Ezekiel 4:4 - Exposition
Lie thou also upon thy left side, etc. We find the explanation of the attitude in Ezekiel 16:46 . Samaria was on the "left hand," i.e. to the north, as a man looked to the east. So the same word yamin is both "the south" ( 1 Samuel 23:19 , 1 Samuel 23:24 ; Psalms 84:12 ) and "the right hand." Here, accordingly, the "house of Israel" is taken in its specific sense, as the northern kingdom as distinguished from the "house of Judah" in Ezekiel 16:6 . Thou shalt bear their iniquity; ie; as in all similar passages ( Exodus 28:43 ; Le Exodus 5:17 ; Exodus 7:18 ; Numbers 18:1 , et al .), the punishment of their iniquity. The words so taken will help us to understand the numerical symbolism of the words that followed. The prophet was by this act to identify himself with both divisions of the nation, by representing in this strange form at once the severity and the limits of their punishment. I adopt, without any hesitation, the view that we have here the record of a fact, and not of a vision narrated. The object of the act was to startle men and make them wonder. As week after week went on this, exceptis excipiendis, was to be Ezekiel's permanent attitude, as of one crushed to the very ground, prostrate under the burden thus laid upon him, as impersonating his people.
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