The Holy Prophet
Ezekiel lived in the sixth century before the birth of Christ. He was
born in the city of Sarir, and descended from the tribe of Levi ; he was
a priest and the son of the priest Buzi. Ezekiel was led off to Babylon
when he was twenty-five years old together with King Jechoniah II and
many other Jews during the second invasion of Jerusalem by the
Babylonian king Nebuchadnessar .
The Prophet Ezekiel lived in captivity by the
River Chebar. When he was thirty years old, he had a vision of the
future of the Hebrew nation and of all mankind. The prophet beheld a
shining cloud, with fire flashing continually, and in the midst of the
fire, gleaming bronze. He also saw four living creatures in the shape of
men, but with four faces (Ez. 1:6). Each had the face of a man in front,
the face of a lion on the right, the face of an ox on the left, and the
face of an eagle at the back (Ez. 1:10). There was a wheel on the earth
beside each creature, and the rim of each wheel was full of eyes.
Over the heads of the creatures there seemed to
be a firmament, shining like crystal. Above the firmament was the
likeness of a throne, like glittering sapphire in appearance. Above this
throne was the likeness of a human form, and around Him was a rainbow (Ez.
1:4-28).
According to the explanation of the Fathers of
the Church, the human likeness upon the sapphire throne prefigures the
Incarnation of the Son of God from the Most Holy Virgin Mary, who is the
living Throne of God. The four creatures are symbols of the four
Evangelists: a man (St Matthew), a lion (St Mark), an ox (St Luke), and
an eagle (St John); the wheel with the many eyes is meant to suggest the
sharing of light with all the nations of the earth. During this vision
the holy prophet fell down upon the ground out of fear, but the voice of
God commanded him to get up. He was told that the Lord was sending him
to preach to the nation of Israel. This was the beginning of Ezekiel's
prophetic service.
The Prophet Ezekiel announces to the people of
Israel, held captive in Baylon, the tribulations it would face for not
remaining faithful to God. The prophet also proclaimed a better time for
his fellow-countrymen, and he predicted their return from Babylon, and
the restoration of the Jerusalem Temple.
There are two significant elements in the
vision of the prophet: the vision of the temple of the Lord, full of
glory (Ez. 44:1-10); and the bones in the valley, to which the Spirit of
God gave new life (Ez. 37:1-14). The vision of the temple was a
mysterious prefiguring of the race of man freed from the working of the
Enemy and the building up of the Church of Christ through the redemptive
act of the Son of God, incarnate of the Most Holy Theotokos. Ezekiel's
description of the shut gate of the sanctuary, through which the Lord
God would enter (Ez. 44: 2), is a prophecy of the Virgin giving birth to
Christ, yet remaining a virgin. The vision of the dry bones prefigured
the universal resurrection of the dead, and the new eternal life
bestowed by the Lord Jesus Christ.
The holy Prophet Ezekiel received from the Lord
the gift of wonderworking. He, like the Prophet Moses, divided the
waters of the river Chebar, and the Hebrews crossed to the opposite
shore, escaping the pursuing Chaldeans. During a time of famine the
prophet asked God for an increase of food for the hungry.
Ezekiel was condemned to execution because he
denounced a certain Hebrew prince for idolatry. Bound to wild horses, he
was torn to pieces. Pious Hebrews gathered up the torn body of the
prophet and buried it upon Maur Field, in the tomb of Sim and Arthaxad,
forefathers of Abraham, not far from Baghdad. The prophecy of Ezekiel is
found in the book named for him, and is included in the Old Testament.
St Demetrius of Rostov (October 28 and
September 21) explains to believers the following concepts in the book
of the Prophet Ezekiel: if a righteous man turns from righteousness to
sin, he shall die for his sin, and his righteousness will not be
remembered. If a sinner repents, and keeps God's commandments, he will
not die. His former sins will not be held against him, because now he
follows the path of righteousness (Ez. 3:20; 18:21-24).