Ezekiel 32 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Ezekiel 32:1 open_in_new

    The twelfth year.. the twelfth month] February-March, 584 b.c., almost a year and seven months after the fall of Jerusalem.

  • Ezekiel 32:1-32 open_in_new

    Two Lamentations for Pharaoh and Egypt

    This chapter consists of two prophecies, both dated more than a year and a half after the capture of Jerusalem, and separated from each other by a fortnight. In the first Pharaoh is likened, no longer to a young lion, but to a foul river monster, which will be caught, cast on the mountains, and devoured by birds and beasts of prey. At the monster's end the lights of heaven will be darkened, and the nations will be dismayed (Ezekiel 32:1-10). The allegory is explained to mean the desolation of Egypt by the king of Babylon (Ezekiel 32:11-16).

    The second prophecy is a burial song over Pharaoh and his people (Ezekiel 32:17-32). They go down to the under-world, which is weirdly conceived as a vast land of graves, the occupants of which, however, retain their consciousness and their speech. Two regions are distinguished in it. Sheol or 'hell' (Ezekiel 32:21; Ezekiel 32:27) is the abode of the ancient heroes who have received honourable burial, while 'the pit' is a remoter region, reserved for the nations which have filled the earth with violence and terror, and whose people have died ingloriously in battle. Each of these nations has its own portion of 'the pit,' where the graves of its people are grouped around a central grave, occupied by the king or the personified genius of the nation. Pharaoh and his people will have a place among these dishonoured nations, and will be comforted to find that they are not alone in their humiliation.

  • Ezekiel 32:2 open_in_new

    Thou art like.. and thou art] RV 'thou wast likened.. yet art thou,' a contrast between a noble and a base comparison. Whale] RV 'dragon': probably a crocodile or a hippopotamus is meant.

  • Ezekiel 32:7 open_in_new

    Put.. out] RV 'extinguish.' Pharaoh is represented as a heavenly luminary, at the extinction of which the other heavenly bodies veil their light. Some suppose that there is a special reference to the constellation of the Dragon.

  • Ezekiel 32:21 open_in_new

    The strong among the mighty] the ancient heroes, referred to also in Ezekiel 32:27. Hell] Sheol, the place of the honoured dead: so in Ezekiel 32:27.

    They are gone down, etc.] the taunt uttered by the heroes against the Egyptians and their allies.

  • Ezekiel 32:27 open_in_new

    The mighty of.. the uncircumcised] A very slight change in the original gives the much better sense of the LXX, 'the mighty, the Nephilim of old time.' The violent nations would not be permitted to share the place of the heroes in the under-world. For the Nephilim see Genesis 6:4; Numbers 13:33 RV. Their iniquities shall be] rather, 'their shields are.' The heroes were buried honourably with their weapons and armour.

  • Ezekiel 32:32 open_in_new

    I have caused my terror] RV 'I have put his terror.' Pharaoh in his violence had been unconsciously carrying out God's purpose.