Day 241 – Reading Ezekiel 9 – 12
Read today’s Scriptures … ANYWHERE you find yourself this summer. Stay in the WORD!
Ezekiel 9.
If you remember, in chapter 8, God had just finished showing Ezekiel all the abominations in the Temple, and the pagan worship that had been established right at the door of God’s dwelling place. Ezekiel is horrified, and God is at the end of His patience. In this chapter, He calls for the nearest heavenly EXECUTORS, each with a destroying weapon in his hand. Six of these fearsome men appear with their weapons of slaughter in their hands.
With these killers is a man, in linen, with only “a writing case.” To this man, God said,
- “Pass through the city, through Jerusalem, and put a mark on the foreheads of the men who sigh and groan over all the abominations that are committed in it.”
The man left to obey. And then to the six “hulks,” God says,
- “Pass through the city after him, and strike. Your eye shall not spare, and you shall show no pity. Kill old men outright, young men and maidens, little children and women…. BUT touch NO ONE on whom is the mark. Begin here at my sanctuary.”
They began their gory duty with those 25 men facing the east and worshiping the sun, their backs to the Holy Sanctuary of God.
Then the killers went out into the city, killing all they met, except those marked by the Man.
Ezekiel is aghast! “Will You destroy ALL the remnant of Israel in Jerusalem??“
God explains that the people’s GUILT is exceedingly great.
- “The land is FULL of blood, and the city is FULL of injustice. My eye will not spare, nor will I have pity.”
Then the “man clothed in linen with the writing case” (possibly the pre-incarnate Jesus) returned to report that he had finished the task,
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Ezekiel 10.
Ezekiel then noticed the awesome, holy “chariot” with the cherubim and wheels. God told the man in linen to go “among the wheels, under the Cherubim,” and fill his hands with the burning coals found there. He was to take them then, and scatter them over the city.
Other Cherubim were standing on the south side of the Temple. When the man went between the wheels, these other Cherubim made the inner court and Temple to be filled with the bright cloud of the “glory of the LORD.” Only the wings of the cherubim could be heard outside the court. The man in linen got the burning coals and went out.
Then, a heart-wrenching scene, as the Glory of the LORD leaves the temple and then Jerusalem.
The flaming, roaring “chariot” rose. The Glory of God left the door of the Temple and stood over the the Cherubim. The “chariot,” with the glory of the LORD, moved to stand over the Eastern Gate.
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Ezekiel 11.
The Spirit lifted Ezekiel and brought him to the Eastern Gate too. God pointed out the men below as the officials and princes of Jerusalem “who devise iniquity and give wicked council.” “Prophesy against them, PROPHESY, O son of man!” the LORD God instructed.
And so Ezekiel did, condemning these men with their false prophesies of being responsible for many deaths in the city. And as he finished, one of the official men dropped down dead. Right then. And Ezekiel feared the whole city was about to die. “Ah, Lord God!” cried Ezekiel.. “Will you make a full end of the remnant of Israel?”
Then…. God reveals His plans. No, he will not completely destroy the remnant of Israel.
- “Though I removed them far off among the nations, and though I scattered them among the countries, YET… I have been a sanctuary to them for a while in the countries where they’ve gone.
- I will gather them and assemble them, and I will give them the land of Israel. And when they come, they will remove the detestable things and the abominations.
- And I will give them one heart and a new spirit. I will remove the heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh that they may walk in my statutes to obey them.
- They shall be my people and I will be their God.”
Then the Cherubim lifted up the flaming “chariot” and the glory of the God of Israel was over it. The glory of the LORD went up from the city and stood on the mountain East of the city.
The Glory of the LORD had gone from the temple, Jerusalem, and Judah, then to Chaldea, where His people were.
And the Spirit carried Ezekiel back to the exiles and he told them everything he had seen.
(This is really a sorrowful scene to me. God had dwelt with His people since they exited Egypt, in that brilliant cloud and fiery pillar, and then, when the Tabernacle and Temple were built, God had the Ark of the Covenant in the Holy of Holies, as “His footstool.” But now, He was gone from His Temple and His City. O, what destruction was left for the people remaining!)
(This reminds me of the end times when antichrist will rule and fool all the people (almost the very elect too!). But his real evil will come when “that which restrains” is removed. (The Holy Spirit in believers at the rapture.) When God departs.) (2 Thessalonians 2:1-12.)
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Ezekiel 12.
Again, Ezekiel was to perform another “object lesson” for the exiles. He was to prepare “an exile’s baggage” and pretend to go into exile by day in their sight. At night he was to go to another place, like an exile sneaking out at night. At one point, he was even to dig through a wall and pull out his baggage in their sight.
So he did this. (What an actor, Ezekiel was!)
If the people asked what he was doing, he would explain what was happening in Jerusalem. AND explain how Prince Zedekiah had tried to sneak out, too. He even pointed to the fact that Zedekiah would not see Babylon because he’d had his eyes put out.
(NOTE: Ezekiel calls Zedekiah “Prince,” because he believed the “real king” was already in Babylon, King Jehoiachin, who had been taken when Ezekiel was taken.)
Then the LORD tells Ezekiel to speak against a PROVERB” that is going around, saying, “The days have grown long, and every vision comes to nothing.”
In other words, they don’t believe what God and Ezekiel are saying about the total destruction of the city and Temple. They thought and were preaching that the “vision of destruction” was FAR OFF.
(It’s like what people were saying in 2 Peter 3:3-4, “knowing this first of all, that scoffers will come in the last days, with scoffing, following their own sinful desires. They will say, ‘Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things are continuing as they were from the beginning….’.”) But they, like the people of Ezekiel’s time, didn’t KNOW God.
God was shortly going to put an end to that proverb. He was going to speak the word, and it WILL be performed.
“That they will KNOW that I am the LORD.”
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(So much to learn and apply in this book! Ezekiel’s obedience is one thing that stands out to me. Whatever he is asked to do… Ezekiel does it … without question.)



