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The Blue Letter Bible

ESV Global Study Bible :: Introduction to Ezekiel

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References for Eze 45:4 —  1   2   3 

INTRODUCTION TO
EZEKIEL

Timeline

Timeline

Author and Date

The first dated message in Ezekiel is from the summer of 593 b.c., four years after Nebuchadnezzar deported the first group of exiles to Babylon. The latest dated oracle is 22 years later, in April 571 b.c. If Ezekiel was 30 years old when his ministry began (1:1), the final vision of the book came when he was about 50.

Theme and Purpose

Ezekiel spoke to a people forced from their home because they had broken faith with their God. As the spokesman for the Lord, Ezekiel spoke oracles that defended his reputation as a holy God (see especially 36:22-23). The primary purpose of Ezekiel's message was to restore God's glory before Israel, who had rejected him in front of the watching nations.

Background

Ezekiel prophesied during a time of great confusion following Israel's exile to Babylon in 597 b.c. A former Judean king was among the exiles (the 18-year-old Jehoiachin), and the Babylonians had appointed a puppet king to the throne in Jerusalem (Jehoiachin's uncle, Zedekiah).

In times of crisis, God sent prophets to bring his message to his people. Judah's exile was therefore a period of intense prophetic activity. (Jeremiah also served during this time.)

Ezekiel's fellow exiles were his main audience, but his oracles also communicated to people who remained in Judah.

Key Themes

  1. As a priest, Ezekiel was deeply concerned with restoring God's people to holiness. His understanding of the depth of Israel's sin is clear in his version of Israel's history (ch. 20). Even the oracles about a restored Israel (chs. 40-48) include a way to deal with the people's sin so they can survive in the presence of a holy God. Ezekiel's concern with sin also accounts for the many places where the book echoes the laws given in the Pentateuch, as well as the similarities between Ezekiel's new temple (chs. 40-42) and the Exodus tabernacle.
  2. Israel was subject to its national God. However, this God is no tribal deity. He is supreme over all nations. Therefore Nebuchadnezzar, king of mighty Babylon, was simply a tool in God's hand to accomplish God's purpose (e.g., 21:19-23; 30:25). God's absolute supremacy is most clearly demonstrated in the battle against Gog, the final enemy (chs. 38-39), where God alone crushes Gog's vast hostile forces.
  3. Ezekiel declares judgment on those clinging to false hope, but offers true hope to those who accept God's judgment (37:11). He linked God's judgment with the hope of a new heart and spirit (36:22-32).
  4. The condemnation of Israel's "princes" (e.g., ch. 19) finds its hopeful counterpart in the promise of a future "prince" who would rule with justice (34:23-24) and connect the people to God (46:1-18).

Outline

  1. Inaugural Vision (1:1-3:27)
  2. Judgment on Jerusalem and Judah (4:1-24:27)
  3. Oracles against Foreign Nations (25:1-32:32)
  4. After the Fall of Jerusalem (33:1-39:29)
  5. Vision of Restoration (40:1-48:35)

The Near East at the Time of Ezekiel

c. 593 b.c.

Ezekiel recorded his visions and prophecies while living near Babylon, where he had been exiled years earlier. By Ezekiel's time, the Babylonian Empire had conquered almost all of the area along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea. It would eventually conquer even the land of Egypt, where many other Judeans had fled.

The Near East at the Time of Ezekiel

ESV

The ESV Global Study Bible
Copyright © 2012 by Crossway.
All rights reserved.
Used by permission.

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The Blue Letter Bible ministry and the BLB Institute hold to the historical, conservative Christian faith, which includes a firm belief in the inerrancy of Scripture. Since the text and audio content provided by BLB represent a range of evangelical traditions, all of the ideas and principles conveyed in the resource materials are not necessarily affirmed, in total, by this ministry.