ISV(i)
1 The Vision of the TempleNext he brought me to the Temple and measured its door jambs at six cubits wide on each side of the structure.
2 The entrance was ten cubits wide and its door jambs were five cubits wide on each side. He measured the length of the nave at 40 cubits and its width at 20 cubits.
3 Then he went inside and measured the door jambs at two cubits wide and the doorway at six cubits high. The doorway was seven cubits wide. 4 He measured its length at 20 cubits, its width at 20 cubits in front of the structure, and then he told me, “This is the most holy area.”
5 Next, he measured the Temple walls at six cubits high and the width of the side chambers at four cubits around all four sides of the Temple. 6 The side chambers consisted of three stories, each above the other, with 30 chambers in each story. The side chambers extended out from the wall that faced the inside of the chambers where the chambers were fastened together, but the chamber walls were not fastened directly into the Temple walls themselves. 7 The side chambers surrounding the Temple were wider at each successive story, because the surrounding structure ascended by proportional increments as it rose, ascending to the highest story by going up successively from the lowest.
8 I observed a raised platform that surrounded the Temple, and the foundations of the side chambers were a full six cubits deep. 9 The outer wall of the side chambers was five cubits thick, and there was an empty space between the Temple’s side chambers 10 and its outer chambers 20 cubits in width, surrounding the Temple on each side. 11 The side chamber doorway facing the free space contained a single north-facing doorway and a second south-facing doorway. The width of the free space was five cubits all around the perimeter. 12 The building that faced the west side of the courtyard was 70 cubits wide, and the building’s wall was five cubits thick all around. It was 90 cubits long.
13The TempleThen he measured the Temple. It was 100 cubits long, and the courtyard, its building, and its walls were 100 cubits long.
14 The front of the Temple and its east-facing courtyard were each 100 cubits long.
15 Next, he measured 100 cubits as the length of the structure toward the front of the courtyard that stood behind it, where it housed a gallery on each side of it. Then he measured the Temple and the inner porticos of the courtyard,
3 Then he went inside and measured the door jambs at two cubits wide and the doorway at six cubits high. The doorway was seven cubits wide. 4 He measured its length at 20 cubits, its width at 20 cubits in front of the structure, and then he told me, “This is the most holy area.”
5 Next, he measured the Temple walls at six cubits high and the width of the side chambers at four cubits around all four sides of the Temple. 6 The side chambers consisted of three stories, each above the other, with 30 chambers in each story. The side chambers extended out from the wall that faced the inside of the chambers where the chambers were fastened together, but the chamber walls were not fastened directly into the Temple walls themselves. 7 The side chambers surrounding the Temple were wider at each successive story, because the surrounding structure ascended by proportional increments as it rose, ascending to the highest story by going up successively from the lowest.
8 I observed a raised platform that surrounded the Temple, and the foundations of the side chambers were a full six cubits deep. 9 The outer wall of the side chambers was five cubits thick, and there was an empty space between the Temple’s side chambers 10 and its outer chambers 20 cubits in width, surrounding the Temple on each side. 11 The side chamber doorway facing the free space contained a single north-facing doorway and a second south-facing doorway. The width of the free space was five cubits all around the perimeter. 12 The building that faced the west side of the courtyard was 70 cubits wide, and the building’s wall was five cubits thick all around. It was 90 cubits long.
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