Verse 1-2
Ezekiel 24:1-2. Again, in the
ninth year — Namely, of
Jehoiachin’s captivity, and of
Zedekiah’s reign; the word of
the Lord came unto me — Namely,
in Chaldea, where the prophet
now was, and where, as the words
here evidently imply, God gave
him notice, though many hundreds
of miles distant from Jerusalem,
of Nebuchadnezzar’s beginning to
lay siege to that city, just at
the time when he began to do it.
Saying, The king of Babylon set
himself against Jerusalem —
Hebrew, סמךְ אל ירושׁלים, hath
set himself, or, as Buxtorf
renders it, accedit, vel
appropinquat, comes, or
approaches, to Jerusalem, בעצם
היום הזה, this self-same day —
Namely, this day that I now
speak to thee. Write thee the
name of the day, &c. — Make a
memorial of the day, and of my
having this day informed thee of
this great event; and signify it
to the people, that when they
shall receive intelligence from
Judea of the siege having been
begun this day, according to thy
information, it may be a
confirmation of the truth of thy
mission, and of the certainty of
the fulfilment of all thy
predictions. This was about two
years before the taking of
Jerusalem: see 2 Kings 25:1;
Jeremiah 39:1; and Jeremiah
52:4.
Verses 3-5
Ezekiel 24:3-5. Utter a parable
unto the rebellious house —
Though the house of Judah has as
yet paid no due regard to what
thou and the rest of the
prophets have uttered or done;
nevertheless, still further
represent to them the
destruction coming upon them by
a symbolical action. Set on a
pot, &c. — By the pot was
signified Jerusalem, (under
which figure it is represented,
both by this prophet, Ezekiel
11:3, and by Jeremiah, Jeremiah
1:13.) and by the pieces
gathered into it, the different
ranks of men gathered into that
city, by taking refuge within
its walls, when the Chaldean
army approached to besiege it.
By the water and fire were
signified the calamities which
they were to suffer. By every
good piece, the thigh and the
shoulder, the wealthiest and
chief of the inhabitants of the
land seem to be meant, who would
flee from their country houses
to live in safety in Jerusalem;
and by the choice bones, the
bravest and strongest among the
common people, or the most
warlike, who would betake
themselves to the city for its
defence. Burn also the bones
under it — Not the bones of the
pieces to be boiled, but of the
many innocent persons to be
murdered in Jerusalem, whose
blood cried for vengeance, and
their bones, scattered on the
face of the earth, will both
make and maintain this fire.
Bishop Newcome renders the
clause, Pile also (in the margin
we read heap) the bones under
it: namely, as he explains it,
“the useless bones (Ezekiel
24:10) which the coals (Ezekiel
24:11) would consume, to show
what a general destruction of
the meaner sort would be caused
by the Chaldeans.” And make it
boil well — To denote the heat
or violence of the calamity, and
perhaps also that the city would
be set on fire and consumed.
Verses 6-8
Ezekiel 24:6-8. Wherefore thus
saith the Lord — Here begins an
explication of the preceding
symbolical representation; Wo to
the bloody city — Jerusalem,
which is this pot; whose scum is
therein — Whose filthiness, or
wickedness, is not purged out of
it. Bring it out piece by piece
— One piece after another till
all be taken. Let nothing be
left in it; let it be emptied of
every thing. This signified the
entire ruin and spoil of the
city and the inhabitants of it,
all without distinction being
either killed or carried into
captivity. Let no lot fall upon
it — There shall be no lot cast
to determine who shall be spared
and who consumed, or who shall
be left and who carried into
captivity; for they shall be all
either destroyed or carried
away. For her blood is in the
midst of her — The innocent
blood which she hath shed. She
set it upon the top of a rock —
Openly and publicly, without
fear, or shame, or reluctance;
she set it where it might be
seen by all, and seen long; she
shed blood in a presumptuous
manner, and with a high hand;
she was impudent and barefaced
in her cruelties; she did not
seek to cover or excuse them.
She poured it not upon the
ground, to cover it with dust —
As being ashamed of shedding it.
“These words allude to the
command of the law: Leviticus
17:13, that they should cover
the blood of any beast, or other
living creature which was slain,
with dust; which precept was not
only intended to prevent their
eating of blood, but also to
give men a sort of horror or
aversion to bloodshed.” — Lowth.
That it might cause fury to come
up to take vengeance — For such
impudent murders as these, which
even dared the divine
indignation. I have set her
blood upon the top of a rock —
Her punishment shall be as
notorious in the sight of the
world as her sin was. I will
punish it so openly, and in such
a manner, as shall not be soon
forgotten.
Verses 9-11
Ezekiel 24:9-11. Thus saith the
Lord, &c. — In this and the two
following verses is still more
fully explained the meaning of
the symbol of the boiling pot,
and what the fire is that made
it boil. By making the pile for
the fire great, is signified the
destruction being very great and
general. And spice it well — Or,
season it well, so as to make it
desirable. The expression
imports, that the Babylonians
should be as much set on
destroying the city and
inhabitants, as hungry people
are greedy of devouring meat
well spiced and dressed. This
was a very proper expression,
considering that Jerusalem, in
the foregoing part of this
chapter, is represented as a
boiling pot, and the inhabitants
of it as pieces of flesh boiled
in it. All the other expressions
of this verse signify an entire
destruction. Then set it empty
upon the coals thereof, &c. —
This expresses, that after a
riddance was made of the
inhabitants, either by
slaughtering them with the
sword, or carrying them away
into captivity, the city itself,
represented by the pot, should
be burned with fire, that its
impurity might be consumed, or
purged away by the flames; that
is to say, that their wickedness
might be taken away with their
persons and city; or that the
remains of the inhabitants, who
were made captives, should be
reformed by this terrible
destruction of Jerusalem. If we
understand it as spoken of the
place of the city, the
expression may allude to what
was commanded in the ceremonial
law, namely, that metal vessels,
which water could not cleanse,
should be purified by fire. Thus
nothing short of burning
Jerusalem down to the ground
could purge it from its
abominations: afterward it
should be rebuilt, and become a
holy city, free from the
idolatries which had formerly
defiled it.
Verses 12-14
Ezekiel 24:12-14. She hath
wearied herself with lies —
Hebrew, תאנים, with vanities, or
troubles; multiplying her
idolatries, and seeking help
sometimes from one idol and
sometimes from another, but all
in vain. The expression may also
include the alliances the Jewish
people entered into, and the
various arts of policy they
employed to avert their ruin,
none of which were of any
service to them: as if he had
said, She has taken a great deal
of pains, but to no purpose: her
allies, their promises, their
forces, their gods, all prove a
lie to the house of Judah. Her
great scum went not out of her,
&c. — All the admonitions I gave
her by my prophets, and my
sundry chastisements and
punishments of her sin, availed
nothing to the purifying her
from her idolatries and other
wickedness; her scum shall be in
the fire — The fire must consume
her and her wickedness. In thy
filthiness is lewdness — Thou
hast shown thyself shameless and
incorrigible in thine
idolatries. Because I have
purged thee, and thou wast not
purged — I did what was
requisite on my part to thy
amendment, but thou refusedst to
comply with those frequent calls
and exhortations which I gave
thee; and therefore my Spirit
shall not strive with thee any
longer with gentle methods, but
I will proceed to execute my
severest judgments upon thee,
namely, by sending thee into
captivity, and letting thee
suffer all the calamities of it
for a long season. According to
thy doings shall they judge thee
— According to thy deserts shall
the Chaldeans, who are the
ministers of my justice, punish
thee.
Verses 16-18
Ezekiel 24:16-18. Behold, I take
away from thee the desire of
thine eyes with a stroke —
Behold, I take away from thee
thy wife, the object of thy love
and thy affection, by a sudden
stroke from my own immediate
hand, that is, by a sudden
death. Observe, reader, we know
not how soon the desire of our
eyes may be removed from us.
Death is a stroke from which the
most pious, the most useful, the
most amiable, are not exempted.
Yet neither shalt thou mourn nor
weep — Thou shall not show any
signs of grief. This command was
given to the prophet, to signify
that the public calamity should
be so great, that private ones
would not appear worthy of
notice, nor would they be at
leisure to lament them, so much
would those of a public nature
distract and oppress them. Bind
the tire of thy head upon thee —
Use thy ordinary dress upon thy
head; for in the time of
mourning it was customary
sometimes to shave the head,
sometimes to cast dust upon it.
Put on thy shoes upon thy feet —
Going barefoot was usual in
great sorrow and affliction; and
therefore the prophet, who was
to show no sign of sorrow, was
commanded to put on his shoes.
Cover not thy lips — Covering
the lips, or face, was another
token of mourning. And eat not
the bread of men — Partake not
of the mourning-feast, that
relations used to prepare for
the funerals of their friends:
see note on Jeremiah 16:7. So I
spake to the people, &c., and at
even my wife died — My wife
accordingly died very suddenly
in the evening of a day, on the
morning of which I had been
speaking to the people,
concerning the intimations I had
of her death; and the next
morning I declared what commands
God had laid upon me, not to
make any outward show, or sign
of mourning upon that occasion.
Verses 19-24
Ezekiel 24:19-24. Wilt thou not
tell us what these things are —
That is, what is the meaning of
thy unusual actions. They seem
to make this inquiry by way of
derision and contempt. Speak
unto the house of Israel — Now
he is commissioned to declare
the meaning of what he did. Thus
saith the Lord, Behold, I will
profane my sanctuary — I will
deliver my temple into the hands
of the heathen, and they shall
profane and destroy it: even
that temple wherein you placed
your glory, and thought your
greatest protection. The desire
of your eyes, and that which
your soul pitieth — As much your
desire, as my wife was mine;
most dear to you, the
destruction of which will affect
you with a most poignant grief.
Your sons and your daughters
whom ye have left shall fall by
the sword — Whom you left behind
you when you were made captives;
for this was addressed to those
who were at this time captives
in Babylonia, having been
carried thither with Jehoiachin.
Or the meaning may be, Your
sons, &c., who are left to you,
from the famine and the
pestilence. Ye shall not mourn
nor weep —
These terrible judgments shall
strike you with astonishment,
and produce in you such distress
as is too great to be expressed
by words or actions; but ye
shall pine away for your
iniquities, &c. — You shall be
absorbed in silent sorrow, and
shall waste away by lingering
grief, and secret lamentation
over each other’s calamities, as
the punishment of your
iniquities, which have made your
land, city, temple, and families
desolate, and yourselves
miserable. Thus Ezekiel is a
sign unto you — His actions
foreshow you what your
conditions shall be. The sacred
writers, in several places,
speak of themselves in the third
person. And when this cometh, ye
shall know that I am the Lord —
Comparing the prediction with
the event will convince the most
obstinate that the immediate
hand of God is in the judgments
which are come upon you.
Verses 25-27
Ezekiel 24:25-27. Also thou son
of man, shall it not be, &c. —
This question is to be resolved
affirmatively; it shall be: in
the day when I take from them
their strength — Their walls,
fortifications, and defences,
with all that is dear and
valuable to them; the joy of
their glory, the desire of their
eyes — Their kingdom, city, and
temple, the emblem of my special
presence among them, and
protection over them, whose
beauty and magnificence were
their peculiar glory, and the
most grateful object of their
sight; together with their sons
and daughters, whereon they
placed their affections; he that
escapeth in that day — Namely,
when the city shall be taken,
and both it and the temple
burned; shall come unto thee, to
cause thee to hear it, &c. — To
acquaint thee, that what thou
didst prophesy is come to pass.
See the fulfilling of this
recorded Ezekiel 33:21-22. In
that day shall thy mouth be
opened to him that is escaped —
This implied, that the prophet
was to prophesy no more about
the affairs of Jerusalem and
Judah till after the destruction
of the city and temple; when the
fulfilling of this part of his
predictions, so contrary to the
expectations of those who
despised his prophecies, would
give him more credit with them,
and make them pay a higher
regard to what other things he
should prophesy of. According to
this we find, that the spirit of
prophecy, in regard to the
affairs of Judea, did not come
on him again till the news of
the taking of Jerusalem was
brought to him. See Ezekiel
3:21-23. |