Exodus 25:37
Context25:37 “You are to make its seven lamps, 1 and then set 2 its lamps up on it, so that it will give light 3 to the area in front of it.
Exodus 29:14
Context29:14 But the meat of the bull, its skin, and its dung you are to burn up 4 outside the camp. 5 It is the purification offering. 6
Exodus 37:6
Context37:6 He made 7 an atonement lid of pure gold; its length was three feet nine inches, and its width was two feet three inches.
Exodus 37:27
Context37:27 He also made 8 two gold rings for it under its border, on its two sides, on opposite sides, 9 as places 10 for poles to carry it with.
1 tn The word for “lamps” is from the same root as the lampstand, of course. The word is נֵרוֹת (nerot). This probably refers to the small saucer-like pottery lamps that are made very simply with the rim pinched over to form a place to lay the wick. The bowl is then filled with olive oil as fuel.
2 tn The translation “set up on” is from the Hebrew verb “bring up.” The construction is impersonal, “and he will bring up,” meaning “one will bring up.” It may mean that people were to fix the lamps on to the shaft and the branches, rather than cause the light to go up (see S. R. Driver, Exodus, 277).
3 tn This is a Hiphil perfect with vav consecutive, from אוֹר (’or, “light”), and in the causative, “to light, give light.”
4 tn Heb “burn with fire.”
5 sn This is to be done because there is no priesthood yet. Once they are installed, then the sin/purification offering is to be eaten by the officiating priests as a sign that the offering was received. But priests could not consume their own sin offering.
6 sn There were two kinds of “purification offering,” those made with confession for sin and those made without. The title needs to cover both of them, and if it is called in the traditional way “the sin offering,” that will convey that when people offered it for skin diseases, menstruation, or having babies, they had sinned. That was not the case. Moreover, it is usual to translate the names of the sacrifices by what they do more than what they cover – so peace offering, reparation offering, and purification offering.
7 tn Heb “and he made.”
8 tn Heb “and he made.”
9 sn Since it was a small altar, it needed only two rings, one on either side, in order to be carried. The second mention of their location clarifies that they should be on the sides, the right and the left, as one approached the altar.
10 tn Heb “for houses.”