diff --git a/content/bible_journal/ezekiel_4:1-17.md b/content/bible_journal/ezekiel_4:1-17.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..21b7c4d --- /dev/null +++ b/content/bible_journal/ezekiel_4:1-17.md @@ -0,0 +1,60 @@ ++++ +title = "Ezekiel 4:1–17" +date = "2023-03-10" ++++ + +### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Ezekiel4.1-17) + +At last, Ezekiel gets the first word that he is to speak to the people on the +Lord's behalf. Like many prophets before him, he is to perform some symbolic +actions that represent what will happen in the future. This one is pretty +elaborate, though. He is to build a model for the siege of Jerusalem, complete +with camps, a wall, and battering rams arranged around it. In addition, he was +to take an iron griddle and place it on edge between himself and the city. This +iron wall is meant to represent the barrier God will erect between Himself and +His people. Sieges are terrible events, so there will normally be lots of +people in Jerusalem praying for deliverance. But this wall will prevent God +from hearing those prayers—because He put it there—so that the destruction of +the city will be complete. + +After these preparations are complete, Ezekiel is given the task of lying down +next to this diorama to bear the punishment of the houses of Israel and Judah. +Israel will be punished for 390 years, so Ezekiel will lie on his left side 390 +days. Judah will be punisheed for 40 years, so he will lie on his right side +for 40 days. "Days" here cannot mean the whole 24-hour period, continuously, +because Ezekiel is also commanded to make bread and eat it in the following +verses. Instead, each day there was a period of time where he would be lying +down on his side, and the Lord would make it so that he couldn't turn from side +to side while he lay there. + +If that wasn't hard enough, Ezekiel is put on siege rations for the duration of +this mock siege. There's a product called Ezekiel Bread that purports to be +healthier than normal bread because it follows a "Biblical recipe", but any +benefits it does or doesn't have are completely unrelated to this passage. +That's the danger of taking things out of context. Just because something is in +the Bible doesn't mean it's something we're supposed to do. Just think of all +the passages that describe how people sinned and failed to follow the Lord's +instruction! I also doubt they use manure as the oven fuel at the Ezekiel Bread +factory. + +The Mosaic Law was meant to emphasized purity and making a distinction between +God's people and the rest of the nations. Clothing was not made of blended +threads, fields were sown with one kind of crop, and so on. When God commands +Ezekiel to make bread out of 6 different grains and legumes, He isn't giving a +general recommendation. I don't believe this is specifically prohibited in the +Law, but the idea of it runs counter to its general themes. Instead, it is to +represent the desperation of the people under siege. Sieges work by inducing +starvation in a populace. As supplies dwindle, you start getting creative with +meals, and so a loaf of bread might be made with the last of _all_ your types +of flour at once. + +The amount that Ezekiel would eat of this bread was tiny: twenty shekels works +out to 220 grams or 8 ounces. His water was also constrained: a hin was about a +gallon (3.5 liters) so a sixth of that is a bit over 2 cups or 0.6 liters. A +man may be able to survive on that for over a year, maybe if each meal was that +amount. But again, the point of this deprivation is to show how the people of +Jerusalem are going to be judged. It is severe and sobering. + +* * * + +You are a just judge, bringing punishment upon the heads of the wicked.