“You shall have
Honest balances.
There must be
An honest ephah,
There must be
An honest bath.
The ephah
With the bath
Shall be
Of the same measure.
The bath
Contains one tenth
Of a homer.
The ephah contains
One tenth
Of a homer.
The homer shall be
The standard measure.
The shekel shall be
Twenty gerahs.
Twenty shekels,
Twenty-five shekels,
Shall make a mina
For you.”
Yahweh, via Ezekiel, was going to tell them how to keep their measurements just and correct. What are all these measurements? Ezekiel loved to be exact. First, a homer was a measure for liquids, about 60 gallons or 6 bushels of grain. The bath was about 6 gallons. The ephah was a measurement for grains about 2/3rd of a bushel or about 6 gallons. The gerah was the smallest size coin, about 1/50th of ounce. The shekel coin was 2/5th of an ounce. The mina was the largest coin, about 1.25 pounds. Thus, these were to be the standard measurements.