Numbers 7
Donations for dedicating the altar
Moses dedicates the worship center
1 When artisans finished making the tent worship center, Moses set it up for the first time and then dedicated it all to the LORD. He anointed everything inside and out, dabbing it with olive oil. Then he went outside and anointed the altar and all its utensils. 2 The 12 tribal leaders[1] appointed earlier to serve Moses as commanders over the tribal armies brought donations for the dedication service. 3 Together, the men donated to the worship center six wagons and a dozen oxen to pull them. The men brought these gifts to the sacred tent at the worship center.4 The LORD told Moses, 5 “Accept these gifts. Give them to the Levites who can use them in their work at the worship center. The wagons and oxen will carry it from one camp to another.” 6 So, Moses divided the carts and oxen among the leading Levite families. 7 He gave two carts and four oxen to the Gershon family. 8 He gave four carts and eight oxen to the Merari family. Aaron’s son, the priest Ithamar, supervised the Merari family’s work. 9 Moses didn’t give the Kohath family anything. They needed to hand-carry the sacred objects assigned to them.[2]
Tribe donations
10 The 12 tribal leaders also brought other donations, which were for the dedication of the altar. Each man put his tribe’s gifts beside the altar.[3] 11 The Lord told Moses, “Reserve one day for each leader to present his offering. One offering a day for 12 days.”Judah’s tribe: Day One of donations
12 Judah’s tribal leader made the first presentation: Nahshon, son of Amminadab. 13 His offering:Silver platter weighing 3¼ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
14 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
15 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering [4]
16 One male goat as a sin offering[5]
17 Peace offerings[6] of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Nahshon’s offering. He was Amminadab’s son.
Issachar tribe: Day Two of donations
18 Issachar’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Nethanel, son of Zuar.His offering:
19 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
20 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
21 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
22 One male goat as a sin offering
23 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Nethanel’s offering. He was Zuar’s son.
Zebulun tribe: Day Three of donations
24 Zebulun’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Eliab, son of Helon.His offering:
25 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
26 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
27 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
28 One male goat as a sin offering
29 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Eliab’s offering. He was Helon’s son.
Reuben tribe: Day Four of donations
30 Reuben’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Elizur, son of Shedeur.His offering:
31 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
32 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
33 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
34 One male goat as a sin offering
35 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Elizur’s offering. He was Shedeur’s son.
Simeon tribe: Day Five of donations
36 Simeon’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Shelumiel, son of Zurishaddai.His offering:
37 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
38 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
39 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
40 One male goat as a sin offering
41 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Shelumiel’s offering. He was Zurishaddai’s son.
Gad tribe: Day Six of donations
42 Gad’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Eliasaph, son of Deuel.His offering:
43 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
44 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
45 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
46 One male goat as a sin offering
47 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Eliasaph’s offering. He was Deuel’s son.
Ephraim tribe: Day Seven of donations
48 Ephraim tribal leader made the next presentation: Elishama, son of Ammihud.His offering:
49 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
50 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
51 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
52 One male goat as a sin offering
53 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Elishama’s offering. He was Ammihud’s son.
Manasseh tribe: Day Eight of donations
54 Manasseh’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Gamaliel, son of Pedahzur.His offering:
55 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
56 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
57 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
58 One male goat as a sin offering
59 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Gamaliel’s offering. He was Pedahzur’s s son.
Benjamin tribe: Day Nine of donations
60 Benjamin’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Abidan, Gideoni.His offering:
61 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
62 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
63 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
64 One male goat as a sin offering
65 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Abidan’s offering. He was Gideoni’s son.
Dan tribe: Day Ten of donations
66 Dan’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Ahiezer, son of Ammishaddai.His offering:
67 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
68 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
69 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
70 One male goat as a sin offering
71 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Ahiezer’s offering. He was Ammishaddai’s son.
Asher tribe: Day Eleven of donations
72 Asher’s tribal leader made the next presentation: Pagiel, son of Ochran.His offering:
73 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
74 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
75 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
76 One male goat as a sin offering
77 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Pagiel ’s offering. He was Ochran’s son.
Naphtali tribe: Day Twelve of donations
78 Naphtali’s tribal leader made the last presentation: Ahira, son of Enan.His offering:
79 Silver platter weighing 3ÂĽ pounds (1.4 kg)
Silver bowl, 1Âľ pounds (.75 kg)
Fine flour with olive oil filled both bowls
80 Gold bowl, 4 ounces (.11 kg)
Incense filled the bowl
81 One young bull
One ram
One year-old male lamb for a burnt offering
82 One male goat as a sin offering
83 Peace offerings of two oxen
And five rams
And five male lambs (each a year old)
This was Ahira’s offering. He was Enan’s son.
84 This was the offering that tribal leaders brought when it came time to dedicate the sacrificial altar. This took place when the altar was anointed with olive oil, to designate it as the LORD’s property. Gifts donated: 12 silver platters, 12 silver bowls, and 12 gold bowls.
85 Each silver platter weighed 3¼ pounds (1.4 kg), and each bowl 1 pounds (.75 kg). Together they weighed 60 pounds (27.7 kg). That’s according to the worship center’s approved weight of a shekel.[7]
86 Each of the dozen gold bowls full of incense weighed 4 ounces (.11 kg). Together, they weighed about 3 pounds (1.4 kg). That’s according to the worship center’s scale.
87 Other donations included a dozen each of the following:
young bulls
rams
one-year-old male lambs for burnt offerings
grain gifts
male goats for sin offerings
88 Animals donated for the large peace offering:
24 bulls
60 rams
60 one-year-old male lambs
This was the combined donation for the altar’s dedication. It was all anointed with olive oil to designate it as the LORD’s property.
89 Moses went into the tent sanctuary at the worship center. There, he heard the LORD speaking to him. The voice came from between the two gold cherubim attached to the top of the lid on the Box of Law.[8] This is how the LORD spoke to Moses.
Notes
See Numbers 1:4.
“The Kohath clan was responsible for almost everything inside the tent worship center. That included the sacred box that held the Ten Commandments, the curtained walls, the table that held the holy bread, the lampstand, the altars, and utensils the priests used inside the Sacred Room” (Numbers 3:31).
This first offering is repeated 11 more times by the tribal leaders who follow. They all brought the same gifts. That would have been a birthday party disaster, but it was great for equipping the worship center with necessary furnishings and animals to sacrifice for the dedication ceremony.
This was the most common animal sacrifice. Worshipers burned the entire animal.
A sin offering here refers to something the people of Israel brought to God after they realized they had accidentally broken one of God’s laws earlier. Some scholars say a better translation is the opposite of “sin” because the sacrifice is intended to “un-sin” people, to purify them. So those scholars call it a “purification offering.”
A peace offering, described in Leviticus 3, is one of several prescribed offerings in Jewish tradition. When Jewish people wanted to give thanks to God for something, such as good health or safety, they would sacrifice a sheep, goat, cow, or bull. They would burn part of the animal, including the kidneys and fat covering the intestines. They would eat the rest in celebration, often with family and friends. It takes a fair number of hungry people to eat a cow. But people were eager to eat meat because it was rare in Bible times for common folks to eat meat, many Bible scholars say.
Shekels came in different kinds of metal and different weights. There was a heavy shekel that weighed about 11.5 grams or .4 ounces. This was sometimes called the King’s Shekel or the Royal Shekel. Some scholars say this was also the weight used in the Israelite worship center and later in the Jerusalem Temple. The lighter shekel weighed about 9.5 grams or .33 ounces. Some scholars say this was probably the shekel accepted at the worship center.
Ark of the Covenant, which means “box of law.” This wooden box plated with gold contained the stone tablets etched with Ten Commandments. It became Israel’s most sacred object. God told Moses, “Make a cover for the box out of pure gold…. Hammer out of gold two images of celestial beings: cherubim. They go on top of the box’s lid, one on each end…When you’re done making the lid, put the lid on top of the box, with the Ten Commandments inside. This is where I’ll meet with you, at the Box of the Law, above the lid and between the cherubim. There, I’ll talk with you about all the laws I’ll have for the people of Israel” (Exodus 25:18-22).
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