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1:1–3 The book of Ezekiel begins with a series of chronological and geographical statements identifying the time and place of Ezekiel’s ministry (during the exile in Babylon in the early sixth century bc). Ezekiel is more meticulous than most of the prophets in attaching a particular date to his oracles.

Introduction to Ezekiel

The Major Prophets

How to Study the Bible

1:1 thirtieth year Date phrases usually originate from important events, such as the reference to the fifth year of Jehoiachin’s exile in Ezek 1:2. Since Ezekiel was a priest, the most likely explanation for the year reference is his 30th year of age, the time when a priest began official service in the temple (see Num 4:30).

fourth month, on the fifth The fourth month corresponds to late June and early July in the modern calendar. The year is the fifth year from King Jehoiachin’s exile, or 593 bc (Ezek 1:2).

Biblical dates are typically calculated using a lunisolar calendar based on a combination of the movements of the sun and moon, the most common calendar in the ancient Near East and Mediterranean. The month begins with the new moon and lasts 29 or 30 days. A solar year is 365 days, while a lunar year is only 354 days. The most common way to correct the calendar was to add an extra month every few years. After the Babylonian exile, the Jews adopted the Babylonian names for the months; the fourth month was known as Tammuz.

Calendar HIBD

Calendar ZEB A—C

Israelite Calendar Table

the Kebar River Ezekiel lived in a Jewish settlement near Nippur, east of Babylon. The Chebar (also rendered “Kebar”) was an aqueduct that diverted water from the Euphrates River through the city of Nippur. Two Babylonian tablets containing the name “Chebar canal” were unearthed in Nippur, establishing Ezekiel’s settlement in the vicinity.

Kebar ZEB H—L

The heavens were opened A common phrase in nt visionary texts, which were heavily influenced by Ezekiel’s visions (see Matt 3:16; John 1:51; Acts 7:56; 10:11; Rev 19:11).

Prophetic Commissioning and the Divine Presence

1:2 fifth year of the exile of Nebuchadnezzar, the crown prince of Babylon, took Jehoiachin and the leading officials of Judah into exile in 597 bc (see 2 Kgs 24:10–16). This vision would have occurred in 593 bc, prior to Nebuchadnezzar’s destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in 586 bc.

Jehoiachin’s father, Jehoiakim, was made a vassal of Babylon in 605 bc. He revolted against Babylon in 601 bc (see 2 Kgs 24:1), resulting in another Babylonian invasion in 598 bc. Jehoiakim died at the beginning of this invasion, and Jehoiachin (also called Jeconiah or Coniah) reigned for three months before surrendering to Nebuchadnezzar (2 Kgs 24:8, 12). Jehoiachin was taken into exile and his uncle, Zedekiah, was named regent prince in Jerusalem. Administrative documents show that Babylon considered Jehoiachin to be Judah’s rightful king—even while Zedekiah ruled. Ezekiel dates most of his oracles from Jehoiachin’s exile, and he never uses the title melekh (“king”) for Zedekiah.

Jehoiachin ZEB H—L

1:3 the word of Yahweh See note on Isa 1:10.

Ezekiel the son of Buzi, the priest Like Jeremiah, Ezekiel is among the priestly elite. His prophecies share many of a priest’s typical concerns, such as purity and holiness. Of all the prophets, Ezekiel has the closest literary affinity with the book of Leviticus. Most of Ezekiel is narrated in the first person, although Ezek 1:3 identifies the prophet in the third person.

the land of the Chaldeans The Hebrew text uses “Babylonians” and “Chaldeans” interchangeably. See note on Isa 43:14.

the hand of Yahweh Symbolizes a physical manifestation of His power and presence. Yahweh’s hand comes on the prophet Elijah giving him physical power to outrun King Ahab’s chariot in 1 Kgs 18:46. The phrase also describes the power of prophecy coming on the prophet Elisha in 2 Kgs 3:15. Ezekiel experiences the power of Yahweh’s hand (see Ezek 2:2, 9; 3:14; 8:3).

1:4–28 Unlike Isaiah, who seems to have encountered Yahweh in the Jerusalem temple (see Isa 6), Ezekiel is visited in Babylon by Yahweh’s chariot-throne. His description of the throne, heavenly beings, and the wheels transporting it likely reflects his own limited ability to describe what he saw; thus he uses metaphors and analogies.

1:4 A storm wind was coming from the north A divine appearance or theophany was characterized by storm, wind, thunder, cloud, lightning, and earthquake imagery (compare Job 38:1).

The description of storm wind from the north is most likely an intentional allusion to Semitic storm-god imagery. The Semitic god, Hadad, was associated with both life-giving rains and the destructive power of storms, especially through strong winds and lightning. In the Ugaritic texts, Hadad was another name for Baal. Biblical writers never refer to Hadad, but they regularly reference the Canaanite god, Baal.

The Bible often appropriates Canaanite storm-god imagery for Yahweh as a means of asserting Yahweh’s superiority. Baal dwells on Mount Zaphon, which is the Hebrew and Canaanite word for “north” (compare Psa 48:2). Ezekiel 1:4: Elements of Theophany IVPBBCOT

Theophany DBI

Hadad DDD

Hadad (deity) ZEB H—L

Theophany in the Old Testament

Old Testament Theophanies Table

amber stone Ezekiel is the only author to use the Hebrew word here, chashmal. The word is used here, in Ezek 1:27, and in 8:2. While the precise meaning of the word is obscure, context and etymology suggest it was a bright yellow substance, probably amber.

The best evidence for a definition connects the Hebrew word to a related Akkadian word for “amber.” The Akkadian word was used in a Neo-Babylonian text describing the god Nergal with upper cheeks of amber and lower cheeks like lightning. The Greek and Latin translations of the ot use the words elektron and electrum, denoting amber or pale gold. The Syriac translation of the ot avoids the word altogether.

Later Jewish tradition endowed the Hebrew word with a holy and dangerous essence. The rabbinic work the Talmud tells a story of a boy pondering the meaning of chashmal and fire coming out from the chashmal and burning him (Babylonian Talmud, Hagigah 13a).

Ezekiel 1:4 ZIBBC OT 4

Ezekiel 1:4 Ezekiel 1–20 (AYBC)

1:5 the likeness of The Hebrew word used here, demuth (which may be translated “likeness”), occurs 25 times in the ot—16 times in Ezekiel alone. Ezekiel uses this word 10 times in ch. 1 and 4 times in ch. 10 to describe the living beings and the divine chariot. Demuth denotes a simple comparison, and Ezekiel uses it to distance himself as he describes the indescribable divine manifestation.

A distinctive meaning of demuth is to describe a model, representation, form, or image of something. For example, King Ahaz sends a demuth of the altar he sees in Damascus to the Jerusalem temple for the priest, Uriah (also rendered “Urijah”), to use in constructing a full-sized version (2 Kgs 16:10). The word is also used to describe the impossibility of finding a deity to compare to Yahweh (Isa 40:18).

Demuth NIDOTTE

four living creatures Ezekiel uses the nondescript Hebrew word chayyah for a living being here rather than a more specific term for heavenly beings such as keruvim (“cherubim”; see Gen 3:24 and note) or seraphim (see Isa 6:2 and note). The term emphasizes that Ezekiel is uncertain as to what he’s seeing, since chayyah most simply means “animate being.”

Ezekiel’s second encounter with the divine chariot in Ezek 10 specifically refers to the beings as cherubim, fitting with imagery of Yahweh riding a cherub in Psa 18:10. Ezekiel’s depiction resembles the apostle John’s vision in Rev 4:6–8, which describes four living creatures surrounding the throne. The creatures in Revelation are composite in form like Ezekiel’s, but they have six wings like the seraphim of Isa 6.

Statues of composite creatures guarding throne rooms have been found in excavations of Assyrian cities such as Nineveh and Nimrud. They often had human heads on the bodies of lions or bulls. Similar figures have been found in Syro-Phoenician and Persian art with eagle’s heads, wings, or bull’s legs. Ezekiel’s creatures are winged with bovine legs and four faces—human, lion, ox, and eagle (see Ezek 1:9–10).

Cherubim DDD

Ezekiel 1:5 IVPBBCOT

1:7 polished bronze Compare to the description of the Son of God with feet of burnished bronze in Rev 1:15; 2:18. Apocalyptic imagery in the books of Daniel and Revelation strongly echoes Ezekiel’s depictions.

1:9 their wings were touching one another Compare to the cherubim in Solomon’s temple. See 1 Kgs 6:27.

went straight forward Since the creatures have four faces, they can travel in any direction without turning.

1:11 and two covering their bodies The creatures covered themselves with wings just like the seraphim in Isa 6:2.

1:12 spirit The Hebrew word used here, ruach, seems to refer to an external spirit or force directing the movements of the living creatures. The word often refers to the Spirit of God and may refer to the empowering of the Holy Spirit, as in Ezek 3:12. Compare the spirit animating the wheels in v. 20.

1:13 appearance The Hebrew word used here, mar'eh, occurs seven times in this vision. The word denotes outward appearance but can also connote a pattern or image (Num 8:4). Here, the term parallels Ezekiel’s careful phrasing in Ezek 1:26, showing an intentional avoidance of concrete descriptions (see note on v. 5).

1:15 wheel Ezekiel’s description shifts from the living creatures in vv. 5–14 to the wheels next to the creatures in vv. 15–21. The wheels described here are more complex than simple chariot wheels (see note on v. 16).

1:16 the wheels Ezekiel uses ambiguous language in describing the wheels (called ophanim in Hebrew) just as he did in depicting the living creatures. The Hebrew word ophan is a term for a typical chariot wheel (see Exod 14:25).

Compare Daniel’s description of the divine chariot throne in Dan 7:9. The parallel vision of the divine chariot in Ezek 10 uses the word galgal for “wheel” to describe the chariot wheels, with a possible connotation of whirling motion (10:2). The term ophan is also used in 10:6 to describe the same wheels as well as those on some temple equipment that were made to resemble chariot wheels (see 1 Kgs 7:33). In later Jewish literature, the ophannim (the plural of ophan) develop into a third class of angelic beings alongside the seraphim and the cherubim (see 1 Enoch 61:10 and 2 Enoch 29:3).

Angels AYBD

like the appearance of beryl The wheels shine like a precious stone (called tarshish in Hebrew), but the precise identification of the stone is uncertain. Beryl, golden topaz, yellow jasper, and chrysolite are possible suggestions. The same word is used to describe a heavenly being in Dan 10:6.

a wheel within a wheel This phrase could refer to concentric circles (i.e., the hub to which the spokes attach in an ordinary wheel), but Ezekiel’s careful description seems to defy such a simple explanation. Another possibility is a gyroscope-like apparatus with wheels at right angles to one another. The latter option provides the possibility of multidirectional travel without turning.

1:18 full of eyes all around The eyes may be metaphors for lights or precious stones covering the wheels, or they may indicate literal eyes, suggesting the wheels themselves were living creatures. This interpretation likely influenced the later development of the ophannim into angelic beings (see note on Ezek 1:16). Compare John’s vision in Rev 4:6–8, where he describes the living creatures covered in eyes (see note on Rev 4:7).

1:20 the spirit Likely refers to whatever animating force is moving the wheels. See note on Ezek 1:12.

the spirit of the living creatures was in the The spirit was in the wheels (i.e., an animating force). The Hebrew uses the singular chayyah (“living thing”), just as wind or breath is the animating force in the creation of Adam (see Gen 2:7).

1:22 like the outward appearance of Ezekiel continues to use ambiguous language (see note on Ezek 1:5).

an expanse The Hebrew term used here is the same term used for the dome of the sky in Gen 1:6. This is an appropriate connection given that the expanse divided heaven and earth, with Yahweh dwelling above the expanse (see note on Gen 1:6–10).

ice Compare John’s vision in Rev 4:6 of a solid crystal surface before the divine throne.

1:24 the sound of many waters A roaring sound like rushing water accompanies Yahweh’s arrival (see Ezek 43:2). Compare the coming of the Son of Man in Rev 1:15.

Shaddai The Hebrew word used here, shadday, is a common name for God (often rendered “Shaddai”) used most frequently in the books of Genesis (see Gen 17:1 and note) and Job (see Job 6:4). Ezekiel uses it only here and in the parallel passage in Ezek 10:5 to describe the sound of the divine chariot.

The precise origin and etymology of shadday is unclear. English renderings as “Almighty” are likely derived from the use of Greek word pantokratōr, meaning “almighty,” to represent shadday in the Greek Septuagint. The Latin Vulgate uses omnipotens, meaning “almighty,” for shadday. The Greek translator may have understood the Hebrew word to be related to the verb shadad, which means “to destroy violently.” Shaddai as a deity’s name probably means “He of the Mountain,” based on the Akkadian word šadû, meaning “mountain.” The name is used for deities in Ugaritic, Phoenician, and Egyptian sources.

Almighty ZEB A—C

Shaddai DDD

Almighty AYBD

1:26 the likeness of a throne See note on v. 5. Ezekiel uses “likeness” four times in vv. 26–28 alone.

looking like a sapphire See note on v. 13. Ezekiel is careful to liken what he sees to something recognizable. The descriptive Hebrew word used here, sappir, indicates sapphire stone or lapis lazuli, a bright blue semiprecious stone that was highly prized in the ancient world. Compare the sapphire pavement under God’s feet in Exod 24:10.

a likeness similar to the appearance of a human Ezekiel sees a figure that resembles a person, but he avoids saying that he sees a human being by using terms that convey likeness (see note on Ezek 1:5) and appearance (see note on v. 13) in his descriptions.

1:27 the likeness of his loins Ezekiel believes he sees the figure of a man with a waist, but he avoids stating so with certainty. Previous appearances of Yahweh in human form have been more subtle, such as His appearance to Abraham in Gen 18:1. Here, Yahweh’s human-like form is obscured by the brightness of His glory. Ezekiel encounters Yahweh again in this form in Ezek 8:2.

1:28 the appearance of a bow Compare Rev 4:3.

the likeness of the glory of Yahweh Ezekiel acknowledges that he’s been describing a vision of Yahweh in His glory (see note on Isa 6:3; compare Exod 16:7 and note; 16:10 and note).

I fell on my face He acts out of reverence and fear, a typical response in human encounters with the divine (see Ezek 3:23; 43:3; 44:4; compare Gen 17:3; Josh 5:14; Dan 8:17; Rev 1:17).

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