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Exodus 12:5

Context
12:5 Your lamb must be 1  perfect, 2  a male, one year old; 3  you may take 4  it from the sheep or from the goats.

Exodus 35:23

Context

35:23 Everyone who had 5  blue, purple, or 6  scarlet yarn, fine linen, goats’ hair, ram skins dyed red, or fine leather 7  brought them. 8 

1 tn The construction has: “[The] lamb…will be to you.” This may be interpreted as a possessive use of the lamed, meaning, “[the] lamb…you have” (your lamb) for the Passover. In the context instructing the people to take an animal for this festival, the idea is that the one they select, their animal, must meet these qualifications.

2 tn The Hebrew word תָּמִים (tamim) means “perfect” or “whole” or “complete” in the sense of not having blemishes and diseases – no physical defects. The rules for sacrificial animals applied here (see Lev 22:19-21; Deut 17:1).

3 tn The idiom says “a son of a year” (בֶּן־שָׁנָה, ben shanah), meaning a “yearling” or “one year old” (see GKC 418 §128.v).

4 tn Because a choice is being given in this last clause, the imperfect tense nuance of permission should be used. They must have a perfect animal, but it may be a sheep or a goat. The verb’s object “it” is supplied from the context.

5 tn The text uses a relative clause with a resumptive pronoun for this: “who was found with him,” meaning “with whom was found.”

6 tn The conjunction in this verse is translated “or” because the sentence does not intend to say that each person had all these things. They brought what they had.

7 tn See the note on this phrase in Exod 25:5.

8 tn Here “them” has been supplied.



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