Exodus
36
- So Bezalel, Oholiab and every skilled person
to whom the LORD has given skill and ability to know how to carry out all
the work of constructing the sanctuary are to do the work just as the LORD
has commanded."
- Then Moses summoned Bezalel and Oholiab
and every skilled person to whom the LORD had given ability and who was willing
to come and do the work.
- They received from Moses all the offerings
the Israelites had brought to carry out the work of constructing the sanctuary.
And the people continued to bring freewill offerings morning after morning.
- So all the skilled craftsmen who were doing
all the work on the sanctuary left their work
- and said to Moses, "The people are
bringing more than enough for doing the work the LORD commanded to be done."
- Then Moses gave an order and they sent this
word throughout the camp: "No man or woman is to make anything else as
an offering for the sanctuary." And so the people were restrained from
bringing more,
- because what they already had was more than
enough to do all the work.
- All the skilled men among the workmen made
the tabernacle with ten curtains of finely twisted linen and blue, purple
and scarlet yarn, with cherubim worked into them by a skilled craftsman.
- All the curtains were the same size -- twenty-eight
cubits long and four cubits wide.
- They joined five of the curtains together
and did the same with the other five.
- Then they made loops of blue material along
the edge of the end curtain in one set, and the same was done with the end
curtain in the other set.
- They also made fifty loops on one curtain
and fifty loops on the end curtain of the other set, with the loops opposite
each other.
- Then they made fifty gold clasps and used
them to fasten the two sets of curtains together so that the tabernacle was
a unit.
- They made curtains of goat hair for the
tent over the tabernacle -- eleven altogether.
- All eleven curtains were the same size --
thirty cubits long and four cubits wide.
- They joined five of the curtains into one
set and the other six into another set.
- Then they made fifty loops along the edge
of the end curtain in one set and also along the edge of the end curtain in
the other set.
- They made fifty bronze clasps to fasten
the tent together as a unit.
- Then they made for the tent a covering of
ram skins dyed red, and over that a covering of hides of sea cows.
- They made upright frames of acacia wood
for the tabernacle.
- Each frame was ten cubits long and a cubit
and a half wide,
- with two projections set parallel to each
other. They made all the frames of the tabernacle in this way.
- They made twenty frames for the south side
of the tabernacle
- and made forty silver bases to go under
them -- two bases for each frame, one under each projection.
- For the other side, the north side of the
tabernacle, they made twenty frames
- and forty silver bases -- two under each
frame.
- They made six frames for the far end, that
is, the west end of the tabernacle,
- and two frames were made for the corners
of the tabernacle at the far end.
- At these two corners the frames were double
from the bottom all the way to the top and fitted into a single ring; both
were made alike.
- So there were eight frames and sixteen silver
bases -- two under each frame.
- They also made crossbars of acacia wood:
five for the frames on one side of the tabernacle,
- five for those on the other side, and five
for the frames on the west, at the far end of the tabernacle.
- They made the center crossbar so that it
extended from end to end at the middle of the frames.
- They overlaid the frames with gold and made
gold rings to hold the crossbars. They also overlaid the crossbars with gold.
- They made the curtain of blue, purple and
scarlet yarn and finely twisted linen, with cherubim worked into it by a skilled
craftsman.
- They made four posts of acacia wood for
it and overlaid them with gold. They made gold hooks for them and cast their
four silver bases.
- For the entrance to the tent they made a
curtain of blue, purple and scarlet yarn and finely twisted linen -- the work
of an embroiderer;
- and they made five posts with hooks for
them. They overlaid the tops of the posts and their bands with gold and made
their five bases of bronze.
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