Verses 1-5
Ezekiel 21:1-5. Son of man, set
thy face toward Jerusalem — Here
God directs the prophet to
declare in plain language, what
he had ordered him to speak
allegorically, from the 46th to
the 48th verses of the foregoing
chapter. And say to the land of
Israel — The prophet’s face
being turned toward Judea and
Jerusalem, he addresses them as
if they were present before him.
Behold, I am against thee — I am
become thine enemy because of
thy sins; I hate thy practices,
and will punish thee for them.
And will draw forth my sword out
of his sheath — By the sword
here is meant the same as by the
fire in the foregoing chapter,
namely, every thing which
destroys. It may, however, be
taken in a rather more literal
sense than the fire is there to
be understood, as the calamities
of Judea were chiefly to arise
from the sword of the king of
Babylon, who was God’s
instrument to execute his
purpose on Judea. And will cut
off from thee the righteous and
the wicked — I will take away
from thee the righteous by
sending them into captivity; and
the wicked by destroying them,
either by the sword, or famine,
or pestilence. My sword shall go
forth against all flesh —
Against all the Jews that dwell
in the land. It shall not return
any more — That is, into its
sheath, till it hath executed
all my purposes.
Verse 6-7
Ezekiel 21:6-7. Sigh, therefore,
with the breaking of thy loins,
&c. — Show all the tokens of
grief and concern; sigh and
groan deeply; let the sense of
these impending judgments so
greatly affect thee, as to make
thee stoop like one quite borne
down under the weight of them.
God’s judgments, as they were
represented to the minds of the
prophets, very often affected
them with dreadful
apprehensions, especially when
they concerned their own people:
see the margin. With bitterness
sigh before their eyes — Before
the eyes of the elders of
Israel, mentioned Ezekiel 20:1,
or of the Jewish captives, who
could not but be touched with a
tender sense of the calamities
ready to befall their brethren
in Judea. Every heart shall
melt, &c. — Men’s hearts and
strength shall fail them for
fear.
Verse 9-10
Ezekiel 21:9-10. Say, A sword, a
sword is sharpened — The sword
was unsheathed in the foregoing
verses; here it is fitted to do
execution, which the prophet is
commanded to lament. 1. It is
sharpened, that it may cut, and
wound, and make sore slaughter.
The wrath of God will put an
edge upon it; and whatever
instruments he shall be pleased
to use in executing his
judgments, he will fill them
with strength, courage, and
fury, according to the service
they are employed in. 2. It is
furbished, that it may glitter,
to the terror of those against
whom it is drawn. It shall be a
kind of flaming sword. Though
the glory of God’s justice may
seem to have been eclipsed for a
while, (like a sword rusting in
the scabbard,) during the day of
his patience, and the delay of
his judgments; yet it will shine
out again, and be made to
glitter. 3. It is a victorious
sword, nothing shall stand
before it. It contemneth the rod
of my son, as every tree — It
makes no distinction between the
sceptre and common wood; between
the branches of the royal
family, descended from David and
Solomon, (who were honoured with
the title of God’s sons,) and
the meanest of the people. This
seems to be the meaning of the
clause, provided our translation
be just; but it is rendered very
differently in some other
versions. The Vulgate reads, Qui
moves sceptrum filii mei,
succidisti omne lignum, Thou who
removest the sceptre of my son,
hast cut down every tree; which
Capellus understands of
Nebuchadnezzar, who took away
the sceptre, and overturned the
kingdom. The marginal reading,
It is the rod of my son, it
despiseth every tree, may be
understood in two senses. It may
either mean, It is the rod
whereby I chastise my son,
namely, my people Israel. These,
collectively considered, are
termed God’s son, Exodus
4:22-23; Hosea 11:1; as being
selected and chosen from all
others, to stand to him in the
relation of sons and daughters.
Or, it may signify, It is the
rod of my son, the Messiah,
appointed by me to be the judge
of the world, and invested with
authority to execute judgment.
This rod despiseth every tree;
for it is the rod of iron,
whereby the Son of God breaks
the power of his enemies, Psalms
2:9, and dashes them in pieces
like a potter’s vessel, without
respect of persons.
Verse 12-13
Ezekiel 21:12-13. Cry and howl,
son of man — As a mark of the
vehemence of thy grief. For it
shall be upon my people —
Namely, the devouring sword;
upon all the princes of Israel —
Both princes and people shall be
involved in one common
destruction. Smite therefore
upon thy thigh —
Use all the outward expressions
of grief and mourning. Because
it is a trial — As all great
calamities are often styled: see
the margin.
And what if the sword contemn
even the rod? — Namely, the
sceptre and royal family. The
Hebrew, שׁבשׂ מאסת ומה אם נם, it
seems, should rather be
rendered, And what if even the
rod, or sceptre, contemn? — That
is, if the king and kingdom of
Judah despise this trial. It
shall be no more, saith the Lord
— Both shall be destroyed, and
be no more. The word rendered
rod here, is continually put in
Scripture for governor, or
government; a rod, staff, or
sceptre, being the usual signs
of government. God, therefore,
here foretels, that if the
sceptre of Judah should despise,
or not profit by, the correction
or punishment brought upon it by
the instrumentality of
Nebuchadnezzar, it should be
entirely broken, and be no more;
which came to pass accordingly.
The royal family was not amended
by this severe judgment, and
therefore was laid aside. “The
sceptre here only means the
kingly power in the house of
David, and not that supreme
authority which Jacob foretold
should not forsake Judah till
the coming of the Messiah.”
Verses 14-17
Ezekiel 21:14; Ezekiel 21:17.
Prophesy, and smite thy hands
together — In token of amazement
and sorrow. And let the sword be
doubled the third time — Bishop
Newcome reads, Bring the sword
twice; yea, bring it thrice;
namely, that God’s judgments
might be fully executed, and his
justice satisfied. It is
probable that the three great
slaughters which should be made
of the inhabitants of Judea and
Jerusalem are here intended,
namely, 1st, During the siege,
in which, undoubtedly, great
numbers fell who were without
the walls of the city, and many
within: 2dly, When the city was
taken by assault, which
certainly was not without great
slaughter: and 3dly, The
massacre of Gedaliah, and those
that sided with him. The sword
of the slain — Wherewith many
shall be slain. It is the sword
of the great men, &c. —
Appointed for the slaughter of
the great men, namely, the
princes, rulers, and captains;
which entereth into their privy
chambers — Where they were
hidden in hopes of escaping. I
have set the point of the sword
against all their gates — I have
gathered together the Chaldeans
round about Jerusalem, with
their swords sharpened and drawn
at every gate, to meet and slay
all that shall attempt to come
out, or to slay all they find on
entering the city. Ah! it is
made bright — Hebrew, עשׂויה
לברק, is made like lightning.
The same metaphor which occurs
in Virgil:
“Vaginaque eripit, ensem
fulmineum.” — ÆN. 4. 50:579.
“He drew his sword, which did
like lightning blaze.”
It is wrapped — Or rather, It is
sharpened for the slaughter. So
Kimchius and some others
translate מעשׂה, deriving the
word from עשׂ, a style, or iron
pen: see Buxtorf. Go thee one
way or other — God is here
represented as speaking, by way
of apostrophe, to the sword, and
giving it an unlimited
commission to destroy wherever
it should be drawn. I will also
smite my hands together — In
token of my approbation. I will
animate and encourage the
slayers to go on. And I will
cause my fury to rest — I will
satisfy my anger by a full
execution of my judgments.
Verse 19-20
Ezekiel 21:19-20. Appoint thee
two ways — So as to represent
them to the eyes of thy
countrymen: see Ezekiel 4:1;
“Designa in tabella, lapide, aut
terra.” Mark on a map, a stone,
or on the earth. — Vatablus.
That the sword of the king of
Babylon may come — Dr. Waterland
translates this, “Appoint thee
two roads for the king of
Babylon’s sword to come by; let
both go forth out of one land;
and choose thou a way-mark;
choose it at the head of the
road toward the city: Ezekiel
21:20, Point out a road for the
sword to go to Rabbath, and to
Judah in Jerusalem the
defenced.” Instead of the
defenced, Houbigant reads, that
he may besiege it. God here
foreshows his prophet, that when
the king of Babylon should come
with his army into Syria, and
find the Ammonites had entered
into a confederacy with Egypt as
well as Zedekiah, he would be in
doubt against which of the two
people he should first make war,
and would commit the decision of
the matter to his arts of
divination, described Ezekiel
21:21; and that God should
direct the divination to be for
taking the road that leads to
Jerusalem. The words, Let both
go forth out of one land, seem
to mean, that the single way
should divide itself into two,
leading to different places.
This, as appears from what
follows, was the road coming out
of Arabia, which afterward
parted into two, one leading to
Rabbath, and the other to
Jerusalem.
Verse 21-22
Ezekiel 21:21-22. For the king
of Babylon stood at the parting
of the way — The prophet here
expresses what was future as if
it were past, according to the
usual style of the prophets,
when speaking of things soon to
come to pass. And he explains
the symbolical action spoken of
in the two foregoing verses; he
shows that it was designed to
represent what the king of
Babylon would do when he was on
his march, and came to the place
where the road was divided; that
he would use divination to
determine which of the roads he
should take. He made his arrows
bright — The Vulgate reads,
Commiscens sagittas, Mingling
his arrows; which sense of the
verb קלקל, agrees better with
the accounts given us by ancient
writers of this kind of
divination, and therefore is
preferred by Dr. Pocock, who
confirms it by the Arabic use of
the word. It is also adopted by
Bishop Newcome. The way of
divining by arrows is thus
described by St. Jerome in his
commentary on this place: “They
wrote on several arrows the
names of the cities they
intended to assault; and then,
putting them all together
promiscuously in a quiver, they
drew them out thence as lots are
drawn; and that city whose name
was written on the arrow first
drawn was the city they first
made war upon.” A method of
divining by arrows is still in
use, it appears, among the
idolatrous Arabs. Of this we
read the following description,
in Sale’s Preliminary Discourse
to the Koran, p. 126: “Seven
divining arrows were kept at the
temple of Mecca; but generally,
in divination, the idolatrous
Arabs made use of three only, on
one of which was written, My
Lord hath commanded me; on
another, My Lord hath forbidden
me; and the third was blank. If
the first was drawn, they looked
on it as an approbation of the
enterprise in question; if the
second, they made a contrary
conclusion; but if the third
happened to be drawn, they mixed
them, and drew over again, till
a decisive answer was given by
one of the others.” He consulted
with images — The Hebrew word
here is teraphim, the name given
to the images, or gods, which
Rachel stole from Laban, Genesis
31:19. In what way these were
consulted cannot now be said,
and all conjectures about it are
vain. He looked in the liver —
This was another way of
divination used among these
heathen; they determined for or
against certain things,
according to the state of the
liver of sacrificed animals,
whether mutilated or complete,
sound or unsound, or from its
colour, or some marks appearing
in particular places of it, and
this by rules laid down among
them. At his right hand was the
divination for Jerusalem — When
the king of Babylon stood at the
head of the two ways, to consult
which of the two he should take,
the tokens that were shown him,
God so ordering it, induced him
to march with his army to the
right, that is, toward
Jerusalem. Nebuchadnezzar must
be considered as coming from
Dan, and marching along the
river Jordan. Rabbath was
therefore situated to the left
hand, and Jerusalem to the
right: see Michaelis. From this,
and many other instances in the
Scriptures, we may conclude,
that things apparently the most
fortuitous, such as the coming
up of lots, and the like, are
subject to the direction of
Divine Providence, and, when
occasion requires it, are
ordered to answer its purposes;
to open the mouth in the
slaughter — Or, to the
slaughter; that is, to animate
the soldiers to slay. To lift up
the voice with shouting — To
make the military cry, in order
to strike the inhabitants with
terror. We find it was usual, in
almost all armies, to begin the
attack of their enemies with a
loud cry, which served to
animate their own men, and to
intimidate the enemy. To cast a
mount — See note on Jeremiah
22:24.
Verse 23-24
Ezekiel 21:23-24. And it shall
be as a false divination to them
that have sworn oaths — That is,
the Jews, when they shall hear
of it, shall deride and despise
it as a vain, lying divination,
and so shall consider themselves
as being unconcerned in it; and
that though they have sworn
homage to the king of Babylon,
and afterward perfidiously
broken their covenant with him.
But he will call to remembrance
the iniquity, that they may be
taken — Nebuchadnezzar will
remember Zedekiah’s breach of
his oath, and all his and his
people’s treacheries, and will
avenge himself by taking the
city, and making him and his
subjects prisoners of war. The
form of expression seems to
imply that the king of Babylon
had had it chiefly in his mind
to go against Rabbath; but the
divinations all signifying that
he should go against Jerusalem,
caused him to reflect on the
perfidious behaviour of the
Jewish nation toward him, and so
determined him to take the way
to Jerusalem, in order severely
to punish the inhabitants of it.
Because ye have made your
iniquity to be remembered — Not
by yourselves, that it might be
repented of, but by me, that it
might be punished: because by
your open and manifest
continuance in your former
sinful courses against me, and
rebellions against the king of
Babylon, you cause both me and
him to call your iniquitous
conduct to mind, and punish you
for it: ye shall be taken by the
hand — As birds or beasts,
entangled in the net, are easily
taken with the hand, so shall
you be taken in the easiest
manner, and fall into the hands
of the king of Babylon, whose
anger you have justly provoked.
Verse 25-26
Ezekiel 21:25-26. And thou,
profane wicked prince of Israel
— The words are directed to
Zedekiah, whom the prophet calls
profane and wicked, chiefly with
respect to his breaking that
solemn oath, uttered in the name
of God, whereby he had engaged
himself to be tributary to the
king of Babylon. By this action
he and his courtiers did great
dishonour to the true God. The
king of Babylon, it appears,
kept the oath which he sware to
them by his false gods, while
they broke the oath which they
sware to him by Jehovah! Thus
disgracing the true God before
the Babylonians and other
heathen, who must needs
entertain a contemptible opinion
of that being, whose worshippers
durst break the oath which they
had sworn by him. Therefore with
respect to this, as well as his
unalterable regard to truth and
the due observance of oaths, God
could not but look with
indignation upon the breach of
their oath, and inflict
punishment upon them for it. See
note on Ezekiel 17:15. Whose day
is come — The day of whose
calamity is near at hand, when
he shall receive the due
punishment of his iniquity.
Remove the diadem — The original
word is often used for the
priestly mitre, but here it
means some kingly ornament,
probably the royal tire of the
head. Take off the crown —
Depose him from his kingly
dignity. This shall not be the
same — The kingdom shall never
be what it has been. Exalt him
that is low — This seems to be
spoken of Jehoiachin, who was
many years kept in prison at
Babylon; but at length, as we
read 2 Kings 25:27, was taken
out of prison, kindly treated,
and advanced to great honour by
Evil-merodach, king of Babylon.
And abase him that is high —
Namely, Zedekiah; who was to be
pulled down from his throne,
have his eyes put out, and be
kept in prison the remainder of
his days.
Verse 27
Ezekiel 21:27. I will overturn,
overturn, overturn it — By
several degrees I will utterly
overthrow the kingdom of Judah;
and it shall be no more — It
shall never recover its former
lustre and dignity; until he
come, &c. — Till the Messiah
come to take his kingdom. To the
same purpose is Lowth’s
paraphrase on the verse: “After
that Zedekiah is deprived of his
regal authority, there shall be
no more kings of that family
till Christ come, the King so
often foretold and promised, who
in due time shall reign upon the
throne of his father David, and
of whose kingdom there shall be
no end, Luke 1:32-33. After the
captivity, some of the priests
of the Asmonean race assumed the
style and title of kings; but
not being of the tribe of Judah,
they could have no just right to
that honour. The expression,
Whose right it is, seems to be
peculiarly characteristic of the
Messiah, who is always spoken of
by the prophets as the true and
right heir to the throne of
David, and as one who was in an
eminent manner to inherit the
kingdom. His indeed the right
was; for him was reserved the
kingly dominion, not only over
Judea, but the whole earth. The
repetition of the word overturn,
in the beginning of this verse,
or, as the Hebrew expression
עוהmay be more literally
rendered, an overturning, may
probably be intended to predict
the repeated subversions which
the Jewish state was to undergo
in future times, by the
Chaldeans, Macedonians, Romans,
and many others, and the
multiplied destructions of their
nation, by which they would be
punished for their sins; which
subversions and destructions
will not come to any happy
termination, till they submit to
the easy yoke of their long-
rejected Messiah, and in
humility, faith, and gratitude,
accept the salvation which he
waits to confer upon them. Nay,
and the expression might be
intended “to predict all the
convulsions in states and
kingdoms, which shall make way
for the establishment of his
kingdom throughout the earth.” —
Scott.
Verse 28-29
Ezekiel 21:28-29. Thus saith the
Lord concerning the Ammonites —
Because the Ammonites were
reprieved by Nebuchadnezzar’s
decision to besiege Jerusalem,
they were ready to promise
themselves security, and to
insult over the calamities
brought on the Jews; a practice
for which they are often
reproved very severely by the
prophets, and threatened with
the like judgments. And
concerning their reproach —
Wherewith they reproached Israel
in the day of Israel’s
afflictions; say thou, The sword
is drawn, is drawn — Warlike
preparations are made against
you, the war is declared, and
your enemy hath drawn the sword.
For the slaughter it is
furbished — It is prepared to
make dreadful destruction, to
lay waste your country, and
consume its inhabitants. While
they see vanity unto thee —
While the soothsayers and
pretenders to divination foretel
nothing but happy events to
thee, O Ammon! the sword is
preparing to destroy thee. To
bring thee upon the necks of
them that are slain — To add thy
people to the number of those
who are slain in Judea, (Ezekiel
21:14-15,) and to make thy
condition like theirs; whose day
is come — See Ezekiel 21:25.
When their iniquity shall have
an end — When their deserved
punishment, coming upon them,
shall put a stop to their
wickedness. This prophecy
concerning the Ammonites was
fulfilled by the Babylonians,
about five years after the
destruction of Jerusalem,
because the Ammonites assisted
Ishmael to wrest the government
of Judea out of the hands of
Gedaliah, whom the king of
Babylon had fixed there as his
deputy.
Verses 30-32
Ezekiel 21:30-32. Shall I cause
it to return into his sheath? —
Shall the sword that is drawn to
execute the judgments of God
upon Ammon be put up in its
sheath before it has done its
work? Surely not. I will judge
thee in the place where thou
wast created — That is, where
thy nation first received its
existence: thou shalt not be
carried captive, but shalt be
destroyed in thy own land. I
will pour out mine indignation
upon thee — Which shall
overwhelm thee as with a flood,
and sweep thy nation into ruin.
I will blow against thee, &c. —
To melt thee as it were in a
furnace. See Ezekiel 22:20-21.
And deliver thee into the hand
of brutish men — The LXX. read,
ανδρων βαρβαρων τεκταινοντων
διαφθορας, of barbarous men,
artificers of destruction; or,
as we render it, skilful to
destroy. Thou shalt be for fuel
to the fire — Thy country and
cities shall be destroyed by
fire. Thy blood shall be in the
midst of the land — A slaughter
shall be made of thee in every
part of thy country, and thy
blood shall appear everywhere.
Thou shalt be no more remembered
— The Jewish people still
subsist, but the Ammonites are
lost in the mass of mankind, and
have been long forgotten. |