
Text -- Exodus 27:9-21 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Exo 27:9 - -- Before the tabernacle there was to be a court, enclosed with hangings of fine linen. This court, according to the common computation, was 50 yards lon...
Before the tabernacle there was to be a court, enclosed with hangings of fine linen. This court, according to the common computation, was 50 yards long, and 25 broad. Pillars were set up at convenient distances, in sockets of brass, the pillars filleted with silver, and silver tenterhooks in them, on which the linen hangings were fastened: the hanging which served for the gate was finer than the rest. This court was a type of the church, enclosed, and distinguished from the rest of the world; the inclosure supported by pillars, noting the stability of the church hung with the clean linen, which is said to be the righteousness of saints, Rev 19:8. Yet this court would contain but a few worshippers; thanks be to God, now the inclosure is taken down; and there is room for all that in every place call on the name of Christ.

Wesley: Exo 27:20 - -- We read of the candlestick in the 25th chapter; here is order given for the keeping of the lamps constantly burning in it. The pure oil signified the ...
We read of the candlestick in the 25th chapter; here is order given for the keeping of the lamps constantly burning in it. The pure oil signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit, which are communicated to all believers from Christ the good olive, of whose fulness we receive, Zec 4:11-12. The priests were to light the lamps, and to tend them; to cause the lamp to burn always, night and day. Thus it is the work of ministers to preach and expound the scriptures, which are as a lamp to enlighten the church. This is to be a statute for ever, that the lamps of the word be lighted as duly as the incense of prayer and praise is offered.
JFB: Exo 27:19 - -- Were designed to hold down the curtains at the bottom, lest the wind should waft them aside.
Were designed to hold down the curtains at the bottom, lest the wind should waft them aside.

JFB: Exo 27:20-21 - -- That is, such as runs from the olives when bruised and without the application of fire.
That is, such as runs from the olives when bruised and without the application of fire.

Were to take charge of lighting it in all time coming.

JFB: Exo 27:21 - -- The tabernacle having no windows, the lamps required to be lighted during the day. JOSEPHUS says that in his time only three were lighted; but his wer...
The tabernacle having no windows, the lamps required to be lighted during the day. JOSEPHUS says that in his time only three were lighted; but his were degenerate times, and there is no Scripture authority for this limitation. But although the priests were obliged from necessity to light them by day, they might have let them go out at night had it not been for this express ordinance.
Clarke: Exo 27:9 - -- The court of the tabernacle - The tabernacle stood in an enclosure or court, open at the top. This court was made with pillars or posts, and hanging...
The court of the tabernacle - The tabernacle stood in an enclosure or court, open at the top. This court was made with pillars or posts, and hangings. It was one hundred cubits, or about fifty-eight yards and a half, in length; the breadth we learn from Exo 27:12, Exo 27:18; and five cubits, or nearly three yards, high, Exo 27:18. And as this was but half the height of the tabernacle, Exo 26:16, that sacred building might easily be seen by the people from without.

Clarke: Exo 27:16 - -- And for the gate of the court - It appears that the hangings of this gate were of the same materials and workmanship with that of the inner covering...
And for the gate of the court - It appears that the hangings of this gate were of the same materials and workmanship with that of the inner covering of the tabernacle, and the outer and inner veil. See Exo 26:36.

Clarke: Exo 27:19 - -- All the vessels - shall be of brass - It would have been improper to have used instruments made of the more precious metals about this altar, as the...
All the vessels - shall be of brass - It would have been improper to have used instruments made of the more precious metals about this altar, as they must have been soon worn out by the severity of the service.

Clarke: Exo 27:20 - -- Pure oil olive beaten - That is, such oil as could easily be expressed from the olives after they had been bruised in a mortar; the mother drop, as ...
Pure oil olive beaten - That is, such oil as could easily be expressed from the olives after they had been bruised in a mortar; the mother drop, as it is called, which drops out of itself as soon as the olives are a little broken, and which is much purer than that which is obtained after the olives are put under the press
Columella, who is a legitimate evidence in all such matters, says that the oil which flowed out of the fruit either spontaneously, or with little application of the force of the press, was of a much finer flavour than that which was obtained otherwise. Quoniam longe melioris saporis est, quod minore vi preli, quasi luxurians, defluxerit - Colum., lib. xii., c. 50

Clarke: Exo 27:20 - -- To cause the lamp to burn always - They were to be kept burning through the whole of the night, and some think all the day besides; but there is a d...
To cause the lamp to burn always - They were to be kept burning through the whole of the night, and some think all the day besides; but there is a difference of sentiment upon this subject. See the note on Exo 27:21
This oil and continual flame were not only emblematical of the unction and influences of the Holy Ghost, but also of that pure spirit of devotion which ever animates the hearts and minds of the genuine worshippers of the true God. The temple of Vesta, where a fire was kept perpetually burning, seems to have been formed on the model of the tabernacle; and from this the followers of Zeratusht, commonly called Zoroaster, appear to have derived their doctrine of the perpetual fire, which they still worship as an emblem of the Deity.

Clarke: Exo 27:21 - -- The tabernacle of the congregation - The place where all the assembly of the people were to worship, where the God of that assembly was pleased to r...
The tabernacle of the congregation - The place where all the assembly of the people were to worship, where the God of that assembly was pleased to reside, and to which, as the habitation of their king and protector, they were ever to turn their faces in all their adorations

Clarke: Exo 27:21 - -- Before the testimony - That is, the ark where the tables of the covenant were deposited. See Exo 25:16
Before the testimony - That is, the ark where the tables of the covenant were deposited. See Exo 25:16

Clarke: Exo 27:21 - -- Aaron and his sons - These and their descendants being the only legitimate priests, God having established the priesthood in this family
Aaron and his sons - These and their descendants being the only legitimate priests, God having established the priesthood in this family

Clarke: Exo 27:21 - -- Shall order it from evening to morning - Josephus says the whole of the seven lamps burned all the night; in the morning four were extinguished, and...
Shall order it from evening to morning - Josephus says the whole of the seven lamps burned all the night; in the morning four were extinguished, and three kept burning through the whole day. Others assert that the whole seven were kept lighted both day and night continually; but it appears sufficiently evident, from 1Sa 3:3, that these lamps were extinguished in the morning: And ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of the Lord, where the ark of God was, and Samuel was laid down to sleep, etc. See also Exo 30:8 : And when Aaron Lighteth The Lamps At Even. It appears therefore that the business of the priests was to light the lamps in the evening; and either to extinguish them in the morning, or permit them to burn out, having put in the night before as much oil as was necessary to last till daylight

Clarke: Exo 27:21 - -- A statute for ever - This ordering of the lamps night and morning, and attendance on the service of the tabernacle, was a statute that was to be in ...
A statute for ever - This ordering of the lamps night and morning, and attendance on the service of the tabernacle, was a statute that was to be in full force while the tabernacle and temple stood, and should have its spiritual accomplishment in the Christian Church to the end of time. Reader, the tabernacle and temple are both destroyed; the Church of Christ is established in their place. The seven golden candlesticks were typical of this Church and the glorious light it possesses, Rev 1:12-20; and Jesus Christ, the Fountain and Dispenser of this true light, walks in the midst of them. Reader, hast thou that celestial flame to enlighten and animate thy heart in all those acts of devotion which thou professest to pay to him as thy Maker, Redeemer, and Preserver? What is thy profession, and what thy religious acts and services, without this? A sounding brass, a tinkling cymbal
Tertullian asserts that all the ancient heathens borrowed their best notions from the sacred writings: "Which,"says he, "of your poets, which of your sophists, have not drunk from the fountain of the prophets? It is from those sacred springs that your philosophers have refreshed their thirsty spirits; and if they found any thing in the Holy Scriptures which hit their fancy, or which served their hypothesis, they took and turned it to a compliance with their own curiosity, not considering those writings to be sacred and unalterable, nor understanding their true sense, every one altering them according to his own fancy."- Apologet
The reader’ s attention has already been called to this point several times in the preceding parts of this work, and the subject will frequently recur. At the conclusion of Exo 25:31 (See Clarke’ s note at Exo 25:31) we had occasion to observe that the heathens had imitated many things in that Divine worship prescribed by Moses; but in application to their own corrupt system every thing was in a certain measure falsified and distorted, yet not so far as to prevent the grand outlines of primitive truth from being discerned. One of the most complete imitations of the tabernacle and its whole service is found in the very ancient temple of Hercules, founded probably by the Phoenicians, at Gades, now Cadiz, in Spain, so minutely described by Silius Italicus from actual observation. He observes that though the temple was at that time very ancient, yet the beams were the same that had been placed there by the founders, and that they were generally supposed to be incorruptible; a quality ascribed to the shittim wood, termed
Vulgatum (nec cassa fides) ab origine fani
Impositas durare trabes, solasque per aevum
Condentum novisse manus: hic credere gaudent
Consedisse Deum, seniumque repellere templis.
Tum, queis fas et honos adyti penetralia nosse,
Foemineos prohibent gressus, ac limine curant
Setigeros arcere sues: nec discolor ulli
Ante aras cultus: velantur corpora lino,
Et Pelusiaco praefulget stamine vertex.
Discinctis mos thura dare, atque, e lege parenturn
Sacrificam Lato vestem distinguere Clavo.
Pes nudus, tousaeque comae, castumque cubile,
Irrestincta focis servant altaria flammae.
Sed nulla effigies, simulacrave nota
Deorum Majestate locum, et sacro implevere timore
Punicor., lib. iii., ver. 17-31
This is such a remarkable case that I think myself justified in quoting it at length, as an extraordinary monument, though corrupted, of the tabernacle and its service. It is probable that the original founders had consecrated this temple to the true God, under the name of
Calvin: Exo 27:9 - -- 9.And thou shalt make the court There were two courts divided from the sanctuary, one for the priests, the other common to the whole people. To the f...
9.And thou shalt make the court There were two courts divided from the sanctuary, one for the priests, the other common to the whole people. To the first chambers were annexed, in which the Levites dwelt, who were the keepers of the tabernacle; and thus sometimes the courts are spoken of in the plural number, and especially in the Psalms, (Psa 64:4.) It is the court of the people which is here referred to, where they consecrated the victims, offered their prayers, and were reconciled to God. In this manner the condition of mankind was shewn to the Israelites, by their being forbidden to enter the Temple, whilst at the same time they were reminded that men, although unworthy outcasts, are received by God, if only they seek Him simply, and with due humility, mindful of their own unworthiness. Hence the consolation in which David gloried, 149 “I had rather dwell in the courts of the Lord, than in the splendid tents of the ungodly.†The court was formed by four curtains, two of which, on the north and south sides, were 100 cubits long, and supported by 20 pillars, whose bases were of brass, and their capitals 150 and fillets of silver; on the east and west, each curtain was 50 cubits long, supported by 10 pillars. The length spoken of is not from the ground upwards, but from their opposite corners: for the court was twice as long as it was broad, as is said in Exo 27:18. There would be an appearance of contradiction in the fact that Moses afterwards speaks of two sides, and assigns fifteen cubits to each, if he did not immediately go on to mention the hanging or curtain, which covered the gate of the court, and which he sets at twenty cubits. Thus the measure will be correct, and the passage will be quite accordant; for, after he has said in Exo 27:13 that the curtain on the east side should consist of fifty cubits, he adds in explanation that there were two curtains at the sides of the door, and a third between them to cover the door, making up in all the fifty cubits. But the door was covered by the hanging, that the Israelites might reflect in themselves, whenever they went into the sanctuary, that it was no profane or common ( promiscuum) place; but if they came thither in purity and chastity, they might be assuredly persuaded that they were safe under the protection of God. Finally also the majesty of holy things was shewn them in this type, in order that they might reverently approach the worship of God; and they were reminded of their own unworthiness, that they might humble themselves the more before God, and that fear might beget penitence, whilst moderation in the desire of knowledge was recommended to them, that they might not be unduly inquisitive. The religion of the Gentiles also had its secret shrines with the same object, but for very different causes; for it was a brutal religion, for which veneration was sought by darkness, and the disguise of ignorance; whereas God, whilst He retained His people in modesty and simplicity, at the same time set before them the Law, from which they might learn whatever it was right and useful for them to know.

Calvin: Exo 27:20 - -- Exo 27:20 And thou shalt command the children of Israel I have transferred these two passages from elsewhere, since they relate to the service of the ...
Exo 27:20 And thou shalt command the children of Israel I have transferred these two passages from elsewhere, since they relate to the service of the tabernacle; for the children of Israel are commanded to contribute as much oil as may be sufficient for the seven lamps. Now, since Divine illumination and the grace of the Holy Spirit were, as we have seen, the truth of this symbol, God requires pure oil, i.e., not muddy, or mixed with lees, for, had it been in any respect faulty, so much would have been detracted from the dignity of the mystery. Its purity, then, shewed that nothing mean or common was signified by it; that the Israelites also might bring with them pure minds, and duly prepared and disposed to consider the spiritual light. He again repeats, that the oil must be supplied seasonably at its proper hours, so that the lamps may be always burning; that thus the children of Israel might learn that nothing is more opposed to the worship of God than obscurity and darkness; and that it is not to be interrupted at intervals, 137 but that the direction of the Spirit should shine from heaven in a perpetual flow. Thus, in the second passage cited, He thrice reiterates the word “continually,†to shew that the true light should never be put out in any respect. This office God enjoins upon the priests, because they ought to be ministers of light when they are interpreting the Law, which David calls “the lamp of our feet, and the light of our paths.†(Psa 119:105.) But what is the meaning of the offering (of the oil) by the people, since men are possessed of no power for the spiritual enlightening of their own minds? I reply that, in the types of the Law, the several parts are not to be so scrupulously forced to the rule, as if there were nothing in the outward sign with which the reality did not correspond; and again, that although men having nothing of their own and of themselves to bring, yet, that they may more diligently exert themselves in their endeavors to serve God, they are justly required to dedicate themselves and all that they have to God. At the end, where the words “a statute for ever†are added, understand them to mean, until the real manifestation of those things, of which the candlestick and its lamps were a type. This point I have discussed in Genesis 138 It is called “a statute from the 139 children of Israel,†( a filiis Israel,) since God requires its observance from them; unless it be preferred to translate it with Jerome, “Before ( coram) the children of Israel.†The exposition of others, “among ( apud) the children of Israel,†or from the fathers to the children, is harsher, and altogether forced.
TSK: Exo 27:9 - -- the court : Exo 38:9-20, Exo 40:8; 1Ki 6:36, 1Ki 8:64; 2Ch 33:5; Psa 84:10, Psa 92:13, Psa 100:4; Psa 116:19; Eze 40:14, Eze 40:20, Eze 40:23, Eze 40:...

TSK: Exo 27:10 - -- sockets shall be of brass : Exo 26:19-21
fillets shall be of silver : Exo 36:38; Jer 52:21
sockets shall be of brass : Exo 26:19-21


TSK: Exo 27:16 - -- of blue : Exo 26:31, Exo 26:36
needlework : Exo 28:39, Exo 36:37, Exo 39:29; Jdg 5:30; Psa 45:14

TSK: Exo 27:19 - -- all the pins thereof : Exo 27:3, Exo 35:18, Exo 38:20, Exo 38:31, Exo 39:40; Num 3:37, Num 4:32; Ezr 9:8; Ecc 12:11; Isa 22:23-25, Isa 33:20; Zec 10:4

TSK: Exo 27:20 - -- pure oil olive beaten : That is, such oil as could be easily expressed from the olives, after they had been bruised in a mortar; and which is much pur...
pure oil olive beaten : That is, such oil as could be easily expressed from the olives, after they had been bruised in a mortar; and which is much purer than that obtained after the olives are put under the press. Exo 39:37; Lev 24:2-4; Jdg 9:9; Psa 23:5; Zec 4:11-14; Rev 11:4
for the light : Exo 25:31-37
to cause the lamp : Josephus says, that the whole of the seven lamps burned all night; and that in the morning four were extinguished, and three burned the whole of the day. Such might have been the practice in his time; but it appears sufficiently evident from Exo 30:8, and 1Sa 3:3, that they were anciently extinguished in the morning.
to burn : Heb. to ascend up

TSK: Exo 27:21 - -- the tabernacle of the congregation : Exo 29:10, Exo 29:44; Lev 3:8; Num 8:9
without the veil : Exo 26:31-33, Exo 40:3
testimony : Exo 16:34, Exo 25:16...
the tabernacle of the congregation : Exo 29:10, Exo 29:44; Lev 3:8; Num 8:9
without the veil : Exo 26:31-33, Exo 40:3
testimony : Exo 16:34, Exo 25:16, Exo 25:21
Aaron : Exo 30:8; 1Sa 3:3; 2Ch 13:11; Mal 2:7; Mat 4:16; Luk 12:35; Joh 5:35; 2Co 4:6; 2Pe 1:19; Rev 2:1
evening : Gen 1:5, Gen 1:8; Lev 24:3; Psa 134:1
a statute for ever : Exo 28:43, Exo 29:9, Exo 29:28; Lev 3:17, Lev 16:34, Lev 24:9; Num 18:23, Num 19:21; 1Sa 30:25

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Exo 27:9-19 - -- The court of the tabernacle - (Compare Exo 38:9-20) Exo 27:9 The south side southward - The south side on the right. See Exo 26:18. ...
The court of the tabernacle - (Compare Exo 38:9-20)
The south side southward - The south side on the right. See Exo 26:18.
Sockets - Bases. See Exo 26:19.
Fillets - Rather, Connecting rods; curtain-rods of silver connecting the heads of the pillars. The hangings were attached to the pillars by the silver hooks; but the length of the space between the pillars would render it most probable that they were also in some way fastened to these rods.
The east side eastward - On the front side eastward.
An hanging - An entrance curtain, which, unlike the hangings at the sides and back of the court, could be drawn up, or aside, at pleasure. The words are rightly distinguished in our Bible in Num 3:26.
Wrought with nedlework - The work of the embroiderer. See Exo 26:36; Exo 35:35. On the materials, see Exo 25:4.
Filleted with silver - Connected with silver rods. See Exo 27:10,
All the vessels ... - All the tools of the tabernacle used in all its workmanship, and all its tent-pins, and all the tent-pins of the court, shall be of bronze. The working tools of the sanctuary were most probably such things as axes, knives, hammers, etc. that were employed in making, repairing, setting up and taking down the structure. Compare Num 3:36.
The tabernacle - The word is here to be taken as including both the
The pins - tent-pins.

Barnes: Exo 27:20 - -- Pure oil olive beaten - The oil was to be of the best kind. It is called beaten, because it was obtained by merely bruising the olives in a mor...
Pure oil olive beaten - The oil was to be of the best kind. It is called beaten, because it was obtained by merely bruising the olives in a mortar or mill, without the application of heat. The finest oil is now thus obtained from young fruit freshly gathered. The inferior kind is pressed from unselected fruit under stronger pressure, and with the application of heat.
The lamp - i. e. the lamps of the golden candlestick. (See Exo 25:37.)
To burn - See the margin "to ascend up."It should be observed that the word does not properly mean to burn in the sense of to consume, but is the word regularly used to express the action of fire upon what was offered to Yahweh (see Lev 1:9).
Always - i. e. every night "from evening until morning."Compare Exo 30:8.

Barnes: Exo 27:21 - -- The tabernacle of the congregation - More literally, the tent of meeting. This is the first occurrence of this designation of the tabernacle, a...
The tabernacle of the congregation - More literally, the tent of meeting. This is the first occurrence of this designation of the tabernacle, and the idea connected with it is that of Yahweh meeting with either Moses, or the priests, or (in a few cases) with the people gathered into a congregation at the entrance of the tent.
Without the rail, which is before the testimony - i. e. the holy place (see Exo 25:16).
Poole: Exo 27:9 - -- A court encompassing the tabernacle, Exo 40:33 , in the midst whereof the altar of sacrifices was placed, upon which the offerings were burnt in the...
A court encompassing the tabernacle, Exo 40:33 , in the midst whereof the altar of sacrifices was placed, upon which the offerings were burnt in the open air, which was most convenient. By the
hangings the court was distinguished and enclosed.

Poole: Exo 27:10 - -- On the twenty pillars the hangings were fastened by the hooks here mentioned.
Their twenty sockets , or, bases , upon which the pillars stood.
T...
On the twenty pillars the hangings were fastened by the hooks here mentioned.
Their twenty sockets , or, bases , upon which the pillars stood.
Their fillets , or, hoops , which encompassed the pillars at the top, being placed there, as it seems, for ornament only.

Poole: Exo 27:14 - -- These fifteen cubits , with the fifteen cubits Exo 27:15 , and the twenty cubits Exo 27:16 , make up the fifty cubits mentioned.

Poole: Exo 27:17 - -- Their hooks shall be of silver , all silver, not only covered with silver, as some unduly infer from Exo 38:17 .
Their hooks shall be of silver , all silver, not only covered with silver, as some unduly infer from Exo 38:17 .

Poole: Exo 27:19 - -- With the pins the tabernacle and curtains thereof were fastened to the ground, as tents usually are with wooden pins.
With the pins the tabernacle and curtains thereof were fastened to the ground, as tents usually are with wooden pins.

Poole: Exo 27:20 - -- Beaten out of the olives with a pestle, which is freer from dregs than that which is squeezed out with a press.
To burn always i.e. at all the tim...
Beaten out of the olives with a pestle, which is freer from dregs than that which is squeezed out with a press.
To burn always i.e. at all the times. appointed; daily, though not continually; as the lamb offered only every morning and every evening is called a continual burnt-offering , Exo 29:42 . For that these were lighted only at the evening, may seem probable from the next verse, and from Exo 27:21 30:8 Lev 24:3 1Sa 3:3 2Ch 13:11 . But because Josephus and Philo, who were eye-witnesses of the temple service, and had no temptation to lie in this matter, expressly affirm, that some lights did burn in the day-time; and it may seem indecent and improbable that God should dwell and the priests minister in darkness, and there were no windows to give light to the tabernacle by day; it may be granted that some few burnt in the day, and all in the night, and that the latter is only mentioned in the places alleged, as being a more solemn time when all are lighted.

Poole: Exo 27:21 - -- The tabernacle of the congregation was so called, because there the people used to meet not only one with another, but with God also. See Exo 25:22 N...
The tabernacle of the congregation was so called, because there the people used to meet not only one with another, but with God also. See Exo 25:22 Num 17:4 . Others render it, in the tabernacle of witness , because there God declared his mind and will, and man’ s duty. Without the veil , to wit, the second veil, in the holy place.
Before the testimony ; a short speech for before the ark of the testimony , as it is elsewhere more largely called: compare Exo 25:16 .
Shall order it , to wit, the lamp, or the lights, taking care that there be a constant supply of them, and that they burn well.
Haydock: Exo 27:9 - -- Court. This inclosed the tabernacle, and the altar of holocausts, being 50 yards long and 25 broad. At the bottom, or western end, there were ten p...
Court. This inclosed the tabernacle, and the altar of holocausts, being 50 yards long and 25 broad. At the bottom, or western end, there were ten pillars, and on the north and south 20, ornamented in the same manner, and supporting curtains of cotton. But on the eastern side, 10 yards were left, with four pillars in the middle, for an entrance, supporting a richer veil, and on either side three pillars of brass, adorned with circles of silver, as all the rest were. (Haydock)

Haydock: Exo 27:10 - -- Engraving. Hebrew and Chaldean, "circles," adorning the chaptrels, (Menochius; ver. 17,) or rather the body of the pillars. The chaptrels were cove...
Engraving. Hebrew and Chaldean, "circles," adorning the chaptrels, (Menochius; ver. 17,) or rather the body of the pillars. The chaptrels were covered with plates of silver.

Haydock: Exo 27:19 - -- Tabernacle, with respect to this court; for surely the utensils prescribed in the former chapter, were to be of gold. The Septuagint do not mention ...
Tabernacle, with respect to this court; for surely the utensils prescribed in the former chapter, were to be of gold. The Septuagint do not mention the tabernacle. (Calmet)

Haydock: Exo 27:20 - -- Pestle. That it may be as free from dregs as possible; quasi luxurians defluxerit. (Columella xii. 20.) The Hebrew and Septuagint are silent abou...
Pestle. That it may be as free from dregs as possible; quasi luxurians defluxerit. (Columella xii. 20.) The Hebrew and Septuagint are silent about the pestle. The olives must, however, be a little bruised, before they will yield their oil. (Haydock) ---
Always: four of the seven lamps were extinguished every morning. ( Josephus ([Antiquities?] iii. 9); 1 Kings iii. 3.) Hecateus (ap. Eusebuis, præp. ix. 4) assures us, that a light was kept always burning in the tabernacle. The temple of Hercules, at the Straits, its priests and ceremonies, bore some resemblance with the tabernacle and usages prescribed by Moses. It was probably erected by the Phenicians. (Calmet) ---
"The wood seemed to be incorruptible. Women and swine are kept at a distance. White linen covers the priests at the altar; that which adorns their head is most beautiful, and brought from Pelusium. Et Pelusiaco præfulget stamine vertex. They offer incense in long ungirded robes, but the vestment in which they sacrifice, is distinguished with a Latus clavus, or with broad studs of purple, (like the Roman senators.) They go barefoot, their heads shaved, and they observe continence, castumque cubile. They keep a perpetual fire burning on the altars. But no images or statues of the gods have filled the place with majesty and sacred fear." Sed nulla effigies, simulacraque nota Deorum,
Majestate locum & sacro implevere timore. Sil. Italic. iii.

Haydock: Exo 27:21 - -- Aaron. Here God declares that the sons of Aaron are chosen by him to perform this office. They were not anointed priests till chap. xxix. (Haydock...
Aaron. Here God declares that the sons of Aaron are chosen by him to perform this office. They were not anointed priests till chap. xxix. (Haydock) ---
Light. Thus God admonishes us to let our good works always shine before men. (Ven. Bede, Taber. iii. 1.)
Gill: Exo 27:9 - -- And thou shall make the court of the tabernacle: for the south side southward,.... This was a large court yard to the house of God, or tabernacle, whi...
And thou shall make the court of the tabernacle: for the south side southward,.... This was a large court yard to the house of God, or tabernacle, which stood in it at the upper end of it; it was enclosed, but open to the air; and in it, between the entrance into it and the holy place, stood the altar of burnt offering before described, and on one side of that the laver for the priests to wash in; into this the people of Israel were admitted, and where they brought their sacrifices and worshipped: it was typical of the visible church of God on earth, which, though an enclosure, and is separated from the world, yet consists of professors, good and bad, of real saints and hypocrites; as into this court Israelites of every character, sex, and state entered. In David's time it was divided into various courts, and what answered to it when the temple was built were the several apartments called the courts of the priests, where they sacrificed, and the court of Israel, where the men Israelites worshipped, and the court of the women, where they were by themselves; and in later times there was another court separate from these, called the court of the Gentiles, into which they might enter; and the description of this court begins with that side of it which lay full south: there shall be
hangings for the court of fine twined linen of one hundred cubits long for one side; for the south side; and these hangings, with the rest all around, made the court, and were the walls of it; and from hence we learn, that it was one hundred cubits or fifty yards long, according to the common computation of a cubit; though it was three hundred inches more, this cubit being three inches more than is commonly supposed. These hangings, vails, or curtains, for so in the versions they are differently called, were the enclosure of the court; they were made of fine linen, six times twisted, but not of various colours, and curiously wrought with cunning work, as the curtains of the tabernacle were; and according to the signification of the word, they were wrought full of holes, like eyelet holes, or in the manner of network; so that though they kept persons from entering in, they might be seen through, and through them might be seen what was doing in the court: and all this may signify that the visible church of God on earth is separated from the world, and should consist of men called out of it, and of such who are clothed with that fine linen, clean and white, the righteousness of the saints, and which is the righteousness of Christ, and who have both inward and outward holiness; and though none but those who are admitted members of it may partake of its ordinances, yet others may be spectators of what is done in it.

Gill: Exo 27:10 - -- And the twenty pillars thereof and their twenty sockets shall be of brass,.... On these pillars the hangings, rails, or curtains were set, and they w...
And the twenty pillars thereof and their twenty sockets shall be of brass,.... On these pillars the hangings, rails, or curtains were set, and they were for one side, the south side, in number twenty; and so must stand five cubits, or two yards and a half or more, distant from each other, since the length of the hangings were one hundred cubits: these, according to Philo the Jew h, were made of cedar, but if of wood, most probably of "shittim wood", as they are by most thought to be; though one would think, according to the plain and express words of the text, they as well as their sockets were of brass: and Josephus i expressly says they were of brass, and which seems fittest for the purpose: now though the church of God itself is a pillar, and so is every true member of it, 1Ti 3:15 yet ministers of the Gospel may be more especially designed, Pro 9:1 who are the principal support of the churches of God, and of the interest of religion; and are set for the defence of the Gospel, and are steadfast in the ministration of it:
the hooks of the pillars and their fillets shall be of silver; the hooks on the pillars might be somewhat like our tenter hooks, and so Jarchi describes them, as having one end crooked upwards, and the other end fixed in the pillar; and as for the fillets, he says, they were silver threads round about the pillars; but whether they were upon the face or of them all, or on the top, or in the middle of them, he confesses his ignorance; only this he knew, that the word has the signification of girding or binding; and these fillets might not only be for ornament, but for the binding of the hangings to the pillars: and so Ben Gersom says, that they were silver threads, with which the curtains were bound to the pillars, that the wind might not separate them from them; and both the silver hooks and fillets may signify the word and ordinances as administered by the preachers of the Gospel, in which there is an union, conjunction, and communion between them and the churches.

Gill: Exo 27:11 - -- And likewise for the north side in length there shall be hangings of one hundred cubits long,.... The north and south sides of this court being equal,...
And likewise for the north side in length there shall be hangings of one hundred cubits long,.... The north and south sides of this court being equal, the same length of hangings were for the one as the other:
and his twenty pillars, and their twenty sockets of brass; there went on this side the same number of pillars and sockets, and of the same metal:
the hooks of the pillars and their fillets of silver; just as they were on the south side.

Gill: Exo 27:12 - -- And for the breadth of the court, on the west side,.... On the west end, the upper end of the court, near to which reached the holy of holies:
shal...
And for the breadth of the court, on the west side,.... On the west end, the upper end of the court, near to which reached the holy of holies:
shall be hangings of fifty cubits: or twenty five yards and more, so that the court was but half as broad as it was long:
their pillars ten, and their sockets ten; which was a number proportionate to the hangings, and stood at an equal distance from each other, as the pillars for the sides, at five cubits, or two yards and a half, as commonly computed.

Gill: Exo 27:13 - -- And the breadth of the court on the east side eastward,.... Which was the entrance into it:
shall be fifty cubits; the east end and west end were o...
And the breadth of the court on the east side eastward,.... Which was the entrance into it:
shall be fifty cubits; the east end and west end were of the same measure.

Gill: Exo 27:14 - -- The hangings of one side of the gate,.... Or entrance into the court:
shall be fifteen cubits; or seven yards and a half:
their pillars three, a...
The hangings of one side of the gate,.... Or entrance into the court:
shall be fifteen cubits; or seven yards and a half:
their pillars three, and their sockets three; and so stood at the same distance from one another as the rest of the pillars did, the distance of five cubits.

Gill: Exo 27:15 - -- And on the other side shall be hangings fifteen cubits,.... On the other side of the gate, or entrance into the court, on the northeast side, as the ...
And on the other side shall be hangings fifteen cubits,.... On the other side of the gate, or entrance into the court, on the northeast side, as the other may be supposed to be the southeast side, there was the same length of hangings:
their pillars three, and their sockets three; the same as on the other side of the gate.

Gill: Exo 27:16 - -- And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits,.... Which, with the fifteen on each side, make the fifty cubits, the breadth of th...
And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits,.... Which, with the fifteen on each side, make the fifty cubits, the breadth of the court eastward, Exo 27:13, this hanging was better than the rest, much finer and richer:
for it was of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, wrought with needle work: and was of the same as the hangings for the door of the holy place, Exo 26:36 this was a figure of Christ, and of the graces of the Spirit in him, and of his bloodshed, sufferings, and death; who is the door into the church, and to the ordinances of it, and leads on to the holy place, and even to the holy of holies, see Joh 10:9.
their pillars shall be four, and their sockets four: so that the pillars of this court at both sides and each end were sixty, twenty on each side, south and north, and ten at each end, west and east.

Gill: Exo 27:17 - -- All the pillars round about the court shall be filleted with silver,.... This is observed, because only mention is made before of the pillars that wer...
All the pillars round about the court shall be filleted with silver,.... This is observed, because only mention is made before of the pillars that were on the south and north sides of the court, as filleted with silver; but inasmuch as those at both ends, east and west, were to be so likewise, this is added:
their hooks shall be of silver, and their sockets of brass; no notice having been taken of the hooks to the pillars at both ends, though they were as necessary there as elsewhere, and must be supposed, and though the sockets are mentioned, yet not their metal, and therefore are in general included here.

Gill: Exo 27:18 - -- The length of the court shall be one hundred cubits,.... And as may be concluded from the length of the hangings on each side:
and the breadth fift...
The length of the court shall be one hundred cubits,.... And as may be concluded from the length of the hangings on each side:
and the breadth fifty everywhere; at both ends, and was the breadth of the hangings there, and which all around made the court:
and the height five cubits; or two yards and a half, and somewhat more; it was but half the height of the tabernacle, and hence that might be seen above it every way; so that, according to Bishop Cumberland, it contained one rood, twenty one perches, and twenty seven square feet, and was half an Egyptian aroura, which is the square of one hundred Jewish or Egyptian cubits: "of fine twined linen"; of which the hangings were made, and here called the court, as they properly were, for they made it:
and their sockets of brass; the bases on which all the pillars stood, upon which the hangings of fine twined linen were, were of brass; which seems to be repeated, that the foundation of this court might be observed to be different from that of the tabernacle; the foundation of that, or the sockets, into which the boards of it were put, being of silver.

Gill: Exo 27:19 - -- All the vessels of the tabernacle in all the service thereof,.... Which either refers to the vessels belonging to the altar of burnt offering, and so ...
All the vessels of the tabernacle in all the service thereof,.... Which either refers to the vessels belonging to the altar of burnt offering, and so is a repetition of what is said, Exo 27:3 or rather to instruments that were used at the setting up and taking down of the tabernacle; such as hammers and the like, to drive the staves into the rings, and knock out the pillars from their sockets, &c., as Jarchi and Ben Gersom observe; for otherwise the vessels used in the sanctuary were of gold or silver, or covered therewith, and not of brass, as these are afterwards said to be:
and all the pins thereof; what these were is not easy to say; for there was nothing made of brass in the holy or most holy place, but the taches or clasps, with which the curtains of goats' hair were coupled together, and the sockets on which the five pillars were set at the entrance of the door of the tabernacle, Exo 26:11 and it is possible that those pillars might be fastened in their sockets with brass pins; for the clasps or taches can hardly be called pins:
and all the pins of the court shall be of brass; these were brass pins, or stakes fastened in the ground all round the court, to which cords were tied, and these fastened to the hangings; whereby they were kept tight and close, that the wind could not move them to and fro, as Jarchi and Ben Melech observe, and so Josephus k; see Isa 33:20.

Gill: Exo 27:20 - -- And thou shall command the children of Israel,.... Here begins a new section of the law; an account being given of the tabernacle, and its parts, and ...
And thou shall command the children of Israel,.... Here begins a new section of the law; an account being given of the tabernacle, and its parts, and the furniture thereof, next the several parts of service done in it are observed; and the account begins with that of the candlestick in the holy place, in order to which Moses is directed to command the people of Israel, whose business it was to provide for it:
that they bring thee pure oil olive beaten for the light; for the light of the candlestick, to light up the several lamps in the several branches of it; and the oil to be brought and used there was not any sort of oil, as what is got out of fishes, as train oil, or out of nuts, as oil of almonds, but what comes from the olive tree; and this must be pure and free from lees and dregs, and must be beaten with a pestle in a mortar, and not ground in a mill, that so it might be quite clear; for being bruised and beaten, only the pulp or flesh of the olive was broken, but being ground in a mill, the stones were broken and ground, and so the oil not so pure.Jarchi and Ben Melech, from their Rabbins, observe, that after the first drop was pressed out, they put them into mills and grind them; but then, though the oil was fit for offerings, it was not fit for the light of the candlestick. Ben Gersom says, they put the olives bruised into a basket, and the oil dropped from them without pressing at all; and this was the choicest and most excellent for the light. The quantity to be brought is not fixed; but the measure fixed by the wise men of Israel, as Jarchi says, was half a log, that is, for every lamp; and this was the measure for the longest nights, the nights of the month Tebet, and so the same for all other nights:
to cause the lamp to burn always night and day, continually, as it was proper it should, that the house of God might not be at any time in darkness; as it would otherwise be, since there were no windows in it; and his servants minister in it in the dark, even in the daytime, at the altar of incense, and at the shewbread table, which is not reasonable to suppose; and though there are some passages of Scripture which seem to intimate as though the lamps only burnt till the morning, and then went out, and were lighted every evening; this difficulty may be solved, and the matter reconciled by what Josephus l relates, who must be an eyewitness of it, that three of the lamps burned before the Lord in the daytime, and the rest were lighted at the evening; and Hecataeus m, an Heathen writer, speaking of the golden candlestick, says, its light was unextinguished day and night, particularly the lamp which was in the middle; also the candlestick is by the ancient Jews, and by Nachmanides, said to have been never extinct.

Gill: Exo 27:21 - -- In the tabernacle of the congregation,.... The reasons usually given for this name of the tabernacle are, either because the children of Israel gather...
In the tabernacle of the congregation,.... The reasons usually given for this name of the tabernacle are, either because the children of Israel gathered and met together here at certain times, or because here the Lord met with Moses, and his successors, as he had promised, Exo 25:22, but neither of them will hold good; not the first, because the place where the candlestick was, and which Aaron and his sons are here said to order, was in the holy place, into which only the priests entered, and therefore could not be called the tabernacle of the congregation, from the people of Israel being gathered and assembling there; not the latter, because it was in the most holy place, where the Lord promised to meet with Moses, and commune with him, even from between the cherubim over the mercy seat there: indeed, at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation the children of Israel assembled, and there the Lord met them, and so the whole might be called from thence, and there seems to be no other reason for it, Exo 29:42 and this place was
without the vail, which is before the testimony; that is, without the vail which divided between the holy and the most holy place, and which vail was before the ark, where the law or the testimony was put; for the candlestick was in that part of the tabernacle which was without the vail, or in the holy place: and here
Aaron and his sons shall order it from evening to morning before the Lord; that is, they were to take care that the lamps which went out might be lighted; and that they be kept clear and burning, they were to trim and snuff them, for which they had proper instruments provided for them, Exo 25:37. This points at the word of God, which shines as a light in a dark place, and is a lamp to the feet, and a light to the path, and to the constant application of Gospel ministers in preaching it, in order to enlighten men in all ages unto the end of the world:
it shall be a statute for ever unto their generations, on the behalf of the children of Israel; on whom it was incumbent to provide oil for the lamps, as long as the tabernacle and temple service lasted; and figured out either the maintenance of Gospel ministers by the churches, or the grace and gifts of the Spirit, with which they are furnished by the head of the church, often signified by oil in Scripture.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Exo 27:9; Exo 27:9; Exo 27:9; Exo 27:9; Exo 27:10; Exo 27:11; Exo 27:11; Exo 27:11; Exo 27:14; Exo 27:14; Exo 27:15; Exo 27:15; Exo 27:17; Exo 27:17; Exo 27:18; Exo 27:18; Exo 27:18; Exo 27:18; Exo 27:19; Exo 27:19; Exo 27:19; Exo 27:20; Exo 27:20; Exo 27:20; Exo 27:20; Exo 27:21; Exo 27:21; Exo 27:21
NET Notes: Exo 27:9 The entire courtyard of 150 feet by 75 feet was to be enclosed by a curtain wall held up with posts in bases. All these hangings were kept in place by...


NET Notes: Exo 27:11 These bands have been thought by some to refer to connecting rods joining the tops of the posts. But it is more likely that they are bands or bind rin...





NET Notes: Exo 27:19 The tabernacle is an important aspect of OT theology. The writer’s pattern so far has been: ark, table, lamp, and then their container (the tabe...

NET Notes: Exo 27:20 The word can mean “continually,” but in this context, as well as in the passages on the sacrifices, “regularly” is better, sin...

NET Notes: Exo 27:21 This is the first of several sections of priestly duties. The point is a simple one here: those who lead the worship use the offerings of the people t...
Geneva Bible: Exo 27:9 And thou shalt make the ( c ) court of the tabernacle: for the south side southward [there shall be] hangings for the court [of] fine twined linen of ...

Geneva Bible: Exo 27:10 And the twenty pillars thereof and their twenty sockets [shall be of] brass; the hooks of the pillars and their ( d ) fillets [shall be of] silver.
(...

Geneva Bible: Exo 27:13 And the breadth of the court on the east side eastward [shall be] ( e ) fifty cubits.
( e ) Meaning curtains of fifty cubits.

Geneva Bible: Exo 27:14 The hangings of one ( f ) side [of the gate shall be] fifteen cubits: their pillars three, and their sockets three.
( f ) Of the door of the court.

Geneva Bible: Exo 27:19 All the vessels of the tabernacle in all the service thereof, and all the ( g ) pins thereof, and all the pins of the court, [shall be of] brass.
( g...

Geneva Bible: Exo 27:20 And thou shalt command the children of Israel, that they bring thee pure oil olive ( h ) beaten for the light, to cause the lamp to burn always.
( h ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Exo 27:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Exo 27:1-21 - --1 The altar of burnt offering, with the vessels thereof.9 The court of the tabernacle inclosed with hangings and pillars.18 The measure of the court, ...
MHCC -> Exo 27:9-19; Exo 27:20-21
MHCC: Exo 27:9-19 - --The tabernacle was enclosed in a court, about sixty yards long and thirty broad, formed by curtains hung upon brazen pillars, fixed in brazen sockets....

MHCC: Exo 27:20-21 - --The pure oil signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit, which all believers receive from Christ, the good Olive, and without which our light cannot...
Matthew Henry -> Exo 27:9-19; Exo 27:20-21
Matthew Henry: Exo 27:9-19 - -- Before the tabernacle there was to be a court or yard, enclosed with hangings of the finest linen that was used for tents. This court, according to ...

Matthew Henry: Exo 27:20-21 - -- We read of the candlestick in the twenty-fifth chapter; here is an order given for the keeping of the lamps constantly burning in it, else it was us...
Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 27:9-11 - --
(cf. Exo 38:9-20). The Court of the dwelling was to consist of ×§×œ×¢×™× "hangings"of spun byssus, and pillars with brass (copper) sockets, and ho...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 27:12-16 - --
" As for the breadth of the court on the west side, (there shall be) curtains fifty cubits; their pillars twenty; and the breadth of the court towa...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 27:17-18 - --
" All the pillars of the court round about (shall be) bound with connecting rods of silver ."As the rods connecting the pillars of the court were o...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 27:19 - --
" All the vessels of the dwelling in all the work thereof (i.e., all the tools needed for the tabernacle), and all its pegs, and all the pegs of th...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 27:20-21 - --
The instructions concerning the Oil For the Candlestick, and the daily trimming of the lamps by the priests, form a transition from the fitting up o...
Constable -> Exo 15:22--Lev 1:1; Exo 24:12--32:1; Exo 27:1-19; Exo 27:9-19; Exo 27:20--29:1; Exo 27:20-21
Constable: Exo 15:22--Lev 1:1 - --II. THE ADOPTION OF ISRAEL 15:22--40:38
The second major section of Exodus records the events associated with Go...

Constable: Exo 24:12--32:1 - --C. Directions regarding God's dwelling among His people 24:12-31:18
Having given directions clarifying I...

Constable: Exo 27:1-19 - --5. The tabernacle courtyard ch. 27:1-19
In this section Moses described the altar of burnt offer...

Constable: Exo 27:9-19 - --The courtyard 27:9-19
The courtyard was 50 cubits wide by 100 cubits long (75 feet by 15...

Constable: Exo 27:20--29:1 - --6. The investiture of the priests 27:20-28:43
Here begins the revelation of those things that re...
