Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 24:21

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 24:21

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

The desire of your eyes. There is something exquisitely pathetic in the iteration of the phrase of . To the priest Ezekiel himself, to the people whom he addressed, the temple was as dear as the wife to the husband. It was also "the pride of their power" (Revised Version), the "pity of their soul" (margin). The former phrase comes from Le . When that temple should be profaned, when sons and daughters should fall by the sword, then they would do as the prophet had done. They would learn that there is a sorrow which is too deep for tears, something that passeth show. The state which the prophet describes is not one of callousness, or impenitence, or despair. The people shall mourn for their iniquities;" this will be the beginning of repentance. Le 26:39, 40 was obviously in the prophet's thoughts. We note that Verse 24 is the one solitary passage since in which Ezekiel names himself. As single acts and gestures had before () been a sign of what was coming, so now the man himself was to be in that hour of bereavement.

Yet another sign was given, not to the people, but to the prophet himself. For the present there was to be the silence of unutterable sorrow, continuing, day after day, as there had been before (). Then there should come a messenger from Jerusalem, reporting its capture and destruction, and then his mouth should be opened. The messenger does not come till nearly three years afterwards (); and we must infer that there was no spoken message during the interval, but that from onward we have the written words of the Lord that came to him from time to time, not as messages to Israel, but as bearing on the fate of the surrounding nations. We have, i.e; what is, strictly speaking, a paten-thesis in the prophet's work.

HOMILETICS.

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