Ezekiel’s outcome
Perseverance of faith and identity during times of exile among nations (during the fire)
The Book of Ezekiel is an important prophetic text in the Old Testament, written by a priest turned prophet during the Babylonian exile. It emphasizes God’s justice and focuses on the repercussions of Israel’s idolatry and violations of the covenant. Ultimately, it offers a compelling promise of spiritual renewal, including a new heart, and the eventual return of God’s presence among His people.
Ezekiel’s name means ‘God strengthens.’ He composed this message on his 30th birthday, just as he was about to begin his ministry as a priest in the temple. The Book of Ezekiel was written five years after the exile, a period during which both the Jews who remained in their destroyed homeland and those forcibly taken into exile were struggling. They faced questions like: How could God turn against His children? How did we reach this point? And how can we return to our former state? During their prosperity, God’s people had fallen into a state of ignorance toward God and His acts of justice.
In answering their questions during the exile, God spoke to them through the prophet Ezekiel by means of intense prophetic activities pointing to:
- God’s Judgment on Israel
- God’s Judgment for nations
- God’s promise to restore His glory before Israel, who had rejected Him, in front of the watching nations.
The Book describes God as being everywhere, all-powerful, all-holy, and all-seeing. The message also explains the four pillars of God’s justice. Justice is the moral and philosophical concept that people receive what they deserve. It encompasses fairness, equality, and the impartial application of rules. Universally, it seeks to answer the fundamental question of what individuals are owed in terms of their rights, dignity, and treatment.