STUDYING THE BOOK

Introduction and summary of

Ezekiel

Who: One of four great Israelite prophets who include Isaiah (8th century B.C.), Jeremiah (7th century B.C.), and Daniel (6th century B.C.), Ezekiel prophesied by the river Chebar in Babylon during the first half of the Jewish captivity there (598-570 B.C.). The book by his name, between Lamentations and Daniel, is the 26th in the Old Testament.

Favorite title for Ezekiel: Son of man (over 90 times)

Primary role: watchman (3:17; 33:1-7)

Apocalyptic: Like Revelation, Ezekiel is sprinkled with mysterious actions, allegories, symbols, and visions. It climaxes in God's final intervention that overwhelms Israel's enemies and exalts her to glory.

Remarkable chapters

1 - The great vision. An angelic collage of man, lion, ox, and eagle wheels its way across the heavens in fiery splendor, revealing the glory of the Lord.

3, 18, 33 - Role of the watchman and responsibility of those who hear him; contrasts God's ways with man's ways ("is it not My way which is fair, and your ways which are not fair?" - 18:25) and evildoers who die with the righteous who live ("The soul who sins shall die," 18:4).

13, 34 - False prophets seduce God's people with "peace" when there is none; failing pastors (shepherds) do not feed or care for the flock, and it is scattered.

16, 23 - Parables of unfaithfulness show that God loved and rescued Israel and adorned her with great favor, yet she repeatedly turned to other lovers and committed spiritual adultery.

24 - On the day Nebuchadnezzar begins his final attack on Jerusalem, Ezekiel's wife dies, symbolizing rupture of the marriage between God and Israel. But the prophet must not grieve. After this chapter and Jerusalem's fall in 587 B.C., the prophet announces only destruction to Israel's enemies (25-32, 38, 39) and restoration to God's people (33-37, 40-48).

28 - This prophecy against the king of Tyre, like that against Babylon in Isaiah 14, may be a parable of Satan's fall.

38, 39 - Last battle. A great company of nations (Gog, Magog, etc.) shall mount a latter-day attack against God's people restored to their land, but Gog and Magog shall be defeated and God's name hallowed among the nations.

Pictures of renewal

Ichabod means "The glory has departed" (1 Sam. 4:21, 22). Revival is needed for Israel because the Lord's glory has departed. The great vision pictured this glory (1:28; 3:12, 23), which later lifted from the temple and from the city (8:1-4; 9:3; 10:4, 18; 11:22, 23). This forms the photo negative for the following renewal pictures:

 Ezekiel in a sentence: After tragic chastening for Jerusalem and the Jews through their rejection of Yahweh's covenant, full restoration of God's glory is ahead for Israel, as well as punishment for her enemies.