Exodus 35:2
Context35:2 In six days 1 work may be done, but on the seventh day there must be a holy day 2 for you, a Sabbath of complete rest to the Lord. 3 Anyone who does work on it will be put to death.
Exodus 35:21
Context35:21 Everyone 4 whose heart stirred him to action 5 and everyone whose spirit was willing 6 came and brought the offering for the Lord for the work of the tent of meeting, for all its service, and for the holy garments. 7
Exodus 35:25-26
Context35:25 Every woman who was skilled 8 spun with her hands and brought what she had spun, blue, purple, or scarlet yarn, or fine linen, 35:26 and all the women whose heart stirred them to action and who were skilled 9 spun goats’ hair.
1 tn This is an adverbial accusative of time.
2 tn The word is קֹדֶשׁ (qodesh, “holiness”). S. R. Driver suggests that the word was transposed, and the line should read: “a sabbath of entire rest, holy to Jehovah” (Exodus, 379). But the word may simply be taken as a substitution for “holy day.”
3 sn See on this H. Routtenberg, “The Laws of the Sabbath: Biblical Sources,” Dor le Dor 6 (1977): 41-43, 99-101, 153-55, 204-6; G. Robinson, “The Idea of Rest in the Old Testament and the Search for the Basic Character of Sabbath,” ZAW 92 (1980): 32-43.
4 tn Heb “man.”
5 tn The verb means “lift up, bear, carry.” Here the subject is “heart” or will, and so the expression describes one moved within to act.
6 tn Heb “his spirit made him willing.” The verb is used in Scripture for the freewill offering that people brought (Lev 7).
7 tn Literally “the garments of holiness,” the genitive is the attributive genitive, marking out what type of garments these were.
8 tn Heb “wisdom of heart,” which means that they were skilled and could make all the right choices about the work.
9 tn The text simply uses a prepositional phrase, “with/in wisdom.” It seems to be qualifying “the women” as the relative clause is.