Exodus 39:32
Thus was all the work of the tabernacle of the tent of the congregation finished: and the children of Israel did according to all that the Lord commanded Moses, so did they.
Cross-reference
Exodus 39:33 follows the completion statement here by listing the items brought to Moses — a direct narrative continuation.
Exodus 39:42 restates the same point: the people completed the work exactly as the LORD commanded — reinforcing the completion.
Exodus 39:43 records Moses' inspection and blessing—directly following the completion statement here, confirming obedience.
Exodus 25:1 begins the LORD's instructions for the tabernacle — here in 39:32 the work is finished, fulfilling that initial command.
Exodus 25:40 gave the pattern command; here, the work is finished exactly as that pattern required.
Exodus 35:1 has Moses relay God's commands for the tabernacle — the work completed here exactly fulfills those instructions.
Exodus 40:38 describes the cloud and fire over the tabernacle after its completion — God's presence validates the finished work.
In Exodus 40:33, Moses finishes the work — this continues the narrative of completing the tabernacle, showing the final step after the items were made.
Hebrews 8:5 explains the tabernacle as a copy of heavenly things, citing the pattern command that this completion exactly followed.
Hebrews 3:2 compares Jesus' faithfulness to Moses, who was faithful in building God's house—the tabernacle completed here.
In Numbers 1:54, Israel does 'according to all that the Lord commanded Moses' — the same formula of obedient completion appears in the census context.
In Numbers 9:5, Israel observes Passover 'as the Lord commanded Moses' — another instance of the community obeying divine instructions exactly.
In Genesis 7:5, the same phrase 'did all that the Lord commanded' appears — Noah's obedience mirrors Israel's completion of the tabernacle.
In Leviticus 8:4, Moses again does 'just as the Lord commanded' — reinforcing the theme of exact obedience seen in the tabernacle completion.
In Leviticus 1:1, God speaks from the tent of meeting — this follows directly after the tabernacle completion, linking the finished structure to divine revelation.
Numbers 3:25 assigns Gershonites to care for the tabernacle tent and coverings — the very structure completed here.
Numbers 3:31 gives Kohathites charge over the ark and furnishings — the holy items completed in the tabernacle.
Numbers 3:36 assigns Merarites the frames and bars — the structural components of the tabernacle just finished.
Numbers 4:4-32 assigns Levitical duties for transporting the tabernacle—the service that follows its completion here.
1 Chronicles 28:19 shows David receiving the temple pattern from God—paralleling the pattern for the tabernacle that was completed here.
In Hebrews 9:2, the tabernacle's furnishings are described — this NT passage references the same completed structure to explain the earthly sanctuary.
Numbers 3:26 adds the court hangings to the Gershonites' duties — part of the tabernacle finished here.
Numbers 3:37 gives Merarites the pillars and cords of the court — part of the completed tabernacle complex.
Leviticus 9:24 shows God's fire consuming the sacrifice after the priesthood is consecrated — a later stage in the same narrative.
In 1 Kings 7:40, Hiram completes temple furnishings — a parallel of skilled work finishing the house of God, now for the temple instead of the tabernacle.