'Pillars' in the Bible
In the same way he made doorposts of olive wood for the entrance to the main hall, only with four-sided pillars.
He named it "The Palace of the Lebanon Forest"; it was 150 feet long, 75 feet wide, and 45 feet high. It had four rows of cedar pillars and cedar beams above the pillars.
The roof above the beams supported by the pillars was also made of cedar; there were forty-five beams, fifteen per row.
He made a colonnade 75 feet long and 45 feet wide. There was a porch in front of this and pillars and a roof in front of the porch.
He fashioned two bronze pillars; each pillar was 27 feet high and 18 feet in circumference.
He made two bronze tops for the pillars; each was seven-and-a-half feet high.
The latticework on the tops of the pillars was adorned with ornamental wreaths and chains; the top of each pillar had seven groupings of ornaments.
When he made the pillars, there were two rows of pomegranate-shaped ornaments around the latticework covering the top of each pillar.
The tops of the two pillars in the porch were shaped like lilies and were six feet high.
He set up the pillars on the porch in front of the main hall. He erected one pillar on the right side and called it Jakin; he erected the other pillar on the left side and called it Boaz.
The tops of the pillars were shaped like lilies. So the construction of the pillars was completed.
He made the two pillars, the two bowl-shaped tops of the pillars, the latticework for the bowl-shaped tops of the two pillars,
the four hundred pomegranate-shaped ornaments for the latticework of the two pillars (each latticework had two rows of these ornaments at the bowl-shaped top of the pillar),
They even built for themselves high places, sacred pillars, and Asherah poles on every high hill and under every green tree.