Ezekiel 4
Summary for Ezek 4:1-3: 4:1–24:27 a In words and in mimed actions, the prophet Ezekiel declared the certainty of impending judgment on Jerusalem. God’s people, having broken the terms of the Lord’s covenant with them at Mount Sinai, now faced the curses of death and destruction that were attached to that covenant. Only after these curses had taken effect could there be any hope for the future.Summary for Ezek 4:1-7:27: 4:1–7:27 b These chapters focus on words and actions that proclaimed doom to the city of Jerusalem (chs 4–5 c) and to the surrounding land of Judah (chs 6–7 d).
Summary for Ezek 4:1-2: 4:1-2 e The first of Ezekiel’s sign acts (see thematic note for Prophetic Sign Acts at end of chapter) was to create a detailed tableau depicting Jerusalem ... under siege.
4:3 f The prophet was to take on the role of God in this dramatic scene. The iron griddle set up between him and the city showed that Jerusalem had cut itself off from God. Meanwhile, the prophet was to turn his face aggressively toward the city, showing that God’s attention had not flagged but that he was implacably determined to destroy Jerusalem in the coming siege.
Summary for Ezek 4:4-8: 4:4-8 g The prophet’s second sign act was related to the first, but this time he was to act the roles of both God and victims of the siege. As a siege victim, he was tied up with ropes (4:8 h) and confined to a single position. Possibly Ezekiel was not confined continually during this 14-month period, but performed this sign on a daily basis. As Ezekiel represented Israel, he was to bear Israel’s sins symbolically by lying on one side, without bringing atonement and forgiveness to Israel.
Summary for Ezek 4:4-5: 4:4-5 i Israel indicates the whole covenant community, not just the northern kingdom. The number 390 has been interpreted in various ways. A likely explanation is that 390 represents years, perhaps from early in Solomon’s reign (971–931 BC) to the destruction of Jerusalem (586 BC; see 2 Kgs 25:3-7 j).
4:6 k Judah was the community of those in exile, whose sojourn outside the land was represented by the symbolic figure of 40 years. They were a lost generation, just like the generation that spent 40 years in the wilderness for their sin (Num 14:34 l).
• The 430 days of Ezekiel’s confinement (cp. Ezek 4:5 m) parallel the 430 years that Israel spent in Egypt (Exod 12:40 n), hinting that there would be a new exodus at the end of the Exile.
4:7 o Throughout the depiction, Ezekiel continued to represent God. With his arm bared, he stared at the siege of Jerusalem and prophesied her destruction.
Summary for Ezek 4:9-17: 4:9-17 p The near-starvation diet of eight ounces of food and a jar of water for each day represent siege rations and reflect a desperate situation in which there was not enough of any one kind of grain to make a whole loaf.
Summary for Ezek 4:12-13: 4:12-13 q Cooking over human dung would render the bread ceremonially unclean, thus defiling Ezekiel when he ate it. The Israelites had to eat defiled bread in exile, when it was extremely difficult to observe kosher dietary laws. They would be unclean and cut off from the cleansing presence of the Lord.
Summary for Ezek 4:14-15: 4:14-15 r The prophet protested that he had never eaten anything unclean. The Lord relented, allowing Ezekiel to cook his food over cow dung and to follow the law regarding disposal of human excrement (see Deut 23:12-14 s).
Thematic note: Prophetic Sign Acts
The prophets of Israel occasionally communicated through sign acts, which were dramatic visual aids performed in public to increase the impact of the message and help people feel the truth as much as hear it. Their purpose was to present an unforgettable message. These acts were unusual, even outlandish—and not just from a modern perspective. Unlike modern readers, however (who might think that the prophet was psychologically disturbed), ancient observers understood these sign acts as a regular part of a prophet’s communication style.
Ezekiel was required to act out his message more frequently than any other prophet, perhaps because he was communicating to a particularly hardened audience (Ezek 2:6-7 t). The sign acts reinforced the content of his message and underlined the depth of his personal commitment to it. For example, after he swallowed the word of God (2:8–3:3 u), Ezekiel embodied it for the exiles (3:4-9 v) in a series of judgment scenes (chs 4–6 w). This dramatic form of communication is difficult for even a hostile audience to ignore or forget.
The ultimate sign act was performed by Jesus Christ on the cross (see Matt 27:32-54 x). There God visibly depicted his wrath against sin in the darkness, the earthquake, and the agony of the sinless one who was apparently abandoned by his Father. God also depicted his profound love for the world in that he would rather die than let his people go. The cross is a confrontational message of God’s love and wrath that is hard to ignore or forget.
Passages for Further Study
Jer 13:1-11 y; 19:1-15 z; 25:15 aa; Ezek 2:6–3:3 ab; 3:4-9 ac; 4:1-17 ad; 5:1–6:14 ae; 12:1-28 af; 21:19-23 ag; 24:1-14 ah, 16-27 ai; 37:15-28 aj; Hos 1:2-9 ak; 3:1-3 al; Matt 26:26-28 am; 27:45-54 an; Mark 6:11 ao; 11:12-21 ap; Luke 22:17-20 aq; Rom 6:3-5 ar; 1 Cor 10:16-17 as; 11:23-32 at
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