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Exodus 36:8-13 meaning
The construction began when all the skillful men among those who were performing the work made the tabernacle. The first part of the process was making the curtains. They needed to make ten curtains, which were comprised of fine twisted linen and blue and purple and scarlet material.
The curtains were also adorned with cherubim. The cherubim (the word is plural) seem to be a class of angelic beings connected to guarding the holiness of the LORD's presence. Cherubim were placed to guard the gate into the Garden of Eden after Adam and Eve were removed (Genesis 3:24), and cherubim were to be placed at each end of the ark (Exodus 25:18). Here, the images of cherubim were to be placed on the curtains of the tabernacle, where the LORD would dwell. These angelic decorations would be a visible reminder that the tabernacle was a holy place. Because of their importance, they needed to be the work of a skillful workman. In fact, Bezalel made them himself.
As described in Exodus 26:2, the length of each curtain was twenty-eight cubits and the width of each curtain four cubits; all the curtains had the same measurements. Since a cubit was approximately eighteen inches (45.7 cm), this would make each curtain around forty-two feet (12.8 meters) long, and six feet (1.82 meters) wide. After the ten curtains were completed, Bezalel joined five curtains to one another and the other five curtains he joined to one another. The curtains comprised the walls of the tabernacle according to the design shown by God to Moses on the mountain (Exodus 26:1).
To join the curtains together, Bezalel made loops of blue on the edge of the outermost curtain in the first set; he did likewise on the edge of the curtain that was outermost in the second set (v. 11). The Hebrew word for loop ("lulai") is used only in Exodus 26 and 36. The description of how the loops were to be made is in Exodus 26:4. To provide the means of the connecting the curtains, he made fifty loops in the one curtain and he made fifty loops on the edge of the curtain that was in the second set (v. 12), ensuring that the loops were opposite each other.
Once the loops were made and placed on the curtains, he made fifty clasps of gold and joined the curtains to one another with the clasps, so the tabernacle was a unit (v. 13). These "fifty clasps" (specified in Exodus 26:5) were used with the loops to join the curtains together. Joined together, the curtains would comprise the walls of the "one tabernacle" (Exodus 26:6).