| WHAT
DOES IT MEAN:
1. This
question is for those of you who like math. The molten sea
is round (v.2).
It measures ten cubits from brim to brim (v.2)
and measures 30 cubits around (v.2).
The brim is the thickness of a handbreadth (v.5).
A cubit is usually said to be 18 inches, but it can be as long
as 20 to 21 inches. A handbreadth is usually said to be about
four inches (the width of four fingers pressed together). The
formula for circumference (the distance around a circle) is
the diameter (length across) times pi (generally 3.14). If
the diameter of the molten sea is ten cubits, then the circumference
should be about 31.4 cubits. Many have used this to prove the
Bible wrong. But simple math will show the numbers to be quite
true. Can you figure out how? Hint: consider the thickness
of the brim. If this is too much math for you, try it on any
numbers-wise person that you know.
2. The
molten sea sits on 12 brazen oxen (v.3-4).
What is the significance of the oxen? Read Psalm 144:14 and
Proverbs 14:4. What do oxen seem to signify in scripture?
3. The
placement of the molten sea in the temple court is described
in verse
10: “And he set the sea on the right side of the east end,
over against the south.”
Solomon’s Temple was built so that the opening pointed toward
the east. The entire temple is three times as long (60 cubits)
as it is wide (20 cubits). Draw a rectangle representing the
temple. Now draw a circle representing the position of the molten
sea according to the description above (10 cubits across). |