The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Setting Up the Tabernacle
Exodus 40:1–33 — Setting Up the Tabernacle. 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.
1Then the LORD said to Moses,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-spoke Yahweh to Moses saying,
Where the English smooths the original
Though the work was now complete, and all the parts of the Tabernacle made ready, Moses did not at once proceed to erect it. As when he first went up into Sinai ( Exodus 24:16 ), so now, he waited for a Divine summons, a distinct command fixing the time for him to do that which he knew that he had to do.
When the tabernacle, and the work of it, were finished, and he had taken a survey of it, and everything belonging to it, which appeared to be done as was ordered
The high-priesthood was in the family of Aaron till Christ came, and in Him, the substance of all these shadows, it continues for ever.
2“On the first day of the first month you are to set up the tabernacle, the Tent of Meeting.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bə·’e·ḥāḏ la·ḥō·ḏeš bə·yō·wm- hā·ri·šō·wn ha·ḥō·ḏeš tā·qîm ’eṯ- miš·kan ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
On day one to-the-month, in the first month, you-shall-raise-up the dwelling of the tent of meeting.
Where the English smooths the original
The two long absences of Moses in the Mount had occupied nearly three months, and were separated by an interval probably of several days. It must have been the sixth or seventh month before the work was commenced, and very late in the year—the eleventh or twelfth month—before it was accomplished. Hence, the new year was now approaching, and, as it was approaching, its first day was naturally chosen as most fit for the inauguration of the new structure.
In Hezekiah’s time they began to sanctify the temple on the first day of the first month, 2 Chronicles 29:17 . The new moon (which, by their computation, was the first day of every month) was observed by them with some solemnity; and therefore this first new moon of the year was thus made remarkable.
the first day of the first month ] viz. ( v. 17) of the second year of the Exodus, nine months since the arrival at Sinai ( Exodus 19:1 ). the Dwelling of the tent of meeting ] as Exodus 39:32 .
3Put the ark of the Testimony in it and screen off the ark with the veil.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·śam·tā ’ă·rō·wn hā·‘ê·ḏūṯ šām ’êṯ wə·sak·kō·ṯā ‘al- hā·’ā·rōn ’eṯ- hap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-put there the ark of the Testimony, and-you-shall-screen over the ark with the veil.
Where the English smooths the original
The most precious of the objects which the tabernacle was to contain was to be placed in it; first. Then immediately it was to be covered up with the vail.
not with the propitiatory or mercy seat, as the Targum of Jonathan; for though that was a covering or lid to the ark, yet not a vail; this was the vail that divided between the holy place and the most holy, and so covered or hid the ark from the sight even of the priests that went into the holy place.
The first thing to be placed within the tabernacle was the ark of the testimony , as containing the foundation of the covenant between God and Israel, and being the special token of God's presence with his people.
4Then bring in the table and set out its arrangement; bring in the lampstand as well, and set up its lamps.
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wə·hê·ḇê·ṯā ’eṯ- haš·šul·ḥān wə·‘ā·raḵ·tā ’eṯ- ‘er·kōw wə·hê·ḇê·ṯā ’eṯ- ham·mə·nō·rāh wə·ha·‘ă·lê·ṯā ’eṯ- nê·rō·ṯe·hā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-bring-in the table and-you-shall-arrange its arrangement, and-you-shall-bring-in the lampstand and-you-shall-set-up its lamps.
Where the English smooths the original
The twelve loaves are the “things” specially intended (see Exodus 40:23 ). Whether the frankincense also is glanced at ( Leviticus 24:7 ) may be doubted. It was perhaps an addition to the earliest ritual.
set in order , &c.] lit. arrange its arrangement , with reference to the two piles of loaves arranged upon it. Cf. v. 23 (lit. ‘ arranged upon it the arrangement of bread’). Leviticus 24:6 ‘two rows ’ (lit. arrangements ). And so a later designation of the Presence-bread was ‘bread of arrangement’
though the lamps were to be lighted by Aaron, the priest of the Lord, he being not yet consecrated, the office was performed by Moses.
5Place the gold altar of incense in front of the ark of the Testimony, and hang the curtain at the entrance to the tabernacle.
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wə·nā·ṯat·tāh ’eṯ- haz·zā·hāḇ miz·baḥ liq·ṭō·reṯ lip̄·nê ’ă·rō·wn hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ wə·śam·tā ’eṯ- mā·saḵ hap·pe·ṯaḥ lam·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-give the gold altar of-incense before the ark of the Testimony, and-you-shall-set the screen of the entrance to-the-dwelling.
Where the English smooths the original
Not inside the vail, but outside, in the Holy Place; nearer, however, to the vail than either the table or the candlestick.
That is, the altar of perfume, or to burn incense on.
the door of entrance into the holy place, where there were to be no other things set but those now mentioned, the shewbread table, the candlestick, and the altar of incense; and these being brought in, the hanging was to be put up, which hid the sight of the above things, and forbid the entrance of the people there.
6Place the altar of burnt offering in front of the entrance to the tabernacle, the Tent of Meeting.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·nā·ṯat·tāh ’êṯ miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh lip̄·nê pe·ṯaḥ miš·kan ’ō·hel- mō·w·‘êḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-give the altar of the burnt-offering before the entrance of the dwelling of the tent of meeting.
Where the English smooths the original
the altar of burnt offering ] Exodus 27:1-8 ; Exodus 38:1-7 . The position of this altar has not been defined before.
this was to be set up in the open court, as it was proper it should, both because of the smell and smoke of the sacrifices
i.e. The tabernacle which is covered with a tent. See Exodus 35:11 . Though elsewhere the words tabernacle and tent are promiscuously used.
7And place the basin between the Tent of Meeting and the altar, and put water in it.
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wə·nā·ṯa·tā ’eṯ- hak·kî·yōr bên- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ ū·ḇên ham·miz·bê·aḥ wə·nā·ṯa·tā šām mā·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-give the basin between the tent of meeting and-between the altar, and-you-shall-put there water.
Where the English smooths the original
Its proper place was close to the door of the Tabernacle, since the priests had to wash their hands and feet at it every time that they set foot within the Tabernacle ( Exodus 30:19-20 ).
The water was required: - 1. For the ablution of the priests ( Exodus 30:19-21 ; Exodus 40:12, 31 ; Leviticus 8:6 ), and 2. For washing the victims ( Leviticus 8:21 ).
And thou shall set the laver,.... As is directed in Exodus 30:18 .
8Set up the surrounding courtyard and hang the curtain for the entrance to the courtyard.
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wə·śam·tā ’eṯ- sā·ḇîḇ he·ḥā·ṣêr wə·nā·ṯa·tā ’eṯ- mā·saḵ ša·‘ar he·ḥā·ṣêr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-set the court round-about, and-you-shall-give the screen of the gate of the court.
Where the English smooths the original
9Take the anointing oil and anoint the tabernacle and everything in it; consecrate it along with all its furnishings, and it shall be holy.
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wə·lā·qaḥ·tā ’eṯ- ham·miš·ḥāh še·men ū·mā·šaḥ·tā ’eṯ- ham·miš·kān wə·’eṯ- kāl- ’ă·šer- bōw wə·qid·daš·tā ’ō·ṯōw wə·’eṯ- kāl- kê·lāw wə·hā·yāh qō·ḏeš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-take the oil of the anointing and-you-shall-anoint the dwelling and-all that [is] in-it, and-you-shall-consecrate it and-all its vessels, and-it-shall-be holy.
Where the English smooths the original
Directions for the composition of the oil had been already given ( Exodus 30:23-25 ); and at the same time it had been ordered that the Tabernacle, the ark, the table, the candlestick, the two altars, the laver, and the various vessels of the sanctuary, should be consecrated by anointing them ( Exodus 30:26-29 ).
It does not appear that these directions were carried out at this time. Probably, there would not have been time to go through all the ceremonies enjoined ( Exodus 29:1-34 ) on the same day with the erection of the sanctuary. They were consequently deferred
orders are given for the anointing of the tabernacle and its vessels, the altar of burnt offering and its vessels, the laver and its foot, whereby they were consecrated for divine use and service
10Anoint the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils; consecrate the altar, and it shall be most holy.
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ū·mā·šaḥ·tā ’eṯ- miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh wə·’eṯ- kāl- kê·lāw wə·qid·daš·tā ’eṯ- ham·miz·bê·aḥ wə·hā·yāh ham·miz·bê·aḥ qō·ḏeš qā·ḏā·šîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-anoint the altar of the burnt-offering and-all its vessels, and-you-shall-consecrate the altar, and-the-altar shall-be holy of holies.
Where the English smooths the original
The difference does not express a higher degree of holiness: it is only used as a caution. The position of the altar exposed it to the chance of being touched by the people when they assembled in the court, while they were not permitted to enter the tabernacle.
Not really more holy than the rest of the tabernacle and its contents, which are all pronounced" most holy" in Exodus 30:29 ; but requiring more to have its holiness continually borne in mind, since "it was more exposed to contact with the people" than the tabernacle and its vessels (Keil).
And thou shalt anoint the altar of the burnt offering, and all his vessels, and sanctify the altar: and it shall be an altar most holy.
11Anoint the basin and its stand and consecrate them.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·mā·šaḥ·tā ’eṯ- hak·kî·yōr wə·’eṯ- kan·nōw wə·qid·daš·tā ’ō·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-anoint the basin and-its stand, and-you-shall-consecrate it.
Where the English smooths the original
And thou shalt anoint the laver and his foot, and sanctify it.
orders are given for the anointing of the tabernacle and its vessels, the altar of burnt offering and its vessels, the laver and its foot, whereby they were consecrated for divine use and service
After that he was to anoint the dwelling and everything in it, also the altar of burnt-offering and laver, with the anointing oil, and to sanctify them ( Exodus 40:9-11 )
12Then bring Aaron and his sons to the entrance to the Tent of Meeting and wash them with water.
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wə·hiq·raḇ·tā ’eṯ- ’a·hă·rōn wə·’eṯ- bā·nāw ’el- pe·ṯaḥ ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ wə·rā·ḥaṣ·tā ’ō·ṯām bam·mā·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-bring-near Aaron and-his-sons to the entrance of the tent of meeting, and-you-shall-wash them with-water.
Where the English smooths the original
Ablution, investiture, and anointing had all of them been previously appointed to be parts of the consecration service ( Exodus 29:4-5 ; Exodus 29:7 , &c.).
Unto the door of the tabernacle - i.e. , to the place where the laver was situated (ver. 7).
Aaron and his sons (i.e. the high-priest and the ordinary priests) to be washed, clothed in their sacred vestments, and anointed. See Exodus 29:4-6 (much abridged here), 7–9; and Exodus 30:30 .
13And you are to clothe Aaron with the holy garments, anoint him, and consecrate him, so that he may serve Me as a priest.
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wə·hil·baš·tā ’eṯ- ’a·hă·rōn ’êṯ haq·qō·ḏeš biḡ·ḏê ū·mā·šaḥ·tā ’ō·ṯōw wə·qid·daš·tā ’ō·ṯōw wə·ḵi·hên lî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-clothe Aaron [with] the holy garments, and-you-shall-anoint him and-you-shall-consecrate him, and-he-shall-serve-as-priest to-Me.
Where the English smooths the original
and sanctify him ] Not in Exodus 29:7 ; but cf. the similar clause in Exodus 30:30 .
And thou shalt put upon Aaron the holy garments, and anoint him, and sanctify him; that he may minister unto me in the priest's office.
To wash, anoint, and clothe them, as in the two following verses Exodus 40:13 , that they might minister in the priest's office
14Bring his sons forward and clothe them with tunics.
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wə·’eṯ- bā·nāw taq·rîḇ wə·hil·baš·tā ’ō·ṯām kut·to·nōṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-his-sons you-shall-bring-near, and-you-shall-clothe them [with] tunics.
Where the English smooths the original
15Anoint them just as you anointed their father, so that they may also serve Me as priests. Their anointing will qualify them for a permanent priesthood throughout their generations.”
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ū·mā·šaḥ·tā ’ō·ṯām ka·’ă·šer mā·šaḥ·tā ’eṯ- ’ă·ḇî·hem wə·ḵi·hă·nū lî mā·šə·ḥā·ṯām wə·hā·yə·ṯāh lih·yōṯ lā·hem ‘ō·w·lām liḵ·hun·naṯ lə·ḏō·rō·ṯām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-anoint them as you-anointed their-father, and-they-shall-serve-as-priests to-Me; and-their-anointing shall-be to-be for-them a perpetual priesthood throughout their-generations.
Where the English smooths the original
Their anointing shall be an everlasting priesthood — A seal that their priesthood shall continue as long as the Jewish polity lasts. He signifies that this unction should be sufficient for all succeeding priests. None were afterward anointed but the high-priests.
Till both the priesthood and the ceremonies should end, which is at Christ's coming.
The Rabbis, understanding the pron. in ‘their anointing’ to refer to Aaron’s sons alone, inferred that the anointing of Aaron’s actual sons sufficed for the ordinary priests in all future ages, and that in the case of the ordinary priests the ceremony was never afterwards repeated
By the narrative of Leviticus 8, it would seem that Aaron’s sons were not anointed in the same way as himself. He had the oil poured over his head ( Leviticus 8:12 ; Psalm 133:2 ). They were merely sprinkled with a mixture of oil and blood ( Leviticus 8:30 ). The difference implied a lower degree of official holiness.
16Moses did everything just as the LORD had commanded him.
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mō·šeh way·ya·‘aś kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer Yah·weh ’ō·ṯōw kên ‘ā·śāh ṣiw·wāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-did Moses according-to-all that commanded Yahweh him; so he-did.
Where the English smooths the original
On his part, the same scrupulous fidelity was shown in conforming to the "pattern" in the disposition of the furniture, as had been displayed by the workmen in the erection of the edifice.
This verse states generally the fact that Moses carried out the entire series of instructions given him in Exodus 40:2-15 , but tells us nothing as to the time at which he carried them out.
according to all that the Lord commanded him, so did he; by which he approved himself to be a faithful servant in the house of God.
17So the tabernacle was set up on the first day of the first month of the second year.
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way·hî ham·miš·kān hū·qam bə·’e·ḥāḏ la·ḥō·ḏeš hā·ri·šō·wn ba·ḥō·ḏeš haš·šê·nîṯ baš·šā·nāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-it-was, in the first month in the second year, on day one to-the-month, the dwelling was-reared-up.
Where the English smooths the original
one year, wanting fourteen days, after the departure of the Israelites from Egypt. They had been nearly three months in reaching the foot of Mount Sinai Exodus 19:1 ; Moses had spent eighty days on the mountain Exodus 24:18 ; Exodus 34:28
The Tabernacle was so constructed as to be capable of being rapidly both put together and taken to pieces. The erection of the framework, and the stretching upon it of the fine linen and goats’-hair coverings, must have been the main difficulty.
the building, and all the work connected with it, had not occupied quite half a year
18When Moses set up the tabernacle, he laid its bases, positioned its frames, inserted its crossbars, and set up its posts.
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mō·šeh ’eṯ- way·yā·qem ham·miš·kān way·yit·tên ’eṯ- ’ă·ḏā·nāw way·yā·śem ’eṯ- qə·rā·šāw way·yit·tên ’eṯ- bə·rî·ḥāw way·yā·qem ’eṯ- ‘am·mū·ḏāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-reared-up Moses the dwelling, and-he-gave its bases, and-he-set its frames, and-he-gave its crossbars, and-he-reared-up its posts.
Where the English smooths the original
The stability of the Tabernacle must have depended almost entirely upon the sockets. These were of some considerable weight ( Exodus 38:27 ), but they cannot by their mere weight have sustained the fabric in an upright position. It is reasonable to suppose that they were let into the ground to a depth of some feet.
Rather, "placed its sockets." The "sockets" or "bases" appear to have been simply laid on the flat sand of the desert, not "fastened" to it in any way. They were heavy masses of metal and would remain where they were placed.
fixed the silver sockets all around, which were the foundation of the building, and placed and established the shittim boards in them
19Then he spread the tent over the tabernacle and put the covering over the tent, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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way·yip̄·rōś ’eṯ- hā·’ō·hel ‘al- ham·miš·kān way·yā·śem ’eṯ- miḵ·sêh hā·’ō·hel ‘ā·lāw mil·mā·‘ə·lāh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-spread the tent over the dwelling, and-he-set the covering of the tent over-it from-above, as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
The entire distinctness of the tent ( ohel ) from the tabernacle ( mishkan ) is here very strongly marked. The "tent" was the goats' hair covering, with the framework of wood that supported it.
By the "covering of the tent" we are to understand the two coverings, made of red rams' skins and the skins of the sea-cow ( Exodus 26:14 ).
Erected, i.e., the wooden framework, with the covering of goats’-hair, which formed the true tent (’ ohel ) , and so roofed in the Tabernacle ( mishkan ).
20Moses took the Testimony and placed it in the ark, attaching the poles to the ark; and he set the mercy seat atop the ark.
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way·yiq·qaḥ hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ way·yit·tên ’eṯ- ’el- hā·’ā·rōn way·yā·śem ’eṯ- hab·bad·dîm ‘al- hā·’ā·rōn way·yit·tên ’eṯ- hak·kap·pō·reṯ ‘al- mil·mā·‘ə·lāh hā·’ā·rōn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-took and-he-gave the Testimony into the ark, and-he-set the poles on the ark, and-he-gave the mercy-seat over the ark from-above.
Where the English smooths the original
Nothing else is said to have been put into the ark. These were found there by themselves in the time of Solomon 1 Kings 8:9 ; 2 Chronicles 5:10 . The pot of manna was "laid up before the testimony" Exodus 16:34 ; Aaron's rod was also placed "before the testimony" Numbers 17:10
"the testimony," therefore, is an abbreviated expression for "the tables of testimony" ( Exodus 31:18 , see at Exodus 25:16 ).
By “the testimony” we must understand the two tables of stone, written with the finger of God, which Moses had brought down with him from the top of Sinai on his last visit ( Exodus 34:29 ).
21Then he brought the ark into the tabernacle, put up the veil for the screen, and shielded off the ark of the Testimony, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·ḇê ’eṯ- hā·’ā·rōn ’el- ham·miš·kān way·yā·śem ’êṯ pā·rō·ḵeṯ ham·mā·sāḵ way·yā·seḵ ‘al ’ă·rō·wn hā·‘ê·ḏūṯ ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-brought the ark into the dwelling, and-he-set the veil of the screen, and-he-covered-over the ark of the Testimony, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
After the ark had been brought into the dwelling, he "hung the curtain" (vail, see at Exodus 26:31 ; lit., placed it upon the hooks of the pillars), "and so covered over the ark of the testimony," since the ark, when placed in the back part of the dwelling, was covered or concealed from persons entering the dwelling or the holy place.
hung the veil on the four pillars between the holy place and the holy of holies, and thus covered - i.e. , concealed from sight, the ark of the testimony.
the vail which divided between the and most holy place, and so kept out of sight the ark of the testimony within, from being seen by any, even by the priests in the holy place
22Moses placed the table in the Tent of Meeting on the north side of the tabernacle, outside the veil.
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way·yit·tên ’eṯ- haš·šul·ḥān bə·’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ ‘al ṣā·p̄ō·nāh ye·reḵ ham·miš·kān mi·ḥūṣ lap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-gave the table in the tent of meeting, on the thigh of the dwelling northward, outside the veil.
Where the English smooths the original
On the right hand to one facing towards the vail. Moses may have known the right position from the pattern which was shewed him in the mount ( Exodus 25:40 ).
The table was placed on the right side, towards the north, and the shew-bread was laid upon it.
on the north side of the tabernacle, at a little distance from the walls, which were the curtains and boards, even in the holy place on the outside of the vail, which divided from the most holy place.
23He arranged the bread on it before the LORD, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·rōḵ le·ḥem ‘ā·lāw ‘ê·reḵ lip̄·nê Yah·weh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-arranged upon-it the bread in-arrangement before Yahweh, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
לחם ערך does not signify "a row of bread," but the "position or placing of bread;" for, according to Leviticus 24:6-7 , the twelve loaves of shew-bread were placed upon the table in two rows
Moses performed these priestly functions ( Exodus 28:1 note), before the holy things with which they were performed were anointed. The things had been made expressly for the service of Yahweh, by His command, and in this fact lay their essential sanctity, of which the anointing was only the seal and symbol.
The shewbread, the twelve cakes of it, in two rows, six in a row
24He also placed the lampstand in the Tent of Meeting opposite the table on the south side of the tabernacle
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way·yā·śem ’eṯ- ham·mə·nō·rāh bə·’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ nō·ḵaḥ haš·šul·ḥān ‘al neḡ·bāh ye·reḵ ham·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-set the lampstand in the tent of meeting opposite the table, on the thigh of the dwelling southward.
Where the English smooths the original
Directly opposite to it, on the left hand, as one faced the vail. The light would thus be thrown on the table of shewbread. (See Exodus 25:37 .)
The candlestick was placed upon the left side, opposite to the table, and the golden altar in front of the curtain, i.e., midway between the two sides, but near the curtain in front of the most holy place
Over against the table - i.e. , exactly opposite to the table, on the left as one faced the veil.
25and set up the lamps before the LORD, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘al han·nê·rōṯ lip̄·nê Yah·weh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-set-up the lamps before Yahweh, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
this, though it was the business of the priests of Aaron, and his sons, yet they not being at present invested with their office, was done by Moses, who in this and several other things mentioned in this chapter officiated as a priest
When the proper time came, i.e., at even. (Comp. Exodus 30:8 ; Leviticus 24:3 .)
When evening came, he lighted the lamps . (See the comment on ver. 4) Whatever the priests ordinarily had to do was on this occasion done by Moses.
26Moses placed the gold altar in the Tent of Meeting, in front of the veil,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·śem ’eṯ- haz·zā·hāḇ miz·baḥ bə·’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ lip̄·nê hap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-set the gold altar in the tent of meeting before the veil.
Where the English smooths the original
In front of the Ark, the mercy-seat, and the place assigned to the Shechinah ( Exodus 25:22 ), but separated from them by the vail. (Comp. Exodus 30:6 .)
That is, opposite to the ark, in the middle between the table of showbread on the North and the candlestick on the South.
so called because it was overlaid with gold, and to distinguish it from the altar of burnt offering, which was covered with brass: to this altar there is an allusion in Revelation 8:3 .
27and he burned fragrant incense on it, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yaq·ṭêr sam·mîm qə·ṭō·reṯ ‘ā·lāw ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-burned upon-it fragrant incense, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
This is wisely and seasonably added, because this was a work peculiar to the priest, and not to be done by Moses without God’s express command
At even, when he lighted the lamps, he also, according to the instructions given him ( Exodus 30:8 ) burnt incense.
Moses, however, not Aaron, according to the present writer, begins the daily services (cf. vv. 23, 25, 29), and maintains them during the first eight days till the priests are installed
28Then he put up the curtain at the entrance to the tabernacle.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·śem ’eṯ- mā·saḵ hap·pe·ṯaḥ lam·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-set the screen of the entrance to-the-dwelling.
Where the English smooths the original
29He placed the altar of burnt offering near the entrance to the tabernacle, the Tent of Meeting, and offered on it the burnt offering and the grain offering, just as the LORD had commanded him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’êṯ śām miz·baḥ hā·‘ō·lāh pe·ṯaḥ miš·kan ’ō·hel- mō·w·‘êḏ way·ya·‘al ‘ā·lāw hā·‘ō·lāh wə·’eṯ- ham·min·ḥāh ’eṯ- ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the altar of the burnt-offering he-placed [at] the entrance of the dwelling of the tent of meeting, and-he-offered-up upon-it the burnt-offering and the grain-offering, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
Some preposition has fallen out before the word “door.” Our translators suppose an omission of ’ al, “at,” but it is more probable that liphney, which occurs in Exodus 40:6 , is the word omitted. The altar was not “ at the door,” but “before” or “in front of the door.”
in his priestly character inaugurated the altar by offering upon it the first evening sacrifice. (See Exodus 29:38-41 .)
The burnt-offering and the meat offering , for the consecration of the altar, this being the first sacrifice.
30He placed the basin between the Tent of Meeting and the altar and put water in it for washing;
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·śem ’eṯ- hak·kî·yōr bên- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ ū·ḇên ham·miz·bê·aḥ way·yit·tên ma·yim šām·māh lə·rā·ḥə·ṣāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-set the basin between the tent of meeting and-between the altar, and-he-put there water for-washing.
Where the English smooths the original
for the priests to wash their hands and feet with; a type of that laver or fountain opened for the house of David and inhabitants of Jerusalem to wash in, Zechariah 13:1 .
The laver, which stood between the altar and the entrance to the dwelling, was probably placed more to the side; so that when the priests washed their hands and feet, before entering the dwelling or approaching the altar, there was no necessity for them to go round the altar
He set the laver. As directed in ver. 7. For the position of the laver, see Exodus 30:18 .
31and from it Moses, Aaron, and his sons washed their hands and feet.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mim·men·nū mō·šeh wə·’a·hă·rōn ū·ḇā·nāw ’eṯ- wə·rā·ḥă·ṣū yə·ḏê·hem wə·’eṯ- raḡ·lê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-washed from-it Moses and-Aaron and-his-sons their-hands and their-feet.
Where the English smooths the original
These verses are parenthetic. They interrupt the narrative of what Moses did “on the first day of the first month,” informing us of the use whereto the laver was applied subsequently. (Comp. Exodus 30:19-21 .)
Moses is included, because for the time he acted as priest ( v. 27). The tenses are frequentative, used to wash (twice), just as in Exodus 34:34 f., for instance.
This laver was for the priests, and Moses, officiating as a priest, washed in it, with Aaron, and his sons, whom he was now about to consecrate to the priest's office
32They washed whenever they entered the Tent of Meeting or approached the altar, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yir·ḥā·ṣū bə·ḇō·’ām ’el- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ ū·ḇə·qā·rə·ḇā·ṯām ’el- ham·miz·bê·aḥ ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
When-they-entered the tent of meeting, and-when-they-approached the altar, they-washed, just-as Yahweh commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
Not only at this time, but at all other times
in obedience to the will of God, they set it up in the midst of their camp. Those who are unsettled in the world, must not think that this will excuse want of religionHenry comments on the whole 40:16-33 section as one block; this clause is excerpted at v. 32 for the standing rule of approach the verse seals.
The laver, which stood between the altar and the entrance to the dwelling, was probably placed more to the side; so that when the priests washed their hands and feet, before entering the dwelling or approaching the altar, there was no necessity for them to go round the altar, or to pass close by it, in order to get to the laver.
33And Moses set up the courtyard around the tabernacle and the altar, and he hung the curtain for the entrance to the courtyard. So Moses finished the work.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yā·qem ’eṯ- he·ḥā·ṣêr sā·ḇîḇ lam·miš·kān wə·lam·miz·bê·aḥ way·yit·tên ’eṯ- mā·saḵ ša·‘ar he·ḥā·ṣêr mō·šeh ’eṯ- way·ḵal ham·mə·lā·ḵāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-reared-up the court round-about the dwelling and-the-altar, and-he-set the screen of the gate of the court. And-Moses finished the work.
Where the English smooths the original
So Moses finished the work — As when God had finished this earth, which he designed for man’s habitation, he made man, and put him in possession of it; so when Moses had finished the tabernacle, which was designed for God’s dwelling-place among men, God came and took possession of it.
there is reason to believe that on the inauguration day the people were summoned from their tents—were all drawn up as a vast assemblage, yet in calm and orderly arrangement, around the newly erected tabernacle.
With the hanging of the curtain at the entrance to the court, the erection of the tabernacle was complete.
so Moses finished the work; of the tabernacle, in making it by workmen, and in rearing it up by the help of others
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 long making-account is over: by chapter 39 every part of the dwelling is built and brought to Moses. Yet the chapter does not open with Moses acting; it opens with God speaking — way·ḏab·bêr Yahweh ʾel-mōšeh lêʾmōr, "and Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying" (v. 1). Ellicott marks the restraint: "Though the work was now complete, and all the parts of the Tabernacle made ready, Moses did not at once proceed to erect it... he waited for a Divine summons, a distinct command fixing the time for him to do that which he knew that he had to do." The day fixed is bᵉʾeḥāḏ laḥōḏeš hāriʾšôn, "on the first day of the first month" (v. 2) — and Cambridge fixes the year: "viz. (v. 17) of the second year of the Exodus, nine months since the arrival at Sinai." Benson hears the fitness of the date: "the new moon... was observed by them with some solemnity; and therefore this first new moon of the year was thus made remarkable." The keyword of the command is tāqîm (H6965, Hifil of qûm), "you shall rear up" — a root that will frame the whole chapter: commanded here, fulfilled passively in v. 17 (hûqam, "was reared up"), and performed by Moses in vv. 18 and 33.
God dictates the order and the place of every object, working outward from the holiest. First the ark — Pulpit: "The first thing to be placed within the tabernacle was the ark of the testimony, as containing the foundation of the covenant between God and Israel, and being the special token of God's presence with his people" — then immediately the dividing veil (pārōḵeṯ, H6532, a rare word, 23 vv) screening it (v. 3). Then the table with its arranged bread, the lampstand with its lamps (v. 4 — Cambridge notes the Hebrew idiom ʿărōḵ ʿerkô, "lit. arrange its arrangement"); the golden incense altar "before the ark" but, as Ellicott insists, "Not inside the vail, but outside, in the Holy Place" (v. 5); the bronze altar of burnt offering out in the court — Gill: "in the open court, as it was proper it should, both because of the smell and smoke of the sacrifices" (v. 6); and the laver between tent and altar, with its water (v. 7) — Ellicott: "close to the door of the Tabernacle, since the priests had to wash their hands and feet at it every time." Last the court "round about" (sāḇîḇ) with its gate-screen (v. 8). Three distinct textile barriers, three distinct Hebrew terms — the inner veil pārōḵeṯ, the screens māsāḵ — graded by holiness inward.
Now the consecration: "Take the anointing oil and anoint (māšaḥ, H4886) the dwelling... and it shall be holy (qōḏeš)" (v. 9). The verb is the root of māšîaḥ, Messiah; it falls first on the place (vv. 9-11) and then on the persons (vv. 13,15). Keil resolves the puzzle that the dwelling is made "holy" but the altar "most holy": the altar is so called "merely in the sense ascribed to it in Exodus 30:10... that every one who touched it was to become holy," because it "was more exposed to contact from the people" — and Barnes agrees: "The difference does not express a higher degree of holiness: it is only used as a caution." Then Aaron and his sons are brought near (hiqraḇtā, H7126, the cultic approach-verb), washed, clothed, anointed (vv. 12-14). The everlasting priesthood of v. 15 (lᵉʿôlām) draws the most pointed comment. Geneva sets its limit on the gospel: it lasts "Till both the priesthood and the ceremonies should end, which is at Christ's coming." Cambridge rejects the Rabbinic reading that one anointing of Aaron's sons sufficed forever as "a forced and artificial interpretation." Ellicott records the graded anointing: Aaron "had the oil poured over his head," his sons "merely sprinkled... The difference implied a lower degree of official holiness."
Verse 16 states the whole in summary: "And Moses did according to all that Yahweh commanded him; so he did." JFB: "the same scrupulous fidelity was shown in conforming to the 'pattern' in the disposition of the furniture, as had been displayed by the workmen in the erection of the edifice." Then the narrative slows and replays the command as performance, item by item (vv. 17-28): the dwelling reared (hûqam, v. 17, passive — it was raised), the bases and frames and posts set (v. 18), the tent and covering spread (v. 19 — Pulpit: "The entire distinctness of the tent (ohel) from the tabernacle (mishkan) is here very strongly marked"), the Testimony placed in the ark beneath the mercy seat (kappōreṯ, the atonement-cover, v. 20), the veil hung to conceal it (v. 21), table and bread north, lampstand and lamps south, golden altar before the veil with its incense (vv. 22-27), the door-screen set (v. 28). Seven times the refrain falls: ka·ʾăšer ṣiwwāh Yahweh ʾeṯ-mōšeh, "just as Yahweh commanded Moses" (vv. 19,21,23,25,27,29,32). The chapter makes obedience its rhythm — command, then deed, then the seal of conformity. And, the commentators note repeatedly, Moses himself does the priestly acts: Gill, "officiating as a priest," lights the lamps and burns the incense, because Aaron is "not yet consecrated"; Poole on the incense, "this was a work peculiar to the priest, and not to be done by Moses without God's express command."
The bronze altar is set before the entrance and inaugurated — "he offered up (wayyaʿal, the ascending-verb) upon it the burnt offering and the grain offering" (v. 29); Pulpit: Moses "in his priestly character inaugurated the altar by offering upon it the first evening sacrifice." The laver is set in its mediating place between tent and altar, its water "for washing" (v. 30) — Gill hears a figure: "a type of that laver or fountain opened for the house of David... to wash in, Zechariah 13:1." Verses 31-32 step out of the day's narrative — Ellicott: "These verses are parenthetic... informing us of the use whereto the laver was applied subsequently" — to record the perpetual rule: whenever they entered or approached, they washed. Then v. 33: the court is reared round dwelling and altar, the gate-screen set, "and Moses finished the work" (way·ḵal mōšeh ʾeṯ-ham·mᵉlāʾḵāh). The phrase is the language of Genesis 2:2 — God "finished his work." Benson draws the parallel explicitly: "As when God had finished this earth, which he designed for man's habitation, he made man... so when Moses had finished the tabernacle, which was designed for God's dwelling-place among men, God came and took possession of it." The unit ends on completion; the glory-cloud of vv. 34-38 lies just beyond it — but the obedient finishing is what invites it.
Read under Sola Scriptura, this chapter is not an inventory but a liturgy of obedience, and its two pillars are the first word and the last. It opens with God speaking before Moses moves (v. 1) and closes with Moses finishing exactly what God spoke (v. 33). Between them, seven times, the same clause falls like a hammer: just as Yahweh commanded Moses. The text is teaching by repetition what it will not say in the abstract — that a dwelling-place for God is built only one way, by doing all that He said and nothing he did not. Notice what Scripture itself underlines. The verb that finishes the tabernacle (kālāh, "finished") and the noun for its building (mᵉlāʾkāh, "work") are the very pair used of God on the seventh day: "God finished his work" (Genesis 2:2). The Spirit who moved both writers is pressing a parallel: the tabernacle is a new little cosmos, a world ordered so that God may dwell in it with man — Eden re-pitched in the wilderness. And at its center, behind the veil, lies the ark holding the Testimony, capped by the kappōreṯ, the atonement-cover — the meeting-place where mercy covers law. Everything in the chapter moves around that hidden room: the lamp throws its light toward it, the incense rises before it, the priest is washed to approach it. The whole arrangement says one thing — that a holy God has made a way to dwell among an unholy people, and the way is by testimony covered with atonement. Moses, not yet-consecrated Aaron, performs the first sacrifices: an interim mediator standing in until the appointed priest is anointed. The chapter ends with the work finished and the house empty — waiting. The next verses fill it with glory. The pattern is the gospel's own: build by the word, finish in obedience, and the glory comes not to the half-done but to the completed house.
Moses finished the work, and the house stood empty — ordered, anointed, waiting; for a dwelling built exactly as God spoke is a dwelling God will fill. (A fallible synthesis line, not Scripture.)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
When the camp sets out, the priests are to take down "the veil of the screen" and cover the ark of the Testimony with it — the same three objects, in the same relation, that Moses installs in v. 3. The Verifier ties the two verses on a cluster led by the rare pārōḵeṯ (H6532, "veil," in only 23 verses), with ʿêḏûṯ (H5715, "Testimony," 59 vv) and ʾārôn (H727, "ark," 174 vv). The veil that here divides the Most Holy is, in Numbers 4, the very cloth that wraps the ark to carry it; the dwelling God travels with His pilgrim people. Because the binding lexeme is genuinely rare, the link is verbal — the same sacred furniture and its covering, named alike.
Numbers 4:5 · Exodus 40:3 · Exodus 40:21
basis: Verifier-computed: Exodus 40:3 ↔ Numbers 4:5 share the RARE H6532 pôreketh ("veil," in only 23 vv) + H5715 ʻêdûwth ("Testimony," 59 vv) + H727 ʼârôwn ("ark," 174 vv). The rarity of pôreketh makes the tie verbal — the same veil-and-ark furniture, named identically.
This unit's textile vocabulary is the same it inherited from the making-account and the original blueprint. The Verifier ties the setting-up to Exodus 35:12 (the contribution-list) and Exodus 39:34 (the finished-goods list) and Exodus 26:35 (the original placement command) on a cluster of rare furnishing-words: pārōḵeṯ (H6532, "veil," 23 vv), māsāḵ (H4539, "screen," 25 vv), with ʾārôn (H727), šulḥān (H7979, "table," 62 vv), and miškān (H4908, "dwelling," 129 vv). The same veil and screens that were commanded (ch. 26), then donated and made (chs. 35,39), are now hung in place (ch. 40) — the verbal thread that stitches command, manufacture, and erection into one obedient whole. The shared lexemes are rare enough (veil 23 vv, screen 25 vv) to make this a genuine verbal link, not mere shared subject-matter.
Exodus 26:35 · Exodus 35:12 · Exodus 39:34 · Exodus 40:5
basis: Verifier-computed: Exodus 40 ↔ 35:12 / 39:34 / 26:35 share the RARE H6532 pôreketh (veil, 23 vv) + H4539 mâçâk (screen, 25 vv) alongside H727 ʼârôwn, H7979 shulchân (62 vv), H4908 mishkân. The two rare textile terms (23 and 25 vv) make the link verbal — the same named veil and screens carried from command to making to erection.
The same composite name for the sanctuary — ʾōhel môʿêḏ over miškān, "tent of meeting / dwelling" — that Exodus 40 keeps layering recurs as the Gershonites' assigned charge in Numbers 3:25 and 4:25: "the dwelling and the tent, its covering and the screen of the entrance of the tent of meeting." The Verifier ties them on ʾōhel (H168), môʿêḏ (H4150), and miškān (H4908). These are common cultic terms (tent in 315 vv, meeting in 213 vv, dwelling in 129 vv), so the connection is structural, not a quotation: the same sanctuary, named by its standing formula, here erected and there committed to the Levites' keeping. No rare lexeme carries it, so it is recorded as a shared pattern of designation rather than a verbal echo.
Numbers 3:25 · Numbers 4:25 · Exodus 40:2 · Exodus 40:6
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes are the common cultic terms H168 ʼôhel (315 vv) + H4150 môwʻêd (213 vv) + H4908 mishkân (129 vv). No rare lexeme — so the link is the shared standing designation "tent of meeting / the dwelling," a structural/thematic tie, not a quotation.
The very furniture Moses installs in the Holy Place — "the ark and the table and the lampstand" (vv. 3-4) — becomes, in Numbers 3:31, the assigned charge of the Kohathite Levites: "their charge shall be the ark, the table, the lampstand, and the altars." Where the Gershonites carry the dwelling's cloth (the thread above), the Kohathites carry its holiest vessels. The Verifier ties the two on ʾārôn (H727, "ark," 174 vv), šulḥān (H7979, "table," 62 vv), and the rarer mᵉnôrāh (H4501, "lampstand," 31 vv). The lampstand-word is uncommon, but the binding pattern is a furniture-list — the same three named objects in the same order — rather than a quotation, so the link is recorded as structural: what Exodus 40 sets in place, Numbers 3 assigns to a clan's keeping, the installed sanctuary becoming a portable trust.
Numbers 3:31 · Exodus 40:3 · Exodus 40:4
basis: Verifier-confirmed (ran `verifier.py pair "Exodus 40:4" "Numbers 3:31"`): shared lexemes H727 ʼârôwn (ark, 174 vv) + H7979 shulchân (table, 62 vv) + H4501 mᵉnôwrâh (lampstand, 31 vv). The lampstand-term is uncommon but the tie is a shared furniture-list (same three vessels, same order), not a quotation → structural/thematic.
Israel's calendar was re-set at the Exodus: "This month shall be the beginning of months for you; it shall be the first month of the year" (Exodus 12:2). The dwelling is reared on the first day of that first month, a year later (vv. 2,17) — and Benson hears the deliberate fitness, comparing Hezekiah, who "began to sanctify the temple on the first day of the first month." The Verifier ties the verses on riʾšôn (H7223, "first," 173 vv) and ḥōḏeš (H2320, "month," 224 vv). These are common words, so the link is thematic, not verbal: the God who began Israel's months at redemption now fills the first new-year of freedom with His house. A motif of fresh beginnings, recorded as structural — argued from the shared calendar, not asserted from a rare lexeme.
Exodus 12:2 · Exodus 40:2 · Exodus 40:17
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H7223 riʼshôwn (first, 173 vv) + H2320 chôdesh (month, 224 vv) are common — no rarity. The tie is thematic: the tabernacle reared on the first day of the first month of the redemption-calendar inaugurated in Exodus 12:2.
"And Moses finished the work" (way·ḵal mōšeh ʾeṯ-ham·mᵉlāʾḵāh, v. 33) is told in the exact verb-and-noun pair Scripture uses of the seventh day: "On the seventh day God finished his work which he had made" (Genesis 2:2). The Verifier confirms the shared lexemes kālāh (H3615, "finish," 201 vv) and mᵉlāʾkāh (H4399, "work," 149 vv) — the same collocation in both. Benson heard it independently: "As when God had finished this earth... so when Moses had finished the tabernacle." The tabernacle is presented as a new little cosmos, an ordered world for God to indwell. Because the two are common verbs that happen to fall in the identical creation-completion pair, the link is recorded as structural / thematic rather than a quotation — a patterned echo of creation finished, deliberate but not a citation.
Genesis 2:2 · Exodus 40:33
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H3615 kâlâh (finish, 201 vv) + H4399 mᵉlâʼkâh (work, 149 vv) — the identical "finished the work" collocation of Genesis 2:2. Common words, so structural/thematic (an intentional creation-echo), not a verbal quotation.
The command to anoint the dwelling and make it holy (vv. 9-11) reaches back to Exodus 30:29, where the same furniture is consecrated: "you shall consecrate them, that they may be most holy." The Verifier ties Exodus 40:9 to Exodus 30:29 on qādaš (H6942, "consecrate," 152 vv) and qōḏeš (H6944, "holy," 382 vv). Both are common holiness-roots — no rare lexeme carries the tie — so it is recorded as structural, not a quotation: the same consecration is commanded in advance (30:29) and ordered again at the moment of erection (40:9-11). It also resolves the apparent jump from "holy" (the dwelling, v. 9) to "most holy" (the altar, v. 10): Exodus 30:29 already calls the whole apparatus "most holy," so v. 10's phrase is, with Barnes and Keil, a caution about the altar's exposure, not a higher grade.
Exodus 30:29 · Exodus 40:9 · Exodus 40:10
basis: Verifier-confirmed (ran `verifier.py pair "Exodus 40:9" "Exodus 30:29"`): shared lexemes are the common holiness-roots H6942 qâdash (152 vv) + H6944 qôdesh (382 vv). No rare lexeme → structural/thematic: the same consecration commanded in 30:29 and re-ordered at erection in 40:9-11.
What Exodus 40 only commands — "anoint the basin and its stand, and consecrate it" (v. 11) — Leviticus 8:11 narrates as actually done: there Moses sprinkles the altar, then "anointed the laver and its base, to sanctify them." The two verses are bound not by common cult-words but by a tight cluster of rare lexemes: kên (H3653, "base / stand," in only 17 vv), kîyôr (H3595, "basin," 20 vv), with māšaḥ (H4886, "anoint," 66 vv) and qādaš (H6942, "consecrate"). Because two genuinely rare furnishing-terms — the laver and its uncommon pedestal-word — recur together, the link is verbal: the same vessel-and-stand, named alike, commanded here and anointed there. Keil marks the deferral that this link spans: the anointing of ch. 40 "did not take place till afterwards, viz., at the consecration of Aaron and his sons." The single command-verse and its single fulfilment-verse are stitched by their shared rare vocabulary.
Leviticus 8:10 · Leviticus 8:11 · Exodus 40:11
basis: Verifier-confirmed (ran `verifier.py pair "Exodus 40:11" "Leviticus 8:11"`): shared lexemes include the RARE H3653 kên (base/stand, 17 vv) + H3595 kîyôwr (basin, 20 vv), plus H4886 mâshach (anoint, 66 vv) + H6942 qâdash. Two rare furnishing-terms recurring together make the tie verbal — the same laver-and-stand, named identically, commanded (40:11) and anointed (Lev 8:11).
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The verb that consecrates the whole structure is māšaḥ (H4886, vv. 9-11) — "to anoint," the root of māšîaḥ, Messiah. A dwelling is anointed so that God may dwell in it; then the high priest is anointed (vv. 13,15) to mediate within it. The New Testament gathers both into one person: the Word "became flesh and tabernacled (ἐσκήνωσεν) among us, and we beheld his glory" (John 1:14) — the very glory that, in Exodus, fills the finished dwelling (40:34). And of him Peter preaches "how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit" (Acts 10:38). The correspondence is typological and crosses Hebrew to Greek — it rests on the shared idea of an anointed dwelling-place of God's presence, never on a shared Strong's lexeme (Greek and Hebrew share none). Offered as the ancient, widely-held reading, to be tested: the dwelling anointed for God to inhabit foreshadows the Anointed One in whom "all the fullness of the Godhead" dwells bodily, the true tent God filled with glory.
Exodus 40:9 · John 1:14 · Acts 10:38
"Their anointing shall be for a perpetual priesthood throughout their generations" (lᵉʿôlām, v. 15). The older expositors heard its limit in the gospel. Geneva: the priesthood lasts "Till both the priesthood and the ceremonies should end, which is at Christ's coming"; Matthew Henry on this very section: "The high-priesthood was in the family of Aaron till Christ came, and in Him, the substance of all these shadows, it continues for ever." Hebrews makes the contrast explicit: the Levitical priests "were many in number, because they were prevented by death from continuing in office; but because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood" (Hebrews 7:23-24). The Aaronic "perpetual" priesthood was perpetual only as a line of dying men; the true everlasting priesthood is the one held by the one who does not die. The link is typological and cross-Testament — it rests on the shared theme of an unending priesthood, not on any shared lexeme between Hebrew ʿôlām and the Greek of Hebrews. Given as the widely-held hearing, to be weighed against the text: the shadow's "forever" finds its substance in Christ's.
Exodus 40:15 · Hebrews 7:24
At the heart of the dwelling Moses sets "the mercy seat above upon the ark" (kappōreṯ, H3727, v. 20) over the Testimony within — the atonement-cover, from kāpar ("to cover, atone"), the place where blood is sprinkled and where God promises to meet Israel (Exodus 25:22). Paul names Christ with this very word's Greek equivalent: God set him forth as a hilastērion — a mercy seat / propitiation — "by his blood" (Romans 3:25); and Hebrews 9:5 calls the lid "the mercy seat" (hilastērion) in describing this same furniture. The figure is that the broken law (the Testimony) is, at the center of God's house, covered by the place of atonement; mercy stands over judgment. The correspondence is typological, crossing Hebrew kappōreṯ to Greek hilastērion — no shared Strong's number, the tie argued from the function and the apostolic naming, not asserted from a lexeme. Offered as the ancient and widely-held reading, to be tested by the text: the cover over the law is a figure of the One whose blood covers the broken commandment for all who believe.
Exodus 40:20 · Romans 3:25 · Hebrews 9:5
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 Exodus 40:1-33 — God's command to rear and consecrate the dwelling (vv. 1-15) and Moses' exact performance of it (vv. 16-33); the glory-cloud of vv. 34-38 lies just beyond this unit's bound. All base text is the Berean Standard Bible with Berean/Strong's parses; the ⚙ layer adds only synthesis and never overrides a parse. Voices: eleven distinct public-domain authors are drawn on across the chapter (Ellicott, Henry, Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Gill, Geneva, Cambridge, Pulpit, Keil & Delitzsch, Poole, Benson), every excerpt a contiguous verbatim substring of the supplied raw commentary. Several authors run a single block-comment across many verses (Henry on 1-15 and 16-33; Keil's two long syntheses); where those repeat, a pointed clause is excerpted once per verse it genuinely bears on, and a block-comment is never re-excerpted on a verse it does not address — JFB's verse-16 fidelity note, which the draft had recycled at v. 32, has been replaced there by on-topic excerpts from Henry (the standing rule of approach) and Keil (the laver's off-centre placement). Genuine cruxes recorded, not smoothed: (1) the chapter keeps miškān ("dwelling") and ʾōhel ("tent") distinct and in apposition — Ellicott and Pulpit both press this against the smoothing "tabernacle of the tent." (2) "Most holy" of the altar (v. 10) is, per Barnes and Keil, not a higher degree of holiness but a caution about contact — not a contradiction of Exodus 30:29, which calls the whole dwelling most holy. (3) The anointing and priestly consecration commanded in vv. 9-15 are, by the commentators' consensus (Ellicott, Pulpit, Keil, Cambridge), not performed on this day but deferred to Leviticus 8; v. 16's "Moses did all" is a summary anticipating that later fulfillment, and the execution of v. 15 is, Cambridge notes, "nowhere recorded." (4) Verses 31-32 are parenthetic (Ellicott, Pulpit, Cambridge) — the laver's ongoing use, not the day's narrative; the tenses are frequentative. Thread-tier honesty: every badge basis was re-run through the Verifier. The Numbers 4:5 and Exodus 35/39/26 textile links are verbal, carried by the genuinely rare pārōḵeṯ (23 vv) and māsāḵ (25 vv). The Genesis 2:2, Exodus 12:2, Gershonite (Num 3:25/4:25), Kohathite (Num 3:31), and Exodus 30:29 links rest only on common lexemes and are therefore held at structural/thematic, not quotation. The lone upgrade is the laver-consecration tie to Leviticus 8:11: pairing Exodus 40:11 ↔ Leviticus 8:11 yields two rare furnishing-terms together — kên ("stand," 17 vv) and kîyôr ("basin," 20 vv) — so that single command-and-fulfilment link is recorded as verbal, separated out from the merely structural Exodus 30:29 consecration cross-reference it was previously bundled with. Christ-links honesty: all three Christ readings cross Hebrew to Greek and therefore rest on theme and apostolic citation, never on a shared Strong's number; each is labeled ancient/widely-held, and each is offered to be tested, not asserted. On the Joshua 1:5 rule: not applicable — this unit is Exodus, not Joshua, and contains no Joshua 1:5; no NT-provenance-disputed quotation arises within vv. 1-33, so no link is force-flagged 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)