Chapter 47:
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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 47
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. The vision of the holy waters, their
rise, extent, depth, and healing virtue, the plenty of fish in them, and an
account of the trees growing on the banks of them (v. 1-12). II. An
appointment of the borders of the land of Canaan, which was to be divided by lot
to the tribes of Israel and the strangers that sojourned among them (v. 13-23).
Verses 1-12
This part of Ezekiel's vision must so necessarily have a
mystical and spiritual meaning that thence we conclude the other parts of his
vision have a mystical and spiritual meaning also; for it cannot be applied to
the waters brought by pipes into the temple for the washing of the sacrifices,
the keeping of the temple clean, and the carrying off of those waters, for that
would be to turn this pleasant river into a sink or common sewer. That prophecy,
Zec. 14:8, may explain it, of
living waters that shall
go out from
Jerusalem,
half of them towards the former sea and half of them towards the
hinder sea. And there is plainly a reference to this in St. John's vision
of a
pure river of water of life, Rev. 22:1. That seems to represent the
glory and joy which are grace perfected. This seems to represent the grace and
joy which are glory begun. Most interpreters agree that these waters signify the
gospel of Christ, which went forth from Jerusalem, and spread itself into the
countries about, and the gifts and powers of the Holy Ghost which accompanied
it, and by virtue of which it spread far and produced strange and blessed
effects. Ezekiel had walked round the house again and again, and yet did not
till now take notice of those waters; for God makes known his mind and will to
his people, not all at once, but by degrees. Now observe,
I. The rise of these waters. He is not put to trace the streams
to the fountain, but has the fountain-head first discovered to him (v. 1):
Waters
issued out from the threshold of the house eastward, and from
under the
right side of the house, that is, the south side of
the alter. And
again (v. 2),
There ran out waters on the right side, signifying that
from
Zion should go forth the law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem, Isa.
2:3. There it was that the Spirit was poured out upon the apostles, and endued
them with the gift of tongues, that they might carry these waters to all
nations. In the temple first they were to stand and
preach the words of this
life, Acts 5:20. They must preach the gospel to all nations, but must
begin
at Jerusalem, Lu. 24:47. But that is not all: Christ is the temple; he is
the door; from him those living waters flow, out of his pierced side. It is the
water that he gives us that is
the well of water which springs up, Jn.
4:14. And it is by believing in him that we receive from him
rivers of living
water; and
this spoke he of the Spirit, Jn. 7:38, 39. The original of
these waters was not above-ground, but they sprang up from under the threshold;
for the fountain of a believer's life is a mystery; it is
hid with Christ
in God, Col. 3:3. Some observe that they came forth
on the right side of
the house to intimate that gospel-blessings are right-hand blessings. It is
also an encouragement to those who attend at Wisdom's gates, at the posts of
her doors, who are willing to lie at the threshold of God's house, as David
was, that they lie at the fountainhead of comfort and grace; the very entrance
into God's word gives light and life, Ps. 119:130. David speaks it to the
praise of Zion,
All my springs are in thee, Ps. 87:7. They came
from
the side of the altar, for it is in and by Jesus Christ, the great altar
(who
sanctifies our gifts to God), that God has
blessed us with
spiritual blessings in holy heavenly places. From God as the fountain, in
him as the channel, flows the river which
makes glad the city of our God, the
holy place of the tabernacles of the Most High, Ps. 46:4. But observe how
much the blessedness and joy of glorified saints in heaven exceed those of the
best and happiest saints on earth; here the streams of our comfort arise
from
under the threshold; there they proceed
from the throne the throne
of
God and of the Lamb, Rev. 22:1.
II. The progress and increase of these waters: They
went
forth eastward (v. 3),
towards the east country (v. 8), for so they
were directed. The prophet and his guide followed the stream as it ran down from
the holy mountains, and when they had followed it about
a thousand cubits
they went over across it, to try the depth of it, and it was
to the ankles,
v. 3. Then they walked along on the bank of the river on the other side, a
thousand cubits more, and then, to try the depth of it, they waded through it
the second time, and it was up to
their knees, v. 4. They walked along by
it a thousand cubits more, and then forded it the third time, and then it was up
to their middle
the waters were to the loins. They then walked a
thousand cubits further, and attempted to repass it the fourth time, but found
it impracticable:
The waters had risen, by the addition either of brooks
that fell into it above ground or by springs under ground, so that they were
waters
to swim in, a river that could not be passed over, v. 5. Note, 1. The waters
of the sanctuary are running waters, as those of a river, not standing waters,
as those of a pond. The gospel, when it was first preached, was still spreading
further. Grace in the soul is still pressing forward; it is an active principle,
plus ultraonward still, till it comes to perfection. 2. They are
increasing waters. This river, as it runs constantly, so the further it goes the
fuller it grows. The gospel-church was very small in its beginnings, like a
little purling brook; but by degrees it came to be
to the ankles, to the
knees: many were added to it daily, and the
grain of mustard seed
grew up to be a
great tree. The gifts of the Spirit increase by being
exercised, and grace, where it is true, is growing, like the light of the
morning, which
shines more and more to the perfect day. 3. It is good for
us to follow these waters, and go along with them. Observe the progress of the
gospel in the world; observe the process of the work of grace in the heart;
attend the motions of the blessed Spirit, and walk after them, under a divine
guidance, as Ezekiel here did. 4. It is good to be often searching into the
things of God, and trying the depth of them, not only to look on the surface of
those waters, but to go to the bottom of them as far as we can, to be often
digging, often diving, into the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, as those who
covet to be intimately acquainted with those things. 5. If we search into the
things of God, we shall find some things very plain and easy to be understood,
as the waters that were but to the ankles, others more difficult, and which
require a deeper search, as the water to the knees or the loins, and some quite
beyond our reach, which we cannot penetrate into, or account for, but,
despairing to find the bottom, must, as St. Paul, sit down at the brink, and
adore the
depth, Rom. 11:33. It has been often said that in the
scripture, like these waters of the sanctuary, there are some places so shallow
that a lamb may wade through them, and others so deep that an elephant may swim
in them. And it is our wisdom, as the prophet here, to begin with that which is
most easy, and get our hearts washed with those things before we proceed to that
which is
dark and hard to be understood; it is good to take our work
before us.
III. The extent of this river:
It issues towards the east
country, but thence it either divide itself into several streams or fetches
a compass, so that it
goes down into the desert, and so
goes into the
sea, either into the
dead sea, which lay
south-east, or the
sea of Tiberias, which lay
north-east, or the great sea, which lay
west,
v. 8. This was accomplished when the gospel was preached with success throughout
all the regions of Judea and Samaria (Acts 8:1), and afterwards the nations
about, nay, and those that lay most emote, even in the isles of the sea, were
enlightened and leavened by it. The sound of it went forth
to the end of the
world; and the enemies of it could no more prevail to stop the progress of
it than that of a mighty river.
IV. The healing virtue of this river. The waters of the
sanctuary, wherever they come and have a free course, will be found a wonderful
restorative. Being
brought forth into the sea, the sulphureous lake of
Sodom, that standing monument of divine vengeance, even those
waters shall be
healed (v. 8), shall become sweet, and pleasant, and healthful. This
intimates the wonderful and blessed change that the gospel would make,
wheresoever it came in its power, a a great change, in respect both of character
and condition, as the turning of the dead sea into a fountain of gardens. When
children of wrath became children of love, and those that were dead in
trespasses an sins were made alive, then this was fulfilled. The gospel was as
that salt which Elisha cast into the spring of the waters of Jericho, with which
he
healed them, 2 Ki. 2:20, 21. Christ, coming into the world to be its
physician, sent his gospel as the great medicine, the
panpharmacon; there
is in it a remedy for every malady. Nay, wherever these rivers come, they
make
things to live (v. 9), both plants and animals; they are the
water of
life, Rev. 22:1, 17. Christ came,
that we might have life and for
that end he sends his gospel.
Every thing shall live whither the river comes.
The grace of God makes dead sinners alive and living saints lively; everything
is made fruitful and flourishing by it. But its effect is according as it is
received, and as the mind is prepared and disposed to receive it; for (v. 11)
with respect to the marshes and
miry places thereof, that are settled in
the mire of their own sinfulness, and will not be healed, or settled in the
moisture of their own righteousness, and think they need no healing, their doom
is,
They shall not be healed; the same gospel which to others is a savour
of life unto life shall to them be a savour of death unto death;
they shall
be given to salt, to perpetual barrenness, Deu. 29:23. Those that will not
be watered with the grace of God, and made fruitful, shall be abandoned to their
own hearts' lusts, and left for ever unfruitful.
He that is filthy, let him
be filthy still. Never fruit grow on thee more for ever. They shall be given
to
salt, that is, to be monuments of divine justice, as Lot's wife that
was turned into a
pillar of salt, to season others.
V. The great plenty of fish that should be in this river.
Everything living moving thing shall be found here, shall
live here (v.
9), shall come on and prosper, shall be the best of the kind, and shall increase
greatly; so that there shall be a
very great multitude of fish, according to
their kinds, as the fish of the great sea, exceedingly many. There shall be
as great plenty of the river fish, and as vast shoals of them, as there is of
salt-water fish, v. 10. There shall be no great numbers of Christians in the
church, and those multiplying like fishes in the rising generations and
the
dew of their youth. In the creation the
waters brought forth the fish
abundantly (Gen. 1:20, 21), and they still live in and by the waters that
produced them; so believers are
begotten by the word of truth (James
1:18), and
born by it (1 Pt. 1:23), that river of God; by it they live,
from it they have their maintenance and subsistence; in the waters of the
sanctuary they are as in their element, out of them they are as fish
upon dry
ground; so David was when he thirsted and panted for God, for the living
God. Where the fish are known to be in abundance, thither will the fishers
flock, and there they will
cast their nets; and therefore, to intimate
the replenishing of these waters and their being made every way useful, it is
here foretold that the fishers shall stand upon the banks of this river, from
En-gedi,
which lies on the border of the dead sea, to
En-eglaim, another city,
which joins to that sea, and all along shall
spread their nets. The dead
sea, which before was shunned as noisome and noxious, shall be frequented.
Gospel-grace makes those persons and places which were unprofitable and good for
nothing to become serviceable to God and man.
VI. The trees that were on the banks of this river
many
trees on the one side and on the other (v. 7), which made the prospect very
pleasant and agreeable to the eye; the shelter of these trees also would be a
convenience to the fishery. But that is not all (v. 12); they
are trees for
meat, and the
fruit of them shall not be consumed, for it shall
produce fresh fruit
every month. The
leaf shall be
for
medicine, and it
shall not fade, This part of the vision is copied
out into St. John's vision very exactly (Rev. 22:2), where, on either side of
the river, is said to grow the
tree of life, which
yielded her fruit
every month, and
the leaves were for the healing of the nations.
Christians are supposed to be these trees, ministers especially,
trees of
righteousness, the planting of the Lord (Isa. 61:3), set by
the rivers of
water, the waters of the sanctuary (Ps. 1:3), grafted into Christ the tree
of life, and by virtue of their union with him made trees of life too,
rooted
in him, Col. 2:7. There is a great variety of these trees, through the diversity
of gifts with which they are endued by that
one Spirit who works all in all.
They grow
on the bank of the river, or they keep close to holy
ordinances, and through them derive from Christ sap and virtue. They are
fruit-trees,
designed, as the fig tree and the olive, with their fruits to
honour God and
man, Jdg. 9:9.
The fruit thereof shall be for meat, for the
lips
of the righteous feed many. The fruits of their righteousness are one way or
other beneficial. The very leaves of these trees
are for medicine, for
bruises
and sores,
margin. Good Christians with their good discourses, which are
as their leaves, as well as with their charitable actions, which are as their
fruits, do good to those about them; they
strengthen the weak, and bind
up the broken-hearted. Their cheerfulness
does good like a medicine, not
only to themselves, but to others also. They shall be enabled by the grace of
God to persevere in their goodness and usefulness; their
leaf shall not fade,
or lose its medicinal virtue, having not only life in their root, but sap in all
their branches; their profession
shall not wither (Ps. 1:3),
neither
shall the fruit thereof be consumed; that is, they shall not lose the
principle of their fruitfulness, but
shall still bring forth fruit in old
age, to
show that the Lord is upright (Ps. 92:14, 15), or the reward
of their fruitfulness shall abide for ever; they bring forth fruit that shall
abound to their account in the great day,
fruit to life eternal; that is
indeed
fruit which shall not be consumed. They bring
new fruit
according to their months, some in one month and others in another: so that
still there shall be one or other found to serve the glory of God for the
purpose he designs. Or each one of them shall bring forth fruit monthly, which
denotes an abundant disposition to fruit-bearing (they shall never be weary of
well-doing), and a very happy climate, such that there shall be a perpetual
spring and summer. And the reason of this extraordinary fruitfulness is
because
their waters issued out of the sanctuary; it is not to be ascribed to any
thing in themselves, but to the continual supplies of divine grace, with which
they are
watered every moment (Isa. 27:3); for, whoever planted them, it
was that which
gave the increase.
Verses 13-23
We are now to pass from the affairs of the sanctuary to those of
the state, from the city to the country. 1. The Land of Canaan is here secured
to them for an inheritance (v. 14):
I lifted up my hand to give it unto your
fathers, that is, promised it upon oath to them and their posterity. Though
the possession had been a great while discontinued, yet God had not forgotten
his oath which he swore to their fathers. Though God's providences may for a
time seem to contradict his promises, yet the promise will certainly take place
at last, for God will be
ever mindful of his covenant. I lifted up my hand to
give it, and therefore it shall without fail
fall to you for an
inheritance. Thus the heavenly Canaan is sure to all the seed, because it is
what
God, who cannot lie, has promised. 2. It is here circumscribed, and
the bounds and limits of it are fixed, which they must not pass over to encroach
upon their neighbours and which their neighbours shall not break through to
encroach upon them. We had such a draught of the borders of Canaan when Joshua
was to put the people in possession of it, Num. 34:1, etc. That begins with the
salt sea in the south, goes round and ends there. This begins with Hamath about
Damascus in the north, and so goes round and ends there, v. 20. Note, It is God
that
appoints the bounds of our habitation; and his Israel shall always
have cause to say that
the lines have fallen to them in pleasant places.
The lake of Sodom is here called
the east sea, for it, being healed by
the waters of the sanctuary, it is no more to be called a
salt sea, as it
was in Numbers. 3. It is here ordered to be divided among the tribes of Israel,
reckoning Joseph for two tribes, to make up the number of twelve, when Levi was
taken out to attend the sanctuary, and had his lot adjoining to that (v. 13,
21):
You shall inherit it, one as well as another, v. 14. The tribes
shall have an equal share, one as much as another. As the tribes returned out of
Babylon, this seems unequal, because some tribes were much more numerous than
the other, and indeed the most were of Judah and Benjamin and very few of the
other ten tribes; but as the twelve tribes stand, in type and vision, for the
gospel-church, the Israel of God, it was very equal, because we find in another
vision an equal number of each of the twelve tribes
sealed for the
living
God, just 12,000 of each, Rev. 7:5, etc. And to those sealed ones these
allotments did belong. It intimates likewise that all the subjects of Christ's
kingdom have
obtained like precious faith. Male and female, Jew and
Gentile, bond and free, are all alike welcome to Christ and made partakers of
him. 4. The strangers who sojourn among them,
who shall beget children
and be built up into families, and so help to people their country,
shall
have inheritance among the tribes, as if they had been native Israelites (v.
22, 23), which was by no means allowed in Joshua's division of the land. This
is an act for a general naturalization, which would teach the Jews who was their
neighbour, not those only of their own nation and religion, but those, whoever
they were, that they had an opportunity of showing kindness to, because from
them they would be willing to receive kindness. It would likewise invite
strangers to come and settle among them, and put themselves under the wings of
the divine Majesty. But it certainly looks at gospel-times, when the
partition-wall between Jew and Gentile was taken down, and both one in Christ,
in whom
there is no difference, Rom. 10:12. This land was a type of the
heavenly Canaan, that
better country (Heb. 11:16), in which believing
Gentiles shall have a blessed lot, as well as believing Jews, Isa. 56:3.
Chapter 47:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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
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