Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year

Day 215: The Completion of Solomon's Temple

In Day 215 of Immerse: The Daily Bible Reading Experience, we reflect on the extensive craftsmanship involved in building King Solomon's Temple. We learn about Huram, the skilled craftsman from Tyre, who cast various bronze items such as pillars, a great basin called 'the sea,' water carts, and smaller basins. Additionally, we read about the final touches King Solomon made, including gold furnishings and sacred items. The episode concludes with Solomon bringing the Ark of the Covenant into the temple, followed by his prayer acknowledging the Lord's presence and the fulfillment of God's promise to David.

00:00 Introduction to Immerse: The Daily Bible Reading Experience
00:04 Craftsmanship of Hurum: Bronze Work for King Solomon
01:28 The Great Round Basin: The Sea
02:20 Bronze Water Carts and Basins
04:34 Completion of the Temple Furnishings
06:32 Solomon Summons the Elders and Brings the Ark
08:19 Solomon's Prayer and Blessing
09:56 Conclusion of Today's Reading

Buy Immerse: Kingdoms Now!
Volume 3 — Joshua, Judges, Ruth, Samuel–Kings
Kingdoms
Immerse: Kingdoms is the third of six volumes in Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience. Kingdoms presents a new and unique journey through the story of Israel from the time of its conquest of Canaan (Joshua) through its struggle to settle the land (Judges, Ruth) and the establishment of Israel’s kingdom, which ends in a forced exile (Samuel–Kings). The nation of Israel, commissioned to be God’s light to the nations, falls to division and then foreign conquest for rejecting God’s rule.

4 Questions to get your conversations started:
1. What stood out to you this week?
2. Was there anything confusing or troubling?
3. Did anything make you think differently about God?
4. How might this change the way we live?

QUICK START GUIDE
3 ways to get the most out of your experience
  1. Use Immerse: Beginnings instead of your regular chapter and verse Bible. This special reader’s edition restores the Bible to its natural simplicity and beauty by removing chapter and verse numbers and other historical additions. Letters look like letters, songs look like songs, and the original literary structures are visible in each book.
  2. Commit to making this a community experience. Immerse is designed for groups to encounter large portions of the Bible together
    for 8 weeks–more like a book club, less like a Bible study. By meeting every week in small groups and discussing what you read in open,
    honest conversations, you and your community can come together to be transformed through an authentic experience with the Scriptures.
  3. Aim to understand the big story. Read through “The Stories and the Story” (p. 483) to see how the books of the Bible work together to tell God’s story of his creation’s restoration. As you read through Immerse: Beginnings, rather than ask, “How do I fit God into my busy life?” begin asking, “How can I join in God’s great plan by living out my part in his story?”

What is Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year?

Take a breath, find your place, and read deeply. Discover the joy of reading God’s word with the Immerse New Living Translation (NLT) Bible.

This daily Bible podcast will take you through the Bible in a year following the Immerse Bible Reading Experience. So grab your family and small group and go through the Bible in a year together with Immerse. Each of the 6 volumes is available online or at your favorite Christian bookstore.

Ethan: Welcome To Immerse: The
Daily Bible Reading Experience.

Day 200 and 15

King Solomon then asked for a man
named Hurum to come from tire.

He was half Israelite since his
mother was a widow from the tribe of

NAFTA lie, and his father had been
a craftsman in bronze from tire.

Hurum was extremely skillful and talented
in any work in bronze, and he came to

do all the metal work for King Solomon.

Here I'm cast two bronze pillars each 27
feet tall and 18 feet in circumference For

the tops of the pillars, he cast bronze
capitals each seven and a half feet tall.

Each capital was decorated with seven sets
of lattice work and interwoven chains.

He also encircled the lattice work
with two rows of pomegranates to

decorate the capitals over the pillars.

The capitals on the columns inside
the entry room were shaped like water

lilies, and they were six feet tall.

The capitals on the two pillars had
200 pomegranates in two rows around

them beside the rounded surface.

Next to the latticework, Hiam set the
pillars at the entrance of the temple, one

toward the south and one toward the north.

He named the one on the south jenkin
and the one on the north Boaz.

The capitals on the pillars were
shaped like water lilies, and so the

work on the pillars was finished.

Then Hirum cast a great round
basin, 15 feet across from

rim to rim called the sea.

It was seven and a half feet deep
and about 45 feet in circumference.

It was encircled just below its rim
by two rows of decorative gourds.

There were about six gourds
per foot all the way around.

And they were cast as part of the basin.

The sea was placed on a base of
12 bronze oxen all facing outward,

three faced north, three faced west,
three faced south, and three faced

east, and the sea rested on them.

The walls of the sea were about three
inches thick, and its rim flared out like

a cup and resembled a water Lily blossom.

It could hold about
11,000 gallons of water.

Hirum also made 10 bronze water
carts each six feet long, six feet

wide, and four and a half feet tall.

They were constructed with side
panels braced with crossbars.

Both the panels and the crossbars
were decorated with carved

lions, oxen, and cherubim.

Above and below, the lions and
oxen were wreath decorations.

Each of these carts had four
bronze wheels and bronze axles.

There were supporting posts for the
bronze basins at the corners of the carts.

These supports were decorated on
each side with carvings of wreaths.

The top of each cart had a
rounded frame for the basin.

It projected one and a half feet above the
carts top, like a round pedestal, and its

opening was two and a quarter feet across.

It was decorated on the outside
with carvings of wreaths.

The panels of the carts
were square, not round.

Under the panels were four wheels
that were connected to axles that had

been cast as one unit with the cart.

The wheels were two and a
quarter feet in diameter, and

were similar to chariot wheels.

The axles, spokes, rims, and hubs
were all cast from molten bronze.

There were handles at each of the four
corners of the carts, and these two

were cast as one unit with the card.

Around the top of each cart
was a rim nine inches wide.

The corner supports and side panels
were cast as one unit with the cart

carvings of cherubim, lions and palm
trees decorated the panels and corner

supports wherever there was room
and there were wreaths all around.

All 10 water carts were the same
size and were made alike for

each was cast from the same mold.

Hirum also made 10 smaller
bronze basins, one for each cart.

Each basin was six feet across and
could hold 220 gallons of water.

He set five water carts on the south side
of the temple and five on the north side.

The great bronze basin called
the sea was placed near the

southeast corner of the temple.

He also made the necessary wash
basins, shovels, and bowls.

So at last, Hiam completed everything
King Solomon had assigned him to

make for the temple of the Lord.

The two pillars, the two bull shaped
capitals on top of the pillars, the

two networks of interwoven chains
that decorated the capitals, the 400

pomegranates that hung from the chains on
the capitals, two rows of pomegranates for

each of the chain networks that decorated
the capitals on top of the pillars.

The 10 water carts holding the 10 basins,
the sea, and the 12 oxen under it.

The ash buckets, the
shovels and the bowls.

Hiam made all these things of burnished
bronze for the temple of the Lord.

Just as King Solomon had directed, the
king had them cast in clay molds in the

Jordan Valley between Zeth and Zhan.

Solomon did not weigh all these
things because there were so many.

The weight of the bronze
could not be measured.

Solomon also made all the
furnishings of the temple of the

Lord, the gold altar, the gold
table for the bread of the presents.

The lamp stands of solid gold, five
on the south and five on the north

in front of the most holy place.

The flower, decorations,
lamps, and tongs, all of gold.

The small bowls lamp, snuffers
bowls, lads, and incense burners,

all of solid gold, the doors for
the entrances to the most holy place

and the main room of the temple with
their fronts overlaid with gold.

So King Solomon finished all his
work on the temple of the Lord.

Then he brought all the gifts.

His father David had dedicated the silver,
the gold, and the various articles.

And he stored them in the
treasuries of the Lord's temple.

Solomon then summoned to Jerusalem,
the elders of Israel and all the heads

of the tribes, the leaders of the
ancestral families of the Israelites.

They were to bring the Ark of the Lord's
covenant to the temple from its location

in the city of David, also known as Zion.

So all the men of Israel assembled
before King Solomon at the

Annual Festival of Shelters.

Which is held in early autumn in the
month of Es Andm, when all the elders

of Israel arrived, the priests picked up
the ark, the priests and levies brought

up the Ark of the Lord, along with the
special tent and all the sacred items

that had been in it there before the Ark.

King Solomon and the entire community of
Israel sacrificed so many sheep, goats,

and cattle that no one could keep count.

Then the priests carried the Ark
of the Lord's covenant into the

inner sanctuary of the temple,
the most holy place, and placed it

beneath the wings of the cherubim.

The cherubim spread their wings
over the ark, forming a canopy over

the ark and its carrying poles.

These poles were so long that their
ends could be seen from the holy

place, which is in front of the most
holy place, but not from the outside.

They are still there to this day.

Nothing was in the ark except the two
stone tablets that Moses had placed in

it at Mount Sinai where the Lord made
a covenant with the people of Israel.

When they left the land of Egypt, when
the priests came out of the holy place, a

thick cloud filled the temple of the Lord.

The priests could not continue
their service because of the cloud.

For the glorious presence of the
Lord, filled the temple of the Lord.

Then Solomon prayed.

Oh Lord.

You have said that you would live
in a thick cloud of darkness.

Now I have built a glorious temple for
you, a place where you can live forever.

Then the king turned around to the
entire community of Israel standing

before him and gave this blessing.

Praise the Lord, the God of
Israel, who has kept the promise

he made to my father, David.

For, he told my father from the day I
brought my people Israel out of Egypt.

I have never chosen a city among any of
the tribes of Israel as the place where a

temple should be built to honor my name.

But I have chosen David to be
king over my people Israel.

Then Solomon said, my father, David
wanted to build this temple to honor

the name of the Lord, the God of Israel.

But the Lord told him you wanted to
build the temple to honor my name.

Your intention is good, but
you are not the one to do it.

One of your own sons will
build the temple to honor me.

And now the Lord has fulfilled
the promise he made for I have

become king in my father's place.

And now I sit on the throne of
Israel just as the Lord promised.

I have built this temple to honor the
name of the Lord, the God of Israel,

and I have prepared a place there for
the ark, which contains the covenant

that the Lord made with our ancestors
when he brought them out of Egypt.

This concludes today's
Immer reading experience.

Thank you for joining us.