Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: June 2nd (Ezekiel 7 & Acts 8:26-40)
Episode Date: June 1, 2021The watchman sounds the alarm. Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supportin...g this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Ezekiel chapter 7
The word of the Lord came to me, and you, O son of man, thus says the Lord God to the land of Israel.
An end, the end has come upon the four corners of the land.
Now the end is upon you, and I will send my anger upon you.
I will judge you according to your ways, and I will punish you for all your abominations.
And my eye will not spare you, nor will I have pity, but I will punish you for your ways,
while your abominations are in your midst.
Then you will know that I am the Lord.
Thus there's the Lord God, disaster after disaster.
Behold it comes.
An end has come.
The end has come.
It has awakened against you.
Behold it comes.
Your doom has come to you,
O inhabitant of the land.
The time has come.
The day is near.
A day of tumult,
a knot of joyful shouting on the mountains.
Now I will soon pour out my wrath upon you
and spend my anger against you, and judge you according to your ways, and I will punish you for all your
abominations, and my eye will not spare, nor will I have pity. I will punish you according to your
ways, while your abominations are in your midst. Then you will know that I am the Lord who strikes.
Behold the day, behold it comes, your doom has come, the rod has blossomed, pride has budded,
violence has grown up into a rod of wickedness. None of them shall remain, nor their abundance, nor their wealth, neither shall there be preeminence among them. The time has come, the day has arrived, let not the buyer rejoice, nor the cellar mourn, for wrath is upon all their multitude, for the seller shall not return to what he has sold while they live, for the vision concerns all their multitude, it shall not turn back, and because of his iniquity, none can maintain his
life. They have blown the trumpet and made everything ready, but none goes to battle, for my wrath
is upon all their multitude. The sword is without, pestilence and famine are within. He who is in the
field dies by the sword, and him who is in the city, famine and pestilence devour. And if any
survivors escape, they will be on the mountains, like dubs of the valleys, all of them moaning,
each one over his iniquity. All hands are feeble, and all knees turn to water. And all the
They put on sackcloth and horror covers them.
Shame is on all faces and boldness on all their heads.
They cast their silver into the streets,
and their gold is like an unclean thing.
Their silver and gold are not able to deliver them
in the day of the wrath of the Lord.
They cannot satisfy their hunger or fill their stomachs with it,
for it was the stumbling block of their iniquity.
His beautiful ornament they used for pride,
and they made their abominable images
and their detestable things of it.
Therefore I make it an unclean thing to them,
and I will give it into the hands of foreigners for prey,
and to the wicked of the earth for spoil,
and they shall profane it.
I will turn my face from them,
and they shall profane my treasured place.
Robbers shall enter and profane it.
Forge a chain, for the land is full of bloody crimes,
and the city is full of violence.
I will bring the worst of the nations to take possession of their houses.
I will put an end to the land,
the pride of the strong, and their holy places shall be profaned. When anguish comes, they will seek
peace, but there shall be none. Disaster comes upon disaster. Rumour follows rumor. They seek a vision
from the prophet, while the Lord perishes from the priest, and counsel from the elders. The king mourns,
the prince is wrapped in despair, and the hands of the people of the land are paralysed by terror.
According to their way I will do to them, and according to their judgments, I will judge them. I will judge
and they shall know that I am the Lord.
Ezekiel chapter 7 is a new oracle beginning with the familiar formula,
The word of the Lord came to me.
The previous chapter had addressed the mountains and the land of Israel,
and this chapter continues to address them.
Ezekiel had been established as a watchman for the House of Israel back in chapter 3.
In this chapter he is called to sound the alarm.
Daniel Block subdivides the oracle into three sections,
verses 2 to 4, 5 to 9, and 10 to 27.
The first two sections, which have significant similarities to each other,
are marked off in the beginning by, thus says the Lord God,
and all three of the sections conclude with what commentators term a recognition formula.
Then you will know that I am the Lord.
The Lord is demonstrating his character through his judgment upon his people.
As commentators note, this is a difficult oracle, presenting many conundrums,
for the translator and interpreter.
Moshe Greenberg recognizes in the second half of the passage
in verses 12 to 18 and 19 to 27
two rounds of scenes of the end awaiting the land and its people,
arguing that much as there are large-scale parallels
between verses 2 to 4 and 5 to 9 in the first half,
strong connections exist between these two parts of the second half of the chapter.
He writes,
it is evident that the second round of the scenes of the end,
not only corresponds to the first, but heightens and specifies it.
This is especially clear in the particularization of sin, cultic and civil,
of the cruel punishments and of the detail of institutional collapse.
The second half of the chapter also elaborates the first,
Block describing it as an intentional exposition of the two-fold alarm sounds in verses two to nine.
The chapter speaks of a coming day of the Lord.
The Day of the Lord is a common theme in the prophets,
the day of the Lord is the event in which the Lord will act decisively in history to establish his justice.
It's the day of salvation and deliverance, but also the day of reckoning and vengeance.
The people seem to have popularly associated the day with positive themes,
but Amos and other prophets paint a far more forbidding portrait of the awaited day.
Amos chapter 5 verses 18 to 20.
Woe to you who desire the day of the Lord.
Why would you have the day of the Lord?
It is darkness and not light,
as if a man fled from a lion and a bear met him,
or went into the house and leaned his hand against the wall,
and a serpent bit him.
He is not the day of the Lord darkness and not light,
and gloom with no brightness in it.
Zephani also speaks in a similar manner of the Day of the Lord
in chapter 1, verse 14 to 16 of his prophecy.
The great day of the Lord is near,
near and hastening fast. The sound of the day of the Lord is bitter. The mighty man cries aloud there.
A day of wrath is that day. A day of distress and anguish. A day of ruin and devastation.
A day of darkness and clouds and thick darkness. A day of trumpet blast and battle cry.
Against the fortified cities and against the lofty battlements.
On the expected day of the Lord, the lights would go out all over Judah. The land and its people,
engulfed in the darkness of uttered destruction and desolation.
The exiles in Babylon would live through all of this horrific history from a distance.
Ezekiel, the watchman, high on the sentry tower, receives the word of the Lord,
the day of reckoning is at hand, the day of the full measure of the Lord's judgment.
It will be comprehensive and conclusive, an end coming upon the four corners of the land.
Whether people are ready or not, it has arrived, the day when the punishment for all of their sins would
come upon them. They had been warned on numerous occasions by earlier prophets, even yet Jeremiah was
among them, offering them the smallest glimmer of hope of escaping with their lives if they would
submit to the Lord's word. The disaster about to befall them should not have been a surprise,
nor could it be claimed that it was excessive. The judgment was only according to the measure of
their sins. Versus five to nine repeat and develop this warning. The watchman's warning trumpet
is sounded once more, but louder.
One of several difficult words and verses in the chapter,
the term that the ESV, with many commentators,
translates as doom in verse 7,
a term found elsewhere in Isaiah chapter 28 verse 5
in reference to a diadem,
might, according to Blark,
here refer to a chain or a leash
by which the Israelites would be led off captive to Babylon.
The judgment about to come would not be tempered by pity,
but would be utterly devastating.
The third cycle of warning opens with a staccato series of alarms in verses 10 to 12.
Verse 10 is especially difficult to interpret, possibly depending upon a figure of speech that is lost to history.
Greenberg observes the fact that its elements are reminiscent of the story of Aaron's rod in Numbers Chapter 17.
He suggests that it might function as a grim parody of election.
The rod might refer to the rod of the Lord's judgment through a foreign nation.
the references to blossoming and budding, making clear that the time was ripe for their destruction.
Alternatively, pointed differently, the vowels of Biblical Hebrew were later added as markings around a text that was originally just consonants.
The word here might refer not to a rod but to perverted justice.
Their sins had reached the full measure, and now they faced the consequent devastation.
Verse 11 is also textually obscure, but its point might be that they would be stripped of everything,
wealth, plenty, and status. The familiar triad of famine, pestilence and sword are set loose upon the people.
The city is the realm of famine and pestilence with the sword apportioned to those without.
Economic activity would cease. The economy would vanish.
Land that former owners were hoping would return to their families would be lost entirely.
No class of persons would escape the general devastation.
The people are paralysed by fear. The knees turned to water and,
in verse 17 might be a reference to them wetting themselves. The watchman's trumpets blow in vain.
The stoutest hearts are seized by terror. People crumple in the face of the onslaught. The few
abject survivors are scattered abroad upon the mountains. Greenberg argues for a parallel between
verses 12 to 18 and 19 to 27, with the latter heightening and specifying the former, what he describes
as the futility of commerce in the first round of the scenes of the end in verses 12 to 13 corresponds
with the futility of wealth in verse 19 the impending war disasters and refugees in verses 14 to 16
with the invasion desecration and spoilation in verses 21 to 24 interspersed references to divine
anger and the people's sin in verses 12 13 14 and 16 correspond with those in verses 19 20 20
22 and 23, and what he terms the general appalement of verses 17 to 18, with all classes being
paralysed in verses 25, 27. Blocks suggests that more than the collapse of the economy is in view in
verse 19. Rather, it's a condemnation of the materialism of the people. Their souls are being
required of them by the Lord's judgment, their enlarged barns are now utterly worthless to them.
Their silver and gold won't buy them freedom from the besieging army.
They can't eat it in the famine.
That which they once rested all of their confidence upon is now powerless to help them.
The beautiful ornament of verse 20 is probably a reference to the temple and its treasures,
the crowning jewel of the city of Jerusalem, the sanctuary of the Lord,
which they had repeatedly defiled with their idolatry.
In Jeremiah chapter 7 we also see that the people treated the temple itself in an idolatrous fashion,
fetishizing and putting their hope in the temple rather than trusting in the Lord.
This great house of the Lord would be utterly profaned and dispoiled by the Babylonians.
They would strip it of its treasures and destroy it.
The place the Lord had treasured is given into the hands of a wrecking crew.
The people themselves, the treacherous bride, would be taken away by a chain
and their possessions given into the hands of strangers.
In the coming disaster, they would flail around for something to grasp hold of,
yet no peace or escape would be afforded them.
It would be one merciless blow after another.
The Lord would be silent in their distress.
The prophet would have no vision.
The priest would no longer be able to bring the clarity of the law to bear,
and the elders would be dumbstruck.
The king, the nobles and officials,
and the citizens would all despair as their sins came upon their heads.
A question to consider.
How might the Lord's terrible judgment against the people's materialism
in verse 19, speak into our own day.
Acts chapter 8, verse 26 to 40.
Now an angel of the Lord said to Philip,
rise and go toward the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.
This is a desert place.
And he rose and went.
And there was an Ethiopian, a eunuch,
a court official of Candace,
queen of the Ethiopians, who was in charge of all her treasure.
He had come to Jerusalem to worship,
and was returning, seated in his chariote.
and he was reading the prophet Isaiah.
And the spirit said to Philip,
Go over and join this chariot.
So Philip brand to him and heard him reading Isaiah the prophet and asked,
Do you understand what you are reading?
And he said, how can I, unless someone guides me?
And he invited Philip to come up and sit with him.
Now the passage of the scripture that he was reading was this.
Like a sheep he was led to the slaughter,
and like a lamb before its shearer is silent,
so he opens not his mouth.
In his humiliation, justice was denied him.
Who can describe his generation, for his life is taken away from the earth?
And the eunuch said to Philip,
About whom I ask you, does the prophet say this?
About himself or about someone else?
Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning with this scripture,
he told him the good news about Jesus.
And as they were going along the road, they came to some water,
and the eunuch said,
See, here is water, what prevents me from being baptized?
and he commanded the chariot to stop, and they both went down into the water, Philip and the eunuch,
and he baptized him. And when they came up out of the water, the spirit of the Lord carried Philip away,
and the eunuch saw him no more, and went on his way rejoicing. But Philip found himself
at Zotus, and as he passed through, he preached the gospel to all the towns until he came to Cesaria.
To this point in the book of Acts, the second half of chapter 8, we have seen the
conversion of various groups of persons. The next few stories, however, focus upon three key
individuals, the Ethiopian eunuch, Saul of Tarsus, and Cornelius and Caesarea. The story of the
Ethiopian eunuch, the second story that focuses upon the character of Philip, is a journey
narrative, like that of Saul after it, and like the story of the two travellers on the road to
Emmaus at the end of Luke's gospel. Later, in Acts chapter 21, verses 8 to 10, we will discover that
Luke stayed for some time with Philip. Presumably during this period Philip informed him of the
events recorded in this chapter. An angel of the Lord directs Philip to go to the south to a road
that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza. Being directed here by the angel of the Lord, and in a few
verses time by the Spirit of the Lord, we see that God is the one in charge of this mission. This is
not a mission that's primarily directed by the apostles. It is directed by God himself, who is
sending the messengers where they really ought to go. On the road he meets an Ethiopian, a eunuch,
who's a court official of the queen. While some have suggested that he might just have been a high-ranking
official, it's almost certain that he was an actual literal eunuch. Because they had no natural heirs,
eunuchs could be of value to courts, as their personal legacy was entirely invested in the health
and the continuance of the dynasty, the loyalties of such men could be more certain than those
who had children of their own. Unix were sometimes used to guard the Harim, whereas other
eunuchs like this were high-ranking officials who performed important state tasks. This eunuch
is in charge of the Queen's treasure. He has come to Jerusalem to worship, which suggests that he is
at the very least a godfeer, perhaps he's some sort of proselyte, others have raised the possibility
that he might have been a diaspora Jew. One way or another, he has a prior attachment to
the worship of God. It's important to remember that when we read of Converaliener,
versions in the Book of Acts, many of them are conversions not from unbelief to believe,
but from old covenant and the status that belonged to someone within that order, to new covenant
and a new status. The eunuch is a very effective illustration of this particular movement,
someone who would have enjoyed little to no status within the old covenant order,
now being marked out as a full member of the people of God. The eunuch would have been restricted
in a number of ways, first of all, as a Gentile or God-fearer, when he went to the
temple he would at most have been able to come in to the court of the Gentiles. Then we read in
Deuteronry chapter 23 verse 1, no one whose testicles are crushed or whose male organ is cut off
shall enter the assembly of the Lord. The spirit directs Philip to go over to the Ethiopian eunuch's
chariot. There Philip hears him reading Isaiah the prophet. While modern readers are accustomed to read
text silently, ancient readers almost invariably read aloud, all while muttering the words
under their breath. We should bear this in mind, as we so often read the scripture without any
regard for the ear and its place in receiving the word. There are certain things that the ear will
hear in texts, the eyes cannot see. The story here is similar to ones that we have read before,
particularly to the story of Emmaus. There's a stranger meeting someone returning from Jerusalem on their
way. They enter into conversation. They speak to a lack of understanding. They teach them the
scriptures beginning with some part in particular. As we go further, we'll see that there are
greater similarities binding together these two stories, similarities that might help us better
understand the message that they have for us. The fact that the Ethiopian eunuch has a copy of
Visiah probably indicates both his personal wealth and his interest in the Old Testament scriptures
as a Gentile God-fehrer or proselyte.
As the travellers of Amayas invited Jesus in to share a meal with them,
so the Ethiopian eunuch invites Philip into his chariot.
The passage he is reading is Isaiah 53,
a text that was of importance for the early church
as a testimony to Christ as the suffering servant.
However, this particular scripture might have had a resonance
for the Ethiopian eunuch beyond its regular readers.
Peter Lightheart observes,
When Philip meets him, the eunuch is in a day of his,
at place, a setting that mimics the barrenness of his own body, yet his reading gives him hope.
Though the suffering servant of Isaiah 53 is cut off from the land of the living, Isaiah chapter 53
verse 8, he will see his offspring.
Verse 10, the suffering servant is a kind of eunuch, but a fruitful one, as his suffering
issues in fruitfulness for Zion, the barren woman who becomes a joyful mother of children.
Chapter 54 verse 1.
Anyone reading the book of Isaiah beyond this point would also discover a reference to the eunuch
that would have been an immediate source of promise to someone like this Ethiopian.
It speaks directly to two aspects of his experience and his existence,
to the fact that he is a foreigner and to the fact that he is a eunuch.
Isaiah chapter 56 verses 3 to 8.
Let not the foreigner who has joined himself to the Lord say,
The Lord will surely separate me from his people.
and let not the eunuchs say,
Behold I am a dry tree.
For thus says the Lord, to the eunuchs
who keep my Sabbaths, who choose
the things that please me and hold fast
my covenant, I will give in my
house, and within my walls,
a monument and a name better than
sons and daughters. I will give them
an everlasting name that shall not be cut off.
And the foreigners who join themselves to the Lord,
to minister to him, to love the name of the
Lord, and to be his servants,
everyone who keeps the Sabbath and does not
profane it and holds fast my covenant. These I will bring to my holy mountain and make them joyful in my
house of prayer. Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be accepted on my altar, for my house
shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples. The Lord God who gathers the outcasts of Israel,
declares, I will gather yet others to him besides those already gathered. The eunuch then receives
a promise that he will have an everlasting name that shall not be cut off. The eunuch, then,
Unuch by virtue of the fact that he could not have children would presume himself to be cut off,
his name would die with him. Yet in this word of prophecy, there is a promise of a way in which his
name need not be cut off. Through the work of the suffering servant, one who himself was cut off,
cut off from the land of the living itself, yet one who nonetheless saw his offspring and gave
fruitfulness to others, he might receive a sort of fruitfulness and re-inclusion himself.
The spirit is clearly working on both sides of this interaction.
He's brought Philip to the Ethiopian eunuch, but he's also brought the Ethiopian eunuch to these particular texts, to reflect upon those, and then to invite Philip into his chariot.
The spirit is a sort of matchmaker, one who's doing the work of forming the kingdom of Christ, beyond the walls of the church, beyond the purview of the church.
He's bringing life in the wilderness to people that the church has not yet encountered, so that when the church in people like Philip encounters people like this Ethiopian unit,
they will discover that the Spirit has already been working there.
Having been provided his text by the work of the Spirit,
Philip is well able to speak of the Gospel and to explain the meaning of Christ from this text.
And like Jesus teaching the disciples on the road to Amaius,
taking this as his starting point he goes all the way through to explain what Christ means.
As they're passing through this wilderness, they encounter some water and the eunuch's response is to ask for baptism.
In certain translations there is a verse 4.
following this, in verse 37, a verse that almost certainly does not belong in the text,
but is a later inclusion. Nevertheless, it likely witnesses to widespread early Christian
understandings of baptism. The charities stopped, they both go down into the water, and Philip
baptizes him. While they're both going down into the water suggests that this was something
more than a sprinkling, it should not be taken as certain evidence of immersion. It could, for instance,
if involved pouring the water upon the Ethiopian Munich, while he was standing in the water,
to his waist. Such a formal baptism would capture different aspects of the symbolism of baptism.
Baptism symbolically draws upon waters from above and waters from below. The waters from below are the
waters associated with death, the waters from which we are delivered, that we pass through,
and the waters from above are the waters of God's heavenly blessing, most particularly the water
of the spirit poured out. Were there these two different dimensions of baptism, it might also
help us better to explain how the church's later practice of baptism could involve either full
submersion or the pouring out of water or the sprinkling of it from above. Both of these forms then
would be running with one particular aspect of the symbolism of the water, either the water from
above or the water from below, whereas both forms could be included in a single right. The story of
the Ethiopian eunuch might also remind us for other stories, a high court official who comes in a chariot
who is then washed in water.
It's the story of Elisha and Naaman the Syrian.
There might also be some sort of reversal of the story of the Exodus.
Here a Jewish man on foot is pursuing a descendant of Ham in the chariot.
This is the reversal of the story of the Exodus,
where the Egyptians, descendants of Ham,
pursued the Israelites who were travelling on foot in their chariots.
And whereas Pharaoh and his men were submerged in the water of the Red Sea,
here the Ethiopian unit goes down into the water
is washed, comes up, and is cleansed. In a reversal of the story of the Egyptians, this man is
delivered through the waters. As they come up from the water, the spirit of the Lord carries Philip away.
It seems to be an instantaneous thing. He has instantaneously moved away from that place and snatched up
and placed somewhere else. We read of similar events in the context of Elijah and also in the book of
Ezekiel. Phillips disappearing from the sight of the eunuch immediately after the baptism is completed,
might remind us of something. It should remind us of the story of Amos once again.
Luke chapter 24 verses 30 to 31. When he was at table with them, he took the bread and blessed it and broke it
and gave it to them, and their eyes were opened, and they recognized him, and he vanished from their sight.
In the story of Amaius, in the story of the Ethiopian eunuch, and later in the story of Paul,
we have three examples of an encounter with Christ in speech or in the words of scripture.
In all of these occasions it is followed by an administration of the sacrament. Christ breaks the bread and is revealed in that act of breaking bread. Here it is in the act of baptism, and then later on in the story of Saul, it is baptism once more.
The story ends with Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch both going their own ways. The eunuch continues on his way back home rejoicing.
According to Christian tradition, he became the father of the Ethiopian church, a very powerful fulfillment of the prophecy.
Zybaziah, his name is not cut off, he has many sons and daughters, even though a eunuch.
Philip, for his part, finds himself to Zotus, the former site of Astard, and then he preaches
all the way up to Caesarea. A question to consider, what lessons might we learn from
Luke's three journey narratives about the proper form and purpose of Christian worship?
