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English Standard Version

New Living Translation

  • The Temple’s Chambers

    Then he led me out into the outer court, toward the north, and he brought me to the chambers that were opposite the separate yard and opposite the building on the north.
  • Rooms for the Priests

    Then the man led me out of the Temple courtyard by way of the north gateway. We entered the outer courtyard and came to a group of rooms against the north wall of the inner courtyard.
  • The length of the building whose door faced north was a hundred cubits,a and the breadth fifty cubits.
  • This structure, whose entrance opened toward the north, was 175 feeta long and 87 1/2 feetb wide.
  • Facing the twenty cubits that belonged to the inner court, and facing the pavement that belonged to the outer court, was galleryb against gallery in three stories.
  • One block of rooms overlooked the 35-footc width of the inner courtyard. Another block of rooms looked out onto the pavement of the outer courtyard. The two blocks were built three levels high and stood across from each other.
  • And before the chambers was a passage inward, ten cubits wide and a hundred cubits long,c and their doors were on the north.
  • Between the two blocks of rooms ran a walkway 17 1/2 feetd wide. It extended the entire 175 feet of the complex,e and all the doors faced north.
  • Now the upper chambers were narrower, for the galleries took more away from them than from the lower and middle chambers of the building.
  • Each of the two upper levels of rooms was narrower than the one beneath it because the upper levels had to allow space for walkways in front of them.
  • For they were in three stories, and they had no pillars like the pillars of the courts. Thus the upper chambers were set back from the ground more than the lower and the middle ones.
  • Since there were three levels and they did not have supporting columns as in the courtyards, each of the upper levels was set back from the level beneath it.
  • And there was a wall outside parallel to the chambers, toward the outer court, opposite the chambers, fifty cubits long.
  • There was an outer wall that separated the rooms from the outer courtyard; it was 87 1/2 feet long.
  • For the chambers on the outer court were fifty cubits long, while those opposite the naved were a hundred cubits long.
  • This wall added length to the outer block of rooms, which extended for only 87 1/2 feet, while the inner block — the rooms toward the Temple — extended for 175 feet.
  • Below these chambers was an entrance on the east side, as one enters them from the outer court.
  • There was an eastern entrance from the outer courtyard to these rooms.
  • In the thickness of the wall of the court, on the southe also, opposite the yard and opposite the building, there were chambers
  • On the southf side of the Temple there were two blocks of rooms just south of the inner courtyard between the Temple and the outer courtyard. These rooms were arranged just like the rooms on the north.
  • with a passage in front of them. They were similar to the chambers on the north, of the same length and breadth, with the same exitsf and arrangements and doors,
  • There was a walkway between the two blocks of rooms just like the complex on the north side of the Temple. This complex of rooms was the same length and width as the other one, and it had the same entrances and doors. The dimensions of each were identical.
  • as were the entrances of the chambers on the south. There was an entrance at the beginning of the passage, the passage before the corresponding wall on the east as one enters them.g
  • So there was an entrance in the wall facing the doors of the inner block of rooms, and another on the east at the end of the interior walkway.
  • Then he said to me, “The north chambers and the south chambers opposite the yard are the holy chambers, where the priests who approach the Lord shall eat the most holy offerings. There they shall put the most holy offerings — the grain offering, the sin offering, and the guilt offering — for the place is holy.
  • Then the man told me, “These rooms that overlook the Temple from the north and south are holy. Here the priests who offer sacrifices to the LORD will eat the most holy offerings. And because these rooms are holy, they will be used to store the sacred offerings — the grain offerings, sin offerings, and guilt offerings.
  • When the priests enter the Holy Place, they shall not go out of it into the outer court without laying there the garments in which they minister, for these are holy. They shall put on other garments before they go near to that which is for the people.”
  • When the priests leave the sanctuary, they must not go directly to the outer courtyard. They must first take off the clothes they wore while ministering, because these clothes are holy. They must put on other clothes before entering the parts of the building complex open to the public.”
  • Now when he had finished measuring the interior of the temple area, he led me out by the gate that faced east, and measured the temple area all around.
  • When the man had finished measuring the inside of the Temple area, he led me out through the east gateway to measure the entire perimeter.
  • He measured the east side with the measuring reed, 500 cubits by the measuring reed all around.
  • He measured the east side with his measuring rod, and it was 875 feet long.g
  • He measured the north side, 500 cubits by the measuring reed all around.
  • Then he measured the north side, and it was also 875 feet.
  • He measured the south side, 500 cubits by the measuring reed.
  • The south side was also 875 feet,
  • Then he turned to the west side and measured, 500 cubits by the measuring reed.
  • and the west side was also 875 feet.
  • He measured it on the four sides. It had a wall around it, 500 cubits long and 500 cubits broad, to make a separation between the holy and the common.
  • So the area was 875 feet on each side with a wall all around it to separate what was holy from what was common.

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