Exodus 26:19

19 and forty sockets of silver thou dost make under the twenty boards, two sockets under the one board for its two handles, and two sockets under the other board for its two handles.

Exodus 26:19 Meaning and Commentary

Exodus 26:19

And thou shall make forty sockets of silver under the twenty
boards
Or bases F19, and which were properly the foundation of the tabernacle, on which it was settled and established; these sockets were the mortises for the two tenons of each board or plank to be placed in, and were as broad as the plank, and, joining each other, made one entire basis for the whole structure; each socket contained a talent of silver, and was made of the silver given at the numbering of the people, ( Exodus 38:25 Exodus 38:27 ) , and a talent of silver, according to Bishop Cumberland, amounted to three hundred and fifty three pounds, eleven shillings and some odd pence of our money: by which may be judged the whole value of this silver foundation, which, with the four sockets of the vail, consisted of one hundred of them, which answer to the one hundred talents of silver collected at the above offering:

two sockets under one board for his two tenons, and two sockets under
another board for his two tenons;
and so in all the twenty boards, which took up the whole forty on the south side.


FOOTNOTES:

F19 (ynda) "bases", V. L. Pagninus, Montanus, Tigurine version, Piscator, Drusius.

Exodus 26:19 In-Context

17 two handles [are] to the one board, joined one unto another; so thou dost make for all the boards of the tabernacle;
18 and thou hast made the boards of the tabernacle: twenty boards for the south side southward;
19 and forty sockets of silver thou dost make under the twenty boards, two sockets under the one board for its two handles, and two sockets under the other board for its two handles.
20 `And for the second side of the tabernacle, for the north side, [are] twenty boards,
21 and their forty sockets of silver, two sockets under the one board, and two sockets under another board.
Young's Literal Translation is in the public domain.