-
Ezekiel 4:1. The word tile means “brick.” They were used by the
Babylonians to preserve their records, and many have been found marked
with building plans, etc. The sign of the tile foretells the sieg...
-
(C) THE HARDSHIPS OF THE EXILES AND THE BESIEGED. The horrors of
famine, consequent upon the siege, are suggested by the symbolical
action of this section, in which the prophet's food and drink are to...
-
CONSUME AWAY, &c. Reference to Pentateuch (Leviticus 26:39). Compare
Ezekiel 24:23. Eze 24:33. to ("pine away "). App-92....
-
Explanation of the symbol of eating bread by measure (Ezekiel 4:10)....
-
Symbol of scarcity during the siege and pollution in the dispersion
from having to eat unclean things among the Gentiles
The passage continues Ezekiel 4:8. The prophet is commanded (while
lying immov...
-
Second Section. Ch. Ezekiel 3:22 to Ezekiel 7:27
The second section of the Book contains these parts:
(1) Ch. Ezekiel 3:22-27. A preface in which the prophet is commanded
to confine himself to his o...
-
III. THE PARABLE OF JERUSALEM'S FAMINE
4:9-17
TRANSLATION
(9) NOW as for You, take to you wheat and barley, and beans and
lentils and millet and fitches, and put them in a vessel, and prepare
them fo...
-
That they may want bread and water, and be astonied one with another,
and consume away for their iniquity. THAT THEY MAY ... BE ASTONIED ONE
WITH ANOTHER - mutually regard one another with astonishme...
-
4:17 in (e-19) Or 'through.'...
-
§ 2. THE OVERTHROW OF THE JEWISH KINGDOM FORETOLD (EZEKIEL 4-7)
The great theme of the first part of Ezekiel's prophetic ministry was
the certainty of the complete downfall of the Jewish state. Though...
-
EZEKIEL: ‘THEY SHALL KNOW THAT I AM GOD’
THE *SIN OF JUDAH AND THE JUDGEMENT OF GOD
EZEKIEL CHAPTER S 1 TO 24
_IAN MACKERVOY_
CHAPTER 4
THE BRICK AND THE IRON PLATE – EZEKIEL 4:1-8
V1 ‘*Son
-
לְמַ֥עַן יַחְסְר֖וּ לֶ֣חֶם וָ מָ֑יִם
וְ נָשַׁ
-
THE END FORETOLD
Ezekiel 4:1 - Ezekiel 7:1
WITH the fourth chapter we enter on the exposition of the first great
division of Ezekiel's prophecies. The chaps, 4-24, cover a period of
about four and a...
-
The second division of the Book contains the messages of the prophet
concerning the reprobation of the chosen nation. These fall into three
parts. In the first, by symbolism and speech he described th...
-
_When. Protestants, "they may want bread and water, and be astonished
one with another, and consume away for their iniquity." (Haydock)_...
-
REFLECTIONS
READER! amidst many very sweet and profitable subjects suggested to
our contemplation by the several types in this Chapter, I feel my mind
constrained to one or two more immediately striki...
-
Melancholy as this was, when the bread and water were given out by
weight and measure, yet infinitely more distressing is it, when the
Lord makes a famine, not of the bread that perisheth, but that wh...
-
Besides the general judgment that God pronounced upon the condition of
Israel, Jerusalem-on whom lay all the iniquity of the people now come
to its height-appears before God whom she had despised. The...
-
THAT THEY MAY WANT BREAD AND WATER,.... Or, "because they shall want"
l c. therefore they shall eat the one, and drink the other, by weight
or they shall do this till there shall be none to eat and dr...
-
That they may want bread and water, and be astonied one with another,
and consume away for their iniquity.
Ver. 17. _And be astonied._] At their straits and disappointments.
_ And consume away for t...
-
_Behold, I will break the staff of bread in Jerusalem_ I will cause a
scarcity of bread in Jerusalem, 2 Kings 25:3; and deprive it of the
chief support of man's life. _And they shall eat their bread b...
-
that they may want bread and water, be in dire need of the food barely
sufficing for their daily needs, AND BE ASTONIED ONE WITH ANOTHER,
with the stupefied look of total despair, AND CONSUME AWAY FOR...
-
THE SYMBOLS OF THE FAMINE...
-
9-17 The bread which was Ezekiel's support, was to be made of coarse
grain and pulse mixed together, seldom used except in times of urgent
scarcity, and of this he was only to take a small quantity....
-
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,...
-
Ezekiel 4:17 lack H2637 (H8799) bread H3899 water H4325 dismayed H8074
(H8738) one H376 another H251 away...
-
‘Moreover he said to me, “Son of man, behold, I will break the
staff of bread in Jerusalem, and they will eat bread by weight and
with carefulness, and they will drink water by measure and with
dismay...
-
CONTENTS: The sign of the tile. Typical representations.
CHARACTERS: God, Ezekiel.
CONCLUSION: If men will not serve God with cheerfulness in the
abundance of all things, God will make them serve th...
-
Ezekiel 4:1. _Son of man, take thee a tile._ It is probable that the
prophet took a sheet of plastic clay proper for his purpose; for the
Hebrew root בנה _banah,_ is generally applied to construction...
-
_Even thus shall the children of Israel eat their defiled bread._
CONFORMITY OF PUNISHMENT TO SIN
They had sinned in excess, and God would take away their plenty. Hosea
13:6, “According to their past...
-
EZEKIEL—NOTE ON EZEKIEL 4:1 Judgment on Jerusalem and Judah. The
oracles of chs. Ezekiel 4:1 come before Jerusalem’s downfall in 587
B.C. Although the sequence
-
_Scanty means of subsistence symbolising punishment_ (chap. Ezekiel
4:9)
EXEGETICAL NOTES.— Ezekiel 4:9. The several sorts of vegetable
food—the richest and the poorest in nutritive elements—being
pla...
-
EXPOSITION
Prior to any detailed examination of the strange series of acts
recorded in this and the following chapter, we are met with the
question whether they were indeed visible and outward acts,...
-
CHAPTER 4.
THE VISION OF THE SIEGE AND THE INIQUITY-BEARING.
Ezekiel 4:1. _And thou, son of man, take thee a brick, and set it
before thee, and engrave on it the city Jerusalem._
Ezekiel 4:2. _And l...
-
Now thou also, Son of man, take a tile (Ezekiel 4:1),
Now this is a brick, and it's about twelve inches by fourteen inches.
The archeologists have uncovered thousands of these bricks there in
the area...
-
Ezekiel 24:23; Leviticus 26:39...