$B 1D7 t,M3 ** '-^ ^ *■ " ^;m^ -:w^';: >^^ »•!<»»■ •* LIBRARY OF THE University of California. Mrs. SARAH P. WALSWORTH. Received October , 1894. Accessions No.SL^toS^ - Class No. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/ezekielbool ^ PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. It is sometime since the first impression of the following Expo- sition was exhausted ; and the opportunity, which the call for a New Edition has presented, of introducing a few alterations and improvements has not been neglected. The changes, however, are not material, as regards the substance of the work, or even the interpretation of particular parts. On a very few passages only, and these not of primary moment, has a different view been presented from the one formerly given. But the Exposition has been rendered more uniform by a translation of the whole Book, while in the first edition, this was limited to the more difficult parts ; and that has necessarily led to a number of minor changes and re-adjustments. It has also rendered necessary the print- ing of the translation in a smaller type, as otlierwise the size, and consequently the expense of the volume, must have been increased beyond what was deemed advisable. An Introduction, besides, has been prefixed, in which certain topics of a preliminary kind, that were not altogether omitted in the former edition, but rather too briefly noticed, have been more fully discussed. These, which constitute the chief alterations in matter and form, it is hoped, will be found to have added somewhat to the usefulness of the volume. The reception it has met with in its first shape has been, for the most part, so favourable and encouraging, that anything beyond the grateful acknowledgments of the author w^ould be here out of place. He did not expect that all would agree with him in the views embodied in his interpretations, or would entirely approve of the form which he has given to his Exposition. Some, VI PREFACE. he has observed, have sought to account for the latter, by supposing it to have been, in the first instance, preached to a congregation. In this, he takes leave to state, they are mistaken ; and it is on principle, and from a regard merely to what he thinks should be found in an Exposition of the Word of God, and in particular of the writings of Ezekiel, that he has introduced so much of the spiritual and practical element. But, as this point has been noticed in the Introduction, it is needless to say more on it at present. If the volume shall be made, by the Divine blessing, instrumental in promoting a more exact acquaintance with this portion of Prophecy, or advancing the study of the prophetic Word in general, the great desire of the Author will be fulfilled. Aberdeen, May 1855. CONTENTS. Page Introdlction, ......... 1 Chap. I. — The Time and Manner of EzekieFs Entering on the Prophetical Office, ......... 17 Chap. II.— HI. 1-11.— Call to the Prophetical Office, .... 34 Chap. III. 12-27. — Ezekiel's Entrance on his Mission, and the First Message imparted to Him, . . . . . . .39 Chap. IV.— The Vision of the Siege and the Iniquity-Bearing, . . 45 Chap. V. — VI. — The Vision of the Shorn Hair, and its Foreshadowing Deso- lations, ......... 61 Chap. VII. — Lamentation over the Guilt and Fall of Israel, ... 76 Chap. VIIL— The Vision of the Image of Jealousy, and other Abominations at Jerusalem, ........ 79 Chap. IX.— The Vision of the Sealing, ...... 93 Chap. X.— The Vision of the Coals of Fire, ..... 100 Cbap. XL — Destruction of a Corrupt Priesthood, with the Promise of Grace and Blessing to a Believing Remnant among the Exiles, . . 105 Chap. XII. — The Vision of Ezekiel's Typical Removing as an Exile, and accompanying Instructions, ...... 116 Chap. XIIL— The False in Prophecy, its Character and Doom, . . 126 Chap. XIV. — Hypocritical Inquirers after God— their Wickedness Discovered and Rebuked, ........ 141 Chap. XV. — The Guilt and Condemnation of Israel Parabolically Represented, 154 Chap. XVI. — The Story of Israel's Guilt and Punishment, . . . 157 Chap. XVIL— The Parable of the Two Great Eagles, and the Cropping of the Cedar of Lebanon, ....... 179 Chap. XVIIL— The Retributive Righteousness of God, . . .187 CuAP. XIX.— The Lamentation Over the Fall of the Royal House, . . 202 Chap. XX. 1-44.— A Display of the People's Long-continued Sinfulness, and the Lord's Loiig-Suffering-Mercy and Goodness, . . . 209 Chap. XX. 45-49.— XXL— The Vision of the Lord's Fire and Sword, . 230 Chap. XXII. — The Lord's Judgment upon the All-Pervading Sinfulness of Jerusalem, ........ 247 Chap. XXIII. — The Story of Israel's Sin and Punishment Parabolically Exhi- bited under the Names of Aholah and Aholibah, . . . 251 Chap. XXIV.— The Vision of the BoiHng Caldron, and of the Death of Ezekiel's Wife, ........ 258 Chap. XXV. — The Judgment of Israel's Immediate Neighbours and Rivals — Ammon, Moab, Edom, and the Philistines, .... 270 Chap. XXVI.— The Judgment of Tyre, ..... 281 Chap. XXV IL — The Lamentation upon Tyre, with an Account of Her Former Greatness and Prosperity, ...... 297 Vlll CONTENTS. Chap. XXVIII. 1-19.— The Criminatory Address to the King of Tyre, and the Lamentation Over His Coming Downfal, .... 303 Chap. XXVIII. 20-26.— The Judgment of Sidon, and the Ultimate Peace of Israel, ......... 316 Chap. XXIX.— The Judgment of Egypt, its Desolation for Forty Years and Subsequent Degradation — the First Instrument of Chastisement, Nebuchadnezzar, . . . . . . .321 Chap. XXX. — Continuation of Egypt's Judgment, .... 335 Chap. XXXI.— The Certainty of Pharaoh's Doom Confirmed, by a Parabolical Relation of Assyria's Greatness and Destruction, . . . 340 Chap. XXXII.— Songs of Lamentation Over the Fall of Pharaoh and his Kingdom, ........ 345 Chap. XXXIII. — Renewal of Ezekiel's Commission, his Office as "Watchman, 354 Chap. XXXIV.— The Promise of the True Shepherd, after the False Shep- herds have been Punished and Removed, .... 366 Chap. XXXV.— The Judgment of Edom, ..... 381 Chap. XXXVI. — Israel Revenged and Comforted — the New Heart and the Blissful Heritage, . ..... 386 Chap. XXXVII. — The Vision of the Dry Bones Restored to Life again, as Symbolical of Israel's Death and Resurrection, . . . 400 Chap. XXXVIII.— XXXIX.— The Assault of Gog and His Destruction, . 414 Preliminary Remarks on the Vision in Chap. XL. — XLVIIL, with Respect to the Principles on which it ought to be interpreted, . . . 431 Chap. XL. 1-48.— The Position, Walls, Gates, and Courts of the Temple, . 450 Chap. XL. 48, 49.— XLL— The Temple Itself, 460 Chap. XLII. — Chambers of the Temple and its Boundary Walls, . . 466 Chap. XLIII.— The Lord's Return to the Temple, . . . .470 Chap. XLIV. — Ordinances for the Prince and the Priesthood, . . 476 Chap. XLV. — The Sacred Allotments in Land and Gifts, . . . 481 Chap. XLVI. — Additional Ordinances for the Prince and People, . . 486 Chap. XLVI I. 1-12.— Vision of the Temple- Waters, . . .489 Chap. XLVII. 13-23.— XLVIIL— The Boundaries and Re-Distribution of the Land, 495 ERRATA. Page 79, last line in te.xt, after sitting, insert before me. 94, third line from bottom, for n"nps read Th'^t, 130, Note 1, for sp2 read 5>pa. 185, line fifteenth,/or representation, read representative. 236, Note 2, for nsns read nsas. 258, Note 3, /or rs-^JJW read r\^-"jn. 367, Note 1,/or nVia read rh''::^. 367, Note 1, for Thr&'L read n'-slna. INTRODUCTION. It is not our intention to detain our readers long at the threshold, or to enter here into any discussions which might pre-suppose and require an intimate acquaintance with the writings of our author. We mean simply to present a few statements of a strictly preli- minary kind, respecting the personal position and circumstances of Ezekiel, the more distinctive features of his prophetical charac- ter, the nature of his style and diction as a sacred writer, the order and classification of his prophecies, and the literature con- nected with their interpretation. I. On the first of these points, it is not necessary to say much ; for the whole that is known with certainty of Ezekiel is furnished by his own hand, and is so closely interwoven with his discharge of the prophetical office, that it is only by following him through the one, we can become properly acquainted with the other. We know nothing of what he was or did as a man ; but only of what he was and did as a prophet. That he was the son of Buzi, a priest, and entered on his prophetical career by the river Chebar or Chaboras, in the fifth year of Jehoiachin's captivity, which was the same also of his own (comp. chap. i. 1, and xxxiii. 21), he has expressly informed us ; and Josephus transmits the additional information (Ant. x. 6, 3), that he had become a captive when he was but a young man. This, however, has been as often questioned as believed ; and among recent commentators — while Ewald sees reason to conclude, that the prophet "was pretty young when he was carried into exile" — Havernick, on the other hand, thinks that " the vigorous priestly spirit, which prevails throughout his prophecies, furnishes evidence of a greater age ; and that he had undoubtedly for some considerable time performed the service of a priest in the temple" before he left Judea. These diversities of opinion show, that the precise age of Ezekiel at the period of A 2 INTRODUCTION. his exile can at most be only a matter of probability. But from certain considerations we intend to adduce on the dates assigned in the opening verses of his Book, we are of opinion, that the probability is mainly on the side of his having been, at the time of his removal to Chaldea, a comparatively young man — in the twenty-fifth year of his age. And as one of his later prophecies makes mention of the twenty-seventh year of his captivity (chap, xxix. 17), this, added to the original number of twenty-five, brings him to an advanced stage of life, though still not to the close of his prophetical agency. For some of his later predictions appear to have been uttered at a period subsequent to the time to which the prediction in ch. xxix. belongs. There is reason, therefore, to conclude, that Ezekiel's public life both began early, and was prolonged to the season of mature age. But of the absolute cessation of his prophetical gift, we have no definite chronological information ; nor, except from incidental notices sometimes introduced into his communications, do w^e learn anything of the experiences and results that attended its exercise. The direct historical notices in his writings, apart from the record of the visions he saw, and the messages of good and evil he re- ceived from above, are comparatively few. But in the messages themselves references are not unfrequently made to the circum- stances amid which he was placed, and the trials or sorrows connected with his official ministry. From those scattered notices we can easily gather, that as the time was marked by the fearful prevalence of evil in a moral, not less than in an outw^ard and worldly respect, so there was the application, on his part, of an unwearied activity, and the energy of a devoted zeal, striving against gigantic difficulties and manifold discouragements. He had to plead the cause of God in an atmosphere of rebellion ; prove himself to be faithful amidst many faithless ; and, without palliation or reserve, lay open evils in the condition of his com- panions in exile, which they sought most anxiously to cover out of sight. Hence, while he appears as one tenderly sympathising with them in their depression and gloom (chap. iii. 15), there is nothing to indicate that they ever properly sympathised with him in his contendings for truth and righteousness. They recognise him, indeed, as a prophet of the Most High, and collect around him, from time to time, to hear what message he might have re- ceived for their behoof, or to make inquiry thi'ough him concerning INTRODUCTION. 6 the mind of God (chap. viii. 1, xi. 25, xiv. 1, etc.) ; but it was never without having a rebuke administered to them on account of the frame of mind in which they appeared, or an intimation made respecting the light and captious humour they were wont to in- dulge in toward him (chap. xiv. 1, xviii., xxxiii. 30-33, etc.). So that his prophetical career, we can have no doubt, was connected with much that was trying and painful, and, like too many of our Lord's prophetical types, he also in no slight degree had to " en- dure the contradiction of sinners against himself." Yet this must not be understood of his connection with the whole / band of exiles, nor probably of the later period of his public ministry nearly so much as of the earlier. For, amid the prevailing iniquity there are not wanting occasional indications of a better spirit among the captives (chap. xi. 16, Jer. xxiv.) ; and, at a period not very distant from the close of his ministrations, a very marked and general amendment had undoubtedly taken place among them. It could not greatly, if it did at all, exceed thirty years from the cessation of his active labours, when the decree was issued for the return of the captives ; and notwithstanding the cor- ruptions which still lingered among them, and which soon began to appear in the infant colony, there was a general repudiation of idolatry, and an adherence to the law of Moses, very different from what had existed at the era of the captivity, or for a considerable time previous to it. Nor can there be any doubt, that among the agencies which contributed to effect this beneficial change, a pro- minent place must be ascribed to the ministry of Ezekiel. By^ the results that appeared, decisive evidence was thus borne to the / fact, that a prophet had been among them, who had not laboured i in vain ; and we can scarcely doubt, from the whole circumstances \ of the case, that the satisfaction was afforded our prophet— a satis- faction which was denied to his great contemporary Jeremiah, of • witnessing the commencement of the spiritual renovation for which i he so earnestly laboured. \ II. It naturally follows, from what has been said of the position and circumstances of Ezekiel, that, in respect to his prophetical agency, one of the leading characteristics was that of active and energetic working. He had, almost single-handed, to begin and direct the process of a general reformation, which no one can do with effect, even now, without force of character and energy of 4 INTRODUCTION. action ; and still less could it be done then, when writing and reading were so much less in use, and practical effects on com- munities were necessarily more dependent upon the instrumen- tality of the living voice. This consideration is of itself sufficient to disprove the idea entertained by Ewald, and more recently espoused by Hitzig, of the comparatively quiescent and chiefly literary character of Ezekiel as a prophet. " As we see him in his Book," says Ewald, " he appears more as a writer, than as a prophet taking part in public life. The writer may have his individual peculiarities of a kind quite foreign to a prophet of the elder sort ; and so, in point of fact, Ezekiel as an author sur- passes all the earlier prophets, in particular Jeremiah, in finish, heauty, and completeness; but the more the man grows as an author and a cultivator of learning, he loses in the same propor- tion as a genuine prophet." He, therefore, contemplates the great book of Ezekiel as " proceeding almost entirely from the study of a learned retreat ;" and Hitzig, following in the same track, and speaking as from the most intimate acquaintance with the facts of the case, tells us that, as Ezekiel was driven from the external world by the badness of the times,. he " but cultivated the more the internal world — he flew to his books, and gave him- self up to literature, leading a kind of dusky retirement in the law and his own past reminiscences" (Yorbem. § 2). If so, we might certainly affirm, never did an author's course of life pre- sent a greater contrast to the character of his writings, or appear less adapted to the aim he professes to have in view. The work, to which he owns himself to have been called, from its very nature required the most resolute and devoted agency : he was expressly called to do the part of a watchman in the midst of abounding dan- ger and corruption; where success in any degree must have seemed utterly hopeless, excepting as the result of unwearied diligence and self-denying labour. And though, it is true, in his writings, as in those of the prophets generally, we have the record of little else than his direct communications with Heaven, and his more special messages to the people ; yet these breathe throughout such a living earnestness and practical vigour, as clearly bespeaks the man of active labour, not the learned leisure and meditative quiet of a recluse. This moral detvorrjs, or fervent, energetic striving after a practical result is stamped upon the whole of Ezekiel's writings, although INTBODUCTTON. 5 it comes out more palpably in some portions than in others. The Book possesses much of a rhetorical character, and has, in a manner, but one aim — that of moral suasion. Hence, the more peculiar difficulties connected with its interpretation, are not those which attach to the meaning of the words, or the construc- tion of sentences, but such rather as inhere in the general form and substance of the prophet's communications. Thougb the former are occasionally found, it is the latter which chiefly prevail ; and some even of the most profound and enigmatical portions are remarkable for the perfect plainness and simplicity of the style. At the same time, while we thus maintain the essential incorrect- ness of the view given of Ezekiel's prophetical character by Ewald and Hitzig, we are not insensible to a difference, in the line indi- cated by them, between the writings of this prophet and the other prophetical books ; this book is characterised in a quite peculiar manner by a tendency to minute, detailed, and, as might seem, elaborate descriptions. But this arose from the native bent of the prophet's mind — not from the retired and studious character of his life. For, as another distinctive peculiarity in Ezekiel, there appears a very marked individuality in his cast of mind — such as gives a kind of uniqueness to his writings, and plainly distinguishes them as productions from those of the other prophets. It is true, that in the one, as well as in the other, we have the inspired utterances of men speaking as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. But it is not the less true, that in thus moving them, the Spirit of God had respect to their native bent of mind, and allowed their several constitutional peculiarities to give their full impress to the form and method of their prophetic announcements. The doctrine of inspiration does not imply, however often it may be represented as if it did, that the persons who were the subjects of it, should be wrought upon by the Spirit as mere mechanical instruments, whose natural faculties were suspended under the violent and impulsive agency of a higher power. On such a supposition, we could never account for the diversities of manner which charac- terise the sacred oracles, and which not only shed over them the charm of an instructive and pleasing variety, but also endow them with a manifold adaptation to the different tastes and capacities of men. The Spirit did not suspend, or imperiously control, but most wisely and skilfully used the mental peculiarities and 6 INTRODUCTION. individual relations of his human instruments of working. And as through the employment of these he has sought in the Divine communications to find his way more thoroughly to our under- standings and our sympathies, so it is by making due account of the same, that we must endeavour to find our way to what, in the communications themselves, may be the mind of the Spirit. In the simply literary department of the religious sphere, we readily concede a full play to the varied idiosyncrasies of mind, and the diversified methods they naturally fall into in the exhibi- tion of Divine truth. A clear and solid judgment, practical wisdom and sagacity, rapt fervour of spirit, logical accuracy, the playful sportings of fancy or the bolder flights of imagination ; the direct and the veiled, the homely and the refined, the histo- rical and the allegorical — all find here their peculiar province, and have each their appropriate use. And in reaping the benefit, which they are severally fitted to render to the cause of truth, and to minister of personal instruction, every one knows, that they must each be treated after their own kind, and judged by their distinctive characteristics of thought and expression. Now, there is the same variety in the natural gifts and endowments of the inspired writers ; and they must be dealt with in the same manner — if we would catch aright their spirit, and receive just impressions from the discourses they delivered. For example, in the case more immediately before us, in the prophet Ezekiel, we have an example of the Spirit's theopneustic agency in one of the more uncommon and eccentric class of minds — a mind susceptible of deep emotions, possessed of an aerial fancy, and intensely ener- getic in its aims and movements ; a mind, therefore, strongly realistic in its tendencies, so that it must be ever striving after the living presence, or the life-like representation of things, behold- ing the unseen mirrored in the seen, and arraying the dim per- spective of the future in the familiar garniture of the past or present. To such a mind the distinctions, in a manner, vanish between history and prophecy, symbol and reality, flesh and spirit ; the one seems insensibly to merge into the other, or to be related to it only as the exterior form of the life that dwells within. And the Spirit of God, in serving himself of such a mind, as a channel of Divine communications to the church, must be under- stood to have left these marked peculiarities to their native opera- \tion, and only to have given them the proper impulse, and furnished INTRODUCTION. 7 them with the necessary materials of working. It was, in truth, precisely such a mind that was needed in the crisis, at which the affairs of the covenant-people had then arrived, when, the external framework of the Divine kingdom having fallen to pieces, the interest of God seemed ready to perish, and the very foundations of the faith were tottering to their base. No ordinary man, at such a time, v/as fitted to raise anew the standard of God's truth, and rally the prostrate forces of the kingdom. One was needed, who should be capable of living alike in the past and the future, and who could see, as with open eye, and grasp, as with a giant's hand, the hidden realities of faith. The peculiarities, therefore, of Ezekiel's mental constitution stood in very close connection with his special calling as a pro- phet ; and due account must be made of them by all who would either understand aright his mission to the church, or read in an intelligent and discerning spirit the Book of his prophecy. If we should expect to find there, as in some of the other prophets, fine displays of tender feeling, or descriptions remarkable for their flow of pleasing sentiment, and artistic beauty of composition, we shall certainly be disappointed. This is not the field for gems of such a nature. The mind of the prophet was concentrated upon one great object — to give life and reality, body and freshness to the objects of faith, so as thereby to reanimate an expiring church, and recall men's confidence to an almost forgotten and unknown God. Whatever might serve this purpose, whether in the real or ideal world, in the symbols of religion or in the facts of sacred history, he freely lays under contribution to effect it. Even strange combinations and grotesque forms are often resorted to, when by means of them he can add to the graphic power and moral force of his delineations. And comparatively regardless of the mode, intent mainly on the effect of his communications, he indulges in frequent reiterations, and invests his imagery with such specific and minute details, as one naturally connects with a felt and present realit3\ The characteristics now noticed in the prophetic agency of Ezekiel seem to call for a species of commentary, which shall be more parcenetical than exegetical; in other words, which shall rather handle the different communications as doctrinal or prac- tical discourses on particular subjects, than break them up into detached fragments for miruite explanatory remarks. There » INTRODUCTION. would otherwise be a want of fitting correspondence in form be- tween the text and the kind of interpretation subjoined to it. And this, it is our purpose, to keep steadily in view, not slurring over difficulties in the text, or refusing any aid we can find for elucidating its import ; yet, at the same time, dwelling chiefly on the great principles of truth and duty, to w^hich all that is either more common or more peculiar in the prophet is rendered prin- cipally subservient.^ It is impossible not to notice, as another distinguishing element in Ezekiel's prophetical character, his strong priestly feeling. For the most part the prophets belonged, either to the priestly or the Levitical order ; and sometimes, as in the cases of Samuel and Jeremiah, prominence is given to the fact of their having been _ by birth connected with those more select portions of the com- munity. But in Ezekiel alone of the later prophets, does the priestly element become so peculiarly prominent and pervading, as to give a tone and impress to the general character of his ministrations, and to render even his prophetical labours a kind of jDriestly service. His thoughts seem perpetually to linger about the temple, and ever delight to find in its symbolical materials and forms of w^orship the channels through which to unfold the truths he was commissioned to declare. This, however, it must be remembered, was less owing to any individual pecu- liarity or personal choice, than to the circumstances of his position and the nature of his calling. It sprung more immediately from the desire of satisfying the spiritual want occasioned, first by the ^ We are glad to see that this is again coming to be recognised as proper in regard to the exposition of Scripture generally. Hengstenberg, in the preface to his Commentary on the Apocalypse, expresses it as his opinion, that the present times demand a kind of exposition of Scripture, which is in ac- cordance with its great doctrinal and practical design. And Stier, in his preface to the 4th vol. of his Reden Jesu, thus vindicates his adoption of such a form of commentary : — " Our older expositors, as is well known, gave to their exegesis very much of the same form, in respect to edification ; it is only in the present age, in our unhappy divorce between the church and the professorial chair, that such can appear to be of a mongrel character. Intentionally and on principle I abandon the wholly unpractical manner of the schools, which coldly and stiffly guards itself against the use of any word that might speak from heart to heart, and which must always carry an unna- tural and unseemly appearance in every, even the most learned treatment of the living word of God." INTRODUCTION. 9 absence, and then by the destruction of the outward temple, which it was of importance to have met by something of a corres- ponding nature. But of this more particularly under the opening verses. Still further, the prophetical gift itself possessed and exercised by Ezekiel was of the higher kind. Beyond all question, he belongs to the first rank of those, who under the old covenant were called to the regular discharge of the prophetical office. As with the prophets generally, his gift w^as exercised as well in regard to the present as the future ; and in both respects it proved itself to be, as Witsius terais it, "incomparable."^ It enabled him to form a correct estimate of the existing state of matters, not less than a clear apprehension of what was going to take place. . His spiritually enlightened eye takes the true guage and measure of w^hat was around him ; looks through the appearances into the realities of things ; so that, with the assured confidence of one who knew the mind of God, he gives forth the judgment of heaven respecting them. His anticipations of the future are not less remarkable. Even De Wette admits, that not only are there here actual predictions, but that " in none of the ancient prophets are there found such definite predictions as in this." The last part of the statement may certainly be questioned by those who believe in the genuineness of Daniel's prophecies ; yet the predictions of Ezekiel are both of great variety, and singularly minute and faithftd in their delineations of coming events. Partly, however, from some of the events referred to in them lying not far remote from the utterance of the predictions, and partly, also, from the strongly figurative form into which not a few of the others are cast, their apologetical value in the present day, against the adversaries of the faith, is not altogether in pro- portion to their number, or their definiteness. Of many of them it must be said, that they are fitted rather for confirming the faith and strengthening the convictions of those who already believe, than for removing the doubts of such as are still opposed to the truth. Yet we should deem it impossible for any one, in a spirit of candour and sincerity, to peruse the wonderful and discrimi- nating predictions contained in his writings respecting either the Jews themselves (those, for example, in chap, v., vi., xi., xvii., Miscel. Sac. i. p. 243. 10 INTRODUCTION. xxi.), or the neighbouring nations, more particularly those of Tyre and Egypt — predictions, which foretold in regard to the subjects of them very different and varying fortunes, and such as necessarily required ages for their accomplishment : — we should deem it impossible for any one in a proper spirit to examine these, and compare them with the fulfilment, without being persuaded that they afford indubitable evidence of a supernatural insight into the far-distant future. No spirit of human di^dnation, or mere worldly sagacity could possibly have enabled him to descry events, at once so remote in time, and so different from what might, on many accounts, have been supposed likely to happen. III. — In respect to the style and diction of Ezekiel, different estimates have been formed by different writers, and exaggerated representations, as well of a favourable, as of an unfavourable kind, are still to be met with. The comparative estimate of Lowth may certainly be characterised as in some respects over- drawn ; but he says with substantial correctness, " that in his images he is fertile, magnificent, harsh, and sometimes almost deformed; in his diction grand, weighty, austere, rough, and some- times vnipolished ; abounding in repetitions, not for the sake of ornament or gracefulness, but through indignation or violence" (Praelec. xxi.). His diction, he adds, is sufficiently perspicuous, almost all his obscurity lying in the matter ; and notwithstand- ing the obvious want of parallelism, which pervades the greater part of the Book, Lowth is disposed to claim most of it as poetical — although, he admits, " the sentences are often so rude and void of composition, that he was often doubtful what to determine in that respect." In truth he was here trying the productions of the prophet by a somewhat mistaken standard. And altogether the view taken, and the estimate formed by Ewald are much more correct. The latter says (Propheten, p. 2 12 ), " considered simply as a writer, this prophet exhibits great excellences, especially as living in so dismal a period. His mode of representation, indeed, like that of most of the later writers, has a tendency to length and expansion, with sentences often very much involved, and rhetorical breadth and copiousness ; yet it seldom dwindles down like that of Jeremiah, readily recovers itself, and usually makes a fine conclusion. His language has scattered through it several Aramaic and foreign expressions, in which one may perceive the INTRODUCTION. 11 influence of his exiled condition ; though, for the most part, it is formed after the elder and better models. His diction, besides, is rich in rare comparisons, often alike attractive and striking, full of varied terms, and commonly wrought out with much beauty (for example, chap, xxxii.). Where the discourse rises higher to the delineation of the sublime visions presented to him (as in chap. i. and x.), it exhibits the vividness of genuine dra- matic composition. It has also a certain evenness and repose, a quality which distinguishes this prophet from Jeremiah ; he but seldom soars into lyrical strains (chap, vii.), or becomes vehe- mently moved (chap, xxi.)." It is added, that the verse is often rough, and the strophe-arrangement much obscured, on account of the tendency to lengthen out the sentences ; but they are still regarded as to some extent existing, though they are only to be found in a distinct and regular manner in a few select portions, such as chap. vii. and xxi. In one respect Ewald also has given an erroneous view of the character of Ezekiel as a writer — representing this as in a certain sense interfering with his character as a prophet. This is done more especially in respect to the symbolical actions and parabo- lical discourses, which abound so much in his writings. " The writer here," he says, ^' overpowers the prophet. The writer seeks for excellent images, similitudes, and enigmas, and the merely-literary prophet finds therein the readiest helps and sup- ports to his fancy ; and so Ezekiel very commonly sets out from an image, conducts this with all possible varieties of form and embellishments, and then unfolds it in proper discourse ; or he draws long delineations marked by genuine poetic beauty : — but the point and keenness of the prophetic style suffers much there- by," etc. This line of remark proceeds on the misapprehension already noticed respecting the prophetical character of Ezekiel. It has been well met, as to the particular point now under con- sideration, by Havernick, who says, " It is quite correct, that a certain amount of skill is discoverable in this mode of represen- tation ; but it is to misapprehend the nature of prophecy, when this artistic impulse is viewed as the productive power of such compositions. Prophecy has its root in quite other soil ; and were it after this fashion drawn into the mere province of art, it would cease to be genuine prophecy, and should belong to the class of degenerate productions — spurious imitations of the true. 12 INTRODUCTION. The writer's skill evinces itself here rather in giving forth with the greatest vividness and fidelity his internal perceptions with the full impress of their immediateness and originality. It is the historical skill of the narrator of internal facts, a simply re-pro- ductive, and not a productive faculty, which must be conceded to the prophet, and in which he shows a perfect mastery" (Comm. p. 24). We simply add, under this head, that the darkness to a certain extent inseparably connected with our prophet's delight in the use of parable and symbol, was, when rightly contemplated, by no means at variance with his great design as a prophet. His primary object was impression — to rouse and stimulate, to awaken spiritual thoughts and feelings in the depths of the soul, and bring it back to a living confidence and faith in God. And for this, while great plainness and force of speech were necessary, mysterious symbols and striking parabolical delineations were also fitted to be of service. They showed the prophet's mind to be on the stretch to arrest the attention of his people, and lead them to penetrate into the deep things of G od. To the great majority of them such things appeared deep, chiefly on account of that superficial habit of mind, which rests satisfied with looking at the exterior, and mistakes shadows for realities — the same habit sub- stantially, which has led the modern Jews to magnify to such a height the obscurities of this book of Ezekiel — ordaining that no one should read it till he had passed his thirtieth year, with other foolish and extravagant things of a like nature. Had either the earlier or the later Jews understood it aright, they would have felt that the profound and enigmatical character of some of the visions, especially when viewed in connection with the awful directness and pungency of others, was itself a witness against them, and formed a call to serious consideration and anxious inquiry. And thus in respect to the more peculiar part of the form and clothing, as well as the matter of his revelations, wisdom is here also justified of her children. IV. The order and classification of his prophecies next demands some notice. And here it ought, first of all, to be borne in mind, that whatever arrangement may be made respecting them as to their subjects, an order and progression belongs to them as a whole, as well as a homogeneousness of nature, which fits them INTRODUCTION. 13 for mutually throwing light on each other ; and, in particular, one large portion of them (chap, i.-xxxii.), which is mainly conversant wdth sin and judgment, in a great degree supplies the key, by which the later announcements — more cheering in their tone, but more remote in their objects — are to be interpreted. There is in this respect a unity in the character of the book, which calls for an orderly and progressive perusal of its contents. And should any one, heedless of this characteristic, overleap all the earlier portions of the prophecy, and proceed at once to grapple with some of the later and more peculiar visions, he would only take the course most likely to involve himself in perplexity or disappointment. A general classification of the contents of the book, as has just been noticed, may be made into those, which have respect pre- dominantly to sin and judgment, and those which are more peculiarly appropriated to the revelation of grace and mercy. We can only, however, speak of prevailing, not by any means of exclusive, characteristics of this sort. For, in the one part mercy is often found intermingling with the judgment, as in the other judgment occasionally alternates with the mercy. The more specific, and at the same time quite natural divisions, are com- monly indicated by the prophet himself, in the several dates which he has, at certain intervals, placed as superscriptions to the messages he successively received. These are altogether eight. 1. The first is introductory, containing a description of the first vision, and in connection with it of the call of the prophet — (chap. i.~iii. 15). 2. The next portion, embracing the remaining verses in chap, iii., and reaching to the close of chap, vii., is occu- pied chiefly with a more explicit announcement of the prophet's commission and charge, and his entrance on the work it devolved upon him, by setting forth the enormous guilt of the people, the certainty of the coming destruction of Jerusalem, with still sub- sequent calamities, and the prostrate condition of the whole affairs of the kingdom. 3. The next section embraces chap, viii.-xix., but falls into two parts. The first, including chap, viii.-xi., contains still farther revelations of the people's sinfulness, espe- cially as connected wath the profanation of the temple, and the corruption of the priesthood — the determination of God, in con- sequence, to forsake his sanctuaiy, with severe executions of vengeance on the wicked, though not without gracious interpo- 14 INTRODUCTION, sitions for the safety of the few who remained faithful — and then, the twofold work of destruction and preservation being (symbolically) done, his actual departure from the temple-mount, that he might go and reveal himself in tenderness and power to an inquiring and afflicted people in exile. In the second part of this division, which includes chap, xii.-xix., the prophet prose- cutes in detail his exposure of the sins, which were bringing down such inflictions of judgment, and shows how all classes, as well as the priests — prophets, princes, and the people generally, had corrupted tlieir ways, and should severally share in the destruction that was impending. 4. In chap, xx.-xxiii., the same subject is con- tinued, though, as the time of judgment had approached nearer, there is an increased keenness and severity in the prophet's tone ; he sits, as it were, in judgment upon the people, brings out in full form the Divine indictment against them, and with awful distinctness and frequent reiteration, announces both their con- summate guilt and its appropriate judgment. 5. Then comes, in chap, xxiv., the actual announcement of the end, as regards Jerusalem and its guilty people, with a representation of the behaviour suitable for such as survived the calamity ; the prophet himself being required to share in the confusion and silence, which were proper at such a time. 6. Chap, xxv.-xxxii. form a group by themselves, containing the announcements respecting sin and judgment, which, during the interval of the prophet's silence towards his own people, he was commanded to utter against the surrounding nations. The great object of them was to show, that if judgment had begun at the house of God, it would assuredly embrace, and visit with still more overwhelming calamities, the ungodly world. There are various headings in this section ; and some of the revelations were given at periods considerably subsequent to others ; but they began to be uttered immediately after the doom of Jerusalem, and all manifestly relate to one great theme. 7. In chap, xxxiii.-xxxix., we have a series of predictions given to the prophet in the tw^elfth year of the captivity, after the appearance in Chaldea of the remnant that had escaped from Jerusalem (chap, xxxiii. 21) ; a series which points more particularly to the better times in prospect, and unfolds, with considerable fulness and variety, the revival of God's cause among the covenant-people, the re-establishment of the Divine kingdom, and its sure and final victory over all the INTRODUCTION. 15 sources of evil, which had prevailed so much against it in the past. 8. Then, after an interval of thirteen years, comes the closing vision, in chap, xl.-xlviii., disclosing, under the symbo- lical representation of a new temple, city, and commonwealth, the restored condition, with the perfect order and beauty, of the people and kingdom of God. Y. All that is necessary for the present time to be said on the literature of the subject may soon be told. Our own country has done comparatively little in relation to it. The bulky and tedious work of Greenhill, reprinted some years ago in a cheap form, is, like most of the Puritan writings, of small account in an exegetical respect ; and is rather a collection of common-places founded on Ezekiel, with a multitude of parallel passages from other Scriptures, than a commentary in the proper sense. The only English work calling for special notice here, is the Transla- tion, with Notes, by Archbishop Newcome, published in 1788. The notes are of a very brief description, chiefly explanatory of the meanings given in the translation ; and both the translation and the notes proceed to a large extent on the vicious principle, very prevalent at the time, of getting rid of diflSculties in the sense by proposed emendations of the text. This false and superficial style of criticism has now deservedly fallen into discredit; although Ewald, and after him Hitzig, still pursue, to some extent, the same course, and not seldom, like Newcome, would correct the Hebrew text from the Septuagint. How little con- fidence can be placed in emendations derived from such a source, no one can need to be told, who is in the least degree acquainted with the character of the Septuagint translation generally, and, in particular, with its translation of this Book. Hitzig himself admits many of its variations from the true sense to have arisen from palpable mistakes ; and that, as a whole, it is pervaded by frequent and systematic deviations from the correct import, while the Hebrew text is remarkable for its degree of purity, are among the surest results of a sound biblical criticism. We have, there- fore, but rarely paid any regard to the diverse readings derived from the Septuagint, and, with the rarest exceptions, have a - hered to the existin g text. By far the most elaborate work ever published on the prophe- cies of Ezekiel, was the joint production of two Spanish Jesuits, 16 INTRODUCTION. Pradus and Villalpandus, in three huge folios (Rome, 1596). The first vohime, which, with a shght exception, was executed by Pradus, and reaches to the close of chap, xxviii., is the best portion of the work ; now, however, chiefly valuable as a reper- tory of the opinions of the Fathers. The two other volumes are occupied with interminable discussions in reference to the Temple, and, as stated in the preliminary remarks to chap, xl.-xlviii., proceed throughout on a wrong principle. The expository discourses of Calvin extend only to the first twenty chapters, and are distinguished by his usual acumen and discrimination, also by his hearty appreciation of the great moral principles exhibited by the prophet ; but afford little help in regard to some of the more peculiar difficulties connected with the interpretation of the Book. The same also may be said of the commentaries of Rosen- muller and Maurer, though both are deserving of consultation — the former, more especially for the judicious and extensive use it makes of existing materials — the latter (which, as to the sense, very commonly follows Rosenmuller), for its grammatical exact- ness and acute remarks on particular passages. The translation of Ewald, with its brief notes, forming part of his Hebrew Prophets, though unsatisfactory as a whole, is yet of considerable value, and has frequently been consulted. But a much more valuable contribution to the study of Ezekiel appeared very shortly after it — that of Hiivernick, which issued from the press in 1843, a year or two before the lamented death of its author. Though I cannot always adopt the views and conclusions arrived at in this work, yet I gratefully acknowledge my deep obligations to it. The commentary of Hitzig, of still later date (1847), is the production of an accurate scholar, but of a very inferior mind to that of Hiivernick ; and while it is entitled to an honourable place as regards the grammatical sense and connection, it has added nothing to the general elucidation of the Book, or done aught to enhance its value as part of the Inspired Volume. In this respect it is rash and superficial, and partakes of the wonted leanness and spiritual poverty of Rationalism. The few passages of Ezekiel examined by Hengstenberg in his Christology, are treated with his usual accuracy and penetration. THE BOOK THE PROPHET EZEKIEL. CHAPTER I. THE TIME AND MANNER OF HIS ENTERING UPON THE PROPHETICAL OFFICE. Ver. 1. And it came to pass in the thirtieth year, on the fifth of the fourth month, while I was among the captives by the river Chebar, the heavens were opened, and I saw visions of God. 2. On the fifth of the month ; it was the fifth year of king Jehoiachin's (Heb. Jojakhin's) captivity. 3 The word of Jehovah did verily comei to EzekieP the priest, the son of Buzi, in the land of the Chaldeans, by the river Chebar ; and the hand of Jehovah was upon him. The information contained in these introductory verses, respect- ing the person of Ezekiel, and the time at which he entered on his prophetical calling, is very explicit upon some points, but indefinite or doubtful upon others. It tells us, that he was of the priestly order, and that his father's name was Buzi ; but it does not indicate with what particular family of the priesthood he was connected ; nor does it state that he had ever personally 1 We have here, at the outset, a striking example of our prophet's love of emphasis. He does not say simply, after the usual manner, the "word of Jehovah was or came r-r; to him ; but n-rr rrr,, using the infinitive absol. along with the verb, according to a common Hebrew usage, to strengthen the meaning. The authorized version employs the adverb expressly to bring out the force of this peculiar construction ; but it is rather the felt assurance with which the revelation came, than its expressness, which is indicated. 2 Ezekiel, composed of Vs -^trr, God strengthens. B 18 EZEKIEL I. discharged the duties of the priestly office m the temple. The more special part of the description has respect to his position and calling as a prophet to his exiled countrymen on the banks of the Chebar. He was, indeed, the only individual raised up among them to fulfil there the prophetical office. Daniel, it is true, flourished during the same period in exile, and was also richly furnished with prophetical gifts ; but Daniel might more fitly be called a seer than a prophet, since the spirit of prophecy imparted to him, was not given to fit him for the discharge of a spiritual office, but for the purpose of enabling him to disclose, beforehand, coming events in the providence of God. Chosen by the king of Babylon from that portion of his countrymen who were distinguished by their superior rank and accomplish- ments, the sphere which Divine Providence marked out for him in the land of exile, was one that required his application to the affairs of worldly business, not to the employments of a sacred ministry. His lot was to dwell in king's palaces ; and in giving counsel to princes, and directing the movements of empire, he found his proper vocation. Hence the revelations vouchsafed to him had respect chiefly to the outward relations of God's kingdom — its connection with the kingdoms of this world, and their ever-shifting dynasties. It is on this account, and not for the fanciful reasons sometimes alleged, that the later Jews place the book of Daniel not among the prophetical scriptures — the writings of strictly prophetical men — but among those of a more general character — the Hagiographa, or sacred writings. The sphere which Ezekiel was called to occupy was entirely different. His was the distinctive work and calling of a pro- phet. Himself of priestly origin, and hence devoted from his birth to the peculiar service of God, he had to do more especially with the inward concerns of the divine kingdom ; and it was in connection with this essentially spiritual vocation that the high calling and supernatural gifts of a prophet were conferred on him. When sent into exile, his duty of service was but trans- ferred from the visible temple in Jerusalem to the spiritual temple in Chaldea, as it was also withdrawn from ministrations of a more common and formal to those of a more select and elevated kind. Therefore, as it was Daniel's part to guide the machinery of government, and transact with affairs of state, it was Ezekiel's to deal In God's behalf with the hearts and con- THE OPENING VISION. 19 sciences of men. And as the one was called to raise the standard of truth and righteousness in the high places of the world's pomp and corruption, so the other had to battle with the forms of evil that were nestling in the bosom of the church of God, and con- tend against the abominations which were laying waste the heritage of his people. The place where Ezekiel was called to discharge the functions of this high ministry is said to have been " in the land of the Chaldeans, by the river Chebar" (ver. 3), — which Chebar is universally agreed to have been the river that is more commonly known by the name of Chaboras, a river in Upper Mesopotamia, flowing into the Euphrates near the ancient Carchemish, or Circe- sium, at the distance of about two hundred miles above Babylon. It was among the captive Jews settled there that Ezekiel's lot was cast, and for them more immediately that he had to do the work of a prophet. But whence came those captive brethren ? and when had they settled there ? They consisted, mainly at least, of that portion of the captivity which was carried away with Jehoiachin, on the second occasion that the Babylonian army made reprisals upon the land and people of Judah. The first occasion was about eight years earlier, in the third or fourth year of the reign of Jehoiakim, the father of Jehoiachin ; of which there is no particular account in the historical books of Scripture, though, from being the occasion on which Daniel was carried into exile, it has found an explicit record at the com- mencement of his book.^ The captives, however, of this first successful expedition of the Chaldeans against Judea, appear to have been few compared with those who suffered in the second expedition, when, having first quelled Jehoiakim's rebellion, and ' Dan. i. 1. In 2 Kings xxiv. 1, it is merely said that Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, came up and besieged Jerusalem, and Jehoiakim became his servant. Daniel places his deportation by Nebuchadnezzar in the third year of Jehoiakim, while Jeremiah (chap. xxv. 1) says, that the fourth year of Jehoiakim was coincident with the first of Nebuchadnezzar, in which same year, he also states, Nebuchadnezzar gained a victory over the Egyptians at Carchemish. The probability is, that it was shortly before this battle, in the end of the third year of Jehoiakim, that Nebuchadnezzar came against Jerusalem and took away some captives (among others Daniel). If his assault on Jerusalem was after the battle, the Jews at Jerusalem, and those in Chaldea, must have dated the commencement of his reign differ- ently. 20 EZEKIEL I. put him to death, the army proceeded to carry oflp his successor Jehoiachin, with all . the flower of the people. The kingdom was then left in a feeble and dependent state, and so continued for about eleven years longer ; when the infatuated revolt of Zedekiah provoked a third incursion of the Chaldeans, who now reduced Jerusalem to a heap of ruins — the remaining inhabitants being partly killed, partly taken captive to Babylon, and partly, also, dispersed to other regions. It is not expressly said that the ivhole of the captives who had been carried away with Jehoiachin were settled near Carchemish, on the banks of the Cliebar, though the probability is, that the great body of them had been located there. Ezeklel's call was to labour among " the captivity," — or, as we prefer rendering it, the captives, — and he constantly represents these captives as having their local habitation on the banks of the Chebar. If there was any considerable number of captives taken from Judea on the first incursion of Nebuchadnezzar, it is probable that the most of them were settled there after the battle of Carchemish ; these would form the older portion of the .Jewish settlers on the banks of the Chebar. And as the leading object of those deportations was evidently to consolidate the Chaldean empire, by w^hat seemed a wise assortment of its subjects, it could scarcely fail to be regarded as a politic arrangement, to attach the succeeding and much larger companies of captive Jews to those already settled there, as they would thus more readily feel at home in their new habitations, and with less difficulty become reconciled to the change that had passed over their condition. So that when we hear of the Jews, time after time, being carried to Babylon, or again delivered from it, we are not to understand by this the city of Babylon itself, in which appar- ently a mere fraction of their number was appointed to dwell, but the Chaldean region at large, and especially this particular district of it on the banks of the Chebar. The place of exile was identified with Babylon, merely because the centre of power and influence was there, and the fortunes of the whole region were necessarily bound up with those of the capital. In a moral point of view, the situation of the exiles on the Chebar was peculiarly tiying and perilous, and never more so than during the eleven years' reign of Zedekiah — the period that elapsed between the captivity of the chief part of them, and the THE OPENING VISION. 21 utter prostration of their country. Encompassed, as they now were, by the atmosphere of a triumphant heathenism, the more degenerate portion were in imminent danger of burying them- selves in the world's darkness and corruption ; while those who had attained to more correct views, both of divine truth and of their own position, were exposed to a variety of influences, which tended to nourish false expectations in their bosom, and to take off their minds from what should have been their grand concern — the work of personal reformation. The kingdom seemed now to have become, in some degree, consolidated in the hands of Zedekiah ; and why might they not hope, after a few years more had elapsed, to get permission from the king of Babylon to re- turn and dwell peaceably in their native land ? Even without any express leave on his part, the matter did not seem entirely hopeless, relief might still possibly come through the interven- tion of Egypt ; for, though that power had sustained a severe blow by its defeat at Carchemish, it was not so far broken as altogether to exclude the prospect of its again taking the field against the king of Babylon. It was precisely this expectation which misled Zedekiah to his ruin ; for it induced him to enter into a treacherous alliance with Egypt, which proved the fore- runner of his utter discomfiture and final overthrow. Nor were persons wanting, as we learn from Jeremiah and Ezekiel, who sought to inspire the exiles at Chebar with the same delusive hopes. And it is more than probable, though we have no explicit information on the subject, that some of the earlier predictions, especially those of Isaiah and Habakkuk, which so clearly foretold the downfal of Babylon, were employed to countenance and support them in the false prospects they enter- tained. Then, for the small remnant of sound believers, who existed there like a few grains of wheat among heaps of chaff, how much was there, if not to betray them into such vain con- fidences, at least to fill their souls with depression and gloom '^ Cut off", as by an impassable gulf, from the temple of the Lord, while their more favoured brethren in Judea were still allowed to frequent its courts, how apt must they have been to feel that they were cast out of God's sight, and to mourn, in the plaintive strains of the Psalmist, " Woe is me that I sojourn in Mesech, that I dwell in the tents of Kedar." We find that Jeremiah, amid the severe and painful struggles 22 EZEKIEL I. which beset his course in Judea, was not unmindful of these en- dangered and forlorn exiles in the land of the enemy. On the ^occasion of an embassy going from king Zedekiah to Babylon, he despatched communications to them by the hand of Seraiah, such as their circumstances required. One of these — the pro- phecy contained in Jer. li. — announced the certain downfal of Babylon, but was probably committed to Seraiah in confidence, that he might impart its tidings only to such as were likely to profit by them. The other was .a letter addressed to the captives generally, in which he warned them not to believe the false pro- phets, who held out flattering hopes of their speedy and certain return to the land of their fathers ; assured them that there should be no return till the period of seventy years had been ac- complished in their captivity ; and exhorted them to submit them- selves to the hand of God, and to seek him with all their hearts (chap. xxix.). So far were the views expressed in this letter from coinciding with those prevalent on the banks of the Chebar, that one of the captives, we are informed, wrote back to the high priest at Jerusalem, and even complained of his allowing Jere- miah to go at large, since he was acting more like a madman than a prophet (chap. xxix. 24-28). And it was in immediate connection with these transactions, and for the purpose of giving a full utterance and a pointed application to the truths and les- sons which had been expressed in the communications of Jere- miah, that one was raised up among the captives themselves to do the work of a prophet — the fervent and energetic Ezekiel. For as it was in the fourth year of Zedekiah's reign that those communications went from Jeremiah to the captives (Jer. li. 59), so it was very shortly after, namely, in the fifth year and fourth month of the same reign, or, which is all one, of Jehoiachin's captivity (Ezek. i. 2), that Ezekiel was called to the prophetical office ; whence he begins with the usual historical formula, "And it came to pass," as if what was going to be recorded was merely the resumption of a thread that had somehow been broken or suspended, a continuation in a new form of the testimony that had been delivered by other servants of God. In him the truth found a most important witness, both as regards the nature and variety of the communications disclosed througii him. By his very name a^d call to the prophetical office, he was a witness of the Lord's faithfulness to his people, as, by the tone and character THE OPENING VISION. 23 of his ministrations, he gave strong expression to the high and holy principles of God's government over them ! For, as has been justly said, " He was one who raised his voice like a trumpet, and showed to Israel his misdeeds ; whose word, like a threshing machine, passed over all their sweet hopes and purposes, and ground them to the dust ; whose whole manifestations furnished the strongest proof that the Lord w^as still among his people ; who was himself a temple of the Lord, before whom the apparent temple, which still stood for a short time at Jerusalem, sunk back into its own nothingness ; a spiritual Samson, who, with a strong arm, seized the pillars of the temple of idols, and dashed it to the ground ; an energetic, gigantic nature, who was thereby suited effectually to counteract the Babylonish spirit of the times, which loved to manifest itself in violent, gigantic, grotesque forms; one who stood alone, but was yet equal to a hundred scholars of the prophets."^ We have referred as yet only to the more explicit date assigned by Ezekiel for his entrance on the prophetical office, viz., the fifth day of the fourth month of the fifth year of Je- hoiachin's captivity. Before this, however, he mentions another, which he simply designates " the thirtieth year," — a date which has been very variously understood. Some, in the first instance, Jewish authorities, in particular Kimchi and Jarchi ; recently, in this country, the Duke of Manchester, in his " Times of Daniel," p. 35 ; and on the continent, Hitzig — regard the prophet as reckoning from the last jubilee. By some misapprehension, the Duke of Manchester represents Jerome and Theodoret as being of this opinion ; both, on the contrary, reject it. Jerome's words are : " Tricesimus annus, non ut plerique aestimant getatis pro- phetae dicitur, nee Jubilgei, qui est annus remissionis, sed a duo- decimo anno Josiae," etc. The chief objection to this view is, that it rests entirely on hypothesis, there being no historical notice of a jubilee about the time referred to, nor any other in- stance of such an occurrence being taken by a prophet as an era from which to date either his own entrance on the prophetical office, or any other event of importance to the church. It seems the more unlikely that Ezekiel should fix upon an era of that description, since it already lay so far in the distance ; and so many painful and humiliating events had occurred in the interval, 1 Hengstenberg's Christol., vol. iii. p. 450, Eiig. Tj-ans. 24 EZEKIEL I. that no one almost would naturally think of it, or feel as if, in existing circumstances, anything had depended on it. Of what moment was it to Ezekiel or his countrymen, that thirty years ago there had been a jubilee in the land of Judah, when now the whole nation was in bondage, and the best of its people were miserable captives in a foreign land ? The more common opinions are, that the thirty years date, either from the eighteenth year of Josiah's reign, when, with the finding of the book of the law in the temple, a notable reformation began — so the Chaldee, Jerome, Theodoret, Grotius, Calov, Piscator, Ideler, Havernick (some also of the Rab- binical writers combine their idea of the jubilee with this period) — or from the Nabopolassarian era, at the commencement of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar's father, and of the Chaldean dynasty — so Pra- dus, Scaliger, Perizonius, Michaelis, Rosenmiiller, Ewald. Of these two epochs, it is quite certain that the eighteenth of Josiah's reign did stand at the distance of thirty years from the fifth year of Jehoiachin's captivity (14 of Josiah's reign, 11 of Jehoiakim's, and 5 of the captivity) ; and recent chronological investigations have rendered it probable, that the Nabopolassarian era must also have nearly, if not altogether coincided with it. But it un- questionably seems strange, that either of these epochs should have been indicated by giving only the number of years that had elapsed, with no explicit mention of the point from which they commenced to run. Neither of them could then possess so marked and settled a character in history that, without being expressly named, the one or the other might have been expected at once to present itself to the mind. The very circumstance that two seem almost with equal right to claim the distinction, implies that neither of them stood so prominently forward as to render the specific mention of them unnecessary. If it were established, however (though it cannot possibly be so), that the Chaldean era had then come into general use, the opinion, which would date the thirty years from it, would be the most probable, as the era would, in that case, have formed a definite note of time, which it had been quite natural for a prophet in Chaldea to point to; while no period of internal reformation, like that in Josiah's reign, is ever taken by the prophets as a chronological starting-point. In this uncertainty as to any reference to a public historical epoch, we cannot but think more weight is due, than has latterly been given, to an ancient opinion, that the prophet had respect to THE OPENING VISION. 25 himself in this number, and meant simply to denote by it the thirtieth year of his own life. It was customary for the Levites, and, we may infer, also for the priests, to enter on their duty of service at the temple in their thirtieth year ; and though the prophets were not wont to connect the period when they received their predictions with their own age at the time of their receiv- ing them, yet the case of Ezekiel was somewhat peculiar. As the Lord, by his special presence and supernatural revelations, was going to become a sanctuary to the exiles on the banks of the Chebar (see especially chap. xi. 1 6), so Ezekiel, to whom these revelations were in the first instance made, w as to be to the people residing there in the room of the ministering priesthood. By waiting upon his instructions they were to learn the mind of God, and to have what, situated as matters now were in Jeru- salem, would prove more than a compensation for the loss of the outward temple service. It seems, therefore, to have been the intention of the prophet, by designating himself so expressly a priest, and a priest having reached the thirtieth year, to represent his prophetic agency to his exiled countrymen as a kind of priestly service, to which he was divinely called at the usual period of life. And then the opening vision, which immediately follows, naturally presented itself as the fonnal institution of that spiritual temple, in connection with which he was to minister in things pertaining to the kingdom of God. Such appears to us, on fresh and careful consideration, by much the most natural view of the subject ; and it seems chiefly from overlooking the dis- tinctive character and design of Ezekiel's agency as a prophet, that the difficulty respecting the thirtieth year has been expe- rienced. The prophet w^ished to mark at the outset, in what he said of his own position and calling, the priestly relation in which he stood both to God and to the people. And thus also the end fitly corresponds with the beginning ; for it is as a priest deline- ating the rise of a new and more glorious temple, that he chiefly unfolds the prospect of a revived and flourishing condition to the remnant of spiritual worshippers among whom he laboured. In regard to the revelation itself, which formed at once the call of Ezekiel to the prophetical office, and the commencement of his mission, there are altogether four expressions employed, the three first having respect to what was objectively presented to the prophet, and the other to his internal fitness for appre- 26 ^ EZEKIEL I. bending what was presented. " The heavens were opened " — " he saw visions of God " — and (in connection with these divine visions, as the aim and object of them), "the word of Jehovah did verily come to him," — all indicating, and that in the first instance, the reality of the supernatural manifestation, both in action and speech, that was made to him. Without such actual appearances and communications on the part of God, nothing in the state of the prophet himself would have been of any avail, as to the certain revelation of God's mind and will. At the same time, a corresponding state of spiritual excitation was needed on his part, to fit him for perceiving what was exhibited in the divine sphere, and for being the organ of the Holy Spirit in making known the truth of God to the church. Hence, the prophet adds in respect to this, " And the hand of Jehovah was upon him ;" as in the case of St John (Rev. i. 1 7, " And he laid his right hand upon me, saying. Fear not "), and of Daniel (chap. x. 10, 18), the Lord now, by a divine touch, invigorated his frame and endowed him with strength of eye and elevation of soul for the lofty sphere he was to occupy. And thus raised on high by the immediate agency of God, he was in a condition for witnessing and reporting aright what passed in the region of his inner man. Ver. 4. And I looked, and behold a whirlwind coming from the north, a great cloud, and a fire kindling itself, and a brightness round about it (the cloud), and from out of it (the fire) like the bright glitter of Chasmal in the midst of the fire.^ 5. And out of the midst of it the likeness of four ^ This fourth verse is peculiar in almost every one of the expressions con- tained in it. The ms-ipV^w 'i-s is literally, fire catching itself; but the only de- finite meaning we can attach to this is, that ^of fire kindling itself — self-com- municating from one part to another. The expression occurs only in another passage (Exod. ix. 24), where it is plainly used to denote, as here, the awful intensity and living force of the fire. The two its, being of difierent genders in the original, plainly refer, the one to the cloud, the other to the fire ; and I have marked this by inserting the words for the two objects respectively. The V^'i-nr; rj?s is rendered by our translators, " as the colour of amber." But y^ is not properly colour ; it is the eye, the look, the glance, such as the eye itself, or anything brilliant gives forth. Amber also is not the right word here for Chasmal. We have no term exactly corresponding to it, as it de- notes a sort of mixed metal, a composition of gold and silver ; which is ex- pressed by the rX5«Tjev of the LXX. The glance of this glittering compound in the midst of so intense a fire, suggests the highest possible splendour. And as it is this quality of it that the prophet here has in view, it is, for us, better THE OPENING VISION. 27 living creatures ; and this was their appearance — they had the likeness of a man. 6. And four faces were to each, also four wings to each of them. 7. And their feet were straight feet ; and the sole of their feet like the sole of a calfs foot; and they sparkled like the glitter of polished brass. i 8. The hand of each (literally, his hand) was that of a man underneath their wings on their foiu* sides ; and they four had their faces and their wings. 9. Their wings were joined one to another ; they turned not when they went ; they went each straight forward. 10- And for the likeness of their faces, there was the likeness of a man and the likeness of a lion on the right side to the four of them : and the likeness of an ox on the left side to the four, and the likeness of an eagle to the four. 11. And their faces and their wings were separated from above ; two of each joined one another, and two covering their bodies. ^ 12. And they went every one of them straight forward; whither the Spirit was to go they went ; they turned not when they went. 13. And for the likeness of the living creatures, their appearance was like burn- ing coals of fire, as the appearance of torches ; it went up and down between the living creatures ; and there was brightness in the fire, and from the fire went forth lightning. 1 4. And the living creatures ran and returned like the appear- ance of the meteor-flash.3 15. And as I was looking at the living creatures, to give prominence to the shining than the mixed character of the metal. The appearance of this fiery cloud is said to have been from the north, we believe simply on natural grounds; it was of the nature of a storm, hence it seemed to come firom the hilly, Caucasian region to the north — the natural region of clouds and tempests. We regard it as quite fanciful in Hav. to suppose, that the prophet conceives himself in the temple, and points to the north as the quarter from which the instruments of God's displeasure, the Chaldeans, were to come. Besides, there is mercy as well as judgment, indicated in the vision. 1 Hitzig would translate this last expression, molten brass, or metal, deriving V-;? from t-;'-;p to roast, or bum in the fire. But the transition from roast T T 7 7 to melt, does not appear at all easier, in respect to such an article as brass, than from to be light, to make light (the common meaning of h'-'p), to fur- " 7 bich or brighten. For nothing is more usual, than to say of any piece of metal, it is heavy or light in appearance, according as it is well or ill polished. I therefore retain the common meaning, which was quite correctly given by Stephanus in his Thes. as refulgens, a consequenti tamen, cum proprie po- litum ac tersum declaret. 2 The import of what is said in this 11th verse, regarding their faces and wings is, that they were each separate or distinct both in regard to their heads and wings, but that the tips of the two oustretched wings reached to one another, while the other two wings, in token of humble and reverential awe, formed a sort of veil or covering for the middle or lower parts of their bodies. Very commonly the first clause is rendered, " and their faces and their wings were expanded from above," or spread forth upwards. But one does not see how that could properly be said of the faces, as well as the wings, and the verb t-i is never used but in the sense of separating, dis- persing, or scattering. The Septuagint leave out the faces altogether, in order, apparently, to make the sense of expanding (s*;riT«/^'y«/) more suitable. ^ The p^= here, which I render by the meteor-fiash, is not found in Heb. 28 EZEKIEL I. behold one wheel upon the earth beside the living creatures for its four faces (or, according to its four sides — i. e., as there was a side or direction for each of the four creatures, so a wheel for each of the sides). 16. The appearance of the wheels and their work, was like the glance of the tartessus-stone ;^ and there was one likeness for the four ; and their appearance and their work was as if there were a wheel in the midst of a wheel. 17. When they went, they went by their four sides (or, directions), they turned not when they went. 18. As for their rings (felloes) they were both high and dreadful ; and their rings were full of eyes round about them four. 19. And when the living creatures went, the wheels went beside them ; and when the living creatures were hfted up from oflF the earth, the wheels were lifted up. 20. Whither- soever the spirit was for going, thither they went — the spirit was for going ; and the wheels were lifted up beside them ; for the spirit of the living crea- tures was in the wheels. ^ 21. When those went, they went ; and when those as a verb, but has in Arabic and Syriac the sense of, to scatter, spread ; hence Hav. prefers the meaning of spark-fire. But this hardly comes up to what seems to be required here ; and something of the same nature as light- ning, only more diffuse and sporadic in its appearance, must be understood. Such is meteor, or sheet-lightning ; and such is at least one of the meanings ascribed to the word by Ephraem : either a flash of lightning, or a meteor, falling-star. Many in ancient and modern times prefer the first ; but Ave should then have expected p^i, which occurs in the verse immediately before. The leading features of the description so far, are, first, the portentous cloud, radiant round about, and within glowing with the fervour and bright- ness of a living, self-fed flame. Then, in the midst of this awful heat and lightning-splendour, the four living creatures, in whom the general form and appearance was that of a man, though conjoined with this, were also the like- nesses of a lion, an ox, and an eagle — each looking to its own quarter — a face each way, so that wherever the living creatures moved, they did not need to turn ; there was a face in that direction. Each were separate in respect to the others ; yet, by the two wings that were expanded for flying, they were in immediate juxta-position above ; and were all moved and animated by one living Spirit, by whose mighty impulse they shot like meteors from place to place, and in all their movements and appearance reflected the bright, burn- ing splendour of the fiery element in which they were seen to exist. At chap. X. 1, they are expressly called cherubim. 1 Our translators have given berj/l as the stone here meant ; but it is now more commonly regarded as the chrysolite of the ancients, though this also is not quite certain. 2 Both Hiiv. and Hitzig here render J^lji^;" ij^"' the spirit, or breath of life, the living principle, holding that if the living creatures had been meant, the usual term t^T^ij would have been used. But in the very next verse, except one, we have the same word as here for what must mean the living creatures — *' the heads of the living creatures;" and there Hitzig, as usual, is obliged to suppose a corruption in the text, and correct from the LXX. But in both places the word is most naturally taken collectively, just as in Gen. vii. 14, viii. 1, for living creatures : that which has life, the living creature-hood, for THE OPENING VISION. 29 stood, they stood ; and when those were lifted up from oflf the earth, the wheels were lifted up beside them ; for the spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels. 22. And above the heads of the living creatures was the like- ness of the firmament, as the ghtter of crystal, terrible, stretched over their heads above. 23. And under the firmament their wings erect, one toward another ; each one had two covering on this side, and each one two covering on that side their bodies.^ 24. And I heard the sound of their wings as the noise of many waters, as the voice of the Almighty ; when they went there was a tumultuous noise, like the noise of a camp ; 2 when they stood, they let the living creatures. So here, the prophet has spoken of the creatures sepa- rately ; he now views them collectively, as being together the aggregate crea- turely forms in which the spirit resided and manifested itself. The clause in the middle of the verse, " the spirit was for going," seems to have been thrown in for greater explicitness, to indicate expressly, that it was not the wheels themselves, but the spirit working in them, that was the source of motion. I see no need, therefore, for rejecting the clause. . The description in this second part of the vision is to the following effect : By the side of each cherub (that is, apparently, on the same side and exterior to the cherub), there was a gigantic wheel, or more properly a double wheel — one within another, going through each other transversely ; for the wheels, like the cherubim with their four faces, did not need to turn when they moved from one direction to another ; and this could only be effected by a sort of double wheel to every cherub, each running transversely through the other, so that to whichever quarter the movement might point, there could be a motion of the wheel towards it. The felloes or outer rings of these wheels, were set round with eyes ; and were each also instinct with the same spirit of life and power that wrought in the cherubim ; so that the motions of all were simultaneous. ^ This looks somewhat hke a contradiction to what was said in ver. 11, where simply four wings were assigned to each cherub, tsvo for flying, and two for covering their bodies. Here it seems as if each had four for covering their bodies. But, possibly, what is meant is, not that four wings existed specially for this purpose, but that the use of the four wings altogether was such as to act like a covering for the body ; the whole body was overshadowed by them, and kept out of sight. ^ A tumultuous noise, *'^^n 'Tj so the expression is now commonly un- derstood. Our translators appear to have given the meaning of -^7- " the voice of speech." But this hardly makes sense, and is also against the point- ing. The only other passage where the word occurs is in Jer. xi. 16, and there our translators have rendered tumult, and the connection evidently requires something of that description. The LXX omits the clause, as it does various others in this chapter, but the vulgate translates : sonus multi- tudinis. The expression here, therefore, may be regarded as equivalent in meaning to the very similar one V -^J '*? which is more frequently employed. (Dan. X. 6; Isa. xiii. 4. See Ges. Lex.). The description in this third and last part, which is that of manifested Godhead in the likeness of enthroned humanity, closely resembles the descrip- 30 EZEKIEL I. down their wings. 25. And there came a voice from above the firmament that was over their heads when they stood, and they let down their wings. 26. And above the firmament that was over their heads, as of the ajjpearance of a sap- phire-stone, Avas the likeness of a throne ; and upon the likeness of the throne, the likeness after the appearance of a man upon it aloft. 27. And I saw like the glitter of Chasmal, as the appearance of fire within it round about, from the appearance of his loins and upwards, and from the appearance of his loins and downwards, I saw as it were the appearance of fire, and it was bright all around. 28. As the appearance of the bow that is in the cloud in the day of rain, so was the appearance of the brightness round about. And I was looking, and I fell upon my face, and I heard a voice speaking." To gather up now the leading features and symbolic purport of this wonderful vision, we can easily perceive that the ground- work of it was derived from the patterns of Divine things in the most holy place in the temple ; yet very considerably modified and changed to suit it to the present occasion. Here also there is the throne of the Divine Majesty, but not wearing the humble and attractive form of the mercy-seat ; more like Sinai, with its electric clouds, and peaUng sounds, and bursting effusions of Hv- ing flame. Here, too, are the composite forms about the throne — the cherubim with outstretched wings touching each other ; but instead of the two cherubic figures of the temple, four, each with four hands, four wings, fom' faces, looking in so many directions — doubtless with respect to the four quarters of the earth, toward which the Divine power and glory was going to manifest itself. These four are here further represented as pecu- liarly living creaturesj full of life and motion, and not only with wings for flight, but wheels also of gigantic size beside them, revolving with lightning speed, and all resplendent with the most intense brightness. The general correspondence between what Ezekiel thus saw in the visions of God, and what was to be found in the temple, indicated, that it was the same Grod, who dwelt between the cherubim in the temple, and who now appeared to his servant on the banks of the Chebar ; while the tion given in Exod. xxiv. 10, only more extended and particular. Here, as there, we have the sky-blue sapphire-stone, and the heavens' crystal clear- ness, emblem of divine splendour, only here the splendour is of a more dreadful aspect ; and there is seen, not merely a pavement, but a throne also as of sapphire ; while the glorious being that sat on it was radiant with the bright lustre of celestial fire. From that throned firmament also were heard voices of terrific majesty and power, at the utterance of which the cherubic forms continually let down their wings as in the attitude of reverent and listening silence. THE OPENING VISION. 31 differences bespoke certain manifestations of the Divine charac- ter to be now at hand, such as required to be less prominently- displayed in his ordinary procedure. 1. That he appeared specially and peculiarly as the God of holiness ; this, first of all, was intimated by the presence of the cherubim. For here, as in the temple, the employment of these composite forms pointed back to their original destination in the garden of Eden, to keep the way to the tree of life, from which man had been debarred on account of sin ; ideal creatures, as the region of pure and blessed life they occupied, had now become to men an ideal territory. Yet still they were creatures, not of angelic, but of human mould ; they bore the predominant like- ness of man, with the liknesses superadded of the three highest orders of the inferior creation (the lion, the ox, the eagle). " It is an ideal combination ; no such composite creature as the cherub exists in the actual world ; and we can think of no reason why the singular combination it presents of animal forms, should have been set upon that of man as the trunk or centre of the whole, unless it were to exhibit the higher elements of humanity in some kind of organic connection with certain distinctive properties of the inferior creation. The nature of man is immensely the high- est upon earth, and towers loftily above all the rest, by powers peculiar to itself. And yet w^e can easily conceive how this very nature of man might be greatly raised and ennobled, by having superadded to its own inherent qualities, those of which the other animal forms here mentioned stand as the appropriate types." — "These composite forms are here called '"'"''u; for which the Sep- tuagint, and John in the Apocalypse, use the synon3''mous term C<^a — living ones. The frequency with which this name is used of the cherubim is remarkable. In Ezekiel and the Apocalypse together it occurs nearly thirty times ; and may consequently be regarded as peculiarly expressive of the symbolical meaning of the cheru- bim. It presents them to our view as exhibiting the property of life in its highest state of power and activity ; as forms of crea- turely existence, altogether instinct with life. And the idea thus conveyed by the name is further substantiated by one or two traits associated with them in Ezekiel and the Apocalypse. Such, especially, is the very singular multiplicity of eyes attached to them, appearing primarily in the mystic wheels that regulated their movements, and at a later stage (ch. x. 12), in the cherubic 32 EZEKIEL I. forms themselves. For, the eye is the symbol of intelligent life ; the living spirit's most peculiar organ and index. And to repre- sent the cherubim as so strangely replenished with eyes, could only be intended to make them known as wholly inspirited. Hence, in ver. 20, " the spirit of the living creatures" is said to have been in the wheels ; where the eye was, there also was the intelligent, thinking, directive spirit of life. Another, and quite similar trait, is the quick and restless activity ascribed to them by Ezekiel, who represents them as '^ running and returning" with lightning speed; and then by John, when he describes them as " resting not day and night." Incessant motion is one of the most obvious symptoms of a plenitude of life. We instinc- tively associate the property of life even with the inanimate things that exhibit motion — such as fountains and running streams, which are called living, in contradistinction to stagnant pools, that seem comparati^'ely dead. So that creatures which appeared to be all eyes, all motion, are, in plain terms, those in which ^e powers and properties of life are quite peculiarly displayed. But life, it must be remembered, most nearly and essentially con- nected with God — life as it is, or shall be held, by those who dwell in his immediate presence, and form, in a manner, the very inclosure and covering of his throne — pre-eminently, therefore, holy and spiritual life."^ 2. But this idea of holy and spiritual life, as connected with the presence and glory of God, was greatly strengthened in the vision by the fervid appearance, as of metallic brightness and flashes of liquid flame, which shone from and around all the parts and figures of the vision. It denoted the intense and holy severity in God's working, which was either to accomplish in the objects of it the highest good, or to produce the greatest evil. Precisely similar in meaning, though somewhat differing in form, was the representation in Isaiah's vision (chap, vi.), where in- stead of the usual name cherubim, that of seraphim is applied to the symbolical attendants of God — the burning ones, as the word properly signifies — burning forms of holy fire, " the emblems of God's purifying and destroying righteousness. Hence their cry one to another was, " Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God of Hosts." And in token of the twofold working of this holiness, ^ The Typology of Scripture, 2d ed. vol. i. p. 221-247, where the whole subject of the cherubim is fully investigated. THE OPENING VISION. 33 it was by the application of a burning coal to his lips, that the prophet, as the representative of the elect portion of the people, was hallowed for God's service, while in the message that follows, the ungodly mass are declared to be for burning (as the word literally is in ver. 13). The same element that refined and purified the one for God's service, was to manifest itself in the destruction of the other. And it is this also that is symbolically taught here by the dazzling light, the glowing embers, and fiery coruscations, with which all was enveloped and emblazoned. It made known God's purpose to put forth the severer attributes of his character, and to purify his church by " the spirit of judg- ment and by the spirit of burning." 3. Even these fiery appearances, however, in the cherubim and the other objects of the vision, did not sufficiently express what was here meant to be conveyed ; and, therefore, to make out the idea more completely, wheels of vast proportions were added to the cherubim. The prophet would thus render palpable to our view the gigantic and terrible energy which was going to characterise the manifestations of the God of Israel. A spirit of awful and resistless might was now to appear in his dealings ; not proceeding, however, by a blind impulse, but in all its move- ments guided by a clear-sighted and unerring sagacity. How striking a representation did such a spirit find for itself in the resolute agency and stern utterances of Ezekiel ! In this respect he comes nearest of all the later prophets to Elijah. 4. Finally, above the cherubim of glory and their wonderful wheel-work, was seen, first, the crystal firmament, and then, above the firmament, the throne of God, on which he himself sat in human form — a form, as here displayed, beaming with the splendour of heavenly fire, but, at the same time, bearing the engaging aspect of a man, and surrounded with the attrac- tive and pleasing halo of the rainbow. In this shone forth the mingled majesty and kindness of God — the overawing authority on the one hand, and the gracious sympathy and regard on the other, which were to distinguish his agency, as now to be put forth for the reproof of sin among the covenant-people, and the establishment of truth and righteousness. The terror which the manifestation was fitted to inspire, was terror only to the guilty ; while, for the penitent and believing, there was to be the bright- est display of covenant love and faithfulness. Especially was 34 EZEKIEL II.-III. 1-11. this indicated by the crowning appearance of the rainbow ; which, from being the token of God's covenant with Noah, in respect to the future preservation of the earth, was like the hanging out from the throne of the Eternal of a flag of peace, giving assur- ance to all, that the purpose of Heaven was to preserve rather than to destroy, and to fulfil that which was promised in the covenant. Even if the Divine work now to be carried forward in the spiritual world should require, as in the natural world of old, a deluge of wrath for its successful accomplishment, still the faithfulness and love of God would be sure to the children of promise, and would only shine forth the more brightly at last, in consequence of the tribulations which might be needed to prepare the way for the ultimate good. Such, then, was the form and import of this remarkable vision. There was nothing about it accidental or capricious; all was wisely adjusted and arranged, so as to convey beforehand suitable impressions of that work of God, to which Ezekiel was now called to devote himself. It was substantially an exhibition by means of emblematical appearances and actions, of the same views of the divine character and government, wdiich were to be unfolded in the successive communications made by Ezekiel to the church. By a significant representation, the Lord gathered into one magnificent vision the substance of what was to occupy the prophetic agency of his servant, as in later times was done by our Lord to the evangelist John, in the opening vision of the Apocalypse. CHAPTER n.-HL I-IL CALL TO THE PROPHETICAL OFFICE. Ver. 1. And he said to me, Son of man,i stand upon thy feet, and I will ^ Hiivernick, after many leading commentators, both ancient and modern, still lays stress on this expression, " Son of man," so frequently applied to Ezekiel, and regards it as containing a perpetual admonition to him of his own weakness and frailty. It seems rather strange, however, that this pro- phet alone should be so often plied with such an admonition, and that it should CALL TO THE PROPHETICAL OFFICE. 35 speak to thee. 2. And the spirit came into me as he spoke to me, and he set me upon my feet, and I heard him speaking to me. 3. And he said to me, Son of man, I send thee to the children of Israel, to the rebellious peo- ples,^ who have rebelled against me; they and their fathers have trans- gressed against me, unto this very day. 4. And they are children of a stiff countenance, and an hard heart; I do send thee unto them, and thou shalt say to them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah. 5. And they, whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear — for they are a rebellious house — shall yet know that a prophet was among them. 6. And thou, son of man, be not afraid of them, neither be afraid of their words; for nettles ^ and thorns are with thee, and thou dwellest with scorpions ; be not afraid of their words, neither be confounded at their faces, for they are a re- bellious house. 7. And thou shalt speak my words to them, whether they shall hear, or whether they shall forbear; for they are rebellious. 8. And thou, son of man, hear what I say to thee; be not thou re- bellious like the rebellious house ; open thy mouth, and eat what I give thee. 9. And I looked, and behold a hand stretched toward me, and behold in it a book-roll. 10. And he spread it out before me, and it was written within and without ; and there was written on it lamentations, and mourning, and woe. Chap. iii. Ver. 1. And he said to me, son of man, that which thou findest eat ; eat this roll, and go speak to the house of Israel. 2. And I opened my mouth, and he made me eat that roll. 3. And he said to me, son of man, cause thy belly to eat, and fill thy bowels with this great roll, which I give thee. And I did eat it ; and it was in my mouth as honey for sweetness. 4. And he said to me, son of man, go, get thee to the house of Israel, and speak my words to them. 5. For not to a people of obscure speech and have been conveyed under so general a form. We are rather disposed to concur with Lightfoot : " This expression is of frequent use in Scripture, in the Hebrew Rabbins, but more especially in the Chaldean and Syrian tongues. .... Why Ezekiel, and no other prophet, should have been so often styled thus, has been ascribed to different reasons by different commentators. To me, at least, who am much inferior to them all, the principal reason appears to be this — that, as his prophecy was written during the Babylonish captivity, he naturally made use of the Chaldean phrase, Son of many that is, O man. The same phrase was also used by Daniel in Chaldea, chap. x. 16." EruUm, chap. iv. 1 It is, literally, to peoples, the rebellious ones — Israel being not only called peoples (n-^ir^, the common epithet of the heathen), but with the addi- tional epithet of the rebellious. They were thus virtually put on a level with the heathen, who might be addressed by God as Loammi, not my people ; with the additional aggravation, that they had brought themselves into that condition, after having been in covenant with God. The Septua- gint, with its characteristic laxity, altogether omits the expression. ^ The precise meaning of a^a^a is involved in some doubt. The sense of rebellious or refractory, has often been ascribed to it, which it bears in the Chaldee ; but this would not suit here, being coupled with thorns, and hence that of pricking briers or nettles has been adopted. Gesenius, however, still prefers rebels. 36 EZEKIEL II.-III. 1-11. hard language^ art tliou sent, — to the house of Israel. 6. Not to many nations of obscure speech and hard language, whose words thou dost not understand. Surely had I sent thee to them, they would have listened to thee. 7. And the house of Israel will not be willing to hearken to thee ; for they are not willing to hearken to me ; for all the house of Israel are of an hard forehead, and a stiff heart. 8. Behold I make thy face hard against their faces, and thy forehead hard against their foreheads. 9. As an ada- mant harder than flint I make thy forehead ; thou shalt not be afraid of them, nor be confounded at their looks ; for they are a rebellious house. 10. And he said to me, son of man, all my words that I shall speak to thee, receive in thy heart, and hear with thine ears. 11. And get thee away to the captives, to the children of thy people, and speak to them and say to them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear. The most striking thing in this section is the strong delinea- tion that is given of the backslidden state, and confirmed de- generacy of the people. Not only are they compared to such things as briers and scorpions, but, with painful and emphatic reiteration, they are declared to be altogether infected with the spirit of rebellion, setting their face, with determined and insolent effrontery, against the will and purposes of Heaven. No doubt the description is to be taken with some limitation, as applicable in its full sense to the greater portion of the captives, though not absolutely to the whole. But that such a gemeral description should have been given of them by the God of truth, was a clear indication that they were in a most sunk and degraded condition, and that the remnant who were animated by a better spirit, must have been comparatively few. How distinguished a proof of covenant love and faithfulness in God, that he should condescend to deal with such a people, and send a prophet yet again to instruct them ! And for that prophet, what an arduous and vexing enterprise, to prosecute among them the business of a faithful ambassador of heaven ! But to render him more fully alive to what awaited him in this respect, a symbolical action was added. Looking up, he saw a hand stretched out towai'd him, and in the hand the roll of a book, written within and without, but written only " w ith lamentations, and mourning, and woe." This was significant of the heavy tidings w^hich were to form the chief burden of his communications to the people. For, broken and afflicted as they ^ The expressions are literally, " deep of lip, and heavy of tongue,'* which can only mean obscurity of speech, and language hard to be understood — a foreign tongue. CALL TO THE PROPHETICAL OFFICE. 37 already were in their condition, they were not yet weaned from their false hopes, nor had they reached the darkest period of their history. Troubles and calamities still more disastrous than those which had yet been experienced, were needed to crush their proud and refractory spirit ; and in such a time of spiritual dis- order and corruption, it was only through a season of midnight darkness that light could arise to the church of God. Therefore, the prophetic roll delivered into the hands of Ezekiel, was necessarily much written with the dark forebodings of tribula- tion and sorrow. And as God's representative at such a time, and to such a people, he must eat it (chap. iii. 1, 2), not, of com'se, literally, swallow the roll, but so receive and appropriate its unsavoury contents, that these should infuse themselves, as it were, into his very moisture and blood, and imbue his soul with a feeling of their reality and importance. Hence the bitter as well as the sweet which followed in the experience of the pro- phet (chap. iii. 3, 14), — " sweet as honey in his mouth," yet afterw^ards causing him to go " in bitterness, in the heat of his spirit;" bitter indeed, because he had to announce a message and prosecute a work which was to be peculiarly painful and arduous ; but sweet notwithstanding, because it was the Lord's service in which he was to be engaged, and a service which had the full consent and approval of his own mind. It was sweet to be the representative and agent of the Most High, however contrary to flesh and blood might be the special embassy on which he was sent; as Jeremiah also says, chap. xv. 16, "I found thy words, and ate them ; and thy words were to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart : for 1 am called by thy name, O Lord God of Hosts." " The action denotes that the prophet, being carried in a manner out of himself, entered into the room of God ; and divesting himself of carnal affection, rising into the region of pure and spiritual contemplation, whatever the will of God might call him to do for magnifying the justice as well as goodness of God, he was thoroughly to approve in his own mind, and derive pleasure from the words of God, whatever might be the tenor of their announcements."^ Li short, like every true reformer, and every faithful ambassador of Heaven, it must henceforth be his to count God's glory his own highest good, ^ Vitringa in Apoc, p. 441, on Chap. x. 8-11. 'nHI7BRSIT7] 38 EZEKIEL II.-III. 1-11. and to make all subordinate to the one end, of fulfilling with joy the ministry he had received from above. And most nobly did this man of God execute his high commission, proving himself to be an Ezekiel indeed — a man strengthened with the might of God — a most powerful and effective instrument of divine working. In the resolute and devoted spirit of his pious ancestry, " he said not nnto his father and to his mother, I have seen them ; neither did he acknowledge his brethren, nor know his own children, that he might teach Jacob thy judgments, and Israel thy law," (Deut. xxxiii. 9). How valiantly did his heroic bearing rebuke the spirit of despondency, and against hope still inspire the hope of better days to come ! And even now, when he has so long since rested from his labours, may it not be an instructive and soul-refreshing thing to look back upon the struggle which he so vigorously main- tained — to see him lifting his giant form above the deep waters of adversity that surrounded him, and the more the evil pre- vailed, raising himself, in God's name, to a more determined and strenuous resistance against it ! In such a spiritual hero, we recognise a sign of the ever-during strength and perpetual revirescence of the cause of God, which, like its Divine author, carries in its bosom the element of eternity — survives all changes — amid all death, lives. If this cause should appear for a season to decline and languish, let us never doubt that it shall again rise into prosperity. Its winters are sure to be succeeded by returning springs. And standing, as it pre-eminently does, in the righteous principles, which have a witness and an echo in every bosom, there only needs the consecrated energies of courageous hearts and strenuous arms, like those of Ezekiel, to raise it from the most oppressed condition, and infuse into it the energy of a renovated life. Lord God of Ezekiel, imprint the image of this thy faithful and devoted servant deep upon our hearts ! Let the thought of his holy daring and triumphant faith put to shame our cowardice and inaction ! And do thou find for thyself, in these days of evil, many who shall be wilHng, like him, to make Heaven's cause their own, and shall count nothing so dear to them as its prosperity and progress ! THE prophet's CHARGE. 39 CHAPTER III. 12-27. ezekiel's entrance on his mission, and the first message imparted to him. Verse 12. And the Spirit lifted me up, and I heard behind me the voice of a loud tumultuous noise, " Blessed be the glory of Jehovah from his place." 13. And I heard the noise of the wings of the living creatures embracing each other, and the noise of the wheels over against them, and the voice of a loud tumultuous noise. 14. And the Spirit lifted me up, and laid hold of me, and I went in bitterness, in the heat of my spirit ; and the hand of Jehovah was strong upon me. 15. And I came to the captives at Tel-abib, that were dwelling (or sitting) by the river Chebar, and 1 beheld them dwell- ing there ; ^ and I sat down there seven days (i. e. in lonely and silent grief) among them. 16. And it came to pass at the end of the seven days, that the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 17. Son of man, I have set thee a watchman to the house of Israel ; and thou shalt hear the word at my mouth. ^ This clause has from an early period been felt to be a difficulty, and given rise to different modes of solution. The Jewish critics could not find their way to the interpretation, as is evident by their suggesting for 'niasi of •'••t the text, the Kri a'rs% which has been adopted by our translators : " And I sat where they sat." Various conjectures, though not of a satisfactory kind, have been resorted to, with a view of making out a somewhat similar meaning from the text. Rosenmuller's, for example, by ascribing to "•mm the sense of the Chaldean s'l'r, and Maurer's, who would identify it with 'nos. Havemick would take it simply for the relative, and renders the clause, " And those who were settled there," that is, as he supposes, the older class of settlers, as contradistinguished from the more recent ones, who were mentioned in the preceding clause, as sitting down or settling beside the Chebar. But the distinction, it must be confessed, is very faintly marked, if two separate com- panies were meant, and there is no difference of time noted in the verbs. I incline, on the whole, to agree with Hitzig, that the pointing should be ^tcsi ••.-IT from the verb ^^ts to see or behold. (For similar cases he refers to 1 Kings iii. 21 ; Zech. vi. 1 ; Lev. xx. 23 ; and for rr>sr:j in the sense of them, Jer. xlvi. 6). The prophet first went to them, then saw their condition, and lastly sat down in pensive solitude, giving vent to his grief; for such the verb t3to^ imports, rather than being astonished. As for the idea of Hav., that the older settlers, whom he supposes to be mentioned here, were the captives of the ten tribes, and that the Habor in 2 Kings xvii. 6, is but another name for the Chaboras, it is against all probability. The region of the captivity of the ten tribes is said to have been in the " cities of the Medes," and by " the river Gozan," — viz., the Kissilozan, that runs into the Caspian. 40 EZEKIEL III. 12-27. and give them warning from me. 18. When I say to the wicked, Thou shalt surely die ; and thou dost not warn him, and dost not speak to warn the wicked away from his wicked way that he may live, he, that is wicked, shall die in his iniquity, and his blood will I require at thy hand. 19. And thou, if thou dost warn the wicked, and he does not turn from his wicked- ness, and from his wicked way, he shall die in his iniquity ; and thou hast delivered thine own soul. 20. And when a righteous man turns from his righteousness, and commits iniquity, and I lay a stumbling-block before him (i. e. appoint for him an occasion and instrument of rebuke), he shall die ; because thou didst not warn him, he shall die in his sin, and his righteous- ness which he has done shall not be remembered, and his blood will I require at thy hand. 21. And thou, if thou dost warn the righteous, that the righteous should not sin, and he does not sin, he shall surely live ; for he was warned, and thou hast delivered thine own soul. Verse 22. And the hand of Jehovah was upon me there ; and he said to me, Arise, go forth into the plain, and there I will speak Avith thee. 23. And I arose, and went forth into the plain : and, behold, there the glory of the Lord stood, as the glory which I saw by the river Chebar : and 1 fell on my face. 24. And the Spirit came into me, and made me stand upon my feet, and spake with me, and said to me, Go, shut thyself within thy house. 25. And thou son of man, behold, they lay bands upon thee, and bind thee with them, that thou mayest not go forth amongst them. 26. And I will make thy tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth, and thou shalt be dumb, and shalt not be to them for a reprover ; for they are a rebellious house. 27. And when I speak to thee, I will open thy mouth, and thou shalt say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, let him hear that will hear, and let him forbear that will forbear ; for they are a rebellious house. This section, which should have formed a separate chapter, records the entrance of Ezekiel on his high vocation, and con- tains the first message dehvered to him respecting it. His former place of abode, it would seem, was not the most advan- tageously situated for prosecuting, with success, the w^ork com- mitted to him ; and, in consequence, he removed to Tel-abib, which is nowdiere else mentioned, but was, in all probability, the best peopled locality, or the chief town of the Jewish colony. When he came and saw the captives dwelling there, in a de- jected and mournful condition, he sat down among them for seven days continuously — sitting being the common attitude of grief (Ezra ix. 3 ; Lam. i. 1-3), and seven days being the usual period for the manifestation of the heaviest sorrow (Job ii. 13). By thus spending, at the outset, so many days of desolation and sadness, he gave proof of his deep fellow-feeling with his exiled brethren in their depressed condition, and showed how entirely he entered into their state. Thus sorrowing in their sorrow, and breathing the tenderness of a sympathising spirit toward them, he sought to win their confidence, and secure THE prophet's CHARGE. 41 a favourable hearing for the words of mercy and of judgment, which he was, from time to time, to press upon their notice. The prophet, iiowever, did not go alone to this mournful field of prophetic agency. He was borne thither under the conscious might of the {Spirit of God, and was attended by the symbols of the Divine presence and glory. When he rose to proceed on his course, the whole machinery of the heavenly vision began also to move ; and amid the crashing or tumultuous noise which broke upon his spiritual ear, he heard the words, " Blessed be the glory of Jehovah from his (or its) place" — certainly a some- what peculiar utterance, and one not found in any other part of Scripture ; yet not materially different from another in frequent use, " Blessed be the name of the Lord." The glory of Jehovah here was that manifested glory which had appeared in vision to the prophet, and which was, in other words, a revelation of his glorious name. To pronounce it blessed from its place, was in effect to bless God himself, as thus and there revealing his adorable perfections and Divine will. And as the prophet was going to be the representative and herald of these in a sphere where there was much to damp his spirit, and withstand his faithful agency, it was fit that he should go with the solemn word pealing in his ears, from those ideal ministers of heaven, " Blessed be the glory of the Lord." As much as to say. Let this above all be magnified ; whatever is experienced or done, let nothing interfere with that pure and majestic glory of Jehovah, which has now in emblem been exhibited. In regard to the message communicated to the prophet, after the seven days of sadness had expired, there is also something peculiar in it ; for it is only Ezekiel, among the prophets, who is described as a watchman appointed by God, to give timely and faithful warning to the people. Habakkuk speaks of standing upon his watch-tower (chap. ii. 1), but this was only in respect to his eager and anxious outlook for the manifestations he was expecting of Divine power and faithfulness. Ezekiel alone is represented as called to do for others the part of a watchman ; and, in doing it, he was most strictly charged, on the one hand, to receive all his instructions from God as to the existence of whatever danger there might be in the condition of the people ; and, on the other, to sound a loud and solemn alarm when he might perceive it actually besetting them. That such should 42 EZEKIEL III. 12-27. have been the distinctive character given to his position and calHng, manifestly bespoke the very perilous condition of those to whom he was sent. It indicated that he had something else to do than merely to sympathise with them in their afflicted state, and speak soothing words to their downcast and drooping spirits. It was to be his rather to open their eyes to the pro- founder evils that encompassed them, to break the spell of inveterate and cherished delusions, and raise the cry of danger where none was suspected. So that the very form of the com- mission given to him was Hke the deliverance of a strong and impressive testimony to the people of the latent corruptions and imminent perils with which they were beset. If we look also to the substance of the communication, or to the particular instructions given to the prophet concerning the discharge of his office, we see at once the grand principle dis- closed, on which the destiny of Israel was to turn. The ques- tion, whether life or death, blessing or cursing, was to be their portion, hung upon another, whether they were to make right- eousness or sin their choice ? Their return to righteousness was the indispensable condition of their restoration to blessing. If, in despite of this, the wicked should persevere in his evil ways, or even the righteous man should turn aside and practise iniquity, the visitation of wrath must be looked for — the original sentence against sin, to which the language designedly points, that the purpose of Gqd in this respect might be seen to be fixed and un- alterable — the sentence, that he who transgresses " shall surely die," must take effect ; for God is unchangeably the same, and what he appointed at first as the wages of sin must continue to be its wages still. But while this part of the charge cut off all hope from a backsliding and impenitent people, the other part of it held out ample encouragement to such as remained stedfast in the cove- nant of God, or repented of their evil ways. The man who continued to love the paths of righteousness, and the man also who, after having forsaken, again returned to them, was to be assured of the blessings of life ; these should as surely live as the others should die. For the prophet, as God's watchman, was to represent the mercy as well as the justice of God's administration ; he was to have a wakeful eye upon the good, not less than the evil, that appeared among the people; and was THE prophet's CHARGE. 43 to stretch out the hand of fellowship, and display the banner of Divine love and protection, in behalf of all v^^ho might be inclined or moved to cleave to the service of Heaven. Thus v^^ere they to know from the outset that, for the people as a whole, and for each individual amongst them, this one path lay open for their return to peace and blessing. We shall not go into the question too often raised from this representation, as to the possibility of the righteous falling from a state of grace. For it seems to us a misapplication of this passage, to introduce it in such a connection. Its direct and immediate bearing had respect only to the inseparable connec- tion between righteousness and life, sin and death. And cer- tainly by the former is meant a real participation of the Divine likeness and blessing, and by the latter the loss of both. Calvin plainly errs in maintaining the contrary. But whether this loss may ever be sustained by any who have properly enjoyed the good — whether those who have been truly renewed by grace ever fall back again into the corruption and ruin of nature — this is not to be determined by a passage like the present, which being intended only for a direction to the prophet, in regard to his public ministrations, of necessity spake of the appearances, as indicative of the realities of things." Unquestionably there were persons then, as there are persons still, who to all human appearance have lived for a time in the fellowship and favour of God, and yet afterwards turn again to folly. And it is well tliat the possibility of this should be borne in mind, both by pastors and people, that there may be preserved in their minds a wakeful jealousy in regard to the vital bond, which connects, in the experiences of men, life with righteousness, and death with sin. Even the most established believer is not safe, unless he keep constantly in mind the dangers of his condition, and, with a godly jealousy over himself, perpetually watch and pray lest he fall into evil. At the very outset, therefore, and by the terms of his Divine commission, the prophet seeks to recall the people to the main point at Issue, and urges them to a right settlement of the con- troversy between them and God. Individually and collectively they must come to be at one with God in respect to the love of righteousness, and the hatred of iniquity. This is the grand turning-point on which hangs the destiny that awaits them, as 44 EZEKIEL III. 12-27. it is also the vital thread that runs through all the prophet's future ministrations and announcements. Once and again he presses it on their notice in the same terms that he does here, only with more fulness of detail, and greater urgency in the application (chap, xviii. xxxiii.), while, in one form or another, the subject is perpetually referred to throughout the book of his prophecy. Here also he was reminded of the necessity of this repeated earnestness in the matter, and of the arduous and diffi- cult task that was given him to accomplish in respect to it. For, immediately after he has received his charge, the hand of the Lord was upon him, and he was ordered to go forth into the plain, that the Lord might there talk with him alone (ver. 22). And when there, and favoured again with a manifestation of the Divine glory, as at the first, the Spirit enters into him, and directs him to go and shut himself up in his house ; thus giving him to understand, that in the work he had to do, he must look for no sympathy and support from man, but must be alone with his God, reverently hearing his word, and receiving strength from his hand. The reason follows, " And thou, son of man, behold they lay bands upon thee, and bind thee with them, that thou mayest not go forth amongst them ;" that is, their obstinate and wayward disposition shall be felt upon thy spirit like re- straining fetters, repressing the energies of thy soul in its spiritual labours, so that thou shalt need to look for thy encouragement elsewhere than in fellowship with them. For, that the imposi- tion of bands must be understood spiritually, of the damping effect to be produced upon his soul by the conduct of the people, can admit of no doubt. It is a marked specimen of the strong idealism of our prophet, which clothes everything it handles with the distinctness of flesh and blood. "And I will make thy tongue (it is added) cleave to the roof of thy mouth, and thou shalt be dumb, and shalt not be to them for a reprover ; for they are a rebellious house." So deeply rooted and inveterate is the evil in them, that it shall prevail over thee ; thou shalt not pre- vail over it ; after thou hast plied every weapon, thou shalt need to sit down in silence, as one baffled of his purpose ; but still not as if the work were altogether in vain, or the cause absolutely hopeless. It is Jehovah's word that is to be spoken, and this cannot for ever be in vain : " And when I speak to thee, I will open thy mouth, and thou shalt say to them. Thus saith the VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEAHING. 45 Lord Jehovah, Let him hear that will hear, and let him forbear that will forbear ; for they are a rebellious house." The word is true, and must ultimately prevail, because it is Divine; and however those may deal with it to whom it is immediately addressed, it is thine to utter it w^th unswerving faithfulness as the Lord's true message. A salutary lesson and instruction to all who are put in trust with souls, as well in regard to the nature of the charge itself, as to the manner in which it ought to be fulfilled ! It is emphati- cally the work of God they have to do, and the instrument to be wielded in the doing of it is his own Word. Let this be plied with unwearied diligence, and earnest strivings for success ; for the w^ork is of infinite importance, and results past reckoning depend on it. Eternal weal or woe grows out of it to all who come within the field of its operations. And for one's self- whatever may be the result for them — the path of duty is the only path of safety ; faithfulness to God must be the supreme rule, and his glory the chief aim. " I have a commission to fulfil, I must deliver my own soul," — let this be the one answer to all counter-solicitations from the flesh or the world ; and it will also be the best guarantee of ultimate success. For it is to the labours of those who thus supremely eye and honour God, that the "harvest of souls is usually given ; and the more that any one proves himself to be such a workman, the less shall he need to be ashamed either here or hereafter. CHAPTER IV. THE VISION OF THE SIEGE AND THE INIQUITY-BEARING. Ver. 1. And thou, son of man, take thee a brick, and set it before thee, and engrave on it the city Jerusalem. 2. And lay siege against it, and build a watchtower ^ against it, and cast a mound against it, and order a camp 1 The sense oi fort, which, in the received translation, as in most earlier versions and commentators, was ascribed here to p^rr, is now generally abandoned, and it is most commonly taken in the sense of watch-tower, such as besiegers were wont to erect in front of a city, for the purpose of descry- 46 EZEKIEL IV. against it, and set against it battering-rams round about.^ 3. And do thou take thee an iron pan and set it for a wall of iron between thee and the city, and direct thy face against it, and it shall be besieged, and thou shalt lay siege against it. It is a sign to the house of Israel. 4. And thou shalt lie upon thy left side, and lay the iniquity of the house of Israel upon it ; according to the number of the days that thou shalt lie upon it, thou shalt bear their iniquity. 5. And I have laid upon thee the years of their iniquity, according to the number of the days — three hundred and ninety days ; and thou shalt bear the iniquity of the house of Israel. 6. And when thou hast accomplished these, thou shalt lie again upon thy right side, and shalt bear the iniquity of the house of Judah forty days ; a day for a year, a day for a year,^ have I appointed it to thee. 7. And thou shalt set thy face toward the siege of Jerusalem, and thine arm uncovered ; and thou shalt prophesy against it. 8. And behold I lay upon thee bands, that thou mayest not turn from one side to another, till thou hast accomplished the days of thy besieging. 9. And do thou take to thee wheat, and barley, and beans, and lentils, and miUet, and spelt, and put them into one vessel, and make thee bread of them ; according to the number of the days that thou liest upon thy side, three hundred and ninety days shalt thou eat thereof. 10. And thy food which thou shalt eat is by weight, twenty shekels a day ; from time to time shalt thou eat it. II. And water by measure shalt thou drink, the sixth part of an liin ; from time to time shalt thou drink it.^ 12. And barley- cakes (i.e. after the manner of these) shalt thou eat it; and thou shalt bake it with dung that cometh out of man, in their sight. 13. And Jehovah said to me, Thus shall the children of Israel eat their defiled bread among the Gentiles, whither I will drive them. 14. And I said, Ah, Lord Jehovah, ing the motions of the besieged. So it is taken by the Syriac, and though the Septuagint has here rt^Uuxes, yet, in chap. xxvi. 8, it uses ^^otpvx^x^ for the same word. So too Gesenius, in the last edition of his Lex., also Ha- vernick, Henderson (on Jer. Ivi. 4), and Maurer. The last, however, hesitates between this sense, according to which the word is derived from pl% to look out, speculari, still found in the Aramaic, and that of a battering machine, from p^n. 1 Instead of battering-rams, Havemick would render w^^'z) through-borers, or through-breakers, on the ground that ^^ does not signify ram, but lamb, and in particular a fat lamb. He would, therefore, take it as a noun from rr^s, to dig or bore through. The thing indicated, however, is still much the same ; and, allowing the derivation, which cannot be regarded as certain, there seems no need for altering the translation, which gives the usual term for the old warlike instrument referred to. The Targum gives the same sense, and Kimchi explains, "iron rams to batter down the walls." The LXX, however, render by the more general term fitXoa-Tiffus, engines for throwing some sort of missiles. 2 The expression, « a day for a year," is twice used, as in Numb. xiv. 34, instead of a day for every year, in order to render the reference to the pas- sage in Numbers more manifest. 3 The allowance of provisions specified would form, if reduced to English measure, about a pound weight of bread per day, and from a pint and a half to two pints of water — barely enough to support life. VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 47 behold my soul has not been polluted, and neither of carcase nor of what is torn in pieces, have I eaten from my youth even until now ; nor has abominable flesh come into my mouth. 15. And he said to me, See, I have given thee cow's dung instead of human ordure, and thou shalt make thy bread of it. 16. And he said to me, Son of man, behold I break the staff of bread in Jerusalem, and they shall eat bread by weight, and with care ; and they shall drink water by measure, and in desolateness ; 17. That they may want bread and water, and be desolate one toward another, and pine away in their iniquities. • The prophet is here commanded to take a tile or brick, and engrave on it an outline of the city Jerusalem. Having done this, he is instructed to direct against the city the usual means and appliances of a siege — to build a tower of observation, to cast up a mound against it, to prepare battering-rams, or instruments for effecting breaches in the walls ; and with an iron frying-pan, set up between him and the city, and as with a wall of metal separating him from it, to carry on a close and vigorous siege. At the same time, and while this action was proceeding (see ver. 7 and 8), the prophet is enjoined to Jie first upon his left side for 390 days, bearing for so long a time the iniquity of the house of Israel ; then to turn to the other side, and for forty days more to bear the iniquity of the house of Judah. These daj^s of iniquity- bearing, he is also given to understand, represent so many years, during which the people whom he personified were destined to bear their iniquity. Nor was there to be any release from the appointed doom ; for in token of the Divine determination to execute what was decreed, bands were to be laid upon him, to hold him in his place till the whole w^as accomplished. Still further, he is directed to take different kinds of grain, from the richest to the poorest (wheat, barley, beans, lentils, millet, spelt or dhourra, the three last being the poorer kinds of grain), and mix them all together for bread, as if no choice was to be exer- cised about the quality, but the worst, as well as the best, had to be turned to account. He was also to bake them with the foulest and most offensive ingredients ; and eat what was baked in scanty portions, with an accompanying pittance of water, as is usual in times of straitness and scarcity. This he was to do for the period of " 390 days, — the days he was to lie upon his side ;" for thus, it is added by way of explanation, " even thus shall the children of Israel eat their defiled bread among the Gentiles, whither I will drive them." And after having com- 48 EZEKIEL IV. plained of the defilement necessarily connected with the order, (" Ah ! Lord God, behold my soul hath not been polluted !"), and having obtained a slight modification of the order, though the bread was still to be scant and abominable, the Divine com- munication was thus briefly and mournfully wound up : " And he said to me, Son of man, behold I break the staff of bread in Jerusalem ; and they shall eat bread by weight, and with care ; and they shall drink water by measure, and in desolateness ; that they may want bread and water, and be desolate one toward another, and pine away in their iniquities." In this singular communication, there is fortunately no diffi- culty worth naming as regards the meaning of the words or the construction of the sentences. And in regard to the part required to be played by the prophet himself, however it may have been understood in former times, we should suppose few now will be disposed to doubt, that the successive actions spoken of took place only in vision, and are no more to be ranked among the occur- rences of actual life than the eating of the prophetic roll men- tioned in the preceding chapter. Indeed, such actions as are described here, though well fitted, when rehearsed as past, and read as narratives of things ideally done, to make a strong and vivid impression upon the mind, would plainly have had an opposite effect if transacted in real life. It would have been impossible for ordinary spectators to see Ezekiel conducting a miniature siege with a tile and a sauce-pan, and such like implements of war, without a feeling of the puerile and ludicrous being awak- ened ; and the other symbolical actions mentioned, especially his lying for 390 days motionless on one side, if literally understood, can scarcely be regarded as coming within the limits of the pos- sible. And along with the physical impossibility of one part of the requirement, there was the moral impossibility of another ; since to eat bread composed of such abominable materials would have been (if performed in real life) a direct contravention of the law of Moses — that law, respectful submission to which was ever held to be the first and most essential characteristic of a true prophet (compare Deut. xiv. 3, xxiii. 12-14, with xiii. 1-5). Besides, we find the prophet (chap. viii. 1) represented as sitting in his house before the number of the days to be spent in a lying posture could have been completed.^ So that, on every account, ^ Dr Pradus and others have sought to lengthen out the time between the VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 49 it is necessary to consider the actions to have taken place in vision, as, indeed, was usually the case in prophetical actions, and uni- formly so, as we shall find in Ezekiel. But if there is little room for diversity of opinion as to the visionary nature of the scene described in this chapter, or to the import of the terms employed, wdien we look to the message itself contained in the vision, there is something so peculiar and enig- matical in its structure, that it would be difficult to point to a single chapter in the whole prophetical scriptures where our com- mentators have found themselves so entirely at sea, and so unable to satisfy either themselves or their readers. It is of great im- portance, however, to find the right clue here, as a good deal de- pends on it for a correct understanding of the peculiar manner of our prophet generally, and for the satisfactory explanation of the more obscure portions of his writings. Nor is there any insur- "mountable difficulty in the way, if only we view the different parts of the vision in their due connection one with another, and give to the language of the prophet its fair and legitimate import. 1. Let it first be noted, then, for a right interpretation of the vision, that the sev^eral parts form but one great whole. What is first symbolised by the prophet's laying siege to Jenisalem, is not to be regarded as something diverse and apart fi*om what is afterwards indicated by his lying so many days upon his side, and eating scant and abominable bread ; for the two actions are distinctly represented as contemporaneous. It is while in the act of lying upon his side that he is to set his face toward Jeru- salem, and to stretch out toward it his uncovered arm as a sign of the Lord's displeasure manifested against it (ver. 7, 8.) Nor is he allow^ed to change his posture " till the days of the siege are ended." So that the second line of action must have been de- signed to be supplementary to the first, and was merely added to bring out more fully and distinctly the instruction sought to be conveyed. But such being the case, the action of the siege, which forms the first part of the vision, cannot have been in- two periods given at the beginning of this and the eighth chap., by resorting to the fiction of an intercalary month. But shifts of this kind, to say the least, are always unsatisfactory, and the defective time taken along with the other considerations mentioned, are quite conclusive against a literal under- standing of the vision. I) 50 EZEKIEL IV. tended to depict the calamity of an actual siege of Jerusalem ; for then, by the other and contemporaneous actions, it must needs have been protracted for centuries, and must also have been a calamity, in which the house of Israel shared as well as the house of Judah. We must, therefore, dismiss from our minds the thought of an actual siege (which has so commonly embarrassed the views of interpreters), excepting in so far as that may have formed a constituent part of the contemplated troubles. Jeru- salem, the common mother — the centre of the whole covenant- people, appearing as a besieged city, assailed with all the means and implements of war, and these plied by the immediate direc- tion and agency of the living God — this stands here as an image of the people themselves, lying under the ban of Heaven, given up as a prey to the powers of evil, and doomed to experience at their hands the most severe and painful indignities. Hence, also, as the siege itself was comprehensive of the whole that was to be experienced, we are told merely of its continued pressure, but not of its result ; for, in the present case, nothing really depended on that, and the mention of it might even have tended to convey a false impression, by leading us to fix our minds simply on the literal besieging and overthrow of Jerusalem. 2. It must be noted again, in regard to the second action in the vision, that by the heamig of the people^ s iniquity must be understood the punishment due to their sins. If the expression had been in itself a doubtful one, the instruction \^q have seen to be imparted by the action of the siege would have obliged us to take it in the sense now" mentioned. But the expression is one that very frequently occurs in Scripture, and always in the sense of sustaining the punishment due to sin. We point only to a few examples out of many which might be given. Numb. xiv. 33 ; Lev. xix. 8 ; Isa. liii. 12 ; and in Ezekiel himself, chap, xviii. 19, 20 ; xxiii. 35. The corresponding years, therefore, on the part of the people, represented by the days of iniquity-bearing in the prophet, must be years of trouble and affliction — ^years, not of committing sin, but of receiving chastisement for sin already com- mitted — years during which the Divine judgment, rather than the Divine mercy and forbearance, came into exercise. The same also appears still further from the kind of treatment they were to receive during the period in question, which has its most prominent representation in the destination to eat defiled bread. VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 51 and that only in small portions, among the Gentiles. What could more impressively denote a people bearing a load of unpar- doned guilt, and groaning under the rebuke and chastisement of heaven ? It implies tliat Israel's peculiar distinction, as compared with others, was to be virtually abolished, and that, as they had degraded themselves spiritually to a level with the heathen, so the Lord would make their condition outwardly to correspond, by subjecting them to a base and dishonourable treatment before the world. This is said with respect more immediately to the house of Israel ; but of entirely similar import is the other, and less prominent part of the representation, which points more directly to the house of Judah ; that they should " eat bread by w^eight and with care : and drink water by measure and in desolateness, and consume away in their iniquities." In respect to both departments alike of the covenant-people, it is manifestly the in- fliction of a penalty that is meant by the e\al suffered — the just desert of sin. 3. These things being premised and explained, we come now to what may be called the grand difficulty of the scene — the time during which the iniquity-bearing was to proceed with its humi- liating and afflicting treatment : 390 years for the house of Israel, and 40 for the house of Judah. It is clear from the remarks already made, that the period mentioned can have no respect to the time that may have actually been consumed in the last siege of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans. For, it is not a literal siege at all which the vision properly contemplates ; and if it could be proved (which it never can with certainty) that the time actually spent by the Chaldeans in besieging Jerusalem precisely corre- sponded with the number of days during which the prophet was to lie on his two sides, what should thereby be gained ? These days have no independent worth in themselves ; they merely re- presented the nwnher of years during which the people were to be dealt with for their sins. Neither can the periods mentioned bear respect to the times during which the houses of Israel and Judah respectively pursued their course of rebellion, provoking, but still not properly experiencing, the execution of Heaven's judgments : as if it might be enough to verify the prophetic de- lineation, could 390 years be ascertained of open defection for the house of Israel, and 40 for the house of Judah, before the de- struction of Jerusalem. It was palpably the reverse, at least in the 52 EZEKIEL IV. case of Judab ; for the vigorous reformation of Josiah took place tviihin these last forty years, and the history of the period does not present such a continued prosecution of rebellious courses, as the supposition would require. But besides this evident failure in respect to the one house, such a line of inquiry leads entirely in the wrong direction for both houses ; as it refers to the time of iniquity being committed, not of iniquity being borne — to the contracting of the guilt, not to the enforcing of the penalty. Calculations, therefore, of the kind just referred to, tend only to mislead ; and we must look elsewhere altogether for the proper clue to this part of the vision.^ The 390 years for the house of Israel, and 40 for the house of Judah, it will be observed, make up together 430 years — a period famous in the earlier history of the covenant-people, being the term of their sojourn in the land of Egypt (Exod. xii. 40, 41). The thought of a reference to this could scarcely escape the notice of a Hebrew scholar or careful student of the prophet ; and, accordingly, we learn from Jerome, in his notes on the pas- sage, that the Jews of his time understood the prophet to inti- mate, that " as the children of Israel had been 430 years in Egypt, so, in the same number, would their final captivity be completed." The commencement of this final captivity, he fur- ther tells us, they dated from the second year of Vespasian, when Jerusalem was taken by the Eomans, and the temple ^ It is by the neglect of the considerations adduced above, that the false in- terpretations of the vision — which unfortunately comprehend all that have been current in this country — have gone so much astray. They all lose themselves in unsatisfactory and needless attempts to show, partly how the number of days assigned to the prophet for lying on his side, coincided with the time consumed in the siege of Jerusalem, and partly how the 390 years for the house (^f Israel, and the 40 for the house of Judah, corresponded with the respective periods of transgression, down to the taking of Jerusalem. The Duke of Manchester in his Times of Daniel, p. 20, etc., has recently pro- duced some calculations of his own on the subject, and dates the 390 years from the first public defalcation of Rehoboam, a little before the revolt of the ten tribes, the usual starting-point, in order to make the time square more exactly with the 390 of the prophet ; and the 40 years he transfers altogether to another age — to the period between John the Baptist's public appearance and the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans. It is needless to go into such calculations and conjectures, as they proceed on an entire misconception of the subject, and refer the prophetic periods to times of God's forbearance with iniquity, instead of times of direct and formal chastisement for its guilt. VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 53' destroyed ; and they were living in the hope, that when 430 years from that memorable era had run their course, a career of uninterrupted prosperity was to be entered on by the Jewish people. In this anticipation, however, they showed but too clearly that they had already lost the key to the right interpre- tation of the mystery — which requires us, indeed, to connect the whole time specified, with the 430 years formerly spent in the house of bondage, yet so as not to overlook the division of this term into the two unequal portions of 390 and 40. For in the 40 years assigned to the house of Judah, there is the recurrence of another remarkable period in the history of ancient Israel, — that of the sojourn in the wilderness. We can the less suppose this latter period to have been overlooked by the prophet, as in the very structure of this part of the vision — in the adoption of the principle, a day for a year- — there is an evident reference to that passage in Numbers, which records the doom of the Israel- ites to their long sojourn in the desert : " And your children shall wander in the wilderness forty years, and bear your whore- doms, until your carcases be wasted in the wilderness. After the number of the days in which ye searched in the land, forty days, each day for a year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years, and ye shall know my breach of promise" (Numb, xiv. 32-34).! Keeping in view, then, this twofold allusion in the periods be- ^ Of course it will be understood, that the two periods of 430 years for Egypt, and 40 for the desert, are referred to as well-known periods of chas- tisement and trouble, marked historical periods of that description — although in reality a portion of each of them was not exactly of that description. Their leading character as great passages in God's dealings with his people, is constantly presented in that light. There is, therefore, no necessity for raising the question, whether the whole 430 years were actually spent by the children of Israel in Egypt, or whether this period did not also comprehend the previous sojourning of the patriarchs in the land of Canaan. The Sama- ritan Pentateuch and the Septuagint translation have both changed the text at Exod. xii. 40, so as to express this latter idea, thereby reducing the sojourn in Egypt to about the half only of the 430. This appears to have been done with the view of making the Egyptian period suit better with the genealo- gical table in Exod. vi., which gives only three generations between Levi and Moses. But it is well known, that particular links in the chain were often omitted in such tables ; and as in another table (1 Chron. vii. 23-27), so many as eight generations are given for another tribe during the same period, there is no ground for doubting on that score, that the whole 430 years were 54 EZEKIEL IV. fore ns to the earlier history of the covenant-people, the solution of the prophet's enigma will not occasion any extreme difficulty. But it will open itself out more easily and naturally to our view, if we first point to one or two prior revelations, which, in a sim- pler form, set forth the principle of the representation, and pre- pared the way for its development in the more hidden and enig- matical shape it assumes in the hands of Ezekiel. The first is the word of Moses, in Deut. xxviii. 68, where, speaking of the evils which were likely to befall the people for their sins, he says, " And the Lord shall bring thee into Egypt again with ships, by the way whereof I spake to thee ; thou shalt see it no more again, and there ye shall be sold to your enemies for bondmen and bond- women, and no man shall buy you." This striking announce- ment of Moses had already proved a fertile word for Hosea, who says, with manifest reference to it, " Now will he remember their iniquity, and visit their sins ; they shall return to Egypt." And again, " They shall not dwell in the Lord's land, but Eph- raim shall return to Egypt, and they shall eat unclean things in Assyria" (Hos. viii. 13 ; ix. 3). This last clause shows beyond a doubt, that when the prophet speaks of the Israelites being sent back to Egypt, it is not the exact country, but the state of bondage and misery with which, from past experience, that country had become identified in their minds, that he has in view. For, as the power that was now in readiness to do the part of the oppressor was the proud Assyrian, so it was in this direction, the opposite one to where it formerly had been, that the new Egypt was to be found ; they were to " eat unclean things in Assyria." That such was really the meaning of Hosea, is rendered still more manifest by another passage (chap. xi. 5), " He shall not return into the land of Egypt, but the Assyrian shall be his king." He shall return there, and yet not return. What can this mean ? but that the Egypt-state shall once more become his, the dominion of sin calling for another house of bondage with . its oppressions and miseries, though the place where the evil was to be endured should no longer be the same ; spent in Egypt. The facts of the case, indeed, will scarcely stand with any smaller number. But the prophet is merely to be regarded as pointing to the well-known historical period, though his doing so may justly be regarded as an incidental testimony to the truth of the longer period. VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 55 it should be transferred to Assyria. Nor, indeed, did the original announcement of Moses mean otherwise ; for, in the same chap- ter, in which he held out the threat of a return to Egypt, he also speaks of their being brought to a nation " which neither they nor their fathers had known," and of their being " scattered among all people, from one end of the earth to the other " So that what was indicated by the return to Egypt, might be found in any region of the earth where God was pleased to drive them in his anger. And the same, also, substantially holds of another prophecy of Hosea (chap. ii. 14, 15), where the Lord speaks of bringing Israel again into the wilderness, of giving them their vineyards from thence, and rendering the valley of Achor to them a door of hope ; that is, he was to deal with them much as he had dealt with their forefathers, when he tried and humbled them in the wilderness. Now, Ezekiel here resumes these earlier announcements of prophecy, and with that minuteness of detail and vividness of colouring which so remarkably characterise his prophetical deli- neations, throws the ideas they embody into a specific and nu- merical form. The covenant-people, as a whole (for they must still in some sense be regarded as one), were now again to suffer for their sins the same sort of hardship and discipline which had of old been laid upon their fathers during the period of their servitude in Egypt ; the doleful past was again substantially to repeat itself in the future ; the dark season of oppression and exile was again to come back with its sad and sorrowful expe- riences. Yet, with this general similarity, there was also a difference — a difference first in the respective spiritual conditions of the two branches of the covenant-people, and requiring to be met by a corresponding difference in the dealing they might expect from God. The house of Israel were spiritually in a much worse case than Judah ; for, from the time of their revolt, they threw off their allegiance to God, and separated themselves from his life-giving ordinances of worship ; in defiance, also, of God's appointment, they renounced their connection vnth the house of David, to which, by an everlasting covenant, he had given the power and the dominion. Therefore, by much the greater part, not far from the whole of the period, which symbolised the Egypt- state of bondage and exile, is assigned to this house of Israel ; for, with them, all, in a manner, was out of course — they were 56 EZEKIEL IV. on the borders of perdition— they virtually needed to be again redeemed. But with the house of Judah, notwithstanding their many sins and backshdings, there ivas redemption, although they had greatly impaired its value, had well nigh rendered it of no effect, by their continued obstinacy and perverseness. They had the covenant of promise, and the tabernacle of David, with which God had irrevocably associated the good of the world. The ele- ments of life, the true grounds of hope, were theirs, yet mixed up with so much that was false and perilous, that severe and painful experiences were needed to fit them for enjoying the good that was within their reach. Therefore, if not precisely the Egypt-state of bondage in all its rigour, yet that which was most nearly akin to it, what was indeed but a continuation of it in a modified form, and in more hopeful circumstances, the course of trial and discipline in the wilderness : this must now again substantially become the portion for a season of the house of Judah. They needed it, much as their fathers of old, who, even after they w^ere redeemed from the house of bondage, still required the forty years of additional troubles and discipline in the wilder- derness, to prepare them for the inheritance and service of God. So these degenerate children of the house of Judah, who could not be moved by all they had experienced of the goodness and severity of God to forsake their evil ways, wdio had seen their brethren of the house of Israel sent anew into the Egypt-state of worldly oppression, and seemingly hopeless exile, and yet would not be warned to abandon the paths of ungodliness and corrup- tion ; for these, now, there was of necessity coming a relegation to the sifting and sore troubles of the wilderness, and there they must be made to know, after the manner of their forefathers, the determination of God to have a people cleansed from the abo- minations of sin, before they can be raised to the sunshine of his favour and blessing. Thus understood, the several parts of the vision receive a per- fectly natural and harmonious meaning. Jerusalem in a state of siege represents the covenant-people, as a whole, straitened and oppressed by the powers of this world, as the instruments of God's just displeasure. And the prophet being appointed to bear, during its continuance, the iniquity of the people, with stinted and foul provisions, points in another form to the same visitation VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 57 of evil — only with a more particular respect to the cause from which it was to spring, and the penal character it should wear. That the time specified should haVe been in all 430 years, denoted that the dealing was to form a kind of new Egyptian exile and bondage to the elements of the world ; but much more so in the case of the one house than the other. The house of Israel having cast off nearly all that was distinctive in the position and privi- leges of the covenant-people, they had consequently sunk into a condition of greatest danger, one bordering on heathen darkness and perdition — nigh unto cursing. What they might expect was to be bruised and crushed to the dust, as if under the rod of Egypt. But Judah was not so far gone ; she had the true priesthood to minister at her altars, and the house of David to rule by Divine right over the heritage of God : so that her sub- jection to the powers of evil was only to be like the time of chas- tisement and trial in the wilderness, out of which she might again emerge into a state of peace and blessing. As the prophet also again declared, in a later prophecy, " And I will bring you into the wilderness of the peoples (not the wilderness merely, but the wilderness of the peoples, to show that it was to be the same only in character as of old, but not in geographical position), and there will I plead with you face to face ; like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wilderness of the land of Egypt, so will I plead with you, saith the Lord God" (chap. xx. 35-38). A new time of chastisement, but mingled, as of old, with mercy ; severe and earnest dealing, but for a gracious result — that they might be refined and purified, so as to become fit for enjoying the good, which, as a redeemed people, was secured to them for a heritage of blessing. And if any hope remained for the other branch, the house of Israel — if they were ever to escape from their state of Egyptian darkness and bondage, it must be by their going to join their brethren of Judah in the wilderness, and sharing in their peculiar treatment and prospects. On which account, it is not the whole of the 430 years of the Egypt- state, that is appointed toward the house of Israel in the vision, but this shortened by the 40 years of the wilderness sojourn ; to teach them that a way still lay open for their return to life, but only by their having the Egypt-state merged into that of the wilderness; in other words, by ceasing from their rank idolatries and open apostacy from the way of God, and coming 58 EZEKIEL IV. to seek, along with Judah, through God's covenant and. ordi- nances, a restoration to righteousness, and peace, and bless- ing.^ 4. But why should the prophet, in thus announcing the future dealings of God, have thrown the delineation into so peculiar, so enigmatical a form ? Why should he have presented it to the view as a returning again " of the years of former generations V Not, certainly, on the principle of a bald and meagre literalism, as if he meant us to understand, that the clock of Providence was actually to be turned back, and the identical ground trodden over again, the precise measures of time filled up anew, of which we read in the earlier history of the chosen race. He who would interpret in such a style the symbolical visions of an Ezekiel, is incapable of entering into the rapt emotions of such a mind, and ^ It may be not improper to note farther, that it is the prophet's desire to make quite plain the reference for Judah to the 40 years' sojourn in the wilderness, and the modified character of the evil this suggested, that an ex- planation arises of an apparent anomaly, of which no express notice has been taken above. At ver. 9, he is ordered to " make bread according to the number of the days that he should lie upon his side ; three hundred and ninety days shalt thou eat thereof." Here the 40 days are left out, although during them also he was to lie upon his side — not, as commentators generally, and still also Havernick, suppose, from the first period being by much the larger of the two, and as such standing for the whole ; but to keep the reference clear to the distinctive character of the wilderness-period, which was the point chiefly to be had in view by the Jewish exiles. The eating of polluted bread as a symbol, properly implied a constrained residence in a Gentile country — an unclean region ; hence, in the explanation given of the symbol at ver. 13, it is declared of the house of Israel, that " they shall eat their defiled bread among the Gentiles.'''' But in the wilderness Israel stood quite separate from the Gentiles, though still under penal treatment, and in a sense still connected with Egypt (hence " the wilderness of Egypt," xx. 86) ; and so, they who were in a manner to return to that state again, were merely to " eat bread by weight, and with care, and drink water by measure, and in desolateness." A state of chastisement and trouble, but not by any means so heathen-like, so depressed and helpless as the other. — It is proper to state, that the path to the right interpretation of the vision as a whole, began to be opened up by Hengstenberg in his Christology, and his work on the Pentateuch, though without any special reference to this passage of Ezekiel. Havernick has taken the right course in regard to its general character ; but by understanding the first part of an actual siege of Jerusalem, and the eating of defiled bread only of subsequent calamities, he has greatly embarrassed his interpretation ; he has also failed to bring fully out the application of the two periods of chas- tisement to Israel and Judah respectively. VISION OF SIEGE AND INIQUITY-BEARING. 59 must necessarily flounder at every step. For here we have to do, not only with a lively and fervid mind, which is ever breathing life, as it were, into the dead, but that mind in a state of ecstasy, a kind of Divine dream, in which the past appeared to return again, the old forms were seen springing up anew ; yet only that the prophet might find in them the fitting shapes in which to clothe the new things concerning God's kingdom, that were through the Spirit fashioning themselves in his bosom. And, indeed, the very imperfection that usually appears in the frame of such historical visions, as compared with the past realities, — the partial mingling together here, for example, of the tw^o great consecutive periods of past judgment and trial in the history of the covenant-people, so as to make the second begin before the first had ended — this very imperfection shows, as it was doubtless intended to do, that an exact reproduction of the past was not in the eye of the prophet ; and that the nature of God's contemplated designs, rather than any definite hounds and limits respecting them, were imaged under those ancient periods of tribulation in Egypt and the wilderness. There were three reasons chiefly why the prophets in general, and this prophet in particular, might be often led to speak of the future under the form and image of the past. In the first place, as the meaning obviously did not lie upon the surface, it called for serious thought and inquiry regarding the purposes of God. A time of general backsliding and corruption is always a time of superficial thinking on spiritual things. And just as our Lord, by his parables, that partly veiled, w^iile they disclosed the truth of God, so the prophets, by their more profound and enigmatical discourses, sought to arouse the careless from their security, to awaken inquiry, and stir the depths of thought and feeling in the soul. It virtually said to them. You are in imminent peril ; direct ordinary discourse no longer suits your case ; bestir your- selves to look into the depths of things, otherwise the sleep of death shall overtake you. Then, again, it conveyed in a few words — by means of a brief allusion — what the most lengthened description without it could scarcel}^ have accomplished. It was employing a device, which the most powerful and effective orators have sometimes resorted to with the gi'eatest effect — as in the memorable w^ords of Mira- beau, when wishing to repel the thought of danger, he flashed 60 EZEKIEL IV, ont the pregnant interrogation, — " Is Hannibal at the gates ?" In h'ke manner, the prophet here, seeking to impress upon his countrymen the certainty and the awfulness of God's impending judgments on account of sin, carries them back to the past; he brings up to their view Egypt and the wilderness as ready to re- new themselves again in their experience. What thoughts of terror and alarm were these fitted to awaken in their minds ! Centuries of bondage and oppression ! A wearisome sojourn amid drought and desolation ! And then this foreshadowing of the future, not only rendered more distinct, but also strengthened as to its credibility, authenticated by those stern realities of the past ! It has been, shall it not be again ? But this suggests another, and indeed still deeper reason for such a mode of representation having been adopted. For such renewed exhibitions of the past were among the means specially chosen by God for the purpose of enforcing on men's notice the uniformity of his dealings, and teaching them to regard the pro- vidential facts of one age, as substantial predictions of what are to be expected in another. It told men then, and it tells us now (only it was more peculiarly adapted to those who lived in ancient times, as the revelations they possessed consisted, much more than now, in the records of history — yet it tells all alike), that the forms alone are transitory in which Divine truth and righteousness manifest themselves, while the principles embodied in these forms are eternal, and can never cease, amid all outward varieties, to be giving forth similar exhibitions of their life and power to those which have already appeared. The eye that can thus look through the shell into the kernel, may see the future things of God's administration mirrored in the past — not, indeed, the exact copy and image of what is to be^ yet its essential character and necessary result. Even those very periods of bygone tribulation and chastisement, which the prophet here represents as coming to life again in his day — have they not also a voice for other times ? Are they not still reiter- ating their lessons, and perpetually renewing their existence, in the case of impenitent transgressors now, as well as formerly, in that of drooping exiles in the cities of the Medes, or on the banks of Chebar? One of these periods — the sojourn in the wilderness — the Baptist still finds prolonging itself to the era of his own ministry. His word of stern expostulation and solemn VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR. 61 warning makes itself heard as " the voice of one crying in the wilderness ;" for he sees everywhere around liim trackless deserts where ways of God need to be opened up — elements of corrup- tion working, which require to be purged away by the searching application of divine righteousness, before the Canaan of God's inheritance can be properly entered and enjoyed. And the lukewarm and fruitless professor still — so long as he cleaves to the ways of iniquity, and refuses to yield a hearty surrender to the will of God — what else is his condition ? He is in bondage to the elements of the world, and therefore can have no part in the Lord's inheritance, that floweth with milk and honey. The doom of Heaven's condemnation hangs suspended over his head ; and if not averted by a timely submission to the righteousness of God, and a cordial entrance into the bond of the covenant, he shall infallibly perish in the wilderness of sin and death. CHAPTER V. VL THE VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR AND ITS FORESHADOWING DESOLATIONS. Ohap. V. 1. And thou, son of man, take thee a sharp sword ; a barber's razor shalt thou take to thee, and cause it to pass over thy head, and over thy beard ; and take the weighing-balances, and divide them (i. e. the hairs). 2. A third part thou shalt burn with fire in the midst of the city, when the days of the siege are accomplished ; and thou shalt take the third part, to smite with the sword round about it ; and the third part (viz., the remain- ing third part) thou shalt scatter in the wind : and I will draw out a sword after them. 3. And take of them a few in number, and bind them in thy skirts. 4. And take of them again, and cast them into the midst of the fire, and bum them in the fire ; from it {i. e. from the fire, emblem of God's righteous judgment) shall go forth a fire to all the house of Israel. 5. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, This is Jerusalem : in the midst of the nations did I set her, and the countries were round about her. 6. And she rebelled against my judgments, for wickedness ^ (^. e. to increase their wickedness, to have it) above the heathen, and against my statutes, more than the countries that were round about her ; for they have refused my judgments, and in my statutes they have not walked. 7. Therefore thus saith the Lord Jehovah, ^ The authorised version, along with some, both ancient and modern, ex- positors, have rendered this clause, "And hath changed my judgments into wickedness." But the verb n'^'s never signifies to chapge. It is always used 62 EZEKIEL V. Yf. Because ye have acted more outrageously than the heathen^ which were round about you, have not walked in my statutes, and my judgments have not kept, nor have done according to the judgments of the nations that were round about you ; 8. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against thee, even I, and I will execute judgments in the midst of thee, in the sight of the heathen. 9. And I will do in thee that which I have not done, and the like of which I shall not do any more, because of all thine abominations. 10. Therefore, fathers shall eat their sons in the midst of thee, and sons shall eat their fathers ; and I shall execute judgments upon thee, and the whole remnant of thee will I scatter to every wind. 1 1 . Therefore, as I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, surely, because thou hast defiled my sanctuary with all thy detestable things, and with all thine abominations, I also will withdraw,^ and mine eye shall not spare, neither also will I have any pity. 12. A third part of thee shall die of the pestilence, and with famine shall they be con- sumed in the midst of thee : and the third part shall fall by the sword round about thee ; and the third part will I scatter to every wind, and will draw out the sword after them. 13. And mine anger is accomplished, and I will make ray fury to rest upon them, and am comforted ; and they know that I, Jeho- vah, have spoken in my zeal, while I expend my fury upon them. 14. And I will make thee a desolation, and a reproach among the nations, which are round about thee, in the sight of all that pass by. 15. And it shall be a re- proach and a taunt, an instruction and an astonishment, to the nations that are round about thee, when I shall have executed in thee judgments in anger, in the sense of resisting, rebelling against, or something similar ; and is often, as here, coupled with the accusative of the object against which the resistance i^ made, — the Lord's word, or statutes, Numb. xx. 24 ; 1 Sam. xii. 15 ; Jer. iv. 17, etc. The sin of the Israelites lay, not in changing the Lord's statutes, but, from their prevailing wickedness, setting them aside, and so exceeding the heathen in guilt. ^ Probably the precise meaning of ass'^n here, is that given by Gesenius, in his Thes. tumultuaraini, ye tumultuate ; and this sense we substantially adopt; though the meaning given in the received translation is entitled to regard, and makes an intelligible sense. The children of Israel had " multi- plied," or heaped up, in the line here referred to by the prophet, above the heathen ; that is, had outdone them in iniquity. The verb certainly is not found in this sense, but its derivative, ••i?:-:, is often used for multitude or heaps, only with the collateral idea of noise or turmoil. And as it seems probable, that the tendency of a multitude to cause such noise or turmoil was the reason of the noun coming to have the sense of multitude, we rather in- cline to take the verb in the same sense. It also agrees well with what was said before, about their doing the part of rebels ; as such they raged, or did outrageously. 2 This is the proper meaning of the verb y.^ ; and, though it may seem here to be used somewhat abruptly, yet if viewed, as it should be, with refer- ence to Deut. iv. 2, where the people were forbidden to withdraw any thing from God's statutes, its propriety and force will be manifest. They had now withdrawn from God's sanctuary all its sacredness, and in return he withdraws from thera— namely, his favour and protection, life and blessing. VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR. 63 and in fury, and in vehement rebukes — I, Jehovah, have spoken it. 1 6. When I shall send upon them the evil arrows of famine, which are for their destruc- tion, which I shall send to destroy you ; and I will increase famine upon you, and will break for you the staff of bread. 17. And I will send upon you fa- mine, and evil beasts, and they shall bereave thee ; and pestilence and blood shall pass through thee ; and I will bring the sword upon thee,— I Jehovah have spoken it.' Chap. vi. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying: 2. Son of man, set thy face toward the mountains of Israel, and prophecy against them and say, 3. Ye mountains of Israel hear the word of the Lord Jehovah ; Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to the mountains and to the hills, to the rivers and to the valleys : Behold I, even I am bringing a sword upon you, and I will destroy your high-places ; 4. And your altars shall be desolate, and your images shall be broken ; and I will make your slain to fall before your idols ; 5. And I will lay the carcases of the children of Israel before their idols, and scatter their bones round about your altars. 6. In all the places of your abode the cities shall be laid waste, and the high-places shall be desolate ; that your altars may be laid waste and made desolate, and your idols be broken and abolished, and your images be cut down, and your works be extirpated. 7. And the slain shall fall in the midst of you ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 8. And I will leave a remnant, in that there shall be some escaped to you from the sword, among the nations, when ye are scattered among the countries. 9. And those of you that escape shall remember me among the heathen, whither they shall be led captive, whose wanton heart, that depart- eth from me, I will break, and their eyes that lust after their idols ; and they shall loathe themselves for the evils which they have done in respect to all their abominations. 10. And they shall know that I, Jehovah, have not in vain declared, that 1 would bring this evil upon them. 11. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, smite with thy hand, and stamp with thy foot, and say, Ah ! to all the vile abominations of the house of Israel ! that they shall fall by the sword, by the famine, and the pestilence. 12. He that is far off shall die by the pestilence, and he that is near shall fall by the sword, and he that remains and is besieged shall die by the famine ; and I will accomplish my fury upon them. 13. And ye shall know that I am Jehovah, when their slain shall be among their idols, round about their altars, at every high hill, upon all the tops of the mountains, and under every green tree, and under every thick oak; the place where they offered sweet savour to all their idols. 14. And 1 stretch out my band upon them, and make the land desolate, and a desolation more than the wilderness toward Diblath,^ in all the places of their abode ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. In the vision of the siege and the iniquity-bearing, a heavy burden of troubles, partly in progress, and partly still impending, 1 Very characteristic, in the latter part of this chapter, of Ezekiel's style, are the frequent transitions from the objective to the subjective, and inversely : they and you, it and thou, alternating with each other ; also the tendency to repeat over and over again the same thought, and even the same expressions, for the sake of deepening the impression. 2 It is not certain what precise district is referred to by the name of Dib- lath. We read elsewhere of the cities, that had Diblathaim as part of their names (Numb, xxxiii. 46 ; Jer. xlviii. 22) ; but not of any wilderness so designated. It is needless to notice the different conjectures which have been thrown out upon the subject, for no certain result has been attained. 64 EZEKIEL V. VI. had been announced by the prophet as determined against the covenant-people. The afflictions of Egypt and the trials of the wilderness were, in a manner, to pass over them again. But even that was not enough ; for as their guilt exceeded the guilt of their forefathers, so the chastisement now to be received from the hand of God was to surpass all that had been experienced in the history of the past. This more severe message is unfolded in the next vision, that recorded in these chapters— in which the prophet is commanded (after having finished the days of the siege, {. e.j spent in vision, not in real life, the time during which it was to be prosecuted) to take a sharp sword, and also a razor, to shave off the whole hair of his head and beard — itself a sym- bol of violent and humiliating treatment. For the priests were enjoined to nourish their hair, and avoid baldness, in token of their peculiar consecration to the Lord (Lev. xxi. 5). There- fore, to have this hair, which was at once the natural ornament of the head and the symbol of its sacredness, cut off by an instru- ment of war, plainly bespoke a work of severe and desolating judgment. But the same was still more strikingly indicated by the use to be made of the hair — of which one-third part was to be burned in the fire, another smitten about with a sword, and the last scattered to the winds, and pursued by a drawn sword. A few of this last division the prophet was instructed to bind in the skirts of his garment, in token of safe preservation ; for even of these, a portion only were to be saved, while others were to be again cast into the fire and burned, a flame issuing from the con- flagration which was to " come forth against all the house of Israel." In these last words, which form the conclusion of ver. 4, the description of the symbol, as sometimes happens in the prophets, passes into the reality, the house of Israel being substituted for the hairs which represented it. This is followed, however, by an express and pointed application of the different parts of the vision to the circumstances and prospects of the covenant-people. Jerusalem, we are again told, was the object of the whole ; but Jerusalem, as in the former vision, standing for the people at large, of which it was the proper centre and natural represen- tative. For the prophet presently proceeds to speak of this Jerusalem as a people set in the midst of surrounding heathen ; and in the two following chapters, which are merely a con- VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR. 65 tinuation and further enlargement of what is contained in chap. v., we find substituted for the name of Jerusalem, " the moun- tains of Israel," " the land of Israel," and " the children of Israel." There can be no doubt, therefore, that the prophecy has the most extensive bearing, and that we are no more in this case, than in that of the siege, to think of the single city Jeru- salem — though, from being the appointed centre of the whole, both the city itself, and that portion of the people more imme- diately connected with it, might expect their full share in the judgments announced. The judgments themselves are distributed into three classes, according to the threefold division of the hair ; the sword was to devour one-third of the people; famine and pestilence, another; and that which remained was to be scattered among the nations. The strongest language is employed to describe the calamities indicated under these various heads, and everything is introduced that might have the effect of conveying the most appalling idea of the coming future. Amid the horrors to be produced by famine and pestilence, the dreadful words of Moses, that " their fathers should eat their sons in the midst of them," are reiterated, with the addition of the still darker feature, that "the sons should also eat their fathers " (ver. 10). The wild beasts of the field, too, were to embitter by their ravages the calamities pro- duced by the evil arrows of famine ; and the sword was to pass through the land in such fury, that none should be able to escape, rendering all a desolate wilderness (chap. vi. 14), destroy- ing also their idols, and scattering around them the dead carcases of the people, so that the things in which they had foolishly trusted, should only in the day of evil prove the witnesses and companions of their ruin (chap. vi. 3-6). Finally, in respect to those who should escape the more immediate evils, not only should they be scattered far and wide among the nations, but should there also meet with taunting and reproaches ; nay, a sword should be drawn out after them, as had already been predicted by Moses (chap. v. 12 ; Lev. xxvi. 33) ; they, too, were to be for burning (so also Isa. vi. 13) ; for the anger of the Lord was still to pursue after them with " furious rebukes," until he had completely broken their rebellious hearts, and wrought in them a spirit of true contrition for sin and perfect reconciliation of heart with God (chap. vi. 9). 66 EZEKIEL V. VI. Nothing of a definite nature is mentioned as to time and place in this dark outline of revealed judgments. That the doom of evil was by no means to be exhausted by the troubles connected with the Chaldean conquest, is manifest; for that portion of the people, who were to go into exile, and be dispersed among the nations, were appointed to other and still future tribulations. There was to be a germinating evil in their destiny, because there would be, as the Lord clearly foresaw, a germinat- ing evil in their character ; and so long as this root of bitterness should still be springing up into acts of rebellion against God, it should never cease to be recoihng upon them with strokes of chastisement in providence. In this there was nothing abso- lutely singular as to the principle on which the Divine govern- ment proceeded — only, as God had connected himself with Israel in a manner he never had done with any nation before, nor would with any other again, there should be a certain sin- gularity in their case as to the actual experience of suffering on account of sin. In their history as a people, the footsteps of God's righteous judgment would leave impressions behind it of unexampled severity, according to the word here uttered, " And I will do in thee that which I have not done, and whereunto I will not do any more the like, because of all thine abomina- tions." But there is no caprice in the dealings of God. When he afflicts with the rod of chastisement and rebuke^ it is only be- cause the righteous principles of his government demand it ; and the fearful burden of evils here suspended over the heads of ancient Israel sounds also a warning-note of judgment to all nations and all ages of the world. There have been, it is true, such changes introduced into the outward administration of God's kingdom, as render it, for the most part, impossible to trace the execution of his judgments with the same ease and certainty with which we can mark their course in the history of ancient Israel. But it is not the less certain, that the principles which produced such marked effects then, are in active operation still ; and wherever Israel's guilt is incurred anew, there will infallibly be experienced a renewal of Israel's doom. For the gospel has brought no suspension of God's justice any more than of his mercy. It contains the most glorious exhibition of his grace to sinners, but along with this it contains the most affecting and VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR. 67 awful display of his righteous indignation against sin. Both features, indeed, of the Divine character have reached under the gospel a higher stage of development ; and so far has the intro- duction of the new covenant been from laying an arrest on the severity of God, that not till it appeared did the Jews themselves experience the heaviest portion of the evils threatened against them ; then only did the wrath begin to fall upon them to the uttermost, and the days of darkness and tribulation come, such as had not hitherto been known. This vision of woe, therefore, extends alike over both dispensations, and speaks to men of every age and clime ; it is a mirror, in wdiich the justice of God reflects itself for the world at large ; with no further alteration for gospel times than such as is implied in the w^ords of the apostle, " Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace ! " Such being the case in respect to the execution of Divine judgment, it becomes the more necessary that we should mark distinctly the nature of the guilt, on account of which the judg- ment was to be executed. We are the rather called to be par- ticular in marking this, as the prophet' so emphatically and re- peatedly presses the circumstance, that the treatment to be given to Israel in the way of punishment, was to be a dealing with them after their own ways, or a meting back to them of their own measure. The passages which more particularly refer to this portion of the subject, are the following : — " This is Jerusa- lem ; In the midst of the nations I set her, and the countries were round about her. And she rebelled against my judgments, for wickedness above the heathen, and against my statutes more than the countries that are round about her," et(;. And again, " Surely because thou has defiled my sanctuary with all thy detestable things, and with all thine abominations, therefore will I also withdraw, neither shall mine eye spare, neither will I have any pity." The stress laid here upon defilement of the sanctuary is in- tended to single out this profanation as the very climax of the prevailing iniquity, and the sign that it had now reached the last stage of Heaven-daring wickedness. But the grand charge 68 EZEKIEL V. VI. which the prophet evidently means to bring against them, was the utter discordance which appeared between their conduct and their calling; they had failed to maintain the position and fulfil the design for which especially they had been settled in Canaan, and had acted so as utterly to defeat the intentions of God respecting them. Let us glance for a little both at what the calling itself was, and at this unfaithfulness in regard to it, that we may thus more clearly perceive the reasonableness of this severity which the Lord exercised toward them, and discern the lessons of instruction which the whole furnishes to future times. 1. In respect to the peculiar calling of the Israelites, the pro- phet represents them as having been placed by God, with the charge of his statutes and judgments, in the midst of the nations. This is not, certainly, to be understood in the sense adopted by some of the earlier commentators, that Jerusalem stood precisely in the centre of the natural world, and on this account was chosen to be the peculiar dwelling-place of God. But neither is it to be understood, with many later ones, as simply meaning, that Israel in Canaan alone possessed as a nation the true know- ledge of God, and that the surrounding nations were all plunged in heathenish darkness and corruption. It rather indicates that the land of Canaan did form a kind of centre for the nations of heathen antiquity, and was designed on that account to be a position of power and influence in respect to the knowledge and worship of God. Viewing the world as it existed at the time of Israel's settlement in Canaan, and for a thousand years after- wards, we believe it would be impossible to fix upon a single region so admirably fitted, at once to serve as a suitable dwelling- place for such a people, and to enable them, as from a central and well-chosen vantage-ground, to act with success upon the heathenism of the world. It lay nearly midway between the oldest and most influential states of antiquity, — on the one side Egypt and Ethiopia, with their dependencies ; on the other, Babylon, Nineveh, India, — the seats of art and civilization, when the rest of the world still lay in comparative barbarism, and to which the much later, but ultimately more powerful, commonwealths of Europe were primarily indebted for their skill, and even their philosophy and religion. Then in the immediate neighbourhood were the Phoenician mariners, whose sails fre- VISION OF THE SHORN HAIR. 69 quented every harbour of the civilized world ; and all around, the Ishmaelite tribes, the great inland traders, who kept up a perpetual and most extensive intercourse among the different communities of southern Asia and northern Africa. So that isolated as the land of Canaan in some respects was, it was the very reverse of being -svithdrawn to a comer ; and no region in the whole ancient world could have been selected, that afforded more obvious and varied facilities for exerting a beneficial and commanding influence on the mind of ancient heathendom. That the children of Israel, by being appointed to occupy such a central position, were also called to take advantage of it for making known the character, and extending the worship of Jehovah, was to be understood of itself from their being the chosen depositories of God's will, and the peculiar seed " in whom all the families of the earth were to be blessed." The dis- tinguished marks of Divine favour they were to enjoy, and the political ascendancy that was to be granted them over the nations of the earth, were made expressly to depend upon their remain- ing stedfast to the covenant of God, and being faithful witnesses of its truth and holiness. " This," said Moses, in Deut. iv. 6, when urging them to fidelity in keeping God's statutes and judg- ments, " this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the nations, which shall hear all these statutes, and say. Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people." And again, in chap, xxviii., he holds out to them the elevated prospect, if they would only keep the commandments of God and walk in his ways, of being " the head only and not the tail, above only and not beneath," and of causing " all the people of the earth to see that Jehovah had established them to be an holy people to himself, and called them by his name." How thoroughly David, and other pious men in the better periods of Israel's history, understood the high calling they thus held of God, is evident from many passages in the Psalms. For example, in Ps. ix., '^ Thou hast rebuked the heathen, thou hast destroyed the wicked. .... Sing praises to the Lord, which dwelleth in Zion, declare among the people his doings." In Ps. lix., perhaps the very earliest of David's compositions, " O Lord God of hosts, the God of Israel, awake to visit all the heathen. . . . Consume them (mine enemies) in wrath ; consume them that they may not be ; and let them know that God ruleth in Jacob unto the 70 EZEKiEL V. yr. ends of the earth." So again, in Ps. Ixviii., probably one of his latest, " Because of thy temple in Jerusalem shall kings bring presents unto thee. Princes shall come out of Egypt ; Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands to God. Sing unto God, ye kingdoms of the earth," etc. And in the Psalm immediately before this, the inspired writer, in the name of the true Israel, and in the most enlarged spirit of philanthropy, entreats God to make his face to shine upon therrij that so his way might be known upon earth, and his saving health among all nations. He desired an increased manifestation of Divine goodness, not so much for its own sake, as for the ulterior good of which it might be productive — " God shall bless usj and all ends of the earth shall fear him." Undoubtedly this wide-spreading effect may, in such cases, have been contemplated as very much a result that was to grow spontaneously out of the good that should appear in Israel, the mere exhibition of God's rich blessing upon them being expected to prompt and allure the nations of the earth to seek that the same might be realised also in their own experience. But still the personal good for Israel was viewed as strictly subservient to the more general good for the nations ; and such desires and expectations toward the world at large could not possibly be cherished without the obligation being recognized and felt to employ every available means for extend- ing the true knowledge of God in the world. So utterly false is the idea — the spurious brood of an unscriptural and exclusive Pharisaism — that the Israelites were placed in Canaan for their own private advantage, and in a sort of unfriendly antagonism to the other nations of the earth ! On the contrary, they were placed there as on a high vantage-ground, for acting the part of the world's benefactors ; placed aloft as God's lights in the earth, that through them the nations around might learn his will, and come to obtain an interest in his blessing. This calling of Israel in respect to the nations of the world is precisely that which now rests upon the Christian church. There is no difference between the two in nature^ though in regard to the manner of its execution the change that has meanwhile entered into the character of God's kingdom, and the general aspect of the world's condition, naturally gives rise to correspond- ing differences. It was necessary that the impulse should be communicated more nationally before, more individually now. ISRAEL'S PECULIAR CALLING AND GUILT. 71 And as the religion of God's ancient people was predominantly of a symbolical, outward and national character ; so, in the manner of its propagation in the world, fleshly weapons, outward pros- perity, the visible sunshine of Heaven's favour and loving- kindness, necessarily played an essential and prominent part. But now, on the other hand, when the discoveries of the gospel have laid open Divine realities themselves to the eye of faith, and thereby given a more spiritual and elevated tone to the true religion, there is greatly less need of those external appli- ances. The grand element of power now lies in the truth itself; and, by means of this, exhibited in the lives of God's people, and plied on every hand by their instrumentality, is the triumph of righteousness chiefly to be sped forward in the world. With such diff*erences, however, as to the method of working, the obli- gation itself remains substantially the same. The Christian church is now, just as Israel was of old, set in the midst of the nations, and charged in all her members to give faithful testi- mony to the truth, by which she has herself been blessed, that others may come and partake of the blessing. What a noble function ! and, as the result of its faithful discharge, what an unspeakable good has to be realized ! Nothing less than the possession of the world under Christ as the field which the Lord doth bless ! The right to this possession is Christ's, who has received from the Father the heritage of the earth ; and he com- mits it to his church, as the instrument of his working, to make good the title. With her people, therefore, lies the weighty responsibility of the world's regeneration ; they are, individually and collectively, the light of the world ; they are the salt of the earth. Happy if they are so in reality ! but if not, heavy above all others, must be their condemnation. 2. In the case of ancient Israel, it was their misfortune to incur the condemnation. They failed to take advantage of their favourable position for extending the knowledge and glory of God among the nations; but, imbibing the corruptions they should have striven to abolish, they dealt more treacherously toward the true religion than the surrounding nations did toward their false ones. That in charging them with an excess over these very nations, the prophet meant that they went absolutely beyond them in the practice of abominable idolatries, we can scarcely suppose. But in sinning against such privileges and 72 EZEKiEL V. vr. obligations, their guilt was unquestionably much greater ; and ill goiug so readily over to the corruptions of heathenism, they so far did worse than others, that they betrayed a looser attach- ment to their religion, than those heathens did to their respective idolatries. " They have not walked in my statutes, neither have kept my judgments, neither have done according to the judgments of the nations that are round about you ;" neither adhered to the one, nor wholly espoused the other, — therefore inferior in point of religious principle to those wretched idolaters who cling with inveterate fondness to their several superstitions. Jeremiah had already called attention to this singular fact, and mourned over the amazing infatuation it displayed : " Pass over the isles of Chittim, and see ; and send unto Kedar, and con- sider diligently, and see if there be such a thing : Hath a nation changed her gods, which yet are no gods *? but my people have (changed their glory for that which doth not profit" (chap. ii. 10, 11). There must have been some ground in the nature of things for this apparent anomaly ; some veiy powerful and constraining impulse, which so incessantly led Israel, in the face of all remon- strances and warnings in Providence, to prefer and fall in with the Gentile superstitions — where shall we seek it ? Undoubtedly the main and fundamental reason is to be sought in their own prevailing carnality and corruption of heart, which the mere nature-religions of heathenism did nothing to check, but rather fostered and sanctioned. Outward and carnal as the Jewish worship was in its character, compared with the Christian, it still was immeasurably less so, than the idolatrous religions of Paganism, in which not only every god had its representation in a visible idol, but the gods themselves were precisely such as the natural heart desires — gods " whose attributes were pride, revenge, and lust." In Judaism, on the contrary, amid all that was outward and showy in its observ^ances, there still was in the bosom of every service a spiritual and holy God as the sole object of veneration, and a conformity to his righteous will, as the one great end to be aimed at. Therefore, whenever the people lost the true spirit of piety, they of necessity lost, at the same time, their relish for the pure service of Jehovah ; they became at once unfit for its duties, and ashamed of its sanctity ; and gladly accepted from the hands of their neighbours what Israel's peculiar calling and guilt. ' 73 might render their religion more palatable to their ungodly dispositions. Shall we wonder at such behaviour in Israel? We may, indeed, wonder at it, when we think of their singular advan- tages, and the astonishing things which God had done in their behalf; but the same perversity, which ran such a career of wickedness in them, lives still in the Christian church; nor is there a country in Christendom, where Israel's folly is not on a large scale perpetually repeating itself. What are the corruptions of Popery but so many accommodations of the pure spirit of the gospel to the grovelling tendencies of the flesh ? And even in Protestant lands, with by far the greater proportion of wor- shippers, the religion actually embraced is not that of the Bible ; but this moulded and shaped into a form more agreeable to the natural heart. It borrows from the thoughts and maxims of the world fully as much as it derives from the gospel ; and gathers up from the two such a compound of flesh and spirit, purity and corruption, as the natural man finds little occasion either to quarrel with or to be ashamed of. Hence the spiritual languor, the worldly-mindedness, the numberless forms of vanity and pollution, which are so commonly seen going hand in hand with a religious profession, and which have at once robbed the church of her power to conquer and bless the world, and miserably curtailed her own inheritance of good. The spiritual adversary, who sought in vain to strangle Christianity in her birth, has too well succeeded in impeding her progress, by cor- rupting the purity of her worship, and replenishing her with the means of worldly honour and enjoyment. Nor can she ever fulfil aright her destiny, or be safe from the rod of chastisement and rebuke, till the foul admixtures she has contracted from the world are purged out, and in the simple spirit of an implicit reliance on the Divine word, and an unswerving adherence to the cause of truth and righteousness, she goes forth to resist and put down whatever is opposed to the wall of Heaven. It may be proper, before closing our remarks on the vision contained in these three chapters, to refer to a style of inter- pretation which is unhappily too current in the present times, and which is equally remarkable for the groundlessness and the confidence of its assertions. " Look," says a popular writer, in a discourse on Ezekiel, ix. 4-6, " into the fifth chapter of 74 EZEKIEL Y. IV. Ezekiel, ver. 12, and you will see a passage which w^as not fulfilled in the days of Zedekiah. There it was predicted, that a third part of the nation should die by pestilence — that a third part should die by the sword — and that another third part of the nation should be scattered unto all the winds, and a sword sent after them. In the days of Zedekiah no such thing occurred. There was nothing of famine or pestilence ; there was no destruc- tion of a third part with the sword ; and those that were carried captive, instead of being scattered unto all the winds, were taken into one country, and were kept in one country all the time of their captivity." It is not saying too much of this passage, that it contains as many errors as sentences. For (1), in regard to the threefold destination of the people to the pestilence, the sword, and dis- persion, it might be as correct to affirm that no such thing was spoken by Ezekiel of the days of Zedekiah, as that no such thing occurred then. The prophet, as we have already shown, is not here speaking of Jerusalem alone, or even of the people of Judah alone, but of the covenant-people at large, as inhabitants of the land of Canaan ; so that we are to take in, not simply what happened in the days of Zedekiah, but what all Israel had been suffering, or were still to suffer, by means of the calamities which the Lord sent against them for their sins. (2.) It is a rash, and utterly groundless affirmation to say, even of those who lived in the days of Zedekiah, that a third part were not destroyed by pestilence, and a third by sword; for that vast numbers perished by both causes, is manifest from the face of the history — and where did the author learn that it was less than two-thirds ? As for the remaining third being all carried captive to one country, and kept there, we have simply to ask whence, then, came the Jews mentioned in the book of Esther, who were scattered through all the provinces of the Persian empire ? Or how should the decree of Cyrus, authorising their return to Palestine, have been addressed to the seed of Israel throughout the whole kingdom, to "every man in the place where he sojoumeth ? " Or why should a special cm'se have been pronounced over Edom, because they sought to cut off, and to some extent did cut off, the miserable fugitives from the land of Israel, who, in the day of their calamity, fled from the face of the adversary? (Obad. v. 14). In short, it is a mere ISRAEL'S PECULIAR CALLING AND GUILT. 75 assertion, and utterly opposed to the well-known facts of history, to affirm that all who survived the Chaldean desolations were carried to the region of Babylonia, and kept there. The larger portion were so, but by no means the whole ; there was a scat- tering to the winds of heaven.^ (3.) It is quite untenable, and is in fact betraying the truthfulness of the prophet into the enemies' hands, to assert, regarding such a vision as this, that the infliction of those calamities, which it marks as presently to be expected, was to be postponed for many centuries, and not to take place till an entirely different state of things had entered. For, in the prophecy, the calamities announced are not merely predicted as events, but threatened as Divine judgments for the sins of that particular period ; and if they were not inflicted in connection with that period, they were plainly not inflicted at all ; the penalties threatened against the prevailing sinfulness were not enforced ; the prophecy, as it stands here, lies unful- filled. Besides, when the prophet so distinctly indicates a cer- tain series of judgments, and so solemnly and repeatedly declares that the time was close at hand for their taking effect, — if, after all, they were not to take effect till seven hundred years had elapsed, and the condition of things in Israel had become so essentially changed, that the special characteristics here given — the copying after the ways of the heathen, and the erection of many altars — were precisely those most carefully avoided at that later period — then it is manifest we must have diff'erent rules for interpreting such portions of vScripture from those we would adopt in regard to any other book. The process of interpreta- tion, in short, becomes a matter of caprice, and the manner of fulfilment is simply what the interpreter himself thinks fit, not what the writing itself seems to indicate. If the prophetical Scriptures really needed such arbitrariness of interpretation to preserve their conformity with the course of things, sceptics would require nothing more to justify their unbelief. But, in the present case, it is merely the interpreter, and not the prophetic word, that is at fault. Amid the desolations of long sieges and bloody conquests, produced by the invading hosts of the Assy- 1 See also chap. xvii. 21, where the remnant of the people of the very king that Nebuchadnezzar was to carry to Babylon, is expressly said to be scat- tered to all the winds of heaven. 76 EZEKIEL VII. rians and Chaldeans, beyond all doubt one large portion of the people perished by famine and pestilence, and another large portion by the sword ; and that the remaining portion was scat- tered into many countries, and even amid these was subjected to ever-recurring troubles and calamities, is as certain as anything of which the record has been handed down to us from ancient times. To deny this, is at once to throw discredit on the plainest utterances of prophecy, and bring into doubt the most unques- tionable facts of history. CHAPTER VII. LAMENTATION OVER THE GUILT AND FALL OF ISRAEL. This chapter does not contain anything properly new. It simply describes the mournful feelings and reflections which the pre- ceding revelations of guilt and judgment had awakened in the mind of the prophet ; and it hence naturally takes the form of a poetical dirge or lamentation over the unhappy case of his infatu- ated country. Some particular words and allusions require ex- planation ; but otherwise the sentiments uttered are so simple and appropriate that no comment is needed to exhibit their import. Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying; 2. And thou, Son of man, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to the land of Israel : An end ! the end is come upon the four corners of the land I 3. Even now the end is upon thee ; and I send forth mine anger against thee ; and I judge thee according to thy ways ; and I lay upon thee all thine abominations. 4. And mine eye shall not have compassion upon thee, nor shall I pity ; for I lay thy ways upon thee, and thine abominations shall be in the. midst of thee ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 6. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Evil, only evil, behold it cometh ! 6. An end cometh — come is the end ; it waketh for thee, lo ! it cometh. 7. The morning has come to thee,^ O inhabitant of the land ; the time has come ; the day is near, the day of distress, and there is no brightness upon the * The morning^ n^-^sss : this is a word of very doubtful import and deriva- tion, and there is great diversity among commentators as to the proper way of rendering it. The most natural sense, however, is that adopted by our translators, aurora, the morning — a sense which has been preserved both in the Syriac and the Chaldee. LAMENTATION OVER THE GUILT ANE> FALL OF ISRAEL. 77 mountains^ 8. Already aai I about to pour out my fury upon thee; and I accomplish mine anger upon thee, and I judge thee according to thy ways, and I lay upon thee all thy abo ninations. 9. And mine eye spares not, nor pities ; according to thy ways I lay upon thee ; and thy abominations shall be in the midst of thei ; and ye shall knovvr that it is I Jehovah that smiteth. 10. Behold the day! Behold it cometh! The morning goetli forth ; the rod sprouts; pride blossoms. 11. Violence is risen up for a rod of the wicked ; there is no more of them (the wicked), nor of their store, nor of their anxiety, nor is there any beauty in them.^ 12. The time is come, the day is at hand ; let not the buyer rejoice, nor the seller mourn, for wrath is upon all its (the land's) store. 13. For the seller shall not return to the sold possession, although he should still live among the living, for the vision is upon all its store ; he shall not return, and no one by his iniquity shall invigorate his life.^ ^ No brightness upon the mountains : taking ■:-, with Havemick, for an unusual form of -nr,, splendour, brightness. This also was the rendering of Jerome, who supports himself by the authority of Theodotion. The whole passage bears a close resemblance to Joel ii. 2 : " A day of darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds and of thick darkness, as the morning spread upon the mountains." * What is meant here by the " rod that sprouts," " the pride, or proud one, that blossoms," and " the violence that rises into a rod of the wicked," is not the evil proceeding to its utmost length within Israel, but the evil without ripening into an instrument of vengeance for Israel — the Babylonish power. It is God's rod of chastisement for punishing the wicked, and now, under his superintending providence, fast assuming that appearance of towering pride and conquering energy, which would speedily put in execution the judgments written. The ynr. in ver. 11, which we render store, rather than 'multitud£f originallv signifies noise or tumult, but is used also of a multitude of persons, or of heaps of riches that are gotten by noisy, bustling activity. It is in this latter sense that it appears to be used by the prophet in this and the two following verses. The word store, which suggests something of care and trouble with what is possessed, expresses the meaning more nearly, perhaps, than any other Avord in our language. The next and closely related word, ar'^rr, is best under- stood as a derivative from n=r:, to make a noise or tumult, hence restless apphcation, careful solicitude or anxiety. The last word, ;rt:, is now com- monly taken in the sense of attraction, or beauty. (See Ges. Lea;.) 3 The idea expressed in ver. 12 and 13 can only be understood by keeping in view the law respecting the year of jubilee, as recorded in Lev. xxv. Ac- cording to that law, all buying and selling of possessions in Israel was bounded by this ever-recurring season of release ; for then every one returned to his proper possession, though he might in the interval have been obliged to part with it. But now, says the prophet, there is to be a suspension of all such transactions ; neither may the purchaser rejoice in what he has got, nor the distressed debtor mourn over what he has been constrained to sell ; the vision of coming wrath stretches over all that can be made matter of merchandise ; and even though the seller may live to see the year of jubilee, yet he shall not 78 EZEKIEL VII. 14. Let them blow with the trumpet,^ and get all in readiness ; yet there is none to go forth to battle, for my wrath is upon all its store. 15. The sword without, and the famine and pestilence within ; he that is in the field shall die by the sword, and he that is in the city, famine and pestilence shall devour him. 16. And let those escape that do escape, and they shall be upon the mountains, like doves of the valleys, all of them sighing, each one for his ini- quity. 17. All hands shall be faint, and all knees shall become water. 18. And they shall gird on sackcloth, and horror shall be a covering for them ; and to all faces there shall be shame, and upon all heads baldness. ] 9. Their silver they shall cast into the streets, and their gold shall be for filth ; their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord's anger, shall not satisfy their souls, nor fill their bowels, for it is the stumbling- block of their iniquity. 20. And his beautiful ornament he has used for pride, and the images of their abominations, their detestable things, they have made in it; therefore do I give it to them for filth. 21. And 1 give it into the hands of strangers for a prey, and to the wicked of the earth for a spoil, and they shall profane it. 22. And I turn away my face from them, and they profane my secret place (my sanctuary), and robbers come into it and profane it. 23. Make a chain, for the land is full of murderousjudgraent, and the city full of violence. 24. And I cause wicked nations to come, and they possess their houses ; and I make the loftiness of the strong to cease, and their sanctuaries shall be profaned. ^ be able to return to his sold possession, for one Sabbath of rest alone remains for the land, — that which it is to enjoy in the absence of all its inhabitants (Lev. xxvi. 84, etc. ; 2 Chron. xxxvi. 21). " And no one," adds this prophet, in words that have seldom been correctly rendered, from the allusion not having been distinctly apprehended, " no one by his iniquity shall invigorate (or strengthen) his life." The Sabbaths of the Lord generally, and, in par- ticular, the Sabbath of the year of jubilee, brought a kind of re vivi cation to the whole commonwealth of Israel ; the disorders and troubles that from time to time crept in were then rectified, and the enervated or diseased state of the body politic sprung up again into renewed health and vigour. But what the Lord thus provided for being done by his own beneficent arrangements, let no one think he can himself do by his iniquity ; from such a source no such strengthening or invigoration of life can be derived ; on the contrary, it is this very iniquity which is bringing all to desolation and ruin. 1 " Let them blow with the trumpet," etc. The meaning is : when the moment of danger arrives, that is now at hand, they may set themselves to meet it with warlike preparation ; let them do so, if they please ; it will be of no avail ; for the face of the Lord is set against them, and he will strike terror into the hearts of their men of war, and render all their efforts fruitless. The coming desolation was inevitable, and it would be the part of wisdom to consult for safety by flight, not by resistance ; even that, a few only would be able to accomplish, and in the midst of deep lamentations and manifold distresses. *In ver. 19-24, a threefold example is given of the Divine lex talionis. But we must first explain, in regard to the r-u -^z-j. in ver. 20, his beautiful ornament, that we differ from Hav. and Hitzig, and indeed, the majority of recent commentators, and agree with some earlier ones and Hengstenberg LAMENTATION OVER THE GUILT AND FALL OF ISRAEL. 79 25. A close comes, and they seek for peace, and there is none. 26. Woe upon woe shall come, and rumour shall be upon rumour, and they shall seek a prophet's vision ; and the law shall perish from the priest, and counsel from the ancients. 27. The king shall mourn, and the prince be clothed with de- solation, and the hands of the people of the land shall be troubled ; after their ways will I do unto them, and according to their judgments will I judge them, and they shall know that I am the Lord. CHAPTER VIII. THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY AND OTHER ABOMINATIONS AT JERUSALEM. Ver. 1. And it came to pass in the sixth year, in the sixth (month), in the fifth of the month, I was sitting in my house, and the elders of Judah were sitting, that the hand of the Lord Jehovah fell upon me there. 2. And I (on Dan. ix. 27), who understand it of the temple. The gold and riches generally of the people might doubtless have had such an expression applied to them ; but, as used here, it seems plainly to point to something that, by way of eminence, was the glory and ornament of the nation, and which, un- doubtedly, was the temple. This, it is said here, they used -p^s^, for the nourishment of pride ; and much the same thing is again said in chap. xxiv. 21, where the temple is expressly called "the pride of their strength." What is said here, too, that " in it they made (or did) their abominations," exactly applies to the temple ; while the threatened retaliation of profaning it, at the close of ver. 21, alone suits the temple. In itself it was their beautiful ornament ; but they had first turned it into an occasion of carnal glorying, and then had defiled it with their impurities ; whence God must outwardly desecrate it. The retaliation then proceeds thus : — The people have abused their wealth, by making idols of gold and silver, and all manner of ornaments for vain-glorious display, so that it had become " the stumbling- block of their iniquity ;" now, it was to be seized as a spoil by the enemy, and, in respect to their deliverance, should be found worthless as the mire of the streets. They had carried their abominations into God's sanctuary, and defiled the secret place of the Most High ; now, the whole is to be laid open to the unhallow^ed feet of the stranger, and robbers are to be sent to walk at, liberty, where saints only should have been permitted to enter. They, by their daring wickedness, have made the land full of violence and blood ; therefore shall they themselves be bound with a chain by the ungodly heathen, and their best possessions be turned into the prey of the lawless and the profane. " Their holy places shall be defiled," as they have already defiled mine. So truly was God to do to them according to their ways, and judge them according to their judgments. 80 EZEKIEL VIII. looked, and behold a resemblance (i. e. of a human figure) as the appearance of fire; from the appearance of his loins and downwards, fire; and from his loins and upwards as the appearance of light-splendour, as the glitter of Chasmal. 3. And he put forth the form of a hand and took hold of me by a lock of my head ; and the Spirit raised me up between the earth and the heavens, and brought me to Jerusalem in the visions of God, to the door of the inner gate, that looks toward the north, where is the seat of the image of jealousy, that provokes to jealousy. 4. And behold there was the glory of the God of Israel, as in the vision that I saw in the plain. 5. And he said to me, Son of man, lift up thine eyes now by the north-way {i. e. the line of approach through the north-gate); and I lifted up mine eyes northward, and behold on the north at the gate of the altar this image of jealousy at the entrance. 6. And he said to me. Son of man, seest thou what they are doing? the great abominations which the house of Israel are practising here, that I should go far off from my sanctuary? And yet turn again, thou shalt see greater abominations. 7. And he brought me to the door of the court ; and I looked and behold there was a hole in the wall. 8. And he said to me, Son of man, dig now in the wall; and I dug in the wall, and behold a door. 9. And he said to me, come and see the evil abominations, which they are prac- tising here. 10. And I came and looked and beheld every form of creeping things, and abominable beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel, por- trayed everywhere upon the wall round about. 11. And there stood before them seventy men, elders of the house of Israel, and Jaazaniah the son of Shaphan, stood in the midst of them, each man with his censer in his hand, and the prayer (or, worship)^ of the cloud of incense ascending. 12. And he said to me, hast thou seen, Son of man, what the elders of the house of Israel are doing in the dark, every man in his chambers of imagery ;2 for they say, Jehovah does not see us, Jehovah has forsaken the earth (or, the land). 13. And he said to me. Turn yet again, thou shalt see greater abomina- tions that they are doing. 14. And he brought me to the door of the gate of the Lord's liouse toward the north, and behold there did women sit, weep- ing for Tammuz. 15. And he said to me, hast thou seen it. Son of man ? Turn yet again, thou shalt see greater abominations than these. 16. And he brought me to the inner court of the Lord's house, and behold at the door of the temple of the Lord, between the porch and the altar, as many as tive-and- twenty men, with their back towards the temple of the Lord, and their faces to the east, and they themselves worshipping the sun toward the east.^ 17. * Our translators have here taken ^n» as an adjective, rendering it thick. 1 T But it is evidently a noun, and must be understood, either generally in the sense of worship, or more specially in that of prayer. To supplicate or pray is the common meaning of the verb, and in Zeph. iii. 10, where it occurs as a noun, it is in sense of " suppliant," or worshipper. It is here explanatory of the offering of incense, which was a symbol of the highest act of worship — believing prayer, which those elders were prostituting to the basest idolatry. * The chambers of imagery were so called from being painted all round with the images referred to in ver. 10 ; and they are called each man's cham- bers of imagery, or the chambers of his imagery, because the idolatrous spirit of each had its representation there, and made the chambers what they were in pollution. ' The persons mentioned in this 16th verse are said to have been in number •o^'^bys^ about twenty, as it is usually put ; but in such a description, in which VISION OF THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY. 81 Hast thou seen it, Son of man ? Is it a light thing to the house of Judah to do the abominations which they commit here ? For, they have filled the land with violence, and have returned (i. e. given themselves again) to provoke me to anger; and, lo, they put the branch to the nose.'^ 18. And I also will deal in fury ; mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity ; and they shall cry in mine ear with a loud voice, and I will not hear them. A NEW stage of the prophetic agency of Ezekiel, and of his spirit-stirring communications to the captives on the banks of numbers and names alike have" a significance, it is not to be supposed that the number here was meant to be left indefinite. The a of similitude, therefore, must be taken in its more exact sense, of likeness in such a manner or to such an extent ; he saw the appearance as of twenty men, as many as that. To express the act of homage, in which these men were engaged, the Hebrew text has a peculiar, a sort of corrupt form : not 'o'^^tip-m, but Dri'^'ihinctt— a slip of the pen, says Ewald, and after him Hitzig. But with more reverence and better taste, Lightfoot, in the very form of the word, saw a reference to the monstrous abominations the men were practising. To him also Havernick assents, perceiving in the word a strong irony ; as if the pro- phet was so impressed with the corruptness of the service he was describing, that he instinctively corrupted the word usually employed to express acts of homage and obeisance. ^ It is impossible to determine precisely the meaning of this singular ex- pression, " they put the branch to their nose." The Septuagint translator evidently took it for a proverbial expression, indicating a scornful or con- temptuous behaviour : " And lo ! these are as persons turning up the nose (or scorning)." The other more ancient translators seem also to have understood it as expressive of insolent or contemptuous feelings, though the exact rendering is different ; but Jerome took it literally, and supposed it to refer to the use of palm branches in the worship of the sun. Various devices have been fallen upon to extract a plain and satisfactory meaning from the words, but with so little success, that we deem it enough to refer to the two last. Havernick views it as pointing to the Adonis-festival ; and changing the usual meaning of the two principal words, translates, " And lo ! they send forth the mournful ditty to their anger " (viz. the anger they are provoking against themselves). But Hitzig, who justly rejects this fanciful interpreta- tion, and takes nnnat in the sense, not of a branch, but of a pruning-knife, renders, " And lo ! they are applying the knife to their nose," — the people being silently likened to a vine, and their nose to a branch, which they were themselves, by their infatuated policy, cutting off! Had it been their throat, or their head, to which the knife was applied, one could have seen some shadow of probability in the idea, but none as it is. Besides, the sense ascribed to the word in question is quite arbitrary, as it never occurs but in the sense of a branch, especially a vine-branch, as in chap. xv. 2. From the connec- tion in which the clause stands, one would expect it to denote something that rendered their sinful ways peculiarly obnoxious to God ; and as nothing would F 32 EZEKIEL VIII. the Chebar, opens with this chapter, and proceeds onward in an uninterrupted strain to the end of the eleventh. These four chapters form one discourse (as the preceding portion had also done, from chap. iii. 12, to the close of chap, vii.), and a discourse somewhat more specific in its character and bearing, than the revelations previously made. The vision of the siege, and of the iniquity-bearing, described in chap, iv., had respect to the covenant-people generally — including, indeed, the inhabitants of Jerusalem, yet so as also to comprehend the scattered portions of Judah and Israel. This, too, was the case w ith the vision of the shaven hair, and its foreshadowing desolations, contained in chap, v.-vii. The burden there delivered was an utterance of Divine judgments against the whole covenant-people on account of sin ; because, having been planted as the witnesses and heralds of God's truth in the midst of the nations, they had themselves fallen before the heathen corruptions, which it was their special calling to have resisted to the uttermost. Therefore, in just retribution for the betrayal of God's cause into the enemies' hands, the heathen were become his instruments of vengeance, to inflict on the whole house of Israel the various forms of a severe and prolonged chastisement. But now, in the section of prophecy, which commences with chap, viii., the people of Jeru- salem, and the small remnant of Judah, who, under Zedekiah, continued to hold a flickering existence in Canaan, form the im- mediate object of the prophet's message, not only as apart from the Babylonish exiles, but even as standing in a kind of contrast to them. And it is of essential moment to a correct understand- ing of the purport of the vision, that we know and take into ac- count the circumstances which led to so partial and specific a direction in the message now delivered. In the sixth year of the captivity, the sixth month, and the fifth day of the month, the prophet was sitting, we are told, in his own house ; and the elders of Judah, namely, of that portion of Judah, who sojourned with him on the banks of the Chebar, sat before him. No express reason is assigned for their sitting there, though we can have little doubt, it was for the purpose of receiving from his lips some communication of the Divine will. more readily do this, than feelings of fancied security or insolent scorn, so the likelihood is, as the Septuagint understood, that the " putting the branch to the nose," was a proverbial expression for something of that nature. VISION OF THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY. 83 The Lord also was present to impart suitq^ble aid to his servant ; but lo ! instead of prompting him to address his speech directly to those before him, the Spirit carried him away in the visions of God to the temple at Jerusalem, that he might obtain an insight into the state of corruption prevalent there, and might learn the mind of God respecting it. The message delivered to the elders who sat around him, consisted mainly in the report of what he witnessed and heard in those Divine visions ; and it falls into two parts— the account given of the reigning abominations con- tained in chap, viii., and the dealings of judgment and of mercy, which were to be pursued toward the respective parties in Israel, as unfolded in the three succeeding chapters. Now, what should have led the prophet to throw his message into such a form as this, but that some connection existed between the exiles of Chebar and the remnant in Jerusalem, which made the report of what more immediately belonged to the one, a seasonable and instructive communication to the other? We formerly had occasion to notice, that among the exiled portion there were some who still looked hopefully toward Jerusalem, and, so far from believing things there to be on the verge of ruin, were persuaded that ere long the way would be opened up for their own return tliither in peace and comfort. Among those also who were still resident in Jerusalem and its neighbourhood, it appears, there were some who not only looked upon themselves as secure in their position, but eyed their exiled brethren with a kind of haughty indifference or con- tempt, as if these had no longer anything in common with them ! That it was this latter state of feeling which more im- mediately led to the present interview between the elders and the prophet, and the revelations which ensued, we may not doubtfully gather from the allusion made to it near the close of the vision (chap. xi. 15), — where the inhabitants of Jerusalem are represented as saying to the exiles, " Get you far (rather, Be ye far, continue in your state of separation and distance) from the Lord ; unto us is this land given in possession." As much as to say, ^'It may well befit you to be entertaining thoughts of evil and dark forebodings of the future ; your out- cast condition cuts you off from any proper interest in God, and renders such sad anticipations natural and just. Abide as you are—but as for us, we dwell near to God, and by his good hand 84 EZEKIEL VIII. upon us, have the city and land of our fatliers in sure possession." It is not improbable, that this taunting declaration of their own fancied superiority and assured feeling of safety, had been called forth by the tidings reaching Jerusalem of the awful judgments announced in Ezekiel's earlier predictions ; as, on the other hand, the express and pointed reference made here to that declaration, leaves little room to doubt, that the rumour of it had been heard on the banks of the Chebar, and had led the elders of Judah to present themselves in the house of the prophet. For, in their unhappy circumstances,- the knowledge of such thoughts and feelings being entertained toward them at Jerusalem, must have exercised a most depressing influence on their minds, and could not but seem an adequate occasion for their endeavouring to ascertain the mind of the Lord as between them and their countrymen in Judea. Raised, therefore, by the Spirit into a state of Divine ecstasy, the prophet forthwith beheld in vision the Lord of glory, though in human form, yet radiant with celestial fire, in token of the searching and purifying righteousness now to be manifested; and was then suddenly transported, by a Divine hand, to the north entrance into the temple at Jerusalem. There, at the altar-gate, as it is called in ver. 5 (because the gate that opened into the inner court, and led straight to the altar of burnt-offer- ing), he sees in vision the glory of the Lord, as it had formerly appeared to him on the plain of Chebar. In the lower part, to- ward the earth, the divine representation had the appearance of fire, indicating, that he came in the glowing ire of his indigna- tion ; while still the tipper parts of the form presented the aspect of the holy majesty of heaven in its pure and unsullied brightness. The vision appeared a little to the north of "the seat of the image of jealousy which provoketh to jealousy." What precisely is to be understood by this image of jealousy, has long been matter of dis- pute, or rather of various conjecture, among commentators. The more common opinion has been, that Baal was meant, while some have understood it rather of the Syrian Venus, called the Aschera or Astarte (the word used in the original for that Queen of Heaven, in 2 Kings xxi. 3, 7 ; xxiii. 4, 7, where, un- happily, the translation grove has been adopted in our version). Havemick, however, has recently advanced the opinion, that it was an image in wax or clay of the Tammuz or Adonis men- VISION OF THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY. 85 tioned afterwards, and called " the image that provoketh to jealousy," with special reference to the youthful and attractive beauty of the object it represented ; and that all the scenes of idolatrous worship, described in the chapter, were but the several and successive portions of the grand festival held shortly before at Jerusalem in honour of Adonis. Some show of sup- port for this idea is derived from the view presented -of the Adonis-festival by recent writers on the mythology of the an- cients ; but it is still entirely fanciful, and, on many accounts, to be rejected. For, first, it is against all probability to suppose, that when disclosing the abominations which were ready to bring down the consuming judgments of Heaven upon the land, those only should have been delineated, which were connected with a single occasion, and that the festival of a comparatively inferior object of idol-worship. Then, the idolatrous scenes described one after another, have manifestly the appearance of separate and cumulative proofs of the people's appetite for heathenish pollutions, rather than the united and consecutive parts of some one religious festival. And still further, as the scenes in question were those submitted to the eye of the prophet in the visions of God, what we are naturally led to expect in them is, not a plain matter-of-fact description of things literally enacted at any set time in the temple, but rather a combined and concentrated view of the prevailing idolatries, gathered from every side, and portrayed, as in one dark and revolting picture, within the temple at Jerusalem. That temple was the image, as well as the centre of the whole kingdom. As the heart of the nation had its seat there, so there also, in the mongrel and polluted character of the worship celebrated, the guilt of the people found its representation ; and, hence, when the object was to give a clear and palpable exhibition of the crying abom- inations that existed in the land, the scene was most fitly laid in the temple, and assumed the form of things seen and transacted in its courts. But we are no more to regard the things themselves in the precise form and combination here given to them, as all actually meeting together at any particular moment in the temple-worship, and simply transcribed by the prophet from the occurrences of real Kfe, than to regard the instructions that immediately follow — to set a mark for preser- vation on the foreheads of some, and to destroy the rest with 86 EZEKIEL VIII. weapons of slaughter — as actually put in force at the time, and in the manner there described. In both cases alike, the descrip- tion is of what took place in the visions of God ; therefore, not the mere outward and naked literalities which the bodily eye might have perceived, and the pen of histoi'y noted down, but a representation so contrived and arranged, as might serve most fitly to express to the apprehension of the mind, and render, in a manner palpable to the sight, the realities of Israel's guilt and judgment.^ While, then, we see ample reason for holding, that by " the image of jealousy" the statue of Adonis is not to be understood, we are further disposed to think, from the ideal character of the representation, that it should not be limited to any specific deity. The prophet, we are persuaded, purposely made the expression general, as it was not so much the particular idol placed on a level with Jehovah, as the idol-worship itself, which he meant to designate and condemn. So sunk and rooted were the people in the idolatrous feeling, that where Jehovah had an altar, there some idol-form must have its " seat " — a fixed residence, to de- note that it was no occasional thing its being found there, but a regular and stated arrangement. And whatever it might for the time be — whether it was Baal, or Moloch, or Astarte, that the image represented — as it was necessarily set up for a rival of Jehovah, to share with him in the worship to which he alone was entitled, it might justly be denominated "the image of ^ Entirely similar in principle, though differing in the particular form, as also much briefer in detail, is the representation given in Amos ix. 1 : " I saw the Lord standing upon the altar ; and he said, Smite the lintel of the door, that the posts may shake : and cut them in the head all of them," etc., where, though the work of judgment had respect to the house of Israel as well as Judah — to the whole covenant-people — yet it is upon the one altar at Jerusalem that the Lord is seen in vision coming forth to execute it, and as if the people were all assembled there, appearing to bring the temple in ruins upon them. The reason is, that there, as the services of the people should have been ever coming up for acceptance and blessing, so now their abominations were lying unpardoned, and crying for vengeance, though in reality, and in point of space, they had mostly been committed elsewhere. Therefore from that, as from the place of collective guilt, the work of judg- ment proceeds, both in Amos, and here also in tlie next chapter — only, while Amos simply supposes the sins to be all clustered around the altar and temple, Ezekiel first gives an embodied representation of them as all appear- ing and nestling there. VISION OF THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY. 87 jealousy," as it provoked that jealousy, and called for that visita- tion of wrath, against which the Lord had so solemnly fore- warned his people in the second commandment. That " he should go far off from his sanctuary," was the inevitable result of such an abomination, as is stated in ver. 6 ; and the moment of his departure must also be the signal for the execution of vengeance. That we do right in thus taking into account the ideal ele- ment in the representation, appears yet more obviously from the next scene, of which no clear and satisfactory explanation can be rendered, but by ascribing to some of the leading traits a non- literal or symbolical meaning. Being commanded to turn again, that he might see other great abominations, the prophet pre- sently finds himself at the door of the court, where he espies a hole in the wall, and after digging, as he was enjoined, he dis- covers a door (a door, of course, not patent or accessible from without, as it only became visible when the wall was cleared away) ; and entering within, he saw " every form of creeping things, and abominable beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel portrayed upon the wall round about. And there stood before them seventy men of the ancients (elders) of the house of Israel ; and in the midst of tliem stood Jaazaniah, the son of Shaphan, with every man his censer in his hand ; and the prayer of a cloud of incense went up." Now, that the prophet could not mean this to be understood of any actual exhibition that was wont to be made in the temple, is evident, first, from the entire seclusion of the chamber in which the idolatrous scene is laid — a recess so hidden from public view, and so closely walled up, that an entrance could only be made good by a process of digging — an inexplicable mystery, if understood as a chamber actually fre- quented by temple-worshippers, but plain enough, if regarded as a symbol of the conscious guilt and cunning secrecy with which the foul rites in question were sought after among the covenant- people. It is also evident from the kind and variety of the ob- jects said to have been portrayed against the wall—" every form of creeping things, and all the idols of the house of Israel," — necessarily a huge hyperbole, if taken literally, but a perfectly intelligible trait, if regarded as an ideal representation of the prevailing tendency to idolize after the manner of Egypt, where the portraying of such objects was so usual, and, at the same 88 EZEKIEL VIII. time, so peculiar to that country among the nations of antiquity, that it might with the utmost propriety be given as the charac- teristic mark of an Egyptizing spirit in religion. It is evident, once again, from the persons who are described as occupying the chamber, and filling it with the incense of devotion — the seventy elders. A reference is plainly had here to those passages in the Pentateuch, where the same number of elders appear in connec- tion with Israel, and especially to Exod. xxiv. 1, wljere seventy elders, as representatives of the congregation, go up with Moses to the mount, to behold the glory of Jehovah, and be witnesses of the more secret transactions which related to the establishment of the covenant. By mentioning, therefore, precisely this num- ber of elders, the prophet sets before us a representation of the whole people — an ideal representation, and of such a kind as to indicate the strong contrast that existed between former and pre- sent times — the original seventy being employed in immediate connection with God's glory and covenant, while these here were engaged in an act which bespoke the dishonouring of God's name and the virtual dissolution of his covenant. To render the con- trast still more palpable between what was and what should have been, the prophet singles out one from among the seventy, and places him in the midst — Jaazaniah, the son of Shaphan. This he does, not from any natural or oflBcial superiority in that per- son above the rest, but from the expressive import of his name, which means Jehovah hears, w^hile by their deeds the whole com- pany were intimating, what in the next verse they are reported to have said, " The Lord seeth us not, the Lord hath forsaken the earth." The very prominence given to this person on account of his name — the representation of the people by the primitive number of seventy elders — the attributing of an act of w^orship to these elders, the offering of incense in censers, wliich was one of the most distinctive prerogatives, not of the elders, but of the priesthood — and the express declaration, that what they were col- lectively doing there, was just what " every man was doing in the chambers of his imagery," — all plainly denote, that it is no actual service which is here described, but an ideal or pictorial repre- sentation of the debasing idolatries, which the people had begun secretly to practise in their own dens of pollution, beyond what they were willing to own and exhibit in the light of day. In a word, we are told, their idolatrous spirit had outrun even their VISION OF THE CHAMBERS OF IMAGERY. 89 public defections, and was already drinking up the rank poison of Egypt, though in nothing did the transactions of their earlier history raise a louder and more emphatic protest, than against such a retrograding to the foul region of Egyptian idolatry.^ From the secret abominations practised in the chambers of imagery, the prophet's attention was next turned to a scene in the outer court, at the north door, where he beholds women sit- ting in an attitude of grief and weeping for Tammuz. We have the explicit testimony of Jerome, that this was the Hebrew and Syriac name for Adonis, the fancied paramour of Yenus, who was fabled to have been killed by a boar, and restored to life again — in which the mystery is said to have been couched of the sun's yearly declension and return, or, more generally, nature's annual decay and renovation. However that may have been, there can be no doubt that the Adonis-festival, which had first its original seat at Byblos in Phoenicia, was celebrated by doleful lamentations, as for one lost or dead, and then by extravagant, libidinous rejoic- ings, on again finding the object of aiFection. This fantastical and impure piece of worship bore in its nature so strong a resemblance to the Egyptian orgies connected with the lost and recovered Osiris, that not a few both earlier and later mytholo- gists are disposed to trace the matter up to this source; although there seems no reason to question the Phoenician caste of the superstition, as practised in Asia and Greece. And the women seen in vision by the prophet, sitting and weeping at the outer gate on the north, betokened that it had now also found its way 1 How little the commentators have succeeded in giving any satisfactory explanation of the leading points above noticed, on the simply literal plan, may be learned from the solutions of the latest of them — Hitzig. He admits a side chamber could hardly be supposed large enough to hold seventy wor- shippers at once, but then it Avas only in spirit the prophet saw them there together ! That the entrance was closed up by a wall, was a still remaining proof of Josiah's reformation ; but, no doubt, the elders had some private door to enter by — as if the prophet could not have discovered that, and as if now, amid the corruptions of Zedekiah's time, they needed to go about the matter so stealthily ! And then, in regard to what is said of every man's doing so " in the chambers of his imagery," as this seems to point to separate scenes of idol- worship enacted in private, why, most likely the text is corrupt ; it should have been simply, what each one did in that one chamber in the dark ! ! With such an elastic style of interpretation, what convenient or wished-for meaning may not be extracted from the sacred text? 90 EZEKIEL VIII. into Judea. It was but a fragment, as it were, of the idolatrous scene which met his eye, but enough to indicate, in accordance WMth the pictorial style of the whole description, that this Phoe- nician abomination had become one of the festering sores of Judah's disease. But turning from this, the prophet is once more directed to another, and what is expressly called a greater abomination, — greater, not as betokening a worse idolatry, but implying, on account of the persons and the place connected with it, a more direct and flagrant dishonour to God. In the inner court of the Lord's house, and immediately before the door of the temple, between the porch and the altar, — where only the most solemn services should have been conducted, and where the priests never advanced but on some rare and extraordinary occasions (Joel ii. 17), — there the prophet sees twenty-five men. The place where they were seen could be trodden only by the priests; and, beyond doubt, the right idea w^as expressed by Lightfoot (in his " Chronica Temporum"), when he understood by them the leaders of the twenty-four classes, into which the priests were divided by David, with the high-priest at their head. With reference, apparently, to the same division, and the presidency of the several classes naturally connected with it, Isaiah speaks (chap, xliii. 28) of " the princes of the sanctuary," and Jeremiah (chap. XXXV. 4), of " the chamber of the princes ;" while, in 2 Chron. xxxvi. 14, we not only read of " the chief of the priests," but are also told of their having " polluted the house of the Lord which he hallowed in Jerusalem." Therefore, twenty-five men of priestly rank, " the princes of the sanctuary," w^ould be the precise number to represent the whole priesthood, just as the seventy elders were the proper representation of the whole people, and for that purpose had been employed in an earlier part of the vision. But how melancholy the appearance pre- sented here by the elite of the priesthood ! Their backs toward the temple, at the very threshold of which they stood (the re- verse position of all devout worshippers, 1 Kings viii. 44 ; Dan. vi. 10), and their faces toward the east, doing obeisance to the rising sun ! Thus they bore wdtness, that the highest places in the land had become infected with the Parsee element of fire- worship. And not then, indeed, for the first time ; for in the reformation effected by Josiah, we are told of his puttin'g away VISION OF ABOMINATIONS AT JERUSALEM. 91 those who burnt incense to the sun, and moon, and other hea- venly bodiesf with the horses and chariots that had been conse- crated to the sun (2 Kings xxiii. 5, 11). But the corruption had taken too deep root to be thus destroyed ; it again revived, with other heathenish customs, and now, in the days of Zedekiah, had attained to a high ascendancy. Thus, from the various scenes that met the eye of the prophet in his ideal walk through the precincts of the temple at Jerusa- lem, it was but too clearly manifest, that so far from the wor- ship of God being preser\-ed there in its purity, the land had become the common sink of heathenism. TJiere was to be seen, side by side with the altar of Jehovah, the image of the Syrian lord of nature, whether known by the name of Baal, or Moloch, or aught besides, the abhorred rival of Heaven's real king ; there also was the Eg^^tian beast-worship, with the foul rites of Phoe- nician licentiousness, and the more refined, but still idolatrous and coiTupting services of the eastern fire or sun-worship. Yet even these heathenish pollutions, the Lord proceeds to testify in the ears of the prophet, were not enough to satisfy the people's depraved appetite for evil ; it was but a light thing, as it were, that they should thus dishonour God in the things immediately connected with his service ; they had, besides, filled the land with violence, trampling as flagrantly upon the second table of the law in their dealings one toward another, as by their hea- thenish abominations they were trampling on the first. " And they have returned," the Lord concludes, " to provoke me to anger ; and lo ! they put the branch to their nose. Therefore will I also deal in fury : mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity ; and though they cry in mine ears with a loud voice, yet will I not hear them." But to revert now to the occasion of these fearful disclosures, how does this state of heathenish corruption and rampant ini- quity in Judah and Jerusalem, comport with the proud satisfac- tion the people there are represented to have felt regarding their own case, as compared with that of their exiled brethren ? It was well with themselves, they had been saying, because they were near to the Lord, and this made them sure of the continued possession of the land ; while, according to the vision now deli- neated, they seemed to be rejoicing in anything rather than the conscious presence of God, — nay, were giving vent to the impious 92 EZEKIEL viir. sentiment, which is again, with marked emphasis, ascribed to them in the next chapter, " The Lord seeth us Hot, the Lord hath forsaken the earth." There was, certainly, a deep practical inconsistence between the two states of feeling indicated, if tried hy the truth of God's word ; but not such an inconsistence as ought to shake our belief, or even greatly excite our wonder. Among the false religionists of our Lord's time, the very same inconsistence again reappears, only somewhat modified and chas- tened by the altered circumstances of the times. In them also, we see both the elements above-noticed very prominently dis- played. There was proud self-complacence, as of persons who plumed themselves on their peculiar nearness to God, not without feelings of settled scorn toward such as seemed to stand at a re- moter distance. Yet along with this, there was the absence of any real love to God, and a plentiful distrust of his power and goodness, appearing in their vain traditions, their secret wicked- ness, their fleshly confidences, their manifold idolatry of a present world, and expectations of mere earthly deliverances; so that with the most perfect truth it might be said of them, they were cherishing the spirit and doing the deeds of their 'fathers in the days of Zedekiah. And wherever religion loses its true child-like spirit of faith and love, and degenerates into a superstition, the same practical inconsistence is sure, in some form or another, to manifest itself For there being in such cases no genuine love of God in the heart, but a slavish dread of him, the afifections of the soul will naturally flow into forbidden channels, while the very pains and services to which it is prompted by that slavish dread, will as naturally tend to beget a feeling of presumptuous confidence toward God, and contemptuous behaviour toward those who take another mode of serving him. Is not this pre- cisely what we see in the deluded votaries of Rome? On the one hand the most perfect conviction that they are peculiarly the people of God ; and on the other, the most flagrant corruptions of the simplicity of his truth and worship, ways and services, such as seem rather to bespeak their sense of an absent or angry, than of a near and loving God. Or look to the superstitious man generally. Did not Milton correctly delineate him, when he said, " In very deed the superstitious man by his good will is an atheist [since, having only a dread of God, he would rather that God were not, and as often as he can, strives to keep God away THE VISION OF THE SEALING. 93 from his thoughts and feelings] ; but being scared from thence by the pangs and gripes of a boiling conscience, all in a pudder he shuffles up to himself such a God and such a worship as is most agreeable to remedy his fear ; which fear of his, as also is his hope, fixed only upon the flesh, renders Hkewise the whole faculty of his apprehension carnal ; and all the inward acts of worship, issuing from the native strength of the soul, run out lavishly to the upper skin, and there harden into a crust of formality ? " In a word, the inward desires and spontaneous movements of minds given to superstition, as well as many of their outward actions, virtually declare, that God — the spiritual and holy God of the Bible — is either not at all, or, at least, not near enough to regard them in their perverse and crooked ways. But yet, if any one should talk to them of salvation, none apparently are so sure of it ; for this to their view, is inseparable from the formal ritualism in which they have encrusted themselves. Such a religion is as vain as it is contrary to the whole genius of the Gospel. We err from the simplicity of the faith whenever we resort to other means and influences for obtaining life and peace to the soul, than those which God has himself sanctioned and approved in his Word. And we err not less plainly from its spirit of child- like confidence and devoted love, if we are not giving to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the undivided homage of our hearts, and habitually realising his gracious presence as alike our safeguard from evil, and our most inspiring motive to faith- fulness in every good work. CHAPTER IX. THE VISION OF THE SEALING. Ver. 1. And he cried in mine ears with a loud voice, saying, Let the over- seers of the city come near,^ and every man his weapon of destruction in his ^ The language in this opening verse, as well as the communication that fol- lows, shows that what is said here is merely the continuation and proper sequel of the preceding vision. In the last words of the eighth chapter, mention was made of a cry being heard in the Lord's ears, a loud cry for mercy from the 94 EZEKIEL IX. hand. 2. And behold six men came, by the way of the upper gate, which looks toward the north, and every man his slaughter- weapon in his hand, and one man among them clothed in Unen, with a writer's inkhorn by his side ; and they went in and stood beside the brazen altar. 3. And the glory of the God of Israel ascended from above the cherub, whereupon it was, to the threshold of the house. And he called to the man that was clothed in linen, who had the writer's inkhorn ; 4. And Jehovah said to him, Go through the midst of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark (literally, mark a mark) upon the foreheads of the men, that sigh and that cry over all the abominations that are done in the midst of it. 5. And to the others he said in my hearing, Go ye after him through the city, and smite ; let not your eye spare, nor have pity. 6. Slay utterly old and young, maids and little children, and women ; and on every man who has the mark upon him, come not near him ; and begin at my sanctuary. And they began at the elders who were before the house. 7. And he said to them. Defile the house, and fill its courts with slain ; — go ye forth ; and they went forth, and smote in the city. 8. And it came to pass, while they were slaying them, and I was left, that I fell upon my face, and I cried and said, Ah ! Lord Jehovah, wilt thou slay all the remnant of Israel, when thou art pouring out thy fury upon Jerusalem ? 9. And he said to me, The iniquity of the house of Israel and Judah is exceedingly great, and the land is tilled with blood, and the city is full of perverseness ; for they say, Jehovah has forsaken the earth, and Jeho- vah sees not. 10. And I also, mine eye shall not spare, nor will I pity ; their way I recompense upon their head. 11. And behold the man clothed in linen, who had the writer's inkhorn at his side, reported the matter, saying 1 have done according as thou didst command me. The vision depicted in chap. viii. was intended to lay open the various workings of that apostate and rebellious spirit which had infected the people of Judah and Jerusalem. And as such a wide-spread and leprous state of guilt manifestly called for the interposition of a righteous God, the prophet proceeds to unfold the course of procedure which was to be adopted regarding it. 1. He first of all hears the Lord crying with a loud voice, as in a matter of great urgency, and in a state of vehement indig- nation, summoning the officers or overseers of the city into his presence, and ordering them to bring each in their hand a weapon for slaughter. The persons who answered to this summons were six in number, but along with these, and in the midst of them, as being the leader of the party, there was one in different habi- liments — clothed in linen, and with a writer's inkhorn at his side. That there should have been in all precisely seven in doomed city ; and now the prophet is made to hear in his ears a loud cry for vengeance — in itself a sign how fruitless the other cry would be. The per- sons addressed, ideal executioners of justice, are called J"'i'=ips, which properly means ojicesy but it is also used concretely for those holding office, or having charge — for example, Isa. Ix. 17; 2 Chron. xxiv. 11. THE VISION OF THE SEALING. 95 number, is chiefly to be accounted for from the sacredness at- tached to that number in ancient times, and especially in the Hebrew Scriptures. It indicated that the action now to be pro- ceeded with bore that sacred character wliich belongs to every- thinfT that comes from the hand of God. With reference to the same import, we read in Zechariah of the seven eyes of the Lord (chap. iii. 9), and in the Apocalypse, of the seven spirits before the Lord (Rev. v. 6). The persons in question, although called men, are evidently to be regarded as the inhabitants of a higher sphere — the special messengers of Jehovah ; and they appeared in the character of officers, who had the charge of the city com- mitted to them, because they had come to execute the judgments of righteousness, which the proper officers should have put in force. Their approach w^as from the north, where also the dif- ferent forms of idolatry had been seen by the prophet, and they stood beside the brazen altar, waiting to receive the command of Jehovah. It was there, as we said before, that the people's guilt lay unpardoned ; and, according to the principle, " where the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together," from the same quarter must proceed the work of judgment. " While those ministers of the Divine justice," says Hengstenberg excellently,^ " tread beside the brazen altar, the glory of the Lord moves to- ward them out of the holy of holies, and appears to them at the threshold of the temple. It imparts to him w^ho is clothed in linen the commission to preserve the pious, to the others to de- stroy the ungodly without mercy. Now, who is the one clothed in linen ? No other than the angel of the Lord. This appears from Dan. x. 5, xii. 6, 7, where Michael, but another name for the angel of the Lord, is designated in the same way — a remark- able agreement in two contemporary prophets. It is also evident from the subject itself. The clothing is that of the earthly high- priest ; but the heavenly high-priest and intercessor is the angel of the Lord (Zech. i. 12). He who was clothed in linen is not, however, to be regarded as solely engaged in the work of de- livering the pious ; not as standing in contrast with the six ministers of righteousness. These are rather to be considered as subordinate to him, as accomplishing the work of destruction only by his command, and under his authority. The punish- 1 Christology, on Amos ix. 1. 96 EZEKIEL IX. ment proceeds from him no less than the prosperity. This ap- pears even from general grounds. Both have the same root, the same object — the prosperity of the kingdom of God. The six cannot be regarded as evil angels. This would be in con- tradiction to the whole doctrine of Scripture on the subject. It uniformly attributes the punishment of the ungodly to the good angels, and the trial of the pious, under God's permission, to the evil ; as is seen, for example, in the trial of Job, the temptation of Christ, the buffeting of Paul by a messenger of Satan. If this, then, be established, it is equally so, that the judgment on this occasion belongs to the angel of the Lord. For all inferior angels are subordinate to him, the prince of the heavenly host, so that all they do is done by his command. But in addition to these general grounds, there are special reasons, which are en- tirely decisive. It deserves consideration, that he who was clothed in linen appears in the midst of the six. They surround him as his followers, his servants. Still more weighty, however, and of itself sufficient, is chap. x. 2, 7, " And the Lord spake to the man clothed in linen, and said. Go between the wheels under the cherubim, and fill thy hand with coals of fire, which are between the cherubim, and scatter them over the city ; and he went before mine eyes. — And a cherub stretched out his hand between the cherubim, to the fire that was between the cheru- bim, and took and gave it unto the hands of him who was clothed in linen. And he took it, and went forth." The fire is an image of the Divine anger. The angel of the Lord is here, therefore, expressly designated as the one who executes the judgments of the Divine justice. — The importance of the transaction extends beyond the explanation of the passage before us. We have here the Old Testament foundation of the doctrine of the New, that all judgment has been committed to the Son ; and a remarkable example of the harmony of the two Testaments, which in recent times has been but too much overlooked. (Comp. Matt. xiii. 41, xxv. 31.)" In regard to what was ordered to be done on the present occa- sion by the angel of the covenant and his attendant ministers of righteousness, a few particulars deserve to be noted. (1.) It was pre-eminently a work of judgment against sin. Of this the moving of the Divine glory from the inner sanctuary to the threshold without, was itself an impressive sign, indicating that VISION OF THE SEALING. 97 God was rising out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the land ; yet even in doing this, the Lord showed the care and fidelity with which he watched over his own. For the first part of the charge given to the presiding angel has respect to the safety of the good — the small remnant of faithful ones, who, so far from going along with the prevailing tide of evil, were daily sighing and crying for the abominations that were proceeding around them. These were to be kept under the shadow of the Almighty, while destruction, like a whirlwind, was sweeping on every side of them. So has it ever been in the history of God's judgments. The angels, who were charged with the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, declared they could do nothing till righteous Lot had made good his escape. Nor was the destroy- ing angel sent forth to slay the first-born in Egypt, till the families of Israel found time to sprinkle on their door-posts the blood of reconciliation. So also in Revelation, before the great tribulations begin, the peremptory command was given, '^ Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of God in their foreheads." Refreshing thought ! The Divine faithfulness still abides sure to the true children of the covenant, even though they should exist but as a few grains of wheat among heaps of chaff destined to destruction. Let such, therefore, trust in the Lord at all times, and fear not, that it shall be well with the righteous. (2.) In respect, again, to the method taken to separate be- tween this faithful remnant and others, though there is some- thing peculiar in it, yet it evidently points to the preservation of Israel in Egypt by the sprinkling of the paschal blood on the door-posts. Here, however, as it was not for families, but for individuals, that the sign was needed, a change in the mode was necessarily adopted. '^ Set a mark (literally, mark a mark) upon their foreheads," is the command given to the angel of the covenant. What kind of mark is not specified, and, indeed, would scarcely have been suitable, as it was a mere symbol of the personal security of the individuals referred to — not a mark to be actually imprinted and seen upon their persons, but as an indication of the place they held in the watchful oversight and directing agency of God. And that the forehead is named — the most prominent and conspicuous part of the person — as tliat on which the mark was to be set, this was simply to show, how clear G 98 EZEKIEL IX. and certain their interest was in the guardianship and protection of Heaven ; it was as if God would have all men to take notice of their connection with his service, and their sure inheritance of blessing from his hand/ (3.) Further, we cannot but perceive, in regard to the sen- tence of judgment, executed upon the rest of the community, that it is ordered so as most fitly to express the utter loathing and abhorrence with which the sins of the people had filled the mind of God. The work of slaughter was appointed to begin at the sanctuary, that all its courts might be defiled with the blood of the slain. In consequence of the aggravated and shameful guilt of the worshippers, it had already lost the reality of holi- ness, and, in accordance with its true character, the appearance of an abominable place must now be given to it. Not only so, but the very first persons whose blood is reported to have been shed there, was that of '^ the ancient men before the house," — the seventy elders mentioned in the preceding chapters, them- ^ The practice of imprinting marks upon men in a religious connection, was in ancient times not unknown in real life, as we learn from Herodotus (ii. 113), who says, in respect to a temple of Hercules in Egypt, "that if the slave of any one takes refuge there, and has sacred marks impressed upon him, it is not lawful to lay hands on him. " In opposition, however, to what is said above, and apparently under the idea, that an actual mark was to be made on the persons in question, some of the fathers (Tertullian, Origen, Jerome), and the Roman Catholic writers generally, have strenu- ously contended for the specific sign of the cross, as being the mark intended. The chief philological ground for this idea is, that as the word used for mark is tau, the name of the last letter of the alphabet, the old form of that letter was a cross. On this ground, though without respect to the use made of it by the Catholics, Hitzig translates, " mark a cross/' But the more ancient versions, the Sept., Aq., and Symm., all render generally a mark. And Vitringa justly observes, that " nowhere throughout Scripture are those words, which are now employed as names of the letters of the alphabet, and several of which occur, ever used to denote those letters themselves or their figures. Besides, tiiere is connected with the word tau in this text, the verb rripj from which the other is derived. And as, among the Hebrews, such conjunctions of verbs with nouns sprung from them are common, it is pro- bable that the tau here is of the same meaning with the verb with which it is joined. Is it not also the case, that in the parallel passage (Rev. vii. 3), where a fact of the same kind is recorded, no mention is made of any special mark ? We, therefore, gladly embrace the version of the Septuagint, which accords with the interpretations of the most eminent Jews, and simply render, " murk a sign." — {Obs. Sac, lib. ii. chap, xv., § 8.) VISION OF THE SEALING. 99 selves the more aged and venerable poilion of the worshippers, and those who might naturally be regarded as occupying the foremost rank among the people at large. The slaying of sucli persons first was an indication of the unsparing severity with which the Divine judgment was to proceed, involving alike in destruction "old and young, maids and little children and women." So terrible was the sight, that the prophet himself for the moment forgets the assurance that had been given by the act of sealing a preserved remnant ; and, overcome by his intense feelings, falls down and exclaims, " Ah ! Lord God, wilt thou destroy all the residue of Israel in the pouring out of thy fury upon Jerusalem ? " A cry for mercy which has no other effect, than to call forth a fresh declaration from the Lord of the great- ness of the people's guilt, and of the necessity of vengeance being- executed against it. So very broadly marked in this portion of the vision is the distinction betv/een the riixhteous and the wicked ! In the ideal territory which the vision occupies, the treatment awarded to each is as different as the character respectively belonging to them ; but was the distinction equally preserved amid the real transactions that followed ? In the calamities that so soon fell like an overwhelming flood on the city, did the wicked alone suffer, and the good escape unhurt? Such, certainly, we are warranted to infer, would in general be the case, as we see in Jeremiah and the false prophets — the one faithfully guarded, though sur- rounded on every hand with instruments of destruction, while the others miserably perished. Yet we cannot suppose the line of demarcation would be preserved with such perfect exactness, as that all the wicked should be destroyed, and all the righteous defended from evil. The records of history prove, indeed, the reverse. " But it must be noted," as Calvin justly remarks, " that while God apparently sends trouble to his people in common with the wicked, there is stiill this distinction on the side of the former, that nothing befalls them but what shall turn to their salvation. When God, therefore, forbids the Chaldeans to touch his fiuthful servants, he does not mean, that they should be free from all trouble and annoyance, but promises that matters should be ordered so differently with them, as compared with the wicked, that they would know in their own experience, God had not forgotten his faithful word. It may be, indeed, tl:at God 100 EZEKIEL X. shall not spare his own, so as to exempt them from having their faith and patience exercised ; yet he will spare so far, as not to allow anything deadly to befall them, so far, as always to prove himself their faithful guardian. But when he appears to extend pardon to the wicked, this only tends to their destruction, because they are rendered by it more and more inexcusable." CHAPTER X. THE VISION OF THE COALS OF FIRE. As soon as the prophet's attention was withdrawn from what had for the time completely absorbed it — the proceedings connected with the persecution of the good and the destruction of the wicked, he was favoured with anotlier vision of the glory of Jehovah, such as he had already beheld on the plains of Chebar. The scene only of the Divine manifestation was different, the mani- festation itself was substantially the same. Here also there w^ere, as had formerly been seen, the cloud of glory, and the dazzling splendour filling the field of vision — the cherubim, with the like- ness of a throne above, surmounted by the sapphire firmament — gigantic wheels by the side of the cherubim, full of eyes round about, instinct with fife and motion, and themselves moving in the midst of glowing fire — the voice, fi.'om time to time, of these cherubim, pealing in the ears of the prophet, as the voice of the Almighty — all serving by the nature of their appearance, and the character of their movements, to shadow forth the mind and will of Him, who, amid such accompaniments of Divine majesty, occu- pied the throne. The presentation of this glorious vision to the eye of the prophet, took place in the midst of the appointed exe- cutions of judgment — one part being already past, while another was still to come. And the leading object of it seems to have been to bring distinctly into view the immediate agency of God in the matter, and to show how all proceeded, as by a law of iuiperious necessity, from the essential holiness of his nature. But let us first give the prophet's description of the scene itself : — THE VISION OF THE COALS OF FIRE. 101 Ver. 1. And I looked, and behold in the firmament that was over the head of the cherubim like a sapphire-stone, as the appearance of the likeness of a throne was seen upon them. 2. And he spoke to the man clothed in linen and said. Go in between the wheels, to below the cherub, and fill thy hand with coals of fire from between the cherubim, and scatter them over the city. And he went in my sight. 3. And the cherubim stood on the right side of the house, when the man went in ; and the cloud filled the inner court. 4. And the glory of Jehovah went up from above the cherub, over the threshold of the house ; and the house was filled with the cloud ; and the court was full of the brightness of the glory of Jehovah. 5. And the sound of the che- rubim's wings was heard to the outer court, as the voice of the Almighty God when he speaks. 6. And it came to pass, when he commanded the man clothed in linen, saying, take fire from between the wheels, from between the cherubim, that he went in and stood beside the wheel. 7. And the cherub (viz., the one at that wheel) stretched forth his hand from between the che- rubim to the fire, which was between the cherubim, and lifted and gave to the hand of him who was clothed in linen, and he took it and went forth. 8. And there appeared in the cherubim the likeness of the hand of a man, under their wings. 9. And I looked and behold there were four wheels beside the cherubim, one wheel beside one cherub, and one wheel beside another cherub, and the appearance of the wheels was as the glitter of the tartessus- stone. 10. And for appearance there was one likeness to the four, as it were a wheel in the midst of a wheel. 11. When they went they went toward their four sides (i. e., in one or other of the four directions to which the wheels severally pointed) ; they turned not when they went ; for to what direction the face looked, thither they went ; they turned not when they went. 12. And their whole flesh, and their backs, and their hands, and their wings, and their wheels, were full of eyes round about, the wheels of the four of them (i. 6., were full of eyes). 13. As for the wheels, to them it was cried in my hearing, The whirling.^ 14. And every one had four faces ; the first face the face of a cherub, and the second face the face of a man, and the third the face of a lion, and the fourth the face of an eagle. ^ 15. And the cherubim ^ This has been unhappily rendered in the authorised version, O wheel. In the original there are two words used in this chapter, which we can scarcely avoid translating by the same word, wheel — l^'ii^, which strictly means a wheel; and Va^a, which comprehends the entire machinery of wheel-work, wheel within wheel, so called from its quick, whirlwind-like movements. This is what the word properly means — any thing having a swift rotatory motion ; whence it denotes a whirlwind — Ps. Ixxvii. 18. It was this last word which was here proclaimed in the prophet's ears, for the purpose partly of indicating their nature, and partly of calling them to put themselves in motion. For, by their rapid energetic motion they symbolised the resistless speed and certainty with which the divine agency accomplishes its purposes. Bottcher, quoted by Maurer, renders, " to the wheels, to these was it always cried in my ears, the Roll — Roll ;" meaning that they were called to be continually revolving. The Septuagint is still more literal, for it simply gives the original word nxysx. 2 The peculiarity in this description of the personal aspect of the cheru- bim is, that while they are said to have had each four faces, that is, to have combined in their visage the fourfold aspect of ox, man, lion, and eagle, the first is represented as having simply the appearance of a cherub, and the 102 EZEKIKL X. rose upwards : it is the living creature which I saw by the river Chebar. 1 6. And when the cherubim went, the wheels went with them ; and when the che- rubim lifted up their wings to mount up frotn off the earth, the wheels also did not turn from beside them. 17. When the one stood the other stood, when the one rose the other rose ; for the spirit of the living creature was in them, 18. And the glory of Jehovah went forth from above the threshold of the house, and stood over the cherubim. 19. And the cherubim lifted up their wings, and ascended from the earth in my sight, when they went forth and the wheels at their side : and it (i. e. , the whole appearance) stood at the door of the east gate of the house of Jehovah, and the glory of the God of Israel was over them aloft. 20. This is the living creature which I saw under the God of Israel by the river Chebar, and I knew that they were the cherubim. 21. Each one had four faces apiece, and four wings apiece ; and the likeness of the hand of a man was under their wings. 22. And the like- ness of their faces — they are the same faces which I saw by the river Chebar, their appearances and themselves; they each go right forward. The Divine manifestation here described as having been pre- sented in vision to Ezekiel, is distinctly connected with the one previously given on the banks of the Chebar. It is substantially a renewal of the former vision, though differing as to the locality where the manifestation was given, and the symbolical actions with which it was accompanied. Looking to the two manifes- tations in their common features, and with respect to their general design, we can have no difficulty in perceiving both the propriety and the importance of such displays of the Divine pre- sence and glory having been vouchsafed to the prophet, espe- cially near the commencement of his career. They were needed to qualify him for the discharge of his high function, and for maintaining the arduous conflict he had to wage against unbelief others that of a man, a lion, and an eagle respectively. Some commentators, as Maurer, confess that thay see no proper way of explaining this ; many more pass on without offering any explanation ; and others, comparing the passage with ch. i. 10, where the ox is mentioned as the fourth component element in the composition of the cherub, take cherub here for ox, and sup- pose that the cherubic structure had some peculiar affinity with the form of the ox. on account of which the name of cherub might be substituted for that of ox. But this is without any foundation, and, indeed, contrary to the de- scription in ch. i., according to which, as formerly stated, the form of man was undoubtedly predominant in the appearance. The explanation I take to be this : the prophet, simply describing what he saw, and standing at the time right in front of one of the cherubim, the one who gave the live coals to the angel, could not say in regard to this cherub which particular form was prominent, the whole cherubic figures appeared in the face, while, having only a side view of the others, they each presented to his eye the different forms he specilies. THE VISION OF THE COALS OF FIRE. 103 and corruption. " The Divine presence," to use the words of Havernick, '^ was discovered to him in such glorious manifesta- tions, — first, for the purpose of calling him to do the part of a witness of that glory in the midst of his God-forgetting people ; then, for the purpose of taking leave of the visible locality with which the old manifestations of Deity were connected, and with which they were never to be associated in the ancient manner again. These two occasions of a Divine manifestation so pecu- liarly glorious, were periods never to be forgotten in the life of Ezekiel ; to exhibit them in their harmonious agreement was what he could on no account omit. Twice had his spiritual eye I)eheld the very God of Israel upon the cherubim ; this was the seal of truth which he stamped on his announcements ; this, for himself, was the dearest pledge of the Divine condescension — an inexpressible grace, which he felt constrained by a lively sense of the Lord's presence, to record with candour and delight." When we look to the differences between this vision and the earlier one, the appearances themselves, and the actions con- nected with them, for the most part admit of a ready explanation. The particular feature mentioned here respecting the cherubim, that they were in every part full of eyes, and not mentioned in the former description, can scarcely be regarded as a difference ; for it seems to be merely a more specific detail, which the pro- phet's secorid and closer inspection of the appearance, enabled him to observe and note. He expressly states that the living creature was the same that he had seen at first ; which implies, that it had each time the same composite and peculiar structure. Here, however, the throne which appeared above the cherubim is without the accompaniment of the rainbow, for, on this parti- cular occasion, it is the work of judgment alone that is symbolized. The sign of returning grace after floods of wrath, might still, indeed, be said to be there, in the background, for the judgment was not to be utterly annihilating — a remnant was still to be spared, and a door left open for fresh manifestations of covenant- love and faithfulness. But this had already been indicated in the preceding part of the vision (chap, ix.), by the action of the sealing of those who had kept aloof from the reigning abomina- tions, and reserving them for a purpose of mercy in the future. What is unfolded in the present chapter, is simply the following (Hit to its proper conclusion of the work of judgment. The 104 EZEKIEL X. sinners in Zion were already slain ; their carcases are seen lying throughout the streets of the city, and some of them were defiling the house which their rampant iniquity had so fearfully profaned. And it now only remained that the work of severity should be consummated, by destroying the city itself, where all the abominations had been practised. The Lord, therefore, appears on his throne of judgment; and, to make it more mani- fest that the judgment is in vindication of his injured holiness, and on account of the sins which had been committed against his covenant, the scene of the judicial action is laid in the temple itself. The cherubic machinery, moved close to the threshold of the house, and the glory of the Lord, not only stood above it, but also pressed inwards, so that the whole house was filled with the cloud — the emblem of God's aw^ul majesty and hot displea- sure. There, in immediate contact with the sanctuary, a cherub, at the Divine command, gives a portion of the fire which glowed between the wheel work of the cherubim, to the man clothed in linen — the angel of the covenant — that he might scatter it over the city, and reduce the whole to ashes. This fire may certainly, with Hengstenberg (on Kev. viii. 5), be called elemental fire, since the purpose for which it was given was to consume the devoted city. But this surely does not render it less (as he conceives) a symbol of the holy wrath and judgment of God, for that consumption of the city was no merely natural operation, but a solemn act of judgment, in vindication of the honour and majesty of God. Nothing here, either in the vision itself, or in the actions represented as proceeding, belongs simply to the natural sphere ; even the natural powers and agencies, of which the cherubic appearances and the wheel-work were partly symbo- lical, have their place in the vision, from their subservience to the moral ends and purposes in progress. But it deserves to be noted, with Calvin (though he errs, we think, in other parts of his explanation), that the fire is represented as being taken, not from the altar of God, which had so much to do with the work of reconciliation for iniquity, but from the ideal source, specially provided for purposes of judgment, suited to the occasion. And that a marHs hand supplied this material element of fire for the work of destruction, may naturally be regarded as indicating that human agents should not be wanting, at the proper time, to carry into effect the judgment written ; the DESTRUCTION OF A CORRUPT PRIESTHOOD, ETC. 105 Lord would not need, as in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah, to rain down fire and brimstone from heaven, but would find among men instruments properly fitted for executing his purpose. The whole prophetic burden contained in this and the preceding chapter, is to be found in plain language, and with much detail, in many parts of Jeremiah's writings, and, indeed was comprised long before in the following brief but awful passage of Isaiah (chap, xxiii. 12, sq.), " The people shall be as the burnings of lime, as thorns cut up shall they be burned in the fire. The sinners in Zion are afraid ; fearfulness hath surprised the hypo- crites. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings ? " Another scene of destruction, however, was yet to be presented to the eye of the prophet, before the revelation could properly be made, of the purpose of mercy that was in reserve, unfolding what must prepare the ,.way for its accomplishment. This we have in the earlier part of the next chapter, after which, in the latter part, comes the exhibition of the purpose of mercy. CHAPTER XI. DESTRUCTION OF A CORRUPT PRIESTHOOD, WITH THE PROMISE OF GRACE AND BLESSING TO A BELIEVING REMNANT AMONG THE EXILES. Ver. 1. And the Spirit lifted me up, and brought me to the east gate of the house of Jehovah, that looks toward the east ; and behold at the entrance of the gate five and twenty men ; and in the midst of them I saw Jaazaniah the son of Azur, and Pelatiah (Heb. Pelatjahu), son of Benaiah (Heb. Binajahu), princes of the people. 2. And he said to me, Son of man, these are the men that devise mischief, and give evil counsel in this city ; 3. Who say, Not at hand (literally, not in the nearness) is the building of houses :^ ' This is the plain import of the original here, and, as will be shown after- wards, gives the best sense. The meaning adopted by Calvin, and followed by the authorised version, and many commentators, is " It is not near (viz. the destruction of the city) ; let us build houses ;" or, " to build houses." Let us proceed to that, and we can do so with safety. This, as Maurer has justly objected, would have required the inf absol. ; not rii:£, but has. Ewald 106 EZEKIEL XI. this is the caldron, and we are the flesh. 4. Therefore prophesy against them, prophesy, Son of man. 5. And the Spirit of the Lord fell upon me, and he said to me, Say ; Thus saith Jehovah, Thus have ye said, O house of Israel : and whatever has risen up in your mind, I have known it. 6. Ye liave multiplied your slain in this city, and have filled its streets with the slaughtered. 7. Therefore thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Yoiu* slain, which ye have laid in the midst of it, these are the flesli, and this city is the caldrou : and I will cause you to go forth out of the midst of it. 8. Ye have feared the sword; and the sword will I bring upon you, saith the Lord Jehovah. 9. And I will make you go forth from the midst of it, and will give you into the hand of strangers, and will execute judgments against you. 10. Ye shall fall by the sword : upon the border of Israel {i. e. at the extreuuty of the land) will I judge you; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 11. This city shall not be to you for a caldron, nor shall you be in the midst of it as ilesh ; at the border of Israel will I judge you. 12, And ye shall know that I am Jehovah : in whose statutes ye did not walk, and whose judgments ye did not execute; but did according to the judgments of the heathen that are round about you. 13. And it came to pass, that while I was prophesying, Pelatiah the son of Benaiah died : and I fell upon my face, and cried with a loud voice, and said, Ah Lord Jehovah ! wilt thou make a complete end of the renmant of Israel ? 14. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 15. Son of man, thy brethren, thy brethren are the men of thy redemption (thy Ooalim — thy redemption-men), and all the house of Israel, the whole to whom the in- habitants of Jerusalem say. Be ye far from the Lord, to us is given this land for an inheritance. 16. Therefore say. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Be- cause I have removed them far off among the heathen, and because I have scattered them among the countries, and have been to them for a sanctuary during a little season in the countries whither they have come, 17. Therefore say. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I will also gather you from the peoples, and will assemble you from the countries whither ye have, been scattered, and I give to you the territory of Israel. 18. And they come thither, and they take away all its detestable things, and all its abominations out of it. 19. And I give them one heart, and will put a new spirit within them ; and I will take away the heart of stone from their flesh, and give to them an heart of flesh. 20. In order that they may walk in my statutes, and may keep my judgments, and do them : -and may be to me for a people, and I may be a God to them. 21. And for those whose heart goes after the heart of their detestable things, and their abominations, their way I bring upon their heads, saith the Lord Jehovah. 22. And the cherubims lifted up their wings, with the wheels at their side ; and the glory of the God of Israel over them aloft. 23. And the glory of Jehovah went up out of the midst of the city, and stood over the mount that is to the east of the city. 24. And the Spirit lifted me up and brought me to Chaldea, to the captives, in a vision by the Spirit of God : and the vision which I had seen went up from me. 25. And I spake to the captives all the words of Jehovah that he had made me see. When the prophet was going to witness the new scene of destruc- tion, with which this chapter opens, he was made to change his would take the words interrogatively, " Is it not in the nearness to build houses?" i. e. cannot we do so with perfect safety? Grammatically, the interpretation is admissible ; but it does not give a natimil sense, nor the one best fitted to explicate the meaning ; but the reverse. DESTRUCTION OF A CORRUPT PRIESTHOOD, ETC. 107 position. For the manifested glory of God had fixed its residence at the entrance of the east gate of tlie Lord's house (chap. x. 19), the princi})al entrance to the temple, as through that the way lay straight into the sanctuary. The Spirit lifted the prophet up, and placed him at that gate, in the immediate presence of the Divine glory. There the first thing that met his eye was a com- pany of twenty-five men, two of whom also are expressly named and called "princes of the people." This number naturally leads us to think of the twenty-five mentioned in chap, viii., whom we identified with the heads of the twenty-four classes into which the families of the priests were divided, with the high- priest as their superior — the natural representatives of the whole priesthood. Nor is there anything in what is said here to pre- vent us from supposing that the same persons are again brought into notice. That they should be called, not as in Isa. xliii. 28, " princes of the sanctuary," or in 2 Chron. xxxvi. 14, " chief (princes) of the priests," but " princes of the people," is suflft- ciently explained from the light in which they are here contem- plated, as ringleaders in the general profligacy and corruption. Hence, it is immediately added, " These are the men that devise mischief, and give wicked counsel in this city;" for they had taken advantage of their influential position, to lead the people astray from God, and infuse perverse counsel into their minds ; and on this account might justly be called, though not perhaps without some mixture of irony, " princes of the people." This view is also confirmed by the place assigned to these twenty-five men in the vision. Already has the wrath of God come forth with consuming powder against the people as repre- sented by the elders, who were then worshipping in the courts of the Lord's house. Nor only this — but the glory of the Lord has also been seen leaving its settled habitation in the most holy place, and, like the cherubim of old, and the flaming sword in the garden of Eden, has gone forth to occupy the gate that leads into the now deserted sanctuary. Of what use, then, any more the ministrations of an apostate and polluted priesthood in this sanctuary? Nay, is it not time that judgment should alight upon such a priesthood ? and that the glory of the Lord should break forth upon them, before they are again permitted to enter the sacred precincts ? This is precisely what we should expect to take place from the order of the Divine vision, and the point at 108 EZEKIEL XI. which it has arrived ; and when viewed in connection with what had been previously said of the twenty-five, as persons minister- ing on peculiarly holy ground, and also in this eastern approach to the temple, leaves no proper room to doubt, that these were the representatives of the priestly portion of Judah. The two who are named in this representative company of priests appear to have been singled out, as was formerly done in the case of the seventy elders, on account of the peculiar signi- ficance of their names, and to mark the contrast that now existed between tiie idea and the reality. '^ Jaazaniah (God hears), the son of Azur (help) ; and Pelatiah (God delivers), the son of Benaiah (God builds)." Such names should have been regarded as perpetual monitors, reminding them where they should have sought, and where also they should have found, their confidence and safety. Had they but remained stedfast in the covenant of God, he would assuredly have heard and helped them in the time of need, delivered them from danger, and built them up. But now it was their very relation to God which proved the source of their greatest danger, and the immediate cause of their overwhelming destruction. For not only the corruptions they had introduced into his service, but also their insolent contempt of his authority, had reached such a height, that he could no longer refrain from manifesting his righteousness in their punish- ment. Setting themselves in direct opposition to the will of God, they had given wicked counsel to the people, and said, " Not in the nearness is the building of houses, this is the caldron, and we are the flesh." It is not quite obvious, at first sight, how these words convey so bad a meaning as the connection in which they are introduced leads us to expect ; for it is in them apparently, that the extreme wickedness of the priesthood expresses itself, while the words themselves might seem to imply nothing particularly bad. This alone suggests to us the propriety of seeking for some covert reference in the language, such as might impart to it a peculiar force and intensity of meaning. And the connection between the prophecies of Ezekiel, and those of Jeremiah, formerly adverted to, supplies here precisely what we need ; for it enables us to perceive in the short speech here put into the lips of a corrupt priesthood, an insolent and scornful parody of words that had been previously uttered by Jeremiah. In the letter DESTRUCTION OF A CORRUPT PRIESTHOOD, ETC. 109 that prophet sent to the captives, among whom Ezekiel lived, the very first announcement was, " Build ye houses, and dwell in them " (chap. xxix. 5) ; because the time of their sojourn there was not to be, as the great majority of the people thought, for a brief space, but for the long period of seventy years. On the other hand, in regard to the people in Jerusalem, and indi- cative of the short respite that was to be allowed them there, Jeremiah had seen in vision a caldron, or seething-pot (chap, i. 13), with its mouth towards the north ; which was interpreted to mean, that the kingdoms of the north, with Babylon at their head, would come and take possession of Jerusalem. Now it is these two speeches — the one bearing respect more immediately to the exiles, the other to the remnant in Judah — which the impious and ungodly priesthood are represented here as parody- ing ; they take the words of the Lord's servant into their mouth, but only for the purpose of showing how they could make light of the most solemn messages. " Those, who are far off in the land of exile, may, if they please, take the prophet's advice, and set about building houses for themselves ; that does not concern us, it is too remote a thing for our needing to be at all careful about it. And as for the pot you have seen, which is ready to smoke and boil under the fury of a hostile invasion from the north, let it be so — let Jerusalem be the pot, then we shall be the flesh within it ; its strong fortifications and sure defences shall pre- serve us against any flame of war that may kindle around us. We know our ground, and have no occasion to be terrified with such visions." Such plainly appears to have been the spirit in v^hich the words were uttered by the priesthood, and the sense they con- veyed. And viewed thus, the language reveals, as by a flash of lightning, the real state of the priesthood in Jerusalem, — show- ing not only how contemptuously they eyed their brethren in exile (the circumstance which gave rise to the whole of this series of visions), but how completely their heart had departed from the^ Lord, and gone to rest in fleshly confidences. The threatenings of the Lord's servant were now bandied about as idle words, or twisted into any shape that might suit their own perverse inclinations. And as if the Lord had indeed forsaken the earth, or was destitute of means to execute his own word, they looked to the bulwarks of their city as amply sufficient to 110 EZEKIKL Xr. jn'otect them from all the assaults that could be made against it. Nay, they had the presumption to intimate, by the turn they gave to the prophet's similitude, that the. city must stand for their sakes, even as the pot exists for the safety and due pre- paration of the flesh that is put into it. In like manner, because they must, as a matter of necessity, continue to abide and flou- rish, the city cannot but stand them in good stead against the cominfT evil ! ^ It was impossible that a holy God could permit such a pre- sumptuous and scornful degree of impiety to pass unpunished, especially when it appeared in those who stood nearest to God, and held the highest places of influence in the land. Therefore the Divine judgment is immediately announced. As perfectly cognizant of their vain imaginations and their wicked courses, the Lord declares, that he is ready to take vengeance on their inventions. Their miserable sophistries and external defences would be equally unavailing in the day of rebuke. Those whom they had cunningly deceived, or violently overborne to their ruin, these would really be as the flesh in the midst of the cal- drouj the hapless victims of destruction ; but the treacherous and wicked priesthood would have to answer for their blood, and, as an abhorred race, would be driven from their imagined sanctuary, and slain by the hands of heathen in the borders of the land, — thus finding, as they deserved, a violent death and a polluted grave. (Comp. Jer. xxxix. 4, 5). As soon as the communication was made of this purpose to execute judgment on the corrupt priesthood, Pelatiah (God de- livers) fell down dead, — a manifest sign, that now all hope of a ^ The state of mind implied in the speech here put into the mouth of the priests, is vividly represented, and with substantial accuracy, by Calvin. He also perceived a reference to both the passages in Jeremiah, above noticed ; though, as formerly stated, he gave an untenable view of the first part, and understood it of the security the people now thought they had to build houses in Jerusalem. Various other modes of explanation have been adopted, — of which none, certainly, are more ridiculous than one of the last, that of Hitzig, who puts into the mouth of the priesthood the very tame and quite inappropriate sentiment : " War is at hand, we are going k) revolt ; it is therefore not a time for building houses, but rather for laying in provisions ! " That of Havernick, which we have followed, is the only one which at once gives to tlie words their proper rendering, and extracts from them a senti- ment entirely suited to the occasion. FORMATION OF A NEW PRIESTHOOD. Ill better issue was gone, that their defence was departed from them, and that the doom pronounced was sure of taking effect. The prophet at once perceived the meaning of this sign ; and, overwhelmed with the fearful carnage that now burst in pros- pect upon his view, he again prostrated himself, and exclaimed, " Ah ! Lord God, wilt thou make a full end of the remnant of Israel ? " Shall this be a final and exterminatingr iudmnent ? Must all perish, and the name Pelatiah henceforth be a lie ? It is this question that brings out the gleam of hope that still lingered amid all those dark and dismal proceedings. But this was not to be found in any mitigation of the purpose to Qxecute judgment upon Jerusalem, and to destroy the confi- dences of those who lived there. There must be, in that respect, a sweeping desolation ; and in that very exile, which the priests and princes of Jerusalem affected to look upon with such dis- dain, it was that the hope of Israel now lay, and from thence was the prospect of better days to begin. " Son of man, thy brethren, thy brethren are the men of thy redemption (thy Goalim — redemption- men), and all the house of Israel, the whole to whom the inhabitants of Jerusalem have said, Be ye far from the Lofd ; to us is this land given in posses- sion. Therefore say, Thus saith the Lord God, etc., ver. 15-21. The full import of the first part of this declaration has been considerably obscured by regarding the Goalim spoken of at the beginning as simply the relations or kindred of the prophet (which the word never properly means), and by mistaking the precise object of the affirmation made respecting them. The prophet, by birth a priest, felt, when he saw the priesthood in Jerusalem doomed to destruction, as if his own nearest kinsmen were given up to ruin ; so that it behoved him to do for them the part of the Goel, and plead or vindicate their cause. Accord- ing to the law of Moses, the right of the Goel belonged only to the brother, or, failing him, to the relative who stood nearest in blood, and so might fitly be regarded as the proper advocate, deputy, or avenger of the individual (Lev. xxv. ^b^ 48). Hence it w^as quite natural for the priest Ezekiel to identify himself with the priesthood in Jerusalem, so far as to feel called upon to espouse their cause, and even to regard his own interest as, in a manner, bound up with theirs. But that natural feeling, the 112 EZEKIEL XI. Lord now taught him, must give way to a higher one. " Thy. brethren, thy brethren " — the repetition of the word indicating, as very commonly in Hebrew, the stress that was intended to be laid upon the relationship — "thy proper, thy real brethren, these are no longer the priests in Jerusalem, with whom thou art bound by the natural ties of blood, and a common right to serve in the temple ; in place of these, doomed to destruction for their incorrigible wickedness, a new brotherhood must hence- forth become known to thee — a royal priesthood, which the Lord is going to form for himself out of the wreck of the natural community. Look no more to Jerusalem, but to thine expatri- ated countrymen, thy fellow-exiles on the banks of the Chebar, and the house of Israel generally, the whole of them that sur- vive. And in them, despised as they are by the inhabitants of Jerusalem, see the true brethren, whom the Lord is preparing as a spiritual seed for the glory of his name. Go and do for them the GoeVs part ; seek their deliverance. The great evangelical principle comes out here, that not those who are most highly esteemed among men, or who may appear to themselves nearest to tlie kingdom, are those whom God chooses, but rather the poor and despised, and such as, in a sense, are not. A spiritual priesthood, such as the Lord sought, could only be found among the broken hearts of the captivity. Weaned there from their fleshly confidences, humbled in the dust, nay, melted and fused in the hot furnace of affliction, they were in a condition to receive the riches of Divine grace, and repair anew to God for strength and blessing. And so then, as continually since, " the last were first " — for only through tribu- lation could the kingdom be entered. No door of hope at such a time, but in the valley of Achor. The Lord did not overlook the contrariety which his word to Ezekiel presented to outward appearances, and to the taunts which had been thrown out by the priests respecting the exiles, as to their being far from the Lord. " Therefore, say to them," the Lord continued, " because I have cast them far off among the heathen, and because I have scattered them among the countries, and have been to them for a sanctuary during a little season in the countries whither they have come ; therefore 1 also will gather you from the peoples," etc. As much as to say. It is true, they are in a sense far removed, and miserably scattered ; FORMATION OF A NEW PRIESTHOOD. 113 but tliat by no means necessarily involves their being also in a state of distance from God. They have lost access to the out- ward temple, where fellowship with God has chiefly been main- tained ; but God himself has come near to them ; he has become their sanctuary ; and as his presence can make any place a temple, so it has proved a present sanctuary to them, in the room of that which has become an abomination of desolation at Jeru- salem. Therefore, these are the true priesthood, and in due time shall be gathered again, and reinstated in the land. A great truth unfolds itself here for all times — that the Lord is not confined to temples made with hands, and that if there be but the lowly and spiritual heart, he is to be found in the most remote and lonely regions, not less than in the place more espe- cially consecrated to his service and glory. Yea, though it may be our own sins w^hich have conducted us into such regions, ancf in our very position we can discern too plainly the signs of an offended God, yet, if even then we cry to him, w^e need not doubt that he is near to give the blessing. But in so particularly un- folding this truth here for the people in exile, it is impossible not to see how the Lord was preparing the way for the better times of the gospel, when the material temple should pass away, and the spiritual alone should rise into view. It was the peculiar temptation of those who lived under the old economy, that even when not chargeable with corrupting the service of God, their minds were apt to contract themselves to the earthly pattern of sacred things exhibited before them, and they could scarcely realise a present God apart from the outward temple and the land of Canaan. So natural and so strong w^as this tendency, that we find the prophet Jonah attempting to evade the Lord's presence by endeavouring to withdraw to Tarshish. And if the feeling had been allowed to grow unchecked — if some great dis- pensation in Providence had not been sent in time — to loosen in some degree the tie that bound them to the outward and mate- rial, to expand and elevate their conceptions of God, we can easily conceive how alien and repulsive to the views of the most devout worshippers must have been the idea of Christ's spiritual king- dom and universal church. In this respect the dispersion, besides being a just chastisement on account of sin, and a salutary discipline to lead the heart of the people back to God, had an important end to accomplish as H 114 EZEKIEL XI. a preparatory movement in Providence for opening the way for Messiah's kingdom. It was very far from being an unmixed evil. As a mere external arrangement, it was destined to be of great service in diffusing the knowledge of God, and providing materials for the first foundations of the Christian church, by giving the bearers of God's truth a place and an influence in many of the most commanding positions in the heathen world. But still more important and necessary was the end it had to serve, in spiritualising the views of the better part of the Jews themselves, and training them to the knowledge and service of God, without the help of a material temple and an earthly king- dom. Practically it had the effect of indefinitely widening the bounds of Canaan, or of giving to the world at large somewhat of its distinctive characteristics, since the devout worshipper at Ba- bylon, Alexandria, Rome, or wherever he might be placed, found himself a partaker of God's presence and blessing, as well as in Jerusalem. What a mighty advance did the kingdom of God thus make toward the possession of the ^vorld ! And in render- ing the dispersion of his people instrumental to the attainment of such a result, how strikingly did the Lord manifest his power to overrule a present evil for the accomplishment of an ultimate good ! Nor were it, perhaps, too much to say, having respect to the issues of things, that the dispersion of the Israelites among the nations was fraught with as much blessing for the church and the world, as even their original settlement in Canaan. At the time, however, of this vision, when the old economy had still ages to run before it could give way to a better, the Lord could not allow the chosen land, and the outward temple, with wdiich it was so essentially connected, to lie long in a state of desolation. The separation of the covenant-people from them could only be temporary. And the very circumstance of God's promising to be a sanctuary to his people in exile — ready to meet them there with tokens of his presence — with refreshments and gifts of the Spirit — was itself an assurance, that a restora- tion could not be far distant. Hence the Lord couples with the promise a limitation in respect to time ; he was to be to them a sanctuary /o?' a little — not a little sanctuary, as in our common version and many others, which gives a sense derogatory to the majesty of God, and one also unsuited to the connection. The thought expressed is, that God would be to his people in exile FORMATION OF A NEW PmESTIIOOD. 115 instead of the temple, a sanctuary, so long as that exile lasted ; but bounds were to be set to it — it would not need to continue for a long period, as a return must again be opened up for them to the land of the covenant. Therefore the Lord immediately proceeds to declare his purpose to gather them out of the nations, among which they had been scattered ; and to do so expressly on the ground, that he had been to them for a sanctuary in their dispersed and scattered condition. Their scattering, in one sense, had been in another a gathering ; it had driven them to take up their refuge in God, thereby preparing and fitting them for being again restored to the land of their fathers. And so, as their sanctuary, God proceeds to make promise of his grace to re- new and sanctify their natures, to change their hearts as from stone to flesh, that when they returned, they might put away all the abominations which had brought such floods of judgment on the land. These abominations had rendered it what it origin- ally was, when its inhabitants were given up to the curse of Heaven ; but, returning to it with a heart utterly opposed to such defilements, they would make it again a holy and blessed habitation. Yet only in the event supposed — only if they hear- kened to the voice of God, and cherished the spirit of holiness and love he sought to implant within them. If any among them were still bent upon going after the heart of their vile and abo- minable things, they must reap in bitterness the fruit of their doings, and a threatening to that effect closes the communication. The promise of a return to Canaan, therefore, was not given to the exiles here, no more than its original possession had been granted, as an absolute and unconditional good. What it should be, would still depend upon the spiritual condition of the people themselves, whether they received or frustrated the grace brought to them through such messengers as Ezekiel and Daniel, and the other men of God raised up from time to time among the people. And comparing the promise of what should have been, with the record of what actually was, we find, that the word received but a partial fulfilment — just because the spiritual renovation had been so partially undergone ; and Canaan, as occupied by the restored remnant, was not the region of holiness here represented. Still the promise did not fail ; the Lord did provide for himself a spiritual offspring from the captivity, and plant them anew^ as a seed of blessing in the land of their fathers — enough to show 116 EZEKIEL XII. that he was mindful of his word — and enough also to furnish a pledge, that the sum of all promise — the work of reconciliation in Christ, and the inheritance by a redeemed people over his everlasting kingdom — would, in due time, be brought to com- pletion. Thus closes this remarkable series of visions. As soon as the last communication was uttered, the glory of the Lord, with the attendant cherubim, withdrew altogether from the temple and its courts, '^ leaving the house to them desolate," and retired even beyond the bounds of the city to the mount of Olives, there to watch upon the evil that was to befall the city. The prophet is borne back again in spirit to the elders, who sat before him, and descending from his state of ecstacy, reports to them what had passed in vision before the eye of his mind. That report itself formed the message, which their present circumstances required ; and it certainly contained much that was fitted to cheer them under the gloom that hung around their condition, as well as to awe and solemnise their hearts, by the thought of such appalling judgments ready to be executed against the guilty. CHx\PTER XII. THE VISION OF EZEKIEL's TYPICAL REMOVING AS AN EXILE, AND ACCOMPANYING INSTRUCTIONS. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying: 2. Son of man thou dwellest in the midst of the rebellious house, with those who have eyes to see and see not, who have ears to hear and hear not ; for they are a rebel- lious house. 3. And do thou, son of man, make thee an exile's implements,* 1 The expression m -is ''2'^ does not mean properly " stuflF for removing," but the articles or implements, which are proper to a person going as an exile or captive to a distant land : in particular, a staff, a scrip, and a knapsack, with a few supplies of food and clothing. The word n-;i;n, which is so often used by Ezekiel to denote the collected body of the exiles, is so used (as has been shown by Hengstenberg on Zech. xiv. 2) by way of personification, the captives being viewed collectively in the light of a female, humbled and depressed. The same kind of personification is applied, and carried out at considerable length, in reference to Babylon, in Isa. xlvii. Hence those who VISION OF EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL EXILE. 117 and go into exile before their eyes ; and thou shalt remove from thy place to another place before their eyes, if perchance they will see, for they are a re- bellious house. 4. And thou shalt bring forth thy implements as an exile's iniplements by day before their eyes ; and in the evening thou shalt go forth before their eyes as the going forth of the exile. 5. Before their eyes dig thee through in the wall, and go forth thereby. 6. Before their eyes bear upon the shoulder, carry out in the dark night ;^ thou shalt cover thy face, that thou see not the earth ; for I have set thee as a portent^ to the house of Israel. 7. And I did as 1 was commanded ; I brought forth implements by day as the implements of an exile ; and in the evening I dug for me in the wall with the hand ; in the darkness of night I brought out upon the shoul- der, I bore before their eyes. 8. And the word of Jehovah came to me in the morning, saying, 9. Son of man, does not the house of Israel, the rebellious house, say to thee. What doest thou ? 10. Say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, The prince is this burden in Jerusalem, and all the house of Israel in their midst.' 11. Say, I am a portent to you ; according as I have done, so shall it be done to you ; as exiles, as captives (literally, in exile, in captivity), they shall go forth. 12. And the prince that is in the midst of them shall bear upon his shoulder in the darkness of night, and shall go forth ; through the wall they shall dig to carry forth by it ; he shall cover his face, that he see not the earth with his eye. 13. And I shall spread my net over him, and he shall be taken in my snare ; and I will bring him to Babylon to the land of the Chaldeans ; yet he shall not see it, and there shall he die. 14. And all that are round about him I will scatter, and all his forces will I scatter to every wind ; and will draw out a sword after them. 15. And they shall know that I am Jehovah, when I scatter them among the nations, and disperse them among the coun- tries. 16. And 1 shall leave of them a few men (literally, men by number), from the sword, from the famine, and from the pestilence ; in order that returned to Jerusalem, are, in Ezra viii. 35, not only said to have " come out of captivity," but also to be "the children of the captivity," i. e., of the captives. Denoting properly a captive or exiled state, it may, of course, be understood of any in that state, whether one or many. The same phrase as in our text, is used by Jeremiah, ch. xlvi. 19, of Egypt, where the marginal reading in our Bibles is, " make thee instruments of captivity." ^ The word n-^Sya is so seldom used, that there might be some dubiety as 7 T " T to its exact meaning, were it not for the passage, Gen. xv. 17, where it certainly means the thick darkness of night. We may suppose it here to refer to any part of the night, though naturally to the earlier part ; but to the night, as enveloping the person in a deep shade, and so affording the opportunity of a secret escape. ^ Portent seems to come nearer to the import of r'r"-^ than sign. It is properly a wonder, or miracle, then something extraordinary and ominous — here ominous of evil, a portent. What was now done by Ezekiel in vision, typically foreshadowed fearful transactions of a like kind in real life. ^ The pouncing at once here on the prince in Jerusalem, as the foremost object in the prophetic burden, is very emphatic ; it proclaimed aloud that the man in whom they were trusting for safety, was himself to be the chief sufferer in the impending calamities. 118 EZEKIEL Xir. tliey may declare all their abominations among the heathen among whom they come ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. 17. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying: 18. Son of man, eat thy bread with quaking, and drink thy water with trembling and with carefulness. 19. And say to the people of the land, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, towards the land of Israel, they shall eat their bread with carefulness, and their water shall they drink in desolateness, that her land may be made desolate, because of the violence of all that dwell therein. 20. And the cities that are inhabited shall be laid waste, and the land shall be desolate ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 21. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 22. Son of man, Avhat is that proverb ye have in the land of Israel, saying, The days are pro- longed, and every vision fails. 23. Therefore say unto them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I will make this proverb to cease, and they shall no more use it as a proverb in Israel ; but say unto them. The days are at hand, and the word (viz., in its fulfilment) of every vision. 24. For there shall be no more any vain vision, nor flattering divination within the house of Israel. 25. For I Jehovah will speak whatever word I will speak, and it shall be done; it shall be no more prolonged; for in your days, O rebellious house, will I speak the word, and will perform it, saith the Lord Jehovah. 26. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying : 27. Son of man, behold the house of Israel say. The vision which he sees is for many days, and he pro- phesies of the times that are far off. 28. Therefore say unto them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, no longer shall any of n)y words be prolonged ; whatever word I may speak, it shall be done, saith the Lord Jehovah. Theke is nothing absolutely new in this portion, if viewed simply in regard to the great objects of the tidings it conveys. The bur- den of some of the preceding visions is again resumed, and several striking particulars added, to confirm the certainty of the coming evil, and beget, if possible, a deeper impression of its fearful nature. The elders, it would seem, had withdrawn, to whom the prophet had communicated the A^isions already imparted to him respecting the crying abominations and approaching doom of Jerusalem. He is to all appearance alone at the time of the Spirit's next descent upon him ; and, indeed, the persons imme- diately interested in the revelation given, were not those around him on the banks of the Cliebar, but those still residing in Jeru- salem — " the rebellious house," as they are described in ver. 2, in words originally addressed by Moses to their fathers (Deut. xxix. 4), " who have eyes to see, and see not, and ears to hear, and liear not." Yet he is spoken of as dwelling in the midst of them, and is commanded to exhibit in his own person a typical representation of what was to happen. " It may be," said the Lord, " they will see, though they are a rebellious house." Two things were to be done by Ezekiel. He was, first, in open day, and in the sight of his neighbours, to provide for himself the VISION OF EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL EXILE. 119 articles usually taken by one, who was going to flee as for his life, or be dragged as a captive to a foreign land. Then, being thus provided, he was ordered to wait till the evening, and depart " as they that go forth into captivity." The expression in the original refers properly, not to the persons of such as went into exile, but to the ptemc?. usually chosen for their doing so; it is literally, " as the goings forth of the exile," viz., amid the dark- ness and silence of night, when he can most easily effect his escape. If more exactly defined, the period intended would be certainly the earlier part of the night, yet still not simply the evening, nor the twilight, as is improperly given by our trans- lators in ver. 6, but rather by night, after it had become dark. When it is said, therefore (in ver. 3), that the prophet was to remove " by day before their eyes," the meaning is, not that he should then actually change his abode, but that he should be employed in the business of removing, so as to give clear evidence to all, that this was his object, which he only waited for the shades of evening to carry into effect. Nor was this all ; the nocturnal departure was not of itself sufficient to indicate the approaching future ; he must also effect his escape through a hole in the wall, as one too closely watched by hostile parties to ad- venture into the open street, and must cover his face, as too sorrowful or abashed even to look upon the ground. The instnictions, thus given are reported to have been faith- fully complied with by the prophet ; and on the morrow, the word of the Lord came to him in explanation of the action, telling him, that in all that he had done he was merely fore- shadowing, as in a type, what was presently to take place with Zedekiah and his people at Jerusalem. And then he goes on to portray, with an appalling distinctness of vision and minute- ness of detail, the disasters that had been prefigured, first and most prominently in the case of Zedekiah, and then in the case of the people at large. In this detail he specifies not only the fact of Jerusalem's approaching overthrow, but also the king's hurried and disgraceful flight under cover of night — the failure of his attempt to escape — his seizure by the Chaldeans — his deportation to Babylon, though in a state in which he should not be able to see it — the utter prostration of his host — the disper- sion of his people among the nations, and the miserable desola- tion of the whole land. The variety of particulars mentioned 120 EZEKIEL XII. ill this prediction, coupled with tlie confirmation given to them in the subsequent history, as recorded in 2 Kings xxv., and Jer. lii., is of a very strikijig nature, and entitles the jn'ophecy to a place among the more remarkable delinea- tions of coming events in Scripture. Nor can we wonder at the statement made By Josephus (AnU b. x. c. 7), though we have no other evidence of its truth, that Ezekiel sent a copy of it to. Zedekiah. The report carries the more probability with it, as Jeremiah's letter of sympathy and counsel to the captives on the river Chebar was what instrumentally called forth at first the agency of Ezekiel ; and it was no more than might be ex- pected, that he should endeavour to strengthen the hands of his spiritual father in the land of Judah, by sending in turn a mes- sage to Jerusalem, confirmator}- of the warnings already uttered there by Jeremiali. On the supposition of this having been ac- tually done by Ezekiel, the farther report of Josephus, as to the effect produced upon Zedekiah by the communication, readily commends itself to our belief. He states, that the infatuated pnnce, instead of simply receiving the word of God, began to compare together the predictions of Jeremiah and Ezekiel, and finding that the one declared he should be carried to Babylon, while the other affirmed he should, indeed, be brought to Baby- lon, but should not see it, he presently concluded, that the tyvo predictions were at variance with each other, and rejected both as false. In this he but showed the captious disposition of superficial inquirers and shallow unbelievers of all ages, who no sooner discover some obvious difficulties on the surface of reve- lation, than they conclude the whole to be a cunningly devised fable, or treat it as unworthy of their serious consideration. Would they but search a little deeper, and survey, in a spirit of impartiality, the entire field of revelation, they w^ould find, that the things which at first stagger their belief, disappear on closer inspection, or remain only as difficulties inseparable from com- munications, which bear respect to the character and purposes of Godhead. They would not unfrequently find, what w'as found by Zedekiah too late for his own good, that the very things which are most apt at first to create a feeling of distrust or suspicion, are those which contain the most undoubted evidences of the finger of God. Human sagacity might possibly have foreseen, or, by a happy conjecture, anticipated, the coming ru])ture be- VISION OF EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL EXILE. 121 tween Zedekiah and the Chaldeans, and the consequent overthrow of the city, Jerusalem ; but that Zedekiah should endeavour to make his escape from it by night, should be caught in the attempt, should meet face to face with the king of Babylon, should himself be carried to Babylon, though (from his eyes having been mean- while put out) should not actually behold the place; — that such a train of peculiar circumstances should have been delineated beforehand by the hand of a prophet, manifestly bespoke the directing agency of that Spirit who sees the end from the beginning. The circumstance that the burden contained in this Divine communication had direct reference to the king and people of Jerusalem, alone renders it highly probable, that the symbolical action here also took place, not externally, but in vision. So far as the parties immediately interested were concerned, the repre- sentation would have been equally significant, if confined to that region within which the prophet's soul properly moved when supernaturally acted on by the Spirit of God, as if exhibited under the form of an outward and ordinary transaction. Indeed, the action is described as proceeding among the very people, for whom the instruction was peculiarly intended, " the rebellious people among whom he dwelt," as if his abode had actually been transferred from Chebar to Jerusalem. So, too, when the action was done, it was still the same *^ rebellious house, the house of Israel," who are represented as saying to him, " What doest thou ?" Throughout the representation the prophet appears pre- sent in the Spirit at Jerusalem, and transacting there directly wdth its people ; but how he could be, and transact, there, while personally resident on the banks of the Chebar, otherwise than in vision, it seems impossible to understand. Besides, if the action had taken place on the territory of real life, how could it have appeared to be other than an incongruous thing for an individual, himself living in exile, to personate, by his removal, the going of his brethren into exile from their proper home in Judea? The action would rather have carried a contrary import — would most naturally have signified the return of his fellow-exiles to Judea — unless it proceeded on the supposition of his being for the time located — of course, as an ideal inhabitant — in his native land. At the same time, holding the action to have taken place in vision, as it certainly bore respect more immediately to the king 122 EZEKIEL xir. and people of Jerusalem, we are not to imagine, that the instruc- tion was without meaning for the prophet's fellow-captives in Chaldea. For many of these, probably by much the larger por- tion of them, were still hanging their hopes upon tlie fallacious confidence, that matters should ere long right themselves with the house of David, so as to admit of their returning again to the land of their fathers. They were but externally dwelling at a distance, for Jerusalem still lived in their hearts ; the delusions, which were reigning at the one place, liad found a home also in the other ; and, just as in the preceding visions, the communica- tions given to the prophet for the behoof of his fellow-captives, were fitted also to admonish and warn the people of .Jerusalem ; so now, inversely, the word received, and most probably sent as soon as received, for the use of the people of Jerusalem, was fraught with wholesome instruction to those among whom he lived and laboured on the Chebar. If anything could have broken the spell of delusion which lay upon the minds of Zedekiah and his counsellors, or their adher- ents in Chaldea, one might suppose this instructive action of the prophet would have done it, especially when followed up by such a minute and varied detail of approaching calamities. Nor was it merely the certainty of those calamities being appointed, which he thus sought to impress upon them ; he was equally explicit in regard to their nearness. For, well knowing how some were ready to treat the message w^ith scorn, and others, though not prepared utterly to despise it, were yet disposed to put away from them the evil day, the Lord spake further in the ears of the prophet, ^' Son of man, what is that proverb ye have in the land of Israel, saying, The days are prolonged, and every vision fails? Tell them, therefore. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I will make this proverb to cease, and they shall no more use it as a proverb in Israel ; but say unto them, The days are at hand, and the word of every vision." It would seem, the class of persons here re- ferred to had succeeded in persuading themselves that as the evil had so often been threatened and still postponed, the evil itself had no reality ; the experience of God's forbearance had destroyed their apprehension of his truthfulness ; so that on hearing such an unwelcome message as that contained in the earlier part of this chapter, they were ready to dispose of it by the slighting re- mark, ^' Ah, we have heard many woi'ds like these before, yet VISION OF EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL EXILE. 123 matters have not turned out so bad ! " They not merely thought much time had still to elapse before the prophetic roll discharged its burden of woe, but a spirit of unbelief had taken possession of their minds regarding the reality of the burden itself; they deemed it but a dream of the prophet's own mind. And there were others, who simply presumed upon the delay they expected to intervene, and, as is said in Amos vi. 3, " put far from them the evil day." They did not deny that a day of evil was coming, but indulged the hope that it might still be at a considerable dis- tance. They were disposed to say, as Ezekiel himself reports their words, in ver. 27, "The vision that he sees, is for many days to come, and he prophesies of the times that are far off." But to them also the prophet was commanded to reply, " There shall none of my words be prolonged any more, but the word which I have spoken shall be done, saith the Lord." The incredulous and secure feeling, which is here ascribed to the people of Jenisalem, growing as the hour of destruction ap- proached, is in perfect accordance with the testimony recorded in other prophetical Scriptures. Thus Zephaniah declares the Lord's determination " to search Jerusalem, and punish the men that are settled on their lees; that say in their heart, The Lord will not do good, neither will he do evil" (chap. i. 12). In a spirit of practical atheism, they had sunk into the convic- tion that there would be no special interposition of Heaven at all, and that, whatever the people might do, events would take their natural course. But still more expressly Jeremiah, " Be- hold, they say unto me, where is the word of the Lord ? Let it come now " (chap. xvii. 15). That this was said in a feeling of scornful disbelief regarding the evil he had so often foretold, is evident from the vindication he immediately presents for himself, protesting before God, that " he had not desired the evil day," but spake only that which God had put into his lips. And again, in chap, xx., he describes the anguish of soul he expe- rienced on account of the treatment that was given to the word of God, which had nearly prevailed on him to yield to the temp- tation of ceasing to utter it any more. " I cried out, I cried violence and spoil ; because the word of the Lord was made a reproach to me, and a derision daily. Then I said, I will not make mention of him, nor speak any more in his name. But it was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones, and I 124 EZEKIEL XII. was weary with forbearing, and I could not stay." No wonder, then, that Ezekiel, in his distant exile, should have sympathised with his afflicted brother in Judah, and should have sought to strengthen him in his conflict with evil, by levelling a word of severe reproof against the vain presumptions and false confi- dences, which were so offensively rearing their head among the people of Jerusalem. The one prophet did for the other the part of a true fellow-labourer in the service of God. He came boldly to his help in the day of blasphemy and rebuke, and gave fresh support to the cause of righteousness and truth, by pro- claiming from another watchtower the faithful, though despised, warninoj-note of dano^er. We cannot but think w^ith wonder, when we look back upon the times of these Olds Testament prophets, of the obstinate incredulity and measureless content, in which so many of the people seem to have shut themselves up, alike in defiance of the most solemn warnings of God, and in spite of several lo wring appearances in Providence, which seemed to give no doubtful indications of a coming storm. So too, doubtless, thought the next generation of the Jews themselves, when, in the language of Zechariah, they saw how " God's words and statutes, w^hich he commanded his servants the prophets, had taken hold of their fathers " (chap. i. 6). But it is well for us to bear in mind, that the spirit of unbelief and false security, which pre- vailed so extensively then, is ever springing forth anew, and is plainly announced in New Testament Scripture as destined to form a distinguishing characteristic of the last times. It was a significant question of our Lord, and evidently pointed to the great defect in this respect that should discover itself before the consummation of all things, " when the Son of man comes, shall he find faith in the earth % " Such faith, namely, as he had been speaking of — faith realising in firm confidence the certainty of the Lord's manifestation to put a final end to the evils that afflict his church, and in this confidence waiting, hoping, pray- ing to the last. The apostle Peter also still more distinctly intimates in his second epistle what might be looked for : — ^' There shall come in the last days, scoffers, walking after their own lusts, and saying. Where is the promise of his coming ? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the world." It will readily be understood VISION OF EZEKIEL'S TYPICAL EXILE. 125 that the danger from this source to the faith of God's elect will always be the greater, the more the time is lengthened out that is to intervene between the first and second coming of the Lord. For time, which is justly said to try all things, in this respect also tries faith, that it silently impairs in men's minds the foun- dation on which faith rests — the word of God. In common with other things of meaner value, this, too, seems to wax old as time proceeds, and to become, the longer it is in use, the less in power and value. Even already it is looked upon by many as comparatively antiquated, or out of date ; the facts of which it testifies, are but faintly descried in the distant past ; centuries have rolled away since they took place and were put on record ; and the record itself has been so long in existence, so frequently handled, and so fully discussed, that, with those to whom nothing is interesting but what possesses the freshness of novelty, the sacred volume, so far from being able to nourish and support a living faith, has itself become stale and dead. Thus it is that natural men judge of God's word, as if, like their own productions, it were subject to wasting and decay. They know not that this word of God, being the expression of his own eternal nature, has in it what lives and abides for ever, — what is as new and fresh to the heart of faith still, as the very moment when, ages ago, it proceeded from the lips of those who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. Then, along with a prevailing ignorance or forgetfulness of this great truth, there is the fascinating influence w^hich is apt to be wielded over men's minds by the onward movements of society in knowledge and civilization. Here they find an attractive contrast to the stationary character of the ground and objects of faith. For everything in this lower field seems constantly in progress, and big with hope for the future. It is deemed incredible, that while such vital powers are at work, and such a career of advancement is in prospect, God should lay a sudden arrest on the vast machinery, and wind up the affairs of the Avorld by bringing in the fixed and final issues of eternity. Nay, the belief of a personal God, separate from the workmanship of his own hands, and capable of suddenly introducing a state of things altogether new, is, in many quarters, fast giving way. In a new and peculiarly subtle form, the old carnal and idolatrous tenden- cies are reviving, impiously commingling the Divine and human, 120 EZKKIEL XITT. identifying the creature with the Creator. And, judging from present appearances, there is too much reason to conclude that, precisely as before Christ came to execute judgment upon Jeru- salem, a rage for ivorldly saviours was one of the reigning delu- sions of the time, so as the period drawls on for his coming to execute judgment upon the world, a like rage will prevail for a worldly gospel^ — one that will seek to confound heaven and earth, God and man, and, in a manner, possibly even more daring and presumptuous than in the Papacy, will dispose man to " exalt himself in the temple of God, and show himself that he is God." What need, then, for those who would escape the condemnation of the wicked, to look well to the foundation of their faith, and to see that this stands not in the wisdom of man, but in the word of God ! How careful should each be to dwell beside the fountain of Israel ! For times of trial manifestly are coming, in which they only who are taught of God, and kept by the power of his Spirit, can expect to resist the swelling tide of delusion, and maintain even the appearance of godliness. CHAPTER Xm. THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS CHARACTER AND DOOM. A VERY close connection exists between the subject of this chapter and the one immediately preceding. The former had denounced the false expectations of the people respecting the safety of Jerusalem ; this denounces the persons who were the chief instruments in feeding these expectations. And in this case, still more directly than in the other, Ezekiel stretches out the hand to Jeremiah, and comes forward as a second, though perfectly independent witness, to reiterate and confirm the testimony already delivered in substance by his fellow-servant in Judea. One of the sorest trials — and, indeed, one of the most baffling difficulties Jeremiah had there to contend with — arose from the false pretenders to the prophetical gift, who were con- stantly delivering, in the name of God, messages which tended only to foster prevailing sins, and to lend the appearance of a thp: false in prophecYj its character and doom. 127 Divine sanction to the popular delusions. " Mine heart within me is broken," he says, in chap, xxiii. 9, " because of the pro- phets ; all my bones shake ; I am like a drunken man." It is more than probable, that most of these false prophets were per- fectly conscious of the fraud they were practising upon the people, and laid claim to Divine communications only as a pre- text for more readily securing their own selfish, though short- sighted purposes. But ft seems evident, especially from what is written in Jeremiah, that there were, at least, some who had become the dupes of their own delusions, and were fully as much fanatics as knaves. A crafty diviner, who plays upon the cre- dulity of others, for the sake of his own gain or aggrandisement, will always be careful to make his announcements run in such a strain, that while they obviously tend to feed the desires and prejudices of the persons he addresses, they at the same time furnish no clear and definite grounds for detecting his hypocrisy. And whenever such vain pretenders to a supernatural insight into the Divine will begin to hazard deliverances, which admit of being distinctly falsified as well as confirmed by approaching events in Providence, we may be sure that the spirit of fanaticism has risen to the ascendant in their bosoms, and that, if they de- ceive others, they have themselves already been deceived. Such, unquestionably, was the case at Jerusalem in the time of Jeremiah. Not only were there persons, in considerable numbers, who prophesied falsely, and gave forth general assur- ances of continued peace (Jer. v. 31; vi. 14; xiv. 13), but there were also those who, in the most confident tone, held out the promise of specific events in the immediate future, and fixed the period of their fulfilment. Thus Hananiah of Gibeon said to Jeremiah, in the house of the Lord, in the presence of the priests and of all the people — " Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, saying, I have broken the yoke of the king of Babyhm. Within two full years will I bring again into this place all the vessels of the Lord's house, which Nebuchadnezzar took away from this place, and carried them to Babylon. And I will bring again to this place Jeconiah, the son of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, with all the captives of Judah, that went into Babylon, saith the Lord ; for I will break the yoke of the king of Babylon" (chap, xxviii. 2-4). No man in his senses would have ventured on such a circumstantial prediction, unless he had 128 EZEKIEL xiir. himself firmly believed it ; for he was plainly committing his entire credit as an authorized ambassador of Heaven, to contin- gencies over w^hich he had no control, and which might shortly take a turn that would expose him to reprobation as an arrant impostor. By whatever process the persuasion may have been reached, we cannot doubt that he had become thoroughly per- suaded in his own mind of the truth of his prediction, before he proclaimed it in the public ear. And we must keep in mind the fact, that there were such self-deceived impostors at Jerusalem — a fact, as we shall see, pointedly referred to in this chapter of Ezekiel — both to understand correctly the circumstances of the time, and to derive from them the improvement they are fitted to convey. It is to be further borne in mind, that while the spirit of false prophesying chiefly prevailed in Judea, it had also extended to the banks of the Chebar. There it, no doubt, existed in com- parative feebleness, having few of the outward stimulants to nurse it into activity and strength, which were supplied in abun- dance by the peculiar position and circumstances of Jerusalem ; and it probably did little more than re-echo the utterances which proceeded from its centre of influence in Judea. Yet that there was such a spirit at work also on the banks of the Chebar, is manifest alone from the letter addressed by Jeremiah to the captives, in which he charged them " not to be deceived by their prophets and their diviners that were in the midst of them, for they prophesied falsely in the Lord's name ;" and he even men- tioned three persons by name, Ahab, Zedekrah, and Shemaiah, who were acting the part of false prophets among them (chap. xxix. 8, 9, 21, etc.) So that the evil against which the commu- nication in this chapter is directed, was not without its abettors in the immediate neighbourhood of Ezekiel, although, in the rampant and offensive form here delineated, it was to be found only in Jerusalem, and the word, therefore, must be regarded as directly and primarily intended for the use of those who still resided there. For this reason, also, it is, that the word of Eze- kiel joins itself so closely to similar words previously delivered by Jeremiah on the spot, and in the very language employed, bears unmistakeable references, especially to the 23d chapter of that prophet's writings. But it is time to come to the more particular examination of the 129 passage itself. It naturally falls into two principal parts — the one bearing respect to the false prophets, and the other to the false prophetesses. Each of these again admits of a twofold division — a first part, delineating the operations and symptoms of the false spirit in question, and a second, disclosing the judg- ment of God upon those who yielded themselves to its sway. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying: 2. Son of man, prophesy against the prophets of Israel that prophesy, and say unto the pro- phets out of their own hearts, Hear ye the word of Jehovah. 3, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe to the foolish prophets, that follow their own spirit, and have seen nothing. 4. As foxes in the deserts have been thy prophets, O Israel. 5. Ye have not gone up into the breach, nor have ye drawn a wall around the house of Israel, to stand in the battle in the day of the Lord. 6. They have seen vanity and lying divination, saying, Jehovah saith ; and Jehovah hath not sent them, and hoped to establish their word.^ 7. Have ye not seen a vain vision, and spoken a lying divination ? And ye say, Jeho- vah saith, and I have not spoken, 8. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jeho- vah, Because ye have spoken vanity and seen a lie, therefore behold I am against you, saith the Lord Jehovah. 9. And my hand will come upon the prophets who prophesy vanity and divine falsehood ; in the council of ray people they shall not be, nor shall they be written in the book of the house of Israel ; and into the land of Israel they shall not come ; and ye shall know that I am the Lord Jehovah. 10. Because, even because they have seduced my people, saying Peace, and there Avas no peace; and the one (viz., the people) build a wall, and the others (viz., the prophets) plaster it with white- wash : 2 11. Say unto them who plaster it with whitewash, and it shall fall : 1 This last clause is rendered in the authorised version, " and they made others to hope, that they would confirm the word." But ^ni with V, as Ha v. remarks, always means to expect or hope for something. The correct inter- pretation, therefore, is that which refers the hope to the prophets themselves. Seeker : " They hoped to establish the word." Michaehs: " They hoped, that their words would be fulfilled.'' Hitzig's attempt to change the refer- ence — " Jehovah has not sent them, that they should hope for the confirma- tion of their words" — is quite arbitrary, and has been resorted to merely because he thought the prophets could not be so self-deceived. But there are sufficient grounds, as we shall show, for holding that they were so. And such expressions as those in Jeremiah : " I have not sent these prophets, yet they ran, I have not spoken by them, yet the people said," " They say the burden of the Lord" (ch. xxiii. 21, 34), betoken the working of a strong spirit of delusion. ^ " Daub with untempered mortar" is the phrase used for this operation in the authorised version, as in many others, ancient and modem. It partly, however, suggests a false idea. The word Vsp, when used in a physical sense, is simply coating, or whitewash, such as is usually laid on the outside of walls. Jarchi : est terra similis calci. Hitzig renders expressly, and not improperly chalk. The idea intended is, that the false prophets, countenancing the I 130 EZEKIEL XIII. There is coming a flood of rain, and ye, O great hailstones, shall fall, and a stormy wind shall break forth.^ 12. And lo ! the wall falls : shall it not be said to you, where is the plastering with which ye plastered it ? 13. There- fore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And I cause to break forth a stormy wind in my wrath, and a flood of rain shall come in mine anger, and great hail- stones in fury to consume. 14. And I destroy the wall, which ye have plastered with whitewash, and bring it down to the ground; and its foundations are discovered, and it falls, and ye are consumed in the midst of it ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 15. And 1 accomplish my wrath upon the wall, and upon them that plastered it with Avhitewash, and Avill say unto you, The wall is not, and they are not that plastered it ; 16. The prophets of Israel, that prophesy to Jerusalem, and see a vision of peace for her, while there is no peace — saith the Lord Jehovah. 17. And thou, son of man, set .thy face against the daughters of thy peo- ple, that prophesy out of their own heart, and prophesy against them. 18. And thou shalt say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe to the women that sew cushions (or coverings) upon all the joints of the hands, and make cover- ings upon the head of every stature, to catch (as a hunter) souls. Will ye catch the souls of my people, and save your own souls aUve?^ 19. And will people in their delusions, sought merely to make the outside fair — to give to the fabric the people raised a showy and promising appearance, while still there was not real solidity or inherent strength. Hence St Paul's word to the high-priest, " Thou Avhited wall," Acts xxiii. 3, and the " whited sepulchre," of our Lord, in Matt, xxiii. 27. ^ The verb ^ps commonly signifies to cleave or rend asunder ; in the Piel to cleave, for example, wood, or tear an object, like a wild beast. Hence it has here commonly been understood of rending or breaking down the wall. But the object of the rending is not expressed; and in ver. 13, it seems plainly to be applied in the causal form, to the wind itself: I make it rend or break forth. It is best, therefore, to understand it in the same sense also in v. 11. The Latins use the quite similar phrase, ventus frangit, for a violent gale. In Greek also '^f,yvv/u,, is often applied to the breaking forth of storms and showers. 2 It is scarcely possible to make out with certainty the precise meaning of some of the expressions in this verse — reference being made to customs, of Avhich we have no exact description. What is meant by the cushions, or pillows (as it is in the common translation, and in the Rabbins pulvinar longius), was probably some sort of soft covering or tapestry, used for pur- poses of luxury. They are said to have been sewed for " all the joints of the hands" — so the words literally mean ; referring, probably, to the wrists and elbow-joints. By comparing Jer. xxxviii. 12, and xli. 9, we learn that it was used of shoulder or elbow-joints ; and in ver. 20 here, the articles of dress are spoken of as going to be torn from the arms of the wearers. The head- dresses, or kerchiefs on every stature seem to be the mantles or coverings, with which the women of the east envelope their heads, and which are sometimes made, both of large dimensions, and of costly workmanship. And as it would certainly be a peculiar expression " coverings upon the head of every stature," if by every stature were meant persons of difierent heights, it is better, per- THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS CHARACTER AND DOOM. 131 ye pollute me among my people for handfuls of barley, and for pieces of bread, to slay the souls that should not die, and to save alive souls that should not live, by your lying to my people that hearken to lies ? 20. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I am against your cushions, with which ye there catch souls for flying (or making to fly)i ; and I will tear them from ofif your arms, and let the souls go, the souls that ye catch to make to fly. 21 . And I will tear ofi" your coverings (for the head), and will deliver my people out of your hand ; and they shall be no more in your hand to be caught ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 22. Because ye have made sad with lies the heart of the righteous, whom I did not make sad ; and have strengthened the hands of the wicked, that he should turn from his wicked way, that he might live ; 23. Therefore ye shall see no more vanity, nor divine divinations ; and I will deliver my people out of your hand, and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. I. We look first at the case of the false prophets. 1. These are variously described ; and first, in regard to the haps, with Havernick, to regard " coverings upon the head" as a complex phrase, like " head-coverings," qualified by the " every stature," or size, to denote the difierent conditions and ages of persons, who had such articles of seduction provided and fitted for them. The persons who are described as doing such things, are obviously represented as plying the arts of seduction, proper to the most abandoned characters ; and in ver. 19 are still farther assi- milated to them by seeking for their reward only " handfuls of barley and pieces of bread," — the smallest rewards. 1 We retain the meaning of niir^s^ given in the authorised version ; which is that also adopted by Gesenius for this passage, and is supported by the Syriac. It certainly, however, does not yield a very distinct or plain mean- ing. The sense in which the word is commonly found, is that of sprouting or fiourishing — in which sense it occurs also in Ezekiel, at ch. xvii. 24. Gussetius would retain that sense here, and renders, ut eflSorescant, that they may flourish or be prosperous. But it is somewhat incongruous to apply such a term to those who are represented immediately before under the image of snared birds. The Septuagint renders hs ^lottr^co^^tfff^ov, for scattering or dispersion — probably understanding the sort of flying meant, to be that of a forced flight to other and distant regions. Ewald interprets : " as if they were birds of passage ;" differing little from the sense given by old Pradus : " with which ye catch souls for birds, i. e., as if they were birds — animas vo- lantes." This mode of interpretation, which seems competent, would make the flying an indication of the light and unstable character of the persons so caught. But probably the more natural meaning is, to regard it as pointing to the result, expressed so as to indicate, with a certain degree of irony, the contrariety between what was promised, and what actually happened. The souls were caught, like silly birds, expecting to get as it were new wings to fly aloft in ample freedom and prosperity ; but it was only to fly away from their native home to the land of captivity. Havernick 's interpretation of diversions ( wanton pleasures), is without any proper foundation, and has only certain analogies to support it. 132 EZEKIEL XIII. fundamental distinction that existed betwixt them and the true. " Son of man, prophesy against the prophets of Israel that pro- phesy, and say thou unto the prophets out of their own hearts, Hear ye the word of Jehovah : Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe unto the foolish prophets that follow their own spirit, and haA^e seen nothing." A threefold error, — first, in regard to the source from which their messages were derived, "their own hearts" (so also in Jer. xxiii. 16, 17) ; then, in the point aimed at, going " after their own spirit," or following the bent of their natural inclinations ; and finally, in the result attained, " they saw nothing," and yet spake as if they had seen something. Expressed in philosophical language, the wdiole was subjective merely, without any objective reality, — hence, but a vision in the air, a false and shadowy superstructure. The true prophet dif- fered in each particular from the false one : He prophesied not from his own heart, but from the heart of God; in conceiving and uttering his message, he followed not his own spirit, but the Spirit of God ; and consequently, the message he delivered was fraught with a Divine reality. There was, first of all, something objective in his experience, something presented to his soul from above, which gave rise to whatever belonged to him of a subjec- tive character — at once lighted, and fed the flame. Hence the expression we sometimes meet with in the prophets, of their seeing the Divine vision : " The vision of Isaiah, the son of Amos, which he saw;" " The burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see;" and the still more peculiar expression, which is frequently em- ployed, of seeing the Word of the Lord (Isa. ii. 1, xiii. 1 ; Amos i. 1 ; Mic. i. 1). " The perception of the Word, which God communicated to the prophets, was made by means of the spiri- tual sense, the apprehension of which is named, in reference to the noblest of the natural senses, a seeing. For what enters into the consciousness of the prophet as such, is not the product of his own natural power of reflection, but an object presented to him by the Spirit of God as from without, and by himself discerned through the opened spiritual eye. The Word itself, indeed, is not seen, inasmuch as it is the body, in a manner, of the thought which has come into the region of his sensible apprehensions. But as the communication of the Divine Word to the prophet is to be conceived of as a purely internal, not a corporeally audible one (unless the contrary is distinctly specified), and the Divine THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS CHARACTER. 133 idea presents itself, not mediately through the natural sense, but directly to the spirit of the prophet ; so the notion of seeing is in its proper place; the prophet perceives that which thereafter forms itself in his soul, as the cover (veil) of the external word."^ Here, then, lay the grand characteristic of the true prophet, as distinguished from the false. There was exhibited objectively to his soul, through the operation of the Spirit of God, a thought, or succession of thoughts — an action, perhaps, revealing the mind and will of God ; and then taking up this in the apprehension of his mind, he went forth to declare it to others, as from his own inward consciousness, clothed in such words as fitly expressed what had been seen within. With the false prophet, on the other hand, even supposing him to be perfectly sincere in what he uttered, all proceeded from the impulse of his own inflated imagination or excited feelings ; the whole was from within merely, nothing from without, from above. Yet with this dis- tinction so clearly traced, and traced for the express purpose of drawing the line of demarcation between the true and the false in prophetic utterances, we are still presented with views and theories of inspiration, which, in the case of inspired men generally, pro- phets as well as evangelists and apostles, if they do not altogether discard the objective, render the subjective alone prominent — make so much account of the internal consciousness or intuitional sense of the subject of inspiration, as necessarily to throw into the background the Divine communication made to him from above. But in the two classes of prophets here presented to our notice, the one could lay claim, as well as the other, to the in- ternal consciousness of some spiritual thought, or idea ; the only question was, whence came the idea? Did it spring up from within, as of itself? or, was it presented there by the Spirit of God? Was the mind's consciousness of the thoughts and feel- ings it experienced, of its own awakening, or was it awakened by a Divine and formal communication from above ? If we lose sight of this important distinction, we virtually make no account of what constitutes the fundamental element of a Divine revela- tion, and leave ourselves without a fixed landmark between the movements of God's Spirit, and the capricious workings of human fancy. And confounding thus things that essentially 1 Delitzsch, Der Prophet Habakkuk ausgelegt, p. 3. 134 EZEKIEL XIII. differ, in regard to the origin of a revelation, we lay ourselves open to the further eiTor of disparaging the value of a revelation, when made ; we totally change it indeed, and lower its character, and assign it only a kind of higher room among the views and cogi- tations of men's own imagining. The church of God will do well to watch with the utmost jealousy against any attempts in this direction, from whatever quarter, and under whatever show of reason or piety they may be introduced. How well had it been for Germany, had the churches there listened to the warning voice, which the learned Bengel in his day lifted against the evil, when it was just begin- ning to appear among them, though still only in its infancy, and breathing the odour of an elevated devotion ! " What some," says he, in his work on the Apocalypse, "" are forward to teach about the imvard word, is likely to occasion much fearful evil, as soon as philosophy shall officiously take such a subject in hand. Persons who are always dwelling upon that subject, are impatient to get possession of the kernel without its fostering shell ; every such appurtenance is with them an impertinence ; in other words, they would have Christ without the Bible. But notwithstanding this favourite refinement, they are insensibly approximating to an opposite extreme, and they will arrive at it. For as it often happens that extremes meet, so are fanaticism and gross deism found at last to coincide ; and mischiefs symptomatic of the one and of the other, may already be seen occasionally in one and the same beclouded mind." It is only, however, at the commencement of a process of this kind, that there is likely to be the appearance of extremes meet- ing ; for the fanatical or hypocritical spirit can never be very long in betraying its essential agreement with the deistical, or, at least, worldly spirit, by its visible distaste for the pure and elevating character of those revelations which come from God. Here also the tree is known by its fruits. The Spirit of God must have a holy vessel for the subject and channel of his Divine communications, — even for such as are of a more ordinary kind ; but how much more, when he comes to put forth his loftier breathings in the soul, and make it, in a peculiar manner, the oracle of Heaven's counsels? The true prophet, therefore, un- like the false one, who lived and breathed merely in the element of his own corruption, behoved to be, in the strictest sense, a THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS CHARACTER. 135 man of God ; one who was accustomed to tread the higher walks of the spiritual Hfe ; for thus only could he possess the necessary- adaptation for the Spirit's agency in his soul, — the receptive faculty, or, as we may rather call it, the spiritual sympathy to apprehend aright what was communicated from above, and appropriate it as his own. If at any time, this spiritual adapta- tion was wanting, or but imperfectly attained, the agency of the Spirit could not fail to exhibit something fitful and irregular, or even violent in its working, — as we see especially in the case of Balaam, when he was constrained to do the part of a true pro- phet. Nor could it be otherwise with the inspired writers of the New Testament Scriptures ; in their case, the personal adapta- tion must rather be of a higher, more regular, and equable kind. For the Spirit's work in them did not so much consist, as for- merly in the case of the prophets, in raising them at times with rapt emotion above present objects, and giving them a superna- tural insight into particular circumstances and events, as in enabling them to stand upon the elevated platform of the objec- tive realities of the gospel dispensation, and thence to read forth, according to the mind of the Spirit, the manifold views of Chris- tian truth, and obligations, and hope, which spring from those realities as from their common ground. But for this it was plainly necessary that they should habitually live in the region of the Spirit's presence, and not merely as in a few ecstatic moments, but, in the regular tone and temper of their minds, be prepared for entertaining and uttering the thoughts of the Spirit. And if " holy men of old " were needed, as instruments of Divine communication, to " speak as they were moved by the Holy Ghost," still more, may we say, were such needed at the begin- ning of the gospel, to declare with infallible certainty, and in " words which the Holy Ghost teacheth," the things that are now freely given us of God. The Spirit's work must reflect itself in the character of the agents he employed, as well as in the nature of the communications they imparted. But to return to the charge of Ezekiel against the false pro- phets. Having exposed the hollo vvness of their pretensions in regard to God, he now unfolds the pernicious results of their course in relation to the people. He compares them to " the foxes in the deserts," and adds, " Ye have not gone up into the breach, neither have drawn a wall around the house of Israel, to 136 EZEKIEL XIII. stand ill the battle in the day of the Lord." The description proceeds upon a silent comparison between the covenant-people and a vineyard, a similitude already in established use (Isa. v. 1-7, xxvii. 2 ; Jer. ii. 21 ; Ps. Ixxx.). It was the special duty of the prophets to do the part of watchmen and overseers in this spiritual vineyard. By their quick discernment in the fear of the Lord, and their faithfulness in disclosing his mind and will to the people, they should have protected the sacred enclosure against the assaults of the adversaries, repaired the breaches as they arose, and repressed, with holy energy, the first risings of corruption. But the reverse of all this was done by the false pro- phets, wdiile they consulted merely their own ease, and humoured the perverse inclinations of the people. In respect to the safety and well-being of the commonwealth they did the part of foxes, " which spoil the vines " (Sol. Song ii. 15), — nay, foxes in waste or desert places, the most savage and insatiable of their species. Yet no suspicion of this seemed to have crossed their own minds ; they looked with the most perfect complacence upon the success of their mission, and " hoped," as is said in ver. 6, " to confirm (or establish) their word." The subjective existed with them in full vigour, though utterly destitute of everthing objective ; for, in the just retribution of God, they had been given up to such strong delusion, that they believed their own lie. 2. The punishment threatened against these false prophets is one exactly suited to the nature of their sin. They had sought, by making high pretensions to communion with Heaven, to be- come persons of great note and influence among the people, while still the true foundation for such greatness was w^anting. There- fore, the Lord declared his determination to make their fate answer to their condition — he would unmask their hypocrisy and discover their nothingness — cast them out of his kingdom as empty and worthless creatures, and, as with a destroying and desolating blast, lay all their pretensions and hopes in the dust. Instead of ruling the counsels of the nation, they should not, he tells them (ver. 8, 9), be so much as found in the assembly of his people ; their names should not even be written in the roll of the house of Israel ; nor their persons be permitted any more to enter the land of Israel ; inheriting the curse of the covenant, " they should be cut off from among their people." Then, in regard to their work of vanity and delusion, a similar visitation THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS DOOM. 137 of severe judgment and exterminating ruin is foretold. By that work they had but ministered to the foolish desires and vain confidences of the people ; so that while the one were like the builders of a loose and incompact wall, the others were as per- sons coming after and daubing it over with a thin and showy, but still feeble and unsubstantial covering. Wherefore, it must be assailed with the storm of the Lord's fury — a storm that is represented as combining the three most destructive agents of the lower heavens — wind, rain, and hailstones. Particular stress is laid upon the hailstones, because these were more out of the usual course of nature in that part of the world, and on that account were sometimes in reality given as tokens, as they are also often poetically referred to as emblems, of the more severe expression of God's displeasure upon the adversaries (Ex. ix. 18; Jos. X. 10; Job xxxviii. 22 ; Ps. xviii. 12, 13, etc.). Here, too, to give the reference to them a more intense form, and render the emblem more strikingly expressive of the unsparing judg- ment that was to be executed, the prophet employs, instead of the usual epithet for hailstones, what is literally ice or crystal stones. And like one who actually beheld the devastation made by these and the other emblematical instruments of vengeance, he winds up the whole description by a kind of solemn attestation to the effect produced : " Thus I accomplish my wrath upon the wall, and upon them that plastered it with whitewash, and say unto you. The wall is not, nor they that plastered it — the prophets of Israel who prophesy concerning Jerusalem, and who see a vision of peace for her, and there is no peace, saith the Lord Jehovah." II. Such is the interpretation given in this vivid picture of the character and doom of the false prophets ; and we turn now to the closely related delineation of the false prophetesses, which occupies the remainder of the chapter. 1. These are plainly represented here as also playing an im- portant part in strengthening the reigning delusions of: the time, and lulling the people into a false security. It is somewhat singular, that in no other passage are they spoken of in such a connection ; probably because the pernicious influence they ex- erted was more from the seductive courses they pursued, than from the false prophecies they uttered. For mention is fre- 138 EZEKIEL XIII. quentlj enough made, both in this prophet and JeremiaK, of the active share the women took at that time in introducing and maintaining the evil practices of idolatry ; but only in this place, of the guilt they incurred by pretending to supernatural reve- lations ; and here also it is coupled vs^ith strong representations of the deceitful and corrupt practices they followed. That they should, however, have made pretensions of this kind, and in such numbers as to call for the special rebuke of Heaven, is itself a convincing proof of the great excitement which prevailed at the period ; since it was not in the ordinary course of things, but only in peculiar emergencies, that either the Lord might be expected to bestow on women the gift of prophecy, or that men would be disposed to receive from their lips the revelation of God's will. There were not wanting instances in the history of the past, which warranted the supposition, that God might sometimes employ- female instruments in making known his purposes to men — such as Miriam, Deborah, Huldah — though the rareness of these in- stances, and the extraordinary nature of the occasions which gave rise to them, tended considerably to aggravate the guilt of those who falsely pretended to a Divine commission. Like the false prophets, these are also represented as prophesying " out of their own hearts ;" and being themselves of one mind and spirit with the people at large, no higher result was achieved, or was aimed at by their prophesyings, than to strengthen and confirm the prevaiUng views. In the case of these prophetesses, however, the false direction given, assumed, if the common view be correct, a more palpably effeminate and luxurious character ; it aimed, not only at encour- aging the people in their false security, but also at pampering their love of fleshly ease and personal indulgence. They are de- scribed as "sewing pillows for all arm-holes," or making soft cushions for all arm -joints — apparently articles of some sort to be used in reclining, so as to give to the person using them the soft- ness of an agreeable repose. Not content with this, they made also " kerchiefs," or coverings, " upon the head of every stature," — some kind of fashionable and attractive head-dress, fitted to act as a lure in winning others to their corrupt and sinful ways. For, the great object they had in view in making such articles of luxury, was to " hunt," or " catch souls ;" so that, with their high pretensions to communion with Heaven, the real design and THE FALSE IN PROPHECY, ITS DOOM. 139 tendency of their arts was no other than that of the profligate characters described in Prov. vi. and vii. — to ensnare and ruin the unwary. It is possible, however, and, indeed, we think, most probable, that the prophet, in his description of the conduct of these women, is not to be understood literally, but that he un- folds the design and tendency of their deceitful ways under the image of gay and luxurious clothing. So was it with his de- scription of the false prophets, when he spoke of them as acting the part of foxes, and whitewashing an unsubstantial wall : that is, ministering to a false security, as the prophetesses here did to a false comfort and delight. In this case, it was their fair speeches and lying divinations which were the cushions and the tapestry mentioned by the prophet. But this makes no altera- tion on the nature of their conduct : they acted a most wicked part. Therefore, the prophet turns on them with a question of fiery indignation and sharp rebuke, " Will ye hunt (catch) the souls of my people, and save your own souls alive ? And will ye pollute me among my people for handfuls of barley, and for pieces of bread, to slay the souls that should not die, and to save alive the souls that should not live, by your lying to my people that hear a lie (being of themselves inclined to listen to false- hood) ?" Acting the part of soul-destroyers to others, it was vain to expect that they should themselves escape the coming vengeance. And the less so, as it was for so paltry a considera- tion they were carrying on the infamous traffic of decoying others to destruction. Of course, the largest prospects of personal gain would have been totally insufficient to justify them in such prac- tices ; but that they should have been ready to prostitute the name of God, and ply the arts of hypocrisy and deceit for such miserable pittances of present good, showed the grovelling debase- ment and intense selfishness of their spirits. It stamped them in the strongest sense as " lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God." 2. In regard to the punishment threatened, there is nothing peculiar or difficult, so far as the act of Divine retribution is con- cerned. The Lord simply declares his purpose to defeat the crooked and carnal policy of those false prophetesses, and, by terrible things in righteousness, to put it beyond their power to employ much longer their pernicious arts. He would rend in pieces their articles of luxury, or defeat the corrupt and capti- 140 EZEKIEL xiir. vating wiles, which they used as gins to ensnare and catch men's souls, so that these might find an escape from their foils ; though still, nothing is said as to the particular way in which the retri- bution was to be efitected. But as it had been plainly enough indicated in the case of the false prophets, that the work of punishment was to be accomplished by weapons of awful violence and unsparing destruction, it was naturally to be inferred, that these female associates would share the same fate, and that their power to use the seductive arts they had hitherto plied with such fatal success, was to cease and determine, because they should themselves be involved in the common ruin, and the vanity of their pretensions would be manifest to all. It is a part of Satan's policy to avoid a formal repetition of exploded errors, and to shift and adapt his stratagems as the ever-changing temper of the times may require. We may not, therefore, expect to see exactly the same devices resorted to, and the same scenes enacted over again, which have passed under our review in this chapter. But we may not the less certainly expect, that the evils here depicted, shall be perpetually recurring, with such modifications in respect to manner and form, as may be likely to render them more effectual in their mischievous operation. Our Lord plainly forewarned the church of false prophets, who should arise and deceive many. And the work- ing of the Antichristian power, of which Paul spake so dis- tinctly, was represented to be "with signs and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish." But, as in all ages, and under all forms alike, the ob- ject of Satan is to corrupt and overthrow the truth of God, so it ever remains the sure, as it also is the only effectual safeguard against his delusions, to hold by that truth in the simplicity and confidence of faith. The danger in such cases is merely, as the apostle intimated, to those who will not believe the truth, and receive it in love. And whether it be in the form of pre- tended revelations concerning the things of God, that the temp- tation comes, or in the more common, but not less dangerous, arts of fleshly indulgence and worldly allurement, let there be but an enlightened knowledge of the word of God, and a lively ap- prehension of its great doctrinal and moral principles, and there will be no material difficulty in distinguishing between the evil and the good. Satan may transform himself for a time into an THE FALSE PROPHETESSES. 141 angel of light ; his agents may assume, when prosecuting their work of delusion, the most lamb-like and winning appearance ; but there still is one thing too hard for them to accomplish — they cannot transmute the saving truth of God into falsehood and cor- ruption ; and the childlike spirit, the soul that is taught of God and abides in the simplicity of the faith, has a rock beneath its feet which cannot be moved, and a w^ay of peace and safety which no force or stratagem can turn into a pathway of ruin. CHAPTER XIV. HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD — THEIR WICKEDNESS DISCOVERED AND REBUKED. Verse. 1. And there came to me some of the elders of Israel and sat before me. 2. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 3. Son of man, these men have set up their idols in their hearts, and the stumbling-block of their iniquity have they put before their face ; should I be at all inquired at for them ? 4. Therefore speak to them, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Every man of the house of Israel that sets up his idols in his heart, and puts the stumbling-block of his iniquity before his face, and comes to the prophet, I Jehovah will answer him according to it, according to the multi- tude of his idols.^ 5. That I may take the house of Israel in their own 1 This last clause is given in the authorised version, as by many others, " I the Lord will answer him that cometh according to the multitude of his idols," following the Kri, which has 553 ij^xDys instead of rra %'t^3»3, There is no need, however, for such a change. Reading mn (which ought to be the pointing), we have, as Havernick remarks, a perfectly common Aramaic construction, according to which the subject expressed in the following noun is anticipated by a pronoun going before, so that the latter is not a mere pleonasm, but employed for the purpose of giving increased emphasis to the following substantive : " I the Lord will answer him according to it, accord- ing to the multitude of his idols." The use of the Niphal of t^jy in the sense of answering, or making answer, is certainly a peculiarity, as elsewhere the common meaning is, to be answered, or to receive answer. Both Ewald and Havernick have tried to establish new renderings, but without any satisfac- tory result. The context plainly obliges us to adhere to the general and common import of the verb. Literally, " I the Lord am answered to him, according to it ;" or reflectively, as the Niphal is often used, " I the Lord answer myself (or, for myself) to him, according to it." The same senti- 142 EZEKIEL XIV. heart, since they are all estranged from me through their idols. 6. There- fore say to the house of Israel, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, turn and come back from your idols (literally, from off your idols), and from all your abomi- nations turn away your faces. 7. For every one of the house of Israel and of the stranger that sojourns in Israel, and separates himself from me, and sets up his idols in his heart, and puts the stumbling-block of his iniquity be- fore his face, and comes to the prophet to inquire of him concerning me, I Jehovah will answer him myself concerning me. 8. And I will set myself against that man, and will make him a sign and a proverb ; and I will cut him off from among my people ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah: 9. And the prophet, if he let himself be enticed (viz., by love of money or any other motive), and speak a word, I Jehovah have enticed that prophet, and will stretch out my hand upon him, and will destroy him from among my people Israel. 10. And they shall bear their iniquity ; as the iniquity of him that inquires so is the iniquity of the prophet. 11. That the house of Israel may go no more astray from me, and may no more be polluted with all their transgressions ; and that they may be to me a people, and I may be to them a God, saith the Lord Jehovah. 12. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 13. Son of man, if a land sin against me by acting very treacherously, and I stretch out my hand upon it, and break for it the staff of bread, and send against it famine, and cut off from it man and beast : 14. And there were in the midst of it these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, these three men should deliver (only) their own souls by their righteousness, saith the Lord Jehovah. 15. If I cause noisome beasts to pass through the land, and they spoil it, and it be- comes a desolation, so. that no one passes through because of the beasts : 16. These three men in the midst of it — saith the Lord Jehovah — should not deliver either sons or daughters ; they alone should be delivered ; and the land shall be a desolation. 17. Or should I bring a sword upon that land, and say, Sword, pass through the land, and cut off from it man and beast ; 18. And these three men were in the midst of it — saith the Lord Jehovah — they should not deliver either sons or daughters ; but themselves alone should be delivered. 19. Or should I send a pestilence upon that land, and pour out my wrath upon it in blood, to cut off from it man and beast : 20. And Noah, Daniel, and Job were in the midst of it, as I live, saith the Lord ment, with a very slight variation, is repeated in ver. 7 : " And cometh to the prophet to inquire of him concerning me ("s), I Jehovah will answer him myself concerning me ("a).'' The "^n should in each case be alike rendered " concerning me," and not in the latter case, as in the common version, " by myself." For the meaning is not, as most commentators, and among others, Havernick, seem to suppose, that God would give an answer directly and personally, as from himself, without the intervention of a prophet ; for in the very next verse but one, the case is supposed of a deceived prophet giving to such persons a wrong answer, Avhile the Lord affirms, that even such answer would be from him. Such would be, at least, one of the modes of his meeting these hypocritical inquirers. But the Lord would show, by the kind of answer given, however it might be communicated, that he had taken the matter into his own hand, and that he dealt with them, not according to their desires and expectations, but to their deserts. He would take them, as it is said in ver. 6, in their own heart, or would make them feel that he was cognizant of their great idolatries and perverse ways. IIYPOCEITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 143 Jehovah, neither son nor daughter should they deliver by their righteousness ; they should but deliver their own souls. 21. For, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, how much more^ when I send my four severe judgments — sword, and famine, and noisome beasts, and pestilence — against Jerusalem, to cut off from it man and beast ! 22. And behold there shall be left in it a remnant, that shall be brought forth, sons and daughters ; they shall come forth to you, and ye shall see their way and their doings, and shall be comforted concerning the evil which I shall have brought upon Jerusalem, in all that I shall have brought upon it. 23. And they shall comfort you ; for not without cause do I per- form all that I do perform against it, saith the Lord Jehovah. This chapter opens with a statement, that "certain of the elders of Israel came to the prophet and sat before him." By these elders we are certainly to understand persons holding that dignity among the exiles of Chebar, and not, as some have erroneously supposed, deputies from the people still resident in Judah and Jerusalem. For what purpose they came — whether to ask counsel from the prophet regarding some point of diffi- culty that had occurred to themselves, or to hear what he might be prompted by the Spirit to communicate of seasonable instruc- tion — we are not expressly told. But that they came in the character of inquirers, may be almost certainly inferred from ver. 3, where the Lord at once proceeds, through his servant, to repudiate the idea of his being inquired at by persons of such a character — persons who had " set up their idols in their heart, and put the stumbling-block of their iniquity before their face." After this it is scarcely possible to doubt that they came in the character of inquirers ; though what might be the precise object of their inquiry is nowhere indicated in what follows, unless we can suppose (what is in the highest degree probable) that the message of the prophet was so framed as in some part to meet the proposed subject of inquiry, and thus incidentally to discover what the subject itself really was. This supposition is confirmed by the fact, which strikes us the moment we glance over the contents of the chapter, that it falls into two parts — the first ^ The " how much more when " here, which we retaia as it is in the English Bible, expresses rather the thought indicated, than the exact force of the original — ',z ps\ The prophet had announced what would take place on each of the supposed cases separately ; and he comes now to say, Surely shall it be so now, when 1 send, etc. The particles are strongly affirmative, and intimate the much greater necessity that existed for what was ow to be declared. 144 EZEKIEL XIV. (ver. 3-11), referring to the preliminary point respecting the character of the inquirersj and the remaining portion addressing itself to a subject entirely distinct — God's method of dealing with a land and people, when they have reached a state of hope- less corruption and depravity. It is more than probable, there- fore, that while God refused to give any formal answer to such inquirers as those who now sat before the prophet, he yet, in this latter portion of the message, gave a substantial deliverance on the question about which their anxiety had been raised. The previous communications of the prophet had disclosed an amazing degree of wickedness prevailing generally among the people of Judah, and extending even to those who should have set themselves vigorously to check and reform it — the priestly and prophetical orders. It was not to be denied, however, with all the truth there might be in such representations, that there still were some noble exceptions. Among the prophets there was, at least, the faithful and unflinching Jeremiah ; and there were others, beyond doubt, of a kindred spirit, both in the priesthood and among the laity. How naturally, then, in such a case might the thought arise, that possibly, after all, the exist- ence of this faithful remnant would tell favourably upon the pro- cedure of God, and throw a kind of shield over the land of Judah for its preservation ! It is even conceivable, that the thought might assume in the minds of some a more decided form, and that they might be tempted to ask, how, with such an admixture of righteousness in the midst of them, God could justly proceed to pour down his exterminating judgments on the land ! Such cogitations and inquiries were by no means unnatural at the time, especially when it is known how loath the people were — as well that portion of them which was already in exile, as those who still dwelt in Jerusalem — to think of the nation going to ruin. And if these were the points respecting which the elders on this occasion came to confer with the prophet, the message deli veered in the latter division of the chapter might certainly be regarded as forming a most direct and explicit deliverance upon their in- tended inquiries. 1. But there was a strong reason for the prophet addressing himself, in the first instance, to the preliminary point connected with the character of the inquiries, on account, more especially, of the close relation that subsisted between such an exhibition of HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 145 character in them, and the false spirit of prophecy which had already been so severely condemned. However they might wish, by coming to the Lord's true prophet, to be regarded as of a dif- ferent spirit from the false prophets and their deluded followers mentioned in the preceding chapter, they were, in reality, of one spirit with them, and, under another form, pursuing the same in- fatuated course. Therefore, when the word of the Lord came describing them as persons who were each setting up their idol in their heart, and putting the stumbling-block of iniquity before their face, their hypocrisy was at once unmasked, and they were themselves identified with the corrupt idolaters and incorrigible backsliders in Judea. " You," the prophet virtually said to them, discerning, through the Spirit, the real state and purposes of their heart, " you also are living in idolatry, and differ only in outward semblance from those who are openly worshipping false gods ; you have not yet returned in truth to the living God, but are each bent on the love and pursuit of things which are utterly op- posed to his mind and will. And that you may be encouraged in these, not that you may learn with child-like docility what God would have you to do, is the object that lies nearest to your heart. In such a state, what presumption is it not in you to expect any friendly communications from God ?" The expression of " setting up their idols in their heart " (lit. making their idols to go up upon their heart), as Calvin justly i;emarks, implies a silent comparison between God and idols. For, as God erects the seat of his empire in our hearts, when we set up idols there, we, of necessity, endeavour to subvert the throne of God, and to render his supremacy of no account. So also in the other expression, "putting the stumbling-block of iniquity before their face," a contrast is implied between the law of God and the perverse inclinations of their own hearts. What should have been set before their eyes for their constant observ- ance, was the law of God, respecting which the exhortation had been given, "Let it not depart from thine eyes; then shalt thou walk in thy way safely, and thou shalt not stumble " (Prov. iii. 21, 23). But displacing this unerring rule of Divine counsel and direction, and adopting in its stead the course dictated by their own selfish and corrupt passions, they were as surely run- ning into mischief as if they had deliberately placed a stumbling- block in their path. So that, in both respects, they were warring K 146 EZEKIEL XIV. with the mind of God — being at once idolatrous at heart, and perverse in their ways. For such persons to come and inquire of God, at the mouth of his servant, was plainly but a mockery of God ; it was professing to have a desire to know God's will, and a heart ready to fall in with its requirements, while in reality their mind was made up to a plan and purpose of its own, which set at nought the Divine authority. No wonder, then, that the Lord should at once have repelled the thought of his being inquired of by such persons ; since, to use the words of Jerome, " he does not deserve to hear the truth, who seeks for it in a fraudulent manner, but ought to be taken in his own heart." Seeing, however, in these elders types of a class, unhappily very numerous among the Jews, both in Judea and in exile, the prophet proceeded to inform them, how, if they persisted in their course, they might expect to be dealt w^ith. They would certainly find an answer to their in- quiries, and that answer in a sense also from the Lord ; but one, at the same time, after their own heart's lusts, not in conformity with the truth of things — " that I may take," it is added, " the house of Israel in their own heart, because they are all estranged from me through their idols." Yet, that this was not what the Lord properly wished — that the giving of such an answer, and the ruinous consequences it was sure to entail, was a judgment which the Lord would fain avert, if He righteously could. He again charged the prophet to say to the house of Israel, " Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Turn and come back from your idols, and turn away your faces from your abominations." He wished them distinctly to understand, that if they really sought to be on terms of friendship with God, and to obtain answ*ers of peace to their inquiries, there was one thing essential to be done, they must thoroughly reform their ways, and abandon the polluted objects on which they had set their hearts. On this condition alone could they expect to be graciously dealt with by God ; and if they refused to comply with the terms, they might, indeed, go to a prophet, and receive an answer to their inquiries, but it must be with a sure reversion of evil ; their own measure would be meted back to them. They should, in that case, be dealing deceitfully tow^ard God, and the prophet in turn would deal deceitfully toward them. Both sub- jects of a common delusion, they should also at last become the HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 147 victims of a common ruin. " And they shall bear the punish- ment of their iniquity ; the iniquity of the prophet shall be even as the iniquity of him that inquires at him ; that the house of Israel may go no more astray from me, and may no more be polluted with all their transgressions ; but that they may be to me a people, and I may be to them a God, saith the Lord Jehovah." The point chiefly to be noticed in this deliverance of the mind of God, is the connection between the self-deceived people and the deceiving prophet ; regarding whom it is said, in peculiarly strong language, '* I the Lord have enticed (or deceived) that prophet." It is an example in the highest sphere of the Uijc talionis. If the people were sincere in their desire to know the mind of God, for the purpose of obeying his will, the path was plain. They had but to forsake their idolatries, and the Lord was ready to meet them with direction and blessing. But if, on the other hand, they were bent on pla3ring the hypocrite, pro- fessing to inquire concerning him, while their hearts in reality were cleaving to corruption, punishment was sure to overtake them, and that, too, in the first instance, after the form of their own iniquity. God would chastise their sin with a correspond- ing sin ; and as they had rejected the safe direction of the true light, he would send the pernicious delusion of a false one. Prophets would be given them, who should re-echo the deceit- fulness that already wrought in their own bosom, so that their iniquity should prove their ruin. The people themselves had no reason to complain of such a procedure ; for they had from the first been distinctly fore- warned of it by Moses. At the beginning of the 13th chapter of Deuteronomy, the supposition is made of a false prophet arising, who, by dreams and visions, should attempt to lead away the people from the true worship and service of Jehovah. In that event, they were expressly discharged from hearkening to his words — nay, were commanded to put him at once to death ; and were instructed to regard such occurrences as among the means of trial which the Lord appointed for the purpose of proving and purifying them. " For the Lord your God proveth you," it is said, " to know whether ye love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul." The very appearance of such characters, then, was a judicial 148 EZEKIEL XIV. act on the part of God. It implied, that he detected the ex- istence of sin among the people, and required, for the ends of his righteous government, to apply a touchstone, by which to eifect a separation between the precious and the vile. Not as of itself, but as a form of chastisement under the hand of God, did the false spirit of prophecy arise — a sure indication that the day of visitation had begun. As happened also in the case of Saul, w^hen an evil spirit was sent to trouble him, in the room of that blessed Spirit whose guidance he had rejected ; a messenger of Satan, indeed ! but one that would not have been suffered to appear, unless there had been a call for judgment ! It was the Lord's instrument of correction for indulged sin. The most notable and striking example of this sort in ancient history, and one to which the prophet here evidently refers, is that recorded in 1 Kings xxii. 19, etc., where the prophet Micaiah says to Ahab, " Hear thou, therefore, the word of the Lord : I saw the Lord sitting on his throne, and all the host of heaven standing by him, on his right hand and on his left. And the Lord said. Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead ? And one said on this manner, and another said on that manner. And there came forth a spirit, and stood before the Lord, and said, I will persuade him. And the Lord said unto him. Wherewith ? And he said, I will go forth ; and I will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his pro- phets. And he said. Thou shalt persuade him, and prevail also ; go forth and do so." Here, it is plain, the spirit of falsehood, entering into and working in the false prophets, appears to come elsewhere than from God ; but not less plain, also, that the giving up of Ahab and his people to the influence of such a spirit, was of God — an act of judgment, standing midway between the sins of a past life and the approaching doom of a fearful retribution. It was God who, in righteousness, fixed the doom, and who also appointed this particular mode of carry- ing it into execution. Yet the power, by the immediate instru- mentahty of which it was to be eifected, was no magical one, such as might fascinate and control the minds of Ahab and his people, independently of their own free will. On the contrary, it was their voluntary adherence to the spirit of delusion, and their obstinate surrender to its influence, which led God to abandon them to this new and more fatal subjection to its power. HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 149 And hence, both in the case of Ahab, and here again, in the representation by Ezekiel, the yielding to that spu'it, whether in the way of persuading, or of being persuaded, is treated as a crime, drawing after it its appropriate punishment : " The Lord stretches out his hand, and punishes both the prophet and him that inquires at him." The facts and statements now referred to clearly imply some- thing more on the part of God than that bare permission, by which many commentators, both in earlier and later times, have sought to explain his entire connection in such cases with evil. " I have deceived that prophet," that is, says Dr Adam Clarke, ^^ He ran before he was sent ; he willingly became the servant of Satan's illusions ; and I suffered this to take place, because he and his followers refused to consult and serve me." So, also, Maurer, who explains the statement thus : " I will suffer him to be deceived ; I will not hinder him from being so ; I will sur- render him to his fate." True, no doubt, so far as it goes, but a portion of the truth still remains to be told. There is not merely a negative, but also a positive relation on God's part to sin, in- asmuch as he controls and directs its operations, so that they may fit suitably into his Divine plan, and may develope them- selves in such forms and ways as are demanded by the order and rectitude of his administration. Should a spirit of delusion, for example, break out in any particular place or time, it is cer- tainly in itself to be regarded as an emanation from the prince of darkness ; but that it should appear in the precise form it does, at such a time, or with such results, must be ascribed to the directing agency and overruling providence of God. So the apostle evidently teaches, when speaking of what, in Christian times, should correspond to the false prophesying of an earlier period, he says, " And for this cause," viz., because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved, " God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie ; that they all might be damned who believe not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness " (2 Thess. ii. 11, 12). " God punishes sin with sin. Therefore upon the lost, who in their guilt would not cherish a love of the truth in their hearts, he sends forth a powerful delusion, that they might believe a lie. The force of the expressions must not be weakened, so as to describe anything less than a judicial hardening. The ^ strong 150 EZEKIEL XIV. delusion/ as to its ultimate ground, points to Antichrist himself, who, in ^ the working of Satan,' sets forward his deceit ; but the * sending ' indicates the coming of Antichrist to be of God. The Lord does not make Antichrist, so far as he is evil, but he cer- tainly does make him, in so far as he manifests himself in this par- ticular shape and form, under these circumstances and relations."^ 11. But we pass on to the second part of the chapter, which, as before noticed, speaks to a case entirely different, and one that probably coincided with the inquiry proposed by the elders. It has respect to the question, what effect the existence of a few righteous persons among the Jewish people might be ex- pected to have at such a time on the purposes of God ? The Lord had already told Jeremiah, that the guilt of the people was too great to be pardoned on account of his intercession, and that even if Moses and Samuel, to whom the Lord had listened on former occasions of grievous backsliding and apostacy (Exod. xxxii. ; Numb. xiv. ; 1 Sam. vii.), were now present to plead in their behalf, it would be altogether in vain ( Jer. xiv. 2, XV. 1). It was in immediate connection with the forms of evil, which are so prominently exhibited in this portion of Ezekiel's writings, viz., the prevalence of the spirit of false prophecy, and the readiness of the people to listen to its lying divinations, which called forth in Jeremiah that strong declara- tion of the utter inefficacy of prayer to meet and remedy such a case as this. And, as in regard to the subject itself, Ezekiel treads in the footsteps of Jeremiah, so also, in the judgment pronounced upon it, he merely supplements the representation previously given by Jeremiah, by bringing another moral element into play, and declaring also its incompetence to prevent or rectify the evil in such a time of apostacy and rebuke. The two most powerful and honoured intercessors, Moses and Samuel, could not do it by their intercession, Jeremiah had said. No, responds Ezekiel from the banks of the Chebar ; nor could three of the most righteous men that have ever lived, either in past or present times, do it by their righteousness. Though Noah, Daniel, and Job were all at this moment in the land, they could not stay the judgment of God from proceeding. ' Olshausen on 2 Thess. ii. 11, 12. HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 151 Many frivolous reasons have been assigned, especially by the Fathers, why these three men in particular should have been singled out for such distinguished honour on this occasion. But the real reasons are not far to seek. For these three individuals were all eminently distinguished for their personal righteousness, and, on account of this, were saved from overwheming calami- ties, which destroyed others. Yet not without some striking diversities of circumstance, evidently in the eye of the prophet. Noah was saved amid the wreck and desolation of a world, and had the members of his family, but these alone, given to him. Daniel was saved from the unreasonable fury of the king of Babylon, and prevailed also to shield from destruction a few companions of kindred spirit, though inferior standing to himself (Dan. ii.). But Job was stript even of his family and household, not a son nor a daughter left to him ; and, of the three, there- fore, was the most striking monument of the simple righteous- ness of God, preserving the good and punishing the bad. On this account, probably, his name comes last in order, since, in his case, the principle under consideration found its most strin- gent application. In all these cases, God had signally stamped their righteousness with his approbation ; yet if the whole three should now stand before him, they could not alter his determina- tion to inflict the sore judgments, which were impending over the king and people of Judah ; the cup of iniquity was full ; the stroke of vengeance must come down ; and the utmost that the righteousness of such men could do, would be to deliver their own souls — only a Job's escape could be given to them, without either son or daughter.^ * Exception has been taken very unreasonably against the mention of Daniel, along with Noah and Job ; and arguments raised out of it against the authenticity of Daniel's history. But at the time Ezekiel now wrote, Daniel had been at least fourteen years in Babylon, and the circumstances, which first spread abroad his fame so much — those recorded in the two first chapters of his book — are understood to have occurred very shortly after his going to Babylon. There was, therefore, ample time for his extraordinary worth to be generally known, and familiarly referred to ; the more so, as the Jews would naturally, in their present low condition, think with pride of one who had acquired so much glory for their nation at the very seat of empire, and would probably even be disposed to count unduly upon the benefits to be derived from his virtues and influence. (See Hengstenberg's Beitr. i. pp. 70-72.) 152 EZEKIEL XIV. The manner of the prophet in unfolding this sentiment is highly rhetorical. He first puts the case in the form of a gene- ral supposition — the case of a land sinning grievousljj and liable to one of the sore judgments threatened in the law against hardened transgressors (Lev. xxvi. 22, 33), — he repeats succes- sively the four different kinds of Divine judgment, a*s ready to be executed, and in respect to each, affirms the impossibility of the three righteous men arresting the course of justice, or prevailing to deliver more than their own souls. Then, at ver. 21, concen- trating the whole of the supposed cases, with their corresponding judgment, as in one mass of condemnation and woe upon Jeru- salem, he proceeds, " How much more when I send my four sore judgments upon Jerusalem, the sword, and the famine, and the noisome beast, and the pestilence, to cut off from it man and beast ? " As much as to say, " This land has now reached such a state of utter abandonment and hopeless depravity, that it deserves to have not one merely, but the whole of my sore judg ments let loose upon it in combined fury; and if those righteous men could not save a land, when one only was due, how foolish to think that they could save such a land as this ! " And even this does not reveal the whole of the severity that was to be exercised upon Jerusalem ; for the two concluding verses, while they point to a remnant escaping the flood of judg- ments,* point at the same time to the necessity of still further severity being made to follow them. It is a word of threatening, not of promise, as the great majority of commentators suppose, and our translators also appear to have understood it. " And, behold, therein shall be left a remnant that shall be brought forth, sons and daughters : behold, they shall come forth unto you, and ye shall see their way and their doings ; and ye shall be comforted concerning the evil that I shall have brought upon Jerusalem, in all that I shall have brought upon it. And they shall comfort you, when ye see their ways and their doings ; and ye shall know, that I have not done without cause all that I have done in it, saith the Lord Jehovah." The word is formally addressed to the people already in exile, who are regarded as viewing the destruction about to be executed on Jerusalem with astonishment, and some degree of dissatisfaction. The prophet tells such, there would certainly be a remnant — not, however, in the proper sense, as if they were themselves deserving persons, HYPOCRITICAL INQUIRERS AFTER GOD. 153 or spared for blessing for the sake of the pious among them— but a remnant still so wedded to sin, and so manifestly deserving of severe chastisement, that every one would recognise the justice of God's dealings toward them. "Ye shall see," to use the language of Cahdn, who here caught the real meaning of the prophet, " the men to be so wicked, that ye shall be forced to confess, the city was deserving of destruction, and the men them- selves worthy of death. And instead of murmuring and fretting against God, ye shall be satisfied, it could not have been other- wdse ordered, their wickedness was of so desperate a nature ; so that, with soothed and tranquil minds, ye shall henceforth pro- claim my righteousness, and cease any more to utter the com- plaints, which now disturb your minds." This, we have no doubt, is the correct view of the passage, for it has respect simply to God's justice in visiting them with such severity ; and there is not a word dropped, either of their being brought to repentance, when in exile, or of God's extend- ing mercy to them when there. It is the severe aspect of the Divine procedure that is exhibited throughout. Doubtless, the view given is to be understood with certain limitations ; there was mercy, to some extent, to be found mingling with the judgment, as there would also be some grains of wheat concealed among the heaps of chaff that were to be driven forth into Chal- dea. Other prophecies speak also of these ; but the word here has to do only with the work of judgment on account of sin. Yet, even in regard to that, it challenges the concurring judg- ment and approval of all who should be at pains to acquaint themselves with the entire circumstances. For God must ever be justified, when he is judged with knowledge and impartiality. Dissatisfaction with his ways, or quarrelling with his purposes, springs up only where ignorance and sinful prejudice exist. And when all things shall at last be made manifest, there is not an act in his administration, however stern and severe, which shall not call forth the response from every intelligent bosom: He bath done all things well ; his ways are righteousness and truth. 154 EZEKIEL XV. CHAPTER XV. THE GUILT AND CONDEMNATION OF ISRAEL PARABOLICALLY REPRESENTED. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying : 2. Son of man, what is the vine-tree more than any tree (or, the vine-wood more than any wood), the branch that is among the trees of the forest ? 3. Shall wood be taken of it to do any work ? or, will they take a pin from it to hang thereon any vessel ? 4. Behold it is given to the fire for fuel ; the two ends of it are burnt by the fire ; and its middle part is on flame ; is it fit for any work ? 5. Behold, when it was entire, it did not serve for work ; how much less when the fire has devoured of it, and it is on flame ; is it still to be taken for any work ? 6. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, As the vine- wood among the wood of the forest, which I have given for fuel to the fire, so have I given the inhabitants of Jerusalem. 7. And I set my face against them ; from the fire they go out, and the fire still devours them ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah, when I set my face against them. 8. And I make the land a desolation, because they have acted most treacherously, saith the Lord Jehovah. This chapter is so closely related to the following, that the one may be regarded as a kind of introduction to the other. It re- presents briefly, and by way of parable, what chap. xvi. exhibits at length, and with all the minuteness of historical detail. The subject of both alike, is the inveterate and incorrigible wickedness of the covenant-people, in its two branches, Israel and Judah, which had defeated the ends of their high calling, and rendered them obnoxious to the severest penalties. In this introductory chapter the prophet begins with asking, " What is the vine-tree more than any tree — the branch that is among the trees of the forest ?" The point of comparison lies in the wood belonging respectively to the vine and the forest-trees, — what is the vine-w^ood more than any forest-wood ? In this respect it has nothing to entitle it to any pre-eminence above the others, but quite the reverse ; it is inferior to them all. Its soft and brittle nature renders it unfit for being made into any useful implements, even of the most common kind : not so much as a pin can be had from it ; it is fit only for fuel to the fire. Such were the chosen people of God, if viewed simply as a people of this world, who had no longer any peculiar connection with the higher purposes of the Divine government. They have often THE PARABLE OF THE VINE. 155 been compared to the vine, and sometimes even to vines of the choicest kind (Deut. xxxii. 32 ; Isa. v.; Ps. Ixxx. ; Jer. ii. 21 ; Hos. X. 1), but always ;with respect to the fruitful quahties of the vine, as significant of the prolific goodness that ought to have been found in them, as the people whom God had chosen. Des- titute of this, what were they better than others ? Nay, in respect of those things which constitute the natural greatness of king- doms, — antiquity of origin, extent of territory, abundance of re- sources, attainments in arts and science, — what could they boast of, in comparison of Egypt, Ethiopia, Babylon, and the greater kingdoms of the earth ! Their inferiority was palpable ; and whenever they lost their distinction as the nation that kept the truth of God, and wrought righteousness in the earth, they were no longer capable of holding a place of power and influence in the destinies of the world. On the contrary, like salt that had lost its savour, they had become fit only to be cast out, or com- mitted as a piece of vine-wood to the fire. Such is the representation here given of the covenant-people as a whole, considered even in their state of undiminished ful- ness and noontide glory. But they were far from being in that state when Ezekiel wrote ; and, in ver. 4 and 5, he modifies this description of the worthless vine, so as exactly to suit their case : " Behold, it is given to the fire for fuel ; the fire has consumed both the ends of it, and its middle part is on flame ; is it (viz. the scorched part that still remains) fit for work ? Behold, when it was entire, it did not serve for work ; how much less when the fire has devoured of it, and it is on flame, shall it still be taken for work !" The allusion is to the impoverished and reduced state of the covenant-people : it was with them as if the two ends were already consumed in the fire, and the middle portion that remained also very severely scorched. The ten tribes had been carried away into Assyria, and the nation, not large or powerful at the best, had been brought to the brink of ruin ; they existed only as a brand plucked from the burning, or, rather with the fire still kindling around them. Therefore, if incapable on merely natural grounds, and in respect to purposes of an inferior kind, of coping with other kingdoms, they were immeasurably more so now, and it might be ev^id^nt, even to the most careless and un- reflecting, that they were in danger of complete destruction. " And I set my face against them ; from the fire they go out, 156 • EZEKIEL XV. and the fire still devours them ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah, when I set my face against them. And I make the land a desolation, because they have acted most treacherously saith the Lord." The parable indicates, in a very striking manner, the strictly moral nature of the ends for which God chooses a people out of the world, and teaches them to expect, in immediate connection with these, all their security, and power, and glory. It is the same truth, only applied to other times and altered circumstances, which is brought out by John the Baptist, when he says, in re- gard to the approaching work and kingdom of Messiah, " And now the axe is laid to the root of the trees ; therefore every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down and cast into the fire." The same also which our Lord himself taught in the parables of the wicked husbandmen, and of the fruitless fig-tree in the vineyard (Matt. xxi. 33-41 ; Luke xiii. 6-9), and which he still further embodied in the parabolical action of the cursing of the fruitless fig-tree by the wayside (Mark xi. 12-14). The truth, therefore, is for all times and stages of the church's history. It matters not that her members are now intermingled with the world, and not, as of old, placed in a state of visible separation and distance from it. They still are a chosen seed, distinguished with the highest privileges, and most elevating hopes, but ail for the single end of withdrawing them from the pollutions of the world, and rendering them to God a peculiar people, zealous of good works. If they only pursue after this high end with un- deviating purpose and steady aim, they shall be found full of the favour, and strong in the might of God ; they shall successfully contend with principalities and powers, and will prove themselves the appointed channels of conveying life and blessing to a perish- ing world. But if they are themselves drawing back to the ways of corruption ; if they begin to breathe the spirit of the world, and do its works, as they must be of all men the most guilty, so are they also the most sure to inherit the woes of condemnation. They oppose and frustrate the very end for which they have been called to the enjoyment of such distinguished privileges, and so belong to the unhappy class of whom our Lord has said, that it shall " be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment than for them." Having prepared the way, by the parabolical delineation of THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 157 the fifteenth chapter, the prophet proceeds, in the long historical detail of the next chapter, to make application of its principles to Israel. In this ideal narrative the covenant-people are per- sonified as a single individual, the daughter Jerusalem, under the image of whose life the most vivid picture is presented of the history of God's connection with them, and their behaviour to- ward him. CHAPTER XVL THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT AND PUNISHMENT. Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying: 2. Son of man, make Jerusalem know her abominations. 3. And say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to Jerusalem : Thy origin and thy birth ^ were of the land of the Canaanite ; thy father was the Amorite, and thy mother the Hittite.^ 4. And for thy birth, in the day that thou wast born, thy navel was not cut, neither wast thou washed with water for cleansing ; thou wast not salted at all, nor wast thou wrapt in swaddling-bands.^ 5. No eye pitied thee, to do ^ Havernick would render here : the place of thy production and the place of thy birth. But no instance can be produced in which the terms are used distinctly to express the locality in which the action or event took place. And if it had been the locahty that was here pointed to, what follows would have been, not of, but in, the land of Canaan. The words are literally, thy diggings, or originatings, and thy bringings forth, to which substantially correspond, thy origin and thy birth. 2 Not simply an Amorite and a Hittite, but these two tribes themselves personified ; as if all the peculiarities respectively belonging to them united in the parentage of the Israelitish people. ' The use of water is here said to be 'ssV-: — which occurs only here, and has been very commonly rendered " for suppling," as from j>^-i to stroke or smear. Gesenius gives cleansing as the meaning, which, with most recent authorities, we adopt. The latter is certainly the more natural sense. In the Septuagint the word is altogether omitted. The application of salt to new-born infants in ancient times is known to have been a common practice, supposed to have been used medicinally, for the purpose of hardening the skin ; but probably, also, not without reference to the symbolical import of salt, as an emblem of purity and incorruption. Jerome says on the passage, " The tender bodies of infants, while they still retain the heat of the womb, and by their cries give evidence of the first commencement of this toilsome life, are wont to be sprinkled with salt by the nurses, to make them more dry and firm." Galen speaks of it, De Sanit. i. 7. 158 EZEKIEL XVI. one of these things to thee, to have compassion upon thee ; and thou wast thrown upon the open field with contempt of thy life/ in the day that thou wast born. 6. And I passed by thee, and saw thee ready to be trampled on in thy blood ; and I said to thee in thy blood, live ; yea, I said to thee in thy blood, live. 7. A myriad like the produce of the field I made thee; and thou didst increase and wax great, and became most beautiful -^ thy breasts formed, and thy hair grew, and thou wast naked and bare.' 8. And I passed by thee, and looked upon thee, and behold thy time was a time of love ; and I spread my skirt over thee,* and covered thy naked- ness; and I sware unto thee, and entered into covenant with thee, saith the Lord Jehovah ; and thou becamest mine. 9. And I washed thee •with water, and rinsed thy blood from ofi" thee, and anointed thee with oil. 10- And I clothed thee with broidered work, and gave thee shoes of tahash,* ^ " With contempt of thy life," seems to come nearer to the idea here ex- pressed than the " loathing of thy person." For, :be3» though often used for life^ never precisely means person ; and when the treatment is said to have been done with loathing of this, it is much the same as we would express by contempt, or disdainful indifierence, to the life. 2 It is literally, "and didst come to ornament of ornaments." The word iiy has no other well ascertained meaning ; and the attempts of Havernick and Hitzig to change the sense are both quite unsuccessful. See Hengstenberg on Psalm xxxii. 9. It is there also used somewhat peculiarly — of the bit and bridle of a horse, "whose ornaments are bit and bridle," meaning that the nature of a horse is such as to require decorations of that sort. ' The meaning of this last clause is much obscured in the authorised ver- sion, by giving the conjunction and the adversative force of wJiereas, thereby making the nakedness and bareness here mentioned point to a condition prior to that described in the preceding terms. But it is only the literal rendering that conveys the proper idea. The prophet means to say, that even when grown to womanhood and ripe for marriage, she was still naked and bare ; beautiful, indeed, in person, but as to other things, in an unfur- nished and poor condition. * This expression, of " throwing the skirt over her," as appears also from what immediately follows, is synonymous with entering into the marriage re- lation. It is taken from Ruth iii. 9, " spread thy skirt over thine handmaid, for thou art a near kinsman." It gives a very feeble sense, when explained, as it often is, of taking under the wing of Divine protection and support. The passage in Ruth, and collateral passages in the law (Deut. xxii. 30, xxvii» 20), fully bear out the other and more specific meaning. Nor are similar expressions wanting in the Greek poets for indicating the marriage union ; as in Sophocles Trachin, v. 536. See also Grotius here. * It is not ascertained with certainty, what was meant by tahash ; it is al- ways used in connection with skin, or articles made of skin ; for example, the tabernacle was covered with tahash skins, Ex. xxv. 5. The ancient versions understood it to denote the colour of the skins, red or blue ; but the Tal- mudists and Hebrew interpreters take it for the name of the animal from which the skins were obtained, probably the badger or seal ; and this is now generally acquiesced in. THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 159 and girded thee with fine linen, and covered thee with silk. 11. And I decked thee with ornaments, and I put bracelets upon thy hands, and a chain upon thy neck. 12. And I put a jewel in thy nose, and ear-rings in thine ears, and a beautiful crown upon thy head. 13. And thou wast adorned with gold and silver, and thy clothing was of fine linen and silk and broidered work ; fine flour, and honey, and oil didst thou eat ; and thou wert exceed- ingly beautiful, and didst prosper into a kingdom. 14. And thy name went forth among the nations on account of thy beauty ; for it was perfect by reason of my adornment, which I put upon thee, saith the Lord Jehovah. 15. But thou didst trust in thy beauty, and didst play the wanton upon thy name,^ and didst pour out thy fornications upon every one that passed by ; it was his (viz., thy beauty). 16. And thou didst take of thy garments, and didst make to thyself high-places of divers colours, and didst play the wanton upon them — (such as) had not come in, nor did exist. 17. And thou didst take thy beauti- ful articles, of my gold and my silver, which I put upon thee, and didst make for thyself statues of men, and didst commit fornication with them. 18. And thou tookest thy broidered garments, and didst cover them ; and my oil and my incense thou didst set before them. 19. And my bread which I gave thee, fine flour and oil and honey, that I fed thee with, thou hast also set it before them for a sweet savour : and it was so, saith the Lord Jehovah. 20. And thou didst take thy sons and thy daughters whom thou barest to me, and to them bast thou sacrificed them, to be devoured : 21. Were thy whoredoms too little, that thou shouldest have slain my children, and given them, by making them pass through the fire for them ? 22. And with all thy abominations and thy whoredoms, didst not remember the days of thy youth, when thou wert naked and bare, wert ready to be trampled on in thy blood. 23. And it came to pass, after all thy wickedness (woe, woe to thee, saith the Lord Jehovah), 24. That thou didst build to thee a chamber,'^ and didst make for thee a high -place in every street. 25. At every corner of a way hast thou built thy high-place, and hast made thy beauty to be abhorred, and hast opened thy feet to every one that passed by, and hast multiplied thy whoredoms. 26. And thou hast played the wanton with the Egyptians, thy neighbours, great of flesh,^ and hast multiplied thy whoredoms, to provoke me to anger. 27. And behold I have stretched out my hand upon thee, and ^ The most literal rendering here is to be preferred. Havernick's "against thy name/' with a reference to Judges xix. 2, is rather forced. She played the wanton upon her name, because her renown, with the riches and honour on which it was grounded, carried her away into sin. 2 It seems probable, that what is meant here by aj is such a chamber as the Latins denoted by fornix, here suitably rendered by the Septuagint oiKTii^ct re^vixoy — a class of apartments too frequently associated with the im- pure religions of antiquity. ^ This epithet, " great of flesh,'" applied to the Egyptians, seems to point to the gross and lustful character of their religion (Comp. ch. xxiii. 20). How much the Egyptian religion partook of such a character, has been abundantly established. See, for example, Hengstenberg on the Pentateuch, ii. p. 118, sq., also Herod, ii. 46. It may be doubted, however, whether committing adultery with the Egyptians means worshipping their idols. We would rather understand it, with Calvin, of their improper trust in the power of Egypt, which was itself an act of unfaithfulness toward God. So also may be understood what is said of the Assyrians. 160 EZEKIEL XVI. have diminished thy allowance, and have given thee to the desire of them that hate thee, the daughters of the Philistines, that are ashamed of thy lewd way.^ 28. Thou hast played the wanton also with the Assyrians, because thou wast not satisfied, and didst play the wanton, and still wast not satisfied. 29. And thou didst multiply thy whoredoms toward the land of Canaan, as far as Chaldea,2 and even still wast not satisfied with this. SO. How weak is thine heart, saith the Lord Jehovah ! since thou doest all these things, the doing of an adulterous, imperious woman ; 31. Since thou buildest thy chamber at the corner of every way, and makest thy high-place in every street ; and hast not been as an harlot, to scorn the hire.^ 32. The adul- terous woman, who receives strangers while under her husband!* 33. To all harlots they give gifts ; but thou bestowest gifts on all thy lovers, and bribest them to come to thee on every side by thy Avhoredoms. 34. And there is in thee the contrary of women, in thy committing whoredoms, while it is not played the wanton after thee ; and in thy giving of a reward, while a reward is not given to thee ; so that thou art contrary. 35. Therefore, O harlot, hear the word of Jehovah: 36. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thy filthiness has been poured out, and thou hast dis- covered thy nakedness by thy whoredoms, upon thy lovers, and upon all the idols of thy abominations, and by the blood of thy children whom thou didst give to them. 37. Behold, therefore, I will gather all thy lovers, with whom thou hast had pleasure, even all whom thou hast loved, with all that thou hatest ; and I will gather them against thee round about, and discover thy nakedness to them, and they shall see all thy nakedness. 38. And I wUl judge thee according to the judgments of adulteresses and those who shed blood ; and I will make thee blood of fury and jealousy. 39. And I will give ^ " The daughters of the Philistines," seem here to be taken generally as a name for heathen adversaries. They were not actually the parties to whom Israel was given up, when her allowance was diminished, or her in- heritance curtailed ; but those to whom they were given up, from their character and position, might be called daughters of the Philistines. 2 The meaning of this fresh charge, which we render quite literally, seems to be this, that the people multiplied still farther their backslidings and pol- lutions, such as belonged to the land of Canaan under its original inhabi- tants, and that by going even to Chaldea ; bringing in Chaldea to aggravate the Canaanitish character of their evil ways. We greatly prefer this sense to taking Caanan as an appellative, and rendering, " the merchant-land to Chaldea." ' The practice of harlots is referred to, scoffing at or scorning the offered hire, in order to obtain more. Unlike such, worse even than those profli- gates, Israel seemed to be indiflPerent to the result of her procedure ; she did not care whether she got much or little — heedlessly bent on the way of ruin. The rendering of this clause by the Vulgate is particularly happy : Nee facta es sicut meretrix fastidio augens pretium. 4 The common version misses the exact import of this verse, by rendering "taketh strangers instead of her husband." The sin charged is that of taking or receiving strangers while under the law of her husband. It refers to Numb. V. 19, 20, 29, where the rendering should be, '* goeth aside under her husband," i. e., turns aside to another, while properly under him. THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 161 thee into their hand, and they shall throw down thy chambers, and shall prostrate thy high-places ; and they shall strip thee of thy clothes, and shall take thy beautiful jewels, and leave thee naked and bare. 40. And they shall make to go up against thee a company, and they shall stone thee with stones, and thrust thee through with their swords. 41. And they shall bum thy houses with fire, and execute judgments upon thee in the sight of many women ; and will make thee cease from playing the wanton, nor also shalt thou give hire any more. 42. And I will make my fury to rest in thee, and my jealousy shall depart from thee ; and I wall be quiet, and will no more be angry. 43. Because thou hast not remembered the days of thy youth, and hast provoked me in all these things, behold I also recompense thy way upon thy head, saith the Lord Jehovah ; and will not do what is scandalous upon all thine abominations. ^ 44. Behold every one that deals in proverbs shall utter a prrtverb upon thee saying : As is the mother, so is the daughter. 45. Thou art thy mother's daughter, that dost loathe her husband and her children ; and the sister of thy sisters art thou, who did loathe their husbands and their children; your mother was a Hittite and your father an Amorite. 46. And thine elder sister is Samaria, she and her daughters that dwell on thy left ; and thy younger sister that dwells on thy right, are Sodom and her daughters. 47. And thou hast not walked after their ways, and done according to their abominations ; it was accounted but a little thing ; and thou hast been corrupted more than they in all thy ways. 48. As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, Sodom thy sisrer has not done, she nor her daughters, as thou hast done and thy daugh- ters. 49. Behold this was the iniquity of Sodom thy sister, pride, fulness of bread, and secure rest w^as in her and in her daughters ; and she did not strengthen the hand of the poor and needy. 50. And they were haughty and committed abomination before me ; and I removed them according to what I saw. 2 51. And Samaria has not committed the half of thy sins ; and thou hast multiplied thy abominations above them, and hast justified thy sisters by all thine abominations which thou hast done. 52. Thou also, who hast vin- dicated^ thy sisters, bear thine own shame; by thy sins, in which thou hast ^ This last clause is very commonly, and also in the authorised version, rendered, " And thou shalt not commit this lewdness above all thy abomina- tions" — but what lewdness ? Nothing had been mentioned separate from the abominations themselves. The verse treats of God's proceedings, not Israel's, and this clause is plainly a continuation of what he declared it his purpose to do to Israel. He will deal with her according to her sins, and will not be guilty of the scandalous part (such is the precise import of the phrase) of encouraging her in her sinful courses. The expression refers to the conduct of a father, who should encourage his daughter to play the harlot, as recorded in Lev. xix. 29. The very same term is also used there. 2 The expression here has been misunderstood, from not perceiving that it refers to Gen. xviii. 21, where the Lord said to Abraham, that he would go down and would see whether the iniquity of Sodom was according to the cry that c^me into his ears : He did according to what he saw. 3 The proper meaning of the verb "ps seems to be to jttd^e for, to under- take or vindicate the cause of any one — and in this sense it is plainly used in 1 Sam. ii. 25. It is used also in Piel in the sense of judging generally ; but most commonly in Hithpael in the sense of entreating for, or supplicating — L 1G2 EZI.KIEL XVI. done more abominaLly than tliey, they are justified above thee ; and also be thou confounded, and bear thy shame, in that thou hast justified thy sisters. 63. And 1 shall turn again the captivity of Sodom and her daughters, and the captivity of Samaria and her daughters, and the captivity of thy captives in the midst of them.^ 54. That thou mayest bear thy shame, and be con- founded for all thou hast done, in making thyself a comfort to them. 55. And thy sisters Sodom and her daughters shall return to their former state, and Samaria and her daughters shall return to their former state, and thou and thy daughters shall return to your former state. 56. Though Sodom thy sister was not for a report in thy mouth in the day of thy pride ; 57. Before thy wickedness was discovered, as at the time of the reproach of the daughters of Syria (i. e., apparently, the time when thou becamest an object of reproach to them), and all round about her, the daughters of the Philistines, that despise thee round about. 58. Thy scandalous behaviour and thine abominations, thou shalt bear them, saith the Lord Jehovah. 59. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I will even deal with thee as thou hast done, who hast despised the oath to break the covenant. 60. But I will re- member my covenant with thee in the days of thy youth, and I will establish with thee an everlasting covenant. 61. And thou shalt remember thy ways and be ashamed, when thou shalt receive thy sisters, thine elder and thy younger, and I give them to thee for daughters — yet not by thy covenant. 62. And I will establish with thee my covenant, and thou shalt know that I am Jehovah. 63. To the end thou mayest remember, and be confounded, and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame, when I grant forgiveness to thee for all that thou hast done, saith the Lord Jehovah. 1. The history recorded so graphically in this chapter, natur- ally falls into several successive portions ; and of these the first, which ends with ver. 7, unfolds Israel's beginnings as a people — a sense very naturally arising out of what we suppose to be the primary one of judging, for the purpose of establishing the cause or right of any one. Here the meaning is, that Israel by her greater guilt had, as it were, given judgment in favour of her less guilty neighbours. 1 I adhere to the common rendering of the phrase r^*="i" ^'"^, in preference to that so strenuously contended for by Hengstenberg in his Beitr. ii. p. 104, and again on Ps. xiv. 6. It is quite true, that in other expressions the verb is used intransitively — to turn back to, or return to anything. That, how- ever, does not conclusively prove, it may not be used actively in a proverbial expression like this ; indeed the ^s here between the verb and the noun, pointing out the one as the object of the other, seems to demand the active sense; and in Jer. xlix. 6, the Iliphil form is employed, to render the force of the expression more apparent : '•' I will cause to return — i. e., I will bring back — the captivity of the children of Anmion." See also Nahum ii. 3. The dif- ference, however, between the two interpretations is merely philological ; it respects simply the original import of the words, whether they mean precisely a turning back of the captivity, or a turning back to it, viz., on the Lord's part, with a view to its removal. The meaning is still, in either case, sub- stantially the same. The expression is a proverbial one, to denote the undoing of an existing evil, and is often used of cases, where there was no real captivity, as in Job. xlii. 10, and Jer. xxx. 18. THE STORY OF ISRAELIS GUILT. 163 when they were struggling into national existence. It takes its commencement with the birth of the female child, and terminates with her advance to womanhood. The two features that are brought prominently out in this portion of the history, are the naturally helpless, unpromising, and polluted condition of Israel, and the wonderful mercy and loving-kindness of God in preserv- ing their existence and nursing them to maturity " The origin and the birth" of this child, are said to have been " in the land of Canaan ;" and it is added, '' Thy father was the Amorite, and thy mother the Hittite." To connect the chosen people with such a parentage, was one of the most impressive ways that could be taken to mark their inveterately depraved and sinful character. The original inhabitants of Canaan, and in parti- cular, the Amorites and the Hittites, who, from being the most important and powerful tribes, are sometimes named as repre- sentatives of the whole,^ were so hateful in the sight of God, on account of their sinful and corrupt ways, that he had decreed their utter extermination from the land, which was given as a possession to the children of Israel. Therefore, to represent these Israelites now as the legitimate offspring of the very out- casts they had supplanted, was, in the strongest manner, to iden- tify the state and manners of the one with those of the other. It was adopting substantially the same figure, when John the Baptist called the scribes and pharisees of his day " a generation of vipers" — the serpent's brood — and when our Lord charged many others with being " of their father the devil, and doing the lusts of their father."^ Even Hosea, whose language is tame compared to Ezekiel's, had already addressed Israel on one occa- sion by the name of Canaan (chap. xii. 7, where we should read, ^' Canaan ! the balances of deceit are in his hands") ; and Isaiah, 1 Thus, in Gen, xv. 16, " the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full," evidently meaning the inhabitants of Canaan generally. (Corap. also Amos ii. 9). So again in Jos. i. 4, '• All the land of the Hittites" is used as q, designation of the whole land of Canaan. In naming a Hittite mother, an allusion is doubtless intended to Esau's wives, daughters of Heth, whose ways vexed the heart of Rebekah (Gen. xxvii. 46). 2 The same figure was in familiar use -among the Greeks and Latins: " Sons of Hercules," " Daughters of Ajpollo," etc. ; and in Virgil the much stronger expression, which finds a parentage in the most senseless part of inanimate nature, " Duris genuit te cautibus horrens Caucasus " (Aen. iv. 164 EZEKiEL xvr. earlier still, had gone to the utmost length in tlie use of the figure, when, in proclaiming the word of the liord to his countrymen, he addressed them as the " rulers of Sodom, and the people of Go- morrah !" (chap. i. 10). It was virtually saying, the people no longer deserved the name of the seed of Abraham, but were rather to be classed with the worst and vilest portion of mankind. When the prophet has thus marked the native vileness and depravity of the people, by ascribing to them a Canaanitic origin, he proceeds to exhibit, under a few striking traits, the miserable helplessness and destitution out of which their national existence had emerged. The child that personifies them is represented as a despised and neglected infant, that was denied the commonest acts of parental regard — its very life a miracle — neither ban- daged, nor washed, nor salted, nor swaddled, at its birth, but cast forth as a worthless and polluted thing on the face of the earth, and mercilessly abandoned to the elements of nature. So wretched and forlorn in the first stage of being, had Israel been left to their own resources, they would certainly have perished under the adverse influences against which they had to struggle, or, which is all one in this connection, would have failed to reach an independent national existence. But here now appears, in striking contrast to the evil, the other prominent feature of the description — the wonderful grace and mercy of God, which pre- vailed over all that was abject and repulsive in their condition, and fostered the feeble life into full-grown maturity. His eye pitied the poor and wretched little one, and with a word of power, he bade it live ; and not only live, but grow and strengthen to its full proportions. ^' I made thee," as the words literally and properly are in ver. 7, " a myriad, like the increase of the field, and thou didst multiply, and wax great, and became most beau- tiful, thy breasts formed, and thy hair grew, and thou (still) wast naked and bare." The idea obviously is, that under the protect- ing and fostering care of God, the small and despised people, who had been at first ready to perish, rapidly grew into considerable numbers and strength, capable of being used for some important purpose, though still, from their low and impoverished state, the aid of a gracious and powerful hand would be needed to bring it into accomplishment. The period of Israel's history embraced in this part of the de- scription, is undoubtedly that of the sojourn in Egypt; for it THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 165 was then, properly, tliat their existence as a people began. It was a beginning, however, impressed with the most humiliating marks of feebleness and contempt. Even when the family of Jacob were, for Joseph's sake, treated to distinguished favour, it was not without accompanying tokens of a contrary description : on account of their occupation as shepherds, they were eyed with disdain by the Egyptians, and had to dwell by themselves, as an inferior caste. But this natural antipathy soon expressed itself in a more actively offensive form, and a tide of undisguised hatred and cruel oppression set in against them, which, with few interruptions, continued to flow for centuries. Everything was done which an unscrupulous tyranny could devise to depress their condition, and even extinguish their existence. Yet so carefully did the Lord watch over them during this long season of peril, that not only was their being preserved, but their growth, also, was supernaturally increased : " they were fruitful," it is said, " and swarmed, and multiplied, and increased most exceed- ingly ;" and " the more they afflicted them, the more they multi- pliedand grew" (Exod.i. 7, 12). This paternal kindness and watch- ful oversight on the part of God was the more striking, and should have produced the deeper impression on the national mind of Israel, as it was exercised, not merely amid destructive influences working from without, but also in the face of much spiritual cor- ruption prevailing within. The families of Israel had become most deeply infected with the foul leprosy of Egypt ; and to the contempt arising from their political feebleness, there was also to be overcome the disgust which could not fail to be produced by their sensual idolatries. Doubtless, there was then, as through all subsequent periods of their history there still was, a faithful remnant, in whose bosoms the hidden life of faith was maintained. The covenant of Abraham, pledging to him in perpetuity a spi- ritual seed, indispensably required this ; and the brief notices of the period abundantly testify, that it was not altogether wanting. Still, viewed as a whole, the people were in a most degenerate and polluted condition. The general meanness and poverty of their external circumstances was but the symbol of their spiritual state ; and while in respect to number they had now become suited to the higher purposes of God, they still lacked what was most essentially needed to fit them for the execution of his will. But in all this, believers of eveiy age must see the image of their 166 EZEKIEL XVI. own state by nature, and the ground of their infinite obligations. What have they of their own ? Only, like Israel, the elements of weakness, pollution, and death. It is the grace of God alone that breathes life into the soul, and at once reveals the things that are to be received and done in God's service, and brings the capacity for receiving or doing them aright. Whence the first and last feeling in every regenerate bosom should be one of deep abasement, and entire renunciation of self, spontaneously yielding the whole praise and glory to God. 2. The second stage of this allegorical history, exhibited in ver. 8-14, represents the singular honour and glory conferred on the ideal virgin in her exaltation to the rank of a spouse to the king of Zion, and her decoration with apparel suited to her ele- vated station. Here, again, every thing is fragrant with the matchless grace and loving-kindness of God. She has nothing of her own to entitle her to such an ennobling distinction, and nothing of her own to fit her for adorning it. It is not she that makes the advance to God, but God that makes the advance to her : " the Lord passes by her" now, as he had done at the first, and fixes on her the regard of his love. And that love, not a mere general benevolence, but such a special affection as one cherishes toward the person he would betroth for his wife ; for when the Lord passed by her, " he spread his skirt over her ;" *' yea," he adds, explaining more distinctly what was meant by the transaction, '^ I sware unto thee, and entered into a coven- ant with thee, saith the Lord Jehovah, and thou becamest mine." That is, she became his in the same sense in which a woman becomes a man's, when united to him by the marriage oath and covenant, in respect to which, as usually connected with the solemnization of marriage, the proper wife of an Israelite is called, in Mai. ii. 14, " the wife of thy covenant." And as it was cus- tomary for brides, when entering into union with earthly kings and potentates, to pass through a period of purification (Esther ii. 12), so this betrothed spouse of the king of Zion, all unfitted as she naturally was for such a glorious union, is declared to have been specially prepared for the occasion : " And I wash thee with water, and I rinse thy blood from off thee (that, namely, of her original impurity still cleaving to her), and I anoint thee with oil." When thus personally pre|)ared for the solemnity, she is furnished with all the nsual articles of a bride's apparel — raiment THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 167 of rich embroidery, shoes oi' tahash, silk and fine linen, ear-rings, jewels, ornaments of silver and gold, and a beautiful crown upon the head ; for, being the spouse of a king, she was raised to the highest dignity, she must bear the emblem of royalty. And as the consequence of this instalment in higli and honourable state, she was furnished with the best provisions — with flour, and honey, and oil — and prospered, and became great, so that the fame of her comely and beautiful appearance spread all around, and she attracted the admiration and envy of her heathen neighbours. The description presents a vivid and impressive image of the singular goodness of God to Israel, from the time that he visited them in Egypt, and raised them from the low and depressed condition which they held there, to the nearest fellow- ship with himself, and the highest place among the kingdoms of the earth. The relation formed between Jehovah and Israel at that interesting period, had already been more than once repre- sented under the image of the marriage-union. To say nothing of various descriptions founded on this image in Isaiah (such as chap. 1. 1, liv. 1), it forms the basis of the whole series of repre- sentations given by Hosea, in the three first chapters of his writings ; and Jeremiah, referring expressly to the period of the deliverance from Egypt, and what immediately followed, says, in one of his earliest prophecies (chap. ii. 2), '^ I remember thee, the kindness of thy youth, the love of thine espousals, when thou wentest after me in the wilderness, in a land not sown." Indeed, no earthly relation could so fitly have been employed as that of marriage, to exhibit the nature of that hallowed union, in virtue of which the Lord not only conferred on them a rich dowry of temporal good, but also graciously condescended to maintain with them a most intimate and endearing interchange of love. For, as Havernick justly remarks, while the external greatness, and glory, afterwards imparted to Israel, are not ex- cluded from this representation, they are by no means (as Grotius, and interpreters of a kindred spirit, imagine) alone intended. It is the internal relationship established between them and God, and the spiritual blessings immediately growing- out of it, which are here primarily and chiefly referred to. Even the outward temporal blessings secured in the covenant, and in part also realised, should never have been viewed as an ultimate and independent good, but rather as the expression 168 EZEKIEL XVI. and emblem of sometliing higher and better. They were not properly blessings at all, except in so far as they were held in connection with the favour of Heaven, and bespoke the fellow- ship of love that subsisted between Jehovah and his people. Canaan itself derived its chief value as a covenant-good from its being the Lord's possession — the land which he claimed as peculiarly his own, and in which his people dwelt as "sojourners with /iwi." It is, therefore, their close relationship to God, raid their high place in respect to the affairs of his spiritual king- dom, which is most directly indicated under the idea of their marriage-union to the Lord. The same, substantially, which is otherwise expressed by their being made a kingdom of priests ; and still again by their having put upon them the name of Israelites — princes of God. But considering the state in which they were found in Egypt, they much needed to undergo a process of purification to fit them for bearing aright so high and ennobling a character. That many rites of cleansing should have been prescribed to them, and a long course of preparatory discipline appointed, only betokened the Lord's earnest desire to have them qualified for the exalted state and destiny he wished them to fill. And throughout, nothing was wanted of tender compassion and faith- ful dealing on his part. From the first he crowned them with marks of his goodness. A fulness of power and glory rested on them, far surpassing what their numbers alone might have warranted them to expect. And when the kingdom at last rose to meridian splendour, and received the confirmation and enlargement given to it, especially in the days of David and Solomon, the surrounding heathen were compelled to own, that there is a* great reality in the favour and blessing of Heaven. They saw in Israel, as a people, living monuments of the mighty efficacy of Divine grace, how it can exalt the feeble, and lay the powers of the world, as well as the bounties of nature, under contribution to the furtherance of its beneficent designs. And, assuredly, the children of grace should be such monuments still ; nor, if true to their principles, and faithful to their heavenly calling, can they fail to be so. " Washed, sanctified, and justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God," they are admitted into the very secret of the Lord's presence ; and all things become theirs — all things need- THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 169 fal for their present and final welfare. They dwell *' where angels visit," '^ where beams descend from the Eternal Sun," where flows that river of life which makes glad the city of God — partakers even now of a blessing, which the world may well envy, but which, blessed be God, it can as little take away as it can give. 3. In the preceding section, the prophet has magnified the grace and goodness of God to Israel, and in the next, embracing ver. 15-34, he exhibits, in the most pungent terms, the ungrate- ful and treacherous conduct of Israel toward God. The much- beloved spouse, who has been treated to such high honours, and replenished with so many precious and costly gifts, proves un- faithful to her husband, employs the very ornaments and pro- visions he has conferred on her to the shameful purpose of feeding her wanton disposition, and compassing her sinful ends ; and instead of seeking, as in duty bound, to promote his credit and renown in the world, acts rather as if her object were to show how low a place he held in her esteem, and how much she preferred others before him. In this part of the narrative the allegorical style is perhaps as closely preserved as it could have been, consistently with vivid- ness and accuracy in the representation ; but it is impossible not to notice at various points, how the fictitious garb drops off, and the plain reality discovers itself — as when mention is made of the children being sacrificed by passing through the fire (ver. 21), and the Egyptians and Assyrians are specified among those with whom a forbidden intercourse was carried on (ver. 26, 28). We can only view the representation generally, and with respect to its leading features ; as from the very nature of the image, it is impossible to be minute, without, at the same time, falling into indelicacy. But we see at a glance, that the primary evil charged, and the spring of all the abominations that followed, was the misappropriation of God's goodness — viewing the gifts conferred apart from the bounteous Giver, and applying them to selfish purposes. " Thou didst trust in thine own beauty, and didst play the wanton upon thy name," or renown — such is the first crime laid to her charge. Instead of holding, as Israel manifestly should have done, all their mercies and privileges in humble dependence on God, and using them for his glory, they looked upon them as in the strictest sense their own, and turned 170 EZEKIEL XVT. tliein into instruments and occasions for exalting tliemselves in the eyes of others. They became vain in their imaginations, and seemed to enter into a sort of senseless rivalry with their neigh- bom's, for tlie countenance and support of their false gods. It may possibly appear as if the picture were somewhat overdrawn, when Israel is represented as courting the attention of those foul divinities, and, for that purpose, turning to account her beautiful ornaments and stores of plenty. But a deep truth lies at the bottom of the representation. For what were the false gods in question, but the personification of those carnal desires and affec- tions which the good things so amply poured into Israel's lot had but served to feed t deified human nature in its manifold varie- ties of lust and earthliness I So that their zeal in worshipping such gods, and lavishing on them costly tokens of their regard, very much resolves itself into an anxiety to have the countenance of Heaven upon the gratification of their own grovelling and earthly propensities. And hence it was, that when replenished with a fulness of worldly comforts, Israel so naturally preferred the worship of idols to that of Jehovah, and, like a treacherous spouse, breaking loose from the holy restraints of wedlock, yielded tliemselves to the service of these impure rivals ; — for thus they could give freer play to the corrupt affections of nature. Their conduct in this was simply an example of the native effect of the world upon the heart, according to the circumstances of the time ; and when our Lord, speaking for all times, sets before us the prodigal son, selfishly coveting his portion of goods, and going to spend them in alienation from his father's house, he but presents us with another exhibition, differently modified, of the same great truth. Let the heart of nature be fed to the full with gifts, and there will never fail to appear, in one form or another, the idolatry of self and the world. The fervid and glowing character of Ezekiel's mind, how^ever, is not satisfied with this general description of the idolatrous spirit that discovered itself in Israel's history. It must give stroke after stroke, and heap one particular upon another, to make the impression complete. And therefore he goes on Uh tell, how everything that Israel had received of good — her gar- ments of divers colours, jewels of gold and silver, oil, flour, honey, incense, were all employed in the service of corruption ; and how new ways were sought out, and special places erected THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 171 for the prosecution of her unhallowed purposes. Nor does he fail to notice, in thus filling up the picture of evil, one or two revolting traits, which gave a peculiar hideousness to the char- acter of Israel's degeneracy. The sacrificing of the children, by making them pass through the fire, is one of these ; and the Lord calls them his own children, rather than her's, — " my children," — because they had been born under his covenant with Israel, and bore the sign of the covenant upon them. Another also is given toward the close of the description, when after having declared the readiness of Israel to take up with every form of idolatry in Canaan, and all round to Chaldea, on the one hand, and Egypt on the other, the cutting remark is brought in, that none of these nations followed her, — the treacherous and wanton dealing was all on Israel's part — she conceded everything to them, they yielded back nothing in return to her — her wicked- ness was gratuitous and unrequited folly. A solemn and preg- nant truth, which the church of God should never forget. She loses all, and the world gains all, when she foolishly stoops to impair the testimony of God, or adjust the claims and services of religion to the tastes and practices of the carnal mind. A nominal advance or apparent reconciliation may possibly be achieved by the manoeuvre ; but it can be no more than nominal and apparent ; the interests that really profit by such a policy are those of the flesh and the world. It is only when the church is faithful to her testimony — when she stands in the truth of Christ, and in that truth shines forth " bright as the sun, clear as the moon," that she is found also, in her conflict with evil, '' terrible as an army with banners." 4. The next section — ver. 35-52 — is chiefly occupied with the denunciation of judgment ; though at diff'erent places, and espe- cially toward the close, the peculiar greatness of Israel's sin is again brought into view, to justify the aw^ful severity of the punishment. Here also, as in the other parts, the prophet in- dulges in considerable amplification, and descends to much minuteness of detail. But the substance of the representation consists in denouncing against the faithless spouse the sentence of death written in the law against conjugal infidelity, and this to be executed by the hand of her guilty paramours. In the law there were two modes sanctioned of capital punishment — • the one for individuals, the other for communities ; in the first 172 EZEKiEL xvr. case, stoning ; in the other, destroying with the sword. Adul- tery belonging to the first of these classes, the appropriate punishment for it was stoning to death.^ And as the conjugal infidelity in this case was coincident with two other heinous crimes — apostacy fi'om the true worship, and the sacrificing of children to Moloch, which were also adjudged to the same punish- ment (Deut. xiii. 10; Lev. xx. 1-5), the doom might be said here to be doubly due. But a single form of punishment, even though a capital one, does not seem adequately to express the full measure of condemnation that was provoked by such aggra- vated guilt ; and therefore, the other also, which was decreed against an apostate city (Deut. xiii. 15), is conjoined with it, though the consistence of the allegory suiFers by the conjunc- tion : " They shall bring up a company against thee, and they shall stone thee with stones, and thrust thee through w'ith their swords." For the same purpose, of rendering what w^as done more fully expressive of the Lord's sore displeasure against the sin, the execution of the doom is coupled with all manner of indignities — exposing the faithless spouse to shame before others, demolishing her high places, spoiling her of her jewels and apparel, burning her houses, and reducing her in all respects to the most abject and humiliating condition. And that the whole was to be accomplished in the presence and by the instrumen- tality of those nations, whose evil manners Israel had followed, and whose treacherous alliance she had courted, is intended to mark the dealing of God tow^ard her as more signally exemplify- ing the Divine law of recompense. It was to bring prominently into view, through her melancholy experience, the grand lesson, that "God will make him, w^ho leaves God for the world, disgraced even in the eyes of the world, and indeed the more so, the nearer he formerly stood to himself."^ The result of this severe execution of judgment is intimated ^ Lev. XX. 10, which, though it simply mentions putting to death, is yet to be connected with ver. 1, as to the manner of inflicting the punisliment. Also John viii. 5, which shows the Jewish mind on the subject. And, indeed, generally, stoning to death appears to have been the only legal form of capital punishment for individual sins. ^ Flengstenberg's Christol. on IIos. ii. 12 ; also Isa. xlvii. 3, Jer. xiii. 26, Nah. iii. 5, in all which the same idea is unfolded, only less fully and broadly. THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 173 in a peculiarly strong manner of expression, tliough already in substance employed at chay). v, 13, " I will make my fury to rest in thee, and my jealousy shall depart from thee, and I will be quiet, and will be no more angry." The meaning is, that the Divine vengeance called forth by the people's sins should then have run its course ; God's holiness and majesty should have un* folded themselves in measures of justice toward the people, cor- responding to their extreme and incorrigible wickedness toward hira. The one followed upon the other by a close and stringent necessity ; since, for God to have acted otherwise, would have been to show himself indifferent to the interests of holiness, or rather to appear as the patron of sin. Hence the very singular and too commonly misunderstood asseveration, with which the Lord winds up this part of the description, " And also I, behold, I recompense thy way on thy head, saith the Lord Jehovah, and will not do what is scandalous upon all thine abominations." I thus vindicate myself from any participation in the guilt, and show, that I do not act the shameful part of countenancing thee in thy abominable ways, but by these judgments raise a solemn and effective protest against them. Yet, as if there might seem an undue severity in the judg- ments pronounced, the prophet again dwells at some length on the greatness of the provocation. And to give his discourse here more pungency and force to those whom it immediately respected, he narrows the application to that portion of the covenant-people, with whom alone he had properly to do — those of the kingdom of Judah. Viewing Jerusalem now in this re- stricted sense, he charges her with having exceeded in the measure of her criminality, the very worst and guiltiest of her neighbours. The legitimate daughter of a Hittite mother and an Amorite father, she had also proved herself the genuine sister of Samaria (called the elder^ because in a moral respect more nearly related) on the north, and Sodom on the south. For she had trodden anew in their polluted ways, but with still greater perverseness of disposition, and wantonness of behaviour ; so that she might even be said to have justified them ; they could shelter themselves, when accused of sin, under her worse example. Not that the unrighteous and perverse ways followed in Judah were in themselves of a darker and more abominable character than those which had already given such an unhappy 174 EZEKiEL xvr. notoriety to Samaria and Sodom. This had well-nigh heen im- possible. But the evil deeds here being committed on holier ground, in the midst of more distinguished privileges, and in de- fiance of warnings and protestations altogether peculiar, bore upon them a far deeper impression of guilt. It was simply on the territory of heathenism, and from being carried away by the full tide of worldly prosperity poured into their lot, that Sodoni and her daughter^ cities of the plain, became to an unusual de- gree immersed in tlie vices of pride, carnaHty, and lust. And even Samaria, though occupying higher ground than Sodom, and sinning against greater privileges, still held, in comparison of Judah, a much inferior position. For it was the peculiar distinction of Judah, that she had in her very bosom the temple of God, a legal priesthood, the order of government which God himself had appointed, kings often of eminent piety, prophets endowed with the richest gifts of the Spirit, and in addition to all, the spectacle before her eyes of God's judgments resting both on Samaria and Sodom — on each hand appalling monuments of Divine vengeance ! Her sins, therefore, were relatively of a much deeper dye than those of her erring neighbours, and it was in the highest degree impossible that she should escape the righteous judgment of God. But if she, in comparison of them, incurred such pre-eminent guilt and condemnation, much more, again, sinners under the gospel, in comparison of her ; for now it is emphatically, that the clear light shines, and that the many talents of knowledge and grace are held in God's kingdom. Sin committed in such circumstances acquires its darkest char- acter, and the judgment that alights must come with correspond- ing severity. As our Lord, indeed, intimated in that solemn word to the Jews, which may still be substantially addressed to every impenitent transgressor : '^ If I had not come and spoken to them, they had not had sin, but now they have no cloak for their sin." 5. The last portion, which reaches from ver. 53 to the close of the chapter, subjoins a word of promise to the long series of ex- postulation and threatening, and lets in a gleam of hope as to the future condition of the people. Of course, this again could only be done at the expense of the allegorical representation ; for on the supposition of the faithless spouse having been actually stoned to death and thrust through with the sword, all hope THE STORY OF Israel's GUILT. 175 must of necessity have been cut off. But truth required that the form in this case sliould be sacrificed to the substance of the deUneation. It was absolutely necessary, to show tliat however severe the judgments of God were to be against the apostacy of Judah, they were not to be utterly exterminating, and that a people of God should still survive for honour and blessing. The particular form given to this more cheering part of the representation was chosen with an especial view to the lowly and abased spirit, which the prophet would have them to understand was absolutely necessary, before they could find a return of the Lord's favour and goodness. Even the humiliating providences and manifold tribulations, which were to pass over the remnant of the house of Judah, would fail to be sufficiently productive of the desired effect ; it would come only with the returning showers of the Divine goodness. For this end, to render the spiritual I'esult in question more certain, the offending sisters, who had shared before Judah in the punishment, are also named before her as partakers of the benefit, that self-boasting on her part might be excluded : " and I shall turn again their captivity, the captivity of Sodom and her daughters, and the captivity of Samaria and her daughters, and the captivity of thy captivities (?'. e.y thy very grievous captivity) in the midst of them. And thy sisters, Sodom and her daughters, shall return to their former state, and Samaria and her daughters shall return to their former state, and thou and thy daughters shall return to your former state:" — thev not less than thou: even Sodom too — though she, as is presently mentioned in ver. 56, " was not for a report in thy mouth (not viewed and spoken of as a case, of which thou shouldst have been mindful, and from which thou shouldst have learned wisdom) in the day of thy glory." She has disdained to be admonished by her example, and even afterwards by the chas- tisements she personally received at the hand of the Syrians, the Philistines, and other warlike neighbours, whom the Lord occa- sionally employed against her as instruments of rebuke ; for her sin was still not fully discovered, she did not yet see to the depth of it, and would not receive correction (ver. 57). Whence it became necessary to have the whole brought clearly to light, and judgments corresponding to it laid on her (ver. 58, 59). But what precisely is to be understood of the returning, or bringing back of the captivity here promised % The expression, 176 EZEKiEL xvr. as we have stated in a previous note, is used proverbially for the removal of an afflicted condition in general, and the appointment of a happy and prosperous one. Its application to the case of Job — " and the Lord turned the captivity of Job " (chap. xlii. 10), — puts this beyond a doubt. And even here, though tlie import of the phrase appears to be rendered more express by specifying a return to the former state, 3'et when it is spoken of Sodom and her neighbour cities, as well as of Samaria and Jerusalem, and their neighbour cities, it manifestly could not be intended to intimate specifically and properly a return from exile, and a re-inhabitation of the old places. This was obviously impossible in the case of Sodom and the cities of the plain. The promise is simply one of restored prosperity — the approaching tide of desolation should again be turned back, and a state of prosperity and happiness, as of old, be appointed. Not that exactly which had been, line for line ; but what, in the altered circumstances of another time, might be regarded as correspond- ing to it. " The safe and prosperous condition of former times," says Havernick justly, " is the determinate form, under which the prophet descries also the future ; but presently again this appears arrayed n so ideal a splendour, that that very form bursts asunder, and a new world in reality comes into view. There is the old God, with his old gifts of love ; but the subjec- tive condition has become quite different, and hence the old blessings are also of a new kind, and the whole state, in conse- quence, rises into something far more elevated and glorious than the old one." It is as if an assurance were given to a child, whose family had become enveloped in misfortune, that he should live to see the former prosperity return again ; but mean- while he himself springs to manhood, and, having now other wants to satisfy, and higher relations to fill than formerly, the revived prosperity must bring new and nobler gifts within his reach, to place him on the same relative position he originally occupied. In short, the bringing back of the captivity, and re- turning to the former state, as applied to the covenant-people, indicates nothing as to the outward form of things to be enjoyed, but points only to their nature and character, as similar to what already had been. And in regard to the manner of accomplishing the promised good, by coupling Sodom and Samaria with Jeini- salem in the happy prospect, it must be borne in mind that the THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S GUILT. 177 representation is figurative ; it is the truth represented and em- bodied in an ideal history ; and nothing more can fairly be deduced from the particular trait now referred to, than that the covenant-people, as they had, in the aggravation and magnitude of their guilt, sunk below the most depraved nations around them, so they might expect the return of God's favour and blessing only when they came to view tlieir case in its real enor- mity, and cherish on account of it a suitable feeling of abasement. They must be ready to put themselves on a level with the lowest, as the necessary condition of their being visited anew with hon- our and enlargement. Hence, it is entirely out of place here to move any question, with some commentators, as to the building anew of Sodom and the other cities of the plain. This were to turn the figure into a reality, and also to transfer the subject itself from the moral region of God's government toward men, to the merely natural region of his providential arrangements respecting the material world. And if it is out of place to move such a question regarding Sodom, it is equally unnecessary, at least, regarding Samaria and Jerusalem. It is the kind, not the precise form of things, which is to be kept in view ; and the promise of good here given for the future might be brought to a full accomplishnient, and carried even to its highest perfection, though the cities of Judah and Israel should continue, like those of the plain, monuments of desolation and ruin. For the happi- ness and glory of the covenant-people, which alone is to be regarded here, however it might be connected with them, might also be attained without them ; and so far from being necessarily tied to them, may even be found in largest measure, while the old things in that respect are gone into utter oblivion. The closing verses, while they carry forward substantially the same line of thought, in respect especially to the necessity of profound humiliation on the part of the people, and the purposed manifestation of rich grace on the part of God, also render pro- minent a remarkable difference between those represented by this ideal woman, and others. With all her guilt and baseness, she still had what they had not, and what in the day of return- ing grace would bring them to her, rather than send her to them for blessing — she had the covenant of God, which, however it had been suffered to fall into abeyance, had never been repudiated by him. " And I remember," the Lord says, " my covenant M 178 EZEKIEL XVI. with thee, in the days of thy youth, and I establish for thee an everlasting covenant." That covenant made with them in the days of their youth, as to its promise of blessing, was God's word, which he could not suffer to pass unfulfilled. And though there was in this respect an Old and a New, yet so little was there of contrariety between them, when rightly understood, that the one was properly, as here represented, the root of the other ; the Old, the germ out of which all the coming good was to spring and develope itself. A glorious rise, indeed, was to take place from a lower to a higher, when the Old passed into the New ; but by no means an antagonism, as from bad to good. The better things to come, when they appeared, merely filled up and completed what had been shadowed forth and promised in the Old ; and precisely by being thus filled up and completed, did the covenant become what it is here called, an everlasting one. Grace reigns now in a manner it never did before, and the bless- ing rests upon better promises, because there is a much fuller manifestation of Divine power and goodness for them to rest on. And on this account there is no longer the same room for the former breaches and desolations to enter ; the inheritance is made sure for ever to all the seed of blessing. But the more that everything appears to stand in the grace and loving-kindness of God, the more is there to abase and humble the partakers of the blessing: especially when they consider the freeness with which grace not only comes from the bosom of God, but also sheds forth its abundance on the worst and the vilest. Those who had been sisters to Judah in guilt and punishment, were now also to become partners with her in experiences of blessing, and were to be given to her for daugh- ters — because through her they should attain to the inheritance of blessing. Yet " not by thy covenant," it is added, lest she should again arrogate the glory to herself; not by virtue of any transaction or league of her own framing, such as of old she was ever attempting to form ; not by any such covenant of thine, but by mine — the Old, and yet New — the everlasting covenant, which I make with you, and establish for the good of the world."^ ^ Such must be held to be the meaning here. The '"not by thy cove- nant," cannot possibly refer to the old covenant made with Israel, as contra- , distinguished from the new, for God had already traced to that covenant as its fountain-head, all the grace and blessing that was to be conferred. And, THE PARABLE OF THE TWO GREAT EAGLES. 179 And so, as the result of all, " Thou shalt know that I am the Lord ; to the end thou mayst remember, and be confounded, and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame, when I am pacified toward thee (or, when I grant forgiveness to thee) for all that thou hast done, saith the Lord Jehovah." So may it be also in our experience. Let the humbling and salutary lessons, so strikingly brought out in this wonderful his- tory, take such deep and abiding hold of our hearts, that we shall ever be careful to avoid the evil, and follow after the good. And especially since God has now laid open to us the marvellous riches of his grace, and called us to the inheritance of his king- dom, may he never allow us to forget how unworthy we naturally are of such singular goodness, and how often, by our light and sinful behaviour, we have provoked him to withdraw it again ; so that we may give to him all the glory, and may set our hearts more upon that better country, where imperfection shall be for ever done away, and the strivings between nature and grace shall be wholly unknown. CHAPTER XVII. THE PARABLE OF THE TWO GREAT EAGLES, AND THE CROPPING OF THE CEDAR OF LEBANON. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying: 2. Son of man, put forth a riddle, and utter a parable (or similitude) to the house of Israel. 3. And say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, the great eagle, large of wing, with long pinions and full plumage, having many colours, came to Lebanon, and pluckt the topmost branch^ of the cedar. 4. The top of his young twigs he cropt off, and brought it to a land of traffic, in a city of merchants he set it. 5. And he took of the seed of the land, and committed it to a fruitful as Calvin justly remarks here, while there were important differences between the two covenants, as noticed by Jeremiah in chap. xxxi. and xxxii., yet the new covenant so sprung from the old, that it is well-nigh the same in sub- stance, though different in form. ^ The term n-_»2s is peculiar to Ezekiel, but from the use of it here, and in chap. xxxi. 3-14, there can be no doubt, that it means the summit, or top- most branch — the woolly part of the tree at the farthest extremity. 180 EZEKIEL XVII. field ; took (it) beside great waters, set it (as) a willow, i 6. And it grew, and became a spreading vine, of low stature, for turning (i. e. of a kind natu- rally fitted for turning from its need of support) its branches toward him (viz., the eagle that planted it), and its roots were under him : and it be- came a vine, and brought forth branches, and shot out twigs. 7. And there was another great eagle, large of wing and with full plumage ; and behold this vine bent her roots toward him, and sent forth her branches to him, that he might water it out of the garden bed, in which it was planted. 8. Upon a good field, beside copious streams was it planted, that it might bring forth branches, and might bear fruit, so as to become a goodly vine. 9. Say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, shall it flourish ? will he not pull up its roots, and cut off its fruit, that it may wither ? All its sprouting leaves shall wither, and without great strength or many people to lift it up by the roots. 10. And behold, though planted, shall it flourish ? Shall it not utterly wither as soon as the east wind touches it ? Upon the plot where it grew shall it wither. II. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying: 12. Say now to the rebellious house, know ye not what these things be ? say. Behold the King of Babylon came to Jerusalem, and took her king and her princes, and brought them along with him to Babylon. 13. And he took of the royal seed, and made a covenant with it, and brought it under an oath ; and the mighty of the land he also took. 14. That the kingdom might be in a low condition, that it might not lift itself up, that it might keep his covenant and establish it. 15. But he rebelled against him, in sending his ambas- sadors to Egypt, that they might give him horses and much people. Shall he flourish ? Shall he escape who does this ? And shall he break the covenant and escape ? 16. As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, surely in the place of the king that made him king, whose oath he despised, and whose covenant he broke, in the midst of Babylon shall he die. 17. Neither shall Pharaoh with mighty power and a great host accomplish for him by war, by casting up mounds, and by building towers, to cut off many souls. 18. And he despised the oath, to break the covenant, and lo ! he gave his hand ; yea he did all these things ; he shall not escape. 19. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, As I live, surely my oath which he despised, and my covenant which he broke, that will 1 bring upon his own head. 20. And I will spread my net upon him, and he shall be taken in my snare, and I will bring him to Babylon, and I will reckon with him there for his treacherous dealing toward me. 21. And all his fugitives, with all his bands, shall fall by the sword, and those that are left of them shall be scattered to every wind ; and ye shall know that I, Jehovah, have spoken. 22. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And I take (namely, when those things have taken place) of the topmost branch of the high cedar, and set — from the top of its shoots, I pluck oflf a slender one, and I plant it upon a moun- 1 We have here also another word peculiar to Ezekiel, nsusisj which is usually rendered willow; and in that sense has the support of Jewish autho- rity. Indeed, this is the only Rabinnical meaning of the term. If any modification whatever were allowable, it might be supposed, with Hitzig, to denote generally a water-plant, a shrub or tree naturally growing in, or be- side waters. It was probably applied as a designation of the willow on this account, being derived from jr^i::, to flood or overflow. Set where it was the cedar-twig became a willow for growth, and a spreading, luxuriant vine for iruitfulness. THE PARABLE OF THE TWO GREAT EAGLES. 181 tain high and elevated. 23. Upon the mountain-height of Israel I will plant it, and it shall raise aloft its branch, and bring forth fruit, and become a glorious cedar ; and under it shall dwell all birds of every kind (literally, every bird of every wing, as at Gen. vii. 14), in the shade of its branches shall they dwell. 24. And all the trees of the field shall know, that I, Jehovah, bring down the high tree, exalt the low tree, dry up the green tree, and make the dry tree to flourish ; I, Jehovah, speak and do. The prophet is here commanded to put forth to the house of Israel a parable, or similitude ; which is also denominated a riddle, because it was to be fraught with a meaning that should by no means discover itself at first sight, and, even with the aid of an accompanying explanation, would require the most careful thought and consideration to be understood in its profound and wide- reaching import. A great eagle first presents itself in vision to the eye of the prophet (literally the great eagle, emblem of the well-known, pre-eminently great king), large and long of wing, very full and variegated in its plumage — the noblest of its kind. He sees it directing its course to Lebanon, and, when there, plucking off the topmost shoot of the cedar, and the summit of its young branches, which it thence carried away to a land of traffic, and placed in a city of merchants. He sees the same eagle taking of the seed of the land — not a foreign production, but one native to the region — and planting it in a fruitful field, in the immediate vicinity of great waters, where it possessed every natural advantage for growth and fruitfulness. Yet still only within certain limits. Its growth was not to be like that of the strong and lofty cedar, but such merely as belonged to the low and spreading vine — and a vine whose branches were instinctively turned toward the eagle that planted it, and whose roots shot under him, as if doing fealty to the power, to which it owed its separate existence and its flourishing condition. But another eagle now comes on the field of vision, also of great bulk, with large wings and many feathers, though not of such long pinions, and richly coloured plumage as the former. Yet the vine, as if it descried an attractive beauty in tliis bird, which the other had not, presently begins to bend its roots, and turn its branches toward him, that he might water it out of the garden-bed in which it was planted. It was ambitious of getting a larger growth, and reaching a greater altitude, than it was likely to attain as it stood ; and, with this view, sought the agency of a new power to supply it more abundantly with the means of 1 82 EZEKIEL XVII. refreshment. An extravagant and vain imagination ! For it was already planted in a good soil, on the banks of a copious river, and, with everything necessary to render it healthful and flourishing. Therefore, going against nature in this new attempt after enlargement, so far from succeeding according to its wishes, it should be made to feel the withering blast of the east wind, nay, should be plucked up by the roots, and left to perish and die ; and that, not as a matter of arduous achievement, but vrith- out great power, or multitudes of people, as a thing of easy ac- complishment. Such is the parabolical delineation contained in the first sec- tion of the chapter, ver. 1-10 ; and in the next, ver. 11-21, the interpretation is given. The first eagle is the king of Babylon, who had come to Jerusalem, the seat of civil honour and dignity in Canaan, as Lebanon was of external elevation and forest grandeur. Like the eagle in plucking off and carrying away the tops of the highest branch, and of the young shoots of the cedar, so the king of Babylon had taken away the head of the royal liouse, Jehoiachin, to Babylon, a place renowned from the earliest times for its merchandise ; and, along with him, many of the younger members of the seed-royal, the princes of Jerusalem. But while he thus bumbled the house of David, he did not en- tirely overthrow it ; he still conceded to it a certain degree of honour ; and, with one of the king's seed, his uncle Zedekiah, he made a covenant, and set him on the throne. The kingdom was now unquestionably in a comparatively enfeebled and dependant state, — no longer like a tall and stately cedar, king of the forest ; but rather as a low and creeping vine, incapable of rising high, or standing altogether alone. Yet still it was capable of such strength and prosperity as is characteristic of the vine, — if only they had been content with the measure of good allotted them by God — if they had but seen the overruling Providence of his hand in their depressed condition, and had bowed with chastened hearts to his wilL In that case, they had resembled a vine-tree planted beside flowing streams, and in a fertile soil. But they acted in an entirely difierent spirit. Fretting under the thought of their dependance on Babylon, they eagerly grasped at the proffered alliance of the king of Egypt, — represented by the other eagle, less strong in pinion and rich in plumage ; and so, provoked their former master to visit them with a severe and merciless retalia- THE PARABLE OF THE TWO GREAT EAGLES. 183 tion. By acting thus, the house of David gave, in its earthly- relations, a new manifestation of that treacherous and deceitful spirit, which it had already so often and so perversely displayed in regard to the covenant of God. Indeed, as the covenant with Babylon had been sworn to in the Lord's name, it also was vir- tually his covenant (ver. 19) ; and he must himself revenge the breach of it, and prevent the infatuated policy from succeeding. " And I will spread my net upon him," — it is now future time, for the prophecy dates upwards of three years at least before the final downfal of Jerusalem ;^ " and he shall be taken in my snare, and I will bring him to Babylon, and will reckon with him there for his treacherous dealing toward me. And all his fugitives, with all his bands, shall fall by the sword, and those that are left of them shall be scattered to every wind ; and ye shall know that I, Jehovah, have spoken." In the charge that is here brought against the house of David, the radical error evidently stood, first, in their not humbling them- selves sufficiently on account of the chastisement they had re- ceived, in being subjected to the yoke of Babylon ; and then,^ in what was the natural consequence of this, their resorting to de- ceitful courses, and wretched contrivances of their own, to recover their lost standing. Destitute of the true fear of God, they looked upon the disasters that had taken place as the result merely of untoward circumstances, and as such, capable of being retrieved by some more skilful manoeuvre, or more propitious turn of the world's affairs. God, therefore, must keep a jealous and watchful eye upon their movements, and utterly defeat their crooked policy. He must constrain them in deep prostration and abasement of spirit to feel, that as his hand had brought them down, so his hand alone could lift them up again ; and that never should the lost glory return to the house of David, or to the church of God through it, till they had effectually learned to cease from man, and had come to put their trust wholly in the grace and power of Jehovah. But it is from this point of depression that the new and better turn of affairs takes its rise. When the execution of deserved ^ The time lies between the two dates, that of the 6th month of the 6th year of Zedekiah's reign, or Jehoiachin's captivity, in chap, viii., and that of the 5th month of the 7th year, in chap. xx. 184 EZEKIEL XVIT. judgment should have accomplished the utter prostration of the house of David, and scattered all their false confidences and hopes to the wind — when matters should have been reduced so low, that to the eye of man everything seemed finally and irre- trievably gone, the Lord himself re-appears upon the scene to rectify the evil, and in the concluding portion (ver. 22-24), gives the assurance of a restoration to the greatest honour and prosperity. " Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And I take (or, I too, take) of the topmost branch of the high cedar, and set — from the top of its shoots I pluck off a slender one, and I plant it upon a mountain high and elevated. Upon the mountain-height of Israel I will plant it ; and it shall raise aloft its branch and bring forth fi'uit, and become a glorious cedar; and under it shall dwell all birds of every kind, in the shade of its branches shall they dwell. And all the trees of the field shall know, that I Je- hovah bring down the high tree, exalt the low tree, dry up the green tree, and make the dry tree to flourish ; I Jehovah speak and do." Here the Lord presents himself as the rival of the king of Babylon, and the doer of a work precisely opposite in its charac- ter and effects to that which the earthly potentate had accom- plished. Nebuchadnezzar had been allowed for a time to wield a magisterial power and authority regarding the house of David, which, in the nature of things, could yield nothing more than an inferior and temporary good, and in reality issued in a complete prostration. Now, however, the Lord manifests himself for the gracious purpose of reviving the house of David from the state of apparent hopelessness to wdiich it had been reduced, and even of raising it to a degree of power and glory hitherto unknown. But in doing this he would not infuse new vigour into that par- ticular branch of it, which Nebuchadnezzar was seeking to pro- tect and foster, the native seed he had planted in a fruitful field — Zedekiah ; this was doomed to certain perdition. He would neither revive that, nor take an altogether new seed, but would pluck a slender twig from the summit of the same lofty cedar, which had previously been pluckt by the king of Babylon ; that is, a scion of the house of David, to which the kingdom belonged by an everlasting covenant, and of no new or secondary forma- tion, but in the old, dii'ect, and proper line. The slender twig Jehovah would plant upon Mount Zion — by pre-eminence the CROPPING OF THE CEDAR OF LEBANON. 185 high and elevated mountain, because morally the grand centre of grace and glory to the world.^ And there it springs and rises aloft, and becomes a tree so magnificent in stature, and so ample in foliage, that it commands the admiration and homage of the world ; every tree of the field owns its superiority, every fowl of heaven seeks its shelter ; in other words, all rival powers, and all intelligent creatures, unite in regarding this as the wonderful impersonation of Divine power and glory in the earth. It is vain to seek the realisation of this prophetic image any- where but in the Messiah. In no other individual do the lines meet of the prophet's delineation ; but in him they meet with the greatest possible exactness — and m him, as the whole tenor of the representation might have led us to expect, primarily as an individual, though not without respect also to his character as the head and representation of the Divine kingdom. The earlier features in the description had each pointed to indi- viduals — to Jehoiachin, Zedekiah, and through them also to Nebuchadnezzar and Pharaoh — but to these as individuals, in whose outward state and condition were reflected those of the whole commonwealth of Israel. So, certainly, it is Messiah as an individual, that is here indicated ; first, as a tender scion of the house of David, in the direct and proper line, then grown into a stately tree, and, finally, risen to the highest place of honour, and power, and glory. But the Messiah, who was to appear on earth only for the sake of the Divine kingdom, could not be regarded as apart from the kingdom itself; its fortunes must stand inseparably bound up with his history, and partake along with it of evil or of good. So that, here, as in our Lord's own parable of the mustard-seed, the smallness of the promised beginning tells at once of the lowliness of his appearance, and the depressed condition of the church at the time ; and the sur- 1 " There can be no doubt," says Calvin, " that God means Mount Zion, which in itself was a little hill. But Isaiah gives us the reason of its being lofty, when he shows it should surpass every elevation in the world in dignity and excellence. The super-eminence, indeed, was not to be patent to the eye, for the prophet declares, at the same time, it should consist in this, that the law should go forth from Zion and the word of God from Jerusalem. Accord- ingly we see Mount Zion, though little among the hills, yet raised aloft above the highest mountains ; because from it shone forth the glory of God, which has been seen even to the farthest bounds of the earth." 186 EZEKIEL XVII. passing greatness afterwards to be reached, while it announces his personal elevation to the highest rank of honour and gloiy in the heavenly places, makes promise also of the world-wide extension of his kingdom, and the prolific fulness of its blessings to all who might seek shelter in its bosom. But when it is said so emphatically, that God himself should do all this, and that all the trees of the field (the other nations or powers of the earth) should thereby be constrained to own that he exalts the humble and abases the high, what could this import ? What, but that the whole should be efiected, in a wav different from that of na- ture, and superior to it — not by fleshly weapons, or any means and appliances of a worldly kind, but by the peculiar operation of the power of God, securing for his own kingdom a gradual and growing ascendancy over everything earthly and human. Whatever glory should come from the accomplishment of the Divine plan, must redound to God, not to man ; the pride of all flesh should be stained by it. Such is the vision here presented to us of God's future pur- . poses in respect to his kingdom among men — how truly the vision of a Divine seer ! What a sublime reach and elevation of soul must have been attained by him, who could appear thus at home with the far distant future, and, with such clear foresight and firm assurance, could tell of things that were not, as if they were ! A greatness of spirit, too, the more surprising, that it was possessed by one, whose outward condition seemed so deeply marred with depression and gloom. Himself but a poor exile on the banks of the Chebar, with the cry perpetually sounding in his ears, of shattered fortunes and ruined expectations ; yet, like the royal bird, of which he here serves himself as an image — he wings his flight aloft, and in the bright radiance of heaven's own light, looks afar upon the field of Providence, and brings up to view the very shape and form of its yet undeveloped movements. If we look to the unerring skill and precision, with which he drew so long beforehand the pattern of what was to come, we might have supposed him a mere automaton, unconsciously obeying the impulse of a higher hand ; but if we regard the manner in which he does it, never did a poet's fancy seem to move with more na- tural and unconstrained fi-eedom in framing its conceptions, or selecting the most appropriate imagery for their expression. And then how divinely strong the faith which could pierce THE RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 187 through the dark and portentous cloud of evils that then over- hung the spiritual firmament — which could still hold its confi- dence in the Divine faithfulness, and instead of being staggered with the signs of approaching desolation, could descry in these but the necessary condition and presage of ultimate good ? What a noble superiority does it show^ him to have reached above that weakness of nature, which is ever apt in dismal times to raise doubt and despondency in our minds ! May such an example of the higher gifts of grace not pass before us in vain I And espe- cially, may the conviction settle itself in our minds, as an abiding ground of consolation, that the word of God is un- failingly true, even in its most peculiar announcements, and that none who trust in it ever can be disappointed ! CHAPTER XVIII. THE RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 2. Why do ye use this proverb upon the land of Israel, saying, The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge ? 3. As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, ye shall no longer use this proverb in Israel. 4. Behold, all the souls are mine ; behold, as the soul of the father, so also the soul of the son is mine ; behold, the soul that sinneth it shall die. 5. And when there is a man that is righteous, and does judgment and justice ; 6. On the mountains has not eaten, nor has lifted up his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, and has not polluted the wife of his neighbour, nor drawn near to an unclean woman : 7. And has not oppressed a man, has restored his debt-pledge, has practised no robbery, has given of his bread to the hungry, and the naked has clothed with raiment ; 8. Has not given forth on usury, nor has taken increase, has withheld his hand from iniquity, has executed true judgment between man and man, 9. Has walked in my statutes, and kept my judg- ments to deal truly ; righteous is he, he shall surely hve, saith the Lord Jehovah. 10. And should he beget a son a robber, a shedder of blood, and a doer of any one of such things, 11. But does none of all those, yea, be- sides, has eaten upon the mountains, and polluted his neighbour's wife, 12. Has oppressed the poor and needy, has practised robbery, has not re- stored a pledge, and to the idols has lifted up his eyes, working abomina- tion, 13. Has given forth on usury, and taken increase ; shall he hve? He shall not live ; he has done all these abominations ; he shall surely die ; his blood shall be upon him. 14. And, lo, should he beget a son, that sees all the sins of his father which he has done, yea, shall see and not do according 188 EZEKIEL XVIII. to them, 15. Shall not eat upon the mountams, nor lift up his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, nor pollute his neighbour's wife, 16. And shall not oppress a man, take no pledge, practise no robbery, give his bread to the hungry, and clothe the naked with raiment, 17. From the poor shall not turn back his hand, shall not take usury and increase, execute my judgments, walk in my statutes ; he shall not die for the iniquity of his father ; he shall surely live. 18. His father, since he did most unjustly, fraudulently spoiled his brother, and did what is not good in the midst of his people, behold, he shall die in his iniquity. 19. And ye say, Wherefore does not the son bear the iniquity of the father? Nay, should the son do justice and righteousness, keep all my statutes, and do them, he shall surely live. 20. The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, nor the father bear the iniquity of the son : the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him. 21. And if the wicked shall turn from all his sins which he hath done, and shall keep all my statutes, and do judgment and righteousness, he shall surely live, he shall not die. 22. None of his transgressions, which he has done, shall be remembered against him ; in his righteousness that he has done he shall live. 23. Have I any pleasure at all in the death of the wicked ? saith the Lord Jehovah ; and not that he turn from his way and live ? 24. But when the righteous turns from his righteousness, and commits iniquity, doing according to all the abominations which the Avicked does, shall he then live ? Nothing of all his righteousness which he has done shall be remembered ; in his trespass that he has trespassed, and in his sin that he has sinned, in them shall he die. 25. Yet ye say. The way of the Lord is not equal. Hear now, O house of Israel, Is not my way equal ? are not your ways unequal ? 26. When a righteous man turns from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and dies upon them (i. e., on account of his acts of iniquity), for his iniquity that he has done he dies. 27. And when the wicked turns away from his wicked- ness that he has committed, and does that which is just and right, he shall save his soul alive. 28. And should he see and return from all his trans- gressions that he has committed, he shall surely live, he shall not die. 29. But the house of Israel say. The way of the Lord is not equal. Are not my ways equal, O house of Israel ? are not your ways miequal ? 30. There- fore every man according to his way will I judge you, O house of Israel, saith the Lord Jehovah. Return and come back from all your trransgressions and iniquity shall not be your ruin. 81. Cast away from you all your trans- gressions, by which ye have transgressed ; and make you a new heart and a new spirit ; and why will ye die, O house of Israel ? 32. For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dies, saith the Lord Jehovah, but return and live ye. The prophet passes from the purposes of God respecting the future establishment of his kingdom and glory in the world — as disclosed in the preceding chapter — to an expostulation with the people on account of sin, and an earnest pleading on behalf of righteousness. He wished them to understand that, however gracious the intentions of Heaven might be, and however cer- tainly they would reach their destined accomplishment, they were not to move as in an orbit of their own, independently of the condition of the people ; nor might the people expect any THE RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 189 benefit from them, if wedded to the love and practice of sin. While, on the one hand, God might confidently be expected to do what he had promised, they, on the other, should not be en- titled to look for any blessing, unless they applied themselves in earnest to do what he required at their hands. The chapter preserves throughout the form of a controversial pleading ; because the people are contemplated by the prophet as in a self-righteous condition, disposed to shift off" themselves the blame of what was evil in their lot, and lay it partly on their fathers, partly on God himself. We suffer, it is true, they were complacently saying among themselves, under the rod of chas- tisement, but that we do so, is our misfortune, rather than our sin ; it is not we, but our fathers, who ate the sour grapes, and now, inheriting the just reward of their transgression, our teeth are set on edge. What was it but in effect to say, God can have no proper quarrel with us ? We are dealing faithfully by the commandments of his law, and we can no otherwise account for his subjecting us to punishment, than on the principle of our being made to bear the iniquities of those who have gone before us. The mere fact of their taking up such a view of their case, and putting it forth in vindication of themselves, was obviously a proof of some sort of reformation having been accomplished. The feeling could not have sprung up, and taken shape in their minds as a ground of defence, without at least an ostensible jus- tification in the present, as compared with the past. To what extent this might actually be the case, either with the remnant at Jerusalem, or with the captives on the Chebar, w^e have no very specific data for ascertaining. Reckoning from the period of Manasseh's reign, when the practice of all manner of corruption seemed to have reached its climax, we can have no reasonable doubt, that in both divisions of the Jewish people a visible reform had taken place — more particularly with the captives, as their actual experience of God's judgments would naturally have forced on them a more serious and thoughtful examination of their ways. But ample grounds exist, both in this prophet and Jeremiah, for holding that in each division ahke there still was no thorough and general renunciation of iniquity. The partial improvements that had been made, were chiefly of a superficial nature, and seem to have had no other effect than in fostering 190 EZEKIEL xviir. the self-righteous spirit, which induced them to seek elsewhere than in themselves the cause of their troubles and calamities. Therefore, in a word of severe expostulation and rebuke, which, if called forth by what then existed, has been no less applicable to succeeding generations of the Jewish people, the prophet ex- poses the vanity of their imaginations, and declares them to be still at war with the principles of God's righteous adminis- tration.^ In doing this, Ezekiel first announces the general principle of God's righteousness as a principle of fair and impartial dealing with each individual according to his actions ; then, he explains and illustrates the operation of this principle in a series of sup- posed cases; and finally calls the people to repentance and amendment of life, as being still far from righteousness, and in danger of perdition. 1. There is first a general announcement made of the principle of God's righteousness ; which is declared to be a principle of fair and impartial dealing with each individual, according to his actions. " As I live, saith the Lord God, ye shall no longer use this proverb in Israel. Behold, all the souls are mine ; as the soul of the father, so also the soul of the son is mine ; the soul that sinneth, it shall die " (ver. 3, 4) ; — It alone shall die, as having, through sin, incurred the law's penalty ; others, who have lived righteously, shall be treated according to their desert, not as persons appointed to die, but rather as entitled to the blessings of life. And this on the broad and comprehensive ground, that God is alike the maker of all, and can have no rea- son for adjudging some to a punishment, from which he exempts others, but the different manner in which they conduct themselves toward him. Here, of course, the question naturally arises, whether such has always been the principle of God's dealing ? or, whether the announcement made by the prophet marked a change in the Divine administration ? There can be no doubt, that the law did sanction the principle of a certain visitation of the sins of the ^ How little the Jews of modern times have learned from what was spoken to their ancestors, may be gathered from the defence Orobius makes, as noticed by Warburton in his Dedication to the Jews, for the evils of their long dispersion : " they suffer," he says, " not for their own sins, but for the sins of their forefathers." THE RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 191 fathers upon the children : " I the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me, and show- ing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments." But then this principle, it would seem, re- mained still in active operation, neither suspended, nor in any way materially affected, by what is written here. For the pro- phet Jeremiah expressly connects the judgments, which were shortly afterwards to alight upon Judah and Jerusalem with the sins of Manasseh's time in the preceding generation (chap. xv. 4) ; and again in Lam. v. 7, after the judgments had actually been inflicted, "our fathers have sinned, and are not; and we have borne their iniquities." Even in Gospel times we find our Lord speaking of the principle as still in force, nay, as ready to be acted on with such fearful severity in the case of that genera- tion, that upon them was to be charged and visited the righteous blood shed in all preceding ages of the church's history (Matt, xxiii. 34-36). Yet neither our Lord, in later, nor the prophets in earlier, times, seem to have had the least suspicion of any contrariety existing between the principle which thus connected the child with the parent in visitations of evil, and the direct and proper responsibility of each person for the actions merely of his own life. How thoroughly the gospel is pervaded by this latter prin- ciple, requires no particular proof; there every one is made to feel, that his condition and destiny depend upon the course he himself takes in respect to the will of God. And the prophet Jeremiah, when addressing God as " recompensing the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of the children after them," in the very next breath celebrates his impartial administration of justice to all according to their doings, " great in counsel and mighty in work ; for thine eyes are upon all the ways of the sons of men, to give every one according to his w^ays, and according to the fruits of his doings" (Jer. xxxii. 18, 19). In the law itself^ in- deed, there is as strong an assertion of this principle of individual responsibility, as anywhere in Scripture, in the charge that is given to the judges, " The fathers shall not be put to death for the children, neither shall the children be put to death for the fathers ; every man shall be put to death for his own sin " (Deut. xxiv. 16), — a charge which would never have been given 192 EZEKIEL XVITI. to God's representatives on earth, unless it were in full accord- ance with the character of his own administration. It is clear, therefore, from these distinct and unambiguous testimonies, that the two principles in question must have been perfectly consis- tent wdth each other, and that onl j the perverseness or misappre- hensions of the people could have led to their being viewed as in any sort of antagonism. Nor is the ground of the reconcilia- tion far to seek. The principle of a descending curse to families on account of sin, proceeds on the assumption of a descending guilt, as the reason of the appointment. The iniquity was to be visited from father to son, because the iniquity itself was viewed as passing with cumulative force from the one to the other. Hence the line of descent is characterized as " the generations of them that hate God," while the superabundant flow of mercy on the other side is declared to be " to thousands of them that love him." In truth, the principle which has its connection with the jealousy of God, as most intently watching the movements of sin, is just the manifestation of God's righteousness in respect to the tendency of sin to spread and perpetuate itself in the world, and especially to go downward from parent to child as a growing and swelling tide of corruption. So that, if successive generations, yielding to this tendency, should unite themselves together into a brotherhood of evil-doers, God must in turn unite them in a bond of chastisement, and proportion his visita- tions of wrath to the degree of perverseness and obstinacy shown in pursuing the course of iniquity. But respect was ever had at the same time, to the personal responsibility and behaviour of each ; and only because the son was regarded as consenting to his father's iniquity, and deliberately choosing it as his own inheritance, did the Lord visit him for both together.^ ^ It is a striking proof of the loose and arbitrary manner in which subjects of this kind were handled half a century ago in this country, that such a man as Paley could deliberately, and with apparent satisfaction, state, " that the only way of reconciling them (the principle set forth in the second com- mandment, and that in this passage of Ezekiel) together, is by supposing that the second commandment related solely to temporal, or rather to family adversity and prosperity, and Ezekiel's chapter to the rewards and punish- ments of a future life." (Sermon xiii.) As if the very point under debate in this chapter were not, why the covenant-people were subjected to their present temporal troubles and misfortunes ? Drop this, and there is no question agitated between them and the prophet. As for the view of War- RETRIBUTIVE RiaHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 193 When the Lord, then, declares in this passage, that the people should no longer have occasion to use the proverb of the fathers having eaten the sour grapes, and the children's teeth being set on edge, allusion is not made to any projected change m the government of God, but merely to the sharp, personal dealing ne was going to hold with each, which would not permit them any more to throw upon others the blame that was properly their own. " It was just as if he had said," to use the excellent words of Calvin, " I will drive out of you this boasting, by laying bare your iniquity, in such a manner that the whole world shall per- ceive you to suffer the punishment you yourselves deserve, and you shall not be able, as you have been hitherto endeavouring, to cast the burden on your fathers." It was to be made fully manifest, that their punishment only corresponded to their guilt- And the circumstance of the Lord prefacing this declaration with his oath, ^' As I live, it shall be done," was like a solemn and earnest protest against the injurious and blasphemous char- acter of the thought, which led them to impute to him a different principle of dealing with his people. This very protest, however, against the wrong principle of dealing falsely imputed to God, carried along with it a strong assertion of the necessity of the opposite principle — that of hold- ing those liable to punishment who were guilty of sin. If it is abhorrent to the mind of God to render the just desert of sin in the wrong quarter, because contrary to the essential principles of justice, it must be equally abhorrent, and for the same reason, to withhold punishment from the quarter where it is due. For to protect and countenance the sinner is all one with discourag- ing and depressing the righteous. Therefore, the soul that burton, that the principle of the second commandment was introduced to supply the want of a future state, and that the word by Ezekiel amounted to a virtual abrogation of it, now that the hope of immortality was going to be brought in, it can only be characterized as an utterly groundless assertion, proceeding on a mistaken view of the Divine dispensations. The idea of an innocent posterity suffering for a guilty parentage is justly designated by Havernick as a heathenish one. " When men lost the faith of a living God, they were impelled to the worship of a blind Nemesis — a fate pregnant with mischief. The sentiments uttered by the people here are precisely what we find in those words of Solon with Stobaeus (Eel. ix. p. 100), 'Aax' i iu.lv HvtU "irtcnvy etc., and in the well known passage of Horace's, Delicta majorum immeritus lues, Romane (Od. iii. 6, 1, comp. iii. 2, 30). See also Homer, 11. iv. 161 ss." N 194 EZEKIEL XVIII. sinneth must die ; and the less God can punish the innocent for the guilty, the less also can he refrain from dealing with the guilty according to their transgressions. Thus, the severe im- partiality of God, while it is a wall of security and defence for the good, becomes of necessity like a consuming fire to the wicked ; and if death is not yet actually their portion, it can only be because the long-suffering of God is still waiting for their re- pentance. 2. So much for the principle itself of fair and impartial deal- ing, which the prophet here asserts for God in his government toward men. Let us now glance for a moment at the series of supposed cases, by which the prophet explains and illustrates the operation of the principle. There are altogether four distinct cases specified, which are also followed up toward the close by a renewed vindication of the Lord's method of dealing in respect to them. (1.) The first case supposed is that of a righteous man, who applies with sincere and honest purpose of heart to keep the ways of the Lord (ver. 5-9). And because very lax and imper- fect notions prevailed concerning God's ways, the prophet enters into some particulars, with the view of exhibiting clearly the nature of the requirements which the Divine law made at the hands of men, and thereby administering a reproof for prevailing evils. His enumeration of excellencies was, doubtless, chosen with a respect to existing circumstances, that the mass of his countrymen might perceive how far they were deviating in their conduct from the character they ought to have maintained. And if, in one or two features of the representation, undue prominence seems to be given to points, which, in themselves, were less important than others that might have been mentioned, a ready explanation is to be found in the prevailing character of the times. The prophet must adapt his description to the persons whom he sought more especially to benefit by it. And when he has thus delineated one, who stood aloof from the reigning cor- ruptions, and gave ample proof of having the law of God within his heart, the prophet draws the conclusion in his favour, that he shall live : " He is just ; he shall surely live, saith the Lord God." Perhaps what will strike most readers in the present day as chiefly peculiar in the description given of the righteous man, is RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 195 the stress laid upon his abstaining from usury : " He hath not given forth upon usury, neither hath taken any increase." We find the same prominence, however, given to this feature in the still briefer description of the righteous by the Psalmist in the 15th Psalm: " putteth not out his money to usury." It arose in both cases from the strict prohibition in the law against lend- ing money for interest to an Israelite (Ex. xxii. 25 ; Lev. xxv. 35-37 ; Deut. xxiii. 19, 20). In several of the passages, it is clearly implied, that the money to be lent \^'as to the poor, which consequently ought to have been done in a spirit of brotherly love, and not for the purpose of taking advantage of their necessi- ties, and turning the loan into an occasion of trouble and oppres- sion. The word denoting usury, Tf = (from the verb to bite or eat), has respect to this vexatious and selfish mode of dealing with a brother's poverty. But as the law permitted the lending of money on usury to strangers, it of course indicated that the practice was not in all circumstances improper. The law had respect to a very simple state of society, and a polity which was designed rather to check speculation in trade and commerce, and diffuse a general well-being and comfort ; hence it was important to encourage liberality to the poorer members of the common- wealth, and repress the tendency to undue exactions on the part of the richer ; though, in corrupt times, the spirit of selfishness was alw^ays breaking through the restrictions. In the artificial and complicated affairs of modern times, the prohibitions of the law against usury cannot fairly be stretched farther, than to re- gard them as involving the imperative obligation of dealing in a kind and liberal spirit toward our poorer brethren, lending to them when they have need, without expecting anything again, and to discourage the spirit of rash and ambitious speculation. We notice, in regard to another part of the description, " the not eating upon the mountains," in ver. 6, that it has respect to the tendency, which so naturally and so frequently also mani- fested itself in the history of the Israelites, of holding their sacri- ficial feasts upon the neighbouring mountains, instead of repair- ing to the place God had chosen. Even when these feasts were held in honour of Jehovah, they were contrary to the express enactments of the law (Deut. xii. 13, etc.), but of course they became much more so, when they were coupled, as they too commonly were, with the worship of false gods. The righteous 196 EZEKIEL XYIII. man is described as not so much as " lifting up his eyes to these false gods/' that is, not cherishing any wistful desire toward them in his heart. And, with this shrinking abhorrence of idolatry, or abstinence from whatever is idolatrous and sensual in the things of religion, he is farther described as carefully shunning any ma- nifestation of such a spirit in his earthly relations ; he is sober, chaste, and faithful. (Upon the last clause, in ver. 6, Cocceius well : notatur castitas observanda in matrimonio ; nam etiam propria conjuga potest quis abuti). (2.) The next case supposed is precisely the reverse of the preceding one ; it is that of a son refusing to follow the example of a righteous parent, and turning aside to the ways of vanity and corruption. Here, again, to make the charge pointed and specific, the prophet descends to an enumeration of the particular deeds in which he held the unrighteousness to consist. But it differs in nothing material from that already given — the son being simply represented as doing the bad things, which w^ere shunned by the father, and leaving undone the good which he did. Therefore, being guilty of such flagrant offences against the Divine law, this ungodly son must bear his own doom ; his pious parentage, which only aggravated his guilt, cannot be allowed to screen him from judgment ; " he has done all these abominations ; he shall surely die ; his blood shall be upon him." (3.) The third supposition, again, presents a reverse picture ; it is the case of a son of such an unrighteous person as the one just described ; seeing the evil of his father's doings, and turning from them to do the will of God. Having more respect to the authority of God, than to the pernicious example of a degenerate parent, he obtains an exemption from the heritage of evil ; though " the father dies in his iniquity," yet " the son shall not die for the iniquity of the father ; he shall surely live." Here the people are introduced, objecting to the word of the prophet, and in their objection apparently seeking for a conti- nuance of that wdiich they had originally preferred as a com- plaint. It seemed to be their burden that the son was made to bear " the iniquity of the father," as to that principle in the Di- vine government, they ascribed their present suffering condition (ver. 2). But now, when they have heard the prophet, in the Lord's name, repudiating this alleged principle, and asserting the Divine impartiality in dealing with each according to his RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 197 ways, they interpose, and say, " Wherefore doth not the son bear the iniquity of the father?" (for so the words, at the beginning of ver. 19, are more properly rendered). Why is such not to be the case ? We had thought this was an undoubted principle of the Divine government, and, on it alone, could account for what otherwise was quite inexplicable to us. It seems now as if it would be a consolation for them to think that the son might suflPer for the father's misdeeds, or, in the language of the pro- verb, that, while the fathers ate the sour grapes, the children's teeth should be set on edge. And the reason, no doubt, was, that they found it more agreeable to their carnahty, and more soothing to their pride, to regard themselves as innocent sufferers for sins they had not personally committed, than to ascribe their •troubles to their own departures from the law of righteousness. For, in the one case, they were furnished with an excuse for continuing to live on still as they had been doing in the past ; while, in the other, as the evil came to be traced up to their own misdeeds, the necessity forced itself upon them, of striving, if they really wished to get rid of it, to realise the high pattern of righteousness set before them in the descriptions of the prophet. This, however, they were by no means inclined to do, and hence, it came upon them rather as a disappointment, to have the querulous complaint taken out of their mouths, that the innocent children were suffering for the sins of their guilty parents. But the prophet will not allow them to enjoy this miserable solace, or to rest in a confidence so utterly groundless. He must con- vince them of their own sinfulness, and lead them to repentance and amendment of life, as the one way of escape from their de- pressed and abject condition. Therefore, in reply to their qnery, he again reiterates the great truth of each man's treatment being according to his personal condition and character before God : " When the son hath done that which is lawful and right, hath kept all my statutes and hath done them, he shall surely live. The soul that siimeth shall die ; the son shall not bear the ini- quity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son : the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him." (4.) And now, having repudiated the false imagination of the people, as to the innocent suffering for the guilty, and asserted anew the great principle of God's impartiality in dealing with 198 EZEKIEL XVIII. each according to his desert, the prophet comes to his last hypo- thetical case, — the case, namely, of a supposed change, not, as hitherto, in the character of one generation as compared with another, but in the character of one and the same individual, from bad to good and from good to bad. This was more espe- cially the practical case for the persons here addressed by the prophet, and, therefore, he reserved it to the last ; as it enabled him to shut them up to the alternative of either abandoning at once their sinful ways, or of charging upon their ow^n hardened impenitence all that they might still experience of the troubles and afflictions that pressed upon them. For the message here is, that, so far from laying to men's charge the burden of ini- quities that had been committed by others, the Lord would not even visit them for their own, if they sincerely repented and turned to the way of righteousness ; while, on the other hand, if they should begin to fall aw^ay into transgression, they must not expect their earlier goodness to screen them from judgment, — because, in that case, having taken up with a new condition, it was just and proper that a corresponding change should be in- troduced into the Divine procedure toward them : " If the wicked will turn from all his sins that he has committed, and keep all my statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die. None of his transgressions that he has committed shall be remembered against him : in his right- eousness that he has done he shall live. Have I any pleasure at all, that the wicked should die ? saith the Lord Jehovah, and not that he turn from his way and live 1 But when the right- eous turns away from his righteousness, and commits iniquity, and does according to all the abominations that the wicked does, shall he live? Nothing of all his righteousness that he has done shall be remembered : in his trespass that he has trespassed, and in his sin that he has sinned, in them shall he die." What a beautiful simplicity and directness in the statement ! It is like the lawgiver anew setting before the people the way of life and the way of death, and calling upon them to determine which of the two they were inclined to choose. Then, what a moving tenderness in the appeal, " Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked ? saith the Lord God." You think of me as if I were a heartless being, indifferent to the calamities that be- fall my children, and even delighting to inflict chastisement on RETKIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 199 them for sins they have not committed. So far from this, I have no pleasure in the destruction of those who by their own trans- gressions have deserved it, but would rather that they turn from their ways and live. Thus he presents himself as a God of holy love, — love yearning over the lost condition of his wayward chil- dren, and earnestly desiring their return to peace and safety, — yet still exercising itself in strict accordance with the principles of righteousness, and only, in so far as these might admit, seek- ing the good of men. For however desirous to secure their sal- vation, he neither can nor will save them, except in the way of righteousness. The people, however, being still wedded to their own sinful- ness, continued, as before, to find fault ; and, looking superficially to the outward diversity that appeared in God's dealings with men, they raised the objection, "■ The way of the Lord is not equal." An outward inequality the prophet, indeed, had ad- mitted : it was the very design of his expostulation, to prove that such must have place according to the varying conditions of those with whom he had to do; but only so as to establish a real equality in a moral point of view. Therefore, the prophet turns the accusation against the people themselves : " Hear, now, O house of Israel ; Is not my way equal ? Are not your ways un- equal ?" My way is equal, he virtually affirms, because I deal with the guilty backslider and the penitent transgressor, each according to his behaviour, — the one as deserving of death, the other as a proper subject of life and blessing. But your ways are unequal, since, living in idolatry and corruption, you expect to be dealt with as if you were following the paths of uprightness. 3. Therefore, finally, having driven the people fi.'om all their false imaginations and captious objections, — having shut them up to the conclusion, that as they were in a depressed and suffering, they must also be in a sinful condition, the prophet closes his ex- postulation by urging them to repent and turn fi-om all their un- righteous ways, that so they might not perish in their sins : "Therefore I will judge you, O house of Israel, every one ac- cording to his ways, saith the Lord God. Return, and come back from all your transgressions, and iniquity shall not be your ruin (more properly : and iniquity shall not be for a snare to you, the occasion of restraining you from good, and entangling you in ruin.) Cast away from you all your transgressions, whereby ye 200 EZEKIEL XVIII. have transgressed ; and make you a new heart and a new sph'it ; and why will ye die, O house of Israel ? For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord Jehovah ; but turn ye, and live." The charge is given to the whole house of Israel ; for the people, as a whole, are regarded by the prophet as in a state of apostacy and alienation from God. And it was no slight or par- tial reformation that was needed to restore them to the favour and blessing of God, but an entire and radical change. There- fore they are called upon, not only to repent and cast away their transgressions, but also to get possession of a new heart and a new spirit, nay, even to make such to themselves, as if it were a matter that lay within the compass of their own responsible agency. This has an appearance of strangeness, as already, in chap, xi., and again in chap, xxxvi., the imparting of such a new heart and spirit is represented as the great boon, which at some future period they were to receive from the grace and mercy of God. Nor, indeed, is there anything more clearly announced, or more frequently stated in the word of God, than that a regene- rated condition can only be reached through the quickening power of his grace; he must himself be the author of this new creation, wherever it is brought into being, as he was at first of the old. But why, then, should God call upon men to make to themselves a new heart, seeing he alone is able to produce it ? Does not such a call but seem to mock men's impotence, or to beget in them false expectations ? By no means. It was rather intended to set before them what was necessary to rectify their state in so strong and startling a manner, that from the very height of the requirement they would despair of themselves, and betake to the promised grace of God. For, as Cah in justly remarks, " it must always be considered for what end God speaks in such a manner; viz., that being convinced of their sinfulness, men may cease to lay the blame elsewhere, as they constantly endeavour to do, there being nothing to which we are more prone, than shifting the ground of our condemnation away to some other quarter, that we ourselves may seem to be just, and God unjust. Therefore, because this perversity is prevalent among men, the Holy Spirit demands of us what no one can deny he ought to do. And so far as regards God's elect people, when he shows what they ought to do, but what they are conscious they can never of them- RETRIBUTIVE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD. 201 selves perform, they then have recourse to the promised aid of the Spirit ; so that the outward command becomes the occasion or instrument, which God employs for conferring the grace of his Spirit ... As often, therefore, as such passages meet us, let the well-known saying of Augustin come to our mind, " Da quod jubes, et jube quod velis (give what thou requirest, and require what thou pleasest). For, otherwise, if God should lay upon us the least tittle of commanded duty, we shall not be able to bear it; wdiile, on the other hand, our strength shall suffice for what- ever he may exact of us, if only he himself shall give the supply, and we shall not be so foolish as to suppose, that nothing more is demanded in his precepts, than what we have power in our- selves to do." Such, then, is the case which the prophet presses on the cove- nant-people as the result of this long and earnest expostulation with their sinfulness. The Lord demands of them a renovated condition — a heart that should dispose them to yield a sincere and ready obedience to his commandments. Never till such a spiritual change was effected, could they expect his judgments to be turned into blessings. Never could they hope to see and reap the accomplishment of that promise of renewed prosperity at the close of the preceding chapter, according to which the little twig of the Lord's planting was to become a mighty tree with fowl of every wing lodging in its branches. And never can the church of God in any age justly expect to be safe and prosperous in her condition, and to be a fit instrument in the hand of the Lord for executing his righteous purposes, till she becomes possessed through all her members of such a spirit of obedience, as shall prompt her to embrace heartily his Divine will, and keep the way of his commandments. Oh ! need we wonder, when we see how little this is really possessed, that the flow of the Divine goodness should be arrested, and that we should seem so often to be dwelling among the tombs, instead of basking, as we should be,, in the sunshine of life and blessing ? In how many forms is the controversy still maintained with the righteousness of God, and wdth all her privileges of grace, how far is the church of Christ, either individually or collectively, from the measure of perfection that ought to be reached ? How much cause still for the prayer. Turn us again. Lord God of hosts, and cause thy face to shine, and we shall be saved ! Rekindle in the 202 EZEKIEL XIX. bosoms of thy people the love of holiness, which so sadly lan- guishes and droops; and let not iniquity and death prevail, where only righteousness and blessing should be found ! CHAPTER XIX. \ THE LAMENTATION OVER THE DOWNFAL OF THE ROYAL HOUSE. \ The expostulation contained in the last chapter was held with ' the covenant-people as a whole, and its final aim was to put ; them on the only way of recovering the prosperity they had lost, ; namely, by a sincere and hearty return to the paths of righteous- ness. But in this chapter, the vision of the prophet is confined to the more distinguished portion of Israel, the princes of the i house of David (for the spirit of prophecy recognizes no other ! princes besides'those who belonged to that house) ; and the only word he receives concerning them, is one of doleful lamentation over their inevitable ruin. In expostulating with the people, it \ was taken for granted, that a period of revival and blessing still awaited them, and that the only question was, as to the course ; of procedure on their part, which might warrant them to expect j its arrival. But no ray of hope mingles with the sombre repre- i sentation he gives respecting the princes of Israel ; in what had '■ already befallen, and what was yet to befall them, there was room only for the wail of sorrow and despair. It is true, the royal house was not to become utterly extinct; it was still \ destined to furnish a head to the people of God, under whom the i cause of righteousness and truth was to attain a glory it had never j reached before. This had been most distinctly announced by j our prophet himself at the close of the seventeenth chapter, under the image of a tender shoot pluckt by the hand of Jehovah from ' the topmost bough of the cedar of Lebanon, and planted on the lofty mountain of Israel. But the very character of the descrip- tion thus given of a coming glory — that it was to be a tender shoot, which was to be pluckt, and that its plantation on the mountain of ! Israel, its marvellous growth, and ultimate unparalleled greatness, were so peculiarly to mark the overruling power and sovereignty \ LAMENTATION UPON THE PRINCES. 203 of God — clearly implied, that the prospect was to be realised in a way quite different from the ordinary course and expectations of nature, and in defiance, as it might seem, of all outward appear- ances. And the melancholy dirge contained in the present chapter may be regarded as supplying the further information, that now and henceforth, appearances were indeed to be of the most humiliating kind as concerned the members of the royal house, that their outward glory was waning to extinction, and that they forfeited all claim to any restoration of the worldly greatness which they had hitherto enjoyed. Viewed simply as princes in the earth, their place was lost beyond recovery. Ver. 1. And do thou take up a lamentation for the princes of Israel; 2. And say, What was thy mother ? A lioness ; she lay down among lions, among young lions she nourished her whelps. 3. And she brought up one of her whelps ; he became a young lion, and he learned to catch prey ; he devoured men. 4. And the nations heard of him ; in their pit was he taken, and they brought him in chains to the land of Egypt. 5. And she saw, that deferred, perished was her hope;^ and she took another of her whelps and made him a young lion. 6. And he went up and down among the lions ; he became a young lion ; and he learned to catch prey ; he devoured men. 7. And he defiled their widows {i. e. the widows of the men devoured);^ and laid waste their cities ; and the land and all its fulness was desolate, by the noise of his roaring. 8, And the nations from the provinces around set against him, and spread upon him their net ; in their pit was he taken. 9. And they put him in ward, in chains, and brought him to the king of Babylon ; they brought him into a stronghold, that his voice might no more ^ In the rendering of this clause, there is only a choice of difficulties, and it is impossible to obtain anything like satisfaction. According to the natural construction, both the verbs should refer to the hope as their object ; and this construction, I think, must be retained. But then there is no well-ascertained meaning of the first of the two verbs, r;'-^;-:, which altogether makes sense. It properly means, to wait, or hope, for anything ; but, undoubtedly, what presents itself as a thing to be waited for, has, to an ardent mind, a deferred and almost forlorn appearance. The transition to this sense cannot be re- garded as unnatural or harsh. It is much less so, in my opinion, than the other derivations and senses which have been adopted by others. The L XX. seem to have had or made a different text ; and Hitzig, as very commonly, prefers following them. 2 The literal rendering here, is : And he knew their widows, — but the sense is that given above. There is no good authority for ascribing to ri-jTs'^jx the meaning oi palaces, or any other than that of widows. Of course, the image is violated by the lion being spoken of thus in connection with widows : the reality breaks through the vail ; but that is no uncommon thing, as we have seen with Ezekiel ; various examples of it occur in chap. xvi. 204 EZEKIEL XIX. I be heard upon the mountains of Israel. 10. Thy mother was like a vine, ' planted when thou wast in thy blood ^ beside waters ; she was fruitful and full i of branches by reason of many waters. 11. And she had strong rods for | sceptres to those who bear rule, and elevated was lier height up among the ; clouds, and she was seen (conspicuous) because of her greatness, because of ' the multitude of her branches, ^ 12. But she is plucked up in fury; she is i cast down to the ground ; and the east wind has dried up her fruit ; broken and withered are her strong rods, the tire has devoured them. 13. And now she is planted in the wilderness, in a dry and parched land. 14. And a fire goes out of the rod of her branches, that devours her fruit, and there is not ' in her a strong rod, a sceptre for a ruler. It is a lamentation, and shall be ; for a lamentation. | Thus we see that, in order to make the import of his message '. more plain and palpable, the prophet gives it the benefit of a two- ' fold representation. But in each case the representation is so ; highly figurative, that to seek a very close and minute corres- ; pondence between the symbol and the reality, cannot be neces- : sary, and may even tend to mislead. Interpreters have commonly i * Our translators have here inserted in the margin two other meanings for ' in thy blood : in thy quietness, and in thy likeness. The former of these ; two is the one adopted by Havernick, deriving m here from a^i-t, -^'/S^J to be silent, to be at rest ; a state of repose, or rest, therefore, is what he under- \ stands to be indicated. Ewald and Hitzig prefer, in thy likeness. The ■ LXX. appear to have read i't^'^s, a pomegranate, and are followed by New- ] come and others. But there is really no need for any change in the received i text, and the most natural and simplest rendering ; especially since the pro- phet, in chap, xvi., had once and again used the same expression, " in thy \ blood," for denoting the earliest stage of existence. In his peculiar phraseo- \ logy, it was all one with saying, " When thou wast in the very infancy of thy being," even then the mother of the royal house was like a vine planted be- ' side waters, full of strength and vigour ; she could look for great things for -^ her offspring. 2 A sudden change of gender takes place here in the original, from the \ feminine to the masculine, which I have not thought it necessary to imi- : tate. Ezekiel uses considerable freedom in that way. A similar anomaly j occurs again in the latter part of ver. 12. The expression ti"rhy y^ h^ ought ; certainly to be " up," or " aloft among the clouds" (comp. chap. xxxi. 3, 10, ■ 14). There it evidently denotes the highest elevation, and "among the i thick branches " will not make sense. The later interpreters agree in this ] result, but differ somewhat in their way of reaching it. Ewald and Heng- | stenberg regarding n"iay, clouds, as one of those nouns which came gradually ] to lose their plural meaning ; and so Ezekiel forms a new plural by adding ] c-^ ; while Havernick, we think with less probability, supposes an inter- | change to have taken place between the meanings of zy and n^sy, so that the ; latter, in the plural, was used, not for thickets, but for thicket-clouds. \ LAMENTATION UPON THE PRINCES. 205 run into this error, when at the outset they begin to inquire, who is to be understood by the mother ? As might be expected, very different answers are given to the question ; some, as Pradus, answering Jerusalem ; others, as Lowth, the land of Israel ; others again, as Havernick, the theocratic Israel at large ; and still others, as Hitzig, the more peculiarly regal portion, the tribe of Judah. To descend upon limitations of this sort, is to lose sight of the bold and luxuriant character of Ezekiel's style ; and one might as well have asked, in regard to the figurative representa- tion of the sixteenth chapter, which of the progenitors of the Jewish people could be meant, when it was said, that their father was an Amorite, and their mother a Hittite. We must keep in view the general object of the representation, which, in tlie case now before us, was to exhibit the princes of Israel in such a light as sufficiently to account for their being allowed to fall into overwhelming and hopeless ruin. For instead of feeling, as they should have done, that they were set up in the high position they occupied, as sons of God in particular, to carry out in all things his will, and promote the interests of truth and righteousness, they acted in such a wild, lawdess, arbitrary man- ner, as might seem to befit only those who were possessed of the most savage and ungovernable natures. It seemed, judging from their behaviour, as if a lioness had been their mother — a lioness who had herself lived among the other wild beasts of her species, and who had reared her young amid the ravening and ferocious tenants of the forest. Hence, when they ceased to be under the mother's care, and began to act for themselves, it was after the capricious and unruly manner of those fierce and un- tamed natures — without regard to any will but their own, and with no desire but the gratification of their own selfish purposes. The particular course followed would, of course, differ in each, according to their natural temperaments, though the prophet simply represents it, according to the image he has chosen, as a catching of prey, devouring men, and spreading around scenes of horror and desolation. We are not to suppose from this, that the princes, more particularly in the eye of the prophet, were all alike remarkable for the ferocity of their disposition, and the heartless manner in which they sported themselves with the calamities and ruin of others, or, indeed, that any of them did so. There is nothing in the history, to countenance the idea. 206 EZEKIEL XIX. that either Jehoahaz first, or afterwards Jehoiakim and Zedekiah, were peculiarly characterised by such a disposition. The whole we are to understand by the representation is, that like the lion among beasts, so they among men followed recklessly the bent of their own minds, and pursued, without let or hindrance, their sinful courses, regardless of the mischiefs which they might thereby bring upon the people they were bound to watch over and protect. Their conduct was as wayward, and the disastrous consequences that flowed from it, were as great, as if their object had been to tear in pieces, and spread desolation throughout the land. So that it was simply to mete to them according to their own measure, and reward them after their own doings, to allow the surrounding nations, first Egypt (in respect to Jehoahaz), and then Babylon, with her multitudinous hosts (in respect to the rest), to come and snare them as wild beasts, and lay them under perpetual airest, "that their voice should no more be heard upon the mountains of Israel." Thus these two foreign kingdoms, and more especially Babylon, became in a manner the grave of the earthly pomp and dominion of the princes of Israel. The figurative representation now given, has respect more immediately to the character of the princes, and the punishment it both provoked, and was destined to receive. But to com- plete the gloomy picture, the prophet adds another, taken from the vine, chief of the fruit-bearing trees, as the lion is of the beasts of prey ; having respect more especially to the royal house itself, and the contrast between its original, and its now altered and doomed condition. This royal house, the source of all the individual princes that sprung from it, is represented as, from the first, like a healthy and fruitful vine, planted beside streams of water for abundance of nourishment, so that she shot forth her branches, which were like so many royal sceptres, aloft in the air, and drew upon her the eyes of all on account of her impos- ing attitude and flourishing appearance. But, without saying how — it is to be understood from the preceding delineation, on account of the corrupt fruit that was borne by those rods of command and rule — this vine becomes the object of irresistible fury, which plucks her up from the fertile situation she had hitherto occupied, dries up her fruit, breaks off" and burns in the fire her once vigorous branches ; and not only this, but trans- LAMENTATION UPON THE PRINCES. 207 plants the tree itself into a dry and sapless region, where it could no longer flourish, and where the little fruitful ness that still appeared in it was to he devoured by a fire coming out of itself. For such was the wilful infatuation and folly of the royal house, that even when reduced and crippled on every hand by the punitive justice and restraining providence of God, it acted so as only to provoke further visitations of wrath, until it was rendered, like the vine-tree of the prophet, without either fruit to yield, or a rod of sufficient strength to form a sceptre to rule. In other words, the royal house of Israel, as to this earthly power and glory, becomes utterly wasted and gone ; the fit theme only of a present and coming lamentation. A doleful picture indeed, but how exactly accordant with the truth of things ! Who but the unerring Spirit of God could have guided the hand of the prophet to exhibit so faithful a representation of the coming future ? It might have been clear enougli, to a discerning mind, from the signs of the times in which Ezekiel lived, that the princes of Israel were likely to be further shorn of their power by the king of Babylon, and pos- sibly even carried captive to his dominions. But that their princely power and glory should thus actually expire — that the royal house of Israel itself should finally lose its place among the princedoms of the world, while yet the Lord should one day bring out of its seeming ruin a king, that should rise to the dominion in spite of all the powers of this world, and ultimately gather them all under his universal sway, — a train of events so peculiar and extraordinary as this, and so entirely corresponding with the future issues of Providence, could only have been tracked out beforehand by him who sees the things that are not, as though they were. But still, let us keep all in its proper place. This wonderful anticipation of the future regarding the house of David, was not intended merely, or even primarily, as a proof of Divine foresight to the church and the world, but rather as a grand demonstration, reaching from the past into the future, of the righteous principles of God's administration. It was to embody and exhibit these principles, in connection with the highest power and authority in the realm, that God originally chose out of Israel a royal house, to which he dele- gated, in a measure, his own rightful supremacy. But the seed of royalty forgot the nature of their calling, and abused, to 208 EZEKIEL XIX. purposes of selfishness and corruption, the honour tliey had received from above. And, as in the case of the people at large, their falling away from the righteous purposes, for which, especially, they were planted in the land of Canaan, carried along with it the forfeiture of all their blessings, so in the house of David, their inveterate attachment to sinful and worldly aims must of necessity involve the extinction of all its rank a,nd consideration among men. It must go down, engulphed in that worldly element to which it had so fondly and perversely- wedded itself; and there must it lie, till, through the special interposition of Heaven, it should again revive in One, in whom the spiritual should so clearly bear the ascendancy over the earthly, — One who should make himself so peculiarly known as loving righteousness and hating iniquity, that none could fail to regard him as of one mind, in this respect, with God, and God, himself should for ever anoint him with the oil of gladness above his fellows. We must ever keep this in view, as the main key to the mystery of God's work, the fundamental and all-pervad- ing element of those w^onderful and otherwise unaccountable evolutions in providence, w^hich prophets were so early instructed to disclose to the people. And let it never be forgotten, that precisely as men enter into God's mind, and embrace the righteous principles on which the government of his kingdom is conducted, are they prepared either to fulfil the part assigned them, as members of the kingdom, or to enjoy the benefits which it provides for those who are destined to inherit it ! For, as it is in righteousness the King of Zion is to reign and prosper, it can only be in proportion as we are imbued with his spirit of righteousness that we are fitted for taking part with him in what concerns the affairs of his kingdom, and for rising to a proper inheritance in its blessings. Israel's sinfulness and god's mercy. 209 CHAPTER XX. A DISPLAY OF THE PEOPLE'S LONG-CONTINUED SINFULNESS AND THE lord's long-suffering MERCY AND GOODNESS. A NEW series of prophecies begins here, and stretches to the close of the twenty-third chapter It commences with a defi- nite period of time, marked as the seventh year, fifth month, and tenth day of the month (nearly a year later than the last previous date given), and took its rise in a specific occasion. The entire series is of a peculiarly dark, objurgatory, and threatening cliaracter, interspersed with only some occasional gleams of light and distant prospects of a still coming good. No substantial amendment had been produced by the earlier communications of the prophet, and the contemporary efforts of other servants of God. Hence the guilt having become so much greater, and the time drawn nearer for the execution of judgment, the burden which the prophet had to deliver was but the more fearfully charged with intimations of brood- ing woe. The occasion of this series of discourses was furnished by certain of the elders of Israel coming to inquire of the Lord at the mouth of the prophet. What might be the precise object of their inquiry is kept in the background, as it was also on a former occasion (chap. xiv.). There can be little doubt, how- ever, that it had respect, in some shape, to the then depressed and suffering condition of the covenant-people, and implied, at least, if it did not openly express, a desire to ascertain some- thing more definite about God's purposes respecting them. But here again, a preliminary objection arose from the moral state of the persons inquiring, which was such as precluded them from any right to expect a friendly response from God to their desire for further information. Regarding, as they did, iniquity in their heart, the Lord could not hear them. He, therefore, at the outset, denounced the presumption of such persons in com- ing to inquire at his servant, and called upon the prophet to do toward them the part of a judge, by charging upon them the rebellious spirit of their fathers, and showing how little either O 210 EZKKIEL XX. they or their fathers had received in chastisement from God, compared with what they had deserved. Ver. 1 . And it came to pass in the fifth (month) of the seventh year, in the tenth of the month, that some of the elders of Israel came to inquire of the Lord, and they sat before me. 2. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 3. Son of man, speak to the elders of Israel, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Have ye come to inquire of me ? As I live, I shall not be inquired of by you, saith the Lord Jehovah. 4. Wilt thou not judge them? wilt thou not judge, Son of man?^ Make them to know the abominations of their fathers. 5. And thou shalt say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah : In the day that I chose Israel, and lifted up my hand to the seed of the house of Jacob, and made myself known to them in the land of Egypt, and lifted up my hand to them, saying, I am Jehovah, your God. 6. In that day I lifted up my hand to them, that I should bring them forth from the land of Egypt to a land that I had espied for them, flowing with milk and honey, the most beautiful of all lands.^ 7. And I said to them, Oast ye, every man, away the pollutions of his eyes, and defile not yourselves with the idols of Egypt ; I am Jehovah, your God. 8. And they rebelled against me, and were not willing to hearken to me ; they did not, every man, cast away the pollutions of his eyes, nor forsake the idols of Egypt ; and I said that I would pour out my wrath upon them, that I would accom- plish my anger in them within the land of Egypt. 9. But I wrought for my name's sake, that it might not be polluted in the eyes of the heathen, among whom they were, in whose sight I made myself known, to bring them forth from the land of Egypt. 10. And I led them forth from the land of Egypt, and brought them into the wilderness. 11. And I gave to them my statutes, and my judgments I made known to them, which if a man do, he shall live in them. 12. And I also gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign be- tween me and them, that they might know that J am Jehovah, who sanctifies them. 13. But the house of Israel rebelled against me in the wilderness; they did not walk in my statutes, and they despised my judgments, which if a man do he shall live in them ; and they grievously profaned my sabbaths ; and I said that I should pour out my wrath upon them in the wilderness to consume them. 14. But I wrought for my name's sake, that it might not be polluted before the heathen, in whose sight I brought them out. 15. And also I lifted up my hand to them in the wilderness, that I would not bring them into the land which I had given, flowing with milk and honey, the most ^ The interrogative has here the force of a command, the n being equiva- lent to the usual s^n, Wilt thou not ? And the interrogation is repeated to show the strength of feeling on the part of God, and the urgency of the oc- casion. Wilt thou not do it? Wilt thou not do it ? Why delay ? There is here the loudest call for the exercise of judgment ; do it promptly. 2 It is, literally, the ornament or beauty of all lands ; and from being ap- plied to Canaan before the Israelites took possession of it, the epithet must, of course, be understood in its natural sense, as denoting the native excel- lence and desirableness of the country. The same epithet is applied in Isa. xiii. 19, to Babylon as a kingdom, and several times in Daniel to Palestine (ch. viii. 9, xi. 16). We may understand by it, not so properly the absolute superiority of Canaan, as its relative superiority, considered as the abode and heritage of the Lord's people. tsrael\s sinfulness and god's mercy. 211 beautiful of all lands. 16. Because tliey acted despitefully against my judg- ments, and did not walk in my statutes, and profaned my sabbaths — for their heart went after its idols: 17. Yet mine eye spared them from being destroyed, neither did I make an end of them in the wilderness. 18. And 1 said to their children in the wilderness, Walk ye not in the statutes of your fathers, and do not keep their judgments, and with their idols defile not yourselves. 19. I Jehovah am your God, walk in my statutes, and keep my judgments, and do them. 20. And sanctify my sabbaths, and they shall be a sign between me and you, that ye may know that I Jehovah am your God. 21. But the children rebelled against me ; they did not walk in my statutes, and kept not my judgments, to do them, w hich if a man do he shall live in them ; they profaned my sabbaths ; and I said, that I would pour out my wrath upon them, that I would accomplish my anger in them, in the wilder- ness. 22. But I turned back my hand, and wrought for my name's sake, that it might not be polluted before the heathen, in whose sight I brought them forth. 23. Also I lifted up my hand to them in the wilderness, that I would scatter them among the nations, and that I would disperse them among the countries; 24. Because they did not execute my judgments, ann to appoint. That the word -,-> was sometimes used in much the same sense that our word hand is, as something to indicate or point out what was to be observed or known, is evident from 1 Sam. xv. 12 ; 2 Sam. xviii. 18, where hand-post or index-pillar, must be meant. See also Deut. xxiii. 12, "And a hand (or sign-post) shall be to thee without the camp," and Isa. Ivi. 5. That $4^3 is used in the sense of forming or engraving, needs no proof. 2 The expressions here are chosen with great care to bring out an impres- sive sense : This way for the sword of the king of Babylon was not only to lead to Judah, but into Jerusalem, to settle and rest there, in the fortified — what then will its fortifications avail? In such a connection, the /or^i/?e as the infinitive of Vs, which 246 EZEKIEL XXI. it might flash ! 29. While they see nothingness for thee, while they divine lies to thee (while this delusive process is going on, and thou art giving heed to it, there is that drawn and furbished sword flashing in the distance), to lay thee upon the necks of the pierced-through godless ones, whose day has come, at the time of the final iniquity.^ 30. Let it return to the scabbard ; in the place where thou wast formed, in the land of thy nativity, will I judge thee. 2 31. And I will pour out my indignation upon thee; with the fire of my wrath will I blow upon thee, and will give thee into the hand of savage men, forgers of destroying weapons.^ 32. Thou shalt be for fuel to the fire ; thy blood shall be in the midst of the land ; thou shalt not be re- membered, for I, Jehovah, have spoken it. Here all is darkness, trouble, and desolation. The Ammonites had not only sinned, like other heathen nations, but they had also taken up a taunt and reproach against the covenant-people in the time of their declension, and had pressed up, and, in the proud spirit of conquerors, spread themselves over a part of Israel's territory (Zeph. ii. 8 ; Jer. xlix. 1). They might, there- fore, be fitly taken here as representatives of the enemies gene- rally of the people of God. And in them the Lord was going to shovr, by a palpable demonstration, that while Israel could not escape this righteous judgment, when they walked like the heathen, their fall would be no gain to the heathen adversaries, but only the forerunner of a still more severe, even a remediless destruction. A germ of life and blessing still existed in the one, which Babylon with all its might could not extirpate ; but in the other there was no such Divine element ; and when the sword of vengeance was drawn, it must accomplish a final end. So was it with the Ammonites as a people. A few years after seems the most natural derivation), would be, — furbished for what it can, or as much as possible ; the infinitive of the verb being taken adverbially. 1 The meaning seems to be, that these Ammonites were to be added to the slain in Judah, thrown, as it were, upon the decapitated bodies of those wicked men, who had there perished in judgment, and whom they had imitated in their foolhardy and sinful ways. 2 The destruction was to overtake them in their own territory ; and the sentence at the beginning of the verse, " Let it return to the scabbard," may be understood thus : — The sword must do the work of destruction for which it is drawn ; do not trouble yourselves to move out of your place ; let it do its work, and then be sheathed ; it is in vain to resist or strive against the doom. ' The word here is singular in the Hebrew ri'^rr'^'o, though it scarcely admits of being rendered but in the plural, — forgers of that which destroys, — slaughter-weapons. There is an evident allusion to the language in Isa. liv. 16. But compare also Jer. v. 26. TUE ALL-PERVADING SINFULNESS. 247 the fall of Jerusalem, the arms of the kmg of Babylon were turned against them, and desolated their country. But this was only the beginning of their troubles ; for they never attained again to political power and importance ; they gradually dwin- dled away, till their separate existence ceased, and their place was no more known. '* So let all thine enemies perish, O Lord (so shall they indeed perish — in the destruction of these aliens and scorners the doom of all is reflected) ; but let them that love thee be as the sun, when he goeth forth in his strength." CHAPTER XXII. THE lord's judgment UPON THE ALL-PERVADING SINFULNESS OF JERUSALEM. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying, 2. Wilt thou (not) judge, wilt thou (not) judge the bloody city? and make her to know all her abominations. 3. And thou shalt say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, The city is one that sheds blood in the midst of it, that her time may come, and has made idols for herself, that she may be defiled. 4. By thy blood which thou hast shed, thou hast become guilty; and by thine idols which thou hast made thou art defiled ; and thou hast caused thy days to draw near, and hast reached thine years ; therefore have I made thee a reproach to the heathen, and a mocking to all countries. 5. Those that are near, and those that are far from thee, shall mock thee (saying), " Thou polluted one in name, and full of confusion !"i 6. Behold, the princes of Israel, each one according to his power, were in thee, in order that they might shed blood (as if that were the only purpose of their existence). 7. Father and mother have been set light by in thee ; in thee they have treated the stranger with injustice ; the widow and the fatherless have been oppressed in thee. 8. Thou hast de- spised my holy things, and hast profaned my Sabbaths. 9. Men of slander have been in thee, that they might shed blood ; and on the mountains have they eaten in thee ; scandalous things have they done in the midst of thee. 10. A father's nakedness has been discovered in thee; they have humbled in thee her that was set apart as polluted. 11. And one has committed abom- ination with his neighbour's wife ; and another has shamejfully defiled his daughter-in-law ; and another has humbled in thee his sister, the daughter of his father. 12. They have taken bribes in thee that they might shed ^ These words are best understood as the reproach itself, which the sur- rounding countries cast against Jerusalem. They held her up to derision as utterly soiled in reputation, and, at the same time, involved in mischief. In name and reality alike evil. 248 EZEKIEL xxir. blood ; thou hast taken usury and increase, and hast overreaclied thy neigh- bour by extortion ; and thou hast forgotten me, saith the Lord Jehovah. 13. And, behold, I have smitten my hand at thy overreaching which thou hast committed, and at the blood which is in the midst of thee. 14. Can thy heart endure, or thy hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee? I, Jehovah, have spoken, and I will do it. 15. And I will scatter thee among the heathen, and disperse thee among the countries, and will consume thy filthiness out of thee. 16. And thou art polluted by thyself^ in the eyes of the heathen ; and thou shalt know that I am Jehovah. 17. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 18. Son of man, the house of Israel has become to me dross ; the whole of them are brass, and tin, and iron, and lead, in the midst of the furnace ; the dross of silver are they. 19. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because ye have all be- come dross, therefore, behold, I will gather you into the midst of Jerusalem. 20. As silver, and brass, and iron, and lead, and tin, are gathered into the midst of the furnace, to blow the fire upon it that it may melt ; so will I gather in my anger and my fury, and I will leave and melt you. 21. And I will collect you, and will blow upon you in the tire of my wrath, and ye shall be melted in the midst of it. 22. As silver is melted in the midst of the furnace, so shall ye be melted in the midst of it ; and ye shall know that I Jehovah have poured out my fury upon you. 23. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 24. Son of man say to her, Thou art the land that is not cleansed, not rained upon in the day of indignation. 25. The conspiracy of prophets in the midst of her is like a roaring lion ravening for the prey : they have devoured souls ; they have taken treasure and precious things ; they have multiplied her widows in the midst of her. 26. Her priests have done violence to my law,^ and have profaned my holy things ; they have put no difference between holy and profane, nor taught between polluted and clean, and have hid their eyes from my Sabbaths, and I am profaned among them. 27. Her princes in the midst of her are as wolves ravening for their prey, to shed blood, to destroy souls, that they may get unjust gain. 28. And her prophets have plastered for them with whitewash, seeing vanity, and divining lies to them, saying, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, and Jehovah has not spoken. 29. The people of the land have used oppression, and exercised robbery, and oppressed the poor and needy, and overreached the stranger by going against the right. 30. And I sought for a man among them that should make up the wall, and stand in the breach before rae for the land 1 Our translators have here put the proper rendering in the margin, and retained a quite wrong one in the text. Most of the old translators and in- terpreters give the sense, " And I shall be profaned by thee." Conjectural emendations of the text are resorted to by Ewald and others, but without any necessity. The thought expressed is, that Jerusalem now appeared, from her depraved and miserable condition, as a polluted thing in the eyes of her heathen neighbours ; and she had brought the reproach upon herself. It had not come upon her as a calamity, which she had no power to prevent ; but she had, with her own hand, made herself vile. 2 Such, undoubtedly, is the meaning of the expression n^niri Jin'oh. It does not mean simply, that the priests personally transgressed the law, but that they dealt violently with it — wrested it in a way to suit their own selfish ends. TFIE ALL-PERVADING SJNILLKESP. 249 that I might not destroy it ; but I found none. 81. And I pour out upon them my indignation ; in the fire of my wrath I consume them : I recompense their way upon their head, saith the Lord Jehovah. A VERY few remarks will suffice on this chapter, as it presents scarcely any difficulty in interpretation, and in its theme differs very little from some portions that have already passed under consideration. It stands closely related, however, to the last chapter, and may fitly be regarded as supplementary to it ; the former having presented a striking delineation of the Lord's pur- pose to execute the seventy of his displeasure upon the people of Jerusalem, while this returns to lay open the fearful mass of cor- ruption on account of which such severity was to be inflicted. In what is written here, there is nothing properly new ; in its general purport, it is a repetition of the charges which were urged in chap. xx. ; and so the chapter begins much in the same way, — with a call upon the prophet to judge the people, and set before them their iniquities. There, however, the charge took the form of an historical review, for the purpose of connecting the present state of wickedness with the past, and showing how continuously the stream of corruption had flowed through all periods of their national existence. Here, on the other hand, the prophet looks exclusively to the present, and brings out in fearful array the many heinous and rampant sins which were crying in Heaven's ear for vengeance. The first section, reaching to the end of ver. 16, is chiefly occupied with detailing the various kinds of transgression that were practised in the land, — the idolatry, revelry, and lust, the selfishness, treachery, oppression, and bloodshed, with which all were polluted. The dark picture is drawn so as to exhibit a sharp contrast between the impure condition to which Israel had now come, and the pure one which Moses had of old repre- sented them as called to maintain. (Lev. xviii.-xx.) In all that was holy, virtuous, and good, they were to stand honourably apart from the heathen nations ; while in reality they had sunk to a level with these in the practice of every species of enormity. Hence, the necessity of a dealing in judgment, — not utterly to exterminate them as a people, but to purge out the corruptions which were defeating the design of their calling and election of God. "And I will scatter thee among the heathen," is the closing denunciation of this part, "and disperse thee in the 250 EZEKIEL XXII. countries, and will consume thy filthiness out of thee. And thou art polluted by thyself (^. e., by thy own sinful doings, and the judgments these have deservedly brought down on thee) in the eyes of the heathen ; and thou shalt know that I am Jehovah." The next section, ver. 17-22, is a sort of figurative episode, in which the prophet, as if impatient to see so much wickedness visited with its due chastisement, introduces a description of the rigliteous judgment that was ready to be executed upon them. The nation is represented as a miserable compound of the baser metals and of the dross of silver, — silver that has become dross ; for it is the degeneracy from good to bad, as well as the actual state of corruption, which the prophet would have us to mark. They were, therefore, to be thrown into the burning furnace of the Lord's anger, so as to be blown upon, and melted ; that the bad — a result implied, though not actually expressed — might be consumed, and the good separated and preserved. It was in Jerusalem this refining process was to be undergone ; so that the doom threatened is but another form of the evil already an- nounced, under the images of a devouring fire and a piercing sword. It was, in other words, the desolations to be accom- plished by the king of Babylon. In the last and concluding section (ver. 23-31), the prophet again returns to the charge of guilt, but with a more especial reference to the different ranks and orders of society in the land, showing how each had corrupted their ways, and, as it were, conspired together to bring on the catastrophe. The land, as a whole, presents itself to his eye as a polluted region, and, as such, not to be blessed, — not to be rained upon (one of the great covenant-blessings) in the day of indignation. The prophets have acted like beasts of prey, intent only on their personal gain (ver. 25) ; the priests have done violence to the law, wrested it to improper ends, and have practically allowed the distinctions between good and evil, clean and unclean, to go into desuetude (ver. 26) ; the princes have exercised cruelty and oppression, countenanced and encouraged by the prophets (ver. 27, 28); the people at large have followed in the footsteps of their leaders, and done iniquity as they could, each one against his neighbour (ver. 29). " And I sought," it is added, " for a man among them, that should make up the wall, and stand in the breach before me for the land, that I might not destroy it : but I found STORY OF AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH. 251 none." It does not mean, that there was literally not a righteous man in it; for. Jeremiah was still there, and, doubtless, others of a kindred spirit beside him. But Jeremiah had been discharged from praying for the people (chap. xi. 14), as being now doomed to destruction ; and the meaning here is, that no one now, know- ing the state to which things had come, and understanding the Lord's mind concerning them, would any longer undertake to do the part of a repairer of the breach, so as to have matters brought right again. " Therefore," the inevitable conclusion follows, " I pour out my indignation upon them ; I consume them in the fire of my wrath ; I recompense their way upon their head, saith the Lord Jehovah." CHAPTER XXm. THE STORY OF ISRAEL'S SIN AND PUNISHMENT PARABOLICALLY EXHIBITED UNDER THE NAMES OF AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH. Verse 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying : 2. Son of man, there were two women, the daughters of one mother. 3. And in Egypt they played the wanton ; in their youth they wantoned ; there were their breasts pressed, and there were the teats of their virginity bruised. 4. And their names were Aholah the elder, and Aholibah her sister; and they were mine, and they bare sons and daughters ; and their names were Samaria- Aholah ; and Jerusalem-Aholibah. 5. And Aholah, when under me (see on ch. xvi. 32) played the wanton; and doted upon her lovers, on the Assyrians her neigh- bours. ^ 6. Clothed in purple, captains and governors, all of them desirable young men, knights riding upon horses. 7. And she bestowed her wanton- ness upon them, all the choice of the sons of Assyria ; and with all on whom she doted, with all her idols she polluted herself. 8. And her whoredoms, which she brought from Egypt, she did not leave ; for in her youth they lay 1 There is no ground for doubting that ai^'Tij? was used to express near- ness of relation — neighbours ; either in respect to juxtaposition, or to close- ness of connection, as friends. Ps. xxxviii. 11, alone proves this, and seems also favourable to the meaning neiglihour in the ordinary sense, rather than to that of relationship. The Assyrians, who at the time referred to were extending their dominions on every side, might properly enough be called, even locally, the neighbours of Israel. On the north-east the one kingdom certainly bordered on the other. Ewald's change of the text, and Plitzig's fanciful analysis to establish the sense red, can yield no satisfaction. 252 EZEKIEL xxiir. ■with her, and they bruised the breasts of her virginity, and poured their whoredoms upon her. 9. Therefore, did I give her into the hand of her lovers, into the hand of the Assyrians, upon whom she doted, 10. These discovered her nakedness : took her sons and her daughters, and slew her with the sword ; and she became a warning (literally, a name) to Avomen ; and they executed judgment upon her. 11. And her sister Aholibah saw it, and did corruptly in inordinate love more than she, and in her whoredoms more than the whoredoms of her sister. 12. She doted upon the Assyrians her neighbours, captains, and governors, clothed most gorgeously, knights riding upon horses, all of them desirable young men. 13. And I saw that she was defiled ; they had both one way. 14. And she increased her whoredoms ; and saw men portrayed upon the wall, the likenesses of the Chaldeans portrayed with vermilion ; 15. Girded with girdles upon their loins, wearing long coloured turbans upon their heads,^ all of them having the appearance of leaders, with Chaldea for the land of their birth. 16. And she doted upon them as soon as her eyes beheld them, and she sent messengers to them into Chaldea. 17. And the Babylonians came to her into the bed of love, and they defiled her with their whoredom, and she was polluted with them ; and her soul was satiated with them (or, loathed on account of them). 18. And she discovered her whoredoms, and discovered her nakedness ; and my soul did loathe in respect to her, like as my soul loathed respecting her sister. 19. And she multiplied her whore- doms, to call to remembrance the days of her youth, in which she played the wanton in the land of Egypt. 20. And she doted upon their paramours, whose flesh is as the flesh of asses, and whose issue as the issue of horses. ^ Gesenius renders this clause, " redundant with mitres upon their heads/' that is, " wearing long turbans hanging down from their heads." In this explanation, he omits the idea of dyed or coloured usually connected with the a-i^int? ; and, we think, without any sufficient reason ; for the word is most naturally derived from Vn-j to dip, whence dyed and coloured readily flow. It is also matter of historical certainty that the Assyrians delighted not only in loose and flowing, but also in richly coloured dresses. The recent discoveries amid the remains of Nineveh and Babylon, have thrown fresh light upon this subject, and supply many illustrations of the description of Ezekiel in this chapter. In respect, generally, to the representations upon the monu- ments, we find that " the dresses furnish us with a proof of a state of great luxury. The robes of the Assyrians were generally ample and flowing, but dififered in form from those of the Egyptians and the Persians. They con- sisted of tunics or robes varying in length, in mantles of divers shapes of long fringed scarfs, and of embroidered girdles. Ornaments were scattered with profusion over these dresses, some of which appear to have been emble- matic of certain dignities or employments Cyrus likewise is related by Xenophon to have given each of his superior officers and allies a dress of the Median fashion, i. e., long robes of a variety of the brightest colours, and richly embroidered with gold and silver," etc. — (Bonomi's Nineveh, p. 319). It is needless to adduce quotations in proof of the practice of engraving and painting the figures of men, and especially of war scenes upon the walls of houses, as it is now familiarly known to all. In these sculptures also the re- mains have been found of colouring in red, blue, and black. STORY OF AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH. 253 21. And thou didst repeat (literally, visit, go back upon) the lewdness of thy youth, in the bruising of thy teats by the Egyptians, because of thy youthful breasts. 22. Therefore, Aholibah, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I will stir up thy lovers against thee, those with whom thou hast had loathing in thy soul, and they shall come against thee round about. 23. The Baby- lonians and all the Chaldeans, Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa,^ all the Assyrians with them, desirable young men all of them, captains and governors, leaders and men of renown, riding every one on horses. 24. And they shall come against thee with chariots, waggons, and wheel-work, and with an assembly of people ; they shall set against thee buckler and shield, and helmet round about ; and I set before them judgment, and they shall judge thse according to their judgments. 25. And 1 lay against thee my jealousy, and they shall deal with thee in fury ; they shall take away thy nose and thine ears ; and thy remnant shall fall by the sword ; they shall take thy sons and thy daughters, and thy remnant shall be devoured by the fire. 26. And they shall strip thee of thy clothes, and take away thy beautiful jewels. 27. And I make thy lewdness to cease from thee, and thy whoredoms from the land of Egypt ; and thou shalt not lift up thine eyes to them, nor remember Egypt any more. 28. For, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I give thee into the hand of such as thou hatest, whom thy soul has loathed. 29. And they shall deal with thee in hatred ; and they shall take away all thy labour, and shall leave thee naked and bare ; and the nakedness of thy whoredoms shall be discovered, and thy lewdness, and thy wanton courses. 30. I will do these things to thee, because thou hast gone a whoring after the heathen, because thou art defiled with their idols. 31. In the way of thy sister hast thou gone, and her cup I put into thy hand. 32. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Thou shalt drink of thy sister's cup which is deep and large ; thou shalt be for laughter and mockery, as much as possible (see note on chap. xxi. 28). 33. Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow — the cup of astonish- ment and desolation — the cup of thy sister Samaria. 34. Thou shalt even drink and lick it, and its ware shalt thou break, and thy breasts shalt thou pluck off; 2 I have spoken it, saith the Lord Jehovah. 35. Therefore, thus ^ The chief peculiarity in this part of the description, is the accumulation of names respecting the Babylonians, at ver. 23 : " Sons of Babel, and all the Chaldeans, Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa ;" but it is one in regard to which little information can be given. The LXX. simply give the Hebrew words. That they are designations, in some respects, of the Babylonians generally, and not names of persons or tribes belonging to the empire, seems certain. By a series of transformations, Hitzig brings them to signify different ranks : noble, and prince, and lord ; good enough certainly, if one could only get solid footing as to the ground on which liberties are taken with the particular words. Pekod is used by Jeremiah (chap. 1. 21) as a designation of Babylon — visitation, punishment, denoting it as peculiarly the land of judgment. Perhaps it is used here to indicate, that it was to be punishment in a double sense — first, actively against Judah, as well as afterwards passively in respect to herself. Shoa and Koa are explained by the ancient interpreters to mean much the same thing, — rich and noble, or powerful : designations of the Ba- bylonians as possessed of great resources, — having all the world's dignity and opulence at their command. 2 The meaning of this passage is, that she acted after receiving the cup of 254 EZEKIEL XXTir. saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thou hast forgotten me, and hast cast me behind thy back, do thou also bear thy lewdness and thy whoredoms. 36. And Jehovah said to me, Son of man, wilt thou (not) judge Aholah andAholibah? and declare to them their abominations ? 37. For they have committed adultery, and blood is in their hands, and with their idols they have committed adultery ; and also their children that they have borne to me they have made to pass through the fire to them. 38. This besides have they done to me, they have defiled my sanctuary in the same day, and pro- faned my Sabbaths. 39. And when they had slain their children to their idols, they then came on the same day into my sanctuary to profane it ; and behold thus did they do in the midst of my house. 40. And further, thou didst send' for men coming from afar, to them was a messenger sent ; and lo ! they came, for whom thou didst wash thyself, paint thine eyes, and deck thyself with oniaments. 41. And thou satest upon a stately bed, with a table pre- pared before it, and my incense and my oil didst thou set upon it. 42. And " there was a voice of a multitude in security with her ; and with men from the mass, men that came from the wilderness, Sabeans ; and they put bracelets upon their hands, and crowns of beauty upon their heads. 43. And I said to her worn out with adulteries, Will they now commit her whoredoms? and she ? 44. And they went in unto her, as they go in to a harlot ; so did they go in to Aholah and to Aholibah, the lewd women. 45. And the righteous men, theyjudged them with the judgment of an adulteress, and the judgment of those that shed blood; for they are adulteresses, and blood is in their hands. 46. For, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I will bring up a company against them, and will give them to be removed and spoiled. 47. And the company shall stone them with stones, and despatch them with their swords ; they shall slay their sons and their daughters, and burn up their houses with fire. 48. And I will make lewdness to cease from the earth, and all women shall be in- structed, and they shall not do after your lewdness. 49. And they shall recompense your lewdness upon you, and ye shall bear the sins of your idols, and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. The figure employed, and the train of thought presented, under it in this chapter, are so much akin to those already contained in chap, xvi., that I deem it unnecessary to give more than the briefest outline of the subject. The nature of the representation also forbids any minuteness of detail. It is the covenant-people in both its branches, Israel and Judah, and not the latter merely, as in chap, xvi., that the prophet here has in view. Hence there are two women, the daughters of one mother — the name of the one Aholah (her tent, her being taken in the sense of her own), of the other Aholibah (my tent in her). The former repre- sents, we are told, Samaria, or the portion of the covenant-people, whose capital Samaria was, and the latter Jerusalem, or that the Lord's anger, like a person utterly devoid of sense and reason, breaking in pieces the vessel itself, from which she had drunk, and tearing her very breasts. The image of the cup in Scripture, as given from the Lord to an enemy, always conveys the idea of utter prostration and helpless impotence. — Comp. Jer. li. 7; Nahum iii. Jl ; Obad. v. 16; Hab. ii. 15, 16. STORY OF AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH. 255 other portion, whose capital was there. The names of the two divisions respectively were evidently chosen for the purpose of expressing the relation in which each stood to God ; — the one, Samaria, having, at the very commencement of her separate existence, apostatised from Jehovah, and set up a tent or standard for herself; while the other, Jerusalem, still had in her the tabernacle of God, the true symbols of worship, and the Divinely appointed means of obtaining God's favour and blessing. This difference, however, vanishes in the sequel ; at least, no further appears, than in the precedence in guilt and punishment ascribed to Samaria, on which account also she is called the elder sister. Iniquity in her reached its maturity earlier, and sooner also received its deserved recompense ; but without the effect of de- terring the other sister from pursuing the same infatuated course; she was of a kindred spirit, and came in process of time to the same miserable end. It is to be noted here also, in respect to the representation on both sides, that the breach of conjugal fidelity charged against the daughters, has reference not so much to their idolatrous prac- tices, as to their worldly spirit — their disposition to form alli- ances with heathen nations, and to look to them, instead of God, for their protection and safety. The one, no doubt, was very closely connected with the other, and was no more, indeed, than its natural outgoing and result. Hitzig plainly carries the matter too far, when he denies that there is any reference whatever here to the idols of the heathen, and that the heathen nations them- selves are alone the idols. This obliges him to hold the last clause in ver. 7, " with all their idols she defiled herself," to be a corruption ; and it also overlooks the inseparable connection be- tween the two false directions. The spirit of heathenish idolatry, situated as Israel was, naturally led to the copying after heathenish manners and the forming of heathenish alliances ; and with every step taken in the one direction, the other was sure to follow. We cannot, therefore, suppose that the prophet should have en- tirely omitted any reference to the idolatrous spirit, which formed the root of the evil. At the same time, it is undoubtedly the other direction which he has throughout chiefly in view ; partly, because the former one had already received very strong and repeated delineations (especially in chap. xvi. and xx.) ; and partly because the prophet wished to make the people under- 25Q EZEKIEL XXIIT. stand how God had in righteous jadgiiieiit resolved to turn their false confidences into the immediate instruments of their ruin. It was their crime to have sought after such lovers, and it was to be their punishment, that these lovers should become their destroyers. In the case of Aholah, or the kingdom of Israel, the apostatising disposition is represented as discovering itself, not only in the foulness they contracted in Egypt, and their still hankering after that when they were settled in Canaan, but also in that they be- came enamoured of the Assyrians. These Assyrians are called their neighbours (ver. 5 ), as they are also of the other division of the covenant-people (ver. 12) ; and are described as having the gallant appearance, and the gay attire, which was fitted to work upon such light and inconstant hearts. The meaning simply is, that they saw in that great neighbouring power all the elements of worldly rank and prosperity, which they desired to possess themselves, and trusted to their connection with it, rather than their interest in God, for the strength they needed. The notices which the historical books contain respecting the commencement of this connection, are so brief, that it would be improper to refer to them for complete information on the subject. The first express mention of the Assyrians in connection with the kingdom of Israel, in the reign of Menahem, when Pul is said to have come against the land (2 Kings xv. 19), has all the ap- pearance of a notice depending upon something going before — a prior connection, which gave him, as he thought, a right to in- terfere amid the troubles that then prevailed. The word of the prophet seems plainly to imply, that the first movement in this direction was on the part of Israel — that she herself courted the alliance ; and there can be no doubt, as well from the history as from the word of the prophet, that the connection ended most disastrously for Israel ; that she was indeed given up by God into the hands of that heathen power, to be Immbled, and smitten, and brought to desolation. In regard to the people of Judah, represented by Aholibah, the delineation is quite similar, only that their folly and guilt were aggravated by having before them the ruin, which befell the kingdom of Israel. They are described as being captivated and allured by the Assyrians first, and then by the Babylonians, so that their heart departed from the Lord to lean upon an arm of STORY OF AHOLAH AND AHOLIBAH. 257 flesh. The historical notices regarding this portion of .ludah's course, from the time of Ahaz downwards, which are much fuller than those given of the like period of Israel's history, amply bear out the language of the prophet. And how completely the re- maining part of the description w^as also verified — how intense a loathing was created between the two parties, and how utter a destruction was brought upon the people of Judah by those ob- jects of their former confidence and admiration, it is needless at present to relate. The closing part of the descri])tion represents the two women, and especially the one that personated the people of Judah, as persevering to the last in their wicked and profligate courses. Like persons in the final stages of abandonment, they went on rioting in the ways of evil, unchecked by all the troubles and humiliations they had experienced in the past ; and now, there- fore, as utterly reprobate and hardened and hopeless, they must be adjudged to the doom appointed against such incorrigible and shameless offenders. So the doleful story ends. The prophet looks only, from first to last, to the course of crime and its de- served recompense ; and he allows the curtain to drop without one gleam of hope as to the future. He sees, that the hammer of the law in its strongest form is needed to break the hard and stony heart of the people. So urgent was the call for a work of conviction, and so great the danger of that not being effectually wrought, that he would not drop a word which might lighten the impression of guilt upon their minds, or afford the least excuse for delay. His message was. Now or never. Judged by the sense of right and wrong current among men, your conduct to- ward God calls for judgment without mercy. And if there be not immediately awakened the contrition of sincere repentance, you have nothing to expect but the most unsparing visitations of wrath. 258 EZEKIEL XXIV, CHAPTER XXIV. THE VISION OF THE BOILING CALDRON, AND OF THE DEATH OF EZEKIEL's WIFE. Verse 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me in the ninth year, in the tenth month, in the tenth of the month, saying : 2. Son of man, write thee the name of the day, this self-same day ; it is the very day on which the king of Babylon lay against Jerusalem J 3. And utter a parable to the rebellious house, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Set on a caldron, set it on, and also pour water into it. 4. Gather into it its pieces (i. e., those which properly belong to it, and are in a sense its own) every good piece, thigh and shoulder, of the choice of bones full {i. e., the pieces that not only are in them- selves best, but also enclose the strongest and firmest bones — for it means bones in the meat, not separate from it). 5. Of the choice of the flock take thou, and also pile the bones under it (the bony parts as distinguished from the fleshy), boil it thoroughly, and let them seethe the bones that are in the midst of it. 2 6. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe to the bloody city ! the caldron whose poisonous scum (verdigrise) is in it. And the poisonous scum has not gone forth from it ; on its every piece let it go forth ; let no lot fall on it.^ 7. For her blood is in the midst of her ; upon the parched rock 1 The usual meaning of -j'^a is to lay against, to lean upon. Michaelis, Gesenius, and others have sought here to identify it with -ro-o, and ascribed to it the sense of drawing near to, approaching. But Ewald, Hav., Hitzig, pro- perly adhere to the more exact and only ascertained meaning of laying against, or throwing one's self upon. 2 There is no need for any change in the clause n-'Pi-p z^i2'j,:^-r, n^'^, either by 7 V : - • 7 - T regarding ri^nj-n, with Dathe, as superfluous, or with Newcome and many others, substituting n-::>'r:, wood, for bones. What the prophet means is, that the best, the fleshiest parts, ftill of the strongest bones, representing the most exalted and powerful among the people, were to be put within the pot and boiled ; but that the rest, the very poorest, were not to escape ; these, the mere bones, as it were, were to be thrown as a pile beneath, suffering first, and, by increasing the fire, hastening on the destruction of the others. i>T^ is properly a noun, a pile ; literally : And also let there be a pile of the bones underneath. The expression cannot signify, with Hav., a pile of wood for the bones ; for i^ri is simply a pile, not a pile of wood, and when coupled with bones, can only mean a heap of these. ' This seems to me the preferable way of understanding the latter part of ver. 6. Most commentators, including Ilavernick and Hitzig, render : bring forth piece after piece. But why drop the it connected with the verb ps'^u't; ? Bring it out — then, what it ? The only thing made prominent in the preceding context is the poisonous scum ; but it does not make sense to speak of bringing it forth piece by piece. This poisonous scum would not VISION OF THE BOILING CALDRON. 259 slie has put it ; she did not pour it forth upon the earth, to cover it with dust. 8. In order that fury may come up, that vengeance may be executed, I have put her blood upon the parched rock, that it might not be covered.^ 9. There- fore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe to the bloody city ; also I will make the pile great : 10. Heap on wood, kindle the fire, consume the flesh, and boil it into a compound,^ and let the bones be burned. II. And let it be set upon the coals empty, so that the brass of it may be hot, and may bum, and that its filthiness may be dissolved in the midst of it, its poisonous scum con- sumed. 12. The toilsome labours it has wearied out (exhausted/, and yet go out, the prophet had said, by such dealings as had already been resorted to ; let it go out, then, he adds, upon each of the pieces in the pot ; let the pot and its contents become alike infected with the corrupting taint ; there is to be no lot cast, as if some were to escape ; all were to be in the same category of evil. The communication of the poisonous scum is only to pre- pare the way for the application of the same consuming judgment to the caldron and its contents. And so the prophet immediately goes on to declare how the heaven-daring guilt was within and throughout the city, just as the poisonous scum was all through the pot and its pieces ; whence all alike must suffer the vengeance of God's destroying judgment. The confusion here commonly fallen into, has arisen chiefly from pressing too closely the refer- ence to chap. xi. 7, where, certainly, the Lord speaks of fetching the people out of the caldron, and giving them up to strangers. But, in the passage before us, the idea throughout is of their being kept in the caldron till they were there utterly wasted and consumed. ^ Blood is here mentioned as the consummation of all wickedness ; that, the existence of which presupposes every other form of guilt. It is also brought specially into notice, with a view to Gen. iv. 10, where, even though the ground did receive the blood of Abel, still it cried to Heaven for ven- geance. Here the people are represented, as, with shameless and hardened effrontery, setting the blood they had shed in the most exposed and promi- nent place, on the naked rock, where there was nothing to conceal it, or inter- cept its cry to Heaven. And the Lord says not only that they had spilt it there, but that he himself also had set it there ; that is, he had ordered mat- ters so as to make the blood appear thus prominent, that the connection be- tween the guilt and the punishmept might be more easily perceived. Hence the proposal of some, after the Septuagint, to change the text in ver. 7, so as to read — upon the parched rock / have put it, etc., instead of she, proceeds upon a superficial view of the passage. It was the city herself that did so, yet not without the overruling providence of God outwardly turning things into that direction ; so that, in one respect, it might be said, she had set it, and, in another, God had set it on the rock. ^ The radical meaning of the verb r:p-^ appears to be the artificial amalga- mation of various substances into one, as in the case of the formation of sweet spices or ointments, usually done by pounding and boiling. Hence the mean- ing here of rfn-^-^rt rr:"^ is, let it be sodden into a compound, or reduce it to a pulp. Vulgate : coquatur universa compositio. ^ This is substantially the rendering of the Vulgate : nuilto labore suda- 2 GO EZEKIEL XXIV. its great poisonous scum has not gone forth ; in the fire be its poisonous scum ! 13. In thy filthiness is infamy, because I have purged thee, and thou wast not purged ; thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest on thee. 14. I, Jehovah, have spoken it ; it comes, and I do. I will not relax,^ I will not spare, and I will not repent ; according to thy ways, and according to thy doings, shall they judge thee, saith the Lord Jehovah. These fourteen verses contain the first part of the message given to Ezekiel on this occasion. The occasion was a melan- choly one, being marked by the actual investiture of Jerusalem by the armies of Nebuchadnezzar. It was the ninth year of Jehoi- achin's captivity, and the tenth day of the tenth month. This is noted in other passages, 2 Kings xxv. 1, Jer. xxxix. 1, as the day and time, on which the siege properly commenced. And that this fact should have been communicated to Ezekiel among the Babylonian exiles, and announced by him immediately after, must have been to afford another proof of his true prophetical character. By such an announcement he put his Divine com- mission in pledge, as he did still further, and more remarkably, by the clear delineation of the disastrous results, in which he de- clared the siege thus begun was sure to terminate. The image, which is chosen for the purpose of unfolding the message to be delivered on this painful subject, that of a caldron set upon the fire to boil, with the best pieces of the meat in it, and the bones piled underneath, was evidently suggested by the proverb formerly noticed as having been bandied about among the people : " The city is the caldron and we are the flesh (chap. turn est. It indicates the pains or toilsome labours God had taken with Je- rusalem to get her purified, but without efi*ect ; she had wearied them out. or allowed them to exhaust themselves without parting with her sins, a-^rsp no- Avhere else occurs in the sense here ascribed to it ; but there is now a general agreement, that it bears this sense here, derived from the root rsj which sometimes has the meaning of trouble or distress, and, in Arab., of being fatigued. 1 The verb :?^3, is used with considerable latitude. But the primary meaning seems to be that of uncovering, or making bare, in which sense it occurs in Numb. v. 18, and other parts of the Pentateuch. Hence the se- condary meaning of loose, relax, or dissolve, in which sense, probably, it is used, Exod. xxxii. 25, for the people were not properly naked, but in a re- laxed and dissolute state. I take it in this sense, also, here. In Prov. i. 25, and other places, it bears the still stronger sense of unbridled, lawless, or contemptuous treatment. It never means to go hack. VISION OF THE BOILING CALDRON. 26 1 xi. 3). In a proud feeling of fancied security, they had spoken thus ; but they were now to find, in bitter experience, that there was a dreadful truth couched in the image, wliich was to rebuke their senseless folly. So far from the city proving to them a place of secure strength, like the iron ribs of a strong caldron, it was to be set as a seetliing-pot upon the fire ; and the people, like so many pieces of meat destined to be devoured, were to be put into it, and subjected to a boiling heat. None were to be spared : the mighty and the noble, as well as the comparatively poor and mean, were to suffer in the calamity ; the only difference should be like that between consumption in the fire at once — the punishment of the poorer sort — ^^and perishing by the somewhat slower and more lingering process of boiling, from which the rich could not escape. After having briefly given the ground of the parabolical de- scription, the prophet proceeds, in ver. 6-14, to make special and pointed appUcation of it. His leading object is to show, that it was the excessive and inveterate wickedness of the people, which provoked, and even rendered necessary, the severe dealing to which they were now subjected. All measures of a less extreme kind had been tried in vain ; those were now exhausted ; and as the iniquity appeared to be entwined with the whole fabric and constitution of things, nothing remained but to subject all to the crucible of a severe and over- whelming catastrophe. This is represented by keeping the cal- dron on the fire till its contents were stewed away, and the very bones burnt. And as if even this were not enough, as if some- thing more were necessary to avenge and pui-ge out such scan- dalous wickedness, the caldron itself must be kept hot and burning, till the pollution should be thoroughly consumed out of it. The wicked city must be laid in ruins. It is the very same thought which occurs in Isa. iv. 4, where the filth of the daughters of Zion is said to be washed away, and the blood of Jerusalem to be purged from the midst of it by the spirit of judgment and the spirit of burning; only, after the manner of our prophet, the image is extended to many minute and particular details. In plain terms, the Lord was no longer going to deal with them by half-measures ; their condition called for the greatest degree of severity compatible with their preservation as a distinct and separate people, and so the indignation of the Lord was to 262 EZEKIEL XXIV. rest on them till a separation was effected between tliem and sin. As to the principle of dealing, there is no essential difference between what God did then with Israel, and what he still does with those who stand in a similar relation to him, and pursue a similar course. Where there is the profession of a belief in God's word, and a regard to God's authority, though intermingled with much that is false in sentiment, or unrighteous in conduct, there must still be dealings of severity and rebuke, to bring the pro- fessor, if possible, to a sense of his sinftdness, and lead him to renounce it ; but failing this, to vindicate concerning him the righteousness of God, and leave him without excuse if his ini- quity should prove his ruin. In the case of the Lord's real people, the severity exercised will always be attended with salu- tary results ; for they have the root of the matter in them, and are sure to profit by the chastening of the Lord. But with those who have the profession only, without the principle of true god- liness, the iniquity is clung to in spite of all the severity that is exercised, until the wrath falls on them to the uttermost. There is enough in New Testament Scripture, and the experience of men under the present dispensation, to warrant us to expect so fa?' a similarit}^ in God's method of procedure to the representation here given of his conduct toward Israel. But, on the other hand, a difference may also be expected, in so far as his dealings now, in accordance with the genius of the new dispensation, respect men more as individuals, less as public communities, and bear more immediately upon their inward state and spiritual relations. He who would regard aright the operations of the Lord's hand, and profit by the corrections of his rod of chastisement, must keep a watchful eye upon the things that concern his own experience and history. There may be signs of the Divine displeasure, suf- ficient to startle the tender conscience, and call for deep humili- ation of spirit, while nothing appears outwardly wrong, and all may even wear a smiling aspect, as fer as regards social and public relations. Should there be a restraining of Divine grace within, an absence of spiritual refreshments, a felt discomfort of mind, or an obvious withdrawal of spiritual privileges, there is "beyond doubt the commencement of a work of judgment ; and if such marks of God's displeasure are slighted, others of a more severe and alarming kind may assuredly be looked for. But as VISION OF THE BOILING CALDRON. 263 men's tempers and circumstances in life are infinitely varied, so there is a cofresponding variety in the methods employed by God to check the risings of sin, and expel its poison from the heart. And it is the part of spiritual wisdom to seek for the wakeful ear and the discerning eye, which may enable one to catch even the earliest intimations of God's displeasure, and so improve these as to render unnecessary the heavier visitations of wrath. The second part of the vision, which Ezekiel saw on this oc- casion, bore respect more immediately to himself, although it was really a revelation to the people. Ver. 15. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 16. Son of man, behold I take away from thee the desire of thine eyes with a stroke ; and thou shalt not mourn, nor weep, neither shall thy tears flow. 17. Forbear to cry, make not mourning for the dead,i bind the tire of thy head upon thee, and put thy shoes upon thy feet, and cover not the chin, nor eat the bread of men.^ 18. And I spoke to the people in the morning ; and at even my wife died ; and I did in the morning as I was commanded. 19. And the people said to me, Wilt thou not tell us, what these things import to us, that thou doest ? 20. And I said to them. The word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 21. Say to the house of Israel, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I am going to profane my sanctuary, the pride of your strength, the desire of your eyes, and that which your soul pitied, and your sons and your daughters whom ye have left shall ftill by the sword. 22, And ye shall do as I have done : ye shall not cover the chin, nor shall ye eat the bread of men. 23. And your tires shall be upon your heads, and your shoes upon your feet ; ye shall not mourn nor weep ; and ye shall pine away in your iniquities, and bemoan yourselves one toward another. 24. And Ezekiel shall be to you for a portent ; according to all that he has done shall ye do ; when it comes ye shall then know that I am the Lord Jehovah, 25. And thou. Son of man, shall it not be in the day that I take from them their strength, the delight of their glory, the desire of their eyes, and the wish of their souls, their sons and their daughters ? 26. In that day he that escapes shall come to thee, to make it heard in the ears. 27. In that day shall thy mouth be opened to him that is escaped, and thou shalt speak and be no more dumb ; and thou shalt be to them for a portent ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. 1 The literal rendering here is : dead-persons' mourning thou shalt not do or make. Storr, and, after him, Havernick, render : the dead shalt thou not make for mourning, i. e., shalt not take for an occasion or object of mourning. A very artificial sort of construction, and liable, besides, to the objection of mentioning dead persons as those for whom the mourning should naturally have been made, while in reality there was only one. The expression is evi- dently, like all the rest, of a quite general kind, referring to what was wont to take place on such occasions ; so that dead-persons' mourning was mourning appropriate to such. 2 "Bread of men " can only mean such bread as men in circumstances of bereavement and distress usually eat ; and hence, though it undoubtedly sug- gests the idea of poor or unsavoury food, yet we are not on that account to render with some : the bread of the mourning, or the wretched. 264 EZEKIEL XXIV. The portion of these verses, which relates to the personal ex- perience and behaviour of the prophet, was well fitted to strike both himself and others. In ordinary circumstances, such a calamity as the sudden death of a beloved wife, would naturally have called forth, and would also have justified, the most affect- ing demonstrations of grief: doleful cries and lamentations, mourning attire, the uncovering of the feet (2 Sam. xv. 30 ; Isa. XX. 2), uncovering also the head in the case of one, who, like Ezekiel was a priest, wearing a peculiar head-dress (comp. Lev. X. 7, xxi. 10, 12 ; Josh. vii. 6 ; 2 Sam. xiii. 19 ; Esth. iv. 1, 3 ; Isa. Ixi. 3, etc.),^ putting a cloth on the cbin (Lev. xiii. 45 ; Micah iii. 7), and eating the bread of sorrow. But not one of these things was the prophet to be permitted to do. He was neither to shed a tear, nor to raise a cry ; not to make dead-per- sons' mourning — the mourning which was wont to be made in honour of the dead — nor throw aside his priestly head-dress, nor put off his shoes, nor cover his chin, nor eat the bread which it was customary for men to eat in seasons of calamity and distress. No reason is given for these singular restrictions as regards the prophet's own case. He simply hears the word of the Lord, telling him what was to happen, and how he was to conduct himself, when it did happen. Then he relates, that in the even- ing his wife died ; and that in obedience to the Divine command, he abstained from all the usual expressions of grief and mourn- ing. The people, he further relates, came to him to inquire what 1 The two first of the passages referred to show that it was a natural and becoming sign of grief in priests to take off their head-dress, at least in times of peculiar distress ; while others, it would seem, rather veiled and covered their heads in times of mourning (2 Sam. xv. 30, etc.). The reason, doubt- less, was, that the priests had their head-dress given them for ornament, as an appropriate badge of office ; and, on this account, as well as from being made of fine twined linen, it was unsuitable for a time of mourning. Beside this and other ornaments peculiar to himself, the high-priest also had on his head the holy anointing oil ; and was therefore forbidden, as mentioned in the second of the above passages, to lay aside his head-dress in any case of mourning ; since it would have been to dishonour that by which he was spe- cially consecrated to his high office, to disrobe himself of his mitre, and after the common custom, wrap his head in sackcloth and ashes. The priests generally, however, might do this, though only in the case of the death of their nearest relatives (Lev. xxi. 1-3). It is, of course, to be understood, that the putting off of the mitre or head-band in such cases, was in order to the putting on of inferior attire, with the addition of dust or ashes. DEATH OF EZEKIEL'S WIFE. 265 these things signified to them ? Not really in the outward trans- actions of life ; for what we have here is not a historical narra- tive in the ordinary sense, but the account of a Divine commu- nication between God and the prophet's own soul. The things all took place in the sense and feehng of the prophet, and are recorded as transactions that he personally witnessed and took part in; but, as in the case of all his other visions, the scene of the transactions lay in the ideal, not in the actual world, in that spiritual sphere in which as a prophet he communed with God. Hence, as showing that he still was in that region, and was there dealing directly with Heaven, at ver. 25, immediately after the explanation given to the people of the sign, he is addressed by God with what is but a continuation of the message : " And thou, son of man, shall it not be," etc. The whole account, there- fore, belongs to that spiritual sphere, in which the prophets lived and acted, when they received communications from above ; and it stands upon the same footing as the narrative of the caldron in the earlier part of the chapter, the vision of the iniquity-bear- ing in the fourth, or indeed any of the preceding communications in his book. What was done and said in his case, as immediately transacting with God, was an acted lesson for the people, to give force and distinctness to the instructions to be delivered respecting themselves. So they are given to understand, in the application of what took place. They were soon actually to lose what was pre-eminently dear to them — the sanctuary of the Lord, which is called, first, " the pride of their strength," because, in connection with it, to a large extent, had grown up their feelings of false security (Jer. vii. 4), then " the desire of their eyes and that which their soul pitied," or yearned over, because it was what they peculiarly delighted in, and clung to with a kind of conjugal regard. But now it was to be profaned, which, in the cir- cumstances, could only mean, laid in the dust, like the prophet's wife. And not only that, but also their sons and their daughters, whom they had left behind them in Judea, were to be given up to the sword. Yet with such singular occasions of grief, the usual signs of affliction were not to be found in them ; they were neither to mourn nor to weep ; their accustomed dress was to be retained, and their ordinary fare partaken of — but not as if their spirits were unmoved by what should have taken place, and no feeling of gloom sat upon their bosoms ; on the contrary, " they 266 EZKKIEL XXIV. should pine away in their sins, and bemoan themselves one toward another" (ver. 23). It appears to us almost unaccountable how any person of or- dinary discernment should understand the prophet here to mean, that those Jews were to receive the coming catastrophe in a callous and indifferent manner, sullenly yielding to their fate, but without any sensible movement of the springs of sorrow and regret. Yet such is the view taken of the passage by some leading commentators abroad (in particular, by Eichhorn, Ewald, Hitzig), although the express declaration at the close, and the whole character of the representation, plainly lead to an opposite conclusion. In the typical part of the delineation, it was not because the prophet was insensible to the loss he sustained by tlie death of his wife, that he was to abstain from the habili- ments and usages of mourning ; but because there was another source of grief behind, of which this was but the sign and pre- sage, and in itself so much greater and more appalling, that his spirit, instead of venting itself in expressions of sorrow at the immediate and ostensible calamity, was rather to brood in silent agony and concern over the more distressing evil it foresha- dowed. And, in like manner with the people, when all their fond hopes and visions were finally exploded — when the destruc- tion of their beautiful temple and the slaughter of their sons and daughters came home to them as dreadful realities, they could only refrain from bewailing the loss of what had so deep a hold on their desires and aflPections, by having come to discern in this the sign of what was still greatly more dreadful and appalling. And what could that be but the bloodstained guilt of their ini- quities, which had brought on the catastrophe? Had it been that portion of the people who dwelt at Jerusalem, that the pro- phet here more immediately referred to, there might have been some room for supposing (with Pradus and others), that he pointed merely to the overawing terror of the enemy, and to the breathless horror and astonishment connected with the capture of the city, when he spake of such an arrest being laid on the common outgoings of grief. But it is the captives at Chebar of whom he more immediately speaks, who, he "well knew, would be living in outward quiet, far removed from the scene of uproar and destruction. It could not, in their case, be the presence of a Babylonian host, or the turmoil and consternation caused by DEATH OF EZEKIEL's WIFE. 267 tlie success of the Babylonian arms, wliich should check the cus- tomary expressions of grief ; it would be the overwhelming sense, that should then break in upon them of the iniquities, to which they had clung with such fatal perverseness, absorbing their spirits, and turning their moanings into a new^ and higher direc- tion. The agonies of bereavement would be in a manner lost under the self-inflicted pains of contrition and remorse (comp. chap. vii. 16). Yet while this seems obvnously the meaning of the prophet's announcement — of the not mourning in one way, and still pining away with distress and sorrow in another — the description must be understood with certain qualifications, and indeed is to be viewed rather as the somewhat ideal delineation of a state of things that should be found, than the exact and literal descrip- tion of what was actually to exist. The representation would otherwise stand in palpable contrariety, as well with undoubted facts, as with statements elsewhere made both by Ezekiel and by his great contemporary in Judea. That many on the fall of Jerusalem, did really exhibit the usual signs of mourning, and give the fiillest vent to their feelings of distress, may be inferred with the utmost certainty fi-om what is written in the Lamenta- tions of Jeremiah, where we read of all the common symptoms and appliances of grief — " elders sitting upon the ground, cast- ing dust upon their heads, girding themselves with sackcloth," and the prophet himself — though he had been told not to lament or bemoan (chap. xvi. 5) — weeping till " his eyes failed with tears, and his liver was poured on the earth, for the destruction of the daughter of his people." Nay, while Ezekiel here speaks as if all the indications of mourning should be restrained at the destruction of Jerusalem, he had previously spoken of the people being so filled with distress on account of it, that " they should gird themselves with sackcloth, and have baldness upon their heads " (chap. vii. 18), and had himself also been instructed to howl and cry in contemplation of the approaching troubles (chap. xxi. 12). There can be no doubt, also, on the other side, that the conscience of -sin, however powerfully it might work in some bosoms, and absorb other feelings, would be very far from being universally felt as it ought to have been. The prophets were by no means disposed to cherish exaggerated views on the subject. Jeremiah had even spoken of the people carrying their iniquities 268 EZEKTEL XXIV. with them into other lands, and there serving other gods day and night (chap. xvi. 13). And Ezekiel himself, in chap. xx. repre- sents them as still needing, after they had been all scattered among the nations, to be brought as into the wilderness, that they might there be dealt with for iniquities not yet forsaken, and purged from still remaining abominations. It is clear, therefore, that the description in the passage before us must not be understood in the absolute sense, as if it were intended to portray wdiat was certainly to be realised among the people at large on the taking of Jerusalem. It is what should have been realised in all ; but what, in point of fact, was to have its realisation only in part. The people should, on the occurrence of such a fearful catastrophe, have sunk under an overpowering sense of their guilt and folly, and, like the prophet, turned the tide of their grief and mourning rather against the gigantic evil that lay behind, seen only in the chambers of imagery, than what outwardly appeared ; they should have be- wailed the enormous sins that had provoked the righteous dis- pleasure of God, rather than the present troubles in which that displeasure had taken effect. Their sorrow should have chiefly flowed in this more inward and spiritual direction ; for it was here pre-eminently that the evil stood. And such, undoubtedly, was the case with the better and more enlightened portion of the people; but many still cleaved to their idols, and would not receive the instruction given them, either by the prophet's parabolical example, or by the reality of God's afflicting dis- pensations. But if, in respect to the people, we see the ideal here exhibited of a suitable and appropriate behaviour still destined to be marred by the prevalence of sin, the light in which the prophet himself appears in this vision, is every way befitting his character and calling. With solemn and affecting grandeur it closes the first period of his high ministry ! He had entered on this ministry under the most appalling discouragements, in a time of peculiar depression, and with the clear understanding that, as to immediate results, it was to be at once a thankless and a hopeless task which was given him to do. But not the less did he imbibe the spirit of his office, and throw his energetic soul into the work of reformation. Message after message came forth from him, charged with the weightiest tidings, and breath- DEATH OF EZEKIEL's WIFE. 269 ing throughout the lively feelings of an aflPectionate and earnest heart ; but without the slightest effect in arresting the fatal cur- rent that was bearing Israel onwards to the gulph of ruin. And now, when all remonstrance had failed, when it was found that warnings had been uttered, and counsels given, only that they might be treated with cold indifference or insolent contempt, the man of God is made in spirit to anticipate the now inevitable doom, and undergoes, in his communings with God, the same affecting experience of evil which was soon to be the common lot of his countrymen ; thus showing, that although he was not a partaker in their sins, he was yet a fellow-sufferer in their condi- tion, and made their case, in a manner, his own. But here, for the present, Ezekiel ceases from his labours for the good of Israel. He has exhausted his commission in respect to the disclosure of the people's sins, and the revelation of the Lord's judgments. He has done all that could be done to im- press on men's minds the necessity and the nearness of the Divine retribution, and laid open, on every side, the purposes of God in connection with it. He must now, therefore, cease from his activity in this direction, and wait in silence the mournful issue. And so, the word spoken to him at the commencement of his labours passes into fulfilment: "And I will make thy tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth, and thou shalt be dumb, and shalt not be to them a reprover ; for they are a rebellious house" (chap. iii. 26). But this was only to be for a season. When the calamity had actually come, and the escaped remnant of the people of Jerusalem had joined their brethren on the banks of the Chebar, " in that day his mouth (it was said) should be opened to him that is escaped, and he should speak and be no more dumb." A new series of communications, suited to the altered circumstances of his people, was then to be given to him, and he would yet do for them the part of a faithful friend and comforter in the time of their greatest desolation. 270 EZEKIEL XXV. CHAPTER XXV. THE JUDGMENT OF ISRAEL'S IMMEDIATE NEIGHBOURS AND RIVALS — AMMON, MOAB, EDOM, AND THK PHILISTINES. The period of Ezekiel's silence toward Israel is broken for the first time by the word contained in chap, xxxiii. ; and the eight intervening chapters are filled with intimations of Divine judgment against the surrounding heathen, accompanied by delineations of their guilt. The prophetic agency of Ezekiel did not cease ; it only turned into a new direction — from what im- mediately concerned his own countrymen, to what concerned the communities and nations around. This was precisely the place for such a series of judgments respecting the worldly kingdoms coming in. The prophet has finished his work as God's repre- sentative, in pronouncing judgment on Israel. And now, there- fore, is the time to make it manifest to all, that, if the judgment begins there, it must proceed onwards and envelop the ungodly world, — that if the covenant-people fall under the stroke of Divine justice, their fall, so far from being the gain of the world, is but the sure presage and forerunner of its doom. It was necessary, as matters then stood, that God should employ heathen instruments in executing his displeasure upon Jerusalem, and scattering the strength and glory of her people ; so that, in her humiliation, she could not but appear for a time in a worse con- dition than her enemies. But the heathen nations were not to be left with the idea, that they really held a position of greater security and permanence than that which belonged to Israel. They must be taught that their doom also was written in heaven, and that the downfal of that kingdom, with which God had peculiarly associated his name, rung, in a manner, the knell of their perdition ; as it proclaimed God's high determination to take vengeance on sin, wherever it might be found, and, con- sequently, to destroy the nations that were wholly devoted to its interests. Worse with them still than with Israel, because they had not, like her, the saving health of Divine truth ming- ling with their corruption, their downfal should be complete, without the prospect of any future recovery. This essential 271 difference between Israel and the heathen nations is frequently referred to by the prophets, and by Jeremiah in particular, is very strongly expressed, when, in the midst of desolating judg- ments ready to alight on others, he exclaims, " But fear thou not, O Jacob, my servant, saith the Lord, for I am with thee ; for I will make a full end of all the nations whither I have driven thee ; but I will not make a full end of thee, but will correct thee in measure, and will not make thee utterly clean," or deso- late (for so the last clause should be rendered), chap. xlvi. 28. It cannot be regarded as accidental, that the heathen nations, who came here within the range of the prophet* s vision for judgment, are precisely seven ; first four, who are briefly dis- posed of in chap, xxv., and then three, whose case is spread over the seven following chapters. Considering the use that is made generally in Scripture, and particularly in some portions of pro- phetical Scripture (such as Daniel, Zechariah, the Apocalypse), of the number seven as a symbol of completeness, we may not unreasonably suppose, that the prophet named those seven on the present occasion wdth some reference to this symbolical im- port of the number. And in that case, he must be understood to intimate that the Divine judgment would not exhaust itself on those, but would also take effect on others who were similarly situated, — that in process of time the execution of God's ven- geance on sin would traverse the entire round of its domain in the world. We may the rather adopt this supposition, as in the second division we find Sidon named separately from Tyre, though properly but a part of the same maritime power ; and yet on another account there was not wanting a reason for the special mention of Sidon, as w^e shall see when we come to the place. The rest were all such as might have been expected, and, with one grand exception, the whole, perhaps, that might have been expected in a catalogue like the present : Ammon, Moab, Edom, the Philistines — all, the immediate neighbours, and hereditary rivals and enemies of Israel; and, less hostilely affected, but still occupying somewhat of the same unfriendly relation, Tyre, Sidon, and Egypt. What we specially miss is Babylon herself — in Ezekiel's time the great impersonation of the world's sinfulness and power, and above all others the enemy of Israel's pre-eminence among the nations ; yet neither here nor elsewhere in this prophet's writings is she expressly 272 EZEKIEL XXV. named as an object of vengeance. It is obviously impossible to account for such an omission, from a desire not to exceed the number seven ; for had this been all, some inferior state could easily have been sacrificed to make room for Babylon. Nor could the omission have arisen from Ezekiel's residence in Chaldea, as if he was too near the throne of the kingdom to announce its coming downfal ; a supposition, which the fearless character of the prophet forbids us to make, to say nothing of the fact of Daniel's once and again proclaiming, in the very presence of the Chaldean monarch, the certain and not very distant overthrow of his empire. The reason most probably was, that as Babylon is constantly viewed by the prophet as the rod of God's vengeance, it stood in some sense apart from the nations of the earth, and seemed too closely connected with the present execution of God's purposes, to be fitly represented as an object of his retributive justice. The more especially may such a consideration have weighed with the prophet, as one of the prevailing tendencies of the time was to overlook the hand of God in the present elevation of Babylon to its high ascendancy, and to fret against the dominion, which God for a season had given her over the nations. Her final desolation, however, in common with that of all earthly dominions, was included in the prophecy already considered (chap. xvii. 22-24), and, as we shall see, is still more distinctly embraced in some subsequent predic- tions. But to proceed now with the denunciations contained in this chapter. I. The judgment of Amnion (ver. 1-7). Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, set thy face toward the cliildren of Ammon, and prophesy upon them : 3. And say unto the children of Ammon, Hear the word of the Lord Jehovah ; Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thou sayest Aha, to my sanctuary — for it is profaned ; and to the land of Israel — for it is desolate ; and to the house of Judah, for it has gone into captivity ;^ 4. Therefore, behold I give thee to the children of the east for a possession, and they shall pitch in thee their folds, 2 and make their dwellings in thee ; they shall eat thy fruit, and drink ^ The "^3 in these three clauses ought plainly to be taken in the usual sense, for, assigning the cause of the joy and contempt of the Ammonites, and not when, as in our common version, and many others. ' The common meaning of n-^-'-j is undoubtedly a pen 6t fold for flocks, THE JUDGMENT OF AMMON. 273 thy milk. 5. And I turn Rabbah into a stable for camels, and the children of Ammon into couching of flocks ;^ and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 6. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thou hast clapped thy hand and stamped with the foot, and rejoiced with all thy disdain, with relish (literally with soul, i. e., the most hearty delight or relish), toward the land of Israel ; 7. Therefore, behold I stretch out my hand upon thee and I give thee for a prey ^ to the nations, and I will cut thee off from among the peoples, and will cause thee to perish from among the countries ; I will de- stroy thee ; and thou shalt know that I am Jehovah. The feelings attributed to the Ammonites in these verses are evidently those of bitter hostility toward the covenant-people, and that mainly on religious gi'ounds. The first element in their joy respecting the desolations of Israel was, because the sanctu- ary of God was profaned, seeing in that, as they thought, the triumph of heathenism over the rival claims of Jehovah. At an earlier period, most probably in the time of Jehoshaphat, we find this feeling ascribed to them in its most offensive fomi in Ps. Ixxxiii., where the combined enemies of Judah, headed by Am- mon and Moab (for it is said of the others merely, that ^' they stretched out the hand to the children of Lot"), are represented as saying : " Let us cut them off from being a nation, that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance ; let us take the houses of God for a possession." Now, at length, this impious wish was for the present realised. The long-cherished grudge and is the only suitable meaning here, where the discourse is of shepherd- tribes. Palaces, the rendering of the authorised version, is quite unsuitable. 1 "Into couching of flocks." I take -^sa-yi^"^'-; to be a sort of complex phrase, made up of the noun denoting the subject, and the participle, indicat- ing the position or attitude ; couching flocks, or flocks in a couching position ; couching being added, to render the idea more graphic— flocks for men, and not that merely, but flocks in a state of perfect repose. It makes no proper sense : children of Aramon into a couch ing-place of flocks ; for what sort of revolution could change men into places, lairs for flocks. What the prophet means to declare, is evidently that flocks were to take the place of men, or, that the fertile parts of the territory were, by changes to the worse, to be- come pastoral. 2 The Kri reading here iz"? instead of ss"^ is almost universally adopted. Hav. defends the text, and would derive the word from the Sanscrit, bhaga, part or portion. This, of course, would render the meaning nearly the same, whichever word were adopted. But as ;2"- is nowhere else found in Hebrew, and so many codices also read uV, that it has been actually received into the text in the Complutensian Bible, we incline to prefer the latter. The ancient versions express this sense. S 274 EZEKIEL XXV. against the chosen seed is gratified ; and, as persons in an ecstasy of delight at what they greatly desired, but hardly expected to see accomplished, they clapped their hands and shouted their huzzas over the prostrate and captive foe. It would appear also, from 2 Kings xxiv. 2, that they took an active part, along with the Chaldeans, in accomplishing the destruction. Viewed, therefore, in respect to their state of feeling, the Am- monites were, in the strictest sense, enemies of God ; they were warring with the purposes of Heaven ; and expressly on this account is the judgment here denounced against them — a judg- ment which declared that their then fertile and cultivated region should be overrun by the children of the east (the sons of Ish- mael, Arabians), that their lands and cities should be pastured by flocks, and their name as a separate people become utterly extinct. The prediction began very soon to be fulfilled ; for the territory of Ammon was a portion of the lands which were shortly afterwards ravaged by the armies of Nebuchadnezzar (Jer. xlix. 28, etc.; Josephus Ant. x. 9, 1). And though the Ammonites still existed as a separate people, when the Jews re- turned from Babylon, and gave indications of their old hostility, yet they appear to have been in an enfeebled condition. Some generations later they became subject, with other tribes in that district, to the Ptolemies of Egypt ; and one of the Ptolemies (Philadelphus) found their capital Rabbah in so ruined a state, that he caused it to be built anew, and called it after himself, Philadelphia. The Ammonites are never afterwards heard of as a separate and independent people, and seem to have become gradually merged in the general Arab population. There is enough surely in these facts to justify the prediction of Ezekiel ; and to point to the desolations of that region, as described by travellers in the present day, seems to us somewhat beside the purpose ; for the region has long since ceased to be the territory of the children of Ammon ; and it was simply as connected with them that any judgment was pronounced against it. The mo- ment it became a desolation for the people then inhabiting it, and they themselves became scattered and dispersed, the word of Ezekiel was fulfilled ; then God's displeasure against their en- mity had taken full effect. It mattered little what might subse- quently become of the region ; and if, under new occupants and a settled government, it should again rise into fertility and culti- THE JUDGMENT OF MOAB. 275 vation, the word uttered by Ezekiel would not in the least be affected by it. II. The judgment of Moab (ver. 8-11). Ver. 8. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because Moab says, and Seir, Lo ! like all the nations is the house of Judah ; 9. Therefore, Behold I open the side of Moab from the cities, from his cities, from his end, a glorious land, — Beth-jeshimotb, Baal-raeon, and Kiriathaim ; 10. To the men of the east, over (or upon) the children of Ammon (elliptically, for: to the men of the east, Avho have overrun the children of Ammon, the tide of conquest being viewed as flowing onwards from the territory of Ammon to that of Moab), and I give it for a possession ; in order that the children of Ammon may not be remembered among the nations; 11. And against Moab will I execute judgments; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. There is a certain degree of confusion in this sentence upon Moab, arising chiefly from the manner in which it is mixed up with Seir and Ammon. Yet we have no reason to think there is any corruption in the text. In regard to Seir, which is coupled with Moab at the beginning, as joining in the congratulation, that it was no better with Judah than the rest of the nations, Hitzig, in his usual smart and somewhat flippant way, declares it to be out of place, as it is also omitted in the LXX., and supposes it to have been introduced by some ignorant emendator, probably from chap. xxxv. 10. It is quite unnecessary to resort to any such supposition. Ammon, Moab, and Edom were all con- tiguous countries, stretching from the land of Gilead on the north, in an unbroken line, to the shores of the Ked Sea, and acted very much in concert in their hostile feelings and opera- tions toward the covenant-people. It was not, therefore, unna- tural, though it might be somewhat out of the most exact order, for the prophet to connect the two latter of these together, in the expression of delight over the downfal of Judah, to show how generally the sentiment was participated in. And that Moab and Ammon should toward the close be coupled together, as alike suflPering under the same inundation of eastern hordes, and perishing, as it were, together — this is not to be wondered at, considering that the two tribes w^ere originally of one origin, and kept so close together, that their respective territories were not separated from each other by any very definite landmarks. It was unavoidable, but that the same destroying wave, which swallowed up the one of these nations, should also sweep over the other. 276 EZEKIEL XXV. It would seem that the territory of Moab was, upon the whole, of a richer and more cultivated character than that of Ammon. It comprehended the district which goes by the name of the Belka, and which, even in the present times, is described by travellers as the best in all the southern parts of Syria, and on that account is the scene of many a contest among the Bedawin. Hence it is called here by the prophet, a glorious land (literally, an ornament of a land) ; and hence also he makes particular mention of the cities belonging to it, natural indications of prosperity, and, in times of danger, important means of defence. Yet the prophet declares, these should not protect them against the coming desolation ; for the Lord was going to lay open the side, or border of Moab from the cities — those cities belonging to him upon his end, or extremity — viz., the extreme north-western border, where the cities here spe- cially mentioned lay, considerably beyond the river Arnon (the old boundary of the kingdom in that direction), and even within the territory usually assigned to Ammon. These cities, with various others in the same region, were among those apportioned to Keuben in Joshua (chap. xiii. 15-21) ; but had again fallen into the hands of their original owners. Yet only for a time. The men of the east were to come down from Ammon, through the cities on the frontier, and were to waste the land of Moab, till it had ceased to be an independent nation, and had melted away among the hordes of the desert. Of the precise manner and period of the accomplishment of this prophecy, we have no record. We know that the country was overrun by the arms of Nebuchadnezzar, and must, conse- quently, have become impaired in strength. But it was chiefly by the encroachments of the men of the east, the wandering Bedawin, the great enemies of civilized and settled life, that the desolation was to be produced. And so completely had this been done, that long before the time of Christ, all traces had ceased of Moab's separate existence as a people ; and for many an age their country has worn the bare and ruined aspect which are the unfailing characteristics of an Arabian ascendancy. III. The judgment of Edom (ver. 12-14). Ver. 12. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because of the doing of Edom in wreaking revenge on the house of Judah, and they have made themselves THE JUDGMENT OF EDOM. 277 very guilty, and have dealt revengefully against them ; 13. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I also stretch out my hand upon Edom, and I cut off from it man and beast ; and I will make it desolate from Teraan (in the south) to Dedan (in the west) ; ^ they shall fall by the sword. 14. And I will lay my vengeance upon Edom by the hand of my people Israel ; and they shall do in Edom according to my anger, and according to my fury ; and they shall know my vengeance, saith the Lord Jehovah. Here, as in the prophets generally, the specific sin charged against Edom is not that simply of hatred or opposition to the covenant-people, but of deep, brooding, implacable vengeance. It was the hereditary spirit of wickedness which descended from their father Esau, who could not forgive his brother .Tacob for getting precedence in regard to the blessing, but nursed for many a year his deadly purpose of revenge. It yielded at last to the unexpected and extraordinary kindness of Jacob, accom- panied by the blessing of Him, with whom Jacob wrestled to the dawning of the day ; and the two brothers appear to have spent their latter days in peace and amity. When Israel, however, grew to be a great people, under God's fostering care, in Egypt, and marched, with his mighty power on their side, to take possession of the land of Canaan, the old spirit revived in the posterity of Esau. They could not bear to see the younger branch rising to the pre-eminence, in rank and glory, which they thought belonged of right to themselves. And thenceforth every opportunity was seized to wreak their vengeance on the children of Israel— for the most part only to draw down a deeper humiliation upon themselves, and never more than with a partial and temporary triumph — till the great period of the Babylonian conquest, when with the fall of Jerusalem, they supposed that their object was for ever gained. So intense then was their spirit of malignity, that they are represented as not merely taking part with the Babylonians in the last catas- trophe, but even as hounding on these ruthless conquerors to consummate the work of destruction, and watching along the by-ways to cut off the poor fugitives who fled from the presence of the enemy to seek an asylum in other lands. (Comp. espe- cially Psal. cxxxvii. ; Amos i. 11 ; Obad. v. 11). ^ The accents are manifestly wrong here, as the to Dedan is required after from Teman to complete the sense. Our translators, by following them, have confused the meaning of the passage. 278 EZEKIEL XXV. Neither the vengeful spite of Edom, however, nor the might of the Babylonian conqueror, could defeat the purposes of God ; and, according to the Divine word, it proved that though Israel was sore broken and depressed by these calamities, he was not destroyed. Edom's malicious joy was but of short continuance ; for he had the mortification of seeing his old enemy return to occupy the former habitation, and, from comparatively small beginnings, rise again to the position of a formidable power. The children of Edom had meanwhile been moving northwards (having been themselves gradually dispossessed in the south by the Nabathgeans), and occupied the territory of Judah as far as Hebron. But this greater proximity to the seed of Israel, and partial encroachment on their possessions, only paved the way for their utter extinction as a nation ; for after many hostile en- counters between the two races, the Edomites were finally sub- dued by John Hyrcanus, who compelled them to be circumcised, that they might be incorporated with the Jewish people. The amalgamation of course could only take place gradually ; but the circumstance of the Herodian family, who were of Idumean origin, reigning as Jews over the entire region occupied by the two races, is abundant proof that it had been substantially ef- fected about the commencement of the Christian era. From that time they ceased to be known as a distinct people, and shared partly in the fortunes of the Jews, and partly in those of the neighbouring Arab population. In this external subjection of Edom to the powder and domi- nion of Israel, there was a certain measure of fulfilment given to the word, " I lay my vengeance upon Edom by the hand of my people;" a word which clearly pointed to the original promise, " the older shall serve the younger," and virtually declared, that still God's purpose should stand — Israel is the Divinely consti- tuted governor of Edom. But it is only in a certain limited and imperfect measure that we see in such external victories and forced compliances the fulfilment of this and similar predictions. These were but the shadow and symbol of what should be ac- complished, when in Israel the characteristic of the " my people" came to be fully realised — when they rose, in Christ and the New Testament church, to be the head of all authority and power and dominion in the world. Viewed in respect to that elevated position, all Edomite rivalry and spite, all carnal oppo- THE JUDGMENT OF EDOM. 279 sition and counter-dominion, is doomed to give way, for, in Christ, Israel is governor among the nations ; all must serve him, and the nation which does not serve hira must perish. So that tliere is what may be called a twofold revenge. There is first the noble revenge, of which Jacob's victory over Esau, by means of prayer and personal kindness, was the type — the revenge that melts enmity into love, and overcomes evil with good ; or, according to the process described by Obadiah, " de- liverance arising first on Mount Zion," and then " saviours coming up there to judge the mount of Esau," making Esau's offspring partakers in t Jacob's blessing, whereby both alike became members of that kingdom which is the Lord's (ver. 17, 21). But in so far as this blessed result fails, in so far as Edom still retains the old hatred, and refuses to bow the neck to the yoke of Jesus, then there inevitably comes the vengeance of deserved and final destruction — a vengeance executed no longer in human passion or for selfish aggrandisement, but, as here expressed, in full accordance with the Lord's mind and purpose, " according to his anger and fury." This mode of understanding the prophecy satisfies to the full all its requirements, for, on both sides, it brings the matter into connection with the perfect adjustments of God's kingdom in Christ ; but we are at a loss to see how it can otherwise meet with any adequate fulfilment. For, since it speaks of the Edomites as a people, and these have long since ceased to he a people, the work of complete and perfect retribution it an- nounces, must either have taken effect in the manner now described, or it never can be accomplished. The people being gone, no changes upon the land they once occupied can satisfy the conditions of the prophecy. ly. The judgment of the Philistines (ver. 15-17). Ver. 15 Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because of the doing of the Phil- istines in vengeance, and they have taken vengeance with disdain, with a mind to destroy (literally, with the soul, for destruction), an everlasting enmity. 16. therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I stretch out my hand upon the Philistines, and I will cut off the Cherethim,^ and destroy the remnant of the sea-coast, 17. And I will execute upon them great vengeance, with furious rebukes ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah, when I lay my vengeance upon them." ^ There is a paronomasia here in the original, which is preserved in the Vulgate : interficiam interfectores, I will slay the slayers — the Philistines 280 EZEKIEL XXV. Little requires to be said on tliis part of the prediction. The Philistines were the immediate neighbours of the people of Judah, on the opposite side to that occupied by Amnion and Moab. Their hereditary enmity to the covenant people is sufficiently known. In the later times of the Hebrew commonwealth, they appear to have been in a very reduced condition, and to be quite unable to cope with Judah even in its comparatively enfeebled state. They were discomfited by Uzziah, and had their chief towns dismantled (2 Chron. xxvi. 6). They were still further humbled and subdued in the days of Hezekiah (2 Kings xviii. 8). From that time we hear nothing more of them in the his- torical books of Scripture ; but as they still retained their enmity to the cause and people of God, they were made the subject of severe denunciations in the prophets, not, however, without some prospects being intermingled of coming good, and even of an in- terest in the peculiar blessings of the covenant (comp. especially Zech. ix. 7). As the country lay on the direct route from Egypt to Chaldea, it suffered exceedingly in the wars that were carried on between these rival kingdoms, and was the scene of some bloody conflicts. The wandering Arabs also gradually spread themselves over the district, and produced the usual results. Even at the Christian era, it no longer appears as the residence of a separate and independent people; so that the vengeance threatened might even then be said to have reached its com- pletion. Gaza alone, from its favourable position, has been able to retain something of its ancient importance, yet merely as a place of comparative wealth and commerce, and w^as for cen- turies the seat of a Christian bishop. In every way, both in respect to tlie evil and the good, the word of the Lord has taken full effect ; and while Israel has risen aloft by being the root out of which has come the world's deliverer and Heaven-appointed king, the Philistines have become the heirs only of trouble and desolation, excepting in so far as they yielded themselves to the sway of the King of Zion, and partook, as spiritual Israelites, of the blessings of the kingdom. being perhaps so designated from their warlike and cruel disposition. But Cheretbim is also used as a proper name, the same probably with Cretans — the Philistines being supposed to be of Cretan extraction. (Comp. Jer. xlvii. 4 ; Amos ix. 7 ; Deut. ii. 23 ; Vitringa on Isa. xiv. 28). THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 281 CHAPTER XXVI. THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. The relative importance of tlie prophet's communication in respect to Tyre, is marked at the commencement, by his prefix- ing the date, while in the four ])receding cases the judgments alone are recorded, without any express mention of the time of their communication. The date given in the case before us has this peculiarity, that it omits the month, and mentions only the \ear and the day: " the eleventh year, and the first day of the month." Various conjectures have been made to account for, or supply this omission. Havemick supposes, that the month, which might be regarded such by way of distinction, was meant — the month, namely, in which Jerusalem was taken and destroyed by the Chaldeans. This, however, is open to the objection (which indeed is urged by Hitzig), that the event in question, as appears from the history, was spread over two months. Jerusalem hav- ing been taken in the fourth month, but not actually reduced to ashes till the fifth (Jer. lii. 6, 12). Some recent commentators (Ewald, Hitzig) think the month has dropped out of the text, but that it must have been one near the close of the year, by which time the report of what had taken place in Judea may have reached the banks of the Chebar. The more probable supposition is that thrown out by the Rabbi David, and followed by Pradus, Grotius, and others, that as the prophet immediately refers to the language of Tyre at the fall of Jerusalem, and takes that as the ground of his communication to Tyre, the month most fitly to be understood is the fifth ; since Jerusalem having been taken in the fourth, and Tyre being situated in the immediate neighbourhood, she may well be conceived to have uttered her taunt before the close of the same month, while on the first day of the next, the prophet meets it with a reply from heaven. This seems to me the most probable opinion, but cer- tainty is unattainable, and it is a matter of comparatively little moment. That tiie communication was given in the eleventh year, determines the period of its announcement to be very nearly contemporaneous with the fall of Jerusalem ; the doom 282 EZEKIEL XXVI. of Tyre was pronounced during the same year that witnessed the overthrow of Jerusalem. It is well known that there were properly two Tyres, — one situated on the mainland of the Phoenician coast, in a rich and fertile plain, commonly called Palaetyrus, or Old Tyre, and another on a rocky isle, lying immediately opposite, and less than half-a-mile distant from the shore, which was sometimes also called New Tyre. The opinion has been very generally entertained, and is expressed ' in many of our most approved works (for example, Prideaux's Connection, Lowth's Commen- tary, Jahn's Hebrew Commonwealth), that the city upon the mainland was the only one that existed down to the time of Nebuchadnezzar ; that while he was besieging this, the inhabi- tants removed their property to the adjacent island, where they built and fortified the new and much stronger city; and that as it had been the continental Tyre before, so afterwards it was the insular Tyre, which was renowned for its commercial greatness and prosperity. More accurate investigations, however, have shown the groundlessness of this opinion. Vitringa (on Isa. xxiii.), who is also followed by Bishop Newton on the Prophecies, has produced authorities to show that both the cities existed at a time considerably prior to that of our prophet, and that insular Tyre appears, from the earliest accounts, to have laid claim to a very remote antiquity. He understands Josephus to speak of this Tyre, when he says that it was built 240 years before the Temple of Solomon (Antiq. viii. 3, 1). Besides, it is evident, from the passage quoted by Josephus out of Menander (Antiq. ix. 14, 2), a passage avowedly taken from the Tyrian archives, that it was not the continental, but the insular city, which Shal- maneser, king of Assyria, besieged for five years, and with so little success, that he was obliged to relinquish the siege. At that time, therefore, nearly a century and a half before the de- struction of Jerusalem, it not only existed, but had reached such maturity of strength, that it could withstand the whole might of the Assyrian empire. Indeed, the evidences that remain of the strength and im- portance of ancient Tyre, seem all to point to the insular, rather than the continental city. The name, also, v::, Zor, rock, rock- city, suits exactly the insular, but not the continental one, which was built on a smooth plain. Hence, some have recently main- THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 283 tained (in particular, Hengstenberg, De rebus Tyriorum, also Havernick here), that the insular Tyre was the original, as it certainly was the chief city, and that Palaetyrus was a more recent and inferior place, though closely connected with the other, and rather a suburb of it, than an entirely separate and independent city. But it is not likely that the founders of the city would, in the first instance, resort to the island to lay the foundations of their future greatness ; it is more in accordance with the laws of probability, and with the natural course of things, to suppose that a city existed first upon the shore, and that the island only came to be occupied after a considerable degree of prosperity had already been reached, and when the advantages of its position for security and defence had been fully ascertained. But it is quite compatible with this opinion, that the insular city may have given to both the name by which they are known to history, as it very early became, and long continued to be, by far the more important of the two. Very possibly, too, the de- signation of Old Tyre to the continental city arose not so pro- perly from its having been the more ancient in its origin, as from having been the first to go into deca3% It had become a ruin, while the other was still in the noontide of its prosperity. The relation was somewhat similar of other two Phoenician cities in the north, Aradus and Antaradus, — the former and more im- portant being situated in a small island, and the latter upon the shore opposite. But leaving the question of the comparative priority of the two cities, which is of no practical moment, the fact chiefly to be borne in mind, when proceeding to consider the prophecy on Tyre, is, that there actually were two cities which then went by the name of Tyre, and that the insular one is that mainly con- templated. In some parts of the description, reference is made to a population and cities upon the land ; but there can be no doubt, that the Tyre spoken of as the seat of commercial power and greatness, is the sea-girt rock and city, perched, as it were, in pride and security among the waters. Keeping in view this, as the actual state of things, we shall have no difficulty in see- ing the propriety of the diff^erent parts of the prophet's delinea- tion ; and we shall also find, that the judgment denounced is in perfect accordance with the issues of Providence in respect to the state and cities of Tvre. 284 EZEKTEL XXVI. The word uttered by Ezekiel on the subject falls into three parts, which are distributed into so many chapters. The first, contained in chap, xxvi., records specifically the sin on account of which Tyre was destined to become the object of Divine retri- bution, the severe and terrible overthrow that was to be brought upon her greatness, and the means and instruments that were to be employed in eflPecting it. The second, which occupies the whole of chap, xxvii., is a lamentation over the downfal and prostration of so much earthly magnificence, busy merchandize, and long-continued prosperity. And the last, which takes up nearly the whole of chap, xxviii., consists of another lamentation more immediately addressed to the king, and forming a sort of elegy upon the humiliation and dishonour, which w^ere to come over all the pride and vain-glory that in him had towered aloft above everything human, and had even vaunted itself against the Most High. The prophecy, in its entire compass, affords a most characteristic specimen of the peculiarities of Ezekiel's manner, especially in regard to the singularly life-like character of his representations, his tendency to crowd the picture by a multiplicity of minute details, and his disposition to see the old reviving itself again in the new. There is also this farther peculiarity, which pervades all Ezekiel's predictions regarding the heathen kingdoms, that the dark side only is exhibited to our view. The judgments he utters are judgments without mercy, reigning to complete destruction, because the kingdoms are contemplated by him simply in their relation of hostility to the cause and kingdom of the Lord. He would lead us to behold in them so many exemplifications of the fall and doom of hea- thenism, in contrast to the destiny of Israel, to which belonged the resurrection and the life, the dominion and the glory. Hence, he looks no farther here than to the ruin of Tyre ; while in the closely-related and earlier prophecy of Isaiah (chap, xxiii.), the prospect is held out at the close, of a period of blessing, when, partially recovered from her desolations, Tyre should turn to the Lord, and her merchandize and her hire should be holiness to him. The word contained in this 26th chapter naturally falls into four divisions: — the sin of Tyre, — her coming doom, — the instruments and means of executing it, — and the effect to be THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 285 produced on other nations by her sad reverse and miserable downfal. The first of these divisions is despatched in a single verse : — Ver. 1. And it came to pass in the eleventh year, in the first of the month, that the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 2. Son of man, because Tyre hath said against Jerusalem, Aha ! broken is the gate of the peoples ;^ it has turned itself to me ; I shall be replenished ; she is become desolate. The mind of Tyre is uttered in a few broken sentences, but these plainly enough indicating her satisfaction at the destruction of Jerusalem, and the hope she entertained of turning it to good account. Tyre being a city of merchants, all bent on the one object of plying their worldly interest and increasing their gains, she is represented as contemplating the fall of Jerusalem in a merely commercial light. To some extent Jerusalem had been a rival, as her gate — in Oriental cities the common resort for business, as well as justice — had been a market-place, where the inland traders of different countries had been wont to meet for traffic. And it appeared a matter of congratulation to Tyre, that this should no longer be the case ; for the tide of merchan- dize, which had hitherto flowed in that direction, would now, she expected, find its way to her; she would obtain a still more exclusive command of the Syrian trade ; and so would get her own coffers more abundantly replenished by means of the deso- lation that was alighting on Jerusalem. It does not appear that there was anything like direct hostility between Tyre, or the people of Phoenicia generally, and the inhabitants of Judah. It would rather seem, that the relation between the two regions was throughout of a peaceful character, as it was connected with mutual advantage. Even in the days of David and Solomon, when Israel was at the very summit of her glory, there is no appearance of bitter animosity or jealous rivalry on the part of the Tyrians, such as was displayed by other surrounding nations; but, on the contrary, a ready co- operation in the transactions of business, and a neighbourly 1 There is here a peculiarity in the construction, ^'■^^Vn, a plural being coupled with a verb in the singular. We find quite a similar construction in Jer. li, 58, in regard to the walls of Babylon. And here, probably, the plural has reference merely to the folding leaves of the gates : the single gate com- posed of two parts, as at chap. xli. 24. 286 EZEKIEL XXVI. interchange of the civilities of life. This was no more than what might have been expected, as the Phoenicians w^ere chiefly devoted to commerce, and, being possessed of a small land-terri- tory, it was their obvious interest to cultivate friendly relations witli the Jews and the other inhabitants of Syria, from whom they derived their principal supplies of corn. It was impossible, however, that there should have been an intimate and cordial agreement between them and Israel, so long as the worship of Jehovah was not altogether proscribed at Jerusalem. One of the most formidable adversaries with which that w^orship ever had to contend, had sprung from the Phoenician territory, — the infamous Jezebel having been a daughter of the king of Zidon. And there can be no doubt, that the commercial intercourse that subsisted between the Phoenicians and the covenant-people, considering the strong idolatrous tendencies of the latter, must often have proved a snare to their souls, or even a direct source of corruption. This, indeed, is plainly intimated by Ezekiel, when, in immediate connection with the desolating judgments that were to be executed upon the Phoenicians, he brings out the result, that " a pricking brier should no longer be found to the house of Israel, nor a grieving thorn in those that were round about them" (chap, xxviii. 24). Yet, we must distinguish between this kind of latent anti- pathy, and the avowed hostility, the persecuting bitterness mani- fested by the nations, whose doom is recorded in the preceding chapter. Nothing of the latter description is here, or anywhere else, charged upon Tyre. It was her intense worldly-minded- ness, her all-engrossing pursuit of the interests of merchandize, and the selfish avarice and pride engendered by her commercial greatness and political strength, — it was simply this, though view^ed also as having its sinfulness aggravated by her heartless indifference regarding the fate of Jerusalem, her hope of being able to turn even that to personal advantage, and subsequently, an actual trafficking in the lives and liberties of the vanquished Jews (Amos i. 9 ; Joel iii. 6), that constituted the peculiar guilt of Tyre, and called for the righteous retributions of Heaven. In that particular region, where God had been pleased to set up his kingdom, she stood pre-eminently the world's representative, in its towering ambition, its fleshly confidences, and its eager prose- cution of selfish ends and purposes, in utter disregard or proud THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 287 defiance of the will and ^loiy of* Jehovah. And being such, in a situation where she miujht have learned better things, it was her just doom, that she should be made a perpetual monument of the instabiHty and emptiness of all that the world can secure for its most successful votaries. " The Lord of hosts hath pur- posed it, to stain the pride of all glory, and to bring into contempt all the honourable of the earth" (Isa. xxiii. 9). This coming doom of Tyre is described with graphic energy, and, in respect to its last issues, in four simple verses : — Ver. 3. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I am against thee, O Tyre, and will cause many nations to come up against thee, as the sea makes his waves to come up. 4, And they shall destroy the walls of Tyre, and break down her towers : And I will sweep off her dust from her, and render her a bare rock. 5. A spreading-ground for nets shall she be in the midst of the sea ; for I have spoken, saith the Lord Jehovah ; and she shall become a spoil to the nations. 6. And her daughters that are in the field (i. e., the filial, or dependent towns and villages on the Phcenician coast), shall be slain by the sword ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah (ver, 3-6). There is nowhere to be found in prophecy, so striking and minute a description of the melancholy reverse which was to take place in the fortunes of Tyre, and of the utter prostration to which she was to be reduced. But before looking at the par- ticular parts of the description, and inquiring how far it corres- ponds with the facts of history, we must bring into view the next section, which connects with the coming desolation, the in- struments that were to be employed in producing it. Ver. 7. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I am bringing against Tyre, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, from the north, a king of kings, with horses, and with chariots, and with horsemen, and a multitude, and much people. 8. Thy daughters in the field he shall slay with the sword, and set a watch-tower against thee, and cast up against thee a rampart, and lift up against thee the buckler. 9. And his enginery of destruc- tion^ he will set against thy walls, and thy towers he will break down with his swords.2 10. By the abundance of his horses their dust shall cover 1 I give here what I take to be the proper meaning of the words, rather than a literal translation, ■'jto is evidently a noun from nhr, which, as Havemick notes, is always used in the sense of destroying, extirpating, etc. ; therefore, not percussio, as many take it, but rather extirpatio, destruction. Vap is anything in front of, or opposition to another ; hence iV:p is a general •• : 1:7 designation of what the enemy was to put in hostile array against the walls of Tyre, — his enginery. • So that the two words together may best be ren- dered : his enginery of destruction, or the destruction of his enginery. 2 It certainly sounds rather strange to speak of breaking down towers with 288 EZEKTEL XXVT. thee ; by the noise of his horsemen, the wlieel-work,' and chariots, thy walls shall shake, when he enters into thy gates as those that enter into a city taken by breach. 2 11. With the hoofs of his horses he shall trample upon all thy streets, he shall slay thy people with the sword, and the pillars of thy strength he shall cast down to the ground. ^ 12. And they shall spoil thy Avealth, and make a prey of thy merchandize, and break down thy walls, and destroy thy pleasant houses; and thy stones, and thy wood, and thy dust they shall lay in the midst of the waters. 13. And I will make to cease the noise of thy songs, and the sound of thy harps shall no more be heard. 14. And I will render thee a bare rock, a spreading-ground for nets shalt thou be ; thou shalt not be built again ; for I Jehovah have spoken saith the Lord Jehovah. It is necessary here, first of all, to look to the part which Nebuchadnezzar was predicted to take in the punishment of swords ; and on this account our translators, with the greater part of com- mentators, substitute axes, or hatchets, for swords. But 3'^)-; is not elsewhere used of any warlike instrument, except the sword. In Exod. xx. 25, it seems to denote an iron tool for hewing stones ; and, perhaps, the general meaning of iron, or steel, might, with Ewald, be adopted here : Thy towers he breaks down with his iron. It is rather against this, however, that the word is plural, and so, appears to denote specific instruments. We, therefore, ad- here to the usual meaning, swords; believing, with Ilavernick, that the coupling of swords with the destruction of towers, was intended to heighten the idea of the extraordinary and resistless character of the Babylonians, who, as God's instruments of vengeance, would do with their swords what common warriors could not attempt. Compare, as a like mark of the pecu- liar and extraordinary, though on a difierent account, the lines in the ode on Sir John Moore ; — *• We buried him darkly by dead of night, The sods with our bayonets turning." ^ It seems evident from the use of -sj"^; here, and in chap, xxiii. 24, also x. 13, that it is employed by our author, not in the ordinary sense of wheels, as part of a conveyance, but for a separate conveyance, or instrument of operations. He means by it some sort of wheelwork, whether as a car for riding on, or for the operations of the siege. 2 Tmhreaclied, if we had such a word, would be the exact meaning of the original here. The prophet intimates, that strong and impregnable as the fortifications of Tyre were deemed, a breach Vould be made in them, through which, as in other vanquished cities, the army would enter. Even Tyre's sea-girt position, and massy walls to the water's edge, would not be sufficient to prevent the catastrophe. 3 I adhere to the usual meaning of rra-i^. a statue, or pillar. It is nowhere found in the sense of garrison, as a thing that could be thrown down, — a military fort or building. It is commonly used of sacred or monumental pillars. And possibly some allusion is made here to the famous pillars in the temple of Hercules (Herod, ii. 44). THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 289 Tyre ; for it admits of no doubt, that the prophet represents the victorious assault of that monarch as the commencement of Tyre's degradation. But to what extent precisely do the terms of the prediction warrant us to carry the result of Nebuchad- nezzar's hostility ? Does it positively ascribe to him both the capture and the complete destruction of the city? Unquestion- ably, the capture of it, and of course, along with that, tlie destruction to some extent of its power and splendour ; but not necessarily anything further. It is plainly foretold, that Nebu- chadnezzar and his army should enter the city by storm, spread terror and dismay among its inhabitants, and generally inflict a blow on the strength and prosperity of the state. But no one even moderately acquainted with the characteristics of the pro- phetic style, can be ignorant how usual it is to connect a deli- neation of events with some grand starting-point, as if all were to spring immediately from it, while ages, perhaps, were needed to consummate the process. Thus Isaiah, in announcing the doom of Babylon (chap, xiii.), introduces the Medes as the in- struments of her coming fall ; and without a break, without an intimation of any future conquerors or any other adverse in- fluences, goes on to paint, in the strongest terms, her utter ruin and desolation, though this end was not to be reached till many a century had revolved after the conquest by the Medes, and many a hostile element besides had played its part on the devoted city. But still, it was neither mistake nor caprice to connect the result so peculiarly with the Median conquest ; for that was the first link in the long chain of evil — the first deadly blow that was never to be properly healed again ; it was such a beginning of sorrows as already foreboded the coming end. In like man- ner, Jeremiah, speaking of the Philistines (with whom he also couples those of Tyre and Sidon), and foretelling the destined prostration of the country, even to a state of hopeless exhaustion, points merely to the destructive agency of the king of Babylon, as if he saw in that the fountainhead of the whole evil. How many similar examples also might be referred to of predictions entirely opposite as to their substance, but perfectly alike as to the mode of representation — predictions of good, and not of evil, but which connect with a particular event (such as the birth of Christ), a long line of operations or issues, which many an age should be required to develop ? In all such cases, the OF THB*^^ OTIVERSITTl 290 EZEKIEL XXVI. Omniscient Spirit, that animated the prophets, perceived, in the particular fact specified, the commencement of the entire series of related events ; so that from the outset he made known this as the germinant force — the sure sign and earnest of all that might otherwise be needed to accomplish the predicted result.^ Such, there can be no reasonable doubt, is the manner in which the prophecy respecting Tyre ought to be interpreted. The pro- phet distinctly announces Nebuchadnezzar as the beginner of the work of judgment ; but not, on that account, its sole and final executor. It would have been to act against all probability, in despite of the commonest rules and lessons of experience, if he had given it forth as his conviction that one individual should extinguish the very existence of Tyre, and, as by a single stroke, reduce her from being the first commercial power in the world to the condition of a shattered fortress and a nearly unpeopled rock. Common sense alone, apart fi-om the principles of the pro- phetic style, might satisfy us that such could not be the meaning of the prophet ; and the change in the narration at ver. 12, from the individual to the general, gives no obscure intimation of the real import of the description. Up to that point it is Nebuch- adnezzar who does all ; he who storms the city, effects a breach in its walls, slays and subdues and triumphs. But as if what he did only served to pave the way for what was to be carried for- ward by many other hands, the language then becomes quite general : " And they shall spoil thy wealth, and make a prey on thy merchandize," etc. ; in short, a progressive work of spoliation and trouble, until she becomes a helpless and a hopeless ruin. We shall not say it is for the purpose of fastening upon the prophet a more distinct charge of error, when Hitzig alleges it as certain, that the passage ascribes to Nebuchadnezzar the total destruction of Tyre, a thing " which notoriously was not accom- 1 Cautious and reverential students of the prophetic word have in every age noted the peculiarity above referred to, though they have not always made a judicious use of it. Even Aberbinel has the following remark con- cerning it : morem hunc esse prophetarum, etc., " that it is the custom of the prophets in their predictions to have respect at once to a near and a remote period, so that prophecies pointing to very distant times are found amongst others which relate to the immediate future. Whence we may the more certainly conclude, that God might threaten the Tyrians with the destruction of their city, though it might be brought on at different times and by gradual advances." THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 291 plished" (p. 227) ; but we have no hesitation in saying, that such an assertion is made in palpable disregard of one of the com- monest principles of prophetical interpretation. The whole that the prophet can in fairness be understood to declare is, that Nebuchadnezzar should by violent means become master of Tyre, and thus commence the process of her downfal — a process which might be delayed, but would never altogether cease till the pe- riod of her complete destruction. But the question still remains. Did the king of Babylon actually do what is here affirmed of him ? Did he in truth gain possession of the city ? and subject Tyre to his dominion ? This is now positively denied (by Hitzig, first in his Commentary on Isaiah, chap, xxiii., and again in his Commentary on Ezekiel ; also by Winer in his Real Wort., art. Tyrus) ; and the charge is distinctly brought against Ezekiel, of having uttered a prediction which failed in its accomplishment. Nay, Ezekiel himself is adduced as chief evidence in support of the assertion, since, at chap. xxix. 18, he makes mention of the Divine commission to Nebuchadnezzar to go against Egypt, because " he had served a great service against Tyre, yet had he no wages for his army." This is construed into a virtual con- fession that he had not taken and spoiled Tyre, but had been obliged to desist from the undertaking after the loss of much time and treasure. But it is manifestly a hasty conclusion ; for the passage indicates nothing as to the result of the expedition against Tyre, excepting that it yielded no booty as a recompense adequate to the toil and labour that had been spent in it. And surely this might well have been the case, even if the expedition had been successful, considering that it lasted for the extraor- dinary period of thirteen years. For, how much of the available wealth of the Tyrians must have been wasted during such a pro- tracted contest? And how likely, that, before the close, they would take the precaution of securing what was left in their ships or their colonies ? This is what Jerome expressly affirms to have been done ; ^ and it is also what we know to have happened to a very considerable extent, in connection with the next great siege ^ Quod quum viderent Tyrii jam jamque perfectum, et percussione arietum, murorum fundamenta quaterentur, quidquid pretiosura in auro, argento, ves- tibusque, et varia supellectili nobilitas habuit, impositum navibus ad insulas asportavit ; ita ut capta urbe, nihil dignum labore suo inveniret Nebucho- donosor (on chap. xxix. 18). 292 EZEKIEL XXVI. Tyre sustained, though it only lasted as many months as the other did years — that, namely, conducted by Alexander the Great (Quint. Cur. iv. 3 ; Diod. Sic. xvii. 41). It is, therefore, to adduce that subsequent passage in Ezekiel for more than it can fairly substantiate, when it is produced as a counter-testimony to the one before us ; for anything that it contains, Nebuchadnezzar may have executed to the full what is here ascribed to him respecting Tyre. And this oracle is so far borne out by the evidence of collateral testimony, that both Menander of Ephesus and Philostratus report, from the Phoe- nician annals, a thirteen j^ears' siege of Tyre by Nebuchadnezzar (Josephus c. Apion, i. 20 ; Ant. x. 11, 1). True, but then it is one thing to besiege, and another to carry the siege ; these pro- fane authors make no mention of this, and that no-mention of course proves, according to the usual logic of rationalism and infidelity, that the city was not taken by the king of Babylon. One would have thought, that, on the supposition of only selfish principles influencing the mind of Ezekiel, allowing him but a measure of common sense, to say nothing of any higher endow- ments, he would have cancelled that portion of his writings which had announced Nebuchadnezzar as the conqueror of Tyre, if the word had palpably proved a mistaken augury. Could he possibly wish to appear before the world as a self-convicted im- postor ? Or, if he was so regardless himself about the character of his own consistency, how certainly would Ezra and the elders, when making up the Jewish canon, have rejected an oracle, which events, still fresh in the recollection of all, had proved to be false ? The supposition is eveiy way incredible ; and, besides, there is not an entire want of external evidence that Nebuchad- nezzar succeeded in his attempts against Tyre ; for both the heathen writers above referred to, in the passages quoted by Josephus from their abstract of Phoenician affairs, represent the king of Babylon as having made himself master of all Phoenicia, which could with no propriety have been done if the principal Phoenician state had successfully withstood his assault. And it admits of no doubt, that, in the history of the period, the Phoe- nician interest is presently afterwards found in a depressed con- dition ; the hereditary monarchy of Tyre ceases, and she is first governed by a joint magistracy, then gets a king from Babylon ; also, during the Persian dynasty, which very soon supplanted THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 293 that of Babylon, Tyre is named after Zidon, as if it liad become the second in rank, and both Tyre and Zidon appear in the train of the new lords of the world as tributary states : — all plainly implying some great work of conquest going before, and com- pelling the proud mistress of the seas to take this inferior place. To say that the long siege of thirteen years may have so far wasted her resources as to render it politic or necessary for her to descend to such a subordinate position, is an assumption alike gratuitous and improbable, since nothing could have contributed so much to foster the pride, and confirm the ascendancy of Tyre, as the circumstance of having so long, if she had but successfully, defied the mighty conqueror of nations. Not her successful resistance, but only her subjection, could account for so altered a turn in her affairs.' In regard to the future fortunes of Tyre, all is matter of well- known and ascertained history ; and the result has been a re- markable verification of the words of the prophet. After the times of Nebuchadnezzar, the next great blow struck at its great- ness and prosperity, was the conquest of it by Alexander, which took place about 322 years before the Christian era, and which was only gained after he had, with incredible pains, connected the mainland with the island by a mount or causeway. The stones of Old Tyre were all used in the construction of this huge ^ For the proof of the facts last referred to, see the passages from Me- nander and Philostratus in Josephus ; also Ezra iii. 7 ; Herod, vii. 99, 100 ; viii. 67. In a matter of this kind, it is only the broader statements of history that should be brought into notice, especially as the historical frag- ments to be depended on are from the pen, not of contemporary writers, but of persons who lived two or more centuries after the events in question, and who merely wrote compends of history. In such a case, it is unwise to urge little points, as it only gives the adversary an opportunity of pressing improbabilities or inconsistencies in the accounts relied on. Hengstenberg and, in part also, Havernick, have, in this way, laid themselves open at various points to the attacks of a sharp and unscrupulous writer like Hitzig, who has a keen eye for any small discrepance or mistake, but does not know how to estimate great and important principles. It is unwise, also, to speculate about the probable way which Nebuchadnezzar took to carry the siege of Tyre, whether by mounds, floats, or ships, or by any other means. No information has come down to us on the subject ; but surely it is not to be supposed that such a monarch as Nebuchadnezzar, accustomed to such gigantic undertakings, was to conduct a thirteen years' siege without resorting to prodigious appliances of s(;me sort. 294 EZEKIEL XXVI. work of art ; and so well compacted had it been from the first, that it continued ever afterwardvS to stand, and in the course of time has grown, bj the gradual accumulations of sand, to the breadth of about half a mile. The site of Tyre, therefore, ceased from the time of Alexander to be an isolated rock, and became, what it still remains, a peninsula. It again, however, endured a long siege in the time of Antigonus, one of Alexander's successors, but w^as obliged to yield at last. Still, even in New Testament times, it had not altogether lost its prosperity. It w^as even then a place of considerable traffic, and w^as known in the first centuries as the seat of a Christian bishop. Though nothing compared with what it had been in former ages, it con- tinued to be a place of considerable importance and great strength. The crusaders in 1124 only got possession of it after a siege of nearly five months, and were surprised at the splen- dour of its houses and the strength of its fortifications. Though it continued for a long period to withstand the arms of the Sara- cens, yet ultimately (about the beginning of the 14th century) it fell into their hands, and they appear to have soon razed its fortifications, as they did also those of Sidon and Beirut ; for, shortly afterwards, Abulfeda speaks of it as being in a state of desolation and ruin. The travellers who in more recent times have been on the spot, have all delivered an unvarying testi- mony concerning it, describing it as a heap of ruins, " not so much as one entire house left, and only a few poor fishermen harbouring themselves in the vaults " (Maundrell). The growth and export of tobacco to Egypt has tended slightly to improve its condition during the present century ; but the accumulation of sand in its harbours, which has rendered them too shallow for large vessels, and the more favourable position of Beirilt at a short distance, prevent the hope of Tyre's ancient glory ever returning to her. The remains of her former magnificence lie for ever buried in the deep, and she can never again be the homestead of merchant-princes, but only at most the abode of fishermen, and a resort for the smaller craft of traders. So surely does the word of God travel on to its accomplishment, though ages may elapse in the process, and seeming impossi- bilities have to be vanquished before the destined result can be reached. The remaining verses in the chapter (ver. 15-21) have respect THE JUDGMENT OF TYRE. 295 to the impression which the overthrow of Tyre was fitted to pro- duce upon other maritime nations, and more especially her own colonial possessions. Ver. 15. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Shall not the isles (or, more gene- rally, the sea- coasts) shake at the sound of thy fall, at the cry of the wounded, and the great slaughter made in the midst of thee ? 16. And all the princes of the sea shall come down from their thrones, and lay aside their robes, and put off their embroidered garments: with terrors they shall clothe themselves, upon the ground shall they sit, and they tremble every moment, and are astonished at thee. 17. And they shall take up a lamentation over thee, and say to thee, How art thou destroyed, thou inhabitant of the seas,i the renowned city, that was strong in the sea, she and her inhabitants, who did put their terror upon all her inhabitants? 2 18. Now shall the sea-coasts tremble in the day of thy fall, and the isles that are in the sea be terrified at thy exit (or end). 19. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because I make thee a deso- late city, like the cities which are not inhabited, because I bring up upon thee the deep and the covering of many waters ; 20. And I make thee to go down with those that go down to the pit, to the people of ancient time, and I make thee dwell in the land of deep places, an eternal desolation, with * Literally, Thou that art inhabited from the seas. The rendering adopted by our translators, " inhabited of sea-faring men," though supported by Grotius and others, is quite untenable, as it arbitrarily substitutes sea-farers for seas, and regards such sea farers, persons merely coming for traffic to Tyre, as its proper inhabitants. The Targum and the Peschito already give the correct meaning, habitatrix marium ; the Vulgate not quite so correctly, quae habi- tas in mari. It denotes Tyre as a prosperous city rising out of the seas, appearing as if she had got thence her very inhabitants, being peopled so closely down to the waters. The rendering of the LXX., which gives, " destroyed out of the sea," is another specimen of the loose character of their translation of Ezekiel. They evidently mistook the verb for a part of i-iauj, ^ Hitzig, with some reason, ridicules the very forced and artificial con- struction adopted by Havernick of this clause : Tyre's inhabitants (her home-people), who kept in terror all the inhabitants (namely, the inhabi- tants of her colonies, who might still be called her own). Understood thus, it is certainly, as Havernick styles it, a " somewhat enigmatical sentence." Hitzig supposes, as very commonly, a corruption in the text, and would pre- fer the more abbreviated reading of the LXX. : " the renowned city that put her terror on all her inhabitants " — finding inhabitants only once in the passage. But there is no need for this change. When the prophet had said, that Tyre was strong in the sea, he specifies both the city itself and its inhabitants as sharing in this strength ; and then adds, that they (the people and city viewed complexly — the state) put their terror upon all her inhabitants ; that is, not only were, as a whole, objects of fear to others, but communicated of this to every one of her people ; causing the name of a Tyrian to be everywhere dreaded. — 296 EZEKIEL XXVI. those that go down to the pit, that thou mayest not be inhabited, nor set as an ornament in the land of the living ;^ 21. Ruins will I make thee, and thou shalt not be ; and thou shalt be sought, and shalt not be found any more for ever, saith the Lord Jehovah. By the isles or sea-coasts, and princes of the sea, in the earlier part of this passage, are chiefly to be understood the maritime powers in different places, colonies of Tyre, with which she traded, and kept up a very close connection.^ Even the greatest and most influential of these, Carthage in Africa, was accus- tomed to send a yearly present of gifts to the temple of the Ty- rian Hercules ; and, as the mother-city. Tyre still had the honour of giving high-priests to her colonial dependencies. Being thus connected by the sacred tie of religion, as well as by the regular intercourse of trade, with these maritime settlements along the coasts of the Mediterranean, we can easily understand how her humiliation would send a thrill of distress through all the affili- ated states, and make them fear also for their own prosperity. The description given of this, however, evidently partakes, to a considerable extent, of the ideal ; and we are not to suppose, that the rulers of these states were actually to divest themselves of their royal garments, and sit as mourners upon the ground ; what is meant is, that the effect produced would be of a kind that would have its just and fitting expression in such natural indications of sorrow. The prophet seems to have before his eye the account of Nineveh's repentance at the preaching of Jonah. And the feeling of trouble and dismay which then pervaded that great city, when it seemed to stand on the verge of destruction, was now, in like manner, to pervade the colonial settlements and trading associates of Tyre, when they heard the report of her overthrow. What is said of Tyre herself, at the close, is also entirely figurative. She is described as a person going to be submerged J The negative in this verse ought undoubtedly to be applied to both clauses : not be inhabited, and not set as an ornament. The Chaldee, and those who followed it, understood the last clause to refer to Judah, and hence took it positively. But the LXX. properly understood both clauses of Tyre, and took both negatively. The hecause, or in that, at the beginning of the whole passage, is to be explained as a construction ad sensum. The reason is here given of what goes before. ^ For the extraordinary number and extent of these colonial possessions of Tyre, see Ileeren, Phoenicians, chap, ii. LAMENTATION UPON TYRE. 297 under the waters that encompassed her, and sent from tlie land of the living to tenant the lower regions of the dead, the land of gloom and forgetful n ess, where the departed of primeval time had their abode. In plain terms. Tyre (like the king of Baby- lon, in the 14th chapter of Isaiah) was to take rank with the dead, and be no more numbered with the living. But, of course, it is the Tyre that then was, which is meant, — the proud, impe- rial mistress of the seas ; as such, she was to cease to have a local habitation and a name in the earth ; she was to be found only among the departed. That there should still be a Tyre on the same spot where the ancient city stood, is nothing against the description ; for this poor and shrivelled thing is no longer the Tyre of the prophet, — that is gone, never to return again. And to apply such expressions — as '* she shall be no more," " she shall be sought for, but not be found" — only to Old Tyre, as we find modern travellers very commonly doing, because the very site of this is not precisely known, — is to misapprehend the nature of the description, — it is to turn a figurative into a literal delineation, and to apply only to an inferior city what was plainly meant of the principal one. It is of insular Tyre the prophet speaks, and she is kmg since written among the dead. CHAPTER XXVII. THE LAMENTATION UPON TYRE, WITH AN ACCOUNT OF HER FORMER GREATNESS AND PROSPERITY. It seems somewhat like a freak of fancy in Ezekiel to dwell at such length, as he does in this chapter, on the commercial greatness of Tyre, and to point out, with such elaborate minute- ness, both the circumstances connected with her thriving and wide-spread merchandize, and the notes of lamentation and pity that should be raised over her coming ruin. It is the mark, cer- tainly, of a somewhat peculiar cast of mind, and has no exact parallel in any of the other prophets, who usually present us with merely a few general and characteristic traits, when they 298 EZEKIEL XXVTI. have occasion to speak of the existing condition of a state or people, as contrasted with what they may be destined to be- come. Yet the prophet, in this singular delineation, was not the less guided by the Spirit of God in what he wrote, nor was the delineation itself less fitted to serve the ends for which such prophecies were written. It was just Ezekiel's way — the way peculiarly suited to his lively and reahstic cast of thought— of conveying a distinct and deep impression concerning the things of Tyre ; first, her pre-eminent greatness as the centre of the world's wealth and merchandize, and then her complete annihi- lation in respect to all that had formerly distinguished her ; that so, the omniscient eye of God, in foretelling what was to happen, and his overruling providence in accomplishing it, might be more strikingly exhibited. With so full and lively a picture be- fore us of what Tyre was in the prophet's own time, we can the more easily discern the hand of God in rendering her what she has become, and. also the Divine foresight which so long before- hand declared that it was certainly to be. In regard to the form of the delineation, it is a trope. Tyre's existing condition and coming destiny are exhibited under the figure of a ship, constructed of the best materials, manned and equipped in the first style, trading in all mercantile commodi- ties, and with all parts of the commercial world, but at length brought into tempestuous seas, shipwrecked, and involved in irrecoverable ruin. This is the general character of the descrip- tion ; but, as usually happens in the more lengthened tropes of the prophet, the figure occasionally gives place to the reality ; the desire to be clear and graphic breaks in, at various points, on the uniformity of the representation. This is particularly the case at ver. 9, where all the ships of the sea are represented as having a place in this figurative vessel; and at ver. 11, where towns and walls and an armed force, as of a city, are mentioned. But, for so long a description, the figure is wonderfully sus- tained, though it has, in several places, been marred by wrong translations. We shall simply present a translation of the whole, and subjoin a few explanatory remarks on those parts which are more obscure ; deeming it unnecessary to enter at any length into the historical points referred to in the description, as regards the commercial relations of antiquity. These have more in them of an antiquarian than of a religious interest, and may be exa- LAMENTATION UPON TYRE. 299 mined, by such as have a taste for the pursuit, in Bocliart's Phaleg, or, what is now more accessible, Heeren's Flistorical Researches, where the trade and poh'cy of the Phoenicians have received due attention. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying: 2. And thou, son of man, lift up a lamentation over Tyre ; 3. And say to Tyre, O thou that dwellest by the entrances (ports or havens) of the sea/ the peoples' mer- chantess into many sea-coasts, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Tyre, thou sayest, I am perfect in beauty. 4. In the midst of the seas is thy territory ; thy builders have perfected thy beauty. 5. Of fir-trees from Senir they con- structed all thy boards ; cedar from Lebanon have they taken to make a mast for thee.^ 6. Of oaks of Bashan they made thy oars ; thy plank- Avork (deck) they made ivory (i. e., they inlaid with ivory) with boxes from the isle of Cyprus.^ 7. Fine linen with broidered work from Egypt, was thy sail, to serve for a banner (streamer) to thee ; bluish and red purple from the sea-coasts of Elisha (Greece) were thy awning.* 8. The inhabitants of Zidon * The 0'"^ ris'c'p are the openings, the inlets or outlets, by which one finds communication with the sea, in going and coming ; hence its ports (as from the Latin porta, the gate that opens out and iji to a city, there is partus, that does the same to the sea). Tyre was remarkable for its good harbours : ancient writers specially notice two — one on the north, and another on the south. 2 Senir was the Sidonian name for Hermon (Deut. iii. 9). Instead of fir-trees, some read cypresses, which is countenanced by Sirach xxiv. 13, where the cypress is named as the peculiar production of Hermon. The names of trees, in Scripture, are not very accurately defined. The cedar of Lebanon is well known from its height, durability, and strength ; hence, well adapted for the purpose here mentioned — making masts. It is also matter of history, that the Tyrians obtained wood for their costlier buildings from these mountains. See, especially, Josephus, Antiq. viii. 5. ^ Instead of the punctuation of the Hebrew text, making two words of a^-i^^s-ria, the junction of the two, long ago proposed by the Chaldee : asseres buxeos ebore obductos, also adopted by Rabbi Solomon, has been sanctioned by Bochart, and is now, indeed, generally acquiesced in. It is scarcely possible to make any intelligible meaning of the existing punctua- tion : Havernick still tries it, but with little success. Even with the change proposed, the sentence is somewhat peculiar in its construction. By the ^inp.i have very commonly been understood, the benches on which the rowers sat ; but as there were tiers of these at each side of the vessel, the singular is rather against the supposition. It is more probably the deck, as Hitzig sug- gests, that is meant, which was one piece, though made up of many separate parts. * The meaning of the verse is, that the fine quality of the sail- cloth, and the embroidery upon it, was instead of a pennant or standard ; it served the purpose of this. Several of the plates in Wilkinson's Egypt show what expense was sometimes gone into by the ancients in decorating their sails. 300 EZEKIEL XXYII. and Arvad were thy rowers ; thy wise men, Tyre, that were in thee, were thy steersmen.^ 9. Men of mature age from Gebal and her skilled ones were thy calkers (literally, stoppers of chinks) ; all the ships of the sea with their mariners were in thee to handle thy merchandize. 10. Persia and Lud, and Phut Avere in thy army, thy men of war ; the shield and helmet they hung in thee ; they made thee glorious. 11. The men of Arvad and thine army were upon thy walls round about, and men of daring were in thy towers;^ they hung their shields upon thy walls round about ; they perfected thy beauty. 12. Tarshish was thy dealer from the abundance of all sort of wealth ; with silver, with iron, with tin, and with lead, they did barter with thee.^ 13. Javan, Tubal, and Mesech, they were thy merchants ; with souls of men and articles of brass they did barter with thee.* 14. They of the house of Togarmah in horses, riding-steeds, and mules, did barter with thee.^ 15. The men of Dedan were thy merchants ; many sea-coasts were the mart of thy hand (i. e., were dependent on thee for their trade) ; horns of ivory and ebony they brought in return as thy reward.^^ 16. Syria was thy mart for * When the men of Zidon and Arvad (Aradus) are mentioned as oars- men in the ships of Tyre, it denotes the relative superiority of Tyre : these also were very important Phoenician cities, yet their men sought em- ployment in the merchant-vessels of Tyre, certainly not working as slaves, but with the view of bettering their condition. 2 The Gammadims of our version ought to be translated ; there is no trace whatever of such a people ; and the position which the persons in question are said to have occupied, that of keeping watch in the towers, is one that would never have been entrusted to foreigners. The sense also adopted by Hitzig and some others, deserters (namely, from other countries), is arbitrary and unsuitable. I follow those, among whom is Havernick, who, from the Arabic, obtain the sense of hardy, strong, daring, or enterprising. The stout-hearted and daring occupied her watch-towers. 3 'n^s'isT.:' 'las^s, not as in the received translation, " they traded in thy fairs," but they made thy exchanges, or did barter with thee. The noun is from the verb 3T:>, to leave ; hence, " that which you leave to any one, for something else given you by him in regular barter" (Gussetius). So also Ewald, Ha- vernick, and others. The richness of Tarshish, the Latin Tartessus, and that part of Spain in which it was situated, in the precious metals mentioned in this part of the text, is well known. 4 Javan, the lonians or Greeks ; Mesech, the Moschi, in the Moschian mountains, between Armenia, Iberia, and Colchis ; Tubal, the Tibareni in Pontus ; all, in short, of Greece, or connected with it. The souls of men, in which these races are said to have trafficked with Tyre, are the slaves which, when obtained from certain parts of Greece and the surrotmding countries, were particularly prized in ancient times. s The a'^i-ns must here mean, a certain kind of horses, — horses for riding ; as it could not be the prophet's design to class horsemen with horses and and mules, as articles of trade. That the word has this meaning also, in other passages, see Gesenius, Lex. Togarmah is Armenia. 6 " Horns of ivory," were so called because of the resemblance of ivory, in its original state, to horns ; not, as some have gratuitously supposed, because LAMENTATION UPON TYKE. 301 the multitude of thy works ; with emeralds, purple, and embroidery, and fine cotton, and corals, and brilliants, they transacted in thy exchanges.^ 1 7. Judah and the land of Israel, they were thy dealers with wheat of Minnith, and Pannag, and honey, and oil, and balm, they trans^acted thy business. ^ 18. Damascus was thy mart for the multitude of thy works, for the fulness of all kind of wealth, with wine of Chalybon, and the whitest wool.^ 19. Vedan and Javan from Uzal transacted in thy exchanges, with wrought (polished) iron, cassia, and calamus, they did business with thee.* 20. Dedan was thy merchant with splendid coverings for chariots. 21. Arabia, and all the princes of Kedar, they were dealers in thine employ (literally, of thv hand) ; Avith lambs, and rams, and goats— with these they were thy dealers.^ 22. The merchants of Sheba and Raamah, they were thy dealers: with the choice of every sort of spicery, and with every precious stone, and gold, they transacted thy exchanges.^ 23. Ilaran, Canneh, and Eden, the merchants of Sheba, Ashur-Chilmod, were thy dealers. ^ 24. These were thy dealers in the ancients falsely imagined ivory was obtained from the horns of certain animals. ^ Instead of Syria, Aram, some codices, LXX., Peschito, read Edom, and many commentators prefer this reading. Neither of the two names is un- suitable, though, from the connection, we might rather have expected Edom, than Aram. 2 Minnith was originally an Ammonite city ( Judg. xi. 33). Of Pannag we know nothing ; hence some translate it here, and give it the meaning of sweet things generally. But if held to be a proper name, then it and Minnith must be regarded as places remarkable for the finest qualities of wheat. 3 Wine of Chalybon was so famous, that the kings of Persia are reported to have used it in preference to all others. 4 There is great difficulty in determining how the proper names in this verse ought to be taken, " And Dan," with which the verse begins in our version, is open especially to the two objections, that none of the parts in the prophet's enumeration begin with And, and that Dan also would be quite out of place here. It seems better, therefore, to read Vedan as one word, and to understand it of some place unknown. From the products specified, one would expect to find some Arabian cities or people mentioned. The conjec- ture of Tuch (on Gen. x. 27) that by Javan here might possibly be meant a Greek settlement in Arabia, in the neighbourhood of Uzal, a town in Yemen, is not improbable. Yemen was distinguished for its manufacture of fine sword-blades, which may be the wrought or polished iron here specified. The other things were the natural products of Arabia. ^ When Arabia is mentioned separately, it is commonly the Nomadic por- tion that is meant ; and especially must that be understood here when it is coupled with the princes of Kedar, the heads, in a manner, of the shepherd tribes. Hence, the articles of traffic named are of the flocks. * Shebah and Eaamah, two ancient places in Arabia (Gen. x. 7). ^ I follow Horsley in this way of reading the names of the verse, which appears to me decidedly preferable to Havernick's : Haran and Canneh and Aden are dealers of Saba; (but) Assur, Chilmad are thy customers." For it seems very unnatm-al to bring in here those who dealt with Saba, and not 302 EZEKIEL XXVII. beautiful things, in cloaks of blue, and embroidery, and bundles of damask wound about with thread, and strong.^ 25. The ships of Tarshish were thy walls as to thy merchandize ; and thou wast replenished and wert very glo- rious in the midst of the seas.^ Ver. 26. Thy rowers bring thee into great waters ; the east wind breaks thee in the midst of the seas. 27. Thy wealth, and thy barterings, thy mer- chandize, thy mariners, and thy pilots, thy calkers, and the transactors of thy merchandize, and all thy men of war, that are in thee, and in all thy company that is in the midst of thee, sink down in the midst of the seas, in the day of thy ruin. 28. At the noise of the cry of thy pilots the suburbs shake. 29. And from their ships come down all that handle the oar, the mariners, all the pilots of the sea, upon the ground they stand. 30. And they make themselves to be heard of thee with their voice, and they cry bitterly, and they cast dust upon their heads, they wallow in ashes. 31. And they make themselves utterly bald for thee, and gird on sackcloth, and weep for thee with bitterness of heart, with bitter mourning. 32. And they lift up for thee in their wailings a lamentation, and lament over thee. Who is like Tyre? as a destroyed one in the midst of the sea? 33. When thy commodities went forth from the seas, thou didst replenish many peoples ; with the abundance of thy wealth and thy merchandize thou didst enrich less so to couple all Assyria with some obscure place or district like Chilmad. 1 think they ought all to be regarded as mentioned here simply on accoimt of their relation to Tyre. The places appear partly to be Arabian, and partly Assyrian. ^ The a-^tnjcs the last word in this verse, is now commonly taken here in the sense of strong, which it has in the Arabic. Cedars, the usual meaning of the word, makes no sense. There is some doubt as to the exact kind of things meant in this last clause, but damask seems on the whole the most probable. 2 To call the ships of Tarshish the walls of Tyre, has been thought so peculiar as to justify a departure from the received meaning of n'li®. But there is endless diversity in the renderings adopted. The Vulgate : princi- pes ; our translators : kings ; and to mention no more, Hitzig, the last com- mentator, while on Jer. v. 10, he had proposed for the passage before us ship-masts, he now abandons this, and would read •^•^^i-rtJj thy fields : " The fitting out and freighting of ships with goods was, in a manner, the cultiva- tion of the land. The importation of all the treasures, which the ships brought back in return, Avas the land's produce " ! ! We make those welcome to such a mode of solution whose imaginations are lively enough to relish it. For ourselves, we think the received text, and the ascertained meaning of walls, afibrd a greatly more natural explanation. The ships of Tarshish, meaning by these, perhaps, not so much the ships that belonged to that particular place, as rather ships of the size usually trading thither, the largest and finest merchant- vessels — these were the walls of thy merchandize, or as to thy merchandize ; at once the bulwarks of thy commercial greatness, and the means by which its traffic was carried on. To name such ships as peculiarly hers, seemed all one with naming walls of security and defence as to her mercantile prosperity. CRIMmATORT ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 303 kings of the earth. 34. Now thou are broken by the waters in the depths of the sea, thy merchandize and all thy company in the midst sink down. 35. All the inhabitants of the sea-coasts are astonished at thee, and their kings are horribly afraid, they are troubled in their countenances. 36. The merchants among the nations hiss at thee ; ruins shalt thou be, and shalt be no more, even for ever. It may be noted, that the remark made at the close of last chapter is equally applicable here. The coming destruction of Tyre is viewed in contrast with her existing greatness ; and as it was her commercial prosperity which made her what she was, so the loss of this, which the prophet foresaw was certainly to take place, would, in a manner, terminate her existence. It is, of course, quite consistent with this, that some remains of a city may still be found ; it is plainly implied in other parts of the prophecy that such should be the case, as when she is spoken of as a spreading-ground for nets ; for who were to spread these but the fishermen still frequenting her ports, and still dwelling among lier ruins ? But the Tyre of antiquity no longer exists. Her place is no more found ; and a voice of lamentation over her fallen and irrecoverable greatness is naturally raised by those who contemplate her condition. CHAPTER XXVIII. 1-19. THE CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE, AND THE LAMENTATION OVER HIS COMING DOWNFAL. The portion of chap, xxviii., which relates to Tyre, may be regarded as a kind of episode to the prophecy of the two pre- ceding chapters. It properly adds nothing to the great theme of the prophecy ; but only presents it in a somewhat new aspect, by bringing prominently forward the king of Tyre, and viewing all — the prosperity, the self-elation it produced, the condemna- tion thence arising, and the subsequent desolation and ruin — as embodied in his personal condition and history. It is rather a matter of surprise to find, that a state so thoroughly commercial as Tyre, and possessed of so limited a territory, should have had 304 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. a king at all ; Lut in the regions of the East, and, indeed, generally in the earlier ages of the world, royalty seems to have been regarded as an indispensable element to the right management and proper dignity of a state. In sucli an active, bustling, and enterprising state as Tyre, however, it could not exist in the same absolute and despotic form, nor could it sur- round itself with the same circumstances of imposing grandeur and majesty, as usually distinguished it in the larger monarchies of the East. That proper scope and security might be found for the active energies of tbe Tyrians, it was necessary that a certain amount of freedom should be enjoyed by the citizens, and even a con- siderable share obtained in the administration of civil affairs. The king there must have been a limited, not a despotic sove- reign, and could only rule as a prince among merchants, who were themselves princes. It is not only certain, that there was a hereditary king in Tyre, but the fragments of Phoenician history already referred to in the preceding chapters, have also preserved the name of the king who, at that precise time, occupied the throne — Ithobal \ II. And in tbe king, as the natural head and representative of the whole state, the prophet sees the full embodiment — the extreme culmination of the spirit by which the state in general was pervaded — the spirit of self-sufficiency, carnal security, and immoderate pride. These feelings, the natural product of un- sanctified prosperity, penetrated the whole community of Tyre ; but in the bosom of its monarch they might justly be supposed to find their chosen seat, and their ripest development. And assuming, as they necessarily did, an attitude of lofty indiffer- ence, or even of high disdain, in respect to the God of Israel, whose cause seemed then to be sinking amid deep waters, while Tyre still held on her majestic course, the prophet's bosom heaved with violent emotion, and, in a vein of severe and cutting irony, he exhibits the fancied superhuman greatness, the godlike independence and ascendancy of the king of Tyre, that he might magnify the more the infinite power and supremacy of Him, whose overruling providence was to lay all prostrate in the dust. It is substantially the same form of representation with that which was adopted by Isaiah, respecting the king of Baby- lon, in the 14th chapter of his writings, w^here the proud heart CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 305 of that aspiring monarch is described as scaling the very heavens, and claiming to be as the Most High, but only that it might be cast down to the stones of the pit, and trodden upon as a carcase under feet of men. But here, as usual, our pro- phet is not satisfied with depicting, in a few lively strokes, the towering ambition of the earthly prince. He ransacks alike the past and the present for the most varied and striking imagery, under which to body forth its pretensions, that so he might present, in more vivid contrast, what it impiously aspired to be, with what it really was. While it was neither new nor peculiar to our prophet to speak in ironical language on such a subject, there is no single passage of Scripture, either in the Old or in the New Testament, where the irony is of so detailed a form, and is cast in altogether so peculiar a mould. Yet it is the Spirit of God that breathes in the words, revealing to our souls the impiety of all ambition, and the vanity of all greatness, which seeks its foundation and support elsewhere than in the power and goodness of the Eternal. Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, say to the prince of Tyre, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thy heart is lifted up, and thou sayest I am God (El), a God's seat I occupy in the midst of the seas ; and (though) thou art man and not God, thou settest thy heart as the heart of God. 3. Behold, thou art wiser than Daniel ; no secret is hid from thee. 4. By thy wisdom and by thy understanding thou hast gotten to thee power ; and thou hast gotten gold and silver in thy treasures. 5. By thy great wisdom in thy traffic thou hast increased thy power, and thy heart is lifted up on account of thy power. It is the feeling of superhuman might and strength which the prophet evidently means to ascribe to the king of Tyre in the first part of this representation. Hence it is God as the El, the Supreme in power, the Mighty One, whose name and prerogative he is described as impiously arrogating to himself. And the idea is further expa^ided by the thought that he sits as a God, or occupies a God's seat in the midst of the seas ; holding his place, as it were, in impregnable security amid the stormiest elements of nature, and knowing how to wield and control them so as to render them subservient to his own ends and interests. To ascribe this sentiment, with Hitzig, to the king of Tyre, " be- cause his residence juts up out of the water, much as the palace of God does out of the heavenly ocean above (Ps. civ. 3)," is indescribably flat, and a palpable misapplication, besides, of the 306 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. passage of Scripture referred to. The Psalmist is there speaking not of the throne or habitation of God standing out from the boundless ocean of immensity (of which there is nowhere a word in Scripture), but of his constructing a sort of visible habitation for himself out of the w^atery vapours of the sky — the clouds, which he makes his chariots. The idea also of Havernick, though in better taste than that of Hitzig, that respect is had, in the language here ascribed to the king of Tyre, to the species of Divine honour paid to Oriental monarchs (notice of which is taken in Curtius x. 11, 1 ; Josephus ix. 4, 6), is fanciful. It was scarcely possible in a city like Tyre, where the subjects necessarily pressed so close upon the king, that he could be the subject of properly religious homage. There was no room there for those wonderful personal exploits, or that mysterious seclu- sion and grandeur, which always formed the ground and nutri- ment of such profound veneration. What is here spoken as from the heart of the king of Tyre, is the proud consciousness of strength and security, which was engendered by the naturally strong position, and the immense maritime resources of the state over which he reigned. This gave him such a sense of elevation and independence, as is only put into words, when he is repre- sented as claiming for himself the name and posture of Deity. It might, certainly, tend to foster and strengthen this feeHng, as Havernick not improbably conceives, that the island, which was the seat and stronghold of the Tyrian state, possessed somewhat of a sacred character, and was regarded as peculiarly connected with the powers above. It is expressly called " the holy island" by Sanconiathon (p. 36, ed. Orelli) ; and, as already noticed, was so distinguished for the worship of Hercules, that the Tyrian colonies all reverenced it as the mother-city of their religion, not less than the original source of their political existence. And it was only in the spirit of ancient heathenism to conclude, that a state, which was considered to stand in so close a connection with the Divine, might be warranted in claiming, through its head, ex- emption from the common casualties of fortune, and even some- thing like supernatural strength and absolute perpetuity of being. In the succeeding verses (ver. 3-5) the prophet merely follows out, and ironically applies the thought which he had already as- cribed to the king of Tyre. Exalting himself as a God, he was of course in his own imagination superior in intelligence and CRIMmATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 307 sagacity to the wisest of mortals ; wiser even than Daniel, who, by special assistance received from Heaven, was known far and wide to have put to shame the renowned wisdom of Chaldea ; and so unerring in counsel, so far-reaching in discernment, as to have surrounded the smallest territory with the most extensive com- merce and the amplest resources. Not perceiving that this is spoken ironically by the prophet, and for the purpose merely of giving a tongue to the foolish thoughts which swelled the heart of the king of Tyre, that their folly and wickedness might appear to all, the ancient interpreters have given some of the sentences an interrogative turn : Art thou wiser, etc. ? and most of the ear- lier commentators have supposed that the words here, and after- wards, in ver. 12-14, were not properly used of Tyre, but were rather to be understood mystically of Satan.^ It is not necessary now, however, to defend the plain sense of Scripture from such arbitrary modes of interpretation, which need only to be applied to other portions, to extract from the Bible any doctrine or meaning that the capricious fancies of men might wish to find in it. Even Jerome silently admits as much ; for however differently he has expressed himself elsewhere, when he comes to write his com- mentary on the passage, he understands the whole discourse of the prince of Tyre, though he still could very imperfectly find his way to a correct explanation of the import. Let only the real character of the description be borne in mind, and there will be no difficulty in perceiving its fitting application to the king of Tyre. It belongs to that species of composition, common to all languages, and frequently resorted to, especially by those who have to deal with the errors and delusions of men, in which — instead of directly disputing the mistaken views they hold, or arguing with the false spirit that actuates them — such a graphic representation is given of these as carries its own exposure or refutation along with it. Thus, here, when the prophet has as- serted of the king of Tyre, that, while he was but a man, he bore himself as God, and then proceeds to give utterance to the senti- ments that necessarily grew out of this absurd and impious pre- 1 The views of the fathers who held this opinion, comprehending those of Origen, Tertullian, Jerome, Ambrose, and Augustine, are carefully brought together in Villalpandus, who himself agrees with those who took a middle course, ascribing what was said, partly to the prince of Tyre, and partly to Satan. 308 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. tension — that he was wiser than Daniel, that he could reveal all secrets, that his own intelligence and sagacity had secured for him the possession of all his wealth ; — this could not fail to con- vey to every reflecting mind an impression of the thoroughly profane and godless spirit that reigned in the hosom of the king of Tyre, and of his ripeness for the judgment of Heaven. The carcase manifestly was there ; now, therefore, must the eagles be gathered together. Ver. 6. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thou hast set thine heart as the heart of God ; 7. Therefore, behold I bring upon thee strangers, the terrible of the nations ; and they shall draw their swords against the beauty of thy wisdom, and pierce through thy splendour ; 8. To the pit shall they bring thee down, and thou shalt die the deaths^ of the pierced- through in the midst of the seas. 9. Wilt thou indeed say, I am God ? in the presence of him that slays thee, and thou art man (that is, thou art as- suredly man), and not God, in the hand of him that pierces thee through : 10. The deaths of the uncircumcised thou shalt die by the hand of strangers ; for I have spoken, saith the Lord Jehovah. The judgment to be executed on the king of Tyre was thus to be exactly adapted to his guilt ; it was to be such as would force on him the conviction, that he had not the might and wis- dom of God at his command, but, like other frail and erring mortals, was liable to be overcome and brought to destruction. This judgment, it is simply declared, was going to be executed by the hand of strangers, the terrible ones of the nations — an epithet elsewhere given to the Chaldeans (chap. xxx. 11, xxxi. 12) ; though there is no necessity here for absolutely confining it to them. Here it only intimates that terrible instruments of vengeance should be provided, fit for executing the Divine pur- pose of retribution ; so that destruction would surely come in its appointed time — the death, as of persons given np to the slaugh- ter, or as of the uncircumcised, who had no interest in the cove- nant of Heaven, and were doomed to perish. The delineation we have considered, first of the high presump- 1 Why deaths here, and in ver. 10, and not rather death? Because, say some, various kinds of death are referred to ; or, because the abstract idea (as made up of the several particulars) is thus denoted when raised to its highest form. No, says Hav., '• the plural is only used of death when several persons are spoken of." This is not so clear. Is. liii. 9 is not quite easily explained on that principle. And certainly the apostle Paul, whose style of thought was quite Hebraistic, used the plural in reference to different kinds, when he says, "in deaths oft." CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 309 tion and peerless glory of the king of Tyre, and then of his Divine chastisement and utter ruin, is followed by another, in which precisely the same topics are again handled, and in the same order. The representation, however, in the first part, of the king's greatness and glory, while it is drawn in the same ironical vein as in the former case, is cast in an entirely different mould, and is intended to exhibit this proud monarch as a kind of normal or primeval man, the type of humanity in its best and most Divine-like form ; but only for the purpose of showing how incapable he was of bearing the glory, and how necessary it was that he should be visited with Divine chastisement, and brought to final ruin. The passage is not without its difficulties ; but these have often been greatly aggravated by not perceiving the exact point of view from which the delineation is drawn ; and hence, from the LXX. downwards, all manner of liberties have been taken with the original. Ver. 11. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 12. Son of man, raise a lamentation over the king of Tyre, and say to him. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Thou sealest completeness,^ full of wisdom, and perfect in ^ Literally, according to the present text and punctuation, which I take to be correct : " Thou art the one sealing exactness." For sr'^i-j is the par- ticiple, and consequently means ohsignans, sealing, the person sealing. In- stead of p-;3ri, all the ancients appear to have read n'^azp? as they give the sense of simihtude or resemblance, and many moderns still prefer this to the received text. But this of course necessitates the further change of nrin for sri'irrj seal for sealing ; and is to be rejected as arbitrary. The noun is from -prij to weigh, to measure exactly, to level, etc. : hence applicable to anything that is of an exact or perfect nature. lu chap, xliii. 10, the pro- phet uses it of the complete or perfect pattern he had exhibited of the temple ; and here more generally, of what is every way exact or complete. To say of the king of Tyre, that he sealed up this, was, in other words, to declare him every way complete ; he gave, as it were, the finishing stroke, the seal, to all that constitutes completeness ; or, as we would now say it, he was a normal man — one formed after rule and pattern. Hence it is immediately explained by what follows : " full of wisdom and perfect in beauty ; *' in this stood his sealing completeness. Thus without any alteration in the text, or even in the punctuation, we get a much more suitable meaning, than can be obtained even by conjectural emendations. Take, for example, Hitzig's : '• Thou art a curiously wrought seal-ring," — a seal-ring full of wisdom ! ! No wonder, that with such a commencement, he should have resorted to many other alterations, and should have held the whole passage to be very corrupt. 310 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. beauty. 13. In Eden, the garden of God, thou wast ; every precious stone was thy covering, the ruby, the topaz, and the diamond, the chrysolite, the onyx, and the jasper, the sapphire, the emerald, and the carbuncle, and gold ;^ the service of thy tambourines and of thy females were prepared with thee in the day when thou wast created. ^ 14. Thou art the cherub of anointing 1 The representation of the king of Tyre as the normal or perfect man, not unnaturally led the prophet back to the garden of Eden, where the man, that really Avas such, had his abode ; and so he ironically represents this as- sumed pattern of perfection as having his local habitation there, in the normal land — just as afterwards (chap. xxxi. 8, 9, xxxvi. 35), the garden of Eden is variously employed by him as the region of ideal beauty and perfection. But occupying such a blessed region, all objects of natural preciousness and beauty of course lay at the king's command ; and as we are told in Genesis (chap, ii.), of the gold and the jewels, with which that land originally abounded, so here the prophet speaks of them as forming the very apparel of the king. How much also Oriental monarchs are in the habit of bespangling, and almost literally covering themselves with such things, is well known. A notion very early prevailed, that the precious stones here mentioned were those of the high-priest's breastplate : and on that account, it is supposed, the LXX, translator made up their number to twelve. Even still Ewald and Hitzig think that respect was had to those sacred gems in this enumeration, and the former even regards the mention of them here as connected with an instru- ment of oracular wisdom and purposes of divination. The idea in any form is entirely gratuitous and out of place. 2 Endless changes and arbitrary meanings have been resorted to from the earliest times, to lighten the difficulty of this last clause of ver. 13. I ad- here to the received text, and the most natural meanings, a'^sr' has no other signification in Scripture than tambourines, or kettle-drums, an instrument of music in frequent use among the Orientals, and commonly played on by women. a''3p3, on the other hand, is never found of a musical instrument, such as pipes, the rendering adopted by our translators and many others. Indeed, as a plural word it never occurs at all ; and the only single word which can be thought of, is nap:, female. Elsewhere, however, it is used only to denote the female sex, not precisely : women ; and there is besides the anomaly of a masculine, instead of a feminine termination. Yet this is not without a parallel, as appears from such examples as a^'i-j, women, and on the other side, mas, fathers, the first with a masculine, the other with a feminine termination. I think, therefore, with Havernick, that the objects denoted here are the musical instruments, tambourines, and the women who played on them ; and that this peculiar word na-3 female, rather than any other, was used, because of the reference which the passage bears to Gen. i. 27, " Male and female created he them." Tambourines, and female musi- cians to play on them, were provided for this king of Tyre on the day of his creation ; that is, from the very first, from the period of his being a king, he was surrounded with the customary pleasures, as well as the peculiar treasure, CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 311 (an anointed or consecrated cherub) that overshadows ; and I did set thee so; upon the holy mount of God thou wert, and thou didst walk among stones of fire.^ 15. Perfect wert thou in thy ways from the day of thy of kings. The royal house of Tyre (for it is of this at large that the discourse must be understood) had not, like many others, to work its way with diffi- culty and through arduous struggles, but started at once into the full posses- sion of royal power and splendour ; no sooner formed, than, like Adam, sur- rounded with fitting attendants, and paradisiacal delights. So already Michaelis : " All things poured in around thee, which could minister to thy necessities, thy comfort, or even thy pleasure, as they did formerly to Adam in the garden of Eden, which God granted to him." ^ Here, again, a great many expedients have been resorted to, both in the way of textual alterations, and extraordinary meanings. The chief verbal difficulty hangs on rrjs's's, which nowhere else occurs ; and the Vulgate ren- dering of extentus (the LXX. omits it altogether) has led to the supposition that it was derived from some Aramaic root, signifying to extend. But there is no solid ground for this, though it has the authority of Gesenius. The Chaldaic version gives the sense of anointing, taking it as a derivative from h^a in its usual meaning. And one does not see why there might not be ntjttto anointing from M'iia, as well as 'istttt sale, from -i^^, or V^-o^o government, from hiii2. Indeed, in this very chapter, in ver. 24, we have a verbal adjec- tive formed in precisely the same way, -iisttt), from hiphil of -s^, bitter or painful, from to make bitter. Cherub of anointing would thus make sub- stantially the same sense as the anointed cherub, 'r\^'n&&r\ a*T^3;the cherub that is consecrated to the Lord by the anointing oil. — In regard to the next diffi- culty in the passage, which respects " the holy mountain of God on which he was," Havernick says, it would indeed be a wonderful representation, if the prophet described the king of Tyre as having been placed on Mount Zion, and he, therefore, renders a holy God's-mount, on which he was raised aloft, as a being of a higher nature, as one of those hill-gods, whom the Syrians worshipped (1 Kings xx. 23). But the lioly hill of God can only be under- stood of a mount, which has been consecrated by peculiar manifestations of Godhead — therefore, either Mount Sinai, or Mount Sion, which is elsewhere named " the holy hill of God." And if the king of Tyre could be placed in God's garden, surely he might also be placed on God's hill. The objection proceeds on a misapprehension of the nature of the representation. — Haver- nick is no happier in regard to the next expression, the stones of lire amid which the king is said to have walked. He considers it to have respect to the worship of the Tyrian Hercules as the fire-god, and to the two pillars in his temple, the one of gold, the other of emerald, which were kept shining by night. But as Hitzig justly remarks, these were not stones, but pillars, and only one of them of stone, and even that not fiery, though resplendent. Be- sides, what a confusion would it make to throw together in one sentence God's holy mount, and any emblems of fire-worship in the island of Tyre ! The reference seems to be to the description in Exod. xxiv., where Moses and the 312 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. creation, until iniquity wast found in thee. 16. By the greatness of thy traffic they have filled thy midst with violence, and thou hast sinned ; and I profane thee from the mount of God (i. e., cast thee from it as a polluted thing), and I destroy thee, thou cherub that overshadowest from the midst of the stones of fire. ^ 17. Thy heart hast been lifted up through thy beauty; thou hast elders of Israel are said to have gone up to the mount to meet God, and to see " under his feet as it were a paved work of sapphire stone," while " the sight of the glory of the Lord was like devouring fire on the top of the mount." It is just another mode of expressing the peculiar nearness of the king of Tyre to God : he was on God's holy mount, where he trode, as it were, the very stones that are beneath the feet of God — stones of fire ; for all is fire where God has his dwelling. 1 This 16th verse also contains several difficulties ; at least what have been regarded as such. The clause " they have filled thy midst with violence," which beyond all question is the literal rendering of the text, has been thought to give an unsuitable meaning — one applicable rather to the city as a whole, than personally to the king — and hence supposed corruptions in the text, and also violent renderings. We refer only to Havernick's, who abides by the existing text, but forces it into a meaning strictly applicable to the king : therefore '^-p nmst denote middle in the physical sense of venter, belly, or the body, with respect to its middle part ; and the plural verb must be ex- plained by a peculiar construction, according to which an active is sometimes substituted in the place of a passive, even where it is not quite suitable ; thus the sense is obtained, " they have filled thy body," for " thou art filled as to thy body, with violence." It is not sense after all. If it had been lust, or wickedness generally, that was represented as filling him, one could have made something of such an interpretation. And so, indeed, Havernick shoves in frevel wickedness, instead of violence, when he comes to give the general import, but without any right to do so. The Vulgate long ago gave substantially the same rendering : in multitudine negotiationis tuse repleta sunt interiora tua iniquitate. But, besides, no example can be produced of -j";p ever signifying, either the inward parts of a man, or his body in general ; though used with great frequency, it is always in the sense of midst — the middle of a great city, a people, or such like. Therefore, I adopt as the only natural rendering, " They have filled thy midst with violence." Which un- doubtedly has respect to the city ; but not, it must be remembered, without at the same time implicating the king. He, as head of the state, is to a cer- tain extent identified with the whole of it ; and he is evidently viewed in that light here. For when the prophet says, " by the greatness of thy traffic," he plainly includes the state along with the king ; and when he says further, that through this " his midst was filled with violence," what does it indicate, but that he had not ruled as he should have done, for righteousness ? He had become the head of a state that was filled with violence ; and so it is im- mediately added, " and thou hast sinned." Thou hast not restrained the iniquity that prevails around thee ; so far from it, thou art thyself also a transgressor. Thus understood, there is a quite natural meaning, and a CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 313 corrupted thy wisdom together with thy splendour ; I throw thee down to the earth, I lay thee before kings, that they may look upon.thee. 18. Through the multitude of thine iniquities, by the dishonesty of thy traffic thou hast profaned thy sanctuaries ;^ and 1 make fire to go out from the midst of thee ; it shall devour thee, and I will turn thee into ashes upon the earth before all that see thee. 19. All that know thee among the peoples shall be astoniedat thee ; thou shalt be ruins, and shalt be no more for ever. It is clear from the very commencement of this singular pass- age, from the mention made here of the garden of Eden, that the representation contained in it is of an ideal character ; that it is, in short, an historical parable. The kings of Tyre are first personified as one individual — an ideal man, and one complete in all natural excellence, perfect manhood. Not unnaturally so, since Tyr« having sprung from a barren rock, and grown till she had become the mistress of the world's commerce, was a kind of new creation in the earth — as a state the most singular product in existence of human energy and enterprising skill. There- fore, this ideal man, the representative of whatever there was of greatness and glory in Tyre, and in whom, consequently, the Tyrian spirit of self-elation and pride appear in full efflorescence, is ironically viewed by the prophet as the type of humanity in regular progression of thought. — It is admitted on all hands that the ^y^ ■t of the received text is for rm'-y-o (which also stands in many codices), as ^ron for ->j-ijj'i5>3 in Job xxxii. 18. — The expression, "And I profane thee from the mount of God," is quite similar to, " Thou hast profaned his crown to the ground," in Ps. Ixxxix. 39. In both cases, it is a pregnant construction, and means that the person was dealt with as no longer sacred, but profane, and as such was driven from the position of honour he had hitherto held to a despi- cable place. 1 The sanctuaries which the king of Tyre is charged with having profaned, are to be understood of the sacred places, with which the prophet had in the preceding verses associated him ; viz., the holy mount of God, and the garden of God. It is his ideil position there, not his actual position in the city of Tyre, that is meant ; for the latter could in no proper sense be called his sanctuary, still less, in the plural, his sanctuaries. And the fire, that is pre- sently afterwards represented as going out of his midst and reducing him to ashes— so different as an instrument of destruction from the violent hands of strangers shortly before mentioned — was doubtless suggested by the stones of fire, amid which in those ideal sanctuaries he had his abode. So far from finding it a good thing for him to have dwelt there, now that he had sinned, there would proceed thence, as it w^ere, a consuming fire against him ; his very elevation, having been abused, carried with it the element of his de- struction. 314 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 1-19. its highest states of existence upon earth. All that is best and noblest in the history of the past, he sees in imagination meeting in this so-called beau ideal of humanity. It was he who in pri- meval time trod the hallowed walks of paradise, and used at will its manifold treasures, and regaled himself with its corporeal de- lights. It was he who afterwards assumed the form of a cherub — ideal compound of the highest kinds of animal existence — type of humanity in its predestined state of ultimate completeness and glory ; and, as such, had a place assigned him among the conse- crated symbols of God's sanctuary in the holy mount, where, in the immediate presence of the Most High, he overshadowed the mercy-seat. Thus, occupying the highest spheres of created life, and familiar even with the sight of the Divine glory, he knew what it was to dwell amidst the consuming fire, and to walk as on burning stones of sapphire. Whatever humanity has had, or has been typified to have of dignity and honour in the past history of God's administration, it has been thine to possess. So thou thinkest, thou ideal man, thou concentration of human excel- lence, thou quintessence of human greatness and pride. Thou thinkest that manhood's divinest qualities, and most honourable conditions of being, belong peculiarly to thyself, since thou dost nobly peer above all, and standest alone in thy glory. Let it be so. But thou art still a man, and, like humanity itself, in its most favoured conditions, thou hast not been perfect before God; thou hast yielded thyself a servant to corruption. With crea- turely waywardness and inconstancy, thou hast gone astray on thy high places, and hast abused, to the gratification of thine own lust and vanity, the ample gifts and resources which should have been all employed in subservience to the will and glory of God. Therefore thou must be cast down from thy proud ele- vation ; thou must lose thy cherubic nearness to God ; the sacred and blissful haunts which thou hast defiled with thy abomina- tions, shall no longer know thee, and thou shalt henceforth be a monument to all of forfeited honours, abused privileges, and hopeless ruin. Such we take to be the style and import of this vision. It is one of the most highly figurative representations in prophecy, and is only to be compared with Isaiah's lamentation (in chap, xiv.) over the downfal of the king of Babylon. It character- istically differs from this, however, in that, while it moves with CRIMINATORY ADDRESS TO THE KING OF TYRE. 315 equal boldness and freedom in an ideal world, it clothes the ideal, according to the usage of our prophet, in an historical drapery, and beholds the past revived again in the personified existence of which it treats. But it is no wild play of fancy, or arbitrary freak of a discursive imagination. A sublime moral runs through the parable. It reads over again the great lesson of man's weakness and degeneracy, and shows how inevitably the good, when unaccompanied by a really Divine element, turns in him to corruption and ruin. In the royal head of the state of Tyre a new trial was made of humanity with the greatest earthly advantages, he being endowed with the amplest re- sources of wealth and art, and placed on the loftiest pinnacle of the world's wisdom and prosperity — but all in vain. The good only served, as in other cases, to feed the well-spring of human depravity, and the day of retribution could not fail to come with its recompenses of evil, and God's justice be as conspicuously displayed in the overthrow of Tyre, as his goodness had been in her singular rise and prosperity. So that the cry, which the prophet would utter through this parabolical history in the ears of all, is, that man in his best estate — with everything that art or nature can bring to his aid — is still corruption and vanity. The flesh can w^in nothing for itself that is really and perma- nently good. It carries in its bosom a principle of self-destruc- tion, and the more that it can surround itself with the comforts and luxuries of life, the more does it pamper the godless pride of nature, and draw^ down upon itself calamity and destruction. Therefore, " let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might ; let not the lich man glory in his riches ; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness in the earth ; for in these things I delight, saith the Lord." 316 EZEKIEL XXVllI. 20-26. CHAPTER XXVIII. 20-26. THE JUDGMENT OF SIDON, AND THE ULTIMATE PEACE OF ISRAEL. We have already remarked, in the introduction to this series of prophecies, that Sidon was not so properly an independent state, as rather an integral portion of the great maritime power, of which Tyre was the centre. Hence, in the description given by the prophet in chap, xxvii., of the resources of Tyre, Sidon is mentioned as contributing of her mariners to man the Tyrian vessels. Though thus, however, politically merged in Tyre, Sidon had possessed a religious connection with the covenant-people, which does not appear to have extended to Tyre, and which fur- nished an historical reason for the separate mention of Sidon, in addition to the circumstance of its being necessary to complete the number seven. Whether it arose from Sidon being the elder city, or from her citizens having more frequent intercourse with the Israelites, or, jBnally, from the character of the religion pre- valent in Sidon being of a more seductive and infectious charac- ter, the fact is certain, that a corrupting influence flowed in upon Israel from Sidon, such as is never mentioned in connection with Tyre. So early as the time of the Judges, the gods of Sidon are named among the false deities, that had acquired an ascendancy over the children of Israel (Judg. x. 6). In the days of Solomon, the worship of Ashtoreth, the goddess of the Sidon- ians, was again openly practised (1 Kings xi. 33). And that this influence never became wholly extinct, and continued even to the times of the prophet, is evident from the scene described in chap, viii., of women sitting in the attitude of mourners, and weeping for Tammuz. This was undoubtedly an importation from the territory of Sidon, where the Tammuz or Adonis-worshi}) had its origin. And that the circumstance now referred to was not without its weight in determining the prophet to give a separate place to Sidon, may be certainly inferred, not only from the strongly historical bias of the prophet's mind, but also from the express mention at the close, of the freedom that was to be ac- quired for Israel, by the overthrow of such neighbours as the THE JUDGMENT OF SIDON. 317 Sidonians, from the corrupting influences that had vexed and troubled them in times past. The prophecy itself against Sidon is of the most general de- scription : Ver. 20. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 21. Son of man, set thy face toward Sidon, and prophesy against it ; and say, 22. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against thee, Sidon, and shall be glori- fied in the midst of thee : and they shall know that 1 am Jehovah, when I shall have executed judgments in her, and shall be sanctified in her. 23. And I will send against her pestilence, and blood shall be in her streets, and the slain shall be judged in her midst by the sword against her from every side ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. It was the less necessary to enter here into particulars, as from the nature of Sidon's relation to Tyre, it would naturally be un- derstood, that the fortunes of the larger city must be shared in by the less. If Tyre was to fall before the adverse influences that were to assail her, and become a scene of desolation ; much more should Sidon, which had far inferior resources to meet the danger. It passed through many a siege, and consequently suf- fered many successive blows ; and though it has never altogether ceased to be an inhabited place, it has possessed for ages nothing of the relative greatness and importance which belonged to it in the time of Ezekiel. God has indeed been sanctified in her by means of the humiliating reverses she has been made to undergo. And now the prophet turns from these scenes of desolation to the prospect of better days to come for the covenant-people, to whom the downfal of these neighbouring heathen powers be- tokened good, as it indicated the purpose of God to rid them of what had hitherto vexed and troubled their condition. Ver. 24. And there shall not be any more to the house of Israel a vexing brier ^ and a grieving thorn of all that are round about them, that despise them ; and they shall know that I am the Lord Jehovah. 25. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because I will gather the house of Israel from the peoples 1 The only verbal peculiarity in the passage, is in the epithet here applied to brier -i-k>:^_. Gesenius derives it from -^n^o, taken as synonymous with n^^, to be bitter ; hence the word here, anything causing bitterness, vexing. ^T.^y:"^ is applied to the leprosy, when found to be fixed and settled (Lev. xiii. 51, 52), where our translators have rendered it /re«m^. The ancient ver- sions, Vulgate, Syriac, express the sense of bitterness in the passage before us ; the noun evidently requires something of that sort. 318 EZEKIEL XXVIII. 20-26. whither they are scattered, and I shall be sanctified in them in the eyes of the nations, and they shall sit down upon the land which I gave to my servant Jacob; 26. And they shall dwell upon it securely, and build houses, and plant vineyards, and dwell securely, since I execute judgments upon all that hate them round about them ; and they shall know that 1 am Jehovah their God. This concluding part of the prophecy evidently has respect to what was said by Moses, in Numb, xxxiii. 55, regarding such of the original inhabitants of Canaan, as the Israelites in their un- faithfulness might fail to drive out : " They shall be pricks in your eyes, and thorns in your sides, and shall vex you in the land wherein you dwell." Such in sad experience they found to be the case ; and in regard to the Sidonians, not less than others. The territory of Sidon lay within the bounds of the tribe of Asher ; and it is expressly recorded, that this tribe could not dispossess the inhabitants of Sidon (Judg. i. 31). A peaceful relation in process of time sprung up between the Sidonians and their Israeli tish neighbours ; but this only opened the way, as we have seen, to a more pernicious and destructive influence than the open assaults of war. In leading them to depart from the pure worship of Jehovah, by the introduction of the foul rites of Ashtoreth and Adonis, the Sidonians proved in the w^orst sense thorns in the side of the covenant-people. But the result of those judgments, which God was now going to execute, should be to put an end to these vexatious and perverting influences. What the people themselves had failed to do, on account of their unfaithfulness to the covenant, the faithful Jehovah would ac- complish by the execution of his judgments ; he would extirpate these annoying briers and thorns, and allow the people to enjoy in undisturbed freedom and repose the heritage he had given in covenant to their father Jacob. The latter part of the prediction, which foretells a future pe- riod of peace and security to Israel, is a promise of coming good thrown into the form of the past — a prophecy cast in the mould of history. That the good would be realised to the full extent promised, we must certainly hold ; but not therefore, that it would be realised to the full in the precise form here adopted. For if our past investigations into the meaning of this prophet have taught us anything, it is, that we must know how to distin- guish between the form and the reality. Even the immediately preceding vision respecting the king of Tyre is remarkable for THE ULTIMATE PEACE OF ISRAEL. 319 nothing so much as the tendency displayed in it to use the his- torical as the merely ideal form of the thoughts and feelings sought to be conveyed by the prophet. In the earlier part of it, a completely ideal representation is given us, though under the form of history, of the pre-eminent greatness and glory of the king of Tyre ; while in the latter part, the form is changed, and is neither so boldly figurative, nor cast at all into the histo- rical type. How far, therefore, in this concluding prophecy regarding Israel, the historical form should be regarded, cannot be pronounced on with absolute certainty from the words them- selves, but must be gathered from the course of Divine provi- dence. The positive element in the promise — that w^hich must be found in history, otherwise the word fails — is, that God's future dealings with his covenant-people should be such as to rid them from the annoyance and the danger to which in past times they had been exposed from the worldly greatness and the idolatrous spirit of their immediate neighbours ; so that they should enjoy the peculiar blessing of the covenant in com- parative peace and security. And, doubtless, the Lord might fulfil this promise, while all the ancient relations were allowed to stand — Israel restored to their proper territory, and the sur- rounding nations either entirely driven from their yjossessions, or so completely changed in their feelings toward Israel, and so reduced in outward circumstances, as to be no longer snares to Israel's peace and prosperity. To a very considerable extent this was the case. Such of the people as afterwards returned from their dispersions, and settled in the land of Canaan, had comparatively few struggles with their old neighbours either as political or religious adversaries. Those neighbours had them- selves become too broken and enfeebled by the reverses they ex- perienced to exert religiously the deleterious influence, or politi- cally to inflict the evils which, in their former flourishing condition they were quite able to produce. And though for a period there were trials and contests, which Israel was obliged to maintain with them, yet these proved only occasional interruptions to the general peace; and for generations before the coming of our Lord, it might justly be said, that Israel had no longer a thorn or a brier to plague them in their immediate neighbours. In a religious point of view — which is the one here chiefly meant — the Jews were even enabled to make reprisals upon the heathen ; 820 ezi:kiel XXVIII. 20-20. and It was not so much the worship of Jehovah that had to be afraid of the corrupting influence of heathenism, as rather the religions of heathenism that were endangered by the knowledge and worship of Jehovah. For instead of melting away as of old, under the pernicious agency of surrounding idolatries and corruptions, Judaism could number its converts out of all lands, rescued from the crumbling superstitions of heathendom. It thus appears, that even in regard to the historical form of this prediction it received a very striking and wonderful degree of fulfilment ages after he who uttered it had slept with his fathers. The Lord did bring back Israel to their own land, and by reason of the judgments he executed upon those wdio, in past ages, had despised and vexed them, they were permitted to dwell in comparative peace, and even attained to a place of relative strength and moral ascendancy. But the prophecy should not be limited to that temporary and partial fulfilment. We see its full extent and compass of meaning only, when, looking through the historical drapery and the shell of ancient relations, we con- template Israel rising in Christ and the church of the New Tes- tament, to be the head and centre of all that is great, permanent, and good in the world, before which everything that is adverse must fall. The heritage of Jacob is now no longer the narrow stripe of territory which was given to the seed of blessing as a temporary type and earnest, but the whole ransomed earth, which to its uttermost bounds is the destined possession of Christ and his Israel-offspring. Till this great consummation is reached, the prophecy still waits for its full realisation. And believing that it shall be realised, that it is the purpose of God to humble and destroy every adverse power, and exalt the saints with Christ to possess the kingdom, let the church of God ply with every means at her command the blessed work of the world's regeneration, and " bate not a jot in heart or hope " on account of the evil influences against her, but strive as those who have eternal truth on their side, and are sure at length of the victory. THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 321 CHAPTER XXIX. THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT — ITS DESOLATION FOR FORTY YEARS, AND SUBSEQUENT DEGRADATION — THE FIRST INSTRUMENT OF CHASTISEMENT, NEBUCHADNEZZAR. We come now to the last of the worldly kingdoms, against which, in this series, the prophet was commissioned to utter the judgments of the Lord. It is also the one that occupies the largest space in the visions of the prophet, as might not unna- turally have been expected from the relative importance of Egypt, and the position it had so long occupied in the world's history. Though standing, as to local situation, at a much greater distance from the children of Israel than Tyre, it yet held, as a kingdom, a much closer connection with them, and sought to obtain the same ascendancy in the dominion of the world that Tyre did in its commerce. It was with this view, and not from any desire to benefit the little kingdom of Judah, that the king of Egypt began, about the time now under consi- deration, to cultivate a fi'iendly understanding with Zedekiah, and, by sending an army to his relief, obliged the Chaldeans for a time to raise the siege against Jerusalem (Jer. xxxvii. 7-11). The real object of the king of Egypt was to create a diversion against the Babylonian monarch, and, if possible, arrest the vic- torious career of that dangerous rival. The monarch who then sat upon the throne of Egypt was Apries, the commencement of whose reign was prosperous, and he was considered " the most fortunate monarch who had hitherto ruled in Egypt, next to his grandfather Psammitichus. He sent an expedition against the island of Cyprus, besieged and took Gaza (Jer. xlvii. 1), and the city of Sidon, engaged and vanquished the king of Tyre by sea, and, being uniformly successful, he made himself master of Phoenicia and Palestine, recovering much of the territory and that influence in Syria, which had been taken from Egypt by the victories of Nebuchadnezzar,"^ especially the great victory at Carchemish, in the fourth year of the reign of ^ Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians, vol. i. p. 169. X 322 EZEKIEL XXTX. Jehoiakim (Jer. xlvi. 2 ; 2 Kings xxiv. 7). So proud was this king of his successes, and so secure did he think himself of his power and dominion, that he is reported to have said, not even a god could deprive him of his kingdom.^ It was while such a king held the sceptre of Egypt, and while he still was in the noontide of his prosperity,'^ that Ezekiel began to utter the prophecies here recorded against him. We can, therefore, the more easily understand how these prophecies should speak so strongly of the pride and lordly bearing of Egypt and her king, as if Deity itself had found its local habita- tion there. And we may also understand how divine was the insight of Ezekiel, which enabled him at such a time to announce the downfal of Egypt from her high pre-eminence, and her final destination to a comparatively low place among the nations of the earth. It could not be human sagacity, which, against all present a[)pearances, spake so fearlessly of the coming future, but the unerring foresight of the Spirit of God. The prophecy consists of four separate pieces, which have each their respective dates ; the first coinciding with the tenth year of the prophet's captivity, and the last in the order of insertion with the close of the twelfth. But one is introduced between the first and second, of a much later date, not having been given till the twenty- seventh year (chap. xxix. 17, xxx. 19), and which had its place assigned there, as the most appropriate position in respect to the matter. The first in order is a general announcement, in para- bolical style, of the punishment of the king of Egypt, on account of his intolerable self-sufiiciency and pride. Ver 1. In the tenth year, in the tenth month, in the twelfth day of the month, the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 2. Son of nkan, set thy face against Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and prophesy against him, and against all Egypt. 3. Speak and say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against thee, Pharaoh, king of Egypt, the great crocodile that lieth in the midst of his streams -^ who says, My own is my river, and I have made it to ^ Herodotus ii. 169. 2 There can be no reasonable doubt, that it is the crocodile which is here meant by a-^irn. Both it, and the word leviathan^ are used in the prophetic Scriptures with considerable latitude, and in a kind of general sense, denoting any huge aquatic animal, or the larger species of serpents — monsters, whether of the water, or of the dry land. The crocodile was this peculiarly in respect to the Nile, and precisely answers to the description here, being covered with scales, each with a high horned crest, which render the skin THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 323 me.i 4. And I will put hooks in thy jaws, and I make the fish of thy streams to stick in thy scales ; and I cause thee to come up out of the midst of thy streams, and all the fish of thy streams shall stick in thy scales,^ 5. And I will throw thee to the wilderness — thee, and all the fish of thy streams ; upon the face of the ground shalt thou fall ; thou shalt not be gathered, and thou shalt not be assembled ; I give thee for food to the beasts of the earth, and the fowls of heaven. 6. And all the inhabitants of Egypt shall know that I am Jehovah, because of their being a staff' of reed to the house of Israel. 7. When they take hold of thee by thy hand, thou art crushed, and rendest for them the whole shoulder ; and when they lean upon thee, thou breakest, and lettest all their loins stand.3 almost impenetrable through them, and give to the animal a very formidable appearance. To the ancients, generally, it was an object of great dread, though in some parts of Egypt it was worshipped as a divinity. More com- monly, however, it was killed as an object of horror, and was usually caught by means of hooks. — The term streams was very often applied to the Nile in antiquity, with reference to the canals and branches that were derived from it, and also probably its various mouths. 1 The expression here is evidently elliptical, " I have made (it) me," for "I have made (it) to me." The suffix has therefore the force of -^Js. 2 The crocodile is here plainly regarded as the lord of the Nile, just as Pharaoh was of Egypt. The fish, therefore, the smaller inhabitants of the water, are viewed as properly belonging to this monster, and following his fate ; so that when he was caught, and laid out as a helpless carcase on the sandy desert, these all came along with him, and lay there too. It intimates, that Pharaoh and his people together should be brought forth as victims for slaughter. ^ That is, as I understand it, lettest them stand the best way they can, stand themselves, if they are able for it — if not, fall. Most modern commentators consider, that there is a transposition of the letters, and that jn-^^yn is for n-;3!''ch, which is used in Ps. Ixix. 23, in connection also with loins ;_so that the sense would be : and dost make all their loins to shake. This seems to have been the view taken by the earlier translators, as the LXX. has cvn- »xce,a-ct(; the Yulgate, dissolvisti; the Syr., concussisti. Yet I do not feel warranted in resorting to this licence with the text. Besides, the meaning obtained is rather flat. The mere crushing of the reed is said to have rent their shoulder by the splinters that flew ofi" from it ; and one would naturally expect something more to come from the utter breaking of it, than the mere shaking or trembling of their loins. A piercing to death would have been more according to our expectations. The prophet, as I understand him, refrains from expressing this result in so many words ; but yet virtually ex- presses it, by saying, that the effect of leaning on the reed was, that it broke, and left the loins to stand for themselves — loins that felt they could not so stand, and whose worst misfortune was to be thus bereft of the power that had failed them ; for falling and destruction then became inevitable. The image is plainly borrowed from Isa. xxxvi. 6 ; but is to be understood of pre- sent, not of former times. 324 EZEKIEL XXIX. This passage represents, under striking and appropriate ima- gery, the high sense the king of Egypt had of his invincible might and glory, and the state of utter helplessness and ruin to which he should be reduced ; as also the damage that should be sustained by those who were dependent upon him for help. It was the old controversy, which had formerly been waged in the land of Egypt itself, only under a somewhat modified form, and v^th altered relations in respect to the covenant-people. The Pharaoh of Moses' time ste{)t forth into open rivalry with God, and sought, in personal conflict, to dispute with him for the mastery. The Pharaoh of Ezekiel's time, presuming on his godlike sufficiency, gave himself out as not only able to stand his own ground against all powerful assailants, but as also quali- > fied to take the place of God in regard to the covenant-people, and minister help to them in the hour of need. But never could the means of Israel's deliverance come from that old house of bondage ; and the very attempt to seek it there was to be met with the rod of chastisement. So far, indeed, the resorting of Zedekiah and his people to such an helper did avail them, as it caused the Babylonians to raise, for a time, the siege of Jeru- salem ; bvit it was only to provoke these powerful adversaries to a severer vengeance, and to accelerate the day of calamity. The staff' altogether failed them, when they were especially desiring to lean on it ; and they were left a helpless prey in the hands of their ruthless conquerors. But this proved insufficiency on the part of Pharaoh to give efficient aid was only the prelude to his own overthrow ; and the mournful reverses which were to befal him and his land, were to be such as would effectually prevent him from ever henceforth presuming to act — as he had been im- piously doing in the past — the part of God. This, however, is more plainly disclosed in the verses that follow ; — Ver. 8. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am going to bring upon thee a sword, and 1 will cut off from thee man and beast. 9. And the land of Egypt shall be a desolation and a desert ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah ; because he says, The river is mine, and I have made it. 10. Therefore, Behold, I am against thee and against thy streams ; and I will make the land of Egypt utterly waste, and a desolation from Migdol to Syene, and to the border of Ethiopia. ^ 11. No foot of man shall pass through it, ^ Our translators have obscured the meaning of this clause, by translating Migdol, and rendering: from the tower of Syene. The words mark the THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 325 nor foot of beast pass through it ; and it shall not be inhabited forty years. 12. And I will make the land of Egypt desolate in the midst of countries that are desolate, and her cities, in the midst of the cities that are laid waste, shall be desolate forty years ; and I will scatter the Egyptians among the nations, and sow them among the countries. 13. For, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, At the end of forty years I will gather the Egyptians from among the peoples whither they were scattered. 14. And 1 will turn again the captivity of Egypt, and I make them return to the land of Pathros, to the land of their nativity ;i and they shall be there a low kingdom. 15. It shall be the lowest of kingdoms, and shall not lift itself up any more above the nations ; and I diminish them, so that they shall not be great among the nations. 16. And it shall not be any more to the house of Israel for a con- fidence, a remembrancer of iniquity ,2 by their turning away after them ; and they shall know that I am the Lord Jehovah. In this part of the prophecy we have another very peculiar exemplification of the characteristic style of our prophet, in respect to his disposition to serve himself of history for the particular hue and form of his announcements. But as we cannot properly elucidate the meaning, and exhibit the fulfil- ment of this portion, without referring to the additional portion, which occupies the remainder of the chapter, and which may fitly be regarded as the complement of the one before us, we shall first give this, that we may have the whole in our view at once. Ver. 17. And it came to pass in the twenty and seventh year, in the first month, in the first day of the month, the word of the Lord came to me, say- two extremities of the land : Migdol, the same as Magdolum, a fortress near Pelusium on the north, and Syene in the farthest south ; then across to the borders of Ethiopia. ^ By Pathros is understood the upper part of Egypt, as distinguished from the lower — the Thebaid. That, it is now generally agreed, was the most ancient part of Egypt, as to civilisation and art, — " the school of learning and the parent of Egyptian science," as Wilkinson calls it (vol. i. p. iv.) He also afterwards quotes Aristotle's words, " that the Thebaid was formerly called P^gypt ;" and those of Herodotus, that " Egypt in ancient times was called Thebes." This part of the country, in particular, is here named the birthplace of the Egyptians ; or rather, Egypt, under this name, is styled the native region of the people, because that district appears to have had the priority over the rest, and now matters had to start, as it were, from a new beginning. 2 It was from Egypt setting herself forth, and being accepted by Israel, as a ground of confidence, that she was a remembrancer of iniquity ; for she thus served as a witness in regard to the people's departure from God. But she was to be too much reduced to do that any more. 326 EZEKIEL XXIX. ing, 18. Son of man, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, caused his army to serve a great service against Tyre, every head made bald, and every shoulder peeled, and there were not wages to him and his army from Tyre for (or after) the service that he served against it.^ 19. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I give Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, the land of Egypt ; and he shall bear of her store,^ and seize her spoil, and lay hold of her prey; and she shall be for wages to his army. 20. For his work which he served in it, I give to him the land of Egypt, because they did it for me, saith the Lord Jehovah. 21. In that day I shall make a horn to bud forth to the house of Israel, and to thee I will give the opening of the mouth in their midst ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. Viewing this prophecy on Egypt in a general light, and with respect more especially to the part assigned in it to Nebuchad- nezzar, there is a certain amount of fulfilment which it is not very difficult to establish. Take, for example, the distinct, and, so far, satisfactory explanation of the matter by Sir G. Wilkin- son. He had previously related the earlier successes of Apries, then the reverses that began to come upon him, issuing in the revolt of Amasis, and the defeat, and ultimately the death of Apries. Having stated, that the information on these points is given on the authority of Herodotus, who professed to have derived it from the Egyptian priests, he proceeds : " But no mention was made of the signal defeat their army experienced, or of that loss of territory in Syria, which resulted from the successes of the victorious Nebuchadnezzar. It is, therefore, reasonable to conclude, they 4isguised the truth from the Greek historian ; and, without mentioning the disgrace which had be- fallen their country, and the interposition of a foreign power, attributed the change in the succession, and the elevation of ^ I give here the most literal rendering possible, to show that the words do not, as formerly mentioned, imply an utter failure, and the loss 'of all profit in respect to the siege of Tyre, but only one in no degree proportioned to the time and labour expended, and in that respect as good as none. For the service, is equivalent to, according to the service; so "^y is used in other places ; for example, in Psal. ex. 4, " after (according to) the order of Mel- chizedec." ^ p^sr: cannot signify multitude here in the sense of crowds or masses of people ; for in that case jsb: could not have been the verb coupled with it. This plainly denotes, that it was property of some sort which Nebuchadnez- zar was to take up and carry away with him. It was this also, and not people, which formed a proper reward for him. I therefore take the word here, as in chap. vii. 12, 13, and in chap. xxx. 4, etc., for multitude, in the sense of great possessions — store. THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 327 Amasis to the throne, solely to his ambition, and the choice of the Egyptian soldiery. Megasthenes and Berosus affirm, that Nebuchadnezzar conquered a great part of Africa, and having invaded Egypt, took many captives, who were committed to the charge of persons appointed to conduct them after him to Babylon. But as this is said to have happened at the period of his father's death, and, consequently, in the reign of Necho, it cannot refer to the point in question. Josephus, however, expressly states, that the Chaldean monarch " led an army into Coelo-Syria, of which he obtained possession, and then waged war on the Am- monites and Moabites. These being subdued, he invaded and conquered Egypt, and having put the king of that country to death, he appointed another in his stead" (Antiq. x. 9, 7). If Josephus be correct in his statement, there is reason to suppose he alludes to Apries being deposed and succeeded by Amasis ; and we can readily imagine that the Assyrians, having extended their conquests to the extremity of Palestine, would, on the rumour of intestine commotions in Egypt, hasten to take advan- tage of the opportunity thus afforded them of attacking the country. And the civil war, and the fatal consequences of the disturbed state of Egypt, appear to be noticed by Isaiah in the following prophecy, " I will set the Egyptians against the Egyp- tians, and they shall fight every one against his brother, and every one against his neighbour , city against city, and kingdom against kingdom . . . and the Egyptians will I give over into the hand of a cruel lord, and a fierce king shall rule over them" (chap. xix. 2, 11). " From a comparison of all these authorities, I conclude that the civil war between Apries and Amasis did not terminate in the single conflict at Momemphis, but lasted several years ; and that either Amasis solicited the aid and intervention of Nebu- chadnezzar, or this prince, availinghimself of the disordered state of the country, of his own accord invaded it, deposed the rightful sovereign, and placed Amasis on the throne, on condition of pay- ing tribute to the Assyrians. The injury done to the land of Egypt by this invasion, and the disgrace with which the Egyp- tians felt themselves overwhelmed after such an event would justify the account given in the Bible of the fall of Egypt ; and to witness many of their compatriots taken captive to Babylon, and to become tributary to an enemy whom they held in abhor- 328 EZEKIEL XXIX. rence, would be considered by the Egyptians the greatest calamity, as though they had for ever lost their station in the scale of nations." ^ It is quite sufficient, in a general point of view, to justify the prediction uttered by Ezekiel, regarding the adverse change that was presently to be brought over the affairs of Egypt by the hand of Nebuchadnezzar. And it may still further be con- firmed by the nearly contemporary word of Jeremiah, which was spoken after he had been violently carried to Egypt, and in the immediate prospect of the troubles it foretold. Had the troubles not actually come, it certainly would never have been allowed to stand among his writings : — " Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, my servant, and will set his throne upon these stones that I have hid ; and he shall spread his royal pavilion over them. And he comes, he smites the land of Egypt, — such as are for death, to death ; and such as are for captivity, to captivity ; and such as are for the sword, to the sword. And I kindle a fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt ; and he burns them, and carries them away captives ; and he clothes himself with the land of Egypt as a shepherd puts on his garments ; and he goes forth from it in peace" (chap. xHii. 10-12). But it is obvious, admitting all this, that a wide chasm still exists between the terms of Ezekiel's prophecy, and the recorded, or even probable facts of history, if the prophecy is to be taken in the simply literal sense. For, what it predicts respecting the land of Egypt is a forty years' desolation, during which it should not so much as be trodden by man or beast, should be, in fact, in a wilderness-condition, while the inhabitants also should be dispersed into other countries, and only restored again after the forty years had run their course. What is there in the annals of ancient Egypt to bear out such statements ? " We cannot prove," says Bishop Newton, in his work on the Prophecies, *^ from heathen authors, that this desolation of the country, con- tinued exactly forty years, though it is likely enough that this, as well as the other conquered countries, did not shake off the Babylonian yoke till the time of Cyrus, which was about forty years after the conquest of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar." But ^ Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians, vol. i. p. 176-8. THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 329 even if we could prove what is thus held to have been within the bounds of the probable, it would still avail little to the point under consideration ; for the word of prophecy is an absolute and determinate thing ; it cannot be verified by halves. It is either wholly true — namely, in the sense of its real import — or it is not entitled to rank as prophecy at all. And, such a subjection as the Bishop notices of Egypt to Babylon, even supposing it to have lasted precisely forty years, comes very far short of that blighted and desolate condition, as of an untrodden wilderness, coupled with the general dispersion of her people, of which the prophet speaks. It is as certain as anything in ancient history can be, that a sweeping desolation of this kind never in reality took place in Egypt during the period of Chaldean ascendancy. And we cannot but express our wonder, how interpreters, with this palpable fact staring them in the face, should be able to glide over the surface of what is written in the easy manner they do, as if they needed to look no farther than to the literal sense of the words. Literalism here, in the hands of a fair and honest interpreter, can lead but to one result, — the manifest failure of the prediction. But is it just or reasonable to deal after this fashion with a prophet, whose representations usually partake so much of the ideal ? and w^ith whom the ideal so frequently clothes itself in the garb of history ? Were it not more in accordance with the true interpreting spirit to inquire, whether the definite terms and external conditions of the prophecy might not be here also used in a historico-ideal sense, — symbolical, and not literal, — expressive of the nature, rather than the precise bounds and limits of the predicted events ? Such a course is the more called for on the present occasion, as the period of forty years is one that stands out so prominently in the history of God's dispensa- tions, and one that on this account had already been employed by the prophet in an ideal manner respecting the future treat- ment of the covenant-people. In the vision of the iniquity-bear- ing, in chap, iv., he had been commanded to lie forty days on his right side, as typical of the forty years during which they were to be dealt with in chastisement for their sins ; a word, as we there showed, which could mean nothing else than that another season was to pass over them, similar in its character, as a time of chastisement and discipHne to that of the forty years' sojourn in the wilderness, but by no means corresponding to it in dura- 330 EZEKIEL XXIX. tion. So again, we have seen (at chap. xx. 35, etc.) that, with- out mentioning the years, the prophet names the wilderness-con- dition, with its stringent dealings and sifting trials, as what must be undergone by Israel anew, while he not obscurely intimates, that what w^as to be, should not be the mere copy of wdiat had been, — not the literal repetition of the wilderness-life, but the substantial renewal of its spiritual treatment. And why should it be thought that the reference here to the same great period is to be understood otherwise ? Even Jerome, however he failed in making a right application of the idea, could not overlook the respect had to the import of the number /or^y : " which," he says, " is always the number of chastisement and affliction. Whence also Moses, and Elias, and the Saviour himself, fasted forty days and nights, and for forty years the people were kept in solitude." Let the proj)het thus be taken as his own interpreter, and we shall naturally conclude, that what he meant by Egypt becoming a desolation and a wilderness for forty years, was, that a season of severe chastisement and hard discipline should be made to pass over them, similar to what, in days of yore, had passed over Israel when inhabiting the desert. It was to be with these proud and fleshly Egyptians, precisely as it had then been with the proud and fleshly Israelites ; their pleasant land was, as it were, to be converted into a lonesome wilderness, — a field of trial, where " alone they must strive wnth God," and be brought down from their self-complacent trust, to learn and realise their own nothing- ness. So that it is not the precise number of years that we are to look to, — these only served to indicate, through their historical value, the character of the predicted dealings ; and, if something like an external correspondence may be descried in the first pe- riod of Egypt's calamities with that particular number of years, it should only be regarded as a sign in Providence to help to the deeper import of the prophecy. There is, indeed, some sort of outward correspondence discern- ible, — though not in the w^ay noticed by Bishop Newton. From what has been already mentioned, there is good ground for believing, that the invasion of Nebuchadnezzar took place about the commencement of the reign of Amasis. Now, this monarch, it is known, occupied the throne for a very long period, — accord- ing to Herodotus, for 44 years, and according to Diodorus, 55 years, — and it is also known, both from the historical reports, and THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 331 from the character of the monuments erected by him, that Egypt enjoyed a high degree of prosperity in his reign ; which, in the circumstances, must have chiefly belonged to the later portion of it, after Egypt had recovered to some extent from the blow of the Chaldean conquest, consequently somewhere toward the completion of the forty years. But as this point is incapable of proper proof, so it is not to be pressed ; nothing material de- pends on it. It is of necessity the character of the approaching troubles, not their precise duration, of which we are chiefly to think under tlie forty years' wilderness-desolation ; the more especially as the dealing of severity refeiTed to, was not confined to one period, but was often repeated ; and in the time of Cam- byses, it returned with still more painful and humiliating circum- stances, than in the days of Nebuchadnezzar. In like manner, what is said in the prophecy of the scattering and the gathering again of the people of Egypt, is another point in Israel's history, — one, as a chastisement, entirely similar in nature to that of the sojourn in the wilderness, — which was also to have its parallel in the treatment of Egypt ; and the very circumstance of the two being coupled together, — the scattering among the nations being represented as coinciding with the forty years' wilderness-condi- tion, — is itself a clear indication, that this, as well as the other, must be understood as an ideal representation. It was not the few captives, that were carried away by the Chaldeans to Baby- lon, of which the prophet spake ; that was nothing more than the external sign of the far worse calamity which his words properly express. They intimated, that the same shattering was ready to befall the power of Egypt, which was accomplished on Israel by their dispersion among the Gentiles ; that though still, perhaps, resident within the boundaries of the land, their independence was to be as much broken, and their forces as scattered as if they were literally driven into exile. In short, Egypt, in her approaching calamities, was to become a sort of shadow of Israel; the judgments which befell the one, were in substance to have their echo in the other ; and hence, the unspeakable folly (for to this grand lesson the whole points) of Israel going to lean on a power which was utterly impotent to help itself, which was des- tined to travel through the same sore visitations of disaster and trouble that brought Israel to the dust. Nay, there was a diflPerence in the cases, as well as an agree- 332 EZEKIEL XXIX. ment, which still more strongly marked the folly of such behaviour on the part of Israel. For Egypt, the prophet intimates, though not to be entirely destroyed, was yet never to regain her former position ; she was to recover from the extreme depression await- ing her, but still only to be in a low condition, — lower than the other kingdoms of the earth, that is, than its larger monarchies. In the evil only w^as it to stand parallel with Israel ; but not in the good. For in Israel, by reason of the covenant, there was a germ of strength and glory, which belonged peculiarly to herself, and which the very downfal of Egypt and such temporal mo- narchies would only serve to develop. Therefore, it is said at the close, " in that day I shall make a horn to bud forth to the house of Israel," — in the very time of Egypt's humiliation, and in consequence of it, shall the Divine power inherent in the cove- nant-people spring up into new vigour. As the false worldly element goes down, — of which Egypt was the representative, — the true spiritual element shall rise up afresh. A truth for all times ! May the Spirit write it in our hearts ! It is only as the rod of the flesh and the world is broken, that the Divine kingdom of Jesus flourishes in the soul or in the world. The more al- ways that the Egypt falls in us, the more will the horn of Israel bud forth ; so that we also, like the prophet, shall get the opening of the mouth, to speak of the Lord's doings and to show forth his praise among men. And coeval with the putting down of all power and authority and dominion that is of man, shall be the triumph of the kingdom of Christ, and the complete establish- ment of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. The explanation now given of this prophecy, proceeding on the characteristic style of Ezekiel, as exemplified in other portions of his writings, will be seen to be very difl'erent from the view of those who would resolve the peculiar language employed into mere hyperbole.^ As for the opposite class, who will hear of nc- ^ This view was adopted by the late Dr Arnokl, who says on the prophecy before us, " This is a striking instance of the hyperbolical language of the prophecies, as far as regards the historical sense of tliem. The prophecy says, ' I will make the land of Egypt utterly waste,' etc. It is perfectly evi- dent that we are to seek for no literal fulfilment of this. But I think also, that the expression ' forty years ' is no more to be taken literally than the other expressions ; and indeed it is inconsistent to seek chronological exact- ness where there is evidently no historical exactness intended " (Sermons on THE JUDGMENT OF EGYPT. 333 thing but literalisms — whose key-note here, as elsewhere, is, it is a literal Egypt that was to be desolated, and a literal Nebuchad- nezzar that was to desolate it, and why not also a literal forty years and a literal dispersion ? It is enough to say that the method of Ezekiel in other places shows how he is to be understood here, and that, for many wise and important reasons, God has not chosen to make his prophetic communications always run in a style, the meaning of which lies on the surface ; indeed, has seldom done so. And let such literalists themselves show, how the infidel is to be answered, when he tells them that the liter- ality they contend for palpably wants its requisite verification in the facts of history. With their style of interpretation we should feel constrained to abandon the veracity of the pre- diction. We shall only advert, in conclusion, to the loose application sometimes made, in popular works on prophecy, of the language employed in this prediction regarding the desolation of Egypt, to its circumstances in the present day. It ought to be borne in mind, that this is not strictly warranted by the language itself, which speaks only of what was to be done to humble the power of Egypt, and to reduce it from the proud elevation of a world- monarchy — a rival to the kingdom of God, and a temptation to his people to depart from him. When Egypt finally ceased to occupy, or to be in circumstances to aspire after that condition, the prophecy might be said to have taken full effect — the desola- tions were accomplished. Now that the relations are so com- pletely changed, and Egypt might be anything, so far as the cause of God generally is concerned, the territory is in a manner gone on which the prophecy moved, and if Egypt were to become ever so prosperous, it would not in the least affect the truth of what is here written concerning it. The contrary, and, as I think, mistaken view, naturally leads those who adopt it to pre- sent exaggerated accounts of the difference between ancient and modern Egypt in population and resources — to represent the latter as nothing in comparison of the former. There is un- doubtedly a considerable inferiority ; yet by no means such as to Prophecy, p. 48). The prophets, however, no more than other writers, must play at random with definite periods and strong descriptions ; and if they did not mean by these historical exactness, we may be sure, there was exactness of some other kind, which warranted them to write as they did. 334 EZEKIEL XXIX. justify us in regarding the one as a desolation compared with the other. Late investigations have satisfactorily proved, that the available ground for cultivation in modern Egypt is not smaller, but probably somewhat larger than it was in ancient times.^ Yet the entire area of the country is only about 11,000 square miles, not quite a fifth of England and Wales, and the arable portion, scarcely exceeds 2300, while in England and Wales there are upwards of 40,000 of arable and meadow land. Small as the area of Egypt is, it is understood to have contained, till within a recent period, not far from 3,000,000 inhabitants — a population fully equal to that of Great Britain, in proportion to extent of surface, and at least three times as great in proportion to the ex- tent of arable ground. But ancient writers (Didorus and Jose- phus) speak of it as having had a population of more than twice as much, of 7,000,000, at a period shortly before the Christian era — a most incredible number, unless, as Wilkinson suggests, we should include in the reckoning some of the neighbouring provinces belonging to Egypt. And they speak also of 30,000 towns and villages in it, which, even taking the population at 7,000,000 for the whole country, would yield the round sum of 330 to each. Notable towns and villages indeed I Or, as Hero- dotus calls them, '^ populous cities !" It is manifest that the statements of ancient writers on this head are of the most random and exaggerated character ; and it may well be doubted, if the population of Egypt proper ever exceeded four or five millions. Its arable ground, if all cultivated, is thought equal, at least in good years, to the support of seven or eight millions ; but the produce is far from being uniform, and Egypt, from the earliest times was always an exporting country in grain. She had, to a considerable extent, to supply surrounding countries ; a circum- stance overlooked by Mr Lane in his Modern Egyptians, when he accredits the ancient statements respecting the populousness of the country under the Pharaohs. We throw out these re- marks merely to show, how unwise it is to point to the existing condition of Egypt in connection with the prophecy under con- sideration ; and to recal attention to what was its real object — the downfal of Egypt as one of the great ancient monarchies, and its 1 Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians, vol. i. p. 216, and Encyclopsedia Britan- nica, art. Egypt. CONTINUATION OF EGYPT'S JUDGMENT. 335 reduction to a comparatively inferior place — a place in which it could have no power to withstand the advancement of God's kingdom, or withdraw the allegiance of its members from the covenant of God. This, which we hold to be the real import of the prediction, has beyond all question been most completely verified. CHAPTER XXX. CONTINUATION OF EGYPT'S JUDGMENT. This chapter is composed of two distinct messages ; the first of which reaches to the close of ver. 19, and is merely, as to its substance, a repetition of what had already been announced in chap. xxix. 1-16, only carried out into much greater fulness of detail. It is another proof how congenial it was to the peculiar temperament of Ezekiel to have the prophetic outline filled up by a great variety of particulars, so as to give a life-like distinct- ness and body to the picture. His spirit was not satisfied till the representation had been clothed, as it were, with flesh and blood, and it was seen in all its variety of parts. This is the more striking here, as the vision does not appear to have been given till long after that, of which it forms the detailed sequel. The date at chap. xxix. 1 7 is most naturally regarded as extending to this portion ; as also the commencement of the message, by de- claring the day of the Lord to be near for Egypt, suits better to the time when Nebuchadnezzar, having finished his operations at Tyre, was on the eve of marching against Egypt. The other vision in the chapter was of a much earlier date, having been communicated on the seventh of the first month of the eleventh year; not quite a year after the first date in chap. xxix., and about three months before the taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans. It relates directly to Pharaoh, and from some reverses already experienced by him, proceeds to announce the entire overthrow of his kingdom. The general subject being the same in both parts as in the immediately preceding chapter, we 336 EZEKIEL XXX. shall do little more than give a translation of the original, with some explanatory notes, where such are required. Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, prophesy and say. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Alas ! for the day. 3. For the day is near, and the day of Jehovah is near, a day of clouds, the time of the heathen shall it be.' 4. And the sword comes upon Egypt, and there shall be terror in Ethiopia, because of the falling of the pierced-through in Egypt, and they shall take away her store, and shall destroy her foundations. 5. Ethiopia, and Phut, and Lud, and all the mixed multitude, and Chub,2 and the children of the land of the covenant, with them, that fall by the sword. ^ 6. Thus saith Jehovah, And the supporters of Egypt shall fall, and the pride of her strength shall go down; from Migdol to Syene they shall fall by the sword in it, saith the Lord Jehovah. 7. And they shall be desolate in the midst of the lands that are desolate. 8. And they shall know that I am Jehovah, when I have set fire in Egypt, and all her helpers are broken. 9. In that day shall messengers go forth from before me in ships, to alarm Ethiopia in her security, and terror shall be among them, as the day of Egypt, ^ The commencement is almost precisely in the words of Joel i. 15, ii. 1, 2. The peculiar expression also, " the day of the heathen," indicates briefly what is described more at large in the last chapter of Joel ; it reveals the world-wide import of the judgment to be inflicted on Egypt, which was like the beginning of revenges on the heathen. We find the same representation given by Obadiah (ver. 15) with respect to Edom. 2 It is not possible to determine with certainty all the countries and people here named. The people of Phut and Lud were formerly mentioned as among the hired soldiers of Tyre (chap, xxvii. 10) ; and as it is known Egypt rehed very much on her mercenary troops at the time before us, it is likely that they are mentioned here in the same character. Indeed, in Jer. xlvi. 9, 21, they are expressly named the hired warriors of Egypt; and are ren- dered by our translators, Lybians and Lydians. But this is conjectural. They must have been some warhke people, of Asia or Africa, who hired themselves out to other countries for military service. The Chub (or, with a different pointing, Kuf) are equally unknown. Havernick would identify them with a people named Kufa on the monuments, and by Wilkinson (vol. i. p. 379) considered to be a people situated considerably to the north of Palestine. But this also is mere conjecture. The LXX. omit the name, as if they did not know what to put for it. The mixed multitude are the people from various countries in the pay of Egypt. * Who are to be understood here by " the children of the land of the co- venant," or the covenant-land, is also a matter of dispute. Havernick takes the expression generally, persons in covenant, allies. But the expression, as Hitzig notices, is too definite for that, and the covenant-land can hardly be taken for anything but the land of Canaan. So the LXX. took it, and to make the matter plain, put " my covenant." So also Jerome and Theodoret understood it of the Jews, who migrated to Egypt, as mentioned in Jer. xlii.- xliv. CONTINUATION OF EGYPT'S JUDGMENT. 337 for behold it comes.^ 10. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And I will make the fulness of Egypt to cease by the hand of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Baby- lon. 1 1 . He and his people with him, the terrible of the nations, are a-com- ing to destroy the land ; and they will draw their swords against Egypt, and fill the land with the pierced-through. 12. And I will make the rivers dry, and sell the land into the hand of the wicked ; and I will make the land and its fulness desolate by the hand of strangers ; I Jehovah have spoken it. 13. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And I will destroy idols, and make images to cease from Noph,2 and a prince of the land of Egypt shall no more be; and I will put fear in the land of Egypt. 14. And I will make Pathros desolate, and put a fire in Zoan, and execute judgments in No.^ 15. And I will pour out my fm*y upon Sin, the strength of Egypt,* and will cut off the multitude of No. 16. And I will make fire in Egypt ; and Sin shall have great pain ; and No shall be for tearing asunder, and Noph distresses perpetually.^ 17. The * The sending of messengers to Ethiopia, to rouse it out of its security, is probably mentioned with reference to Isa. xviii. 2. It merely denotes, that the tidings of evil would quickly travel from the one country to the other ; Egyptians fleeing from before the Lord, in his executions of judgment, would hasten in their vessels to their neighbours in Ethiopia, and would do the part of special messengers. " As the day of Egypt," may either mean, that the time of sore visitation would come on them, as it had just come on Egypt, or as it had been at some former time in Egypt, the day pecidiarly of Egypt's judgment at the smiting of the first-born. Havernick would refer the expres- sion to the latter event. But this seems unnatural. The connection of the passage is best sustained by understanding day of the present time — Egypt's day would shortly be Ethiopia's. 2 Noph is Memphis, the residence of the kings of Egypt, and the chief seat of its idolatrous worship ; hence in connection with it both idol-gods and princes are named as going to be cut off. ' Pathros denotes Upper Egypt, of which No, or No-Ammon, was one of the chief cities; but it is coupled with Zoan, or Tanis, a principal city in Lower Egypt. * Sin is the same with Pelusiun, which, on account of its position as a barrier-town, might justly be called the strength of Egypt. Suidas names it the Key of Egypt, because the possession of it opened the way to the whole. ^ That a difficulty was early felt in rendering this last clause of ver. IG, is evident from the obviously conjectural meaning given by the LXX., " and waters shall be poured out." — ^ is either enemies^ or the distresses, troubles occasioned by them. So also c^"- is either b^ day, of the day, or daily, per- petually, in which last sense, though rare, it occurs also in Ps. xiii. 3. Hence there are two literal renderings : Noph's enemies shall be in the day, that is, fill her streets in broad daylight ; or, Noph shall be distresses per- petually. I prefer the latter, as yielding a better sense, and more in accord- ance with the immediately preceding clause, in which No is said to be for tear- ing asunder, given up, as it were, to that. So here Noph is to be made the subject of perpetual distress. Havernick adopts from the Aramaic the sense y 338 EZEKIEL XXX. jonng men of Aven and of Pi-beseth shall fall by the sword, and these (i. e., the cities themselves — their inhabitants bodily) shall go into captivity.^ 18. And at Tehaphnehes the day is darkened, because I break there the yokes of Egypt ; and the pride of her strength ceases in her ; she — a cloud shall cover her, and her daughters shall go into captivity.^ 19. And I will execute judgments in Egypt, and they shall know that I am Jehovah. 20. And it came to pass in the eleventh year, in the first month, in the seventh day of the month, that the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 21. Son of man, I have broken the arm of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and lo ! it shall not be bound up to be healed, to put a bandage for binding, that it may be strengthened, that it may lay hold of the sword. 22. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against Pharaoh king of Egypt, and I break his arms, both the strong and that which is broken, and I make the sword to fall out of his hand. 23. And I disperse the Egyptians among of splitting or division, and thus gives to the last clause respecting Noph much the same meaning as the preceding bears respecting No : Noph shall be for perpetual splitting. I don't think the meaning would be improved by this change, even if it could be established ; but the entire absence of any countenance to it in the Hebrew, is enough to set it aside, considering that the word is one in such common use. ^ The Aven in this 17th verse is undoubtedly the same as what is else- where read On, Heliopolis, a strong and well-fortified city in Lower Egypt, and one of the great seats of Egyptian idolatry. On this account, probably, the prophet, by a slight alteration in the name, marks it as the place of ini- quity — the Aven. Pi-beseth is rendered Bubastos in the LXX. and Vul- gate ; and doubtless Bubastos, or Bubastis, was a mere corruption of Pi-bast. The place, situated in Lower Egypt, near the Pelusiac branch of the Nile, was celebrated for the worship of the goddess Bubastis (Copt. Pasht), re- garded as the same with Diana of the Greeks. A beautiful and much- frequented temple stood there in honour of her (Herod, ii. 137, 138). The Persians destroyed the walls of the city, though it continued to be a place of some note long afterwards. 2 Tehaphnehes, or Tapannes, rendered by the LXX. Taphnae, is the city Daphne, not far from Pelusium, on the confines of Lower Egypt, a place of considerable strength ; hence with its capture the pride or glory of Egypt's strength is said to cease. Jeremiah speaks of Pharaoh having a house there (chap, xliii. 9), which implies that it had been occasionally, at least, a royal residence. By "breaking the yokes of Egypt" there, appears to be meant her dominion or supremacy, which she exercised over many other people in and around her. I see no need for any other view than this simple one. The LXX. (and, after them, Ewald, Hitzig, and others) render as if nrj^a were in the text : " the sceptres of Egypt." As if Egypt was made up of several states or kingdoms ! The present text gives a better meaning. The idea of Havernick, that by the yokes of Egypt reference is made to the Jews who, according to Jer. xliv. and xlvi., went and settled there, is quite unnatural. In going there, they acted of their own accord, and there was no yoke or bondage of Egypt on them. CONTINUATION OF EGYPT'S JUDGMENT. 339 the nations, and scatter them among the countries. 24. And I strengthen the arms of the king of Babylon, and put my sword in his hand ; and I break the arms of Pharaoh, and he utters the moanings of the pierced-through before him. 25. And I strengthen the arms of the king of Babylon, and the arms of Pharaoh shall fall down ; and they shall know that I am Je- hovah, when I give my sword into the hands of the king of Babylon, and he stretches it forth against the land of Egypt. 26. And I will disperse the Egyptians among the nations, and scatter them among the countries, and they shall know that I am Jehovah. This word against Pharaoh appears to have been occasioned by some reverse he had experienced, v^^hich was like the break- ing of one of his arms, and which the prophet regarded as the sign of his coming downfal. What the reverse was, we can have little doubt, when we refer to Jer. xxxvii., and find, that the army of Pharaoh had unsuccessfully attempted to deliver Jeru- salem from the hand of the Chaldeans. On the appearance of the Egyptian army, the Chaldeans raised the siege for a time, and marched against the Egyptians, who, however, durst not give battle, but retired again to their own country, leaving the Jews to the mercy of their adversaries. This pusillanimous or prudent retreat the prophet here regards as tantamount to a discomfiture of the Egyptians by Nebuchadnezzar ; it was like the breaking of one of his arms, which was not again to be healed, but only broken anew, and the other also with it, by the conquests of the Chaldeans. It is, of course, the breaking of the power of the king of Egypt, and the subjection of his kingdom to a foreign yoke, that is meant by the prophet, and not any injuries that might be done to his person. And it is no more necessary here, than in the similar language used of the king of Judah in chap, xxi. 25, to suppose that Pharaoh must have been corporeally wounded and pierced by the sword of tlie king of Babylon, and fallen before him in the agonies of death. As king of Egypt, he was smitten to death, and his empire scattered and destroyed, when his forces were vanquished by the king of Babylon, and he and all his kingdom lay at the feet of the conqueror. And in the same relative sense must be understood the ceasing of a prince from Memphis in the former part (ver. 13) ; it indicates, not the absolute non-existence of any one of princely rank, but the com- parative failure of such ; no prince now, as had been formerly ; no strictly independerit monarch. 340 EZEKIEL XXXI. CHAPTER XXXI. THE CERTAINTY OF PHARAOH's DOOM CONFIRMED BY A PARA- BOLICAL RELATION OF ASSYRIA'S GREATNESS AND DESTRUC- TION. The discourse in this chapter, which is dated two months later than the concluding portion of the immediately preceding one, is formally an address to Pharaoh ; but, in its great object and de- sign, it is a confirmation of the doom already pronounced upon Pharaoh and his kingdom, by a reference to what had befallen the once magnificent king and empire of Assyria. To the eye of reason, it seemed a very bold and scarcely credible announce- ment, that such a kingdom as Egypt, so ancient in its origin, so strong in its foundations, so extensive in its dominion and re- sources, was destined to fall from its proud ascendancy, and be- come, compared with what it had been, a desolation and a ruin. Therefore, the prophet seeks to establish the faith of God's people in what had been spoken respecting Egypt, by directing their attention to the parallel case of Assyria, which, within a compa- ratively recent period, had been a vast and flourishing empire, while now, its place was no more found in the earth. And having thus told the story of Assyria's past greatness and present desolation, he concludes with declaring that what had been Assyria's fate shall now be Egypt's ; the same mournful reverse, and the same instrument, too, in accomplishing it. It was the Chaldean sword which had given the fatal blow to the Assyrian monarchy, and the same sword was to prostrate the power and glory of Pharaoh. Thus the past contributed to establish the certainty of the future. It will easily be understood, that it is only in the general that the resemblance between the two monarchies is here traced. The Assyrian empire was entirely supplanted by the Babylonian, and not a fragment, we may say, remained of its existence as an empire. But, in respect to Egypt, the prophet had already de- clared that the desolation was not to be by any means so com- plete ; that it was not to cease altogether to be a kingdom, but was to lose for ever its ascendancy in the affairs of the world PHARAOH'S DOOM CONFIKMED. 341 and to sink into a low and enfeebled condition. So far as its grand ambition was concerned, of ruling the destinies of the world, it was to vanish even as Assyria had done ; its Pharaohs were no longer to bear sway as great masters of empire. But the kingdom within its own narrow limits was still to be pro- longed, and depression, not annihilation, was to be the portion of its cup. The comparison, therefore, must be understood with this obvious difference. It is scarcely necessary to add, that the whole of the present chapter, with the exception of the last verse, has immediate re- spect only to Assyria. There have not been wanting commen- tators, who have understood the prophet as speaking throughout of Egypt, under the image of an Assyrian, or some particular kind of cedar. But this is so palpably against the sense and connection of the passage, that it has never received any general concurrence.^ The cedar is unquestionably the king of Assyria ; and the parabolical representation under this image is one of the most striking and beautiful in Ezekiel, though not without the occasional intermixtures of the real with the figurative, which usually occur in the parabolical delineations of our prophet. Bishop Lowth says of it, that, " if we consider the image itself, none can be found more appropriate or graceful ; if the features and colouring, none more elegant or more polished ; though the prophet has introduced some literalities into the figure (ver. 11, 14-16), whether from the nature of this sort of parable admit- ting it, or from his own fervent disposition leading him to dis- regard perfect accuracy of style, I can scarcely take upon me to say" (Praelec. x.) Ver. 1. And it came to pass, in the eleventh year, in the third month, in the first day of the month, that the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, say to Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and to his multitude, To whom art thou like in thy greatness ? 3. Behold the Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon, beautiful in branches, and with an overshadowing thicket, and ^ The author of this opinion seems to have been one Meimbomius. Horsley speaks of Bishop Lowth as agreeing with it ; if he ever did, it must have been in the first edition of his Praelections, for, in the second, Michaelis's edition, he expressly refers the cedar to the king of Assyria. Havernick also quotes Michaelis as supporting the same view. But he renounces it in his note on the passage in Lowth's Tenth Praelec. ; he adheres, he there says, to the common view, Meibomianam deserens. 342 EZEKIEL XXXI. of an high stature, and his topmost shoot was among the clouds. ^ 4. The waters nourished him ; the deep raised him aloft with its streams going round about its plantation (viz., that which belonged to the deep), and its channels sending forth to all the trees of the field. 6. Therefore his height was increased above all the trees of the field, and his boughs were enlarged and his foliage extended, because of the many waters in his shooting forth (i. e., the many waters that accompanied him wherever he shot forth). 6. In his boughs nestled all the fowls of heaven, and under his foliage all the beasts of the field brought forth, and under his shadow dwelt all great nations. 7. And he was beautiful in his greatness, in the length of his branches ; for his root was beside great waters. 8. The cedars obscured him not — (those that are) in the garden of God — the fir trees did not equal his boughs, and the planes were not like his foliage ; no tree in the garden of God Avas equal to him in beauty, 9. I made him comely by the multitude of his branches, and all the trees of Eden, which are in the garden of God, envied him. 10. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Because thou art exalted in height, yea, he sent up his topmost shoot among the clouds, and his heart was lifted up in his greatness, 11. So I delivered him into the hand of the Lord (the El, the mighty prince or leader) ^ of the nations ; he did what he would with him ; I have driven him away for his wickedness, 12. And strangers, the terrible of the nations have cut him ofi", and left him ; by the hills and upon all heights have his branches fallen ; and his leafy twigs are broken beside all the rivers of the land ; and all the people of the land have gone from his shade, and have left him. 13, Upon his ruins abide all the fowls of heaven, and upon his foliage are all the beasts of the field. 14. To the end that none of the trees of the waters (those, namely, which have plentiful supplies of waters) may magnify themselves for their height, nor send forth their topmost shoot among the clouds, and that no drinkers of water may stand upon their own greatness ;^ for they are all delivered to death, to the lower regions of the earth, in the midst of the children of men, with those that go down to the pit, 15. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, In the day that he went down to Sheol I made to mourn, I covered against him the deep,* and I restrained its floods, and the great waters were staged ; * See on chap. xix. 11. 2 The tss here has by some been thought too strong, and they would sub- stitute V'^s a ram, then a powerful person, a leader or prince ; so also some MSS. But perhaps the El might rather be chosen to denote the kind of Divine-like power of judgment given to Nebuchadnezzar, ^ Literally, may stand for, or on themselves, because of their greatness. For I agree with Hitzig and some others, that the tjn^^s of the text should be pointed thus, arr^^s^ so as to make the preposition with the pron. suffix, and not : their terebinths or trees (taking it generally). The latter makes a very awkward and imnatural sense. The meaning is, that the trees were to be taught not to stand as by themselves, upon their own greatness, as if this, with their plentiful supply of water, could do all for them. * The most literal rendering is here the best. Ewald, and after him Hav., liave missed the precise shade of meaning by throwing the two verbs to- gether, and rendering as if it were : And I covered with mourning over him the deep. The prophet rather personifies the deep ; God causes it to wrap itself in mourning, to cover up its fulness against him, who had abused its phauaoh's doom confirmed. 343 and I made Lebanon mourn for him, and all the trees of the field faint for him. 16. At the sound of his fall I made the nations shake, when I made him go down to Sheol with those that go down to the pit ; and these were comforted in the lower regions of the earth, all the trees of Eden, the choice and good of Lebanon, all that drink water. 17. They also went down to Sheol with him, to the pierced-through with the sword, and, his arm, they dwelt under his shadow in the midst of the nations.^ 18. To whom art thou so exactly like in glory and in greatness among the trees of Eden ? and art to be brought down with the trees of Eden to the lower regions of the earth ; in the midst of the uncircumcised thou shalt lie with the pierced- through with the sword. This is Pharaoh and all his multitude, saith the Lord Jehovah." This parabolical representation, it will be observed, is marked by the same peculiarity, which we had occasion to notice in the ideal delineation of the king of Tyre ; it combines the historical with the figurative. While the cedar that represents the king of Assyria is called a cedar in Lebanon — Lebanon being by way of eminence the region of cedars — it is presently transferred in the prophet's imagination to the land of primeval beauty and perfec- tion, the Eden in which was the garden that God had planted. There this cedar is described as flourishing, and growing till it overtopt in magnificence and beauty all the trees of the field around it; because, fed in a manner quite peculiar with the waters of that deep flood, which, rising somewhere in Eden, divided itself into four branches and watered the whole garden. Thus happily circumstanced, the exuberance and glory of para- dise appeared to revive in this singular tree, and none even there could be compared with it. But it was only, that it might afford another specimen of that instability and transitoriness which be- longs to all on earth, when the good bestowed by Heaven is treasures, and to withhold the streams which it had hitherto poured forth with joyfulness ; for it is of the nature of grief to contract and seal up the flowing streams of plenty. ^ It cannot be denied that the latter clause of this 17th verse is very pe- culiar in its construction and obscure in its import. Various emendations have been proposed in the text, but, as usual, with no satisfactory result ; so that the last emendator, Hitzig, has still his own to propose, and, we have no hesitation in saying, with no better success than his predecessors. Many, after the LXX., with a slight difference in the punctuation, read his seed, for his arm ; but the king of Assyria, as here considered, had no seed ; he was the last of his race. I take : And, his arm, they dwelt, for : Even they who, as his arm, had dwelt, or : though, being his arm (the instruments of his power and glory) they had dwelt. Their connection with him was such, that they could not but share his fate. 344 EZEKiEL xxxr. abused to purposes of selfishness, and the creature begins to thrust himself into the place of his Creator. Thus the incomparable cedar, forgetting as it were, its own place, is given to destruction, and its place is no more found. Transferred to the king of Assyria, whom the cedar repre- sented, this parabolical history tells us in the first instance, of his unparalleled greatness ; he was the head and centre of a vast monarchy, which was fed by the tributary streams of surrounding nations, and gathered within its ample bosom the resources of the civilised world. But its peerless grandeur proved the occa- sion of its overthrow ; for it only served to nurse into fatal ma- turity that " pride which goetli before a fall." How thoroughly the loftiness of spirit in the head of that monarchy kept pace with the growth and magnitude of his dominion, may be seen from the Heaven-daring language of Sennacherib to Hezekiah, when, before the gates of Jerusalem, his servants openly blasphemed and defied the God of Israel. Most truly was his heart lifted up in his greatness ; and the hand of a righteous God must cast him down. When God's purpose is formed, the proper instru- ment is sure to be forthcoming at the appointed time ; and in an amazingly brief period, the mighty fabric of Assyrian glory fell, an irrecoverable ruin. It was a lesson on a gigantic scale to the world that then was, how God in his providence abases the proud, and scatters the mighty from their seats ; how all power and glory that is of the world, is destined to vanish away as a dream of the night ! And connected, as it here is, with the guilt and the doom of Pharaoh, it was to him, and to those who knew the will of God concerning him, an instructive warning and ex- ample of that which certainly awaited him ! for, in the govern- ment of an unchangeable God, that which has been, is the sure index to what in like circumstances shall again be. LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHAKAOH. 345 CHAPTER XXXII. SONGS OP LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHARAOH AND HIS KINGDOM. This chapter is composed of two closely-related parts, though the visions contained in them were given at two different periods, — the one on the first, the other on the fifteenth day of the twelfth month of the twelfth year. They are hoth elegies, or songs of lamentation over the coming fall of Pharaoh and his kingdom ; not entirely, however, in the same strain, but with certain marked differences in the one as compared with the other, which will appear as we proceed. They afford striking examples of that feature in the prophet's mental constitution, which delighted in amplifying his subject, and following it out to all, even the most minute and varied particulars. He would leave nothing to be supplied by the reader's own fancy, but would place every circumstance and result distinctly before his view. The first vision reaches to the close of ver. 16, and is as fol- lows : — Ver. 1 . And it came to pass in the twelfth year, in the twelfth month, in the first day of the month, that the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, take up a lamentation for Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and say unto him, A lion of the nations thou art like, and thou art the crocodile in the waters, and dost break forth in thy rivers, and dost trouble the waters with thy feet, and makest foul their rivers. ^ 3. Thus saith the Lord Je- hovah, And I will spread upon thee my net, in the assembly of many peoples (that is, with such for spectators, ver. 9, 10), and they make thee to come ^ There is a crowding of thought here, and in connection with that a mix- ture also of images. Pharaoh is like a lion on dry land among the nations, and a monster, a crocodile, in the rivers. The idea, however, is still the same : Pharaoh was an object of terror, by reason of his great power and dominion. And his breaking forth, — for such is undoubtedly the usual, and here quite appropriate, meaning of )-;"'a ; and there is no need for repairing, with Hiivernick and Hitzig, to the cognate languages for some other, — his breaking forth in the waters, like an impetuous and self-willed monster of the deep, and disturbing them with the commotion he raised, is merely added to strengthen the idea of his formidable character. 346 EZEKIEL XXXII. up with my drag. 4. And I leave thee on the land, on the face of the field I cast thee, and I make to nestle on thee all the fowl of the heavens, and I will satiate with thee the beasts of the whole earth. 5. And I lay thy flesh upon the hills, and fill the valleys with thy hugeness.^ 6. And I water the earth with what flows from thee, from thy blood (reaching) to the hills, and the valleys are full of thee. ^ 7. And I cover the heavens when I extinguish thee (literally, with thy extinguishing), and darken their stars, I will cover the sun with clouds, and the moon shall not shine in brightness. 8. All the shining lights of heaven I will bedim for thee, and I give darkness upon thy land, saith the Lord Jehovah.^ 9. And I will grieve the heart of many peoples, when I bring thy ruins among the nations,* to lands which thou hast not known. 10. And I make many peoples astonied at thee, and their kings shall be filled with horror because of thee, when I brandish my sword in their faces ; and they tremble every moment each for his life in the day of thy fall. 11. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, The sword of the king of Babylon shall come on thee. 12. By the swords of the mighty I will cause thy multitude to fall, the terrible of the nations, all of them ; and they shall spoil the pride of Egypt, and all her multitude shall perish. 13. And I will destroy all her cattle, from beside the great waters, and the foot of man shall not trouble them any more, nor shall the hoofs of beasts trouble them. 14. Then will I cause their waters to subside, and will make their rivers flow like oil, saith the Lord Jehovah ; ^ 16. When I make the land of Egypt desolate, and the ^ With thy hugeness, T^n^^^, The verb a^rn commonly signifying, to be high, lifted up, greatened ; and the participle, lofty, great of stature ; it is a very natural meaning for the noun to bear here, hugeness^ — such an elevation or magnitude as to fill up the valleys of the land. It might be put more literally : thy prominences, thy projecting heights (referring, perhaps, to the scaly protuberances of the crocodile), — these filling up the valleys, as the flesh was to be spread over the hills. Havernick's corrupting corpse, and Hitzig's hlood, are quite fanciful, and are without the least shadow of support in Hebrew. 2 The first part of ver. 6 : And I water the earth with, or make the earth to drink, what flows from thee, is evidently the correct rendering, and is now generally adopted ; though De Wette still has, " where thou swimmest." But, as Havernick remarks, the verb ^^-s., from which nss comes, never signi- fies exactly to swim, but rather to flow, or stream out ; hence the word here, which is properly a participle, the discharging or streaming of blood that flowed out from the slain creature. ^ Pharaoh is represented, in these two verses, as himself a great light of heaven, a star of the first magnitude, at the fall of which the whole heavenly host are put into disorder, and veiled in darkness. A poetical representation, of course ; to show the terrible sensation that would naturally be caused in the political heavens by the fall of so great a monarchy : trouble and con- fusion would seize many a heart. * " Thy ruins," t^^a^, literally, thy breakage or fracture, a strong expres- sion for the broken and ruined people themselves. Shattered and dispersed, they would appear among the nations as one great fracture, — the ruins of what they had been. ^ Our translators give the first part of this verse : Then will I make their LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHARAOH. 347 land is destitute of that of which it was full ; when I smite all the inhabitants in it; then they shall know that I am Jehovah. 16- This is a lamentation^ and they lament her ; the daughters of the nations shall lament her ; upon Egypt and upon all her multitude they shall lament her, saith the Lord Jehovah. In this first song of lamentation, there is a gradual transition from the strictly figurative to the more literal. It begins with parabolical representations of the coming destruction of Pharaoh's greatness : the huge monster, that had moved at will and trou- bled all around him, becomes himself a helpless prey in the hands of the mighty ; and his mortal remains are spread forth over hill and dale, so that they everywhere meet the eyes of men, and cover with the monuments of his fall the whole extent of his kingdom. This is the main idea intended to be conveyed by the details of this part of the description. It was not to be, as if the proud monarch, after being slain, were buried out of sight, and no more seen or thought of among men. The circumstances connected with his overthrow should be ordered so as to keep fully before them his fallen greatness, that they might neither forget him, nor the sad change that had taken place in his con- dition. And the idea is still further expanded, by the introduc- tion of a new image — the extinguishing of the light of that portion of the world, so as to make it, instead of a bright and illuminated region, a land of darkness, striking horror into the minds of those who should behold it. Then, becoming more literal in his delineations, the prophet exhibits the kingdom of Egypt as a general wreck ; its people scattered in fragments among the nations ; its riches given up as a spoil to the hands of enemies; its waters no more frequented by man or beast, and themselves shrivelled into smaller dimensions, and running smooth and calm in their channels, as if they were no longer able to overflow then' banks, and saturate the fields with the means of fruitfulness and plenty. We see thus a gradual change from the more to the less figu- waters deep. The verb is, properly, to sink ; but this, as applied to a river, may be variously understood, according to the circumstances. When the discourse here is of a diminishing of the resources of Egypt, the most natural sense is, certainly, the subsiding of her waters, — make them sink or decrease, so that they should not overflow, but keep easily in their proper channel. To deepen, in the sense of increasing, or to make them clear, are both un- suitable. 348 KZEKIEL XXXII. rative, from the ideal to the real. And yet, to the very last, the representation is of an ideal character ; and, like many other portions of this book, is utterly at variance with that bald and meagre species of interpretation, which insists upon reading prophecy as literally as it does history. To apply such a prin- ciple here, would manifestly be to take this passage out of the category, alike of prophecy and history. For there certainly never has been, and, so long as the general course of nature stands as it is, there never will be a period in the history of Egypt, when the settled drought upon its waters, and the still quiet and desolation throughout its borders, spoken of by the prophet, may be found according to the letter of the description. And this very circumstance, that when Egypt is viewed in a merely natural light, its fertility and abundance must ever con- tinue, because the waters of its river will still overflow, and sup- ply the land with productive moisture, — this might alone satisfy us, that the prophet could not intend, under such language, to speak of any merely natural revolutions, but that through the image of the natural he sought to shadow forth the moral. It is of what Egypt was to be as an empire, as the seat of a monarchy that had once extensively ruled, and still wished to rule in the affairs of men, that the description must be understood. And in this respect it tells us, that the result would be, as if the land were to be enveloped in darkness and desolation, the springs of its fertility dried up, and its people scattered to the mnds. So it happened. The political ascendancy of Egypt began with the Chaldean conquest finally to decline ; the arm of its power was for ever broken ; its monarch could no more move about as he pleased, and trouble the nations ; he was henceforth to reside in compara- tively still and peaceful waters, himself on every hand restrained and hemmed in by superior force, and all his pride and glory, as the head of empire, reduced to perpetual desolation. It is in this higher point of view, that the whole prophecy contemplates Egypt and its monarch — this alone ; and so, the entire forsaking of its waters, here mentioned, by man and beast, and other symptoms of outward destruction, are perfectly compatible with what was said in a previous chapter, of its always continuing to be a kingdom, though in a depressed condition. In truth, when rightly understood, the one means no more than the other ; for it is Egypt's doom as a kingdom, not the mere condition of its LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHARAOH. 349 soil and surface, that the prophet throughout has in view. And if we keep our eye distinctly upon that, we shall easily find our way, both to the import of the prediction, and the reality of its fulfilment. That the representation is to be understood in the manner now described — as having respect chiefly to the position of Egypt in its political power and relations, to Egypt as a king- dom, and not simply as a natural region of the earth — is still further evident from the next vision, which fills up the remain- der of the chapter, and closes the whole of this series of Divine judgments. There the prophet utters another lamentation over the fallen power, and sings, as it were, its funeral song, accom- panying the departed into the world of spirits, and surrounding him there with other prostrate monuments of human greatness. Manifestly, the inditing of such a funeral song proceeds on the supposition, that it is a great worldly power that is meant, per- sonified in its political head, and ideally represented as under- going the changes to which humanity itself is subject. The introduction of Egypt, in the person of its destroyed head and people, into the shadowy mansions of the nether world, is easily understood, if viewed simply as a mode of presenting distinctly before our view the irrecoverable prostration of the great mon- archy ; for it shows us its natural representative as now become a tenant of that region, where the temporary distinctions of this life are unknown, and where, as regards power and influence among men, the small and the great are reduced to one sad level. To represent Egypt, with her king and her mighty forces, as transferred thither, was all one with saying, that their sway on earth was finished ; it was numbered for ever with the things that are past and gone. But let this be kept steadily in view as the one grand object of the representation, in the other parts of the prophecy, as well as here. We cannot otherwise give a con- sistent interpretation to what is written ; but must find our path checked by inextricable difficulties. Read from the right point of view, the vision is plain in its meaning, and in all its fore- bodings is again re-echoed by the facts of histoiy ; but, if placed in a wrong position, and contemplated in a false light, it ceases to give the sure and unerring instruction we expect to find in a word of God. 350 EZEKIEL XXXII. Ver. 17. And it came to pass in the twelfth year, in the fifteenth day of the monthji that the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 18. Son of man, wail over the multitude of Egypt, and cast them down — her and the daugh- ters of glorious nations to the nether world, with those that go down to the pit. 2 19. Than whom art thou more dear? Go down and dwell with the uncircumcised.^ 20. In the midst of the pierced-tErough with the sword they fall ; to the sword she is surrendered ; draw her and all her multitude* 21. The princes of the mighty speak to him with his helpers from the midst of Sheol (that is, they give him welcome there as now one with them- selves) ; they go down, they lie there, the uncircumcised, pierced-through with the sword. 22. There is Asshur and all her company, his graves round about him, all of them pierced-through, fallen by the sword. 23. Whose graves are appointed in the extremities of the pit ; and her company is round about her grave, all pierced-through, fallen by the sword, who did spread terror in the land of the living.* 24. There is Elam and all her multitude ^ The number of the month is here omitted, and only the year and the day announced. But there can be no doubt, that the twelfth month is to be supplied from the preceding vision ; so that this is separated from the former by an interval of fourteen days. ^ There is a certain degree of abruptness in the manner in which the lamentation commences : all at once Egypt is coupled with others, in com- pany with whom she is sent down to the pit, while it is only afterwards we are told who these others are ; and both between her and them, and in the use of the person, rapid interchanges are made. The daughters of glorious nations, coupled with Egypt, are undoubtedly those afterwards mentioned by name ; not the tributaries of Egypt, but those who, like her, had risen to eminence in the world, and grasped at dominion. Their destiny was bound up with hers. And the prophet is commanded to bring them down ; because his word was the expression of God's will, and carried with it the execution of his pleasure. 3 Egypt was uncircumcised, that is, polluted and corrupt ; hence it must share the fate of all such ; they are all doomed to perdition, and Egypt can have no exemption from the common lot : she has no ground of endearment above the rest. 4 This 20th verse describes the common lot of Egypt, and the other nations similarly circumstanced. They are alike destined to fall by the sword ; but she, as the more immediate object of the Divine word, has a place of pre-eminence assigned her ; she is given up to the sword ; and as such, the command is issued to draw her forth as peculiarly devoted to destruction. ** In these two verses, 22 and 23, which relate to Assyria (and the same is partly found in some of the other cases), there is a singular rapidity of alter- nations in the gender of the pronouns : her company, his graves, then again her graves and her company. It can only be explained by the circumstance of the party named, being in the prophet's eye, partly as a kingdom, partly as a monarch with his people ; so that sometimes the one,, sometimes the LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHARAOH. 351 round about her grave, all pierced-through, fallen by the sword, who are gone down uneircumcised into the nether world, who did spread their terror in the land of the living : and they bear their shame with such as go down to the pit. 1 25. They have set a "couch for her in the midst of the pierced-through with all her multitude ; her graves are round about him ; all uneircumcised, pierced-through with the sword ; for they did spread their terror in the land of the living ; ^ and they bear their shame with such as go down to the pit ; in the midst of the pierced-through he is set. 26. There is Mesech, Tubal, and all her multitude ; her graves are round about him ; all of them uneir- cumcised, pierced-through with the sword, for they did spread their terror in the land of the living. ^ 27- And shall they not lie with the fallen heroes of the uneircumcised, who went down to Sheol with their weapons of war ; and have their swords laid under their heads, and their iniquities are upon their bones ; for they were the terror of heroes in the land of the living ?* 28. And other, seemed fittest to be specially thought of. The general character of the representation is clear : Assyria and her people, not only have gone down to the pit, but as deepest in guilt, they have their graves appointed in its farthest extremities ; they occupy its lowest depths ; and their graves stand open around them ; like profane wretches, they have been denied the rites of burial ; the horror they had inspired in others now rests on themselves. 1 Elam is joined immediately with Assyria, probably as having been con- nected with it in the way of conquest. The territory of Elam lay in Persia, though the boundaries of it are not distinctly known. Originally it was an independent kingdom, and existed as early as the time of Abraham (Gen. xiv.) Its people were much addicted to war, and were famous for the use of the bow. At the time of Ezekiel, they had become amalgamated with the Chal- dean empire, as they afterwards were with the Median. The shame they were to bear with others among the dead, is the punishment of their pride and lawless doings among men. 2 The 13 here, and in the other passages that follow, is to be taken in the usual meaning of /or, and not though^ as in our version. It assigns the rea- son of the doom to the pit : the power given by God for good had been abused to spread terror through its violent proceedings in the world. ^ The Mesech and Tubal here mentioned as one people were also named together in chap, xxvii. 13. Some, and among these Ewald, have been dis- posed to identify them with the Scythians. They were certainly very closely connected with the Scythian tribes, but were themselves properly the Moschi and Tibareni, whose territory lay between the Black and Caspian Seas, and among the Caucasian mountains. They appear here as a subdued people, and they are known to have paid tribute to Darius Hyst. (Herod, iii. 94.) * I read this verse with Hav. as an interrogative. I see no other way of understanding the existing text, so as to make sense. It is expressly said of the people in question, that they were to dwell with the uneircumcised and slain, and the negative, therefore, at the beginning, must be understood in- terrogatively. Shalt thou not do so ? thou who hast been among the most violent — a terror even to heroes, thou must dwell in the midst of them. The going down with weapons of war, refers to the ancient practice of burning, or 352 EZEKIEL XXXI r. thou shalt be broken in the midst of the uncircumcised, and shalt dwell with the pierced-through by the sword. 29. There is Edom, her kings and all her princes, who, in their might, are put with them that are pierced-through by the sword ; they shall lie with the uncircumcised, and with such as go down to the pit. 30. There are the princes of the north, all of them, and all the Zidonians, who are gone down with the pierced-through ; because of their terror from their might they are ashamed ; and they lie uncircumcised with the pierced-through by the sword ; and they bear their shame with such as go down to the pit. 31. Pharaoh shall see them, and be comforted upon all her multitude of the pierced-through with the sword — Pharaoh and all his force, saith the Lord Jehovah. 32, For I have put his terror in the land of the living ; and he shall be laid with the uncircumcised, with the pierced- through by the sword — Pharaoh and all her multitude, saith the Lord Je- hovah. ^ Thus closes the Divine word against Pharaoh and his king- dom ; they go down to the land of forgetfulness, in common with all the surrounding heathen who stood in a position of rivalry or antagonism to Israel. Throughout the whole series of the pre- dictions, we find the one grand point of difference between the two parties kept steadily in view ; the judgment that lights on Israel is only partial and temporary, the power and dominion again return to him, and settle in everlasting possession ; while the neighbouring kingdoms, that in turn aspired to the supre- macy, fall, to rise no more. Viewed in respect to its substance, the series is merely an expansion, with a fuller application to particular cases, of what was uttered at the commencement of the national history of Israel by Balaam : " I see him, but not now ; I behold him, but not nigh ; there comes forth a star out of Jacob, and a sceptre rises out of Israel, and shatters the tem- burying the bodies of warriors with their armour. It seems also to be these, the instruments of their iniquitous courses — which are meant by their " ini- quity on their bones ; " the instrument of iniquity being put by metonymy, for the iniquity itself. It is certainly, however, a peculiar expression ; and one cannot speak with confidence of its meaning. ^ In these two last verses, Pharaoh's case again comes up as the conclusion . of the whole matter — the beginning and the ending of the lamentation. The his and her here also exchange with each other, in what appears to us ex- traordinary confusion and disorder. Some of the MSS., to avoid this, retain only the masculine suffix, his. But there can be no doubt, that the more difficult text is the correct one, and that the variation was made in order to remove the apparent anomaly. I have rendered it as it stands, believing, that the alternations arise from the double reference to Egypt as a kingly power, and as a kingdom. The comfort to be got by Pharaoh is spoken ironically ; as much as to say, This is the only comfort he is to have, that he is not without companions in his ruin. LAMENTATION OVER THE FALL OF PHARAOH. 353 tory of Moab, and destroys all the children of tumult. And Edora is possessed, and Seir, his enemy, is possessed, and Israel gains strength. And out of Jacob comes the ruler, and he de- stroys what is left from the city" (Numb. xxiv. 17-19). Thus early was the issue of the contest indicated ; it was announced that the supremacy must belong to Israel, because with him was the covenant of blessing, and out of him was to be the one in whom, as the messenger and head of the covenant, all power, bless- ing, and glory were to reside. The question virtually discussed in all such predictions is this : Who shall give law to the world ? Israel, or the rival nations of heathendom ? And the answer re- turned, though with manifold variety of form, is perpetually the same : all other dominions are destined to pass away, that alone of Israel becomes permanent and universal. We see both sides of the representation attaining to a certain measure of realisation, even before the old relations altogether ceased to exist. The antipathies of the surrounding nations failed to extirpate Israel ; and their struggles for dominion in ever}^ case issued in natural decay or ruin. Not one of them succeeded in making good its ambitious designs, or could even preserve its own natural independence and authority ; and before Israel was finally dispersed among the nations, all liis ancient rivals had fallen from their former greatness, and lost their national per- sonality ; Israel stood his ground much better than any of them. But that relative prosperity was rather the earnest of the great distinction pointed to in the prophecies, than its ultimate and proper development. This is to be sought only in Christ, in whom all that peculiarly belonged to Israel concentrates itself, and rises to its proper perfection. In him, therefore, it is that the pre-eminence destined for Israel has its accomplishment, and all the external victories gained over the surrounding heathen, or the advantages granted to Israel in preference to them, were but the sign and prelude of that glorious ascendancy over the whole earth, w^hich in right is already Christ's, and in due time shall also be his in actual possession. Such is the unrivalled honour of Israel among the nations ; hers alone is the glory that abides ; and from her must spring all that the world is to have, that is permanently great and good ! It is she, who in Christ has become the new life of humanity ; she also who has acquired the right to reign over all the tribes of men, and all the regions z 354 EZEKIEL XXXIII. of the earth ; and however long may be the struggle, however severe the conflict, the result is certain, that the kingdoms of this world must one and all become the kingdoms of our Lord and his Christ. CHAPTER XXXIII. RENEWAL OF EZEKTEL's COMMISSION — HIS OFFICE AS WATCHMAN. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me saying : 2. Son of man, Speak to the cliildren of thy people, and say to them, When I bring upon a land the sword, and the people of the land take a man from their borders, and set him for their watchman : 3. And he sees the sword coming upon the land, and blows the trumpet, and warns the people : 4. Then whosoever hears the sound of the trumpet, and does not take warning, and the sword comes and takes him away, his blood shall be upon his own head. 5. He heard the sound of the trumpet, and did not take warning ; his blood shall be upon him ; but he that takes warning shall deliver his soul. 6. And when the watchman sees the sword coming, and does not blow the trumpet, and the people are not warned, and the sword does come, and takes a person from among them, that person is taken away in his iniquity, and his blood will I require at the watchman's hand. 7. And thou. Son of man, I have set thee a watchman to the house of Israel, and thou shalt hear the word from my mouth, and shalt give them warning from me. 8. When I say to the wicked, wicked man, thou shalt surely die, and thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way, that wicked man shall die in his iniquity, and his blood 1 will require at thy hand. 9. And when thou dost warn the wicked from his way, that he should turn from it, and he does not turn from his way, he shall die in his iniquity, and thou hast delivered thy soul. 10. And thou, Son of man, say to the house of Israel, Thus ye speak, saying : " For our transgressions and our sins are upon us, and we pine away in them ; how, then, should we live ?" 11. Say to them, As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live : turn ye, turn ye, from your evil ways ; and why will ye die, O house of Israel? 12. And thou. Son of man, say to the children of thy people. The righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression, nor by the wickedness of the wicked shall he fall in the day that he turns from his wickedness ; and the righteous shall not be able to live by it (viz. his righteousness) in the day of his transgression. 13. When I say to the righteous, lie shall surely live ; and he trusts in his righteousness, and commits iniquity, none of his righteousness shall be re- membered, and in his iniquity that he has committed, in that shall he die. 14. And when I say to the wicked. Thou shalt surely die, and he turns from his iniquity, and does judgment and righteousness : 15. The wicked restores the pledge, compensates for his robbery, walks in the statutes of life without committing iniquity — he shall surely live, he shall not die. 16. None of RENEWAL OF THE PKOPHEX's COMMISSION. 355 his sins that he has committed shall be remembered against him ; he does what is just and right — he shall sm-ely hve. 17. Yet the children of thy people say, The way of the Lord is not equal ; but for them, their way is not equal. 18. When the righteous turns from his righteousness, and commits iniquity, then he dies in them (viz. his iniquities). 19. And when the wicked turns from his wickedness, and does what is just and right, on account of these he shall live. 20. Yet ye say, The way of the Lord is not equal ; every man according to his way will 1 judge you, O house of Israel. 21. And it came to pass, in the twelfth year of our captivity, in the fifth of the tenth month, the escaped from Jerusalem came to me, saying, The city is taken. 22. And the hand of Jehovah was upon me in the evening before that the escaped came ; and had opened my mouth until he (the escaped) came in the morning ; and my mouth was opened, and I was no more dumb. 23. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying : 24. Son of man, the inhabitants of those wastes upon the territory of Israel speak, saying, " Abraham was but one, and he inherited the land ; while we are many, to us is the land given for an inheritance." 25. Therefore say to them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Ye eat with the blood,^ and lift up your eyes to your idols, and shed blood — and shall ye inherit the land? 26. Ye stand upon your swords (i. e., look to these as the ground of your security and strength), ye work abomination, and defile every one his neighbour's wife — and shall ye inherit the land ? 27. Thus shalt thou say to them. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, As I live, surely they that are in the wastes shall fall by the sword, and he who is in the open field, I give him to the wild beast for food ; and such as are in the forts and caves shall die of the pestilence. 28. And I give the land to be waste and desolate ; and ceased is the pomp of its strength, and the mountains of Israel are desolate, so that there is none passing through. 29. And they shall know that I am Jehovah, in that 1 make the land waste and desolate, because of all their abominations which they have committed. 30. And thou, Son of man, the children of the people, ^ Spencer (De Leg. Heb. ii. 11) has laboured to prove that the expression here ^"■jssn aTf-;-7y, literally, upon, or over the blood ye eat, differs materially from that which merely prohibits the eating of blood : Ye shall not eat the blood. He understands the reference here to be to Lev. xix. 26, where the same form of expression is used ; and that in both passages what is forbidden is the practice of eating over or near the blood of animals sacrificed in the celebration of magical rites, particularly the rites of evocation. And Horsley speaks of Spencer's exposition being clearly and incontrovertibly proved. To me it seems to fail in the very point to be proved, viz., that the connection between the eating near tlie blood of slain victims and practising the rites of magic, was of so close and peculiar a kind, that the one might be sufficient to indicate the other. It was palpably the reverse : there was no sacrifice at all when the witch of Endor evoked Samuel, and while, with Balaam's en- chantments, there were sacrifices employed, yet, these being holocausts, there was no eating connected with them. Besides, in 1 Sara. xiv. 32-34, where the army of Saul are spoken of as eating with the blood, and where there was no room for enchantments or magical rites of any sort, it is precisely the ex- pression before us that is used. Hence, all recent commentators justly regard the sin here charged upon the people, as simply a disregard of the Divine prohibition against eating the blood with the flesh. 356 EZEKIEL XXXIII. who speak against thee beside the walls, and at the doors of their houses, and talk one to another, each man to his neighbour, saying, " Come, now, and let us hear what the word is that proceedeth from the Lord." 31. And they come to thee like a gathering of the people (literally, according to the com- ing of a people — like a streaming multitude, as in a solemn public meeting) ; and they sit before thee as my people, and they hear thy words, but they do them not ; for with their mouths they act the part of lovers (literally, they do or act lovers),^ after their gain their heart goes. 32. And lo! thou art to them like a lover's song, with a pleasant voice, and playing well on an instrument ; and they hear thy words, but they do them not. 33. And when it comes — behold, it is come — and they know that a prophet is among them. An entirely new department of Ezekiel's labours begins here. After a period of suspended animation, the prophetic Spirit again returns to breathe in his soul, and prompts him to a new discharge of his prophetical function. Hitherto it has been chiefly the com minatory part that he has fulfilled, now it is to be the consolatory. He has laboured in vain to avert the stroke of Jerusalem's overthrow, and the utter prostration of the taber- nacle of David. The calamity, so often foretold and warned against, has come ; and he must now address himself to the more agreeable task of reviving the hopes of the fallen, by disclosing to them the prospect of a glorious future. For judgment cannot rest for ever on the house of God. The night of sorrow must give way to the morning of joy ; and when the period of lowest depression has been reached, the moment has assuredly come for the commencement of a new and better position. It was not till the evil had got to its worst stage of judicial destruction, that the prophet was permitted to enter on this more cheering strain of announcements. At the close of chap. ^ The word n-^pss as a noun, only occurs in Jer. iv. 30, besides the double use of it in the present passage, and there it is plainly used in the sense of lovers. But in another passage (chap, xxiii. 5), the verb is used by Ezekiel in much the same sense, " She doted upon her lovers," or went after them with fond affection. So that simply lovers, or admirers, not much love, as our version, nor jokes, as Ewald, nor lovely, as Hitzig, must be taken as the proper meaning of the word here. Havernick says, it is always used by Ezekiel in the sense of impure love, gallantry (buhleri), and that he is par- ticularly fond of it. But this fondness shows itself altogether but three times, and then only as indicative of a strong, but not necessarily, at least, a wrong affection. Plis common word for lovers in a bad sense, is not this, but O'^arrs':, as it is also of the other prophets. If any subordinate meaning, therefore, were to be added to the meaning lovers, it should simply be that of fond, or doting affection. RENEWAL OF THE PROPHET's COMMISSION. 357 xxiv., he was instructed to remain silent till the catastrophe had occurred ; for till then, neither should God be disposed to give, nor the people be prepared to receive, the word of comfort, and encouragement. He was not to open his mouth to Israel again, till the escaped from Jerusalem's desolations came to him, as a witness that the work of judgment was completed, that the false foundations were thoroughly swept away (chap. xxiv. 26, 27). And in ver. 21 and 22 of this chapter, he states the fact of such having actually come, with the additional intelligence, that already on the evening previous, the hand of God had begun to operate on his soul, and had re-opened his closed lips. It was in the eleventh year of Zedekiah's reign, or Ezekiel's captivity, the fourth month, that Jerusalem was taken by the Chaldeans, and on the following month was reduced to ashes. It would seem, therefore, that a whole year and five months had elapsed before this appearance of the escaped before Ezekiel, — too long, Hitzig thinks, for the communication of so important a piece of intelligence to the captivity at Chebar, and therefore he would substitute the eleventh for the twelfth year ; as Ewald also does, though without assigning any reason. Not too long, however, Havernick judges, considering the turmoil and confu- sion which must necessarily have ensued on the destruction of Jerusalem, and the existing state of things in Judea. If it were simply, indeed, the communication of the tidings of what had taken place that was meant, seventeen months would certainly be a very long period for the conveyance of such intelligence over a distance so comparatively short. But there is no need for supposing that. The expression, " he that has escaped," or " the escaped," is very often used in a collective sense, to denote generally the remnant that survived any great catastrophe.^ And it is the more probable that such should be the meaning of the term here, as the re-opening of the prophet's mouth, and that for the special purpose of speaking the word of consolation and hope, would most naturally be deferred till the last deporta- tion had taken place, and the number of the captives was complete. ^ See for example, Isa, xv. 9, " the escaped of Moab ;" also Isa. xxxvii. 31, 32 ; Jer. xlviii. 19, "he that is escaped ;" Amos ix. 1, " he that escapeth of them ;" 1 Kings xix. 17 ; in all which passages the singular is used col- lectively for the whole company . 358 EZEKTEL XXXIII. But in that case we can easily suppose the period of seventeen months to have elapsed, as all the arrangements connected with the settlement of affairs in Judea, and the transportation of a considerable band of captives to Chebar, must necessarily have occupied much time. Such, then, being the case — the time having arrived when, by the appearance of an escaped remnant from Jerusalem, the pro- phet was again to open his mouth in new and more encouraging strains to his countrymen, the prophetic spirit began to prepare him for the work by descending on him the night before — thus graciously anticipating the circumstances, and giving practical proof of his readiness to meet them by suitable communications from above. What the Spirit actually communicated to the pro- phet on that preceding night — with what tidings his mind was filled, or what words his mouth was opened to speak, we are not expressly told. But the natural supposition is, that the message contained in the earlier part of the chapter (ver. 1-20) forms the substance of his first communication, while that contained in the latter part (ver. 23-33), which is very much like a resumption and practical application of the former, constitutes what the pro- phet delivered after the escaped had actually come. We thus most naturally account for the first part standing without any intimation of the time or occasion prefixed — this was more fitly reserved for the arrival of the escaped on the following day. And it also affords an easy explanation of the close connection as to substance between the two divisions of the chapter, the one being indeed properly the continuation of the other, with a more spe- cial reference to the existing circumstances of the people. 1. In regard to the first part of the communication — that which we suppose to have been made to the prophet on the preceding night — there is no need to dwell at any length, as it consists of representations which have already in substance passed under our notice. The first nine verses exhibit anew the prophet's calling and office, under the same character in which it was pre- sented at the outset, in chap. iii. 16-21, as that of a spiritual watchman. Only here the description commences with a de- tailed account of the responsibilities and duties of such an office, when it has respect merely to common evils, and when the per- son exercising it is the delegate only of his fellow-men. This distinct reference to human affairs, and minute delineation of a RENEWAL OF THE PUOPHET's COMMISSION. 359 watchman's calling, is doubtless introduced for the purpose of impressing upon those, with whom Ezekiel had to do, the para- mount importance of faithfulness in the discharge of his minis- terial function. For who does not know that faithfulness is the one grand prerequisite in him who is chosen to do the part of a watchman in times of peril or alarm ? He must have his eye intent simply on the realities of things — whether these may be agreeable or not to men's feelings ; nay, all the more intent on these, the more they are fraught with danger and distress ; that those for whom he watches may learn from him the true position of affairs, and know how to provide against the coming evil. For such a one to slumber at his post, or to conceal the danger he descries, is to incur the highest guilt ; as, on the other hand, for them to neglect and slight the faithful warning, is to exhibit the most reckless folly. Now, the people had only to transfer such reflections from the earthly to the spiritual region, in order to acquit Ezekiel in the judgment of their own minds, and con- demn themselves. He had received, not from man, but from God, the charge to do the part of a watchman to his country- men; so that faithfulness was pre-eminently required of him. Nor had it been wanting. He had most zealously and devotedly done his part. He had sounded the trumpet of alarm over ex^ry cause of disquietude, and at every appearance of danger, but it was only to deaf ears and incredulous hearts. The dreaded cala- mities had come, sending multitudes to destruction, and involv- ing all in the deep waters of affliction and sorrow. The blood of souls to a fearful extent has been incurred — but not on the part of the prophet ; his hands are clean ; it rests upon the head of the people themselves. But now that the worst has come, is there nothing more to be done ? Has the office of Heaven's watchman ceased, when the cloud of Heaven's vengeance has burst on the guilty? Has he no commission to speak to those who are sinking under the stroke of judgment — the miserable remnant that have escaped absolute destruction, but are still shivering on the brink of ruin ? Yes ; and it is here that a new sphere of labour presents itself to the prophet, and that a new call comes to him to enter on it. " Therefore, O thou son of man," or rather, as it literally is, " And thou son of man" — since by thy past watchings and warn- ings, thou hast but delivered thy own soul, and the children of 360 EZEKIEL XXXIII, thy people are involved in the just desert of their sins — '^ say to the house of Israel, Thus ye speak, saying, ' For our transgres- sions and our sins are upon us, and we pine away in them, and how should we live 1 ' Say to them, As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live. Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways ; and why will ye die, O house of Israel !" (ver. 10, 11). A yearning tenderness here manifests itself, still seeking, not- withstanding all that has taken place, the return of those, who survived, to the way of peace. But with that tenderness, what a stern and unflinching holiness ! There can be no relaxation or abatement mentioned, in respect to this, not even amid the moan- ings of pain and cries of distress which arose from the people ; no return to life possible, but through a return to righteousness. God is anxious, as a kind and affectionate parent, to see them restored to a happy and prosperous condition ; he would not have them ignorant of that. But they must also know, that in Good's sight, there was a higher thing still, which he could on no account sacrifice for the sake of the other ; he must maintain in his deal- ings with them the honour of his authority and the rectitude of his government ; and only if they turn from their wicked ways, can he turn from his fierce displeasure. Here, therefore, stands the one door-way of escape ; and the prophet, in entering upon this second department of his ministerial calling, must begin by reiterating the message with which he entered on the first (chap, iii. 18-21), and which he had also subsequently repeated and en- larged upon (chap, xviii.) — the message, namely, that each should be dealt with according to his ways. The righteousness of the righteous should not deliver him if he turned aside to transgres- sion ; but neither would the wickedness of the wicked prove his destruction, if he sincerely repented of his sins, and laid hold of the covenant of God. These are God's terms now, as they have been all along ; the Lord's servant has no other to offer ; and if they are not concurred in, recovery is impossible. There was something, too, especially since matters had come to the worst, in the individual and personal character of God's communication to the prophet. It not only disclosed the right- eous nature in general of the Divine administration, but the close adaptation of its righteousness to each particular case ; the right- RENEWAL OF THE PROPHET's COMMISSION. 361 eons, the wicked, — the righteous lapsed into a transgressor, the wicked reclaimed from the paths of transgression — each according to their state and conduct were to receive at the hands of God. The people, therefore, must be done with the imagination, that outward political changes were to avail them much, that their fortunes were to be determined, as it were, in the lump, and that it should matter little, what they might be in their single and separate conditions. But, on the other hand, every encourage- ment was held out to the penitent and believing, as it w^as God's settled purpose to distinguish in his dealings between the right- eous and the wicked ; and so to do it, that such as were inclined to submit to the righteousness of God might be sure it w^ould go well w ith them, w^hether in Chaldea or in Canaan ; they, at least, should be made to experience the loving-kindness of God. 2. So much, then, for the first communication, received imme- diately before the arrival of the escaped from Jerusalem. And that which came immediately afterwards, and fills up the con- cluding part of the chapter, is so far an application of the former, as it shows, in the case of two distinct portions of the people, how opposed they still generally were to the righteousness of God, and, consequently, how far from salvation. The first portion are those who remained in Judea, the miser- able fraction who dwelt among its desolations, and. who notwith- standing all they had seen and suffered of the righteous judgments of God, were still wedded to their sinful ways, and cherishing the most groundless hopes. They are represented as continuing much in the same condition, and practising the same enormities, as those which had brought down the judgments of God upon the land. The particular sins specified — eating with blood, law- less murder, adultery, and continued adherence to the practices of idolatry — are evidently given as individualising examples of the corruption prevalent among the remnant in Judea : not only was sin unrepented of, but sins of the worst kind, crying enormities, were still openly practised. And that this was but too faithful a description of the state of matters in desolate Judea, is abundantly confirmed by the historical notices in Jeremiah (chap, xl.-xliii.), which exhibit a degree of spiritual blindness, resolute opposition to the will of God, reckless disregard of consequences, and inve- terate attachment to the soul- destroying errors of idolatry, which, considering the circumstances, have few parallels in the records 362 EZEKIEL xxxiir. of human guilt. Yet, with such apparent contempt for every- thing sacred, the people still seemed anxious to keep up a hypo- critical show of piety. They sought advice of Jeremiah, though, when obtained, they refused to follow it in anything that crossed their own inclinations ; and here they are represented as appeal- ing in the most confident manner to their connection with Abra- ham, and on that ground assuring themselves of their right to possess the land of Canaan. He, though but one, got the land for an inheritance, and we, his descendants, who, how- ever reduced in numbers, are still a greatly larger company than he could boast of, may not we justly expect to be kept in possession of it ? Strange infatuation ! That when the signs of God's displeasure had been so strikingly displayed against them for their sins, scattering all their vain confidences to the wind, they should still, without abandoning those sins, hope for the peculiar tokens of the Divine favour ! Yet in a more subtle and refined form we find the same flagrant in- consistence practised by the Jews of our Lord's time, who, in like manner, reckoned with confidence on their being children of Abraham, as if that alone were enough to secure them in all co- venant-blessings, while he charged them with being in spirit children of the devil, and consequently entitled only to look for the portion of the lost (John viii. 33-44). Indeed, the folly, in one form or another, is common to all ages — though the carnal Jews were more peculiarly in danger of falling into it, as their external connection with Abraham formed a strong temptation in that particular direction. In their case the title to blessing was held by a double tie, a natural and a spiritual one — the spiritual, however, being of necessity the one of chiefest and most essential moment in the estimation and reckoning of God — that without which the other was in a manner nothing. Oneness with Abra- ham in faith and obedience could alone in his account carry any title to Abraham's heritage of blessing. But, on the other hand, with the carnal portion of his posterity, the tendency always was, in proportion as they receded from the right spiritual position, to cling to the mere outward tie of a corporeal descent, and to rest their views and prospects on simply natural considerations. And it is not a disadvantage, as compared with them, but a great and important boon, a freedom from one of the most insidious and powerful temptations to which human nature can be exposed, that RENEWAL OF THE PROPHET'S COMMISSION. 363 the believei-'s title to blessing under the gospel rests so exclusively on spiritual grounds, and that no assurance of the Divine favour can be f )und apart from continuance in faith and holiness before God. Could men know, as they would often fain do, their election of God in an absolute manner ; were it to be held by them as a simple piece of information, derived from supernatural insight into the purposes of Deity ; it would be their misfortune, rather than a privilege ; for it would immensely increase the danger of their falling into spiritual inactivity or presumption. That assurance only can be safe which is the fruit of a living faith and a righteous behaviour. The small remnant in Judea being so far from righteousness, the prophet could only speak to them as a minister of condemna- tion ; they had not turned from their evil ways, and they could not live. What they had to expect was only judgment, still more severe aiid exterminating than what yet had been appointed. For them the desolations of the land must become still more deso- late, and new horrors be inflicted by the sword, the pestilence, and the wild beast. All must be reduced to the condition of a howling wilderness — as it really was — that the new hope for Israel miglit spring from another and better root, and that the people might know how impossible it was to attain to blessing from God, with- out first separating from sin. But unfortunately these were not the only persons who still stood in irreconcileable opposition to the righteousness of God ; there were others, close beside the prophet — apparently, indeed, the great mass of the exiles on the banks of the Chebar — who, though less flagrantly at variance with the mind of God in out- ward conduct, were actuated at heart by the same wayward and refractory spirit. Referring now to this class, the word of the Lord says to the prophet, " And thou, son of man, the children of thy people, who speak against thee beside the walls and at the doors of their houses, and talk one to another, each man to his neighbour, saying, * Come now, and let us hear what the word is that proceedeth from the Lord.' And they come to thee like a gathering of the people, and they sit before thee as my people, and they hear thy words, but they do them not ; for with their mouths they act the part of lovers, after their gain their heart goes : And lo ! thou art to them like a lover's song, w^ith a pleasant voice, and playing well on an instrument ; and they hear thy 364 EZEKIEL XXXIII. words, and do them not: And when it comes— lo! it is come; and they know that a prophet is among them" (ver. 30-33). The description forms a continuous and incomplete sentence. Tlie Lord does not say what the prophet was to do, though he begins with the address to him, "And thou, son of man." But there can be no doubt as to what is meant. He is furnished with a delineation of the people, as to their real state and con- duct, and especially of the false and hypocritical manner in which they had acted toward him as the Lord's messenger ; ending with the conclusion, that now, at least, — now that the great catastrophe had come, and that they had living evidence before them of the fact in the presence of the escaped from Jerusalem, — they could no longer treat his communications with the dis- belief, nor speak of himself with the disrespect they had done. They must at length be convinced in their minds, that a true prophet is among them. And this conviction, of course, would be for him like a higher vantage-ground, from which to address them in his future ministrations. It will be understood that the description here given of the people properly applies to the past. During the period of the prophet's former ministrations, their bearing had been that of those who, with a certain degree of deference to the prophet's character, continued to retain and manifest the most settled an- tipathy to the spiritual object he had in view. His high vocation as an ambassador of heaven they durst not altogether disavow ; the manner in which he fulfilled it bore on it too distinctly the impress of Heaven's majesty and earnestness ; and they even professed to seek with desire after the communications he had been receiving from above. In respect to these, they had done, as it were, a lover's part with their mouths, exciting one another to go and learn what might be the mind of the Lord. Various occasions of this kind are recorded in the earlier part of the Book, on which they appeared before the prophet as avowed inquirers respecting the will or purposes of Heaven. Not only so, but even while receiving the prophet's message, there was nothing irreverent or unbecoming in their manner ; they listened to his communications, as if they felt really interested in the matter ; hearing it with lovers' ears, as with lovers' lips they -had prompted one another to go where it might be heard. But still it was only as persons floating on the surface of things — dealing as with a RENEWAL OF THE PROPHET'S COMMISSION. 365 lover's song pleasantly chanted, and set off with fit accompani- ments of music. Their hearts remained impenetrably shut against the substance of the tidings brought to them, because inveterately attached to their own fond imaginations and fooHsh conceits. And, as a natural consequence, they talked among themselves against the prophet — both more privately at the doors of their houses, and also in their more pubhc haunts around the walls of the city. They noticed in a hostile spirit everything that was peculiar in his manner, or enigmatical in the style of his communications, with the view of excusing themselves from giv- ing an implicit reception to his testimony, or yielding a hearty obedience to his commands. Precisely as in another age their descendants took refuge in the distinctive characteristics of our Lord and his forerunner ; alleging, in excuse of their impeni- tence, that the one was a wine-bibber, and that the other had a devil. In all such cases, which are unfortunately confined to no age or country, the make-shift can only last for a time ; sooner or later the spell of delusion must be broken — God's word proves to be true, and every man that sets at nought its counsel, a liar. So now it fared with those exiles on the Chebar : the gain they were each looking for, by a speedy return to Judea, perished ; the often reiterated, but as often discredited announcement of Jerusalem's fall and desolation, took effect. With all the pro- phet's peculiarities, and notwithstanding everything they could say against him, the seal of Heaven is at length given to his tes- timony, in such a manner as to put all doubt and disbelief to silence : wisdom is justified in him as one of her true witnesses and most faithful children. So that here again the lesson comes forth with loud and impressive warnings for all times, that " the word of the Lord is pure, like silver purified seven times." Whatever exceptions men may be able to take against the casket in which it is presented, or the characteristic properties of the instrument that wields it, the truth it contains is great, and must prevail : " The counsel of the Lord standeth for ever, the thoughts of his heart to all generations ;" while he brings the counsel of the heathen to nought, he makes the devices of the peo- ple of none effect." In making use of family agents to reveal his will to men, the Lord teaches us to expect no external perfection. There may be found all the diversities of manner, and nearly. 366 EZEKIEL XXXIV. too, all the imperfections which distinguish ordinary speakers among men, in his most special instruments of working ; for the Spirit, even in his highest operations, must still leave free play- to native peculiarities of thought and utterance. But in regard to its substance, God*s word is perfect, and stands nobly apart from all that is of man. Let it ever be ours, therefore, to hear it with reverence, and bow to its requirements with child-like submission. It is we who must come down to its terms, not it that must come down to ours. And whatever is opposed to it, either in the imaginations of the heart, or in the course of life outwardly pursued, must sooner or later be brought to nought. They only find the true wisdom, who have learned to prove what is the holy and acceptable will of God ; for theirs is the " way everlasting." CHAPTER XXXIV. THE PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD, AFTER THE FALSE SHEPHERDS HAVE BEEN PUNISHED AND REMOVED. In the preceding chapter the prophet has announced the first condition of an improved state of things, in reiterating the call to a hearty submission on the part of the people to the demands of God's righteousness. So long as this was postponed, nothing could be looked for of good. But that position being laid down as the first preliminary to a better future, the way now opened itself for the promise of another — the appointment of a good shepherd, one who should be emphatically the good shepherd, to rule over and feed them, in the room of the false ones, who had but sought their own interests, and oppressed and ruined the flock. The chapter falls naturally into two parts ; in the first of which the misrule of the false shepherds is described, with the fatal results to which it had led ; and in the second, the gracious interposition of God, to undo the evils that had arisen from the presidency under which the people had been placed, and set over them one whose benign and careful superintendence would en- sure the best and most lasting good. PR031ISE OF THE TllUE SHEPHERD. 367 Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel, prophesy and say to them, the shepherds, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Woe to the shepherds of Israel, who feed themselves ! Should not the shepherds feed the flocks ? 3. Ye eat the fat, and clothe yourselves with the wool ; that which is fed ye kill ; the flock ye do not feed. 4. The weak ye have not strengthened, and the sick ye have not healed,^ and that which is broken ye have not bound up, and the driven away ye have not brought back, and the lost ye have not sought ; but with force ye rule over them, and with cruelty.^ 5. And they are scattered from there being no shepherd (that is, none worth the name), and they are food to every beast of the field ; and they are scattered. 6. My flock wander upon all the mountains, and upon every hill, and upon the whole face of the earth my flock is scattered, and none inquires and makes search.^ 7. Therefore, ye shepherds, hear the word of Jehovah : 8. As I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, truly because my flock is become a prey, and my flock is for food to all the beasts of the field, on account of there being no shepherd, and the shepherds have not sought after my flock, and the shepherds feed thempelves, and the flock they do not feed ; 9. Therefore, ye shepherds, hear the word of Jehovah ; 10. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against the shepherds, and I require my flock at their hand, and I cause them to cease from feeding the flock ; and the shepherds do not any more feed themselves ; and I deliver my flock from their mouth, and they shall not be any more for food to them. This passage evidently points, both as to its subject, and the language it employs, to a quite similar and earlier prophecy of Jeremiah (chap, xxiii. 1-6), where, in like manner, the false shepherds are denounced and judged, that the way might be opened up for the appearance of the Lord's true Shepherd. In both prophecies alike, what is meant by the shepherds, is mani- festly, not priests or prophets, but kings and rulers — the supreme * The two epithets here ^'l?h5 and nVij can only have their distinctive im- port determined by the verbs respectively connected with them ; strengthen- ing being used with the first, the evil affection referred to must have been feebleness or impotence, the effect of sickness ; and healing being the other verb, sickness itself must have been the disorder there to be remedied. That ji'iVrr: should have been put in the plural, probably arose from a desire to prevent its being mistaken for rh^na, the inheritance. 2 In this charge of ruling with force and with cruelty -r'^sn, there is a refer- ence to Lev. xxv. 43, where this word is used in the instruction given to the judges, as to the way they were not to rule over the people. They had done the very thing which Moses in the law had charged them not to do. 3 Our translators have missed the precise import of the two verbs here, and indeed have rather transposed them : ta^^ signifying to be concerned about anything, and make inquiry after it in a general way ; somewhat like the Latin petere ; while '^pa means more definitely to make search for, nearly corresponding to quaerere. There was no inquisition and no search made for the lost portion of the flock. 368 EZEKIEL XXXIV. head of the commonwealth, in the first instance, though not without respect also to the subordinate rulers of the kingdom. This admits of no reasonable doubt, even from what is said of the false shepherds themselves — violent, selfish, and oppressive dealing toward the flock being the crimes charged against them. They were rulers who acted towards their subjects with senseless rigour and cruelty. And it is rendered perfectly certain by the promise in the second part of the prophecy, where the special counteractive to the past evil is declared to be the raising up of David, as the shepherd that was henceforth to feed them. Such also is the usual meaning of shepherd in the Old Testament Scripture. It has plainly this meaning in the 23d chapter of Jeremiah. And in an earlier chapter of that prophet, the shep- herds are distinguished alike from priests and prophets, leaving no other class of persons to be embraced in the designation but rulers : " The priests said not. Where is the Lord ? And they that handle the law knew me not; and the shepherds transgressed against me, and the prophets prophesied by Baal" (chap. ii. 8). This mode of representation originated in the case of David, and had respect partly to the natural employment from which he was taken, and partly also to the essentially pas- toral character, when rightly understood, of the higher employ- ment to which he was called. Thus, we find, the leaders of the people, who came to David at Hebron, to invite him to assume the undivided sovereignty of the kingdom, knew perfectly how to connect the lower with the higher in his history : " Also in time past, when Saul was king over us, thou wast he who led- dest out and broughtest in Israel : and the Lord said to thee, Thoa shalt feed my people Israel, and thou shalt be a captain over Israel" (2 Sam. v. 2). And still more expressly is the double reference brought into notice in Ps. Ixxxviii. 70, 71, " And he chose David his servant, and took him from the sheep- folds, from following the ewes great with young : he brought him to feed Jacob his people, and Israel his inheritance." The connection between the natural and the -spiritual here, was certainly not accidental — no more than in the case of our Lord's first disciples, who, from being fishers on the lake of Ga- lilee, were called to be fishers of men. It was intended to be to David himself, and afterwards to his successors in office, a per- petual monitor, reminding them of the kind, watchful, and PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. 369 paternal character of the administration which they were called to exercise in Israel. For the earthly kingdom set up there was not to be after the pattern of the kingdoms of this world, in which everything is too often managed for the gratification of a single man's ambition, and the purposes of his own selfish aggran- disement. Samuel had foretold it would in all probability grow into this, but, at the same time, protested against such an abuse, as an entire fnistration of the purposes for which the Lord allowed it to be established. The king in Israel was to be the deputy of Jehovah, " ruling in the fear of God," nay, occupying the throne " in the name of the Lord his God;" with the law of God before him as his only statute-book (Deut. xvii. 18, 19), and the promotion of a general conformity to its requirements among the people as the great object of his administration. The office of such a king must, therefore, have materially differed from that of the merely civil ruler of an earthly kingdom. He was the head of a theocracy, which, from its very nature, was throughout spiritual in its aim, and had pre-eminently to do with the moral and religious interests of the people. He was conse- quently bound to act in all things, not as the organ and repre- sentative of the popular will, but as peculiarly the servant of God — as the land over which he presided was the Lord's heri- tage, and the people he governed were the flock of the Lord's pasture. How much David understood this to be his high calling, is manifest, not only from his last words in Samuel (2 Sam. xxiii, 1-6), but also from the conflict he maintained through life with the sons of Belial, the efforts he made to revive the cause and regulate the worship of God, and the beautiful identification of himself, in all his sorrows and his joys, his struggles, and his prospects, with the truth and the church of God. In these respects he showed himself, above all others, to be the man after God's own heart — the man who made the cause of heaven so much his own, that he might be said to live and reign for it ; and who has left, in the recorded experience of his spiritual desires and earnest contendings for the truth, one of the richest legacies ever bequeathed to the household of faith. Some of his successors copied after his example, but none of them came near to him as the representative of God's heart and mind, in this intense zeal for the interests of righteous- ness, and supreme regard for the good of Zion. 2 A 370 EZEKIEL XXXIV. Bearing this in mind, as to the end for which the Lord ap- pointed an earthly head over Israel, we have a sufficient explana- tion of what seems at first sight a peculiarity in the passage before us — its charging upon the kings all the evils that had befallen the heritage of the Lord. It was they who, by their selfish, cruel, and unrighteous administration, had caused the people to become a prey to the ills of life, and to be scattered abroad as the refuse of the earth. We are not to understand from the representation, that the people themselves had done nothing to incur these calamities ; that had been to belie a large proportion of the earlier part of the Book, and even to contra- dict the leading purport of the message contained in the chapter immediately preceding. The people had been smitten with the rod of chastisement, because their continued guilt and impeni^ tence had provoked the Lord's anger against them. But the persons who should have set themselves against this wayward- ness of the people, who, by a vigilant oversight, and a faithful discipline, should have ever checked the evil, and laboured for the establishment of truth and righteousness ; those who should thus have done the part of real shepherds of the people, were the very persons who had been most influential in speeding forward the progress of iniquity. Instead of acting as the guardians and regenerators of society, they had, by their selfish indiffer- ence and shameful profligacy, fed and nourished its corruptions. So that, comparing what they should have done, as exemplified in the case of David, with what they had actually done, the prophet might justly lay at their door, in the first instance, the guilt of all the disorders and desolations that had taken place. If such rulers as David had always occupied the throne of justice, such calamities as they had now to bewail would never have happened. The judgment of such bad shepherds, therefore, must lie at the foundation of all reasonable expectation of a better future. And so, the prospect which God begins here to open up of such a future, starts with the punishment of the shepherds (ver. 7-10). Mercy to the flock imperatively required the execution of judgment upon those who had betrayed and injured them. And this being done, as it was in great part, at least, by the terrible things in righteousness, in which God had manifested himself toward them, the way was now prepared for the gracious PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. 371 interposition of God to restore and rectify all — which forms the second and main part of the prophecy. Ver. 11. For thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I come (I, the proprie- tor of the sheep, now appear on the field in their behalf), and seek after my flock, and search them out. 12. Like a shepherd's searching of his flock, in the day that he is in the midst of his flock, that has been scattered ; so will I search out my sheep, and deliver them from all the places, whither they have been scattered in the day of clouds and thick darkness. 13. And I lead them forth from the peoples, and gather them from the countries, and bring them to their own land, and feed them upon the mountains of Israel, beside the streams and all the habitable portions of the land. 14. With good pasture I will feed them, and upon the mountains of the height of Israel ^ shall their lair be ; there shall they lie down in a good lair, and in a fat pasture shall they feed upon the mountains of Israel. 15. I will feed my flock, and I will make them to lie down, saith the Lord Jehovah. 16. That which is lost, I will search out, and that which is driven away, I will bring back, and will bind up that which is broken, and will strengthen that which is weak ; but the fat and the strong I will de- stroy, I will tend them with judgment. 17. And for you, my flock, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I judge between sheep and sheep, rams and he-goats. ^ 18. Is it too little for you, that ye eat up the good * On two former occasions (chap. xvii. 23, xx. 40), the prophet had used the expression, " the mountain of the height of Israel,^' or its high mountain ; but here we have the plural, " the mountains of the height." The reason of the difierence is evident : there the prophet spoke of the centre of the king- dom, where the king was to have his seat, and the people were to meet for the worship of Jehovah, — mount Zion ; but here he speaks of the kingdom at large, — the entire region occupied by the flock. The mountains on which they roam are still, however, the mountains of the height of Israel, because everything in Israel has a moral elevation, — a height, not as perceived by the eye of flesh, but well-known and discerned by the eye of faith ; for to it the high places of the earth are always those where God's kingdom is. ^ The parties meant here by the rams and the he-goats, are evidently the same as in ver. 16, and are called "the fat and the strong," as contra-dis- tinguished from the lean, the weak, and the sick. The Lord would judge between sheep and sheep, — the rams and he-goats ; that is, between the sheep generally, and this particular class of them, the more robust and head- strong part ; for the rib? is in apposition with the two expressions that follow, — the rams and he-goats ; these form the evil-doers that are to be distinguished from the nb, the flock generally. Many have erred in supposing, that by this fat and robust class are represented the rulers of the people, identifying them with the shepherds in the earlier portion : against the connection, for these have already been judged and disposed of (ver. 10, 11), and also against the natural import of the figure, which treats here of one part of the flock as com- pared with another. The misconduct of the rulers had been imitated by the stronger and more ungodly portion of the people, who had dealt unkindly with their poorer brethren, and acted as if it would even be an enhancement 872 EZEKIEL XXXIV. pasture, but that ye tread down the residue of your pastures with your feet ? and that ye drink of the deeper waters (i. e., the clearer and cooler), but that ye trouble the residue of them with your feet? 19. And my flock! they feed on what has been trodden by your feet ; and drink of what has been troubled by your feet. 20. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah to you, Behold, I come and judge between the fat sheep and the lean sheep. 21. Because, with side and with shoulder ye have pushed, and with your horns have thrust at all the weak, till ye have scattered them abroad ; 22. And I deliver my flock, and they shall no more be for a prey, and I judge between sheep and sheep. 23. And 1 will raise up over them one shepherd,^ and he will feed them, my servant David, he will feed them, and he will be their shepherd. 24. And I, Jehovah, will be their God, and my servant David a prince among them ; I, Jehovah, have spoken. 25. And I establish for them a covenant of peace, and cause the evil beasts to cease out of the land, and they dwell in the wilderness securely, and sleep in the woods. 26. And I will make them and the environs of my hill a blessing ; and I will cause the rain to come down in its season ; there shall be showers of blessing.2 27. And the tree of their own comforts to oppress and trample on the rights of others. The description given is of a haughty, insolent, and selfish disposition, — the very reverse of that required in the kingdom of God ; and hence one that must be judged and punished by him. ^ The emphasis is here on the singleness of the shepherd, ni-;x rijS, a shep- herd, one : qualified to exercise an undivided superintendence over the cove- nant-people, as opposed to the old division, fraught with such unhappy re- sults, into the two kingdoms of Judah and Israel. It implies, of course, the possession of singidar qualities in the one who should be appointed to hold such a place ; he must be, in the fullest sense, a shepherd after God's own heart, capable of healing far worse divisions, and rectifying far worse dis- orders, than those which prevailed when David came to the throne. In this oneness, therefore, of the promised shepherd, an intimation of his pre-eminent excellence lies concealed ; as is also presently expressed, in his being called " my servant David," — my servant^ not pursuing a self-chosen and arbitrary course, as so many of the kings had done, but acting as the faithful adminis- trator of the will of God. In an immense number of passages, this appella- tion is given to David, to indicate his peculiar fitness for the ojffice of ruling in the name of God. 2 What is meant by my hill in the first clause of this verse, is undoubtedly Zion ; for this was God's hill by way of eminence. But the idea of Heng- stenberg, that this hill here designates Israel, as the people of God, and that the environs are the heathen, who join themselves to Israel, is quite unna- tural. The discourse here is simply of Israel, and of the blessings to be conferred on them. They are represented as dwellers on God's hill of Zion, where, as in the seat and centre of all good, they are richly blessed : — but not them alone, the blessing streams forth, and all the environs of the hill par- take in the beneficence of Heaven. All the suburbs, the pasture-grounds (for the allusion is plainly to that), are refreshed from the Lord's presence, as well as the people themselves. And so, the idea indicated is presently ex- pressed more fully by the promise of rain in plentiful abundance, to produce PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. * 373 of the field shall yield its fruit, and the land shall give forth its increase, and they shall be on their land in security, and they shall know that I am Jeho- vah, when I break their yoke, and deliver them from the hand of those who made slaves of them. 28. And they shall no more be for a prey to the hea- then, and the wild beasts of the earth shall not devour them, and they shall dwell securely, and there is nothing that shall make them afraid. 29. And I raise up to them a plantation for a name, and no more shall they be taken away by hunger in the land, and no more shall they bear the reproach of the heathen.^ 30. And they shall know that I, Jehovah, their God, am with them, and they are my people, the house of Israel, saith the Lord Jehovah. 31. And ye, my flock, my pasture-flock, men are ye, I am your God — saith the Lord Jehovah. ^ A succession of blessings is promised to the covenant-people in this glowing delineation. First, the evils were to be rectified, that had sprung from the former misrule and corruption — the scattered flock gathered again from its dispersions, and restored to the good pasturage of the mountains of Israel. Then, the internal disorders that had been allowed to exist and grow, like festering sores, among the flock themselves — the selfishness and fraud and violence which had so greatly marred the mutual flow and interchange of good, and aggravated every evil — these were now to be rooted out ; for the persons indulging in such unright- a rich pasturage. In this promise, as well as in the promise of peace and security, allusion is made to Lev. xxvi. 2-6, where these blessings are specially connected with the covenant of God. ^ By " the plantation for a name," or renown, that the Lord promises in the earlier part of this verse to raise up, is not to be understood Israel itself, but something for Israel's benefit, something that would give them a name of honour among the nations, and take away for ever the reproach of poverty and want. It simply means, that the Lord would secure for them a flourish- ing and prosperous condition, under the image of " a place well planted with fruitful trees, rising aloft and growing through the goodness of God, so that the Israelites should be replenished with the means of nourishment, and be no more impoverished with want." (Gussetius Lex. ) An allusion appears to be made, as Hengstenberg and Havernick suggest, to Gen. ii. 8-11, where the garden of Eden is described with its trees of all kinds good for food and pleasant to the sight : the land of Israel would become such a glorious plan- tation — a second Eden. 2 Dathe, Ewald, and others, would understand the declaration in this closing verse as a mere explanation of the parable — that the flock are the men of Israel, and the shepherd is God. But there is evidently an emphasis on the men : men are ye ; remember your place, you are but men ; but remem- ber, at the same time, that I am your God ; so that without me nothing, but with me all. Hitzig prefers the miserable tautology of the LXX. : ye are ray sheep and the sheep of my flock, and I am," etc., and calls it an excellent 374 ' EZEKIEL XXXIV. eous dispositions were to be judged by God, and henceforth denied a place in his kingdom. Then again, in lieu of the false shepherds, who had formerly wasted and devoured the flock, there was to be raised up one, the pre-eminently good shepherd, the Lord's servant David, who, by his wise and faithful adminis- tration, should prevent such disorders and misrule from again arising, and should establish throughout the whole land, even to its wildernesses and forests, perfect security and peace. Finally, in fit correspondence with this happy state of internal order and settled righteousness, all was to be smiling and prosperous out- wardly — refreshing showers of rain to fertilize the ground, fruitful fields, cultivated by a free and joyous people, crops everywhere yielding their produce, and trees their fruit in due season, — all exhibiting the delightful spectacle of a flock pastured by God himself, or a people enjoying the noble distinction of having him for their God, and sharing in the richest manifesta- tions of his goodness. In principle, it will be observed, this promise of future good is precisely similar to what has already so frequently appeared in the threatenings of judgment. It takes the form of a renewal of the old, with such modifications and changes, as might adapt it to the altered circumstances of the time to come. When judgment was the prophet's theme, the Spirit led him to predict the return of the years of former troubles and desolations — not only of the more general calamities often experienced, of famine and sword and pestilence, but even of the more peculiar afflic- tions of the Egypt-state of bondage and oppression, and the dreary sojourn in the w^ilderness. So germain to the prophet's cast of mind is this mode of representation, that even w^hen he passes out of the territory of Israel, and speaks of what was to befall the nations of the earth — there, too, when the delineation is of a lengthened and minute description (as in the cases of Tyre and Egypt), it is as a recurrence of the past, that he delights to present the evil to our view : the history of Tyre's head and representative is a kind of rehearsal of the best and the worst in the general history of man ; and Egypt is spoken of as passing through Israel's peculiar experiences of evil — her bondage, her dispersion, and even her forty years' sojourn in the wilderness. Not that in any of these cases of threatened judgment, there was to be the exact reproduction of the old ; but only a renewal PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. 375 of its general character and design — a repetition of it in its essential moral features. And in each case, peculiar traits, we found, were introduced into the delineation, as if on purpose to indicate, that not the literal recurrence of the past was intended, but only what chiefly characterized it as a dispensation of God. Now, the correspondence in form between those threatenings of evil and this promise of good, warrants us in applying to it the same principle of interpretation ; and, indeed, the earlier here^ as in all similar cases, must be taken as the key to the later. The uniformity that we expect to characterize the productions of the same hand, demand that it be so taken. Nor can we fail to perceive here also the introduction of such an ideal trait, as was sufficient to show that the past only in character, not in the precise forms and outward conditions of being, was to be ex- pected. For, while we are told of a recovered possession of the mountains of Israel, and a secure habitation there, as in the best periods of the past, and a fruitful inheritance, and a united people dwelling under the peculiar favour and blessing of Jehovah ; we are, at the same time, told of David being the shepherd, under whose invigorating influence and paternal oversight the Lord's flock were to rise to such a height of peace and prosperity. But David has long ago slept with his fathers, having " served his own generation according to the will of God ;" and not the literal David restored to life again, but a distinguished scion of David's house, as our prophet had himself already announced (chap. xvii. 22, xxi. 27), was to be the future head and leader of the Lord's people. Shall we, therefore, consider the name of the father here put for the name of the son ? — shall we merely sub- stitute the Messiah for David, and hold, that with this exception, the whole description must be understood according to the letter! This is what is commonly done, but it is manifestly quite arbi- trary ; and we can see no reason in the nature of things why the literal and the non-literal should be thus made to alternate and be confounded with each other. The proper view rather is, not that this individual trait merely, but that the description throughout is of an ideal kind ; the pro- phet fortells simply the nature of the coming future under the form of the old landmarks, and well-known relations. The best of the past shall revive again ; more than revive, it shall appear free from the defects that formerly intermingled with it, clothed 376 EZEKIEL XXXIV. with a perfection and a completeness hitherto unknown. But while the substance should thus coincide in the new and the old, it is not obscurely intimated, that the shell would materially differ ; for certainly the literal David should not be the prince in whom the promise was to stand, but one unspeakably greater than he. And if the other things in the description should re- ceive a corresponding elevation, ought it to have been a matter of surprise to any ? Would the terms of the prediction have been thereby contravened ? Would there not rather have been given to them a wider range of meaning and a nobler realisation? Unquestionably, up to the time that the new David came to ac- complish the predicted good, believers were bound to look for a fulfilment in the nearest possible accordance with the letter of the description. They would thus get the highest idea of the expected good they were then capable of entertaining. But when the personal manifestation of the promised shepherd gave a new turn and aspect to affairs, — when he proved to be as much superior to David, as the builder of the house is to the house it- self, — when he was found to be the glorious and mighty Lord, to whom, as David in the Spirit foresaw, the heritage, not of Canaan, but of all lands and all nations belonged, — when the flock of the Lord's pasture thus saw how sublime a turn was given to what may be called the key-note of the prediction, then it behoved them to conclude, that all the rest must receive a corresponding enlargement : the region, the people, the inheritance of blessing, must severally be what the old but represented and typified ; therefore, no longer confined to the ancient bounds and condi- tions, but found wherever Christ himself is, and reaching as far and as high as the blessings of his great redemption extend. And what Canaan would have been with its David restored again, and all its covenant-blessings enjoyed in richest profusion, such, in the new and higher sphere of the Messiah's kingdom, shall the whole domain be over which he is Lord, when this promise of good things to come attains to its full and final accomplishment. Nothing shall be left in it that can hurt or offend ; it shall be the inheritance of the saints in light. Such, we are persuaded, is the only consistent mode of hand- ling a prophecy like the one before us ; the only style of inter- pretation that brings it into harmonious agreement with other predictions that resemble it in form, and binds together its PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. 37T several parts by a common principle of union. But if still it should seem strange to any, that the Spirit of God should have led his servant to give forth a prediction of coming good, so deeply encased in the literalities of the old land and people of the covenant, wjiile not these precisely, but things far higher and greater were to constitute the proper fulfilment, let them seriously consider and resolve the question, whether it could have been otherwise ? It is easy for persons now — since the realities of the Messiah's dispensation have come — to say, that if these had been chiefly meant in the promise, they would have been more plainly described, — the promise would not have run so exclusively in the form of blessings announced to the land and people of Israel. But the question to be fairly met and deter- mined, is, — could the promise of the Messiah, and of the aflkirs connected with his work and kingdom, have been unfolded to the church beforehand, with any degree of detail, excepting under the form and shadow of Old Testament relations ? We unhesitatingly answer, no — not unless the Spirit of God had violently controlled the minds of the prophets, and superseded the free exercise of their faculties ; which, again, would have in- terfered with the essential principles of his working in inspiration, as well as in the commoner operations of grace. In conceiving of the higher, and anticipating the future things of God's kingdom, the mind must always serve itself of the ob- jects and relations of the present ; these are the ladders by which it must rise, the leading-strings by which it must feel its way to what is above and beyond. Man is the highest form of intelli- gent and animated being with which we are conversant on earth ; and it is solely by means of his powers and organs, — indefinitely expanded, indeed, in the idea, — but still by means of these as the forms and elements of thought, that we are enabled to think of the higher creatures of God's universe, and even of God him- self. We can ascribe no perfection to God, we cannot, even in imagination, conceive of any belonging to him, but what, in an infinitely smaller degree, we ourselves possess. And so also in regard to the concerns of God's kingdom, the future must always take shape in our minds from the present or the past, — the unknown from the known. We are scarcely sensible how much this is the case, so long as we confine ourselves to a few vague and general ideas ; but whenever we attempt to go into 378 EZEKIEL XXXIV. detail, our impotence presently betrays itself. Let the purest and loftiest mind under the present dispensation, begin to parti- cularise in its thoughts and words respecting the coming dispen- sation of glory, and what can it do but tell of the removal of existing evils, or the accumulation and enhancement of present blessings? It imagines to itself a state in which there are no longer to be found sin and corruption, sorrow and sighing, bodily diseases, mental infirmities, the numberless evils and disorders of life, or the wide-wasting desolation of death, now so universally experienced : but, instead of these, undecaying health and beauty, purity unalloyed, the splendours of an eternal day, rivers of pleasure, feasts of joy, pavements of gold, sceptres, crowns, thrones of glory ; — what can we say more ? And when we have said them, what are they but the best and greatest things that the world, as it now^ is, presents to our view ? And yet we know, that as flesh and blood cannot inherit that world of incorruption, so there shall be no place there for such carnal elements of grandeur and delight. But we have no other means to help out our apprehensions of what is to be hereafter, no other forms and conditions of being under which to shape and fashion our ideas respecting it ; and inspired teachers, as well as others, have no alternative but to resort to them. The things that cannot be exhibited thus, are things for the present unutterable (2 Cor. xii. 4). But the position which we now occupy in regard to the more glorious future, is precisely that which God's servants of old occupied in regard to our present. And nearly all the difficulty that is experienced, as also nearly all the misapprehensions that have arisen, in reading the descriptions they have penned of what was to take place in Messianic times, springs from the necessity of realising their exact position (which requires some effort of mind), and surveying the prospects they delineated from their, and not from our, point of observation. To get a correct understanding* of what they wrote, it must be borne in mind, that all was conceived and uttered by them under the bond of the old shadows and relations, the impress of whose imperfect image and superscription necessarily appears in what they wrote. It might, no doubt, have been possible for them, without any marked reference to these older forms of things, to have given forth a few vague and general statements respecting the future PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD. 379 dispensation of the Gospel — such as, that a great Saviour was to appear, or a glorious work was to be achieved for the good of the church, or a general difiusion was to take place of peace and blessing throughout the world. But such announcements could not of themselves have served the great ends of prophecy. They could not have met the emergencies that arose in the church's history, nor provided for a weak and dim-eyed faith what it required for support and nourishment. Particular and even lengthened descriptions were indispensable. But these could only be presented under the existing forms of things, by telling, as is done here, how the present evils should be abolished, or the past good restored — by filling up the picture with pleasing views of Canaan, Jerusalem, Zion, hills of holiness, sacrifices of right- eousness, a seed of blessing, a king and a commonwealth every way worthy of the goodness and majesty of Heaven — by em- ploying, in short, and, at the same time, expanding and improv- ing upon the old forms and relations, so as to make out of them the picture of a glorious future — a picture perfectly true, when viewed in respect to its substance ; but necessarily imperfect, when considered as to its external conditions. One of two things was inevitable. Either there must have been no detailed predictions extending into Gospel times, or those given must have been cast into the mould and pattern of what existed in the times going before. And for any one to insist now on having a fulfilment, which shall preserve entire the very forms of the prophetical representations, is just to repeat on the field of prophecy the error of those in apostolic times, who, in respect to the things of salvation themselves, sought to retain the shadow along with the substance — w^ho clung with childish fondness to the weak and beggarly elements of typical ordinances, after the Divine reality had come and burst the narrow shell, because it then required a larger room and a nobler elevation. Does any enlightened Christian doubt, that the prophecy of the sacrificial types has been really fulfilled in Christ, though he formally offered himself on no external altar, and sprinkled no actual mercy-seat mth his blood I Does he not readily under- stand, that however necessary it might be to present the coming redemption under such aspects before, yet, when the redemption itself came, it was too grand to be wrapt up in these little swad- dling-bands ? And why should we judge otherwise of a pro- 380 EZEKIEL XXXIV. phecy like the one before us ? a prophecy in detail, and as such necessarily written out in the language of Old Testament times ? In that language it made promise of a glorious future under Heaven's anointed King. It told the heart of faith, even in the darkest season, not to despair; for the evils then prevailing should be abolished. The kingdom of God should rise from its depression, and the territory of the kingdom yet become, to its utmost bounds, a region of righteousness, and peace, and bless- ing. We see the word- beginning to take eflPect, even before Messiah came, in the partial re-establishment of the Divine kingdom within the ancient bounds, and, as far as was needed, for the higher purposes of the kingdom. We see it advancing afterwards toward its riper fulfilment, when the great object of the prediction came and did the part of the Good Shepherd, by avenging for ever the cause of his elect, and laying the sure foundation of his everlasting inheritance. And we see it still travelling on to its full and destined realisation, in every victim that is won from the power of Satan, and every conquest that is made by the truth of God over the darkness and corruption of the world. Thus understood, the prophecy is consistent with itself, and in accordance with others of a like kind in the earlier portions of the Book, while in the form it assumes, it bears the natural impress of the time to which it belonged. But if any, deter- mined to hear of nothing but the letter, will still hold to the watchword of literality — will maintain, that it is a literal Israel that is the subject of promise, a literal Canaan, a literal disper- sion, and a literal return from it, and such also must be the ful- filment, then, we say, let them carry it out, and the shepherd by whom the good is to be accomplished must be the literal David ; for David alone is expressly named in the promise. And so the Messiah altogether vanishes from the word, of which he is the very heart and centre, and there must be no advance in the Divine dispensations, nothing but the formal reproduction of the past. Such is the result of a slavish adherence to the letter ; it ends in shutting up the new wine of the Messiah's kingdom to the old bottles of a transitory and provisional economy. It was neces- sary that the Spirit of prophecy should serve itself of such old things, so long as the old lasted ; but it is otherwise now, since the greater and better things have come — things so great and THE JUDGMENT OF EDOM. 381 good, that " eye had not seen them, nor ear heard, nor had they entered into the mind of man." And we do no more than make due allowance for the change that the introduction of these has brought into the Divine kingdom, when we say, that as the new David in the prophecy before us, was to be one, to whom the heritage, not of Canaan, but of the whole earth belonged, so the flock which he presides over and blesses must be the saints of God, gathered from every region by his grace, and feeding in security on his good pasturage ; and that the full realisation of the word of promise shall be found, only when these saints with him shall possess the kingdom, and the ends of the earth shall be blessed in Christ. CHAPTER XXXV. THE JUDGMENT OP EDOM. Superficial readers will be disposed to ask, what has Edom to do here? The Lord's judgment has already been pronounced against Edom (chap. xxv. 12-14), among the enemies of the covenant-people ; and this fresh denunciation against it is inserted among predictions, which, both before and after, have immediate respect to the covenant-people themselves. It is, however, in its proper place ; and brings out another element in the prosperity which the Lord promises to his church and people. It gives body and prominence to the thought expressed in ver. 28 of the preceding chapter, that *' they should no more be a prey to the heathen." So far from it, the prophet now declares, that the worst and bitterest of all the heathen shall be utterly destroyed and made desolate ; and that those who were then rejoicing over Israel's calamities, must themselves become a spoil, without any prospect of recovery. Ver. 1. And the word of the Lord came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, set thy face against Mount Seir, and prophesy against it ; 3. And say to it, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, I come to thee, Mount Seir, and I stretch out my hand upon thee, and I make thee utterly desolate. 4. Thy cities will I render a desert, and thou shalt be a wilderness, and shalt know that I am Jehovah. 5. Because thou hast had enmity for ever, and hast delivered 382 EZEKIEL XXXV. up the children of Israel to the hands of the sword,i in the time of their calamity, in the time of the consummation of iniquity. 6. Therefore, as I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, yea for blood will I make thee, and blood shall pursue thee; surely thou dost hate blood, and blood shall pursue thee.^ 7. And I make Mount Seir a waste and a desolation, and I cut off from it, him that passes and returns. 8. And I will fill his mountains with his slain ; thy hills and thy valleys, and all watered plains — the pierced-through with the sword shall fall in thee. 9. Perpetual desolations I will make thee ; and thy cities shall not return, and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. 10. Be- cause thou hast said. These two nations and these two lands shall be mine, 1 The more literal rendering here is : And hast poured out the children of Israel upon the hands of the sword. It is a strong personification both ways — the children of Israel being likened to water, which the Edomites poured out, and the sword upon which they were poured being thought of as a person, a devourer, whose hands were instruments of destruction. When the figure is understood, there is no need for supplying hlood as the object of the pouring out, as our translators have done. The same expression is used in Jer. xviii. 21, and Ps. Ixiii. 11 ; a very closely related one also by our prophet at chap. xxi. 17. There, too, at ver. 30, the peculiar phrase of VP'.f?., the end, or consummation of iniquity, occurs. 2 The whole cast of expression in this verse will appear strange, unless it is understood, that there is a play upon the name of Edom, w^hich is very like the Heb. word for blood. Q^s (Edom) was to be made for bi (dam) blood, the former also signifying red, which rendered the transition to blood more natural and easy. Q^*? also has the signification of hlood in the cognate dia- lects. The most peculiar part of the verse, however, is the clause sV-ns nsp ai, which not only our version, but also nearly all commentators, render " since thou hast not hated blood." But no examples can be produced to justify such a rendering, and the remark of Hitzig, that as the words stand, they must be regarded by every reader as an aflfirmative protestation, is quite correct. Because the clause, therefore, ascribes to Edom the hating of blood, he rejects it as a gloss — a most unlikely clause to be a gloss — and supports himself by the omission of it in the LXX. I cannot concur with Theodoret, Jerome, Michaelis, and others, that 13"J is to be taken in the sense of relation- ship, and refers to the near affinity between Esau and Jacob, as being both sprung from one father ; so that the hating of the Israelites on the part of Edom, was like a hating of their own blood. There is no authority for ascribing to the word such a meaning. But taking blood in the usual sense, I do not see why, in a passage so strongly epigrammatic and alliteral as this, the hatred of it might not be affirmed of Edom ; for the grand point on which the desires of the Edomites were centered, was life, life in themselves, as opposed to the bloody extermination they sought for Israel ; the shedding of their blood was what they would on no account think of I take the meaning to be, therefore : The preservation of thy life is what thou art intent on securing ; the thought of blood being shed among thee is what thou art putting far from thee as the object of aversion ; but God's purposes are contrary to thine, and what thou hatest he will send — blood shall pursue thee. THE JUDGMENT OF EDOM. 383 and we inherit it — and Jehovah was there !^ 11. Therefore, as I live, saith the Lord Jehovah, so I act according to thy anger, and according- to thy envy, which thou hast shown out of thy hatred toward them ; and I make myself known among them (namely, the Israelites), when I shall execute judgment on thee. 12. And thou shalt know that I Jehovah have heard all thy scornful speeches which thou hast uttered against the mountains of Israel, saying, A desolation ! to us they are given for food. 13. And ye have mag- nified yourselves against me with your mouth, and have swelled your words against me ; I have heard. 14. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, According to the joy of the whole land, I will make you a desolation. ^ 15. According to thy rejoicing for the inheritance of the house of Israel, because it is deso- late, so will I do to thee ; a desolation shalt thou be. Mount Seir, and all Edom, all of it ; and they shall know that I am Jehovah. The leading object of this severe and unsparing denunciation against Edom, is plainly to exhibit in sharp contrast the things that concerned them with those which belonged to the covenant- people. There was an apparent superiority on the side of Edom, at the time Ezekiel wrote ; but the real advantage was with Israel. In the latter, amid all their desolations, there still was a seed of blessing, the Divine germ of a glorious future. But in the other, no such germ existed; nothing wrought there but enmity to God and holiness ; and nothing was to be expected but unrelieved desolation. In the earlier prediction (chap, xxv.), while the Edomites were declared to be the objects of the Lord's vengeance, it was also said, that " his people Israel" were to be the instruments of executing it. Here, however, nothing is ^ The construction in this 10th verse is peculiar, as in broken sentences it expresses the excited feelings which were called forth. It is on this principle we are to account for the ms at the beginning of the words put into the mouth of the Edomites ; it marks the object uppermost in their thought : these two nations and these two lands. Then, they think of the two as one whole, a region to be possessed : And we inherit it. And the last clause, And Jehovah was there ! is thrown in by the prophet as an interjection, a sudden flash of light revealing the folly and impiety of their imaginations. They were calculating on doing what they pleased with a land with which Jehovah was peculiarly connected, and which he claimed as specially his own ; how vain and presumptuous ! 2 I quite agree with Hav., that v^xn-^D must here be taken in the re- stricted sense of all the land, viz., of Edom. For it could scarcely be meant that Edom was to be desolate, while all the earth rejoiced, since, in the next chapter, the other heathen nations are expressly coupled with Edom in her desolations. The meaning is, that as the whole country had rejoiced in Israel's fall, so it would all be made desolate in turn ; according to the joy, so the desolation ; as is explained in next verse. 384 EZEKIEL XXXV. mentioned as to the way by which the w^ork of desolation was to be accomplished : the thoughts chiefly pressed are, that Edom's own destructive policy was to be meted back to her in full measure, and that the destruction in her case was to be very complete. So far from being allowed, as the children of Edom themselves thought, to step into the room of Israel and occupy what they had lost, they should not be able to retain their own : their prospects for the future looked out upon blank and dreary desolation. It is necessary, however, to understand this, not absolutely of the Edomites as men, but only in their character as the heredi- tary and sworn enemies of the covenant-people — the people whom the Lord had chosen and blessed. For, it is in this character that they are here introduced ; and only when under- stood as applying to them thus, is the word found to consist, either with the facts of history, or with the prophecy of Amos (chap. ix. 12), which makes mention of a remnant of Edom, over whom, as well as other heathen, God's name should be called. But as a nation, set with relentless hatred against the truth and people of God, the Edomites ivere doomed to utter destruction, and, as we said before, they actually experienced it. While Israel rose in Christ to the supremacy of the world, Edom vanished from the face of history — their memorial perished, their envy and cruel hatred were for ever buried among the ruins of the nations. But why in this connection should Edom have alone been singled out for destruction by the prophet ? Not as if her people only were appointed to suffer vengeance at the hand of God ; but because in the bitterness of their spite, and the intensity of their hatred to the cause and people of God, they stood pre- eminent among the nations; and so were fitly chosen as the representatives of the whole. It is precisely what was done also by Isaiah in his sixty-third chapter, and still more strikingly in the thirty-fourth, when speaking of the Lord's controversy with the heathen, and the fury that he was to pour forth on the nations, it is all represented as concentrating itself on Edom, and taking end there in one fearful outburst of overwhelming vengeance. The region where the greatest enmity reigned, is the ideal territory, where the final recompenses of judgment take place. And that it is on the same account such peculiar promi- THE JUDGMENT OF EDOM. 385 nence is here also given to Edom, is clear, not only from the connection and character of the prophecy itself, but also from what is written in ver. 5 of the next chapter, where it is said, that " the Lord had spoken in the fire of his jealousy against the remnant of the heathen, and against all Edom." Whilst speak- ing against Edom, he had in reality spoken against all the heathen ; for it was simply as heathen, of the worst and most inveterate stamp, that he had spoken as he did against Edom, So that wherever the same elements of evil might be found, the same judgment from the Lord might be expected. This also, it will be seen, confirms the view we took of the promise to Israel in the preceding chapter. The coming good and evil are alike pictured forth under the old relations, as if these were always, and these only to exist ; while yet the word is pregnant with meaning for all nations and all times. The heathen at large are represented in Edom ; and hence by parity of reason, the whole elect family of God in Israel. Edom's doom, as here delineated, is the fate of heathendom ; and Israel's promised blessedness and glory under the good shepherd, carries in its bosom the high and happy destiny of the church of the living God. As formerly in the case of Isaac and Ishmael (Gal. iv. 22-31), so here in Israel and Edom, the whole human family have their representation — in the one all that are of the Spirit, in the other all that are of the flesh. The old relations in both cases alike have passed, and can never be recalled again ; but the truth couched under them eternally abides. And in that truth, as set forth in tlie prophecy before us, there is embodied the solemn testimony, that the Edomite spirit, the carnal, un- believing rebellious spirit is most surely doomed to perdition ; enmity to the cause and kingdom of Christ is marked out in the councils of heaven for irretrievable ruin. They who are of it cannot overthrow the church, but must themselves be over- thrown and fall under the stroke of vengeance. 2 B 386 EZEKIEL XXXVI. CHAPTER XXXVI. ISRAEL REVENGED AND COMFORTED — THE NEW HEART AND THE BLISSFUL HERITAGE. In this chapter we have a continuation of the present great theme of the prophet — Israel's prospective revival and prosperity as the Lord's coven ant- people. But it treats of this under differ- ent aspects. In the first section (ver. 1-15), the prophet unfolds the essential distinction between Israel and Edom with the other nations of heathendom, in that the former had, what the others had not, an interest in the power and faithfulness of God, in consequence of which Israel's heritage must revive and flourish, and the hopes of the heathen concerning it must be disappointed. In the next section (ver. 16-21), the reason is given why the Lord had for a time acted toward his land and people as if their connection with him was an evil rather than a blessing ; it is traced up to the incorrigible wickedness of the people, and the necessity of God's vindicating the cause of his holiness by exer- cising upon them the severity of his displeasure. Then in another section (ver. 22-33), the purpose of the Lord for their future good is unfolded — his purpose for his own name's sake to revive his cause among his people, and that in the most effec- tual manner, by first renewing their hearts to holiness, and then by restoring them to a flourishing condition outwardly. And in a short, concluding section (ver. 34-38), the general result is summed up, and the impressions noticed, w^hich the whole was fitted to produce upon the minds of others. We shall take up the chapter in these successive portions. Ver. 1. And thou son of man, prophesy to the mountains of Israel, and say. Mountains of Israel, hear the word of Jehovah. 2. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, because the enemy says over you, " Aha ! and the everlasting heights have become an inheritance for us."^ 3. Therefore prophesy and say. Thus ' The prophecy takes the form of an address to the mountains of Israel, partly in allusion to the "Mount Seir" of the preceding prophecy; and partly also with reference to the original prophecy in Gen. xlix. 26, where the peculiar blessings of the covenant are spoken of in connection with the ISRAEL REVENGED AND COMFORTED. 387 saith the Lord Jehovah, because, because of their breathing and snuflSng after you round about,^ in order that you might be an inheritance to the remnant of the heathen, and ye have been taken up (literally, and are gone up) in the lips of talkers,^ and are an infamy of the people ; 4. Therefore, mountains of Israel, hear the word of the Lord Jehovah ; thus saith the Lord Jehovah to the mountains, and the hills, to the watered plains, and the valleys, and to the desolate wastes, and to the cities that are forsaken, which are for a prey and for a derision to the remnant of the heathen, that are round about : — 5. Therefore, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Surely in the fire of my jealousy I speak against the remnant of the heathen, and against Edom all of it,^ who have appointed my land for an inheritance to themselves with the joy of the whole heart, with contempt of soul, in order that they may plunder its pasturage.* 6. Therefore prophesy upon the land of Israel, " everlasting hills." The reference to this passage is especially manifest in the words put into the mouth of the adversaries, claiming the everlasting heights for their inheritance : as much as to say. We have seen an end of the blessings to Israel — the heights, with which these blessings were con- nected, and which stood as fixed natural memorials of them, have become ours. Here, too, the adversaries are personified as one — a-^'isn* the enemy ; for, as was mentioned under last chapter, they were all represented in the Edomite — the name Edom comprehends the whole. ^ In regard to the second of the two verbs in this clause, p]s:sj there is not much diversity of opinion now. It does not properly signify to swallow up, but to snuff up, in the manner of a wild beast, which with a keen and raven- ous appetite smells after its prey, in order to seize and devour it. In this sense it is used by the Psalmist (in Ps. Ivi. 1, 2) of his cruel enemies : — " Be gracious to me, O God, for their snuffs after me man," etc. The other verb, r-73'i is generally derived from a'^i-j whose proper signification is, to be made desolate, although here it has sometimes, still also by Ewald and Havemick, been rendered by, to make desolate, to lay waste. But this would more appropriately have been ascribed to the Chaldeans, not to the neighbouring enemies, who are regarded here as hunting after the land of Israel as an object of desire. I think, therefore, with Hitzig, that the pass- age is to be explained from Isa. xlii. 14, where the same two verbs are used together, and the ai's must be taken from the root ni;:} to breathe, of which niQca, breath, is a derivative in very frequent use. Viewed thus, the surrounding enemies are strikingly and quite appropriately represented as breathing, and snuffing, like wild beasts, after Canaan as their prey. 2 The expression here is best understood as an elliptical one : the lip of the tongue, for, the lip of a man of tongue, -S-o-i hyz, a talker, or speakers generally. ^ The iparent in the world, especially in those who stand nearest to him. So also, the expression at the close of the same verse, " when I sanctify myself in you before your eyes," for which many critical autho- rities, both ancient and modem, would substitute, '* before their eyes," namely, those of the heathen — this expression creates no difficulty to a person who enters thoroughly into the import of the passage. For, it points to the fact, that Israel, as well as the heathen, needed the manifestation in question of Jehovah's righteousness. It must be done first before the eyes of the people, who by their depravity had lost sight of God's real character; and then what was seen by them experimentally, would also be seen reflectively by the heathen who dwelt around. This twofold perception of God's character is also brought out in other passages of our prophet ; as in chap. xx. 41, 42, " And I w\\\ be sanctified in you before the eyes of the heathen, and ye shall know that I am Jehovah." Finally, the mention, in ver. 25, of clean water to be sprinkled on the people, as the means of puri- fication, can only be understood symbolically ; it does not refer to any mere external rite, or to any specific ordinance of the old covenant, such as the Lustration-ceremony with water and the 1 Such appears to be the leading design and purport of this prophecy. Hengstenberg, in his Christology on the passage, has viewed the matter as if it was God's faithfulness to his covenant that was at stake, which required that a seed of blessing should still be found among the people of the covenant, notwithstanding all their sins and defections. That certainly is true, but, as Havernick justly remarks, not the truth under consideration here. The heathen did not reproach God for want of iidelity to his own covenant ; for in truth they did not know what that covenant really was or required. This was precisely the thing to be made plain ; God must let them know that here holiness was everything, and that by the possession or the want of it all his outward deahngs must be regulated. THE NEW HEART AND BLISSFUL HERITAGE. 397 ashes of the red heifer (Rosenmuller, Hengs.), or to the ablutions connected with the consecration of the Levites (Havernick). It is rather to be viewed in reference to the purifications by water collectively, which were all, in one respect or another, symbolical of the removal of impurity, and the establishment of the worship- per in a sound and acceptable condition. This was no more of a merely formal and outward character in Old Testament times, than it is now, as we may learn from the whole tenor of this prophecy. It was by their moral pollutions most of all, that the people of Israel had profaned God's name and drawn down his displeasure ; and the purification, which was to undo the evil, and again to sanctify the name of God, could be nothing short of a conformity to God's own righteousness, which throughout all ages is the same. The whole of the water-lustrations of the Jews were symbolical of this purity of heart and conduct ; and in referring to them here, the prophet simply expresses in symbo- lical language a great spiritual promise : the Lord would make Israel in reality, w^hat under the law was outwardly denoted by a sprinkling with clean water. He gives himself, indeed, the interpretation in the verses that follow, where the change is de- scribed by the Lord's imparting to them a new^ heart, and putting his own Spirit within them. In short, the peculiar blessing pro- mised for the future was their being raised to the participation of God's holiness, precisely as in the past the great evil was their having become morally so unlike him. The last section, as was noticed before, is merely a gathering up of the general result, with some reference to the impressions it was fitted to produce upon the minds of others. Ver. 33. Thus saitli the Lord Jehovah, In the day that I cleanse you from all your iniquities, I shall also make you to dwell in the cities, and the ruins are built. 34. And the land that is desolate shall be tilled, whereas it was desolate in the eyes of all that pass by. 35. And they say, " This land that was waste is become as the garden of Eden, and the cities, ruined, and de- serted, and destroyed, sit fortified." 36. And the heathen that are left round about you shall know that I, Jehovah, buUd the destroyed, plant the deserted ; I, Jehovah, speak and do. 37. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Yet for this will I be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them ; I wiU, multiply them as a flock of men. 38. As the holy flock, as the flock of Jerusalem in her solemn feasts, so shall the ruined cities be full of flocks of men ; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah. The general meaning is, that the purpose of God was to accom- plish an entire change in the outward, as well as the inw^ard con- 398 EZEKIEL XXXVI. dition of his people. They would be as remarkably distinguished for prosperity and blessing, as they had been for distress and desolation ; so that even the passing stranger could not fail to notice the happy revolution that had taken place in their cir- cumstances. But still not as a matter of fixed and inevitable necessity ; nor in any way that might supersede the obligation resting on themselves personally to seek and serve the Lord. Hence the intimation is made at ver. 37, that for this the Lord would " yet be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them." On former occasions, he had reftised to be inquired of by them (chap. xiv. 3 ; xx. 3), that is, sought after in such a manner as to be found ready to perform what was expected, be- cause the inquirers were not in a condition to receive any token of his favour and blessing. Only, therefore, in so far as they attained to a better condition, and stood morally on right terms with God, were they warranted to look for the happy and flour- ishing state described in the promise. And the higher always they rose in the one respect, the higher also might they expect God to raise them in the other. Such promises as those contained in this chapter cannot, therefore, be taken in an absolute sense ; they must be under- stood to some extent conditionally. They reveal the kind pro- pensions of God towards his people — what he is disposed and leady to do toward them, rather than what he will for certain accomplish at any one stage or period of their history. So far the word contains an absolute element, as God certainl}' pledges himself to make provision for securing, in a larger measure than formerly, a proper regeneration of heart and conduct in his ])eople, and also for giving palpable proof of this in their more flourishing and prosperous condition generally. The goodness of God was certainly to manifest itself for these ends ; but it would do so to the full extent represented, only if they continued in his goodness. In the case of God's threatenings, even when most particular and express, it was always possible by a change of mind to the better to escape the evil ; according to the word in Jeremiah, " At what instant I speak concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy ; if that nation against whom I have pronounced, turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them " (chap, xviii. 7). And there is no reason why we should not expect the same thk new heart and blissful heritage. 399 rule to hold in respect to the promises. Here also there would be but a partial realization of what was announced, if the spiritual condition on which it proceeded, was not complied with, and those to whom the promise was given, set themselves to resist the grace of God. The possibility of their doing this is plainly implied in the accomplishment of the promise being so specially connected with their inquiring of God concerning it ; and it was still more distinctly indicated in another passage, where they are commanded to do for themselves what the Lord here promised to do for them : " make you a new heart and a new spirit" (chap, xviii. 31). As much as to say, Do not ex- pect the good as an absolute and inalienable heritage of blessing; like all spiritual blessing, it stands inseparably connected with your own earnestness of purpose and diligence in working. The question, no doubt, may still be asked, Since God himself undertakes to give to Israel as a people the new heart and the right spirit, on which all depends, how could there be any failure of what was promised without unfaithfulness in God? The question, however, touches on the secret things, which belong not to us, but to God himself. For it may as well be asked, why is there only a partial renewal in the case of any individual Christian, seeing he has the Omnipotent Spirit dwelHng in him? Or why, since the Lord promised the Spirit to convince the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment, is the world still so imperfectly convinced ? Had the Spirit continued to work universally, as he did on the day of Pentecost, or with sinners individually, as he did in the case of Saul of Tarsus, the world would long ere now have been converted to the truth of Christ. But somehow there are elements at work, and ends higher even than salvation, though closely connected with it, which still limit, though they cannot altogether prevent, the realization of the good unfolded in the promises. Were we to look simply to the good exhibited there, we might have expected to see in Israel before the coming of Messiah, a people all righteous, and a land replenished through all its bounds with fruitfulness and blessing; as, after his coming, we might equally have expected to find a church instinct in every part with the Spirit of life and holiness, and ordinances of grace operating with resistless might to the diffusion of light and blessing in the world. But in both respects alike the good promised on the part of God is qualified by the 400 EZEKIEL XXXVII. evil that works in the world ; and, though the good must ulti- mately triumph, because it has Omnipotence on its side, yet till the last issues of Providence are brought in, we may still expect it to be to some extent countervailed by the intermingling evil. So far, then, the matter admits of an explanation, and that of a kind fitted to abase and silence man, as it charges on his own culpable negligence and waywardness, whatever shortcoming may appear in the good that is realised, as compared with the larger good that is promised. But when we rise to the higher region of Divine grace, sovereignty, and power, and begin to inquire why these operate no farther, or no otherwise, than they do, we soon reach an insurmountable barrier; for, with our present imperfect powers of discernment, we have no way of explaining, how the good that is in God, the good even that is expressed in his promises of blessing, should not prevail more effectually than it does over the evil that is in man. In this respect, God gives no account of his matters; and remembering that we now see but in part, it becomes us to be silent, or to say only with our blessed Lord, " Even so. Father, for so it seemeth good in thy sight." CHAPTER XXXVII. THE VISION OF THE DRY BONES RESTORED TO LIFE AGAIN, AS ' SYMBOLICAL OF ISRAEL'S DEATH AND RESURRECTION. The preceding prophecies have unfolded, in all essential parti- culars, the future salvation of Israel as God's covenant-people — on what conditions it was to proceed, and in what respects it was to develop itself. "The prophet's eye," however, to use the words of Ewald, " still dwells upon the manner in which it is to unfold itself, and beholds with rapture how it arises, how it grows, how it becomes insuperably great. Three stages here present themselves in vivid colours to the vision of the prophet ; 1. The new awakening of the people, the resurrection of the dead (chap, xxxvii. 1-14) ; 2. Then the re-union of the formerly hostile members of the community, through whose contentions VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 401 the whole had suffered (chap, xxxvii. 15-28) ; Finally, 3. The strength of the community thus again restored, so as to be able to meet the formidable danger which was to come from the hostile assault of Gog with all the inimical heathen forces of the earth" (chap, xxxviii. xxxix). This is a brief outline of the leading subjects now immediately before us, and of the relations in which they stand to each other. "Ver. 1. The hand of Jehovah was upon me, and carried me forth in the spirit of Jehovah (therefore, not a corporeal, but a spiritual transaction, — a thing done in the visions of God), and set me down in the midst of a valley,^ and it was full of bones. 2. And he made me pass by them all around, and, lo, there were very many on the face of the valley, and, lo, they were very dry. 3. And he said to me, Son of man, shall these bones live ? And I said, O Lord Jehovah, thou knowest. 4. And he said to me. Prophesy upon these bones, and say to them, Ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah. 5. Thus saitli the Lord Jehovah to these bones. Behold 1 bring spirit into you, and ye shall live. 6. And I lay sinews on you, and I make flesh to come up on you, and I cover you with skin, and I put in you spirit, and ye shall live, and shall know that I am Jehovah. 7. And I prophesied as I was commanded, and, as I prophesied, there was a noise, and lo! a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. 8. And I looked, and lo ! sinews and flesh came up on them, and skin covered them from above, yet no spirit in them. 9- And he said to me, Prophesy to the Spirit ; prophesy, son of man, and say to the' Spirit, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, from the four winds let the Spirit come and breathe in these slain, that they may live.^ 10. And I prophesied as he commanded me, and the Spirit came into them, and they lived ; and they stood upon their feet, an exceeding great force. ^ 11. * It is literally the valley, rtjparr* which was also used at chap. iii. 22. But as no particular valley was mentioned, we must use the indefinite article, for the Hebrews sometimes prefixed their definite article to nouns by way of emphasis, when these, though neither previously nor subsequently described, were viewed as definite in the mind of the writer. (Nordheimer, Gr. ii. § 720). 2 This passage plainly shows, that the spirit, ttn-, here and tliroughout the section, is not to be identified with the wind, for the thing wanted was to be called from the four winds. It is the life-breath, the spirit of life, imme- diate eflux of God, as the source of animated life in the creature. 3 Ewald renders here : " with very, very great power." But there is no preposition answering to the with, so that the clause is most naturally regarded as in apposition with what precedes. At the same time, the idea of power is certainly indicated in the original, and the "great army" of our common version does not convey the exact meaning. Our word /orce, however, pre- cisely corresponds to the Heb. '•-^^r, and, equally with it, is used in the double sense of power, as connected either with numbers, or with personal resources and energy. Both references are intended here; the now living skeletons presented the appearance of a vast multitude in full strength and vigour, 2c 402 BZEKIEL XXXVII. And he said to me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel ; lo ! they say, " Our bones are dried up, and our hope is perished ; we are un- done." ^ 12. Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I open your graves, and I make you come up out of your graves, my people, and bring you into the land of Israel. 13. And ye know that I am Jehovah, when I open your graves, and when I make you to come up out of your graves, my people. 14. And I put my Spirit within you, and ye shall live, and I will make you to rest upon your land ; and ye shall know that I, Jehovah, speak and do, saith Jehovah. There can be no reasonable doubt as to the leading scope and purpose of this remarkable vision. It is intended to counteract the feeling of despair which had now succeeded to the opposite one of carnal security and presumptuous confidence which, at an earlier period, had wrought so disastrously among the people. Now that they were reduced to so hapless and shattered a condi- tion, the glowing delineations the prophet had been drawing of a happy future seemed as visionary to their minds, as formerly had appeared his dark forebodings of impending distress and ruin. They felt as if they had become like bones dried and scattered at the grave's mouth, and destitute of everything on which they could build any reasonable prospect of restored feli- city. The prophet, therefore, meets them on their own ground. He admits, that, as compared with the elevated prospects he had been unfolding, they were in themselves no better than lifeless skeletons, but, at the same time, shows, that even this could raise no barrier against the realisation of the better future, since they had to do with the word of Him who is equally able to make alive as to kill. Carried in spirit into a valley of destruc- tion, he there sees the whole ground covered with bones, the skeletons of slaughtered men, so thoroughly bleached and dried by long exposure to the atmosphere, that all apparent capability of life had left them; and when asked, whether such bones should live, he could only refer the matter to God, as one that exclusively belonged to his grace and power. But presently, on being commanded to prophesy to them, or to proclaim God's purpose to endow them anew^ with the powers and properties of ' The last clause is literally, " we are cut off to ourselves," ^jV ^ij^tsS that is, cut off from the source of power and influence, and abandoned to our- selves. The " cut off for our parts," in the authorised version, is scarcely intelligible. VISION OP THE DRY BONES. 403 life, the word is no sooner uttered than it begins to take effect. The rushing sound of God's mighty working is heard ; bone is seen starting up and joining itself to its fellow ; immediately they are clothed upon with sinews, and flesh, and skin ; and then, in obedience to another word of God, the breath of life from his creative Spirit penetrates the whole mass, and transforms them into a host of valiant men, instinct with the animation, and braced with the healthful freshness and energy of life. Such was the wonderful scene that took place in vision before the eyes of the prophet ; and in the application that is made of it, he is told, that these bones are (i. e., represent) the whole house of Israel, who w^ere then, indeed, as to all that could be called life, according to the covenant of God, in a lost condition — in a manner dead and buried; but, he is assured, they should be again resuscitated by the word of God, brought up from their present temporary graves, and resettled in their own land to enjoy once more the blessings of the covenant. Considered in this natural manner, there is no difficulty in the passage. It is merely intended, in the most lively and effectual way, to remove the despondency that hung over the minds of the people, by exhibiting before them an exercise of Divine power, similar to that which was needed to retrieve their ruined for- tunes, and put them in a condition to inherit all the good of which Ezekiel had spoken. In the visions of God — the proper region of the prophet's activity — he shows them an effect of the Divine Spirit, adequate to the full wants and necessities of their state ; so that they might the more readily re-assure their hearts, and encourage themselves in God as to the issue. If we keep this one definite object of the vision in vi(iw, we are in little danger of misapprehending the particulars, or doing violence to the representation. It was certainly doing a kind of violence to it, when the Fathers, almost with one consent, appealed to it as furnishing in itself a direct and explicit proof of the resurrection ; (for example, Tertul. de. resur. car. c. 30, Jerome in loco ; Augustine de Genes, ad lit. x. 8) ; in which they have been followed by many distinguished modern divines. The greater part, indeed, hold, after the manner of Jerome, that the resurrection here is introduced only, by way of similitude, as an image of Israel's restoration, which it could not have been unless the resurrection itself had been considered cer- 404 EZEKIEL XXXVII. tain.^ Calov, however, maintains, that, down to the close of ver. 10, the passage treats distinctly of the resurrection from the dead in the literal sense, and that what follows is entirely another discourse, in which God's promised good- ness to Israel is presented under the analogy of that literal resurrection. This last view is manifestly untenable, as it breaks into two separate parts what is obviously but one discourse, and regards as an independent action what was done only with a view to its intended application. Even the other, and more common view, is not strictly tenable. For it is not properly a similitude that Ezekiel uses in the vision, as if from the certain fact of a general future resurrection he would fortify Israel in the belief and expectation of their own political resuscitation ; but it is this resuscitation itself exhibited now in vision, that they might be prepared to look for it afterwards in the reality. The mere cir- cumstance of such a resurrection-scene being thus employed by the prophet, for such a specific purpose, could not of itself prove the doctrine of a future general resurrection of the dead ; — no more than his employing the machinery of cherubim and wheels of peculiar structure in his opening vision, is a proof of the actual existence of such objects, either in the past or the future, in heaven or on earth. In both cases alike, what was exhibited in the vision was a representation in symbol of something corresponding that might be expected in the transactions of life, and the events of providence ; but whether that symbol might have any separate and substantial existence of its own, was not determined by such an employment of it, and in fact was quite immaterial as regarded the end in view. The resurrection-scene here is simply a pro- phecy in action, to render more palpable to the view, and more credible to the apprehension of the people, the corresponding prophecy in word, and stands parallel to the prophetic actions of the sealing vision in chap, ix., or the prophet's going into exile in chap. xii. At the same time, while the mere employment of such a scene in a symbolical vision cannot justly be regarded as of itself establishing the doctrine of the resurrection, it should, un- 1 Nunquam enim poneretur similitudo resurrectionis ad restitutionem Israelitici populi significandam, nisi staret ipsa resurrectio, et futura crederetur quid nemo de rebus non extantibus incerta eonfirmat. — Jerome, VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 405 doubtedly, have a place assigned it among the collateral proofs of the doctrine. Its introduction, in such a free and familiar manner, clearly bespoke it to be one of the loftier anticipations, with which the servants of God sought to accustom the minds of the people ; which they would have them take, in a manner, for granted, as things destined one day to be actually realised. It may justly be classed w4th such brief and familiar allusions as those in Isaiah xxv. 8, " He will swallow up death in victory ;" and chap. xxvi. 19, " Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise ; awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust ;" also Dan. xii. 2, " And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake." And then the principle on which, as its very basis, the whole vision rests, is one that carries in its bosom the hope of the resurrection to all the family of God, For it is the relation of the people, whom those bones represented, to God himself, securing for them an interest in the vital energy and omnipotent working of his hand, on which everything is made to hang. The resuscitation must take place, because the living God cannot let death work in those who are related to him as his own — those in regard to whom he can say, mi/ people. But this, of course, holds good of the literal resurrection from the dead, not less than of any temporary revival out of death-like bondage and degrada- tion ; and is, in truth, the very kernel of the argument used by our Lord against the Sadducees, when, from the declaration of God to Moses at the bush, "I am the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob," he showed that the dead are raised, because " God is not a God of the dead, but of the living ; for all live unto him." An argument not so subtle and profound as many would represent it, but level to the apprehension even of the commonest believers ! It is simply this : that God having owned himself the God of those patriarchs, their bodies cannot be lost, they must live again ; because by taking to himself the name of their God, he undertook to do for them whatever Omnipotence itself could perform. As, if any one were to adopt a helpless orphan into his family, and promise to be a father to it, should he not warrant the child to expect everything that paternal love or fidelity could do for it ? So, when God said to Abraham, " I am thy God," he virtually said. Whatever a God can do for thee, that thou mayest look for at my hands. But cannot God — 406 EZEKIEL XXXVII. he who at first formed Abraham of the dust of the ground, and afterwards breathed life into his dead soul — cannot he also breathe the life of immortality into Abraham's mouldering body ? Doubtless he can, and because he can — he will — he must. He is the ever-living God, and life must be the property of all that are his. He, who would have been ashamed to be called their God, if he had not provided for them a city, would much more have been ashamed to be called their God, if their very body, an essential part of their nature, were to be for ever left rotting in the dust. This would not have been to do to them the part of their God. It is precisely this relation to God, so pregnant with blessing to those who possess it, on which the promise of good in the Avord before us is founded. And it must have been impossible for any thoughtful and pious Israelite to enter into the appli- cation made of it, to the temporal resuscitation of Israel's pros- trate condition, without perceiving how it also involved, for all true believers, the future resurrection of their bodies from the power of death .^ But, along with this higher instruction en- wrapped in the prophecy, let us not overlook the honour ascribed in it to the Divine word, at whose proclamation from the lips of a man of God, the dead hear, the scattered bones move into their proper places, the spirit of life breathes and quickens. How does the Lord here show that he magnifies that word above all his name? It is his peculiar and chosen instrument of working. Where it alights, there darkness becomes light, death itself is turned into life again. '* For the word of God is quick and ^ We might have added, though this is not properly the place to discuss the subject, that many other portions, even the earlier portions of Old Testament Scripture, equally imply the doctrine of the resurrection ; and so far from thinking with Hitzig, and Havernick also, that the belief of that doctrine was not generally diffused among the older Jewish people, we are convinced it was always held by believers — inseparable from a living faith in the Divine word. The first promise involved it ; the earliest religion could have imparted no consolation, and inspired no hope, without presupposing it ; all the leading promises and dispensations of Grod contained it, as the vital germ, with the unfolding of which their own final perfection was to be reached ; so that the hope of the resurrection, rather than the simple belief of immortality, was the form which the ulterior expectations of God's earlier worshippers took. See this investigated at some length in the Typology of Scripture, vol. i., pp. 173 and 425. VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 407 powerful, and sharper than a two-edged sword." When he reallj " speaks, it is done ; when he commands, it stands fast." We turn now to the second part of the prophecy, which occupies the remaining verses of the chapter, and points espe- cially to the re-union of the formerly hostile members of the community. Ver. 15. And the word of the Lord came to me saying, 16. And thou, son of man, take to thee one rod (literally, one wood, but a rod or staff is evidently meant, with allusion of Numb. xvii. 2), and write upon it, "For Judah and for the children of Israel his associates" (not simply Benjamin, for considerable numbers also out of the other tribes adhered to Judah) ; and take another rod, and write upon it, " For Joseph — the rod of Joseph, and all the house of Israel his associates." 17. And join them one to another for one rod to thee, and they shall become one in thy hand. 18. And when the children of thy people speak to thee, say- ing, " Wilt thou not tell us what thou dost with these?" 19. Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I take the rod of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim and the tribes of Israel his associates, and I put them with it, even with the rod of Judah, and I make them one rod, and they become one in my hand.^ 20. So the rods, on which thou writest, are in thy hand before thine eyes. 21. And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I take the children of Israel from among the heathen, whither they have gone, and gather them on every side, and I bring them into their own land 22. And I make them to be one people in the land on the mountains of Israel, and one king shall be to them all a king ; and they shall no more be two peoples, and shall never again be divided into two king- doms. 23. And they will no more pollute themselves with their foxil idols, and with their detestable things, and with all their transgressions ; and I will redeem them from all their dwelling-places, wherein they have sinned, and purify them ; and they shall be my people, and I will be their God. 24. And my servant David shall be king over them, and one shepherd shall be to them all ; and they shall walk in my judgments, and keep my statutes and do them. 25. And they shall dwell in the land, which I gave to my servant Jacob, wherein their fathers dwelt, and they shall dwell in it, they and their sons, and their sons' sons for ever, and David my servant shall be prince to them for ever. 26. And I will conclude with them a covenant of peace, ^ There are two peculiarities in this verse. The first is the apparent anomaly of the rod of Joseph, which had been spoken of as being, along with the other, in the hand of the prophet, being said to be in the hand of Ephraim, — of which some far- fetched explanations have been given. The proper explanation evidently is, that the prophet here passes to the meaning of what had been said previously : the staff was the symbol of authority and rule ; and this, in the case of Joseph, had been seized and exercised by Ephraim, but now was to be withdrawn from his hand, and united with the other staff into one in God's hand. The two met in God. The other pecu- liarity is the use of the plural in the second clause : and I put them with it, though, properly, the rod of Joseph is the object referred to. It is a con- struction according to the sense, — the rod being identified in the prophet's mind with the ten tribes, who owned its authority. 408 EZEKIEL XXXVII. an everlasting covenant shall be with them, and I will set them,^ and multi- ply them, and will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for ever. 27. And my dwelling shall be over them,^ and I shall be to them a God, and tliey shall be to me a people. 28. And the heathen shall know that I, Jehovah, sanctify Israel, by my sanctuary being in the midst of them for ever. Here, precisely as in the resurrection-scene of the earlier part, the action with the rods, first writing on them the names of the two ancient divisions of the covenant-people, and then pressing them together into one, is employed merely as a symbol of what was to take place with the people themselves, — a prophecy in action to give distinctness and credibility to the immediately following prophecy in word. And for the direct import of the communi- cation, the close and brotherly union among the members of the covenant, that forms the substance of it, is here presented to our view as an immediate and. certain effect of the manifestation of God's power to revive and bless them, and as the necessar}^ con- dition to their complete and final establishment. The whole people of Israel had been represented as participating in the re- generating efficacy of the spirit of life, which was to be given from above : and, as the direct result of this was to unite them to God, so its secondary operation could not fail to be, to unite them in brotherly concord with each other. For the true cove- nant-people must form but one body, as they can only have one Head ; and hence, as the necessary shell for preserving this great truth, it was so strictly enjoined of old, that they should have but one temple, one high-priest, one king, and one common- w^ealth. The breaking up of this united brotherhood by the * The expression here is certainly peculiar, though I see no need, with many, for either omitting the clause or emending the text. Hengstenberg follows Venema, who throws this and the following verb together, and renders: dabo eos multiplicatos, I will give them multiplied, and supposes there is a reference to the promise to Abraham, "I give thee for nations." But for this reference the expression is greatly too abbreviated. I rather incline to take the verb -jna in the sense of appointing or setting, which it certainly often possesses ; and understand it as importing, that now God himself orders and determines everything concerning them — sets them, in opposition to their former fluctuating, because self-ordered, condition. 2 The expression may possibly have some respect to the elevated position of the temple-mount, which seemed as if it overlooked the land generally ; but if so, only to this as an emblem of God's watchful and gracious oversight : his sanctuary was to be in their midst, but his dwelling all over them, for protection and blessing. VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 409 revolt of the ten tribes under Jeroboam, however needful at the time as a salutary chastisement to the house of David, is con- stantly represented as a sad dismemberment of the church of God, and the source, to a large extent, of the more overwhelming tide of evils which thenceforth set in upon the land, and at last laid it desolate. As soon, therefore, as there might be produced a revived and healthful condition among the covenant-people, there must be a return to brotherly union, and that in connec- tion with the house of David ; for to this house had been com- mitted, by an irrevocable decree, the right to rule over the heritage of God, and to abide in separation from it was to continue in rebellion against Heaven. Nay, not only must the brotherly union find its centre in the house of David, but David himself must again preside over the united brotherhood ; since he is pre-eminently that servant of God, whose grand end in ruling was to do the will of God, and promote the ends of his righteous government. This God-honouring king must reign for ever ; his rule shall be perpetuated through all generations ; that the covenant of peace also maybe perpetual, and that God's sanctuary may constantly abide among the people, and his name be magnified through their pure and prosperous condition. Thiis, the order of God being re-established and made sure, there should be nothing any more to interrupt the flow of the Divine blessing; God would be most really present with his people, and the inheritance of good promised in the covenant, hitherto found only in part, be fully and for ever realised. There is nothing absolutely new in the prophecy ; it is sub- stantially a fresh exhibition of the prospect already unfolded in chaps, xxxiv. and xxxvi. ; but rendering prominent what was there implied rather than broadly asserted, the formal union of the covenant-people, along with their sanctification and blessed- ness, under the presidency of David. That there has been no adequate fulfilment of the prophecy in what may be called the literal sense of its terms, is too plain to require any lengthened proof. Some advances were of old made towards it,— that is all that can be said. There was a return, to some extent, of the covenant-people, chiefly indeed of the house of Judah, though not without representatives from the other tribes ; a visible dis- play of union among such as did return, a partial repossession of the land of the covenant, and an external reconstruction of the 410 EZEKIEL XXXVII. temple and its worship — enough to show that God had not for- gotten his word, and that he was ready to bless to the full, if his people had been willing to seek to him for the blessing. But still all, not excepting even the things connected with the temple (see on chap. xxi. 26), were found in a very imperfect and mutilated condition, not after the bright pattern furnished here by the hand of the prophet. And the most characteristic part of the description — the cementing, strengthening, benignant rule of David — had not even the appearance of a literal fulfilment in the post-Babylonish history of Israel. The prophecy, there- fore, has not been accomplished according to the letter in the past ; and, with so strong and prominent a feature of an ideal sort as the eternal presidency of David, it seems amazing that any one should expect it to be realised after that manner in the ages to come. For to that end it were indispensable that the literal David should be raised from the dead, and again set over the heritage of God, vested there even with perpetual sovereignty; notwithstanding that Christ has expressly received, by Divine appointment, the throne of his father David. The prophecy is a detailed picture of coming good, drawn, as such a picture must have been, under the form of the old covenant relations. It exhibits the prospective good, as a revival of Israel's best periods, freed from their still remaining defects and oft-intermingling judgments ; and a picture that could be realised only in part, while the old covenant stood, both from its own inherent im- perfections, and from the wilful neglect and obstinacy of its people. Not till the new covenant enters does the comparatively perfect begin to develop itself. For with the coming of Messiah, the head and centre of the new, as David was of the old, every- thing connected with God's kingdom takes a loftier flight and a wider range ; the shadows vanish away, being supplanted by the substance ; and that which before was partial and restricted, presents now the aspect of an expansive freedom and a universal adaptation. The whole earth is as much Christ's rightful heri- tage as the territory and people of Canaan were David's ; and only when- it becomes his actual possession, can the prophecy respecting him, as the New Testament David, reach its destined accomplishment. So that to speak now of the prophecy still requiring for its fulfilment a literal Israel, a literal Canaan, a literal tabernacle, with the many outward and fleshly conditions VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 411 therewith connected, and that too in the face of the palpable incongruity in the heart of the prophecy of a non-literal David, is as if one were to reduce the lofty tree again to the puny dimensions of the plant, or send the man of full-grown stature back to his cradle, — as if, in short, against all the experience of the past, which is ever moving on to something higher and better, we should expect the chariot- wheels of God's providence to return to their former courses, and keep within the ancient landmarks. It was the peerless glory of Israel as a nation, to give to the world the new David, who was to be for humanity the one child of hope, and to furnish to his hand the first builders of that spiritual house, which was to be formed of renewed souls, and reared on the foundation of his perfected redemption. But there their distinctive honour ceases — not as if their real privileges and blessings were lost, but because these must henceforth be shared in common by the household of faith. The very mother that bore Jesus, and his nearest kindred, could attain to no peculiar place in his kingdom by reason of their earthly connec- tion with him : not these, he said, but every one that heareth the word, and doeth the will of my Father in heaven, is my mother and sister and brother. Thus the fleshly bond was broken at the centre, and it must vanish to the farthest circumference; everything founded on natural relationships and genealogical descent was, with the handwriting of ordinances, nailed to the cross of Christ, and buried in his grave, as a part of that bond- age to the elements of the world, from which the church had at length escaped, and which should never more be heard of in her borders. The one relationship to be accounted of is union to Christ, which renders all who possess it children of Abraham, and heirs according to the promise — heirs, that is, of all that was given to Abraham in promise ; more even, if more could be, for they are heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ him- self. Therefore, it is folly to speak of robbing the Jew b}'' putting him on a level with the believer in Christ; for to put him there is to raise him to the highest standing that a child of humanity can enjoy, and give him a share in that, which being large enough for all, is not diminished, but rather enhanced by the numbers who partake in it. And for the church herself, seeing that her exalted Head is now at the riglit hand of the 412 EZEKIEL XXXVII. IVIajestj on high, with power and authority to make the whole earth his possession, instead of seeking to revive the old distinc- tions, which have served their day, or hanging her hopes on effete outward arrangements, it is aHke her wisdom and her duty to press forward the spiritual conquest of the w^orld, — plying with unwearied diligence the means of its regeneration, and withal waiting and praying for the time when, nature itself being re- generated, the earth shall become the fit abode of manifested Deity, and all shall be full of the knowledge, and resplendent with the glory of the Lord. Then in the fullest sense shall the vision of our prophet be realised ; for then the entire territory of the new covenant shall be reclaimed for righteousness, and the tabernacle of the Lord most truly be with men. In closing this section, we present a brief outline of the view that has been taken of the prophecies contained in the three closely related chapters, xxxiv., xxxvi., xxxvii. ; and which in sub- stance applies equally to many other portions of the prophetical Scriptures. 1. They were originally given to revive and animate the hearts of God's covenant-people, by holding out to them the assured prospect of a reversion from the present evil, and their still certain destination in God's purpose to the highest and most honourable place on the earth. 2. It was the duty of those to whom such prophecies were delivered, at once to believe the word spoken to them, and apply themselves in earnest to do what was needed to secure its accomplishment; and had they only done this, a far larger measure of the promised good would have been reaped than they actually experienced ; this later prospect of blessing, like the earlier, given before entering Canaan, greatly failed through their own sinful unbelief. 3. But there being manifestly ideal features introduced into the delineation, especially the good spoken of being so peculiarly connected with the rule and presidency of David, clearly betokens a kind and degree of blessing, which could not have been completely fulfilled under the old covenant, nor intended to be altogether fulfilled any time according to the letter. It shows the prophecies in question to be, like several of an earlier kind in Ezekiel, descriptions of the future under the form and image of the past — not as if the past were actually to return again, but that its general spirit and character were to revive. 4. The new things thus to be looked for in the future, could only meet with their full and adequate VISION OF THE DRY BONES. 41 3 accomplishment in Christ, who is certainly the David of the pro- mise. They are consequently of a higher and more comprehensive nature than any that could be enjoyed under the old covenant, when the kingdom of God was so straitened in its dimensions, and so outward and earthly in its visible constitution. But still, they were of necessity described under the hue and aspect of tlie things belonging to the old covenant— as if it were these only returning again, or these with certain alterations and improve- ments, such as might give the future a pre-eminence in glory over the past. For, only by means of what belonged to existing or previous dispensations of God, could the prophet have given any detailed exhibition of what might be expected under another and higher dis|:)ensation. The details of the future must have been cast into the mould of the present or the past. 5. There- fore, in forming one's conceptions now of the real import of such prophecies — now that the transition has been made into the new and higher dispensation — we must throw ourselves back into the narrower and more imperfect relations, amid which they were' written, and thence judge of what is still to come. Thus, as the David of the promise is Christ, so the covenant-people are no longer the Jews distinctively, but the faithful in Christ ; and the territory of blessing no longer Canaan, but the region of which Christ is king and lord. What was spoken immediately of the one class of personages and relations, may most fully be applied to the other ; and by such a method of interpretation alone do we get a uniform and consistent principle to carry us through the whole. While those, on the other hand, who would find a literal Israel, and a non -literal David, or a literal restoration in Christian times, and a non-literal tabernacle and ritual of wor- ship, arbitrarily confound together things dissimilar and in- congruous, and render certainty of interpretation absolutely impossible. 6. Sixthly, the view thus given is confirmed by the re-production of some of these prophecies in the field of the New Testament Church, set free, as was to be expected, from the outward distinctions and limits of the Old. Thus, in particular, the resurrection -scene of this 37th chapter substan- tially recurs in the 20th chapter of Rev., and is followed precisely as here by the attack from the embattled forces of Gog and Magog; while not a word is said, which would confine the things spoken to the land of Canaan, or the literal Israel ; it is 414 EZEKIEL XXXVIII. the church and people of Christ at large that are discoursed of. We say nothing respecting the probahle time and nature of the events there referred to, but simply point to the identity in character of what is written with the prophecies before us. In those visions of the Apocalypse, the inspired Evangelist stretches out the hand to Ezekiel, and shows how the word spoken so long before by that servant of God, freed from the peculiarities of its Jewish form, is to find its application to the Christian church. The shell has gone, but the substance remains. 7. We may add, lastly, that the common interpretation, which understands Christ by David, and takes all the rest literally, must inevitably tend to justify the Jew in his unbelief. For he naturally says, Your Messiah has not done the thing you yourselves hold must be done, to fulfil the prophecy ; he has not set up his throne in Canaan, and gathered Israel there, and re-established the old worship in its purity ; this was the very purpose for which he was to appear, and we must wait till he comes to do it. On the basis of the literal interpretation, there seems no satisfactory answer to this ; and it is well known, that, since it has become prevalent, many Jews believe that Christians are coming over to their view of the matter. We are not surprised to hear, as we have heard, of converted Jews declaring, that with such a mode of interpretation, they would go back to Judaism. CHAPTERS XXXVIIL, XXXIX. THE ASSAULT OF GOG, AND HIS DESTRUCTION. The last portion of the prophecy, which began at chap, xxxvii., stretches through these two next chapters, which properly form but one piece. It is one of the most remarkable predictions in the book of Ezekiel; and before offering any remarks on its general purport and design, we shall present an exact translation of the whole, with such explanatory notes as may be needed to elucidate the meaning, that the subject in its entire compass may be distinctly in view. ASSAULT OF GOG, AND HIS DESTRUCTION. 415 Chap, xxxviii. Ver. 1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, 2. Son of man, set thy face against Gog, of the land of Magog,^ prince of Rosh (or Rhos),2 Meshech, and Tubal; and prophesy upon him; 3. And say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I am against thee, Gog, prince of Rosh, Meshech, and Tubal. 4. And I make thee turn back,^ and ^ The name Magog occurs only once elsewhere in the Old Testament, at Gen. X. 2, among the sons of Japheth ; and, according to the principles on which the genealogical tables are there constructed, it must be regarded as the name of a land and people, belonging to a branch of Japheth's posterity. The syllable Ma, which in Coptic bears the meaning of place (in the Sanscrit, also Maha signifies earth or land), was probably regarded as having respect to the territory ; so that Gog would naturally denote the people, or the head who represented both land and people. Gog is clearly a name formed by the prophet from Magog — a representative name, intended to designate the poli- tical head of the region. With a like freedom, Gog and Magog are in Rev. XX. used as the names of two separate people. 2 The two words ^-st si-^ba are, with various ancient and some modem authorities, connected together in our common version, and rendered chief prince. Ewald adheres to this view, on the ground that no people are known in the Bible by the name of Rosh ; so also does Hengstenberg on Rev. xx. 7 — he regards Gog as having Magog for his original kingdom, though he had also acquired the mastery over Meshech and Tubal, and so might be called their " chief prince." It is certainly possible. But Hitzig justly objects, on the other side, that an epithet formed by the junction of these two words is nowhere else known in the Bible ; and that the full title, if it were simply a compound title, should be so formally repeated three several times (ver. 2, 3, xxxix. 1), is rather improbable. Besides, traces have been found of a northern people, anciently bearing such a name. The passage especially of Tzetzes, in Gallseus ad Orac. Sibyl, p. 391, quoted by Havernick, in which the Tauri are expressly called Ros (ihiiXuiroc. Ta-v^ovs rove vz? xetXtla-Oott), is a strong proof. Bochart, also (Paleg iii. 13), has shown, that the Araxes had the name of Rhos, rendering it probable that the people in the neighbourhood were called by the same name. There is hence great probability in the opinion, that the people referred to were the Russi, from whom the modem Russians derive their name. The other two names connected with them, Meshech and Tubal, are the Moschi and Tihareni, inhabitants of the regions about Caucasus. So that the people mentioned are northern tribes; and Jerome gives it as the opinion of the Jews in his day, that Magog was a general name for the numberless Scythian tribes. 3 The usual meaning of the verb suits well enough here — if only it is understood, that the aspect under which Gog is contemplated by the prophet, is that of an untamed, fractious wild beast, which thought only of taking its own way, and pursuing its lawless career at pleasure ; while God was going to direct events into such a channel, as would draw it where destruction Avas sure to overtake it. He would turn it back, bend its lawless and ferocious energies into this one course, in which it must inevitably perish. In the 41(5 EZEKIEL XXXVIII. put hooks into thy jaws, and lead thee forth and all thy host, horses and horsemen, clothed in complete armour all of them, a great multitude, with buckler and shield, all of them handling swords. 5. Persia, Ethiopia, and Phut, with them — all with shield and helmet. 6. Gomer, and all his hordes; the house of Togarmah in the extreme north, and all his hordes; many nations with thee.' 7. Be prepared and hold thyself ready, thou and all thy multitude that are gathered around thee, and be thou a guard (or commander) to them. 8. After many days thou gettest the com- mand ; at the end of the years thou dost come to a land withdrawn from the sword, (a people) gathered out of many nations, upon the mountains of Israel, which were perpetually desolate ; and they were brought forth from the heathen, and dwelt all securely.^ 9. And thou dost go up, as a tempest wilt thou come, as a cloud to cover the land shalt thou be, thou and all thy hordes, and many people with thee. 10. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, And it shall come to pass in that day, that words come up into thy heart, and thou dost imagine an evil device. 11. And thou shalt say, " I will go up into the land of villages, I will come upon the people at rest, who are all dwelling securely, who dwell without walls, and have neither bars nor gates." 12. To make booty, and to carry off prey, to turn thine hand upon the now inhabited ruins, and on a people gathered from the nations, that have gotten cattle and goods, parallel passage (Rev. xx.), the directing impulse is ascribed to the deceptive power of Satan, but to him, of course, as the mere instrumental agent; precisely as in 1 Chron. xxi. 1, where the temptation is ascribed to Satan, which in 2 Sam. xxiv. 1, is represented as coming from God, in the exercise of his just displeasure. ^ We must note, respecting the nations that are mentioned as in league with Gog, and under his influence, their great distance from each other, as well as from Canaan. Not only have we the Scythian hordes, but the Per- sians also, the Ethiopians and Libyans of Africa ; Gomer, or the Cimmerians of Crim Tartary ; Togarmah, or the Armenians, and the multitudes beyond them that peopled the regions of the far north. ^ The first clause in this verse has been very differently understood ; most commonly, as in our version, made to express the destiny of Gog to punish- ment : thou art visited or chastised. But to make this sense the preposition Vy, with the person, would have been necessary : to visit upon one, to punish. Havernick supposes a reference to Isa. xxiv. 22, and renders : for a long time thou art missed ; that is, regarded as a lost people, not heard of — a very unnatural idea, and founded on a very unusual sense. I greatly prefer the rendering of De Wette, Rosen. Hitzig : after a long time thou art made leader, or gettest the command. The verb certainly has this sense in Jer. xv. 3, Neh. vii. 1, xii. 44. It was not to be immediately; a long period was to elapse before the assault, headed by Gog, was to take place ; but when the time came, he should have the leadership, and everything would seem favour- able — the land against which they came apparently an easy prey to their combined and numerous forces, unfortified, and its people dwelling in outward security, without any thought of the sword. The eye of flesh looked only to the want of visible defences, and perceived not the grand security — the in- visible shield of Jehovah. ASSAULT OF GOG AND HIS DESTRUCTION. 417 who dwell in the heart (literally, navel) of the earth.' 13. Sheba, and Dedan, and the merchants of Tarshish, and all her young lions, shall say to thee, " Art thou come to take spoil? to carry off booty hast thou gathered thy multitude? to bear away silver and gold? to take cattle and goods? to seize great spoil?" 2 Ver. 14. Therefore prophesy, son of man, and say to Gog, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Shalt thou not know in that day when my people Israel dwell securely? 15. And thou comest out of thy place from the extreme north, thou and many nations with thee, all of them riding upon horses, a great assemblage, and a mighty force. 16. And thou comest up upon my people Israel like a cloud to cover the land ; in the latter days shall it be ; and I bring thee upon my land, that the nations may know me, when I sanctify myself on thee, Gog, before their eyes. 17. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Art thou he of whom I have spoken in the days of old, by the hand of nay servants the prophets of Israel, that prophesied in those days — years, to bring thee upon them ?^ 18. And it shall come to pass in that day, in the day that Gog comes upon the land of Israel, saith the Lord Jehovah, mine anger shall rise up in my nose ; 19. And in my zeal, in the fire of my wrath I will speak, Surely in that day there shall be a great earthquake over the land of Israel.* ^ The peculiar expression, " the navel of the earth," is very much the same in meaning as that used in chap. v. 5, where Israel was said to have been set in the midst of the nations. It does not denote, as was shown there, that Jerusalem, or Judea generally, was placed physically in the centre of the world ; but that it occupied morally a central position, and one also in every respect advantageously situated for exerting a happy influence on the world. The expression here may include the two points — of a prominent position, and of great fulness of blessing — on both accounts fitted to awaken the envy of others. It is the same idea, though differently expressed, in Rev. xx. 9, where the combined forces are said to " compass the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city" — the city which was the object of special favour, and held the pre eminent place. ^ The people here represented as speaking thus to Gog and his company, were on his side rather than with the covenant-people. They are represen- tatives of that portion of the world, who, though they are not disposed to take any active part against the cause of God, are well pleased to see others do it. Their worldly feeling makes them disrelish the truth ; and they are ready to cheer on those who would make a spoil of its defenders. 3 Gog and his warlike force are here identified with the enemies of whom former prophets have spoken, when they spake of the conflicts and troubles of the last days. Thinking of those prophecies — prophecies uttered long ago, and spread over many years — such, for example, as those recorded in Numb. xxiv. 17-24, Isa. xiv. 28-32, xviii. etc., Joel iii., Dan. ii. 44, 45, etc., — and seeing now in vision this last grand gathering of the powers of evil under Gog, the prophet asks, whether it was not the same that had already so often been announced? It appeared now only in a new form, but the thing itself had been many times described by God's servants. * We find mention made of the earthquake also, though more briefly, in the parallel prophecy of Joel iii. 16 ; also Isaiah xxix. 6. In Rev. xx. 9, the 2d 418 EZEKIEL XXXVIII., XXXIX. 20. So that before me the fishes of the sea quake, and the fowl of heaven, and the beasts of the field, and every creeping thing that creepeth on the ground, and all men that are upon the face of the ground ; and the moun- tains are thrown down, and the craggy rocks fall, and every wall tumbles to the ground. 21. And I call for a sword against him to all my mountains, saith the Lord Jehovah ; one sword shall be against another.^ 22. And I will judge him through pestilence and blood ; and a torrent of rain, and hail- stones, fire, and brimstone, will I pour down on him and on his hordes, and on the many peoples that are with him. 23. And I will magnify myself, and sanctify myself, and make myself to be known before many nations, and they shall know that I am Jehovah. Chap, xxxix. 1. And thou, son of man, prophesy against Gog, and say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold I am against thee, Gog, prince of Rosh, Mesech, and Tubal. 2. And I turn thee back, and guide thee,2 and lead thee up from the extreme north, and bring thee upon the mountains of Israel. 3. And I will dash thy bow out of thy left hand, and make thine arrows fall from thy right hand. 4. Upon the mountains of Israel shalt thou fall, thou and all thy hordes, and the nations that are with thee ; to birds of prey of every kind, and beasts of the field I give thee for food. 5. Upon the open field shalt thou fall, for I have spoken, saith the Lord Jehovah. 6. And I send fire upon Magog, and upon the inhabitants of the sea-coasts in their security, and they shall know that I am Jehovah. ^ 7. And my holy name I will manifest in the midst of my people Israel, and will not profane my holy name any more ; and the heathen shall know that I, Jehovah, am the holy one in Israel. 8. Behold it comes and is done, saith the Lord Jehovah ; this is the day of which I have spoken. 9. And the inhabitants of the cities of Israel shall go forth and kindle a flame, and make a fire with the armour, external form difiers : there is no earthquake, but fire is said to come down from heaven to consume the adversaries, as here also in ver. 22. 1 There can be no doubt that this is the proper rendering of the original in this clause, and the translation in the authorised version : every man's sword shall be against his brother, suggests a wrong idea, as if the enemies were to turn and fight against each other. The meaning simply is, that God would meet sword with sword ; for the sword of the adversary he would pro- vide a brother sword, a fellow, in the hand of his people. 2 In this rendering of Tj'^^i at, or by) ; there he descries the city-like framework a little to the south of him, and then God " brings him thither," i. e., close up to it, that he might see what it was. 452 EZEKIEL XL. observe in them so far a resemblance between the commencement and the close of the book, that in each alike the prophet is borne away by a Divine hand, and placed amid the visions of God. There are, however, two characteristic differences between the earlier and the later. First, in respect to the region where these ideal manifestations of Divine truth and glory were given, — formerly on the banks of the Cliebar, as if the glory of Jehovah had forsaken its old haunts, and now on what was emphatically the mount of God, as if he were again returned thither, and had even already raised it to a far nobler elevation. The substance of the visions, too, very strikingly differed ; for while that on the Chebar was fitted chiefly to awaken thoughts of terror and solemn awe in the bosom ; this, on the other hand, was calculated to produce feelings of the liveliest confidence and the most exalted hopes. The heavens seemed now, in a sense, cleared of all their stormier elements, and were radiant with the sunshine of the Divine favour. The man with the appearance of brass (bright, furbished brass, is to be understood) must, of course, be con- sidered a representative of the higher world, a special messenger of God ; and the two instruments in his hand, the linen tape and the measuring rod, were for taking the dimensions, — the first the larger, the second the less. It is also quite in unison with the prophet's strongly ideal and realistic cast of mind, that he should not simply have given the pattern and dimensions, but should have presented the Divine messenger in the attitude of going to take all the measurements before his eyes. Ver. 5. And behold a wall outside the house (viz., the house of God) round about, and in the man's hand a measuring rod of six cubits, by the cubit and an handbreadth ;^ and he measured the breadth of the building (the boundary- wall) one rod, and the height one rod. 6. And he came to the gate which looks toward the east, and went up on its (seven) steps, and measured the threshold (more exactly, sill) of the gate — one rod broad ; ^ The exact proportions of the Hebrew measures of length cannot be ascertained with absolute correctness, as they were derived from parts of the human body, which necessarily vary. But the most careful inquiries have led to the conclusion, that the ordinary Hebrew cubit was to a nearness 21 inches ; and consequently the one employed here, being an handbreadth, or 3^ inches more, will make the cubit somewhere about 2 feet of our reckoning, and the rod about 12 feet. This must have been very near the length of each. (See Winer's Real- Wort., art. Elle, and Kitto's Bib. Cyclop., art. Cubit.) THE POSITION, ETC., OF THE TEMPLE. 453 even the one threshold, one rod broad. ^ 7. And the chamber one rod long, and one rod broad ; and between the chambers five cubits ; and the threshold of the gate beside the porch of the gate within, one rod, 8. And he measured the porch of the gate within, one rod. 9. And he measured the porch of the gate, eight cubits ; and its pillars, two cubits ; and the porch of the gate within. 10. And the chambers of the gate toward the east were three on the one side, and three on the other ; all three of one measure ; and the pillars had one measure on both sides. 1 1 . And he measured the breadth of the gate-entry, ten cubits ; the length of the gate Avas thirteen cubits. 12. And a boundary-mark was before the chambers, one cubit ; and on the other side a boundary-mark of one cubit ; and the chamber, six cubits on this side, and six cubits on that. 13. And he measured the gate from the roof of one chamber to the roof of another, the breadth five-and-tAventy cubits, door against door. 14. And he made pillars of sixty cubits, even unto the pillar of the court of the gate, round and round. 15. And from the front of the outer gate to the front of the inner gate-porch were fifty cubits. 16. And there were closed (or fixed) windows to the chambers and their pillars within the gate round and round ; and also to the porches ; and windows were all round about inward ; and upon each pillar palm-trees. ^ ^ It is impossible to make sense of our English version here, which renders, " and the other threshold of the gate, which was one reed broad." What other threshold ? There could be but one sill or threshold to each gate. Ewald arbitrarily substitutes ^rrs for -liis, and renders, " the back threshold was one rod broad," as if there could properly be two thresholds, or the dimensions behind were to be different from those in front. The true meaning is undoubtedly that adopted by Bottcher, and followed by Hav., that the prophet in this clause calls attention to the ample dimensions of the threshold of the gate, the breadth (one rod, or 12 feet, the height of the wall), being sufficient to let numbers pass and repass at once. There was no break or division ; even the one gate had its threshold a rod-breadth. 2 The whole of these verses (ver. 7-16) are taken up with a description of the east gate, and the buildings connected with it ; but from certain obscurities in the terms, and the vagueness in some parts of the description itself, it is not possible to speak definitely and minutely of the plan, — not, at at least, without taking great liberties with the text. Some parts of the description are intelligible enough ; as that, there was a porch with pillars, or some sort of ornamental work, to the gate — that on each side there were three chambers (by which are plainly to be understood guard-chambers, such as also belonged to the old temple-buildings, 1 Chron. ix. 26, 27, xxvi. 1 2 ; 2 Kings xxii. 4) — that these chambers were each a rod or six cubits long by as much in breadth, separated from each other by a wall of five cubits, and having windows somehow fixed in them. These are the more prominent points. But when we ask, how the chambers stood precisely to the gate ? whether longitudinally or transversely, projecting altogether outwards from the wall, or altogether inwards, or partly both ? How the threshold could be found in ver. 7 one rod or six cubits broad, and in ver. 9 could be said to be eight cubits ? What precisely were the cV-s, translated pillars, though " they are themselves said to have posts (ver. 49), or how they, as well as the 454 EZEKIEL XL. In this description, as stated in the note below, there are obscurities in regard to several of the particulars mentioned, which we have not the means of satisfactorily clearing up. But we may not the less apprehend the general import of this part of the description. It marks a very decided superiority in the new pattern presented to the eye of Ezekiel, over that which had previousl}^ existed ; the imperfections of the one should have no place in the other. And this, first, in regard to the wall that inclosed the sacred edifice. It is probable that the temple of Solomon was surrounded by such a boundary-wall ; as something of this kind was customary in ancient temples, but there is no appearance of that having formed part of the Divine plan or possessing strictly a sacred character. Hence, various alterations were made from time to time in that respect, and new gates opened (2 Kings xv. 35 ; Jer. xxxvi. 10), for the purpose, no doubt, of suiting more fully the convenience of the worshippers. Something of an irregular, adventitious, of a common or profane character, was thus brought into close contact with the affairs of the temple ; and on this account no scruple was made of turning apartments in the buildings raised on these sacred precincts to the commonest uses. It was in one of these that Jeremiah was detained as in a prison (chap. xx. 2, xxix. 26). But now^ according to the new and better state of things seen in vision by the prophet, this imperfection and arbitrariness were to be done away. The whole summit of the temple-mount was to be set guard chambers, could have had windows, in ver. 16 ? What could be the use of windows, especially to the porches ? How the measurement of the chambers from roof to roof could have been managed so as to make 25 cubits ? And how the pillars of 60 cubits are to be understood, whether as rising aloft to this enormous height, or placed horizontally? These, and several other points, are involved in hopeless obscurity, partly from the terms not being sufficiently understood, and partly from the relative positions of the objects not being distinctly enough marked. Ewald and Hitzig endeavour to make something of it by occasionally altering the text, support- ing themselves to some extent by the LXX. ; but I prefer saying, I don't find the text such as I can fully explain, to making a text which needs little or no explanation. I have no doubt that the original would have been more precise and definite, if this had been necessary to our getting the instruction it was intended to convey. I deem it, therefore, quite unnecessary to enter into the minutiffi of the difierent terms, which can lead to no satisfactory result. THE POSITION, ETC., OF THE TEMPLE. 455 off as an holy place to the Lord ; and the wall enclosing it, and the gates and erections connected with it, were all, equally with the temple itself, to bear on them the stamp of Divine perfection. The wall, as described by the prophet, does not seem to have been planned with any other view than to convey this impression of sacredness. As usual in Divine measurements (for example, the Most Holy Place in the sanctuary, and the city in Rev. xxi. 16), it bears the square form, as broad as it is high ; but this being only twelve feet at the utmost, it was manifestly not designed to present, by its altitude, an imposing aspect, or by its strength to constitute a bulwark of safety. In these respects it could not for a moment be compared with many of the mural erections which existed in antiquity. But as the boundary-line between the sacred and the profane, which, being drawn by the hand of God, must therefore remain free from all interference on the part of man, it is precisely such as might have been expected. Something more, however, needed to be expressed in the construction of the gates. These being the channels of intercourse with what was within — the door-ways out and in to what might be called emphatically the city of the living God — they must be formed so as adequately to provide for the due preservation of the sacred character of the house. This is the point chiefly brought out in the plans and measurements con- nected with them. There are not wanting in the description signs of beauty and magnificence— porticoes, pillars, turrets, carved and ornamented, so as to convey the impression that the way through them conducted to the palace of the great King. But furnished, as they were, so amply with guard-chambers, for those who should be charged with maintaining the sanctity of the house (chap. xliv. 11, 14), they were formed more especially with a view to the holiness, which must be the all-pervading characteristic of the place. It was imprinting on the architecture of this portion of the buildings, the solemn truth, " that there shall in nowise enter into it anything that defileth, neither worketh abomination, or maketh a lie" (Rev. xxi. 27), — a truth which, in past times, partly from defective arrangements, partly from the wilful disregard of such as existed, had been most grievously suffered to fall into abeyance. But henceforth, it must be made known to all, that holiness becometh God's house, and that 456 EZEKIEL XL. they only who possess this shall be allowed to come and minister before him. While this character attaches substantially to each of the four gates, it is brought out most especially and distinctly in connec- tion with the eastern gate, because this was the one that looked straight to the door of the temple, and to it, therefore, belonged a place of pre-eminence. It was through that gate that the prophet in a former vision had seen the glory of the Lord departing (chap. xi. 23), and through this also it was to return ; whence the access through it was to be reserved for special occasions (chap. xliv. 2, 3). The more intimate connection between this and the peculiar manifestations of Deity, imparted to it a character of deeper sacredness. Ver. 17. And he brought me to the outer court, and lo! there were rooms and a pavement made for the court round about ; thirty rooms for the pave- ment ; 18. And the pavement was by the side of the gates, corresponding to the length of the gates; this is the lower pavement. 19. And he measured the breadth from the front of the lower gate to the outer part of the inner court : an hundred cubits eastward and northward. In this brief description of the outer court, there is properly no difficulty in the terms, or any of the particular parts; but still there is an indefiniteness, which would leave us at sea if we were going to draw out the plan. For what was the position of the thirty rooms or cells spoken of in this space? Did they appear immediately in front when one entered the east gate (as Havernick contends), or were they placed at a side (as Bottcher and Hitzig affirm)? Did the measurement of an hundred cubits apply merely to the buildings, or to the court itself? Here, again, is room for difference of opinion. It is foolish for us to fix and determine what the prophet has left indeterminate. I think the natural impression is, that the prophet means to repre- sent the whole outer court as laid with a smooth and polished pave- ment round and round, as far as this court reached ; that on the pavement, but to the north or right, as one entered, there was a large building of thirty rooms covering the whole width of the court in that direction (for why otherwise should he have given the measurement on the east and north merely ? and yet have made it reach from the lower gate to the outer part of the inner court?), so that the measurement given indicated at once the extent of the buildings and the width of the court. (Havernick THE POSITION, ETC., OF THE TEMPLE. 457 disputes this, but without any just reason ; he would make the court larger.) Such is the impression I take up from the description ; but there can be no absolute certainty in regard to the relative positions and adjustments, itself a proof that nothing depends on them. The determinate things in the description are, that the compass of the outer court was exactly defined, an hundred cubits; that it was finely paved, as a place which should be trodden only by clean feet (emblem of internal purity) ; and that the erections belonging to it were to be a square of an hundred cubits, and consisting of thirty apartments. So that here also nothing was left to men's caprice or corrupt fancies ; as had been the case of old. While from the first there appears to have been an outer court connected with Solomon's temple, it seems to have been left to a certain extent open to alterations, as well as the intrusion of idolatrous inventions ; hence we read in 2 Chron. xx. 5, of "a new court," and in 2 Kings xxiii. 11, 12, of the profanation of the place, by some of the worst things of heathenish idolatry being set up there, for which, no doubt, the innovators would plead the absence of any express statutes deter- mining what should or should not belong to it. Now, however, there should be no room for such displays of human arbitrariness and corruption ; a more perfect state of things was to be brought in ; and even all in the outer court was to be regulated by God's hand, and bear the impress of his holiness. This, too, must be hallowed ground, fashioned and ruled in all its parts after the perfect measures of the Divine mind and the just requirements of his service; therefore,— such was evidently the practical result aimed at — let not the ungodly and profane any longer presume to tread such courts (Isaiah i. 12), or desecrate them by the introduction of their own unwarranted inventions. Let all feel that, in coming here, they have to do with a God of purer eyes than to behold iniquity. Now follows a brief description of the north and south gates : Ver. 20. And the gate of the outer court which looks toward the north he measured in its length and its breadth, 21. And its three chambers were on the one side, and three on the other ; and its pillars and its porches were after the measure of the first gate ; the length of it fifty cubits, and the breadth of it twenty-five cubits. 22. And its windows, and its porches, and its palm-trees, were after the measure of the gate which looks toward the east; and by seven steps they go up to it, and its porch before them. 23. And the gate of the inner court was over against the gate northward, and eastward (that is, apparently, the gate of the inner court here stood 458 EZEKIEL XL. right opposite the outer gate, just as it had done on the east : so that the « and eastward," must be taken elliptically for ; and as it was with the east- ward; compare ver. 27, Avhere, the eastward, is left out). 24. And he brought me toward the south, and lo! a gate toward the south, and he measured its pillars and its porches according to these measures. 25. And there were windows to it and to its porches entirely round about, according to those windows ; fifty cubits long, and five-and-twenty cubits broad. 26. And its ascent is by seven steps, and its porch before them ; and it had palm-trees, one on this side, and one on that side, upon its pillars. 27. And there was a gate for the inner court toward the south ; and he measured from gate to gate an hundred cubits. These directions regarding the north and south divisions merely intimate a correspondence in the plan between the different approaches, excepting that in the case of these two other gates, no mention is made of the building with its thirty chambers, which was found on the eastern side. Probably, because only one was needed, and it was assigned to the eastern quarter, as being the more peculiarly sacred ; and being intended for the officiating priests, it might be most conveniently situated there. Having thus finished the boundary-wall and the outer court, he comes to the inner court : Ver. 28. And he brought me to the inner court, by the south gate; and he measured the gate beyond the south according to these measures (the measures, namely, of the outer gate — the inner were of the same dimensions and general structure). 29. And its chambers, and its pillars, and its porch, were according to these measures ; and it had windows for it and for its porch round about; fifty cubits long, and twenty-five cubits broad. 30. And the porch round about was twenty-five cubits long, and five cubits broad. ^ 31. And its porch was toward the outer court; and palm-trees were on its pillars; and its ascent was by eight steps (the outer gate had only seven). 32. And he brought me to the inner court toward the east, and measured the gate according to these measures. 33. And its chambers, and its pillars, and its porch were according to these measures ; and it had windows for it and for its porch round about; the length fifty cubits, and the breadth five-and- twenty cubits. 34. And its porch was toward the outer court ; and palm- trees were on its pillars on both sides ; and its ascent was by eight steps. 35. And he brought me to the north gate, and measured according to these measures. 36. Its chambers, its pillars, and its porch, and its windows round about ; the length fifty cubits, and the breadth twenty-five cubits. 37. And its pillars were toward the outer court (it seems rather odd that these merely ornamental parts should be mentioned here ; we would rather have expected the porch itself, as in the other two cases ; but so the text stands) ; ^ This seems to contradict what has just been said, that the porch of this inner gate was of the same dimensions with the outer one ; it is now made immensely larger. Michaelis, Bottcher, Ewald, Hitzig, etc, consequently reject the text in its present form ; Havernick understands what is said of another porch, one looking inwards towards the temple. It may be so ; but there is nothing in the text to determine such to be the meaning. THE POSITION, ETC., OF THE TEMPLE. 459 and palm-trees were on the pillars on each side ; and the ascent was by eight steps, Ver 38. And there were chambers and doors (literally, a chamber or dwelling, and its door — but it must be understood collectively as chamber, at ver. 7, and elsewhere), by the pillars of the gates (that is, immediately adjoining to these) ; there they washed the burnt-offering. 39. And in the porch of the gate were two tables on the one side, and two tables on the other, to slay on them the burnt-offering, and sin-oflfering, and trespass- offering. 40. And on the side without, where the ascent is to the gate- entrance northwards, were two tables ; and on the other side, which was at the porch of the gate, two tables. 41. Four tables were on this side, and four tables on that, by the side of the gate ; eight tables whereon they killed. 42. And the four tables for the burnt-offering were of hewn stone a cubit and a half long, and a cubit and a half broad, and one cubit high ; and on them they placed the instruments with which they killed the burnt-offering and the sacrifice. 43. And the boundaries (meaning probably the borders of the tables ; this is the only ascertained meaning of the word ; see Hengstenberg on Psalm Ixviii, 14), were one handbreadth, set inwards round about; and on the tables was the flesh of the offering. The provision here made for killing and washing the sacrifice appears evidently to have been connected with only one of the gates ; and yet the passage at the commencement speaks of " the pillars of the gates," as if it were something in common to them all. But by the original direction (Lev. i. 11), the sacrifices were all to be killed on the north side of the altar ; and there is no reason to think, that that regulation was generally departed from in the ministrations of the old temple. It seems to have been with respect to that custom, that Ezekiel himself (chap. viii. 5) calls the north gate " the gate of the altar," that gate being on the account of the sacrifices specially connected with the altar. Hence here, it is in immediate connection with the north gate, that the description is introduced about the prepara- tion of the sacrifices ; and the particular mention of " the north" in ver. 40, seems still more decisively to point out the north gate as the quarter to which these arrangements belonged. It appears quite arbitrary, therefore, to substitute (as Ewald and Hitzig here do) the east for the north gate ; the more especially as the east gate was to be shut to the mass of worshippers, and must, consequently, have been the most unsuitable for such a purpose. The description itself, as to its general import, is of the same nature as the preceding. Everything connected even with the killing and preparing of victims must now be regulated by the word of God. Even there all is to have an impress of sacred- ness, such as has not hitherto been found, in consequence of the higher elevation to which the Divine kingdom was to attain. 460 EZEKIEL XL. 48, 49, XLI. Ver. 44. And outside the inner gate were apartments for the singers in the inner court, which were alongside the north gate, and looking toward the south ; and one alongside the east gate, looking toward the north. 45. And he said to me. This apartment which looks toward the south, is for the priests who keep the charge of the house. 46. And the apartment that looks toward the north, is for the priests who keep the charge of the altar ; these are the sons of Zadok, who draw near of the children of Levi to minister to the Lord. 47. And he measured the court, an hundred cubits long, and an hundred cubits broad, a square ; and the altar was before the house. The two remaining verses properly belong to the next chapter, which treats of the temple itself; with which, therefore, we shall couple them. The court mentioned in the last verse, which measured an hundred cubits square, must not be confounded with w^hat in the preceding verses is called the inner court. The. inner court was the court of Israel, which was open to all who had sacrifices and offerings to bring ; and it went round the three sides of the sacred territory, of the breadth of an hun- dred cubits, or two hundred feet. But this court was precisely an hundred cubits square, and had the altar standing in it, in front of the temple. It was the court of the priests ; and hence is mentioned in connection with those who had charge of the house, the altar, and the sacred music. The description here is more brief, as the things connected with this portion had from the first been made matter of Divine regulation. CHAPTER XL. 48, 49, XLI. THE TEMPLE ITSELF. Chap. XL. 48. And he brought me to the porch of the house, and he measured for the porch five cubits on the one side, and five cubits on the other ; and the breadth of the gate three cubits on the one side, and three cubits on the other. 49. The length of the porch twenty cubits, and the breadth eleven cubits ; and by the steps which they go up to it ; and posts beside the pillar- work, one on this side, and another on that.^ XLI. 1. ^ It is not to be denied, that there are some peculiarities in this last verse, which look very like corruptions of the text. Thus, the eleven cubits assigned for the breadth of the porch gate, which do not bear any exact proportion to the length, and which also difter from the dimensions given in 1 Kings vi. THE TEMPLE ITSELF. 461 And he brought me to the temple, and he measured the pillars (or pillar- work), six cubits broad on the one side, and six cubits broad on the other side ; the breadth of the tabernacle.^ 2. And the breadth of the entrance was ten cubits, and the sides of the entrance ten cubits, and the sides of the entrance five cubits on the one side, and five cubits on the other side ; and he measured its length (viz. of the Holy place), forty cubits, and its breadth twenty cubits. 3. And he went inward (toward the most Holy place), and measured the post of the entrance, two cubits ; and the entrance six cubits ; and the breadth of the entrance seven cubits. 4. And he measured its length twenty cubits, and its breadth, twenty cubits, before the temple ;2 and he said to me. This is the Holy of holies. 5. And he measured the wall of the house, six cubits ; and the breadth of the side-chambers (rib-like struc- tures on the wall — the singular again used collectively), four cubits, round about the house on every side. 6. And the side-chambers were three-storied (literally, chamber on chamber three), and thirty in succession ; and joinings 3, of Solomon's temple, while the length agrees. Some would, therefore, altogether omit the two, and read ten, and others, with the LXX, (changing •^nt^y into •>'n-o)i would make the number twelve. Again, in the clause about the steps, which certainly reads awkwardly as it stands, many substitute '-•by for '•^.i-s, and render : — And by ten steps they go up to it. If the present text is retained, we must supply, " and he measured," or something like it : (he measured) by the steps which they go up to it — the course merely being noticed, but not the exact measurement, as the description here is very brief. It seems intended to show that the porch was much the same as in the old temple of Solomon. 1 The introducing of the tabernacle has certainly a peculiar appearance in this connection ; hence some would regard '-rrs as used in an unusual sense for temple, while the greater part suppose a corruption of the text, and render " porch," or " projection-work." Hav., however, defends the existing text, and conceives that the prophet, as in the dimensions of the outer porch he had pointed to Solomon's temple ; so here, in the temple proper, he points to the old tabernacle, which being composed in its breadth of eight boards, each one and a half cubit broad, would make in all twelve cubits, as here. This was the breadth externally of the tabernacle, though the interior was only ten cubits. The prophet would thus connect together the two most sacred erections of former times. Such was probably the reason, though the mention of the tabernacle even in such a way, looks somewhat artificial. 2 This expression, " before (or in front of) the temple," is used on account of the peculiar sacredness of the Most Holy Place, which stood in a sense by itself, and into which the prophet did not enter with the angel. Hence, he had said, not that the angel brought him in thither, but that the angel went in himself, and measured it ; so that the Most Holy Place appeared like a separate apartment in front of the portion of the temple which alone was accessible to him (comp. 1 Kings vi. 3, where temple is used in the same restricted sense). The dimensions of the two apartments are precisely those of Solomon's temple, which having been fixed of old by Divine direction, are to be regarded as already finally determined. 462 EZEKIEL XLI. were to the wall of the house for the side-chambers round about ; that they might be holden, yet were they not holden in the wall of the house.^ 7. And there was an enlarging and a winding still upwards to the chambers ; for the house had a winding stair still upwards round about for the house ; therefore there was an enlarging of the house upwards, and so, one ascended from the lower to the higher, through the middle. 8. And 1 saw the house's height round about ; the foundations of the chambers were a full rod, six cubits to the joining (or corner). ^ 9. The thickness of the wall, which belonged to the chambers outside, was five cubits ; and there was an unoccupied place (literally, what remained free) within chambers that belonged to the house. 10. And between the apartments {i. e., of the priests in the court, between these and the side-chambers) was the width of twenty cubits round about the house on every side. 11. And the entrance to the chambers was toward the unoccupied place ; one entrance toward the north, and one entrance toward the south ; and the breadth of the unoccupied place was five cubits round about. There is considerable minuteness in the description of these side-chambers, as compared, at least, with the original descrip- tion in 1 Kings vi., where the whole that is said of them is com- prised in two verses. And yet with the advantage of the greater minuteness here, it would be impossible to construct an architec- tural plan, without taking a good deal for granted, that has no place in the prophet's delineation. One can easily understand how there might be a winding stair within, leading up through the several stories, but how should this have been accompanied with an enlarging, or widening of the house itself? What is meant by the foundations being a full rod of six cubits ? Some underground buildings, on which they rested ? or, the ground it- self on which they were raised ? (Both have their advocates.) What was the object of the unoccupied place of five cubits ? and how did it differ from the space of twenty cubits lying between the side-chambers and the halls of the priests ? Very different answers might be, and have been, given to these questions, and the greatest liberties taken with the text to lighten the difficul- ties connected with the account. But we deem it needless to ^ The meaning of this rather obscure description, as we learn by turning to 1 Kings vi. 6, is that there were rests made in the walls of the temple for supports to the side-chambers ; but the temple walls did not thereby become part of this side building ; they stood separate from it. 2 The ^jisis here must be regarded as an architectural term, denoting some- thing about the foundations ; and as it is used elsewhere in the sense of joints, the natural supposition is, that it indicates the point where the foundation of one chamber ceased and another began. Yet, it must be confessed, there is no certainty. THE TEMPLE ITSELF. 463 enter into these, or to attempt fixing what the prophet himself has left vague and obscure. He never intended, that a structure should be reared precisely according to the plan and measure- ments he furnishes ; otherwise, he would have been still more minute in his delineations. He has given enough, however, for his great object, which was chiefly to show, that in the Divine purpose respecting the future, there was to be a full and every- way complete re-construction of the house of God — if not in the outward and material sense, yet in the higher things, which that represented and symbolised ; and with the effect of securing a far purer and more elevated condition for the covenant-people. It is this last point which throughout he seeks to render prominent by the nature of his descriptions. Hence, in marked contrast to the earlier delineations respecting the tabernacle and Solo- mon's temple, he passes rapidly over the things that more im- mediately respected God, and dwells upon those which bore on the state and condition of the people. The temple itself, in its two important divisions, is hastily sketched, and nothing scarcely said of its sacred furniture, not even the slightest notice taken of the ark of the covenant, the heart and centre of the whole in former times ; while the most lengthened details are given of all that concerned the chambers of the priests, and the courts w^hich were to be frequented by the worshippers. The prophet would thus teach, that there was to be in the future a conformity to the Divine idea, where there had been but little before ; that, while Jehovah should remain the same in all his essential attri- butes and manifestations as formerly, he should be otherwise known and glorified by his people ; their dwellings should all become true sanctuaries, and their services fragrant with the odour of living piety. In the excellent words of Havernick, " Jehovah will dwell among a new people ; and accordingly he must do so in a new manner, though one still analogous to the old. The most essential and indispensable condition of this new indwelling of Jehovah among his people, is the due elevation of the Divine community ; hence the importance and high signifi- cance attached by the prophet to the otherwise much inferior and outward parts of the temple-buildings. The description now advances to the preparation of the proper centre of those external forms. No longer, as in the old sanctuary, will Jehovah mani- fest himself in an imperfect manner, but in the full splendour of 464 EZEKIEL XLI. his glory, as at chap, xliii. 1-12. The interior of the temple there stands empty, waiting for the entrance of the Lord, that he may come and fill it with his glory. It is the same temple, but the courts of it have become different, in order to accommo- date a far more numerous people ; and all the provisions and arrangements here bespeak the sincerity and the zeal with which they now seek and serve the Lord. The entire compass of the temple-mount has become a Holy of holies (chap. xlii. 12) ; con- sequently everything now rises to a higher, to its true dignity and importance. On this account the ark of the covenant had no place in this temple ; the full display of the Divine Shechinah has come into its room. And so, Ezekiel treads very closely in the footsteps of his predecessor Jeremiah — who, under the dark foreboding of the near loss of the sacred ark, consoles the people with the glorious promise, that what might seem in a natural point of view to be an irreparable loss, was going to be compen- sated by an unparalleled manifestation of the immediate glory of Jehovah : ' In those days they shall say no more. The ark of the covenant of the Lord, and it shall not come to mind ; neither shall it be missed; and another shall not be made. At that time they shall call Jerusalem the throne of the Lord' (Jer. iii. 16, 17). This thought is merely carried out by Ezekiel after his own manner." Ver 12. And the building which was in front of the separate place on the west end, was seventy cubits broad ; and the wall of the building five cubits broad round about, and its length ninety cubits. 13. And he measured the house an hundred cubits long, and the separate place, and the build- ing and its walls, an hundred cubits long. 14. And the breadth of the front of the house, and of the separate place on the east, an hundred cubits. 15. And he measured the length of the building in front of the separate place, which was upon its back part, and its galleries upon the one side and the other side, an hundred cubits : ^ and (he measured) the inner temple and the ^ By the B''j?;»?i? galleries, are supposed, to be meant some sort of terrace-build- ing, but the word, being only found in this description of Ezekiel, cannot be defined exactly. Indeed, in the account contained in these four verses there is considerable obscurity, so that some have even held, and Bottcher still holds, that it is only the temple that is spoken of. But I think this impos- sible. The prophet seems plainly to mean, that on the west, or to the back of the temple, there was a separate place occupied, as to its greater part, by buildings, which were much about the same external dimensions with the temple — both being in their entire compass a hundred cubits square. But THE TEMPLE ITSELF. 465 porches of the court, 16. The thresholds, and the fixed windows, and the galleries round about, with their three (stories) over against the threshold ; of fine wood (or wainscoated with wood) round about, and from the ground up to the carved windows (probably the highest, and, as such, covered from the view below, though the expression is still peculiar) ; 17. Above the entrance, even to the interior of the house, and the outside, and to all the wall round about, within and without; measurements (were taken). 18. And there were made cherubim and palm-trees ; and a palm-tree v^as between each cherub ; and the cherub had two faces. 19. And the face of a man was toward the palm-tree on the one side, and the face of a lion toward the palm- tree on the other ; they were made over all the house round about. 20. lYom the ground to above the entrance were the cherubim and palm-trees made, and the wall of the temple. 21. The door-posts of the temple were squared, and the face of the sanctuary was of the well-known appearance (literally, of the appearance according to the appearance, the appearance it was wont to present). 22. The altar of wood was three cubits high,'and its length two cubits, and its comers, and its length, and its walls were of wood ; and he said to me, " This is the table which is before the Lord." 23. And there were two doors to the temple and the sanctuary. 24. And the two doors had two leaves, turning-leaves ; two leaves for one door, and two for the other. 25. And there were made for them, for the doors of the temple, cherubim and palm-trees, hke those made on the walls ; and a wooden sill- piece (or plank) upon the front of the porch from without. 26. And there were fixed windows, and palm-trees on each hand on the sides of the porch, and the side-chambers of the house, and the sill-pieces (or planks). The latter part of the description has reference chiefly to the ornamental work, which was done upon the walls of the temple; and which is also mentioned in 1 Kings vi. The account here is fuller, though it makes no mention of the flowers and the over- laying with gold, which are found there. What is meant by the ay in ver. 25 and 26, is quite uncertain, but has been conjec- turally understood to be some sort of sill- piece, or plank about the threshold. Some later writers (Ewald, Hitzig) incline rather to understand it of some peculiar kind of carved work, or settings in the outer porch ; but opinions may vary as much as the fancies of men. It will be observed, too, that the only article of sacred fur- niture mentioned, the altar of incense, is called the Lord's table ; and it is again also, at chap. xliv. 16, referred to under this name ; " They shall enter into my sanctuary, and they shall come near to my table, to minister unto me." It was at the incense-altar, and not at the table of shew-bread, that the daily and regular ministrations of the priesthood in the sanctuary proceeded ; and it was of this also, which stood in immediate front of the veil, that it could with special propriety be said, that it was " before in neither case is the description so full as to enable us to make up the differ- ent items with anything like certainty. 2g 466 EZEKIEL XLII. the Lord." Its being called a table probably referred to the satisfaction and delight with which the Lord was to regard the services, which were henceforth to be offered to him by his re- newed people. And possibly on this account, too, the dimensions are given larger than of old — three cubits in height and two in breadth, instead of two^and one. But the most peculiar part of the description is what relates to the buildings connected with the separate place, so closely adjoining to the temple — in the unoccupied ground on the west — and so much resembling it in size. Nothing is said of their exact intention, nor is there even any particular description of the internal construction. The account, as to details, is remarkably general and obscure ; and why then given at all ? To show, as it would seem, that there was now to be no place left, as of old, which might not be held to be sacred ground. It appears to have been there that, in Manasseh's time, the horses were kept, which were consecrated to the sun (2 Kings xxiii. 11), called " the suburbs of the temple." But all excuse was henceforth to be taken away for such abomi- nations ; the Lord laid claim to all for his peculiar service, and had this also filled up with sacred erections. CHAPTER XLII. CHAMBERS OF THE TEMPLE AND ITS BOUNDARY WALLS. Ver. 1. And he brought me forth into the outer court, the way toward the north, and he brought me to the chamber which is over against the separate place, and which is over against the building toward the north. 2. Before the length of the hundred cubits (those, namely, of the separate place, mentioned in chap. xli. 13), was the north door, and the breadth fifty cubits (occupying half the space). 3. Over Against the twenty (i. c, probably the twenty cubits spoken of in chap. xli. 10), which belonged to the inner court, and over against the pavement which belonged to the outer court, was gallery on gallery threefold. 4. And before the chamber was a walk ten cubits broad ; into the interior (namely, of the chamber) a way of one cubit ; and their doors toward the north. 6. And the upper chambers were shorter ; for the galleries took away (room) from them, above the lower, and the middle parts of the building. 6. For they were threefold ; but they had not pillars as the pillars of the courts ; therefore was it straitened more than the lower- most and the middle part from the ground. 7- And the wall which was without over against the chambers, toward the outer court, in front of the chambers — its length was fifty cubits. 8. For the length of the chambers CHAMBERS OF THE TEMPLE, ETC. 467 which belonged to the inner court was fifty cubits ; and lo, before the temple were an hundred cubits. 9. And from below these chambers was the entrance on the east, when one goes to them from the outer court. 10. The chambers were of the thickness of the wall of the court toward the east, over against the separate place and over against the building. 11. And the way (or direction) before them was like the appearance of the chambers which were on the north side, as long as they, as broad as they ; and all their outgoings, and according to their plans, and according to their doors (was all made). 12. And according to the doors of the chambers, which were toward the south, there was a door by the head of the way, the way directly before the wall toward the east, where one enters in. 13. And he said to me, the apartments on the north and the apartments on the south, which are before the separate place, these are the sacred dwellings, wherein the priests, that draw near to the Lord, shall eat the most holy things ; there shall they lay the most holy things, and the meat-offering, and the sin-offering, and the trespass-offering ; for the place is holy. 14. When the priests enter in, then they shall not go out from the holy place into the outer court ; and there shall they lay their garments wherein they minister, for they are holy ; they shall put on other garments, and shall approach to what is of the people. This part of cliap. xlii. is taken up with describing the apart- ments, or chambers, which were reserved for the officiating priests. That this was their particular destination, is expressly stated in the two last verses. The aim and object of the buildings, there- fore, is quite accurately defined ; they were for the priests, that these might be able in their ministrations, to treat with due solemnity the sacred things of the Lord, and keep broad the distinction between the holy and the corrupt, the Divine and the human. So that the particularising here, is in perfect accordance with the great design of the prophet, in exhibiting a restored community and worship purified from the corruptions which had hitherto cleaved to them. And as he had before (chap. xl. 44-46) spoken of apartments on the north and south gates of the inner court, for the officiating priests, it seems quite necessary to understand what is said here of the same ; the prophet merely returns, after having seen and described what belonged to the temple, to take a second and more exact view of these sacerdotal chambers. But why they should be said to stand over against the separate place and the building belonging to it, rather than the temple itself (ver. 1-10), does not appear. Nor is the de- scription generally of such a kind, that we could hope to make it more intelligible to an English reader, by any lengthened observations. It seems impossible to ascertain distinctly the pattern, without either making considerable alterations in the text, or filling up many blanks from imagination. It is enough 468 EZEKIEL XLir. for us to know, that the prophet saw in vision all the subordinate provisions made, which were necessary to the full and efficient discharge of the duties of the priesthood. He thus obtained for the church the assurance, that the service of God would yet be performed so as to meet God's perfect approval. We, therefore, pass on to the closing verses, which give the dimensions of the boundary-wall. Ver. 15. And he finished the measurements of the house inwards, and he brought me forth by the gate, which looks toward the east, and he measured it round about. 16. He measured the east side (literally, wind) with the measuring rod, 600 rods, with the measuring rod round about. 17. He measured the north side, 500 rods, with the measuring rod round about. 18. He measured the south side, 500 rods, with the measuring rod. 19. He turned about to the west side, and measured 500 rods with the measuring rod. 20. By the four sides he measured it ; it had a wall round about, 500 long, and 500 broad, to make a separation between the holy and the profane. We cannot but note the particularity with which these measure- ments are given, the rod as the measuring instrument, and the number of lengths on each side, being successively stated in regard to each. This plainly shows the importance which the prophet attached to the external dimensions, while the frequent occurrence also of the terms employed, more fully certifies us of their exact amount. Yet from an early period a disposition has been shown to tamper with the numbers. The Septuagint sub- stitutes cubits for rods, and the great mass of modern commen- tators (still also Ewald, Hitzig, Bottcher, Thenius, the latter iu his Anhang to the Com. on Kings) have thought it necessary to adopt the same alteration. The chief reasons for this are, first, the apparently extravagant compass, assigned to the sacred buildings, — a square of 500 rods, or 3,000 cubits, and these cubits about two feet each (chap. xl. 5), making in all a square of fully 1^ of a mile. There can be no doubt that this exceeded the limits of all ancient Jerusalem ; and so, it is thought, the prophet could never intend to give such enormous bounds to his new temple ; he must have meant cubits only, and not rods. Then, it is also alleged, that the particular measurements* in the preceding portion, do not require a space larger than a square of 500 cubits, and that the adoption of rods here instead of cubits, would necessarily leave an immense space of unappropriated ground. Havernick has tried to evade this argument, by denying CHAMBERS OF THE TEMPLE, ETC. 469 that the 100 cubits mentioned in connection with the outer and inner courts (chap. xl. 23, 27) are given as the measures of the whole breadth of these, and contending that they apply only to the distance between one gate and another in the same court. I cannot concur in this ; for I think the natural supposition is, that the gates between which the distances in question lay, were simply those of the two courts respectively. But if by rejecting that method of relief, we seem to have far too much space on hand, by adopting the smaller measures of cubits instead of rods, we should have decidedly too little. I think this might be proved by reckoning up the different items of the several measures con- nected with the temple itself and the separate place. But as we should thus inevitably get into intricacies, where few w ould follow, we prefer establishing our position by a simpler process. In the central part to the east of the temple, there was a square of 100 cubits, the court of the priests. But if on three sides of an entire square of 500 cubits, you take off first 100 cubits for the outer court, then 100 for the inner, with nothing intervening, there would be left precisely this square of 100 more for the court of the priests. But where, then, w^ere the space to be found for the broad outermost wall, outside of which the measurement of 500 was made — six cubits all round ? Where, again, for the seven steps leading up to the gate of the inner court, and the breadth of the wall dividing it from the outer ? and where, once again, space for the eight steps leading up to the court of the priests, and the buildings of many chambers for them ? There is evidently no room for these on the cubit hypothesis, which would require the different courts to be inclosed, and separated from each other, by strictly mathematical lines. So that, the objection of too much ground by the measurements of the text, may fairly be met by the too little of the hypothesis. In truth, we have here another of those traits which render manifest, and, I believe, were intended to render manifest and palpable the ideal character of the whole description. It is of a nature throughout, which defies all attempts to bring it within the bounds of the real. Those who have endeavoured jso to deal with it, have always been obliged to resort to numberless arbitrary suppositions and violent adjustments. And, in par-. ticular, the vast compass the prophet so explicitly and distinctly assigns to the whole area, involving a sort of natural incongruity, 470 EZEKIEL XLIir. like the promise of the new David in the prophecies of the restoration, must ever be regarded as an inseparable obstacle to their superficial literalism. It is an incontrovertible evidence tliat the prophet had something else in his eye than the masonry of stone and lime erections, and was labouring with conceptions which could only find their embodiment in the high realities of God's everlasting kingdom. We abide, then, by the Hebrew text as the true handwriting of the prophet, the very difficulties of which are a proof of their correctness ; and we regard the immense extent of the sacred area as a symbol of the vast enlargement that was to be given to -the kingdom of God in the times of Messiah. It was im- measurably to surpass the old in the extent of its territory, and the number of its adherents, as well as in the purity of its worship. The wall that surrounded the sacred buildings is expressly said, in ver. 20, to have been for separating between the holy and profane ; not, therefore, as in Rev. xxi. 12, and very commonly elsewhere, for defence and safety ; as, indeed, its comparative want of elevation might seem to render it unfit for such a purpose. But its square form, and the square appearance of the entire buildings (as in John's city. Rev. xxi. 16), betokened the strength and solidity of the whole, along with a vast increase in extent and number. A perfect cube, it was the emblem of a kingdom that could not be shaken or removed. And thus every way it exhibited, to the eye of faith, the true ideal of that pure and glorious temple, which, resting on the foundation of the eternal Son, and girt round by all the perfections of Godhead, shall shine forth the best and noblest workmanship of Heaven. CHAPTER XLIIL THE lord's return TO THE TEMPLE. In the preceding part of the vision, the external things belong- ing to the Lord's house have been exhibited in their vast THE lord's return TO THE TEMPLE. 471 proportions and manifold arrangements. Everything has be- come ready for the Lord himself taking formal possession of it, by the visible manifestations of his glory. This v^as now, as of old, to constitute the peculiar distinction of the place ; and was to belong to this temple in a degree so much higher than formerly, as the general plan transcended what had existed in the past. The prophet had seen in vision the glory of the Lord depart from the old temple (chap, xi.), by the way of the east, and rest over the Mount of Olives, as it were to watch upon the destruction which must thenceforth alight on the devoted city. And now, again, when the work of judgment has run its course, and due preparation has been made for the return of Jehovah to bless his people, a manifestation of the Divine glory appears to the prophet similar to what he had seen on the banks of the Chebar, and also in the old temple-courts (ver. 1-3) ; and by the very same approach, through which it had departed, it comes back, and fills the whole house. The prophet is then caught up by the Spirit of the Lord, and placed in the inner court, where as a priest his proper position was ; and he heard the voice of God speaking to him from within, while the interpreting angel beside him gives utterance to the message meant to be conveyed. Ver. 1. And he brought me to the gate that looks toward the east. 2. And, behold, the glory of the God of Israel came by the way of the east ; and its noise * was as the sound of many waters : and the earth shone from his glory. 3. And according to appearance, the appearance that I saw was like the appearance which I saw when I came to destroy the city ; 2 and the vision like the vision which I saw by the river Chebar ; and 1 fell upon my face. 4. And the glory of Jehovah came into the house, by the way of the gate whose prospect is toward the east. 5. And the Spirit lifted me up, and brought me into the inner court ; and, behold, the glory of Jehovah filled the whole house. 6. And I heard him speaking to me from the house ; and the man (viz., he who had been measuring the buildings) was standing beside 1 What is meant is not the voice of God, but the sound or noise of the manifested glory of God, as formerly described, chap. i. 24. It is better, therefore, to render " its noise," than " his voice," as the latter seems to point to what is not here intended — a personal speaking on the part of God. ^ A striking example of the manner in which the prophets identified themselves with him in whose name they spake, and whose word they uttered. Ezekiel came to destroy, when he came to utter God's destroying word. Comp. Gen. xlviii. 22 ; IIos. vi. 5, etc. 472 EZEKIEL XLIII. me. 7. And he said to me, Son of man, the place of my throne,* and the place of the soles of my feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel for ever, and not any more shall the children of Israel defile my holy name, they and their kings, by their whoredoms, and by the carcases of their kings — their high places.^ 8. In that they have set their threshold by my threshold, and their posts beside my posts, and there was (but) a wall between me and them ; and they defiled my holy name by their abominations which they have done, and I consumed them in mine anger. 9. Now they shall put far away their whoredom, and the carcases of their kings, from me, and I will dwell among them for ever. 10. Thou son of man, show the house to the house of Israel, and let them be ashamed for their iniquities, and measure the pattern. 11. And if they are ashamed for all that they have done, show them the form of the house, and the pattern of it, and the entrances out and in to it, and all its forms, and all its ordinances, even all its forms, and all its statutes; and write it before them, that they may observe all its forms, and all its statutes, and do them. 12. This is the law of the house : Upon the top of the mountain its whole boundary round about is most holy (a holy of holies). Behold, this is the law of the house. ^ The construction is here quite similar to that of chap. xxxv. 10, where, to render the object uppermost in the thoughts particularly prominent, the speech begins with it, preceded by an ris- It is as much as to say, This is it —this that you have seen, with which your mind has been so long occupied, is my throne. 2 By mentioning the " carcases of their kings," the prophet has been very commonly thought to refer to the burying-place of the kings being improperly situated within the temple-mount, and, perhaps, to some connec- tion between this and the abominations of idolatry. But there is no evidence of such a thing in the historical or prophetical books. No charge of cor- ruption, on this score, is even so much as mooted against the people ; while it is clear, from the manner it is noticed here, that not only a corruption, but a most flagrant and crying abomination ^is referred to. I think, there- fore, that we must understand by the expression, the pollutions of idolatry. These are characterised by a strong, yet, in the circumstances, not unnatural epithet of contempt and abhorrence. Not unnatural ; for God is here pre- senting himself as the glorious head and monarch of his people — so near to them, that the earthly head, the David, has only the name of the prince (chap, xliv., xxxvi.). God himself occupies the throne ; and in what light, then, appeared their old idols ? Kings indeed — other kings, but dead and not living ; only carcases of kings. And to make it more plain that such are really meant, the high-places are immediately mentioned, and placed in apposition with these carcases of kings, as but another name for the same thing ; for it was with the high-places that the idol-worship was more ^specially connected ; insomuch, that God gave the name of Bamah, high- place, to all their worship (see on chap. xx. 29). These rival monarchs, therefore, whose throne was, as it were, on the high-places, but whose foul services had also been brought into the courts of God's house, these must now be put away — must, like carcases, be buried out of sight. THE lord's return TO THE TEMPLE. 473 In this striking passage, we are first of all to note the character in which the Lord now appears to dwell and manifest himself among his people. It is as their Divine king occupying that house as the throne of his kingdom. God had always claimed this position, and had at first resisted their desires to have an earthly sovereign, because this virtually implied a rejection of him as the proper head of the state. Even when he consented to their request, it was with a solemn and earnest protest against the person chosen ruling in his own name, and for selfish pur- poses, or in any other way than as the Lord's vicegerent. The protest, however, was soon forgotten. The king looked upon himself, and the people also looked upon him, as possessing an absolute title to the throne, and the earthly head came very much to occupy, in men's eyes, the place of the true and proper king. But in the new and more perfect order of things now unfolded in vision to the prophet, this flagrant perversion of the past must be rectified ; God must be known and honoured as alone pro- perly " king in Jeshurun." And lience, not only here does he declare that he had come to occupy his throne in the house, but, as mentioned in the note on ver. 7, the earthly head, when spokeil of in a subsequent chapter, is simply called " the prince." The supremacy and glory of Jehovah were henceforth to appear in their full splendour. We have further to notice in the pre- ceding passage the essentially moral character of all that was here displayed in vision respecting the future things of God's kingdom. It was not a pattern which God was going to carry out anyhow, and accomplish as by a simple fiat of Omnipotence. It depended upon the condition of the people, and only if they agreed to put away sin from among them, and give God the supreme place in their hearts, could he manifest himself toward them in the manner described. And, finally, while the whole scheme was fraught with lessons of instruction, and inlaid with principles of holiness, the grand and distinguishing peculiarity of this pattern of the future, as compared with the past, we are expressly informed, was to be a general and all-pervading sanctity. The law of the house, — what was pre-eminently en- titled to be called the law, — consisted in the whole region of the temple-mount being most holy. Not, as hitherto, was this characteristic to be confined to a single apartment of the temple, it was to embrace the entire circumference occupied by the 474 EZEKIEL XLIII. symbolical institutions of the kingdom, — the chambers allotted to the priests, and even the courts trodden by the people, as well as the immediate dwelling-place of »Tehovah. All were to have one character of sacredness, because all connected with them were to occupy a like position of felt nearness to God, and equally to enjoy the privilege of access to him. So that the pattern delineated is that of a true theocracy, having God himself for king, with the community in all its members for true denizens of the kingdom, and acceptable ministers of righteousness before the Lord. The remaining verses of this chapter (ver. 13-27), which con- tain a description of the altar of burnt-offering, and of the necessary rites of consecration connected with it, seem at first view somewhat out of place. But there is an historical reason for such a description being given here. Now that the Lord has taken possession of the house, the prophet goes on to show how the work of fellowship and communion with him is to pro- ceed on the part of the people. It must, as it were, commence anew ; and of course be conducted after the old manner, for no other could here come into contemplation. But in ancient times the grand medium of Divine intercourse was the altar, at*which all gifts and sacrifices were to be presented for the Divine favour and blessing. And, therefore, the prophet here, to show that the way was open, and that the people might have free access to the fellowship of God, after having briefly sketched the dimensions of the altar, gives instructions for its consecration, and the con- secration of the priesthood, which was all that was needed to complete the arrangements. There is no need for going into the particulars, either of the dimensions of the altar, or of the prescribed services, as nothing peculiar seems to belong to them. The dimensions named have usually been thought to differ materially from those of the altar made by Solomon, which was ten cubits high, and twenty in length and breath. But the pro- bability is, that they are the same ; though it is scarcely possible to show the agreement without a diagram. The curious may see it done in Thenius (Biicher der Konige, Anhang, p. 42). The seven days' purification services for the altar, have respect to the original directions of Moses for the same purpose, in Exod. xxix. 37 ; and are simply a preparation for the great end aimed at — that God might accept the sacrifices of the people and be ' THE lord's return TO THE TEMPLE. 475 gi'acious to them (ver. 27). This indispensably required that there should first be a consecrated way of access — a holy altar, and a holy priesthood to minister at it. Ver. 13. And these are the measures of the altar by cubits ; the cubit is the cubit and an handbreadth : And the bottom is a cubit, and a cubit in breadth (i.e., on each side a cubit); and its border to its edge round about, a span ; and this is the rim (or surface) of the altar. 14. And from the bottom on the ground to the lower ledge, two cubits, and the breadth one cubit ; and from the lower ledge to the greater ledge, four cubits, and the breadth a cubit. 15. And the Harel, four cubits ; and from the Arieil and upwards, four horns. ^ 16. And the Arieil, twelve cubits long, by twelve broad, square on the four sides of its squares. 17. And the ledge, fourteen in length, by fourteen in breadth, on the four squares of it ; and the border about it half a cubit; and the bottom of it a cubit round about; and its steps looking toward the east. 18. And he said to me, Son of man, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, These are the ordinances of the altar in the day when they shall make it, to offer burnt-offerings on it, and to sprinkle blood on it. 19. And thou shalt give to the priests the Levites, those that are of the seed of Zadok, who draw near to me, saith the Lord Jehovah, to minister to me, a young bullock for a sin-offering. 20. And thou shalt take of its blood and put it on the four horns thereof, and on the four corners of the ledge, and on the border round about ; and thou shalt cleanse it (literally, bear its blame, or make expiation for it), and shalt purify it. 21. And thou shalt take the bullock of the sin-offering, and it shall be burnt in the appointed place of the house, without the sanctuary. 22. And on the second day thou shalt offer a kid of the goats without blemish for a sin-offering ; and the altar shall be cleansed according as it was cleansed with the bullock. 23. When thou hast made an end of cleansing, thou shalt offer a young bullock without blemish, and a ram out of the flock without blemish. 24. And thou shalt offer them before the Lord, and the priests shall cast salt upon them, and shall offer them up for a burnt-offering to the Lord. 25. Seven days shalt thou prepare a goat for a sin-offering daily; and a bullock from the herd, and a ram from the flock without blemish, shall they prepare. 26. Seven days shall they purge the altar and purify it, and consecrate themselves (literally, fill their hands, comp. Exod. xxix. 24). 27. And when these days are expired, on the eighth day, and thenceforth, it shall be, that the priests shall present your burnt-offerings upon the altar, and your peace-offerings ; and I will accept you, saith the Lord Jehovah. 1 This is the most singular part of the description respecting the altar, and we simply give in the original form the two terms, which cause the chief difficulty. Many, including Havernick, regard these as significant terms ap- plied to the altar, to denote the high security and strength which it was to be the means of imparting to the new community: " And the mount of God is four cubits, and from the lion of God," etc. One can scarcely avoid feel- ing, that such epithets, introduced thus in the middle of dry measurements, have a very fanciful and unnatural appearance. Besides the second of the two, '^^s^Sj is not exactly the same with the Vs'-'S of Isaiah xxix. 1. I am, therefore, inclined to follow Gesenius, Ewald, Hitzig, Thenius, and to regard the words as properly but one, and to take it as a term for the hearth, or fire-place of the altar. 476 EZEKIEL XLIV. CHAPTER XLIV. ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND THE PRIESTHOOD. Ver. 1. And he brought me again by the way of the outer gate of the sanctuary, that looks toward the east, and it was shut. 2. And Jehovah said to me, This gate shall be shut, it shall not be opened, and no man shall enter in by it ; for Jehovah the God of Israel entered by it, and it shall be shut. 3. For the prince — he, the prince, shall sit in it, to eat bread before the Lord ; he shall enter through the porch of the gate, and by that way also go out. 4. And he brought me by the way of the north gate to the front of the house ; and I looked, and behold, the glory of Jehovah filled the house, and I fell upon my face. 5. And Jehovah said to me, Son of man, set thine heart, and see with thine eyes, and hear with thine ears, all that I am going to speak to thee, concerning all the ordinances of the house of the Lord, and concerning all its laws ; and direct thy heart to the entrance of the house, in every approach to the sanctuary. 6. And thou shalt say to the rebellious, to the house of Israel, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Let it suffice you of all your abominations, O house of Israel. 7. In that you brought strangers, uncircumcised in heart, and uncircumcised in flesh, to be in my sanctuary, to pollute it, my house ; in that you made them ofier my bread, the fat and the blood ; and they broke my covenant to (i. e., in addition to) all your abominations. 8. And ye did not keep my holy charge, and ye set for keepers of my charge in my sanctuary for yourselves (i. e., such as you yourselves thought good, persons after your mind and ways, not mine). 9. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, No stranger, uncircumcised in heart, and un- circumcised in flesh, shall come into my sanctuary, of any stranger that is in the midst of the children of Israel. 10. But only the Levites that have gone away far from me, when Israel went astray, who went astray from me after their idols, and (for so doing) they bear their iniquity. 11. And they shall be ministers in my sanctuary, ofticers at the gates of the house, and ministers to the house : they shall slay the burnt-offering and the sacrifice for the people, and they shall stand before them to minister to them. 12. Because they ministered for them before their idols, and were for a stumbling- block of iniquity to the house of Israel : therefore have I lifted up my hand against them, saith the Lord Jehovah, and they bear their iniquity. 13. And they shall not draw near to me to do the priest's office to me, and come near to any of my holy things, to the most holy place ; and they shall bear their shame, and their abominations which they have committed. 14. But I appoint them keepers of the charge of the house, for all its service, and for all that is done in it. 15. And the priests, the Levites, the sons of Zadok, who kept the charge of my sanctuary, when the children of Israel went astray from me, they shall draw near to me to minister to me ; and they shall stand before me to offer to me the fat, and the blood, saith the Lord Jehovah. 16. They shall enter into ray sanctuary, and they shall draw near to my table, to minister to me, and they shall keep my charge. 17. And it shall be, that when they enter into the gates of the inner court, they shall be clothed with linen garments ; and no wool shall come upon them, while they minister in the gates of the inner court, and within. 18. Linen turbans shall they have upon their heads, and linen breeches upon their loins ; they shall not gird themselves in sweat. 19. And when they go forth into the outer court, into ^ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND THE PRIESTHOOD. 477 the outer court to the people, they shall put off their garments in which they ministered, and shall lay them in the holy chambers, and shall put on other garments : and they shall not sanctify the people in their garments (those, viz., in which they ministered in the sanctuary — their more peculiar priestly attire). 20. And they shall not shave their heads, nor let the hair grow long ; they shall only poll their heads. 21. And no priest shall drink wine, when he enters into the inner court. 22. And they shall not take to wife a widow, or her that has been put away, but only virgins of the seed of the house of Israel, and a widow that may be the widow of a priest shall they take. 23. And they shall teach my people between holy and profane, and cause them to discern between impure and clean. 24. And in controversy they shall stand to judge according to my judgments ; and they shall give judgment ; and they shall keep my laws and my statutes in all mine assem- blies ; and they shall hallow my sabbaths. 25. And they shall come at no dead person to defile themselves, but they may be defiled for father and for mother, and for son and for daughter, for brother and for sister, who has not had an husband. 26. And after he is cleansed, they shall reckon to him seven days. 27. And on the day of his going into the sanctuary, into the inner court, to minister in the sanctuary, he shall bring his sin-offering, saith the Lord Jehovah. 28. And it shall be to them for an inheritance ; I am their inheritance, and ye shall give them no possession in Israel, I am their possession. 29. The meat-offering, and the sin-offering, and the trespass-offering shall they eat ; and every devoted thing in Israel shall be theirs. 30. And the first of all the first fruits wholly, and all the oblations wholly, of all your oblations, shall belong to the priests ; and the first of your dough shall ye give to the priest, that the blessing may be made to rest in your house. 31. Of no carcase, or what is torn, whether of fowl or of beast, shall the priests eat. As the preceding chapter had disclosed the purpose of God to re-occupy, and that for ever, this new temple, and had described the necessary means and rites of consecration, in order to its be- ing a source of blessing to his people, so the present chapter lays down regulations for preventing an}^ new desecration of the house, such as might again compel God to withdraw his gracious pre- sence. These regulations refer successively to the prince and the priesthood — the two classes, through whom directly the former pollutions had been introduced into the house of God. In regard to the former, who is simply called the pririce (for the reason stated under last chapter), it is impossible for us to think of any one but the royal head, as he is throughout spoken of as an individual, and in the next chapter is directed " to pre- pare for himself, and for all the people of the land," a sin-oflFering (chap. xlv. 22). So that the idea of Havernick, that the word is used collectively for the rulers and presidents generally of the people, is quite untenable. And not less so is the opinion, that by the expression is simply to be understood the Messiah ; for this is utterly irreconcileable with all the prescriptions given, and 478 EZEKIEL XLIV. in particular with those requiring the presentation of sacrifices and sin-offerings for the prince. It is to be explained precisely as the whole delineation here, and in the preceding visions (chap, xxxiv.-xxxix,), by viewing it as part of an ideal description of coming realities under the form and aspect of the old relations. And no more than we expect other parts of the vision to find their accomplishment under the gospel by a restoration of the carnal sacrifices and institutions of Judaism, should we look here for an actual prince to follow the regulations prescribed. Stand- ing on the position he did, the prophet must speak of the future under the image of the past ; and as it w^as by means of the earthly head of the Jewish state, that many of the former cor- ruptions had been introduced, he now shows how a repetition of such evils is to be guarded against in the future. Whether the kingly power should ever again be concentrated in one person, or should be shared by many, is of no moment as regards the substance of the truth here unfolded. What is said in the present chapter on this subject is very little, and relates to but one point, — the connection between the prince and the east gate (ver. 1-3). Because the Lord had ap- peared in the vision returning by this gate, a peculiar stamp of sacredness was put upon it. It was, therefore, not to be open for ordinary worshippers, but only for the prince; he was to enter by it, and sit there and eat bread before the Lord. What could this import, but that the prince should feel he now occupied a place of peculiar nearness to God ? As God's vicegerent and deputy among the people, it became him to be the most distin- guished representative in public life of God's holiness ; to tread the higher walks of spiritual communion and fellowship with Heaven ; and stand pre-eminent in his zeal for the interests of truth and righteousness. Far now from usurping the authority that belonged to God, and abusing to selfish ends and purposes the power w^hich was given by him for higher ends, all authority and power in Israel should be exercised — if this Divine ideal were reduced to practice— in a solemn feeling of subordination to God's majesty, and with an unfeigned desire for his glory. 2. The prophet dwells at much greater length on the priest- hood, as this class had more immediately to do with God's sanc- tuary, and in their condition and behaviour were reflected those generally of the covenant-})eople. It is on account of this close ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND THE PRIESTHOOD. 479 connection, first between the priesthood and the sanctuary, and then between the priesthood and those whom they represented in Israel, that the prophet appears at the commencement of the passage to identify the apostacy of the nation at large with the desecrations of Grod's house by the priesthood. He says (ver. 6, etc.), " Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Let it suffice you of all your abominations, O house of Israel ; in that you brought strangers uncircumcised in heart and uncircumcised in flesh to be in my sanctuary, to pollute it, my house, in that ye made them offer my bread, the fat and the blood ; and they broke my covenant to (in addition to) all your abominations. And ye did not keep my holy charge, but set for keepers of my charge in my sanctuary for yourselves." The children of Israel are spoken of as doing all this because the corrupt priesthood was inseparably connected with the sins of the people— the one continually acting and re-acting on the other. And the corruption in the priest- hood, it will be observed, is expressed as if persons had been put into the office, who were not of the tribe of Levi, or even of the seed of Israel, but uncircumcised heathen. Not that literally persons of this description had been admitted into the priestly office ; that did not take place, not even in the kingdom of Israel, where still the Israelites were employed, though not of the fa- mily of Aaron. But the prophet is viewing all in a spiritual light ; he is reading forth the import of the outward transactions, as they appeared to the eye of God ; and as in that respect, the officiating priesthood had been no better than uncircumcised strangers, so he speaks of them as having actually been such. And if thus, in regard to the past, the prophet expresses the reality in the language of symbol, and must be understood according to the spiritual import, not the mere letter of the description, it cannot certainly be otherwise, when he points to the future. In reference to this, he says, not any of these uncir- cumcised strangers of the children of Israel, not any of the Levites who took part in the idolatrous services which had formerly been practised in the house of God — not these, but only the sons of Zadok, who had stood faithful, and kept the charge of the Lord, when others fell into impurities, were henceforth to minister in the Lord's house ; the rest were, at the most, to be employed about the subordinate ministrations of the temple-courts. The instruction points back to 1 Sam. ii. 32, 35, where the priesthood 480 EZEKIEL XLIV. of the line of Ithamar was discharged from the office of minister- ing in the Lord's house, on account of its corruption, in order that another line might be chosen, who should perform the work after the Lord's mind and heart. This new line was found in Zadok and his house (1 Kings ii. 35 : 1 Chron. xxiv. 3), whose name also (the righteous) was significant of what was expected at their hand. In later times they lost the distinction implied in this name, and took part in the general apostacj; but the prophet keeps his eye upon their original state, and speaks of them as they appeared when first chosen to the office. The promise, therefore, of a priesthood of the house of Zadok, entirely corresponded to the promise of a shepherd with the name of David. It simply indicated a race of faithful and devoted ser- vants, in whom the outward and the inward, the name and the idea, should properly coincide — a priesthood serving God in newness of spirit, not in the oldness of the letter, as the people whom they represented, should also have become true Israelites, themselves a royal priesthood offering up spiritual sacrifices to the Lord. In truth, it is the raising up of a people, who should be such a priesthood, that is meant by the description, and the sons of Zadok came into notice, only because in connection with them there was an historical ground for taking them as repre- sentatives of a right-hearted spiritual community. So that it is the same truth, only under a different outward clothing, which is exhibited by Isaiah, when he speaks of the Lord's people generally in the more glorious future being taken to be priests and Levites (Isa. Ixi. 6, Ixvi. 21). All was to rise into a new and higher sphere, first the kingdom of God itself, and then the people who enjoyed its distinctive privileges and experienced its blessings. Having given promise of such a true spiritual priesthood, under the old names and historical relations, the prophet pro- ceeds to describe, after the same manner, how the sanctity of the priesthood was to be preserved and manifested. The true import of the symbolical regulations in the law was now to be reached, and he therefore describes what was to be done under the observance of these regulations : — They should wear only linen garments (emblems of cleanliness and purity), they should neither shave their heads (as mourners did), nor let their hair grow uncut (as persons unfit for active service), nor drink wine THE SACRED ALLOTMENTS IN LAND AND GIFTS. 481 when engaged in the service of the sanctuary, lest they should be unfit for the spiritual actions required of them, nor, in short, do any of the things which, under the outward restrictions of a symbolical ritual, betokened a want of inward purity. Holiness to the Lord should be expressed in their whole state and pro- cedure, as well as in the ministrations of their public service ; and one pervading characteristic be found in God's house, and the servants who belonged to it. CHAPTER XLV. THE SACRED ALLOTMENTS IN LAND AND GIFTS. Ver. 1. And when ye shall divide the land by lot, ye shall offer an oblation to the Lord ; an holy portion of the land, in length five-and twenty thousand long, and ten thousand broad : it shall be holy in all its borders round about. 2. Of this there shall be for the sanctuary five hundred by five hundred {i.e., in length and breadth so many) square round about ; and fifty cubits round about for its suburbs round about. 3. And of this measure thou shalt measure the length of five- and- twenty thousand, and a breadth of ten thousand, and in it shall be the sanctuary and the Most Holy Place. 4. The holy portion of the land shall be for the priests, the ministers of the sanctuary, who shall come near to minister to the Lord ; and it shall be a place for their houses, and an holy place for the sanctuary. 5. And the five- end-twenty thousand in length, and ten thousand in breadth, shall be for the Levites,the ministers of the house, as a possession for twenty chambers. 6. And ye shall appoint the possession of the city five thousand broad, and five-and -twenty thousand in length, over against the oblation of the holy portion ; it shall be for the whole house of Israel. 7. And for the prince there shall be on the one side, and on the other side (a portion) of the holy oblation, and of the possession of the city, in front of the holy oblation, and in front of the possession of the city, on the west side westward, and on the east side east- ward ; and the length over against one of the portions from the west border to the east border. 8. For land it shall be to him a possession in Israel ; and my princes shall no more oppress my people ; and they shall give the land to the house of Israel by their tribes. 9. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Let it suffi.ce you, O princes of Israel ; remove violence and spoil, and execute judgment and justice ; withdraw your spoliations from off my people, saith the Lord Jehovah. 10. Ye shall have just balances, and a just ephah, and a just bath. 11. The ephah and the bath shall be of one measure, that the bath may contain the tenth part of an homer, and the ephah the tenth part of an homer ; after the homer shall be its measure. 12. And the shekel shall be twenty gerahs ; twenty shekels, five-and-twenty shekels, fifteen shekels, shall be your maneh.^ 13. This is ^ It is scarcely possible to make any intelligible sense of this verse as it 2 II 482 EZEKIEL XLV. the oblation that ye shall offer, the sixth part of an ephah of an homer of wheat, and the sixth part of an ephah of an homer of barley. 14. And the ordinance of the oil, the bath of oil, (ye shall offer) the tenth of the bath out of the cor — an homer of ten baths, for ten baths are an homer. 15. And one lamb out of the flock, out of two hundred, from the fat pastures of Israel, for a meat-offering, and for a burnt-offering, and for peace-offerings, to make reconciliation for them, saith the Lord Jehovah.^ 16. All the people in the land shall give (literally, shall be for) this oblation to the prince in Israel. 17. And there shall be upon the prince the burnt-offerings, and the meat- offering, and the drink-offerings in the feasts, and in the new moons, and in the Sabbaths, in all the feasts of the house of Israel : he shall prepare the sin-offering, and the meat-offering, and the burnt-offering, and the peace- offerings, to make atonement for the house of Israel. 18. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, In the first of the first month, thou shalt take a young bullock without blemish, and cleanse the sanctuary. 19. And the priest shall take of the blood of the sin-offering, and shall put it upon the posts of the house, and upon the four corners of the ledge of the altar, and upon the posts of the gate of the inner court. 20. And so shalt thou do on the seventh of the month for any one that errs and for the foolish, and ye shall make atonement for the house. 21. On the fourteenth day of the first month, ye shall have the passover, a feast of seven days ; unleavened bread shall be eaten. 22. And upon that day the prince shall prepare for himself and for all the people of the land a bullock as a sin-offering. 23. And during the seven days of the feast he shall prepare a burnt-offering for the Lord, seven bullocks and seven rams without blemish daily for the seven days ; and a kid of the goats for a sin-offering daily. 24. And he shall prepare a meat-offering of an ephah of barley for the bullock, and an ephah for the ram shall he prepare, and an hin of oil for the ephah. 25. On the fifteenth day of the seventh month, he shall do the like at the feast of seven days, according to the sin-offering, according to the burnt-offering, and according to the meat- offering, and according to the oil. The prophet passes here to what may be called the outer ter- ritory, and presents a pattern of things in beautiful accordance with the inner and more sacred. There must be a new distribu- tion of the land, and a new adjustment as to giving and receiving between prince and people, in order that the old heats and stands. The greater part of commentators suppose a corruption of the text here, not excepting Hav., who adopts the meaning given by the Sept. : " And the five shekels shall be five, and the ten shekels shall be ten, and fifty shekels shall be your maneh." It is, of course, quite conjectural. Hitzig prefers understanding the three numbers of the different metals ; 20 shekels for the gold maneh, 25 for the silver, and 15 for the brass or copper. Also quite conjectural ; the more so as, by comparing 1 Kings x. 17 with 2 Chron. ix. 16, the maneh of gold seems to have been 100 shekels. 1 In these oblations, from the different kinds of property there is an evident progression as to the relation between the kind and the quantity. Of the corn there was to be the sixth of a tenth, — that is, a 60th part of the quantity specified ; of the oil, the tenth of a tenth, — that is, an 100th part ; and of the flock, one from every 200. THE SACUED ALLOTMENTS IN LAND AND GIFTS. 483 discords might be avoided, and no pretext any longer found for arbitrary appointments and oppressive exactions. In regard to the new distribution of the land, what is mentioned here (ver. 1-7) has respect merely to the central portion, which was to be set apart for' the temple, the priesthood, the prince, and the city (the remainder is treated of in chap, xlvii.) And this alto- gether was to form a square of 25,000 — it is not said of what ; and hence many insert cubits, as at chap. xlii. 16 they substi- tuted cubits for rods. We showed the proposed change there to be unwarranted and arbitrary ; and as the present passage is merely a continuation of the other, the same reasons which obliged us to abide by rods there, render it necessary for us to understand these also here. Besides, the express mention of so many cubits hr the suburbs of the sanctuary (ver. 2) clearly im- plies, that in all the other measures, not cubits, but rods, are intended; for why should cubits have been named only there, unless it was because there alone such were to be understood ? It might also be shown, were it necessary, that, on the supposi- tion of cubits being meant, the portion of land would be im- mensely too small for the purpose indicated — a space of ground, in that case, not nearly so large as is possessed by many a modern nobleman, being assigned for the support of the whole priesthood, the prince and his household, and the people of the city. Hold- ing it, then, to be rods by which, the dimensions are given, and taking each rod, as before, at about twelve feet, the entire area of the central portion of land would be a square of somewhere about sixty miles on each side. Of this area, a large part was to be of a sacred character, and is hence called " an holy portion, offered to the Lord" (ver. 1). It embraced the whole length, but only two-fifths of the breadth ; and was to be appropriated thus : — 500 rods square for the temple, with 50 cubits outside additional (that other buildings might not come too close upon those of so sacred a character), and all that remained of the 10,000 in breadth, by 25,000 in length, was to be for a possession to the priesthood, allowing, however, as much as might be needed for the erection of twenty apartments to the Levites, who for the time being happened to minister at the temple. It is plainly of such sort of chambers that mention is made in ver. 5, and not ordinary dwellings ; they were to be for the ministering Levites, what the chambers within the temple-grounds were for the ofii- 484 EZEKIEL XLY. dating priests. The other part of the central portion was to be assigned for the city and the prince — 5000 in breadth for the city itself, and the remaining 10,000 for a possession to the people of the city and to the prince to supply them with food, but in what relative proportions is not stated, either here or in chap, xlviii. It is merely said, respecting the prince, that his possession was to be taken out of this civic portion, and was to consist of two halves — the one on the west, and the other on the east side of the sacred territory. For thus, again, the prophet would set forth the close relation in which the prince, as head of so holy a community, should stand to the sanctuary. His pos- session must on each side adjoin that which was to be peculiarly the Lord's. That the whole ground for the priesthood, the prince, and the people of the city, was to form together a square, betokened the perfect harmony and agreement which should subsist between these different classes, as well as the settled order and stability that should distinguish the sacred commonwealth, in which they held the highest place. That the priesthood were to occupy what was emphatically holy ground, was a symbol of the singular de- gree of holiness which should characterise those who stood, in their official position, the nearest to the Lord. And that the prince was to have a separate possession assigned him, was to cut oif all occasion for his lawlessly interfering with the posses- sions of the people, and to exhibit the friendly bearing and up- right administration which was to be expected of him. Hence, in immediate connection with the assignment of such a portion, it is said (ver. 8), " And my princes shall no more oppress my people, and the land shall they give to the house of Israel accord- ing to their tribes." And not only must he personally abstain from all oppressive behaviour, but, as the Divinely constituted head of a righteous commonwealth, he must take effective mea- sures for establishing judgment and justice throughout the whole. Particular examples are given of this in regard to the using of just weights and measures in the transactions of business (ver. 9-12). Then follow directions respecting the contributions to be made by the people to the prince (ver. 13-17) ; the sixtieth part of their wheat, the hundredth of their oil, and of the young of their flocks, the two -hundredth part. These were to be regularly given to the prince, as the representative of the people, that he might THE SACRED ALLOTMENTS IN LAND AND GIFTS. 485 provide out of them the suitable offerings to be presented to the Lord for the community, especially at the stated solemnities. They would, therefore, be perpetual remembrancers to the prince of the sacred character he maintained as the head of such a people, and would supply him, by Divine enactment, with what was needed to fulfil this part of his office, without needing to have resort to any arbitrary and oppressive measures. Expressed more generally, it was a symbol of the perfect harmony and mutual co-operation, which should exist in such a holy commu- nity in regard to the public service and glory of God ; without constraint or any sort of jarring, the several classes would freely and faithfully do their parts. As it was more especially in connection with the stated and yearly festivals, that the prince had to represent the people in the public service of God, so the prophet takes a rapid glance of these, and refers particularly to the first and the last. But he first mentions a consecration service with which the year was always to begin, and of which no mention whatever was made in the law (ver. 18-20). On the first, and again on the seventh day of the first month, the sanctuary was always to be cleansed, that the year might be commenced in sacredness, and that all might be in preparation for the feast of the Passover on the fourteenth day of the month. As the prophet has introduced a new solemnity before the Passover, so for the Passover itself he appoints quite different sacrifices from those named by Moses ; instead of one ram and seven lambs for the daily burnt-offering, he has seven bullocks and seven rams ; and the meat-offerings also vary. And while there were quite peculiar offerings pre- scribed in the law for the feast of Tabernacles, constantly diminishing as the days of the feast proceeded; here, on the other hand, the prophet appoints the same as in the case of the Passover. This shows how free a use was made by the prophet of the Old Testament ritual, and how he only employed it as a cover for the great spiritual truths he sought to unfold. They were not permanently fixed and immutable things, he vu'tually said, those external services of Judaism, as if they had an absolute and independent value of their own, so that precisely those and no other should be thought of; they were all sym- bolical of the spiritual and eternal truths of God's kingdom, and may be variously adjusted, as is now done, in ord«r to make 486 EZEKIEL XLVI. them more distinctly expressive of the greater degree of holiness and purity, that is in future times to distinguish the people and service of God, over all that has been in the past. CHAPTER XLVI. ADDITIONAL ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND PEOPLE. Ver. 1. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, the gate of the inner court that looks toward the east shall be shut the six working days : and it shall be opened on the Sabbath-day, and on the day of the new moon it shall be opened. 2. And the prince shall enter by the way of the porch from without, and shall stand beside the post of the gate ; and the priests shall offer his burnt-offering and his peace-offerings ; and he shall worship at the threshold of the gate, and shall go forth; and the gate shall not be shut till the evening. 3. And the people of the land shall worship at the entrance of that gate before the Lord, on Sabbaths and in the new moons. 4. And the burnt-offering which the prince shall offer to Jehovah on the Sabbath-day, shall be six lambs without blemish, and a ram without blemish. 5. And the meat-offering shall be an ephah for a ram, and the meat-offering for the lambs what his hand may give, and an hin of oil to an ephah. 6. And in the day of the new moon, a young bullock without blemish, and six lambs and a ram ; without blemish shall they be. 7. And he shall prepare a meat-offering, an ephah for the bullock, and an ephah for the ram, and for the lambs according as his hand may reach to ; and an hin of oil for the ephah. 8. And when the prince enters, he shall enter by the way of the porch of the gate, and by its way shall he go out. 9. And when the people of the land shall come before Jehovah, in the solemn feasts, he that enters by the way of the north gate to worship, shall go out by the way of the south gate ; and he that enters by the way of the south gate, shall go out by the way of the north gate ; he shall not return by the way of the gate through which he entered ; but shall go forth over against it. 10. And the prince in the midst of them, when they go in, shall go in ; and when they go forth, shall go forth. 11. And in the feasts, and in the solemn assemblies, the meat-offerings shall be an ephah for a bullock, and an ephah for a ram, and for lambs a gift of his hand, and of oil an hin to the ephah. 12. And when the prince shall prepare a volun- tary burnt- offering, or voluntary peace-offerings, to Jehovah, then there shall be opened for him the gate that looks toward the east, and he shall perform his burnt-offering, and his peace-offerings, according as he did on the Sabbath- day; then he shall go forth, and when he goes forth shall shut the gate after him. 13. And a lamb of two years old without blemish, shalt thou prepare for a burnt-offering to Jehovah; morning by morning shalt thou prepare it. 14. And thou shalt prepare a meat-offering for it every morning, the sixth part of an ephah, and the third part of an hin of oil, to moisten the fine flour — a meat-offering to Jehovah by a perpetual ordinance continually. 15. Thus shall they prepare the lamb, and the meat-offering, and the oil, every morning, for a continual burnt-offering. Ver. 16. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, If the prince give a gift to any of ADDITIONAL ORDINANCES FOR THE PRINCE AND PEOPLE. 487 his sons, the inheritance of that shall be to his sons ; it is their possession by inheritance. 17. But if he give a gift from his inheritance to one of his servants, then it shall be his till the year of liberty, and it shall return to the prince ; his inheritance shall altogether belong to his sons. 18. And the prince shall not take of the people's inheritance by oppression, to dispossess them ; of his own possession shall he give an inheritance to his sons : that my people may not be scattered every man from his possession. 19. And he brought me through the entrance, that is by the side of the gate, into the holy chambers for the priests that look toward the north ; and behold there was a place by the two sides westward. 20. And he said to me. This is the place where the priests shall boil the trespass-offering, and the sin-offering, where they shall bake the meat-offering : that they may not go forth to the outer court to sanctify the people. 21. And he brought me into the outer court, and caused me to pass by the four corners of the court ; and, behold, a court at every corner of the court. 22. In the four corners of the court there were courts joined (probably, roofed or vaulted), forty long, and thirty broad : there was one measure to the four-cornered places. 23. And there was a row round about in them, round about for the four ; and it was made with boiling-places under the rows round about. 24. And he said to me, These are the places of them that boil, where the ministers of the house shall boil the sacrifices of the people. The instructions contained in this chapter are merely a following out into some subordinate details of the subject handled in the chapter immediately preceding. The first section (ver. 1-8) refers more immediately to the prince in his worship. To him, it was already said, belonged the distinction of entering for worship by the east gate. But this gate, to mark more distinctly its pecuhar sacredness, was to be shut during the six days of the week, and opened only on Sabbath-days, and those of the new moon. On these occasions, the prince w^as to go through this gate to the porch of the inner court (for such is undoubtedly meant by the gate in ver. 2), but no farther ; he had no right to advance into the court of the priests. There, as the head and representative of the people, and as such in a state of peculiar nearness to God, he should present his offerings to the Lord ; while, at a greater distance, at the outer gate of the same entrance, the people were to stand worshipping without. The offerings he is here appointed to bring, on Sabbaths, and on new moons, are considerably larger than those mentioned in the law of Moses ; and hence serve to show, that the worship of God in the future was to be conducted in a more complete and glorious manner than formerly, and that as both prince and people were to rise to a higher place in connection with the kingdom of God, so they would express this in more liberal and generous mani- festations of pious feeling. 488 EZEKIEL XLVI. The next section (ver. 9-15) exhibits the order that should be observed in the great festivals. On those occasions, the prince was to depart from the state of isolation which it was proper for him to observe at other times, and at the head of the people join in the great throng of worshippers that were to pass through the temple courts, from one side to another. It reminds us of David, who in this was doubtless the exemplar in the eye of the prophet : " I had gone with the multitude, I went with them to the house of God, with the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept holyday." A beautiful picture of a religi- ous people ! the highest in rank freely mingling with the mass of worshippers, and inspiriting their devotions by the elevating influence of his presence and example ! But to show that his worship was not merely to be of a public and official nature, that it should spring from a heart truly alive to Divine things, and itself delighting in fellowship with God, the prophet passes from those holyday services to the voluntary offerings, and the daily morning sacrifice, which the prince was also to present to the Lord. In a word, the proper head of a religious people, he was to surpass them all, and be an example to them all in the multi- tude and variety of his acts of homage and adoration. A short section follows (ver. 16-18), respecting the inalienable nature of the prince's possession, and the sacred regard he must pay to the people's. He might give his own sons an inheritance with himself, but if he should give a grant of any portion of it to a servant, it must revert to the royal house at the year of jubilee ; in order that no temptation might exist to spoil the people of their proper inheritances, as had been too often done in the days that were past. It is the exhibition, by an individual trait, of the pure righteousness and settled order which should pervade the kingdom of God when set up in its new and more perfect form. Everything should now be ruled by the principles of eternal rectitude, and no licence given, no occasion even, or pretext afforded, for the usurpations of tyrannical violence. The closing verses (ver. 19-24) refer to a matter which is cer- tainly not immediately connected with what precedes, but which the prophet adds as necessary to complete the picture he has been drawing of a well-ordered, sacred community. It respects the preparation made in the temple-building for the officiating priests eating, with due regard to the sanctity of the food, the VISION OF THE TEMPLE- WATERS. 489 portion that fell to them of the sacred offerings. For this pur- pose there were provided, in connection with the chambers of the priests, cooking apartments at the several corners, where the flesh of the sacrifices should be boiled, and the meat-offering pre- pared, so that they might eat them before again mingling with the people. A distinction is even made in regard to one portion of the sacred food and another. For, the sin and trespass-offer- ings being of a higher class than the peace-offerings (in the par- ticipation of which latter, the people according to the law shared with the priesthood) ; therefore two sets of chambers were to be provided for cooking — one at the corners of the inner court, re- served for the flesh of the sin and trespass-offerings, which was " a holy of holies," to be eaten only by the priests (Lev. vi. 25, vii. 7) ; and another at the corners of the outer court, where the flesh of the peace-offerings was to be prepared. The arrange- ment indicates, as by an additional stroke, the peculiar sacred- ness that should now attach in men's feelings to everything that bore on it the impress of the Lord's name. No longer confound- ing together the common and unclean, the Divine and human, they should in all things give to God the pre-eminent glory, which is due, and the nearer they stood to him, be always the more jealous of his honour. A truly royal priesthood ! following even to the minutest particulars the rule of the apostle, " Whether they might eat or drink, or whatsoever they might do, doing all to the glory of God." CHAPTER XLVIL 1-12. VISION OF THE TEMPLE- WATERS. It is necessary to take the first part of this chapter apart from the second, which relates to a different subject, the new division of the land, and which ought to have formed part of chap, xlviii. The vision contained in the first twelve verses of this chapter is a thing by itself, although it stands in close connection with what precedes, and springs naturally out of it. The prophet has been exhibiting, by means of a variety of detailed representations, the 490 EZEKIEL XLVII. 1-12. blessed results to the Lord's people of his re-occupying his tem- ple. The way now stands open to them, for a free and elevating communion with the Lord ; and the work proceeds, on their part, by the regular employment of all spiritual privileges and the faithful discharge of holy ministrations ; God is duly glorified in his people, and his people are blessed in the enjoyment of his gracious presence and the benefit of his fatherly admhiistration. But what is to be the nature of the kingdom in this new form, in respect to the world without ? Is it to be of a restrictive or expansive character? Is the good it discloses and provides for a regenerated people to be confined, as of old, to a select spot, or is it to spread forth and communicate itself abroad for the salva tion of the world at large ? In an earlier prophecy (chap, xvii.), when speaking of the future head of the Divine kingdom, under the image of a little twig, pluckt from the top of a cedar in Lebanon, and planted upon a lofty mountain in Israel, the prophet had represented this, not only as growing and taking root there, but as winning the regard of all the trees of the field, and gathering under its ample foliage beasts of every kind and birds of every wing. The kingdom of God, as thus exhibited, seemed to carry a benign and diffusive aspect tow^ard the entire world. And should it be otherwise now, when presented under the different, but more detailed and variegated form of a spiritual house, with the living God himself for the glorious inhabitant, and a royal priesthood for its ministering servants 1 No ; it is for humanity, mankind as a whole, that God was thus seen dwelling with men ; and though everything presents itself, ac- cording to the relations then existing, as connected with a local habitation and circumscribed bounds, yet the good in store was to be confined within no such narrow limits ; it was to flow forth with healthful and restorative energy, even upon the waste and dead places of the earth, and invest them with the freshness of life and beauty. This fine idea is presented by the prophet under a pleasing natural image. He is brought back by the angel from the outer court, where he was standing, to the door of the temple on the east ; and there he sees a stream of water gushing from beneath the threshold, and running in the direction of south-east, so as to pass the altar on the south. He is then brought outside by the north gate, and carried round to where the waters appeared be- VISION OF THE TEMPLE-WATERS. 491 yond the temple-grounds, that he might witness the measurements that were to be made of them, and the genial effects they pro- duced. But let us take his own account of it. Ver, 1. And he brought me back to the door of the house; and, behold, waters issued forth from under the threshold of the house eastward : for the front of the house is to the east ; and the waters descended from below, from the right side of the house, on the south of the altar. 2. And he brought me forth by the way of the north gate, and led me round by the Avay without to the outer gate, by the way that looks eastward ; and, behold, waters were pouring forth on the right side. 3. And when the man that had the line in his hand went forth eastward, he measured a thousand cubits ; and he made me pass through the waters — waters to the ankles. 4. Again, he measured a thousand, and made me pass through the Avaters — waters to the knees. Again, he measured a thousand, and brought me through waters to the loins. 5. Again, he measured a thousand, it was a river which I could not pass : for the waters were risen, waters for swimming, a river that could not be passed over. 6. And he said to me, Son of man, hast thou seen it ? And he led me and brought me back to the brink of the river. 7. And when I came back, behold on the bank of the river, very many trees on the one side and the other. 8. And he said to me, These waters issue toward the eastern boundary, and descend upon the plain,^ and go toward the sea ; in the sea are their outgoings, and the waters are healed. 9. And it comes to pass, that every living creature which creeps whithersoever the streams go,2 lives ; and there is a great multitude of fish, because these waters go thither ; and they shall be healed, and everything lives whithersoever the river goes. 10. And it comes to pass, that fishers shall stand upon it from Engedi, even unto pjn-eglaim ;^ a spreading-place of nets shall they be ; their fish shall be after their kind (i. e., of many sorts), like the fish of the great sea (the Mediter- ^ Perhaps the word should be untranslated, for the Arabah (plain) is the name given at this day to the valley that lies around, and to the south of, the Dead Sea (Robinson's Researches, ii p. 595). We can, therefore, have no doubt, that by the sea is meant the Dead Sea ; which also lies in the direction of the stream toward the east. 2 The dual here, aV^jnj, double-stream, is peculiar ; but there is no reason for supposing, with some, that it is used with reference to any division in the current into two or more branches ; for no mention is made of that; and the word is presently, in the latter part of the verse, and again in ver. 12, used in the singular. It is rather to be understood of the copiousness of the stream ; increasing at such a rapid rate, it becomes like rivers, though still really but one. ^ The former of these two names, Engedi, was applied to the wilderness lying to the west and south of the Dead Sea, where David sought a place of refuge from Saul. A fountain, and the remains of a town, still exist under that name, and have been identiHed by Robinson (Researches, ii., p. 214). The other place, En-eglaim, no doubt lay somewhere at a considerable distance on the shores of the same sea. The two places appear to be used as boundaries, comprising between them the whole extent of the Dead Sea. 492 EZEKIEL XLVII. 1-12. ranean), very many. 11. Its marshes and its pits, which are not healed, are given for salt.^ 12. And by the river on each bank, there shall come up all trees for food, whose leaf shall not fade, nor shall their fruit fail ; every month they bring forth afresh (literally, produce firstlings — in such undecaying vigour, that they are still, as it were, yielding their first fruit) ; for their waters proceed from the sanctuary itself ; and their fruit is for food and their leaves for healing. That the description given of this stream and its effects, must be understood in an ideal manner, not of any actual river, but like all the rest of the vision, of spiritual things shadowed forth under it, is so evident as scarcely to require any proof. The source of it alone (the summit of an elevated mountain), and the manner of its increase, should put this beyond a doubt with all who would not convert the Bible into a nursery of extrava- gance and credulity. For a natural river like this would of necessity be in contravention of the established laws of nature, and could only exist as a perpetual miracle. Supposing that by some new adjustment of the land, a stream might be made to rise on the top of Mount Zion, yet a stream feeding itself as described in the vision, and growing w^ith such rapid strides, is utterly at variance with the known laws of the material world. For, it is to be observed, the increase here comes from no ex- traneous and incidental sources ; it is all along the temple-waters that form the river, and at last empty themselves into the sea ; 1 This verse tells us, that the sea had certain parts or places about it, which did not participate in the general change, and which were given or appointed for salt. But both the things themselves, and the nature of the destination, have been variously understood ; and as usual, in cases of difficulty, alterations in the text have also been proposed. We must keep in view the general nature and design of the representation. This stream of life, flowing from the dwelling-place of God, images the regenerating efficacy of his grace and word upon a dead world, represented by the barren region through Avhich the stream flows, and the salt waters of the Dead Sea, into which it empties itself. The general result is such, that the barren soil becomes in the highest degree fertile, and even the salt waters of the Dead Sea are sweetened and made capable of sustaining the greatest abundance of fish. But certain parts in the neighbourhood — pits and marshes, such as the region is known to possess, and which, it is to be understood, the stream from the temple does not reach, remain still unhealed, and are therefore given to salt — the image of what is waste, bitter, and unproductive in nature (Deut. xxix. 23, Ps. cvii. 34, Zeph. ii. 9). So that the meaning is, in so far as there might be any places in the desert world, which should not participate in the beneficent influence, these, if any, would remain in their originally bad state — unhealed. VISION OF THE TEMPLE-WATERS. 493 and yet from being at first but a small streamlet, these grow, by self-production, in the space of little more than a mile, into an unfordable river ! To expect such a prodigy as this,, on the outward territory of nature, is plainly to identify the natural with the miraculous, and confound the hopes of faith with the dreams of superstition. The Bible does teach us to look for things above nature, but never for merely natural things against the ascertained laws of nature. Issuing as this stream does from the threshold of the temple, from the very foot of the throne of God (comp. Rev. xxii. 1 ), it must be, like all the special manifestations of God to his church, itself of a spiritual nature, and only in its effects productive of outward material good. It is just the efflux of that infinite fulness of life and blessing, which is treasured up in his spiritual temple, and continually pours itself forth as tlie operations of his grace proceed among men. It is emphatically a river of life. Wherever it is experienced, the barren soil of nature fruc- tifies, the dead live again, the soul is replenished with joy and gladness. And instead of spending, like the streams of nature, as it advances through the moral deserts of the world, it still multiplies and grows ; for it diffuses itself from heart to heart, from family to family. Every true recipient of grace becomes a channel and instrument of grace to those around him ; so that the more who partake of the blessing, the more always does the region expand over which the kingdom developes its resources. And in proportion as these are developed, everything around wears a smiling and joyous aspect ; the evils and disorders of nature are rectified ; peace and order reign where before were the favourite haunts of wTetchedness and crime ; the very field of judgment becomes a region of life and blessing ; until, at last, corruption itself is changed into incorruption, mortality is swal- lowed up in life, and the earth which God had cursed for men's sin, is transformed into the inheritance of the saints in light. Such, we have no doubt, is the general import of the vision before us ; and to this we must confine ourselves. It must be contemplated as a whole, and not broken up into fragments ; as if we. should inquire, what is to be understood specially by the fish, what by the fishers, what by the trees, and so on. A life-giving and ever-increasing stream of heavenly influence, proceeding from the centre of the Divine kingdom, and diffusing itself far 494 EZEKIEL XLVII. 1-12. and wide among men, is what the prophet intends to exhibit to our mind ; and to give this idea form and shape to our apprehen- sions, he must fill up the picture with the appropriate signs and manifestations of life. But to take these up, one by one, and adapt them to particular things in the present or future dispen- sations of God, can only be an exercise of fancy, as likely to mislead as to conduct to sound and legitimate conclusions. Let us rest in the great reality. Let us rejoice in the thought, that the Spirit of God should have coupled, with all the other exhibitions of the Divine kingdom given to the prophet, so encouraging a prospect of its vivifying, restorative, and expand- ing energies. And let it deepen the blessed conviction in our bosom, that the purpose of God in grace is fixed; and that mighty as the obstacles are, which everywhere present them- selves to withstand its progress, it shall certainly not fail to make good its triumph over all the disorders and corruption of the world. We simply add, in regard to the relation of this prophecy to others in Scripture, that there is undoubtedly a reference, in the whole passage, to the description in Gen. ii. of the garden of Eden ; although it seems rather pushing the allusion too far, when Hengstenberg, on Rev. xxii. 2, maintains, the trees here mentioned to be simply the tree of life. The mention of every kind of tree for food, in v. 12, and the prominence given also to the abundance of fish in the waters, show, that there is no servile copying of the description in Genesis; while still it is impossible not to see, that a kind of new paradise was evidently intended to be described by the prophet. Then, as he has, after his own manner, enlarged and amplified the thought which is contained in such passages as Joel iii. 18 ; Zech. xiv. 8, so his delineation is again taken up by the evangelist John, and in his peculiar manner accommodated to express the last grand issues of God's kingdom toward man : "And he showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and the Lamb. Li the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month (for which Ezekiel has all manner of fruit trees, bearing monthly) ; and the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations. And there shall be no more curse (corresponding in THE BOUNDARIES AND RE- DISTRIBUTION OF THE LAND. 495 Ezekiel to the beneficent change wrought on tlie doomed region of the Dead Sea) ; but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it, and his servants shall serve him," (Rev. xxii. 1-3). CHAPTER XL VII. 13-23, XLVIIL THE BOUNDARIES AND RE-DISTRIBUTION OF THE LAND. As the whole of the representations contained in the preceding parts of the vision proceed on the basis of the old covenant, the series naturally closes wdth a re-occupation of the land of Canaan, which formed the great objective promise of the cove- nant. A people settled in the inheritance of their God, is the proper result of the re-establishment of the covenant, and the renewal of their souls after its principles of righteousness. There is, of course, no more reason for understanding this portion according to the letter, than those which went before. The whole vision is of a piece — a pictorial representation of the future things of God's kingdom under the image of the past, yet so altered and adjusted, as to indicate the vast superiority of what was to come, compared with what hitherto had been. To say, as many in effect do, that the part of the vision which refers to the temple and its worship is figurative, while this, which makes mention of a re-occupation of the land by the tribes of Israel, must be understood literally, is to bring complete arbitrariness and confusion into the interpretation of the pro- phecy. There is the very same reason for holding, that the Old Testament ritual of worship, with all its carnal ordinances, and more than its carnal display of outward pomp, shall again be set up, as for holding, that the natural Israel shall again be restored to the possession of Canaan, so as to form a peculiar commonwealth of believers. And if to maintain the one, be to place the prophets of the Old Testament in palpable contrariety to the apostles of the New, to maintain the other by itself is not less evidently to mutilate the prophetic record, and place one part of the prophetic testimony in virtual opposition to another. 496 EZEKIEL XLVII., 13-23 — ^LVIII. Ver. 13. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, This^ shall be the boundary as to liow ye shall inherit the land according to the twelve tribes of Israel : Joseph two portions. 14. And ye shall inherit it, one as well as another, since I lifted up my hand to give it to your fathers, and this land has fallen to you for an inheritance. 15. And this shall be the boundary of the land on the north side, from the great sea by the way of Hethlon, as one goes to Zedad : 16. Hamath, Berothah, Sibraim, which is between the border of Damascus and the border of Hamath ; Hazar-hatticon, which is by the border of Hauran. 17. And from the sea the boundary shall be Hazar-enan, the bor- der of Damascus, and the north northward, and the border of Hamath. And this is the north side. 18. And the east side ye shall measure from between Hauran and Damascus, and from between Gilead and the land of Israel, the Jordan, from the boundary even to the east sea. And this is the east side. 19. And the south side southward, from I'amar to the waters of Meribah Kadesh, to the river on the great sea. And this is the south side southward. 20. And the west side, the great sea, from the boundary till one comes over against Hamath. This is the west side. 21. And ye shall divide this land to you according to the tribes of Israel. 22. And it shall be, that ye divide it by lot for an inheritance to you, and to the strangers that sojourn among you, who beget children among you : and they shall be to you as natives among the children of Israel ; they shall have inheritance with you in the midst of the tribes of Israel. 23. And it shall be, that in whatsoever tribe the stranger sojourns, there shall ye give him his inheritance, saith the Lord Jehovah. Chap, xlviii. ver. 1. And these are the names of the tribes. From the north end by the way of Hethlon, as one goes to Hamath, Hazar-enan, the border of Damascus northward, to the boundary of Hamath ; and it is for him the east and the west side — Dan one (viz., one portion). 2. And on Dan's boundary, from the east side to the west side, Asher one. 3. And by the boundary of Asher, from the east to the west side, Naphtali one, 4. And by the boundary of Naphtali, from the east to the west side, Manasseh one. 5. And by the boundary of Manasseh, from the east to the west side, Ephraim one. 6. And by the boundary of Ephraim, from the east to the west side, Reuben one. 7. And by the boundary of Reuben, from the east to the west side, Judah one. 8. And by the boundary of Judah, from the east to the west side, shall be the offering, which ye shall offer of five and twenty thousand (rods) in breadth, and in length as one of the portions, from the east side to the west side : and the sanctuary shall lie in the midst of it. 9. The oblation that ye shall offer to Jehovah, of five and twenty thousand in length, and of ten thousand in breadth. 10. And for these shall be the holy oblation : for the priests, on the north 26,000, toward the west 10,000 broad, and toward the east 10,000 broad, and toward the south 25,000 long ; and the sanctuary of Jehovah shall be in the midst of it. 11. For the priests that are sanctified, of the sons of Zadok, who have kept my charge, who have not gone astray, when the children of Israel went astray, as the Levites went astray. 12. And the oblation of the land that is offered shall be to them a holy of holies by the boundary of the Levites. 13. And over against the boundary of the priests, the Levites (shall have) 25,000 in length, and 1 0,000 in breadth ; the whole length 25,000, and the breadth 10,000. 14. And they shall not sell of it, nor exchange, nor alienate the first fruits of the land ; ^ The -J here we take, with our translators, and the greater part of com- i mentators, to be a corruption for J^.! ; so also the Septuagint, Vulgate and i Chaldee. " ; VISION OF THE TEMPLE-WATEUS. 497 for it is holy to Jehovah. 15. And the 5000 that are left in breadth over against the 25,000, shall be a profane place for the city, for dwelling and for suburbs; and the city shall be in the midst of it. 16. And these shall be its measures : the north side 4500, and the south side 4500, and on the east side 4500, and the Avest side 4500. 17. And the suburbs of the city shall be toward the north 250, and toward the south 250, and toward the east 250, and toward the west 250. 18. And what is left in length over against the holy oblation, 10,000 eastward, and 10,000 westw^ard: and it shall be over against the holy oblation, and its produce shall be for food to the servants of the city. 19. And for the service of the city, they shall serve it out of all the tribes of Israel. 20. The whole oblation shall be 25,000 by 25,0f)0 ; ye shall offer the holy oblation four-square, together with the possession of the city. 21. And the residue shall belong to the prince, on the one side and on the other of the holy oblation, and of the possession of the city: over against the 25,000 of the oblation toward the east border ; and westward over against the 25,000 toward the west border, over against the portions for the prince ; and it shall be the holy oblation, and the sanctuary of the house in the midst of it. 22. And from the possession of the Levites, from the possession of the city, in the midst of what is the prince's, between the boimdary of Judah and the boundary of Benjamin — to the prince shall it belong. 23. And for the rest of the tribes, from the east side to the west side, Benjamin one. 24. And by the boundary of Benjamin, from the east side to the west side, Simeon one. 25. And by the boundary of Simeon, from the east side to the west side, Isaachar one. 26. And by the boundary of Issachar, from the east side to the west side, Zebulun one. 27. And by the boundary of Zebulun, from the east side to the west side, Gad one. 28. And by the boundary of Gad, at the south side southward, the boundary shall be — from Tamar, the Avaters of Meribah Kadesh, to the river upon the great sea. 29. This is the land, which ye shall divide by lot to the tribes of Israel for an inheritance ; and these are their portions, saith the Lord Jehovah. 30. And these are the goings out of the city on the north side, 4500 measures. 31. And the gates of the city shall be after the names of the tribes of Israel : three gates north- Avard ; the gate of Reuben one ; the gate of Judah one ; the gate of Levi one. 32. And at the east side 4500 measures ; and three gates ; the gate of Joseph, one ; the gate of Benjamin, one ; the gate of Dan, one. 33. And at the south side, 4500 measures : and three gates ; the gate of Simeon, one ; the gate of Issachar, one ; the gate of Zebulun, one. 34. At the Avest side, 4500 (measures) : their three gates ; the gate of Gad, one ; the gate of Asher, one ; the gate of Naphtali, one. 35. The circumference 18,000 : and the name of the city thenceforth, Jehovah-shammah (Jehovah thither). ^ The concluding portion of chap, xlvii. is nearly all occupied with the boundaries of the land, which seem to be substantially the same with those originally given by Moses in Numb, xxxiv., though the names mentioned to some extent differ. It is to be noted, however, that in the fair and natural construction of the words, it is only Canaan proper, exclusive of what was given to the two tribes and a-half beyond Jordan, which forms * Not precisely, Jehovah there ; for the r,— cannot be sunk, as Hengsten. berg has remarked on Hos. iii. 17. The exact import is thither, or there- upon. 2 I 498 EZEKIEL XLVII. 13-23. here the inheritance to be divided. For the eastern boundary runs (ver. 18), " From between Hauran and Damascus, and from between Gilead and the land of Israel, the Jordan, from the border unto the east sea." We can make no intelligible sense of this, unless it means, that the boundary-line on the east was to be cut off by Hauran and Gilead, and go straight down to the Dead Sea by the valley of Jordan. And this is confirmed by comparing Numb, xxxiv. 11, 12, where the border is also said to go down by Jordan and the Salt Sea ; while im- mediately afterwards (ver. 13), it is stated that the land thus bounded is what was to be allotted to the nine tribes and a half. What the prophet here, therefore, describes as the land, is strictly and properly Canaan within Jordan, which was the original in- heritance promised. We did not urge this point in our prelimi- nary remarks on this last vision, lest we should seem to press the matter too far, but allowed that the prophet might include all that Israel ever occupied. There is really, however, no ground for supposing this ; and if we abide by what seems the plain boundary-line of the prophet, the statement of Lightfoot becomes in both parts quite correct, that the site of the prophet's temple is larger than all ancient Jerusalem, and his central portion for the city, prince, and priesthood, larger than all the land of Canaan, as described by himself. The territory to be divided being thus obviously viewed in an ideal light, the division itself is conducted in the same manner — not as it ever could have taken place in the reality, but after rule and measure, in exact and regular portions running along- side of each other the whole breadth from west to east, and standing in a common relation to the temple in the centre. Seven of the tribes have their portions on the north, on account of the greater stretch of the land in that direction with respect to the actual Jerusalem, and in the following order : Dan, Asher, Naphthali, Manasseh, Ephraim, Reuben, Judah; the latter having its place close by the central portion, on the north, as Benjamin had on its south. This honour appears to have been given to these two tribes in consideration of their relative historical supe- riority, having so long adhered to the temple and ordinances of God, when the others deserted them. Dan, on the contrary, was placed at the extreme north, on account of the low religious character of the tribe, precisely as John, in representing the whole THE BOUNDARIES xVND RE-DISTRIBUTION OF THE LAND. 499 elect church by twelve thousand from the several tribes of Israel, leaves Dan out altogether (Rev. vii.) As there were actually thirteen tribes, he finds his 12 times 12 by omitting Dan, whose idolatrous and semi-heathen character made it border morally, as it did locally, on the Gentiles. Here the two tribes of Joseph are thrown into one, to admit of Dan's having a place, but it is still the lowest place in the ideal territory of a blessed world. With these exceptions, we can discern no specific grounds for the particular places assigned to the tribes respectively. The order on the south side was, Benjamin, Simeon, Issachar, Zebu- Ion, Gad. But the city, the temple, the prince, and priesthood, with their respective portions, being situated precisely in the middle, and not within the boundaries of any of the tribes, was intended to intimate, that all were now to be regarded as having a common interest in them; and that the miserable and mis- chievous jealousies which had of old exercised so disastrous an influence, especially between Judah and Ephraim, should finally and for ever cease. All now should stand related as a united and compact brotherhood to the sanctuary of the Lord, from which, as a central fountainhead of life and blessing, there should continually stream forth manifestations of grace to all the people.^ The desire of giving due prominence to the sacred portions in the centre, leads the prophet again to enter into some statements regarding the Terumah, or oblation, and its subdivisions. Nothing of importance is added to what was said before, except that the 5000 rods apportioned out of the 25,000 square to the city, is here ^ In chap, xlvii. 22, 23, provision is also made for the strangers who should come and join themselves to the Lord : these, it was ordered, should be treated as Israelites, and have an inheritance like the rest. It is merely a trait thrown in to show, how the spiritual community of the Lord would now form a point of attraction to others, and how also, instead of repelling these, they were to give them free access to the highest privileges, as the provision to be made was to be large enough for all, and none need envy another. Easily under- stood on the spiritual interpretation, but quite inexplicable on the literal ; for, as within the bounds mentioned, it is impossible to understand how even the members of the different tribes could be accommodated, what room could be found for an influx of strangers ? The notice is intelligible only if understood as intimating, that the distinction of Jew and Gentile should be abolished, and that the whole believing world should be one, and their name one. 500 laid off in a square of 4500, with the 250 all round for suburbs. This space for the city was not strictly holy ground, in the sense that the sacerdotal portions were, and hence it is called profane or common. But being thus immediately connected with the sacred portions, and standing apart from the individual tribes, the city built on it formed a fit and proper centre to the whole land — in its position and its structure the beau-ideal of a theocratic capi- tal, encompassed by the most hallowed influences, and fitted to exert a uniting and healthful effect upon the entire community. Hence, the prophet closes the description by the mention of some things regarding the city, which might serve more deeply to im- press the feeling of its being the suitable representative and com- mon centre of the community. Itself occupying a central position, and immediately in front of the house of God, it was also to have twelve gates, bearing the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel ; in token, that all the family of faith had their repre- sentation in it, and, as if they were actually resident in it, stood before the Lord for the enjoyment of his favour and blessing. He specifies, again, the entire circumference of the city, 18,000 rods (between twenty and thirty miles), as a symbol of the im- mense numbers of the covenant-people, under the new and bet- ter dispensation of the future, immeasurably transcending what had existed under the old. And to exhibit the character of the city itself, as representative of the community at large, and indi- cative of its own relative position, it was to bear from that day, namely, from the period of the beginning of this new and better order of things, the honourable name of "Jehovah Shammah" — not, as has been already stated, Jehovah- there, but Jehovah- thither, or thereupon. For it was in the temple, rather than in the city, that the Lord was represented as having his peculiar dwelling-place. But his eyes were to be ever from the temple toward the city, and again from the city toward the whole land. The manifestations of his love and goodness were to radiate from the chosen seat of the kingdom through all its borders ; he in all, and all united and blessed in him. So that the consummation of this vision substantially corresponds with the object prayed for by our Lord, when he sought respecting his people that they might be where he was, and that they might be all one, as he and the Fatlier are one ; he in them, and they in him, that they might be made perfect in one. CONCLUSION. 501 Thus ends the marvellous vision of the prophet — alike marvel- lous, whether we look to the lofty pattern (true in the spirit, though unavoidably wearing the garb of imperfect forms and shadowy relations) which it embodied of better things to come in God's kingdom, or to the time chosen for presenting this to the church of God. The cause of Heaven was then at its lowest ebb. The temple that had been, together with the kingdom it symbolised and represented, were laid in ruins ; they were to be Seen only in broken fragments and mournful dilapidations — as if smitten wnth the powerful curse of an irrecoverable perdition. Yet from the midst of these howling desolations, from the very " suburbs of hell," we might say, the prophet ascends, as in a chariot of fire, the mount of vision, and there descries the Divine purpose to have all again reconstructed, nay, incomparably en- larged and beautified in a certainly to be expected and much more glorious future. He even sees it as already present ; and, with such imperfect materials of thought and utterance as then lay within his reach, he exhibits it to the church and the world, as a thing which his own eyes had beheld, showing how God would certainly dwell with his people in a manner he had never done before — how he would at once immeasurably extend the sphere of his kingdom, and greatly elevate the condition of those who belonged to it — and how, through the copious effusions of his life-giving Spirit, the former imperfections should be done away, the most remote regions of the divine territory hallowed and blessed, and even the peculiar haunts of cursing and desola- tion made to rejoice and blossom like the ro§e. " O scenes surpassing fable, and yet true ! Scenes of accomplished bliss ! which, who can see, Though but in distant prospect, and not feel His soul refreshed with foretaste of the joy !" That such scenes should have been described with such assured confidence, and at a time so deeply overspread with gloom, was indeed an ennobling triumph of faith over sight. It gave a most illustrious proof of the height in spiritual discernment, and far- reaching insight into the purposes of Heaven, which is sometimes imparted, in the hour of greatest need, especially to the more select instruments of the Spirit's working. And surely the children of the kingdom now must be chargeable with neglecting an important privilege, if they fail to profit by so inspiriting an 502 CONCLUSION. example. Here the heart of faith is taught never to despair, — not even in the darkest seasons. And when it is seen how much of the scheme delineated in the prophetic vision has already been accomplished, should not men feel encouraged to look and strive for its complete realisation, not doubting that God is ready to hear their cry, and to second with the aid of his Spirit the efforts that are made to dispossess and drive out the hostile powers that continue to linger in his kingdom. It is theirs, if they feel thus, not only to contend in the best of causes, but also with the surest prospect of success; for the Lord himself is upon their side, and his word of promise must be established. "Thus heavenward all things tend. For all were once Perfect, and all must be at length restored. So God has greatly purposed ; who would else In his dishonoured works himself endure Dishonour, and be wronged without redress ! — Come, then, and added to thy many crowns, Receive yet one as radiant as the rest, Due to thy last and most effectual work. Thy word fulfilled, the conquest of a world." INDEX TO SOME OF THE MORE LEADING TOPICS DISCUSSED IN THE VOLUME. A. Page Adonis, liis worship introduced into Judea, 89 Aholah and Aholibah, whj' used as desi{2fnation.s of Israel and Judah, 254 Ammon, its guilt and doom, . . 272 Aniorites, sometimes put for inhabi- tants of Canaan {generally, . . 163 An<>;e]s, the peculiar office of the Lord, 96 Assyria, its greatness and fall, . 340 Assyrians, their fondness for coloured and gay attire, .... 252 498 417 410 26 Canaan proper, only what lay within the Jordan, Canaan, in what sense in the middle of the nations, . . .68, Canaan under David, typical of the earth generally, under Christ, Chasmal, what meant by. Cherubim, their appearance and office, 30, 32 Creeping things, as objects of wor- ship, introduced from Egypt, . 87 D. Daniel, his proper work and calling, 18 Daniel, his high and early reputation, 151 David, why sr^o emphatically called Gods servant, .... 372 David, his reign, in what sense per- petual, 409 Divination by liver and arrows, . 238 E. Edom, its guilt and doom, . . 276 Egypt, its pride and judgment, . 321 Egypt, its forty years' desolation, how to be understood, . . . 326 Egypt, its ancient, as compared with its modern resources, . . 334 Egypt, its downfal to be understood of the kingdom of Egypt, . . 348 Egyptians, why called great of flesh, 159 Escaped, what meant by, , . 357 Ezekiel, his call to the prophetic office, 18 Ezekiel, his priestly-prophetic work, 8, 25 4 10 Ezekiel, his active energy, Ezekiel, his style and diction, F. Faith, the peculiar dangers to which it is exposed in the latter days, . 124 Fire, a symbol of divine wrath, 32, 84 Future things in God's kingdom ne- cessarily predicted under the form and image of the past, . . 374 G. Gog, the name, how formed, . . 421 Gog, his place, and the nature of his assault, .... 421, 426 Goat-worship practised in Egypt, and adopted by Israelites there, - 214 Grace of God, its expansive and grow- ing nature, 493 H. Heathen, the connection between their judgment and that of the church, 270 Hittites, sometimes taken as repre- sentatives of all the Canaanites, . 163 45 50 133 Iniquity-bearing, vision of, Iniquity-bearing, what meant by the term, Inspiration alloM's free play to the human faculties, ... 5, 186 Inspiration, the objective in, the foun- dation of all, .... Israel, their high spiritual calling in Canaan, Israel, their blessing in Canaan de- pendent on spiritual rather than on outward thiny:s, Israel, their peculiar glory, as re- gards Christian times. 69 167 411 J. 84 Jealousy, image of, what, Jews, their dispersion among the Gentiles preparatory for Chris- tianity, 113 504 INDEX. M. Page Magogf, what region meant by, . 415 Mesech, 415 Moab, its guilt and doom, . . 275 Mourning, how usually expressed in Israel, 264 P. Pharaoh, his power first broken by Nebuchadnezzar, .... 339 Philistines, their guilt and doom, . 279 Predictions of the future often thrown into the form of the past, 58, 176, 375, 390 Priestly and royal dignities destined to a long abasement in Israel, . 244 Promises sometimes conditional, . 398 Prophecy, the distinction between false and true, .... 131 Prophecy, false, among God's instru- ments of chastisement, . . 147 Prophets, the existence of the false as well as the true in Judea, . 126 Prophets, necessity of personal lioli- ness for the true, .... 135 Prophetesses, false, .... 137 Punishment of children for fathers, how to be understood, . R. 192 33 Rainbow, its symbolical import. Responsibility of individuals for them- selves, the doctrine of both Testa- ments, 191 Resurrection, the prevalence and an- tiquity of the belief of, in Israel, . 404 Righteous, their security in times of judgment, 97 Righteousness, its retributive charac- ter, 190 Righteousness of God, its inflexibility, 360 Roll, what meant by being eaten, . 37 Sabbath, its impoi*tance for Israel, and for all times. . . . .217 Page Sanctuary, in what sense God became such to the exiles, . . . 114 Sealing, its symbolical import, . 97 Shepherds, who meant by, in ancient Israel, 368 Sidon, her judgment, . . . 316 Sin, how sometimes made the punish- ment of sin, .... 147, 221 Skirt, to spread it over one, a figura- tive expression for marriage, . 158 Sodom, what meant by the returning of her captivity, .... 175 Square -form of the temple-buildings, its symbolical import, . . . 470 Superstition, its close affinity with unbelief, 92 T. Teraphim, instruments of idolatry, . 238 Trees, green and dry, symbolical of righteous and wicked, . . . 231 Turning again the captivity, a prover- bial expression, .... 162 Tyre, its guilt and doom, . . 281 Tyre, the part taken by Nebuchad- nezzar in its downfal, . . . 288 Tyre, the former extent and greatness of her commerce, . . . 299 Tyre, the king of, personified as ideal humanity in its best and worst, . 305 Usury, why and how far condemned in Scripture, .... 195 W. Watchman, why the prophet Ezekiel so designated, .... 41 Watchman, his office as such more fully described, .... 354 Wilderness, what meant by Israel being sent back thither, . . 226 THE END. ^^ Of THl [nSITERSITTI MURRAY AND GIRB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH. 1 " """^ IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW AN INITIAL PInFof 25 CENTS OAY AND TO |i,.00 ON Th/=J, """^ OVERDUE. ^ SEVENTH DAY M.AV 4 iQ3g '^^Qv^^^afs-^-a^ -":^ f?^>Lm.mm tOAN-DB>T^ ^JAJU^49S9- LD 21-l00m-7,'33 asLS UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UBRARY " 1 ss^'. K^^. '^■'xm m "•■■• ■ I