Ezekiel 7 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Ezekiel 7:1-27 open_in_new

    The Desolation of the Land of Israel

    This is a final message of doom upon the whole land (Ezekiel 7:2). God's wrath against Israel's sin is relentless, and the judgment is inevitable and close at hand. Social relations will be broken up (Ezekiel 7:12); preparations for defence will be unavailing (Ezekiel 7:14); wealth, which has been an occasion of sin and an instrument of idolatry, will not avert calamity, but will become the spoil of the heathen (Ezekiel 7:19-21); priests and prophets, king and nobles, will be helpless to deliver (Ezekiel 7:26; Ezekiel 7:17); the Temple will be profaned (Ezekiel 7:22); the remnant will be overwhelmed with sorrow (Ezekiel 7:16). Ezekiel 7:5-7; Ezekiel 7:10-12 are in the poetic metre commonly used for laments or dirges.

    7, 10. The morning is come] RV 'Thy doom is come.'

  • Ezekiel 7:9 open_in_new

    Ye shall know, etc.] another aspect of the result of God's judgment. He would be recognised as the God who punishes sin.

    10, 11. The meaning here is rather obscure. If the rod in Ezekiel 7:10 is that of chastisement, pride will mean the same thing. Babylon is called 'Pride' in Jeremiah 50:31 (RM). But the violence in Ezekiel 7:11 seems to be that of Israel, and the rod of wickedness to be a figure for its developed form. Possibly 'the rod' and 'pride' in Ezekiel 7:10 may also refer to Israel's sin.

  • Ezekiel 7:13 open_in_new

    The seller, etc.] This may mean, either that those of Ezekiel's fellow-exiles of the first captivity who had sold their possessions before leaving Jerusalem would not return to regain them, or that land which ought to have come back to its seller at the year of Jubilee would not do so, since the destruction of the city would obliterate this and all other social institutions. The vision is touching, etc.] A more probable reading is, 'wrath is upon,' etc., as in Ezekiel 7:12; Ezekiel 7:14.

  • Ezekiel 7:20 open_in_new

    21. The rendering in AV and RV means that the Temple, profaned already by Israel's idolatry, would be further polluted by the heathen conquerors. Most scholars, however, take the beauty of his (the people's) ornament to refer to the silver and gold of Ezekiel 7:19, and render as in RM, 'they turned it to pride and they made the images.. thereof.' The wealth which had been turned to idolatrous uses would be defiled by passing into heathen hands.

  • Ezekiel 7:22 open_in_new

    Secret place] RM 'secret treasure.' Not the Holy of Holies specially, but Jerusalern and the Temple viewed as God's precious possession.