Saturday, July 21, 2012
Today the Church Commemorates Ezekiel
Ezekiel, son of Buzi, was a priest, called by God to be a prophet to the exiles during the Babylonian captivity (Ez. 1:3). In 597 B.C. King Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonian army brought the king of Judah and thousands of the best citizens of Jerusalem including Ezekiel to Babylon (2 Kgs 24:816). Ezekiel's priestly background profoundly stamped his prophecy, as the holiness of God and the Temple figure prominently in his messages (for example, Ezekiel 910 and 4048). From 593 B.C. to the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in 586 B.C., Ezekiel prophesied the inevitability of divine judgment on Jerusalem, on the exiles in Babylon, and on seven nations that surrounded Israel (Ezekiel 132). Jerusalem would fall, and the exiles would not quickly return, as a just consequence of their sin. Once word reached Ezekiel that Jerusalem and the temple were destroyed, his message became one of comfort and hope. Through him God promised that his people would experience future restoration, renewal and revival in the coming Messianic kingdom (Ezekiel 3348). Much of the strange symbolism of Ezekiel's prophecies was later employed in the Revelation to St. John.
To listen to an interview of Dr. Andrew Steinmann of Concordia University-Chicago on Ezekiel the Prophet on Issues Etc, click on the Issues Etc logo below.
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