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William W. Hallo and K. Lawson Younger Jr. 4 vols. Leiden: Brill, 1997–2017

      ESV English Standard Version

      KJV King James Version

      NASB New American Standard Bible

      NJPS Jewish Publication Society translation

      NET The NET Bible

      NIV New International Version

      NKJV New King James Version

      NLT New Living Translation

      NRSV New Revised Standard Version

      Introduction

      The Life and Times of the Prophet Ezekiel

      Ezekiel was born into a priestly family (Ezek 1:3) and was a young man when the Babylonians subjugated the kingdom of Judah. As was customary, the conquerors took youths from elite families into captivity in order to “socialize” them to be good servants of their overlord. The first such deportation was in 605 BC. Among these earliest political prisoners were the likes of Daniel (Dan 1:1–7). Ezekiel was likely part of a second wave of deportation. After Jehoiachin’s rebellion against the Babylonian overlords in 598 BC, there was a punitive exile of Jerusalem’s leaders (2 Kgs 24:12–16). Ezekiel’s prophetic call came five years after this event while living among the exiles (Ezek 1:1–3). His oracles span 20 years of his life (see comments at Ezek 40:1). God addresses Ezekiel as “son of man,” which stresses his human frailty in contrast to the sovereign sufficiency of God (see comments at Ezek 2:1). We do not know the exact location of the Kebar Canal, where Ezekiel lived among the exiles, but it was a primary irrigation canal branching off the Euphrates River.

      The Message of the Book as a Whole

      Nevertheless, Ezekiel envisions a day when God’s glory will return to dwell among his people in a healed land (Ezek 43:5–7; 47:1–12). In preparation for that return, the people of Israel are restored spiritually as well as physically to full covenant blessing (Ezek 36–37). God will bring to fulfillment the covenant blessings promised to Abraham and Moses (Ezek 11:16–20; 16:60; 36:8–12; 37:11–14) as well as to David (Ezek 34:23–31; 37:24–28). The whole “covenant package” is assured in the final line of Ezekiel, “Yahweh is there” (cf. Exod 3:12–15; Lev 26:12). Much of the challenge in preaching Ezekiel is to translate these themes for Christian hope and living.

      An overview of the book’s structure is as follows:

      1. Judgment against Israel (Ezek 1–24)

      After seeing a vision of the glory of God (chapters 1–3) and dramatically portraying the siege of Jerusalem (chapters 4–7), Ezekiel envisions the glory of God departing from the defiled temple (chapters 8–11). Then, a dramatic portrayal of exile (chapter 12) is followed by extensive explanation of the reasons for judgment (chapters 13–24).

      2. Judgment against the Nations (Ezek 25–32)

      The nations, who would exult their own glory