Exodus 25:4

blue.{Techaileth,} generally supposed to mean an azure or sky-colour; rendered by the LXX, [uakinthon,] {uakinthon}, and Vulgate, {hyacinthum.}

fine linen. or, silk.

Ge 41:42; Eze 16:10; Re 19:8

Exodus 35:6

blue.

26:1,31,36; 28:5,6,15,33

goats' hair.

26:7-14

Exodus 35:25

28:3; 31:6; 36:1; 2Ki 23:7; Pr 14:1; 31:19-24; Lu 8:2,3; Ac 9:39

Ro 16:1-4,6,12; Ga 3:28; Php 4:3

Exodus 35:35

he filled.

31; 31:3,6; 1Ki 3:12; 7:14; 2Ch 2:14; Isa 28:26

the cunning.

26:1; Ac 19:6,8; 1Co 1:5,7; 12:4,8,12; Ga 3:2,5; 1Ti 3:15; 4:16

2Ti 2:15

of the weaver.

Job 7:6; Isa 38:12

Exodus 36:8

wise.

31:6; 35:10

made.

26:1-37; 1Ch 15:1

cherubims.{Keroovim,} cherubim, not cherubims. What these were we cannot determine. Some, observing that the verb {kerav} in Syriac, sometimes means to resemble, make like, conceive the noun {keroov} signifies no more than an image, figure, or representation of anything. Josephus says they were flying animals, like none of those which are seen by man, but such as Moses saw about the throne of God. In another place he says, "As for the cherubim, nobody can tell or conceive what they were like." These symbolical figures, according to the description of them by Ezekiel, (ch. 1:10; 10:14,) were creatures with four heads and one body; and the animals of which these forms consisted were the noblest of their kind; the lion among the wild beasts; the bull among the tame ones; the eagle among the birds, and man at the head of all. Hence some have conceived them to be somewhat of the shape of flying oxen; and it is alleged in favour of this opinion, that the far more common meaning of the verb {kerav,} in Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic, being to plough, the natural meaning of {keroov,} is a creature used in ploughing. This seems to have been the ancient opinion which tradition had handed down, concerning the shape of the cherubim with the flaming sword, that guarded the tree of life. (Ge 3:24.)

25:18,22; 1Ki 6:23; 2Ch 3:10; Eze 1:5-28; 10:1-19
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