Temple Vision |
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- This is the temple that Solomon built. It
was used in Ezekiel's day before the Babylonian
captivity for idol worship.
- The furniture still there from the original
purpose was the bronze altar, the bronze basin, the
ten lamp stands, the ten tables, the altar of incense
and the ark of the covenant.
- The two pillars out front of the holy place on the
portico were called "Jakin" and "Boaz."
- Only priest could enter the holy place and did
most of the work in the inner court around the bronze
altar and bronze basin.
- Until the days of Ezekiel the presence of God
dwelt in the Most Holy Place on the ark of the
covenant.
- Notice the three gates: the Upper (North)
Gate, the main entry known as the East Gate, and the
southern gate
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- In Ezekiel
8:1, on Sept.17, 592 BC, Ezekiel was taken from
Babylon to the Jerusalem temple in a vision while the
captive elders watched him sit in a trance in his
house.
- Ezekiel is
shown four things that God says shows why the people
of Jerusalem must be judged.
- ONE:
When Ezekiel went into the temple through the North
Gate he saw the idol of jealousy. Most likely an
Asherah pole.
- TWO:
Then Ezekiel was told to dig through the wall and he
saw images of idols drawn on the wall of the priestly
rooms around the temple. There were 70 leaders
of Israel worshipping there. Idolatry is a
system of thinking that establishes a person's (or,
society's) meaning to life, ethics, and plans for the
future.
- THREE:
Ezekiel is then shown women crying for Tammuz.
Tammuz was a false god who controlled the dry seasons
and the seasons of rain. At the time of this
vision it was the dry season (September) and the women
were seeking Tammuz for the rain.
- FOUR:
The last line of defense for a nation is the priest
who were to teach the people the Word of God.
The Word was revealed to them in the written Law of
Moses and the temple system of worship. The last
hope for these people was that the priesthood would
teach them the truth. But, the priests were
standing between the altar and the portico of the
temple with their backs to the temple worshipping the
rising sun. Things do not look to hopeful for
Jerusalem's
future.
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- Ezekiel 9:1 God says, "Bring the
guards of the city here, each with a weapon in
his hand." Then six angels that had been
guarding the city come in to receive orders to destroy
the people.
- Also, a man with a writing kit (a case to carry
reed pens with an inkhorn attached) is told to put a
mark (The Hebrew letter "taw", an "x") on the people
who mourn for the wicked things done in the city.
- The Lord leaves the ark of the covenant and moves
to the door way (threshhold) of the temple to give
instructions to the angels. (9:3)
- The angel with the writing kit goes out into the
city first to begin marking the faithful. These
will be spared.
- The angels with the "deadly weapons" (Hebrew
"slaughter weapon" like a crushing device such
as a battle ax, but not a sword) begin by
slaughtering the 25 priest by the altar in front of
the temple.
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- In 9:5 the destroying angels leave the temple for
the city. They leave behind a temple
court defiled with dead bodies of the priest.
- Ezekiel pleads with God for mercy. But, the
purpose of this vision is to convince Ezekiel that the
people must be destroyed.
- In 9:11 the angel with the writing kit returns and
says, "I have done as you
commanded."
- This same scribe angel is told by God, who is at
the door of the temple, to go to the cheribum under
the throne/expanse on the south side of the temple and
get burning coals.
- This fire is the judgment that will be
scattered over the city.
- Ezekiel stresses that this vision of the glory of
God in Jerusalem is the same image that he had seen
with the captive exiles in Babylon by the Kebar
River.
- God is leaving Jerusalem, but is going with the
exiles into
Babylon.
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- God leaves the temple and goes to the throne
carried by the cherubim on the south side of the
temple. (10:18)
- The cherubim move with the glory of the Lord to
the east gate.
- Ezekiel is given an explanation by God from His
position by the east gate. This is chapter 11:1-21.
- At the end of chapter 11 in verse 23 God leaves
the temple and moves east of the city to the Mt.
of Olives.
- In six years the manifestation of this vision
occurs when Nebuchadnezzar's army burns the city. (586
BC)
- Ezekiel returns to the exile elders in his house
and tells them what he has seen (11:23-25).
- This vision is the subject of Ezekiel's spoken
messages in chapters
12-19
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