Ezekiel 3:1-15
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| title = "Ezekiel 3:1–15" | ||||
| date = "2023-03-07" | ||||
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| 
 | ||||
| ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Ezekiel3.1-15) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| As we learned last time, the Lord expects Ezekiel to eat this scroll of | ||||
| judgement. Since this is in a vision, he probably didn't physically eat | ||||
| anything, especially as doing so allowed him to speak the words on the scroll | ||||
| to the people. However, I am a little curious what it looked and felt like to | ||||
| him. Did it shrink so he could fit it all in one bite, or did he have to chew | ||||
| it? Once he does eat it, he tells us that it tasted as sweet as honey. This is | ||||
| clearly a similar passage to Revelation 10, where John also receives a scroll | ||||
| to eat, which gives him the authority to speak prophecy to the world. John's | ||||
| scroll is also sweet in his mouth, but is bitter in his stomach. I believe the | ||||
| sweetness represents the ease with which he can speak the words. It feels good | ||||
| to obey the Lord, and though the words are of lamentation and woe, Ezekiel is | ||||
| rewarded for saying them. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Again the Lord reiterates that Ezekiel is to speak the words to Israel, his own | ||||
| people. He already knows the language and the culture, but if he was sent to a | ||||
| different people, they would listen more easily than the stubborn Israelites. | ||||
| He then makes a play on Ezekiel's name by saying that Ezekiel's face and | ||||
| forehead will be stronger and harder than Israel's. In Hebrew, Ezekiel means | ||||
| "God makes strong, hardens". Therefore, he is to be more stubborn than they in | ||||
| preaching God's word to them, whether they listen or not. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| With this, Ezekiel is dismissed, but before the vision ends, he hears the | ||||
| mighty voice of God's throne and the beings that make it up blessing God's | ||||
| glory. Get this: the sound of the wings of the living creatures brushing | ||||
| against each other formed the words, as did the sound of the wheels. God's | ||||
| glory is so majestic that incidental sounds praise Him. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Ezekiel is carried away by the Spirit back to the Chebar canal, in "bitterness | ||||
| in the heat of my spirit". That's probably the same bittereness John felt after | ||||
| he ate his scroll. He is so overwhelmed by his experience that he sits and | ||||
| processes it for seven days. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| * * * | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Worthy are You to be praised by all that You have created, in heaven, on earth, | ||||
| and under the earth. | ||||
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