Verse 1-2
Ezekiel 44:1-2. Then he brought
me back, &c. — From the altar to
the gate belonging to the court
of the priests, and leading to
the outward court of the temple.
All the courts were reckoned
holy ground, and called
sometimes by the name of the
temple. And it was shut — After
that the glory of the Lord had
entered that way. Then saith the
Lord, This gate shall be shut —
Shall be generally kept shut; no
man shall enter in by it — None
of the common people: see chap.
Ezekiel 46:1. Because the Lord
hath entered in by it — Namely,
that glory which was the visible
sign of God’s presence. This
order was given, both to
perpetuate the remembrance of
the solemn entrance of the glory
of the Lord into the house, and
also to possess the minds of the
people with a deep reverence for
the Divine Majesty, and with
very awful thoughts of his
transcendent glory; which was
also designed in God’s charge to
Moses at the bush, Put off thy
shoe from off thy foot.
Verse 3
Ezekiel 44:3. It is for the
prince — The words, It is, are
not in the Hebrew, which is
only, For the prince; and
therefore the meaning seems to
be, that this gate should, in
general, be shut for, or to the
prince, as well as to private
persons; even he should not have
the liberty of entering in at
it, except at certain seasons.
Dr. Waterland translates the
clause thus: As to the prince,
since he is prince, he shall
sit, &c. The kings of Judah had
a distinguished place in the
temple; a kind of tribunal
placed opposite the eastern
gate: see Ezekiel 46:12; 2
Chronicles 6:12-13. By the
prince here is probably meant
the chief governor of the Jews
after the captivity, such as
were Zerubbabel and Nehemiah,
for Sheshbazzar, or Zerubbabel,
is called the prince of Judah,
Ezra 1:8. The prince, he shall
sit in it to eat bread before
the Lord — To eat part of the
peace-offerings which were
provided at his charge: see
chap, Ezekiel 46:2. Bread stands
for all sorts of entertainments,
and particularly for a religious
feast made of the remainder of a
sacrifice: see the margin.
Verses 4-8
Ezekiel 44:4-8. Then he brought
me by the way of the north gate
of the house — The east gate
being shut. And, behold, the
glory of the Lord filled the
house of the Lord — As appeared
by the light which shone through
the windows, for there was no
door into the sanctuary on that
side. And the Lord said, Son of
man, mark well, &c. — See notes
on Ezekiel 40:4; and Ezekiel
43:2. Mark well the entering,
&c., with every going forth of
the sanctuary — The word laws is
to be understood in this last
sentence, the sense being, that
the prophet should admonish the
people of the laws relating to
the admitting certain persons
into the temple, or the courts
of it, and to suffer none that
were unqualified to attend upon
God’s service there. This
appears to be the sense from the
following verses. And thou shalt
say, Let it suffice you of all
your abominations — Let the time
past be sufficient for you to
have provoked me with your
abominations. In that ye have
brought into my sanctuary
strangers, &c. — In that ye have
set up idols within the
precincts of my temple, and have
appointed idolatrous priests to
officiate there. When ye offer
my bread, the fat, and the blood
— At the very time when ye were
offering my sacrifices upon the
altar. Or the words may imply,
that they suffered heathen to
offer at God’s altar, expressly
contrary to the law, Leviticus
22:27. By bread may be
understood the meat-offerings
made of flour, which accompanied
the other sacrifices, although
every thing offered upon the
altar is properly called the
bread of God. The fat and blood
of every sacrifice were
peculiarly appropriated to God.
And they have broken my covenant
— Idolatry was a direct breach
of that covenant into which God
had entered with the Jews: upon
which account it is so often
represented under the metaphor
of adultery. And ye have not
kept the charge of my holy
things — You have not observed
the laws I gave you for taking
care of the things relating to
my house and worship, but have
appointed such persons to
officiate there as best suited
with your own inclinations.
Verses 9-14
Ezekiel 44:9-14. No stranger
shall enter into my sanctuary —
To offer any sacrifice or
oblation there, (see Ezekiel
44:7,) nor be suffered to go
beyond the precincts appointed
for proselytes. The Levites that
are gone far from me, &c. — Many
of the Levites departed from
God’s service, and fell into
idolatry; first in the general
apostacy of the ten tribes, and
afterward under Ahaz, and other
wicked kings of Judah: see 2
Kings 23:9. These, God here
says, should bear the punishment
due to their iniquity, and be
degraded from attending upon the
higher offices belonging to the
priesthood, and thrust down to
lower services: see Ezekiel
44:13. Many of the priests and
Levites, who had been employed
in the service of the first
temple, lived to see the second,
as appears from Ezra 3:12. But
the descendants of former
idolatrous priests and Levites
may be here meant; or, the
ordinances here prescribed were
intended to be standing rules,
which were to be always observed
whenever such a case as that
here specified should happen.
Yet they shall be ministers,
&c., having charge at the gates
— Performing the office of
porters, or other inferior
offices belonging to the
Levites. They shall slay the
burnt-offering, &c. — Shall kill
and flay the beasts appointed
for the sacrifices. And they
shall stand before them, &c. —
They shall be servants to the
people, in performing the most
servile offices belonging to the
temple. Because they ministered
unto them before their idols,
&c. — They led the people into
idolatry, by giving them a bad
example. Therefore have I lifted
up my hand against them — I have
solemnly sworn that I will
punish them for this their sin.
They shall not come near me, &c.
— They shall not offer any
sacrifice at my altar, or come
into the temple to perform any
part of the priestly office
there. So Josiah discharged the
priests that had been guilty of
idolatry from attending upon the
service of the altar, 2 Kings
23:9.
Verse 15-16
Ezekiel 44:15-16. The priests
the Levites — The Levites who
are priests; the sons of Zadok —
Who continued faithful; they
shall stand before me to offer
the fat, &c. — They shall serve
at the altar of burnt-offering,
and offer sacrifices thereon.
They shall enter into my
sanctuary — Into the holy place;
to minister unto me — To burn
incense there upon the golden
altar, to sprinkle the blood of
the victims before the veil, to
trim the lamps, and to change
the loaves on the sacred table
every sabbath. They shall keep
my charge — They shall have this
honour in reward of their
fidelity. Observe, reader, God
will put marks of honour upon
those who are faithful to him in
trying times, and will employ
those in his service who have
kept close to it when others
drew back.
Verses 17-20
Ezekiel 44:17-20. When they
shall enter in at the gates of
the inner court — The court just
before the temple, where the
altar of the burnt-offering
stood; they shall be clothed
with linen garments — The ephod,
breeches, mitre, and girdle,
(the habit of the ordinary
priests,) were all of fine
linen, contrived for glory and
beauty, (Exodus 28:40,) fine
linen being the habit of persons
of the greatest quality; while
they minister in the gates of
the inner court — That is, in
the court of the priests; and
within — In the sanctuary
itself. They shall not gird
themselves with any thing that
causeth sweat — Not with a
woollen girdle, which may make
them sweat during their
laborious service about the
altar, and make their garments
smell offensively. When they go
forth into the outer court, they
shall put off their garments —
See note on Ezekiel 42:14. They
shall not sanctify the people
with their garments — According
to the law, common things,
touching holy things, became
consecrated, and no more fit for
common use. Neither shall they
shave their heads — This
prescription is implied in the
words of the law, Leviticus
21:5; especially according to
the translation of the LXX., who
render the sentence, Thou shalt
not shave thyself with baldness
[to make thyself bald] upon the
head for the dead. They indeed
understand it as an expression
of mourning for the dead, which
agrees with the sense of the
parallel texts, Leviticus
19:27-28; Deuteronomy 14:1. But
the words in the original
contain a general prohibition,
and consequently include other
seasons, as well as times of
mourning. St. Jerome upon this
place supposes, with great
probability, that the Jewish
priests were forbidden to shave
their heads, that they might
distinguish themselves from the
heathen priests, particularly
the Egyptian priests of Isis and
Serapis, who had their heads
shaved and uncovered. Learned
men have observed, that many
other Jewish laws were made in
opposition to the rites observed
in the heathen worship. Nor
suffer their locks to grow long
— Letting their hair grow long
and neglected was a sign of
mourning, as well as shaving it
close to the head, and therefore
was forbidden to be practised by
the priests of God.
Verses 21-23
Ezekiel 44:21-23. Neither shall
any priest drink wine when they
enter into the inner court —
That is, during the time of
their ministration: see the note
on Leviticus 10:9-10, from
whence this law is taken, and
where the reason of it is given.
Neither shall they take for
their wives a widow — This law
we find Leviticus 21:13-14; but
it there concerns only the
high-priest, here it is applied
to all the priests in general.
And they shall teach my people
the difference between the holy
and profane, &c. — Between good
and evil, between what is lawful
and what is unlawful; that they
may neither scruple what is
lawful, nor venture upon what is
unlawful; that they may not
pollute what is holy, nor
pollute themselves with what is
profane. Ministers should take
pains to cause people to discern
between the clean and the
unclean, that they may not
confound the distinctions
between right and wrong, nor
mistake concerning them, so as
to put darkness for light, or
light for darkness; but may have
a well-informed judgment,
especially in all matters of
duty.
Verse 24
Ezekiel 44:24. And in
controversy they shall stand in
judgment — The priests were to
determine all controversies
relating to the law, as well the
judicial as the ceremonial part
of it, which were brought before
them, Deuteronomy 17:8-9; and
the people were to seek the law
at their mouths, (Malachi 2:7,)
that is, to inquire of them what
was the purport and meaning of
it, and to abide by their
determination. And they shall
judge according to my judgments
— Which I have declared, and not
according to their own fancies,
inclinations, or secular
interests. Thus ministers must
decide controversies among the
people of God according to his
word; and must take care that
they give no countenance to any
false or perfidious, fraudulent
or dishonest practices, but must
set their faces against them.
And they shall keep my laws and
my statutes in all mine
assemblies, &c. — As well upon
the solemn festivals, and the
assemblies proper to them, as at
other times, and on ordinary
occasions. And they shall hallow
my sabbaths — Whereas the
priests before the captivity
profaned them: see Ezekiel
22:26.
Verse 25-26
Ezekiel 44:25-26. They shall
come at no dead person to defile
themselves —
Whosoever touched a dead body
became legally unclean, (Numbers
19:11,) and thereby was
disqualified for attending upon
God’s worship in the temple,
Leviticus 22:3. Upon which
account the priests were
forbidden to contract such
defilement, unless for their
nearest relations, which
prohibition is here renewed: see
the margin. After he is cleansed
they shall reckon unto him seven
days — His uncleanness continued
seven days, according to the
forecited law, Numbers 19:11;
and the priests were to reckon
to him seven days more, before
he could be admitted into the
sanctuary.
Verses 28-30
Ezekiel 44:28-30. It shall be
unto them for an inheritance,
&c. — Their ministry in my
sanctuary, and the perquisites
thereto belonging, shall be to
them instead of lands and
inheritances, of which they
shall not have any share, as the
other tribes have, (see the
margins) excepting the portion
allotted to them in the
beginning of the following
chapter. They shall eat the
meat-offering, &c. — They shall
have their share of them, after
the part dedicated to God has
been consumed upon the altar.
And every dedicated thing shall
be theirs — Whatsoever men
dedicate to God, the use of it
shall accrue to the priests; if
it be a living creature, it
shall be killed, and the priests
shall have the benefit of it; if
a piece of land, it shall belong
to the priests: see the margin.
And the first of all the
first-fruits, &c. — The word
בכורים, translated first-fruits,
signifies the first ripe, or
best of the fruits, while they
were growing in the field: see
the margin. The latter word,
תרומה, rendered oblation,
denotes an offering out of the
product of the ground after it
was made fit for use; as out of
the corn, after it was threshed
and laid in heaps in the floor
or granary; and so of oil and
wine, after they were pressed
and fitted to be used. Ye shall
also give unto the priests the
first of your dough — The first
dough that you bake of the new
corn every year, in the same
proportion as in other
first-fruits. That he may cause
a blessing to rest on thy house
— That the priest, whose office
it is to bless the people in
God’s name, may pray for and
bless thee and thy family.
Observe, reader, it is all in
all to the comfort of any house
to have the blessing of God upon
it, and that blessing to rest in
it; to dwell where we dwell, and
to extend to those that shall
come after us. And the way to
have the blessing of God upon
our estates is, to honour God
with them, and to give him and
his ministers, him and his poor,
their share out of them. God
blesses, he surely blesses, the
habitation of those who are thus
just, or righteous, Proverbs
3:33; and ministers, by
instructing and praying for the
families that are kind to them,
should do their part toward
causing God’s blessing to rest
there. |