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2 Chronicles 4:1 open_in_new
The supplementary character of Chronicles is here once more apparent. The author of Kings had omitted to record the dimensions of the brass altar. It stood in the great court 2 Chronicles 6:12-13.
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2 Chronicles 4:3 open_in_new
For “oxen” we find in 1 Kings 7:24, “knops” or “gourds.” An early copyist, not comprehending the comparatively rare word here used for “gourd,” and expecting to hear of oxen, as soon as the molten sea was mentioned, changed the reading.
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2 Chronicles 4:5 open_in_new
Three thousand baths - See 1 Kings 7:23 note. It is quite possible that either here or in Kings the text may have been accidentally corrupted.
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2 Chronicles 4:7 open_in_new
According to their form - Rather, “after their manner” (compare 2 Chronicles 4:20). There is no allusion to the shape of the candlesticks, which were made, no doubt, after the pattern of the original candlestick of Moses.
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2 Chronicles 4:8 open_in_new
The number of the tables (see 2 Chronicles 4:19) and of the basins, is additional to the information contained in Kings.
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2 Chronicles 4:16 open_in_new
Huram his father - Or, “Huram his master-workman” (2 Chronicles 2:13 note).
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2 Chronicles 4:17 open_in_new
Zeredathah - Or, Zarthan (marginal reference). The writer of Chronicles probably uses the name which the place bore in his own day.
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2 Chronicles 4:19 open_in_new
The tables - A single table only is mentioned in 1 Kings 7:48; 2 Chronicles 29:18. It is supposed that Solomon made ten similar tables, any one of which might be used for the showbread; but that the bread was never placed on more than one table at a time.
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2 Chronicles 4:22 open_in_new
The entry of the house - The text is, by some, corrected by 1 Kings 7:50, “the hinges” of the doors of the house, etc.