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 5:5
Context5:5 Pharaoh was thinking, 5 “The people of the land are now many, and you are giving them rest from their labor.”
Exodus 25:40
Context25:40 Now be sure to make 6 them according to the pattern you were shown 7 on the mountain. 8


[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.”
[5:5] 5 tn Heb “And Pharaoh said.” This is not the kind of thing that Pharaoh is likely to have said to Moses, and so it probably is what he thought or reasoned within himself. Other passages (like Exod 2:14; 3:3) show that the verb “said” can do this. (See U. Cassuto, Exodus, 67.)
[25:40] 9 tn The text uses two imperatives: “see and make.” This can be interpreted as a verbal hendiadys, calling for Moses and Israel to see to it that they make these things correctly.
[25:40] 10 tn The participle is passive, “caused to see,” or, “shown.”
[25:40] 11 sn The message of this section surely concerns access to God. To expound this correctly, though, since it is an instruction section for building the lampstand, the message would be: God requires that his people ensure that light will guide the way of access to God. The breakdown for exposition could be the instructions for preparation for light (one lamp, several branches), then instructions for the purpose and maintenance of the lamps, and then the last verse telling the divine source for the instructions. Naturally, the metaphorical value of light will come up in the study, especially from the NT. So in the NT there is the warning that if churches are unfaithful God will remove their lampstand, their ministry (Rev 2-3).