The Torah provides detailed instructions () for the garments worn by the
priests in the Temple. These details became the subject of later symbolic interpretations. According to
Philo: The priest's upper garment symbolized the ether, the blossoms represented the earth, the
pomegranates typified running water, and the
bells denoted the music of the water. The
ephod corresponded to heaven, and the stones on both shoulders to the two hemispheres, one above and the other below the earth. The six names on each of the stones were the six signs of the
zodiac, which were denoted also by the twelve names on
the breastplate. The
miter was the sign of the crown, which exalted the high priest above all earthly kings.
Josephus interpreted as follows: The coat symbolized of the earth, the upper garment symbolized heaven, while the bells and pomegranates represented thunder and lightning. The
ephod typified the four elements, and the interwoven gold denoted the glory of God. The breastplate was in the center of the ephod, as the earth formed the center of the universe; the
girdle symbolized the ocean, the stones on the shoulders the sun and moon, and the jewels in the breastplate the twelve signs of the zodiac, while the miter was a token of heaven. The
Jerusalem Talmud and
Midrash described each garment as providing atonement for a specific sin: the coat for murder or for
shatnez, the
undergarment for unchastity, the miter for pride, the belt for theft or trickery, the breastplate for any perversion of the Law, the ephod for idolatry, and the robe for slander. ==The symbolic values of numbers==