Ezekiel 4:12-13
Context4:12 And you must eat the food like you would a barley cake. You must bake it in front of them over a fire made with dried human excrement.” 1 4:13 And the Lord said, “This is how the people of Israel will eat their unclean food among the nations 2 where I will banish them.”
Ezekiel 18:2
Context18:2 “What do you mean by quoting this proverb concerning the land of Israel,
“‘The fathers eat sour grapes
And the children’s teeth become numb?’ 3
Ezekiel 18:15
Context18:15 He does not eat pagan sacrifices on the mountains, does not pray to the idols of the house of Israel, does not defile his neighbor’s wife,
Ezekiel 22:9
Context22:9 Slanderous men shed blood within you. 4 Those who live within you eat pagan sacrifices on the mountains; 5 they commit obscene acts among you. 6
Ezekiel 34:3
Context34:3 You eat the fat, you clothe yourselves with the wool, you slaughter the choice animals, but you do not feed the sheep!
Ezekiel 34:19
Context34:19 As for my sheep, they must eat what you trampled with your feet, and drink what you have muddied with your feet!
Ezekiel 39:19
Context39:19 You will eat fat until you are full, and drink blood until you are drunk, 7 at my slaughter 8 which I have made for you.
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.
Ezekiel 44:31
Context44:31 The priests will not eat any bird or animal that has died a natural death or was torn to pieces by a wild animal. 9
1 sn Human waste was to remain outside the camp of the Israelites according to Deut 23:15.
2 sn Unclean food among the nations. Lands outside of Israel were considered unclean (Josh 22:19; Amos 7:17).
3 tn This word only occurs here and in the parallel passage in Jer 31:29-30 in the Qal stem and in Eccl 10:10 in the Piel stem. In the latter passage it refers to the bluntness of an ax that has not been sharpened. Here the idea is of the “bluntness” of the teeth, not from having ground them down due to the bitter taste of sour grapes but to the fact that they have lost their “edge,” “bite,” or “sharpness” because they are numb from the sour taste. For this meaning for the word, see W. L. Holladay, Jeremiah (Hermeneia), 2:197.
4 tn Heb “men of slander are in you in order to shed blood.”
5 tn Heb “and on the mountains they eat within you.” The mountains mentioned here were the site of pagan sacrifices. See 18:6.
6 sn This statement introduces vv. 10-11 and refers in general terms to the sexual sins described there. For the legal background of vv. 10-11, see Lev 18:7-20; 20:10-21; Deut 22:22-23, 30; 27:22.
7 sn Eating the fat and drinking blood were God’s exclusive rights in Israelite sacrifices (Lev 3:17).
8 tn Or “sacrifice” (so also in the rest of this verse).
9 tn The words “by a wild animal” are not in the Hebrew text, but have been supplied in the translation as a clarification of the circumstances.
sn For this law, see Lev 7:24; 17:15.