Ezekiel 10
Summary for Ezek 10:1-22: 10:1-22 a The Temple provided an earthly residence where the Lord’s glory could dwell among his people. This central blessing of the covenant could only be maintained if the people were holy. In the face of their defilement, the Lord abandoned his house, leaving it and the surrounding city vulnerable to the impending assault of the Babylonians.Summary for Ezek 10:1-2: 10:1-2 b Almost the same vision of fearsome glory that Ezekiel had seen earlier in Babylonia (ch 1 c) now appeared to him in the Jerusalem Temple. In a building filled with heavenly symbols, Ezekiel clearly perceived that the living creatures he had seen earlier were cherubim, the enforcers of divine judgment (Gen 3:24 d).
• The burning coals that the priestly figure was instructed to gather showed that the defiled Jerusalem was to be burned by fire, as the city of Sodom had been (see 16:46-50 e). The implication of the Lord’s abandoning his city was later worked out in history: Several years after this vision, Nebuchadnezzar burned the city of Jerusalem and filled it with corpses.
Summary for Ezek 10:3-22: 10:3-22 f As if reluctant to leave, the glory of the Lord (10:4 g) moved slowly and haltingly, by stages. From above the cherubim in the Most Holy Place, it moved to the entrance of the Temple, paused, then hovered above the cherubim (10:18 h) and moved to the east gate of the courtyard (10:19 i), where it again paused. The glory of the Lord later left the city altogether (11:23 j).
10:12 k covered with eyes: The elders’ earlier statement that “the Lord doesn’t see us” (8:12 l) was foolish and false.
Summary for Ezek 10:19-22: 10:19-22 m From this point on, the city was doomed; God, whose threatening judgment appeared in such fearsome majesty in the opening chapter of Ezekiel, had abandoned it.
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