, all of it white, the color the chapter keeps returning to as the sign of consecrated cleanness.
The unit climbs to its one inscribed word. They made the צִיץ (ṣîṣ) — a “shining-thing,” a golden blossom — of the נֵזֶר הַקֹּדֶשׁ, “the holy crown / separation-diadem,” pure gold, and cut into it “like the engravings of a seal” the only sentence written on any garment: קֹדֶשׁ לַיהוָה — HOLY TO YHWH. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown set the engraving against the Egyptian signet-ring, which bore “along with the owner's name, a religious sentiment or sacred symbol, intimating that he was the servant of God” — the high priest is sealed, stamped as God's possession. A single blue cord (פְּתִיל) fastens the plate “on high upon the turban,” and the Pulpit Commentary notes this placement “was not mentioned in the directions” — the doing specifies what the command left open, lifting the divine name to the highest point of the vesture. The chapter's refrain closes it: “just as YHWH had commanded Moses.”
Read whole, these ten verses are not a tailor's inventory but an argument in fabric. The unit moves upward and inward: from a robe that cannot be torn, through a hem that both sounds (bells) and bears fruit (pomegranates), to a forehead that simply reads — קֹדֶשׁ לַיהוָה, Holy to YHWH. The whole man is being said in cloth: a body covered, a presence heard, a service performed, an ownership confessed. And over every garment, seven times in the chapter, falls the refrain “just as the LORD had commanded Moses” — the same cadence as the seven days of Genesis 1, where the world was made by word and found “very good.” The making of the priest is a small re-creation: a man fashioned, garment by garment, exactly as God spoke, until he is fit to stand between the holy and the people. The bells warn that this nearness is mortal — the priest could die in the Presence; the plate answers why he does not — because he comes marked as belonging wholly to the LORD. This is my fallible reading, offered to be tested against the text: the priestly wardrobe is the gospel pre-spoken in thread — that someone must be made holy, bear the names of the people, and be heard and accepted in the holy place on their behalf.
The robe is built not to tear; the brow is built to be read — Holy to the LORD. (a synthesis reading, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Exodus 39:22 fulfills the command of Exodus 28:31 almost word for word. The Verifier records a verbal link resting on the cluster kâlîyl (“whole,” 15 vv), mᵉʻîyl (“robe,” 27 vv), ʼêphôwd (“ephod,” 39 vv), and tᵉkêleth (“blue,” 49 vv) — the rare “whole/blue” combination ties the doing to the saying. The chapter is the matching half of a command-and-fulfillment diptych: God said “make the robe of the ephod wholly of blue,” and here Bezalel does exactly that.
Exodus 28:31
basis: shared rare lexemes H3632 kâlîyl (15 vv), H4598 mᵉʻîyl (27 vv), H646 ʼêphôwd (39 vv), H8504 tᵉkêleth (49 vv) — execution-account quoting the command-account
The detail of the bound neck-opening in Exodus 39:23 quotes Exodus 28:32, and the link is anchored by a genuinely rare word: תַחְרָא (tachărâʼ, “corslet”) occurs in only two verses in the entire Hebrew Bible — these two. The Verifier returns it with qâraʻ (“tear”) and sâphâh (“lip/edge”). Two verses sharing a word that appears nowhere else are not parallel by chance; they are the command and its execution.
Exodus 28:32
basis: shared lexemes incl. the hapax-rare H8473 tachărâʼ (only 2 vv: Ex 28:32; 39:23), with H7167 qâraʻ, H8193 sâphâh
Exodus 39:24 executes the ornamentation prescribed in Exodus 28:33. The Verifier confirms a strong verbal basis: shûwl (“hem/skirt,” 10 vv), rimmôwn (“pomegranate,” 25 vv), ʼargâmân (“purple,” 38 vv), and shânîy (“scarlet,” 42 vv) — a dense cluster of relatively rare terms. The phrase that the BSB renders “finely spun linen,” however, is only mošzār, “twisted”; Ellicott and the Pulpit Commentary note the Masoretic text here lacks the word “linen” the command supplies.
Exodus 28:33
basis: shared rare lexemes H7757 shûwl (10 vv), H7416 rimmôwn (25 vv), H713 ʼargâmân (38 vv), H8144 shânîy (42 vv)
Exodus 39:30 fulfills Exodus 28:36 with three rare engraving-words clustered together: pittûwach (“engraving,” 11 vv), chôwthâm (“seal/signet,” 13 vv), and tsîyts (“plate/blossom,” 15 vv), all confirmed shared by the Verifier alongside the inscription itself, קֹדֶשׁ (qôdesh). The concentration of three independently rare lexemes makes this one of the strongest verbal links in the unit — the goldsmith's plate executed exactly as commanded.
Exodus 28:36
basis: shared rare lexemes H6603 pittûwach (11 vv), H2368 chôwthâm (13 vv), H6731 tsîyts (15 vv), plus the inscribed H6944 qôdesh
The linen tunic, turban, and breeches of Exodus 39:27–28 are the very garments Aaron is later commanded to wear on the Day of Atonement in Leviticus 16:4. The strength of the link sits in v. 28: the Verifier ties it to Leviticus 16:4 by two genuinely rare words — miknâç (“breeches,” in only 5 verses of the whole Bible) and mitsnepheth (“turban,” 9 vv), with bad (“linen,” 19 vv) — and accordingly rates 39:28 ↔ Leviticus 16:4 a verbal / quotation link. The tunic of v. 27 alone shares only the commoner kᵉthôneth (26 vv) with Leviticus 16:4, which on its own the Verifier tiers merely structural; but read together the linen vestments made here are, word for word, the vestments worn before the mercy seat there. The garments fashioned in Exodus 39 are the garments Aaron puts on to enter the Most Holy Place on the one day of the year — manufacture and atonement bound by the same rare nouns.
Exodus 39:27 · Exodus 39:28 · Leviticus 16:4
basis: 39:28 ↔ Lev 16:4 share the rare H4370 miknâç (only 5 vv) and H4701 mitsnepheth (9 vv), plus H906 bad (19 vv) — rare-lexeme verbal link; the 39:27 ↔ Lev 16:4 tie alone is only the commoner H3801 kᵉthôneth (26 vv), structural on its own
The inscription קֹדֶשׁ לַיהוָה (“Holy to YHWH”) on the high priest's brow is taken up by Zechariah's vision of the last day, when the very bells of the horses and every cooking pot in Jerusalem shall be engraved “HOLY TO THE LORD” (Zechariah 14:20). The Verifier registers this as a thematic link through qôdesh (“holy,” 382 vv) — a common word, so the connection rests on the shared phrase and motif, not on rarity. What was once the unique badge of one man's forehead becomes, in the prophet, the universal stamp on all things.
Zechariah 14:20
basis: shared motif/phrase via H6944 qôdesh (common, 382 vv); link is thematic — the priestly inscription universalized, not a rare verbal quotation
The golden plate is fastened to the turban by פְּתִיל תְּכֵלֶת (pəṯîl təkêleth), a “cord of blue” (Exodus 39:31). The same two words name what every Israelite was commanded to put on the tassels of the corners of his garments: “a cord of blue” (Numbers 15:38), so that seeing it they would “remember all the commandments of the LORD.” The Verifier confirms the verbal link on a genuinely rare word — pâthîyl (“cord/lace,” in only 11 verses) — joined to təkêleth. The connection is striking and honest: the very thread that binds the holy name to the high priest's head is the thread the whole nation wears in miniature on its clothing. The high priest carries on his brow, concentrated and inscribed, the blue remembrance Israel carries on its hems.
Numbers 15:38
basis: shared rare lexeme H6616 pâthîyl (only 11 vv) with H8504 tᵉkêleth (49 vv) — the identical “cord of blue” of the priest's crown and Israel's tassels
The blue mantle of v. 22 is the מְעִיל (mᵉʻîyl), a word of office and rank. The same noun names the robe of King Saul whose skirt David secretly cut in the cave (1 Samuel 24:4) — a tearing of the royal mᵉʻîyl that David's own conscience smote him for, and that Samuel had already read as a sign that the kingdom was “torn” from Saul (1 Samuel 15:27–28). The Verifier returns only the shared mᵉʻîyl (27 vv), so the link is a motif-resonance, not a quotation: the priest's robe is woven expressly not to be torn (v. 23), while the king's robe is torn as the visible omen of a torn kingdom — two mᵉʻîyl, one preserved whole for an enduring priesthood, one severed for a forfeited throne.
1 Samuel 24:4
basis: shared lexeme H4598 mᵉʻîyl (27 vv) only — same garment-word, no quotation; thematic contrast between the un-tearable priestly robe and Saul's cut royal robe
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The robe of the ephod was woven כְּלִיל, “whole,” one piece, and bound deliberately “that it not be torn” (39:22–23). Matthew Henry reads the priestly garments straight to their substance: “the substance is Christ… Christ is our great High Priest.” The Gospel of John lingers on a detail the soldiers noticed at the cross: Jesus' tunic “was seamless, woven in one piece from top to bottom,” and so “they did not tear it” (John 19:23–24). This is a typological reading across Testaments — the link is figural, not verbal (Greek chitōn cannot share a Strong's number with Hebrew mə‘îl), but the convergence is striking: the un-torn woven garment of the priest answers to the un-torn woven garment of the crucified High Priest. Note honestly: John's robe is the tunic, not the over-mantle; the figure is suggestive, not exact.
Exodus 39:22 · Exodus 39:23 · John 19:23
On the high priest's forehead alone stood the words קֹדֶשׁ לַיהוָה, “Holy to YHWH” (39:30), engraved “like a seal,” marking him as wholly God's. Henry applies it directly: Christ “crowned himself with holiness to the Lord, consecrating his whole undertaking to the honour of his Father's holiness.” Hebrews names Jesus the High Priest who is “holy, innocent, undefiled, set apart from sinners” (Hebrews 7:26) and who passed through the greater tabernacle (Hebrews 9:11). The connection is typological and cross-Testament — argued from the pattern (a consecrated mediator who bears holiness for the people), not from any shared lexeme, since the Verifier rightly returns no common original-language word between a Greek and a Hebrew text. Henry extends it to believers, who are “spiritual priests,” clothed in “the righteousness of saints” (Revelation 19:8).
Exodus 39:30 · Hebrews 7:26 · Hebrews 9:11
The divine name was cut into the gold plate “like the engravings of a seal” (חוֹתָם, chôthâm, signet, 39:30), so that the high priest stood before God stamped, owned, certified. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown read the engraving against the ancient signet that bore the owner's name together with “a religious sentiment or sacred symbol, intimating that he was the servant of God, or expressive of trust in Him. And it was to this practice the inscription on the high priest alludes (compare Joh 3:33).” That cross-reference is JFB's own: John 3:33, where the one who receives Christ's testimony “hath set to his seal that God is true.” The motif of the seal runs from the priest's brow to the New Testament's seal of the Spirit on the believer (Ephesians 1:13; 2 Corinthians 1:22) — God's name stamped now not on gold but on his people. This is a structural/typological reading across Testaments, not a verbal one: the Hebrew chôthâm and the Greek sphragizō cannot share a Strong's number, so the link rests on the shared figure of sealed ownership, named here as figural. The seal that marked one man holy becomes the pledge that marks the many.
Exodus 39:30 · John 3:33 · Ephesians 1:13
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 the execution half of a command-and-fulfillment pair: nearly every verse here echoes a verse in Exodus 28. The Verifier accordingly returns very high-scoring intra-Exodus links (28:31–36), and these are correctly tiered verbal / quotation where they rest on rare shared lexemes — most strikingly tachărâʼ (39:23 ↔ 28:32), a word found in only two verses in all of Scripture. A textual honesty note: in v. 24 and v. 29 the BSB reads “finely spun linen,” but the Masoretic Hebrew has only mošzār (“twisted”); Ellicott, the Pulpit Commentary, and the Cambridge Bible all observe that the word “linen” is supplied — present in the Samaritan Pentateuch and Septuagint, absent in the Hebrew. Two corrections were applied to thread bases on re-checking the Verifier: (1) the Day-of-Atonement vestment link to Leviticus 16:4 carries its rare lexemes — miknâç (5 vv), mitsnepheth (9 vv) — through v. 28, not v. 27; v. 27's tunic alone shares only the commoner kᵉthôneth (26 vv), so the badge now cites the right verse and is honestly raised to verbal on the rare-word strength of v. 28. (2) Two further verbal/structural threads were added that the draft only mentioned in passing: the blue cord pəṯîl təkêleth of v. 31 is verbatim the “cord of blue” of the tassels in Numbers 15:38 (rare pâthîyl, 11 vv), and the priestly mᵉʻîyl of v. 22 is the same garment-word as Saul's robe whose hem David cut (1 Samuel 24:4) — tiered structural, since only the shared garment-noun, not a quotation, links them. The cross-Testament Christ links (John 19; Hebrews; the seal motif to John 3:33 / Ephesians 1:13) are deliberately not tiered as verbal threads: a Greek text and a Hebrew text cannot share a Strong's number, so those connections live in the typology section, argued from pattern and named as figural. The seven-fold refrain “just as the LORD had commanded Moses” (here in vv. 26, 29, 31) is the structural spine of the chapter and is treated as such in the grand commentary. Commentator note: Gill, JFB, and Barnes attach their fullest remarks to Exodus 39:1–3 and simply cross-reference Exodus 28 here; their per-verse texts are therefore the same running comment repeated, and have been excerpted at the points where they bear on this unit.
✦ = 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)