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Exodus 4:12

Context
4:12 So now go, and I will be with your mouth 1  and will teach you 2  what you must say.” 3 

Exodus 5:17

Context

5:17 But Pharaoh replied, 4  “You are slackers! Slackers! 5  That is why you are saying, ‘Let us go sacrifice to the Lord.’

Exodus 9:30

Context
9:30 But as for you 6  and your servants, I know that you do not yet fear 7  the Lord God.”

Exodus 12:10

Context
12:10 You must leave nothing until morning, but you must burn with fire whatever remains of it until morning.

Exodus 22:21

Context

22:21 “You must not wrong 8  a foreigner 9  nor oppress him, for you were foreigners in the land of Egypt.

Exodus 23:28

Context
23:28 I will send 10  hornets before you that will drive out the Hivite, the Canaanite, and the Hittite before you.

Exodus 23:30

Context
23:30 Little by little 11  I will drive them out before you, until you become fruitful and inherit the land.

Exodus 25:24

Context
25:24 You are to overlay it with 12  pure gold, and you are to make a surrounding border of gold for it.

Exodus 26:7

Context

26:7 “You are to make curtains of goats’ hair 13  for a tent over the tabernacle; 14  you are to make 15  eleven curtains.

Exodus 26:30

Context
26:30 You are to set up the tabernacle according to the plan 16  that you were shown on the mountain.

Exodus 27:6

Context
27:6 You are to make poles for the altar, poles of acacia wood, and you are to overlay them with bronze.

Exodus 29:39

Context
29:39 The first lamb you are to prepare in the morning, and the second lamb you are to prepare around sundown. 17 

Exodus 30:1

Context
The Altar of Incense

30:1 18 “You are to make an altar for burning incense; 19  you are to make it of 20  acacia wood. 21 

1 sn The promise of divine presence always indicates intervention (for blessing or cursing). Here it means that God would be working through the organs of speech to help Moses speak. See Deut 18:18; Jer 1:9.

2 sn The verb is וְהוֹרֵיתִיךָ (vÿhoretikha), the Hiphil perfect with a vav (ו) consecutive. The form carries the instructional meaning because it follows the imperative “go.” In fact, there is a sequence at work here: “go…and/that I may teach you.” It is from יָרָה (yara), the same root behind תּוֹרָה (torah, “law”). This always referred to teaching either wisdom or revelation. Here Yahweh promises to teach Moses what to say.

3 tn The form is the imperfect tense. While it could be taken as a future (“what you will say”), an obligatory imperfect captures the significance better (“what you must say” or “what you are to say”). Not even the content of the message will be left up to Moses.

4 tn Heb “And he said.”

5 tn Or “loafers.” The form נִרְפִּים (nirpim) is derived from the verb רָפָה (rafah), meaning “to be weak, to let oneself go.”

6 tn The verse begins with the disjunctive vav to mark a strong contrastive clause to what was said before this.

7 tn The adverb טֶרֶם (terem, “before, not yet”) occurs with the imperfect tense to give the sense of the English present tense to the verb negated by it (GKC 314-15 §107.c). Moses is saying that he knew that Pharaoh did not really stand in awe of God, so as to grant Israel’s release, i.e., fear not in the religious sense but “be afraid of” God – fear “before” him (S. R. Driver, Exodus, 76).

8 tn Or “oppress.”

9 tn Or “alien,” both here and in 23:9. This individual is a resident foreigner; he lives in the land but, aside from provisions such as this, might easily be without legal rights.

10 tn Heb “and I will send.”

11 tn The repetition expresses an exceptional or super-fine quality (see GKC 396 §123.e).

12 tn “Gold” is an adverbial accusative of material.

13 sn This chapter will show that there were two sets of curtains and two sets of coverings that went over the wood building to make the tabernacle or dwelling place. The curtains of fine linen described above could be seen only by the priests from inside. Above that was the curtain of goats’ hair. Then over that were the coverings, an inner covering of rams’ skins dyed red and an outer covering of hides of fine leather. The movement is from the inside to the outside because it is God’s dwelling place; the approach of the worshiper would be the opposite. The pure linen represented the righteousness of God, guarded by the embroidered cherubim; the curtain of goats’ hair was a reminder of sin through the daily sin offering of a goat; the covering of rams’ skins dyed red was a reminder of the sacrifice and the priestly ministry set apart by blood, and the outer covering marked the separation between God and the world. These are the interpretations set forth by Kaiser; others vary, but not greatly (see W. C. Kaiser, Jr., “Exodus,” EBC 2:459).

14 sn This curtain will serve “for a tent over the tabernacle,” as a dwelling place.

15 tn Heb “you will make them”

16 tn The noun is מִשְׁפָּט (mishpat), often translated “judgment” or “decision” in other contexts. In those settings it may reflect its basic idea of custom, which here would be reflected with a rendering of “prescribed norm” or “plan.”

17 tn Heb “between the two evenings” or “between the two settings” (בֵּין הָעַרְבָּיִם, ben haarbayim). This expression has had a good deal of discussion. (1) Tg. Onq. says “between the two suns,” which the Talmud explains as the time between the sunset and the time the stars become visible. More technically, the first “evening” would be the time between sunset and the appearance of the crescent moon, and the second “evening” the next hour, or from the appearance of the crescent moon to full darkness (see Deut 16:6 – “at the going down of the sun”). (2) Saadia, Rashi, and Kimchi say the first evening is when the sun begins to decline in the west and cast its shadows, and the second evening is the beginning of night. (3) The view adopted by the Pharisees and the Talmudists (b. Pesahim 61a) is that the first evening is when the heat of the sun begins to decrease, and the second evening begins at sunset, or, roughly from 3-5 p.m. The Mishnah (m. Pesahim 5:1) indicates the lamb was killed about 2:30 p.m. – anything before noon was not valid. S. R. Driver concludes from this survey that the first view is probably the best, although the last view was the traditionally accepted one (Exodus, 89-90). Late afternoon or early evening seems to be intended, the time of twilight perhaps.

18 sn Why this section has been held until now is a mystery. One would have expected to find it with the instructions for the other furnishings. The widespread contemporary view that it was composed later does not answer the question, it merely moves the issue to the work of an editor rather than the author. N. M. Sarna notes concerning the items in chapter 30 that “all the materials for these final items were anticipated in the list of invited donations in 25:3-6” and that they were not needed for installing Aaron and his sons (Exodus [JPSTC], 193). Verses 1-10 can be divided into three sections: the instructions for building the incense altar (1-5), its placement (6), and its proper use (7-10).

19 tn The expression is מִזְבֵּחַ מִקְטַר קְטֹרֶת (mizbeakh miqtar qÿtoret), either “an altar, namely an altar of incense,” or “an altar, [for] burning incense.” The second noun is “altar of incense,” although some suggest it is an active noun meaning “burning.” If the former, then it is in apposition to the word for “altar” (which is not in construct). The last noun is “incense” or “sweet smoke.” It either qualifies the “altar of incense” or serves as the object of the active noun. B. Jacob says that in order to designate that this altar be used only for incense, the Torah prepared the second word for this passage alone. It specifies the kind of altar this is (Exodus, 828).

20 tn This is an adverbial accusative explaining the material used in building the altar.

21 sn See M. Haran, “The Uses of Incense in Ancient Israel Ritual,” VT 10 (1960): 113-15; N. Glueck, “Incense Altars,” Translating and Understanding the Old Testament, 325-29.



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