Ezekiel 8:11 - Exposition
Seventy men , etc. The number was probably chosen with reference to the "elders" who had seen the Divine glory in Exodus 24:9 , Exodus 24:10 . The Sanhedrin, or council of seventy, did not exist till after the Captivity. The number can scarcely have been accidental, and may imply that the elders were formally representative. Another Jaazaniah, the son of Jeremiah, appears in Jeremiah 35:3 ; yet another, the son of Azur, in Ezekiel 11:1 . If the Shaphan mentioned is the scribe, the son of Azaliah, under Josiah ( 2 Kings 22:3 ), the father of Ahikam ( 2 Kings 22:12 ), of Elasah ( Jeremiah 29:3 ), and of Gemariah ( Jeremiah 36:10 , Jeremiah 36:11 , Jeremiah 36:12 ), and the grandfather of Gedaliah ( Jeremiah 39:14 , et al. ) , all of whom were prominent in the reform movement under Josiah, or as friends of Jeremiah, and no other Shaphan appears in history, the fact that one of his sons is the leader of the idolatrous company must have had for Ezekiel a specially painful significance. He could scarcely have forgotten the meaning of his name, "The Lord is listening," and probably refers to it in verse 12. As the climax of this chamber of horrors, the seventy elders were all acting as priests, and were offering to their pictured idols the incense which none but the sons of Aaron had a right to use, and which they offered to Jehovah only.
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