2 Chronicles 4:11
Context4:11 Huram Abi 1 made the pots, shovels, and bowls. He finished all the work on God’s temple he had been assigned by King Solomon. 2
Exodus 27:3
Context27:3 You are to make its pots for the ashes, 3 its shovels, its tossing bowls, 4 its meat hooks, and its fire pans – you are to make all 5 its utensils of bronze.
Exodus 38:3
Context38:3 He made all the utensils of the altar – the pots, the shovels, the tossing bowls, the meat hooks, and the fire pans – he made all its utensils of bronze.
Zechariah 14:20-21
Context14:20 On that day the bells of the horses will bear the inscription “Holy to the Lord.” The cooking pots in the Lord’s temple 6 will be as holy as the bowls in front of the altar. 7 14:21 Every cooking pot in Jerusalem and Judah will become holy in the sight of the Lord who rules over all, so that all who offer sacrifices may come and use some of them to boil their sacrifices in them. On that day there will no longer be a Canaanite 8 in the house of the Lord who rules over all.
[4:11] 1 tn Heb “Huram,” but here this refers to Huram Abi (2 Chr 2:13). The complete name has been used in the translation to avoid possible confusion with King Huram of Tyre.
[4:11] 2 tn Heb “Huram finished doing all the work which he did for King Solomon [on] the house of God.”
[27:3] 3 sn The word is literally “its fat,” but sometimes it describes “fatty ashes” (TEV “the greasy ashes”). The fat would run down and mix with the ashes, and this had to be collected and removed.
[27:3] 4 sn This was the larger bowl used in tossing the blood at the side of the altar.
[27:3] 5 tn The text has “to all its vessels.” This is the lamed (ל) of inclusion according to Gesenius, meaning “all its utensils” (GKC 458 §143.e).
[14:20] 6 tn Heb “house” (also in the following verse).
[14:20] 7 sn In the glory of the messianic age there will be no differences between the sacred (the bowls before the altar) and the profane (the cooking pots in the
[14:21] 8 tn Or “merchant”; “trader” (because Canaanites, especially Phoenicians, were merchants and traders; cf. BDB 489 s.v. I and II כְּנַעֲנִי). English versions have rendered the term as “Canaanite” (KJV, NKJV, NASB, NIV), “trader” (RSV, NEB), “traders” (NRSV, NLT), or “merchant” (NAB), although frequently a note is given explaining the other option. Cf. also John 2:16.