EZEKIEL CHAPTER 4 The prophet is directed to represent a mock siege of
Jerusalem for a sign to the Jews, EZEKIEL 4:1; and to lie before it in
one posture for a set number of days, in order to denote the time of
their sins for which God did visit, EZEKIEL 4:4. His allotted
provisions, with design to... [ Continue Reading ]
Draw the figure of a siege about the city; raise a tower and bulwarks
which may annoy the besieged, and defend the besiegers, from which may
be shot either darts against men, or mighty stones against the walls
and towers of the city. CAST A MOUNT; which made large, high, and
strong, and near as they... [ Continue Reading ]
AN IRON PAN, to signify the hardness and obstinacy of the besiegers;
probably a frying-pan, on the plain part of which the the bearing the
portrait of Jerusalem lying, the iron edges or brims compassed it
round about, as a line drawn round a besieged city, out of which the
distressed could not flee,... [ Continue Reading ]
LIE THOU ALSO; a posture which was to signify the settled resolution
of the besiegers, who had taken up their abode till the siege were
finished in taking Jerusalem. UPON THY LEFT SIDE, to note the less
worthy part, the ten tribes, or Samaria, which was from Jerusalem
toward the left hand, and was h... [ Continue Reading ]
This verse explains the former. I have pointed out the number of years
wherein apostate Israel sinned against me, and I did bear with them
according to the number of days, wherein thou must lie on thy left
side. Three hundred and ninety days. See EZEKIEL 4:4. There is some
difference, though of no g... [ Continue Reading ]
When thou hast almost accomplished, or when about to accomplish them,
i.e. forty days, before the three hundred and ninety do expire, at the
end of three hundred and fifty days turn thou to thy right side, and
bear the iniquity of the house of Judah; and that this is the true
account appears from th... [ Continue Reading ]
THEREFORE, Heb. _And_, while thou liest on thy side, thou shalt fix
thy countenance on the portrait of besieged Jerusalem, with angry and
menacing looks. JERUSALEM; not which was in the land of Judah, but
that described in the tile, the emblem of the other. THINE ARM, thy
right arm, the stronger and... [ Continue Reading ]
Whoever were the persons that laid bonds on Ezekiel, in EZEKIEL 3:25,
here it is plain that the Lord doth it. If the prophet represent the
besieged citizens who must be captives in bonds, then it is likely
these bonds were visible and material, that they might be a teaching
sign and admonition, that... [ Continue Reading ]
Provide thee corn enough; for a grievous famine will accompany the
siege. And whereas all sorts of grain are to be provided, it assures
us all would be little enough; wheat and barley would not outlast the
siege, coarser and meaner must be provided, though less fit for bread.
Mix the worst with the... [ Continue Reading ]
THY MEAT; the mean and coarse bread which thou must eat and be content
with. BY WEIGHT; not full, as once; not as much as you will, but a
small pittance delivered by weight to all; which bespeaks the extreme
penury the city should be brought to. TWENTY SHEKELS; some say five
ounces, others say ten o... [ Continue Reading ]
WATER; not wine or cordial drinks, but cold and thin water, nor a
bellyful of this. THE SIXTH PART OF AN HIN; about six ounces of water,
and that measured out by others to him that drinks it, scarce enough
to keep the man alive. Such proportions of bread and water rather fed
death than the man, yet... [ Continue Reading ]
AS BARLEY CAKES: these were delicacies with them when they could
temper and make them right, but now these pitiful things should be to
these half-starved bodies as delicates, Or rather, because they were
greedy, and could not stay till they were baked. Or, lest any should
take it from them. Or, beca... [ Continue Reading ]
This verse is a key to the former. EVEN THUS; scanty, mean,
ill-dressed, and polluted in the very dressing, loathsome to any but
starved bellies. THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL; not only the house of Judah,
but all the rest of the children of Israel; not in the siege only, but
this misery should pursue them... [ Continue Reading ]
AH LORD GOD he deprecateth this, and entreats it may not be enjoined
him. He proposeth his legal purity, as one argument; in obedience to
ceremonial precepts, he had kept himself clean, and now prays that he
may not have his obedience tried by enjoining to eat what is
abominable. FROM MY YOUTH UP; h... [ Continue Reading ]
So soon as he prayed God answered, and condescends to Ezekiel that he
should use what was less abominable than man's dung; but it was not
granted to the Jews, who in the siege at Jerusalem did much worse
things, and more detestable, reduced to it by straits, as EZEKIEL 5:10
LAMENTATIONS 1:11, LAMENT... [ Continue Reading ]
Here the Lord confirms his threat of famine by a solemn protestation
that he would break the staff of bread; either take their, harvests
away, and deny them bread, or withhold his blessing, the strength of
bread, that it should not nourish and refresh, as LEVITICUS 26:26. IN
JERUSALEM, that sinful c... [ Continue Reading ]
The Lord will take away their provision, that they may die with want,
punished for all their sins, and disappointed of all that their false
prophets promised them; and under strangest disappointments, be filled
with strangest amazements and horrors, at the woeful miseries of one
another, and falling... [ Continue Reading ]