Exodus 3:5
Context3:5 God 1 said, “Do not approach any closer! 2 Take your sandals off your feet, for the place where you are standing is holy 3 ground.” 4
Exodus 4:25
Context4:25 But Zipporah took a flint knife, cut off the foreskin of her son and touched it to Moses’ feet, 5 and said, “Surely you are a bridegroom of blood 6 to me.”
Exodus 12:11
Context12:11 This is how you are to eat it – dressed to travel, 7 your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand. You are to eat it in haste. It is the Lord’s Passover. 8
Exodus 25:26
Context25:26 You are to make four rings of gold for it and attach 9 the rings at the four corners where its four legs are. 10
Exodus 37:13
Context37:13 He cast four gold rings for it and attached the rings at the four corners where its four legs were.


[3:5] 1 tn Heb “And he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[3:5] 2 sn Even though the
[3:5] 3 sn The word קֹדֶשׁ (qodesh, “holy”) indicates “set apart, distinct, unique.” What made a mountain or other place holy was the fact that God chose that place to reveal himself or to reside among his people. Because God was in this place, the ground was different – it was holy.
[3:5] 4 tn The causal clause includes within it a typical relative clause, which is made up of the relative pronoun, then the independent personal pronoun with the participle, and then the preposition with the resumptive pronoun. It would literally be “which you are standing on it,” but the relative pronoun and the resumptive pronoun are combined and rendered, “on which you are standing.”
[4:25] 5 tn Heb “to his feet.” The referent (Moses) has been specified in the translation for clarity. The LXX has “and she fell at his feet” and then “the blood of the circumcision of my son stood.” But it is clear that she caused the foreskin to touch Moses’ feet, as if the one were a substitution for the other, taking the place of the other (see U. Cassuto, Exodus, 60).
[4:25] 6 sn U. Cassuto explains that she was saying, “I have delivered you from death, and your return to life makes you my bridegroom a second time, this time my blood bridegroom, a bridegroom acquired through blood” (Exodus, 60-61).
[12:11] 9 tn Heb “your loins girded.”
[12:11] 10 tn The meaning of פֶּסַח (pesakh) is debated. (1) Some have tried to connect it to the Hebrew verb with the same radicals that means “to halt, leap, limp, stumble.” See 1 Kgs 18:26 where the word describes the priests of Baal hopping around the altar; also the crippled child in 2 Sam 4:4. (2) Others connect it to the Akkadian passahu, which means “to appease, make soft, placate”; or (3) an Egyptian word to commemorate the harvest (see J. B. Segal, The Hebrew Passover, 95-100). The verb occurs in Isa 31:5 with the connotation of “to protect”; B. S. Childs suggests that this was already influenced by the exodus tradition (Exodus [OTL], 183, n. 11). Whatever links there may or may not have been that show an etymology, in Exod 12 it is describing Yahweh’s passing over or through.