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Ezekiel 4:1-17 - Model City as a Sign of Doom

Summary

Ezekiel builds a model of Jerusalem and acts out symbolic plays as a sign of doom from the Lord.

Analysis

This is the first of a series of symbolic one-man dramas, in which Ezekiel acts out the future destruction of Jerusalem and the exile. His audience, the Jews in exile, was still tied by family and feelings to their home city. These enacted parables were arresting ways of communicating God's word of doom and judgment upon Jerusalem. They function as "a sign for the house of Israel" (4:3). These enacted signs are not unique to Ezekiel; Isaiah walked naked and barefoot through Jerusalem for three years (Isaiah 20:3)!

In the first of these prophetic signs or acts, Ezekiel builds a model of the city from clay, a kind of toy Jerusalem, and lays siege to it. In the second enacted parable, the prophet bears the guilty burden of Judah and Israel, one day for every year of their sin. For much of the day (but surely not all or he could not eat-see below) he lies only on his left side for 390 days (for Israel and Judah, from David to the exile), and then only on his right side for forty days (the years of the exile?). During the forty days, Ezekiel also prophesied against the model of Jerusalem.

During the 390 days for Israel and Judah, Ezekiel eats a very limited diet (half a pound of food and two-thirds of a quart of water), symbolizing famine, destruction, and exile. This shows not only the destruction of the city and the temple, but the exile as well: "Thus shall the people of Israel eat their bread, unclean, among the nations to which I will drive them" (4:13). God shows some pity for the prophet, however, allowing him to use cattle dung for fuel (a common practice even today in some places) instead of human excrement as originally commanded (4:15).

AUTHOR: Alan Padgett, Professor of Systematic Theology

Passages

Ezekiel 1:4-28
Vision of the Glory of the Lord
Ezekiel 2:1-3:3
The Call of the Prophet and the Scroll
Ezekiel 3:16-21
The Prophet as a Watchman
Ezekiel 4:1-17
Model City as a Sign of Doom
Ezekiel 6:8-10
Some Are Spared Destruction
Ezekiel 7:26-27
Doom Will Fall upon All of Society
Ezekiel 10:15-19
The Glory of the Lord Departs from the Temple
Ezekiel 11:14-20
God’s Promise of Restoration
Ezekiel 11:22-25
The Glory of the Lord Departs from Jerusalem
Ezekiel 16:1-63
Israel, the Unfaithful Wife
Ezekiel 18:1-32
Individual Repentance and Responsibility
Ezekiel 23:1-49
Samaria and Jerusalem, Two Wanton Sisters
Ezekiel 28:11-19
Lament over the King of Tyre or Fall of Satan?
Ezekiel 33:1-20
The Parable of the Watchman
Ezekiel 36:16-38
New Heart, New Spirit
Ezekiel 37:1-14
Valley of Dry Bones
Ezekiel 38:1-39:29
The Lord Destroys Gog, the Enemy of God’s People
Ezekiel 40-48
“The Lord Is There”: Israel Perfected and Blessed