Chapter 43:
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| Geneva
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| Jamieson Faussett Brown
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Lamentations Daniel
Ezekiel 43
Complete Concise
The prophet, having given us a view of the mystical temple, the
gospel-church, as he received it from the Lord, that it might appear not to be
erected in vain, comes to describe, in this and the next chapter, the worship
that should be performed in it, but under the type of the Old-Testament
services. In this chapter we have, I. Possession taken of this temple, by the
glory of God filling it (v. 1-6). II. A promise given of the continuance of God's
presence with his people upon condition of their return to, and continuance in,
the instituted way of worship, and their abandoning idols and idolatry (v. 7-12).
III. A description of the altar of burnt-offerings (v. 13-17). IV. Directions
given for the consecration of that altar (v. 18-27). Ezekiel seems here to
stand between God and Israel, as Moses the servant of the Lord did when the
sanctuary was first set up.
Verses 1-6
After Ezekiel has patiently surveyed the temple of God, the
greatest glory of this earth, he is admitted to a higher form, and honoured with
a sight of the glories of the upper world; it is said to him,
Come up hither.
He has seen the temple, and sees it to be very spacious and splendid; but, till
the glory of God comes into it, it is but like the dead bodies he had seen in
vision (ch. 37), that had
no breath till the Spirit of life entered into
them. Here therefore he sees the house filled with God's glory.
I. He has a vision of
the glory of God (v. 2),
the
glory of the God of Israel, that God who is in covenant with Israel, and
whom they serve and worship. The idols of the heathen have no glory but what
they owe to the goldsmith or the painter; but this is the glory of the God of
Israel. This glory
came from the way of the east, and therefore he was
brought to the
gate that leads towards the east, to expect the appearance
and approach of it. Christ's
star was seen in the east, and he is that
other
angel that ascends out of the east, Rev. 7:2. For he is the morning star, he
is the sun of righteousness. Two things he observed in this appearance of the
glory of God:1. The power of his word which he heard:
His voice was like a
noise of many waters, which is heard very far, and makes impressions; the
noise of purling streams is grateful, of a roaring sea dreadful, Rev. 1:15;
14:2. Christ's gospel, in the glory of which he shines, was to be proclaimed
aloud, the report of it to be heard far; to some it is a savour of life, to
others of death, according as they are. 2. The brightness of his appearance
which he saw:
The earth shone with his glory; for God is light, and none
can bear the lustre of his light, none
has seen nor
can see it.
Note, That glory of God which shines in the church shines on the world. When God
appeared for David
the brightness that was before him dispersed the
clouds, Ps. 18:12. This appearance of the glory of God to Ezekiel he observed to
be the same with the vision he saw when he first received his commission (ch.
1:4),
according to that by the river Chebar (v. 3); because God is the
same, he was pleased to manifest himself in the same manner, for with him is
no
variableness. "It was the same" (says he) "as that which I
saw
when I came to destroy the city, that is, to foretel the city's
destruction," which he did with such authority and efficacy, and the event
did so certainly answer the prediction, that he might be said to destroy it. As
a judge, in God's name, he passed a sentence upon it, which was soon executed.
God appeared in the same manner when he sent him to speak words of terror and
when he sent him to speak words of comfort; for in both God is and will be
glorified.
He kills and he makes alive; he
wounds and he heals,
Deu. 32:39. To the same hand that destroyed we must look for deliverance.
He
has smitten, and he will bind up. Una eademque manus vulnus opemque tulitThe
same hand inflicted the wound and healed it.
II. He has a vision of the entrance of this glory into the
temple. When he saw this glory he
fell upon his face (v. 3), as not
able
to bear the lustre of God's glory, or rather as one willing to give him the
glory of it by a humble and reverent adoration. But the Spirit
took him up
(v. 5) when the
glory of the Lord had
come into the house (v. 4),
that he might see how the house was filled with it. He saw how the glory of the
Lord in this same appearance departed from the temple, because it was profaned,
to his great grief; now he shall see it return to the temple to his great
satisfaction. See ch. 10:18, 19; 11:23. Note, Though God may forsake his people
for a small moment, he will return with everlasting loving-kindness. God's
glory
filled the house as it had filled the tabernacle which Moses set up
and the temple of Solomon, Ex. 40:34; 1 Ki. 8:10. Now we do not find that ever
the Shechinah did in that manner take possession of the second temple, and
therefore this was to have its accomplishment in that glory of the divine grace
which shines so brightly in the gospel church, and fills it. Here is no mention
of a cloud filling the house as formerly, for we now
with open face behold
the glory of the Lord, in the face of Christ, and not as of old through the
cloud of types.
III. He receives instructions more immediately from the glory of
the Lord, as Moses did when God had taken possession of the tabernacle (Lev.
1:1):
I heard him speaking to me out of the house, v. 6. God's glory
shining in the church, we must thence expect to receive divine oracles.
The
man stood by me; we could not bear to hear the voice of God any more than to
see the face of God if Jesus Christ did not stand by us as Mediator. Or, if this
was a created angel, it is observable that when God began to speak to Ezekiel he
stood by and gave way, having no more to say. Nay, he stood by the prophet, as a
learner with him; for
to the principalities and powers, to the angels
themselves, who
desire to look into these things,
is known by the
church the manifold wisdom of God, Eph. 3:10. The man stood by him to
conduct him thither where he might receive further discoveries, ch. 44:1.
Verses 7-12
God does here, in effect, renew his covenant with his people
Israel, upon his retaking possession of the house, and Ezekiel negotiates the
matter, as Moses formerly. This would be of great use to the captives at their
return both for direction and encouragement; but it looks further, to those that
are blessed with the privileges of the gospel-temple, that they may understand
how they are before him on their good behaviour.
I. God, by the prophet, puts them in mind of their former
provocations, for which they had long lain under the tokens of his displeasure.
This conviction is spoken to them to make way for the comforts designed them.
Though God
gives and upbraids not, it becomes us, when he forgives, to
upbraid ourselves with our unworthy conduct towards him. Let them now remember
therefore, 1. That they had formerly
defiled God's holy name, had
profaned and abused all those sacred things by which he had made himself known
among them, v. 7.
They and their kings had brought contempt on the
religion they professed, and their relation to God, by their spiritual whoredom,
their idolatry, and by worshipping images, which they called
their kings
(for so
Moloch signifies) or lords (for so
Baal signifies), but
which were really the
carcases of kings, not only lifeless and useless,
but loathsome and abominable as dead carcases,
in their high places, set
up in honour of them. They had defiled God's name by their abominations. And
what were they? It was
in setting their threshold by my thresholds, and their
post by my posts, that is, adding their own inventions to God's
institutions, and urging all to a compliance with them, as if they had been of
equal authority and efficacy,
teaching for doctrines the commandments of men
(Isa. 29:13); or, rather, setting up altars to their idols even in the courts of
the temple, than which a more impudent affront could not be put upon the divine
Majesty. Thus they set up a separation
wall between him and them, which
stopped the current of his favours to them and spoiled the acceptableness of
their services to him. See what an indignity sinners do to God, setting up their
walls in opposition to his, and thrusting him out from what is his right; and
see what injury they do to themselves, for the nearer any come to God with their
sins the further they set him at a distance from them. Some give this sense of
it: Though their houses joined close to God's house, their posts and
thresholds to hi, so that they were in a manner his next neighbours,
there
was but a wall between me and them (so it is in the margin), so that it
might have been expected they would acquaint themselves with him and be in care
to please him, yet they were not so much as neighbourly. Note, It often proves
too true,
The nearer the church the further from God. They were, by
profession, in covenant with God, and yet they had
defiled the place of his
throne and of
the soles of his feet, his temple, where he did both
reside and reign. Jerusalem is called the
city of the great king (Ps.
48:2) and his
footstool, Ps. 99:5; 132:7. Note, When God's ordinances
are profaned his holy name is polluted. 2. That for this God had had a
controversy with them in their late troubles. They could not condemn him, for he
had but brought upon them the desert of their sins:
Wherefore I have consumed
them in my anger. Note, Those that pollute God's holy name fall under his
just displeasure.
II. He calls upon them to repent and reform, and, in order to
that, to be ashamed of their iniquities (v. 9):
"Now let them put away
their whoredom; now that they have smarted so severely for it, and now that
God is returning in mercy to them and setting up his sanctuary again in the
midst of them, now let them cast away their idols and have no more to do with
them, that they may not again forfeit the privileges which they have been taught
to know the worth of by the want of them. Let them put away their idols, those
loathsome
carcases of their kings, far from me, from being a provocation
to me." This was seasonable counsel now that the prophet had the model or
pattern of the temple to set before them; for, 1. If
they see that pattern,
they will surely be ashamed of their sins (v. 10): when they see what mercy God
has in store for them, notwithstanding their utter unworthiness of it, they will
be ashamed to think of their disingenuous conduct towards him. Note, The
goodness of God to us should lead us to repentance, especially to a penitential
shame. Let
them measure the pattern themselves, and see how much it
exceeds the former pattern, and guess by that what great things God has in store
for them; and surely it will put them out of countenance to think what the
desert of their sins was. And then, 2. If
they be ashamed of their sins,
they shall surely see more of the pattern, v. 11. If they
be ashamed of all
that they have done, upon a general view of the goodness of God, let them
have a more distinct particular account of the temple. Note, Those that improve
what they see and know of the goodness of God shall see and know more of it. And
then, and not till then, we are qualified for God's favours, when we are truly
humbled for our own follies.
"Show them the form of the house; let
them see what a stately structure it will be; and withal show them the
ordinances and laws of it." Note, With the foresights of our comforts it is
fit that we should get the knowledge of our duty; with the privileges of God's
house we must acquaint ourselves with the rules of it.
Show them these
ordinances, that they may
keep them and
do them. Note,
Therefore
we are made to know our duty, that we may do it, and be blessed in our deed.
III. He promises that they shall be such as they should be, and
then he will be to them such as they would have him to be, v. 7. 1. The house of
Israel shall no more defile my holy name. This is pure gospel. The
precept of the law says, You must not defile my name: the grace of the gospel
says, You shall not. Thus what is required in the covenant is promised in the
covenant, Jer. 32:40. 2. Then
I will dwell in the midst of them for ever;
and the same again v. 9. God secures to us his good-will be confirming in us his
good work. If we do not defile his name, we may be sure that he will not depart
from us.
IV. The general law of God's house is laid down (v. 12), That,
whereas formerly only the chancel, or sanctuary, was
most holy, now the
whole
mountain of the house shall be so; the
whole limit thereof,
including all the courts and all the chambers, shall be as the most holy place,
signifying that in gospel-times, 1. The whole church shall have the privilege of
the
holy of holies, that of a near access to God. All believers have now,
under the gospel,
boldness to enter into the holiest (Heb. 10:19), with
this advantage, that whereas the high priest entered in the virtue of the blood
of bulls and goats, we enter in the virtue of the blood of Jesus, and, wherever
we are, we have through him
access to the Father. 2. The whole church
shall be under a mighty obligation to press towards the perfection of holiness,
as
he who has called us is holy. All must now be most holy.
Holiness becomes
God's house for ever, and in gospel-times more than ever. Behold this is
the
law of the house; let none expect the protection of it that will not
submit to this law.
Verses 13-27
This relates to the altar in this mystical temple, and that is
mystical too; for Christ is our altar. The Jews, after their return out of
captivity, had an altar long before they had a temple, Ezra 3:3. But this was an
altar in the temple. Now here we have,
I. The measures of the altar, v. 13. It was six yards square at
the top and seven yards square at the bottom; it was four yards and a half high;
it had a lower bench or shelf, here called a
settle, a yard from the
ground, on which some of the priests stood to minister, and another two yards
above that, on which others of them stood, and these were each of them half a
yard broad, and had ledges on either side, that they might stand firmly upon
them. The sacrifices were killed at the table spoken of before, ch. 40:39. What
was to be burnt on the altar was given up to those on the lower bench, and
handed by them to those on the higher, and they laid it on the altar. Thus in
the service of God we must be assistant to one another.
II. The ordinances of the altar. Directions are here given, 1.
Concerning the dedication of the altar at first.
Seven days were to be
spent in the dedication of it, and every day sacrifices were to be offered upon
it, and particularly a goat for a
sin-offering (v. 25), besides a young
bullock for a
sin-offering on the first day (v. 19), which teaches us in
all our religious services to have an eye to Christ the great sin-offering.
Neither our persons nor our performances can be acceptable to God unless sin be
taken away, and that cannot be taken away but by the blood of Christ, which both
sanctifies the altar (for Christ entered by his own blood, Heb. 9:12) and the
gift upon the altar. There were also to be a
bullock and a ram offered
for a
burnt-offering (v. 24), which was intended purely for the glory of
God, to teach us to have an eye to that in all our services; we present
ourselves as living sacrifices, and our devotions as spiritual sacrifices, that
we and they may be to him for a name, and for a praise, and for a glory. The
dedication of the altar is here called the
cleansing and
purging
of it, v. 20, 26. Christ, our altar, though he had no pollution to be cleansed
from, yet sanctified himself (Jn. 17:19); and when we consecrate the altars of
our hearts to God, to have the fire of holy love always burning upon them, we
must see that they be purified and cleansed from the love of the world and the
lusts of the flesh. It is observable that there are several differences between
the rites of dedication here and those which were appointed Ex. 29, to intimate
that the ceremonial institutions were mutable things, and the changes in them
were earnests of their period in Christ. Only here, according to the general
law, that all the sacrifices must be seasoned with salt (Lev. 2:13), particular
orders are given (v. 24) that the priests shall
cast salt upon the
sacrifices. Grace is the
salt with which all our religious
performances must be seasoned, Col. 4:6. An everlasting covenant is called a
covenant
of salt, because it is incorruptible. The
glory reserved for us is
incorruptible and undefiled; and the
grace wrought in us is the hidden
man of the heart in that
which is not corruptible. 2. Concerning the
constant use that should be made of it, when it was dedicated:
Henceforward
the priests shall
make their burnt-offerings and peace-offerings upon this
altar (v. 27), for
therefore it was
sanctified, that it might
sanctify
the gift that was offered upon it. Observe further, (1.) Who were to serve
at the altar: The
priests of the seed of Zadok, v. 19. That family was
substituted in the room of Abiathar by Solomon, and God confirms it. His name
signifies
righteous, for they are the righteous seed that are priests to
God, through Christ
the Lord our righteousness. (2.) How they should
prepare for this service (v. 26):
They shall consecrate themselves, shall
fill their hand with the offerings, in token of the giving up of
themselves with their offerings to God and to his service. Note, Before we
minister to the Lord in holy things we must consecrate ourselves by getting our
hands and hearts filled with those things. (3.) How they should speed in it (v.
27):
I will accept you. And if God now accept our works, if our services
be pleasing to him, it is enough, we need no more. Those that give themselves to
God shall be accepted of God, their persons first and then their performances,
through the Mediator.
Chapter 43:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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