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Ezekiel 43:13 - Exposition

The measures of the altar . The altar is הַמִּזְבֵּחַ , that formerly mentioned as standing in the inner court, immediately in front of the" house" ( Ezekiel 40:47 ), the altar of burnt offering, and not the altar of incense in the holy place ( Ezekiel 41:22 ). Its dimensions, then omitted, are now reported in connection with its consecration, which also is narrated as a pendant to that of the "house," because of the intimate connection between the two—the consecration of the altar being practically equivalent to the consecration of the house, and the consecration of the house finding approximate expression in the consecration of the altar. As in the other portions of the temple, so in this, the measurements are given after the cubits , i.e. by or in cubits, the length of each cubit being noted at "a cubit and an hand-breadth," as in Ezekiel 40:5 . They are likewise taken first from the foundation upwards ( Ezekiel 40:13-15 ), and then from the top downwards ( Ezekiel 40:16 , Ezekiel 40:17 ). The first portion measured is the bottom ; literally, the bosom (Hebrew, חֵיק , "that which embraces," from הוּק "to embrace;" LXX ; κόλπωμα : Vulgate, sinus ); but what exactly that signified is debated among interpreters. Gesenius thinks of "the hollowed part for the fire;" Hitzig, of "a frame running round, a stand in which the altar stood;" Kliefoth, of "a deepening on the wooden ring in which the whole altar stands;" Keil, of" a lower hollow or base of the altar, formed by a border of a definite height;" Smend, of "the channel or gutter of the altar base, which should receive the sacrificial blood;" Havernick, Currey, and Plumptre, of "a base upon which the altar stood." If Smend's feasible notion be not adopted, then probably that of Hitzig, Kliefoth, or Keil most nearly expresses the conception of the Hebrew term. The altar was surrounded by an enclosure in which it seemed to be set, or out of which to rise; the dimensions of this "stand" or "enclosure" being a cubit in height, and a cubit in breadth, with a border on its edge round about a span or half a cubit high. This, the stand just described, should be the higher place ; literally, the back ; hence the support, base (Revised Version), or elevation, ὕψος ( LXX .) of the altar.

See drawing, The Altar

The Legend for the Altar

A, base.

B, border.

C, lower settle.

D, upper settle.

E, "mount of God" (harel).

F, "hearth of God" (ariel).

H, H, horns of altar.

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