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Exodus 20:24

Context

20:24 ‘You must make for me an altar made of earth, 1  and you will sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your peace offerings, 2  your sheep and your cattle. In every place 3  where I cause my name to be honored 4  I will come to you and I will bless you.

Deuteronomy 12:5

Context
12:5 But you must seek only the place he 5  chooses from all your tribes to establish his name as his place of residence, 6  and you must go there.

Deuteronomy 12:11

Context
12:11 Then you must come to the place the Lord your God chooses for his name to reside, bringing 7  everything I am commanding you – your burnt offerings, sacrifices, tithes, the personal offerings you have prepared, 8  and all your choice votive offerings which you devote to him. 9 

Ezekiel 48:35

Context
48:35 The circumference of the city will be six miles. 10  The name of the city from that day forward will be: ‘The Lord Is There.’” 11 

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[20:24]  1 sn The instructions here call for the altar to be made of natural things, not things manufactured or shaped by man. The altar was either to be made of clumps of earth or natural, unhewn rocks.

[20:24]  2 sn The “burnt offering” is the offering prescribed in Lev 1. Everything of this animal went up in smoke as a sweet aroma to God. It signified complete surrender by the worshiper who brought the animal, and complete acceptance by God, thereby making atonement. The “peace offering” is legislated in Lev 3 and 7. This was a communal meal offering to celebrate being at peace with God. It was made usually for thanksgiving, for payment of vows, or as a freewill offering.

[20:24]  3 tn Gesenius lists this as one of the few places where the noun in construct seems to be indefinite in spite of the fact that the genitive has the article. He says בְּכָל־הַמָּקוֹם (bÿkhol-hammaqom) means “in all the place, sc. of the sanctuary, and is a dogmatic correction of “in every place” (כָּל־מָקוֹם, kol-maqom). See GKC 412 §127.e.

[20:24]  4 tn The verb is זָכַר (zakhar, “to remember”), but in the Hiphil especially it can mean more than remember or cause to remember (remind) – it has the sense of praise or honor. B. S. Childs says it has a denominative meaning, “to proclaim” (Exodus [OTL], 447). The point of the verse is that God will give Israel reason for praising and honoring him, and in every place that occurs he will make his presence known by blessing them.

[12:5]  5 tn Heb “the Lord your God.” The pronoun has been used in the translation for stylistic reasons to avoid redundancy.

[12:5]  6 tc Some scholars, on the basis of v. 11, emend the MT reading שִׁכְנוֹ (shikhno, “his residence”) to the infinitive construct לְשָׁכֵן (lÿshakhen, “to make [his name] to dwell”), perhaps with the 3rd person masculine singular sf לְשַׁכְּנוֹ (lÿshakÿno, “to cause it to dwell”). Though the presupposed nounשֵׁכֶן (shekhen) is nowhere else attested, the parallel here with שַׁמָּה (shammah, “there”) favors retaining the MT as it stands.

[12:11]  7 tn Heb “and it will be (to) the place where the Lord your God chooses to cause his name to dwell you will bring.”

[12:11]  8 tn Heb “heave offerings of your hand.”

[12:11]  9 tn Heb “the Lord.” See note on “he” in 12:5.

[48:35]  10 tn Heb “eighteen thousand cubits” (i.e., 9.45 kilometers).

[48:35]  11 sn See Rev 21:12-21.



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