Verse 1
Ezekiel 4:1. Take a tile, &c.,
and lay it before thee — The
prophets often foreshowed
impending judgments by
significant emblems, which
usually strike more powerfully
than words. So Jeremiah was
commanded to go down to the
potter’s house, and observe how
frequently vessels were marred
in his hands, (chap. 18.,) and
to take one of those earthen
vessels and break it in the
sight of the elders of the Jews,
(chap. 19.,) that they might
thereby be sensibly taught the
greatness of God’s power, and
their own frailty. So here God
commands Ezekiel to take a tile,
or such a slate as mathematical
lines, or figures, are usually
drawn upon, and there to make a
portraiture of Jerusalem,
thereby to represent it as under
a siege. We may observe, that
God often suited prophetical
types and figures to the genius
and education of the prophets
themselves: so the figures which
Amos makes use of are generally
taken from such observations as
are proper to the employment of
a shepherd, or a husbandman.
Ezekiel had a peculiar talent
for architecture, therefore
several of his representations
are suitable to that profession.
And they that suppose the emblem
here made use of to be below the
dignity of the prophetical
office, may as well accuse
Archimedes of folly for making
lines in the dust: see Lowth.
Verse 2-3
Ezekiel 4:2-3. And lay siege
against it — Make a portraiture
of a siege, and of such warlike
instruments as are used in
sieges, figuring every thing
just as when an army lies before
a place with an intention of
taking it. Moreover, take thou
an iron pan — Or rather, an iron
plate, probably such as cakes
were baked on. “This,” says
Bishop Newcome, “may denote the
strong trenches of the
besiegers, or their firmness and
perseverance in the siege; or,
according to others, that there
was an iron wall between the
besieged and God, whom the
prophet represented;” namely,
the sins of the people, which
separated between them and God,
and prevented him from showing
them mercy.
Verses 4-6
Ezekiel 4:4-6. Lie thou also,
&c. — “In his own house, Ezekiel
3:24. This was to be his
posture, not without
intermission, but in the
exercise of his prophetical
office, during that part of each
day, when the people were likely
to observe his conduct.” —
Bishop Newcome. Upon thy left
side — The left side, as being
the least respectable, signified
Israel, or the ten tribes: the
right side, as being most
honoured, the tribes of Judah
and Benjamin; or, as it is
generally expressed, the kingdom
of Judah. Ezekiel’s lying on one
side for a long time together,
signified the great patience of
God in bearing with the sins of
Israel. And lay the iniquity of
the house of Israel upon it:
according to the number of the
days, &c. — From the days that I
shall order thee to lie upon thy
left side thou shalt understand
how many years I have borne with
their iniquity, for each day was
to signify a year: see Ezekiel
4:6. Thou shalt bear their
iniquity — Thou shalt, in the
way of a sign or symbol, suffer
for their iniquity, namely, in
lying so long upon one side. Or,
thou shalt pre-signify the
punishment which they shall
bear. For I have laid upon thee
the years of their iniquity —
This verse explains the former:
I have pointed out the number of
years wherein apostate Israel
sinned against me. According to
the number of days, three
hundred and ninety days — “This
number of years will take us
back, with sufficient exactness,
from the year in which Jerusalem
was sacked by Nebuchadnezzar to
the first year of Jeroboam’s
reign, when national idolatry
began in Israel.” — Bishop
Newcome. Some, however, rather
suppose that the years are meant
which intervened between the
falling of Solomon into
idolatry, and the carrying away
of the ten tribes by Shalmanezer,
at which time they entirely
ceased to be a nation or people
of themselves, and were wholly
dispersed and mixed with other
nations. Thou shalt bear the
iniquity of Judah forty days —
So many years there were from
the time when King Josiah
entered into a solemn covenant
to serve and worship God, (from
whence their future idolatry
received a great aggravation,)
to the destruction of the city
and temple. I have appointed
thee each day for a year — Days
frequently stand for years in
the prophetical accounts of
time.
Verse 7-8
Ezekiel 4:7-8. Thou shalt set
thy face toward the siege of
Jerusalem — Thou shalt look
toward Jerusalem, or toward the
portraiture of it upon the tile,
with a threatening countenance,
as men do toward the city which
they are besieging. And thine
arm shall be uncovered — Or,
stretched out, as the Vulgate
reads it. Their habits were
anciently so contrived, that
their right arms were disengaged
from their upper garments, that
they might be the more ready for
action. So ancient statues and
coins represent heroes with
their right arms bare, and out
of the sleeves of their
garments. Thus God is said to
make bare his arm, Isaiah 52:10,
where he is represented as
subduing his adversaries, and
bringing salvation to his
people. And thou shalt prophesy
against it — Thou shalt signify
by these signs what shall happen
to it. And, behold, I will lay
bands upon thee — See Ezekiel
3:25. God is said to do what was
done in consequence of his
command. And thou shalt not turn
thee from one side to another —
This may mean, that the Lord
would powerfully enable, and
even constrain him to lie
quietly in the posture appointed
him, till the days were
accomplished, in the sense
explained in note on Ezekiel
4:4, this being intended to
signify that the Chaldeans
should continue the siege, and
should be, as it were, fixed and
fastened there, as by bonds,
till the city was taken. This
evidently seems to have been a
real transaction, and not a
vision, otherwise it does not
appear how it could have been a
sign to the people; for how
could any thing be a sign to
them, of which they were not
eye-witnesses? Till thou hast
ended the days of thy siege —
“The three hundred and ninety
days, mentioned Ezekiel 4:5;
Ezekiel 4:9, it seems, were
designed, not only to signify
the years of Israel’s sin, but
the continuance of the siege of
Jerusalem. That siege lasted,
from the beginning to the end of
it, seventeen months, as appears
from 2 Kings 25:1-4. But the
king of Egypt, coming to relieve
the city, was the occasion of
raising the siege for some time,
as appears from Jeremiah 37:3.
So that it may reasonably be
gathered from the authority of
the text, joined to the
circumstances of the story, that
the siege lasted about thirteen
months, or three hundred and
ninety days.”
Verse 9
Ezekiel 4:9. Take thou also
wheat and barley, &c. — In times
of scarcity it is usual for
people to mix a great deal of
the coarse kinds of grain with a
little of the better sort, to
make their provisions last the
longer. This Ezekiel was
commanded to do, to signify the
scarcity, and the coarse fare
the inhabitants should have in
the siege of the city. Three
hundred and ninety days thou
shalt eat thereof — During which
time the siege lasted: see
Ezekiel 4:8. The forty days,
mentioned Ezekiel 4:6, seem not
to be brought into this account.
These, denoting Judah’s sin of
forty years’ continuance, being
superadded to the three hundred
and ninety days of the siege,
may signify the days spent in
spoiling and desolating the city
and temple, and carrying away
the remnant of the people.
Jerusalem was taken on the ninth
day of the fourth month,
Jeremiah 52:6; and on the tenth
day of the fifth month the
temple was burned, Ezekiel 4:12;
and so we may reasonably
conjecture by the eighteenth of
that month, which was the
fortieth from the taking of the
place, the whole city was
burned, and the few Jews who
were left were carried into
captivity: see Lowth.
Verses 10-12
Ezekiel 4:10-12. And thy meat
shall be by weight twenty
shekels, &c. — In sieges it is
common to stint every one to a
certain allowance, by which
means they can guess how long
their provisions will last:
twenty shekels is but ten
ounces; a short allowance for a
day’s sustenance. From time to
time shalt thou eat of it — This
shall be thy daily allowance
during the whole three hundred
and ninety days. Thou shalt
drink also water by measure — In
sieges it is usual for the enemy
to cut off the water from coming
into the cities which they
besiege, as much as they can,
which produces a scarcity of it;
the sixth part of a hin — Which
is about a pint and a half of
our measure. Thou shalt eat it
as barley cakes — Such as people
make in haste, when they have
not time for preparing a set
meal: see Exodus 12:39. This
represents the hurry and
disorder which would be
occasioned by the siege. And
thou shalt bake it with dung —
To signify the scarcity of all
kinds of fuel. Sir J. Chardin,
in his MS. quoted by Harmer,
tells us, “the eastern people
always used cow-dung for baking,
boiling a pot, and dressing all
kinds of victuals that are
easily cooked; especially in
countries that had but little
wood.” And D’Arvieux,
“complaining that one sort of
Arab bread smells of smoke, and
tastes of the cow-dung used in
baking it, informs us, that the
peasants often make use of the
same fuel, and that all who live
in villages where there is not
plenty of wood, are very careful
to stock themselves with it; the
children,” he says, “gather up
the dung, and clap it against a
wall to dry, from whence the
quantity that is necessary for
baking, or warming themselves,
is taken from time to time.” —
Harmer, chap. 4. observ. 20,
vol. 1. According to Dathius,
quoted by Bishop Newcome, the
dung of camels, as well as that
of cows or oxen, was also “often
used by the easterns as fuel for
preparing their food.” But the
command here given to the
prophet, to use human dung,
expressed the greatest
necessity, and was terribly
significant of the extremities
which the inhabitants of
Jerusalem should undergo during
the siege, no nation making use
of that offensive kind of fuel.
Verse 13
Ezekiel 4:13. Even thus shall
the children of Israel eat their
defiled bread among the Gentiles
— The prophet, speaking above of
eating and drinking by weight
and measure, foretels the famine
in Jerusalem; now in the bread
baked with dung is also
pre-signified the unclean bread
which the children of Israel
were to eat among the Gentiles.
For their circumstances in their
captivity would not permit them
to observe the rules of their
law relating to unclean meats;
and they would be constrained to
partake of meats, part of which
had been offered to idols.
Compare Hosea 9:1-3; Daniel 1:8.
Bread is often used in the
Hebrew for all sorts of food.
Verse 14-15
Ezekiel 4:14-15. Then said I,
Ah, Lord God, &c. — He
deprecates this, and entreats it
may not be enjoined him. Behold,
my soul hath not been polluted —
I have always carefully observed
the distinction between meats
clean and unclean: I beseech
thee, command me not now to eat
any thing so contrary to my
former practice. Neither came
their abominable flesh into my
mouth — The Hebrew word, פגול,
abominable, is used of such
meats as were forbidden by the
law, as the learned reader may
see, Leviticus 7:18; Leviticus
19:7; Isaiah 65:4. Then he said,
Lo, I have given thee cow’s
dung, &c. — This indicated, that
even the pious would suffer
greatly during the siege of
Jerusalem; and that all the
circumstances of things would
admit of, would be a very small
distinction between them and the
wicked; for Ezekiel, God’s
prophet, could only obtain the
exchange of a somewhat less
offensive kind of fuel for one
extremely offensive.
Verse 16-17
Ezekiel 4:16-17. Behold, I will
break the staff of bread in
Jerusalem — I will cause a
scarcity of bread in Jerusalem,
2 Kings 25:3; and deprive it of
the chief support of man’s life.
And they shall eat their bread
by weight and with care — Here
we have a declaration of the
meaning of what the prophet was
ordered to do, Ezekiel 4:10-11.
It was intended to signify, that
during the siege, the people of
Jerusalem should eat their food
very sparingly, and with great
anxiety, for fear they should
not be able to get a further
supply, when what they had was
consumed. That they may want
bread and water — Or, so that
they shall want bread and water:
and be astonished one at another
— Shall look upon one another
astonished at each other’s
ghastly, meager countenances, or
at the greatness of their
calamities; and consume away,
&c. — And pine away with hunger
and hardships, on account of
their wickedness. |