Verse 1-2
Ezekiel 41:1-2. Afterward he
brought me to the temple —
“After having described the
courts and the porch, the
prophet enters into the temple,
properly so called, whereof he
gives the dimensions and
description.” And he measured
the posts — By the posts are
meant the door-cases on each
side of the entrance. These were
six cubits thick on the north
and south sides; which was the
breadth of the tabernacle —
These walls, in their thickness,
took up as much space as the
whole breadth of Moses’s
tabernacle, as appears from
Exodus 26:16; Exodus 26:22-23;
where the west side of the
tabernacle consists of eight
boards, each a cubit and a half
broad. The breadth of the door
was ten cubits, &c. — The
entrance itself being ten cubits
broad, and the wall on each side
five cubits, makes the breadth
of the house to be just twenty
cubits, as it is expressed in
the latter part of the verse,
which was the same in Solomon’s
temple, 1 Kings 6:2. And the
length forty cubits — Namely,
the length of the first
sanctuary, or holy place, as
distinct from the holy of
holies, which was twenty cubits
in length, Ezekiel 41:4, and
made the whole structure sixty
cubits long; wherein it agreed
with Solomon’s temple.
Verse 3-4
Ezekiel 41:3-4. Then went he
inward — From the outward
sanctuary he went forward toward
the holy of holies, and measured
the thickness of the partition
wall to be two cubits, the
entrance itself six cubits, and
breadth of the wall, on each
side of the door, seven cubits:
see Ezekiel 40:48; where the
breadth of the gate is taken in
the same sense. The breadth of
the wall, thus computed, making
up fourteen cubits, and being
added to the breadth of the
entrance itself, makes up twenty
cubits; the breadth of the inner
sanctuary, as it is set down in
the next verse. So he measured
the length thereof — Of the holy
of holies twenty cubits, and the
breadth twenty cubits — It was
an exact cube, of the same
dimensions in length, breadth,
and height: see 1 Kings 6:20;
before the temple — Or rather,
as the words should be rendered,
according to the temple; that
is, the breadth of it.
Verse 5-6
Ezekiel 41:5-6. He measured the
wall of the house, six cubits —
Three yards thick was this wall,
from the ground to the first
story of the side-chambers. And
the breadth of every
side-chamber, four cubits — Of
the lowest floor; for there were
three stories of these, and they
differed in their breadth, as
the wall of the temple, on which
they rested, abated of its
thickness; for the middle
chambers were broader than the
lowest by a cubit, and the
highest as much broader than the
middle. The side-chambers were
three, one over another — They
were three stories high; and
thirty in order — As in
Solomon’s temple, according to
Josephus’s description, Antiq.,
lib. 8. cap. 3, sec. 2, where it
appears, that round Solomon’s
temple were chambers three
stories high, each story
consisting of thirty chambers.
It is supposed that twelve were
placed to the north, twelve to
the south, and six to the east.
And they entered into the wall —
At five cubits height from the
ground, the wall which supported
these outward chambers, abated
of its thickness one cubit, in
consequence of which there was a
rest, or a ledge, of one cubit’s
breadth, on which the ends of
each story were fastened: see 1
Kings 6:10. But they had not
hold in the wall of the house —
They were not fastened into the
main wall of the house, but
rested on the outside of the
wall where it became more
narrow.
Verse 7-8
Ezekiel 41:7-8. And there was an
enlarging — Namely, of the
side-chambers; so much of
breadth added to the chambers as
was taken from the thickness of
the wall: see the preceding
note; and a winding about still
upward — Winding stairs, which
enlarged as the rooms did, went
up between each two chambers
from the bottom to the top; and
there were two doors at the top
of each pair of stairs, one door
opening into one chamber, and
the other into the opposite one.
For the winding about, &c. — The
stairs, as they rose in height,
enlarged themselves too; round
about the house — On all sides
of the house, where these
chambers were. Therefore the
breadth was still upward — It
became broader by one cubit in
every upper chamber. I saw also
the height of the house — Of the
chambers which rose to three
stories high. The foundations,
&c., were a full reed of six
great cubits — The lowest
chamber had properly a
foundation laid on the earth,
but the floor of the middle and
the highest story must be
accounted here a foundation; so
from the ground to the ceiling
of the first room were six great
cubits; from the first to the
second, six great cubits; and
from the third floor to the roof
of the chamber, a like number;
to which if we add one cubit for
the thickness of each of the
three floors, you have
twenty-one cubits, or ten yards
and a half for height.
Verses 9-11
Ezekiel 41:9-11. The thickness
of the wall, &c. — This is
supposed to be meant of an
outward wall enclosing the
side-chambers. And that which
was left — Or, the space which
was left, as Bishop Newcome
translates it, judging it to be
intended of a space allowed for
a walk, or gallery of
communication, before the
chambers, which space was five
cubits broad, Ezekiel 41:11. And
between the chambers was the
wideness of twenty cubits —
A word being here used for
chambers different from that
which occurs before, it is
supposed that another row of
buildings, parallel with the
side- chambers, but at twenty
yards’ distance from them, is
intended, and that there was a
passage of twenty cubits between
these buildings. The
description, however, is very
obscure, and the interpretations
of commentators, of course,
different. The doors of the
side-chambers were toward the
place that was left — Or, toward
the void space. The doors of the
lower rooms opened into this
void space before the chambers.
Verses 12-14
Ezekiel 41:12-14. Now the
building, &c. — This seems to be
another building not before
mentioned, but now measured by
itself. So he measured the house
— The whole temple, oracle,
sanctuary, and porch, with the
walls, which were in length a
hundred cubits from east to
west, which may be thus
computed:
CUBITS. |
The thickness of the
wall of the east
porch |
5 |
The passage through
the porch |
11 |
The wall between the
porch and the temple |
6 |
The outward
sanctuary |
40 |
The partition wall |
2 |
The holy of holies |
20 |
The thickness of the
west wall |
6 |
The side-chambers at
the west end |
5 |
The outer wall of
those chambers |
5 |
|
|
Also the breadth of the face of
the house — The front of the
temple eastward was a hundred
cubits.
Verses 15-17
Ezekiel 41:15-17. And he
measured the length, &c. —
Noldius translates this sentence
more clearly thus: And he
measured the length of the
building which was before the
separate place, [and] that which
was behind it, or opposite to
it; by which he understands the
north and south porch, the east
and west sides having been
measured before, Ezekiel 41:12;
Ezekiel 41:14. And the galleries
thereof on one side, &c., a
hundred cubits, with [or and]
the inner temple, and the
porches thereof — As the temple,
and the area wherein it stood,
made a square of a hundred
cubits; so the courts and
buildings thereto belonging were
of the same dimensions. By the
galleries are meant the
side-chambers, described Ezekiel
41:6-7. Within the inner temple
— Called the inner house,
Ezekiel 41:17, Ezekiel 42:15, to
distinguish it from the courts
and buildings which were about
it. The door- posts and the
narrow windows, &c. — He
measured also the thickness of
the walls on each side of the
porch, and the thickness of the
door-cases at the entrance into
the temple; as also the narrow
windows belonging to the three
stories of chambers, which were
placed on the outside of the
temple. From the ground up to
the windows — He measured from
the ground up to the windows
which were placed above the
side-chambers. And the windows
were covered — With lattices or
curtains, or both. To that above
the door — It seems this verse
is connected with the preceding,
and signifies that the windows
were made in exact proportion,
both over the porch, and through
every part of the temple and the
buildings adjoining to it.
Verses 18-20
Ezekiel 41:18-20. And it was
made with cherubims and with
palm-trees — On the inside of
the house the walls were adorned
with carved work of cherubim and
palm-trees, as Solomon’s temple
was, 1 Kings 6:29. The cherubs
and palm-trees were placed
alternately; and according to
the different ways of counting
them, you might reckon a
palm-tree placed between two
cherubs, or a cherubim placed
between two palm-trees. So the
face of a man was toward a
palm-tree, &c. — The cherubim
had four faces, or appearances,
but only two of these appeared
plainly in this carved work; the
two other faces, namely, that of
an ox and an eagle, being
supposed to be hid in the plain
or surface of the wall. From the
ground unto above the door — Up
to the windows, as it is
expressed Ezekiel 41:16, or up
to the ceiling, as the LXX.
explain it.
Verse 21-22
Ezekiel 41:21-22. The posts of
the temple were squared, &c. —
The lintels, or door-posts, both
of the temple and inner
sanctuary, were not arched, but
square, with a flat beam, or
upper lintel, laid upon the top
of the side-posts: compare the
margin of 1 Kings 6:33. The
altar of wood was three cubits
high, and the length thereof two
cubits — The LXX. add, by way of
explication, και το ευρος πηχων
δυο, and the breadth thereof two
cubits; that it might be
foursquare, as Moses’s altar of
incense was, Exodus 30:2. The
altar here described is a cubit
higher, and double the breadth
to that of Moses, which is
supposed to be agreeable to the
dimensions of the altar made by
Solomon, who did not exactly
observe the proportions
prescribed to Moses, in making
the cherubim and the other
furniture of the temple; God
having given a new model to
David of all the parts and
ornaments of the temple, 1
Chronicles 28:12; 1 Chronicles
28:19. This altar was made of
wood, but overlaid with gold,
Exodus 30:3, and therefore is
called the golden altar. And the
corners thereof, &c., were of
wood — The corners are the same
with the horns, mentioned Exodus
30:2, being made out of the four
posts which supported each
corner of the altar. The
surface, or top of it, is called
the length, and the sides the
walls. This is the table that is
before the Lord — The words
altar and table are used
promiscuously; and this table,
or altar, is said to be before
the Lord, as being in the place
of his peculiar presence:
compare Exodus 30:8. In the same
sense the burnt-offering is said
to be made at the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation
before the Lord, that is, in the
place dedicated to his worship,
Exodus 29:42; and the lamp is
said to burn before the Lord,
chap. Ezekiel 27:21, though the
candlestick stood in the outward
sanctuary.
Verses 23-25
Ezekiel 41:23-25. And the temple
and the sanctuary had two doors
— Each of them had a double, or
folding-door. And the doors had
two leaves apiece — The two
doors being exceedingly large,
that of the outward sanctuary
ten cubits broad, and that of
the inner six, (see Ezekiel
41:2-3,) and of a height
proportionable; each of them had
two leaves, that they might be
more easily opened, and each
leaf had a wicket in it. And
there were made on them, &c.,
cherubims and palm-trees —
Namely, on the doors both of the
outward and inward sanctuary.
And there were thick planks upon
the face of the porch without —
There was a wainscot work of
boards fastened to the end of
the great beams, which came out
beyond the wall of the porch.
These were laid so as to make a
frieze-work over the entrance of
the eastern porch. |