An Introduction to the Book of Ezekiel
Study By: David MalickI. TITLE OF THE BOOK:
A. In Hebrew: In Hebrew the book is titled laqzhy meaning God strengthens
B. In Greek: In Greek the book is titled IESEKIHL; the Hebrew is simply transliterated.
II. DATE: 593/2 to 562 B.C.
A. Ezekiel's prophecies seem to be dated around the exile of
king Jehoiachin (597 B.C.)
Thirteen of Ezekiel's message are dated precisely to the day, month and year of King Jehoiachin's exile to Babylon. The following chart lays out the general chronological arrangement of these prophecies with three exceptions (29:1, 17; 32:1) all of which were oracles against Egypt and thus placed together with the other Egyptian prophecies:1
Thirteen of Ezekiel's message are dated precisely to the day, month and year of King Jehoiachin's exile to Babylon. The following chart lays out the general chronological arrangement of these prophecies with three exceptions (29:1, 17; 32:1) all of which were oracles against Egypt and thus placed together with the other Egyptian prophecies:1
Chariot Vision
|
1:1-3
|
June 593 B.C.
|
Call to be a Watchman
|
3:16
|
June 593
|
Temple Vision
|
8:1
|
August/September 492
|
Discourse with Elders
|
20:1
|
August 591
|
Second Siege of Jerusalem
|
24:1
|
January 588
|
Judgment on Tyre
|
26:1
|
March/April 587/586
|
Judgment on Egypt
|
29:1
|
January 587
|
Judgment on Egypt
|
29:17
|
April 571
|
Judgment on Egypt
|
30:20
|
April 587
|
Judgment on Egypt
|
31:1
|
June 587
|
Lament over Pharaoh
|
32:1
|
March 585
|
Lament over Egypt
|
32:17
|
April 586
|
Fall of Jerusalem
|
33:21
|
December/January 586/85
|
New Temple Vision
|
40:1
|
April 573
|
B. Ezekiel was called to his prophetic ministry in the fifth
year of the exile of King Jehoiachin--593/92 B.C.
C. Ezekiel's last discourse was dated in the twenty-seventh
year of Jehoiachin's exile--571/70 B.C. (29:17)
D. Ezekiel never mentions the release of Jehoiachin in 560
B.C.
E. Therefore, it reasonable to conclude that Ezekiel's
messages cover the period from 593/92 to 571/70 B.C. and were written down in
present form from 571/70 B.C. to 562 B.C.
III. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND2
A. Josiah brought about the final spiritual revival for Judah
when he came to the throne in 622 B.C.
B. The Assyrian Empire Fell
1. The Assyrian power rose with Ashurnasirpal II (884-859 B.C.)
and Shalmaneser II (859-824 B.C.)
2. Tiglath-pileser III (Pul in the Scriptures) began a group of
conquerors who took Syria and Palestine including Shalmaneser V (727-722 B.C.
who began the deportation of Samaria), Sargon II (722-705 B.C. who completed the
deportation of Samaria), Sennacherib (704-581 B.C. who attacked king of Judah,
Hezekiah [Josiah's father]), and Esarhaddon (681-669 B.C. who led campaigns
against Egypt)
3. Esarhaddon's son, Ashurbanipal (669-631) ruled much of the
upper Egyptian city of Thebes, but his decline and that of Assyria's soon
followed
4. Nineveh, the capital, was destroyed in 612 B.C.
5. Assyria's army was defeated in 609 B.C. at Haran
6. What was left of Assyria's army went to Carchemish (just west
of the Euphrates River and north of Aram)
C. The Neo-Babylonian Empire Arose
1. Merodach Baladan was a Chaldean and father of Nabopolassar and
grandfather of Nebuchadnezzar. Merodach Baladan sent ambassadors to Hezekiah (Isa
39; 2
Ki 20:12-19)
2. In October 626 B.C. Nabopolassar defeated the Assyrians outside
of Babylon
3. In 616 B.C. Nabopolassar expanded his kingdom, and in 612 B.C.
he joined with the Medes and destroyed Nineveh
D. A Realignment of Power in 609 B.C. and later
1. Judah: When Assyria fell and Babylon arose Judah, under Josiah,
removed itself from Assyria's control and existed as an autonomous state until
609 B.C. when it lost a battle with Egypt on the plain of Megiddo
2. Egypt:
a. Attempted to expand its presence into Palestine with Assyria's
troubles
b. Egypt joined with Assyria to fight the Babylonians at Haran
1) Judah tried to stop Egypt's (Pharaoh Neco II) alliance but was
defeated on the plain of Megiddo with the loss of their king, Josiah (cf. 2 Chron
35:20-24)
2) The Assyrians lost their battle with Babylon (even with the
help of Egypt) and disappeared as a power in the world, and Egypt retreated to
Carchemish as the dividing line between Egypt and Babylonian
3) Egypt ruled Judah:
a) Egypt (Necho) replaced Josiah's son, Jehoahaz, after three
months with Jehoiakim (who was another son of Josiah) as a vassal king (2 Ki
23:34-35)
b) Egypt (Necho) plundered Judah's treasuries
c) Egypt (Necho) took Jehoahaz into captivity in Egypt
E. In 605 B.C. other changes of power occurred:
1. Nebuchadnezzar defeated the Egyptians at Carchemish
2. Judah's king, Jehoiakim, changed his loyalty to the Babylonians
rather than the Egyptians and became Nebuchadnezzar's vassal king (2 Ki. 24:1)
3. Nebuchadnezzar had to return to Babylon with the death of his
father, Nebopolassar
4. Nebuchadnezzar solidified his rule by appointing vassal kings
and taking hostages; Daniel was taken as a part of this deportation (Dan 1:1-6)
F. In 601 Egypt defeated the Babylonians
1. Judah's king, Jehoiakim, switched loyalty from Babylonia to the
Egyptians (2 Ki
24:1)
2. On December of 598 Babylonia made an attack on Jerusalem
leading to Jehoiakim's death and the surrender of the city by his successor,
Jehoiachin, in March of 597
3. Nebuchadnezzar, replaced Jehoiachin after only three months of
reign, deported him and 10,000 other leaders from the city, looted the city, and
placed Zedekiah Judah's vassal king (cf. 2 Ki 24:12-16)
G. Ezekiel was one of those deported during this second
deportation (597 B.C.). He would begin his prophetic ministry five years later
(Ezk 1:2;
8:1 etc.)
1. He lived in Tel Aviv beside the Kebar River (Grand Canal) in
Babylon 3:15
2. Dyer writes, During these final years Ezekiel was ministering
in Babylon, predicting the coming collapse of Jerusalem. His message fell on
deaf ears till word of the city's destruction was received in Babylon. The fall
of the city prompted a change in Ezekiel's prophetic message. Before Jerusalem
fell, Ezekiel's message focused on Judah's forthcoming destruction because of
her sin. After Jerusalem's fall, Ezekiel's message centered on Judah's future
restoration.3
IV. AUTHOR: The Prophet Ezekiel, a priest and son of Buzi (1:3)
A. External Evidence:
1. Ezekiel was considered to be the author of this book until the
Twentieth Century when in 1924 Gustav Hoelscher first questioned authorship
based upon questionable internal evidence4
2. Therefore, external evidence is almost unanimously in favor of
the prophet Ezekiel as the book's author
B. Internal Evidence
1. The autobiographical style of the book supports Ezekiel as the
author of the book (I, me, my are in almost every chapter of the book; cf.
chapter 2:1-10)
2. The book has a uniformity of language, style, theme, and
message which support the theory of a single author
3. Hill and Walton write, The lack of strict chronological
ordering of the literature may argue in favor of Ezekiel as the compiler of the
oracles, since it is very likely another editor would have been more concerned
with the deliberate sequencing of the dated materials5
V. CANONICAL PLACEMENT
A. In the Hebrew canon Ezekiel is placed following Isaiah and
Jeremiah among the Major Prophets
B. In the Greek canon, which the English arrangement follows,
Ezekiel is placed after Lamentations which was associated with the Prophet
Jeremiah
C. Hill and Walton write, While Ezekiel was always included
in the Hebrew canon, later Jewish scholars disputed the book's canonical value.
At issue were seeming discrepancies between the prophet's understanding of
temple ritual and the prescriptions of Mosaic law (e.g., a disagreement in the
number and kinds of animals sacrificed at the New Moon festival--cf. Num. 28:11 and Ezek. 46:6). The rabbis eventually
restricted the public and private use of Ezekiel, commenting that the ultimate
harmonization of the difficulties must await 'the coming of Elijah' (cf. Mal
4:5).6
VI. LITERARY STYLE
A. There are many different Speech Types which Ezekiel
employs to communicate his message. The following chart lists some of them
out7
Judgment oracle
|
Usually introduced by formula, I am against you
|
21:1-5
|
Aftermath or restoration oracle
|
Reversing judgment formula, I am for you
|
34:11-15
|
Command formula
|
Especially Son of man, set your face ...
|
6:2-3; 20:46-47
|
Woe oracle of indictment
|
13:3-7; 34:2-6
| |
Demonstration oracle
|
Usually containing because ... therefore clauses
|
13:8-9; 16:36-42
|
Disputation oracle
|
IN which popular proverb is recited and then refuted by
prophetic discourse (e.g., sour grapes proverb)
|
18:1-20; cf. 12:22-25
|
Lament
Over Tyre Over Pharaoh |
26:15-18
32:1-16
| |
Wailing lament
|
Introduced by wail
|
30:1-4
32:17-21
|
Riddles, parables, allegories
|
E.g., parable of the vine Allegories of the eagle and cedars,
lion, boiling pot etc.
|
15
Chaps. 17, 19, 23, 24, 27
|
B. The book has a basic chronological arrangement (unlike
Jeremiah)
C. The major units of the book follow the chronological flow
of Ezekiel's life and naturally relate to the message of the book:
1. Chapters 1--24 speak of judgment since the fall of Jerusalem is
coming
2. Chapters 25--32 emphasize judgment upon the nations after the
fall of Jerusalem for either being participants in or gleeful onlookers to 'the
day of Jacob's trouble'8
3. Chapters 33-48 speak of the hope of restoration for the people
held in captivity after the fall of Jerusalem.
VII. PURPOSES FOR THE BOOK
A. To speak locally to the exiles whom Jeremiah addresses by
letter (e.g., Jer. 29),
as people who continue to listen to false prophets and practice idolatry. The
contents of Ezekiel indicate that little has changed in the attitude of the
Jewish people who have come to Babylon9
B. To outline the blessing that follows necessary
judgment10
C. To emphasize God's sovereignty which will bring about
judgment and restoration11
D. To warn Israel as a watchman of imminent judgment
E. To stress the need for individual responsibility and
national accountably before God12
1 Andrew E. Hill and John H.
Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 343.
2 This was adapted from Charles
H. Dyer, Jeremiah, The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the
Scriptures by Dallas Seminary Faculty: Old Testament, 1125-27, and Homer
Heater, Jr., Notes on the Book of Jeremiah, unpublished class notes in seminar
in the preexilic Old Testament prophets (Dallas Theological Seminary, Fall
1990), 101-105.
3 Charles H.
Dyer, Ezekiel, The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the
Scriptures by Dallas Seminary Faculty: Old Testament, 1226. Hill and Walton
also emphasize the couture of the book with the development of Ezekiel's message
(Andrew E. Hill and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament,
342-43).
4 Gustav
Hoelscher, Hesekiel: Der Dicter und das Buch, BZAW 39 (1924).
S. R. Driver wrote early in the Twentieth Century that No
critical question arises in connection with the authorship of the book, the
whole from beginning to end bearing unmistakably the stamp of a single mind
(Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament, 297.
See Gleason L. Archer, Jr. A Survey of Old Testament
Introduction, 377-79 for a more indepth discussion; also see John B. Taylor,
Ezekiel: An Introduction & Commentary, 13-20.
An exception to this might be that later Jewish tradition
attributed the compilation of Ezekiel's oracles to the men of the Great
Synagogue (see also Andrew E. Hill and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old
Testament, 339-40).
5 Andrew E. Hill
and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 343.
6 Andrew E. Hill
and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 339. For a fuller
discussion of this problem see Gleason L. Archer, Jr. A Survey of Old
Testament Introduction, 381-384. He provides a better resolution when he
writes, In view of the foregoing considerations, the present writer has come to
the view that a moderately literal interpretation of these chapters [40--48] is
attended by less serious difficulties than a figurative interpretation. Much
caution should be exercised in pressing details, but in the broad outline it may
be reasonably deduced that in a coming age all the promises conveyed by the
angel to Ezekiel will be fulfilled in the glorious earthly kingdom with which
the drama of redemption is destined to close. The sacrificial offerings
mentioned in these chapters are to be understood as devoid of propitiatory or
atoning character, since Christ's sacrifice provided an atonement which was
sufficient for all time (Heb
10:12). Nevertheless, the Lord Jesus ordained the sacrament of holy
communion as an ordinance to be practiced even after His crucifixion, and He
specified that it was to observed until His second coming (1 Co 11:26: 'till he
come'). By premillennial definition, the millennium is to follow His second
advent. If, then, there was a sacramental form practiced during the church age,
why should there not be a new form of sacrament carried on during the millennium
itself? (Gleason L. Archer, Jr. A Survey of Old Testament Introduction,
383).
7 Andrew E.
Hill and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 345.
8 Andrew E.
Hill and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 343.
9 Homer Heater,
Jr., Notes on the Book of Ezekiel, unpublished class notes in seminar in the
preexilic Old Testament prophets [Dallas Theological Seminary, Fall 1990],
202.
10 Whereas
Jeremiah's primary emphasis was to warn of impending judgment (with a slight
focus upon coming restoration), Ezekiel was emphasizing that necessary judgment
on sin established a foundation for future national blessing. Future national
blessing is the emphasis of Ezekiel. The opening vision in Jeremiah emphasizes
the certain judgment which will come through man (the almond/cauldron), but the
opening vision in Ezekiel emphasizes God in his glory in order to reassure him
that He will carry out necessary judgment (4--32) and bring his nation
subsequent blessing (33--38). While Judgment is the climax in Jeremiah, it is
the foundation upon which righteous blessing builds in Ezekiel.
Dyer states it this way, Ezekiel's purpose in writing
chapters 1--32 was to show both the necessity and inevitability of Judah's fall
to Babylon because of her sin against God's holy character. After the fall of
Jerusalem Ezekiel was recommissioned to show the necessity and inevitability of
Judah's restoration to fellowship by God (chaps. 33-48) (Charles H. Dyer, Notes
on the Book of Ezekiel, [Unpublished class notes in 304 Preexlic and Exilic
Prophets, Dallas Theological Seminary, Fall 1993], 4).
11 Andrew E.
Hill and John H. Walton, A Survey of the Old Testament, 344.
12 Ralph H.
Alexander, Ezekiel. The Expositor's Bible Commentary, VI:744.
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