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The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20: Ezekiel
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20: Ezekiel
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20: Ezekiel
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The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20: Ezekiel

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Written BY Preachers and Teachers FOR Preachers and Teachers

Combining fresh insights with readable exposition and relatable examples, The Preacher's Commentary will help you minister to others and see their lives transformed through the power of God's Word. Whether preacher, teacher, or Bible study leader--if you're a communicator, The Preacher's Commentary will help you share God's Word more effectively with others.

This volume on Ezekiel pays special attention to unpacking the prophet’s historical particularity, confusing apocalypticism, and frequent repetition.

Each volume is written by one of today's top scholars, and includes:

  • Innovative ideas for preaching and teaching God's Word
  • Vibrant paragraph-by-paragraph exposition
  • Impelling real-life illustrations
  • Insightful and relevant contemporary application
  • An introduction, which reveals the author's approach
  • A full outline of the biblical book being covered
  • Scripture passages (using the New King James Version) and explanations

 

The Preacher's Commentary offers pastors, teachers, and Bible study leaders clear and compelling insights into the Bible that will equip them to understand, apply, and teach the truth in God's Word.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherThomas Nelson
Release dateJul 28, 2004
ISBN9781418587703
The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20: Ezekiel
Author

Douglas Stuart

Douglas Stuart was born and raised in Glasgow. After graduating from the Royal College of Art, he moved to New York, where he began a career in fashion design. Shuggie Bain, his first novel, won the Booker Prize and both 'Debut of the Year' and 'Book of The Year' at the British Book Awards. It was also shortlisted for the US National Book Award for Fiction, among many other awards. His short stories have appeared in the New Yorker and his essay on gender, anxiety and class was published by Lit Hub. He divides his time between New York and Glasgow. Young Mungo is his second novel.

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    The Preacher's Commentary - Vol. 20 - Douglas Stuart

    SECTION ONE

    BEFORE THE FALL OF JERUSALEM

    E

    ZEKIEL

    1:1–24:27

    CHAPTER ONE—VISIONS OF GOD

    EZEKIEL 1:1–28

    Scripture Outline

    The Heavens Opened (1:1–3)

    Creatures in the Wind (1:4–14)

    Wheels in Wheels (1:15–21)

    Firmament and Throne (1:22–28)

    E zekiel’s prophecy is filled with visions. No other Old Testament book contains so many vivid pictures of what God caused a person to see. In that sense, Ezekiel is an exceptional book, since a majority of the sixteen prophetical books in the Old Testament do not contain vision reports. Daniel has several in its latter chapters. Isaiah has some, as do Jeremiah, Amos, and Zechariah. It was obviously not necessary for a prophet to see visions to receive God’s revelation. Visions were, however, one way for God to convey His truth through a prophet to His people.

    A well-established tenet of learning theory is that people remember pictures better than they remember words. Popular books on how to improve one’s memory and memory specialists who can dazzle an audience by memorizing hundreds of names in just a few minutes depend on this fact: the best way to remember words (or names) is to associate them with pictures in your mind. Then by remembering the pictures you can usually come up with the words.

    Sociologists often describe the present era as a visual age. People are more oriented to what is visual than to what is merely spoken or written. The average American sees almost thirty hours of television a week but would probably find it an intolerable burden to have to read any combination of written materials for that many hours. Besides this, people simply see more than they talk or listen. Except for those whose vision is impaired, seeing is a bigger part of life than words could ever be. The skillful communicator must realize this and use it to good advantage. Whether one is preaching, teaching, writing, or counseling, getting a message across effectively involves communicating in a way that will allow people to form mental images. Unless what we say is clear and vivid enough that people can somehow see what we’re saying, they are not as likely to remember it long enough for it to do any good.

    God knows this and always has. Thus the Bible, while containing no photographs or drawings, is nevertheless liberally provided with word-generated images, things that can be visualized. Truths do not need to be changed or simplified to be vivid. The Bible is packed with stories that the mind’s eye can follow, poetry that conjures up images in our heads, parables, similitudes, analogies, and other literary forms that turn on the visual imagination or memory. Among the prophetical books, then, Ezekiel is an example of an almost constant use of visual literature. Ezekiel tells us what he saw, and no other Bible author, with the possible exception of John the apostle, the writer of Revelation, saw so much.

    THE HEAVENS OPENED

    1:1 Now it came to pass in the thirtieth year, in the fourth month, on the fifth day of the month, as I was among the captives by the River Chebar, that the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God. ² On the fifth day of the month, which was in the fifth year of King Jehoiachin’s captivity, ³ the word of the L

    ORD

    came expressly to Ezekiel the priest, the son of Buzi, in the land of the Chaldeans by the River Chebar; and the hand of the L

    ORD

    was upon him there.

    —Ezekiel 1:13

    These verses are like the title page of a book, or the information on its dust jacket or front cover. They are not intended to be exciting or dramatic, but to orient us in as simple and direct a fashion as is possible to the subject matter of what follows. While it is quite true that you can’t judge a book by its cover, a good descriptive title and mention of the author’s name still provide a great deal of important information. If we saw a title like China: 19001950 by Yi Po Ling on the cover of a volume in a used book store, we would know at once that here was a book about a specific Asian country in a specific time period, almost surely a history, and probably written by someone who was a native of that country and a speaker of its language.

    From the longer title in Ezekiel we glean an even greater amount of information. Verse 1 gives us a precise closing date for Ezekiel’s visionary ministry. Verses 2 and 3, on the other hand, identify the day on which Ezekiel saw his first vision. Jehoiachin was exiled in 598 B.C. (2 Kin. 24:8–17) and replaced with a puppet king, Zedekiah, by the Babylonians who conquered Jerusalem in that year (2 Kin. 24:17–18). The Jews in the first exile (the one of 598 B.C.) in Mesopotamia, of whom Ezekiel was a member, refused to recognize the puppet Zedekiah as their king. They considered Jehoiachin to be the last legitimate Judean king, even though he had reigned only three months before being deposed and exiled (2 Kin. 24:8). Thus Ezekiel dates his prophecies according to the amount of time that had elapsed since Jehoiachin had left Jerusalem in 598 B.C. The final prophecies (presumably those of chs. 40–48) were therefore delivered not later than the thirtieth year (568 B.C.) while the first prophecy (1:4 and following) was the result of Ezekiel’s experience in 593 B.C., the fifth year of King Jehoiachin’s captivity.

    Verse 1, in the first person and thus spoken by Ezekiel himself, functions as an introduction to the entire book and makes two paramount points: (1) Ezekiel was among the exiles; (2) he saw revelatory visions. Virtually everything we read in this extensive book was first reported to that defeated community of expatriate Jews forcibly deported to Mesopotamia by the Babylonians, an unknown number of whom (probably a few hundred) lived where Ezekiel did at the city of Tel-Abib along the Chebar River. This river was in fact a great irrigation canal that took water from the Euphrates River at the city of Nippur and carried it in a large semicircle through the countryside until it rejoined the Euphrates downstream near the city of Uruk.

    Because the word Tel in the name Tel-Abib can mean ruined mound, it is quite possible that the Judean exiles were allowed to live there in order to rebuild and repopulate a destroyed or abandoned city. Such a policy would have been advantageous to the Babylonians, who could use these Jewish settlers to reclaim land. For the Jews, however, it was a discouraging life. They were displaced, hopelessly distant from the type of economy and society they understood, and far out of range of ever worshiping at the Jerusalem temple as the Law required. In other words, they could no longer even carry on their religion normally, since properly worshiping God involved temple sacrifice at Mount Zion (Deut. 12).

    Yet to these despairing deportees God encouragingly revealed His will through the visions He gave to His prophet Ezekiel. As verse 3 tells us, Ezekiel was a priest. He was trained in the elaborate procedures for appearing ritually pure before God at the temple and properly butchering and/or cooking food for the sacrificial meals. That God should later reveal through him many specifics about the rituals and standards of worship in the new temple (chs. 40–48) is especially understandable in the light of this training.

    The hand of the Lord was upon him (v. 3). This idiomatic expression indicates in part God’s acceptance and approval of Ezekiel, but its central emphasis is that God was in charge of Ezekiel, supervising his experiences and directing his life (cf. 1 Chr. 4:10; Ezra 7:6), just as any of us would hope that God would direct our lives for good.

    CREATURES IN THE WIND

    1:4 Then I looked, and behold, a whirlwind was coming out of the north, a great cloud with raging fire engulfing itself; and brightness was all around it and radiating out of its midst like the color of amber, out of the midst of the fire. ⁵ Also from within it came the likeness of four living creatures. And this was their appearance: they had the likeness of a man. ⁶ Each one had four faces, and each one had four wings. ⁷ Their legs were straight, and the soles of their feet were like the soles of calves’ feet. They sparkled like the color of burnished bronze. ⁸ The hands of a man were under their wings on their four sides; and each of the four had faces and wings. ⁹ Their wings touched one another. The creatures did not turn when they went, but each one went straight forward.

    ¹⁰ As for the likeness of their faces, each had the face of a man; each of the four had the face of a lion on the right side, each of the four had the face of an ox on the left side, and each of the four had the face of an eagle. ¹¹ Thus were their faces. Their wings stretched upward; two wings of each one touched one another, and two covered their bodies. ¹² And each one went straight forward; they went wherever the spirit wanted to go, and they did not turn when they went.

    ¹³ As for the likeness of the living creatures, their appearance was like burning coals of fire, like the appearance of torches going back and forth among the living creatures. The fire was bright, and out of the fire went lightning. ¹⁴ And the living creatures ran back and forth, in appearance like a flash of lightning.

    —Ezekiel 1:4–14

    Ezekiel’s first vision began with a storm out of the north (v. 4). He saw a dark cloud, illumined round the edges as if by the backlighting of the sun, what seems to have been lightninglike fire, and a glowing center of brightness. The fact that the storm came from the north is significant. It hints that this storm has something to do with God, since one symbolic way of describing God’s abode in Bible times was to depict it as in the north (Ps. 48:2; Is. 14:13). Moreover, storms and clouds were often associated with theophanies (appearances of God: Is. 29:6; Job 38:1; Pss. 29:3–9; 104:3). Indeed we look forward to the fact that the Lord Jesus will return with the clouds (Matt. 24:30; 26:24; 1 Thess. 4:17) that will accompany His Second Coming in fulfillment of this same association between storms/clouds and theophany (cf. Ex. 13:21; Lev. 16:2; etc.).

    As the vision progressed, Ezekiel’s attention was drawn to four living creatures (v. 5). From their description in verses 5–11 it is clear that they fit the general category of cherubim, known to us both from other accounts in the Old Testament (1 Kin. 6:24–27; Ex. 25:18–22; etc.) and also from ancient Near Eastern throne sculpture (cf., e.g., Zondervan Pictorial Bible Encyclopedia, 1:789). Cherubim are sometimes likened to the animals of the angelic creation. (The creation of angels and angelic life was separate from and is therefore not described in Genesis 1–3). In the Bible, they are often depicted as God’s beasts of burden, as it were, the creatures that draw His divine chariot (see vv. 22–28).

    In the present passage the emphasis is not really on their appearance, even though appearance (vv. 5, 13, 14) and likeness (vv. 5, 10, 13) are words used often in the context. Rather, the point made is that as Ezekiel gradually began to make sense of these unusual creatures that he was seeing, he could tell that they were oriented omnidirectionally. Later (vv. 15ff.) Ezekiel describes how the creatures were stationed at the four sides of the divine chariot, each facing in a different direction, yet all—by reason of having four faces—were able to see at once in any direction. Here he also notes (v. 10) that their faces represented man, lion, ox, and eagle. These were traditionally the four most impressive of the land and air animals: man, chief over all; the lion, chief of the wild animals; the ox, chief of the domesticated animals; and the eagle, chief of the birds of the air. Intelligence, strength, ferocity, freedom, etc. were all wrapped up in one in these special angelic creatures.

    Ezekiel saw that when they flew bearing God’s chariot they did not need to turn to face the intended direction of their flight, because they were already oriented to all directions (v. 12). He also notes how fiery and brilliant was their appearance (vv. 13–14).

    So here we have special creatures, supernatural and unusual, coming out of a cloud lined with fire. So far, Ezekiel hasn’t told us everything about his vision, but from what we already know, two things are evident. (1) Something that is supernatural and that involves God on the move is about to happen. (2) It is happening in Mesopotamia, to exiles who thought themselves hopelessly removed from God’s presence and out of the picture religiously, as well as economically and politically.

    In terms of images familiar in our day, it might well be that some people looking for God would expect Him to choose symbolically to manifest Himself via a space shuttle, or perhaps the biggest, longest, most impressive limousine anyone had ever seen. Maybe they would look for Him to choose to appear as if out of the mushroom cloud of an atomic blast, or a grand volcanic eruption, or a terrible hurricane. In fact, God’s most direct self-manifestation to date has been very different. He came as a human being, in remarkably humble circumstances, living and dying in a rather obscure part of the world. Yet we beheld His glory even more brightly than Ezekiel did (John 1:14). In Ezekiel’s day God chose means that readily conveyed something of His greatness and His special nature, so that His prophet and the people to whom His prophet relayed the message would not miss the importance of what was about to take place.

    This visual display, and those that follow in the book, were by no means ends in themselves. The purpose was not simply to dazzle Ezekiel, but to point to a message. God is on the move, He is allowing Himself to be seen, He is appearing even in what people thought was a godforsaken place. What an enduring message of hope! How important it is for us to remember that God is never confined, never limited, never distracted, never disinterested in His people.

    WHEELS IN WHEELS

    ¹⁵ Now as I looked at the living creatures, behold, a wheel was on the earth beside each living creature with its four faces. ¹⁶ The appearance of the wheels and their workings was like the color of beryl, and all four had the same likeness. The appearance of their workings was, as it were, a wheel in the middle of a wheel. ¹⁷ When they moved, they went toward any one of four directions; they did not turn aside when they went. ¹⁸ As for their rims, they were so high they were awesome; and their rims were full of eyes, all around the four of them. ¹⁹ When the living creatures went, the wheels went beside them; and when the living creatures were lifted up from the earth, the wheels were lifted up. ²⁰ Wherever the spirit wanted to go, they went, because there the spirit went; and the wheels were lifted together with them, for the spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels. ²¹ When those went, these went; when those stood, these stood; and when those were lifted up from the earth, the wheels were lifted up together with them, for the spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels.

    —Ezekiel 1:1521

    Because of the language of verse 16, a wheel in the middle of a wheel, much misunderstanding about the nature of Ezekiel’s vision has occurred. There have been suggestions that a little wheel was somehow encased in a big one; that the smaller wheel was perhaps a rim; that the wheels counter-rotated in opposite directions as part of a propulsion system of some sort; that the wheels were symbolic of key truth hidden within a larger corpus of fact; or even that Ezekiel was seeing the workings of a flying saucer.

    In fact, the explanation is not complicated, and it relates to the omnidirectional emphasis already made in the preceding passage in connection with the cherubim. The two sets of wheels were within each other in the sense of being interconnected on different axes. One wheel intersected the other at right angles so that no turning was necessary to go in any of the four main directions, as verse 17 says. (Each wheel could, of course, go in two directions since a wheel can go forward or backward equally easily.) Moreover, the wheels were so closely linked to the cherubim (v. 22), which they were right beside (v. 15), that there was no lack of response to the cherubim’s leading (v. 19). Together, the cherubim all flying in concert and the wheels always ready to go without needing to turn provided a means of conveyance that could go anywhere, in any direction, immediately (v. 21).

    That was the point: the spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels so that this chariot could move fast. God was moving—and fast! Ezekiel and his compatriots needed to be encouraged and challenged. Ezekiel’s vision provided him with a vivid symbol of the fact that nothing was keeping God from going wherever He wanted to. Just as He had protected these people and controlled their fortunes in Palestine, He was now prepared to protect and direct their lives in exile in Babylon. God had wheels! He was not limited. He could go anywhere anytime.

    The concept of God shared by Ezekiel’s countrymen, the Judean exiles, had been too small. They had assumed, like many peoples of ancient times, that gods had jurisdiction only over their own nations. But here was evidence of a different sort of jurisdiction. One God, the God, was traveling the earth, in control of it all. His supremacy might just mean that their situation was not so hopeless after all.

    Thus ultimately the chariot vision is a vision of hope for a people who needed encouragement to hope once again. A vision of God’s mobility was for them a message not to despair but to anticipate: in what way was God on the move and how did it concern them? The following passages provided the answer.

    FIRMAMENT AND THRONE

    ²² The likeness of the firmament above the heads of the living creatures was like the color of an awesome crystal, stretched out over their heads. ²³ And under the firmament their wings spread out straight, one toward another. Each one had two which covered one side, and each one had two which covered the other side of the body. ²⁴ When they went, I heard the noise of their wings, like the noise of many waters, like the voice of the Almighty, a tumult like the noise of an army; and when they stood still, they let down their wings. ²⁵ A voice came from above the firmament that was over their heads; whenever they stood, they let down their wings.

    ²⁶ And above the firmament over their heads was the likeness of a throne, in appearance like a sapphire stone; on the likeness of the throne was a likeness with the appearance of a man high above it. ²⁷ Also from the appearance of His waist and upward I saw, as it were, the color of amber with the appearance of fire all around within it; and from the appearance of His waist and downward I saw, as it were, the appearance of fire with brightness all around. ²⁸ Like the appearance of a rainbow in a cloud on a rainy day, so was the appearance of the brightness all around it. This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the L

    ORD

    . So when I saw it, I fell on my face, and I heard a voice of One speaking.

    —Ezekiel 1:2228

    The English word firmament translates the Hebrew rāqîʿa, a word conveying the sense of something spread out, extensive. Verses 22–24 describe the firmament as gemlike, supported by the cherubim, whose wings made a great roar as they flew around bearing the firmament. Verses 25–26 reveal that the firmament functioned as a kind of platform for God’s throne. The likeness on the throne was that of God, who, as verses 27–28 tell us, could not really be seen except in general shape, and whose most visible feature was His glorious shining brightness. Firmament, throne, wheels, and cherubim together, commanded by the voice of God (v. 25), constituted an impressive picture of God’s giant, fiery, air chariot driven by the King of kings Himself, which had touched down right there at the obscure town of Tel-Abib.

    A previously unknown prophet might now have a firsthand experience of the power and majesty of God Himself. No wonder Ezekiel tells us that he fell on his face (v. 28). In ancient times it was standard practice for people to lie face down on the ground when they appeared before a monarch. In Egypt, at certain times at least, appearing before the Pharaoh required formal groveling: rolling from stomach to back seven times before being allowed to rise at the command of the Pharaoh. Here Ezekiel is privileged to hear the voice of God speaking to him. He did not seek this audience with God, but rather God sought him out and showed him a token of His splendor and power. What follows then, we may expect, ought to be an indication of what God has in store for Ezekiel and his countrymen, a revelation to them of what God is about to do.

    Let us hope that the majesty of God would always cause us, similarly, to respect and honor Him. His glory is not something reserved for Old Testament-era visions, but part of what we are to manifest as a result of His indwelling us (2 Cor. 3:7–18). We must show forth His glory, not merely be impressed by it. As Christ revealed the Father, so we are to imitate the Son (1 Cor. 4:16; 1 Thess. 1:6; cf. Eph. 5:1).

    God is truly a glorious being. It will be our pleasure to behold and adore that glory in heaven, but we ought not to ignore our opportunity to get in practice now. By prayer, meditation, worship, and study of His words and deeds in Scripture, we can renew our own contact with God’s glory in a strengthening, even impelling way. Then, just as Ezekiel’s vision of God’s glory led to action on behalf of God, we can act with confidence to do God’s will, reminded by His glory of the certainty of our success.

    CHAPTER TWO—FIVE COMMISSIONS

    EZEKIEL 2:1–3:27

    Scripture Outline

    First Commission (Rebels) (2:1–7)

    The Sweet Scroll (2:8–3:3)

    Second Commission (Poor Listeners) (3:4–9)

    Third Commission (Lifted by the Spirit) (3:10–15)

    Fourth Commission (Watchman for Israel) (3:16–21)

    Fifth Commission (Dumbness) (3:22–27)

    Ezekiel now learns of his call. God has for him an almost intolerable assignment. He must preach a message likely to be rejected as ridiculous to a group of people, the Israelites, whose long history has been characterized by their rebelliousness against God and many of whom are in exile in a foreign country as a result. To a bitter, hostile, unreceptive audience he must faithfully convey God’s word even if no one listens.

    Again and again God reminds Ezekiel of the necessity of his task and of the need to be faithful to it. No fewer than five times God commissions His prophet in symbolic ways to undertake the assignment, hard though it may be. Ezekiel even has to experience the inability to speak (the fifth commission) as a forceful experiential reminder of the fact that he has no authority to make up on his own what he says to his fellow Israelites. Rather, only God can, as it were, loose his tongue. He must let God speak through him, and not invent anything himself or take his message from anyone else. Originality is usually prized among writers and speakers. Yet there was to be no originality in Ezekiel’s doctrine. In all five commissions he is reminded that his job is to convey and not to create. The great king has arrived among the exiles to give him his assignment. He must be faithful.

    FIRST COMMISSION (REBELS)

    2:1 And He said to me, Son of man, stand on your feet, and I will speak to you. ² Then the Spirit entered me when He spoke to me, and set me on my feet; and I heard Him who spoke to me. ³ And He said to me: "Son of man, I am sending you to the children of Israel, to a rebellious nation that has rebelled against Me; they and their fathers have transgressed against Me to this very day. ⁴ For they are impudent and stubborn children. I am sending you to them, and you shall say to them, ‘Thus says the Lord G

    OD

    .’ ⁵ As for them, whether they hear or whether they refuse—for they are a rebellious house—yet they will know that a prophet has been among them.

    And you, son of man, do not be afraid of them nor be afraid of their words, though briers and thorns are with you and you dwell among scorpions; do not be afraid of their words or dismayed by their looks, though they are a rebellious house. ⁷ You shall speak My words to them, whether they hear or whether they refuse, for they are rebellious.

    —Ezekiel 2:17

    Good parents make sure that their children hear what they need to hear: warnings about safety, advice about associations and habits, counsel about the proper directions in life, etc. Sometimes a parent must repeat a type of warning or advice over and over to be sure that a child gets the message. Everyone is capable of listening without paying attention, and the children of Israel were no exception.

    But Israel’s refusal to hear (vv. 5, 7) went even beyond this. The verb šāmaʿ, rendered hear, can also carry the connotation heed/obey, as it does in this case. Ezekiel had every reason to believe that his fellow Israelites in exile could actually hear what he said to them. What he had reason to be unsure of, however, is whether they would accept his words as those of God or ignore them. Israel’s history is full of examples of the people’s listening to false prophets instead of true prophets of the Lord (e.g., 1 Kin. 20; Jer. 14:14–16; Is. 59:13). When false prophets told the people what they wanted to hear, for example, that they would prosper even though they had lived selfishly and did not acknowledge God or worship Him exclusively, the people tended to hear. But Ezekiel was being required to announce judgment and to call for repentance, an unpopular message of the sort the people had plenty of practice not hearing.

    God addresses him (vv. 1, 3, 6, and about ninety times hereafter) as son of man (Hebrew, ben ʾādām) in a manner that emphasizes his humanity as over against God’s supernatural greatness and power. The expression son of can have a special idiomatic sense in Hebrew. Son of indicates a close relationship even when it does not literally connote sonship. For example, in Jonah 4:10 the leafy gourd that sheltered Jonah is called a son of a night, meaning that it lasted only one night. Jesus calls a person of peaceful intentions and hospitality literally a son of peace in Luke 10:6. A person deserving to die is literally a son of death in 1 Samuel 10:31. Thus Ezekiel, as son of man is the human. Later, the term took on the symbolism of The Human and became a Messianic term connoting in effect a new Adam, but here it stresses Ezekiel’s inferiority to and dependence on God, who alone is sovereign.

    In light of the characterization of the Israelites as rebels (vv. 3, 5, 6, 7), transgressors (v. 3), and impudent and stubborn (v. 4), it is no wonder that Ezekiel might be afraid to go to them as a prophet. Who wants a career full of hostility? Who could enjoy the kind of angry criticism and contempt that would be as painful to endure as thorns or scorpions? What modern-day pastor would choose to take a parish where he or she was guaranteed a hostile rejection from the congregation? Is it easy for a missionary to set off for a tribe or territory where he or she is sure to meet not merely hostile disapproval of God’s message, but rejection personally? There are many modern-day saints who understand from experience exactly what Ezekiel was called to endure, but there are few who enjoyed the process. Rare is the person who can set out on a task knowing that people will hate him or her for doing it. But this is exactly what Ezekiel was called to do. His faithfulness stands as a challenge to ours.

    THE SWEET SCROLL

    ⁸ But you, son of man, hear what I say to you. Do not be rebellious like that rebellious house; open your mouth and eat what I give you."

    ⁹ Now when I looked, there was a hand stretched out to me; and behold, a scroll of a book was in it. ¹⁰ Then He spread it before me; and there was writing on the inside and on the outside, and written on it were lamentations and mourning and woe.

    3:1 Moreover He said to me, Son of man, eat what you find; eat this scroll, and go, speak to the house of Israel. ² So I opened my mouth, and He caused me to eat that scroll.

    ³ And He said to me, Son of man, feed your belly, and fill your stomach with this scroll that I give you. So I ate, and it was in my mouth like honey in sweetness.

    —Ezekiel 2:8–3:3

    The command to eat the scroll given him from God represents both the first act of obedience on the part of Ezekiel and also a divine means of encouragement to the newly called prophet. Scrolls were no more appetizing in Bible times than they would seem to be today. Yet by his obedience to this unusual command, Ezekiel shows himself to have accepted God’s call to be a prophet to his fellow exiles and also demonstrates that he is willing to do whatever God commands him to do as part of the process. The Israelites were indeed rebellious. Ezekiel could not be if he were to serve God responsibly (2:8). The scroll of a book (Hebrew, megillat-sēper) would not be a dainty thing but a big, thick papyrus or leather roll. Indeed, Ezekiel reports that He caused me to eat that scroll as if it were something he would otherwise expect to choke on and not be able to consume. To his apparent surprise, however, it was as sweet as honey when he actually ate it (3:3).

    This incident reminds us of Jesus’ teaching that people cannot live only on food but need also the Word of God to sustain their lives (Matt. 4:4), a teaching which Jesus repeated from its original statement in Deuteronomy 8:3. It is not food as usual that will give Ezekiel the strength he needs to carry on his difficult ministry, but rather God’s Word. It must fill him (3:3) so that he preaches only what God has given him to preach and nothing else.

    This is also the meaning of the fact that the scroll is written on both sides, on the inside and on the outside (2:10). It was completely covered with writing, so that neither Ezekiel nor anyone else could add anything to it. Scrolls in ancient times were not normally written upon this way, but were blank on one side. Perhaps the writing on both sides also served to alert Ezekiel to the sheer amount of communication that God was calling him to do.

    Characteristic of Ezekiel’s obligatory preaching would be lamentation, mourning, and woe (2:10). In the Hebrew these words function as synonyms for one another, so there is no suggestion here that his message had three slightly differing facets or the like. Rather, what Ezekiel had to bring to his fellow exiles was a message of bad news, and plenty of it. In fact, when Jerusalem fell in 586 B.C. (ch. 33), God immediately gave to Ezekiel a message of hope for the future of Israel. So his preaching was not entirely negative throughout his career. But the bulk of it was indeed bad news for those to whom it was addressed, the Jews in exile as well as the Jews in Judah and Jerusalem, and the many nations of the Fertile Crescent whose actions in opposing and oppressing one another would not remain unpunished by the Righteous Judge of all nations.

    Correspondingly, the faithful communicator of the Word of God has no right to soften the blow that hearing the truth may bring to those caught up in sin. While no preacher, teacher, evangelist, or counselor should want to emphasize the negative out of proportion to the positive, and while the gospel represents by its very essence good news announced to the whole world, there is also the inescapable fact that God has appointed a time at which He will judge the world. There is a hell, and it will receive for destruction those who have rebelled against God. To hide this from people is to do them no favor. Lovingly, sensitively, but honestly and seriously, the warning must be heard along with the invitation.

    SECOND COMMISSION (POOR LISTENERS)

    ⁴ Then He said to me: Son of man, go to the house of Israel and speak with My words to them. ⁵ For you are not sent to a people of unfamiliar speech and of hard language, but to the house of Israel, ⁶ not to many people of unfamiliar speech and of hard language, whose words you cannot understand. Surely, had I sent you to them, they would have listened to you. ⁷ But the house of Israel will not listen to you, because they will not listen to Me; for all the house of Israel are impudent and hard-hearted. ⁸ Behold, I have made your face strong against their faces, and your forehead strong against their foreheads. ⁹ Like adamant stone, harder than flint, I have made your forehead; do not be afraid of them, nor be dismayed at their looks, though they are a rebellious house.

    —Ezekiel 3:4–9

    Again God’s commission to Ezekiel concerns the importance of perseverance. The term house of Israel (Hebrew, bêt yiśrāʾēl) is used three times in this short passage (vv. 4, 5, 7) and house alone is used once as well (v. 9). A more meaningful translation might be family of Israel and family (v. 9). The Israelites are a people descended from a common ancestry, who are God’s people as well as merely being a nation among others. And they are Ezekiel’s own people, the folks he grew up with, the people whose language is also his mother tongue (vv. 5–6).

    Yet familiarity can breed contempt. Jesus’ comment that a prophet receives honor everywhere but the place he is from (Matt. 13:57) reflects a fact that Ezekiel must confront. Foreigners would have listened to him (v. 6b), perhaps even with the level of acceptance that Jonah found among the citizens of the Assyrian chief city, Nineveh (Jon. 3:5), because he would have been someone new, an outsider, not someone to whom they were accustomed. But Ezekiel was, as it were, just another former Judean temple priest, of whom there were probably plenty among the exiles, and the fact that he would approach his own people with a prophetic message would be nothing impressive to them.

    Even the most eloquent evangelist knows how much more difficult it is to call a family member or a close friend to faith and repentance than to call a total stranger. The pastor knows how much less likely his or her advice is to be taken well by his or her spouse or children or siblings than by those in the congregation to whom he or she is more formally, professionally connected. Yet those close to us need us, too. We do not usually have the luxury of calling in outside specialists. Nobody will care for our families, friends, the people we grew up with, neighbors, close associates, etc., in the same way that we will. So even though it can be harder and more awkward, we must still go to them. They are our own, as the house of Israel was Ezekiel’s own.

    In addition, to the description of the Israelites as impudent (v. 7), repeated from 2:4, Ezekiel hears his people also described as hard-hearted (v. 7). This is not really a new designation, since it is a synonym of stubborn used in 2:4, which it reflects in company with impudent (v. 7). It is, however, the same essential term used at points in Exodus to describe Pharaoh’s attitude (qasah leb; cf. Ex. 7:3) and thus may have sent to Ezekiel the rather unsettling message that he might be running into the same kind of opposition that Moses encountered almost a millennium before, in trying to bring God’s word to a hostile audience.

    Again God encouraged Ezekiel by symbolically strengthening his face and forehead (vv. 8–9). We talk about facing difficult situations. The Hebrew idiom is comparable. Ezekiel learns that it will be hard to go back again and again to face an unreceptive, resentful audience and tell them what God wants them to hear, but he also learns that God will give him the strength and resolve to do it.

    Perhaps the key statement in the present passage is found in verse 7, Israel will not listen to you, because they will not listen to Me. Ezekiel must understand that the rejection he encounters is not ultimately personally directed, though it may appear so. If he speaks only what God has given him, adding nothing of his own making to the inspired word (2:10; 3:4), then he can at least have the confidence that any lack of acceptance of his message is not his fault.

    This we too must guard against. The gospel we preach cannot be our own reformulation, our own selection, our own creative construction. It must be God’s Word. We want to clarify, not invent. Originality should have no premium with the faithful communication of God’s message. If others reject God’s message, we cannot stop that. But let us be sure it is not our way of telling God’s message that is the problem.

    THIRD COMMISSION (LIFTED BY THE SPIRIT)

    ¹⁰ Moreover He said to me: "Son of man, receive into your heart all My words that I speak to you, and hear with your ears. ¹¹ And go, get to the captives, to the children of your people, and speak to them and tell them, ‘Thus says the Lord G

    OD

    ,’ whether they hear, or whether they refuse."

    ¹² Then the Spirit lifted me up, and I heard behind me a great thunderous voice: "Blessed is the glory of the L

    ORD

    from His place!" ¹³ I also heard the noise of the wings of the living creatures that touched one another, and the noise of the wheels beside them, and a great thunderous noise. ¹⁴ So the Spirit lifted me up and took me away, and I went in bitterness, in the heat of my spirit; but the hand of the L

    ORD

    was strong upon me. ¹⁵ Then I came to the captives at Tel Abib, who dwelt by the River Chebar; and I sat where they sat, and remained there astonished among them seven days.

    —Ezekiel 3:10–15

    God continues to address Ezekiel not by his name but by the title Son of Man (v. 10) so as to remind him of his inferior, dependent relationship to God. He continues also to emphasize Ezekiel’s special ministry to his own people (children of your people), those whose circumstances were the same as his own, that is, exile. And now, Ezekiel reports that he was actually taken from wherever he had been until this point (somewhere by himself, outside the city?) and was brought by God’s Spirit back to where the other captives who lived at Tel-Abib were located.

    Ezekiel was not yet able to begin preaching the divine message to them. He had been overwhelmed by his visions, conversations, and lately his experience of being carried from one location to another by the Spirit (v. 14). So he remained astonished (Hebrew, mašmȋm, overwhelmed, desolated) for an entire week. Probably this means that he was having little contact with others, staying inside and keeping quiet. It does not necessarily mean that he was unable to speak or the like (see below, 3:22–27).

    By the end of this passage, a week has passed since Ezekiel’s first sighting of the storm cloud out of the north (1:4). The date is still the same unspecified month in the fifth year of Jehoiachin’s captivity, 593 B.C., but we move from the fifth day to the twelfth in these verses. From 1:4 to 3:15a, a lot happened in the course of a single day.

    But it was not just the rapidity of major revelatory events that left Ezekiel so devastated. Verse 14 tells us about his resultant bitterness and heat of spirit as well as his realization that the hand of the Lord was strong upon me. The bitterness and heat (anger and agitation) that he felt were understandable. His life had been changed by the call of God from what may well have been a quiet, perhaps even comfortably secure existence to one characterized, according to God’s promise, by difficulty, rejection, and hostility. The word but should read and in verse 14, since the idea of the Lord’s hand being strong (Hebrew, hāzāqāh) upon someone is a way of conveying that one has been forced into a difficult set of circumstances. We already learned from 1:3 that the Lord’s hand (control) was on Ezekiel. Now we know that it was not always a pleasant experience.

    But that is something all of God’s servants can acknowledge, if they are honest enough to admit it. We sometimes attempt to avoid any impression that our lives are not constantly happy and that we are not always confident and positive, for fear that if we are more frank, people will conclude that the Christian’s life is not sufficiently different from the non-Christian’s life. We forget that faithfulness and love are to characterize the demeanor of the Christian, not coziness and freedom from hardship. Thus testimonies often tell only of past misery and present bliss, not just in terms of one’s relationship to God, but as if all of life had become trouble free. Nowhere in the Bible is reality avoided in this way, however. The trials of life, major and minor, are to be expected and are not embarrassments to God’s people. It is how we respond to discouragement and to the heavy hand of God upon us that represents an effective testimony. What Ezekiel had found out about his life ahead was genuinely painful to him, and his reaction of dismay was entirely reasonable. However, he neither gave up nor hid his distress. That should be an example to us.

    In verse 10, receive into your heart simply means commit to memory (cf. Luke 2:51). It does not imply some special level of acceptance or emotional agreement, but the need for Ezekiel to be accurate.

    In verse 12, the statement, Blessed is the glory of the LORD from His place is apparently the result of a scribe’s copy mistake, at a time when the Hebrew letter mem could easily be mistaken for the Hebrew letter kaph. Thus an original berûm (as . . . arose) was miscopied into barûk (blessed . . .). It would be best, then, to translate "I heard behind me a great thunderous sound [Hebrew, gôl] as the glory of the LORD arose from its place," which fits the context completely and lets us know that God’s great omnidirectional chariot was taking off and Ezekiel’s inaugural vision had come to an end.

    FOURTH COMMISSION (WATCHMAN FOR ISRAEL)

    ¹⁶ Now it came to pass at the end of seven days that the word of the L

    ORD

    came to me, saying, ¹⁷ "Son of man, I have made you

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