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TWOT Reference: 722a,723a
Strong's Number H2691 matches the Hebrew חָצֵר (ḥāṣēr),
which occurs 190 times in 163 verses
in the WLC Hebrew.
Page 3 / 4 (Psa 84:2–Eze 42:9)
Better a day in your courts
than a thousand anywhere else.
I would rather stand at the threshold of the house of my God
than live in the tents of wicked people.
Enter his gates with thanksgiving
and his courts with praise.
Give thanks to him and bless his name.
“When you come to appear before me,
who requires this from you —
this trampling of my courts?
Let the desert and its cities shout,
the settlements where Kedar dwells cry aloud.
Let the inhabitants of Sela sing for joy;
let them cry out from the mountaintops.
For those who gather grain will eat it
and praise the LORD,
and those who harvest the grapes will drink the wine
in my holy courts.
Jeremiah returned from Topheth, where the LORD had sent him to prophesy, stood in the courtyard of the LORD’s temple, and proclaimed to all the people,
“This is what the LORD says: Stand in the courtyard of the LORD’s temple and speak all the words I have commanded you to speak to all Judah’s cities that are coming to worship there. Do not hold back a word.
At that time, the army of the king of Babylon was besieging Jerusalem, and the prophet Jeremiah was imprisoned in the guard’s courtyard in the palace of the king of Judah.
“Then, as the LORD had said, my cousin Hanamel came to the guard’s courtyard and urged me, ‘Please buy my field in Anathoth in the land of Benjamin, for you own the right of inheritance and redemption. Buy it for yourself.’ Then I knew that this was the word of the LORD.
“and gave the purchase agreement to Baruch son of Neriah, son of Mahseiah. I did this in the sight of my cousin[fn] Hanamel, the witnesses who had signed the purchase agreement, and all the Judeans sitting in the guard’s courtyard.
While he was still confined in the guard’s courtyard, the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah a second time:
Then at the LORD’s temple, in the chamber of Gemariah son of Shaphan the scribe, in the upper courtyard at the opening of the New Gate of the LORD’s temple, in the hearing of all the people, Baruch read Jeremiah’s words from the scroll.
Then, after depositing the scroll in the chamber of Elishama the scribe, the officials came to the king at the courtyard and reported everything in the hearing of the king.
So King Zedekiah gave orders, and Jeremiah was placed in the guard’s courtyard. He was given a loaf of bread each day from the bakers’ street until all the bread was gone from the city. So Jeremiah remained in the guard’s courtyard.
So they took Jeremiah and dropped him into the cistern of Malchiah the king’s son, which was in the guard’s courtyard, lowering Jeremiah with ropes. There was no water in the cistern, only mud, and Jeremiah sank in the mud.
They pulled him up with the ropes and lifted him out of the cistern, but he remained in the guard’s courtyard.
Jeremiah remained in the guard’s courtyard until the day Jerusalem was captured, and he was there when it happened.[fn]
had Jeremiah brought from the guard’s courtyard and turned him over to Gedaliah son of Ahikam, son of Shaphan, to take him home. So he settled among his own people.
Now the word of the LORD had come to Jeremiah when he was confined in the guard’s courtyard:
Then he brought me to the entrance of the court, and when I looked there was a hole in the wall.
So he brought me to the inner court of the LORD’s house, and there were about twenty-five men at the entrance of the LORD’s temple, between the portico and the altar, with their backs to the LORD’s temple and their faces turned to the east. They were bowing to the east in worship of the sun.
Then he said to them, “Defile the temple and fill the courts with the slain. Go! ” So they went out killing people in the city.
Now the cherubim were standing to the south of the temple when the man went in, and the cloud filled the inner court.
Then the glory of the LORD rose from above the cherub to the threshold of the temple. The temple was filled with the cloud, and the court was filled with the brightness of the LORD’s glory.
The sound of the cherubim’s wings could be heard as far as the outer court; it was like the voice of God Almighty when he speaks.
Then he brought me into the outer court, and there were chambers and a paved surface laid out all around the court. Thirty chambers faced the pavement,
Then he measured the distance from the front of the lower gate to the exterior front of the inner court; it was 175 feet.[fn] This was the east; next the north is described.
The inner court had a gate facing the north gate, like the one on the east. He measured the distance from gate to gate; it was 175 feet.
The inner court had a gate on the south. He measured from gate to gate on the south; it was 175 feet.
Then he brought me to the inner court through the south gate. When he measured the south gate, it had the same measurements as the others.
Its portico faced the outer court, and its jambs were decorated with palm trees. Its stairway had eight steps.
Then he brought me to the inner court on the east side. When he measured the gate, it had the same measurements as the others.
Its portico faced the outer court, and its jambs were decorated with palm trees on each side. Its stairway had eight steps.
Its portico[fn] faced the outer court, and its jambs were decorated with palm trees on each side. Its stairway had eight steps.
Next he measured the court. It was square, 175 feet long and 175 feet wide. The altar was in front of the temple.
Next he measured the length of the building facing the temple yard to the west, with its galleries[fn] on each side; it was 175 feet.
The interior of the great hall and the porticoes of the court —
Then the man led me out by way of the north gate into the outer court. He brought me to the group of chambers opposite the temple yard and opposite the building to the north.
Opposite the 35 foot space[fn] belonging to the inner court and opposite the paved surface belonging to the outer court, the structure rose gallery by gallery in three tiers.
For they were arranged in three stories and had no pillars like the pillars of the courts; therefore the upper chambers were set back from the ground more than the lower and middle stories.
A wall on the outside ran in front of the chambers, parallel to them, toward the outer court; it was 87 1/2 feet long.
For the chambers on the outer court were 87 1/2 feet long, while those facing the great hall were 175 feet long.
3. Psa 84:2–Eze 42:9
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