Much of our discussion focused on the copper or bronze lavers (wash basins) made from women’s mirrors (8).
Mirrors at that time, we noted, were not made of glass but of copper or bronze polished so well that a person’s image would appear in the mirror. Tsav’u can mean either to perform service or to form a crowd or multitude. If the latter is chosen, the passage refers to the mirrors of the women who flocked to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting.