Verse 1-2
Ezekiel 12:1-2. The word of the
Lord also came, &c. — This is
supposed to have happened in the
sixth year of Zedekiah, and five
years before the siege of
Jerusalem: and the prophecies
contained in the following
chapters, to the twentieth, are
thought to be of the same year.
Thou dwellest in the midst of a
rebellious house — “He was among
them of the captivity in
Chaldea, as appears from Ezekiel
12:10, Ezekiel 11:24; Ezekiel
14:22, and Ezekiel 24:2. And
these seem to have disbelieved
the prophecies that Jerusalem
should be smitten and burned,
and its inhabitants scattered
abroad: see Ezekiel 4:2; Ezekiel
9:5; Ezekiel 10:2; Ezekiel
11:9.” — Newcome. They saw
Jerusalem still inhabited, and
under the government of its own
king. And as they who were left
in Judea thought themselves much
more highly in God’s favour than
those who had been carried away
captives, so those who had been
made captives repined at their
lot, and thought those who
remained in their own country
were in a much better condition
than themselves; therefore the
following symbolical
representations were designed to
show, that they who were left
behind, to endure the miseries
of a siege, and the insults of a
conqueror, would be in a much
worse condition than those who
were already settled in a
foreign land: see Lowth. Which
have eyes to see, and see not,
&c. — Who will not make use of
that sense and understanding
which God has given them, nor
learn from those examples and
incidents which have happened,
and by which God intended they
should be instructed.
Verses 3-6
Ezekiel 12:3-6. Therefore,
prepare thee stuff for removing
— Hebrew, כלי גולה, vessels, or
instruments of removing, namely,
such as were suited for that
purpose. Get all thy goods
together, and pack them up as
those do that remove from one
place to another. Do this
openly, and at noon-day, that
the people, among whom thou
dwellest, may all see and take
notice of it. The prophets often
prophesied in this way by signs,
as being of greater force and
efficacy than words. Thou shalt
bring forth thy stuff by day in
their sight — Before it is quite
night, that they, who ought to
learn by this sign, may see and
consider it. Thou shalt go forth
at even — To signify that
Zedekiah and his retinue should
escape out of the city by night,
2 Kings 25:4. Dig through the
wall in their sight — To show
that the king would make his
escape by the same means. Carry
it forth in the twilight — What
the prophet was here commanded
to carry out in the twilight, it
seems, was something different
from the goods he removed in the
day-time; probably, necessary
provision for his present
subsistence may be intended.
Thou shalt cover thy face that
thou see not the ground — As
Zedekiah shall do, that he may
not be discovered. Or, as the
prophet was now in Chaldea, this
covering of his face, that he
might not see the ground, might
be intended to signify, that
though Zedekiah should be
brought into that country, yet
he should never see it; as his
eyes would be put out on the
borders of Judea, as we read
they were, Jeremiah 52. For I
have set thee for a sign unto
the house of Israel — I will
show, by what thou dost, what
shall happen to the Jewish
nation, and particularly to
their king.
Verses 9-16
Ezekiel 12:9-16. Hath not the
house of Israel said — That is,
I know they have said; as the
words, “are they not written in
the book of Chronicles, &c.?”
mean, they are written there.
What doest thou, &c. — They have
inquired by way of derision and
contempt, what these signs mean.
Say — This burden concerneth the
prince, &c. — Namely, King
Zedekiah, chap. Ezekiel 7:27.
The prince that is among them
shall bear upon his shoulder,
&c. — Their king shall even be
forced himself to carry what he
can out of the city, in the dusk
of the evening. They shall dig
through the wall, &c. — His
retinue shall make a private way
to get out of the city, that
they may not be discovered: see
Jeremiah 39:4; Jeremiah 52:7. It
is probable that the king and
his companions fled through a
breach made by themselves in the
wall. Or the gate through which
they fled might have been walled
up during the siege. He shall
cover his face, &c. — See note
on Ezekiel 12:6, and on 2 Kings
25:7. My net also will I spread
upon him — Though he thinks to
escape, yet I will bring his
enemies upon him, who shall
encompass him, and stop his
flight, as when a wild beast is
entangled in a net. I will bring
him to Babylon, yet shall he not
see it — Neither the land nor
the city; for his eyes will be
put out at Riblah: see notes on
2 Kings 25:5-7. I will scatter
toward every wind all that are
about him — Either the
Egyptians, who came to assist
him, or those that fled with
him. And I will draw out the
sword after them — I will cause
them to be pursued by the sword
and slain, whithersoever they
go. But I will leave a few men —
Hebrew, מספר אנשׁי, men of
number: that is, populus
numerabilis utpote parvus, a
people easily numbered, as being
few: Hor., Ars Poet., 50:206.
From the sword &c., that they
may declare all their
abominations — May confess that
they were justly punished for
their idolatries and
immoralities: or that they may
declare the cause (namely, their
heinous wickedness) why the city
of Jerusalem, and the temple
dedicated to Jehovah there, were
delivered up to destruction, and
thereby may justify my
proceedings. And they shall know
that I am the Lord — Namely, the
Chaldeans shall know it. See how
God brings good out of evil! The
dispersion of sinners, who had
done God much dishonour and
disservice in their own country,
proves the dispersion of
penitents, who shall do him much
honour and service in other
countries.
Verses 17-19
Ezekiel 12:17-19. Moreover, &c.
— As he was a sign to them in
digging through the wall and
carrying out his stuff, so he
must now be a sign to them in
another way. Eat thy bread with
quaking, &c. — Show all the
signs of anxiety and
consternation when thou takest
thy common sustenance. This he
was to do that he might express
the calamitous condition of
those that should be in
Jerusalem during the siege. And
say unto the people — Thy
fellow-captives; Thus saith the
Lord of the inhabitants of
Jerusalem — This was designed to
inform the captives that they
were not in a worse condition
than those that were left behind
in Judea. They shall eat their
bread with carefulness, &c. —
See note on Ezekiel 4:16-17.
That her land may be desolate —
Rather, because her land shall
be desolate, namely, the land of
Jerusalem, or the country, of
which it was the head city,
which was shortly to be laid
waste, emptied of its
inhabitants, wealth, and plenty.
Because of the violence, &c. —
The injustice, oppression, and
tyranny of the Jews toward one
another.
Verses 22-25
Ezekiel 12:22-25. Son of man,
what is that proverb? — The
saying become proverbial. The
days are prolonged, and every
vision faileth — Words of the
same import with those that
occur Ezekiel 12:27, and Ezekiel
11:3. Both of them the words of
scoffers, who turned the grace
of God into wantonness, and took
encouragement from his patience
and long-suffering, to despise
his threatenings, as if they
would never be fulfilled. Tell
them therefore — Who either use
this proverb, or who stumble at
my deferring to execute
judgment; I will make this
proverb to cease — My patience
shall soon be at its period, and
will call on my justice to
vindicate it, and then
calamities felt will prove that
there can be no more place for
such a proverb, the
groundlessness of it being
manifest to all. Say unto them,
The days are at hand — The time
when God will show his wrath,
and make his power and justice
known to the world by fulfilling
his threatenings and the
predictions of his prophets. For
there shall be no more any vain
vision — The false prophets, who
foretold peace and safety, shall
see their prophecies so confuted
by the events, quite contrary to
what they foretold, that they
will never pretend any more to
publish new prophecies. I am the
Lord — I am able to discover the
vanity and falsehood of the
prophets that have flattered the
people, and will do it by
accomplishing what my true
prophets have foretold. The word
that I shall speak shall come to
pass — No length of time shall
make me forget it; no pretences
of self-flattering prophets or
people shall divert me from my
purpose; no power can hinder,
nor counsel defeat my design. It
shall be no more prolonged: for
in your days, &c. — My
threatenings shall be fulfilled
in your own days, and you shall
have ocular demonstration of
their truth. |