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Sunday, April 27th, 2025
Second Sunday after Easter
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Read the Bible

Jerome's Latin Vulgate

Exodus 30:13

Hoc autem dabit omnis qui transit ad nomen, dimidium sicli juxta mensuram templi (siclus viginti obolos habet); media pars sicli offeretur Domino.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Atonement;   Census;   Gerah;   Money;   Religion;   Shekel;   Tabernacle;   Tax;   Thompson Chain Reference - Gerah;   Shekels;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Offerings;   Redemption;   Tribute;   Weights;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Altar;   Bekah;   Gerah;   Shekel;   Tribute;   Weights;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Coins;   Shekel;   Tabernacle;   Weights;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Atonement;   Government;   Money;   Redeem, Redemption;   Sanctuary;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Gerah;   Money-Changer;   Shekel;   Taxes;   Weights;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Census;   Jehoiada;   Money;   Sacrifice;   Taxes;   Tribute;   Weights and Measures;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Census;   Coins;   Half-Shekel Tax;   Weights and Measures;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Gerah,;   Money;   Tabernacle;   Weights and Measures;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Den ;   Law (2);   Money (2);   Tribute (2);   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Atonement;   Census;   Silver;   Weights and Measures;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Measures;   Money-changers;   Shekel;   Tables of measures weights and money in the bible;   Tax taxing taxation;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Law of Moses;   Money-Changers;   Taxes;   Tribute;   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Expiation;   Money;   Tribute;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Gerah;   Jehoash;   Jesus Christ (Part 2 of 2);   Money-Changers;   Tax;   Weights and Measures;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Commandments, the 613;   Fiscus Judaicus;   Hafṭarah;   Heave-Offering;   Johanan B. Zakkai;   Mishnah;   Numismatics;   Opferpfennig, Goldener;   Parashiyyot, the Four;   Poll-Tax;   Saadia B. Joseph (Sa'id Al-Fayyumi);   Shekel;   Valuation;   Weights and Measures;  

Parallel Translations

Clementine Latin Vulgate (1592)
Dixitque Lia : Hoc pro beatitudine mea : beatam quippe me dicent mulieres : propterea appellavit eum Aser.
Nova Vulgata (1979)
Hoc autem dabit omnis, qui transit ad censum, dimidium sicli iuxta mensuram sanctuarii siclus viginti obolos habet ; media pars sicli offeretur Domino.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

a shekel is: Leviticus 27:25, Numbers 3:47, Ezekiel 45:12

an half shekel: Exodus 38:26, Matthew 27:24,*Gr.

Reciprocal: Genesis 23:16 - four Exodus 38:24 - the shekel Leviticus 5:15 - the shekel Leviticus 27:3 - after the Numbers 7:13 - the shekel Numbers 18:16 - which is Matthew 17:24 - tribute

Gill's Notes on the Bible

This they shall give, everyone that passeth among them that are numbered,.... And their number, according to Jarchi, was known by what was paid; for he says the sum was taken not by heads, but everyone gave the half shekel, and by counting them the number was known, as follows:

half a shekel after the shekel of the sanctuary; that is, after the standard of a shekel kept in the sanctuary as a rule for all; and so Jarchi paraphrases it,

"according to the weight of a shekel, which I have fixed for thee to weigh, the shekel of the sanctuary.''

It was about fourteen pence: a shekel is twenty gerahs; a gerah being the twentieth part of a shekel, it was not quite three halfpence of our money:

an half shekel [shall be] the offering of the Lord; which was to be offered to him for the ransom of souls, whose lives were forfeited by sin; and of the redemption of which this was an acknowledgment; and was typical of the ransom price of souls by Christ, which is not silver or gold, but his precious blood, his life, himself, which is given as an offering and sacrifice to God, in the room and stead of his people; and which is given to God, against whom sin is committed, the lawgiver, whose law is broken, the Judge, whose justice must be satisfied, and the creditor, to whom the price must be paid.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The Ransom of Souls. - Exodus 38:25-28. On comparing these words with those of Numbers 1:1-3, we may perhaps infer that the first passage relates to a mere counting of the adult Israelites at the time when the money was taken from each, and that what the latter passage enjoins was a formal enrolment of them according to their genealogies and their order of military service.

A ransom for his soul - What the sincere worshipper thus paid was at once the fruit and the sign of his faith in the goodness of Yahweh, who had redeemed him and brought him into the covenant. Hence, the payment is rightly called a ransom inasmuch as it involved a personal appropriation of the fact of his redemption. On the word soul, see Leviticus 17:11.

That there be no plague - i. e. that they might not incur punishment for the neglect and contempt of spiritual privileges. Compare Exodus 28:35; 1 Corinthians 11:27-30; and the exhortation in our communion Service.

Exodus 30:13

Half a shekel - The probable weight of silver in the half-shekel would now be worth about 1 shilling, 3 1/2d. (Compare Genesis 23:16. See Exodus 38:24 note.) Gerah is, literally, a bean, probably the bean of the carob or locust-tree. It was used as the name of a small weight, as our word grain came into use from a grain of wheat.

Exodus 30:15

Every Israelite stood in one and the same relation to Yahweh. See Exodus 30:11-12.

Exodus 30:16

tabernacle of the congregation - tent of meeting, here and in Exodus 30:18, Exodus 30:20,

A memorial unto the children of Israel - The silver used in the tabernacle was a memorial to remind each man of his position before the Lord, as one of the covenanted people.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Exodus 30:13. Half a shekel — Each of the Israelites was ordered to give as a ransom for his soul (i.e., for his life) half a shekel, according to the shekel of the sanctuary. From this we may learn,

1. That the life of every man was considered as being forfeited to Divine justice.

2. That the redemption money given, which was doubtless used in the service of the sanctuary, was ultimately devoted to the use and profit of those who gave it.

3. That the standard by which the value of coin was ascertained, was kept in the sanctuary; for this appears to be the meaning of the words, after the shekel of the sanctuary.

4. The shekel is here said to be twenty gerahs. A gerah, according to Maimonides, weighed sixteen barleycorns, a shekel three hundred and twenty of pure silver. The shekel is generally considered to be equal in value to three shillings English; the redemption money, therefore, must be about one shilling and sixpence.

5. The rich were not to give more, the poor not to give less; to signify that all souls were equally precious in the sight of God, and that no difference of outward circumstances could affect the state of the soul; all had sinned, and all must be redeemed by the same price.

6. This atonement must be made that there might be no plague among them, intimating that a plague or curse from God must light on those souls for whom the atonement was not made.

7. This was to be a memorial unto the children of Israel, Exodus 30:16, to bring to their remembrance their past deliverance, and to keep in view their future redemption.

8. St. Peter seems to allude to this, and to intimate that this mode of atonement was ineffectual in itself, and only pointed out the great sacrifice which, in the fulness of time, should be made for the sin of the world. "Ye know," says he, "that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot: who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world," c.; 1 Peter 1:18-20.

9. Therefore all these things seem to refer to Christ alone, and to the atonement made by his blood; and upon him who is not interested in this atonement, God's plagues must be expected to fall. Reader, acquaint now thyself with God and be at peace, and thereby good shall come unto thee.


 
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