Verse 1
THE WICKED ISRAELITES SLAIN; THE FAITHFUL SPARED
This chapter continues the great theme of these four chapters by recording the first stage of the removal of God's presence (Ezekiel 9:3). Keil's divisions of the chapter are: (1) the supernatural executioners of Jerusalem are summoned (Ezekiel 9:1-3; (2) mercy is extended to the faithful (Ezekiel 9:4-7); and (3) Ezekiel's intercession cannot avail (Ezekiel 9:8-11).[1]
THE EXECUTIONERS SUMMONED
"Then he cried in mine ears with a loud voice, saying, Cause ye them that have charge over the city to draw near, every man with his destroying weapon in his hand. And, behold, six men came by way of the upper gate, which lieth toward the north, every man with his slaughter weapon in his hand; and one man in the midst of them, clothed in linen, with a writer's inkhorn by his side. And they went in and stood beside the brazen altar. And the glory of the God of Israel was gone up from the cherub, whereupon it was, to the threshold of the house: and he called to the man clothed in linen, who had the writer's inkhorn by his side."
"This chapter is closely connected with the preceding, and carries expressly the threatening of Ezekiel 8:18 into immediate action."[2]
"Cause ye them that have charge over the city ..." (Ezekiel 9:1). These words need to carry a more ominous import; and Cooke translated this sentence, "Approach, ye executioners of the city."[3]
"Six men ... and one man ..." (Ezekiel 9:2). It is ridiculous for men to suppose that there is any reference here to the pagan gods of the seven planets, or to the so-called Seven Arch-angels (there being only one archangel). "Seven is a perfect number, associated in Hebrew thought with 'completeness.'"[4] Clearly, the six men were supernatural beings, probably angels; because, in the New Testament, angels are always represented as aiding Christ in the execution of judgment. Also, the appearance of the seventh `man' with an inkhorn, his evident superiority over the six, and his having charge of marking the faithful, all suggest his identity as the pre-incarnated Christ. Feinberg noted that, "From his clothing and the nature of his work, it is to be inferred that the Chief of these six angels was the Angel of the Lord."[5] Keil disputed this, but he offered no better explanation. Furthermore, Keil admitted the superior rank of the seventh man; and that fact alone identifies him as a member of the godhead, there being no one else, as far as we know, who is any higher than the angels.
"These seven are an overwhelming embodiment of the Divine will, in the face of which humanity is helpless."[6]
No details of the actual destruction of Jerusalem are included here. None are needed. God decreed it, and it happened! Just exactly how it happened doesn't really matter.
The supernatural nature of these six made them more powerful and formidable than all of the greatest armies on earth combined into a single force.
"And stood beside the brazen altar ..." (Ezekiel 9:2). "This was the Solomonic altar (1 Kings 8:64), which Ahab had removed and placed north of his new-style Damascus altar (2 Kings 16:14)."[7] Significantly, these heavenly beings, by their actions, snubbed Ahab's copy of the pagan altar by choosing to stand by the true altar.
"And the glory of the God of Israel was gone up from the cherub, whereupon it was, to the threshold of the house ..." (Ezekiel 9:3) The departure of the glory of the Lord from Israel is part of the theme of these four chapters; and, "Ezekiel traces it in stages, this being the first."[8] The normal place for God's glory in the temple was above the mercy seat in the Holy of Holies; and in this first stage of the glory's leaving, it removed from the Holy of Holies and went to the entrance of the temple.
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