Verse 2
Ezekiel 28:2. Say to the prince
of Tyrus — The name of this
prince was Ithobalus, according
to the Phenician annals. Because
thy heart is lifted up — In
pride and self-conceit; and thou
hast said — Namely, in thy
heart; I am a god — I am like a
god. I sit in the seat of God —
Inaccessible by mortals. In the
midst of the seas — As God is
safe from all injury in his
throne in heaven, so am I as
safe; for the sea secures me.
These words express an insolent
boast of self-sufficiency, as if
he had said, I fear no man, nor
stand in need of any: I am
seated in a place of impregnable
strength: the sea defends me, so
that no enemy can assault me.
And they represent the excessive
pride and carnal security of
this prince, who trusted in his
own strength, and forgot his
dependance upon God. The same
crime was in like manner
punished in the king of Egypt,
Ezekiel 29:3, and afterward in
Nebuchadnezzar himself, Daniel
4:30-31. Yet thou art man, and
not God — Subject to all the
infirmities, casualties,
sorrows, and distresses that
attend human nature, and to all
the changes of human affairs,
and hast not any of that innate,
invincible power, and of that
immutability of condition, which
is in God. Though thou hast set
thy heart as the heart of God —
Hast entertained thoughts which
become none but God.
Verses 3-8
Ezekiel 28:3-8. Behold, thou art
wiser than Daniel — In thy own
conceit. The fame of Daniel’s
wisdom was quickly spread over
Chaldea, upon his being advanced
to several posts of honour and
dignity by Nebuchadnezzar. See
Daniel 2:8. So here the prophet
in an ironical manner upbraids
the vain boasts which the prince
of Tyre made of his wisdom, and
the policy of those about him,
as if it exceeded the endowments
of Daniel. The Phenicians, of
whom the Tyrians were a colony,
(see note on Isaiah 23:12,)
valued themselves for their
wisdom and ingenuity, as being
inventors of navigation,
letters, and sciences. Compare
Zechariah 9:2. With thy wisdom,
&c., thou hast gotten thee
riches — Thy skill in navigation
and trade has increased thy
wealth. Behold, I will bring
upon thee the terrible of the
nations — The Babylonians, who
by their conquests have made
themselves terrible to all the
nations round about them. They
shall draw their swords against
the beauty of thy wisdom — They
shall deface and destroy all the
beautiful edifices which thou
hast erected with admirable art,
and every thing which thou
valuest as ornamental or useful,
beauteous or magnificent, even
all the glory of thy kingdom.
They shall defile thy brightness
— They shall render thy kingdom,
which is now flourishing and
glorious, weak and contemptible.
Thou shalt die the deaths, &c. —
Thou shalt die the death of
those who perished in the flood.
The expression deaths, in the
plural, intimates a still
further punishment, even after
the death of the body; such as
that impious race experienced,
and such as this haughty prince
had well deserved by his mad
pride and blasphemous impiety.
And therefore with the same
emphasis the prophet tells us,
Ezekiel 28:10, Thou shalt die
the deaths, the double death, of
the uncircumcised; that is, of
unbelievers and enemies to God.
For circumcision being the rite
which distinguished God’s chosen
people from the heathen,
uncircumcised is equivalent in
sense to wicked or profane. So
the Chaldee Paraphrase renders
it here. “This is not the only
place in this prophecy where the
destruction by the deluge is
alluded to: for this, and the
fall of angels, being two of the
greatest events that ever
happened, and the most
remarkable of God’s judgments,
it was very natural for the
prophets to recur to them, when
they would raise their style in
the description of the fall of
empires and tyrants. See Ezekiel
26:19-20; Ezekiel 27:26; Ezekiel
27:32; Ezekiel 27:34. As the
style of this prophet is
wonderfully adapted to the
subject whereof he treats, so he
compares the destruction of this
famous maritime city to a vessel
shipwrecked in the sea, and so
sends its inhabitants to the
people of old times, as he calls
them, who were swallowed up in
the universal deluge. Their
prince he compares to the prince
of the rebel angels, whose pride
had given him such a dreadful
fall.” See Peters on Job, p.
373, and notes on Ezekiel 28:14.
Verse 9
Ezekiel 28:9. Wilt thou yet say
— Or, Wilt thou then say, before
him that slayeth thee, I am God
— Nothing can be more finely
expressed than this: the prince
of Tyrus thought himself, as a
god, as invincible, as secure
from all harm; God therefore, by
his prophet, asks him here if he
would have these proud thoughts,
if he would think of himself as
a god, when he found himself in
his enemy’s power, just going to
be slain. The question is most
sharp and cutting: it sets the
folly of his insolent pride in
the strongest light; for surely
he could not boast of being a
god, when he was to fall by the
sword of a man; and whatever
proud thoughts he now
entertained of himself, they
certainly would be changed when
he saw the sword of his enemy
lifted up to slay him. So
Plutarch tells us of Alexander,
that “he vainly affected to be
thought Jupiter’s son, and next
in honour to Bacchus and
Hercules: yet when he saw the
blood run out of a wound he had
received, which at the same time
gave him much pain, he confessed
that was not such blood as Homer
said issued from the immortal
gods.” — Lib. 2, De Alexandri
fortuna. This whole chapter, as
well as the foregoing one, is
exceedingly fine, both as to the
style and composition.
Verse 12-13
Ezekiel 28:12-13. Take up a
lamentation upon the king of
Tyrus — See Ezekiel 27:32. Thou
sealest up the sum, full of
wisdom, &c. — In thine own
opinion thou art the perfect
pattern of wisdom and all other
excellences; thou possessest
them in full measure, they are
thine by an unalienable tenure,
sealed up safely among thy
treasures. The LXX. render this,
συ αποσφραγισμα ομοιωσεως, και
στεφανος καλλους, Thou art the
seal of likeness, and crown of
beauty. To the same purpose the
Vulgate, Tu signaculum
similitudinis, plenus sapientia,
perfectus decore: that is, says
Lowth, “Thou art the image of
God, an exact impression taken
from that great copy. For the
following verse shows that the
expression alludes to Adam, when
he was first created, and came
pure out of the hands of his
Maker; full of wisdom, and
perfect in beauty.” Thou hast
been in Eden — “As thy situation
was pleasant, so wast thou
plentifully supplied with every
thing which could contribute to
make thy life pleasant and
happy. The state of paradise, in
common speech, denotes a
condition every way complete and
happy. See Isaiah 51:3. The
expression, as well as the whole
context, alludes to the complete
happiness which Adam enjoyed in
paradise, before his apostacy
and fall.” Every precious stone
was thy covering — Not only was
thy crown adorned with the
choicest jewels, but thou wast
arrayed with royal robes,
enriched with gold and precious
stones of all sorts. There is
probably an allusion here to the
precious stones which were
placed in the high-priest’s
breast-plate, as the next verse
alludes to the cherubim over the
mercy-seat. Accordingly the LXX.
enlarge the number of the stones
here mentioned from nine to
twelve, and place them in the
same order in which they are
ranked Exodus 28:17, &c. The
workmanship of thy tabrets,
&c.,was prepared in thee — Or,
for thee, in the day thou wast
created — The highest
expressions of joy, such as are
the sounding of all sorts of
musical instruments, ushered
thee into the world, according
to the usual practice at the
birth of great princes; and ever
since thou hast been brought up
in the choicest delicacies which
a royal palace or a luxurious
city could furnish.
Verse 14-15
Ezekiel 28:14-15. Thou art the
anointed cherub that covereth —
The prophet here alludes to the
cherubim in the temple of
Solomon, which were a part of
the ark, being made of beaten
gold, and therefore were with it
anointed, and were very large,
and covered the mercy-seat with
their wings. The prince of Tyrus
is here compared to one of
these, on account of the high
power which he bore among men,
and his covering or protecting
his people by that power. St.
Jerome translates the
expression, The extended cherub
that covereth: that is, whose
wings are stretched out to
cover, &c., reading ממשׁן,
extended, instead of ממשׁח,
anointed. And I have set thee so
— It was I myself that
determined that thou shouldest
be so great a king, and have a
vast power to defend and protect
thy people. But this prince,
like too many of mankind, was
insensible of the hand which
raised him, and did not consider
to whom he owed his power and
glory. Thou wast upon the holy
mountain of God — The image of
the cherub is pursued. “Such was
thy eminent distinction, that
thou wast, as it were, placed in
the temple of God on his holy
mountain.” Or, thou wast placed
in as secure a situation as if
thou hadst been fixed on the
holy mountain where the temple
of God stands. Thou hast walked,
&c., in the midst of the stones
of fire — Thou hast, as it were,
been placed among the twelve
precious stones on the
breast-plate of the high-priest.
Or this obscure sentence may
signify that this prince’s
palace and his attendants were
very richly adorned with
precious stones, which shone
with a burning brightness, like
fire. Lowth thinks “the words
allude to the high advancement
of Satan in heaven before his
fall, where he was placed in one
of the highest orders of angels,
such as were nearest in
attending upon the Divine
Majesty.” Thou wast perfect in
thy ways, till iniquity was
found in thee — “An exact
description of the evangelical
purity in which the devil was
created, and in which he
continued till, being lifted up
with pride, he fell from his
first estate.” “Whoever compares
this place in Ezekiel with the
parallel place in Isaiah 14:12,
&c., where the downfall of the
king of Babylon is foretold in
the same prophetic language,
will soon perceive that they
throw a reciprocal light upon
each other, and that the fall of
angels is alluded to in both.
The beauty and propriety of
these allusions of the prophets
will appear with greater lustre
when it is considered that the
host of heaven were the objects
of the heathen idolatry; both
the visible and invisible host,
as well the angels as the lights
of heaven; for the superstition
seems to have been originally
the same, as the worship of the
heavenly bodies terminated in
the worship of those angels, or
intelligences, who were believed
to animate and conduct them: and
hence we see a reason why the
angels were called stars, and
morning-stars, in Scripture: as
in Job 38:7, and so here, the
covering cherub is the same with
Lucifer, the son of the morning,
in Isaiah. Thus, while the
prophets describe the overthrow
of an idolatrous prince or state
by a fallen angel, or a falling
star, they only make their gods
to tumble with them: see
Dissertation on Job, p. 374.
Verse 16-17
Ezekiel 28:16-17. By the
multitude of thy merchandise,
&c. — The riches which thy great
trade has produced have but
increased thy love of gain more
and more, and induced thee to
commit acts of violence, fraud,
and extortion, to make further
additions to thy power and
riches; therefore I will cast
thee out of the mountain of God
— I will cast thee down to
contempt from that super-eminent
degree of power and glory to
which I had raised thee, and
from the exalted station of
governing others, and being able
to afford them protection, and
from all thy great pomp and
magnificence. Thy heart was
lifted up because of thy beauty
— Thou becamest vain and
insolent on account of thy
power, riches, and magnificence.
Here the root of this prince’s
ruin is pointed out to us. His
power and riches produced pride
and insolence in him, and those
every evil way. His grandeur
blinded him, so that he did not
see his true happiness, nor the
right way of pursuing it, but
wandered in ways which led to
ruin. I will lay thee before
kings, that they may behold thee
— I will make thee a spectacle
to other princes, expose thee as
a miserable object before their
eyes, that thou mayest be an
example to them to deter them
from the like pride and
practices.
Verse 18-19
Ezekiel 28:18-19. Thou hast
defiled thy sanctuaries — Thy
throne, palace, judgment-seats.
The word מקדשׁ, generally
rendered sanctuary, sometimes
signifies a palace, in which
sense it probably ought to be
taken Amos 7:13, where our
translation renders it the
king’s chapel. Thus Bishop
Patrick understands it, Exodus
25:8, where our version reads,
Let them make me a sanctuary;
God commanding that he should be
served and attended upon in the
tabernacle, as a king in his
court or palace. The cherubim
were his throne, the ark his
footstool, the altar his table,
(and therefore called by that
name, Ezekiel 41:22; Malachi
1:7,) the priests his
attendants, and the show-bread
and sacrifices his provisions.
The king of Tyre had filled his
palace and courts of judicature,
and the Tyrians their stately
buildings, with iniquity and
injustice, and therefore God was
determined utterly to destroy
them by the Chaldeans. I will
bring fire from the midst of
thee — Punishment shall follow
thy crimes, and thy own ways
shall bring it upon thee: thy
destruction shall proceed from
thyself. I will bring thee to
ashes upon the earth — I will
bring thee to dust. Thou shalt
be made no more account of than
ashes spread on the ground. All
that know thee shall be
astonished — So low a fall from
such a height of glory will
astonish all who ever saw thy
former magnificence.
Verses 21-23
Ezekiel 28:21-23. Set thy face
against Zidon — Direct thy face
and thy speech toward Zidon, and
fore-tel its destruction by the
king of Babylon. Tyre and Zidon
were neighbouring cities, and
generally partakers of the same
prosperity or adversity. We
have, indeed, no history that
informs us of the particulars of
what befell Zidon; but it is
likely that it sent help to the
Tyrians, and so (Nebuchadnezzar
proving victorious) suffered
with them, and was reduced first
under the power of the
Chaldeans, and afterward of the
Persians. Say, Behold, I am
against thee, O Zidon — Provoked
by thy sins, I am an adversary
to thee, and am determined to
punish thee. I will be glorified
in the midst of thee — I will
make my power and justice known
by the judgments I will execute
upon thee. In the same sense God
saith, Exodus 14:17, I will get
me honour upon Pharaoh. And will
be sanctified in her — And will
get myself reverence, fear, and
praise, by the punishment I will
bring upon her. God is said to
be sanctified in those for whose
preservation or destruction he
exerts his power in a remarkable
manner, so as to get glory to
himself. For I will send her
pestilence and blood — The
pestilence, which often
accompanies long sieges, shall
destroy her inhabitants. And the
wounded shall be judged, &c., by
the sword — That is, the wounded
shall fall in the midst of her
by the sword, and meet with
their deserved punishment from
it.
Verses 24-26
Ezekiel 28:24-26. There shall be
no more a pricking brier — There
shall no more be any nation that
shall injure, and be a vexation
to the house of Israel; for all
their troublesome neighbours,
who had been as so many thorns
in their sides, shall be
destroyed or repressed, and in
consequence thereof they shall
dwell quietly and securely in
their own land. This promise was
in part fulfilled after their
return from their captivity in
Babylon; but the following verse
shows that it chiefly relates to
the general restoration of the
Jews, when all the enemies of
God’s church and truth shall be
vanquished and subdued, often
denoted in the prophetical
writings by the name of Edom,
Moab, and other neighbouring
nations, who, upon all
occasions, were wont to show
their spite and ill-will against
God’s ancient people. When I
shall have gathered the house of
Israel, &c. — This seems to be a
plain prophecy of the
restoration of the Jews to their
own land, as will appear to any
one who will compare the words
with the parallel texts referred
to in the margin; and the rules
laid down concerning the
division of the land among the
twelve tribes (chap. 47., 48.)
do very much favour this
interpretation: see note on
Isaiah 11:12. And shall be
sanctified in them — See on
Ezekiel 28:22. And they shall
dwell safely therein — In
comparison of what they have
done formerly: they shall have
peace, and freedom from the
annoyance of enemies. And shall
build houses, and plant
vineyards — Building and
planting are commonly joined
together. When I shall have
executed judgments — The
prophets commonly conclude their
threatenings against infidels
with gracious promises to God’s
people, implying that he will
not make an utter destruction of
them, as of other people, but
preserve a remnant, to whom he
may fulfil his promises made to
their fathers. |