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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871) |
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INTRODUCTION
The name Ezekiel means "(whom) God will strengthen" [GESENIUS]; or, "God will prevail" [ROSENMULLER]. His father was Buzi (Eze 1:3), a priest, and he probably exercised the priestly office himself at Jerusalem, previous to his captivity, as appears from the matured priestly character to be seen in his prophecies, a circumstance which much increased his influence with his captive fellow countrymen at Babylon. Tradition represents Sarera as the land of his nativity. His call to prophesy was in the fifth year from the date of his being carried away with Jehoiachin (see 2Ki 24:11-15) by Nebuchadnezzar, 599 B.C. The best portions of the people seem to have been among the first carried away (Eze 11:16; Jer 24:2-7, 8, 10). The ungodly were willing to do anything to remain in their native land; whereas the godly believed the prophets and obeyed the first summons to surrender, as the only path of safety. These latter, as adhering to the theocratic principle, were among the earliest to be removed by the Chaldeans, who believed that, if they were out of the way, the nation would fall to pieces of itself. They were despised by their brethren in the Holy Land not yet captives, as having no share in the temple sacrifices. Thus Ezekiel's sphere of labor was one happier and less impeded by his countrymen than that of Jeremiah at home. The vicinity of the river Chebar, which flows into the Euphrates near Circeslum, was the first scene of his prophecies (Eze 1:1). Tel-Abib there (now Thallaba) was his place of residence (Eze 3:15), whither the elders used to come to inquire as to God's messages through him. They were eager to return to Jerusalem, but he taught them that they must first return to their God. He continued to prophesy for at least twenty-two years, that is, to the twenty-seventh year of the captivity (Eze 29:17), and probably remained with the captives by the Chebar the rest of his life. A treatise, falsely attributed to EPIPHANIUS, states a tradition that he was killed at Babylon by a prince of his people whom he had reproved for idolatry.
He was contemporary with Jeremiah and Daniel. The former had prophesied for thirty-four years before Ezekiel, and continued to do so for six or seven years after him. The call of Ezekiel followed the very next year after the communication of Jeremiah's predictions to Babylon (Jer 51:59), and was divinely intended as a sequel to them. Daniel's predictions are mostly later than Ezekiel's but his piety and wisdom had become proverbial in the early part of Ezekiel's ministry (Eze 14:14, 16; 28:3). They much resemble one another, especially in the visions and grotesque images. It is a remarkable proof of genuineness that in Ezekiel no prophecies against Babylon occur among those directed against the enemies of the covenant-people. Probably he desired not to give needless offence to the government under which he lived. The effect of his labors is to be seen in the improved character of the people towards the close of the captivity, and their general cessation from idolatry and a return to the law. It was little more than thirty years after the close of his labors when the decree of the Jews' restoration was issued. His leading characteristic is realizing, determined energy; this admirably adapted him for opposing the "rebellious house" "of stubborn front and hard heart," and for maintaining the cause of God's Church among his countrymen in a foreign land, when the external framework had fallen to pieces. His style is plain and simple. His conceptions are definite, and the details even of the symbolical and enigmatical parts are given with lifelike minuteness. The obscurity lies in the substance, not in the form, of his communications. The priestly element predominates in his prophecies, arising from his previous training as a priest. He delights to linger about the temple and to find in its symbolical forms the imagery for conveying his instructions. This was divinely ordered to satisfy the spiritual want felt by the people in the absence of the outward temple and its sacrifices. In his images he is magnificent, though austere and somewhat harsh. He abounds in repetitions, not for ornament, but for force and weight. Poetical parallelism is not found except in a few portions, as in the seventh, twenty-first, twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth through thirty-first chapters. His great aim was to stimulate the dormant minds of the Jews. For this end nothing was better suited than the use of mysterious symbols expressed in the plainest words. The superficial, volatile, and wilfully unbelieving would thereby be left to judicial blindness (Isa 6:10; Mt 13:11-13, &c.); whereas the better-disposed would be awakened to a deeper search into the things of God by the very obscurity of the symbols. Inattention to this divine purpose has led the modern Jews so to magnify this obscurity as to ordain that no one shall read this book till he has passed his thirtieth year.
RABBI HANANIAS is said to have satisfactorily solved the difficulties (Mischna) which were alleged against its canonicity. Ecclesiasticus 49:8 refers to it, and JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 10.5.1]. It is mentioned as part of the canon in MELITO'S catalogue [EUSEBIUS, Ecclesiastical History, 4.26]; also in ORIGEN, JEROME, and the Talmud. The oneness of tone throughout and the repetition of favorite expressions exclude the suspicion that separate portions are not genuine. The earlier portion, the first through the thirty-second chapters, which mainly treats of sin and judgment, is a key to interpret the latter portion, which is more hopeful and joyous, but remote in date. Thus a unity and an orderly progressive character are imparted to the whole. The destruction of Jerusalem is the central point. Previous to this he calls to repentance and warns against blind confidence in Egypt (Eze 17:15-17; compare Jer 37:7) or other human stay. After it he consoles the captives by promising them future deliverance and restoration. His prophecies against foreign nations stand between these two great divisions, and were uttered in the interval between the intimation that Nebuchadnezzar was besieging Jerusalem and the arrival of the news that he had taken it (Eze 33:21). HAVERNICK marks out nine sections:--(1) Ezekiel's call to prophesy (Eze 1:1-3:15). (2) Symbolical predictions of the destruction of Jerusalem (Eze 3:16-7:27). (3) A year and two months later a vision of the temple polluted by Tammuz or Adonis worship; God's consequent scattering of fire over the city and forsaking of the temple to reveal Himself to an inquiring people in exile; happier and purer times to follow (Eze 8:1-11:25). (4) Exposure of the particular sins prevalent in the several classes--priests, prophets, and princes (Eze 12:1-19:14). (5) A year later the warning of judgment for national guilt repeated with greater distinctness as the time drew nearer (Eze 20:1-23:49). (6) Two years and five months later--the very day on which Ezekiel speaks--is announced as the day of the beginning of the siege; Jerusalem shall be overthrown (Eze 24:1-27). (7) Predictions against foreign nations during the interval of his silence towards his own people; if judgment begins at the house of God, much more will it visit the ungodly world (Eze 25:1-32:32). Some of these were uttered much later than others, but they all began to be given after the fall of Jerusalem. (8) In the twelfth year of the captivity, when the fugitives from Jerusalem (Eze 33:21) had appeared in Chaldea, he foretells better times and the re-establishment of Israel and the triumph of God's kingdom on earth over its enemies, Seir, the heathen, and Gog (Eze 33:1-39:29). (9) After an interval of thirteen years the closing vision of the order and beauty of the restored kingdom (Eze 40:1-48:35). The particularity of details as to the temple and its offerings rather discountenances the view of this vision being only symbolical, and not at all literal. The event alone can clear it up. At all events it has not yet been fulfilled; it must be future. Ezekiel was the only prophet (in the strict sense) among the Jews at Babylon. Daniel was rather a seer than a prophet, for the spirit of prophecy was given him to qualify him, not for a spiritual office, but for disclosing future events. His position in a heathen king's palace fitted him for revelations of the outward relations of God's kingdom to the kingdoms of the world, so that his book is ranked by the Jews among the Hagiographa or "Sacred Writings," not among the prophetical Scriptures. On the other hand, Ezekiel was distinctively a prophet, and one who had to do with the inward concerns of the divine kingdom. As a priest, when sent into exile, his service was but transferred from the visible temple at Jerusalem to the spiritual temple in Chaldea.
CHAPTER 1
Eze 1:1-28. EZEKIEL'S VISION BY THE CHEBAR. FOUR CHERUBIM AND WHEELS.
1. Now it came to pass--rather, "And it came," &c. As
this formula in
Jos 1:1
has reference to the written history of previous times, so here
(and in
Ru 1:1,
and Es 1:1),
it refers to the
unwritten history which was before the mind of the writer. The
prophet by it, as it were, continues the history of the preceding times.
In the fourth year of Zedekiah's reign
(Jer 51:59),
Jeremiah sent by Seraiah a message to the captives
(Jer 29:1-32)
to submit themselves to God and lay aside their flattering hopes of a
speedy restoration. This communication was in the next year, the fifth,
and the fourth month of the same king (for Jehoiachin's captivity and
Zedekiah's accession coincide in time), followed up by a prophet
raised up among the captives themselves, the energetic Ezekiel.
thirtieth year--that is, counting from the beginning of the
reign of Nabopolassar, father of Nebuchadnezzar, the era of the
Babylonian empire, 625 B.C., which epoch coincides
with the eighteenth year of Josiah, that in which the book of the law
was found, and the consequent reformation began [SCALIGER]; or the thirtieth year of Ezekiel's life. As
the Lord was about to be a "little sanctuary"
(Eze 11:16)
to the exiles on the Chebar, so Ezekiel was to be the ministering
priest; therefore he marks his priestly relation to God and the people
at the outset; the close, which describes the future temple, thus
answering to the beginning. By designating himself expressly as "the
priest"
(Eze 1:3),
and as having reached his thirtieth year (the regular year of priests
commencing their office), he marks his office as the priest among the
prophets. Thus the opening vision follows naturally as the formal
institution of that spiritual temple in which he was to minister
[FAIRBAIRN].
Chebar--the same as Chabor or Habor, whither the ten tribes had been
transported by Tiglath-pileser and Shalmaneser
(2Ki 17:6;
1Ch 5:26).
It flows into the Euphrates near Carchemish or Circesium, two hundred
miles north of Babylon.
visions of God--Four expressions are used as to the revelation granted
to Ezekiel, the three first having respect to what was presented from
without, to assure him of its reality, the fourth to his being
internally made fit to receive the revelation; "the heavens were opened"
(so
Mt 3:16;
Ac 7:56; 10:11;
Re 19:11);
"he saw visions of God"; "the word of Jehovah came verily (as
the meaning is rather than 'expressly, English Version,
Eze 1:3)
unto him" (it was no unreal hallucination); and "the hand of Jehovah
was upon him"
(Isa 8:11;
Da 10:10, 18;
Re 1:17;
the Lord by His touch strengthening him for his high and arduous
ministry, that he might be able to witness and report aright the
revelations made to him).
2. Jehoiachin's captivity--In the third or fourth year of Jehoiakim, father of Jehoiachin, the first carrying away of Jewish captives to Babylon took place, and among them was Daniel. The second was under Jehoiachin, when Ezekiel was carried away. The third and final one was at the taking of Jerusalem under Zedekiah.
4. whirlwind--emblematic of God's judgments
(Jer 23:19; 25:32).
out of the north--that is, from Chaldea, whose hostile forces would
invade Judea from a northerly direction. The prophet conceives
himself in the temple.
fire infolding itself--laying hold on whatever surrounds it, drawing
it to itself, and devouring it. Literally, "catching itself," that is,
kindling itself [FAIRBAIRN].
The same Hebrew occurs in
Ex 9:24,
as to the "fire mingled with the hail."
brightness . . . about it--that is, about the "cloud."
out of the midst thereof--that is, out of the midst of the "fire."
colour of amber--rather, "the glancing brightness (literally, 'the
eye', and so the glancing appearance) of polished brass. The
Hebrew, chasmal, is from two roots, "smooth" and "brass" (compare
Eze 1:7;
Re 1:15)
[GESENIUS]. The Septuagint and
Vulgate translate it, "electrum"; a brilliant metal
compounded of gold and silver.
5. Ezekiel was himself of a "gigantic nature, and thereby suited to
counteract the Babylonish spirit of the times, which loved to manifest
itself in gigantic, grotesque forms" [HENGSTENBERG].
living creatures--So the Greek ought to have been translated in
the parallel passage,
Re 4:6,
not as English Version, "beasts"; for one of the "four" is a
man, and man cannot be termed "beast."
Eze 10:20
shows that it is the cherubim that are meant.
likeness of a man--Man, the noblest of the four, is the ideal model
after which they are fashioned
(Eze 1:10;
Eze 10:14).
The point of comparison between him and them is the erect posture of
their bodies, though doubtless including also the general mien. Also
the hands
(Eze 10:21).
6. Not only were there four distinct living creatures, but each of the four had four faces, making sixteen in all. The four living creatures of the cherubim answer by contrast to the four world monarchies represented by four beasts, Assyria, Persia, Greece, and Rome (Da 7:1-28). The Fathers identified them with the four Gospels: Matthew the lion, Mark the ox, Luke the man, John the eagle. Two cherubim only stood over the ark in the temple; two more are now added, to imply that, while the law is retained as the basis, a new form is needed to be added to impart new life to it. The number four may have respect to the four quarters of the world, to imply that God's angels execute His commands everywhere. Each head in front had the face of a man as the primary and prominent one: on the right the face of a lion, on the left the face of an ox, above from behind the face of an eagle. The Mosaic cherubim were similar, only that the human faces were put looking towards each other, and towards the mercy seat between, being formed out of the same mass of pure gold as the latter (Ex 25:19, 20). In Isa 6:2 two wings are added to cover their countenances; because there they stand by the throne, here under the throne; there God deigns to consult them, and His condescension calls forth their humility, so that they veil their faces before Him; here they execute His commands. The face expresses their intelligence; the wings, their rapidity in fulfilling God's will. The Shekinah or flame, that signified God's presence, and the written name, JEHOVAH, occupied the intervening space between the cherubim Ge 4:14, 16; 3:24 ("placed"; properly, "to place in a tabernacle"), imply that the cherubim were appointed at the fall as symbols of God's presence in a consecrated place, and that man was to worship there. In the patriarchal dispensation when the flood had caused the removal of the cherubim from Eden, seraphim or teraphim (Chaldean dialect) were made as models of them for domestic use (Ge 31:19, Margin; Ge 31:30). The silence of the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth chapters of Exodus to their configuration, whereas everything else is minutely described, is because their form was so well-known already to Bezaleel and all Israel by tradition as to need no detailed description. Hence Ezekiel (Eze 10:20) at once knows them, for he had seen them repeatedly in the carved work of the outer sanctuary of Solomon's temple (1Ki 6:23-29). He therefore consoles the exiles with the hope of having the same cherubim in the renovated temple which should be reared; and he assures them that the same God who dwelt between the cherubim of the temple would be still with His people by the Chebar. But they were not in Zerubbabel's temple; therefore Ezekiel's foretold temple, if literal, is yet future. The ox is selected as chief of the tame animals, the lion among the wild, the eagle among birds, and man the head of all, in his ideal, realized by the Lord Jesus, combining all the excellencies of the animal kingdom. The cherubim probably represent the ruling powers by which God acts in the natural and moral world. Hence they sometimes answer to the ministering angels; elsewhere, to the redeemed saints (the elect Church) through whom, as by the angels, God shall hereafter rule the world and proclaim the manifold wisdom of God (Mt 19:28; 1Co 6:2; Eph 3:10; Re 3:21; 4:6-8). The "lions" and "oxen," amidst "palms" and "open flowers" carved in the temple, were the four-faced cherubim which, being traced on a flat surface, presented only one aspect of the four. The human-headed winged bulls and eagle-headed gods found in Nineveh, sculptured amidst palms and tulip-shaped flowers, were borrowed by corrupted tradition from the cherubim placed in Eden near its fruits and flowers. So the Aaronic calf (Ex 32:4, 5) and Jeroboam's calves at Dan and Beth-el, a schismatic imitation of the sacred symbols in the temple at Jerusalem. So the ox figures of Apis on the sacred arks of Egypt.
7. straight feet--that is, straight legs. Not protruding in any
part as the legs of an ox, but straight like a man's
[GROTIUS]. Or, like
solid pillars; not bending, as man's, at the knee. They glided
along, rather than walked. Their movements were all sure, right, and
without effort [KITTO, Cyclopedia].
sole . . . calf's
foot--HENDERSON hence supposes that
"straight feet" implies that they did not project horizontally like men's feet,
but vertically as calves' feet. The solid firmness of the round foot
of a calf seems to be the point of comparison.
colour--the glittering appearance, indicating God's purity.
8. The hands of each were the hands of a man. The hand is the symbol
of active power, guided by skilfulness
(Ps 78:72).
under their wings--signifying their operations are hidden from our
too curious prying; and as the "wings" signify something more than
human, namely, the secret prompting of God, it is also implied that they
are moved by it and not by their own power, so that they do nothing at
random, but all with divine wisdom.
they four had . . . faces and . . .
wings--He returns to what he had stated already in
Eze 1:6;
this gives a reason why they had hands on their four sides, namely,
because they had faces and wings on the four sides. They moved
whithersoever they would, not by active energy merely, but also by
knowledge (expressed by their faces) and divine guidance
(expressed by their "wings").
9. they--had no occasion to turn themselves round when changing their direction, for they had a face (Eze 1:6) looking to each of the four quarters of heaven. They made no mistakes; and their work needed not be gone over again. Their wings were joined above in pairs (see Eze 1:11).
10. they . . . had the face of a man--namely, in front. The human face was the primary and prominent one and the fundamental part of the composite whole. On its right was the lion's face; on the left, the ox's (called "cherub," Eze 10:14); at the back from above was the eagle's.
11. The tips of the two outstretched wings reached to one another,
while the other two, in token of humble awe, formed a veil for the lower
parts of the body.
stretched upward--rather, "were parted from above" (compare Margin;
see on
Isa 6:2).
The joining together of their wings above implies that, though the
movements of Providence on earth may seem conflicting and confused, yet
if one lift up his eyes to heaven, he will see that they admirably
conspire towards the one end at last.
12. The same idea as in
Eze 1:9.
The repetition is because we men are so hard to be brought to
acknowledge the wisdom of God's doings; they seem tortuous and confused
to us, but they are all tending steadily to one aim.
the spirit--the secret impulse whereby God moves His angels to the
end designed. They do not turn back or aside till they have fulfilled
the office assigned them.
13. likeness . . . appearance--not tautology. "Likeness" expresses
the general form; "appearance," the particular aspect.
coals of fire--denoting the intensely pure and burning justice
wherewith God punishes by His angels those who, like Israel, have
hardened themselves against His long-suffering. So in
Isa 6:2, 6,
instead of cherubim, the name "seraphim," the burning ones, is
applied, indicating God's consuming righteousness; whence their cry to
Him is, "Holy! holy! holy!" and the burning coal is applied to his
lips, for the message through his mouth was to be one of judicial
severance of the godly from the ungodly, to the ruin of the latter.
lamps--torches. The fire emitted sparks and flashes of light, as
torches do.
went up and down--expressing the marvellous vigor of God's Spirit,
in all His movements never resting, never wearied.
fire . . . bright--indicating the glory of God.
out of the fire . . . lightning--God's righteousness will at last
cause the bolt of His wrath to fall on the guilty; as now, on Jerusalem.
14. ran and returned--Incessant, restless motion indicates the
plenitude of life in these cherubim; so in
Re 4:8,
"they rest not day or night"
(Zec 4:10).
flash of lightning--rather, as distinct from "lightning"
(Eze 1:13),
"the meteor flash," or sheet lightning [FAIRBAIRN].
15. one wheel--The "dreadful height" of the wheel
(Eze 1:18)
indicates the gigantic, terrible energy of the complicated revolutions
of God's providence, bringing about His purposes with unerring
certainty. One wheel appeared traversely within another, so that the
movement might be without turning, whithersoever the living creatures
might advance
(Eze 1:17).
Thus each wheel was composed of two circles cutting one another at
right angles, "one" only of which appeared to touch the ground ("upon
the earth"), according to the direction the cherubim desired to move
in.
with his four faces--rather, "according to its four faces" or
sides; as there was a side or direction to each of the four creatures,
so there was a wheel for each of the sides
[FAIRBAIRN]. The four sides
or semicircles of each composite wheel pointed, as the four faces of
each of the living creatures, to the four quarters of heaven.
HAVERNICK
refers "his" or "its" to the wheels. The cherubim and their wings
and wheels stood in contrast to the symbolical figures, somewhat
similar, then existing in Chaldea, and found in the remains of Assyria.
The latter, though derived from the original revelation by tradition,
came by corruption to symbolize the astronomical zodiac, or the sun and
celestial sphere, by a circle with wings or irradiations. But Ezekiel's
cherubim rise above natural objects, the gods of the heathen, to the
representation of the one true God, who made and continually upholds
them.
16. appearance . . . work--their form and the material of their
work.
beryl--rather, "the glancing appearance of the Tarshish stone"; the
chrysolite or topaz, brought from Tarshish or Tartessus in Spain. It was
one of the gems in the breastplate of the high priest
(Ex 28:20;
So 5:14;
Da 10:6).
four had one likeness--The similarity of the wheels to one another
implies that there is no inequality in all God's works, that all have a
beautiful analogy and proportion.
17. went upon their four sides--Those faces or sides of the four wheels moved which answered to the direction in which the cherubim desired to move; while the transverse circles in each of the four composite wheels remained suspended from the ground, so as not to impede the movements of the others.
18. rings--that is, felloes or circumferences of the wheels.
eyes--The multiplicity of eyes here in the wheels, and
Eze 10:12,
in the cherubim themselves, symbolizes the plenitude of intelligent
life, the eye being the window through which "the spirit of the
living creatures" in the wheels
(Eze 1:20)
looks forth (compare
Zec 4:10).
As the wheels signify the providence of God, so the eyes imply that He
sees all the circumstances of each case, and does nothing by blind
impulse.
19. went by them--went beside them.
20. the spirit was to go--that is, their will was for going
whithersoever the Spirit was for going.
over against them--rather, beside or in conjunction with them.
spirit of the living creature--put collectively for "the living
creatures"; the cherubim. Having first viewed them separately, he
next views them in the aggregate as the composite living creature in
which the Spirit resided. The life intended is that connected with God,
holy, spiritual life, in the plenitude of its active power.
21. over against--rather, "along with" [HENDERSON]; or, "beside" [FAIRBAIRN].
22. upon the heads--rather, "above the heads"
[FAIRBAIRN].
colour--glitter.
terrible crystal--dazzling the spectator by its brightness.
23. straight--erect [FAIRBAIRN],
expanded upright.
two . . . two . . . covered . . .
bodies--not, as it might seem, contradicting
Eze 1:11.
The two wings expanded upwards, though chiefly used for flying, yet up
to the summit of the figure where they were parted from each other,
covered the upper part of the body, while the other two wings covered
the lower parts.
24. voice of . . . Almighty--the thunder
(Ps 29:3, 4).
voice of speech--rather, "the voice" or "sound of tumult," as in
Jer 11:16.
From an Arabic root, meaning the "impetuous rush of heavy rain."
noise of . . . host--
(Isa 13:4;
Da 10:6).
25. let down . . . wings--While the Almighty gave forth His voice, they reverently let their wings fall, to listen stilly to His communication.
26. The Godhead appears in the likeness of enthroned humanity, as in Ex 24:10. Besides the "paved work of a sapphire stone, as it were the body of heaven in clearness," there, we have here the "throne," and God "as a man," with the "appearance of fire round about." This last was a prelude of the incarnation of Messiah, but in His character as Saviour and as Judge (Re 19:11-16). The azure sapphire answers to the color of the sky. As others are called "sons of God," but He "the Son of God," so others are called "sons of man" (Eze 2:1, 3), but He "the Son of man" (Mt 16:13), being the embodied representative of humanity and the whole human race; as, on the other hand, He is the representative of "the fulness of the Godhead" (Col 2:9). While the cherubim are movable, the throne above, and Jehovah who moves them, are firmly fixed. It is good news to man, that the throne above is filled by One who even there appears as "a man."
27. colour of amber--"the glitter of chasmal" [FAIRBAIRN]. See on Eze 1:4; rather, "polished brass" [HENDERSON]. Messiah is described here as in Da 10:5, 6; Re 1:14, 15.
28. the bow . . . in . . . rain--the symbol of the sure covenant of
mercy to God's children remembered amidst judgments on the wicked; as
in the flood in Noah's days
(Re 4:3).
"Like hanging out from the throne of the Eternal a fing of peace,
assuring all that the purpose of Heaven was to preserve rather than to
destroy. Even if the divine work should require a deluge of wrath,
still the faithfulness of God would only shine forth the more brightly
at last to the children of promise, in consequence of the
tribulations needed to prepare for the ultimate good" [FAIRBAIRN].
(Isa 54:8-10).
I fell upon . . . face--the right attitude, spiritually, before we
enter on any active work for God
(Eze 2:2; 3:23, 24;
Re 1:17).
In this first chapter God gathered into one vision the substance of all
that was to occupy the prophetic agency of Ezekiel; as was done
afterwards in the opening vision of the Revelation of Saint John.
CHAPTER 2
Eze 2:1-10. EZEKIEL'S COMMISSION.
1. Son of man--often applied to Ezekiel; once only to Daniel (Da 8:17), and not to any other prophet. The phrase was no doubt taken from Chaldean usage during the sojourn of Daniel and Ezekiel in Chaldea. But the spirit who sanctioned the words of the prophet implied by it the lowliness and frailty of the prophet as man "lower than the angels," though now admitted to the vision of angels and of God Himself, "lest he should be exalted through the abundance of the revelations" (2Co 12:7). He is appropriately so called as being type of the divine "Son of man" here revealed as "man" (see on Eze 1:26). That title, as applied to Messiah, implies at once His lowliness and His exaltation, in His manifestations as the Representative man, at His first and second comings respectively (Ps 8:4-8; Mt 16:13; 20:18; and on the other hand, Da 7:13, 14; Mt 26:64; Joh 5:27).
2. spirit entered . . . when he spake--The divine word is ever
accompanied by the Spirit
(Ge 1:2, 3).
set . . . upon . . . feet--He had been "upon his face"
(Eze 1:28).
Humiliation on our part is followed by exaltation on God's part
(Eze 3:23, 24;
Job 22:29;
Jas 4:6;
1Pe 5:5).
"On the feet" was the fitting attitude when he was called on to walk
and work for God
(Eph 5:8; 6:15).
that I heard--rather, "then I heard."
3. nation--rather, "nations"; the word usually applied to the heathen or Gentiles; here to the Jews, as being altogether heathenized with idolatries. So in Isa 1:10, they are named "Sodom" and "Gomorrah." They were now become "Lo-ammi," not the people of God (Ho 1:9).
4. impudent--literally, "hard-faced"
(Eze 3:7, 9).
children--resumptive of "they"
(Eze 2:3);
the "children" walk in their "fathers'" steps.
I . . . send thee--God opposes His command to all obstacles. Duties
are ours; events are God's.
Thus saith the Lord God--God opposes His name to the obstinacy of
the people.
5. forbear--namely, to hear.
yet shall know--Even if they will not hear, at least they will not
have ignorance to plead as the cause of their perversity
(Eze 33:33).
6. briers--not as the Margin and
GESENIUS, "rebels," which would
not correspond so well to "thorns." The Hebrew is from a root meaning
"to sting" as nettles do. The wicked are often so called
(2Sa 23:6;
So 2:2;
Isa 9:18).
scorpions--a reptile about six inches long with a deadly sting at the
end of the tail.
be not afraid--
(Lu 12:4;
1Pe 3:14).
7. most rebellious--literally, "rebellion" itself: its very essence.
8. eat--(See on Jer 15:16; Re 10:9, 10). The idea is to possess himself fully of the message and digest it in the mind; not literal eating, but such an appropriation of its unsavory contents that they should become, as it were, part of himself, so as to impart them the more vividly to his hearers.
9. roll--the form in which ancient books were made.
10. within and without--on the face and the back. Usually the parchment was written only on its inside when rolled up; but so full was God's message of impending woes that it was written also on the back.
CHAPTER 3
Eze 3:1-27. EZEKIEL EATS THE ROLL. IS COMMISSIONED TO GO TO THEM OF THE CAPTIVITY AND GOES TO TEL-ABIB BY THE CHEBAR: AGAIN BEHOLDS THE SHEKINAH GLORY: IS TOLD TO RETIRE TO HIS HOUSE, AND ONLY SPEAK WHEN GOD OPENS HIS MOUTH.
1. eat . . . and . . . speak--God's messenger must first inwardly appropriate God's truth himself, before he "speaks" it to others (see on Eze 2:8). Symbolic actions were, when possible and proper, performed outwardly; otherwise, internally and in spiritual vision, the action so narrated making the naked statement more intuitive and impressive by presenting the subject in a concentrated, embodied form.
3. honey for sweetness--Compare Ps 19:10; 119:103; Re 10:9, where, as here in Eze 3:14, the "sweetness" is followed by "bitterness." The former being due to the painful nature of the message; the latter because it was the Lord's service which he was engaged in; and his eating the roll and finding it sweet, implied that, divesting himself of carnal feeling, he made God's will his will, however painful the message that God might require him to announce. The fact that God would be glorified was his greatest pleasure.
5. See Margin, Hebrew, "deep of lip, and heavy of tongue," that is, men speaking an obscure and unintelligible tongue. Even they would have listened to the prophet; but the Jews, though addressed in their own tongue, will not hear him.
6. many people--It would have increased the difficulty had he been
sent, not merely to one, but to "many people" differing in tongues, so
that the missionary would have needed to acquire a new tongue for
addressing each. The after mission of the apostles to many peoples, and
the gift of tongues for that end, are foreshadowed (compare
1Co 14:21
with Isa 28:11).
had I sent thee to them, they would have hearkened--
(Mt 11:21, 23).
7. will not hearken unto thee: for . . . not . . . me-- (Joh 15:20). Take patiently their rejection of thee, for I thy Lord bear it along with thee.
8. Ezekiel means one "strengthened by God." Such he was in godly firmness, in spite of his people's opposition, according to the divine command to the priest tribe to which he belonged (De 33:9).
9. As . . . flint--so Messiah the antitype (Isa 50:7; compare Jer 1:8, 17).
10. receive in . . . heart . . . ears--The transposition from the natural order, namely, first receiving with the ears, then in the heart, is designed. The preparation of the heart for God's message should precede the reception of it with the ears (compare Pr 16:1; Ps 10:17).
11. thy people--who ought to be better disposed to hearken to thee, their fellow countryman, than hadst thou been a foreigner (Eze 3:5, 6).
12. (Ac 8:39). Ezekiel's abode heretofore had not been the most suitable for his work. He, therefore, is guided by the Spirit to Tel-Abib, the chief town of the Jewish colony of captives: there he sat on the ground, "the throne of the miserable" (Ezr 9:3; La 1:1-3), seven days, the usual period for manifesting deep grief (Job 2:13; see Ps 137:1), thus winning their confidence by sympathy in their sorrow. He is accompanied by the cherubim which had been manifested at Chebar (Eze 1:3, 4), after their departure from Jerusalem. They now are heard moving with the "voice of a great rushing (compare Ac 2:2), saying, Blessed be the glory of the Lord from His place," that is, moving from the place in which it had been at Chebar, to accompany Ezekiel to his new destination (Eze 9:3); or, "from His place" may rather mean, in His place and manifested "from" it. Though God may seem to have forsaken His temple, He is still in it and will restore His people to it. His glory is "blessed," in opposition to those Jews who spoke evil of Him, as if He had been unjustly rigorous towards their nation [CALVIN].
13. touched--literally, "kissed," that is, closely embraced.
noise of a great rushing--typical of great disasters impending over
the Jews.
14. bitterness--sadness on account of the impending calamities of which I was required to be the unwelcome messenger. But the "hand," or powerful impulse of Jehovah, urged me forward.
15. Tel-Abib--Tel means an "elevation." It is identified by
MICHAELIS with Thallaba on the Chabor. Perhaps the name expressed
the Jews' hopes of restoration, or else the fertility of the region.
Abib means the green ears of corn which appeared in the month
Nisan, the pledge of the harvest.
I sat, &c.--This is the Hebrew Margin reading. The text is
rather, "I beheld them sitting there"
[GESENIUS]; or, "And those
that were settled there," namely, the older settlers, as distinguished
from the more recent ones alluded to in the previous clause. The ten
tribes had been long since settled on the Chabor or Habor
(2Ki 17:6)
[HAVERNICK].
17. watchman--Ezekiel alone, among the prophets, is called a "watchman," not merely to sympathize, but to give timely warning of danger to his people where none was suspected. Habakkuk (Hab 2:1) speaks of standing upon his "watch," but it was only in order to be on the lookout for the manifestation of God's power (so Isa 52:8; 62:6); not as Ezekiel, to act as a watchman to others.
18. warning . . . speakest to warn--The repetition implies that it
is not enough to warn once in passing, but that the warning is to be
inculcated continually
(2Ti 4:2,
"in season, out of season";
Ac 20:31,
"night and day with tears").
save--Eze 2:5
had seemingly taken away all hope of salvation; but the reference there
was to the mass of the people whose case was hopeless; a few
individuals, however, were reclaimable.
die in . . . iniquity--
(Joh 8:21, 24).
Men are not to flatter themselves that their ignorance, owing to the
negligence of their teachers, will save them
(Ro 2:12,
"As many as have sinned without law, shall also perish without
law").
19. wickedness . . . wicked way--internal wickedness of heart, and external of the life, respectively.
delivered thy soul--
(Isa 49:4, 5;
Ac 20:26).
20. righteous . . . turn from . . . righteousness--not one "righteous"
as to the root and spirit of regeneration
(Ps 89:33; 138:8;
Isa 26:12; 27:3;
Joh 10:28;
Php 1:6),
but as to its outward appearance and performances. So the
"righteous"
(Pr 18:17;
Mt 9:13).
As in
Eze 3:19
the minister is required to lead the wicked to good, so in
Eze 3:20
he is to confirm the well-disposed in their duty.
commit iniquity--that is, give himself up wholly to it
(1Jo 3:8, 9),
for even the best often fall, but not wilfully and
habitually.
I lay a stumbling-block--not that God tempts to sin
(Jas 1:13, 14),
but God gives men over to judicial blindness, and to their own
corruptions
(Ps 9:16, 17; 94:23)
when they "like not to retain God in their knowledge"
(Ro 1:24, 26);
just as, on the contrary, God makes "the way of the righteous plain"
(Pr 4:11, 12; 15:19),
so that they do "not stumble." CALVIN refers
"stumbling-block" not to the guilt, but to its
punishment; "I bring ruin on him." The former is best.
Ahab, after a kind of righteousness
(1Ki 21:27-29),
relapsed and consulted lying spirits in false prophets; so God
permitted one of these to be his "stumbling-block," both to sin and its
corresponding punishment
(1Ki 22:21-23).
his blood will I require--
(Heb 13:17).
22. hand of the Lord--
(Eze 1:3).
go . . . into the plain--in order that he might there, in a place
secluded from unbelieving men, receive a fresh manifestation of the
divine glory, to inspirit him for his trying work.
23. glory of the Lord-- (Eze 1:28).
24. set me upon my feet--having been previously prostrate and unable
to rise until raised by the divine power.
shut thyself within . . . house--implying that in the work he had to
do, he must look for no sympathy from man but must be often alone with
God and draw his strength from Him
[FAIRBAIRN]. "Do not go out of thy
house till I reveal the future to thee by signs and words," which God
does in the following chapters, down to the eleventh. Thus a
representation was given of the city shut up by siege
[GROTIUS]. Thereby
God proved the obedience of His servant, and Ezekiel showed the reality
of His call by proceeding, not through rash impulse, but by the
directions of God [CALVIN].
25. put bands upon thee--not literally, but spiritually, the binding, depressing influence which their rebellious conduct would exert on his spirit. Their perversity, like bands, would repress his freedom in preaching; as in 2Co 6:12, Paul calls himself "straitened" because his teaching did not find easy access to them. Or else, it is said to console the prophet for being shut up; if thou wert now at once to announce God's message, they would rush on thee and bind them with "bands" [CALVIN].
26. I will make my tongue . . . dumb--Israel had rejected the prophets; therefore God deprives Israel of the prophets and of His word--God's sorest judgment (1Sa 7:2; Am 8:11, 12).
27. when I speak . . . I will open thy mouth--opposed to the silence
imposed on the prophet, to punish the people
(Eze 3:26).
After the interval of silence has awakened their attention to the cause
of it, namely, their sins, they may then hearken to the prophecies
which they would not do before.
He that heareth, let him hear . . . forbear--that is, thou hast done
thy part, whether they hear or forbear. He who shall forbear to hear, it
shall be at his own peril; he who hears, it shall be to his own eternal
good (compare
Re 22:11).
CHAPTER 4
Eze 4:1-17. SYMBOLICAL VISION OF THE SIEGE AND THE INIQUITY-BEARING.
1. tile--a sun-dried brick, such as are found in Babylon, covered with cuneiform inscriptions, often two feet long and one foot broad.
2. fort--rather, "watch-tower"
(Jer 52:4)
wherein the besiegers could watch the movements of the besieged
[GESENIUS]. A wall of circumvallation
[Septuagint and ROSENMULLER]. A kind of
battering-ram [MAURER]. The first view is best.
a mount--wherewith the Chaldeans could be defended from missiles.
battering-rams--literally, "through-borers." In
Eze 21:22
the same Hebrew is translated "captains."
3. iron pan--the divine decree as to the Chaldean army investing the
city.
set it for a wall of iron between thee and the city--Ezekiel, in the
person of God, represents the wall of separation between him and the
people as one of iron: and the Chaldean investing army. His instrument
of separating them from him, as one impossible to burst through.
set . . . face against it--inexorably
(Ps 34:16).
The exiles envied their brethren remaining in Jerusalem, but exile is
better than the straitness of a siege.
4. Another symbolical act performed at the same time as the former,
in vision, not in external action, wherein it would have been only
puerile: narrated as a thing ideally done, it would make a vivid
impression. The second action is supplementary to the first, to bring
out more fully the same prophetic idea.
left side--referring to the position of the ten tribes, the
northern kingdom, as Judah, the southern, answers to "the right
side"
(Eze 4:6).
The Orientals facing the east in their mode, had the north on their
left, and the south on their right
(Eze 16:46).
Also the right was more honorable than the left: so Judah as being the
seat of the temple, was more so than Israel.
bear the iniquity--iniquity being regarded as a burden; so it
means, "bear the punishment of their iniquity"
(Nu 14:34).
A type of Him who was the great sin-bearer, not in mimic show as
Ezekiel, but in reality
(Isa 53:4, 6, 12).
5. three hundred and ninety days--The three hundred ninety years of punishment appointed for Israel, and forty for Judah, cannot refer to the siege of Jerusalem. That siege is referred to in Eze 4:1-3, and in a sense restricted to the literal siege, but comprehending the whole train of punishment to be inflicted for their sin; therefore we read here merely of its sore pressure, not of its result. The sum of three hundred ninety and forty years is four hundred thirty, a period famous in the history of the covenant-people, being that of their sojourn in Egypt (Ex 12:40, 41; Ga 3:17). The forty alludes to the forty years in the wilderness. Elsewhere (De 28:68; Ho 9:3), God threatened to bring them back to Egypt, which must mean, not Egypt literally, but a bondage as bad as that one in Egypt. So now God will reduce them to a kind of new Egyptian bondage to the world: Israel, the greater transgressor, for a longer period than Judah (compare Eze 20:35-38). Not the whole of the four hundred thirty years of the Egypt state is appointed to Israel; but this shortened by the forty years of the wilderness sojourn, to imply, that a way is open to their return to life by their having the Egypt state merged into that of the wilderness; that is, by ceasing from idolatry and seeking in their sifting and sore troubles, through God's covenant, a restoration to righteousness and peace [FAIRBAIRN]. The three hundred ninety, in reference to the sin of Israel, was also literally true, being the years from the setting up of the calves by Jeroboam (1Ki 12:20-33), that is, from 975 to 583 B.C.: about the year of the Babylonians captivity; and perhaps the forty of Judah refers to that part of Manasseh's fifty-five years' reign in which he had not repented, and which, we are expressly told, was the cause of God's removal of Judah, notwithstanding Josiah's reformation (1Ki 21:10-16; 2Ki 23:26, 27).
6. each day for a year--literally, "a day for a year, a day for a year." Twice repeated, to mark more distinctly the reference to Nu 14:34. The picturing of the future under the image of the past, wherein the meaning was far from lying on the surface, was intended to arouse to a less superficial mode of thinking, just as the partial veiling of truth in Jesus' parables was designed to stimulate inquiry; also to remind men that God's dealings in the past are a key to the future, for He moves on the same everlasting principles, the forms alone being transitory.
7. arm . . . uncovered--to be ready for action, which
the long Oriental garment usually covering it would prevent
(Isa 52:10).
thou shalt prophesy against it--This gesture of thine will be a tacit
prophecy against it.
8. bands--
(Eze 3:25).
not turn from . . . side--to imply the impossibility of their being
able to shake off the punishment.
9. wheat . . . barley, &c.--Instead of simple flour
used for delicate cakes
(Ge 18:6),
the Jews should have a coarse mixture of six different kinds of grain,
such as the poorest alone would eat.
fitches--spelt or dhourra.
three hundred and ninety--The forty days are omitted, since these
latter typify the wilderness period when Israel stood
separate from the Gentiles and their pollution, though partially
chastened by stint of bread and water
(Eze 4:16),
whereas the eating of the polluted bread in the three hundred ninety
days implies a forced residence "among the Gentiles" who were
polluted with idolatry
(Eze 4:13).
This last is said of "Israel" primarily, as being the most debased
(Eze 4:9-15);
they had spiritually sunk to a level with the heathen, therefore
God will make their condition outwardly to correspond. Judah and
Jerusalem fare less severely, being less guilty: they are to "eat bread
by weight and with care," that is, have a stinted supply and be
chastened with the milder discipline of the wilderness period. But
Judah also is secondarily referred to in the three hundred ninety days,
as having fallen, like Israel, into Gentile defilements; if, then, the
Jews are to escape from the exile among Gentiles, which is their
just punishment, they must submit again to the wilderness probation
(Eze 4:16).
10. twenty shekels--that is, little more than ten ounces; a scant measure to sustain life (Jer 52:6). But it applies not only to the siege, but to their whole subsequent state.
11. sixth . . . of . . . hin--about a pint and a half.
12. dung--as fuel; so the Arabs use beasts' dung, wood fuel being scarce. But to use human dung so implies the most cruel necessity. It was in violation of the law (De 14:3; 23:12-14); it must therefore have been done only in vision.
13. Implying that Israel's peculiar distinction was to be abolished and that they were to be outwardly blended with the idolatrous heathen (De 28:68; Ho 9:3).
14. Ezekiel, as a priest, had been accustomed to the strictest
abstinence from everything legally impure. Peter felt the same scruple
at a similar command
(Ac 10:14;
compare
Isa 65:4).
Positive precepts, being dependent on a particular command can
be set aside at the will of the divine ruler; but moral precepts
are everlasting in their obligation because God cannot be inconsistent
with His unchanging moral nature.
abominable flesh--literally, "flesh that stank from putridity." Flesh
of animals three days killed was prohibited
(Le 7:17, 18; 19:6, 7).
15. cow's dung--a mitigation of the former order (Eze 4:12); no longer "the dung of man"; still the bread so baked is "defiled," to imply that, whatever partial abatement there might be for the prophet's sake, the main decree of God, as to the pollution of Israel by exile among Gentiles, is unalterable.
16. staff of bread--bread by which life is supported, as a man's weight
is by the staff he leans on
(Le 26:26;
Ps 105:16;
Isa 3:1).
by weight, and with care--in scant measure
(Eze 4:10).
17. astonied one with another--mutually regard one another with astonishment: the stupefied look of despairing want.
CHAPTER 5
Eze 5:1-17. VISION OF CUTTING THE HAIRS, AND THE CALAMITIES FORESHADOWED THEREBY.
1. knife . . . razor--the sword of the foe (compare
Isa 7:20).
This vision implies even severer judgments than the Egyptian
afflictions foreshadowed in the former, for their guilt was greater
than that of their forefathers.
thine head--as representative of the Jews. The whole hair being shaven
off was significant of severe and humiliating
(2Sa 10:4, 5)
treatment. Especially in the case of a priest; for priests
(Le 21:5)
were forbidden "to make baldness on their head," their hair being the
token of consecration; hereby it was intimated that the ceremonial must
give place to the moral.
balances--implying the just discrimination with which Jehovah
weighs out the portion of punishment "divided," that is, allotted to
each: the "hairs" are the Jews: the divine scales do not allow even one
hair to escape accurate weighing (compare
Mt 10:30).
2. Three classes are described. The sword was to destroy one third of the people; famine and plague another third ("fire" in Eze 5:2 being explained in Eze 5:12 to mean pestilence and famine); that which remained was to be scattered among the nations. A few only of the last portion were to escape, symbolized by the hairs bound in Ezekiel's skirts (Eze 5:3; Jer 40:6; 52:16). Even of these some were to be thrown into the fiery ordeal again (Eze 5:4; Jer 41:1, 2, &c.; Jer 44:14, &c.). The "skirts" being able to contain but few express that extreme limit to which God's goodness can reach.
5, 6. Explanation of the symbols:
Jerusalem--not the mere city, but the people of Israel generally, of
which it was the center and representative.
in . . . midst--Jerusalem is regarded in God's point of view as center
of the whole earth, designed
to radiate the true light over the nations in all directions. Compare
Margin ("navel"),
Eze 38:12;
Ps 48:2;
Jer 3:17.
No center in the ancient heathen world could have been selected more
fitted than Canaan to be a vantage ground, whence the people of God
might have acted with success upon the heathenism of the world. It lay
midway between the oldest and most civilized states, Egypt and Ethiopia
on one side, and Babylon, Nineveh, and India on the other, and
afterwards Persia, Greece, and Rome. The Phœnician mariners were
close by, through whom they might have transmitted the true religion to
the remotest lands; and all around the Ishmaelites, the great
inland traders in South Asia and North Africa. Israel was thus
placed, not for its own selfish good, but to be the spiritual
benefactor of the whole world. Compare
Ps 67:1-7
throughout. Failing in this, and falling into idolatry, its guilt was
far worse than that of the heathen; not that Israel literally
went beyond the heathen in abominable idolatries. But "corruptio
optimi pessima"; the perversion of that which in itself is the best
is worse than the perversion of that which is less perfect: is in fact
the worst of all kinds of perversion. Therefore their punishment was
the severest. So the position of the Christian professing Church now,
if it be not a light to the heathen world, its condemnation will be
sorer than theirs
(Mt 5:13; 11:21-24;
Heb 10:28, 29).
6. changed . . . into--rather, "hath resisted My judgments wickedly"; "hath rebelled against My ordinances for wickedness" [BUXTORF]. But see on Eze 5:7, end.
7. multiplied--rather, "have been more abundantly outrageous";
literally, "to tumultuate"; to have an extravagant rage for idols.
neither have done according to the judgments of the nations--have not
been as tenacious of the true religion as the nations have been of the
false. The heathen "changed" not their gods, but the Jews changed
Jehovah for idols (see
Eze 5:6,
"changed My judgments into wickedness," that is, idolatry,
Jer 2:11).
The Chaldean version and the Masora support the negative.
Others omit it (as it is omitted in
Eze 11:12),
and translate, "but have done according to the
judgments," &c. However, both
Eze 11:12
and also this verse are true. They in one sense "did according to the
heathen," namely, in all that was bad; in another, namely, in that
which was good, zeal for religion, they did not.
Eze 5:9
also proves the negative to be genuine; because in changing their
religion, they have not done as the nations which have not
changed theirs, "I (also) will do in thee that which I have not
done."
8. I, even I--awfully emphatic. I, even I, whom thou thinkest to be asleep, but who am ever reigning as the Omnipotent Avenger of sin, will vindicate My righteous government before the nations by judgments on thee.
9. See on
Eze 5:7.
that which I have not done--worse than any former judgments
(La 4:6;
Da 9:12).
The prophecy includes the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, and
the final one by Antichrist
(Zec 13:8, 9; 14:2),
as well as that by Nebuchadnezzar. Their doom of evil was not exhausted
by the Chaldean conquest. There was to be a germinating evil in their
destiny, because there would be, as the Lord foresaw, a germinating
evil in their character. As God connected Himself peculiarly with
Israel, so there was to be a peculiar manifestation of God's wrath
against sin in their case [FAIRBAIRN]. The higher
the privileges the greater the punishment in the case of abuse of them.
When God's greatest favor, the gospel, was given, and was abused by
them, then "the wrath was to come on them to the uttermost"
(1Th 2:16).
10. fathers . . . eat . . . sons--alluding to Moses' words (Le 26:29; De 28:53), with the additional sad feature, that "the sons should eat their fathers" (see 2Ki 6:28; Jer 19:9; La 2:20; 4:10).
11. as I live--the most solemn of oaths, pledging the self-existence
of God for the certainty of the event.
defiled my sanctuary--the climax of Jewish guilt: their defiling
Jehovah's temple by introducing idols.
diminish--literally, "withdraw," namely, Mine "eye" (which
presently follows), that is, My favors;
Job 36:7
uses the Hebrew verb in the same way. As the Jews had
withdrawn from God's sanctuary its sacredness by "defiling" it,
so God withdraws His countenance from them. The significance of
the expression lies in the allusion to
De 4:2,
"Ye shall not diminish aught from the word which I command you";
they had done so, therefore God diminishes them. The reading
found in six manuscripts, "I will cut thee off," is not so good.
12. Statement in plain terms of what was intended by the symbols
(Eze 5:2;
see
Eze 6:12;
Jer 15:2; 21:9).
draw out . . . sword after them--
(Le 26:33).
Skeptics object; no such thing happened under Zedekiah, as is here
foretold; namely, that a third part of the nation should die by
pestilence, a third part by the sword, and a third be scattered unto
all winds, and a sword sent after them. But the prophecy is not
restricted to Zedekiah's time. It includes all that Israel suffered, or
was still to suffer, for their sins, especially those committed at that
period
(Eze 17:21).
It only received its primary fulfilment under Zedekiah: numbers then
died by the pestilence and by the sword; and numbers were scattered in
all quarters and not carried to Babylonia alone, as the objectors
assert (compare
Ezr 1:4;
Es 3:8;
Ob 14).
pestilence . . . and famine--signified by the symbol "fire"
(Eze 5:2).
Compare
Isa 13:8;
La 5:10;
plague and famine burning and withering the countenance, as fire
does.
13. cause my fury to rest upon them--as on its proper and permanent
resting-place
(Isa 30:32,
Margin).
I will be comforted--expressed in condescension to man's conceptions;
signifying His satisfaction in the vindication of His justice by His
righteous judgments
(De 28:63;
Pr 1:26;
Isa 1:24).
they shall how--by bitter experience.
14. reproach among the nations--They whose idolatries Israel had adopted, instead of comforting, would only exult in their calamities brought on by those idolatries (compare Lu 15:15).
15. instruction--literally, "a corrective chastisement," that is, a striking example to warn all of the fatal consequences of sin. For "it shall be"; all ancient versions have "thou," which the connection favors.
16. arrows of famine--hail, rain, mice, locusts, mildew (see
De 32:23, 24).
increase the famine--literally, "congregate" or "collect." When ye
think your harvest safe because ye have escaped drought, mildew, &c., I
will find other means
[CALVIN], which I will congregate as the
forces of an invading army, to bring famine on you.
17. beasts--perhaps meaning destructive conquerors
(Da 7:4).
Rather, literal "beasts," which infest desolated regions such as
Judea was to become (compare
Eze 34:28;
Ex 23:29;
De 32:24;
2Ki 17:25).
The same threat is repeated in manifold forms to awaken the careless.
sword--civil war.
CHAPTER 6
Eze 6:1-14. CONTINUATION OF THE SAME SUBJECT.
2. mountains of Israel--that is, of Palestine in general. The mountains are addressed by personification; implying that the Israelites themselves are incurable and unworthy of any more appeals; so the prophet sent to Jeroboam did not deign to address the king, but addressed the altar (1Ki 13:2). The mountains are specified as being the scene of Jewish idolatries on "the high places" (Eze 6:3; Le 26:30).
3. rivers--literally, the "channels" of torrents. Rivers were often the scene and objects of idolatrous worship.
4. images--called so from a Hebrew root, "to wax hot," implying
the mad ardor of Israel after idolatry
[CALVIN]. Others translate
it, "sun images"; and so in
Eze 6:6
(see
2Ki 23:11;
2Ch 34:4;
Isa 17:8,
Margin).
cast your slain men before your idols--The foolish objects of their
trust in the day of evil should witness their ruin.
5. carcasses . . . before . . . idols--polluting thus with the dead bones of you, the worshippers, the idols which seemed to you so sacrosanct.
6. your works--not gods, as you supposed, but the mere work of men's hands (Isa 40:18-20).
7. ye shall know that I am the Lord--and not your idols, lords. Ye shall know Me as the all-powerful Punisher of sin.
8. Mitigation of the extreme severity of their punishment; still their life shall be a wretched one, and linked with exile (Eze 5:2, 12; 12:16; 14:22; Jer 44:28).
9. they that escape of you shall remember me--The object of God's
chastisements shall at last be effected by working in them true
contrition. This partially took place in the complete eradication of
idolatry from the Jews ever since the Babylonian captivity. But they
have yet to repent of their crowning sin, the crucifixion of Messiah;
their full repentance is therefore future, after the ordeal of trials
for many centuries, ending with that foretold in
Zec 10:9; 13:8, 9; 14:1-4, 11.
"They shall remember me in far countries"
(Eze 7:16;
De 30:1-8).
I am broken with their whorish heart--FAIRBAIRN
translates, actively,
"I will break" their whorish heart; English Version is better. In
their exile they shall remember how long I bore with them, but was at
last compelled to punish, after I was "broken" (My long-suffering wearied out)
by their desperate
(Nu 15:39)
spiritual whorishness [CALVIN],
(Ps 78:40;
Isa 7:13; 43:24; 63:10).
loathe themselves--
(Le 26:39-45;
Job 42:6).
They shall not wait for men to condemn them but shall condemn
themselves
(Eze 20:43; 36:31;
Job 42:6;
1Co 11:31).
11. Gesticulations vividly setting before the hearers the greatness of the calamity about to be inflicted. In indignation at the abominations of Israel extend thine hand towards Judea, as if about to "strike," and "stamp," shaking off the dust with thy foot, in token of how God shall "stretch out His hand upon them," and tread them down (Eze 6:14; Eze 21:14).
12. He that is far off--namely, from the foe; those who in a distant
exile fear no evil.
he that remaineth--he that is left in the city; not carried away
into captivity, nor having escaped into the country. Distinct from "he
that is near," namely, those outside the city who are within reach of
"the sword" of the foe, and so fall by it; not by "famine," as those
left in the city.
14. Diblath--another form of Diblathaim, a city in Moab (Nu 33:46; Jer 48:22), near which, east and south of the Dead Sea, was the wilderness of Arabia-Deserta.
CHAPTER 7
Eze 7:1-27. LAMENTATION OVER THE COMING RUIN OF ISRAEL; THE PENITENT REFORMATION OF A REMNANT; THE CHAIN SYMBOLIZING THE CAPTIVITY.
2. An end, the end--The indefinite "an" expresses the general fact of God bringing His long-suffering towards the whole of Judea to an end; "the," following, marks it as more definitely fixed (Am 8:2).
4. thine abominations--the punishment of thine abominations.
shall be in the midst of thee--shall be manifest to all. They and
thou shall recognize the fact of thine abominations by thy punishment
which shall everywhere befall thee, and that manifestly.
5. An evil, an only evil--a peculiar calamity such as was never before; unparalleled. The abruptness of the style and the repetitions express the agitation of the prophet's mind in foreseeing these calamities.
6. watcheth for thee--rather, "waketh for thee." It awakes up from its past slumber against thee (Ps 78:65, 66).
7. The morning--so Chaldean and Syriac versions (compare
Joe 2:2).
Ezekiel wishes to awaken them from their lethargy, whereby they were
promising to themselves an uninterrupted night
(1Th 5:5-7),
as if they were never to be called to account [CALVIN]. The expression, "morning," refers to the fact
that this was the usual time for magistrates giving sentence against
offenders (compare
Eze 7:10,
below;
Ps 101:8;
Jer 21:12).
GESENIUS, less probably, translates, "the
order of fate"; thy turn to be punished.
not the sounding again--not an empty echo, such as is
produced by the reverberation of sounds in "the mountains," but
a real cry of tumult is coming [CALVIN]. Perhaps
it alludes to the joyous cries of the grape-gatherers at vintage on the
hills [GROTIUS], or of the idolaters in their
dances on their festivals in honor of their false gods [TIRINUS]. HAVERNICK translates, "no
brightness."
8, 9. Repetition of Eze 7:3, 4; sadly expressive of accumulated woes by the monotonous sameness.
10. rod . . . blossomed, pride . . . budded--The "rod" is the Chaldean Nebuchadnezzar, the instrument of God's vengeance (Isa 10:5; Jer 51:20). The rod sprouting (as the word ought to be translated), &c., implies that God does not move precipitately, but in successive steps. He as it were has planted the ministers of His vengeance, and leaves them to grow till all is ripe for executing His purpose. "Pride" refers to the insolence of the Babylonian conqueror (Jer 50:31, 32). The parallelism ("pride" answering to "rod") opposes JEROME'S view, that "pride" refers to the Jews who despised God's threats; (also CALVIN'S, "though the rod grew in Chaldea, the root was with the Jews"). The "rod" cannot refer, as GROTIUS thought, to the tribe of Judah, for it evidently refers to the "smiteth" (Eze 7:9) as the instrument of smiting.
11. Violence (that is, the violent foe) is risen up as
a rod of (that is, to punish the Jews') wickedness
(Zec 5:8).
theirs--their possessions, or all that belongs to them, whether
children or goods. GROTIUS
translates from a different Hebrew root,
"their nobles," literally, "their tumultuous trains" (Margin)
which usually escorted the nobles. Thus "nobles" will form a contrast to
the general "multitude."
neither . . . wailing--
(Jer 16:4-7; 25:33).
GESENIUS translates, "nor shall there be left any
beauty among them." English Version is supported by the
old Jewish interpreters. So general shall be the slaughter, none shall
be left to mourn the dead.
12. let not . . . buyer rejoice--because he has bought an estate at
a bargain price.
nor . . . seller mourn--because he has had to sell his land at a
sacrifice through poverty. The Chaldeans will be masters of the land,
so that neither shall the buyer have any good of his purchase, nor the
seller any loss; nor shall the latter
(Eze 7:13)
return to his inheritance at the jubilee year (see
Le 25:13).
Spiritually this holds good now, seeing that "the time is short"; "they
that rejoice should be as though they rejoiced not, and they that buy
as though they possessed not": Paul
(1Co 7:30)
seems to allude to Ezekiel here.
Jer 32:15, 37, 43,
seems to contradict Ezekiel here. But Ezekiel is speaking of the
parents, and of the present; Jeremiah, of the children, and of the
future. Jeremiah is addressing believers, that they should hope for a
restoration; Ezekiel, the reprobate, who were excluded from hope of
deliverance.
13. although they were yet alive--although they should live to the
year of jubilee.
multitude thereof--namely, of the Jews.
which shall not return--answering to "the seller shall not return";
not only he, but the whole multitude, shall not return.
CALVIN omits
"is" and "which": "the vision touching the whole multitude shall not
return" void
(Isa 55:11).
neither shall any strengthen himself in the iniquity of his life--No
hardening of one's self in iniquity will avail against God's threat of
punishment. FAIRBAIRN
translates, "no one by his iniquity shall
invigorate his life"; referring to the jubilee, which was regarded as a
revivification of the whole commonwealth, when, its disorders being
rectified, the body politic sprang up again into renewed life. That for
which God thus provided by the institution of the jubilee and which is
now to cease through the nation's iniquity, let none think to bring
about by his iniquity.
14. They have blown the trumpet--rather, "Blow the trumpet," or, "Let them blow the trumpet" to collect soldiers as they will, "to make all ready" for encountering the foe, it will be of no avail; none will have the courage to go to the battle (compare Jer 6:1), [CALVIN].
15. No security should anywhere be found (De 32:25). Fulfilled (La 1:20); also at the Roman invasion (Mt 24:16-18).
16.
(Eze 6:6).
like doves--which, though usually frequenting the valleys, mount up
to the mountains when fearing the bird-catcher
(Ps 11:1).
So Israel, once dwelling in its peaceful valleys, shall flee from the
foe to the mountains, which, as being the scene of its idolatries, were
justly to be made the scene of its flight and shame. The plaintive note
of the dove
(Isa 59:11)
represents the mournful repentance of Israel hereafter
(Zec 12:10-12).
17. shall be weak as water--literally, "shall go (as) waters"; incapable of resistance (Jos 7:5; Ps 22:14; Isa 13:7).
18. cover them--as a garment.
baldness--a sign of mourning
(Isa 3:24;
Jer 48:37;
Mic 1:16).
19. cast . . . silver in . . . streets--just retribution; they had abused their silver and gold by converting them into idols, "the stumbling-block of their iniquity" (Eze 14:3, 4, that is, an occasion of sinning); so these silver and gold idols, so far from "being able to deliver them in the day of the Lord's wrath" (see Pr 11:4), shall, in despair, be cast by them into the streets as a prey to the foe, by whom they shall be "removed" (GROTIUS translates as the Margin, "shall be despised as an unclean thing"); or rather, as suits the parallelism, "shall be put away from them" by the Jews [CALVIN]. "They (the silver and gold) shall not satisfy their souls," that is, their cravings of appetite and other needs.
20. beauty of his ornament--the temple of Jehovah, the especial
glory of the Jews, as a bride glories in her ornaments (the very imagery
used by God as to the temple,
Eze 16:10, 11).
Compare
Eze 24:21:
"My sanctuary, the excellency of your strength, the desire of your
eyes."
images . . . therein--namely, in the temple
(Eze 8:3-17).
set it far from them--God had "set" the temple (their "beauty of
ornament") "for His majesty"; but they had set up "abominations
therein"; therefore God, in just retribution, "set it far from them,"
(that is, removed them far from it, or took it away from them
[VATABLUS]).
The Margin translates, "Made it unto them an
unclean thing" (compare Margin on
Eze 7:19,
"removed"); what I designed for their glory they turned to their shame,
therefore I will make it turn to their ignominy and ruin.
21. strangers--barbarous and savage nations.
22. pollute my secret place--just retribution for the Jews' pollution of the temple. "Robbers shall enter and defile" the holy of holies, the place of God's manifested presence, entrance into which was denied even to the Levites and priests and was permitted to the high priest only once a year on the great day of atonement.
23. chain--symbol of the captivity (compare Jer 27:2). As they enchained the land with violence, so shall they be chained themselves. It was customary to lead away captives in a row with a chain passed from the neck of one to the other. Therefore translate as the Hebrew requires, "the chain," namely, that usually employed on such occasions. CALVIN explains it, that the Jews should be dragged, whether they would or no, before God's tribunal to be tried as culprits in chains. The next words favor this: "bloody crimes," rather, "judgment of bloods," that is, with blood sheddings deserving the extreme judicial penalty. Compare Jer 51:9: "Her judgment reacheth unto heaven."
24. worst of the heathen--literally, "wicked of the nations"; the
giving up of Israel to their power will convince the Jews that this is a
final overthrow.
pomp of . . . strong--the pride wherewith men "stiff of forehead"
despise the prophet.
holy places--the sacred compartments of the temple
(Ps 68:35;
Jer 51:51)
[CALVIN]. God calls it "their holy places,"
because they had so defiled it that He regarded it no longer as
His. However, as the defilement of the temple has already been
mentioned
(Eze 7:20, 22),
and "their sacred places" are introduced as a new subject, it seems
better to understand this of the places dedicated to their
idols. As they defiled God's sanctuary, He will defile their
self-constituted "sacred places."
25. peace, and . . . none-- (1Th 5:3).
26. Mischief . . . upon . . . mischief--
(De 32:23;
Jer 4:20).
This is said because the Jews were apt to fancy, at every abatement of
suffering, that their calamities were about to cease; but God will
accumulate woe on woe.
rumour--of the advance of the foe, and of his cruelty
(Mt 24:6).
seek a vision--to find some way of escape from their difficulties
(Isa 26:9).
So Zedekiah consulted Jeremiah
(Jer 37:17; 38:14).
law shall perish--fulfilled
(Eze 20:1, 3;
Ps 74:9;
La 2:9;
compare
Am 8:11);
God will thus set aside the idle boast, "The law shall not perish from
the priest"
(Jer 18:18).
ancients--the ecclesiastical rulers of the people.
27. people of the land--the general multitude, as distinguished from
the "king" and the "prince." The consternation shall pervade all ranks.
The king, whose duty it was to animate others and find a remedy for
existing evils, shall himself be in the utmost anxiety; a mark of the
desperate state of affairs.
clothed with desolation--Clothing is designed to keep off shame; but
in this case shame shall be the clothing.
after their way--because of their wicked ways.
deserts--literally, "judgments," that is, what just judgment awards
to them; used to imply the exact correspondence of God's judgment with
the judicial penalties they had incurred: they oppressed the poor and
deprived them of liberty; therefore they shall be oppressed and lose
their own liberty.
CHAPTER 8
This eighth chapter begins a new stage of Ezekiel's prophecies and continues to the end of the eleventh chapter. The connected visions at Eze 3:12-7:27 comprehended Judah and Israel; but the visions (Eze 8:1-11:25) refer immediately to Jerusalem and the remnant of Judah under Zedekiah, as distinguished from the Babylonian exiles.
1. sixth year--namely, of the captivity of Jehoiachin, as in
Eze 1:2,
the "fifth year" is specified. The lying on his sides three hundred
ninety and forty days
(Eze 4:5, 6)
had by this time been completed, at least in vision. That event
was naturally a memorable epoch to the exiles; and the computation of
years from it was to humble the Jews, as well as to show their
perversity in not having repented, though so long and severely
chastised.
elders--namely, those carried away with Jehoiachin, and now at the
Chebar.
sat before me--to hear the word of God from me, in the absence of
the temple and other public places of Sabbath worship, during the exile
(Eze 33:30, 31).
It was so ordered that they were present at the giving of the prophecy,
and so left without excuse.
hand of . . . Lord God fell . . . upon
me--God's mighty operation fell, like a thunderbolt, upon
me (in
Eze 1:3,
it is less forcible, "was upon him"); whatever, therefore, he is to
utter is not his own, for he has put off the mere man, while the power
of God reigns in him [CALVIN].
2. likeness--understand, "of a man," that is, of Messiah, the Angel
of the covenant, in the person of whom alone God manifests Himself
(Eze 1:26;
Joh 1:18).
The "fire," from "His loins downward," betokens the vengeance of God
kindled against the wicked Jews, while searching and purifying the
remnant to be spared. The "brightness . . . upward" betokens
His unapproachable majesty
(1Ti 6:16).
For Hebrew, eesh, "fire," the Septuagint, &c., read
ish, "a man."
colour of amber--the glitter of chasmal
[FAIRBAIRN],
(see on
Eze 1:4,
"polished brass").
3. Instead of prompting him to address directly the elders before
him, the Spirit carried him away in vision (not in person bodily) to
the temple at Jerusalem; he proceeds to report to them what he
witnessed: his message thus falls into two parts: (1) The abominations
reported in
Eze 8:1-18.
(2) The dealings of judgment and mercy to be adopted towards the
impenitent and penitent Israelites respectively
(Eze 9:1-11:25).
The exiles looked hopefully towards Jerusalem and, so far from
believing things there to be on the verge of ruin, expected a return in
peace; while those left in Jerusalem eyed the exiles with contempt, as
if cast away from the Lord, whereas they themselves were near God and
ensured in the possessions of the land
(Eze 11:15).
Hence the vision here of what affected those in Jerusalem immediately
was a seasonable communication to the exiles away from it.
door of the inner gate--facing the north, the direction in which he
came from Chebar, called the "altar-gate"
(Eze 8:5);
it opened into the inner court, wherein stood the altar of burnt
offering; the inner court
(1Ki 6:36)
was that of the priests; the outer court
(Eze 10:5),
that of the people, where they assembled.
seat--the pedestal of the image.
image of jealousy--Astarte, or Asheera (as the Hebrew for "grove"
ought to be translated,
2Ki 21:3, 7; 23:4, 7),
set up by Manasseh as a rival to Jehovah in His temple, and arresting
the attention of all worshippers as they entered; it was the Syrian
Venus, worshipped with licentious rites; the "queen of heaven," wife of
Phœnician Baal. HAVERNICK thinks all the
scenes of idolatry in the chapter are successive portions of the
festival held in honor of Tammuz or Adonis
(Eze 8:14).
Probably, however, the scenes are separate proofs of Jewish idolatry,
rather than restricted to one idol.
provoketh to jealousy--calleth for a visitation in wrath of the
"jealous God," who will not give His honor to another (compare the
second commandment,
Ex 20:5).
JEROME refers this verse to a statue of Baal,
which Josiah had overthrown and his successors had replaced.
4. The Shekinah cloud of Jehovah's glory, notwithstanding the provocation of the idol, still remains in the temple, like that which Ezekiel saw "in the plain" (Eze 3:22, 23); not till Eze 10:4, 18 did it leave the temple at Jerusalem, showing the long-suffering of God, which ought to move the Jews to repentance.
5. gate of . . . altar--the principal avenue to the altar of burnt offering; as to the northern position, see 2Ki 16:14. Ahaz had removed the brazen altar from the front of the Lord's house to the north of the altar which he had himself erected. The locality of the idol before God's own altar enhances the heinousness of the sin.
6. that I should go far off from my sanctuary--"that I should (be compelled by their sin to) go far off from my sanctuary"-- (Eze 10:18); the sure precursor of its destruction.
7. door of the court--that is, of the inner court
(Eze 8:3);
the court of the priests and Levites, into which now others were
admitted in violation of the law [GROTIUS].
hole in . . . wall--that is, an aperture or window in the wall of the
priests' chambers, through which he could see into the various
apartments, wherein was the idolatrous shrine.
8. dig--for it had been blocked up during Josiah's reformation. Or rather, the vision is not of an actual scene, but an ideal pictorial representation of the Egyptian idolatries into which the covenant-people had relapsed, practising them in secret places where they shrank from the light of day [FAIRBAIRN], (Joh 3:20). But compare, as to the literal introduction of idolatries into the temple, Eze 5:11; Jer 7:30; 32:34.
10. creeping things . . . beasts--worshipped in Egypt; still found
portrayed on their chamber walls; so among the Troglodytæ.
round about--On every side they surrounded themselves with incentives
to superstition.
11. seventy men--the seventy members composing the Sanhedrim, or
great council of the nation, the origination of which we find in the
seventy elders, representatives of the congregation, who went up with
Moses to the mount to behold the glory of Jehovah, and to witness the
secret transactions relating to the establishment of the covenant;
also, in the seventy elders appointed to share the burden of the people
with Moses. How awfully it aggravates the national sin, that the
seventy, once admitted to the Lord's secret council
(Ps 25:14),
should now, "in the dark," enter "the secret" of the wicked
(Ge 49:6),
those judicially bound to suppress idolatry being the ringleaders of
it!
Jaazaniah--perhaps chief of the seventy: son of Shaphan, the scribe
who read to Josiah the book of the law; the spiritual privileges of the
son
(2Ki 22:10-14)
increased his guilt. The very name means, "Jehovah hears," giving the
lie to the unbelief which virtually said
(Eze 9:9),
"The Lord seeth us not," &c. (compare
Ps 10:11, 14; 50:21; 94:7, 9).
The offering of incense belonged not to the elders, but to the priests;
this usurpation added to the guilt of the former.
cloud of incense--They spared no expense for their idols. Oh, that
there were the same liberality toward the cause of God!
12. every man in . . . chambers of . . . imagery--The elders
("ancients") are here the representatives of the people, rather than to
be regarded literally. Mostly, the leaders of heathen superstitions
laughed at them secretly, while publicly professing them in order to
keep the people in subjection. Here what is meant is that the people generally addicted themselves to secret idolatry, led on by their
elders; there is no doubt, also, allusion to the mysteries, as in
the worship of Isis in Egypt, the Eleusinian in Greece, &c., to which
the initiated alone were admitted. "The chambers of imagery" are their
own perverse imaginations, answering to the priests' chambers in
the vision, whereon the pictures were portrayed
(Eze 8:10).
Lord . . . forsaken . . . earth--They infer this because God has left
them to their miseries, without succoring them, so that they seek help
from other gods. Instead of repenting, as they ought, they bite the curb
[CALVIN].
14. From the secret abominations of the chambers of imagery, the
prophet's eye is turned to the outer court at the
north door; within the outer court women were not admitted, but
only to the door.
sat--the attitude of mourners
(Job 2:13;
Isa 3:26).
Tammuz--from a Hebrew root, "to melt down." Instead of
weeping for the national sins, they wept for the idol. Tammuz (the
Syrian for Adonis), the paramour of Venus, and of the
same name as the river flowing from Lebanon; killed by a wild boar,
and, according to the fable, permitted to spend half the year on earth,
and obliged to spend the other half in the lower world. An annual feast
was celebrated to him in June (hence called Tammuz in the Jewish
calendar) at Byblos, when the Syrian women, in wild grief, tore off
their hair and yielded their persons to prostitution, consecrating the
hire of their infamy to Venus; next followed days of rejoicing for his
return to the earth; the former feast being called "the disappearance
of Adonis," the latter, "the finding of Adonis." This Phœnician
feast answered to the similar Egyptian one in honor of Osiris. The idea
thus fabled was that of the waters of the river and the beauties of
spring destroyed by the summer heat. Or else, the earth being clothed
with beauty, during the half year when the sun is in the upper
hemisphere, and losing it when he departs to the lower. The name
Adonis is not here used, as Adon is the appropriated
title of Jehovah.
15, 16. The next are "greater abominations," not in respect to the idolatry, but in respect to the place and persons committing it. In "the inner court," immediately before the door of the temple of Jehovah, between the porch and the altar, where the priests advanced only on extraordinary occasions (Joe 2:17), twenty-five men (the leaders of the twenty-four courses or orders of the priests, 1Ch 24:18, 19, with the high priest, "the princes of the sanctuary," Isa 43:28), representing the whole priesthood, as the seventy elders represented the people, stood with their backs turned on the temple, and their faces towards the east, making obeisance to the rising sun (contrast 1Ki 8:44). Sun-worship came from the Persians, who made the sun the eye of their god Ormuzd. It existed as early as Job (Job 31:26; compare De 4:19). Josiah could only suspend it for the time of his reign (2Ki 23:5, 11); it revived under his successors.
16. worshipped--In the Hebrew a corrupt form is used to express Ezekiel's sense of the foul corruption of such worship.
17. put . . . branch to . . . nose--proverbial, for "they turn up the nose in scorn," expressing their insolent security [Septuagint]. Not content with outraging "with their violence" the second table of the law, namely, that of duty towards one's neighbor, "they have returned" (that is, they turn back afresh) to provoke Me by violations of the first table [CALVIN]. Rather, they held up a branch or bundle of tamarisk (called barsom) to their nose at daybreak, while singing hymns to the rising sun [STRABO, 1.15, p. 733]. Sacred trees were frequent symbols in idol-worship. CALVIN translates, "to their own ruin," literally, "to their nose," that is, with the effect of rousing My anger (of which the Hebrew is "nose") to their ruin.
18. though they cry . . . yet will I not hear-- (Pr 1:28; Isa 1:15).
CHAPTER 9
Eze 9:1-11. CONTINUATION OF THE PRECEDING VISION: THE SEALING OF THE FAITHFUL.
1. cried--contrasted with their "cry" for mercy
(Eze 8:18)
is the "cry" here for vengeance, showing how vain was the former.
them that have charge--literally, officers; so "officers"
(Isa 60:17),
having the city in charge, not to guard, but to punish it. The angels
who as "watchers" fulfil God's judgments
(Da 4:13, 17, 23; 10:20, 21);
the "princes"
(Jer 39:3)
of Nebuchadnezzar's army were under their guidance.
draw near--in the Hebrew intensive, "to draw near quickly."
2. clothed with linen--
(Da 10:5; 12:6, 7).
His clothing marked his office as distinct from that of the six
officers of vengeance; "linen" characterized the high priest
(Le 16:4);
emblematic of purity. The same garment is assigned to the angel of the
Lord (for whom Michael is but another name) by the contemporary prophet
Daniel
(Da 10:5; 12:6, 7).
Therefore the intercessory High Priest in heaven must be meant
(Zec 1:12).
The six with Him are His subordinates; therefore He is said to be
"among them," literally, "in the midst of them," as their recognized
Lord
(Heb 1:6).
He appears as a "man," implying His incarnation; as "one" (compare
1Ti 2:5).
Salvation is peculiarly assigned to Him, and so He bears the "inkhorn"
in order to "mark" His elect
(Eze 9:4;
compare
Ex 12:7;
Re 7:3; 9:4; 13:16, 17; 20:4),
and to write their names in His book of life
(Re 13:8).
As Oriental scribes suspend their inkhorn at their side in the present
day, and as a "scribe of the host is found in Assyrian inscriptions
accompanying the host" to number the heads of the slain, so He stands
ready for the work before Him. "The higher gate" was probably where now
the gate of Damascus is. The six with Him make up the sacred and
perfect number, seven
(Zec 3:9;
Re 5:6).
The executors of judgment on the wicked, in Scripture teaching, are
good, not bad, angels; the bad have permitted to them the trial of the
pious
(Job 1:12;
2Co 12:7).
The judgment is executed by Him
(Eze 10:2, 7;
Joh 5:22, 27)
through the six
(Mt 13:41; 25:31);
so
beautifully does the Old Testament harmonize with the New Testament. The
seven come "from the way of the north"; for it was there the idolatries
were seen, and from the same quarter must proceed the judgment (Babylon
lying northeast of Judea). So
Mt 24:28.
stood--the attitude of waiting reverently for Jehovah's commands.
brazen altar--the altar of burnt offerings, not the altar of incense,
which was of gold. They "stood" there to imply reverent obedience;
for there God gave His answers to prayer
[CALVIN]; also as being about
to slay victims to God's justice, they stand where sacrifices are
usually slain [GROTIUS],
(Eze 39:17;
Isa 34:6;
Jer 12:3; 46:10).
3. glory of . . . God--which had heretofore, as a bright cloud, rested on the mercy seat between the cherubim in the holy of holies (2Sa 6:2; Ps 80:1); its departure was the presage of the temple being given up to ruin; its going from the inner sanctuary to the threshold without, towards the officers standing at the altar outside, was in order to give them the commission of vengeance.
4. midst of . . . city . . . midst of Jerusalem--This twofold
designation marks more emphatically the scene of the divine judgments.
a mark--literally, the Hebrew letter Tau, the last in the
alphabet, used as a mark ("my sign,"
Job 31:35,
Margin); literally, Tau; originally written in the form
of a cross, which TERTULLIAN explains as
referring to the badge and only means of salvation, the cross of
Christ. But nowhere in Scripture are the words which are now employed
as names of letters used to denote the letters themselves or their
figures [VITRINGA]. The noun here is cognate to
the verb, "mark a mark." So in
Re 7:3
no particular mark is specified. We seal what we wish to guard
securely. When all things else on earth are confounded, God will secure
His people from the common ruin. God gives the first charge as
to their safety before He orders the punishment of the rest
(Ps 31:20;
Isa 26:20, 21).
So in the case of Lot and Sodom
(Ge 19:22);
also the Egyptian first-born were not slain till Israel had time to
sprinkle the blood-mark, ensuring their safety (compare
Re 7:3;
Am 9:9).
So the early Christians had Pella provided as a refuge for them,
before the destruction of Jerusalem.
upon the foreheads--the most conspicuous part of the person, to imply
how their safety would be manifested to all (compare
Jer 15:11; 39:11-18).
It was customary thus to mark worshippers
(Re 13:16; 14:1, 9)
and servants. So the Church of England marks the forehead with the sign
of the cross in baptizing. At the exodus the mark was on the
houses, for then it was families; here, it is on the
foreheads, for it is individuals whose safety is guaranteed.
sigh and . . . cry--similarly sounding verbs in Hebrew, as in
English Version, expressing the prolonged sound of their grief.
"Sigh" implies their inward grief ("groanings which cannot be
uttered,"
Ro 8:26);
"cry," the outward expression of it. So Lot
(2Pe 2:7, 8).
Tenderness should characterize the man of God, not harsh sternness in
opposing the ungodly
(Ps 119:53, 136;
Jer 13:17;
2Co 12:21);
at the same time zeal for the honor of God
(Ps 69:9, 10;
1Jo 5:19).
5. the others--the six officers of judgment (Eze 9:2).
6. come not near any . . . upon whom . . . mark--
(Re 9:4).
It may be objected that Daniel, Jeremiah, and others were carried away,
whereas many of the vilest were left in the land. But God does not
promise believers exemption from all suffering, but only from what will
prove really and lastingly hurtful to them. His sparing the ungodly
turns to their destruction and leaves them without excuse [CALVIN]. However, the prophecy waits a fuller and final
fulfilment, for
Re 7:3-8,
in ages long after Babylon, foretells, as still future, the same
sealing of a remnant (one hundred forty-four thousand) of Israel
previous to the final outpouring of wrath on the rest of the nation;
the correspondence is exact; the same pouring of fire from the altar
follows the marking of the remnant in both (compare
Re 8:5,
with Eze 10:2).
So
Zec 13:9; 14:2,
distinguish the remnant from the rest of Israel.
begin at . . . sanctuary--For in it the greatest
abominations had been committed; it had lost the reality of
consecration by the blood of victims sacrificed to idols; it must,
therefore, lose its semblance by the dead bodies of the slain idolaters
(Eze 9:7).
God's heaviest wrath falls on those who have sinned against the highest
privileges; these are made to feel it first
(1Pe 4:17, 18).
He hates sin most in those nearest to Him; for example, the
priests, &c.
ancient men--the seventy elders.
8. I was left--literally, "there was left I." So universal seemed the
slaughter that Ezekiel thought himself the only one left
[CALVIN]. He
was the only one left of the priests "in the sanctuary."
fell upon my face--to intercede for his countrymen (so
Nu 16:22).
all the residue--a plea drawn from God's covenant promise to save the
elect remnant.
9. exceeding--literally, "very, very"; doubled.
perverseness--"apostasy" [GROTIUS];
or, "wresting aside of justice."
Lord . . . forsaken . . . earth . . .
seeth not--The order is reversed from
Eze 8:12.
There they speak of His neglect of His people in their misery; here
they go farther and deny His providence
(Ps 10:11),
so that they may sin fearlessly. God, in answer to Ezekiel's question
(Eze 9:8),
leaves the difficulty unsolved; He merely vindicates His justice by
showing it did not exceed their sin: He would have us humbly acquiesce
in His judgments, and wait and trust.
10. mine eye--to show them their mistake in saying, "The Lord seeth not."
recompense their way upon their head--
(Pr 1:31).
Retribution in kind.
11. I have done as thou hast commanded--The characteristic of Messiah (Joh 17:4). So the angels (Ps 103:21); and the apostles report their fulfilment of their orders (Mr 6:30).
CHAPTER 10
Eze 10:1-22. VISION OF COALS OF FIRE SCATTERED OVER THE CITY: REPETITION OF THE VISION OF THE CHERUBIM.
1. The throne of Jehovah appearing in the midst of the judgments
implies that whatever intermediate agencies be employed, He controls
them, and that the whole flows as a necessary consequence from His
essential holiness
(Eze 1:22, 26).
cherubim--in
Eze 1:5,
called "living creatures." The repetition of the vision implies that
the judgments are approaching nearer and nearer. These two visions of
Deity were granted in the beginning of Ezekiel's career, to qualify him
for witnessing to God's glory amidst his God-forgetting people and to
stamp truth on his announcements; also to signify the removal of God's
manifestation from the visible temple
(Eze 10:18)
for a long period
(Eze 43:2).
The feature
(Eze 10:12)
mentioned as to the cherubim that they were "full of eyes," though
omitted in the former vision, is not a difference, but a more specific
detail observed by Ezekiel now on closer inspection. Also, here, there
is no rainbow (the symbol of mercy after the flood of wrath) as
in the former; for here judgment is the prominent thought,
though the marking of the remnant in
Eze 9:4, 6
shows that there was mercy in the background. The cherubim, perhaps,
represent redeemed humanity combining in and with itself the highest
forms of subordinate creaturely life (compare
Ro 8:20).
Therefore they are associated with the twenty-four elders and are
distinguished from the angels
(Re 5:1-14).
They stand on the mercy seat of the ark, and on that ground
become the habitation of God from which His glory is to shine upon the
world. The different forms symbolize the different phases of the
Church. So the quadriform Gospel, in which the incarnate Saviour has
lodged the revelation of Himself in a fourfold aspect, and from which
His glory shines on the Christian world, answers to the emblematic
throne from which He shone on the Jewish Church.
2. he--Jehovah; He who sat on the "throne."
the man--the Messenger of mercy becoming the Messenger of judgment
(see on
Eze 9:2).
Human agents of destruction shall fulfil the will of "the Man,"
who is Lord of men.
wheels--Hebrew, galgal, implying quick revolution; so
the impetuous onset of the foe (compare
Eze 23:24; 26:10);
whereas "ophan," in
Eze 1:15, 16
implies mere revolution.
coals of fire--the wrath of God about to burn the city, as His
sword had previously slain its guilty inhabitants. This "fire," how
different from the fire on the altar never going out
(Le 6:12, 13),
whereby, in type, peace was made with God! Compare
Isa 33:12, 14.
It is therefore not taken from the altar of reconciliation, but from
between the wheels of the cherubim, representing the providence of God,
whereby, and not by chance, judgment is to fall.
3. right . . . of . . . house--The scene of the locality whence
judgment emanates is the temple, to mark God's vindication of His
holiness injured there. The cherubim here are not those in the holy of
holies, for the latter had not "wheels." They stood on "the right of the
house," that is, the south, for the Chaldean power, guided by them, had
already advanced from the north (the direction of Babylon), and had
destroyed the men in the temple, and was now proceeding to destroy
the city, which lay south and west.
the cherubim . . . the man--There was perfect concert of action between
the cherubic representative of the angels and "the Man," to minister to
whom they "stood" there
(Eze 10:7).
cloud--emblem of God's displeasure; as the "glory" or "brightness"
(Eze 10:4)
typifies His majesty and clearness in judgment.
4. The court outside was full of the Lord's brightness, while it was only the cloud that filled the house inside, the scene of idolatries, and therefore of God's displeasure. God's throne was on the threshold. The temple, once filled with brightness, is now darkened with cloud.
5. sound of . . . wings--prognostic of great and awful changes.
voice of . . . God--the thunder
(Ps 29:3,
&c.).
6. went in--not into the temple, but between the cherubim. Ezekiel sets aside the Jews' boast of the presence of God with them. The cherubim, once the ministers of grace, are now the ministers of vengeance. When "commanded," He without delay obeys (Ps 40:8; Heb 10:7).
7. See on
Eze 10:3.
one cherub--one of the four cherubim.
his hand--
(Eze 1:8).
went out--to burn the city.
8. The "wings" denote alacrity, the "hands" efficacy and aptness, in executing the functions assigned to them.
9. wheels--(See on Eze 1:15, 16). The things which, from Eze 10:8 to the end of the chapter, are repeated from the first chapter are expressed more decidedly, now that he gets a nearer view: the words "as it were," and "as if," so often occurring in the first chapter, are therefore mostly omitted. The "wheels" express the manifold changes and revolutions in the world; also that in the chariot of His providence God transports the Church from one place to another and everywhere can preserve it; a truth calculated to alarm the people in Jerusalem and to console the exiles [POLANUS].
10. four had one likeness--In the wonderful variety of God's works there is the greatest harmony:--
"In human works, though labored on with pain,
One thousand movements scarce one purpose gain; In God's one single doth its end produce, Yet serves to second, too, some other use. |
(See on
Eze 1:16).
wheel . . . in . . . a wheel--cutting one another at fight angles,
so that the whole might move in any of the four directions or quarters
of the world. God's doings, however involved they seem to us, cohere, so
that lower causes subserve the higher.
11. (See on
Eze 1:17).
turned not--without accomplishing their course
(Isa 55:11)
[GROTIUS]. Rather, "they moved straight on
without turning" (so
Eze 1:9).
Having a face towards each of the four quarters, they needed not to
turn around when changing their direction.
whither . . . head looked--that is, "whither the head" of the animal
cherub-form, belonging to and directing each wheel, "looked," thither
the wheel "followed." The wheels were not guided by some external
adventitious impetus, but by some secret divine impulse of the cherubim
themselves.
12. body--literally, "flesh," because a body consists of flesh.
wheels . . . full of eyes--The description
(Eze 1:18)
attributes eyes to the "wheels" alone; here there is added, on
closer observation, that the cherubim themselves had them. The
"eyes" imply that God, by His wisdom, beautifully reconciles seeming
contrarieties (compare
2Ch 16:9;
Pr 15:3;
Zec 4:10).
13. O wheel--rather, "they were called, whirling," that is, they were most rapid in their revolutions [MAURER]; or, better, "It was cried unto them, The whirling" [FAIRBAIRN]. Galgal here used for "wheel," is different from ophan, the simple word for "wheel." Galgal is the whole wheelwork machinery with its whirlwind-like rotation. Their being so addressed is in order to call them immediately to put themselves in rapid motion.
14. cherub--but in Eze 1:10 it is an ox. The chief of the four cherubic forms was not the ox, but man. Therefore "cherub" cannot be synonymous with "ox." Probably Ezekiel, standing in front of one of the cherubim (namely, that which handed the coals to the man in linen), saw of him, not merely the ox-form, but the whole fourfold form, and therefore calls him simply "cherub"; whereas of the other three, having only a side view, he specifies the form of each which met his eye [FAIRBAIRN]. As to the likelihood of the lower animals sharing in "the restoration of all things," see Isa 11:6; 65:25; Ro 8:20, 21; this accords with the animal forms combined with the human to typify redeemed man.
15. The repeated declaration of the identity of the vision with that
at the Chebar is to arouse attention to it
(Eze 10:22; 3:23).
the living creature--used collectively, as
in
Eze 10:17, 20; 1:20.
16. (See on
Eze 10:11;
Eze 1:19).
lifted up . . . wings--to depart, following "the glory
of the Lord" which was on the point of departing
(Eze 10:18).
17.
(Eze 1:12, 20, 21).
stood--God never stands still
(Joh 5:17),
therefore neither do the angels; but to human perceptions He seems to
do so.
18. The departure of the symbol of God's presence from the temple preparatory to the destruction of the city. Foretold in De 31:17. Woe be to those from whom God departs (Ho 9:12)! Compare 1Sa 28:15, 16; 4:21: "I-chabod, Thy glory is departed." Successive steps are marked in His departure; so slowly and reluctantly does the merciful God leave His house. First He leaves the sanctuary (Eze 9:3); He elevates His throne above the threshold of the house (Eze 10:1); leaving the cherubim He sits on the throne (Eze 10:4); He and the cherubim, after standing for a time at the door of the east gate (where was the exit to the lower court of the people), leave the house altogether (Eze 10:18, 19), not to return till Eze 43:2.
20. I knew . . . cherubim--By the second sight of the cherubim, he learned to identify them with the angelic forms situated above the ark of the covenant in the temple, which as a priest, he "knew" about from the high priest.
21. The repetition is in order that the people about to live without the temple might have, instead, the knowledge of the temple mysteries, thus preparing them for a future restoration of the covenant. So perverse were they that they would say, "Ezekiel fancies he saw what has no existence." He, therefore, repeats it over and over again.
22. straight forward--intent upon the object they aimed at, not deviating from the way nor losing sight of the end (Lu 9:52).
CHAPTER 11
Eze 11:1-25. PROPHECY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF THE CORRUPT "PRINCES OF THE PEOPLE;" PELATIAH DIES; PROMISE OF GRACE TO THE BELIEVING REMNANT; DEPARTURE OF THE GLORY OF GOD FROM THE CITY; EZEKIEL'S RETURN TO THE CAPTIVES.
1. east gate--to which the glory of God had moved itself
(Eze 10:19),
the chief entrance of the sanctuary; the portico or porch of Solomon.
The Spirit moves the prophet thither, to witness, in the presence of
the divine glory, a new scene of destruction.
five and twenty men--The same as the twenty-five (that is, twenty-four
heads of courses, and the high priest) sun-worshippers seen in
Eze 8:16.
The leading priests were usually called "princes of the
sanctuary"
(Isa 43:28)
and "chiefs of the priests"
(2Ch 36:14);
but here two of them are called "princes of the people," with irony, as
using their priestly influence to be ringleaders of the people in sin
(Eze 11:2).
Already the wrath of God had visited the people represented by
the elders
(Eze 9:6);
also the glory of the Lord had left its place in the holy of holies,
and, like the cherubim and flaming sword in Eden, had occupied the gate
into the deserted sanctuary. The judgment on the representatives of the
priesthood naturally follows here, just as the sin of the
priests had followed in the description
(Eze 8:12, 16)
after the sin of the elders.
Jaazaniah--signifying "God hears."
son of Azur--different from Jaazaniah the son of Shaphan
(Eze 8:11).
Azur means "help." He and Pelatiah ("God delivers"), son of
Benaiah ("God builds"), are singled out as Jaazaniah, son of Shaphan,
in the case of the seventy elders
(Eze 8:11, 12),
because their names ought to have reminded them that "God" would have
"heard" had they sought His "help" to "deliver" and "build" them up.
But, neglecting this, they incurred the heavier judgment by the very
relation in which they stood to God [FAIRBAIRN].
2. he--the Lord sitting on the cherubim
(Eze 10:2).
wicked counsel--in opposition to the prophets of God
(Eze 11:3).
3. It is not near--namely, the destruction of the city;
therefore "let us build houses," as if there was no fear. But the
Hebrew opposes English Version, which would require the
infinitive absolute. Rather, "Not at hand is the building of houses."
They sneer at Jeremiah's letter to the captives, among whom Ezekiel
lived
(Jer 29:5).
"Build ye houses, and dwell in them," that is, do not
fancy, as many persuade you, that your sojourn in Babylon is to be
short; it will be for seventy years
(Jer 25:11, 12; 29:10);
therefore build houses and settle quietly there. The scorners in
Jerusalem reply, Those far off in exile may build if they please, but
it is too remote a concern for us to trouble ourselves about
[FAIRBAIRN], (Compare
Eze 12:22, 27;
2Pe 3:4).
this city . . . caldron . . . we . . . flesh--sneering at
Jer 1:13,
when he compared the city to a caldron with its mouth towards the
north. "Let Jerusalem be so if you will, and we the flesh, exposed to
the raging foe from the north, still its fortifications will secure us
from the flame of war outside; the city must stand for our sakes, just
as the pot exists for the safety of the flesh in it." In opposition to
this God says
(Eze 11:11),
"This city shall not be your caldron, to defend you in it from
the foe outside: nay, ye shall be driven out of your imaginary
sanctuary and slain in the border of the land." "But," says God,
in
Eze 11:7,
"your slain are the flesh, and this city the caldron; but (not as you
fancy, shall ye be kept safe inside) I will bring you forth
out of the midst of it"; and again, in
Eze 24:3,
"Though not a caldron in your sense, Jerusalem shall be so in
the sense of its being exposed to a consuming foe, and you yourselves
in it and with it."
4. prophesy . . . prophesy--The repetition marks emphatic earnestness.
5. Spirit . . . fell upon me--stronger than "entered into me"
(Eze 2:2; 3:24),
implying the zeal of the Spirit of God roused to immediate indignation
at the contempt of God shown by the scorners.
I know--
(Ps 139:1-4).
Your scornful jests at My word escape not My notice.
6. your slain--those on whom you have brought ruin by your wicked counsels. Bloody crimes within the city brought on it a bloody foe from without (Eze 7:23, 24). They had made it a caldron in which to boil the flesh of God's people (Mic 3:1-3), and eat it by unrighteous oppression; therefore God will make it a caldron in a different sense, one not wherein they may be safe in their guilt, but "out of the midst of" which they shall be "brought forth" (Jer 34:4, 5).
7. The city is a caldron to them, but it shall not be so to you. Ye shall meet your doom on the frontier.
8. The Chaldean sword, to escape which ye abandoned your God, shall be brought on you by God because of that very abandonment of Him.
9. out of the midst thereof--that is, of the city, as captives led into the open plain for judgment.
10. in the border of Israel--on the frontier: at Riblah, in the land
of Hamath (compare
2Ki 25:19-21,
with 1Ki 8:65).
ye shall know that I am the Lord--by the judgments I inflict
(Ps 9:16).
11. (See on Eze 11:3).
12. (De 12:30, 31).
13. Pelaliah--probably the ringleader of the scorners
(Eze 11:1);
his being stricken dead (like Ananias,
Acts 5. 5)
was an earnest of the destruction of the rest of the twenty-five, as
Ezekiel had foretold, as also of the general ruin.
fell . . . upon . . .
face--(See on
Eze 9:8).
wilt thou make a full end of the remnant--Is Pelatiah's destruction
to be the token of the destruction of all, even of the remnant? The
people regarded Pelatiah as a mainstay of the city. His name (derived
from a Hebrew root, "a remnant," or else "God delivers") suggested
hope. Is that hope, asks Ezekiel, to be disappointed?
15. thy brethren . . . brethren--The repetition
implies, "Thy real brethren" are no longer the priests at Jerusalem
with whom thou art connected by the natural ties of blood and
common temple service, but thy fellow exiles on the Chebar, and the
house of Israel whosoever of them belong to the remnant to be spared.
men of thy kindred--literally, "of thy redemption," that is, the
nearest relatives, whose duty it was to do the part of Goel, or
vindicator and redeemer of a forfeited inheritance
(Le 25:25).
Ezekiel, seeing the priesthood doomed to destruction, as a priest, felt
anxious to vindicate their cause, as if they were his nearest kinsmen
and he their Goel. But he is told to look for his true kinsmen in those,
his fellow exiles, whom his natural kinsmen at Jerusalem despised, and
he is to be their vindicator. Spiritual ties, as in the case of Levi
(De 33:9),
the type of Messiah
(Mt 12:47-50)
are to supersede natural ones where the two clash. The hope of better
days was to rise from the despised exiles. The gospel principle is
shadowed forth here, that the despised of men are often the chosen of
God and the highly esteemed among men are often an abomination before
Him
(Lu 16:15;
1Co 1:26-28).
"No door of hope but in the valley of Achor" ("trouble,"
Ho 2:15),
[FAIRBAIRN].
Get you far . . . unto us is this land--the contemptuous words of those
left still in the city at the carrying away of Jeconiah to the exiles,
"However far ye be outcasts from the Lord and His temple, we are
secure in our possession of the land."
16. Although--anticipating the objection of the priests at Jerusalem,
that the exiles were "cast far off." Though this be so, and they are far
from the outer temple at Jerusalem, I will be their asylum or sanctuary
instead
(Ps 90:1; 91:9;
Isa 8:14).
My shrine is the humble heart: a preparation for gospel catholicity
when the local and material temple should give place to the spiritual
(Isa 57:15; 66:1;
Mal 1:11;
Joh 4:21-24;
Ac 7:48, 49).
The trying discipline of the exile was to chasten the outcasts so as to
be meet recipients of God's grace, for which the carnal confidence of
the priests disqualified them. The dispersion served the end of
spiritualizing and enlarging the views even of the better Jews, so as
to be able to worship God everywhere without a material temple;
and, at the same time, it diffused some knowledge of God among the
greatest Gentile nations, thus providing materials for the gathering in
of the Christian Church among the Gentiles; so marvellously did God
overrule a present evil for an ultimate good. Still more does all this
hold good in the present much longer dispersion which is preparing for
a more perfect and universal restoration
(Isa 2:2-4;
Jer 3:16-18).
Their long privation of the temple will prepare them for appreciating
the more, but without Jewish narrowness, the temple that is to be
(Eze 40:1-44:31).
a little--rather, "for a little season"; No matter how long the
captivity may be, the seventy years will be but as a little season,
compared with their long subsequent settlement in their land. This
holds true only partially in the case of the first restoration; but as
in a few centuries they were dispersed again, the full and permanent
restoration is yet future
(Jer 24:6).
17. (Eze 28:25; 34:13; 36:24).
18. They have eschewed every vestige of idolatry ever since their return from Babylon. But still the Shekinah glory had departed, the ark was not restored, nor was the second temple strictly inhabited by God until He came who made it more glorious than the first temple (Hag 2:9); even then His stay was short, and ended in His being rejected; so that the full realization of the promise must still be future.
19. I will give them--lest they should claim to themselves the
praise given them in
Eze 11:18,
God declares it is to be the free gift of His Spirit.
one heart--not singleness, that is, uprightness, but oneness of heart in all, unanimously seeking Him in contrast to their state
at that time, when only single scattered individuals sought God
(Jer 32:39;
Zep 3:9)
[HENGSTENBERG]. Or, "content with one God,"
not distracted with "the many detestable things"
(Eze 11:18;
1Ki 18:21;
Ho 10:2)
[CALVIN].
new spirit--
(Ps 51:10;
Jer 31:33).
Realized fully in the "new creature" of the New Testament
(2Co 5:17);
having new motives, new rules, new aims.
stony heart--like "adamant"
(Zec 7:12);
the natural heart of every man.
heart of flesh--impressible to what is good, tender.
20. walk in my statutes--Regeneration shows itself by its fruits
(Ga 5:22, 25).
they . . . my people, . . . I . . . their God--
(Eze 14:11; 36:28; 37:27;
Jer 24:7).
In its fullest sense still future
(Zec 13:9).
21. whose heart . . . after . . . heart of
. . . detestable things--The repetition of "heart" is
emphatic, signifying that the heart of those who so obstinately clung
to idols, impelled itself to fresh superstitions in one continuous
tenor [CALVIN]. Perhaps it is implied that they
and their idols are much alike in character
(Ps 115:8).
The heart walks astray first, the feet follow.
recompense . . . way upon . . . heads--They
have abandoned Me, so will I abandon them; they profaned My temple, so
will I profane it by the Chaldeans
(Eze 9:10).
23. The Shekinah glory now moves from the east gate (Eze 10:4, 19) to the Mount of Olives, altogether abandoning the temple. The mount was chosen as being the height whence the missiles of the foe were about to descend on the city. So it was from it that Jesus ascended to heaven when about to send His judgments on the Jews; and from it He predicted its overthrow before His crucifixion (Mt 24:3). It is also to be the scene of His return in person to deliver His people (Zec 14:4), when He shall come by the same way as He went, "the way of the east" (Eze 43:2).
24. brought me in a vision--not in actual fact, but in ecstatic vision. He had been as to the outward world all the time before the elders (Eze 8:3) in Chaldea; he now reports what he had witnessed with the inner eye.
25. things . . . showed me--literally, "words"; an appropriate expression; for the word communicated to him was not simply a word, but one clothed with outward symbols "shown" to him as in the sacrament, which AUGUSTINE terms "the visible word" [CALVIN].
CHAPTER 12
Eze 12:1-28. EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL MOVING TO EXILE: PROPHECY OF ZEDEKIAH'S CAPTIVITY AND PRIVATION OF SIGHT: THE JEWS' UNBELIEVING SURMISE AS TO THE DISTANCE OF THE EVENT REPROVED.
1, 2. eyes to see, and see not, . . . ears to hear, and hear not--fulfilling the prophecy of De 29:4, here quoted by Ezekiel (compare Isa 6:9; Jer 5:21). Ezekiel needed often to be reminded of the people's perversity, lest he should be discouraged by the little effect produced by his prophecies. Their "not seeing" is the result of perversity, not incapacity. They are wilfully blind. The persons most interested in this prophecy were those dwelling at Jerusalem; and it is among them that Ezekiel was transported in spirit, and performed in vision, not outwardly, the typical acts. At the same time, the symbolical prophecy was designed to warn the exiles at Chebar against cherishing hopes, as many did in opposition to God's revealed word, of returning to Jerusalem, as if that city was to stand; externally living afar off, their hearts dwelt in that corrupt and doomed capital.
3. stuff for removing--rather, "an exile's outfit," the articles
proper to a person going as an exile, a staff and knapsack, with a
supply of food and clothing; so "instruments of captivity,"
Jer 46:19,
Margin, that is, the needful equipments for it. His simple
announcements having failed, he is symbolically to give them an ocular
demonstration conveyed by a word-painting of actions performed in
vision.
consider--
(De 32:29).
4. by day--in broad daylight, when all can see thee.
at even--not contradicting the words "by day." The baggage was to be
sent before by day, and Ezekiel was to follow at nightfall
[GROTIUS]; or, the preparations were to be made by day, the actual
departure was to be effected at night [HENDERSON].
as they that go forth into captivity--literally, "as the goings forth
of the captivity," that is, of the captive band of exiles, namely, amid
the silent darkness: typifying Zedekiah's flight by night on the taking
of the city
(Jer 39:4; 52:7).
5. Dig--as Zedekiah was to escape like one digging through a wall,
furtively to effect an escape
(Eze 12:12).
carry out--namely, "thy stuff"
(Eze 12:4).
thereby--by the opening in the wall. Zedekiah escaped "by the gate
betwixt the two walls"
(Jer 39:4).
6. in . . . twilight--rather, "in the dark." So in
Ge 15:17,
"it" refers to "thy stuff."
cover thy face--as one who muffles his face, afraid of being recognized
by anyone meeting him. So the Jews and Zedekiah should make their exit
stealthily and afraid to look around, so hurried should be their fight
[CALVIN].
sign--rather, "a portent," namely, for evil.
9. What doest thou?--They ask not in a docile spirit, but making a jest of his proceedings.
10. burden--that is, weighty oracle.
the prince--The very man Zedekiah, in whom they trust for safety, is
to be the chief sufferer. JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities, 10.7] reports that
Ezekiel sent a copy of this prophecy to Zedekiah. As Jeremiah had sent a
letter to the captives at the Chebar, which was the means of calling
forth at first the agency of Ezekiel, so it was natural for Ezekiel to
send a message to Jerusalem confirming the warnings of Jeremiah. The
prince, however, fancying a contradiction between
Eze 12:13;
"he shall not see Babylon," and
Jer 24:8, 9,
declaring he should be carried to Babylon, believed neither. Seeming
discrepancies in Scripture on deeper search prove to be hidden
harmonies.
11. sign--portent of evil to come (Eze 24:27; Zec 3:8, Margin). Fulfilled (2Ki 25:1-7; Jer 52:1-11).
12. prince . . . among them--literally, "that is in the midst of them,"
that is, on whom the eyes of all are cast, and "under whose shadow" they
hope to live
(La 4:20).
shall bear--namely, his "stuff for removing"; his equipments for his
journey.
cover his face, that he see not the
ground--See on
Eze 12:6;
the symbol in
Eze 12:6
is explained in this verse. He shall muffle his face so as not to be
recognized: a humiliation for a king!
13. My net--the Chaldean army. He shall be inextricably entangled in
it, as in the meshes of a net. It is God's net
(Job 19:6).
Babylon was God's instrument
(Isa 10:5).
Called "a net"
(Hab 1:14-16).
bring him to Babylon . . . ; yet shall he not see it--because he should
be deprived of sight before he arrived there
(Jer 52:11).
14. all . . . about him--his satellites: his bodyguard.
bands--literally, "the wings" of an army
(Isa 8:8).
draw out . . . sword after
them--(See on
Eze 5:2;
Eze 5:12).
16. I will leave a few . . . that they may declare . . . abominations--God's purpose in scattering a remnant of Jews among the Gentiles; namely, not only that they themselves should be weaned from idolatry (see Eze 12:15), but that by their own word, as also by their whole state as exiles, they should make God's righteousness manifest among the Gentiles, as vindicated in their punishment for their sins (compare Isa 43:10; Zec 8:13).
18. Symbolical representation of the famine and fear with which they should eat their scanty morsel, in their exile, and especially at the siege.
19. people of the land--the Jews "in the land" of Chaldea who thought
themselves miserable as being exiles and envied the Jews left in
Jerusalem as fortunate.
land of Israel--contrasted with "the people in the land" of Chaldea.
So far from being fortunate as the exiles in Chaldea regarded them, the
Jews in Jerusalem are truly miserable, for the worst is before them,
whereas the exiles have escaped the miseries of the coming siege.
land . . . desolate from all that is
therein--literally, "that the land (namely, Judea) may be despoiled
of the fulness thereof"; emptied of the inhabitants and abundance of
flocks and corn with which it was filled.
because of . . . violence--
(Ps 107:34).
20. the cities--left in Judea after the destruction of Jerusalem.
22. proverb--The infidel scoff, that the threatened judgment was so
long in coming, it would not come at all, had by frequent repetition
come to be a "proverb" with them. This skeptical habit contemporary
prophets testify to
(Jer 17:15; 20:7;
Zep 1:12).
Ezekiel, at the Chebar, thus sympathizes with Jeremiah and strengthens
his testimony at Jerusalem. The tendency to the same scoff
showed itself in earlier times, but had not then developed into a
settled "proverb"
(Isa 5:19;
Am 5:18).
It shall again be the characteristic of the last times, when "faith"
shall be regarded as an antiquated thing
(Lu 18:8),
seeing that it remains stationary, whereas worldly arts and sciences
progress, and when the "continuance of all things from creation" will
be the argument against the possibility of their being suddenly brought
to a standstill by the coming of the Lord
(Isa 66:5;
2Pe 3:3, 4).
The very long-suffering of God, which ought to lead men to repentance,
is made an argument against His word
(Ec 8:11;
Am 6:3).
days . . . prolonged . . . vision faileth--their twofold argument:
(1) The predictions shall not come to pass till long after our time. (2)
They shall fail and prove vain shadows. God answers both in
Eze 12:23, 25.
23. effect--literally, "the word," namely, fulfilled; that is, the effective fulfilment of whatever the prophets have spoken is at hand.
24. no more . . . vain vision . . . flattering divination--All those false prophets (La 2:14), who "flattered" the people with promises of peace and safety, shall be detected and confounded by the event itself.
25. word . . . shall come to pass--in opposition to
their scoff "the vision faileth"
(Eze 12:22).
The repetition, "I will speak . . . speak," &c. (or as
FAIRBAIRN, "For I, Jehovah, will speak whatever
word I shall speak, and it shall be done") implies that whenever God
speaks, the effect must follow; for God, who speaks, is not divided in
Himself
(Eze 12:28;
Isa 55:11;
Da 9:12;
Lu 21:33).
no more prolonged--in opposition to the scoff
(Eze 12:22),
"The days are prolonged."
in your days--while you are living (compare
Mt 24:34).
27. Not a mere repetition of the scoff (Eze 12:22); there the scoffers asserted that the evil was so often threatened and postponed, it must have no reality; here formalists do not go so far as to deny that a day of evil is coming, but assert it is still far off (Am 6:3). The transition is easy from this carnal security to the gross infidelity of the former class.
CHAPTER 13
Eze 13:1-23. DENUNCIATION OF FALSE PROPHETS AND PROPHETESSES; THEIR FALSE TEACHINGS, AND GOD'S CONSEQUENT JUDGMENTS.
1. As the twelfth chapter denounced the false expectations of the people, so this denounces the false leaders who fed those expectations. As an independent witness, Ezekiel confirms at the Chebar the testimony of Jeremiah (Jer 29:21, 31) in his letter from Jerusalem to the captive exiles, against the false prophets; of these some were conscious knaves, others fanatical dupes of their own frauds; for example, Ahab, Zedekiah, and Shemaiah. Hananiah must have believed his own lie, else he would not have specified so circumstantial details (Jer 28:2-4). The conscious knaves gave only general assurances of peace (Jer 5:31; 6:14; 14:13). The language of Ezekiel has plain references to the similar language of Jeremiah (for example, Jer 23:9-38); the bane of false prophecy, which had its stronghold in Jerusalem, having in some degree extended to the Chebar; this chapter, therefore, is primarily intended as a message to those still in the Jewish metropolis; and, secondarily, for the good of the exiles at the Chebar.
2. that prophesy--namely, a speedy return to Jerusalem.
out of . . . own hearts--alluding to the words of Jeremiah
(Jer 23:16, 26);
that is, what they prophesied was what they and the people
wished; the wish was father to the thought. The people
wished to be deceived, and so were deceived. They were
inexcusable, for they had among them true prophets (who spoke not
their own thoughts, but as they were moved by the Holy Ghost,
2Pe 1:21),
whom they might have known to be such, but they did not wish to know
(Joh 3:19).
3. foolish--though vaunting as though exclusively possessing "wisdom"
(1Co 1:19-21);
the fear of God being the only beginning of wisdom
(Ps 111:10).
their own spirit--instead of the Spirit of God. A threefold
distinction lay between the false and the true prophets: (1) The source
of their messages respectively; of the false, "their own hearts"; of the
true, an object presented to the spiritual sense (named from the noblest
of the senses, a seeing) by the Spirit of God as from without, not
produced by their own natural powers of reflection. The word, the body
of the thought, presented itself not audibly to the natural sense, but
directly to the spirit of the prophet; and so the perception of it is
properly called a seeing, he perceiving that which thereafter forms
itself in his soul as the cover of the external word
[DELITZSCH]; hence
the peculiar expression, "seeing the word of God"
(Isa 2:1; 13:1;
Am 1:1;
Mic 1:1).
(2) The point aimed at; the false "walking after their own spirit"; the
true, after the Spirit of God. (3) The result; the false saw nothing,
but spake as if they had seen; the true had a vision, not subjective,
but objectively real [FAIRBAIRN]. A refutation of
those who set the inward word above the objective, and
represent the Bible as flowing subjectively from the inner light of its
writers, not from the revelation of the Holy Ghost from without. "They
are impatient to get possession of the kernel without its fostering
shell--they would have Christ without the Bible" [BENGEL].
4. foxes--which cunningly "spoil the vines"
(So 2:15),
Israel being the vineyard
(Ps 80:8-15;
Isa 5:1-7; 27:2;
Jer 2:21);
their duty was to have guarded it from being spoiled, whereas they
themselves spoiled it by corruptions.
in . . . deserts--where there is nothing to eat;
whence the foxes become so ravenous and crafty in their devices to get
food. So the prophets wander in Israel, a moral desert, unrestrained,
greedy of gain which they get by craft.
5. not gone up into . . . gaps--metaphor from breaches made in a
wall, to which the defenders ought to betake themselves in order to
repel the entrance of the foe. The breach is that made in the theocracy
through the nation's sin; and, unless it be made up, the vengeance of
God will break in through it. Those who would advise the people to
repentance are the restorers of the breach
(Eze 22:30;
Ps 106:23, 30).
hedge--the law of God
(Ps 80:12;
Isa 5:2, 5);
by violating it, the people stripped themselves of the fence of
God's protection and lay exposed to the foe. The false prophets did not
try to repair the evil by bringing back the people to the law with good
counsels, or by checking the bad with reproofs. These two duties answer
to the double office of defenders in case of a breach made in a wall:
(1) To repair the breach from within; (2) To oppose the foe from
without.
to stand--that is, that the city may "stand."
in . . . day of . . . Lord--In the day of the battle which God wages
against Israel for their sins, ye do not try to stay God's vengeance by
prayers, and by leading the nation to repentance.
6. made others to hope, &c.--rather, "they hoped" to confirm (that is, 'make good') their word, by the event corresponding to their prophecy. The Hebrew requires this [HAVERNICK]. Also the parallel clause, "they have seen vanity," implies that they believed their own lie (2Th 2:11). Subjective revelation is false unless it rests on the objective.
8. I am against you--rather understand, "I come against you," to punish your wicked profanation of My name (compare Re 2:5, 16).
9. mine hand--My power in vengeance.
not . . . in . . . assembly--rather, the "council"; "They shall not
occupy the honorable office of councillors in the senate of elders
after the return from Babylon"
(Ezr 2:1, 2).
neither . . . written in . . . Israel--They shall not even have a place
in the register kept of all citizens' names; they shall be
erased from it, just as the names of those who died in the year, or had
been deprived of citizenship for their crimes, were at the annual
revisal erased. Compare
Jer 17:13;
Lu 10:20;
Re 3:5,
as to those spiritually Israelites;
Joh 1:47,
and those not so. Literally fulfilled
(Ezr 2:59, 62;
compare
Ne 7:5;
Ps 69:28).
neither . . . enter . . . land--They shall not so much as be allowed
to come back at all to their country.
10. Because, even because--The repetition heightens the emphasis.
Peace--safety to the nation. Ezekiel confirms
Jer 6:14; 8:11.
one--literally, "this one"; said contemptuously, as in
2Ch 28:22.
a wall--rather, "a loose wall." Ezekiel had said that the false
prophets did not "go up into the gaps, or make up the breaches"
(Eze 13:5),
as good architects do; now he adds that they make a bustling show of
anxiety about repairing the wall; but it is without right mortar, and
therefore of no use.
one . . . others--besides individual effort, they
jointly co-operated to delude the people.
daubed . . . with untempered mortar--as sand without lime, mud without
straw [GROTIUS].
FAIRBAIRN translates, "plaster it with whitewash." But
besides the hypocrisy of merely outwardly "daubing" to make the wall
look fair
(Mt 23:27, 29;
Ac 23:3),
there is implied the unsoundness of the wall from the absence of
true uniting cement; the "untempered cement" answering to the
lie of the prophets, who say, in support of their
prophecies, "Thus saith the Lord, when the Lord hath not spoken"
(Eze 22:28).
11. overflowing--inundating; such as will at once wash away the mere clay mortar. The three most destructive agents shall co-operate against the wall--wind, rain, and hailstones. These last in the East are more out of the regular course of nature and are therefore often particularly specified as the instruments of God's displeasure against His foes (Ex 9:18; Jos 10:11; Job 38:22; Ps 18:12, 13; Isa 28:2; 30:30; Re 16:21). The Hebrew here is, literally, "stones of ice." They fall in Palestine at times an inch thick with a destructive velocity. The personification heightens the vivid effect, "O ye hail stones." The Chaldeans will be the violent agency whereby God will unmask and refute them, overthrowing their edifice of lies.
12. shall it not be said--Your vanity and folly shall be so manifested that it shall pass into a proverb, "Where is the daubing?"
13. God repeats, in His own name, as the Source of the coming calamity, what had been expressed generally in Eze 13:11.
14. The repetition of the same threat
(see on
Eze 13:11)
is to awaken the people out of their dream of safety by the
certainty of the event.
foundation--As the "wall" represents the security of the nation, so
the "foundation" is Jerusalem, on the fortifications of which they
rested their confidence. GROTIUS
makes the "foundation" refer to
the false principles on which they rested;
Eze 13:16
supports the former view.
16. prophesy concerning Jerusalem--With all their "seeing visions of peace for her," they cannot ensure peace or safety to themselves.
17. set thy face--put on a bold countenance, fearlessly to denounce
them
(Eze 3:8, 9;
Isa 50:7).
daughters--the false prophetesses; alluded to only here; elsewhere
the guilt specified in the women is the active share they took in
maintaining idolatry
(Eze 8:14).
It was only in extraordinary emergencies that God bestowed prophecy on
women, for example on Miriam, Deborah, Huldah
(Ex 15:20;
Jud 4:4;
2Ki 22:14);
so in the last days to come
(Joe 2:28).
The rareness of such instances enhanced their guilt in pretending
inspiration.
18. sew pillows to . . . armholes--rather, elbows and wrists, for
which the false prophetesses made cushions to lean on, as a symbolical
act, typifying the perfect tranquility which they foretold to those
consulting them. Perhaps they made their dupes rest on these cushions in
a fancied state of ecstasy after they had made them at first
stand (whence the expression, "every stature," is used
for "men of every age"). As the men are said to have built a
wall
(Eze 13:10),
so the women are said to sew pillows, &c., both alike typifying the
"peace" they promised the impenitent.
make kerchiefs--magical veils, which they put over the heads of
those consulting them, as if to fit them for receiving a response, that
they might be rapt in spiritual trance above the world.
head of every stature--"men of every age," old and young, great and
small, if only these had pay to offer them.
hunt souls--eagerly trying to allure them to the love of yourselves
(Pr 6:26;
2Pe 2:14),
so as unwarily to become your prey.
will ye save . . . souls . . . that come unto you--Will ye haul after
souls, and when they are yours ("come unto you"), will ye
promise them life? "Save" is explained
(Eze 13:22),
"promising life" [GROTIUS]. CALVIN explains, "Will ye hunt My people's souls and yet
will ye save your own souls"; I, the Lord God, will not allow
it. But "save" is used
(Eze 13:19)
of the false prophetesses promising life to the impenitent, so
that English Version and GROTIUS explain it
best.
19. handfuls--expressing the paltry gain for which they bartered
immortal souls (compare
Mic 3:5, 11;
Heb 12:16).
They "polluted" God by making His name the cloak under which they
uttered falsehoods.
among my people--an aggravation of their sin, that they committed it
"among the people" whom God had chosen as peculiarly His own, and
among whom He had His temple. It would have been a sin to have done so
even among the Gentiles, who knew not God; much more so among the people
of God (compare
Pr 28:21).
slay . . . souls that should not die, &c.--to
predict the slaying or perdition of the godly whom I will save.
As true ministers are said to save and slay their hearers, according to
the spirit respectively in which these receive their message
(2Co 2:15, 16),
so false ministers imitate them; but they promise safety to those on
the broad way to ruin and predict ruin to those on the narrow way of
God.
my people that hear your lies--who are therefore wilfully deceived,
so that their guilt lies at their own door
(Joh 3:19).
20. I am against your pillows--that is, against your lying ceremonial
tricks by which ye cheat the people.
to make them fly--namely, into their snares, as fowlers disturb birds
so as to be suddenly caught in the net spread for them. "Fly" is
peculiarly appropriate as to those lofty spiritual flights to which
they pretended to raise their dupes when they veiled their heads with
kerchiefs and made them rest on luxurious arm-cushions
(Eze 13:18).
let . . . souls go--"Ye make them fly" in order to destroy them; "I
will let them go" in order to save them
(Ps 91:3;
Pr 6:5;
Ho 9:8).
21. in your hand--in your power. "My people" are the elect remnant of
Israel to be saved.
ye shall know--by the judgments which ye shall suffer.
22. ye have made . . . the righteous sad--by lying predictions of
calamities impending ever the godly.
strengthened . . . wicked--
(Jer 23:14).
heart of . . . righteous . . . hands of . . . wicked--Heart is
applied to the righteous because the terrors foretold penetrated to
their inmost feelings; hands, to the wicked because they were so
hardened as not only to despise God in their minds, but also to manifest
it in their whole acts, as if avowedly waging war with Him.
23. ye shall see no more vanity--The event shall confute your lies, involving yourselves in destruction (Eze 13:9; Eze 14:8; 15:7; Mic 3:6).
CHAPTER 14
Eze 14:1-23. HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS ARE ANSWERED ACCORDING TO THEIR HYPOCRISY. THE CALAMITIES COMING ON THE PEOPLE; BUT A REMNANT IS TO ESCAPE.
1. elders--persons holding that dignity among the exiles at the
Chebar. GROTIUS refers this to Seraiah and those
sent with him from Judea
(Jer 51:59).
The prophet's reply, first, reflecting on the character of the
inquirers, and, secondly, foretelling the calamities coming on Judea,
may furnish an idea of the subject of their inquiry.
sat before me--not at once able to find a beginning of their speech;
indicative of anxiety and despondency.
3. heart . . . face--The heart is first corrupted, and then the
outward manifestation of idol-worship follows; they set their idols
before their eyes. With all their pretense of consulting God now,
they have not even put away their idols outwardly; implying gross
contempt of God. "Set up," literally, "aloft"; implying that their idols
had gained the supreme ascendancy over them.
stumbling-block of . . . iniquity--See
Pr 3:21, 23,
"Let not them (God's laws) depart from thine eyes, then
. . . thy foot shall not stumble." Instead of God's
law, which (by being kept before their eyes) would have saved them from
stumbling, they set up their idols before their eyes, which proved a
stumbling-block, causing them to stumble
(Eze 7:19).
inquired of at all--literally, "should I with inquiry be inquired of"
by such hypocrites as they are?
(Ps 66:18;
Pr 15:29; 28:9).
4. and cometh--and yet cometh, reigning himself to be a true
worshipper of Jehovah.
him that cometh--so the Hebrew Margin reads. But the
Hebrew text reading is, "according to it, according to the
multitude of his idols"; the anticipative clause with the pronoun not
being pleonastic, but increasing the emphasis of the following clause
with the noun. "I will answer," literally, reflexively, "I will Myself
(or for Myself) answer him."
according to . . . idols--thus, "answering a fool according to his
folly"; making the sinner's sin his punishment; retributive justice
(Pr 1:31; 26:5).
5. That I may take--that is, unveil and overtake with
punishment the dissimulation and impiety of Israel hid in their
own heart. Or, rather, "That I may punish them by answering them
after their own hearts"; corresponding to "according to the
multitude of his idols" (see on
Eze 14:4);
an instance is given in
Eze 14:9;
Ro 1:28;
2Th 2:11,
God giving them up in wrath to their own lie.
idols--though pretending to "inquire" of Me, "in their hearts" they
are "estranged from Me," and love "idols."
6. Though God so threatened the people for their idolatry
(Eze 14:5),
yet He would rather they should avert the calamity by "repentance."
turn yourselves--CALVIN translates, "turn others" (namely,
the stranger proselytes in the land). As ye have been the advisers of
others (see
Eze 14:7,
"the stranger that sojourneth in Israel") to idolatry, so bestow at
least as much pains in turning them to the truth; the surest proof of
repentance. But the parallelism to
Eze 14:3, 4
favors English Version. Their sin was twofold: (1) "In their
heart" or inner man; (2) "Put before their face,"
that is, exhibited outwardly. So their repentance is generally
expressed by "repent," and is then divided into: (1) "Turn
yourselves (inwardly) from your idols"; (2) "Turn away your
faces (outwardly) from all your abominations." It is not likely
that an exhortation to convert others should come between the
two affecting themselves.
7. stranger--the proselyte, tolerated in Israel only on condition of
worshipping no God but Jehovah
(Le 17:8, 9).
inquire of him concerning me--that is, concerning My will.
by myself--not by word, but by deed, that is, by
judgments, marking My hand and direct agency; instead of answering
him through the prophet he consults.
FAIRBAIRN translates, as it is the
same Hebrew as in the previous clause, "concerning Me," it is
natural that God should use the same expression in His reply as was
used in the consultation of Him. But the sense, I think, is the
same. The hypocrite inquires of the prophet concerning God; and
God, instead of replying through the prophet, replies for Himself
concerning Himself.
8. And I will set my face against that
man--(See on
Le 17:10).
and will make him a sign--literally, "I will destroy him so as to
become a sign"; it will be no ordinary destruction, but such as will
make him be an object pointed at with wonder by all, as Korah, &c.
(Nu 26:10;
De 28:37).
9. I the Lord have deceived that prophet--not directly, but through Satan and his ministers; not merely permissively, but by overruling their evil to serve the purposes of His righteous judgment, to be a touchstone to separate the precious from the vile, and to "prove" His people (De 13:3; 1Ki 22:23; Jer 4:10; 2Th 2:11, 12). Evil comes not from God, though God overrules it to serve His will (Job 12:16; Jas 1:3). This declaration of God is intended to answer their objection, "Jeremiah and Ezekiel are but two opposed to the many prophets who announce 'peace' to us." "Nay, deceive not yourselves, those prophets of yours are deluding you, and I permit them to do so as a righteous judgment on your wilful blindness."
10. As they dealt deceitfully with God by seeking answers of peace without repentance, so God would let them be dealt with deceitfully by the prophets whom they consulted. God would chastise their sin with a corresponding sin; as they rejected the safe directions of the true light, He would send the pernicious delusions of a false one; prophets would be given them who should re-echo the deceitfulness that already wrought in their own bosom, to their ruin [FAIRBAIRN]. The people had themselves alone to blame, for they were long ago forewarned how to discern and to treat a false prophet (De 13:3); the very existence of such deceivers among them was a sign of God's judicial displeasure (compare in Saul's case, 1Sa 16:14; 28:6, 7). They and the prophet, being dupes of a common delusion, should be involved in a common ruin.
11. Love was the spring of God's very judgments on His people, who were incurable by any other process (Eze 11:20; 37:27).
12. The second part of the chapter: the effect which the presence of a few righteous persons was to have on the purposes of God (compare Ge 18:24-32). God had told Jeremiah that the guilt of Judah was too great to be pardoned even for the intercession of Moses and Samuel (Ps 99:6; Jer 14:2; 15:1), which had prevailed formerly (Ex 32:11-14; Nu 14:13-20; 1Sa 7:8-12), implying the extraordinary heinousness of their guilt, since in ordinary cases "the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man (for others) availeth much" (Jas 5:16). Ezekiel supplements Jeremiah by adding that not only those two once successful intercessors, but not even the three pre-eminently righteous men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, could stay God's judgments by their righteousness.
13. staff of . . . bread--on which man's existence is supported as on a staff (Eze 4:16; 5:16; Le 26:26; Ps 104:15; Isa 3:1). I will send a famine.
14. Noah, Daniel . . . Job--specified in particular as having been
saved from overwhelming calamities for their personal righteousness.
Noah had the members of his family alone given to him, amidst the
general wreck. Daniel saved from the fury of the king of Babylon the
three youths
(Da 2:17, 18, 48, 49).
Though his prophecies mostly were later than those of Ezekiel,
his fame for piety and wisdom was already established, and the
events recorded in
Da 1:1-2:49
had transpired. The Jews would naturally, in their fallen condition,
pride themselves on one who reflected such glory on his nation at the
heathen capital, and would build vain hopes (here set aside) on his
influence in averting ruin from them. Thus the objection to the
authenticity of Daniel from this passage vanishes. "Job" forms the
climax (and is therefore put out of chronological order), having not
even been left a son or a daughter, and having had himself to pass
through an ordeal of suffering before his final deliverance, and
therefore forming the most simple instance of the righteousness of God,
which would save the righteous themselves alone in the nation, and that
after an ordeal of suffering, but not spare even a son or daughter for
their sake
(Eze 14:16, 18, 20;
compare
Jer 7:16; 11:14; 14:11).
deliver . . . souls by . . . righteousness--
(Pr 11:4);
not the righteousness of works, but that of grace, a truth less clearly
understood under the law
(Ro 4:3).
15-21. The argument is cumulative. He first puts the case of the land sinning so as to fall under the judgment of a famine (Eze 14:13); then (Eze 14:15) "noisome beasts" (Le 26:22); then "the sword"; then, worst of all, "pestilence." The three most righteous of men should deliver only themselves in these several four cases. In Eze 14:21 he concentrates the whole in one mass of condemnation. If Noah, Daniel, Job, could not deliver the land, when deserving only one judgment, "how much more" when all four judgments combined are justly to visit the land for sin, shall these three righteous men not deliver it.
19. in blood--not literally. In Hebrew, "blood" expresses every premature kind of death.
21. How much more--literally, "Surely shall it be so now, when I send," &c. If none could avert the one only judgment incurred, surely now, when all four are incurred by sin, much more impossible it will be to deliver the land.
22. Yet . . . a remnant--not of righteous persons, but
some of the guilty who should "come forth" from the destruction of
Jerusalem to Babylon, to lead a life of hopeless exile there. The
reference here is to judgment, not mercy, as
Eze 14:23
shows.
ye shall see their . . . doings; and . . . be comforted--Ye, the
exiles at the Chebar, who now murmur at God's judgment about to be
inflicted on Jerusalem as harsh, when ye shall see the wicked "ways" and
character of the escaped remnant, shall acknowledge that both Jerusalem
and its inhabitants deserved their fate; his recognition of the
righteousness of the judgment will reconcile you to it, and so ye shall
be "comforted" under it [CALVIN].
Then would follow mercy to the elect
remnant, though that is not referred to here, but in
Eze 20:43.
23. they shall comfort you--not in words, but by your recognizing in their manifest guilt, that God had not been unjustly severe to them and the city.
CHAPTER 15
Eze 15:1-8. THE WORTHLESSNESS OF THE VINE AS WOOD ESPECIALLY WHEN BURNT, IS THE IMAGE OF THE WORTHLESSNESS AND GUILT OF THE JEWS, WHO SHALL PASS FROM ONE FIRE TO ANOTHER.
This chapter represents, in the way of a brief introduction, what the sixteenth chapter details minutely.
2, 3. What has the vine-wood to make it pre-eminent above other
forest-wood? Nothing. Nay, the reverse. Other trees yield useful
timber, but vine-wood is soft, brittle, crooked, and seldom large; not
so much as a "pin" (the large wooden peg used inside houses in the East
to hang household articles on,
Isa 22:23-25)
can be made of it. Its sole excellency is that it should bear fruit;
when it does not bear fruit, it is not only not better, but inferior to
other trees: so if God's people lose their distinctive excellency by
not bearing fruits of righteousness, they are more unprofitable than
the worldly
(De 32:32),
for they are the vine; the sole end of their being is to bear fruit to
His glory
(Ps 80:8, 9;
Isa 5:1,
&c.; Jer 2:21;
Ho 10:1;
Mt 21:33).
In all respects, except in their being planted by God, the Jews were
inferior to other nations, as Egypt, Babylon, &c., for example, in
antiquity, extent of territory, resources, military power, attainments
in arts and sciences.
or than a branch--rather, in apposition with "the vine tree." Omit
"or than." What superiority has the vine
if it be but a branch among the trees of the forest, that is, if,
as having no fruit, it lies cut down among other woods of trees?
4. cast into . . . fire--
(Joh 15:6).
both the ends--the north kingdom having been already overturned by
Assyria under Tiglath-pileser; the south being pressed on by Egypt
(2Ki 23:29-35).
midst of it is burned--rather, "is on flame"; namely, Jerusalem,
which had now caught the flame by the attack of Nebuchadnezzar.
Is it meet for any work--"it," that is, the scorched part still
remaining.
5. If useless before, much more so when almost wholly burnt.
6. So will I give the inhabitants of Jerusalem, as being utterly unprofitable (Mt 21:33-41; 25:30; Mr 11:12-14; Lu 13:6-9) in answering God's design that they should be witnesses for Jehovah before the heathen (Mt 3:10; 5:13).
7. And I will set my face against
them--(See on
Le 17:10).
from one fire . . . another--(Compare
Isa 24:18).
"Fire" means here every kind of calamity
(Ps 66:12).
The Jewish fugitives shall escape from the ruin of Jerusalem, only to
fall into some other calamity.
8. trespass--rather, "they have perversely fallen into perverse rebellion." The Jews were not merely sinners as the other nations, but revolters and apostates. It is one thing to neglect what we know not, but quite another thing to despise what we profess to worship [JEROME], as the Jews did towards God and the law.
CHAPTER 16
Eze 16:1-63. DETAILED APPLICATION OF THE PARABOLICAL DELINEATION OF THE FIFTEENTH CHAPTER TO JERUSALEM PERSONIFIED AS A DAUGHTER.
(1) Taken up by God's gratuitous favor from infancy (Eze 16:1-7); (2) and, when grown up, joined to Him in spiritual marriage (Eze 16:8-14); (3) her unfaithfulness, her sin (Eze 16:15-34); (4) the judgment (Eze 16:35-52); (5) her unlooked-for restoration (Eze 16:53 to the close).
2. cause Jerusalem to know--Men often are so blind as not to perceive their guilt which is patent to all. "Jerusalem" represents the whole kingdom of Judah.
3. birth . . . nativity--thy origin and birth;
literally, "thy diggings" (compare
Isa 51:1)
"and thy bringings forth."
of . . . Canaan--in which Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob sojourned before
going to Egypt, and from which thou didst derive far more of thy innate
characteristics than from the virtues of those thy progenitors
(Eze 21:30).
an Amorite . . . an Hittite--These, being the most powerful tribes,
stand for the whole of the Canaanite nations (compare
Jos 1:4;
Am 2:9),
which were so abominably corrupt as to have been doomed to utter
extermination by God
(Le 18:24, 25, 28;
De 18:12).
Translate rather, "the Amorite . . . the
Canaanite," that is, these two tribes personified; their wicked
characteristics, respectively, were concentrated in the parentage of
Israel
(Ge 15:16).
"The Hittite" is made their "mother"; alluding to Esau's wives,
daughters of Heth, whose ways vexed Rebekah
(Ge 26:34, 35; 27:46),
but pleased the degenerate descendants of Jacob, so that these are
called, in respect of morals, children of the Hittite (compare
Eze 16:45).
4. Israel's helplessness in her first struggling into national
existence, under the image of an infant
(Ho 2:3)
cast forth without receiving the commonest acts of parental regard. Its
very life was a miracle
(Ex 1:15-22).
navel . . . not cut--Without proper attention to the navel cord, the
infant just born is liable to die.
neither . . . washed in water to supple thee--that is, to make the
skin soft. Rather, "for purification"; from an Arabic root
[MAURER].
GESENIUS translates as the Margin, "that thou mightest (be presented
to thy parents to) be looked upon," as is customary on the birth of
a child.
salted--Anciently they rubbed infants with salt to make the skin firm.
5. cast . . . in . . . open field--The exposure of infants was common
in ancient times.
to the loathing of thy person--referring to the unsightly aspect of
the exposed infant. FAIRBAIRN
translates, "With contempt (or disdainful
indifference) of thy life."
6. when I passed by--as if a traveller.
polluted in . . . blood--but
PISCATOR, "ready to be trodden on."
I said--In contrast to Israel's helplessness stands God's omnipotent
word of grace which bids the outcast little one "live."
in thy blood--Though thou wast foul with blood, I said, "Live"
[GROTIUS].
"Live in thy blood," that is, Live, but live a life exposed
to many deaths, as was the case in the beginnings of Israel's national
existence, in order to magnify the grace of God
[CALVIN]. The former
view is preferable. Spiritually, till the sinner is made sensible of
his abject helplessness, he will not appreciate the provisions of God's
grace.
7. caused . . . to multiply--literally, "I . . . made thee a myriad."
bud of . . . field--the produce of the field. In two hundred fifty
years they increased from seventy-five persons to eight hundred thousand
(Ac 7:14)
[CALVIN]. But see
Ex 12:37, 38.
excellent ornaments--literally, "ornament of ornaments."
naked . . . bare--
(Ho 2:3).
Literally, "nakedness . . . bareness" itself; more
emphatic.
8. thy time of love--literally, "loves" (compare
So 2:10-13).
Thou wast of marriageable age, but none was willing to marry thee, naked
as thou wast. I then regarded thee with a look of grace when the full
time of thy deliverance was come
(Ge 15:13, 14;
Ac 7:6, 7).
It is not she that makes the advance to God, but God to her; she has
nothing to entitle her to such notice, yet He regards her not with mere
benevolence, but with love, such as one cherishes to the person
of his wife
(So 1:3-6;
Jer 31:3;
Mal 1:2).
spread my skirt over thee--the mode of espousals
(Ru 3:9).
I betrothed thee
(De 4:37; 10:15;
Ho 11:1).
The cloak is often used as a bed coverlet in the East. God explains
what He means, "I entered into . . . covenant with thee,"
that is, at Sinai. So Israel became "the wife of God's covenant"
(Isa 54:5;
Jer 3:14;
Ho 2:19, 20;
Mal 2:14).
thou . . . mine--
(Ex 19:5;
Jer 2:2).
9. washed I thee--as brides used to pass through a preparatory
purification
(Es 2:12).
So Israel, before the giving of the law at Sinai
(Ex 19:14);
"Moses sanctified the people, and they washed their clothes." So
believers
(1Co 6:11).
oil--emblem of the Levitical priesthood, the type of Messiah
(Ps 45:7).
10.
Ps 45:13, 14,
similarly describes the Church (Israel, the appointed mother of
Christendom) adorned as a bride (so
Isa 61:10).
It is Messiah who provides the wedding garment
(Re 3:18; 19:8).
badgers' skin--tahash; others translate, "seal skins." They formed
the over-covering of the tabernacle, which was, as it were, the nuptial
tent of God and Israel
(Ex 26:14),
and the material of the shoes worn by the Hebrews on festival days.
(See on
Ex 25:5).
fine linen--used by the priests
(Le 6:10);
emblem of purity.
11. The marriage gifts to Rebekah (Ge 24:22, 47).
12. jewel on thy forehead--rather, "a ring in thy nose"
(Isa 3:21).
a crown--at once the badge of a bride, and of her being made a queen,
as being consort of the King; the very name Israel meaning "a prince
of God." So they are called "a kingdom of priests"
(Ex 19:6;
compare
Re 1:6).
Though the external blessings bestowed on Israel were great, yet not
these, but the internal and spiritual, form the main reference in the
kingly marriage to which Israel was advanced.
13. flour . . . honey . . . oil--These three
mixed form the sweetest cakes; not dry bread and leeks as in Egypt.
From raiment He passes to food
(De 32:13, 14).
exceeding beautiful--
Ps 48:2,
the city; also,
Ps 29:2,
the temple.
prosper into a kingdom--exercising empire over surrounding nations.
14. thy renown . . . among . . . heathen--The theocracy reached its
highest point under Solomon, when distant potentates heard of his "fame"
(1Ki 10:1,
&c.), for example, the queen of Sheba, Hiram, &c.
(La 2:15).
my comeliness--It was not thine own, but imparted by Me.
15. Instead of attributing the glory of her privileges and gifts to
God, Israel prided herself on them as her own
(De 32:15;
Jer 7:4;
Mic 3:11),
and then wantonly devoted them to her idols
(Ho 2:8;
compare
Lu 15:12, 13).
playedst . . . harlot because of thy renown--"didst play the wanton
upon thy name" [FAIRBAIRN],
namely, by allowing thy renown to lead thee
into idolatry and leagues with idolaters
(Isa 1:21; 57:8;
Jer 3:2, 6).
English Version is better, "because of thy renown," that is,
relying on it; answering to "thou didst trust in thine own
beauty."
his it was--Thy beauty was yielded up to every passer-by.
Israel's zest for the worship of foul idols was but an anxiety to have
the approbation of heaven for their carnal lusts, of which the idols
were the personification; hence, too, their tendency to wander from
Jehovah, who was a restraint on corrupt nature.
16. deckedst . . . with divers colours--or, "didst make . . . of
divers colors" [FAIRBAIRN];
the metaphor and the literal are here mixed.
The high places whereon they sacrificed to Astarte are here compared to
tents of divers colors, which an impudent harlot would spread to
show her house was open to all
[CALVIN]. Compare as to "woven hangings
for Astarte" (the right translation for "grove")
2Ki 23:7.
the like . . . shall not come, neither shall . . . be--rather, "have
not come, nor shall be." These thy doings are unparalleled in the past,
and shall be so in the future.
17. my gold . . . my silver--
(Hag 2:8).
images of men--rather, "of the phallus," the Hindu lingam, or
membrum virile [HAVERNICK],
deified as the emblem of fecundity; man
making his lust his god. English Version, however, is appropriate;
Israel being represented as a woman playing the harlot with
"male images," that is, images of male gods, as distinguished from
female deities.
18. tookest thy . . . garments . . . coveredst them--that is, the
idols, as if an adulteress were to cover her paramours with garments
which she had received from the liberality of her husband.
my oil--the holy anointing oil sacred to God
(Ex 30:22-25).
Also that used in sacrifices
(Le 2:1, 2).
19. My meat . . . I gave--
(Ho 2:8).
set it before them--as a minchah or "meat offering"
(Le 2:1).
a sweet savour--literally, "a savor of rest," that is, whereby they
might be propitiated, and be at peace ("rest") with you; how ridiculous
to seek to propitiate gods of wood!
thus it was--The fact cannot be denied, for I saw it, and say it was
so, saith Jehovah.
20, 21. sons and . . . daughters borne unto me--Though
"thy children," yet they belong "unto Me," rather than to thee, for
they were born under the immutable covenant with Israel, which even
Israel's sin could not set aside, and they have received the sign of
adoption as Mine, namely, circumcision. This aggravates the guilt of
sacrificing them to Molech.
to be devoured--not merely to pass through the fire, as
sometimes children were made to do
(Le 18:21)
without hurt, but to pass
through so as to be made the food of the flame in honor of idols
(see on
Isa 57:5;
Jer 7:31;
Jer 19:5;
Jer 32:35).
Is this of thy whoredoms a small matter, that thou hast slain my
children--rather, "Were thy whoredoms a small matter (that is, not
enough, but) that thou hast slain
(that is, must also slay)," &c. As if thy unchastity was not enough,
thou hast added this unnatural and sacrilegious cruelty
(Mic 6:7).
22. not remembered . . . youth--Forgetfulness of God's love is the source of all sins. Israel forgot her deliverance by God in the infancy of her national life. See Eze 16:43, to which Eze 16:60 forms a lovely contrast (Jer 2:2; Ho 11:1).
23. woe, woe unto thee, &c.--This parenthetical exclamation has an awful effect coming like a lightning flash of judgment amidst the black clouds of Israel's guilt.
24. eminent place--rather, "a fornication-chamber," often connected with the impure rites of idolatry; spiritual fornication, on "an eminent place," answering to "fornication-chamber," is mainly meant, with an allusion also to the literal fornication associated with it (Jer 2:20; 3:2).
25. at every head of the way--in the most frequented places
(Pr 9:14).
thy beauty . . . abhorred, . . . opened . . . feet to every one--The
wanton advances were all on Israel's part; the idolatrous nations
yielded to her nothing in return. She had yielded so much that, like a
worn-out prostitute, her tempters became weary of her. When the Church
lowers her testimony for God to the carnal tastes of the world, with a
view to conciliation, she loses everything and gains nothing.
26. fornication with . . . Egyptians--alliances with Egypt, cemented
by sharing their idolatries.
great of flesh--of powerful virile parts; figuratively for the gross
and lustful religion of Egypt (for example, Isis, &c.), which alone
could satisfy the abominable lust of Israel
(Eze 20:7, 8; 23:19, 20, 21).
to provoke me--wantonly and purposely.
27. The consequent judgments, which, however, proved of no avail in
reforming the people
(Isa 9:13;
Jer 5:3).
delivered thee unto . . . Philistines--
(2Ki 16:6;
2Ch 28:18, 19).
ashamed of thy lewd way--The Philistines were less wanton in idolatry,
in that they did not, like Israel, adopt the idols of every foreign
country but were content with their own
(Eze 16:57;
Jer 2:11).
28. unsatiable--Not satisfied with whoredoms with neighbors, thou hast gone off to the distant Assyrians, that is, hast sought a league with them, and with it adopted their idolatries.
29. multiplied . . . fornication in . . . Canaan unto Chaldea--Thou hast multiplied thy idolatries "in Canaan" by sending "unto Chaldea" to borrow from thence the Chaldean rites, to add to the abominations already practised "in Canaan," before the carrying away of Jehoiachin to Chaldea. The name "Canaan" is used to imply that they had made Judea as much the scene of abominations as it was in the days of the corrupt Canaanites. The land had become utterly Canaanitish (Eze 23:14, &c.).
30. weak . . . heart--Sin weakens the intellect ("heart") as, on the contrary, "the way of the Lord is strength to the upright" (Pr 10:29).
31. Repetition of
Eze 16:24.
not . . . as . . . harlot . . . thou scornest hire--Unlike an ordinary
harlot thou dost prostitute thy person gratis, merely to satisfy thy
lust. JEROME translates, "Thou hast not been as a harlot in scorning
(that is, who ordinarily scorns) a hire offered,"
in order to get a larger one: nay, thou hast offered hire thyself to
thy lovers
(Eze 16:33, 34).
But these verses show English Version to be preferable, for they
state that Israel prostituted herself, not merely for any small
reward without demanding more, but for "no reward."
32. instead of her husband--referring to Nu 5:19, 20, 29. FAIRBAIRN translates, "whilst under her husband."
33, 34. Israel hired her paramours, instead of being, like other harlots, hired by them; she also followed them without their following her.
35. Here begins the threat of wrath to be poured out on her.
36. filthiness--literally, "brass"; metaphor for the lowest
part of the person [CALVIN]. English
Version is better: thy filthy lewdness is poured out without
restraint (compare
Jer 13:27).
As silver is an emblem of purity, brass typifies "filthiness,"
because it easily contracts rust. HENDERSON
explains it, "Because thy money was lavished on thy lovers"
(Eze 16:31, 33, 34).
blood of thy children--
(Eze 16:20;
Jer 2:34).
37. thy lovers--the Chaldeans and the Assyrians. The law of retribution
is the more signally exemplified by God employing, as His instruments of
judgment on Israel, those very nations whose alliance and idols Israel
had so eagerly sought, besides giving her up to those who had been
always her enemies. "God will make him, who leaves God for the world,
disgraced even in the eyes of the world, and indeed the more so the
nearer he formerly stood to Himself" [HENGSTENBERG],
(Isa 47:3;
Jer 13:26;
Ho 2:12;
Na 3:5).
all . . . thou hast hated--the Edomites and Philistines; also Moab
and Ammon especially
(De 23:3).
I . . . will discover thy nakedness--punishment in
kind, as she had "discovered her nakedness through whoredoms"
(Eze 16:36);
the sin and its penalty corresponded. I will expose thee to public
infamy.
38-40. judge thee, as women that break wedlock--
(Le 20:10;
compare
Eze 16:2).
In the case of individual adulteresses, stoning was the
penalty
(Joh 8:4, 5).
In the case of communities, the sword. Also apostasy
(De 13:10)
and sacrificing children to Molech
(Le 20:1-5)
incurred stoning. Thus the penalty was doubly due to Israel; so the
other which was decreed against an apostate city
(De 13:15, 16)
is added, "they shall stone thee with stones and thrust thee through
with . . . swords." The Chaldeans hurled stones on
Jerusalem at the siege and slew with the sword on its capture.
shed blood . . . judged--
(Ge 9:6).
jealousy--image taken from the fury of a husband in jealousy shedding
the blood of an unfaithful wife, such as Israel had been towards God,
her husband spiritually. Literally, "I will make thee (to become)
blood of fury and jealousy."
39. thine eminent place--literally, "fornication-chamber"
(see on
Eze 16:24),
the temple which Israel had converted into a place of spiritual
fornication with idols, to please the Chaldeans
(Eze 23:14-17).
strip thee of . . . clothes--
(Eze 23:26;
Ho 2:3).
They shall dismantle thy city of its walls.
fair jewels--literally, "vessels of thy fairness" or beauty; the
vessels of the temple [GROTIUS].
All the gifts wherewith God hath
adorned thee [CALVIN].
40. (Eze 23:10, 47). Compare as to the destruction under Titus, Lu 19:43, 44.
41. The result of the awful judgment shall be, when divine vengeance
has run its course, it shall cease.
burn--
(De 13:16;
2Ki 25:9).
women--the surrounding Gentile nations to whom thou shalt be an object
of mocking
(Ps 137:7).
I will cause thee to cease . . . harlot--
(Eze 23:27).
Thou shalt no longer be able to play the harlot through My
judgments.
thou . . . shall give . . . no hire . . . any more--Thou shalt have
none to give.
42. my fury . . . rest--when My justice has exacted the full penalty commensurate with thy awful guilt (see on Eze 5:13). It is not a mitigation of the penalty that is here foretold, but such an utter destruction of all the guilty that there shall be no need of further punishment [CALVIN].
43.
(Eze 16:22;
Ps 78:42).
In gratitude for God's favors to her in her early history.
fretted me--
(Isa 63:10;
Eph 4:30).
thou shalt not commit this lewdness above all thine abominations--that
is, this the wickedness (compare
Zec 5:8),
peculiarly hateful to God, namely, spiritual unchastity or idolatry,
over and "above" (that is, besides) all thine other abominations. I
will put it out of thy power to commit it by cutting thee off. FAIRBAIRN translates, "I will not do what is scandalous
(namely, encouraging thee in thy sin by letting it pass with impunity)
upon all thine abominations"; referring to
Le 19:29,
the conduct of a father who encouraged his daughter in harlotry.
English Version is much better.
44. As . . . mother . . . her daughter--"Is," and "so is," are not in the original; the ellipsis gives the proverb (but two words in the Hebrew) epigrammatic brevity. Jerusalem proved herself a true daughter of the Hittite mother in sin (Eze 16:3).
45. mother's . . . that loatheth her husband--that is,
God ("haters of God,"
Ro 1:30);
therefore the knowledge of the true God had originally been in Canaan,
handed down from Noah (hence we find Melchisedek, king of Salem, in
Canaan, "priest of the most high God,"
Ge 14:18),
but Canaan apostatized from it; this was what constituted the blackness
of the Canaanites' guilt.
loathed . . . children--whom she put to death in honor
of Saturn; a practice common among the Phœnicians.
sister of thy sisters--Thou art akin in guilt to Samaria and Sodom,
to which thou art akin by birth. Moab and Ammon, the incestuous children
of Lot, nephew of Abraham, Israel's progenitor, had their origin from
Sodom; so Sodom might be called Judah's sister. Samaria, answering to
the ten tribes of Israel, is, of course, sister to Judah.
46. elder sister . . . Samaria--older than Sodom, to whom Judah
was less nearly related by kindred than she was to Samaria. Sodom is
therefore called her younger sister; Samaria, her "elder sister"
[GROTIUS]. Samaria is called the "elder," because
in a moral respect more nearly related to Judah
[FAIRBAIRN]. Samaria
had made the calves at Dan and Beth-el in imitation of the cherubim.
her daughters--the inferior towns subject to Samaria (compare
Nu 21:25,
Margin).
left--The Orientals faced the east in marking the directions of the
sky; thus the north was "left," the south "right."
Sodom . . . daughters--Ammon and Moab, offshoots from Sodom; also
the towns subject to it.
47. their abominations--Milcom and Chemosh, the "abominations of Ammon
and Moab"
(1Ki 11:5, 7).
corrupted more than they--So it is expressly recorded of Manasseh
(2Ki 21:9).
48. Sodom-- (Mt 11:24). Judah's guilt was not positively, but relatively, greater than Sodom's; because it was in the midst of such higher privileges, and such solemn warnings; a fortiori, the guilt of unbelievers in the midst of the highest of all lights, namely, the Gospel, is the greatest.
49. pride--inherited by Moab, her offspring
(Isa 16:6;
Jer 48:26),
and by Ammon
(Jer 49:4).
God, the heart-searcher, here specifies as Sodom's sin, not merely her
notorious lusts, but the secret spring of them, "pride" flowing from
"fullness of bread," caused by the fertility of the soil
(Ge 13:10),
and producing "idleness."
abundance of idleness--literally, "the secure carelessness of ease"
or idleness.
neither did she strengthen . . . the poor--Pride is always cruel; it
arrogates to itself all things, and despises brethren, for whose needs
it therefore has no feeling; as Moab had not for the outcast Jews
(Isa 16:3, 4;
Jer 48:27;
Lu 16:19-21;
Jas 5:1-5).
50. haughty--puffed up with prosperity.
abomination before me--"sinners before the Lord"
(Ge 13:13);
said of those whose sin is so heinous as to cry out to God for
immediate judgments; presumptuous sins, daring God to the face
(Ge 18:20; 19:5).
I took them away--
(Ge 19:24).
as I saw good--rather, "according to what I saw"; referring to
Ge 18:21,
where God says, "I will go down, and see whether they have done
altogether according to the cry of it which is come unto
Me."
51. Samaria--the kingdom of the ten tribes of Israel less guilty than
Judah; for Judah betrayed greater ingratitude, having greater
privileges, namely, the temple, the priesthood, and the regular order of
kings.
justified thy sisters--made them appear almost innocent by comparison
with thy guilt
(Jer 3:11;
Mt 12:41, 42).
52. Thou . . . which hast judged . . . bear thine own--
(Mt 7:1, 2;
Ro 2:1, 17-23).
Judah had judged Sodom (representing "the heathen nations") and Samaria
(Israel), saying they were justly punished, as if she herself was
innocent
(Lu 13:2).
thy shame--ignominious punishment.
53. Here follows a promise of restoration. Even the sore chastisements
coming on Judah would fail to reform its people; God's returning
goodness alone would effect this, to show how entirely of grace was to
be their restoration. The restoration of her erring sisters is mentioned
before hers, even as their punishment preceded her punishment; so all
self-boasting is excluded
[FAIRBAIRN]. "Ye shall, indeed, at some time
or other return, but Moab and Ammon shall return with you, and some of
the ten tribes" [GROTIUS].
bring again . . . captivity--that is, change the affliction into
prosperity (so
Job 42:10).
Sodom itself was not so restored
(Jer 20:16),
but Ammon and Moab (her representatives, as sprung from Lot who dwelt
in Sodom) were
(Jer 48:47; 49:6);
probably most of the ten tribes and the adjoining nations, Ammon and
Moab, &c., were in part restored under Cyrus; but the full realization
of the restoration is yet future; the heathen nations to be
brought to Christ being typified by "Sodom," whose sins they now
reproduce
(De 32:32).
captivity of thy captives--literally, "of thy captivities." However,
the gracious promise rather begins with the "nevertheless"
(Eze 16:60),
not here; for
Eze 16:59
is a threat, not a promise. The sense here thus is, Thou shalt be
restored when Sodom and Samaria are, but not till then
(Eze 16:55),
that is, never. This applies to the guilty who should be utterly
destroyed
(Eze 16:41, 42);
but it does not contradict the subsequent promise of restoration to
their posterity
(Nu 14:29-33),
and to the elect remnant of grace [CALVIN].
54. bear thine own shame--by being put on a level with those whom thou
hast so much despised.
thou art a comfort unto them--since they see thee as miserable as
themselves. It is a kind of melancholy "comfort" to those chastised to
see others as sorely punished as themselves
(Eze 14:22, 23).
55. (See on Eze 16:53).
56. Sodom was not mentioned--literally, "was not for a report." Thou didst not deign to mention her name as if her case could possibly apply as a warning to thee, but it did apply (2Pe 2:6).
57. Before thy wickedness was discovered--manifested to all, namely,
by the punishment inflicted on thee.
thy reproach of . . . Syria and . . . Philistines--the indignity and
injuries done thee by Syria and the Philistines
(2Ki 16:5;
2Ch 28:18;
Isa 9:11, 12).
58. borne thy lewdness--that is, the punishment of it (Eze 23:49). I do not treat thee with excessive rigor. Thy sin and punishment are exactly commensurate.
59. the oath--the covenant between God and Israel (De 29:12, 14). As thou hast despised it, so will I despise thee. No covenant is one-sided; where Israel broke faith, God's promise of favor ceased.
60. The promise here bursts forth unexpectedly like the sun from the
dark clouds. With all her forgetfulness of God, God still remembers her;
showing that her redemption is altogether of grace. Contrast "I will
remember," with "thou hast not remembered"
(Eze 16:22, 43);
also "My covenant," with "Thy covenant"
(Eze 16:61;
Ps 106:45);
then the effect produced on her is
(Eze 16:63)
"that thou mayest remember." God's promise was one of promise
and of grace. The law, in its letter, was Israel's
(thy) covenant, and in this restricted view was long subsequent
(Ga 3:17).
Israel interpreted it as a covenant of works, which she while boasting
of, failed to fulfil, and so fell under its condemnation
(2Co 3:3, 6).
The law, in its spirit, contains the germ of the Gospel; the New
Testament is the full development of the Old, the husk of the outer
form being laid aside when the inner spirit was fulfilled in Messiah.
God's covenant with Israel, in the person of Abraham, was the reason
why, notwithstanding all her guilt, mercy was, and is, in store for
her. Therefore the heathen or Gentile nations must come to her for
blessings, not she to them.
everlasting covenant--
(Eze 37:26;
2Sa 23:5;
Isa 55:3).
The temporary forms of the law were to be laid aside, that in its
permanent and "everlasting" spirit it might be established
(Jer 31:31-37; 32:40; 50:4, 5;
Heb 8:8-13).
61. thou shalt remember--It is God who first remembers her before she
remembers Him and her own ways before Him
(Eze 16:60;
Eze 20:43; 36:31).
ashamed--the fruit of repentance
(2Co 7:10, 11).
None please God unless those who displease themselves; a foretaste of
the Gospel
(Lu 18:9-14).
I will give them unto thee for daughters--
(Isa 54:1; 60:3, 4;
Ga 4:26,
&c.). All the heathen nations, not merely Sodom and Samaria, are meant
by "thy sisters, elder and younger." In Jerusalem first,
individual believers were gathered into the elect Church. From
Jerusalem the Gospel went forth to gather in individuals of the
Gentiles; and Judah with Jerusalem shall also be the first
nation which, as such, shall be converted to Christ; and to her
the other nations shall attach themselves as believers in
Messiah, Jerusalem's King
(Ps 110:2;
Isa 2:2, 3).
"The king's daughter" in
Ps 45:12-14
is Judah; her "companions," as "the daughter of Tyre," are the nations
given to her as converts, here called "daughters."
not by thy covenant--This does not set aside the Old Testament in
its spirit, but in its mere letter on which the Jews had rested, while
they broke it: the latter ("thy covenant") was to give place to
God's covenant of grace and promise in Christ who "fulfilled" the
law. God means, "not that thou on thy part hast stood to the covenant,
but that 'I am the Lord, I change not'
(Mal 3:6)
from My original love to thee in thy youth" (see
Ro 3:3).
62.
(Ho 2:19, 20).
thou shalt know that I am the Lord--not, as elsewhere, by the judgments
falling on thee, but by My so marvellously restoring thee through grace.
63. never open thy mouth--in vindication, or even palliation, of
thyself, or expostulation with God for His dealings
(Ro 3:19),
when thou seest thine own exceeding unworthiness, and My superabounding
grace which has so wonderfully overcome with love thy sin
(Ro 5:20).
"If we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged"
(1Co 11:31).
all that thou hast done--enhancing the grace of God which has pardoned
so many and so great sins. Nothing so melts into love and humility as
the sense of the riches of God's pardoning grace
(Lu 7:47).
CHAPTER 17
Eze 17:1-24. PARABLE OF THE TWO GREAT EAGLES, AND THE CROPPING OF THE CEDAR OF LEBANON. JUDAH IS TO BE JUDGED FOR REVOLTING FROM BABYLON, WHICH HAD SET UP ZEDEKIAH INSTEAD OF JEHOIACHIN, TO EGYPT; GOD HIMSELF, AS THE RIVAL OF THE BABYLONIAN KING, IS TO PLANT THE GOSPEL CEDAR OF MESSIAH.
The date of the prophecy is between the sixth month of Zedekiah's sixth year of reign and the fifth month of the seventh year after the carrying away of Jehoiachin, that is, five years before the destruction of Jerusalem [HENDERSON].
2. riddle--a continued allegory, expressed enigmatically, requiring more than common acumen and serious thought. The Hebrew is derived from a root, "sharp," that is, calculated to stimulate attention and whet the intellect. Distinct from "fable," in that it teaches not fiction, but fact. Not like the ordinary riddle, designed to puzzle, but to instruct. The "riddle" is here identical with the "parable," only that the former refers to the obscurity, the latter to the likeness of the figure to the thing compared.
3. eagle--the king of birds. The literal Hebrew is, "the great eagle." The symbol of the Assyrian supreme god, Nisroch; so
applied to "the great king" of Babylon, his vicegerent on earth
(Jer 48:40; 49:22).
His "wings" are his great forces. Such symbols were familiar to the
Jews, who saw them portrayed on the great buildings of Babylon; such as
are now seen in the Assyrian remains.
long-winged--implying the wide extent of his empire.
full of feathers--when they have been renewed after moulting; and so
in the full freshness of renovated youth
(Ps 103:5;
Isa 40:31).
Answering to the many peoples which, as tributaries, constituted the
strength of Babylon.
divers colours--the golden eagle, marked with star-like spots,
supposed to be the largest of eagles [BOCHART].
Answering to the variety of languages, habits, and costumes of the
peoples subject to Babylon.
came unto Lebanon--continuing the metaphor: as the eagle frequents
mountains, not cities. The temple at Jerusalem was called "Lebanon" by
the Jews [EUSEBIUS],
because its woodwork was wholly of cedars of
Lebanon. "The mountain of the Lord's house"
(Isa 2:2).
Jerusalem, however, is chiefly meant, the chief seat of civil
honor, as Lebanon was of external elevation.
took the highest branch--King Jeconiah, then but eighteen years old,
and many of the chiefs and people with him
(2Ki 24:8, 12-16).
The Hebrew for "highest branch" is, properly, the fleece-like
tuft at the top of the tree. (So in
Eze 31:3-14).
The cedar, as a tall tree, is the symbol of kingly elevation (compare
Da 4:10-12).
4. land of traffic . . . merchants--Babylon (2Ki 24:15, 16), famous for its transport traffic on the Tigris and Euphrates. Also, by its connection with the Persian Gulf, it carried on much commerce with India.
5. seed of the land--not a foreign production, but one native in the
region; a son of the soil, not a foreigner: Zedekiah, uncle of
Jehoiachin, of David's family.
in a fruitful field--literally, a "field of seed"; that is, fit for
propagating and continuing the seed of the royal family.
as a willow--derived from a Hebrew root, "to overflow," from its
fondness for water
(Isa 44:4).
Judea was "a land of brooks of water and fountains"
(De 8:7-9;
compare
Joh 3:23).
6. vine of low stature--not now, as before, a stately "cedar"; the
kingdom of Judah was to be prosperous, but not elevated.
branches turned toward him--expressing the fealty of Zedekiah as a
vassal looking up to Nebuchadnezzar, to whom Judah owed its peace and
very existence as a separate state. The "branches" mean his sons and the
other princes and nobles.
The roots . . . under him--The stability of Judah depended on Babylon.
The repetition "branches" and "springs" is in order to mark the
ingratitude of Zedekiah, who, not content with moderate prosperity,
revolted from him to whom he had sworn allegiance.
7. another . . . eagle--the king of Egypt
(Eze 17:15).
The "long-winged" of
Eze 17:3
is omitted, as Egypt had not such a wide empire and large armies as
Babylon.
vine . . . bend . . . roots towards him--literally, "thirsted after
him with its roots"; expressing the longings after Egypt in the Jewish
heart. Zedekiah sought the alliance of Egypt, as though by it he could
throw off his dependence on Babylon
(2Ki 24:7, 20;
2Ch 36:13;
Jer 37:5, 7).
water it by . . . furrows of . . . plantation--that is, in the
garden beds (Judea) wherein (the vine) it was planted. Rather, "by"
or "out of the furrows." It refers to the waters of Egypt, the Nile
being made to water the fields by means of small canals or "furrows";
these waters are the figure of the auxiliary forces wherewith Egypt
tried to help Judah. See the same figure,
Isa 8:7.
But see on
Eze 17:10,
"furrows where it grew."
8. It was planted in a good soil--It was not want of the necessaries of life, nor oppression on the port of Nebuchadnezzar, which caused Zedekiah to revolt: it was gratuitous ambition, pride, and ingratitude.
9. Shall it prosper?--Could it be that gratuitous treason should
prosper? God will not allow it. "It," that is, the vine.
he . . . pull up--that is, the first eagle, or Nebuchadnezzar.
in all . . . leaves of her spring--that is, all its springing
(sprouting) leaves.
without great power or many--It shall not need all the forces of
Babylon to destroy it; a small division of the army will suffice because
God will deliver it into Nebuchadnezzar's hand
(Jer 37:10).
10. being planted--that is, "though planted."
east wind--The east wind was noxious to vegetation in Palestine; a
fit emblem of Babylon, which came from the northeast.
wither in . . . furrows where it grew--Zedekiah was taken at Jericho,
on Jewish soil
(Jer 52:8).
"It shall wither, although it has furrows from which it expects
continual waterings" [CALVIN],
(Eze 19:12;
Ho 13:15).
12. Know ye not--He upbraided them with moral, leading to intellectual,
stupidity.
hath taken the king--Jeconiah or Jehoiachin
(2Ki 24:11, 12-16).
13. the king's seed--Zedekiah, Jeconiah's uncle.
taken . . . oath of him--swearing fealty as a vassal to Nebuchadnezzar
(2Ch 36:13).
also taken the mighty--as hostages for the fulfilment of the covenant;
whom, therefore, Zedekiah exposed to death by his treason.
14. That the kingdom might be base--that is, low as to national elevation by being Nebuchadnezzar's dependent; but, at the same time, safe and prosperous, if faithful to the "oath." Nebuchadnezzar dealt sincerely and openly in proposing conditions, and these moderate ones; therefore Zedekiah's treachery was the baser and was a counterpart to their treachery towards God.
15. he rebelled--God permitted this because of His wrath against
Jerusalem
(2Ki 24:20).
horses--in which Egypt abounded and which were forbidden to Israel to
seek from Egypt, or indeed to "multiply" at all
(De 17:16;
Isa 31:1, 3;
compare
Isa 36:9).
DIODORUS SICULUS [1.45] says
that the whole region from Thebes to Memphis was filled with royal
stalls, so that twenty thousand chariots with two horses in each could
be furnished for war.
Shall he prosper?--The third time this question is asked, with an
indignant denial understood
(Eze 17:9, 10).
Even the heathen believed that breakers of an oath would not "escape"
punishment.
16. in the place where the king dwelleth--righteous retribution. He brought on himself in the worst form the evil which, in a mild form, he had sought to deliver himself from by perjured treachery, namely, vassalage (Eze 12:13; Jer 32:5; 34:3; 52:11).
17. Pharaoh--Pharaoh-hophra
(Jer 37:7; 44:30),
the successor of Necho
(2Ki 23:29).
Neither . . . make for him--literally, "effect (anything)
with him," that is, be of any avail to Zedekiah. Pharaoh did not
act in concert with him, for he was himself compelled to retire to
Egypt.
by casting up mounts, &c.--So far from Pharaoh doing so for Jerusalem,
this was what Nebuchadnezzar did against it
(Jer 52:4).
CALVIN MAURER, &c., refer it
to Nebuchadnezzar, "when Nebuchadnezzar shall cast up
mounts."
18. given his hand--in ratification of the oath (2Ki 10:15; Ezr 10:19), and also in token of subjection to Nebuchadnezzar (1Ch 29:24, Margin; 2Ch 30:8, Margin; La 5:6).
19. mine oath--The "covenant" being sworn in God's name was really His covenant; a new instance in relation to man of the treacherous spirit which had been so often betrayed in relation to God. God Himself must therefore avenge the violation of His covenant "on the head" of the perjurer (compare Ps 7:16).
20. my net--
(Eze 12:13; 32:3).
God entraps him as he had tried to entrap others
(Ps 7:15).
This was spoken at least upwards of three years before the fall of
Jerusalem (compare
Eze 8:1,
with Eze 20:1).
plead with him--by judgments on him
(Eze 20. 36).
21. all his fugitives--the soldiers that accompany him in his flight.
22. When the state of Israel shall seem past recovery, Messiah,
Jehovah Himself, will unexpectedly appear on the scene as Redeemer of
His people
(Isa 63:5).
I . . . also--God opposes Himself to Nebuchadnezzar:
"He took of the seed of the land and planted it
(Eze 17:3, 5),
so will I, but with better success than he had. The branch he
plucked (Zedekiah) and planted, flourished but for a time, to perish at
last; I will plant a scion of the same tree, the house of David,
to whom the kingdom belongs by an everlasting covenant, and it shall be
the shelter of the whole world, and shall be for ever."
branch--the peculiar title of Messiah
(Zec 3:8; 6:12;
Isa 11:1; 4:2;
Jer 23:5; 33:15).
a tender one--Zerubbabel never reigned as a universal
(Eze 17:23)
king, nor could the great things mentioned here be said of him, except
as a type of Messiah. Messiah alone can be meant: originally "a
tender plant and root out of a dry ground"
(Isa 53:2);
the beginning of His kingdom being humble, His reputed parents of lowly
rank, though King David's lineal representatives; yet, even then, God
here calls Him, in respect to His everlasting purpose, "the highest
. . . of the high"
(Ps 89:27).
I . . . will plant it upon an high mountain--Zion; destined to be the
moral center and eminence of grace and glory shining forth to the
world, out-topping all mundane elevation. The kingdom, typically begun
at the return from Babylon, and the rebuilding of the temple, fully
began with Christ's appearing, and shall have its highest manifestation
at His reappearing to reign on Zion, and thence over the whole earth
(Ps 2:6, 8;
Isa 2:2, 3;
Jer 3:17).
23. under it . . . all fowl--the Gospel "mustard tree," small at first, but at length receiving all under its covert (Mt 13:32); the antithesis to Antichrist, symbolized by Assyria, of which the same is said (Eze 31:6), and Babylon (Da 4:12). Antichrist assumes in mimicry the universal power really belonging to Christ.
24. I . . . brought down the high--the very attribute given to God
by the virgin mother of Him, under whom this was to be accomplished.
high . . . low tree--that is, princes elevated
. . . depressed. All the empires of the world, represented by
Babylon, once flourishing ("green"), shall be brought low before the
once depressed ("dry"), but then exalted, kingdom of Messiah and His
people, the head of whom shall be Israel
(Da 2:44).
CHAPTER 18
Eze 18:1-32. THE PARABLE OF THE SOUR GRAPES REPROVED.
Vindication of God's moral government as to His retributive righteousness from the Jewish imputation of injustice, as if they were suffering, not for their own sin, but for that of their fathers. As in the seventeenth chapter he foretold Messiah's happy reign in Jerusalem, so now he warns them that its blessings can be theirs only upon their individually turning to righteousness.
2. fathers . . . eaten sour grapes, . . . children's teeth . . . set on edge--Their unbelieving calumnies on God's justice had become so common as to have assumed a proverbial form. The sin of Adam in eating the forbidden fruit, visited on his posterity, seems to have suggested the peculiar form; noticed also by Jeremiah (Jer 31:29); and explained in La 5:7, "Our fathers have sinned, and are not; and we have borne their iniquities." They mean by "the children" themselves, as though they were innocent, whereas they were far from being so. The partial reformation effected since Manasseh's wicked reign, especially among the exiles at Chebar, was their ground for thinking so; but the improvement was only superficial and only fostered their self-righteous spirit, which sought anywhere but in themselves the cause of their calamities; just as the modern Jews attribute their present dispersion, not to their own sins, but to those of their forefathers. It is a universal mark of corrupt nature to lay the blame, which belongs to ourselves, on others and to arraign the justice of God. Compare Ge 3:12, where Adam transfers the blame of his sin to Eve, and even to God, "The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat."
3. ye shall not have occasion any more to use this proverb--because I will let it be seen by the whole world in the very fact that you are not righteous, as ye fancy yourselves, but wicked, and that you suffer only the just penalty of your guilt; while the elect righteous remnant alone escapes.
4. all souls are mine--Therefore I can deal with all, being My own
creation, as I please
(Jer 18:6).
As the Creator of all alike I can have no reason, but the principle of
equity, according to men's works, to make any difference, so as to
punish some, and to save others
(Ge 18:25).
"The soul that sinneth it shall die." The curse descending from father
to son assumes guilt shared in by the son; there is a natural tendency
in the child to follow the sin of his father, and so he shares in the
father's punishment: hence the principles of God's government, involved
in
Ex 20:5
and Jer 15:4,
are justified. The sons, therefore (as the Jews here), cannot complain
of being unjustly afflicted by God
(La 5:7);
for they filled up the guilt of their fathers
(Mt 23:32, 34-36).
The same God who "recompenses the iniquity of the fathers into the
bosom of their children," is immediately after set forth as "giving to
every man according to his ways"
(Jer 32:18, 19).
In the same law
(Ex 20:5)
which "visited the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the
third and fourth generation" (where the explanation is added, "of them
that hate me," that is, the children hating God, as well
as their fathers: the former being too likely to follow their parents,
sin going down with cumulative force from parent to child), we find
(De 24:16),
"the fathers shall not be put to death for the children, neither the
children for the fathers: every man shall be put to death for his own
sin." The inherited guilt of sin in infants
(Ro 5:14)
is an awful fact, but one met by the atonement of Christ; but it
is of adults that he speaks here. Whatever penalties fall on
communities for connection with sins of their fathers,
individual adults who repent shall escape
(2Ki 23:25, 26).
This was no new thing, as some misinterpret the passage here; it had
been always God's principle to punish only the guilty, and not
also the innocent, for the sins of their fathers. God does not here
change the principle of His administration, but is merely about to
manifest it so personally to each that the Jews should no longer
throw on God and on their fathers the blame which was their own.
soul that sinneth, it shall die--and it alone
(Ro 6:23);
not also the innocent.
5. Here begins the illustration of God's impartiality in a series of
supposed cases. The first case is given in
Eze 18:5-9,
the just man. The excellencies are selected in reference to the
prevailing sins of the age, from which such a one stood aloof; hence
arises the omission of some features of righteousness, which, under
different circumstances, would have been desirable to be enumerated.
Each age has its own besetting temptations, and the just man
will be distinguished by his guarding against the peculiar defilements,
inward and outward, of his age.
just . . . lawful . . . right--the duties of the second table of the
law, which flow from the fear of God. Piety is the root of all charity;
to render to each his own, as well to our neighbor, as to God.
6. not eaten upon . . . mountains--the high places,
where altars were reared. A double sin: sacrificing elsewhere than at
the temple, where only God sanctioned sacrifice
(De 12:13, 14);
and this to idols instead of to Jehovah. "Eaten" refers to the feasts
which were connected with the sacrifices (see
Ex 32:6;
De 32:38;
Jud 9:27;
1Co 8:4, 10; 10:7).
lifted . . . eyes to--namely, in adoration
(Ps 121:1).
The superstitious are compared to harlots; their eyes go eagerly after
spiritual lusts. The righteous man not merely refrains from the
act, but from the glance of spiritual lust
(Job 31:1;
Mt 5:28).
idols of . . . Israel--not merely those of the Gentiles, but even those
of Israel. The fashions of his countrymen could not lead him astray.
defiled . . . neighbour's wife--Not only does he shrink from spiritual,
but also from carnal, adultery (compare
1Co 6:18).
neither . . . menstruous woman--Leprosy and elephantiasis were said to
be the fruit of such a connection [JEROME].
Chastity is to be observed
even towards one's own wife
(Le 18:19; 20:18).
7. restored . . . pledge--that which the poor debtor absolutely needed;
as his raiment, which the creditor was bound to restore before sunset
(Ex 22:26, 27),
and his millstone, which was needed for preparing his food
(De 24:6, 10-13).
bread to . . . hungry . . . covered . . . naked--
(Isa 58:7;
Mt 25:35, 36).
After duties of justice come those of benevolence. It is not enough to
refrain from doing a wrong to our neighbor, we must also do him good.
The bread owned by a man, though "his," is given to him, not to keep to
himself, but to impart to the needy.
8. usury--literally, "biting." The law forbade the Jew to take
interest from brethren but permitted him to do so from a foreigner
(Ex 22:25;
De 23:19, 20;
Ne 5:7;
Ps 15:5).
The letter of the law was restricted to the Jewish polity, and is not
binding now; and indeed the principle of taking interest was even then
sanctioned, by its being allowed in the case of a foreigner. The
spirit of the law still binds us, that we are not to take
advantage of our neighbor's necessities to enrich ourselves, but be
satisfied with moderate, or even no, interest, in the case of the
needy.
increase--in the case of other kinds of wealth; as "usury" refers
to money
(Le 25:36).
withdrawn . . . hand, &c.--Where he has the opportunity and might find
a plausible plea for promoting his own gain at the cost of a wrong to
his neighbor, he keeps back his hand from what selfishness prompts.
judgment--justice.
9. truly--with integrity.
surely live--literally, "live in life." Prosper in this life, but still
more in the life to come
(Pr 3:1, 2;
Am 5:4).
10-13. The second case is that of an impious son of a pious father.
His pious parentage, so far from excusing, aggravates his guilt.
robber--or literally, "a breaker," namely, through all constraints of
right.
doeth the like to any one--The Hebrew and the parallel
(Eze 18:18)
require us to translate rather, "doeth to his brother any of
these things," namely, the things which follow in
Eze 18:11,
&c. [MAURER].
11. those duties--which his father did (Eze 18:5, 9).
12. oppressed the poor--an aggravation to his oppressions, that
they were practised against the poor; whereas in
Eze 18:7
the expression is simply "oppressed any."
abomination--singular number referring to the particular one mentioned
at the end of
Eze 18:6.
13. shall he . . . live?--because of the merits of his father;
answering, by contrast, to "die for the iniquity of his father"
(Eze 18:17).
his blood shall be upon him--The cause of his bloody death shall
rest with himself; God is not to blame, but is vindicated as just in
punishing him.
14-18. The third case: a son who walks not in the steps of an
unrighteous father, but in the ways of God; for example, Josiah, the
pious son of guilty Amon; Hezekiah, of Ahaz
(2Ki 16:1-20; 18:1-37; 21:1-22:20).
seeth . . . and considereth--The same Hebrew stands for both
verbs, "seeth . . . yea, seeth." The repetition implies the attentive
observation needed, in order that the son may not be led astray by his
father's bad example; as sons generally are blind to parents sins, and
even imitate them as if they were virtues.
17. taken off his hand from the poor--that is, abstained from oppressing the poor, when he had the opportunity of doing so with impunity.The different sense of the phrase in Eze 16:49, in reference to relieving the poor, seems to have suggested the reading followed by FAIRBAIRN, but not sanctioned by the Hebrew, "hath not turned his hand from," &c. But Eze 20:22 uses the phrase in a somewhat similar sense to English Version here, abstained from hurting.
19. Here the Jews object to the prophet's word and in their objection seem to seek a continuance of that very thing which they had originally made a matter of complaint. Therefore translate, "Wherefore doth not the son bear the iniquity of his father?" It now would seem a consolation to them to think the son might suffer for his father's misdeeds; for it would soothe their self-love to regard themselves as innocent sufferers for the guilt of others and would justify them in their present course of life, which they did not choose to abandon for a better. In reply, Ezekiel reiterates the truth of each being dealt with according to his own merits [FAIRBAIRN]. But GROTIUS supports English Version, wherein the Jews contradict the prophet, "Why (sayest thou so) doth not the son (often, as in our case, though innocent) bear (that is, suffer for) the iniquity of their father?" Ezekiel replies, It is not as you say, but as I in the name of God say: "When the son hath done," &c. English Version is simpler than that of FAIRBAIRN.
20. son shall not bear . . . iniquity of . . . father--
(De 24:16;
2Ki 14:6).
righteousness . . . wickedness--that is, the reward for
righteousness . . . the punishment of wickedness. "Righteousness" is
not used as if any were absolutely righteous; but, of such as have
it imputed to them for Christ's sake, though not under the Old
Testament themselves understanding the ground on which they were
regarded as righteous, but sincerely seeking after it in the way of
God's appointment, so far as they then understood this way.
21-24. Two last cases, showing the equity of God: (1) The penitent
sinner is dealt with according to his new obedience, not according to
his former sins. (2) The righteous man who turns from righteousness to
sin shall be punished for the latter, and his former righteousness will
be of no avail to him.
he shall surely live--Despair drives men into hardened recklessness;
God therefore allures men to repentance by holding out hope
[CALVIN].
To threats the stubborn sinner oft is hard,
Wrapt in his crimes, against the storm prepared, But when the milder beams of mercy play, He melts, and throws the cumbrous cloak away. |
Hitherto the cases had been of a change from bad to good, or vice versa, in one generation compared with another. Here it is such a change in one and the same individual. This, as practically affecting the persons here addressed, is properly put last. So far from God laying on men the penalty of others' sins, He will not even punish them for their own, if they turn from sin to righteousness; but if they turn from righteousness to sin, they must expect in justice that their former goodness will not atone for subsequent sin (Heb 10:38, 39; 2Pe 2:20-22). The exile in Babylon gave a season for repentance of those sins which would have brought death on the perpetrator in Judea while the law could be enforced; so it prepared the way for the Gospel [GROTIUS].
22. in his righteousness . . . he shah live--in it, not for it, as if that atoned for his former sins; but "in his righteousness" he shall live, as the evidence of his being already in favor with God through the merit of Messiah, who was to come. The Gospel clears up for us many such passages (1Pe 1:12), which were dimly understood at the time, while men, however, had light enough for salvation.
23. (1Ti 2:4; 2Pe 3:9). If men perish, it is because they will not come to the Lord for salvation; not that the Lord is not willing to save them (Joh 5:40). They trample on not merely justice, but mercy; what farther hope can there be for them, when even mercy is against them? (Heb 10:26-29).
24. righteous--one apparently such; as in
Mt 9:13,
"I came not to call the righteous," &c., that is, those who fancy
themselves righteous. Those alone are true saints who by the grace of
God persevere
(Mt 24:13;
1Co 10:12;
Joh 10:28, 29).
turneth away from . . . righteousness--an utter apostasy; not like
the exceptional offenses of the godly through infirmity or heedlessness,
which they afterwards mourn over and repent of.
not be mentioned--not be taken into account so as to save them.
his trespass--utter apostasy.
25. Their plea for saying, "The way of the Lord is not equal," was that God treated different classes in a different way. But it was really their way that was unequal, since living in sin they expected to be dealt with as if they were righteous. God's way was invariably to deal with different men according to their deserts.
26-28. The two last instances repeated in inverse order. God's emphatic
statement of His principle of government needs no further proof than the
simple statement of it.
in them--in the actual sins, which are the manifestations of the
principle of "iniquity," mentioned just before.
27. he shall save his soul--that is, he shall have it saved upon his repentance.
28. considereth--the first step to repentance; for the ungodly do not consider either God or themselves (De 32:29; Ps 119:59, 60; Lu 15:17, 18).
29. Though God's justice is so plainly manifested, sinners still object to it because they do not wish to see it (Mic 2:7; Mt 11:18, 19).
30-32. As God is to judge them "according to their ways"
(Pr 1:31),
their only hope is to "repent"; and this is a sure hope, for God takes
no delight in judging them in wrath, but graciously desires their
salvation on repentance.
I will judge you--Though ye cavil, it is a sufficient answer that I,
your Judge, declare it so, and will judge you according to My will; and
then your cavils must end.
Repent--inward conversion
(Re 2:5).
In the Hebrew there is a play of like sounds, "Turn ye
and return."
turn yourselves, &c.--the outward fruits of repentance. Not
as the Margin, "turn others"; for the parallel clause
(Eze 18:31)
is, "cast away from you all your transgressions."
Perhaps, however, the omission of the object after the verb in the
Hebrew implies that both are included: Turn alike
yourselves and all whom you can influence.
from all . . . transgressions--not as if believers are perfect; but
they sincerely aim at perfection, so as to be habitually and
wilfully on terms with no sin
(1Jo 3:6-9):
your ruin--literally, "your snare," entangling you in ruin.
31. Cast away from you--for the cause of your evil rests with
yourselves; your sole way of escape is to be reconciled to God
(Eph 4:22, 23).
make you a new heart--This shows, not what men can do, but what
they ought to do: what God requires of us. God alone can make us a
new heart
(Eze 11:19; 36:26, 27).
The command to do what men cannot themselves do is designed to drive
them (instead of laying the blame, as the Jews did, elsewhere rather
than on themselves) to feel their own helplessness, and to seek God's
Holy Spirit
(Ps 51:11, 12).
Thus the outward exhortation is, as it were, the organ or instrument
which God uses for conferring grace. So we may say with AUGUSTINE, "Give what thou requirest, and (then) require
what thou wilt." Our strength (which is weakness in itself) shall
suffice for whatever He exacts, if only He gives the supply [CALVIN].
spirit--the understanding: as the "heart" means
the will and affections. The root must be changed before the fruit can
be good.
why will ye die--bring on your own selves your ruin. God's decrees
are secret to us; it is enough for us that He invites all, and will
reject none that seek Him.
32. (La 3:33; 2Pe 3:9). God is "slow to anger"; punishment is "His strange work" (Isa 28:21).
CHAPTER 19
Eze 19:1-14. ELEGY OVER THE FALL OF DAVID'S HOUSE.
There is a tacit antithesis between this lamentation and that of the Jews for their own miseries, into the causes of which, however, they did not inquire.
1. princes of Israel--that is, Judah, whose "princes" alone were recognized by prophecy; those of the ten tribes were, in respect to the theocracy, usurpers.
2. thy mother--the mother of Jehoiachin, the representative of David's
line in exile with Ezekiel. The "mother" is Judea: "a lioness," as
being fierce in catching prey
(Eze 19:3),
referring to her heathenish practices. Jerusalem was called Ariel (the
lion of God) in a good sense
(Isa 29:1);
and Judah "a lion's whelp . . . a lion . . . an
old lion"
(Ge 49:9),
to which, as also to
Nu 23:24; 24:9,
this passage alludes.
nourished . . . among young lions--She herself had "lain" among lions,
that is, had intercourse with the corruptions of the surrounding heathen
and had brought up the royal young ones similarly: utterly degenerate
from the stock of Abraham.
Lay down--or "couched," is appropriate to the lion, the Arab name of
which means "the coucher."
3. young lion--Jehoahaz, son of Josiah, carried captive from Riblah to Egypt by Pharaoh-necho (2Ki 23:33).
4. The nations--Egypt, in the case of Jehoahaz, who probably provoked
Pharaoh by trying to avenge the death of his father by assailing the
bordering cities of Egypt
(2Ki 23:29, 30).
in their pit--image from the pitfalls used for catching wild beasts
(Jer 22:11, 12).
chains--or hooks, which were fastened in the noses of wild beasts
(see on
Eze 19:9).
5. saw that she had waited, and her hope was lost--that is, that her
long-waited-for hope was disappointed, Jehoahaz not being restored to
her from Egypt.
she took another of her whelps--Jehoiakim, brother of Jehoahaz, who
was placed on the throne by Pharaoh
(2Ki 23:34),
according to the wish of Judah.
6. went up and down among the lions--imitated the recklessness and
tyranny of the surrounding kings
(Jer 22:13-17).
catch . . . prey--to do evil, gratifying his lusts by oppression
(2Ki 23:37).
7. knew . . . desolate palaces--that is, claimed as his own their
palaces, which he then proceeded to "desolate." The Hebrew, literally
"widows"; hence widowed palaces
(Isa 13:22).
VATABLUS (whom FAIRBAIRN
follows) explains it, "He knew (carnally) the widows of those whom he
devoured"
(Eze 19:6).
But thus the metaphor and the literal reality would be blended: the
lion being represented as knowing widows. The reality,
however, often elsewhere thus breaks through the veil.
fulness thereof--all that it contained; its inhabitants.
8. the nations--the Chaldeans, Syrians, Moab, and Ammon (2Ki 24:2).
9. in chains--
(2Ch 36:6;
Jer 22:18).
Margin, "hooks"; perhaps referring to the hook often passed
through the nose of beasts; so, too, through that of captives, as seen
in the Assyrian sculptures (see on
Eze 19:4).
voice--that is, his roaring.
no more be heard upon the mountains--carrying on the metaphor of the
lion, whose roaring on the mountains frightens all the other beasts. The
insolence of the prince, not at all abated though his kingdom was
impaired, was now to cease.
10. A new metaphor taken from the vine, the chief of the
fruit-bearing trees, as the lion is of the beasts of prey (see
Eze 17:6).
in thy blood--"planted when thou wast in thy blood," that is, in thy
very infancy; as in
Eze 16:6,
when thou hadst just come from the womb, and hadst not yet the blood
washed from thee. The Jews from the first were planted in Canaan to
take root there [CALVIN]. GROTIUS translates as the Margin, "in thy
quietness," that is, in the period when Judah had not yet fallen into
her present troubles. English Version is better. GLASSIUS explains it well, retaining the metaphor, which
CALVIN'S explanation breaks, "in the blood of thy
grapes," that is, in her full strength, as the red wine is the strength
of the grape.
Ge 49:11
is evidently alluded to.
many waters--the well-watered land of Canaan
(De 8:7-9).
11. strong rods--princes of the royal house of David. The vine shot
forth her branches like so many scepters, not creeping lowly on the
ground like many vines, but trained aloft on a tree or wall. The mention
of their former royal dignity, contrasting sadly with her present sunken
state, would remind the Jews of their sins whereby they had incurred
such judgments.
stature--
(Da 4:11).
among the thick branches--that is, the central stock or trunk of the
tree shot up highest "among its own branches" or offshoots, surrounding
it. Emblematic of the numbers and resources of the people.
HENGSTENBERG
translates, "among the clouds." But
Eze 31:3, 10, 14,
supports English Version.
12. plucked up--not gradually withered. The sudden
upturning of the state was designed to awaken the Jews out of their
torpor to see the hand of God in the national judgment.
east wind--(See on
Eze 17:10).
13. planted--that is, transplanted. Though already "dried up" in
regard to the nation generally, the vine is said to be "transplanted" as
regards God's mercy to the remnant in Babylon.
dry . . . ground--Chaldea was well-watered and fertile; but it is the
condition of the captive people, not that of the land, which is referred
to.
14. fire . . . out of a rod of her branches--The Jews'
disaster was to be ascribed, not so much to the Chaldeans as to
themselves; the "fire out of the rod" is God's wrath
kindled by the perjury of Zedekiah
(Eze 17:18).
"The anger of the Lord" against Judah is specified as the cause why
Zedekiah was permitted to rebel against Babylon
(2Ki 24:20;
compare
Jud 9:15),
thus bringing Nebuchadnezzar against Jerusalem.
no strong rod . . . sceptre to rule--No more kings of David's stock
are now to rule the nation. Not at least until "the Lord shall send the
rod of His strength ("Messiah,"
Ps 110:2;
Isa 11:1)
out of Zion," to reign first as a spiritual, then hereafter as a
literal king.
is . . . and shall be for a lamentation--Part of the lamentation (that
as to Jehoahaz and Jehoiakim) was matter of history as already
accomplished; part (as to Zedekiah) was yet to be fulfilled; or, this
prophecy both is a subject for lamentation, and shall be so to distant
posterity.
CHAPTER 20
Eze 20:1-49. REJECTION OF THE ELDERS' APPLICATION TO THE PROPHET: EXPOSURE OF ISRAEL'S PROTRACTED REBELLIONS, NOTWITHSTANDING GOD'S LONG-SUFFERING GOODNESS: YET WILL GOD RESTORE HIS PEOPLE AT LAST.
1. seventh year, &c.--namely, from the carrying away of Jeconiah
(Eze 1:2; 8:1).
This computation was calculated to make them cherish the more ardently
the hope of the restoration promised them in seventy years; for, when
prospects are hopeless, years are not computed [CALVIN].
elders . . . came to inquire--The object of their inquiry, as in
Eze 14:1,
is not stated; probably it was to ascertain the cause of the national
calamities and the time of their termination, as their false prophets
assured them of a speedy restoration.
3. The chapter falls into two great parts:
Eze 20:1-32,
the recital of the people's rebellions during five distinct periods: in
Egypt, the wilderness, on the borders of Canaan when a new generation
arose, in Canaan, and in the time of the prophet.
I will not be inquired of by you--because their moral state precluded
them from capability of knowing the will of God
(Ps 66:18;
Pr 28:9;
Joh 7:17).
4. Wilt thou judge? . . . judge--The emphatical repetition expresses, "Wilt thou not judge? yes, judge them. There is a loud call for immediate judgment." The Hebrew interrogative here is a command, not a prohibition [MAURER]. Instead of spending time in teaching them, tell them of the abomination of their fathers, of which their own are the complement and counterpart, and which call for judgment.
5, 6. The thrice lifting up of God's hand (the sign of His oath,
Re 10:5, 6;
Ex 6:8,
Margin;
Nu 14:30;
to which passages the form of words here alludes) implies the solemn
earnestness of God's purpose of grace to them.
made myself known unto them--proving Myself faithful and true by the
actual fulfilment of My promises
(Ex 4:31; 6:3);
revealing Myself as "Jehovah," that is, not that the name was
unknown before, but that then first the force of that name was
manifested in the promises of God then being realized in
performances.
6. espied for them--as though God had spied out all other lands, and
chose Canaan as the best of all lands
(De 8:7, 8).
See
Da 8:9; 11:16, 41,
"the glorious land"; see Margin, "land of delight," or,
ornament"; "the pleasant land," or "land of desire,"
Zec 7:14,
Margin.
glory of all lands--that is, Canaan was "the beauty of all lands";
the most lovely and delightful land; "milk and honey" are not the
antecedents to "which."
7. Moses gives no formal statement of idolatries practised by Israel
in Egypt. But it is implied in their readiness to worship the golden
calf (resembling the Egyptian ox, Apis)
(Ex 32:4),
which makes it likely they had worshipped such idols in Egypt. Also, in
Le 17:7,
"They shall no more offer their sacrifices unto devils (literally,
seirim, 'he-goats,' the symbol of the false god, Pan), after whom
they have gone awhoring." The call of God by Moses was as much to them
to separate from idols and follow Jehovah, as it was to Pharaoh to let
them go forth.
Ex 6:6, 7
and Jos 24:14,
expressly mention their idolatry "in Egypt." Hence the need of their
being removed out of the contagion of Egyptian idolatries by the
exodus.
every man--so universal was the evil.
of his eyes--It was not fear of their Egyptian masters, but their
own lust of the eye that drew them to idols
(Eze 6:9; 18:6).
8, 9. then I said, I will . . . But, &c.--that is, (God speaking in condescension to human modes of conception) their spiritual degradation deserved I should destroy them, "but I wrought (namely, the deliverance 'out of . . . Egypt') for My name's sake"; not for their merits (a rebuke to their national pride). God's "name" means the sum-total of His perfections. To manifest these, His gratuitous mercy abounding above their sins, yet without wrong to His justice, and so to set forth His glory, was and is the ultimate end of His dealings (Eze 20:14, 22; 2Sa 7:23; Isa 63:12; Ro 9:17).
11. which if a man do, he shall . . . five in them--not "by them," as though they could justify a man, seeing that man cannot render the faultless obedience required (Le 18:5; Ga 3:12). "By them" is the expression indeed in Ro 10:5; but there the design is to show that, if man could obey all God's laws, he would be justified "by them" (Ga 3:21); but he cannot; he therefore needs to have justification by "the Lord our righteousness" (Jer 23:6); then, having thus received life, he "lives," that is, maintains, enjoys, and exercises this life only in so far as he walks "in" the laws of God. So De 30:15, 16. The Israelites, as a nation, had life already freely given to them by God's covenant of promise; the laws of God were designed to be the means of the outward expression of their spiritual life. As the natural life has its healthy manifestation in the full exercise of its powers, so their spiritual being as a nation was to be developed in vigor, or else decay, according as they did, or did not, walk in God's laws.
12. sabbaths, . . . a sign between me and them--a kind
of sacramental pledge of the covenant of adoption between God and His
people. The Sabbath is specified as a sample of the whole law, to show
that the law is not merely precepts, but privileges, of which the
Sabbath is one of the highest. Not that the Sabbath was first
instituted at Sinai, as if it were an exclusively Jewish ordinance
(Ge 2:2, 3),
but it was then more formally enacted, when, owing to the apostasy of
the world from the original revelation, one people was called out
(De 5:15)
to be the covenant-people of God.
sanctify them--The observance of the Sabbath contemplated by God was
not a mere outward rest, but a spiritual dedication of the day
to the glory of God and the good of man. Otherwise it would not be, as
it is made, the pledge of universal sanctification
(Ex 31:13-17;
Isa 58:13, 14).
Virtually it is said, all sanctity will flourish or decay, according as
this ordinance is observed in its full spirituality or not.
13. in the wilderness--They "rebelled" in the very place where death and terror were on every side and where they depended on My miraculous bounty every moment!
15. I swore against them (Ps 95:11; 106:26) that I would not permit the generation that came out of Egypt to enter Canaan.
16. The special reason is stated by Moses
(Nu 13:32, 33; 14:4)
to be that they, through fear arising from the false report of the
spies, wished to return to Egypt; the general reasons are stated
here which lay at the root of their rejection of God's grace; namely,
contempt of God and His laws, and love of idols.
their heart--The fault lay in it
(Ps 78:37).
17. Nevertheless--How marvellous that God should spare such sinners! His everlasting covenant explains it, His long-suffering standing out in striking contrast to their rebellions (Ps 78:38; Jer 30:11).
18. I said unto their children--being unwilling to speak any more to
the fathers as being incorrigible.
Walk ye not in . . . statutes of . . . fathers--The traditions of the
fathers are to be carefully weighed, not indiscriminately followed. He
forbids the imitation of not only their gross sins, but even their
plausible statutes [CALVIN].
19. It is an indirect denial of God, and a robbing Him of His due, to add man's inventions to His precepts.
20. (Jer 17:22).
21. Though warned by the judgment on their fathers, the next generation also rebelled against God. The "kindness of Israel's youth and love of her espousals in the wilderness" (Jer 2:2, 3) were only comparative (the corruption in later times being more general), and confined to the minority; as a whole, Israel at no time fully served God. The "children" it was that fell into the fearful apostasy on the plains of Moab at the close of the wilderness sojourn (Nu 25:1, 2; De 31:27).
23. It was to that generation the threat of dispersion was proclaimed (De 28:64; compare Eze 29:4).
25. I gave them . . . statutes . . . not good--Since they would not follow My statutes that were good, "I gave them" their own (Eze 20:18) and their fathers' "which were not good"; statutes spiritually corrupting, and, finally, as the consequence, destroying them. Righteous retribution (Ps 81:12; Ho 8:11; Ro 1:24; 2Th 2:11). Eze 20:39 proves this view to be correct (compare Isa 63:17). Thus on the plains of Moab (Nu 25:1-18), in chastisement for the secret unfaithfulness to God in their hearts, He permitted Baal's worshippers to tempt them to idolatry (the ready success of the tempters, moreover, proving the inward unsoundness of the tempted); and this again ended necessarily in punitive judgments.
26. I polluted them--not directly; "but I judicially gave
them up to pollute themselves." A just retribution for their
"polluting My sabbaths"
(Eze 20:24).
This
Eze 20:26
is explanatory of
Eze 20:25.
Their own sin I made their punishment.
caused to pass through the fire--FAIRBAIRN translates, "In their presenting
(literally, 'the causing to pass over') all their first-born," namely,
to the Lord; referring to the command
(Ex 13:12,
Margin, where the very same expression is used). The lustration
of children by passing through the fire was a later abomination
(Eze 20:31).
The evil here spoken of was the admixture of heathenish practices with
Jehovah's worship, which made Him regard all as "polluted." Here, "to
the Lord" is omitted purposely, to imply, "They kept up the outward
service indeed, but I did not own it as done unto Me, since it was
mingled with such pollutions." But English Version is
supported by the similar phraseology in
Eze 20:31,
see on
Eze 20:31.
They made all their children pass through the fire; but he names
the first-born, in aggravation of their guilt; that is, "I had
willed that the first-born should be redeemed as being Mine, but they
imposed on themselves the cruel rites of offering them to Molech"
(De 18:10).
might know . . . the Lord--that they may be compelled to know Me as
a powerful Judge, since they were unwilling to know Me as a gracious
Father.
27-29. The next period, namely, that which followed the
settlement in Canaan: the fathers of the generation existing in
Ezekiel's time walked in the same steps of apostasy as the generation
in the wilderness.
Yet in this--Not content with past rebellions, and not moved with
gratitude for God's goodness, "yet in this," still further they
rebelled.
blasphemed--"have insulted me" [CALVIN].
Even those who did not
sacrifice to heathen gods have offered "their sacrifices"
(Eze 20:28)
in forbidden places.
28. provocation of their offering--an offering as it were purposely
made to provoke God.
sweet savour--What ought to have been sweet became offensive by
their corruptions. He specifies the various kinds of offerings, to show
that in all alike they violated the law.
29. What is the high place whereunto ye go?--What is the meaning of
this name? For My altar is not so called. What excellence do ye see
in it, that ye go there, rather than to My temple, the only lawful place
of sacrificing? The very name, "high place," convicts you of sinning,
not from ignorance but perverse rebellion.
is called . . . unto this day--whereas this name ought to have been
long since laid aside, along with the custom of sacrificing on high
places which it represents, being borrowed from the heathen, who so
called their places of sacrifice (the Greeks, for instance, called
them by a cognate term, Bomoi), whereas I call mine Mizbeaach, "altar." The very name implies the place is not that sanctioned by Me,
and therefore your sacrifices even to ME there (much more those you
offer to idols)
are only a "provocation" to Me
(Eze 20:28;
De 12:1-5).
David and others, it is true, sacrificed to God on high places, but it
was under exceptional circumstances, and before the altar was set up on
Mount Moriah.
30. The interrogation implies a strong affirmation, as in Eze 20:4, "Are ye not polluted . . . ? Do ye not commit?" &c. Or, connecting this verse with Eze 20:31, "Are ye thus polluted . . . and yet (do ye expect that) I shall be inquired of by you?"
31. through the fire--As "the fire" is omitted in Eze 20:26, FAIRBAIRN represents the generation here referred to (namely, that of Ezekiel's day) as attaining the climax of guilt (see on Eze 20:26), in making their children pass through the fire, which that former generation did not. The reason, however, for the omission of "the fire" in Eze 20:26 is, perhaps, that there it is implied the children only "passed through the fire" for purification, whereas here they are actually burnt to death before the idol; and therefore "the fire" is specified in the latter, not in the former case (compare 2Ki 3:27).
32. We will be as the heathen--and so escape the odium to which we are exposed, of having a peculiar God and law of our own. "We shall live on better terms with them by having a similar worship. Besides, we get from God nothing but threats and calamities, whereas the heathen, Chaldeans, &c., get riches and power from their idols." How literally God's words here ("that . . . shall not be at all") are fulfilled in the modern Jews! Though the Jews seemed so likely (had Ezekiel spoken as an uninspired man) to have blended with the rest of mankind and laid aside their distinctive peculiarities, as was their wish at that time, yet they have remained for eighteen centuries dispersed among all nations and without a home, but still distinct: a standing witness for the truth of the prophecy given so long ago.
33. Here begins the second division of the prophecy. Lest the
covenant people should abandon their distinctive hopes and amalgamate
with the surrounding heathen, He tells them that, as the wilderness
journey from Egypt was made subservient to discipline and also to the
taking from among them the rebellious, so a severe discipline (such as
the Jews are now for long actually undergoing) should be administered
to them during the next exodus for the same purpose
(Eze 20:38),
and so to prepare them for the restored possession of their land
(Ho 2:14, 15).
This was only partially fulfilled before, and at the return from
Babylon: its full and final accomplishment is future.
with a mighty hand, . . . will I rule over you--I will assert My right
over you in spite of your resistance
(Eze 20:32),
as a master would in the case of his slave, and I will not let you be
wrested from Me, because of My regard to My covenant.
34. The Jews in exile might think themselves set free from the "rule"
of God
(Eze 20:33);
therefore, He intimates, He will reassert His right over them by
chastening judgments, and these, with an ultimate view, not to destroy,
but to restore them.
people--rather, "peoples."
35. wilderness of the people--rather, "peoples," the various
peoples among whom they were to be scattered, and about whom God
saith
(Eze 20:34),
"I will bring you out." In contrast to the literal "wilderness of
Egypt"
(Eze 20:36),
"the wilderness of the peoples" is their spiritual wilderness
period of trial, discipline, and purification while exiled among the
nations. As the state when they are "brought into the wilderness of the
peoples" and that when they were among the peoples "from" which God was
to "bring them out"
(Eze 20:34)
are distinguished, the wilderness state probably answers partially to
the transition period of discipline from the first decree for their
restoration by Cyrus to the time of their complete settlement in their
land, and the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the temple. But the full and
final fulfilment is future; the wilderness state will comprise not only
the transition period of their restoration, but the beginning of their
occupancy of Palestine, a time in which they shall endure the sorest of
all their chastisements, to "purge out the rebels"
(Eze 20:38;
Da 12:1);
and then the remnant
(Zec 13:8, 9; 14:2, 3)
shall "all serve God in the land"
(Eze 20:40).
Thus the wilderness period does not denote locality, but their
state intervening between their rejection and future
restoration.
plead--bring the matter in debate between us to an issue. Image is
from a plaintiff in a law court meeting the defendant "face to face."
Appropriate, as God in His dealings acts not arbitrarily, but in most
righteous justice
(Jer 2:9;
Mic 6:2).
36. (Nu 14:21-29). Though God saved them out of Egypt, He afterwards destroyed in the wilderness them that believed not (Jude 5); so, though He brought the exiles out of Babylon, yet their wilderness state of chastening discipline continued even after they were again in Canaan.
37. pass under the rod--metaphor from a shepherd who makes his sheep
pass under his rod in counting them
(Le 27:32;
Jer 33:13).
Whether you will or not, ye shall be counted as Mine, and so shall be
subjected to My chastening discipline
(Mic 7:14),
with a view to My ultimate saving of the chosen remnant (compare
Joh 10:27-29).
bond of . . . covenant--I will constrain you by sore chastisements
to submit yourselves to the covenant to which ye are lastingly
bound, though now you have cast away God's bond from you. Fulfilled
in part,
Ne 9:8, 26, 32-38; 10:1-39;
fully hereafter
(Isa 54:10-13; 52:1, 2).
38.
(Zec 13:9; 14:2).
purge out--or, "separate." Hebrew, barothi, forming a designed
alliteration with "berith," the covenant; not a promise of
grace, but a threat against those Jews who thought they could in exile
escape the observation and "rule" of God.
land of Israel--Though brought out of the country of their sojourn
or exile (Babylon formerly, and the various lands of their exile
hereafter) into the literal land of Palestine, even it shall be to
them an exile state, "they shall not enter into the land of Israel,"
that is, the spiritual state of restored favor of God to His covenant
people, which shall only be given to the remnant to be saved
(Zec 13:8, 9).
39. Equivalent to, "I would rather have you open idolaters than
hypocrites, fancying you can worship Me and yet at the same time serve
idols"
(Am 5:21, 22, 25, 26;
compare
1Ki 18:21;
2Ki 17:41;
Mt 6:24;
Re 3:15, 16).
Go ye, serve--This is not a command to serve idols, but a judicial
declaration of God's giving up of the half-idol, half-Jehovah
worshippers to utter idolatry, if they will not serve Jehovah alone
(Ps 81:12;
Re 22:11).
hereafter also--God anticipates the same apostasy afterwards, as
now.
40. For--Though ye, the rebellious portion, withdraw from My worship,
others, even the believing remnant, will succeed after you perish, and
will serve Me purely.
in mine holy mountain--
(Isa 2:2, 3).
Zion, or Moriah, "the height of Israel" (pre-eminent above all
mountains because of the manifested presence of God there with
Israel), as opposed to their "high places," the worship on which
was an abomination to God.
all--not merely individuals, such as constitute the elect Church now;
but the whole nation, to be followed by the conversion of the Gentile
nations
(Isa 2:2,
"all nations;"
Ro 11:26;
Re 11:15).
with--rather, "in all your holy things"
[MAURER].
41. with--that is, in respect to your sweet savor (literally, "savor
of rest," see on
Eze 16:19).
Or, I will accept you (your worship) "as a sweet savor" [MAURER],
(Eph 5:2;
Php 4:18).
God first accepts the person in Messiah, then the
offering
(Eze 20:40;
Ge 4:4).
bring . . . out from . . . people, &c.--the same words as in
Eze 20:34;
but there applied to the bringing forth of the hypocrites, as well as
the elect; here restricted to the saved remnant, who alone shall be at
last restored literally and spiritually in the fullest sense.
sanctified in you before . . . heathen--
(Jer 33:9).
All the nations will acknowledge My power displayed in restoring you,
and so shall be led to seek Me
(Isa 66:18;
Zec 14:16-19).
43. there--not merely in exile when suffering punishment which makes
even reprobates sorry for sin, but when received into favor
in your own land.
remember--
(Eze 16:61, 63).
The humiliation of Judah
(Ne 9:1-38)
is a type of the future penitence of the whole nation
(Ho 5:15; 6:1;
Zec 12:10-14).
God's goodness realized by the sinner is the only thing that leads to
true repentance
(Ho 3:5;
Lu 7:37, 38).
44. The English Version chapter ought to have ended here,
and the twenty-first chapter begun with "Moreover," &c., as in the
Hebrew Bible.
for my name's sake--
(Eze 36:22).
Gratuitously; according to My compassion, not your merits. After having
commented on this verse, CALVIN was laid on his
death bed, and his commentary ended.
45-49. An introductory brief description in enigma of the destruction by fire and sword, detailed more explicitly in Eze 21:1-32.
46. south . . . south . . . south--three different Hebrew words,
to express the certainty of the divine displeasure resting on the region
specified. The third term is from a root meaning "dry," referring to
the sun's heat in the south; representing the burning judgments of God
on the southern parts of Judea, of which Jerusalem was the capital.
set thy face--determinately. The prophets used to turn themselves
towards those who were to be the subjects of their prophecies.
drop--as the rain, which flows in a continuous stream, sometimes
gently
(De 32:2),
sometimes violently
(Am 7:16;
Mic 2:6,
Margin), as here.
forest--the densely populated country of Judea; trees representing
people.
47. fire--every kind of judgment
(Eze 19:12; 21:3,
"my sword";
Jer 21:14).
green tree . . . dry--fit and unfit materials for fuel alike; "the
righteous and the wicked," as explained in
Eze 21:3, 4;
Lu 23:31.
Unsparing universality of the judgment!
flaming flame--one continued and unextinguished flame. "The glowing
flame" [FAIRBAIRN].
faces--persons; here the metaphor is merged in the reality.
49. Ezekiel complains that by this parabolic form of prophecy he only makes himself and it a jest to his countrymen. God therefore in Eze 21:1-32 permits him to express the same prophecy more plainly.
CHAPTER 21
Eze 21:1-32. PROPHECY AGAINST ISRAEL AND JERUSALEM, AND AGAINST AMMON.
2. the holy places--the three parts of the temple: the courts, the holy place, and the holiest. If "synagogues" existed before the Babylonian captivity, as Ps 74:8 seems to imply, they and the proseuchæ, or oratories, may be included in the "holy places" here.
3. righteous . . . wicked--not contradictory of Eze 18:4, 9 and Ge 18:23. Ezekiel here views the mere outward aspect of the indiscriminate universality of the national calamity. But really the same captivity to the "righteous" would prove a blessing as a wholesome discipline, which to the "wicked" would be an unmitigated punishment. The godly were sealed with a mark (Eze 9:4), not for outward exemption from the common calamity, but as marked for the secret interpositions of Providence, overruling even evil to their good. The godly were by comparison so few, that not their salvation but the universality of the judgment is brought into view here.
4. The "sword" did not, literally, slay all; but the judgments of God by the foe swept through the land "from the south to the north."
6. with the breaking of thy loins--as one afflicted with pleurisy; or as a woman, in labor-throes, clasps her loins in pain, and heaves and sighs till the girdle of the loins is broken by the violent action of the body (Jer 30:6).
7. The abrupt sentences and mournful repetitions imply violent emotions.
9. sword--namely, of God (De 32:41). The Chaldeans are His instrument.
10. to make a sore slaughter--literally, "that killing it may kill."
glitter--literally, "glitter as the lightning flash": flashing terror
into the foe.
should we . . . make mirth--It is no time for levity when such a
calamity is impending
(Isa 22:12, 13).
it contemneth the rod of my son, &c.--The sword has no more respect
to the trivial "rod" or scepter of Judah
(Ge 49:10)
than if it were any common "tree." "Tree" is the image retained from
Eze 20:47;
explained in
Eze 21:2, 3.
God calls Judah "My son" (compare
Ex 4:22;
Ho 11:1).
FAIRBAIRN arbitrarily translates, "Perchance the
scepter of My son rejoiceth; it (the sword) despiseth every tree."
11. the slayer--the Babylonian king in this case; in general, all the instruments of God's wrath (Re 19:15).
12. terrors by reason of the sword, &c.--rather, "they (the princes
of Israel) are delivered up to the sword together with My people"
[GLASSIUS].
smite . . . upon . . . thigh--a mark of
grief
(Jer 31:19).
13. it is a trial--rather, "There is a trial" being made: the sword
of the Lord will subject all to the ordeal. "What, then, if it contemn
even the rod" (scepter of Judah)? Compare as to a similar scourge of
unsparing trial,
Job 9:23.
it shall be no more--the scepter, that is, the state, must
necessarily then come to an end. Fulfilled in part at the overthrow of
Judah by Nebuchadnezzar, but fully at the time of "Shiloh's" (Messiah's)
coming
(Ge 49:10),
when Judea became a Roman province.
14. smite . . . hands together--
(Nu 24:10),
indicative of the indignant fury with which God will "smite" the
people.
sword . . . doubled the third time--referring to the threefold
calamity:--(1) The taking of Zedekiah (to whom the "rod," or scepter,
may refer); (2) the taking of the city; (3) the removal of all those who
remained with Gedaliah. "Doubled" means "multiplied" or "repeated." The
stroke shall be doubled and even trebled.
of the slain--that is, by which many are slain. As the Hebrew is
singular,
FAIRBAIRN makes it refer to the king, "the sword of the
great one that is slain," or "pierced through."
entereth . . . privy chambers--
(Jer 9:21).
The sword shall overtake them, not merely in the open battlefield, but
in the chambers whither they flee to hide themselves
(1Ki 20:30; 22:25).
MAURER translates, "which besieged them";
FAIRBAIRN, "which penetrates to them." English
Version is more literal.
15. point--"the whirling glance of the sword"
[FAIRBAIRN]. "The
naked (bared) sword" [HENDERSON].
ruins--literally, "stumbling-blocks." Their own houses and walls
shall be stumbling-blocks in their way, whether they wish to fight or
flee.
made bright--made to glitter.
wrapped, &c.--namely, in the hand of him who holds the hilt, or in
its scabbard, that the edge may not be blunt when it is presently drawn
forth to strike. GESENIUS, translates, "sharpened," &c.
16. Apostrophe to the sword.
Go . . . one way--or, "Concentrate thyself"; "Unite thy forces
on the right hand" [GROTIUS]. The sword is commanded to take the nearest
route for Jerusalem, "whither their face was set," whether south or
north ("right hand or left"), according to where the several parts of
the Chaldean host may be.
or other, . . . on the left--rather "set thyself on the left." The
verbs are well-chosen. The main "concentration" of forces was to be
on "the right hand," or south, the part of Judea in which Jerusalem
was, and which lay south in marching from Babylon, whereas the Chaldean
forces advancing on Jerusalem from Egypt, of which Jerusalem was north,
were fewer, and therefore "set thyself" is the verb used.
17. Jehovah Himself smites His hands together, doing what He had
commanded Ezekiel to do (see on
Eze 21:14),
in token of His smiting Jerusalem; compare the similar symbolical
action
(2Ki 13:18, 19).
cause . . . fury to rest--give it full vent, and so satisfy it
(Eze 5:13).
19. two ways--The king coming from Babylon is represented in the
graphic style of Ezekiel as reaching the point where the road branched
off in two ways, one leading by the south, by Tadmor or Palmyra, to
Rabbath of Ammon, east of Jordan; the other by the north, by Riblah in
Syria, to Jerusalem--and hesitating which way to take. Ezekiel is told
to "appoint the two ways" (as in
Eze 4:1);
for Nebuchadnezzar, though knowing no other control but his own will
and superstition, had really this path "appointed" for him by the
all-ruling God.
out of one land--namely, Babylon.
choose . . . a place--literally, "a hand." So it is
translated by FAIRBAIRN, "make a
finger-post," namely, at the head of the two ways, the hand post
pointing Nebuchadnezzar to the way to Jerusalem as the way he should
select. But MAURER rightly supports English
Version. Ezekiel is told to "choose the place" where Nebuchadnezzar
should do as is described in
Eze 21:20, 21;
so entirely does God order by the prophet every particular of place and
time in the movements of the invader.
20. Rabbath of the Ammonites--distinct from Rabbah in Judah
(2Sa 12:26).
Rabbath is put first, as it was from her that Jerusalem, that doomed
city, had borrowed many of her idols.
to Judah in Jerusalem--instead of simply putting "Jerusalem," to imply
the sword was to come not merely to Judah, but to its people within Jerusalem, defended though it was; its defenses on which the Jews relied
so much would not keep the foe out.
21. parting--literally, "mother of the way." As "head of the two ways"
follows, which seems tautology after "parting of the way,"
HAVERNICK
translates, according to Arabic idiom, "the highway," or principal
road. English Version is not tautology, "head of the two ways"
defining more accurately "parting of the way."
made . . . bright--rather, "shook," from an Arabic root.
arrows--Divination by arrows is here referred to: they were put into
a quiver marked with the names of particular places to be attacked, and
then shaken together; whichever came forth first intimated the one
selected as the first to be attacked
[JEROME]. The same usage existed
among the Arabs, and is mentioned in the Koran. In the Nineveh
sculptures the king is represented with a cup in his right hand, his
left resting on a bow; also with two arrows in the right, and the bow in
the left, probably practising divination.
images--Hebrew, "teraphim"; household gods, worshipped as family
talismans, to obtain direction as to the future and other blessings.
First mentioned in Mesopotamia, whence Rachel brought them
(Ge 31:19, 34);
put away by Jacob
(Ge 35:4);
set up by Micah as his household gods
(Jud 17:5);
stigmatized as idolatry
(1Sa 15:23,
Hebrew;
Zec 10:2,
Margin).
liver--They judged of the success, or failure, of an undertaking by the
healthy, or unhealthy, state of the liver and entrails of a sacrifice.
22. Rather, "In his right hand was [is] the divination," that is,
he holds up in his right hand the arrow marked with "Jerusalem," to
encourage his army to march for it.
captains--The Margin, "battering-rams," adopted by
FAIRBAIRN, is
less appropriate, for "battering-rams" follow presently after
[GROTIUS].
open the mouth in . . . slaughter--that is, commanding slaughter:
raising the war cry of death. Not as
GESENIUS, "to open the mouth
with the war shout."
23. Unto the Jews, though credulous of divinations when in their
favor, Nebuchadnezzar's divination "shall be (seen) as false." This
gives the reason which makes the Jews fancy themselves safe from the
Chaldeans, namely, that they "have sworn" to the latter "oaths" of
allegiance, forgetting that they had violated them
(Eze 17:13, 15, 16, 18).
but he, &c.--Nebuchadnezzar will remember in consulting his idols
that he swore to Zedekiah by them, but that Zedekiah broke the league
[GROTIUS]. Rather, God will remember against them
(Re 16:19)
their violating their oath sworn by the true God, whereas
Nebuchadnezzar kept his oath sworn by a false god;
Eze 21:24
confirms this.
24. Their unfaithfulness to Nebuchadnezzar was a type of their general
unfaithfulness to their covenant God.
with the hand--namely, of the king of Babylon.
25. profane--as having desecrated by idolatry and perjury his office
as the Lord's anointed.
HAVERNICK translates, as in
Eze 21:14,
"slain," that is, not literally, but virtually; to Ezekiel's idealizing
view Zedekiah was the grand victim "pierced through" by God's sword of
judgment, as his sons were slain before his eyes, which were then put
out, and he was led a captive in chains to Babylon. English
Version is better: so GESENIUS
(2Ch 36:13;
Jer 52:2).
when iniquity shall have an end--
(Eze 21:29).
When thine iniquity, having reached its last stage of guilt, shall be
put an end to by judgment
(Eze 35:5).
26. diadem--rather, "the miter" of the holy priest
(Ex 28:4;
Zec 3:5).
His priestly emblem as representative of the priestly people. Both this
and "the crown," the emblem of the kingdom, were to be removed, until
they should be restored and united in the Mediator, Messiah
(Ps 110:2, 4;
Zec 6:13),
[FAIRBAIRN]. As, however, King Zedekiah alone, not
the high priest also, is referred to in the context, English
Version is supported by GESENIUS.
this shall not be the same--The diadem shall not be as it was
[ROSENMULLER]. Nothing shall remain what it was
[FAIRBAIRN].
exalt . . . low, . . . abase . . . high--not the general truth
expressed
(Pr 3:34;
Lu 1:52;
Jas 4:6;
1Pe 5:5);
but specially referring to Messiah and Zedekiah contrasted together.
The "tender plant . . . out of the dry ground"
(Isa 53:2)
is to be "exalted" in the end
(Eze 21:27);
the now "high" representative on David's throne, Zedekiah, is to be
"abased." The outward relations of things shall be made to
change places in just retaliation on the people for having so perverted
the moral relations of things [HENGSTENBERG].
27. Literally, "An overturning, overturning, overturning, will I make
it." The threefold repetition denotes the awful certainty of the event;
not as ROSENMULLER
explains, the overthrow of the three, Jehoiakim,
Jeconiah, and Zedekiah; for Zedekiah alone is referred to.
it shall be no more, until he come whose right it is--strikingly
parallel to
Ge 49:10.
Nowhere shall there be rest or permanence; all things shall be in
fluctuation until He comes who, as the rightful Heir, shall restore the
throne of David that fell with Zedekiah. The Hebrew for "right"
is "judgment"; it perhaps includes, besides the right to rule,
the idea of His rule being one in righteousness
(Ps 72:2;
Isa 9:6, 7; 11:4;
Re 19:11).
Others (Nebuchadnezzar, &c.), who held the rule of the earth delegated
to them by God, abused it by unrighteousness, and so forfeited the
"right." He both has the truest "right" to the rule, and exercises it
in "right." It is true the tribal "scepter" continued with Judah
"till Shiloh came"
(Ge 49:10);
but there was no kingly scepter till Messiah came, as the
spiritual King then
(Joh 18:36, 37);
this spiritual kingdom being about to pass into the literal,
personal kingdom over Israel at His second coming, when, and not
before, this prophecy shall have its exhaustive fulfilment
(Lu 1:32, 33;
Jer 3:17; 10:7;
"To thee doth it appertain").
28. Lest Ammon should think to escape because Nebuchadnezzar had taken
the route to Jerusalem, Ezekiel denounces judgment against Ammon,
without the prospect of a restoration such as awaited Israel.
Jer 49:6,
it is true, speaks of a "bringing again of its captivity," but this
probably refers to its spiritual restoration under Messiah; or,
if referring to it politically, must refer to but a partial
restoration at the downfall of Babylon under Cyrus.
their reproach--This constituted a leading feature in their guilt; they
treated with proud contumely the covenant-people after the taking of
Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar
(Eze 25:3, 6;
Zep 2:9, 10),
and appropriated Israel's territory
(Jer 49:1;
Am 1:13-15).
furbished, to consume--MAURER
punctuates thus, "Drawn for the
slaughter, it is furbished to devour ('consume'), to glitter."
English Version, "to consume because of the glittering," means, "to
consume by reason of the lightning, flash-like rapidity with which
it falls." Five years after the fall of Jerusalem, Ammon was destroyed
for aiding Ishmael in usurping the government of Judea against the will
of the king of Babylon
(2Ki 25:25;
Jer 41:15)
[GROTIUS].
29. see vanity . . . divine a lie--Ammon, too, had false diviners who
flattered them with assurances of safety; the only result of which will
be to "bring Ammon upon the necks," &c., that is, to add the Ammonites
to the headless trunks of the slain of Judah, whose bad example
Ammon followed, and "whose day" of visitation for their guilt "is come."
when their iniquity shall have an
end--See on
Eze 21:25.
30. Shall I cause it to return into his sheath--namely, without first
destroying Ammon. Certainly not
(Jer 47:6, 7).
Others, as the Margin, less suitably read it imperatively,
"Cause it to return," that is, after it has done the work appointed to
it.
in the land of thy nativity--Ammon was not to be carried away captive
as Judah, but to perish in his own land.
31. blow against thee in, &c.--rather, "blow upon thee with the fire,"
&c. Image from smelting metals
(Eze 22:20, 21).
brutish--ferocious.
skilful to destroy--literally, "artificers of destruction"; alluding
to
Isa 54:16.
32. thy blood shall be--that is, shall flow.
be no more remembered--be consigned as a nation to oblivion.
CHAPTER 22
Eze 22:1-31. GOD'S JUDGMENT ON THE SINFULNESS OF JERUSALEM.
Repetition of the charges in the twentieth chapter; only that there they were stated in an historical review of the past and present; here the present sins of the nation exclusively are brought forward.
2. See
Eze 20:4;
that is, "Wilt thou not judge?" &c. (compare
Eze 23:36).
the bloody city--literally, "the city of bloods"; so called on account
of murders perpetrated in her, and sacrifices of children to Molech
(Eze 22:3, 4, 6, 9; 24:6, 9).
3. sheddeth blood . . . that her time may come--Instead of deriving
advantage from her bloody sacrifices to idols, she only thereby brought
on herself "the time" of her punishment.
against herself--
(Pr 8:36).
4. thy days--the shorter period, namely, that of the siege.
thy years--the longer period of the captivity. The "days" and
"years" express that she is ripe for punishment.
5. infamous--They mockingly call thee, "Thou polluted one in name (Margin), and full of confusion" [FAIRBAIRN], (referring to the tumultuous violence prevalent in it). Thus the nations "far and near" mocked her as at once sullied in character and in actual fact lawless. What a sad contrast to the Jerusalem once designated "the holy city!"
6. Rather, "The princes . . . each according to his power, were in thee, to shed blood" (as if this was the only object of their existence). "Power," literally, "arm"; they, who ought to have been patterns of justice, made their own arm of might their only law.
7. set light by--Children have made light of, disrespected, father . . . (De 27:16). At Eze 22:7-12 are enumerated the sins committed in violation of Moses' law.
9. men that carry tales--informers, who by misrepresentations cause innocent blood to be shed (Le 19:16). Literally, "one who goes to and fro as a merchant."
10. set apart for pollution--that is, set apart as unclean (Le 18:19).
12. forgotten me-- (De 32:18; Jer 2:32; 3:21).
13. smitten mine hand--in token of the indignant vengeance which I will execute on thee (see on Eze 21:17).
14. (Eze 21:7).
15. consume thy filthiness out of thee--the object of God in scattering the Jews.
16. take thine inheritance in thyself--Formerly thou wast Mine inheritance; but now, full of guilt, thou art no longer Mine, but thine own inheritance to thyself; "in the sight of the heathen," that is, even they shall see that, now that thou hast become a captive, thou art no longer owned as Mine [VATABLUS]. FAIRBAIRN and others needlessly take the Hebrew from a different root, "thou shalt be polluted by ('in,' [HENDERSON]) thyself," &c.; the heathen shall regard thee as a polluted thing, who hast brought thine own reproach on thyself.
18. dross . . . brass--Israel has become a worthless compound of the dross of silver (implying not merely corruption, but degeneracy from good to bad, Isa 1:22, especially offensive) and of the baser metals. Hence the people must be thrown into the furnace of judgment, that the bad may be consumed, and the good separated (Jer 6:29, 30).
23. From this verse to the end he shows the general corruption of all ranks.
24. land . . . not cleansed--not cleared or cultivated; all a scene
of desolation; a fit emblem of the moral wilderness state of the people.
nor rained upon--a mark of divine "indignation"; as the early and
latter rain, on which the productiveness of the land depended, was one
of the great covenant blessings. Joel
(Joe 2:23)
promises the return of the former and latter rain, with the restoration
of God's favor.
25. conspiracy--The false prophets have conspired both to propagate
error and to oppose the messages of God's servants. They are mentioned
first, as their bad influence extended the widest.
prey--Their aim was greed of gain, "treasure, and precious things"
(Ho 6:9;
Zep 3:3, 4;
Mt 23:14).
made . . . many widows--by occasioning, through false prophecies, the
war with the Chaldeans in which the husbands fell.
26. Her priests--whose "lips should have kept knowledge"
(Mal 2:7).
violated--not simply transgressed; but, have done violence to the law, by wresting it to wrong ends, and putting wrong constructions
on it.
put no difference between the holy and profane, &c.--made no
distinction between the clean and unclean
(Le 10:10),
the Sabbath and other days, sanctioning violations of that holy day.
"Holy" means, what is dedicated to God; "profane," what is in
common use; "unclean," what is forbidden to be eaten;
"clean," what is lawful to be eaten.
I am profaned among them--They abuse My name to false or unjust
purposes.
27. princes--who should have employed the influence of their position
for the people's welfare, made "gain" their sole aim.
wolves--notorious for fierce and ravening cruelty
(Mic 3:2, 3, 9-11;
Joh 10:12).
28. Referring to the false assurances of peace with which the prophets flattered the people, that they should not submit to the king of Babylon (see on Eze 13:10; Eze 21:29; Jer 6:14; 23:16, 17; 27:9, 10).
29. The people--put last, after the mention of those in office.
Corruption had spread downwards through the whole community.
wrongfully--that is, "without cause," gratuitously, without the
stranger proselyte giving any just provocation; nay, he of all others
being one who ought to have been won to the worship of Jehovah by
kindness, instead of being alienated by oppression; especially as the
Israelites were commanded to remember that they themselves had been
"strangers in Egypt"
(Ex 22:21; 23:9).
30. the hedge--the wall
(see on
Eze 13:5);
image for leading the people to repentance.
the gap--the breach
(Ps 106:23);
image for interceding between the people and God
(Ge 20:7;
Ex 32:11;
Nu 16:48).
I found none--
(Jer 5:1)
--not that literally there was not a righteous man in the city. For
Jeremiah, Baruch, &c., were still there; but Jeremiah had been
forbidden to pray for the people
(Jer 11:14),
as being doomed to wrath. None now, of the godly, knowing the desperate
state of the people, and God's purpose as to them, was willing
longer to interpose between God's wrath and them. And none "among
them," that is, among those just enumerated as guilty of such sins
(Eze 22:25-29),
was morally able for such an office.
31. their own way . . . recompensed upon their heads-- (Eze 9:10; 11:21; 16:43; Pr 1:31; Isa 3:11; Jer 6:19).
CHAPTER 23
Eze 23:1-49. ISRAEL'S AND JUDAH'S SIN AND PUNISHMENT ARE PARABOLICALLY PORTRAYED UNDER THE NAMES AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH.
The imagery is similar to that in the sixteenth chapter; but here the reference is not as there so much to the breach of the spiritual marriage covenant with God by the people's idolatries, as by their worldly spirit, and their trusting to alliances with the heathen for safety, rather than to God.
2. two . . . of one mother--Israel and Judah, one nation by birth from the same ancestress, Sarah.
3. Even so early in their history as their Egyptian sojourn, they
committed idolatries (see on
Eze 20:6-8;
Joshua 24. 14).
in their youth--an aggravation of their sin. It was at the very time
of their receiving extraordinary favors from God
(Eze 16:6, 22).
they bruised--namely, the Egyptians.
4. Aholah--that is, "Her tent" (put for worship, as the first
worship of God in Israel was in a tent or tabernacle), as contrasted
with Aholibah, that is, "My tent in her." The Beth-el worship of
Samaria was of her own devising, not of God's appointment; the
temple-worship of Jerusalem was expressly appointed by Jehovah, who
"dwelt" there, "setting up His tabernacle among the people as His"
(Ex 25:8;
Le 26:11, 12;
Jos 22:19;
Ps 76:2).
the elder--Samaria is called "the elder" because she preceded Judah
in her apostasy and its punishment.
they were mine--Previous to apostasy under Jeroboam, Samaria (Israel,
or the ten tribes), equally with Judah, worshipped the true God. God
therefore never renounced the right over Israel, but sent prophets, as
Elijah and Elisha, to declare His will to them.
5. when . . . mine--literally, "under Me," that is, subject to Me as
her lawful husband.
neighbours--On the northeast the kingdom of Israel bordered on that
of Assyria; for the latter had occupied much of Syria. Their
neighborhood in locality was emblematical of their being near in
corruption of morals and worship. The alliances of Israel with
Assyria, which are the chief subject of reprobation here, tended to this
(2Ki 15:19; 16:7, 9; 17:3;
Ho 8:9).
6. blue--rather, "purple"
[FAIRBAIRN]. As a lustful woman's passions
are fired by showy dress and youthful appearance in men, so Israel was
seduced by the pomp and power of Assyria (compare
Isa 10:8).
horsemen--cavaliers.
7. all their idols--There was nothing that she refused to her lovers.
8. whoredoms brought from Egypt--the calves set up in Dan and Beth-el by Jeroboam, answering to the Egyptian bull-formed idol Apis. Her alliances with Egypt politically are also meant (Isa 30:2, 3; 31:1). The ten tribes probably resumed the Egyptian rites, in order to enlist the Egyptians against Judah (2Ch 12:2-4).
9. God, in righteous retribution, turned their objects of trust into the instruments of their punishment: Pul, Tiglath-pileser, Esar-haddon, and Shalmaneser (2Ki 15:19, 29; 17:3, 6, 24; Ezr 4:2, 10). "It was their sin to have sought after such lovers, and it was to be their punishment that these lovers should become their destroyers" [FAIRBAIRN].
10. became famous--literally, "she became a name," that is, as
notorious by her punishment as she had been by her sins, so as to be
quoted as a warning to others.
women--that is, neighboring peoples.
11. Judah, the southern kingdom, though having the "warning" (see on Eze 23:10) of the northern kingdom before her eyes, instead of profiting by it, went to even greater lengths in corruption than Israel. Her greater spiritual privileges made her guilt the greater (Eze 16:47, 51; Jer 3:11).
12.
(Eze 23:6, 23).
most gorgeously--literally, "to perfection."
GROTIUS translates,
"wearing a crown," or "chaplet," such as lovers wore in visiting their
mistresses.
13. one way--both alike forsaking God for heathen confidences.
14. vermilion--the peculiar color of the Chaldeans, as purple was of the Assyrians. In striking agreement with this verse is the fact that the Assyrian sculptures lately discovered have painted and colored bas-reliefs in red, blue, and black. The Jews (for instance Jehoiakim, Jer 22:14) copied these (compare Eze 8:10).
15. exceeding in dyed attire--rather, "in ample dyed turbans";
literally, "redundant with dyed turbans." The Assyrians delighted in
ample, flowing, and richly colored tunics, scarfs, girdles, and
head-dresses or turbans, varying in ornaments according to the rank.
Chaldea, . . . land of their nativity--between the Black and Caspian
Seas (see on
Isa 23:13).
princes--literally, a first-rate military class that fought by threes
in the chariots, one guiding the horses, the other two fighting.
16. sent messengers . . . into Chaldea-- (Eze 16:29). It was she that solicited the Chaldeans, not they her. Probably the occasion was when Judah sought to strengthen herself by a Chaldean alliance against a menaced attack by Egypt (compare 2Ki 23:29-35; 24:1-7). God made the object of their sinful desire the instrument of their punishment. Jehoiakim, probably by a stipulation of tribute, enlisted Nebuchadnezzar against Pharaoh, whose tributary he previously had been; failing to keep his stipulation, he brought on himself Nebuchadnezzar's vengeance.
17. alienated from them--namely, from the Chaldeans: turning again to the Egyptians (Eze 23:19), trying by their help to throw off her solemn engagements to Babylon (compare Jer 37:5, 7; 2Ki 24:7).
18. my mind was alienated from her--literally, "was broken off from her." Just retribution for "her mind being alienated (broken off) from the Chaldeans" (Eze 23:17), to whom she had sworn fealty (Eze 17:12-19). "Discovered" implies the open shamelessness of her apostasy.
19. Israel first "called" her lusts, practised when in Egypt, "to her (fond) remembrance," and then actually returned to them. Mark the danger of suffering the memory to dwell on the pleasure felt in past sins.
20. their paramours--that is, her paramours among them (the
Egyptians); she doted upon their persons as her paramours
(Eze 23:5, 12, 16).
flesh--the membrum virile (very large in the ass). Compare
Le 15:2,
Margin;
Eze 16:26.
issue of horses--the seminal issue. The horse was made by the Egyptians
the hieroglyphic for a lustful person.
21. calledst to remembrance--"didst repeat"
[MAURER].
in bruising--in suffering . . . to be bruised.
22. lovers . . . alienated-- (Eze 23:17). Illicit love, soon or late, ends in open hatred (2Sa 13:15). The Babylonians, the objects formerly of their God-forgetting love, but now, with characteristic fickleness, objects of their hatred, shall be made by God the instruments of their punishment.
23. Pekod, &c.--
(Jer 50:21).
Not a geographical name, but descriptive of Babylon. "Visitation,"
peculiarly the land of "judgment"; in a double sense:
actively, the inflicter of judgment on Judah; passively,
as about to be afterwards herself the object of judgment.
Shoa . . . Koa--"rich . . . noble"; descriptive of Babylon in her
prosperity, having all the world's wealth and dignity at her disposal.
MAURER suggests that, as descriptive appellatives are subjoined to the
proper name, "all the Assyrians" in the second hemistich of the verse
(as the verse ought to be divided at "Koa"), so Pekod, Shoa, and Koa
must be appellatives descriptive of "The Babylonians and . . .
Chaldeans" in the first hemistich; "Pekod" meaning "prefects";
Shoa . . . Koa, "rich . . . princely."
desirable young men--strong irony. Alluding to
Eze 23:12,
these "desirable young men" whom thou didst so "dote upon" for their
manly vigor of appearance, shall by that very vigor be the better able
to chastise thee.
24. with chariots--or, "with armaments"; so the Septuagint; "axes"
[MAURER]; or, joining it with "wagons,"
translate, "with scythe-armed wagons," or "chariots"
[GROTIUS].
wheels--The unusual height of these increased their formidable
appearance
(Eze 1:16-20).
their judgments--which awarded barbarously severe punishments
(Jer 52:9; 29:22).
25. take away thy nose . . . ears--Adulteresses were punished so among the Egyptians and Chaldeans. Oriental beauties wore ornaments in the ear and nose. How just the retribution, that the features most bejewelled should be mutilated! So, allegorically as to Judah, the spiritual adulteress.
26. strip . . . of . . . clothes--whereby she attracted her paramours (Eze 16:39).
27. Thus . . . make . . . lewdness to cease--The captivity has made the Jews ever since abhor idolatry, not only on their return from Babylon, but for the last eighteen centuries of their dispersion, as foretold (Ho 3:4).
28. (Eze 23:17, 18; 16:37).
29. take away . . . thy labour--that is, the fruits of thy labor.
leave thee naked--as captive females are treated.
31. her cup--of punishment (Ps 11:6; 75:8; Jer 25:15, &c.). Thy guilt and that of Israel being alike, your punishment shall be alike.
34. break . . . sherds--So greedily shalt thou suck out every drop like
one drinking to madness (the effect invariably ascribed to drinking
God's cup of wrath,
Jer 51:7;
Hab 2:16)
that thou shalt crunch the very shreds of it; that is, there shall be
no evil left which thou shalt not taste.
pluck off thine own breasts--enraged against them as the ministers to
thine adultery.
35. forgotten me--the root of all sin
(Jer 2:32; 13:25).
cast me behind thy back--
(1Ki 14:9;
Ne 9:26).
bear . . . thy lewdness--that is, its penal consequences
(Pr 1:31).
36-44. A summing up of the sins of the two sisters, especially those
of Judah.
wilt thou judge--Wilt thou (not) judge
(see on
Eze 20:4)?
38. the same day--On the very day that they had burned their children to Molech in the valley of Gehenna, they shamelessly and hypocritically presented themselves as worshippers in Jehovah's temple (Jer 7:9, 10).
40. messenger was sent--namely, by Judah
(Eze 23:16;
Isa 57:9).
paintedst . . . eyes--
(2Ki 9:30,
Margin;
Jer 4:30).
Black paint was spread on the eyelids of beauties to make the white of
the eye more attractive by the contrast, so Judah left no seductive art
untried.
41. bed--divan. While men reclined at table, women sat, as it seemed
indelicate for them to lie down
(Am 6:4)
[GROTIUS].
table--that is, the idolatrous altar.
mine incense--which I had given thee, and which thou oughtest to
have offered to Me
(Eze 16:18, 19;
Ho 2:8;
compare
Pr 7:17).
42. Sabeans--Not content with the princely, handsome Assyrians, the
sisters brought to themselves the rude robber hordes of Sabeans
(Job 1:15).
The Keri, or Margin, reads "drunkards."
upon their hands--upon the hands of the sisters, that is, they allured
Samaria and Judah to worship their gods.
43. Will they, &c.--Is it possible that paramours will desire any longer to commit whoredoms with so worn-out an old adulteress?
45. the righteous men--the Chaldeans; the executioners of God's righteous vengeance (Eze 16:38), not that they were "righteous" in themselves (Hab 1:3, 12, 13).
46. a company--properly, "a council of judges" passing sentence on a criminal [GROTIUS]. The "removal" and "spoiling" by the Chaldean army is the execution of the judicial sentence of God.
47. stones--the legal penalty of the adulteress
(Eze 16:40, 41;
Joh 8:5).
Answering to the stones hurled by the Babylonians from engines
in besieging Jerusalem.
houses . . . fire--fulfilled
(2Ch 36:17, 19).
48.
(Eze 23:27).
that all . . . may be taught not to do, &c.--
(De 13:11).
49. bear the sins of your idols--that is, the punishment of your
idolatry.
know that I am the Lord God--that is, know it to your cost . . . by
bitter suffering.
CHAPTER 24
Eze 24:1-27. VISION OF THE BOILING CALDRON, AND OF THE DEATH OF EZEKIEL'S WIFE.
1, 2. Ezekiel proves his divine mission by announcing the very day, ("this same day") of the beginning of the investment of the city by Nebuchadnezzar; "the ninth year," namely, of Jehoiachin's captivity, "the tenth day of the tenth month"; though he was three hundred miles away from Jerusalem among the captives at the Chebar (2Ki 25:1; Jer 39:1).
2. set himself--laid siege; "lay against."
3. pot--caldron. Alluding to the self-confident proverb used among the people, Eze 11:3 (see on Eze 11:3), "This city is the caldron and we be the flesh"; your proverb shall prove awfully true, but in a different sense from what you intend. So far from the city proving an iron, caldron-like defense from the fire, it shall be as a caldron set on the fire, and the people as so many pieces of meat subjected to boiling heat. See Jer 1:13.
4. pieces thereof--those which properly belong to it, as its
own.
every good piece . . . choice bones--that is, the most
distinguished of the people. The "choice bones" in the pot have
flesh adhering to them. The bones under the pot
(Eze 24:5)
are those having no flesh and used as fuel, answering to the poorest
who suffer first, and are put out of pain sooner than the rich who
endure what answers to the slower process of boiling.
5. burn . . . bones--rather, "pile the bones." Literally, "Let
there be a round pile of the bones."
therein--literally, "in the midst of it."
6. scum--not ordinary, but poisonous scum, that is, the people's
all-pervading wickedness.
bring it out piece by piece--"it," the contents of the pot; its flesh,
that is, "I will destroy the people of the city, not all at the same
time, but by a series of successive attacks." Not as
FAIRBAIRN, "on its
every piece let it (the poisonous scum) go forth."
let no lot fall upon it--that is, no lot, such as is sometimes cast,
to decide who are to be destroyed and who saved
(2Sa 8:2;
Joe 3:3;
Ob 11;
Na 3:10).
In former carryings away of captives, lots were cast to settle who were
to go, and who to stay, but now all alike are to be cast out without
distinction of rank, age, or sex.
7. upon the top of a rock--or, "the dry, bare, exposed rock," so as to be conspicuous to all. Blood poured on a rock is not so soon absorbed as blood poured on the earth. The law ordered the blood even of a beast or fowl to be "covered with the dust" (Le 17:13); but Jerusalem was so shameless as to be at no pains to cover up the blood of innocent men slain in her. Blood, as the consummation of all sin, presupposes every other form of guilt.
8. That it might cause--God purposely let her so shamelessly pour
the blood on the bare rock, "that it might" the more loudly and
openly cry for vengeance from on high; and that the connection between
the guilt and the punishment might be the more palpable. The blood of
Abel, though the ground received it, still cries to heaven for vengeance
(Ge 4:10, 11);
much more blood shamelessly exposed on the bare rock.
set her blood--She shall be paid back in kind
(Mt 7:2).
She openly shed blood, and her blood shall openly be shed.
9. the pile for fire--the hostile materials for the city's destruction.
10. spice it well--that the meat may be the more palatable, that is, I will make the foe delight in its destruction as much as one delights in well-seasoned, savory meat. GROTIUS, needlessly departing from the obvious sense, translates, "Let it be boiled down to a compound."
11. set it empty . . . that . . . brass . . . may burn, . . . that . . . scum . . . may be consumed--Even the consumption of the contents is not enough; the caldron itself which is infected by the poisonous scum must be destroyed, that is, the city itself must be destroyed, not merely the inhabitants, just as the very house infected with leprosy was to be destroyed (Le 14:34-45).
12. herself--rather, "she hath wearied Me out with lies"; or rather, "with vain labors" on My part to purify her without being obliged to have recourse to judgments (compare Isa 43:24; Mal 2:17) [MAURER]. However, English Version gives a good sense (compare Isa 47:13; 57:10).
13. lewdness--determined, deliberate wickedness; from a Hebrew root, "to purpose."
I have purged thee--that is, I have left nothing untried which would
tend towards purging thee, by sending prophets to invite thee to
repentance, by giving thee the law with all its promises, privileges,
and threats.
thou shalt not be purged . . . any more--that is, by My gracious
interpositions; thou shalt be left to thine own course to take its fatal
consequences.
14. go back--desist; relax [FAIRBAIRN].
15. Second part of the vision; announcement of the death of Ezekiel's wife, and prohibition of the usual signs of mourning.
16. desire of . . . eyes--his wife: representing the
sanctuary
(Eze 24:21)
in which the Jews so much gloried. The energy and subordination of
Ezekiel's whole life to his prophetic office is strikingly displayed in
this narrative of his wife's death. It is the only memorable event of
his personal history which he records, and this only in reference to
his soul-absorbing work. His natural tenderness is shown by that
graphic touch, "the desire of thine eyes." What amazing subjection,
then, of his individual feeling to his prophetic duty is manifested in
the simple statement
(Eze 24:18),
"So I spake . . . in the morning; and at even my wife died;
and I did in the morning as I was commanded."
stroke--a sudden visitation. The suddenness of it enhances the
self-control of Ezekiel in so entirely merging individual feeling, which
must have been especially acute under such trying circumstances, in the
higher claims of duty to God.
17. Forbear to cry--or, "Lament in silence"; not forbidding sorrow,
but the loud expression of it [GROTIUS].
no mourning--typical of the universality of the ruin of Jerusalem,
which would preclude mourning, such as is usual where calamity is but
partial. "The dead" is purposely put in the plural, as referring
ultimately to the dead who should perish at the taking of Jerusalem;
though the singular might have been expected, as Ezekiel's wife was
the immediate subject referred to: "make no mourning,"
such as is usual, "for the dead, and such as shall be hereafter in
Jerusalem"
(Jer 16:5-7).
tire of thine head--thy headdress [FAIRBAIRN]. JEROME explains, "Thou
shalt retain the hair which is usually cut in mourning." The fillet,
binding the hair about the temples like a chaplet, was laid aside at
such times. Uncovering the head was an ordinary sign of mourning in
priests; whereas others covered their heads in mourning
(2Sa 15:30).
The reason was, the priests had their headdress of fine twined linen
given them for ornament, and as a badge of office. The high priest, as
having on his head the holy anointing oil, was forbidden in any case
to lay aside his headdress. But the priests might do so in the case of
the death of the nearest relatives
(Le 21:2, 3, 10).
They then put on inferior attire, sprinkling also on their heads dust
and ashes (compare
Le 10:6, 7).
shoes upon thy feet--whereas mourners went "barefoot"
(2Sa 15:30).
cover not . . . lips--rather, the "upper lip," with the moustache
(Le 13:45;
Mic 3:7).
bread of men--the bread usually brought to mourners by friends in
token of sympathy. So the "cup of consolation" brought
(Jer 16:7).
"Of men" means such as is usually furnished by men. So
Isa 8:1,
"a man's pen";
Re 21:17,
"the measure of a man."
19. what these things are to us--The people perceive that Ezekiel's strange conduct has a symbolical meaning as to themselves; they ask, "What is that meaning?"
21. excellency of your strength--(compare
Am 6:8).
The object of your pride and confidence
(Jer 7:4, 10, 14).
desire of . . . eyes--
(Ps 27:4).
The antitype to Ezekiel's wife
(Eze 24:16).
pitieth--loveth, as pity is akin to love: "yearned over."
Profane--an appropriate word. They had profaned the temple with
idolatry; God, in just retribution, will profane it with the Chaldean
sword, that is, lay it in the dust, as Ezekiel's wife.
sons . . . daughters . . . left--the children left behind in Judea,
when the parents were carried away.
22. (Jer 16:6, 7). So general shall be the calamity, that all ordinary usages of mourning shall be suspended.
23. ye shall not mourn . . . but . . . pine away for your iniquities--The Jews' not mourning was to be not the result of insensibility, any more than Ezekiel's not mourning for his wife was not from want of feeling. They could not in their exile manifest publicly their lamentation, but they would privately "mourn one to another." Their "iniquities" would then be their chief sorrow ("pining away"), as feeling that these were the cause of their sufferings (compare Le 26:39; La 3:39). The fullest fulfilment is still future (Zec 12:10-14).
24. sign--a typical representative in his own person of what was to
befall them
(Isa 20:3).
when this cometh--alluding probably to their taunt, as if God's word
spoken by His prophets would never come to pass. "Where is the word of
the Lord? Let it come now"
(Jer 17:15).
When the prophecy is fulfilled, "ye shall know (to your cost) that I am
the Lord," who thereby show My power and fulfil My word spoken by My
prophet
(Joh 13:19; 14:29).
25, 26. "The day" referred to in these verses is the day of the overthrow of the temple, when the fugitive "escapes." But "that day," in Eze 24:27, is the day on which the fugitive brings the sad news to Ezekiel, at the Chebar. In the interval the prophet suspended his prophecies as to the Jews, as was foretold. Afterwards his mouth was "opened," and no more "dumb" (Eze 3:26, 27; compare Eze 24:27; 33:21, 22).
CHAPTER 25
Eze 25:1-17. APPROPRIATELY IN THE INTERVAL OF SILENCE AS TO THE JEWS IN THE EIGHT CHAPTERS, (TWENTY-FIFTH THROUGH THIRTY-SECOND) EZEKIEL DENOUNCES JUDGMENTS ON THE HEATHEN WORLD KINGDOMS.
If Israel was not spared, much less the heathen utterly corrupt, and having no mixture of truth, such as Israel in its worst state possessed (1Pe 4:17, 18). Their ruin was to be utter: Israel's but temporary (Jer 46:28). The nations denounced are seven, the perfect number; implying that God's judgments would visit, not merely these, but the whole round of the heathen foes of God. Babylon is excepted, because she is now for the present viewed as the rod of God's retributive justice, a view too much then lost sight of by those who fretted against her universal supremacy.
3.
(Jer 49:1).
when . . . profaned; . . . when . . .
desolate; . . . when . . . captivity--rather,
"for . . . for . . . for": the cause of the
insolent exultation of Ammon over Jerusalem. They triumphed especially
over the fall of the "sanctuary," as the triumph of heathenism over the
rival claims of Jehovah. In Jehoshaphat's time, when the eighty-third
Psalm was written
(Ps 83:4, 7, 8, 12,
"Ammon . . . holpen the children of Lot," who were,
therefore, the leaders of the unholy conspiracy, "Let us take to
ourselves the houses of God in possession"), we see the same
profane spirit. Now at last their wicked wish seems accomplished in the
fall of Jerusalem. Ammon, descended from Lot, held the region east of
Jordan, separated from the Amorites on the north by the river Jabbok,
and from Moab on the south by the Arnon. They were auxiliaries to
Babylon in the destruction of Jerusalem
(2Ki 24:2).
4. men of . . . east--literally, "children of the East," the nomad
tribes of Arabia-Deserta, east of the Jordan and the Dead Sea.
palaces--their nomadic encampments or folds, surrounded with mud
walls, are so called in irony. Where thy "palaces" once stood, there
shall their very different "palaces" stand. Fulfilled after the ravaging
of their region by Nebuchadnezzar, shortly after the destruction of
Jerusalem (compare
Eze 21:22;
Jer 49:1-28).
5. Rabbah--meaning "the Great," Ammon's metropolis. Under the Ptolemies
it was rebuilt under the name Philadelphia; the ruins are called Amman now, but there is no dwelling inhabited.
Ammonites--that is, the Ammonite region is to be a
"couching place for flocks," namely of the Arabs. The "camels," being
the chief beast of burden of the Chaldeans, are put first, as their
invasion was to prepare the Ammonite land for the Arab "flocks."
Instead of busy men, there shall be "still and couching flocks."
6, 7. "Because thou hast clapped thine hands," exulting over
the downfall of Jerusalem, "I also will stretch out Mine hand upon
thee" (to which
Eze 21:17
also may refer, "I will smite Mine hands together").
hands . . . feet . . . heart--with the whole inward feeling, and with
every outward indication. Stamping with the foot means
dancing for joy.
7. a spoil--so the Hebrew Margin, or Keri, for the text or Chetib, "meat" (so Eze 26:5; 34:28). Their goods were to be a "spoil to the foe"; their state was to be "cut off," so as to be no more a "people"; and they were as individuals, for the most part, to be "destroyed."
8. Moab, Seir, and Ammon were contiguous countries, stretching in one
line from Gilead on the north to the Red Sea. They therefore naturally
acted in concert, and in joint hostility to Judea.
Judah is like . . . all . . . heathen--The Jews fare no better than
others: it is of no use to them to serve Jehovah, who, they say, is the
only true God.
9, 10. open . . . from the cities--I will open up the side, or
border of Moab (metaphor from a man whose side is open to blows),
from the (direction of) the cities on his northwest border
beyond the Arnon, once assigned to Reuben
(Jos 13:15-21),
but now in the hands of their original owners; and the "men of the
east," the wandering Bedouin hordes, shall enter through these cities
into Moab and waste it. Moab accordingly was so wasted by them, that
long before the time of Christ it had melted away among the hordes of
the desert. For "cities," GROTIUS translates the
Hebrew as proper names, the Ar and Aroer, on the
Arnon. Hence the Hebrew for "cities," "Ar" is repeated twice
(Nu 21:28;
De 2:36;
Isa 15:1).
glory of the country--The region of Moab was richer than that of Ammon;
it answers to the modern Belka, the richest district in South Syria, and
the scene in consequence of many a contest among the Bedouins. Hence it
is called here a "glorious land" (literally, "a glory," or "ornament of
a land") [FAIRBAIRN]. Rather, "the glory of the country" is in
apposition with "cities" which immediately precedes, and the names of
which presently follow.
Beth-jeshimoth--meaning "the city of desolations"; perhaps so named
from some siege it sustained; it was towards the west.
Baal-meon--called also "Beth-meon"
(Jer 48:23),
and "Beth-baal-meon"
(Jos 13:17,
called so from the worship of Baal), and "Bajith," simply
(Isa 15:2).
Kiriathaim--"the double city." The strength of these cities engendered
"the pride" of Moab
(Isa 16:6).
10. with the Ammonites--FAIRBAIRN explains and translates, "upon the children of Ammon" (elliptically for, "I will open Moab to the men of the east, who, having overrun the children of Ammon, shall then fall on Moab"). MAURER, as English Version, "with the Ammonites," that is, Moab, "together with the land of Ammon," is to be thrown "open to the men of the east," to enter and take possession (Jer 49:1-39).
12. taking vengeance--literally, "revenging with revengement," that is, the most unrelenting vengeance. It was not simple hatred, but deep-brooding, implacable revenge. The grudge of Edom or Esau was originally for Jacob's robbing him of Isaac's blessing (Ge 25:23; 27:27-41). This purpose of revenge yielded to the extraordinary kindness of Jacob, through the blessing of Him with whom Jacob wrestled in prayer; but it was revived as an hereditary grudge in the posterity of Esau when they saw the younger branch rising to the pre-eminence which they thought of right belonged to themselves. More recently, for David's subjugation of Edom to Israel (2Sa 8:14). They therefore gave vent to their spite by joining the Chaldeans in destroying Jerusalem (Ps 137:7; La 4:22; Ob 10-14), and then intercepting and killing the fugitive Jews (Am 1:11) and occupying part of the Jewish land as far as Hebron.
13. Teman . . . they of Dedan--rather, "I will make it desolate from Teman (in the south) even to Dedan (in the northwest)" [GROTIUS], (Jer 49:8), that is, the whole country from north to south, stretching from the south of the Dead Sea to the Elanitic gulf of the Red Sea.
14. by . . . my people Israel--namely, by Judas Maccabeus. The Idumeans were finally, by compulsory circumcision, incorporated with the Jewish state by John Hyrcanus (see Isa 34:5; 63:1, &c.; 1 Maccabees 5:3). So complete was the amalgamation in Christ's time, that the Herods of Idumean origin, as Jews, ruled over the two races as one people. Thus the ancient prophecy was fulfilled (Ge 25:23), "The elder shall serve the younger."
15. (1Sa 13:1-14:52; 2Ch 28:18). The "old hatred" refers to their continual enmity to the covenant-people. They lay along Judea on the seacoast at the opposite side from Ammon and Moab. They were overthrown by Uzziah (2Ch 26:6), and by Hezekiah (2Ki 18:8). Nebuchadnezzar overran the cities on the seacoast on his way to Egypt after besieging Tyre (Jer 47:1-7). God will take vengeance on those who take the avenging of themselves out of His hands into their own (Ro 12:19-21; Jas 2:13).
16. cut off the Cherethims--There is a play on similar sounds in the
Hebrew, hichratti cherethim, "I will slay the slayers." The name may
have been given to a section of the Philistines from their warlike
disposition
(1Sa 30:14; 31:3).
They excelled in archery, whence David enrolled a bodyguard from them
(2Sa 8:18; 15:18; 20:7).
They sprang from Caphtor, identified by many with Crete, which was
famed for archery, and to which the name Cherethim seems akin.
Though in emigration, which mostly tended westwards, Crete seems more
likely to be colonized from Philistia than Philistia from Crete, a
section of Cretans may have settled at Cherethim in South
Philistia, while the Philistines, as a nation, may have come
originally from the east (compare
De 2:23;
Jer 47:4;
Am 9:7;
Zep 2:5).
In
Ge 10:14
the Philistines are made distinct from the Caphtorim, and are
said to come from the Casluhim; so that the Cherethim were but a
part of the Philistines, which
1Sa 30:14
confirms.
remnant of--that is, "on the seacoast" of the Mediterranean: those
left remaining after the former overthrows inflicted by Samuel,
David, Hezekiah, and Psammetichus of Egypt, father of Pharaoh-necho
(Jer 25:20).
17. know . . . vengeance--They shall know Me, not in mercy, but by My vengeance on them (Ps 9:16).
CHAPTER 26
Eze 26:1-21. THE JUDGMENT ON TYRE THROUGH NEBUCHADNEZZAR (TWENTY-SIXTH THROUGH TWENTY-EIGHTH CHAPTERS).
In the twenty-sixth chapter, Ezekiel sets forth:--(1) Tyre's sin; (2) its doom; (3) the instruments executing it; (4) the effects produced on other nations by her downfall. In the twenty-seventh chapter, a lamentation over the fall of such earthly splendor. In the twenty-eighth chapter, an elegy addressed to the king, on the humiliation of his sacrilegious pride. Ezekiel, in his prophecies as to the heathen, exhibits the dark side only; because he views them simply in their hostility to the people of God, who shall outlive them all. Isaiah (Isa 23:1-18), on the other hand, at the close of judgments, holds out the prospect of blessing, when Tyre should turn to the Lord.
1. The specification of the date, which had been omitted in the case
of the four preceding objects of judgment, marks the greater weight
attached to the fall of Tyre.
eleventh year--namely, after the carrying away of Jehoiachin, the year
of the fall of Jerusalem. The number of the month is, however, omitted,
and the day only given. As the month of the taking of Jerusalem was
regarded as one of particular note, namely, the fourth month, also
the fifth, on which it was actually destroyed
(Jer 52:6, 12, 13),
RABBI DAVID reasonably
supposes that Tyre uttered her taunt at the close of the fourth month,
as her nearness to Jerusalem enabled her to hear of its fall very soon,
and that Ezekiel met it with his threat against herself on "the first
day" of the fifth month.
2. Tyre--
(Jos 19:29;
2Sa 24:7),
literally, meaning "the rock-city," Zor; a name applying to the
island Tyre, called New Tyre, rather than Old Tyre on the
mainland. They were half a mile apart. "New Tyre," a century and
a half before the fall of Jerusalem, had successfully resisted
Shalmaneser of Assyria, for five years besieging it (MENANDER, from the Tyrian archives, quoted by JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 9.14. 2). It was the
stronger and more important of the two cities, and is the one chiefly,
though not exclusively, here meant. Tyre was originally a colony of
Zidon. Nebuchadnezzar's siege of it lasted thirteen years
(Eze 29:18;
Isa 23:1-18).
Though no profane author mentions his having succeeded in the siege,
JEROME states he read the fact in Assyrian
histories.
Aha!--exultation over a fallen rival
(Ps 35:21, 25).
she . . . that was the gates--that is, the single gate composed of two
folding doors. Hence the verb is singular. "Gates" were the place of
resort for traffic and public business: so here it expresses
a mart of commerce frequented by merchants. Tyre regards Jerusalem
not as an open enemy, for her territory being the narrow, long strip of
land north of Philistia, between Mount Lebanon and the sea, her interest
was to cultivate friendly relations with the Jews, on whom she was
dependent for corn
(Eze 27:17;
1Ki 5:9;
Ac 12:20).
But Jerusalem had intercepted some of the inland traffic which she
wished to monopolize to herself; so, in her intensely selfish
worldly-mindedness, she exulted heartlessly over the fall of Jerusalem
as her own gain. Hence she incurred the wrath of God as pre-eminently
the world's representative in its ambition, selfishness, and pride, in
defiance of the will of God
(Isa 23:9).
she is turned unto me--that is, the mart of corn, wine, oil,
balsam, &c., which she once was, is transferred to me. The caravans
from Palmyra, Petra, and the East will no longer be intercepted by the
market ("the gates") of Jerusalem, but will come to me.
3, 4. nations . . . as the sea . . . waves--In striking contrast to the
boasting of Tyre, God threatens to bring against her Babylon's army
levied from "many nations," even as the Mediterranean waves that dashed
against her rock-founded city on all sides.
scrape her dust . . . make her . . . top of . . . rock--or, "a bare
rock" [GROTIUS]. The soil which the Tyrians had brought together upon
the rock on which they built their city, I will scrape so clean away as
to leave no dust, but only the bare rock as it was. An awful contrast to
her expectation of filling herself with all the wealth of the East
now that Jerusalem has fallen.
5. in the midst of the sea--plainly referring to New Tyre (Eze 27:32).
6. her daughters . . . in the field--The surrounding villages, dependent on her in the open country, shall share the fate of the mother city.
7. from the north--the original locality of the Chaldeans; also, the
direction by which they entered Palestine, taking the route of Riblah
and Hamath on the Orontes, in preference to that across the desert
between Babylon and Judea.
king of kings--so called because of the many kings who owned allegiance
to him
(2Ki 18:28).
God had delegated to him the universal earth-empire which is His
(Da 2:47).
The Son of God alone has the right and title inherently, and shall
assume it when the world kings shall have been fully proved as abusers
of the trust
(1Ti 6:15;
Re 17:12-14; 19:15, 16).
Ezekiel's prophecy was not based on conjecture from the past, for
Shalmaneser, with all the might of the Assyrian empire, had failed in
his siege of Tyre. Yet Nebuchadnezzar was to succeed. JOSEPHUS tells us that Nebuchadnezzar began the siege in
the seventh year of Ithobal's reign, king of Tyre.
9. engines of war--literally, "an apparatus for striking." "He
shall apply the stroke of the battering-ram against thy walls."
HAVERNICK translates, "His enginery of destruction"; literally, the
"destruction (not merely the stroke) of his enginery."
axes--literally, "swords."
10. dust--So thick shall be the "dust" stirred up by the immense
numbers of "horses," that it shall "cover" the whole city as a cloud.
horses . . . chariots--As in
Eze 26:3-5,
New Tyre on the insular rock in the sea (compare
Isa 23:2, 4, 6)
is referred to; so here, in
Eze 26:9-11,
Old Tyre on the mainland. Both are included in the
prophecies under one name.
wheels--FAIRBAIRN thinks that here, and in
Eze 23:24,
as "the wheels" are distinct from the "chariots," some wheelwork for
riding on, or for the operations of the siege, are meant.
11. thy strong garrisons--literally, "the statutes of thy strength"; so the forts which are "monuments of thy strength." MAURER understands, in stricter agreement with the literal meaning, "the statues" or "obelisks erected in honor of the idols, the tutelary gods of Tyre," as Melecarte, answering to the Grecian Hercules, whose temple stood in Old Tyre (compare Jer 43:13, Margin).
12. lay thy stones . . . timber . . . in . . . midst of . . . water--referring to the insular New Tyre (Eze 26:3, 5; Eze 27:4, 25, 26). When its lofty buildings and towers fall, surrounded as it was with the sea which entered its double harbor and washed its ramparts, the "stones . . . timbers . . . and dust" appropriately are described as thrown down "in the midst of the water." Though Ezekiel attributes the capture of Tyre to Nebuchadnezzar (see on Eze 29:18), yet it does not follow that the final destruction of it described is attributed by him to the same monarch. The overthrow of Tyre by Nebuchadnezzar was the first link in the long chain of evil--the first deadly blow which prepared for, and was the earnest of, the final doom. The change in this verse from the individual conqueror "he," to the general "they," marks that what he did was not the whole, but only paved the way for others to complete the work begun by him. It was to be a progressive work until she was utterly destroyed. Thus the words here answer exactly to what Alexander did. With the "stones, timber," and rubbish of Old Tyre, he built a causeway in seven months to New Tyre on the island and so took it [CURTIUS, 4, 2], 322 B.C.
13. Instead of the joyousness of thy prosperity, a death-like silence shall reign (Isa 24:8; Jer 7:34).
14. He concludes in nearly the same words as he began
(Eze 26:4, 5).
built no more--fulfilled as to the mainland Tyre, under Nebuchadnezzar.
The insular Tyre recovered partly, after seventy years
(Isa 23:17, 18),
but again suffered under Alexander, then under Antigonus, then under
the Saracens at the beginning of the fourteenth century. Now its
harbors are choked with sand, precluding all hope of future
restoration, "not one entire house is left, and only a few fishermen
take shelter in the vaults" [MAUNDRELL]. So
accurately has God's word come to pass.
15-21. The impression which the overthrow of Tyre produced on other
maritime nations and upon her own colonies, for example, Utica,
Carthage, and Tartessus or Tarshish in Spain.
isles--maritime lands. Even mighty Carthage used to send a yearly
offering to the temple of Hercules at Tyre: and the mother city gave
high priests to her colonies. Hence the consternation at her fall felt
in the widely scattered dependencies with which she was so closely
connected by the ties of religion, as well as commercial intercourse.
shake--metaphorically: "be agitated"
(Jer 49:21).
16. come down from their thrones . . . upon the ground--"the throne
of the mourners"
(Job 2:13;
Jon 3:6).
princes of the sea--are the merchant rulers of Carthage and other
colonies of Tyre, who had made themselves rich and powerful by trading
on the sea
(Isa 23:8).
clothe . . . with trembling--Hebrew,
"tremblings." Compare
Eze 7:27,
"clothed with desolation";
Ps 132:18.
In a public calamity the garment was changed for a mourning garb.
17. inhabited of seafaring men--that is, which was frequented by
merchants of various sea-bordering lands
[GROTIUS].
FAIRBAIRN translates
with Peschito, "Thou inhabitant of the seas" (the Hebrew literal
meaning). Tyre rose as it were out of the seas as if she got thence
her inhabitants, being peopled so closely down to the waters. So Venice
was called "the bride of the sea."
strong in the sea--through her insular position.
cause their terror to be on all that haunt it--namely, the sea. The
Hebrew is rather, "they put their terror upon all her (the city's)
inhabitants," that is, they make the name of every Tyrian to be feared
[FAIRBAIRN].
18. thy departure-- Isa 23:6, 12 predicts that the Tyrians, in consequence of the siege, should pass over the Mediterranean to the lands bordering on it ("Chittim," "Tarshish," &c.). So Ezekiel here. Accordingly JEROME says that he read in Assyrian histories that, "when the Tyrians saw no hope of escaping, they fled to Carthage or some islands of the Ionian and Ægean Seas" [BISHOP NEWTON]. (See on Eze 29:18). GROTIUS explains "departure," that is, "in the day when hostages shall be carried away from thee to Babylon." The parallelism to "thy fall" makes me think "departure" must mean "thy end" in general, but with an included allusion to the "departure" of most of her people to her colonies at the fall of the city.
19. great waters--appropriate metaphor of the Babylonian hosts, which literally, by breaking down insular Tyre's ramparts, caused the sea to "cover" part of her.
20. the pit--Tyre's disappearance is compared to that of
the dead placed in their sepulchres and no more seen among the living
(compare
Eze 32:18, 23;
Isa 14:11, 15, 19).
I shall set glory in the land--In contrast to Tyre consigned to the
"pit" of death, I shall set glory (that is, My presence symbolized
by the Shekinah cloud, the antitype to which shall be Messiah, "the
glory as of the only-begotten of the Father,"
Joh 1:14;
Isa 4:2, 5;
Zec 6:13)
in Judah.
of the living--as opposed to Tyre consigned to the "pit" of death.
Judea is to be the land of national and spiritual life, being restored
after its captivity
(Eze 47:9).
FAIRBAIRN loses the antithesis by applying the
negative to both clauses, "and that thou be not set as a glory
in the land of the living."
21. terror--an example of judgment calculated to terrify all evildoers.
thou shall be no more--Not that there was to be no more a Tyre, but she
was no more to be the Tyre that once was: her glory and name were to
be no more. As, to Old Tyre, the prophecy was literally fulfilled, not a
vestige of it being left.
CHAPTER 27
Eze 27:1-36. TYRE'S FORMER GREATNESS, SUGGESTING A LAMENTATION OVER HER SAD DOWNFALL.
2. lamentation--a funeral dirge, eulogizing her great attributes, to make the contrast the greater between her former and her latter state.
3. situate at the entry of the sea--literally, plural, "entrances,"
that is, ports or havens; referring to the double port of Tyre, at which
vessels entered round the north and south ends of the island, so that
ships could find a ready entrance from whatever point the wind might
blow (compare
Eze 28:2).
merchant of . . . people for many isles--that is, a
mercantile emporium of the peoples of many seacoasts, both from the
east and from the west
(Isa 23:3),
"a mart of nations."
of perfect beauty--
(Eze 28:12).
4. Tyre, in consonance with her seagirt position, separated by a strait of half a mile from the mainland, is described as a ship built of the best material, and manned with the best mariners and skilful pilots, but at last wrecked in tempestuous seas (Eze 27:26).
5. Senir--the Amorite name of Hermon, or the southern height of
Anti-libanus
(De 3:9);
the Sidonian name was Sirion. "All thy . . . boards";
dual in Hebrew, "double-boards," namely, placed in a
double order on the two sides of which the ship consisted [VATABLUS]. Or, referring to the two sides or the two
ends, the prow and the stern, which every ship has [MUNSTER].
cedars--most suited for "masts," from their height and durability.
6. Bashan--celebrated for its oaks, as Lebanon was for its cedars.
the company of . . . Ashurites--the most skilful workmen summoned from
Assyria. Rather, as the Hebrew orthography requires, "They have made
thy (rowing) benches of ivory inlaid in the daughter of cedars"
[MAURER], or, the best boxwood.
FAIRBAIRN, with
BOCHART, reads the
Hebrew two words as one: "Thy plankwork (deck: instead of
'benches,' as the Hebrew is singular) they made ivory
with boxes." English Version, with
MAURER'S correction, is simpler.
Chittim--Cyprus and Macedonia, from which,
PLINY tells us, the best
boxwood came [GROTIUS].
7. broidered . . . sail--The ancients embroidered their sails often
at great expense, especially the Egyptians, whose linen, still preserved
in mummies, is of the finest texture.
Elishah--Greece; so called from Elis, a large and ancient
division of Peloponnesus. PAUSANIAS says that the
best of linen was produced in it, and in no other part of Greece;
called by HOMER, Alisium.
that which covered thee--thy awning.
8. Arvad--a small island and city near Phœnicia, now
Ruad: its inhabitants are still noted for seafaring habits.
thy wise men, O Tyrus . . . thy pilots--While the men
of Arvad, once thy equals
(Ge 10:18),
and the Sidonians, once thy superiors, were employed by thee in
subordinate positions as "mariners," thou madest thine own skilled men
alone to be commanders and pilots. Implying the political and
mercantile superiority of Tyre.
9. Gebal--a Phœnician city and region between Beirut and
Tripolis, famed for skilled workmen
(1Ki 5:18,
Margin;
Ps 83:7).
calkers--stoppers of chinks in a vessel: carrying on the metaphor
as to Tyre.
occupy thy merchandise--that is, to exchange merchandise with thee.
10. Persia . . . Phut--warriors from the extreme east and west.
Lud--the Lydians of Asia Minor, near the Meander, famed for archery
(Isa 66:19);
rather than those of Ethiopia, as the Lydians of Asia Minor form a kind
of intermediate step between Persia and Phut (the Libyans about Cyrene,
shielded warriors,
Jer 46:9,
descended from Phut, son of Ham).
hanged . . . shield . . . comeliness--Warriors hanged their
accoutrements on the walls for ornament. Divested of the metaphor, it
means that it was an honor to thee to have so many nations supplying
thee with hired soldiers.
11. Gammadims--rather, as the Tyrians were Syro-Phœnicians, from a Syriac root, meaning daring, "men of daring" [LUDOVICUS DE DIEU]. It is not likely the keeping of watch "in the towers" would have been entrusted to foreigners. Others take it from a Hebrew root, "a dagger," or short sword (Jud 3:16), "short-swordsmen."
12. Tarshish--Tartessus in Spain, a country famed for various
metals, which were exported to Tyre. Much of the "tin" probably was
conveyed by the Phœnicians from Cornwall to Tarshish.
traded in thy fairs--"did barter with thee"
[FAIRBAIRN]; from a root,
"to leave," something left in barter for something else.
13. Javan--the Ionians or Greeks: for the Ionians of Asia Minor
were the first Greeks with whom the Asiatics came in contact.
Tubal . . . Meshech--the Tibareni and Moschi, in the mountain region
between the Black and Caspian Seas.
persons of men--that is, as slaves. So the Turkish harems are supplied
with female slaves from Circassia and Georgia.
vessels--all kinds of articles. Superior weapons are still
manufactured in the Caucasus region.
14. Togarmah--Armenia: descended from Gomer
(Ge 10:3).
Their mountainous region south of the Caucasus was celebrated for
horses.
horsemen--rather, "riding-horses," as distinct from "horses" for
chariots [FAIRBAIRN].
15. Dedan--near the Persian Sea: thus an avenue to the commerce of
India. Not the Dedan in Arabia
(Eze 27:20),
as the names in the context here prove, but the Dedan sprung from Cush
[BOCHART],
(Ge 10:7).
merchandise of thine hand--that is, were dependent on thee for trade
[FAIRBAIRN]; came to buy the produce of thy hands
[GROTIUS].
a present--literally, "a reward in return"; a price paid for
merchandise.
horns of ivory--Ivory is so termed from its resemblance to horns. The Hebrew word for "ivory" means "tooth"; so that they cannot have
mistaken ivory as if coming from the horns of certain animals,
instead of from the tusks of the elephant.
16. "Syria was thy mart for the multitude," &c. For "Syria" the
Septuagint reads "Edom." But the Syrians were famed as merchants.
occupied--old English for "traded"; so in
Lu 19:13.
agate--Others translate, "ruby," "chalcedony," or "pearls."
17. Minnith . . . Pannag--names of places in Israel famed for good
wheat, wherewith Tyre was supplied
(1Ki 5:9, 11;
Ezr 3:7;
Ac 12:20);
Minnith was formerly an Ammonite city
(Jud 11:33).
"Pannag" is identified by GROTIUS with "Phenice,"
the Greek name for "Canaan." "They traded . . .
wheat," that is, they supplied thy market with wheat.
balm--or, "balsam."
18. Helbon--or Chalybon, in Syria, now Aleppo; famed for its wines; the Persian monarchs would drink no other.
19. Dan also--None of the other places enumerated commence with the
copula ("also"; Hebrew, ve). Moreover, the products specified,
"cassia, calamus," apply rather to places in Arabia. Therefore,
FAIRBAIRN translates, "Vedan"; perhaps the modern Aden, near the straits
of Bab-el-man-deb. GROTIUS refers it to Dana, mentioned by
PTOLEMY.
Javan--not the Greeks of Europe or Asia Minor, but of a Greek
settlement in Arabia.
going to and fro--rather, as Hebrew admits, "from Uzal." This
is added to "Javan," to mark which Javan is meant
(Ge 10:27).
The metropolis of Arabia Felix, or Yemen; called also Sanaa [BOCHART]. English Version gives a good sense,
thus: All peoples, whether near as the Israelite "Dan," or far as the
Greeks or "Javan," who were wont to "go to and fro" from their love of
traffic, frequented thy marts, bringing bright iron, &c., these
products not being necessarily represented as those of Dan or Javan.
bright iron--Yemen is still famed for its sword blades.
calamus--aromatic cane.
20. Dedan--in Arabia; distinct from the Dedan in
Eze 27:15
(see on
Eze 27:15).
Descended from Abraham and Keturah
(Ge 25:3)
[BOCHART].
precious clothes--splendid coverlets.
21. Arabia--the nomadic tribes of Arabia, among which Kedar was
pre-eminent.
occupied with thee--literally, "of thy hand," that is, they traded with thee for wares, the product of thy hand
(see on
Eze 27:15, 16).
22. Sheba . . . Raamah--in Arabia.
chief of . . . spices--that is, best spices
(De 33:15).
Obtained from India and conveyed in caravans to Tyre.
23. Haran--the dwelling-place of Abraham in Mesopotamia, after he
moved from Ur
(Ge 11:31).
Canneh--Calneh, an Assyrian city on the Tigris; the Ctesiphon of the
Greeks
(Ge 10:10).
Eden--probably a region in Babylonia (see
Ge 2:8).
Chilmad--a compound; the place designated by
PTOLEMY "Gaala of Media."
The Chaldee version interprets it of Media.
HENDERSON refers it to
Carmanda, which XENOPHON
describes as a large city beyond the Euphrates.
24. all sorts of things--Hebrew, "perfections"; exquisite articles
of finery [GROTIUS].
clothes--rather, "mantles" or "cloaks"; literally, "wrappings." For
"blue," HENDERSON translates, "purple."
chests of rich apparel, bound with cords--treasures or repositories of
damask stuffs, consisting of variegated threads woven together in
figures [HENDERSON].
cedar--The "chests" were made of cedar, in order to last the
longer; and it also keeps off decay and has a sweet odor.
25. sing of thee--personification; thy great merchant ships were palpable proofs of thy greatness. Others translate from a different Hebrew root, "were thy (mercantile) travellers." FAIRBAIRN translates, "Were thy walls." But the parallelism to "thou wast glorious" favors English Version, "sing of thee."
26. In contrast to her previous greatness, her downfall is here, by
a sudden transition, depicted under the image of a vessel foundering at
sea.
east wind--blowing from Lebanon, the most violent wind in the
Mediterranean
(Ps 48:7).
A Levanter, as it is called. Nebuchadnezzar is meant. The "sea" is the
war with him which the "rowers," or rulers of the state vessel, had
"brought" it into, to its ruin.
27. The detailed enumeration implies the utter completeness of
the ruin.
and in all thy company--"even with all thy collected multitude"
[HENDERSON].
28. The suburbs--the buildings of Tyre on the adjoining continent.
29. So on the downfall of spiritual Babylon
(Re 18:17,
&c.).
shall stand upon . . . land--being cast out of their ships in which
heretofore they prided themselves.
30. against thee--rather, "concerning thee."
31. utterly bald--literally, "bald with baldness." The Phœnician custom in mourning; which, as being connected with heathenish superstitions, was forbidden to Israel (De 14:1).
32. take up--lift up.
the destroyed--a destroyed one. Literally, (as opposed to its
previous bustle of thronging merchants and mariners,
Eze 27:27),
"one brought to death's stillness."
in . . . midst of . . . sea--insular Tyre.
33. out of the seas--brought on shore out of the ships.
filledst--didst supply plentifully with wares.
enrich . . . kings--with the custom dues levied on the wares.
34. In the time when . . . shall . . . shall--Now that thou art broken (wrecked) . . . thy merchandise . . . are fallen [MAURER].
35. isles--seacoasts.
36. hiss--with astonishment; as in 1Ki 9:8.
CHAPTER 28
Eze 28:1-26. PROPHETICAL DIRGE ON THE KING OF TYRE, AS THE CULMINATION AND EMBODIMENT OF THE SPIRIT OF CARNAL PRIDE AND SELF-SUFFICIENCY OF THE WHOLE STATE. THE FALL OF ZIDON, THE MOTHER CITY. THE RESTORATION OF ISRAEL IN CONTRAST WITH TYRE AND ZIDON.
2. Because, &c.--repeated resumptively in
Eze 28:6.
The apodosis begins at
Eze 28:7.
"The prince of Tyrus" at the time was Ithobal, or Ithbaal II; the name
implying his close connection with Baal, the Phœnician supreme
god, whose representative he was.
I am a god, I sit in . . . seat of God . . . the
seas--As God sits enthroned in His heavenly citadel exempt from all
injury, so I sit secure in my impregnable stronghold amidst the
stormiest elements, able to control them at will, and make them
subserve my interests. The language, though primarily here applied to
the king of Tyre, as similar language is to the king of Babylon
(Isa 14:13, 14),
yet has an ulterior and fuller accomplishment in Satan and his
embodiment in Antichrist
(Da 7:25; 11:36, 37;
2Th 2:4;
Re 13:6).
This feeling of superhuman elevation in the king of Tyre was fostered
by the fact that the island on which Tyre stood was called "the holy
island" [SANCONIATHON], being sacred to Hercules,
so much so that the colonies looked up to Tyre as the mother city of
their religion, as well as of their political existence. The
Hebrew for "God" is El, that is, "the Mighty One."
yet, &c.--keen irony.
set thine heart as . . . heart of God--Thou thinkest of thyself as if
thou wert God.
3. Ezekiel ironically alludes to Ithbaal's overweening opinion of
the wisdom of himself and the Tyrians, as though superior to that of
Daniel, whose fame had reached even Tyre as eclipsing the Chaldean
sages. "Thou art wiser," namely, in thine own opinion
(Zec 9:2).
no secret--namely, forgetting riches
(Eze 28:4).
that they can hide--that is, that can be hidden.
5. (Ps 62:10).
6. Because, &c.--resumptive of Eze 28:2.
7. therefore--apodosis.
strangers . . . terrible of the nations--the Chaldean foreigners
noted for their ferocity
(Eze 30:11; 31:12).
against the beauty of thy wisdom--that is, against thy beautiful
possessions acquired by thy wisdom on which thou pridest thyself
(Eze 28:3-5).
defile thy brightness--obscure the brightness of thy kingdom.
8. the pit--that is, the bottom of the sea; the image being that of
one conquered in a sea-fight.
the deaths--plural, as various kinds of deaths are meant
(Jer 16:4).
of them . . . slain--literally, "pierced through." Such deaths as
those pierced with many wounds die.
9. yet say--that is, still say; referring to
Eze 28:2.
but, &c.--But thy blasphemous boastings shall be falsified, and thou
shalt be shown to be but man, and not God, in the hand (at the mercy) of
Him.
10. deaths of . . . uncircumcised--that is, such a death as the uncircumcised or godless heathen deserve; and perhaps, also, such as the uncircumcised inflict, a great ignominy in the eyes of a Jew (1Sa 31:4); a fit retribution on him who had scoffed at the circumcised Jews.
12. sealest up the sum--literally, "Thou art the one sealing the sum of perfection." A thing is sealed when completed (Da 9:24). "The sum" implies the full measure of beauty, from a Hebrew root, "to measure." The normal man--one formed after accurate rule.
13. in Eden--The king of Tyre is represented in his former high state
(contrasted with his subsequent downfall), under images drawn from the
primeval man in Eden, the type of humanity in its most Godlike form.
garden of God--the model of ideal loveliness
(Eze 31:8, 9; 36:35).
In the person of the king of Tyre a new trial was made of humanity with
the greatest earthly advantages. But as in the case of Adam, the good
gifts of God were only turned into ministers to pride and self.
every precious stone--so in Eden
(Ge 2:12),
"gold, bdellium, and the onyx stone." So the king of Tyre was arrayed
in jewel-bespangled robes after the fashion of Oriental monarchs. The
nine precious stones here mentioned answer to nine of the twelve
(representing the twelve tribes) in the high priest's breastplate
(Ex 39:10-13;
Re 21:14, 19-21).
Of the four rows of three in each, the third is omitted in the
Hebrew, but is supplied in the Septuagint. In this, too,
there is an ulterior reference to Antichrist, who is blasphemously to
arrogate the office of our divine High Priest
(Zec 6:13).
tabrets--tambourines.
pipes--literally, "holes" in musical pipes or flutes.
created--that is, in the day of thine accession to the
throne. Tambourines and all the marks of joy were ready prepared
for thee ("in thee," that is, "with and for thee"). Thou hadst not,
like others, to work thy way to the throne through arduous struggles.
No sooner created than, like Adam, thou wast surrounded with the
gratifications of Eden. FAIRBAIRN, for "pipes,"
translates, "females" (having reference to
Ge 1:27),
that is, musician-women. MAURER explains the
Hebrew not as to music, but as to the setting and
mounting of the gems previously mentioned.
14. anointed cherub--GESENIUS translates from an Aramaic root,
"extended cherub." English Version, from a Hebrew root, is
better. "The cherub consecrated to the Lord by the anointing oil"
[FAIRBAIRN].
covereth--The imagery employed by Ezekiel as a priest is from
the Jewish temple, wherein the cherubim overshadowed the mercy seat, as
the king of Tyre, a demi-god in his own esteem, extended his protection
over the interests of Tyre. The cherub--an ideal compound of the
highest kinds of animal existence and the type of redeemed man in his
ultimate state of perfection--is made the image of the king of Tyre, as
if the beau ideal of humanity. The pretensions of Antichrist are the
ulterior reference, of whom the king of Tyre is a type. Compare "As God
. . . in the temple of God"
(2Th 2:4).
I have set thee--not thou set thyself
(Pr 8:16;
Ro 13:1).
upon the holy mountain of God--Zion, following up the image.
in . . . midst of . . . stones of fire--In ambitious imagination he
stood in the place of God, "under whose feet was, as it were, a pavement
of sapphire," while His glory was like "devouring fire"
(Ex 24:10, 17).
15. perfect--prosperous [GROTIUS], and
having no defect. So Hiram was a sample of the Tyrian monarch in his
early days of wisdom and prosperity
(1Ki 5:7,
&c.).
till iniquity . . . in thee--Like the primeval man thou hast fallen
by abusing God's gifts, and so hast provoked God's wrath.
16. filled the midst of thee--that is, they have filled
the midst of the city; he as the head of the state being involved in
the guilt of the state, which he did not check, but fostered.
cast thee as profane--no longer treated as sacred, but driven out of
the place of sanctity (see
Eze 28:14)
which thou hast occupied (compare
Ps 89:39).
17. brightness--thy splendor.
lay thee before kings--as an example of God's wrath against
presumptuous pride.
18. thy sanctuaries--that is, the holy places, attributed to the king
of Tyre in
Eze 28:14,
as his ideal position. As he "profaned" it, so God will "profane" him
(Eze 28:16).
fire . . . devour--As he abused his supposed elevation
amidst "the stones of fire"
(Eze 28:16),
so God will make His "fire" to "devour" him.
21. Zidon--famous for its fishery (from a root, Zud, "to fish"); and afterwards for its wide extended commerce; its artistic elegance was proverbial. Founded by Canaan's first-born (Ge 10:15). Tyre was an offshoot from it, so that it was involved in the same overthrow by the Chaldeans as Tyre. It is mentioned separately, because its idolatry (Ashtaroth, Tammuz, or Adonis) infected Israel more than that of Tyre did (Eze 8:14; Jud 10:6; 1Ki 11:33). The notorious Jezebel was a daughter of the Zidonian king.
22. shall be sanctified in her--when all nations shall see that I am the Holy Judge in the vengeance that I will inflict on her for sin.
24. no more . . . brier . . . unto . . . Israel--as the idolatrous
nations left in Canaan (among which Zidon is expressly specified in the
limits of Asher,
Jud 1:31)
had been
(Nu 33:55;
Jos 23:13).
"A brier," first ensnaring the Israelites in sin, and then being made
the instrument of punishing them.
pricking--literally, "causing bitterness." The same
Hebrew is translated "fretting"
(Le 13:51, 52).
The wicked are often called "thorns"
(2Sa 23:6).
25, 26. Fulfilled in part at the restoration from Babylon, when
Judaism, so far from being merged in heathenism, made inroads by
conversions on the idolatry of surrounding nations. The full
accomplishment is yet future, when Israel, under Christ, shall be the
center of Christendom; of which an earnest was given in the woman from
the coasts of Tyre and Sidon who sought the Saviour
(Mt 15:21, 24, 26-28;
compare
Isa 11:12).
dwell safely--
(Jer 23:6).
CHAPTER 29
Eze 29:1-21. THE JUDGMENT ON EGYPT BY NEBUCHADNEZZAR; THOUGH ABOUT TO BE RESTORED AFTER FORTY YEARS, IT WAS STILL TO BE IN A STATE OF DEGRADATION.
This is the last of the world kingdoms against which Ezekiel's prophecies are directed, and occupies the largest space in them, namely, the next four chapters. Though farther off than Tyre, it exercised a more powerful influence on Israel.
2. Pharaoh--a common name of all the kings of Egypt, meaning "the sun"; or, as others say, a "crocodile," which was worshipped in parts of Egypt (compare Eze 29:3). Hophra or Apries was on the throne at this time. His reign began prosperously. He took Gaza (Jer 47:1) and Zidon and made himself master of Phœnicia and Palestine, recovering much that was lost to Egypt by the victory of Nebuchadnezzar at Carchemish (2Ki 24:7; Jer 46:2), in the fourth year of Jehoiakim [WILKINSON, Ancient Egypt, 1.169]. So proudly secure because of his successes for twenty-five years did he feel, that he said not even a god could deprive him of his kingdom [HERODOTUS, 2.169]. Hence the appropriateness of the description of him in Eze 29:3. No mere human sagacity could have enabled Ezekiel to foresee Egypt's downfall in the height of its prosperity. There are four divisions of these prophecies; the first in the tenth year of Ezekiel's captivity; the last in the twelfth. Between the first and second comes one of much later date, not having been given till the twenty-seventh year (Eze 29:17; 30:19), but placed there as appropriate to the subject matter. Pharaoh-hophra, or Apries, was dethroned and strangled, and Amasis substituted as king, by Nebuchadnezzar (compare Jer 44:30). The Egyptian priests, from national vanity, made no mention to HERODOTUS of the Egyptian loss of territory in Syria through Nebuchadnezzar, of which JOSEPHUS tells us, but attributed the change in the succession from Apries to Amasis solely to the Egyptian soldiery. The civil war between the two rivals no doubt lasted several years, affording an opportunity to Nebuchadnezzar of interfering and of elevating the usurper Amasis, on condition of his becoming tributary to Babylon [WILKINSON]. Compare Jer 43:10-12, and see on Jer 43:13, for another view of the grounds of interference of Nebuchadnezzar.
3. dragon--Hebrew, tanim, any large aquatic animal, here the
crocodile, which on Roman coins is the emblem of Egypt.
lieth--restest proudly secure.
his rivers--the mouths, branches, and canals of the Nile, to which
Egypt owed its fertility.
4. hooks in thy jaws--
(Isa 37:29;
compare
Job 41:1, 2).
Amasis was the "hook." In the Assyrian sculptures prisoners are
represented with a hook in the underlip, and a cord from it held by the
king.
cause . . . fish . . . stick unto . . . scales--Pharaoh, presuming
on his power as if he were God
(Eze 29:3,
"I have made it"), wished to stand in the stead of God as defender of
the covenant-people, his motive being, not love to them, but rivalry
with Babylon. He raised the siege of Jerusalem, but it was only for a
time (compare
Eze 29:6;
Jer 37:5, 7-10);
ruin overtook not only them, but himself. As the fish that clung to
the horny scales of the crocodile, the lord of the Nile, when he was
caught, shared his fate, so the adherents of Pharaoh, lord of Egypt,
when he was overthrown by Amasis, should share his fate.
5. wilderness--captivity beyond thy kingdom. The expression is used
perhaps to imply retribution in kind. As Egypt pursued after Israel,
saying, "The wilderness hath shut them in"
(Ex 14:3),
so she herself shall be brought into a wilderness state.
open fields--literally, "face of the field."
not be brought together--As the crocodile is not, when caught,
restored to the river, so no remnant of thy routed army shall be
brought together, and rallied, after its defeat in the wilderness.
Pharaoh led an army against Cyrene in Africa, in support of Aricranes,
who had been stripped of his kingdom by the Cyrenians. The army
perished and Egypt rebelled against him
[JUNIUS]. But the reference is
mainly to the defeat by Nebuchadnezzar.
beasts . . . fowls--hostile and savage men.
6. staff of reed to . . . Israel--alluding to the reeds on the banks of the Nile, which broke if one leaned upon them (see on Eze 29:4; Isa 36:6). All Israel's dependence on Egypt proved hurtful instead of beneficial (Isa 30:1-5).
7. hand--or handle of the reed.
rend . . . shoulder--by the splinters on which the shoulder or arm
would fall, on the support failing the hand.
madest . . . loins . . . at a stand--that is, made them to be disabled.
MAURER somewhat similarly (referring to a kindred Arabic form),
"Thou hast stricken both their loins."
FAIRBAIRN, not so well, "Thou
lettest all their loins stand," that is, by themselves, bereft of the
support which they looked for from thee.
8. a sword--Nebuchadnezzar's army (Eze 29:19). Also Amasis and the Egyptian revolters who after Pharaoh-hophra's discomfiture in Cyrene dethroned and strangled him, having defeated him in a battle fought at Memphis [JUNIUS].
9. I am the Lord--in antithesis to the blasphemous boast repeated here from Eze 29:3, "The river is mine, and I have made it."
10. from the tower of Syene--GROTIUS translates, "from Migdol (a fortress near Pelusium on the north of Suez) to Syene (in the farthest south)"; that is, from one end of Egypt to the other. So "from Migdol to Syene," Eze 30:6, Margin. However, English Version rightly refers Syene to Seveneh, that is, Sebennytus, in the eastern delta of the Nile, the capital of the Lower Egyptian kings. The Sebennyte Pharaohs, with the help of the Canaanites, who, as shepherds or merchants, ranged the desert of Suez, extended their borders beyond the narrow province east of the delta, to which they had been confined by the Pharaohs of Upper Egypt. The defeated party, in derision, named the Sebennyte or Lower Egyptians foreigners and shepherd-kings (a shepherd being an abomination in Egypt, Ge 46:34). They were really a native dynasty. Thus, in English Version, "Ethiopia" in the extreme south is rightly contrasted with Sebennytus or Syene in the north.
11. forty years--answering to the forty years in which the Israelites, their former bondsmen, wandered in "the wilderness" (compare Note, see on Eze 29:5). JEROME remarks the number forty is one often connected with affliction and judgment. The rains of the flood in forty days brought destruction on the world. Moses, Elias, and the Saviour fasted forty days. The interval between Egypt's overthrow by Nebuchadnezzar and the deliverance by Cyrus, was about forty years. The ideal forty years' wilderness state of social and political degradation, rather than a literal non-passing of man or beast for that term, is mainly intended (so Eze 4:6; Isa 19:2, 11).
12. As Israel passed through a term of wilderness discipline (compare Eze 20:35, &c.), which was in its essential features to be repeated again, so it was to be with Egypt [FAIRBAIRN]. Some Egyptians were to be carried to Babylon, also many "scattered" in Arabia and Ethiopia through fear; but mainly the "scattering" was to be the dissipation of their power, even though the people still remained in their own land.
13. (Jer 46:26).
14. Pathros--the Thebaid, or Upper Egypt, which had been especially
harassed by Nebuchadnezzar
(Na 3:8, 10).
The oldest part of Egypt as to civilization and art. The Thebaid was
anciently called "Egypt" [ARISTOTLE]. Therefore it
is called the "land of the Egyptians' birth" (Margin, for
"habitation").
base kingdom--Under Amasis it was made dependent on Babylon; humbled
still more under Cambyses; and though somewhat raised under the
Ptolemies, never has it regained its ancient pre-eminence.
16. Egypt, when restored, shall be so circumscribed in power that it
shall be no longer an object of confidence to Israel, as formerly; for
example, as when, relying on it, Israel broke faith with Nebuchadnezzar
(Eze 17:13, 15, 16).
which bringeth their iniquity to remembrance, when they shall look
after them--rather, "while they (the Israelites) look to
(or, turn after) them"
[HENDERSON]. Israel's looking to Egypt, rather
than to God, causes their iniquity (unfaithfulness to the covenant) to
be remembered by God.
17. The departure from the chronological order occurs here only, among the prophecies as to foreign nations, in order to secure greater unity of subject.
18. every head . . . bald, . . . shoulder . . . peeled--with carrying
baskets of earth and stones for the siege works.
no wages . . . for the service--that is, in proportion to it and
the time and labor which he expended on the siege of Tyre. Not that he
actually failed in the siege
(JEROME expressly states, from Assyrian
histories, that Nebuchadnezzar succeeded); but, so much of the Tyrian
resources had been exhausted, or transported to her colonies in ships,
that little was left to compensate Nebuchadnezzar for his thirteen
year's siege.
19. multitude--not as
FAIRBAIRN, "store"; but, he shall take away a
multitude of captives out of Egypt. The success of Nebuchadnezzar is
implied in Tyre's receiving a king from Babylon, probably one of her
captives there, Merbal.
take her spoil . . . prey--literally, "spoil her spoil, prey her prey,"
that is, as she spoiled other nations, so shall she herself be a spoil
to Babylon.
20. because they wrought for me--the Chaldeans, fulfilling My will as to Tyre (compare Jer 25:9).
21. In the evil only, not in the good, was Egypt to be parallel to
Israel. The very downfall of Egypt will be the signal for the rise of
Israel, because of God's covenant with the latter.
I cause the horn of . . . Israel to bud--
(Ps 132:17).
I will cause its ancient glory to revive: an earnest of Israel's full
glory under Messiah, the son of David
(Lu 1:69).
Even in Babylon an earnest was given of this in Daniel
(Da 6:2)
and Jeconiah
(Jer 52:31).
I will give thee . . . opening of . . .
mouth--When thy predictions shall have come to pass, thy words
henceforth shall be more heeded (compare
Eze 24:27).
CHAPTER 30
Eze 30:1-26. CONTINUATION OF THE PROPHECIES AGAINST EGYPT.
Two distinct messages: (1) At Eze 30:1-19, a repetition of Eze 29:1-16, with fuller details of lifelike distinctness. The date is probably not long after that mentioned in Eze 29:17, on the eve of Nebuchadnezzar's march against Egypt after subjugating Tyre. (2) A vision relating directly to Pharaoh and the overthrow of his kingdom; communicated at an earlier date, the seventh of the first month of the eleventh year. Not a year after the date in Eze 29:1, and three months before the taking of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar.
2. Woe worth the day!--that is, Alas for the day!
3. the time of the heathen--namely, for taking vengeance on them. The judgment on Egypt is the beginning of a world-wide judgment on all the heathen enemies of God (Joe 1:15; 2:1, 2; 3:1-21; Ob 15).
4. pain--literally, "pangs with trembling as of a woman in childbirth."
5. the mingled people--the mercenary troops of Egypt from various
lands, mostly from the interior of Africa (compare
Eze 27:10;
Jer 25:20, 24; 46:9, 21).
Chub--the people named Kufa on the monuments
[HAVERNICK], a people
considerably north of Palestine
[WILKINSON]; Coba or Chobat, a
city of Mauritania [MAURER].
men of the land that is in league--too definite an expression to mean
merely, "men in league" with Egypt; rather, "sons of the land
of the covenant," that is, the Jews who migrated to Egypt and
carried Jeremiah with them
(Jer 42:1-44:30).
Even they shall not escape
(Jer 42:22; 44:14).
6. from the tower of Syene--(see on Eze 29:10).
7. in the midst of . . . countries . . . desolate--Egypt shall fare no better than they (Eze 29:10).
9. messengers . . . in ships to . . . Ethiopians--
(Isa 18:1, 2).
The cataracts interposing between them and Egypt should not save them.
Egyptians "fleeing from before Me" in My execution of judgment, as
"messengers" in "skiffs" ("vessels of bulrushes,"
Isa 18:2)
shall go up the Nile as far as navigable, to announce the advance of
the Chaldeans.
as in the day of Egypt--The day of Ethiopia's "pain" shall come
shortly, as Egypt's day came.
10. the multitude--the large population.
12. rivers--the artificial canals made from the Nile for irrigation. The drying up of these would cause scarcity of grain, and so prepare the way for the invaders (Isa 19:5-10).
13. Noph--Memphis, the capital of Middle Egypt, and the stronghold of
"idols." Though no record exists of Nebuchadnezzar's "destroying" these,
we know from HERODOTUS and others, that Cambyses took Pelusium, the key
of Egypt, by placing before his army dogs, cats, &c., all held sacred
in Egypt, so that no Egyptian would use any weapon against them. He slew
Apis, the sacred ox, and burnt other idols of Egypt.
no more a prince--referring to the anarchy that prevailed in the civil
wars between Apries and Amasis at the time of Nebuchadnezzar's invasion.
There shall no more be a prince of the land of Egypt, ruling the whole
country; or, no independent prince.
14. Pathros--Upper Egypt, with "No" or Thebes its capital (famed for its stupendous buildings, of which grand ruins remain), in antithesis to Zoan or Tanis, a chief city in Lower Egypt, within the Delta.
15. Sin--that is, Pelusium, the frontier fortress on the northeast, therefore called "the strength (that is, the key) of Egypt." It stands in antithesis to No or Thebes at the opposite end of Egypt; that is, I will afflict Egypt from one end to the other.
16. distresses daily--MAURER translates, "enemies during the day," that is, open enemies who do not wait for the covert of night to make their attacks (compare Jer 6:4; 15:8). However, the Hebrew, though rarely, is sometimes rendered (see Ps 13:2) as in English Version.
17. Aven--meaning "vanity" or "iniquity": applied, by a slight change
of the Hebrew name, to On or Heliopolis, in allusion to its idolatry.
Here stood the temple of the sun, whence it was called in Hebrew, Beth-shemesh
(Jer 43:13).
The Egyptian hieroglyphics call it, Re Athom, the sun, the
father of the gods, being impersonate in Athom or Adam,
the father of mankind.
Pi-beseth--that is, Bubastis, in Lower Egypt, near the Pelusiac branch
of the Nile: notorious for the worship of the goddess of the same name
(Coptic, Pasht), the granite stones of whose temple still attest its
former magnificence.
these cities--rather, as the Septuagint, "the women," namely,
of Aven and Pi-beseth, in antithesis to "the young men." So in
Eze 30:18,
"daughters shall go into captivity" [MAURER].
18. Tehaphnehes--called from the queen of Egypt mentioned in
1Ki 11:19.
The same as Daphne, near Pelusium, a royal residence of the Pharaohs
(Jer 43:7, 9).
Called Hanes
(Isa 30:4).
break . . . the yokes of Egypt--that is, the tyrannical supremacy
which she exercised over other nations. Compare "bands of their yoke"
(Eze 34:7).
a cloud--namely, of calamity.
20. Here begins the earlier vision, not long after that in the twenty-ninth chapter, about three months before the taking of Jerusalem, as to Pharaoh and his kingdom.
21. broken . . . arm of Pharaoh-- (Ps 37:17; Jer 48:25). Referring to the defeat which Pharaoh-hophra sustained from the Chaldeans, when trying to raise the siege of Jerusalem (Jer 37:5, 7); and previous to the deprivation of Pharaoh-necho of all his conquests from the river of Egypt to the Euphrates (2Ki 24:7; Jer 46:2); also to the Egyptian disaster in Cyrene.
22. arms--Not only the "one arm" broken already
(Eze 30:21)
was not to be healed, but the other two should be broken. Not a
corporal wound, but a breaking of the power of Pharaoh is
intended.
cause . . . sword to fall out of . . . hand--deprive him of the
resources of making war.
CHAPTER 31
Eze 31:1-18. THE OVERTHROW OF EGYPT ILLUSTRATED BY THAT OF ASSYRIA.
Not that Egypt was, like Assyria, utterly to cease to be, but it was, like Assyria, to lose its prominence in the empire of the world.
1. third month--two months later than the prophecy delivered in Eze 30:20.
2. Whom art thou like--The answer is, Thou art like the haughty king of Assyria; as he was overthrown by the Chaldeans, so shalt thou be by the same.
3. He illustrates the pride and the consequent overthrow of the
Assyrian, that Egypt may the better know what she must expect.
cedar in Lebanon--often eighty feet high, and the diameter of the
space covered by its boughs still greater: the symmetry perfect. Compare
the similar image
(Eze 17:3;
Da 4:20-22).
with a shadowing shroud--with an overshadowing thicket.
top . . . among . . . thick boughs--rather
[HENGSTENBERG], "among the
clouds." But English Version agrees better with the Hebrew. The
top, or topmost shoot, represents the king; the thick boughs,
the large resources of the empire.
4. waters . . . little rivers--the Tigris with its branches and "rivulets," or "conduits" for irrigation, the source of Assyria's fertility. "The deep" is the ever flowing water, never dry. Metaphorically, for Assyria's resources, as the "conduits" are her colonies.
5. when he shot forth--because of the abundant moisture which nourished him in shooting forth. But see Margin.
6. fowls . . . made . . . nests in . . . boughs--so Eze 17:23; Da 4:12. The gospel kingdom shall gather all under its covert, for their good and for the glory of God, which the world kingdoms did for evil and for self-aggrandizement (Mt 13:32).
8. cedars . . . could not hide him--could not outtop him. No other
king eclipsed him.
were not like--were not comparable to.
garden of God--As in the case of Tyre
(Eze 28:13),
the imagery, that is applied to the Assyrian king, is taken from Eden;
peculiarly appropriate, as Eden was watered by rivers that afterwards
watered Assyria
(Ge 2:10-14).
This cedar seemed to revive in itself all the glories of paradise, so
that no tree there outtopped it.
9. I . . . made him--It was all due to My free grace.
10. thou . . . he--The change of persons is because the language refers partly to the cedar, partly to the person signified by the cedar.
11. Here the literal supersedes the figurative.
shall surely deal with him--according to his own pleasure, and
according to the Assyrian's (Sardanapalus) desert. Nebuchadnezzar is
called "the mighty one" (El, a name of God), because he was God's
representative and instrument of judgment
(Da 2:37, 38).
12. from his shadow--under which they had formerly dwelt as their covert (Eze 31:6).
13. Birds and beasts shall insult over his fallen trunk.
14. trees by the waters--that is, that are plentifully supplied by
the waters: nations abounding in resources.
stand up in their height--that is, trust in their height:
stand upon it as their ground of confidence.
FAIRBAIRN points the
Hebrew differently, so as for "their trees," to translate,
"(And that none that drink water may stand) on themselves,
(because of their greatness)." But the usual reading is better, as Assyria and the
confederate states throughout are compared to strong trees. The clause,
"All that drink water," marks the ground of the trees' confidence "in
their height," namely, that they have ample sources of supply.
MAURER,
retaining the same Hebrew, translates, "that neither their
terebinth trees may stand up in their height, nor all (the other
trees) that drink water."
to . . . nether . . . earth . . .
pit--
(Eze 32:18;
Ps 82:7).
15. covered the deep--as mourners cover their heads in token of
mourning, "I made the deep that watered the cedar" to wrap itself in
mourning for him. The waters of the deep are the tributary peoples of
Assyria
(Re 17:15).
fainted--literally, were "faintness" (itself); more forcible than
the verb.
16. hell--Sheol or Hades, the unseen world: equivalent to, "I cast
him into oblivion" (compare
Isa 14:9-11).
shall be comforted--because so great a king as the Assyrian is brought
down to a level with them. It is a kind of consolation to the wretched
to have companions in misery.
17. his arm, that dwelt under his shadow--those who were the helpers or tool of his tyranny, and therefore enjoyed his protection (for example, Syria and her neighbors). These were sure to share her fate. Compare the same phrase as to the Jews living under the protection of their king (La 4:20); both alike "making flesh their arm, and in heart departing from the Lord" (Jer 17:5).
18. Application of the parabolic description of Assyria to the
parallel case of Egypt. "All that has been said of the Assyrian consider
as said to thyself. To whom art thou so like, as thou art to the
Assyrian? To none." The lesson on a gigantic scale of Eden-like
privileges abused to pride and sin by the Assyrian, as in the case of
the first man in Eden, ending in ruin, was to be repeated in Egypt's
case. For the unchangeable God governs the world on the same
unchangeable principles.
thou shall lie in . . . uncircumcised--As circumcision was an object
of mocking to thee, thou shall lie in the midst of the uncircumcised,
slain by their sword
[GROTIUS]. Retribution in kind
(Eze 28:10).
This is Pharaoh--Pharaoh's end shall be the same humiliating one as
I have depicted the Assyrian's to have been. "This" is demonstrative, as
if he were pointing with the finger to Pharaoh lying prostrate, a
spectacle to all, as on the shore of the Red Sea
(Ex 14:30, 31).
CHAPTER 32
Eze 32:1-32. TWO ELEGIES OVER PHARAOH, ONE DELIVERED ON THE FIRST DAY (Eze 32:1), THE OTHER ON THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF THE SAME MONTH, THE TWELFTH OF THE TWELFTH YEAR.
1. The twelfth year from the carrying away of Jehoiachin; Jerusalem was by this time overthrown, and Amasis was beginning his revolt against Pharaoh-hophra.
2. Pharaoh--"Phra" in Burmah, signifies the king, high priest, and
idol.
whale--rather, any monster of the waters; here, the crocodile of the
Nile. Pharaoh is as a lion on dry land, a crocodile in the waters; that
is, an object of terror everywhere.
camest forth with thy rivers--"breakest forth"
[FAIRBAIRN]. The
antithesis of "seas" and "rivers" favors
GROTIUS rendering, "Thou camest
forth from the sea into the rivers"; that is, from thy own empire
into other states. However, English Version is favored by the "thy":
thou camest forth with thy rivers (that is, with thy forces) and
with thy feet didst fall irrecoverably; so Israel, once desolate,
troubles the waters (that is, neighboring states).
3. with a company of many people--namely, the Chaldeans
(Eze 29:3, 4;
Ho 7:12).
my net--for they are My instrument.
4. leave thee upon the land--as a fish drawn out of the water loses all its strength, so Pharaoh (in Eze 32:3, compared to a water monster) shall be (Eze 29:5).
5. thy height--thy hugeness [FAIRBAIRN]. The great heap of corpses of thy forces, on which thou pridest thyself. "Height" may refer to mental elevation, as well as bodily [VATABLUS].
6. land wherein thou swimmest--Egypt: the land watered by the Nile, the the source of its fertility, wherein thou swimmest (carrying on the image of the crocodile, that is, wherein thou dost exercise thy wanton power at will). Irony. The land shall still afford seas to swim in, but they shall be seas of blood. Alluding to the plague (Ex 7:19; Re 8:8). HAVERNICK translates, "I will water the land with what flows from thee, even thy blood, reaching to the mountains": "with thy blood overflowing even to the mountains." Perhaps this is better.
7. put thee out--extinguish thy light (Job 18:5). Pharaoh is represented as a bright star, at the extinguishing of whose light in the political sky the whole heavenly host is shrouded in sympathetic darkness. Here, too, as in Eze 32:6, there is an allusion to the supernatural darkness sent formerly (Ex 10:21-23). The heavenly bodies are often made images of earthly dynasties (Isa 13:10; Mt 24:29).
9. thy destruction--that is, tidings of thy destruction (literally, "thy breakage") carried by captive and dispersed Egyptians "among the nations" [GROTIUS]; or, thy broken people, resembling one great fracture, the ruins of what they had been [FAIRBAIRN].
10. brandish my sword before them--literally, "in their faces," or sight.
13. (See on Eze 29:11). The picture is ideally true, not to be interpreted by the letter. The political ascendency of Egypt was to cease with the Chaldean conquest [FAIRBAIRN]. Henceforth Pharaoh must figuratively no longer trouble the waters by man or beast, that is, no longer was he to flood other peoples with his overwhelming forces.
14. make their waters deep--rather, "make . . . to subside";
literally, "sink" [FAIRBAIRN].
like oil--emblem of quietness. No longer shall they descend
violently on other countries as the overflowing Nile, but shall be still
and sluggish in political action.
16. As in Eze 19:14. This is a prophetical lamentation; yet so it shall come to pass [GROTIUS].
17. The second lamentation for Pharaoh. This funeral dirge in
imagination accompanies him to the unseen world. Egypt personified in
its political head is ideally represented as undergoing the change by
death to which man is liable. Expressing that Egypt's supremacy is no
more, a thing of the past, never to be again.
the month--the twelfth month
(Eze 32:1);
fourteen days after the former vision.
18. cast them down--that is, predict that they shall be cast
down (so
Jer 1:10).
The prophet's word was God's, and carried with it its own fulfilment.
daughters of . . . nations--that is, the nations with
their peoples. Egypt is to share the fate of other ancient nations
once famous, now consigned to oblivion: Elam
(Eze 32:24),
Meshech, &c.
(Eze 32:26),
Edom
(Eze 32:29),
Zidon
(Eze 32:30).
19. Whom dost thou pass in beauty?--Beautiful as thou art, thou art
not more so than other nations, which nevertheless have perished.
go down, &c.--to the nether world, where all "beauty" is speedily
marred.
20. she is delivered to the sword--namely, by God.
draw her--as if addressing her executioners: drag her forth to death.
21.
(Eze 31:16).
Ezekiel has before his eyes
Isa 14:9,
&c.
shall speak to him--with "him" join "with them that help him";
shall speak to him and his helpers with a taunting welcome, as now
one of themselves.
22. her . . . his--The abrupt change of gender is, because Ezekiel has in view at one time the kingdom (feminine), at another the monarch. "Asshur," or Assyria, is placed first in punishment, as being first in guilt.
23. in the sides of the pit--Sepulchres in the East were caves
hollowed out of the rock, and the bodies were laid in niches formed at
the sides. MAURER needlessly departs from the
ordinary meaning, and translates, "extremities" (compare
Isa 14:13, 15).
which caused terror--They, who alive were a terror to others, are
now, in the nether world, themselves a terrible object to behold.
24. Elam--placed next, as having been an auxiliary to Assyria. Its
territory lay in Persia. In Abraham's time an independent kingdom
(Ge 14:1).
Famous for its bowmen
(Isa 22:6).
borne their shame--the just retribution of their lawless pride.
Destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar
(Jer 49:34-38).
25. a bed--a sepulchral niche.
all . . . slain by . . . sword, &c.--
(Eze 32:21, 23, 24).
The very monotony of the phraseology gives to the dirge an
awe-inspiring effect.
26. Meshech, Tubal--northern nations: the Moschi and Tibareni, between the Black and Caspian Seas. HERODOTUS [3.94], mentions them as a subjugated people, tributaries to Darius Hystaspes (see Eze 27:13).
27. they shall not lie with the mighty--that is, they shall not have
separate tombs such as mighty conquerors have: but shall all be heaped
together in one pit, as is the case with the vanquished
[GROTIUS].
HAVERNICK reads it interrogatively, "Shall they not lie with the mighty
that are fallen?" But English Version is supported by the parallel
(Isa 14:18, 19),
to which Ezekiel refers, and which represents them as not lying
as mighty kings lie in a grave, but cast out of one, as a carcass
trodden under foot.
with . . . weapons of war--alluding to the custom of
burying warriors with their arms (1 Maccabees 13:29). Though honored by
the laying of "their swords under their heads," yet the punishment of
"their iniquities shall be upon their bones." Their swords shall thus
attest their shame, not their glory
(Mt 26:52),
being the instruments of their violence, the penalty of which they are
paying.
28. Yea, thou--Thou, too, Egypt, like them, shalt lie as one vanquished.
29. princes--Edom was not only governed by kings, but by subordinate
"princes" or "dukes"
(Ge 36:40).
with their might--notwithstanding their might, they shall be brought
down
(Isa 34:5, 10-17;
Jer 49:7, 13-18).
lie with the uncircumcised--Though Edom was circumcised, being
descended from Isaac, he shall lie with the uncircumcised; much more
shall Egypt, who had no hereditary right to circumcision.
30. princes of the north--Syria, which is still called by the Arabs the
north; or the Tyrians, north of Palestine, conquered by Nebuchadnezzar
(Eze 26:1-28:26),
[GROTIUS].
Zidonians--who shared the fate of Tyre
(Eze 28:21).
with their terror they are ashamed of their might--that is,
notwithstanding the terror which they inspired in their contemporaries.
"Might" is connected by MAURER thus, "Notwithstanding the terror which
resulted from their might."
31. comforted--with the melancholy satisfaction of not being alone, but of having other kingdoms companions in his downfall. This shall be his only comfort--a very poor one!
32. my terror--the Margin or Keri. The Hebrew text or Chetib is "his terror," which gives good sense (Eze 32:25, 30). "My terror" implies that God puts His terror on Pharaoh's multitude, as they put "their terror" on others, for example, under Pharaoh-necho on Judea. As "the land of the living" was the scene of "their terror," so it shall be God's; especially in Judea, He will display His glory to the terror of Israel's foes (Eze 26:20). In Israel's case the judgment is temporary, ending in their future restoration under Messiah. In the case of the world kingdoms which flourished for a time, they fall to rise no more.
CHAPTER 33
Eze 33:1-33. RENEWAL OF EZEKIEL'S COMMISSION, NOW THAT HE IS AGAIN TO ADDRESS HIS COUNTRYMEN, AND IN A NEW TONE.
Heretofore his functions had been chiefly threatening; from this point, after the evil had got to its worst in the overthrow of Jerusalem, the consolatory element preponderates.
2. to the children of thy people--whom he had been forbidden to
address from
Eze 24:26, 27,
till Jerusalem was overthrown, and the "escaped" came with tidings of
the judgment being completed. So now, in
Eze 33:21,
the tidings of the fact having arrived, he opens his heretofore closed
lips to the Jews. In the interval he had prophesied as to foreign
nations. The former part of the chapter, at
Eze 33:2-20,
seems to have been imparted to Ezekiel on the evening previous
(Eze 33:22),
being a preparation for the latter part
(Eze 33:23-33)
imparted after the tidings had come. This accounts for the first part
standing without intimation of the date, which was properly reserved
for the latter part, to which the former was the anticipatory
introduction [FAIRBAIRN].
watchman--
Eze 33:1-9
exhibit Ezekiel's office as a spiritual watchman; so in
Eze 3:16-21;
only here the duties of the earthly watchman (compare
2Sa 18:24, 25;
2Ki 9:17)
are detailed first, and then the application is made to the spiritual
watchman's duty (compare
Isa 21:6-10;
Ho 9:8;
Hab 2:1).
"A man of their coasts" is a man specially chosen for the office out
of their whole number. So
Jud 18:2,
"five men from their coasts"; also the Hebrew of
Ge 47:2;
implying the care needed in the choice of the watchman, the spiritual
as well as the temporal
(Ac 1:21, 22, 24-26;
1Ti 5:22).
3. the sword--invaders. An appropriate illustration at the time of the invasion of Judea by Nebuchadnezzar.
4. blood . . . upon his own head--metaphor from sacrificial victims, on the heads of which they used to lay their hands, praying that their guilt should be upon the victims.
6. his iniquity--his negligence in not maintaining constant watchfulness, as they who are in warfare ought to do. The thing signified here appears from under the image.
7. I have set thee a watchman--application of the image. Ezekiel's appointment to be a watchman spiritually is far more solemn, as it is derived from God, not from the people.
8. thou shalt surely die--by a violent death, the earnest of everlasting death; the qualification being supposed, "if thou dost not repent."
9. Blood had by this time been shed (Eze 33:21), but Ezekiel was clear.
10. be upon us--that is, their guilt remain on us.
pine away in them--if we suffer the penalty threatened for them in
Eze 24:23,
according to the law
(Le 26:39).
how should we . . . live?--as Thou dost promise in
Eze 33:5
(compare
Eze 37:11;
Isa 49:14).
11. To meet the Jews' cry of despair in Eze 33:10, Ezekiel here cheers them by the assurance that God has no pleasure in their death, but that they should repent and live (2Pe 3:9). A yearning tenderness manifests itself here, notwithstanding all their past sins; yet with it a holiness that abates nothing of its demands for the honor of God's authority. God's righteousness is vindicated as in Eze 3:18-21 and Eze 18:1-32, by the statement that each should be treated with the closest adaptation of God's justice to his particular case.
12. not fall . . . in the day that he turneth-- (2Ch 7:14; see Eze 3:20; 18:24).
15. give again that he had robbed--
(Lu 19:8).
statutes of life--in the obeying of which life is promised
(Le 18:5).
If the law has failed to give life to man, it has not been the fault of
the law, but of man's sinful inability to keep it
(Ro 7:10, 12;
Ga 3:21).
It becomes life-giving through Christ's righteous obedience to it
(2Co 3:6).
17. The way of the Lord--The Lord's way of dealing in His moral government.
21. twelfth year . . . tenth month--a year and a half after the capture of the city (Jer 39:2; 52:5, 6), in the eleventh year and fourth month. The one who escaped (as foretold, Eze 24:26) may have been so long on the road through fear of entering the enemy's country [HENDERSON]; or, the singular is used for the plural in a collective sense, "the escaped remnant." Compare similar phrases, "the escaped of Moab," Isa 15:9; "He that escapeth of them," Am 9:1. Naturally the reopening of the prophet's mouth for consolation would be deferred till the number of the escaped remnant was complete: the removal of such a large number would easily have occupied seventeen or eighteen months.
22. in the evening--(see on
Eze 33:2).
Thus the capture of Jerusalem was known to Ezekiel by revelation before
the messenger came.
my mouth . . . no more dumb--that is, to my
countrymen; as foretold
(Eze 24:27),
He spake
(Eze 33:2-20)
in the evening before the tidings came.
24. they that inhabit . . . wastes of . . .
Israel--marking the blindness of the fraction of Jews under
Gedaliah who, though dwelling amidst regions laid waste by the foe,
still cherished hopes of deliverance, and this without repentance.
Abraham was one . . . but we are many--If God gave the
land for an inheritance to Abraham, who was but one
(Isa 51:2),
much more it is given to us, who, though reduced, are still many. If
he, with 318 servants, was able to defend himself amid so many foes,
much more shall we, so much more numerous, retain our own. The grant of
the land was not for his sole use, but for his numerous posterity.
inherited the land--not actually possessed it
(Ac 7:5),
but had the right of dwelling and pasturing his flocks in it [GROTIUS]. The Jews boasted similarly of their Abrahamic
descent in
Mt 3:9
and Joh 8:39.
25. eat with the blood--in opposition to the law (Le 19:26; compare Ge 9:4). They did so as an idolatrous rite.
26. Ye stand upon your sword--Your dependence is, not on right and
equity, but on force and arms.
every one--Scarcely anyone refrains from adultery.
27. shall fall by the sword--The very object of their confidence
would be the instrument of their destruction. Thinking to "stand" by it,
by it they shall "fall." Just retribution! Some fell by the sword of
Ishmael; others by the Chaldeans in revenge for the murder of Gedaliah
(Jer 40:1-44:30).
caves--
(Jud 6:2;
1Sa 13:6).
In the hilly parts of Judea there were caves almost inaccessible, as
having only crooked and extremely narrow paths of ascent, with rock in
front stretching down into the valleys beneath perpendicularly [JOSEPHUS, Wars of the Jews, 1.16.4].
28. most desolate--
(Jer 4:27; 12:11).
none . . . pass through--from fear of wild beasts and pestilence
[GROTIUS].
30. Not only the remnant in Judea, but those at the Chebar, though
less flagrantly, betrayed the same unbelieving spirit.
talking against thee--Though going to the prophet to hear the word
of the Lord, they criticised, in an unfriendly spirit, his
peculiarities of manner and his enigmatical style
(Eze 20:49);
making these the excuse for their impenitence. Their talking was not
directly "against" Ezekiel, for they professed to like his
ministrations; but God's word speaks of things as they really are, not
as they appear.
by the walls--in the public haunts. In the East groups assemble under
the walls of their houses in winter for conversation.
in the doors--privately.
what is the word--Their motive was curiosity, seeking pastime and
gratification of the ear
(2Ti 4:3);
not reformation of the heart. Compare Johanan's consultation of
Jeremiah, to hear the word of the Lord without desiring to do it
(Jer 42:1-43:13).
31. as the people cometh--that is, in crowds, as disciples flock to
their teacher.
sit before thee--on lower seats at thy feet, according to the Jewish
custom of pupils
(De 33:3;
2Ki 4:38;
Lu 10:39;
Ac 22:3).
as my people--though they are not.
hear . . . not do--
(Mt 13:20, 21;
Jas 1:23, 24).
they show much love--literally, "make love," that is, act the part of
lovers. Profess love to the Lord
(Mt 7:21).
GESENIUS translates, according to Arabic
idiom, "They do the delights of God," that is, all that is agreeable to
God. Vulgate translates, "They turn thy words into a song of
their mouths."
heart goeth after . . . covetousness--the grand rival to the love of
God; therefore called "idolatry," and therefore associated with impure
carnal love, as both alike transfer the heart's affection from the
Creator to the creature
(Mt 13:22;
Eph 5:5;
1Ti 6:10).
32. very lovely song--literally, a "song of loves": a lover's song.
They praise thy eloquence, but care not for the subject of it as a real
and personal thing; just as many do in the modern church
[JEROME].
play well on an instrument--Hebrew singers accompanied the "voice"
with the harp.
33. when this cometh to pass--when My predictions are verified.
lo, it will come--rather, "lo it is come" (see
Eze 33:22).
know--experimentally, and to their cost.
CHAPTER 34
Eze 34:1-31. REPROOF OF THE FALSE SHEPHERDS; PROMISE OF THE TRUE AND GOOD SHEPHERD.
Having in the thirty-third chapter laid down repentance as the necessary preliminary to happier times for the people, He now promises the removal of the false shepherds as preparatory to the raising up of the Good Shepherd.
2. Jer 23:1 and Zec 11:17 similarly make the removal of the false shepherds the preliminary to the interposition of Messiah the Good Shepherd in behalf of His people Israel. The "shepherds" are not prophets or priests, but rulers who sought in their government their own selfish ends, not the good of the people ruled. The term was appropriate, as David, the first king and the type of the true David (Eze 34:23, 24), was taken from being a shepherd (2Sa 5:2; Ps 78:70, 71); and the office, like that of a shepherd for his flock, is to guard and provide for his people. The choice of a shepherd for the first king was therefore designed to suggest this thought, just as Jesus' selection of fishermen for apostles was designed to remind them of their spiritual office of catching men (compare Isa 44:28; Jer 2:8; 3:15; 10:21; 23:1, 2).
3. fat--or, by differently pointing the Hebrew, "milk"
[Septuagint]. Thus the repetition "fat" and "fed" is avoided: also
the eating of "fat" would not probably be put before the "killing" of
the sheep. The eating of sheep's or goats' milk as food
(De 32:14;
Pr 27:27)
was unobjectionable, had not these shepherds milked them too often, and
that without duly "feeding" them [BOCHART],
(Isa 56:11).
The rulers levied exorbitant tributes.
kill . . . fed--kill the rich by false accusation so as to get
possession of their property.
feed not . . . flock--take no care of the people
(Joh 10:12).
4. The diseased--rather, those weak from the effects of "disease,"
as "strengthened" (that is, with due nourishment) requires
[GROTIUS].
broken--that is, fractures from wounds inflicted by the wolf.
brought again . . . driven away--
(Ex 23:4).
Those "driven away" by the enemy into foreign lands through God's
judgments are meant
(Jer 23:3).
A spiritual reformation of the state by the rulers would have turned
away God's wrath, and "brought again" the exiles. The rulers are
censured as chiefly guilty (though the people, too, were
guilty), because they, who ought to have been foremost in checking the
evil, promoted it.
neither . . . sought . . . lost--Contrast the Good Shepherd's love
(Lu 15:4).
with force . . . ruled--
(Ex 1:13, 14).
With an Egyptian bondage. The very thing forbidden by the law they did
(Le 25:43;
compare
1Pe 5:3).
5. scattered, because . . . no shepherd--that is, none
worthy of the name, though there were some called shepherds
(1Ki 22:17;
Mt 9:36).
Compare
Mt 26:31,
where the sheep were scattered when the true Shepherd was smitten. God
calls them "My sheep"; for they were not, as the shepherds
treated them, their patrimony whereby to "feed themselves."
meat to all . . . beasts--They became a prey to the Syrians, Ammon,
Moab, and Assyria.
6. every high hill--the scene of their idolatries sanctioned by the
rulers.
search . . . seek--rather, "seek . . . search." The former is the
part of the superior rulers to inquire after: to search out is the
duty of the subordinate rulers
[JUNIUS].
10. I will require my flock-- (Heb 13:17), rather, "I require," &c., for God already had begun to do so, punishing Zedekiah and the other princes severely (Jer 52:10).
11. I . . . will . . . search--doing that which the so-called shepherds had failed to do, I being the rightful owner of the flock.
12. in the day that he is among--in the midst of (Hebrew) His
sheep that had been scattered. Referring to Messiah's second advent,
when He shall be "the glory in the midst of Israel"
(Zec 2:5).
in the cloudy . . . day--the day of the nation's calamity
(Joe 2:2).
13. And I will bring them out from the people, &c.-- (Eze 28:25; 36:24; 37:21, 22; Isa 65:9, 10; Jer 23:3).
14. good pasture--
(Ps 23:2).
high mountains of Israel--In
Eze 17:23; 20:40,
the phrase is "the mountain of the height of Israel" in the
singular number. The reason for the difference is: there
Ezekiel spoke of the central seat of the kingdom, Mount Zion, where the
people met for the worship of Jehovah; here he speaks of the
kingdom of Israel at large, all the parts of which are regarded as
possessing a moral elevation.
16. In contrast to the unfaithful shepherds
(Eze 34:4).
The several duties neglected by them I will faithfully
discharge.
fat . . . strong--that is, those rendered wanton by prosperity
(De 32:15;
Jer 5:28),
who use their strength to oppress the weak. Compare
Eze 34:20,
"the fat cattle"
(Isa 10:16).
The image is from fat cattle that wax refractory.
with judgment--that is, justice and equity, as contrasted with the
"force" and "cruelty" with which the unfaithful shepherds ruled the
flock
(Eze 34:4).
17. you, . . . my flock--passing from the rulers to the people.
cattle and cattle--rather, "sheep and sheep"; Margin, "small
cattle," or "flocks of lambs and kids," that is, I judge between one
class of citizens and another, so as to award what is right to each. He
then defines the class about to be punitively "judged," namely, "the
rams and he-goats," or "great he-goats" (compare
Isa 14:9,
Margin;
Zec 10:3;
Mt 25:32, 33).
They answer to "the fat and strong," as opposed to the "sick"
(Eze 34:16).
The rich and ungodly of the people are meant, who imitated the bad
rulers in oppressing their poorer brethren, as if it enhanced their own
joys to trample on others' rights
(Eze 34:18).
18, 19. Not content with appropriating to their own use the goods of
others, they from mere wantonness spoiled what they did not use, so as
to be of no use to the owners.
deep waters--that is, "limpid," as deep waters are generally clear.
GROTIUS explains the image as referring to the usuries with which the
rich ground the poor
(Eze 22:12;
Isa 24:2).
19. they eat--scantily.
they drink--sorrowfully.
20. fat . . . lean--the rich oppressors . . . the humble poor.
21. scattered them abroad--down to the time of the carrying away to Babylon [GROTIUS].
22. After the restoration from Babylon, the Jews were delivered in some degree from the oppression, not only of foreigners, but also of their own great people (Ne 5:1-19). The full and final fulfilment of this prophecy is future.
23. set up--that is, raise up by divine appointment; alluding to the
declaration of God to David, "I will set up thy seed after thee"
(2Sa 7:12);
and, "Yet have I set My king on My holy hill of Zion"
(Ps 2:6;
compare
Ac 2:30; 13:23).
one shepherd--literally, "a Shepherd, one": singularly and
pre-eminently one: the only one of His kind, to whom none is
comparable
(So 5:10).
The Lord Jesus refers to this prophecy
(Joh 10:14),
"I am THE Good Shepherd." Also "one" as uniting in
one the heretofore divided kingdoms of Israel and Judah, and also
"gathering together in one all things in Christ, both which are in
heaven and on earth"
(Eph 1:10);
thus healing worse breaches than that between Israel and Judah
(Col 1:20).
"God by Him reconciling all things unto Himself, whether things in
earth or in heaven."
David--the antitypical David, Messiah, of the seed of David, which
no other king after the captivity was: who was fully, what David was
only in a degree, "the man after God's own heart." Also, David means
beloved: Messiah was truly God's beloved Son
(Isa 42:1;
Mt 3:17).
Shepherd means King, rather than religious instructor; in this
pre-eminently He was the true David, who was the Shepherd King
(Lu 1:32, 33).
Messiah is called "David" in
Isa 55:3, 4;
Jer 30:9;
Ho 3:5.
24. my servant--implying fitness for ruling in the name of God, not pursuing a self-chosen course, as other kings, but acting as the faithful administrator of the will of God; Messiah realized fully this character (Ps 40:7, 8; Isa 42:1; 49:3, 6; 53:11; Php 2:7), which David typically and partially represented (Ac 13:36); so He is the fittest person to wield the world scepter, abused by all the world kings (Da 2:34, 35, 44, 45).
25. covenant of peace . . . evil beasts . . . to cease . . . dwell safely--The original promise of the law (Le 26:6) shall be realized for the first time fully under Messiah (Isa 11:6-9; 35:9; Ho 2:18).
26. them and the places round about my hill--The Jews, and Zion, God's hill (Ps 2:6), are to be sources of blessing, not merely to themselves, but to the surrounding heathen (Isa 19:24; 56:6, 7; 60:3; Mic 5:7; Zec 8:13). The literal fulfilment is, however, the primary one, though the spiritual also is designed. In correspondence with the settled reign of righteousness internally, all is to be prosperity externally, fertilizing showers (according to the promise of the ancient covenant, Le 26:4; Ps 68:9; Mal 3:10), and productive trees and lands (Eze 34:27). Thus shall they realize the image of Eze 34:14; namely, a flock richly pastured by God Himself.
27. served themselves of them--availed themselves of their services, as if the Jews were their slaves (Jer 22:13; 25:14; compare Ge 15:13; Ex 1:14).
28. dwell safely-- (Jer 23:6).
29. plant of renown--Messiah, the "Rod" and "Branch" (Isa 11:1), the "righteous Branch" (Jer 23:5), who shall obtain for them "renown." FAIRBAIRN less probably translates, "A plantation for a name," that is, a flourishing condition, represented as a garden (alluding to Eden, Ge 2:8-11, with its various trees, good for food and pleasant to the sight), the planting of the Lord (Isa 60:21; 61:3), and an object of "renown" among the heathen.
31. ye my flock . . . are men--not merely an explanation of the image, as JEROME represents. But as God had promised many things which mere "men" could not expect to realize, He shows that it is not from man's might their realization is to be looked for, but from GOD, who would perform them for His covenant-people, "His flock" [ROSENMULLER]. When we realize most our weakness and God's power and faithfulness to His covenant, we are in the fittest state for receiving His blessings.
CHAPTER 35
Eze 35:1-15. JUDGMENT ON EDOM.
Another feature of Israel's prosperity; those who exulted over Israel's humiliation, shall themselves be a "prey." Already stated in Eze 25:12-14; properly repeated here in full detail, as a commentary on Eze 34:28. The Israelites "shall be no more a prey"; but Edom, the type of their most bitter foes, shall be destroyed irrecoverably.
2. Mount Seir--that is, Idumea (Ge 36:9). Singled out as badly pre-eminent in its bitterness against God's people, to represent all their enemies everywhere and in all ages. So in Isa 34:5; 63:1-4, Edom, the region of the greatest enmity towards God's people, is the ideal scene of the final judgments of all God's foes. "Seir" means "shaggy," alluding to its rugged hills and forests.
3. most desolate--literally, "desolation and desolateness" (Jer 49:17, &c.). It is only in their national character of foes to God's people, that the Edomites are to be utterly destroyed. A remnant of Edom, as of the other heathen, is to be "called by the name of God" (Am 9:12).
5. perpetual hatred--
(Ps 137:7;
Am 1:11;
Ob 10-16).
Edom perpetuated the hereditary hatred derived from Esau against Jacob.
shed the blood of, &c.--The literal translation is better.
"Thou hast poured out the children of Israel"; namely, like water. So
Ps 22:14; 63:10,
Margin;
Jer 18:21.
Compare
2Sa 14:14.
by the force of the sword--literally, "by" or "upon the hands of the
sword"; the sword being personified as a devourer whose "hands" were the
instruments of destruction.
in the time that their iniquity had an end--that is, had its
consummation
(Eze 21:25, 29).
Edom consummated his guilt when he exulted over Jerusalem's downfall,
and helped the foe to destroy it
(Ps 137:7;
Ob 11).
6. I will prepare thee unto blood--I will expose thee to slaughter.
sith--old English for "seeing that" or "since."
thou hast not hated blood--The Hebrew order is, "thou
hast hated not--blood"; that is, thou couldst not bear to live without
bloodshed [GROTIUS]. There is a play on similar
sounds in the Hebrew; Edom resembling dam, the
Hebrew for "blood"; as "Edom" means "red," the transition to
"blood" is easy. Edom, akin to blood in name, so also in nature and
acts; "blood therefore shall pursue thee." The measure which Edom meted
to others should be meted to himself
(Ps 109:17;
Mt 7:2; 26:52).
7. cut off . . . him that passeth--that is, every passer to and fro; "the highways shall be unoccupied" (Eze 29:11; Jud 5:6).
9. shall not return--to their former state (Eze 16:55); shall not be restored. The Hebrew text (Chetib) reads, "shall not be inhabited" (compare Eze 26:20; Mal 1:3, 4).
10. So far from being allowed to enter on Israel's vacated inheritance,
as Edom hoped
(Eze 36:5;
Ps 83:4, 12;
Ob 13),
it shall be that he shall be deprived of his own; and whereas Israel's
humiliation was temporary, Edom's shall be perpetual.
Lord was there--
(Eze 48:35;
Ps 48:1, 3; 132:13, 14).
Jehovah claimed Judea as His own, even when the Chaldeans had
overthrown the state; they could not remove Him, as they did the idols
of heathen lands. The broken sentences express the excited feelings of
the prophet at Edom's wicked presumption. The transition from the "two
nations and two countries" to "it" marks that the two are regarded as
one whole. The last clause, "and Jehovah was there," bursts in, like a
flash of lightning, reproving the wicked presumption of Edom's
thought.
11. according to thine anger--
(Jas 2:13).
As thou in anger and envy hast injured them, so I will injure thee.
I will make myself known among them--namely, the Israelites. I will
manifest My favor to them, after I have punished thee.
12, 13. blasphemies . . . against . . . Israel . . . against me--God regards what is done against His people as done against Himself (Mt 25:45; Ac 9:2, 4, 5). Edom implied, if he did not express it, in his taunts against Israel, that God had not sufficient power to protect His people. A type of the spirit of all the foes of God and His people (1Sa 2:3; Re 13:6).
14. (Isa 65:13, 14). "The whole earth" refers to Judea and the nations that submit themselves to Judea's God; when these rejoice, the foes of God and His people, represented by Edom as a nation, shall be desolate. Things shall be completely reversed; Israel, that now for a time mourns, shall then rejoice and for ever. Edom, that now rejoices over fallen Israel, shall then, when elsewhere all is joy, mourn, and for ever (Isa 65:17-19; Mt 5:4; Lu 6:25). HAVERNICK loses this striking antithesis by translating, "According to the joy of the whole land (of Edom), so I will make thee desolate"; which would make Eze 35:15 a mere repetition of this.
15. (Ob 12, 15).
CHAPTER 36
Eze 36:1-38. ISRAEL AVENGED OF HER FOES, AND RESTORED, FIRST TO INWARD HOLINESS, THEN TO OUTWARD PROSPERITY.
The distinction between Israel and the heathen (as Edom) is: Israel has a covenant relation to God ensuring restoration after chastisement, so that the heathen's hope of getting possession of the elect people's inheritance must fail, and they themselves be made desolate (Eze 36:1-15). The reason for the chastisement of Israel was Israel's sin and profanation of God's name (Eze 36:16-21). God has good in store for Israel, for His own name's sake, to revive His people; first, by a spiritual renewal of their hearts, and, next, by an external restoration to prosperity (Eze 36:22-33). The result is that the heathen shall be impressed with the power and goodness of God manifested so palpably towards the restored people (Eze 36:34-38).
1, 2. mountains of Israel--in contrast to "Mount Seir" of the previous prophecy. They are here personified; Israel's elevation is moral, not merely physical, as Edom's. Her hills are "the everlasting hills" of Jacob's prophecy (Ge 49:26). "The enemy" (Edom, the singled-out representative of all God's foes), with a shout of exultation, "Aha!" had claimed, as the nearest kinsman of Israel (the brother of their father Esau), his vacated inheritance; as much as to say, the so-called "everlasting" inheritance of Israel and of the "hills," which typified the unmoved perpetuity of it (Ps 125:1, 2), has come to an end, in spite of the promise of God, and has become "ours" (compare De 32:13; 33:15).
3. Literally, "Because, even because."
swallowed you up--literally, "panted after" you, as a beast after its
prey; implying the greedy cupidity of Edom as to Israel's inheritance
(Ps 56:1, 2).
lips of talkers--literally, "lips of the tongue," that is, of the
slanderer, the man of tongue. Edom slandered Israel because of the
connection of the latter with Jehovah, as though He were unable to save
them.
De 28:37,
and Jer 24:9
had foretold Israel's reproach among the heathen
(Da 9:16).
4. Inanimate creatures are addressed, to imply that the creature
also, as it were, groans for deliverance from the bondage of corruption
into the glorious liberty of the children of God
(Ro 8:19-21)
[POLANUS]. The completeness of the renewed
blessedness of all parts of the land is implied.
derision--
(Ps 79:4).
5. to cast it out for a prey--that is, to take the land for a prey, its inhabitants being cast out. Or the land is compared to a prey cast forth to wild beasts. FAIRBAIRN needlessly alters the Hebrew pointing and translates, "that they may plunder its pasturage."
6. the shame of the heathen--namely, the shame with which the heathen cover you (Ps 123:3, 4).
7. lifted . . . mine hand--in token of an oath
(Eze 20:5;
Ge 14:22).
they shall bear their shame--a perpetual shame; whereas the "shame"
which Israel bore from these heathen was only for a time.
8. they are at hand to come--that is, the Israelites are soon about to return to their land. This proves that the primary reference of the prophecy is to the return from Babylon, which was "at hand," or comparatively near. But this only in part fulfilled the prediction, the full and final blessing in future, and the restoration from Babylon was an earnest of it.
10. wastes builded-- Isa 58:12; 61:4; Am 9:11, 12, 14, where, as here (Eze 34:23, 24), the names of David, Messiah's type, and Edom, Israel's foe, are introduced in connection with the coming restoration.
11. do better . . . than at your beginnings--as in the case of Job (Job 42:12). Whereas the heathen nations fall irrevocably, Israel shall be more than restored; its last estate shall exceed even its first.
12. to walk upon you--O mountains of Israel
(Eze 36:8)!
thee . . . thou--change from plural to singular: O hill of
Zion, singled out from the other mountains of Israel
(Eze 34:26);
or land.
thou shall no more . . . bereave them of men--Thou shalt no more
provoke God to bereave them of children (so the ellipsis ought to be
supplied, as Ezekiel probably alludes to
Jer 15:7,
"I will bereave them of children").
13. Thou land devourest up men--alluding to the words of the spies (Nu 13:32). The land personified is represented as doing that which was done in it. Like an unnatural mother it devoured, that is, it was the grave of its people; of the Canaanites, its former possessors, through mutual wars, and finally by the sword of Israel; and now, of the Jews, through internal and external ills; for example, wars, famine (to which Eze 36:30, "reproach of famine among the heathen," implies the allusion here is).
14. bereave--so the Keri, or Hebrew Margin reads, to correspond to "bereave" in Eze 36:13; but "cause to fall" or "stumble," in the Hebrew text or Chetib, being the more difficult reading, is the one least likely to come from a corrector; also, it forms a good transition to the next subject, namely, the moral cause of the people's calamities, namely, their falls, or stumblings through sin. The latter ceasing, the former also cease. So the same expression follows in Eze 36:15, "Neither shalt thou cause thy nations to fall any more."
17. removed woman-- (Le 15:19, &c.).
18, 19. The reason for their removal was their sin, which God's holiness could not let pass unpunished; just as a woman's legal uncleanness was the reason for her being separated from the congregation.
20. profaned my holy name, when they--the heathen
said to them--the Israelites.
These, &c.--The Israelites gave a handle of reproach to the heathen
against God, who would naturally say, These who take usury, oppress,
commit adultery, &c., and who, in such an abject plight, are "gone
forth" as exiles "out of His land," are specimens of what Jehovah can or
will effect, for His people, and show what kind of a God this so-called
holy, omnipotent, covenant-keeping God must be!
(Isa 52:5;
Ro 2:24).
21. I had pity for mine holy name--that is, I felt pity for it; God's own name, so dishonored, was the primary object of His pitying concern; then His people, secondarily, through His concern for it [FAIRBAIRN].
22. not . . . for your sakes--that is, not for any merit in you; for, on the contrary, on your part, there is everything to call down continued severity (compare De 9:5, 6). The sole and sure ground of hope was God's regard to "His own name," as the God of covenant grace (Ps 106:45), which He must vindicate from the dishonor brought on it by the Jews, before the heathen.
23. sanctify--vindicate and manifest as holy, in opposition to the
heathen reproaches of it brought on by the Jews' sins and their
punishment (see on
Eze 36:20).
sanctified in you--that is, in respect of you; I shall be regarded
in their eyes as the Holy One, and righteous in My dealings towards you
(Eze 20:41; 28:22).
24. Fulfilled primarily in the restoration from Babylon; ultimately to be so in the restoration "from all countries."
25. The external restoration must be preceded by an internal one. The change in their condition must not be superficial, but must be
based on a radical renewal of the heart. Then the heathen, understanding
from the regenerated lives of God's people how holy God is, would
perceive Israel's past troubles to have been only the necessary
vindications of His righteousness. Thus God's name would be "sanctified"
before the heathen, and God's people be prepared for outward blessings.
sprinkle . . . water--phraseology taken from the law; namely, the
water mixed with the ashes of a heifer sprinkled with a hyssop on the
unclean
(Nu 19:9-18);
the thing signified being the cleansing blood of Christ sprinkled on
the conscience and heart
(Heb 9:13, 14; 10:22;
compare
Jer 33:8;
Eph 5:26).
from all your idols--Literal idolatry has ceased among the Jews ever
since the captivity; so far, the prophecy has been already fulfilled;
but "cleansing from all their idols," for example, covetousness,
prejudices against Jesus of Nazareth, is yet future.
26. new heart--mind and will.
spirit--motive and principle of action.
stony heart--unimpressible in serious things; like the "stony ground"
(Mt 13:5, 20),
unfit for receiving the good seed so as to bring forth fruit.
heart of flesh--not "carnal" in opposition to "spiritual"; but
impressible and docile, fit for receiving the good seed. In
Eze 18:31
they are commanded, "Make you a new heart, and a new spirit."
Here God says, "A new heart will I give you, and a new spirit
will I put within you." Thus the responsibility of man, and the
sovereign grace of God, are shown to be coexistent. Man cannot make
himself a new heart unless God gives it
(Php 2:12, 13).
27. my spirit-- (Eze 11:19; Jer 32:39). The partial reformation at the return from Babylon (Ezr 10:6, &c.; Ne 8:1-9:38) was an earnest of the full renewal hereafter under Messiah.
28. ye . . . my people, . . . I . . . your God-- (Eze 11:20; Jer 30:22).
29. save . . . from all . . . uncleannesses--the province of Jesus,
according to the signification of His name
(Mt 1:21).
To be specially exercised in behalf of the Jews in the latter days
(Ro 11:26).
call for . . . corn--as a master "calls for" a servant; all the powers
and productions of nature are the servants of Jehovah
(Ps 105:16;
Mt 8:8, 9).
Compare as to the subordination of all the intermediate agents to the
Great First Cause, who will give "corn" and all good things to His
people,
Ho 2:21, 22;
Zec 8:12.
30. no more reproach of famine among the heathen--to which their taunt (Eze 36:13), "Thou land devourest up men," in part referred.
31. remember your . . . evil ways--with shame and loathing. The unexpected grace and love of God, manifested in Christ to Israel, shall melt the people into true repentance, which mere legal fear could not (Eze 16:61, 63; Ps 130:4; Zec 12:10; compare Jer 33:8, 9).
35. they shall say--The heathen, who once made Israel's desolation a
ground of reproach against the name of Jehovah Himself
(Eze 36:20, 21);
but now He so vindicates its sanctity
(Eze 36:22, 23)
that these same heathen are constrained to acknowledge Israel's more
than renewed blessedness to be God's own work, and a ground for
glorifying His name
(Eze 36:36).
Eden--as Tyre (the type of the world powers in general: so Assyria,
a cedar "in the garden of God, Eden,"
Eze 31:8, 9),
in original advantages, had been compared to "Eden, the garden of God"
(Eze 28:13),
from which she had fallen irrecoverably; so Israel, once desolate, is
to be as "the garden of Eden"
(Isa 51:3),
and is to be so unchangeably.
36. Lord . . . spoken . . . do it-- (Nu 23:19).
37. I will yet for this be inquired of--so as to grant it. On former
occasions He had refused to be inquired of by Israel because the
inquirers were not in a fit condition of mind to receive a blessing
(Eze 14:3; 20:3).
But hereafter, as in the restoration from Babylon
(Ne 8:1-9:38;
Da 9:3-20, 21, 23),
God will prepare His people's hearts
(Eze 36:26)
to pray aright for the blessings which He is about to give
(Ps 102:13-17, 20;
Zec 12:10-14; 13:1).
like a flock--resuming the image
(Eze 34:23, 31).
38. As the holy flock--the great flock of choice animals for sacrifice, brought up to Jerusalem at the three great yearly festivals, the passover, pentecost, and feast of the tabernacles.
CHAPTER 37
Eze 37:1-28. THE VISION OF DRY BONES REVIVIFIED, SYMBOLIZING ISRAEL'S DEATH AND RESURRECTION.
Three stages in Israel's revival present themselves to the prophet's eye. (1) The new awakening of the people, the resurrection of the dead (Eze 37:1-14). (2) The reunion of the formerly hostile members of the community, whose contentions had affected the whole (Eze 37:15-28). (3) The community thus restored is strong enough to withstand the assault of Gog, &c. (Eze 38:1-39:29) [EWALD].
1. carried . . . in the spirit--The matters transacted, therefore,
were not literal, but in vision.
the valley--probably that by the Chebar
(Eze 3:22).
The valley represents Mesopotamia, the scene of Israel's sojourn in her
state of national deadness.
2. dry--bleached by long exposure to the atmosphere.
3. can these bones live? . . . thou knowest--implying that, humanly speaking, they could not; but faith leaves the question of possibility to rest with God, with whom nothing is impossible (De 32:39). An image of Christian faith which believes in the coming general resurrection of the dead, in spite of all appearances against it, because God has said it (Joh 5:21; Ro 4:17; 2Co 1:9).
4. Prophesy--Proclaim God's quickening word to them. On account of this innate power of the divine word to effect its end, prophets are said to do that which they prophesy as about to be done (Jer 1:10).
5. I . . . cause breath to enter into you--So
Isa 26:19,
containing the same vision, refers primarily to Israel's
restoration. Compare as to God's renovation of the earth and all its
creatures hereafter by His breath,
Ps 104:30.
ye shall live--come to life again.
6. ye shall know that I am the Lord--by the actual proof of My divinity which I will give in reviving Israel.
7. noise--of the bones when coming in mutual collision. Perhaps
referring to the decree of Cyrus, or the noise of the Jews' exultation
at their deliverance and return.
bones came together--literally, "ye bones came together"; as in
Jer 49:11
(Hebrew), "ye widows of thine shall trust in Me." The
second person puts the scene vividly before one's eyes, for the whole
resurrection scene is a prophecy in action to render more
palpably to the people the prophecy in word
(Eze 37:21).
8. So far, they were only cohering in order as unsightly skeletons. The next step, that of covering them successively with sinews, skin, and flesh, gives them beauty; but still "no breath" of life in them. This may imply that Israel hereafter, as at the restoration from Babylon was the case in part, shall return to Judea unconverted at first (Zec 13:8, 9). Spiritually: a man may assume all the semblances of spiritual life, yet have none, and so be dead before God.
9. wind--rather, the spirit of life or life-breath (Margin). For it is distinct from "the four winds" from which
it is summoned.
from the four winds--implying that Israel is to be gathered from the
four quarters of the earth
(Isa 43:5, 6;
Jer 31:8),
even as they were "scattered into all the winds"
(Eze 5:10; 12:14; 17:21;
compare
Re 7:1, 4).
10. Such honor God gives to the divine word, even in the mouth of a man. How much more when in the mouth of the Son of God! (Joh 5:25-29). Though this chapter does not directly prove the resurrection of the dead, it does so indirectly; for it takes for granted the future fact as one recognized by believing Jews, and so made the image of their national restoration (so Isa 25:8; 26:19; Da 12:2; Ho 6:2; 13:14; compare Note, see on Eze 37:12).
11. Our bones are dried--
(Ps 141:7),
explained by "our hope is lost"
(Isa 49:14);
our national state is as hopeless of resuscitation, as marrowless bones
are of reanimation.
cut off for our parts--that is, so far as we are concerned. There is
nothing in us to give hope, like a withered branch "cut off" from a
tree, or a limb from the body.
12. my people--in antithesis to "for our parts"
(Eze 37:11).
The hope that is utterly gone, if looking at themselves, is sure
for them in God, because He regards them as His people.
Their covenant relation to God ensures His not letting death
permanently reign over them. Christ makes the same principle the ground
on which the literal resurrection rests. God had said, "I am the God of
Abraham," &c.; God, by taking the patriarchs as His, undertook
to do for them all that Omnipotence can perform: He, being the ever
living God, is necessarily the God of, not dead, but living persons,
that is, of those whose bodies His covenant love binds Him to raise
again. He can--and because He can--He will--He must [FAIRBAIRN]. He calls them "My people" when
receiving them into favor; but "thy people," in addressing His
servant, as if He would put them away from Him
(Eze 13:17; 33:2;
Ex 32:7).
out of your graves--out of your politically dead state, primarily in
Babylon, finally hereafter in all lands (compare
Eze 6:8;
Ho 13:14).
The Jews regarded the lands of their captivity and dispersion as their
"graves"; their restoration was to be as "life from the dead"
(Ro 11:15).
Before, the bones were in the open plain
(Eze 37:1, 2);
now, in the graves, that is, some of the Jews were in the graves of
actual captivity, others at large but dispersed. Both alike were
nationally dead.
16. stick--alluding to
Nu 17:2,
the tribal rod. The union of the two rods was a prophecy in action of
the brotherly union which is to reunite the ten tribes and Judah. As
their severance under Jeroboam was fraught with the greatest evil to
the covenant-people, so the first result of both being joined by the
spirit of life to God is that they become joined to one another under
the one covenant King, Messiah-David.
Judah, and . . . children of Israel his companions--that is, Judah
and, besides Benjamin and Levi, those who had joined themselves to him
of Ephraim, Manasseh, Simeon, Asher, Zebulun, Issachar, as having the
temple and lawful priesthood in his borders
(2Ch 11:12, 13, 16; 15:9; 30:11, 18).
The latter became identified with Judah after the carrying away of the
ten tribes, and returned with Judah from Babylon, and so shall be
associated with that tribe at the future restoration.
For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim--Ephraim's posterity took the lead,
not only of the other descendants of Joseph (compare
Eze 37:19),
but of the ten tribes of Israel. For four hundred years, during the
period of the judges, with Manasseh and Benjamin, its dependent tribes,
it had formerly taken the lead: Shiloh was its religious capital;
Shechem, its civil capital. God had transferred the birthright from
Reuben (for dishonoring his father's bed) to Joseph, whose
representative, Ephraim, though the younger, was made
(Ge 48:19;
1Ch 5:1).
From its pre-eminence "Israel" is attached to it as "companions." The
"all" in this case, not in that of Judah, which has only attached as
"companions" "the children of Israel" (that is, some of them, namely,
those who followed the fortunes of Judah), implies that the bulk
of the ten tribes did not return at the restoration from Babylon, but
are distinct from Judah, until the coming union with it at the
restoration.
18. God does not explain the symbolical prophecy until the Jews have been stimulated by the type to consult the prophet.
19. The union effected at the restoration from Babylon embraced but
comparatively few of Israel; a future complete fulfilment must therefore
be looked for.
stick of Joseph . . . in the hand of Ephraim--Ephraim, of the
descendants of Joseph, had exercised the rule among the ten tribes: that
rule, symbolized by the "stick," was now to be withdrawn from him, and
to be made one with the other, Judah's rule, in God's hand.
them--the "stick of Joseph," would strictly require "it"; but
Ezekiel expresses the sense, namely, the ten tribes who were subject to
it.
with him--that is, Judah; or "it," that is, the stick of Judah.
22. one nation--
(Isa 11:13;
Jer 3:18;
Ho 1:11).
one king--not Zerubbabel, who was not a king either in fact or name,
and who ruled over but a few Jews, and that only for a few years;
whereas the King here reigns for ever. MESSIAH
is meant
(Eze 34:23, 24).
The union of Judah and Israel under King Messiah symbolizes the union
of Jews and Gentiles under Him, partly now, perfectly hereafter
(Eze 37:24;
Joh 10:16).
23.
(Eze 36:25).
out of . . . their dwelling-places--
(Eze 36:28, 33).
I will remove them from the scene of their idolatries to dwell in their
own land, and to serve idols no more.
24. David--Messiah (See on Eze 34:23, 24).
25. for ever-- (Isa 60:21; Joe 3:20; Am 9:15).
26. covenant of peace--better than the old legal covenant, because
an unchangeable covenant of grace
(Eze 34:25;
Isa 55:3;
Jer 32:40).
I will place them--set them in an established position; no longer
unsettled as heretofore.
my sanctuary--the temple of God; spiritual in the heart of all true
followers of Messiah
(2Co 6:16);
and, in some literal sense, in the restored Israel
(Eze 40:1-44:31).
27. My tabernacle . . . with them--as foretold (Ge 9:27); Joh 1:14, "The Word . . . dwelt among us" (literally, "tabernacled"); first, in humiliation; hereafter, in manifested glory (Re 21:3).
28.
(Eze 36:23).
sanctify Israel--set it apart as holy unto Myself and inviolable
(Ex 19:5, 6).
CHAPTER 38
Eze 38:1-23. THE ASSAULT OF GOG, AND GOD'S JUDGMENT ON HIM.
The objections to a literal interpretation of the prophecy are--(1) The ideal nature of the name Gog, which is the root of Magog, the only kindred name found in Scripture or history. (2) The nations congregated are selected from places most distant from Israel, and from one another, and therefore most unlikely to act in concert (Persians and Libyans, &c.). (3) The whole spoil of Israel could not have given a handful to a tithe of their number, or maintained the myriads of invaders a single day (Eze 38:12, 13). (4) The wood of their invaders' weapons was to serve for fuel to Israel for seven years! And all Israel were to take seven months in burying the dead! Supposing a million of Israelites to bury each two corpses a day, the aggregate buried in the hundred eighty working days of the seven months would be three hundred sixty millions of corpses! Then the pestilential vapors from such masses of victims before they were all buried! What Israelite could live in such an atmosphere? (5) The scene of the Lord's controversy here is different from that in Isa 34:6, Edom, which creates a discrepancy. (But probably a different judgment is alluded to). (6) The gross carnality of the representation of God's dealings with His adversaries is inconsistent with Messianic times. It therefore requires a non-literal interpretation. The prophetical delineations of the divine principles of government are thrown into the familiar forms of Old Testament relations. The final triumph of Messiah's truth over the most distant and barbarous nations is represented as a literal conflict on a gigantic scale, Israel being the battlefield, ending in the complete triumph of Israel's anointed King, the Saviour of the world. It is a prophetical parable [FAIRBAIRN]. However, though the details are not literal, the distinctiveness in this picture, characterizing also parallel descriptions in writers less ideally picturesque than Ezekiel, gives probability to a more definite and generally literal interpretation. The awful desolations caused in Judea by Antiochus Epiphanes, of Syria (1 Maccabees; and PORPHYRY, quoted by JEROME on Ezekiel), his defilement of Jehovah's temple by sacrificing swine and sprinkling the altar with the broth, and setting up the altar of Jupiter Olympius, seem to be an earnest of the final desolations to be caused by Antichrist in Israel, previous to His overthrow by the Lord Himself, coming to reign (compare Da 8:10-26; 11:21-45; 12:1; Zec 13:9; 14:2, 3). GROTIUS explains Gog as a name taken from Gyges, king of Lydia; and Magog as Syria, in which was a city called Magog [PLINY, 5.28]. What Ezekiel stated more generally, Re 20:7-9 states more definitely as to the anti-Christian confederacy which is to assail the beloved city.
2. Gog--the prince of the land of Magog. The title was probably a
common one of the kings of the country, as "Pharaoh" in Egypt. Chakan
was the name given by the Northern Asiatics to their king, and is still
a title of the Turkish sultan: "Gog" may be a contraction of this. In
Ezekiel's time a horde of northern Asiatics, termed by the Greeks
"Scythians," and probably including the Moschi and Tibareni, near the
Caucasus, here ("Meshech . . . Tubal") undertook an expedition against
Egypt [HERODOTUS, 1.103-106]. These names might be adopted by Ezekiel
from the historical fact familiar to men at the time, as ideal titles
for the great last anti-Christian confederacy.
Magog--
(Ge 10:2;
1Ch 1:5).
The name of a land belonging to Japheth's posterity. Maha, in
Sanskrit, means "land." Gog is the ideal political head of the region.
In
Re 20:8,
Gog and Magog are two peoples.
the chief prince--rather, "prince of Rosh," or "Rhos"
[Septuagint]. The Scythian Tauri in the Crimea were so called. The
Araxes also was called "Rhos." The modern Russians may have hence
assumed their name, as Moscow and Tobolsk from Meshech and Tubal,
though their proper ancient name was Slavi, or Wends.
HENGSTENBERG supports English Version, as "Rosh" is not found in the
Bible. "Magog was Gog's original kingdom, though he acquired also
Meshech and Tubal, so as to be called their chief prince."
3. His high-sounding titles are repeated to imply the haughty self-confidence of the invader as if invincible.
4. turn thee back--as a refractory wild beast, which thinks to take
its own way, but is bent by a superior power to turn on a course which
must end in its destruction. Satan shall be, by overruling Providence,
permitted to deceive them to their ruin
(Re 20:7, 8).
hooks into thy jaws--
(Eze 29:4;
2Ki 19:28).
5. Persia . . . Libya--expressly specified by APPIAN as supplying the ranks of Antiochus' army.
6. Gomer--the Celtic Cimmerians of Crim-Tartary.
Togarmah--the Armenians of the Caucasus, south of Iberia.
7. Irony. Prepare thee and all thine with all needful accoutrements
for war--that ye may perish together.
be . . . a guard unto them--that is, if thou canst.
8. thou shall be visited--in wrath, by God
(Isa 29:6).
Probably there is allusion to
Isa 24:21, 22,
"The host of the high ones . . . shall be gathered
. . . as prisoners . . . in the pit . . .
and after many days shall they be visited." I therefore prefer
English Version to GROTIUS rendering, "Thou
shalt get the command" of the expedition. The "after many days"
is defined by "in the latter years," that is, in the times just before
the coming of Messiah, namely, under Antiochus, before His first
coming; under Antichrist, before His second coming.
the mountains of Israel . . . always waste--that is, waste during the
long period of the captivity, the earnest of the much longer period of
Judea's present desolation (to which the language "always waste" more
fully applies). This marks the impious atrocity of the act, to assail
God's people, who had only begun to recover from their protracted
calamities.
but it is brought . . . and they shall dwell--rather, "And they (the
Israelites) were brought . . . dwelt safely"
[FAIRBAIRN].
English Version means, "Against Israel, which has been waste, but
which (that is, whose people) is now (at the time of the invasion)
brought forth out of the nations where they were dispersed, and shall be
found by the invader dwelling securely, so as to seem an easy prey to
him."
9. cloud to cover the land--with the multitude of thy forces.
10. an evil thought--as to attacking God's people in their defenseless state.
11. dwell safely--that is, securely, without fear of danger (compare Es 9:19). Antiochus, the type of Antichrist, took Jerusalem without a blow.
12. midst of the land--literally, "the navel" of the land (Jud 9:37, Margin). So, in Eze 5:5, Israel is said to be set "in the midst of the nations"; not physically, but morally, a central position for being a blessing to the world: so (as the favored or "beloved city," Re 20:9) an object of envy. GROTIUS translates, "In the height of the land" (so Eze 38:8), "the mountains of Israel," Israel being morally elevated above the rest of the world.
13. Sheba, &c.--These mercantile peoples, though not taking an active
part against the cause of God, are well pleased to see others do it.
Worldliness makes them ready to deal in the ill-gotten spoil of the
invaders of God's people. Gain is before godliness with them
(1 Maccabees 3:41).
young lions--daring princes and leaders.
14. shalt thou not know it?--to thy cost, being visited with punishment, while Israel dwells safely.
16. I will bring thee against my land, that the heathen may know me--So in Ex 9:16, God tells Pharaoh, "For this cause have I raised thee up, for to show in thee My power; and that My name may be declared throughout all the earth."
17. thou he of whom I have spoken in old time--Gog, &c. are here
identified with the enemies spoken of in other prophecies
(Nu 24:17-24;
Isa 27:1;
compare
Isa 26:20, 21;
Jer 30:23, 24;
Joe 3:1;
Mic 5:5, 6;
Isa 14:12-14; 59:19).
God is represented as addressing Gog at the time of his assault;
therefore, the "old time" is the time long prior, when Ezekiel uttered
these prophecies; so, he also, as well as Daniel
(Da 11:1-45)
and Zechariah
(Zec 14:1-21)
are included among "the prophets of Israel" here.
many years--ago.
18. fury shall come up in my face--literally, "nose"; in Hebrew, the idiomatic expression for anger, as men in anger breathe strongly through the nostrils. Anthropopathy: God stooping to human modes of thought (Ps 18:8).
19. great shaking--an earthquake: physical agitations after accompanying social and moral revolutions. Foretold also in Joe 3:16; (compare Hag 2:6, 7; Mt 24:7, 29; Re 16:18).
20. fishes--disturbed by the fleets which I will bring.
fowls, &c.--frightened at the sight of so many men: an ideal picture.
mountains--that is, the fortresses on the mountains.
steep places--literally, "stairs"
(So 2:14);
steep terraces for vines on the sides of hills, to prevent the earth
being washed down by the rains.
every wall--of towns.
21. every man's sword . . . against his brother--I will destroy them partly by My people's sword, partly by their swords being turned against one another (compare 2Ch 20:23).
22. plead--a forensic term; because God in His inflictions acts on
the principles of His own immutable justice, not by arbitrary impulse
(Isa 66:16;
Jer 25:31).
blood . . . hailstones, fire--
(Re 8:7; 16:21).
The imagery is taken from the destruction of Sodom and the plagues of
Egypt (compare
Ps 11:6).
Antiochus died by "pestilence" (2 Maccabees 9:5).
CHAPTER 39
Eze 39:1-29. CONTINUATION OF THE PROPHECY AGAINST GOG.
1. Repeated from Eze 38:3, to impress the prophecy more on the mind.
2. leave but the sixth part of thee--Margin, "strike thee with six
plagues" (namely, pestilence, blood, overflowing rain, hailstones, fire,
brimstone,
Eze 38:22);
or, "draw thee back with an hook of six teeth"
(Eze 38:4),
the six teeth being those six plagues. Rather, "lead thee about"
[LUDOVICUS DE DIEU and Septuagint]. As Antiochus was led (to his
ruin) to leave Egypt for an expedition against Palestine, so shall the
last great enemy of God be.
north parts--from the extreme north [FAIRBAIRN].
3. bow--in which the Scythians were most expert.
4, 5. (Compare
Eze 39:17-20).
upon the mountains of Israel--The scene of Israel's preservation shall
be that of the ungodly foe's destruction.
6. carelessly--in self-confident security.
the isles--Those dwelling in maritime regions, who had helped Gog with
fleets and troops, shall be visited with the fire of God's wrath in
their own lands.
7. not let them pollute my holy name--by their sins bringing down judgments which made the heathen think that I was unable or unwilling to save My people.
8. it is come . . . it is done--The prediction of the salvation of My people, and the ruin of their enemy, is come to pass--is done: expressing that the event foretold is as certain as if it were already accomplished.
9, 10. The burning of the foe's weapons implies that nothing belonging to them should be left to pollute the land. The seven years (seven being the sacred number) spent on this work, implies the completeness of the cleansing, and the people's zeal for purity. How different from the ancient Israelites, who left not merely the arms, but the heathen themselves, to remain among them [FAIRBAIRN], (Jud 1:27, 28; 2:2, 3; Ps 106:34-36). The desolation by Antiochus began in the one hundred and forty-first year of the Seleucidæ. From this date to 148, a period of six years and four months ("2300 days," Da 8:14), when the temple-worship was restored (1 Maccabees 4:52), God vouchsafed many triumphs to His people; from this time to the death of Antiochus, early in 149, a period of seven months, the Jews had rest from Antiochus, and purified their land, and on the twenty-fifth day of the ninth month celebrated the Encænia, or feast of dedication (Joh 10:22) and purification of the temple. The whole period, in round numbers, was seven years. Mattathias was the patriotic Jewish leader, and his third son, Judas, the military commander under whom the Syrian generals were defeated. He retook Jerusalem and purified the temple. Simon and Jonathan, his brothers, succeeded him: the independence of the Jews was secured, and the crown vested in the Asmonean family, in which it continued till Herod the Great.
11. place . . . of graves--Gog found only a grave where he had expected
the spoils of conquest.
valley--So vast were to be the masses that nothing but a deep valley
would suffice for their corpses.
the passengers on the east of the sea--those travelling on the high
road, east of the Dead Sea, from Syria to Petra and Egypt. The publicity
of the road would cause many to observe God's judgments, as the stench
(as English Version translates) or the multitude of graves
(as HENDERSON translates, "it shall stop the passengers") would arrest
the attention of passers-by. Their grave would be close to that of their
ancient prototypes, Sodom and Gomorrah in the Dead Sea, both alike being
signal instances of God's judgments.
13. I . . . glorified--in destroying the foe (Eze 28:22).
14. with the passengers--The men employed continually in the burying
were to be helped by those happening to pass by; all were to combine.
after the end of seven months shall they search--to see if the work
was complete [MUNSTER].
15. First "all the people of the land" engaged in the burying for seven months; then special men were employed, at the end of the seven months, to search for any still left unburied. The passers-by helped them by setting up a mark near any such bones, in order to keep others from being defiled by casually touching them, and that the buriers might come and remove them. Denoting the minute care to put away every relic of heathen pollution from the Holy Land.
16. A city in the neighborhood was to receive the name Hamonah, "multitude," to commemorate the overthrow of the multitudes of the foe [HENDERSON]. The multitude of the slain shall give a name to the city of Jerusalem after the land shall have been cleansed [GROTIUS]. Jerusalem shall be famed as the conqueror of multitudes.
17.
(Re 19:17).
sacrifice--Anciently worshippers feasted on the sacrifices. The
birds and beasts of prey are invited to the sacrificial feast provided
by God (compare
Isa 18:6; 34:6;
Zep 1:7;
Mr 9:49).
Here this sacrifice holds only a subordinate place in the picture, and
so is put last. Not only shall their bones lie long unburied, but they
shall be stripped of the flesh by beasts and birds of prey.
18. rams . . . lambs . . . goats--By these various animal victims
used in sacrifices are meant various ranks of men, princes, generals,
and soldiers (compare
Isa 34:6).
fatlings of Bashan--ungodly men of might
(Ps 22:12).
Bashan, beyond Jordan, was famed for its fat cattle. Fat implies
prosperity which often makes men refractory towards God
(De 32:14, 15).
20. my table--the field of battle on the mountains of Israel
(Eze 38:8, 20).
chariots--that is, charioteers.
22. So the house of Israel shall know . . . Lord--by My interposition for them. So, too, the heathen shall be led to fear the name of the Lord (Ps 102:15).
23. hid I my face-- (De 31:17; Isa 59:2).
25. bring again the captivity--restore from calamity to prosperity.
the whole house of Israel--so "all Israel"
(Ro 11:26).
The restorations of Israel heretofore have been partial; there must be
one yet future that is to be universal
(Ho 1:11).
26. After that they have borne their shame--the punishment of their sin: after they have become sensible of their guilt, and ashamed of it (Eze 20:43; 36:31).
27. sanctified in them--vindicated as holy in My dealings with them.
28. The Jews, having no dominion, settled country, or fixed property to detain them, may return at any time without difficulty (compare Ho 3:4, 5).
29. poured out my Spirit upon . . . Israel--the sure forerunner of their conversion (Joe 2:28; Zec 12:10). The pouring out of His Spirit is a pledge that He will hide His face no more (2Co 1:22; Eph 1:14; Php 1:6).
CHAPTER 40
Eze 40:1-49. THE REMAINING CHAPTERS, THE FORTIETH THROUGH FORTY-EIGHTH, GIVE AN IDEAL PICTURE OF THE RESTORED JEWISH TEMPLE.
The arrangements as to the land and the temple are, in many particulars, different from those subsisting before the captivity. There are things in it so improbable physically as to preclude a purely literal interpretation. The general truth seems to hold good that, as Israel served the nations for his rejection of Messiah, so shall they serve him in the person of Messiah, when he shall acknowledge Messiah (Isa 60:12; Zec 14:17-19; compare Ps 72:11). The ideal temple exhibits, under Old Testament forms (used as being those then familiar to the men whom Ezekiel, a priest himself, and one who delighted in sacrificial images, addresses), not the precise literal outline, but the essential character of the worship of Messiah as it shall be when He shall exercise sway in Jerusalem among His own people, the Jews, and thence to the ends of the earth. The very fact that the whole is a vision (Eze 40:2), not an oral face-to-face communication such as that granted to Moses (Nu 12:6-8), implies that the directions are not to be understood so precisely literally as those given to the Jewish lawgiver. The description involves things which, taken literally, almost involve natural impossibilities. The square of the temple, in Eze 42:20, is six times as large as the circuit of the wall enclosing the old temple, and larger than all the earthly Jerusalem. Ezekiel gives three and a half miles and one hundred forty yards to his temple square. The boundaries of the ancient city were about two and a half miles. Again, the city in Ezekiel has an area between three or four thousand square miles, including the holy ground set apart for the prince, priests, and Levites. This is nearly as large as the whole of Judea west of the Jordan. As Zion lay in the center of the ideal city, the one-half of the sacred portion extended to nearly thirty miles south of Jerusalem, that is, covered nearly the whole southern territory, which reached only to the Dead Sea (Eze 47:19), and yet five tribes were to have their inheritance on that side of Jerusalem, beyond the sacred portion (Eze 48:23-28). Where was land to be found for them there? A breadth of but four or five miles apiece would be left. As the boundaries of the land are given the same as under Moses, these incongruities cannot be explained away by supposing physical changes about to be effected in the land such as will meet the difficulties of the purely literal interpretation. The distribution of the land is in equal portions among the twelve tribes, without respect to their relative numbers, and the parallel sections running from east to west. There is a difficulty also in the supposed separate existence of the twelve tribes, such separate tribeships no longer existing, and it being hard to imagine how they could be restored as distinct tribes, mingled as they now are. So the stream that issued from the east threshold of the temple and flowed into the Dead Sea, in the rapidity of its increase and the quality of its waters, is unlike anything ever known in Judea or elsewhere in the world. Lastly, the catholicity of the Christian dispensation, and the spirituality of its worship, seem incompatible with a return to the local narrowness and "beggarly elements" of the Jewish ritual and carnal ordinances, disannulled "because of the unprofitableness thereof" [FAIRBAIRN], (Ga 4:3, 9; 5:1; Heb 9:10; 10:18). "A temple with sacrifices now would be a denial of the all-sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ. He who sacrificed before confessed the Messiah. He who should sacrifice now would solemnly deny Him" [DOUGLAS]. These difficulties, however, may be all seeming, not real. Faith accepts God's Word as it is, waits for the event, sure that it will clear up all such difficulties. Perhaps, as some think, the beau ideal of a sacred commonwealth is given according to the then existing pattern of temple services, which would be the imagery most familiar to the prophet and his hearers at the time. The minute particularizing of details is in accordance with Ezekiel's style, even in describing purely ideal scenes. The old temple embodied in visible forms and rites spiritual truths affecting the people even when absent from it. So this ideal temple is made in the absence of the outward temple to serve by description the same purpose of symbolical instruction as the old literal temple did by forms and acts. As in the beginning God promised to be a "sanctuary" (Eze 11:16) to the captives at the Chebar, so now at the close is promised a complete restoration and realization of the theocratic worship and polity under Messiah in its noblest ideal (compare Jer 31:38-40). In Re 21:22 "no temple" is seen, as in the perfection of the new dispensation the accidents of place and form are no longer needed to realize to Christians what Ezekiel imparts to Jewish minds by the imagery familiar to them. In Ezekiel's temple holiness stretches over the entire temple, so that in this there is no longer a distinction between the different parts, as in the old temple: parts left undeterminate in the latter obtain now a divine sanction, so that all arbitrariness is excluded. So that it is be a perfect manifestation of the love of God to His covenant-people (Eze 40:1-43:12); and from it, as from a new center of religious life, there gushes forth the fulness of blessings to them, and so to all people (Eze 47:1-23) [FAIRBAIRN and HAVERNICK]. The temple built at the return from Babylon can only very partially have realized the model here given. The law is seemingly opposed to the gospel (Mt 5:21, 22, 27, 28, 33, 34). It is not really so (compare Mt 5:17, 18; Ro 3:31; Ga 3:21, 22). It is true Christ's sacrifice superseded the law sacrifices (Heb 10:12-18). Israel's province may hereafter be to show the essential identity, even in the minute details of the temple sacrifices, between the law and gospel (Ro 10:8). The ideal of the theocratic temple will then first be realized.
1. beginning of the year--the ecclesiastical year, the first month
of which was Nisan.
the city . . . thither--Jerusalem, the center to which all the
prophet's thoughts tended.
2. visions of God--divinely sent visions.
very high mountain--Moriah, very high, as compared with the plains
of Babylon, still more so as to its moral elevation
(Eze 17:22; 20:40).
by which--Ezekiel coming from the north is set down at (as the
Hebrew for "upon" may be translated) Mount Moriah, and sees the
city-like frame of the temple stretching southward. In
Eze 40:3,
"God brings him thither," that is, close up to it, so as to inspect it
minutely (compare
Re 21:10).
In this closing vision, as in the opening one of the book, the divine
hand is laid on the prophet, and he is borne away in the visions of
God. But the scene there was by the Chebar, Jehovah having forsaken
Jerusalem; now it is the mountain of God, Jehovah having returned
thither; there, the vision was calculated to inspire terror; here, hope
and assurance.
3. man--The Old Testament manifestations of heavenly beings as men prepared men's minds for the coming incarnation.
brass--resplendent.
line--used for longer measurements
(Zec 2:1).
reed--used in measuring houses
(Re 21:15).
It marked the straightness of the walls.
5. Measures were mostly taken from the human body. The
greater cubit, the length from the elbow to the end of the
middle finger, a little more than two feet: exceeding the ordinary
cubit (from the elbow to the wrist) by an hand-breadth, that is,
twenty-one inches in all. Compare
Eze 43:13,
with Eze 40:5.
The palm was the full breadth of the hand, three and a half
inches.
breadth of the building--that is, the boundary wall. The imperfections
in the old temple's boundary wall were to have no place here. The
buildings attached to it had been sometimes turned to common uses; for
example, Jeremiah was imprisoned in one
(Jer 20:2; 29:26).
But now all these were to be holy to the Lord. The gates and doorways
to the city of God were to be imprinted in their architecture with the
idea of the exclusion of everything defiled
(Re 21:27).
The east gate was to be especially sacred, as it was through it the
glory of God had departed
(Eze 11:23),
and through it the glory was to return
(Eze 43:1, 2; 44:2, 3).
6. the stairs--seven in number
(Eze 40:26).
threshold--the sill [FAIRBAIRN].
other threshold--FAIRBAIRN considers there
is but one threshold, and translates, "even the one threshold, one rod
broad." But there is another threshold mentioned in
Eze 40:7.
The two thresholds here seem to be the upper and the lower.
7. chamber--These chambers were for the use of the Levites who watched at the temple gates; guard-chambers (2Ki 22:4; 1Ch 9:26, 27); also used for storing utensils and musical instruments.
9. posts--projecting column-faced fronts of the sides of the doorway, opposite to one another.
12. space--rather, "the boundary."
16. narrow--latticed [HENDERSON]. The ancients had no glass, so they
had them latticed, narrow in the interior of the walls, and widening at
the exterior. "Made fast," or "firmly fixed in the chambers"
[MAURER].
arches--rather, "porches."
17. pavement--tesselated mosaic
(Es 1:6).
chambers--serving as lodgings for the priests on duty in the temple,
and as receptacles of the tithes of salt, wine, and oil.
18. The higher pavement was level with the entrance of the gates, the lower was on either side of the raised pavement thus formed. Whereas Solomon's temple had an outer court open to alterations and even idolatrous innovations (2Ki 23:11, 12; 1Ch 20:5), in this there was to be no room for human corruptions. Its compass was exactly defined, one hundred cubits; and the fine pavement implied it was to be trodden only by clean feet (compare Isa 35:8).
20-27. The different approaches corresponded in plan. In the case of these two other gates, however, no mention is made of a building with thirty chambers such as was found on the east side. Only one was needed, and it was assigned to the east as being the sacred quarter, and that most conveniently situated for the officiating priests.
23. and toward the east--an elliptical expression for "The gate of the inner court was over against the (outer) gate toward the north (just as the inner gate was over against the outer gate) toward the east."
28-37. The inner court and its gates.
according to these measures--namely, the measures of the outer gate.
The figure and proportions of the inner answered to the outer.
30. This verse is omitted in the Septuagint, the Vatican
manuscript, and others. The dimensions here of the inner gate do not
correspond to the outer, though
Eze 40:28
asserts that they do. HAVERNICK, retaining the
verse, understands it of another porch looking inwards toward the
temple.
arches--the porch [FAIRBAIRN]; the columns on which the arches rest
[HENDERSON].
31. eight steps--The outer porch had only seven (Eze 40:26).
37. posts--the Septuagint and Vulgate read, "the porch," which answers better to Eze 40:31-34. "The arches" or "porch" [MAURER].
38. chambers . . . entries--literally, "a chamber and
its door."
by the posts--that is, at or close by the posts or
columns.
where they washed the burnt offering--This does not apply to all the
gates but only to the north gate. For
Le 1:11
directs the sacrifices to be killed north of the altar; and
Eze 8:5
calls the north gate, "the gate of the altar." And
Eze 40:40
particularly mentions the north gate.
43. hooks--cooking apparatus for cooking the flesh of the sacrifices that fell to the priests. The hooks were "fastened" in the walls within the apartment, to hang the meat from, so as to roast it. The Hebrew comes from a root "fixed" or "placed."
44. the chambers of the singers--two in number, as proved by what follows: "and their prospect (that is, the prospect of one) was toward the south, (and) one toward the north." So the Septuagint.
46. Zadok--lineally descended from Aaron. He had the high priesthood conferred on him by Solomon, who had set aside the family of Ithamar because of the part which Abiathar had taken in the rebellion of Adonijah (1Ki 1:7; 2:26, 27).
47. court, an hundred cubits . . . foursquare--not to be confounded with the inner court, or court of Israel, which was open to all who had sacrifices to bring, and went round the three sides of the sacred territory, one hundred cubits broad. This court was one hundred cubits square, and had the altar in it, in front of the temple. It was the court of the priests, and hence is connected with those who had charge of the altar and the music. The description here is brief, as the things connected with this portion were from the first divinely regulated.
48, 49. These two verses belong to the forty-first chapter, which treats of the temple itself.
49. twenty . . . eleven cubits--in Solomon's temple
(1Ki 6:3)
"twenty . . . ten cubits." The breadth perhaps was ten
and a half;
1Ki 6:3
designates the number by the lesser next round number, "ten";
Ezekiel here, by the larger number, "eleven" [MENOCHIUS]. The Septuagint reads "twelve."
he brought me by the steps--They were ten in number
[Septuagint].
CHAPTER 41
Eze 41:1-26. THE CHAMBERS AND ORNAMENTS OF THE TEMPLE.
1. tabernacle--As in the measurement of the outer porch he had pointed to Solomon's temple, so here in the edifice itself, he points to the old tabernacle, which being eight boards in breadth (each one and a half cubits broad) would make in all twelve cubits, as here. On the interior it was only ten cubits.
2. length thereof--namely, of the holy place [FAIRBAIRN].
3. inward--towards the most holy place.
4. thereof--of the holy of holies.
before the temple--that is, before, or in front of the most holy place
(so "temple" is used in
1Ki 6:3).
The angel went in and measured it, while Ezekiel stood in front, in the
only part of the temple accessible to him. The dimensions of the two
apartments are the same as in Solomon's temple, since being fixed
originally by God, they are regarded as finally determined.
5. side chamber--the singular used collectively for the plural. These chambers were appendages attached to the outside of the temple, on the west, north, and south; for on the east side, the principal entrance, there were no chambers. The narrowness of the chambers was in order that the beams could be supported without needing pillars. The plan is similar to that of the hall at Koyunjik, a large central hall, called the oracle, with smaller rooms built round it.
6. might . . . hold, but . . . not hold in . . . wall of the house-- 1Ki 6:6 tells us there were rests made in the walls of the temple for supports to the side chambers; but the temple walls did not thereby become part of this side building; they stood separate from it. "They entered," namely, the beams of the chambers, which were three-storied and thirty in consecutive order, entered into the wall, that is, were made to lean on rests projecting from the wall.
7. the breadth . . . so increased from the lowest . . . to the highest--that is, the breadth of the interior space above was greater than that below.
8. foundations . . . six . . . cubits--the substructure, on which the
foundations rested, was a full reed of six cubits.
great--literally, "to the extremity" or root, namely, of the hand
[HENDERSON]. "To the joining," or point, where the foundation of one
chamber ceased and another began [FAIRBAIRN].
9. that which was left--There was an unoccupied place within chambers that belonged to the house. The buildings in this unoccupied place, west of the temple, and so much resembling it in size, imply that no place was to be left which was to be held, as of old, not sacred. Manasseh (2Ki 23:11) had abused these "suburbs of the temple" to keeping horses sacred to the sun. All excuse for such abominations was henceforth to be taken away, the Lord claiming every space, and filling up this also with sacred erections [FAIRBAIRN].
10. the chambers--that is, of the priests in the court: between these and the side chambers was the wideness, &c. While long details are given as to the chambers, &c., no mention is made of the ark of the covenant. FAIRBAIRN thus interprets this: In future there was to be a perfect conformity to the divine idea, such as there had not been before. The dwellings of His people should all become true sanctuaries of piety. Jehovah Himself, in the full display of the divine Shekinah, shall come in the room of the ark of the covenant (Jer 3:16, 17). The interior of the temple stands empty, waiting for His entrance to fill it with His glory (Eze 43:1-12). It is the same temple, but the courts of it have become different to accommodate a more numerous people. The entire compass of the temple mount has become a holy of holies (Eze 43:12).
12-15. Sum of the measures of the temple, and of the buildings behind and on the side of it.
15. galleries--terrace buildings. On the west or back of the temple, there was a separate place occupied by buildings of the same external dimensions as the temple, that is, one hundred cubits square in the entire compass [FAIRBAIRN].
16. covered--being the highest windows they were "covered" from the view below. Or else "covered with lattice-work."
17. by measure--Measurements were taken [FAIRBAIRN].
21. appearance of the one as the appearance of the other--The appearance of the sanctuary or holy of holies was similar to that of the temple. They differed only in magnitude.
22. table . . . before the Lord--the altar of incense (Eze 44:16). At it, not at the table of showbread, the priests daily ministered. It stood in front of the veil, and is therefore said to be "before the Lord." It is called a table, as being that at which the Lord will take delight in His people, as at a feast. Hence its dimensions are larger than that of old--three cubits high, two broad, instead of two and one.
25. thick planks--a thick-plank work at the threshold.
CHAPTER 42
Eze 42:1-20. CHAMBERS OF THE PRIESTS: MEASUREMENTS OF THE TEMPLE.
2. Before the length of an hundred cubits--that is, before "the separate place," which was that length (Eze 41:13). He had before spoken of chambers for the officiating priests on the north and south gates of the inner court (Eze 40:44-46). He now returns to take a more exact view of them.
5. shorter--that is, the building became narrower as it rose in height. The chambers were many: so "in My Father's house are many mansions" (Joh 14:2); and besides these there was much "room" still left (compare Lu 14:22). The chambers, though private, were near the temple. Prayer in our chambers is to prepare us for public devotions, and to help us in improving them.
16. five hundred reeds--the Septuagint substitutes "cubits" for "reeds," to escape the immense compass assigned to the whole, namely, a square of five hundred rods or three thousand cubits (two feet each; Eze 40:5), in all a square of one and one-seventh miles, that is, more than all ancient Jerusalem; also, there is much space thus left unappropriated. FAIRBAIRN rightly supports English Version, which agrees with the Hebrew. The vast extent is another feature marking the ideal character of the temple. It symbolizes the great enlargement of the kingdom of God, when Jehovah-Messiah shall reign at Jerusalem, and from thence to the ends of the earth (Isa 2:2-4; Jer 3:17; Ro 11:12, 15).
20. wall . . . separation between . . . sanctuary and . . . profane--No longer shall the wall of partition be to separate the Jew and the Gentile (Eph 2:14), but to separate the sacred from the profane. The lowness of it renders it unfit for the purpose of defense (the object of the wall, Re 21:12). But its square form (as in the city, Re 21:16) is the emblem of the kingdom that cannot be shaken (Heb 12:28), resting on prophets and apostles, Jesus Christ being the chief corner-stone.
CHAPTER 43
Eze 43:1-27. JEHOVAH'S RETURN TO THE TEMPLE.
Everything was now ready for His reception. As the Shekinah glory was the peculiar distinction of the old temple, so it was to be in the new in a degree as much more transcendent as the proportions of the new exceeded those of the old. The fact that the Shekinah glory was not in the second temple proves that it cannot be that temple which is meant in the prophecy.
2. the way of the east--the way whereby the glory had departed
(Eze 11:22, 23),
and rested on Mount Olivet (compare
Zec 14:4).
his voice . . . like . . . many waters--So
English Version rightly, as in
Eze 1:24,
"voice of the Almighty";
Re 1:15; 14:2,
prove this. Not as FAIRBAIRN translates, "its
noise."
earth his glory--
(Re 18:1).
3. when I came to destroy the city--that is, to pronounce God's word for its destruction. So completely did the prophets identify themselves with Him in whose name they spake.
6. the man--who had been measuring the buildings (Eze 40:3).
7. the place--that is, "behold the place of My throne"--the place on which your thoughts have so much dwelt (Isa 2:1-3; Jer 3:17; Zec 14:16-20; Mal 3:1). God from the first claimed to be their King politically as well as religiously: and He had resisted their wish to have a human king, as implying a rejection of Him as the proper Head of the state. Even when He yielded to their wish, it was with a protest against their king ruling except as His vicegerent. When Messiah shall reign at Jerusalem, He shall then first realize the original idea of the theocracy, with its at once divine and human king reigning in righteousness over a people all righteous (Eze 43:12; Isa 52:1; 54:13; 60:21).
9. carcasses of their kings--It is supposed that some of their
idolatrous kings were buried within the bounds of Solomon's temple
[HENDERSON]. Rather, "the carcasses of their
idols," here called "kings," as having had lordship over them in
past times
(Isa 26:13);
but henceforth Jehovah, alone their rightful lord, shall be their king,
and the idols that had been their "king" would appear but as
"carcasses." Hence these defunct kings are associated with the "high
places" in
Eze 43:7
[FAIRBAIRN].
Le 26:30
and Jer 16:18,
confirm this. Manasseh had built altars in the courts of the temple to
the host of heaven
(2Ki 21:5; 23:6).
I will dwell in the midst . . . for ever--
(Re 21:3).
10. show the house . . . that they may be ashamed of their iniquities--When the spirituality of the Christian scheme is shown to men by the Holy Ghost, it makes them "ashamed of their iniquities."
12. whole . . . most holy--This superlative, which had been used exclusively of the holy of holies (Ex 26:34), was now to characterize the entire building. This all-pervading sanctity was to be "the law of the (whole) house," as distinguished from the Levitical law, which confined the peculiar sanctity to a single apartment of it.
13-27. As to the altar of burnt offering, which was the appointed means of access to God.
15. altar--Hebrew, Harel, that is, "mount of God"; denoting the
high security to be imparted by it to the restored Israel. It was a high
place, but a high place of God, not of idols.
from the altar--literally, "the lion of God," Ariel (in
Isa 29:1,
"Ariel" is applied to Jerusalem). MENOCHIUS
supposes that on it four animals were carved; the lion perhaps was the
uppermost, whence the horns were made to issue. GESENIUS regards the two words as expressing the "hearth"
or fireplace of the altar.
16. square in the four squares--square on the four sides of its squares [FAIRBAIRN].
17. settle--ledge [FAIRBAIRN].
stairs--rather, "the ascent," as "steps" up to God's altar were
forbidden in
Ex 20:26.
18-27. The sacrifices here are not mere commemorative, but propitiatory ones. The expressions, "blood" (Eze 43:18), and "for a sin offering" (Eze 43:19, 21, 22), prove this. In the literal sense they can only apply to the second temple. Under the Christian dispensation they would directly oppose the doctrine taught in Heb 10:1-18, namely, that Christ has by one offering for ever atoned for sin. However, it is possible that they might exist with a retrospective reference to Christ's sufferings, as the Levitical sacrifices had a prospective reference to them; not propitiatory in themselves, but memorials to keep up the remembrance of His propitiatory sufferings, which form the foundation of His kingdom, lest they should be lost sight of in the glory of that kingdom [DE BURGH]. The particularity of the directions make it unlikely that they are to be understood in a merely vague spiritual sense.
20. cleanse--literally, "make expiation for."
21. burn it . . . without the sanctuary-- (Heb 13:11).
26. Seven days--referring to the original directions of Moses for
seven days' purification services of the altar
(Ex 29:37).
consecrate themselves--literally, "fill their hands," namely, with
offerings; referring to the mode of consecrating a priest
(Ex 29:24, 35).
27. I will accept you-- (Eze 20:40, 41; Ro 12:1; 1Pe 2:5).
CHAPTER 44
Eze 44:1-31. ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND THE PRIESTS.
2. shut . . . not be opened-- (Job 12:14; Isa 22:22; Re 3:7). "Shut" to the people (Ex 19:21, 22), but open to "the prince" (Eze 44:3), he holding the place of God in political concerns, as the priests do in spiritual. As a mark of respect to an Eastern monarch, the gate by which he enters is thenceforth shut to all other persons (compare Ex 19:24).
3. the prince--not King Messiah, as He never would offer a burnt
offering for Himself, as the prince is to do
(Eze 46:4).
The prince must mean the civil ruler under Messiah. His connection with
the east gate (by which the Lord had returned to His temple) implies,
that, as ruling under God, he is to stand in a place of peculiar
nearness to God. He represents Messiah, who entered heaven, the true
sanctuary, by a way that none other could, namely, by His own holiness;
all others must enter as sinners by faith in His blood, through grace.
eat bread before the Lord--a custom connected with sacrifices
(Ge 31:54;
Ex 18:12; 24:11;
1Co 10:18).
4-6. Directions as to the priests. Their acts of desecration are attributed to "the house of Israel" (Eze 44:6, 7), as the sins of the priesthood and of the people acted and reacted on one another; "like people, like priest" (Jer 5:31; Ho 4:9).
7. uncircumcised in heart--Israelites circumcised outwardly, but
wanting the true circumcision of the heart
(De 10:16;
Ac 7:51).
uncircumcised in flesh--not having even the outward badge of the
covenant-people.
8. keepers . . . for yourselves--such as you yourselves thought fit, not such as I approve of. Or else, "Ye have not yourselves kept the charge of My holy things, but have set others as keepers of My charge in My sanctuary for yourselves" [MAURER].
10, 11. Levites . . . shall . . .
bear--namely, the punishment of
their iniquity . . . Yet they shall be ministers--So Mark, a
Levite, nephew of Barnabas
(Ac 4:36),
was punished by Paul for losing an opportunity of bearing the cross of
Christ, and yet was afterwards admitted into his friendship again, and
showed his zeal
(Ac 13:13; 15:37;
Col 4:10;
2Ti 4:11).
One may be a believer, and that too in a distinguished place, and yet
lose some special honor--be acknowledged as pious, yet be excluded from
some dignity [BENGEL].
charge at the gates--Better to be "a doorkeeper in the house of God,
than to dwell in the tents of wickedness"
(Ps 84:10).
Though standing as a mere doorkeeper, it is in the house of God,
which hath foundations: whereas he who dwells with the wicked,
dwells in but shifting tents.
15. Zadok--The priests of the line of Ithamar were to be discharged from ministrations in the temple, because of their corruptions, following in the steps of Eli's sons, against whom the same denunciation was uttered (1Sa 2:32, 35). Zadok, according to his name (which means "righteous") and his line, were to succeed (1Ki 2:35; 1Ch 24:3), as they did not take part in the general apostasy to the same degree, and perhaps [FAIRBAIRN] the prophet, referring to their original state, speaks of them as they appeared when first chosen to the office.
17. linen--symbolical of purity. Wool soon induces perspiration in the sultry East and so becomes uncleanly.
18. bonnets--turbans.
19. not sanctify the people with their garments--namely, those peculiarly priestly vestments in which they ministered in the sanctuary.
20. Neither . . . shave . . . heads--as mourners do
(Le 21:1-5).
The worshippers of the Egyptian idols Serapis and Isis shaved their
heads; another reason why Jehovah's priests are not to do so.
nor suffer . . . locks to grow long--as the luxurious, barbarians, and
soldiers in warfare did [JEROME].
21. Neither . . . wine--lest the holy enthusiasm of their devotion should be mistaken for inebriation, as in Peter's case (Ac 2:13, 15, 18).
28. I am their inheritance-- (Nu 18:20; De 10:9; 18:1; Jos 13:14, 32).
30. give . . . priest the first . . . that he may cause the blessing to rest-- (Pr 3:9, 10; Mal 3:10).
CHAPTER 45
Eze 45:1-25. ALLOTMENT OF THE LAND FOR THE SANCTUARY, THE CITY, AND THE PRINCE.
1. offer an oblation--from a Hebrew root to "heave" or "raise";
when anything was offered to God, the offerer raised the hand. The
special territorial division for the tribes is given in the
forty-seventh and forty-eighth chapters. Only Jehovah's portion is here
subdivided into its three parts: (1) that for the sanctuary
(Eze 45:2, 3);
(2) that for the priests
(Eze 45:4);
(3) that for the Levites
(Eze 45:5).
Compare
Eze 48:8-13.
five and twenty thousand reeds, &c.--So English
Version rightly fills the ellipsis (compare Note, see on
Eze 42:16).
Hence "cubits" are mentioned in
Eze 45:2,
not here, implying that there alone cubits are meant. Taking
each reed at twelve feet, the area of the whole would be a square of
sixty miles on each side. The whole forming a square betokens the
settled stability of the community and the harmony of all classes. "An
holy portion of the land"
(Eze 45:1)
comprised the whole length, and only two-fifths of the breadth. The
outer territory in its distribution harmonizes with the inner and more
sacred arrangements of the sanctuary. No room is to be given for
oppression (see
Eze 45:8),
all having ample provision made for their wants and comforts. All will
mutually co-operate without constraint or contention.
7. The prince's possession is to consist of two halves, one on the west, the other on the east, of the sacred territory. The prince, as head of the holy community, stands in closest connection with the sanctuary; his possession, therefore, on both sides must adjoin that which was peculiarly the Lord's [FAIRBAIRN].
12. The standard weights were lost when the Chaldeans destroyed the temple. The threefold enumeration of shekels (twenty, twenty-five, fifteen) probably refers to coins of different value, representing respectively so many shekels, the three collectively making up a maneh. By weighing these together against the maneh, a test was afforded whether they severally had their proper weight: sixty shekels in all, containing one coin a fourth of the whole (fifteen shekels), another a third (twenty shekels), another a third and a twelfth (twenty-five shekels) [MENOCHIUS]. The Septuagint reads, "fifty shekels shall be your maneh."
13-15. In these oblations there is a progression as to the relation between the kind and the quantity: of the corn, the sixth of a tenth, that is, a sixtieth part of the quantity specified; of the oil, the tenth of a tenth, that is, an hundredth part; and of the flock, one from every two hundred.
18. The year is to begin with a consecration service, not mentioned under the Levitical law; but an earnest of it is given in the feast of dedication of the second temple, which celebrated its purification by Judas Maccabeus, after its defilement by Antiochus.
20. for him that is simple--for sins of ignorance (Le 4:2, 13, 27).
21. As a new solemnity, the feast of consecration is to prepare for the passover; so the passover itself is to have different sacrifices from those of the Mosaic law. Instead of one ram and seven lambs for the daily burnt offering, there are to be seven bullocks and seven rams. So also whereas the feast of tabernacles had its own offerings, which diminished as the days of the feast advanced, here the same are appointed as on the passover. Thus it is implied that the letter of the law is to give place to its spirit, those outward rites of Judaism having no intrinsic efficacy, but symbolizing the spiritual truths of Messiah's kingdom, as for instance the perfect holiness which is to characterize it. Compare 1Co 5:7, 8, as to our spiritual "passover," wherein, at the Lord's supper, we feed on Christ by faith, accompanied with "the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." Literal ordinances, though not slavishly bound to the letter of the law, will set forth the catholic and eternal verities of Messiah's kingdom.
CHAPTER 46
Eze 46:1-24. CONTINUATION OF THE ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND FOR THE PEOPLE IN THEIR WORSHIP.
2. The prince is to go through the east gate without (open on the Sabbath only, to mark its peculiar sanctity) to the entrance of the gate of the inner court; he is to go no further, but "stand by the post" (compare 1Ki 8:14, 22, Solomon standing before the altar of the Lord in the presence of the congregation; also 2Ki 11:14; 23:3, "by a pillar": the customary place), the court within belonging exclusively to the priests. There, as representative of the people, in a peculiarly near relation to God, he is to present his offerings to Jehovah, while at a greater distance, the people are to stand worshipping at the outer gate of the same entrance. The offerings on Sabbaths are larger than those of the Mosaic law, to imply that the worship of God is to be conducted by the prince and people in a more munificent spirit of self-sacrificing liberality than formerly.
9. The worshippers were on the great feasts to pass from one side to the other, through the temple courts, in order that, in such a throng as should attend the festivals, the ingress and egress should be the more unimpeded, those going out not being in the way of those coming in.
10. prince in the midst--not isolated as at other times, but joining the great throng of worshippers, at their head, after the example of David (Ps 42:4, "I had gone with the multitude . . . to the house of God, with the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept holy day"); the highest in rank animating the devotions of the rest by his presence and example.
12-15. Not only is he to perform official acts of worship on holy days and feasts, but in "voluntary" offerings daily he is to show his individual zeal, surpassing all his people in liberality, and so setting them a princely example.
16-18. The prince's possession is to be inalienable, and any portion given to a servant is to revert to his sons at the year of jubilee, that he may have no temptation to spoil his people of their inheritance, as formerly (compare Ahab and Naboth, 1Ki 21:1-29). The mention of the year of jubilee implies that there is something literal meant, besides the spiritual sense. The jubilee year was restored after the captivity [JOSEPHUS, Antiquities, 14.10,6; 1 Maccabees 6:49]. Perhaps it will be restored under Messiah's coming reign. Compare Isa 61:2, 3, where "the acceptable year of the Lord" is closely connected with the comforting of the mourners in Zion, and "the day of vengeance" on Zion's foes. The mention of the prince's sons is another argument against Messiah being meant by "the prince."
19-24. Due regard is to be had for the sanctity of the officiating priests' food, by cooking courts being provided close to their chambers. One set of apartments for cooking was to be at the corners of the inner court, reserved for the flesh of the sin offerings, to be eaten only by the priests whose perquisite it was (Le 6:25; 7:7), before coming forth to mingle again with the people; another set at the corners of the outer court, for cooking the flesh of the peace offerings, of which the people partook along with the priests. All this implies that no longer are the common and unclean to be confounded with the sacred and divine, but that in even the least things, as eating and drinking, the glory of God is to be the aim (1Co 10:31).
22. courts joined--FAIRBAIRN translates, "roofed" or "vaulted." But these cooking apartments seem to have been uncovered, to let the smoke and smell of the meat the more easily pass away. They were "joined" or "attached" to the walls of the courts at the corners of the latter [MENOCHIUS].
23. boiling places--boilers.
under the rows--At the foot of the rows, that is, in the lowest part
of the walls, were the places for boiling made.
CHAPTER 47
Eze 47:1-23. VISION OF THE TEMPLE WATERS. BORDERS AND DIVISION OF THE LAND.
The happy fruit to the earth at large of God's dwelling with Israel in holy fellowship is that the blessing is no longer restricted to the one people and locality, but is to be diffused with comprehensive catholicity through the whole world. So the plant from the cedar of Lebanon is represented as gathering under its shelter "all fowl of every wing" (Eze 17:23). Even the desert places of the earth shall be made fruitful by the healing waters of the Gospel (compare Isa 35:1).
1. waters--So Re 22:1, represents "the water of life as proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb." His throne was set up in the temple at Jerusalem (Eze 43:7). Thence it is to flow over the earth (Joe 3:18; Zec 13:1; 14:8). Messiah is the temple and the door; from His pierced side flow the living waters, ever increasing, both in the individual believer and in the heart. The fountains in the vicinity of Moriah suggested the image here. The waters flow eastward, that is, towards the Kedron, and thence towards the Jordan, and so along the Ghor into the Dead Sea. The main point in the picture is the rapid augmentation from a petty stream into a mighty river, not by the influx of side streams, but by its own self-supply from the sacred miraculous source in the temple [HENDERSON]. (Compare Ps 36:8, 9; 46:4; Isa 11:9; Hab 2:14). Searching into the things of God, we find some easy to understand, as the water up to the ankles; others more difficult, which require a deeper search, as the waters up to the knees or loins; others beyond our reach, of which we can only adore the depth (Ro 11:33). The healing of the waters of the Dead Sea here answers to "there shall be no more curse" (Re 22:3; compare Zec 14:11).
7. trees--not merely one tree of life as in Paradise (Ge 3:22), but many: to supply immortal food and medicine to the people of God, who themselves also become "trees of righteousness" (Isa 61:3) planted by the waters and (Ps 1:3) bearing fruit unto holiness.
8. the desert--or "plain," Hebrew, Arabah
(De 3:17; 4:49;
Jos 3:16),
which is the name still given to the valley of the Jordan and the plain
south of the Dead Sea, and extending to the Elanitic gulf of the Red
Sea.
the sea--the Dead Sea. "The sea" noted as covering with its waters
the guilty cities of the plain, Sodom and Gomorrah. In its bituminous
waters no vegetable or animal life is said to be found. But now death is
to give place to life in Judea, and throughout the world, as symbolized
by the healing of these death-pervaded waters covering the doomed
cities. Compare as to "the sea" in general, regarded as a symbol of the
troubled powers of nature, disordered by the fall, henceforth to rage no
more,
Re 21:1.
9. rivers--in Hebrew, "two rivers." Hence Hebrew expositors think that the waters from the temple were divided into two branches, the one emptying itself into the eastern or Dead Sea, the other into the western or Mediterranean. So Zec 14:8. However, though this probably is covertly implied in the Hebrew dual, the flowing of the waters into the Dead Sea only is expressed. Compare Eze 47:8, "waters . . . healed," which can apply only to it, not to the Mediterranean: also Eze 47:10, "fish as the fish of the great sea"; the Dead Sea, when healed, containing fish, as the Mediterranean does.
10. En-gedi . . . En-eglaim--En-gedi (meaning
"fountain of the kid"), anciently, Hazazon-Tamar, now Ain-Jidy; west of
the Dead Sea; David's place of refuge from Saul. En-eglaim means
"fountain of two calves," on the confines of Moab, over against
En-gedi, and near where Jordan enters the Dead Sea
(Isa 15:8).
These two limits are fixed on, to comprise between them the whole Dead
Sea.
fish . . . according to their kinds--JEROME quotes an ancient theory that "there are a hundred
fifty-three kinds of fishes," all of which were taken by the apostles
(Joh 21:11),
and not one remained uncaptured; signifying that both the noble and
baseborn, the rich and the poor, and every class, are being drawn out
of the sea of the world to salvation. Compare
Mt 13:47,
the gospel net; the apostles being fishermen, at first literally,
afterwards spiritually
(Mt 4:19).
11. marshes--marshy places. The region is known to have such pits and
marshes. The Arabs take the salt collected by evaporation in these pits
for their own use, and that of their flocks.
not be healed--Those not reached by the healing waters of the Gospel,
through their sloth and earthly-mindedness, are given over
(Re 22:11)
to their own bitterness and barrenness (as "saltness" is often employed
to express,
De 29:23;
Ps 107:34;
Zep 2:9);
an awful example to others in the punishment they suffer
(2Pe 2:6).
12. Instead of the "vine of Sodom and grapes of Gomorrah"
(De 32:32),
nauseous and unwholesome, trees of life-giving and life-restoring
virtue shall bloom similar in properties to, and exceeding in number,
the tree of life in Eden
(Re 2:7; 22:2, 14).
leaf . . . not fade--expressing not only the unfailing character of
the heavenly medicine of the tree of life, but also that the graces of
the believer (as a tree of righteousness), which are the leaves, and
his deeds, which are the fruits that flow from those graces, are
immortal
(Ps 1:3;
Jer 17:8;
Mt 10:42;
1Co 15:58).
new fruit--literally, "firstlings," or first fruit. They are still,
each month afresh, as it were, yielding their first-fruit
[FAIRBAIRN].
The first-born of a thing, in Hebrew idiom, means the chiefest. As
Job 18:13,
"the first-born of death," that is, the most fatal death.
13. The redivision of the land: the boundaries. The latter are
substantially the same as those given by Moses in
Nu 34:1-29;
they here begin with the north, but in Numbers they begin with the
south
(Nu 34:3).
It is only Canaan proper, exclusive of the possession of the two and a
half tribes beyond Jordan, that is here divided.
Joseph . . . two portions--according to the original promise of Jacob
(Ge 48:5, 22).
Joseph's sons were given the birthright forfeited by Reuben, the
first-born
(1Ch 5:1).
Therefore the former is here put first. His two sons having
distinct portions make up the whole number twelve portions, as
he had just before specified "twelve tribes of Israel"; for Levi
had no separate inheritance, so that he is not reckoned in the
twelve.
15. Zedad--on the north boundary of Canaan.
16. Hamath--As Israel was a separate people, so their land was a
separate land. On no scene could the sacred history have been so well
transacted as on it. On the east was the sandy desert. On the north and
south, mountains. On the west, an inhospitable sea-shore. But it was
not always to be a separate land. Between the parallel ranges of
Lebanon is the long valley of El-Bekaa, leading to "the entering in of
Hamath" on the Orontes, in the Syrian frontier. Roman roads, and the
harbor made at Cæsarea, opened out doors through which the Gospel
should go from it to all lands. So in the last days, when all shall
flock to Jerusalem as the religious center of the world.
Berothah--a city in Syria conquered by David
(2Sa 8:8);
meaning "wells."
Hazar-hatticon--meaning "the middle village."
Hauran--a tract in Syria, south of Damascus; Auranitis.
17. Hazar-enan--a town in the north of Canaan, meaning "village of fountains."
18. east sea--the Dead Sea. The border is to go down straight to it by the valley of the Jordan. So Nu 34:11, 12.
19. Tamar--not Tadmor in the desert, but Tamar, the last town of Judea, by the Dead Sea. Meaning "palm tree"; so called from palm trees abounding near it.
22. to the strangers--It is altogether unprecedented under the old covenant, that "strangers" should have "inheritance" among the tribes. There would not be room locally within Canaan for more than the tribes. The literal sense must therefore be modified, as expressing that Gentiles are not to be excluded from settling among the covenant-people, and that spiritually their privileges are not to be less than those of Israel (Ro 10:12; Ga 3:28; Eph 3:6; Col 3:11; Re 7:9, 10). Still, "sojourneth," in Eze 47:23, implies that in Canaan, the covenant people are regarded as at home, the strangers as settlers.
CHAPTER 48
Eze 48:1-35. ALLOTMENT OF THE LAND TO THE SEVERAL TRIBES.
1. Dan--The lands are divided into portions of ideal exactness, running alongside of each other, the whole breadth from west to east, standing in a common relation to the temple in the center: seven tribes' portions on the north, five in the smaller division in the south. The portions of the city, the temple, the prince, and the priesthood, are in the middle, not within the boundaries of any tribe, all alike having a common interest in them. Judah has the place of honor next the center on the north, Benjamin the corresponding place of honor next the center on the south; because of the adherence of these two to the temple ordinances and to the house of David for so long, when the others deserted them. Dan, on the contrary, so long locally and morally semi-heathen (Jud 18:1-31), is to have the least honorable place, at the extreme north. For the same reason, St. John (Re 7:5-8) omits Dan altogether.
3. Asher--a tribe of which no one of note is mentioned in the Old Testament. In the New Testament one is singled out of it, the prophetess Anna.
4. Manasseh--The intercourse and unity between the two and a half tribes east of the Jordan, and the nine and a half west of it, had been much kept up by the splitting of Manasseh, causing the visits of kinsmen one to the other from both sides of the Jordan. There shall be no need for this in the new order of things.
5. Ephraim--This tribe, within its two dependent tribes, Manasseh and Benjamin, for upwards of four hundred years under the judges held the pre-eminence.
6. Reuben--doomed formerly for incest and instability "not to excel" (Ge 49:4). So no distinguished prophet, priest, or king had come from it. Of it were the notorious Dathan and Abiram, the mutineers. A pastoral and Bedouin character marked it and Gad (Jud 5:16).
15-17. The five thousand rods, apportioned to the city out of the
twenty-five thousand square, are to be laid off in a square of four
thousand five hundred, with the two hundred fifty all around for
suburbs.
profane--that is, not strictly sacred as the sacerdotal portions, but
applied to secular uses.
24. Benjamin--Compare Jacob's prophecy (Ge 49:27; De 33:12). It alone with Judah had been throughout loyal to the house of David, so its prowess at the "night" of the national history was celebrated as well as in the "morning."
25. Simeon--omitted in the blessing of Moses in De 33:1-29, perhaps because of the Simeonite "prince," who at Baal-peor led the Israelites in their idolatrous whoredoms with Midian (Nu 25:14).
26. Issachar--Its ancient portion had been on the plain of Esdraelon. Compared (Ge 49:14) to "a strong ass crouching between two burdens," that is, tribute and tillage; never meddling with wars except in self-defense.
31. gates-- (Re 21:12, &c.). The twelve gates bear the names of the twelve tribes to imply that all are regarded as having an interest in it.
35. Lord is there--Jehovah-Shammah. Not that the city will be called so in mere name, but that the reality will be best expressed by this descriptive title (Jer 3:17; 33:16; Zec 2:10; Re 21:3; 22:3).
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871) |
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