The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Cloud and the Glory
Exodus 40:34–38 — The Cloud and the Glory. 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.
34Then the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
he·‘ā·nān ’eṯ- way·ḵas ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ ū·ḵə·ḇō·wḏ Yah·weh mā·lê ’eṯ- ham·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-covered the-cloud the-Tent-of Meeting, and-the-glory of-YHWH filled the-Dwelling.”
Where the English smooths the original
The cloud rested on the tent outside; the “glory of God,”—some ineffably brilliant appearance—entered inside, and “filled” the entire dwelling. It pleased God thus to manifest His intention of making good His promise to go with the people in person
On the distinction between the tent as the outer shelter and the tabernacle as the dwelling-place of Yahweh, which is very clear in these verses, see Exodus 26:1 note. The glory appeared as a light within and as a cloud on the outside.Barnes names the two-noun, two-location structure (’ōhel mō‘ēd / miškān) that organizes the whole scene — light within, cloud without.
Its miraculous character is shown by the fact, that, though "it filled the tabernacle," not a curtain or any article of furniture was so much as singed.JFB on the glory as a created splendor distinct from, yet emanating from, the cloud.
The glorious presence of God, which having been forfeited and lost was now returned to them, and took its habitation among them.Poole reads the descent against the golden-calf rupture of ch. 32 — presence forfeited, now restored.
an emblem of Christ, the brightness of his Father's glory, dwelling in and filling the tabernacle of the human nature, where the Godhead, the Shechinah, the divine Majesty, dwells bodily, Hebrews 1:3 Colossians 2:9 .
Thus a distinct approval was given to all that had been done. God accepted his house, and entered it. The people saw that he had foregone his wrath, and would be content henceforth to dwell among them and journey with them.Pulpit reads the descent as God's visible verdict on the finished work — acceptance after the golden-calf wrath.
35Moses was unable to enter the Tent of Meeting because the cloud had settled on it, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh wə·lō- yā·ḵōl lā·ḇō·w ’el- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ kî- he·‘ā·nān šā·ḵan ‘ā·lāw ū·ḵə·ḇō·wḏ Yah·weh mā·lê ’eṯ- ham·miš·kān
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-not was-able Moses to-enter into the-Tent-of Meeting, because had-settled upon-it the-cloud, and-the-glory of-YHWH filled the-Dwelling.”
Where the English smooths the original
Moses could not endure the unclouded effulgence, nor the sublimest of the prophets (Isa 6:5). But what neither Moses nor the most eminent of God's messengers to the ancient church through the weakness of nature could endure, we can all now do by an exercise of faith; looking unto Jesus
Moses was not able to enter in , partly because of the extraordinary thickness and brightness of the cloud, which both dazzled his eyes and struck him with horror, as 1 Kings 8:11 ; and partly, because of his great reverence and dread of that eminent and glorious appearance of God; and partly, because he was not called to it
Moses, that went into the midst of the cloud where the Lord was, now could not or durst not go into the tabernacle it coveredGill marks the reversal: the man admitted to the Sinai cloud is now shut out of the tent it covers.
Moses, seeing the cloud descend, as it had been wont to do upon the temporary “tent of meeting” ( Exodus 33:9 ), endeavoured to re-enter the Tabernacle which he had quitted, but was unable; the “glory” forbade approach.
36Whenever the cloud was lifted from above the tabernacle, the Israelites would set out through all the stages of their journey.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
he·‘ā·nān ū·ḇə·hê·‘ā·lō·wṯ mê·‘al ham·miš·kān bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl yis·‘ū bə·ḵōl mas·‘ê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-when was-lifted-up the-cloud from-upon the-Dwelling, the-sons-of Israel would-set-out in-all their-journeyings.”
Where the English smooths the original
went onward ] lit. plucked up (tent-pegs), i.e. broke up camp, the usual Heb. expression for set out . The verb is cognate with ‘journeys,’ and is rendered ‘journeyed’ in v. 37.Cambridge names the etymological figure: the verb (set out) and the noun (journeys) share one root.
the motion of the cloud was a direction to set forward and continue their journey as long as it lasted; but when it rested and abode upon the tabernacle, then they stopped and rested also
its peculiar appearance, unvarying character, and regular movements, distinguished it from all the common atmospheric phenomena. It was an invaluable boon to the Israelites, and being recognized by all classes among that people as the symbol of the Divine Presence, it guided their journeys and regulated their encampments
37If the cloud was not lifted, they would not set out until the day it was taken up.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’im- he·‘ā·nān lō yê·‘ā·leh wə·lō yis·‘ū ‘aḏ- yō·wm hê·‘ā·lō·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-if the-cloud was-not lifted-up, then-not would-they-set-out, until the-day of-its-being-lifted-up.”
Where the English smooths the original
Even if it continued so two days, or a month, or a year, as very probably it sometimes did; which will in some measure account for the long continuance of the Israelites in the wilderness, see Numbers 9:22 .Gill on the cost of obedience: the wait could stretch indefinitely.
While the cloud rested on the tabernacle, they rested; when it removed, they followed it.
So long as this cloud rested upon the tabernacle the children of Israel remained encamped; but when it ascended, they broke up the encampment to proceed onwards. This sign was Jehovah's command for encamping or going forward
38For the cloud of the LORD was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel through all their journeys.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
kî ‘ă·nan Yah·weh ‘al- ham·miš·kān yō·w·mām wə·’êš tih·yeh bōw lay·lāh lə·‘ê·nê ḵāl bêṯ- yiś·rā·’êl bə·ḵāl mas·‘ê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“For the-cloud-of YHWH was over the-Dwelling by-day, and-fire was in-it by-night, in-the-sight of-all the-house-of Israel through-all their-journeyings.”
Where the English smooths the original
The same pillar which in the day-time was like a cloud, in the night-time had the appearance of fire. See Exodus 13:21 .
from the moment that sanctuary was erected, and the glory of the Lord had filled the sacred edifice, the Israelites had to look to the place which God had chosen to put His name there, in order that they might enjoy the benefit of a heavenly Guide
Thus the presence of God preserved and guided them night and day, till they came to the land promised.Geneva’s marginal gloss (note h) on the abiding cloud.
The cloud had two aspects - one obscure, the other radiant. It was a dark column by day - a pillar of fire by night. Thus it was always visible.
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 Book of Exodus does not end with a word; it ends with a weight. Forty chapters of deliverance and instruction — the plagues, the sea, the law, the long blueprint of the sanctuary from chapter 25 — converge on a single sentence: “the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the Dwelling.” The Hebrew is precise where the English blurs: two verbs, two locations. Barnes draws the line that organizes the whole scene — “the glory appeared as a light within and as a cloud on the outside.” Ellicott says the same: “The cloud rested on the tent outside; the ‘glory of God’ … entered inside, and ‘filled’ the entire dwelling.” The covering verb is kāsāh; the filling verb is mālê. What had blazed on the summit of Sinai (Exodus 24:16) has come down to dwell at the center of the camp. Poole reads the descent against the wound of the golden calf: this is “the glorious presence of God, which having been forfeited and lost was now returned to them, and took its habitation among them.” The book that recorded Israel’s worst apostasy ends with God moving in.
Then comes the sharpest reversal in the chapter. “Moses was unable to enter.” The man who had gone up into the very cloud on Sinai — “Moses entered the cloud as he went up on the mountain” (Exodus 24:18) — now cannot pass the door of the tent he himself raised. Gill fixes the irony exactly: “Moses, that went into the midst of the cloud where the Lord was, now could not or durst not go into the tabernacle it covered.” Keil & Delitzsch explain the structure of it: the glory “filled the dwelling in both its parts,” so that the cloud which would later “draw back into the most holy place” first barred even the mediator. JFB turns it forward: what “neither Moses nor the most eminent of God’s messengers … could endure, we can all now do by an exercise of faith; looking unto Jesus.” The exclusion is not God’s rejection of Moses; it is the Law’s honest verdict — the holiest man in Israel cannot, of himself, stand in the unveiled glory.
From verse 36 the grammar changes from a once-for-all event to a settled habit. Cambridge notes that “the tenses are throughout frequentative … describing what was the case habitually during the journeyings in the wilderness.” The same glory that consecrated the house now governs the march. The mechanism is utterly simple and entirely surrendered: when the cloud lifts (‘ālāh, repeated four times across vv. 36–37), they travel; when it rests, they stay — even, as Gill observes, if the wait stretched “two days, or a month, or a year.” There is a play on words the English cannot keep: the verb “set out” (nāsa‘, “pull up the tent-pegs”) and the noun “journeyings” (massa‘) are one root — Cambridge flags it: “the verb is cognate with ‘journeys.’” A people who do nothing but pull up stakes and re-pitch them, always at the cloud’s command. Keil & Delitzsch sum the rule: “This sign was Jehovah’s command for encamping or going forward.” Guidance is not a map handed over but a Presence to be watched.
The final verse gathers everything into one abiding picture and, for the first time in the unit, names the cloud’s owner: it is ‘ănan YHWH, the cloud of the LORD, bound by construct to the covenant name. Poole identifies it simply — “the same pillar which in the day-time was like a cloud, in the night-time had the appearance of fire.” Pulpit draws out the doubleness: “The cloud had two aspects — one obscure, the other radiant … Thus it was always visible.” And it was visible lə·‘ê·nê, “before the eyes of all the house of Israel” — a public, unbroken pledge. JFB reads the settledness as the point: “from the moment that sanctuary was erected … the Israelites had to look to the place which God had chosen to put His name there.” The wandering, calf-making, fearful people who once asked “Is the LORD among us, or not?” (Exodus 17:7) are given a standing answer they can see every day and every night, through all their journeyings, until — as the Geneva gloss says — “they came to the land promised.”
Read whole, these five verses are the keystone the entire book was built to bear. Exodus is the story of God bringing a people out; it ends with God coming in. The structural arc runs from the redemption of chapter 12 through the covenant of chapter 24 to the indwelling of chapter 40 — and the indwelling is the goal. Keil & Delitzsch name the stakes: with the consecration “Israel had now received a real pledge of the permanence of the covenant of grace.” Yet the same passage that announces the nearness of God also marks the distance still to be crossed: Moses cannot enter; “the barrier, which sin had erected … was not yet taken away” (K&D). The book closes with God present and God still veiled — a tension the rest of Scripture exists to resolve.
Set against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things stand out from this unit — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. First, presence is the point of redemption. The whole exodus does not climax in freedom-as-autonomy but in “that I may dwell among them” (Exodus 25:8) made fact — the gracious aim of salvation is God Himself with His people, not merely deliverance from Egypt. Second, the Law glorifies and excludes in the same breath. That the holiest man alive cannot enter the filled tent is the verdict the New Testament will name: the law, “weakened by the flesh,” could bring Israel to the door of glory but not through it. The exclusion of Moses is not a footnote; it is a confession that a better Mediator is needed. Third, guidance is by surrendered watchfulness, not by sight of the road. Israel never knew the next stage; they knew only the cloud. The pattern the passage commends is faith that moves when God moves and waits when God waits — the Berean posture of measuring every step against what He has shown, not against what we can foresee.
The Book of Exodus ends not with a people who possess God, but with a God who has come to possess a people — covered without, filling within, and not yet fully enterable.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The pattern is reproduced almost exactly at the dedication of Solomon’s Temple: a cloud fills the house, the glory of the LORD fills the house, and the priests “could not stand to minister because of the cloud” — Moses’ very incapacity, now repeated on a national stage (1 Kings 8:10–11). Keil & Delitzsch note that there “the cloud filled the house of Jehovah” is used interchangeably with “the glory of Jehovah filled the house.” The Verifier confirms the verbal overlap of cloud, glory, and filling.
Exodus 40:34 · 1 Kings 8:10-11 · 2 Chronicles 5:13-14
basis: shared Strong's lexemes (Verifier, Exodus 40:34 ↔ 1 Kings 8:11): H6051 ʻânân (cloud), H3519 kâbôwd (glory), H4390 mâlêʼ (filled) — a shared consecration pattern, not a quotation claim
What Exodus 40:34–38 states in five compressed verses, Numbers 9:15–23 unfolds “still more elaborately” (Keil & Delitzsch): the cloud covered the Dwelling (the Tent of the Testimony), by day it had the appearance of cloud and by night of fire, and the children of Israel journeyed or stayed exactly as it lifted or rested. Nearly every voice on this unit points there — Ellicott, JFB, Pulpit, Cambridge, and Gill all send the reader to Numbers 9:15–23 as the fuller account of the same sign. The Verifier confirms the overlap of cloud (‘ānān), covering (kāsāh), Dwelling (miškān), and tent (’ōhel): the same vocabulary, deployed at narrative length.
Exodus 40:34 · Exodus 40:36 · Numbers 9:15-23
basis: shared Strong's lexemes (Verifier, Exodus 40:34 ↔ Numbers 9:15): H6051 ʻânân (cloud), H4908 mishkân (Dwelling), H3680 kâçâh (cover), H168 ʼôhel (tent) — the same cluster of sanctuary-and-cloud terms re-narrated at length; a structural parallel, not a quotation
The closing formula of vv. 36–38 is taken up verbatim as the rubric of the wilderness march in Numbers, where the cloud’s lifting and resting structures every departure and the rare noun massa‘ (“journeyings / stages”) becomes a technical term for the itinerary (Numbers 10:12; 33:1–2). Because massa‘ occurs in only eleven verses, the overlap is a genuine verbal link, not a generic motif.
Exodus 40:36 · Exodus 40:38 · Numbers 10:12 · Numbers 33:1-2
basis: shared RARE lexeme (Verifier, Exodus 40:36 ↔ Numbers 10:12): H4550 maççaʻ, found in only 11 verses, with H5265 nâçaʻ and H6051 ʻânân — the low-frequency cognate noun is the recorded verbal basis
Isaiah picks up the same furniture — cloud and glory over the dwelling — and turns it eschatological: over restored Zion the LORD will create “a cloud by day … and the shining of a flaming fire by night,” a glory-canopy over the whole assembly (Isaiah 4:5). The Tabernacle’s pillar becomes the promise of God’s presence over His people at the end. Gill already points there (“see Isaiah 4:5”).
Exodus 40:34 · Exodus 40:38 · Isaiah 4:5
basis: shared Strong's lexemes (Verifier, Exodus 40:34 ↔ Isaiah 4:5): H6051 ʻânân (cloud), H3519 kâbôwd (glory) — a shared cloud-and-glory motif over the dwelling, prophetically re-deployed; not a quotation
The descent of the glory is the explicit cashing-out of a promise made fifteen chapters earlier: “there I will meet with the Israelites, and the place will be consecrated by My glory” (Exodus 29:43). Cambridge closes the book by pointing back to it: “The book thus closes with the fulfilment of the promise given in Exodus 29:43.” The shared lexeme is the keyword kāḇôḏ (glory) itself.
Exodus 40:34 · Exodus 40:35 · Exodus 29:43-46
basis: shared lexeme (Verifier, Exodus 40:34 ↔ Exodus 29:43): H3519 kâbôwd (glory) — promise-and-fulfilment of the same keyword within Exodus; structural, not a citation
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
What the cloud-covered, glory-filled miškān did in shadow, the incarnate Word does in fact: “the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us, and we beheld His glory” (John 1:14). John’s verb (eskēnōsen) and noun (doxa, glory) deliberately reach back to the Tabernacle filled with the kāḇôḏ. Gill already sees Christ here: the filled tabernacle is “an emblem of Christ, the brightness of his Father’s glory, dwelling in and filling the tabernacle of the human nature” (Hebrews 1:3; Colossians 2:9). The link is real but typological, argued not asserted: it is a cross-Testament reading (Greek ↔ Hebrew) with no shared Strong’s lexeme — the Verifier finds none — so it rests on the figural pattern, not a verbal quotation.
Exodus 40:34 · John 1:14 · Colossians 2:9
Moses’ inability to enter the glory-filled tent dramatizes what the Law could never accomplish. JFB draws the contrast at the verse: what Moses could not endure “we can all now do … looking unto Jesus, who … having as the Forerunner for us, entered within the veil, has invited us to come boldly to the mercy seat.” Where Moses stood barred outside, Christ “entered the most holy place once for all” and opened “a new and living way … through the veil, that is, His flesh” (Hebrews 9:11–12; 10:19–20). The exclusion is not arbitrary: Barnes reads Moses’ barring alongside “the entrance of the high priest into the holy of holies on the day of atonement” (Leviticus 16:2, 13) — access to the cloud-veiled glory was henceforth mediated, granted only through blood, once a year, by one man. Keil & Delitzsch follow that line to its end: the curtain “was to be lifted at least once a year by the anointed priest,” prefiguring “the perfect atonement through the blood of the eternal Mediator, through which the way to the throne of grace is opened to all believers.” The excluded mediator of Exodus is fulfilled in the Mediator who admits His people. (The Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme between Exodus 40:35 and Hebrews 9–10 — a cross-Testament reading argued from the veil-and-access pattern, not a verbal citation.)
Exodus 40:35 · Hebrews 9:11-12 · Hebrews 10:19-20
The closing image of Exodus — God’s presence permanently with His people, visible day and night “through all their journeyings” — is the trajectory that ends in the new creation: “Behold, the dwelling place (skēnē) of God is with man, and He will dwell with them” (Revelation 21:3), where “the glory of God” is the city’s light (21:23). The Tabernacle’s answer to “Is the LORD among us, or not?” becomes the final, unveiled answer — no longer cloud-shrouded but face to face. This is a typological/eschatological reading across Testaments; the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme between the Hebrew and the Greek, so the connection is argued from the dwelling-motif, not claimed as a quotation.
Exodus 40:34 · Exodus 40:38 · Revelation 21:3
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:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries via Biblehub: Ellicott (1878), Matthew Henry (1706), Albert Barnes (1834), Jamieson-Fausset-Brown (1871), Matthew Poole (1685), John Gill (1746–63), the Geneva Study Bible (1599), the Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges (1880s), the Pulpit Commentary (1880s), and Keil & Delitzsch (1860s). The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; transliterations, parsings, literal renderings, and the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” notes are this tool’s own work (⚙) — careful but fallible; check them against BDB/HALOT and a standard grammar.
Honesty notes specific to this unit. (1) The literal rendering keeps two distinct Hebrew verbs the BSB renders alike — kāsāh (“covered,” outside) vs. mālê (“filled,” inside) — and two distinct nouns, ’ōhel mō‘ēd (“Tent of Meeting”) vs. miškān (“Dwelling/Tabernacle”). Barnes and Ellicott both insist on these distinctions; we follow them. (2) The play between the verb nāsa‘ and the noun massa‘ in vv. 36–38 is a genuine Hebrew figura etymologica, flagged by the Cambridge Bible. (3) The cross-references in the Threads section carry bases computed by the Verifier from shared Strong’s lexemes; the Numbers itinerary link is tiered verbal/quotation only because the noun massa‘ (H4550) is rare (11 verses), whereas the Numbers 9:15–23, 1 Kings 8, Isaiah 4, and Exodus 29:43 links rest on common sanctuary terms (cloud, glory, filled, Dwelling) and so are tiered structural, not verbal, even where the Verifier returns a match. (4) The links in Christ in the Unit are cross-Testament (Greek ↔ Hebrew). The Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme for John 1:14 or Revelation 21:3 against Exodus 40 — by rule, such links cannot be tiered “verbal.” They are presented as typological, argued from the dwelling-and-glory pattern, not asserted as quotation. This typology (Tabernacle → incarnate Christ → new-creation dwelling) is ancient and widely held; weigh it against the text. ⚙ = machine synthesis, fallible, to be verified. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)
✦ = 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)