Ezekiel 12:14
Context12:14 All his retinue – his attendants and his troops – I will scatter to every wind; I will unleash a sword behind them.
Ezekiel 12:22
Context12:22 “Son of man, what is this proverb you have in the land of Israel, ‘The days pass slowly, and every vision fails’?
Ezekiel 21:10
Context21:10 It is sharpened for slaughter,
it is polished to flash like lightning!
“‘Should we rejoice in the scepter of my son? No! The sword despises every tree! 1
Ezekiel 30:16
Context30:16 I will ignite a fire in Egypt;
Syene 2 will writhe in agony,
Thebes will be broken down,
and Memphis will face enemies every day.
Ezekiel 38:21
Context38:21 I will call for a sword to attack 3 Gog 4 on all my mountains, declares the sovereign Lord; every man’s sword will be against his brother.
Ezekiel 44:29
Context44:29 They may eat the grain offering, the sin offering, and the guilt offering, and every devoted thing in Israel will be theirs.
1 tn Heb “Or shall we rejoice, scepter of my son, it despises every tree.” The translation understands the subject of the verb “despises,” which is a feminine form in the Hebrew text, to be the sword (which is a feminine noun) mentioned just before this. Alternatively, the line may be understood as “let us not rejoice, O tribe of my son; it despises every tree.” The same word in Hebrew may be either “rod,” “scepter,” or “tribe.” The word sometimes translated as “or” or taken as an interrogative particle may be a negative particle. See D. I. Block, Ezekiel (NICOT), 1:672, n. 79.
sn The people of Judah should not place false hope in their king, symbolized by his royal scepter, for God’s judgment (symbolized by fire and then a sword) would destroy every tree (see 20:47), symbolizing the righteous and wicked (see 21:3-4).
2 tc The LXX reads “Syene,” which is Aswan in the south. The MT reads Sin, which has already been mentioned in v. 15.
3 tn Heb “against.”
4 tn Heb “him”; the referent (Gog, cf. v. 18) has been specified in the translation for clarity.