Ezekiel 5:7
Context5:7 “Therefore this is what the sovereign Lord says: Because you are more arrogant 1 than the nations around you, 2 you have not followed my statutes and have not carried out my regulations. You have not even 3 carried out the regulations of the nations around you!
Ezekiel 12:7
Context12:7 So I did just as I was commanded. I carried out my belongings packed for exile during the day, and at evening I dug myself a hole through the wall with my hands. I went out in the darkness, carrying my baggage 4 on my shoulder while they watched.
Ezekiel 14:22
Context14:22 Yet some survivors will be left in it, sons and daughters who will be brought out. They will come out to you, and when you see their behavior and their deeds, you will be consoled about the catastrophe I have brought on Jerusalem – for everything I brought on it.
Ezekiel 17:9
Context17:9 “‘Say to them: This is what the sovereign Lord says:
“‘Will it prosper?
Will he not rip out its roots
and cause its fruit to rot 5 and wither?
All its foliage 6 will wither.
No strong arm or large army
will be needed to pull it out by its roots. 7
Ezekiel 20:21
Context20:21 “‘But the children 8 rebelled against me, did not follow my statutes, did not observe my regulations by carrying them out (the one who obeys 9 them will live by them), and desecrated my Sabbaths. I decided to pour out 10 my rage on them and fully vent my anger against them in the wilderness.
Ezekiel 46:12
Context46:12 When the prince provides a freewill offering, a burnt offering, or peace offerings as a voluntary offering to the Lord, the gate facing east will be opened for him, and he will provide his burnt offering and his peace offerings just as he did on the Sabbath. Then he will go out, and the gate will be closed after he goes out. 11
1 tn Traditionally this difficult form has been derived from a hypothetical root הָמוֹן (hamon), supposedly meaning “be in tumult/uproar,” but such a verb occurs nowhere else. It is more likely that it is to be derived from a root מָנוֹן (manon), meaning “disdain” (see L. C. Allen, Ezekiel [WBC], 1:52). A derivative from this root is used in Prov 29:21 of a rebellious servant. See HALOT 600 s.v. מָנוֹן.
2 sn You are more arrogant than the nations around you. Israel is accused of being worse than the nations in Ezek 16:27; 2 Kgs 21:11; Jer 2:11.
3 tc Some Hebrew
4 tn The words “my baggage” are not in the Hebrew text, but are implied from the context.
5 tn The Hebrew root occurs only here in the OT and appears to have the meaning of “strip off.” In application to fruit the meaning may be “cause to rot.”
6 tn Heb “all the טַרְפֵּי (tarpey) of branches.” The word טַרְפֵּי occurs only here in the Bible; its precise meaning is uncertain.
7 tn Or “there will be no strong arm or large army when it is pulled up by the roots.”
8 tn Heb “sons.”
9 tn Or “carries them out.”
10 tn Heb “and I said/thought to pour out.”
11 tn Heb “he shall shut the gate after he goes out.”