Commentaries and Other Bible Study Helps - Prayer Tents - Prayer Tents

Introduction To
Ezekiel
Author and Title
Ezekiel is both the name of the prophet and the title of the book that records his preaching. Ezekiel's name (Hb. Yekhezqe’l) means "God strengthens" or "May God strengthen," appropriate for a prophet called to proclaim a message of uncompromising judgment and later a message of a restoration for God's sake, not Israel's. Ezekiel lived out his prophetic career among the community of exiled Judeans in Babylon. He belonged to the priestly class and was married (see 24:15-24), but it is doubtful that he had any children.
If Ezekiel was thirty years old at the time of the inaugural vision (see note at 1:1), an intriguing connection can be made with the final vision of the book, which is dated to the twenty-fifth year of the exile (40:1), when Ezekiel would have been fifty. As Numbers 4 makes clear, the ages of thirty and fifty mark the span of the active service of the priests. As a member of the exilic community, Ezekiel would not have been able to participate in the ritual life of the Jerusalem temple, nor would he have undergone initiation into priestly service while living outside the land. But perhaps the timing of these visions coincided with what would have been Ezekiel's "working life" as a priest had he lived in Jerusalem prior to the exile.
The relationship between the Hebrew prophets and the books that bear their names is complex. For both Isaiah (see Isa. 8:16) and Jeremiah (e.g., Jeremiah 36) there is evidence of individuals or groups who preserved the prophet's words. Such is not the case with Ezekiel. No such disciples are named, and Ezekiel's autobiographical style suggests his close involvement with recording the written traditions that bear his name. At the same time, the very preservation of his scroll implies the existence of a support group, which may also have provided some editorial input.
Date
Ezekiel's oracles are more frequently dated than those of other OT prophets. The first date of the book takes the reader to the , after the first group of exiles was deported to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar. The latest-dated oracle comes after that summer, in The book is arranged chronologically in three parts: chapters 1-24 and 33-48 form one sequence, while the foreign-nation oracles of chapters 25-32 have their own order (see Outline). Caution must be exercised in attempting to align Ezekiel's dates with those of the modern calendar, but the rough equivalents are as shown in the chart, Dates in Ezekiel.
Dates in Ezekiel
Reference | Year/month/day following exile of Jehoiachin | Modern equivalent*/year b.c. | Situation |
---|---|---|---|
1:2 | *** | inaugural vision | |
8:1 | first temple vision | ||
20:1 | elders come to inquire | ||
24:1 | siege of Jerusalem begins | ||
26:1 | oracle against Tyre, before Babylon besieged it | ||
29:1 | oracle against Egypt | ||
29:17 | **** | Egypt assigned to Babylon; after end of Babylon's siege of Tyre | |
30:20 | oracle against Egypt | ||
31:1 | oracle against Egypt | ||
32:1 | oracle against Egypt | ||
32:17 | oracle against Egypt | ||
33:21 | fugitive arrives in Babylon | ||
40:1 | second temple vision |
*For simplicity, here and in the notes that follow, only the second month of the modern equivalent is given (cf. Months in the Hebrew Calendar) **Unique dating formula in Hebrew; see notes ***earliest recorded oracle ****latest recorded oracle
Theme and Purpose
Ezekiel spoke to a community forced from its home, a people who had broken faith with their God. As the spokesman for the God of Israel, Ezekiel spoke oracles that vindicate the reputation of this holy God. This radically God-centered point of view finds its sharpest expression in 36:22-23 ("It is not for your sake, O house of Israel, that I am about to act, but for the sake of my holy name. . . . And I will vindicate the holiness of my great name. . . . And the nations will know that I am the Lord"). Thus the primary purpose of Ezekiel's message was to restore God's glory before the people who had spurned it in view of the watching nations. But Israel's own welfare was bound up with its God. So the prophet pleads: "Why will you die, O house of Israel? For I have no pleasure in the death of anyone, declares the Lord God; so turn, and live" (18:31-32).
Ezekiel's message was unrelenting. Of all the books in the OT, only Psalms, Jeremiah, and Genesis are longer. Ezekiel's uncompromising message is matched by language that often seems hard and sometimes offensive. If there is no softening his language, at least it appears that the grandeur of Ezekiel's vision of God rendered much of the earthly reality he observed as sordid, and worse. The appropriate response, in Ezekiel's terms, is not simply revulsion but repentance and a longing for the restoration of God's glory.
Occasion and Background
Ezekiel prophesied during a time of great confusion. In the Babylonians had exiled Judah's king Jehoiachin--only
The pattern in the history of the exiled northern kingdom of Israel, and now again for the southern kingdom of Judah, was that prophets emerged in times of crisis to bring God's message to his people. The time of Judah's exile was therefore a period of intense prophetic activity. Jeremiah was an older contemporary of Ezekiel (and, like Ezekiel, from a priestly family). Ezekiel clearly knows Jeremiah's message and develops some of the older prophet's themes. However, it is not known whether they ever met, and it seems Jeremiah was not aware of Ezekiel, whose ministry did not begin until after Ezekiel had been in exile for .
Although Ezekiel's fellow exiles formed his main audience, it seems likely that his oracles would have been communicated to their compatriots back in Judah. Ezekiel probably lived out his days in exile. His second temple vision--in which a new constitution for renewed, ideal Israel was spelled out--came well into the long exile Jeremiah predicted (Jer. 25:8-14). If Ezekiel was
Key Themes
Style
Prophetic books often make use of formulaic statements, but such formulas have a frequency and consistency in Ezekiel not matched in other prophetic writings. Once recognized, these formulas can greatly help interpretation because they formally mark the introduction and conclusion of oracles. Introductory formulas include "the word of the Lord came to me" (
Some of the unusual aspects of Ezekiel's prophecies are inevitably some of the better known. This is true of his frequent recourse to street theater, and symbolic actions of a quite odd and striking kind (e.g., 4:1-5:17; 12:3-6; 24:16-18; 37:16-17). He also makes plentiful use of extended allegories (e.g., chs. 15-17; 19; 21; 23; etc.). Especially in the foreign-nation oracles, laments become vehicles for his message (e.g., 27:2; 28:11-12; 32:2).
Influence
This book stands at a turning point in the history of biblical prophecy. In part this has to do with Ezekiel's standing on the cusp between the predominant preexilic message, which called for repentance by threatening judgment, and postexilic prophecy, which regularly called for repentance by promising restoration. It has also to do with forms of prophetic experience. While the origins of apocalyptic literature are still debated, Ezekiel's visions must play a role in contributing to its development. In particular, the scenario in which a vision of heavenly realities is given in the company of a celestial guide-interpreter--so familiar from Zechariah and Daniel, as well as the NT book of Revelation--finds its headwaters in Ezekiel's prophecy.
Ezekiel inherited some of his themes from earlier prophets, but his handling of them contributes to their later shape in the NT. This seems particularly true of the imagery of the "good shepherd" (34:11-24) and "living water" (47:1-14; cf. Rev. 22:1-2). The book of Revelation draws inspiration from some of Ezekiel's most negative images--e.g., the "whoring" of Ezekiel 16 and 23, the enemy Gog of Magog (on the use of this in Rev. 20:8, see note on Ezek. 38:2)--but Ezekiel's vision of a new city also resonates there (Rev. 3:12; 21:1-22:5). There are few clear hints of resurrection in the OT, but one of them is found in the interpretation of Ezekiel's vision of the valley of dry bones (see Ezek. 37:12-13 and note). Whatever it might have meant to Ezekiel's audience, it makes an important contribution to the development of biblical thought.
History of Salvation Summary
Like other prophets called to explain the Babylonian exile, Ezekiel stressed that it was due to the people's faithlessness toward God, and therefore to their failure to live as God's renewed humanity. He also stressed that even this disaster was not the end of Israel's story. God would restore them morally and spiritually, and eventually use Israel to bring light to the Gentiles. Ezekiel adds a nuance to this prophetic refrain: Israel's calling was to show forth the holiness of God's name, but they had "profaned" that name (treated it as unholy); in restoring them, God would act to vindicate the holiness of his name before all nations, enabling them to know him. (For an explanation of the "History of Salvation," see the Overview of the Bible. See also History of Salvation in the Old Testament: Preparing the Way for Christ.)
Literary Features
The book of Ezekiel is one of the most complex books in the Bible because so many different genres converge in it. It is important to grasp right at the start that this book is an anthology of separate pieces of writing. There is no single overarching story line; the unity is that of a carefully arranged collection (see Outline). The general arrangement of the material is one that several other OT prophetic books also follow--a general movement from
Several observations are in order. First, much of the book consists of visionary writing, which transports readers to a world of the imagination where the rules of reality are obviously suspended in favor of highly unusual visions. To understand and relish the book of Ezekiel, readers often need to abandon expectations of realism. Second, Ezekiel employs a technique known as symbolic reality, which occurs when a writer consistently transports the reader to a world of visionary experience where the most important ingredients are symbols--symbols like a vine, a boiling pot, or a valley full of dry bones. Third, prophecy is itself a genre, made up of oracles (pronouncements from God through the agency of a prophet) that fall into two main categories--oracles of judgment and oracles of blessing. Oracles of judgment are ordinarily examples of satire, and in the prophetic satire of Ezekiel there are three motifs:
In addition to abandoning expectations of consistent realism, readers should give themselves to the sheer strangeness of what is presented. Ezekiel talks about real, historical events, but much of the time he does not portray these events in literal terms. Instead he prefers extravagant visions as his mode. Additionally, readers need to be ready for a kaleidoscope of details, always shifting and never in focus for very long. The best approach to the oracles of judgment is to analyze them according to the usual literary rules regarding satire.
The Near East at the Time of Ezekiel
Ezekiel recorded his visions and prophecies while living in the vicinity of Babylon, where he had been exiled years earlier. By Ezekiel's time, the Babylonian Empire had engulfed virtually all of the area along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea and would eventually subdue even the land of Egypt, where many other Judeans had fled.
Outline
Ezekiel is the most overtly and deliberately structured of the Major Prophets. The book as a whole is organized around the fulcrum of the destruction of Jerusalem in , with chapters 1-25 preceding its fall, and chapters 33-48 following. The foreign-nation oracles of chapters 26-32 also have a chronological ordering, as well as geographical and thematic organization (see notes for details). The book's major visions play a structuring role too. The inaugural vision of chapters 1-3 finds an explicit cross-reference in the middle of the first temple vision of chapters 8-11 (see 10:20-22). The "dry bones" vision of 37:1-14 is shorter than the others but plays a pivotal role in the movement toward restoration, seen in the culminating vision of chapters 40-48, which in turn makes a pronounced cross-reference back to the inaugural vision as well as the previous temple vision (43:1-5). These observations alone powerfully imply that in Ezekiel's book, both content and form contribute to the message.
- Inaugural Vision (1:1-3:27)
- Judgment on Jerusalem and Judah (4:1-24:27)
- God against Jerusalem (4:1-5:17)
- Oracles against the "land" (6:1-7:27)
- Ezekiel's temple vision (8:1-11:25)
- Anticipating exile (12:1-28)
- False prophecy, true prophecy (13:1-14:11)
- The consequences of infidelity (14:12-15:8)
- The faithless bride (16:1-63)
- The parable of the eagles and the vine (17:1-24)
- Moral responsibility (18:1-32)
- Lament for the princes of Israel (19:1-14)
- Learning from history (20:1-44)
- Fire and sword (20:45-21:32)
- A city defiled (22:1-31)
- Two sisters (23:1-49)
- Two losses (24:1-27)
- Oracles against Foreign Nations (25:1-32:32)
- Against Judah's neighbors (25:1-17)
- Oracles against Tyre (26:1-28:19)
- Oracle against Sidon (28:20-23)
- Israel gathered in security (28:24-26)
- Oracles against Egypt (29:1-32:32)
- After the Fall of Jerusalem (33:1-39:29)
- Reminders (33:1-20)
- The fall of Jerusalem (33:21-22)
- Culpability (33:23-33)
- Shepherds and sheep (34:1-31)
- The mountains of Edom and Israel (35:1-36:15)
- Restoration for the sake of God's name (36:16-38)
- The vision of dry bones (37:1-14)
- The houses of Israel and Judah (37:15-28)
- Gog of Magog (38:1-39:29)
- Vision of Restoration (40:1-48:35)
- Vision of the new temple (40:1-42:20)
- The return of God's glory (43:1-5)
- Regulations for renewed Israel (43:6-46:18)
- The river flowing from the temple (46:19-47:12)
- Dividing the land: allotment and access (47:13-48:35)
During Ezekiel's time, the city of Tyre had grown very wealthy due to its strategic island location in the middle of the ancient Near East. Tyre served as a sort of international commodities exchange for the surrounding nations, and Ezekiel's extensive list of various nations who traded or collaborated with Tyre (shown here) gives a glimpse of the city's great influence. Merchants from as far away as Persia, southern Arabia (including Sheba, etc.), and perhaps even Spain (a possible location of Tarshish) traded their goods there.
Ezekiel prophesied that even the great nation of Egypt and its allies would fall to the Babylonians, who already occupied the land of Israel and Judah. The rule of the Babylonians would eventually extend as far as the borders of Cush, referred to elsewhere as Ethiopia. None of the great cities of Egypt would be spared Babylon's wrath.
Ezekiel's final vision of an ideal temple (and city, and land; chs. 40-48) forms a counterpart to the vision of chs. 8-11. In each case he is taken on a tour of the structure, but whereas in the earlier vision he discovers abominations and perverted worship, in this final vision all is in readiness for the perpetual dwelling of the glory of the God of Israel. In chs. 8-10 most of the movement centers on the gate structures to the north and finally focuses on the main sacrificial altar, from which central point the slaughtering angels begin their work (9:6b). In this final vision Ezekiel's tour begins and ends at the East Gate, but passes by the same areas as those he saw in the earlier vision. With the "tour" completed, he is again outside the main East Gate as he senses the approach of the glory of God returning the same way as Ezekiel had seen him go.
Temple Plan
The labels are arranged from the innermost, and most sacred, area and moving outward. It must be borne in mind that "temple" can have two quite distinct references: it can refer generally to the entire "temple" complex, including the outer gates and court; in its more "strict" reference the "temple" is the innermost structure itself, which has a single (eastern) entrance and contains the Most Holy Place.
Reference | Explanation | |
---|---|---|
A | 41:4 | The "Most Holy Place." |
B | 41:3 | The inner room of the temple. |
C | 42:2 | The entrance to the temple. |
D | 43:13-17 | The imposing altar; although the number of stairs is not given, the entire altar structure is about |
E | 40:46 | Chamber for Zadokite priests. |
F | 40:45 | Chamber for "priests who have charge of the temple." |
G | 40:17-19 | The outer court, with its |
H | 46:21-24 | The temple "kitchens," one in each corner of the outer court. |
I | 40:17 | The |
J | 46:2 | The "prince's gate": from its threshold he worships on each Sabbath while the priests bring the offerings into the inner court. |
K | 43:1 | The main east gate, through which "the glory of the God of Israel" returns to his temple (cf. 10:19; 11:22-23). |
Temple Tour
Reference | Explanation | |
---|---|---|
1 | 40:6 | The eastern (main) gate begins the tour; the E-W axis of the temple should be noted; if a line is drawn from the east gate to the Most Holy Place, there are a sequence of three elevations, as the space in the inner temple becomes increasingly constricted. |
2 | 40:17 | From this vantage point in the outer court, Ezekiel is shown the main features of this "plaza" area. |
3 | 40:20 | The northern-facing gate. |
4 | 40:24 | En route to the southern-facing gate, no details are given of the outer facade of the inner court; the architectural details of this area must remain speculative. |
5 | 40:28 | Ezekiel's entry to the inner court is by way of its south gate . . . |
6 | 40:32 | . . . then to the east gate (past the imposing altar, not yet described) . . . |
7 | 40:35 | . . . and on to the north gate, which includes areas for handling sacrificial animals. |
8 | 40:48; 41:1 | Ezekiel approaches the inner temple structure itself, first describing its entrance; he is then stationed outside the entrance while his guide first measures its interior, then the exterior. |
9 | 42:1 | They exit the inner court through its north gate to explore the northwestern quadrant of the outer court. |
10 | 42:15 | Ezekiel and his guide leave the temple from the east gate by which they first entered. From this vantage point, Ezekiel was able to watch the return of "the glory of the God of Israel" moments later (43:1-5). |
Ezekiel's final vision describes the boundaries of a restored Israel, including the allotment to each tribe and the temple. Rather than following the boundaries traditionally occupied by the Israelites, which included Gilead east of the Jordan River and excluded land north of Tyre, Ezekiel's new boundaries generally follow those described by Moses in Numbers 34. Ezekiel's vision also departs from the traditional allotment of the land among the