<< Ê-xê-chi-ên 41 5 >>

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  • 1 Các Vua 6 5-1 Các Vua 6 6
    Against the walls of the main hall and inner sanctuary he built a structure around the building, in which there were side rooms.The lowest floor was five cubits wide, the middle floor six cubits and the third floor seven. He made offset ledges around the outside of the temple so that nothing would be inserted into the temple walls. (niv)
  • Ê-xê-chi-ên 41 6-Ê-xê-chi-ên 41 9
    The 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.The 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.I 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.The outer wall of the side rooms was five cubits thick. The open area between the side rooms of the temple (niv)
  • Ê-xê-chi-ên 42 3-Ê-xê-chi-ên 42 14
    Both in the section twenty cubits from the inner court and in the section opposite the pavement of the outer court, gallery faced gallery at the three levels.In front of the rooms was an inner passageway ten cubits wide and a hundred cubits long. Their doors were on the north.Now the upper rooms were narrower, for the galleries took more space from them than from the rooms on the lower and middle floors of the building.The rooms on the top floor had no pillars, as the courts had; so they were smaller in floor space than those on the lower and middle floors.There was an outer wall parallel to the rooms and the outer court; it extended in front of the rooms for fifty cubits.While the row of rooms on the side next to the outer court was fifty cubits long, the row on the side nearest the sanctuary was a hundred cubits long.The lower rooms had an entrance on the east side as one enters them from the outer court.On the south side along the length of the wall of the outer court, adjoining the temple courtyard and opposite the outer wall, were roomswith a passageway in front of them. These were like the rooms on the north; they had the same length and width, with similar exits and dimensions. Similar to the doorways on the northwere the doorways of the rooms on the south. There was a doorway at the beginning of the passageway that was parallel to the corresponding wall extending eastward, by which one enters the rooms.Then he said to me,“ The north and south rooms facing the temple courtyard are the priests’ rooms, where the priests who approach the Lord will eat the most holy offerings. There they will put the most holy offerings— the grain offerings, the sin offerings and the guilt offerings— for the place is holy.Once the priests enter the holy precincts, they are not to go into the outer court until they leave behind the garments in which they minister, for these are holy. They are to put on other clothes before they go near the places that are for the people.” (niv)