< Ezekiela 41 >

1 Heneke izay le nendese’e mb’ amy kivohoy mb’eo vaho nanjehe o tolà’eo: kiho eneñe ty ampohe’ ty ila’e naho kiho eneñe ka ty añ’ ila’e, ie treha’ i voko’ey.
He took me to the Temple and measured the posts as cubits wide on both sides.
2 Kiho folo ty ampohe’ i lalañey naho kiho lime ty añ’ ila’ i lalañey naho kiho lime ka ty ila’e; zinehe’e ka ty andava’e le kiho efapolo; naho kiho roapolo ty am-pohe’e.
The entrance was ten cubits wide, and the sides of the entrance were five cubits long on both sides. He measured the outer sanctuary as forty cubits long and twenty cubits wide.
3 Nimoak’ ao amy zao re nanjehe o tolà’ i lalambei’eio, kiho roe; le i lalañey, kiho eneñe; naho kiho fito ty ampohe’ i lalañey.
He went into the inner sanctuary and measured the entrance posts as two cubits wide. The entrance was six cubits wide, and the walls on both sides were seven cubits wide.
4 Le zinehe’e ka ty andava’e: kiho roa­polo; naho kiho roapolo ty ampohe’e aolo’ i kivohoy eo; le hoe re ­tamako, Itoy i toetse masiñe do’ey.
He measured the room beside the inner sanctuary as twenty cubits long and twenty cubits wide. He told me, “This is the Most Holy Place.”
5 Heneke izay le zinehe’e ty rindri’ i anjombay: kiho eneñe; le ty am-pohe’ o efe-traño’eo, kiho efatse mañarikatoke i anjombay amo ila’e iabio.
He measured Temple wall as six cubits thick, and each side room around the Temple was four cubits wide.
6 Telo mifaningitse o efe-traño’eo, telo-polo ty am-pidadaña’e raike; nampiziliheñe an-drindri’ i anjomba nandranjiañe o efe-traño añ’ariary azeoy iereo, soa te hirampy amy trañoy fa tsy hirampy an-drindri’ i kivohoy.
There were three levels of side rooms above one another, each having thirty rooms. The wall of the Temple had external supports for the side rooms, so that they would not be fixed into the wall of the Temple itself.
7 Nibey ty am-pohe’ o efe-traño niarikatokeo naho o lalañe mioza amo efe-trañoo naho ambone te amo ambaneo, aa le nitombo nañambone ty treha’ o trañoo naho o lalañeo. Ty fanongañe boak’ ambaney pak’ amboney le niranga i añivo’ey.
The side rooms around the Temple became wider at each higher level, because as the structure around the Temple went up the Temple wall grew narrower A stairway provided access from the bottom story to the top, going through the middle level.
8 Nitreako te nañarikatoke i anjombay ty lavaranga naonjoñe; kobay raike, toe kiho eneñe, ty nitakare’e hifamitrañe ami’ty mananta’ o efe-trañoo.
I saw that the Temple was on a raised platform that surrounded it. This was the foundation for the side rooms. Its height was the complete length of a measuring rod, six long cubits.
9 Ty treha’ i rindriñe alafe’ o efe-trañoo, le kiho lime; mira amy zay ty malalak’ añivo’ o efe-trañoo naho i anjombay.
The thickness of the outer wall of the side rooms was five cubits, and there was open space between the side rooms of the Temple
10 Ty treha’ o efe-traño mañarikatoke i anjombaio mizehe kiho roapolo.
and the outer chambers that measured twenty cubits wide all round the Temple.
11 Misokak’ an-toetse malalake ty lala’ o efe-trañoo; miatrek’ avaratse ty lala’e raike naho miatrek’ atimo ty lala’e ila’e; vaho kiho lime ty treha’ i malalake miariary ama’ey.
The doors of the side rooms opened into this area, with one entrance to the north and another one to the south. The open space was five cubits wide on each side.
12 I traño aolo’ i kiririsan-kivoho ahandrefa’ey, le kiho fitom-polo ty am-pohe’e; kiho lime ty hate­ve’ i rindri’e mañariary azey vaho kiho sivam­-polo ty andava’e.
Another building faced the Temple courtyard on the west side. It measured seventy cubits wide and ninety cubits long, with walls all the way round that were five cubits thick.
13 Zinehe amy zao i kivohoy, kiho zato ty andava’e; naho kiho zato ka ty an-dava’ i kiririsa’ey naho i trañoy rekets’ o rindri’eo.
He measured the Temple as one hundred cubits long. The Temple courtyard and the building including its walls were also one hundred cubits long.
14 Ty treha’ i fiatrefa’ i Anjombaiy naho o kiririsa’e atiñanañeo, le zato kiho.
The Temple courtyard on the east side, (including the front of the Temple), was one hundred cubits wide.
15 Zinehe’e amy zao ty andava’ i traño miatreke i kiririsa ahandrefañey naho o oloñolo’e añ’ila’e atoy naho añ’ila’e aroio; zato kiho. I kivohoy, i toe’e añate’ey, naho o lavaranga miakatse an-kiririsao;
He measured the length of the building that faced the Temple courtyard towards the rear of the Temple, including its open halls on each side. It was one hundred cubits long. The outer sanctuary, the inner sanctuary, and the porches facing the courtyard,
16 le o tolà’eo, naho o lalan-kede milentekeo, o oloñolo’e mañariari’ i telo mañambone rey tandrife i lalambeiio, vaho niteme­rem-baramba ty añariari’ i kivohoiy, mifototse an-tane mionjoñe pak’amo lalan-kedeo, vaho o tokonan-dalan-kedeo,
as well as the thresholds and the narrow windows and the surrounding open halls with their three levels up to and including the threshold, were covered with wood on every side. This extended from the ground up to and including the windows.
17 le nitakatse ty malalak’ ambone’ i lalambeiy, sikal’am-po’ i anjombay ao; ie alafe’e etoy naho mañariary o rindriñe añate’eo ty nipateran-tsare:
On the outside of all the walls by the entrance to the inner sanctuary, spaced at regular intervals around the inner and outer sanctuary,
18 kerobe naho satrañe; añivo’ ty ke­robe naho ty kerobe ty satrañe; songa manan-daharañe roe o kerobeo;
were carved designs of cherubim and palm trees. Every cherub had two faces:
19 lahara’ ondaty ty miatreke ty satrañe naho tarehen’ ana-diona ty miatreke i satrañe añ’ila’ey. Sinokitse añ’ ariari’ i kivohoy iaby irezay;
a man's face looked in the direction of a palm tree on one side, and the face of a young lion looked in the direction of the palm tree on the other side. These carvings extended the whole way round the Temple.
20 mifototse an-tane eo pak’ ambone’ i lalambeiy ty nanitsihañe kerobe naho satrañe, vaho an-drindri’ i toetse miavakey eo.
Designs of cherubim and palm trees were carved on the Temple wall from the floor up to the space above the doorway.
21 Efa-mira o tolàn-dalambein-kivohoo, le mañirinkiriñe i nitreako zay ty aolo’ i toetse miavakey eo.
The Temple's doorframe was rectangular, as was the doorframe of the sanctuary.
22 An-katae ty kitrely, kiho telo ty haabo’e naho kiho roe ty an-dava’e, le an-katae o kotso’e añate’eo naho i an-dava’ey vaho o rindri’eo; le hoe re amako, Itoy ty latabatse aolo’ Iehovà eo.
An altar made of wood stood there, three cubits high and two cubits by long. All of it—its corners, base, and sides—were made of wood. The man told me, “This is the table that stands before the Lord.”
23 Songa aman-delan-dalambey roe i kivohoy naho i toetse miavakey.
The Temple and the sanctuary both had hinged double doors.
24 Sindre amam-baramba roe I lalañe rey, varamba mi­viom­bio; amam-baramba roe’ i lalañe raikey naho varamba roe ka i lalañe ila’ey.
Each door had two panels that opened. There were two panels for one door, and two panels for the other door.
25 Nipatereñe am’ iereo, amo lalambei’ i kivohoio, ty kerobe naho ty satrañe, hambañe amy nanoañe o rindri’eoy; nanoeñe lapalapam-baramba ty aolo’ i fizilihañe alafe’ey.
There were carvings of cherubim and palm trees on the Temple doors like those on the walls, and there was a wooden roof that covered the outside part of the porch at the front.
26 Teo ty lalan-kede nilenteke naho satrañe añ’ila’e roe, an-drindriñe añ’ila’ i fizilihañey, naho amo efe-traño añ’ila’ i anjombaio vaho amo lapalapa’eo.
There were narrow windows and palm tree designs on the walls of the porch. The side rooms of the Temple also had roofs.

< Ezekiela 41 >