Verses 1–6
EXODUS - CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
Verses 1-6:
This chapter gives the description of the tabernacle, ohel, "tent," the portable house of worship which consisted of four main parts:
I. A rectangular enclosure, ten cubits (15’) by thirty cubits (45’), open at one end and enclosed on three sides by boards of acacia wood overlaid with gold. This was the mishkan, "dwelling place," usually translated "tabernacle."
2. "Ten curtains," designed to link together to form one covering, to be placed over the mishkan.
3. A tent, ohel, of goat’s hair, supported on poles, and stretched in the ordinary manner over the mishkan (boards).
4. A covering, mikseh, of rams’ skins dyed red, and seals’ skins, to be placed over the ohel.
Ancillary parts were: sockets or bases of silver, to support the upright boards; bars used to hold the boards together; the veil, stretched on pillars and separating the two rooms of the tabernacle; and the curtain or "hanging" for the open end of the enclosure where there were no boards.
Each of the "ten curtains" was to be 4 cubits (6 feet) wide, and 28 cubits (6 feet) long. Five curtains were to be sewn together, forming a section 30’ x 42’. The two sections thus formed were joined together to form one continuous curtain 42’ x 60’. On the selvedge of each section, fifty loops of blue fabric were to be affixed. These loops were to match with fifty loops on the other section. They were then joined by means of gold "taches" (clasps or pins).
The "ten curtains" were to be made of "fine twined linen." This fabric was woven from linen threads formed by several fine strands of linen twisted together. The colors: blue, purple, and scarlet (see Ex 25:4).
"Cherubims of cunning work." lit. "cherubim, the work of a skilled weaver." Figures of cherubim were to be woven into the curtain in the loom; they were not to be embroidered on them.
The length of the curtains allowed them to hang down over the boards which formed the sides of the tabernacle.