Ezekiel 41NIV
Books
All books

Ezekiel41

New International Version

1Then the man brought me to the main hall and measured the jambs; the width of the jambs was six cubits on each side.

2The entrance was ten cubits wide, and the projecting walls on each side of it were five cubits wide. He also measured the main hall; it was forty cubits long and twenty cubits wide.

3Then he went into the inner sanctuary and measured the jambs of the entrance; each was two cubits wide. The entrance was six cubits wide, and the projecting walls on each side of it were seven cubits wide.

4And he measured the length of the inner sanctuary; it was twenty cubits, and its width was twenty cubits across the end of the main hall. He said to me, “This is the Most Holy Place.”

5Then he measured the wall of the temple; it was six cubits thick, and each side room around the temple was four cubits wide.

6The side rooms were on three levels, one above another, thirty on each level. There were ledges all around the wall of the temple to serve as supports for the side rooms, so that the supports were not inserted into the wall of the temple.

7The side rooms all around the temple were wider at each successive level. The structure surrounding the temple was built in ascending stages, so that the rooms widened as one went upward. A stairway went up from the lowest floor to the top floor through the middle floor.

8I saw that the temple had a raised base all around it, forming the foundation of the side rooms. It was the length of the rod, six long cubits.

9The outer wall of the side rooms was five cubits thick. The open area between the side rooms of the temple

10and the priests’ rooms was twenty cubits wide all around the temple.

11There were entrances to the side rooms from the open area, one on the north and another on the south; and the base adjoining the open area was five cubits wide all around.

12The building facing the temple courtyard on the west side was seventy cubits wide. The wall of the building was five cubits thick all around, and its length was ninety cubits.

13Then he measured the temple; it was a hundred cubits long, and the temple courtyard and the building with its walls were also a hundred cubits long.

14The width of the temple courtyard on the east, including the front of the temple, was a hundred cubits.

15Then he measured the length of the building facing the courtyard at the rear of the temple, including its galleries on each side; it was a hundred cubits. The main hall, the inner sanctuary and the portico facing the court,

16as well as the thresholds and the narrow windows and galleries around the three of them—everything beyond and including the threshold was covered with wood. The floor, the wall up to the windows, and the windows were covered.

17In the space above the outside of the entrance to the inner sanctuary and on the walls at regular intervals all around the inner and outer sanctuary

18were carved cherubim and palm trees. Palm trees alternated with cherubim. Each cherub had two faces:

19the face of a human being toward the palm tree on one side and the face of a lion toward the palm tree on the other. They were carved all around the whole temple.

20From the floor to the area above the entrance, cherubim and palm trees were carved on the wall of the main hall.

21The main hall had a rectangular doorframe, and the one at the front of the Most Holy Place was similar.

22There was a wooden altar three cubits high and two cubits square; its corners, its base and its sides were of wood. The man said to me, “This is the table that is before the Lord.”

23Both the main hall and the Most Holy Place had double doors.

24Each door had two leaves—two hinged leaves for each door.

25And on the doors of the main hall were carved cherubim and palm trees like those carved on the walls, and there was a wooden overhang on the front of the portico.

26On the sidewalls of the portico were narrow windows with palm trees carved on each side. The side rooms of the temple also had overhangs.

Cross References

Ezekiel 41
v11 Kings 6:2thematic

The dimensions of the temple house correspond directly with Solomon's temple measurements.

Supported by Matthew Poole, JFB

v41 Kings 6:20thematic

The Holy of Holies is a perfect square of twenty cubits, as in Solomon's temple.

Supported by Matthew Poole, JFB

v61 Kings 6:6thematic

Matches the structural design of side chambers resting on ledges without entering the main temple wall.

Supported by Matthew Poole, JFB

v71 Kings 6:8thematic

Describes the winding stairs or passages ascending upward through the stories of side chambers.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v8Ezekiel 40:5thematic

The measuring reed of six great cubits defines the foundations of the side chambers.

Supported by Matthew Poole, JFB

v181 Kings 6:29-32thematic

Carvings of cherubim and palm trees decorated the walls and doors of Solomon's temple.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v22Ezekiel 44:16thematic

Identifies the wooden altar as the table where priests minister directly before the Lord.

Supported by JFB

v22Exodus 30:1-3typology

The dimensions of the wooden altar of incense are compared with the tabernacle's golden altar.

Supported by JFB

v4Exodus 26:33typology

Establishes the boundary dividing the holy place from the most holy place in the tabernacle.

v51 Kings 6:5thematic

Solomon built side chambers against the walls of the temple round about both sanctuary and oracle.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v7Ezekiel 42:5thematic

Explains how the upper chambers were wider as the walls of the house receded.

v19Ezekiel 1:10allusion

The two faces of the cherubim (man and lion) link back to the four-faced living creatures.

v211 Kings 6:33thematic

The squared posts of the temple entrance parallel the square posts in Solomon's temple.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v4Hebrews 9:3-8typology

The theological significance of the Holy of Holies and access into the divine presence.

v16Ezekiel 40:16thematic

The narrow windows and palm tree decorations echo the design elements of the outer gates.

v161 Kings 6:4thematic

Solomon's temple likewise featured narrow, latticed windows for light and ventilation.

v22Malachi 1:7thematic

The altar is functionally called the 'table of the Lord' in sacrificial vocabulary.

v231 Kings 6:34thematic

The two folding leaves for each of the two doors matches the entrance pattern.