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Ezekiel 1:5

Context
1:5 In the fire 1  were what looked like 2  four living beings. 3  In their appearance they had human form, 4 

Ezekiel 6:10

Context
6:10 They will know that I am the Lord; my threats to bring this catastrophe on them were not empty.’ 5 

Ezekiel 16:29

Context
16:29 Then you multiplied your promiscuity to the land of merchants, Babylonia, 6  but you were not satisfied there either.

Ezekiel 16:50

Context
16:50 They were haughty and practiced abominable deeds before me. Therefore when I saw it I removed them.

Ezekiel 20:25

Context
20:25 I also gave 7  them decrees 8  which were not good and regulations by which they could not live.

Ezekiel 21:30

Context

21:30 Return it to its sheath! 9 

In the place where you were created, 10 

in your native land, I will judge you.

Ezekiel 27:21

Context
27:21 Arabia and all the princes of Kedar were your trade partners; for lambs, rams, and goats they traded with you.

Ezekiel 40:31

Context
40:31 Its porches faced the outer court, and decorative palm trees were on its jambs, and its stairway had eight steps.

Ezekiel 41:21

Context
41:21 The doorposts of the outer sanctuary were square. In front of the sanctuary one doorpost looked just like the other.

Ezekiel 42:10

Context

42:10 At the beginning 11  of the wall of the court toward the south, 12  facing the courtyard and the building, were chambers

1 tc Heb “from its midst” (מִתּוֹכָהּ, mitokhah). The LXX reads ἐν τῷ μέσῳ (en tw mesw, “in the midst of it”). The LXX also reads ἐν for מִתּוֹךְ (mitokh) in v. 4. The translator of the LXX of Ezekiel either read בְּתוֹךְ (bÿtokh, “within”) in his Hebrew exemplar or could not imagine how מִתּוֹךְ could make sense and so chose to use ἐν. The Hebrew would be understood by adding “from its midst emerged the forms of four living beings.”

2 tn Heb “form, figure, appearance.”

3 tn The Hebrew term is feminine plural yet thirty-three of the forty-five pronominal suffixes and verbal references which refer to the living beings in the chapter are masculine plural. The grammatical vacillation between masculine and feminine plurals suggests the difficulty Ezekiel had in penning these words as he was overcome by the vision of God. In ancient Near Eastern sculpture very similar images of part-human, part-animal creatures serve as throne and sky bearers. For a discussion of ancient Near Eastern parallels, see L. C. Allen, Ezekiel (WBC), 1:26-31. Ezekiel’s vision is an example of contextualization, where God accommodates his self-revelation to cultural expectations and norms.

4 sn They had human form may mean they stood erect.

5 tn Heb “not in vain did I speak to do to them this catastrophe.” The wording of the last half of v. 10 parallels God’s declaration after the sin of the golden calf (Exod 32:14).

6 tn Heb “Chaldea.” The name of the tribal group ruling Babylon (“Chaldeans”) and the territory from which they originated (“Chaldea”) is used as metonymy for the whole empire of Babylon.

7 tn Or “permitted.”

sn The content of the verse is shocking: that God would “give” bad decrees. This probably does not refer to the Mosaic law but to the practices of the Canaanites who were left in the land in order to test Israel. See Judg 2:20-23, the note on “decrees” in v. 25, and the note on “pass through the fire” in v. 26.

8 tn The Hebrew term חֻקּוֹת (khuqot; translated “statutes” elsewhere in this chapter) is normally feminine. Here Ezekiel changes the form to masculine: חֻקִּים (khuqim). Further, they are not called “my decrees” as vv. 11 and 13 refer to “my statutes.” The change is a signal that Ezekiel is not talking about the same statutes in vv. 11 and 13, which lead to life.

9 sn Once the Babylonian king’s sword (vv. 19-20) has carried out its assigned task, the Lord commands it to halt and announces that Babylon itself will also experience his judgment. See L. C. Allen, Ezekiel (WBC), 2:28.

10 tn In the Hebrew text of vv. 30-32 the second person verbal and pronominal forms are feminine singular. This may indicate that the personified Babylonian sword is being addressed. The Hebrew word for “sword” (see v. 28) is feminine. However, it may refer to the Ammonites.

11 tc The reading is supported by the LXX.

12 tc This reading is supported by the LXX; the MT reads “east.”



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