It is difficult to understand the caldron of the Middle East without
first studying the remarkable prophecies found in the book of Ezekiel.
Ezekiel was among the captives with King Jehoiachin in the second of
three deportations under King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. He mentions
Daniel three times, who had been in Babylon nine years before Ezekiel
arrived. Ezekiel ministered, as did Jeremiah, to a nation experiencing
judgment for their sins. In his captivity he lived at the River Chebar,
which was the great ship canal branching off from the Euphrates above
Babylon and turning through Nippur to the Tigris. This was the primary
settlement location of the Jewish captives.
Ezekiel was born in approximately 627 B.C. and lived in a time of moral
decline, distress and uprooting. His messages were not well received at
first, but did ultimately result in the nation being purged of
idolatrous practices. He was married and owned his home. His wife died
during his ministry, and he was forbidden to mourn her.
We also learn that God intended his life to be a series of signs to
Israel; therefore, he does all kinds of strange things. He shuts
himself up in his home. He binds himself. He is struck dumb. In a
formal ritual, he was to lie on his right and his left sides for a
total of 430 days. He ate bread that was prepared in an unclean manner.
He shaved his head and beard, which was considered a shame in his
particular calling.
Throughout the book, his main theme was the sovereignty and glory of
God. This is good for us, because we can get so focused on God’s grace
that we tend to forget there is also a governing role of God, and that
His glory requires justice.
Ezekiel was very direct. He carefully vindicated God’s justice
throughout the book, although he deals more in symbol and allegory that
any other Old Testament prophet. He is probably the greatest mystic of
the Old Testament. He was well suited for the calling God gave him,
which included a remarkable vision of God's Throne in Chapter 1. This
dramatic vision of God never left him. It is not just introduced in the
first chapter, it is referenced all the way through.
The Prophet of the Regathering
The famed vision of the Valley of the Dry Bones in Chapters 36 and 37
is unquestionably the monumental Biblical fulfillment of the 20th
century. Beginning in the last half of the 19th century, the
regathering that climaxed in the establishment of the State of Israel
is one of the most irrefutable evidences that we are on threshold of
God's climax for the nations mentioned throughout the Bible - and
remarkably detailed in the writings of Ezekiel.
The final chapters, 40-48, climax with a remarkably detailed
description of the Millennial Temple to be rebuilt. Ezekiel was
uniquely qualified for this role due to his priestly background. He was
the son of Buzi, who was also a priest. It is interesting that even
though he never served as a priest, he apparently so influenced later
worship that today he is called by some, "The Father of Judaism." From
Numbers 4:3 we know that Kohathites had to be 30 years old before they
could begin service as priests. When Ezekiel became 30, however, he was
deported, in approximately the eightieth year of the reign of
Nebuchadnezzar. The Temple which Ezekiel describes has never yet been
built. Most scholars regard it as the details for the Temple which will
be established during the Millennium on Planet Earth.
Between the regathering of the nation in Chapters 36 and 37, and the
Millennium Temple described in Chapters 40-48, there is a climactic
event that intervenes. The invasion of Gog and Magog, described in
Chapters 38 and 39, are among the most famous prophetic passages in the
Bible. For a variety of reasons, the identity of "Magog" as the people
of Russia seems well established.
Have you ever studied this incredible book carefully? See our
verse-by-verse Commentary on the Book of Ezekiel, click on the link
below to learn more.
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EXAMINING EZEKIEL
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