Ezekiel 40:28-49

This commit is contained in:
Lyle Mantooth 2023-07-03 09:31:10 -04:00
parent ba8e6de4b8
commit 175f1f1d7b
Signed by: IslandUsurper
GPG key ID: 6DB52EAE123A5789

View file

@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
+++
title = "Ezekiel 40:2849"
date = "2023-07-03"
+++
### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Ezekiel40.28-49)
With the outer court measured and mapped out, the survey vision moves to the
inner court of the temple. Like the outer court, the inner court has three
gateways with steps to a higher level on the north, east, and south sides.
Since the measurements of these gates are not explicitly given, I take it to
mean "the same size as the others" refer to the outer gateways. One difference
from the outer court is mentioned: eight steps up to the temple instead of
seven.
Just inside the inner court's northern vestibule is a room for the preparation
of animal sacrifices. The animals would be handed off to the priests in the
outer court, which was as far as the lay people were allowed to go. After being
led up the eight steps, the animals would be laid on the stone tables,
slaughtered, skinned, and butchered according to the manner of sacrifice being
made. The hooks were for draining the blood, which was collected to sprinkle on
the altar and to make the meat suitable for eating.
On the either side of the inner court are chambers for the priests to provide
service for the temple and the altar. The Lord gives an injunction that only
the descendants of Zadok, who was high priest during Solomon's reign, may serve
here. More on this in chapter 44 when reasons for this restriction are given.
The altar for burnt offerings sits in front of the temple in the inner court,
and two pillars sit beside the door jambs of the building. These pillars are
likely to be recreations of Jachin and Boaz, the bronze pillars set up in front
of Solomon's temple. (_1 Kings 7_) The temple was even higher than the inner
court, with a vestibule containing ten steps.
* * *
You create an orderly universe, and You provide security and stability through
structrue.