Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 21:6

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 21:6

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Sigh therefore, etc. As in other instances (; ), the prophet dramatizes the coming calamity. He is to act the part of a mourner, whose sighs are so deep that they seem to "break his loins" (compare, for the gesture, , , ; ). The strange action was meant to lead to questions. What did it mean? And then he is to answer that he does it "for the tidings" which are to him as certain as if they had already come. He is but doing what all would do, when the messenger brought word, as in , five years later, that the city was at last smitten.

A sword, a sword, etc. The new section () rises out of the thought of the unsheathed sword in . More than most other portions of Ezekiel's writings, it assumes a distinctly lyrical character, and might be headed, "The Lay of the Sword of Jehovah." The opening words are probably an echo of . The dazzling brightness of the sword is added to its sharpness as a fresh element of terror.

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