The Bible Recap - Day 252 (Ezekiel 40-42) - Year 6
Episode Date: September 8, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Exodus 36-40 - Ezekiel 8:2 - Ezekiel 9:2 - P...icture: Ezekiel's Temple - John 14:6 - Graphic: Chart of Israel's and Judah's Kings and Prophets BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for The Bible Recap.
Buckle up, we've got three days of descriptions of Ezekiel's temple vision.
But guess what?
You've already got one day under your belt.
You're almost halfway through.
We made it through five chapters of blueprints for the first temple back in Exodus plus 18
more chapters of the descriptions of building and finishing it, so I'm confident we can
tackle this too.
But before we spend another minute of these three days in this text, I want to give you
a heads up.
Ezekiel 40-48 is one of the most challenging sections of Scripture in the whole Bible.
It's not as hard to read as it is to interpret. Commentators are at odds on how to view this text, and I'll explain more about that as we
continue in the passage, but I don't want to give too much away yet, so here's what we need to know
for now. God is giving this vision to Ezekiel in 573 BC, at a time when his people are in exile in
a foreign land. For God to go on for nine chapters about this temple is like Him showing up and
saying, hey, I know you've lost everything. I know the first temple was destroyed, the
one Solomon built about 350 years ago, and we're all living here in the land of our
enemies. But I want you to know without question that I've got a plan for restoration. You're
not forgotten. I'm with you. On the day Ezekiel has this vision, it's not just any day, it's
Passover. That's the day that commemorates the this vision, it's not just any day, it's Passover.
That's the day that commemorates the Israelites' exodus from Egyptian slavery.
And the Passover celebration also corresponds to our modern-day celebration of Easter,
because Jesus had gone to Jerusalem to celebrate Passover when he was crucified.
As part of Ezekiel's Passover vision, God gives him a complementary tour guide.
He kind of resembles the fiery man Ezekiel saw
back in chapter eight.
And remember how the linen man in chapter nine
brought his own tool belt for writing?
Bronze man also comes with tools.
They're both tools for measuring, a reed and a cord,
which serve kind of like a tape measure and a ruler.
Bronze man and Ezekiel go around measuring everything,
from the gates to the inner and
outer courts to the priest chambers.
Then in chapter 41, they head into the inner temple area.
Bronzeman leads Ezekiel up to the most holy place, the Holy of Holies, but Ezekiel doesn't
go inside.
Next, while he's describing the walls of the nave and the vestibule, you may have noticed
that they have cherubim carved on them, the created beings who serve as walls of the nave and the vestibule, you may have noticed that they have cherubim carved on them,
the created beings who serve as guardians of the holy places.
And maybe, like me, you wondered why they only have two faces
when Ezekiel has plainly told us about their quad-faced heads.
Not to worry, there's an explanation.
Wall surfaces are two-dimensional,
so it makes much more sense to carve two faces than four.
If these were three-dimensional
statues, not wall carvings, I'd demand the full four faces or half my money back. But since they're
wall carvings, I'll let it slide. In chapter 42, Ezekiel sees into the temple's chambers.
I know it's hard to translate cubits into feet in your head, but the measurements described in
this vision are massive, especially
compared to Temple 1.0. In fact, the temple courts are bigger than the surface of the whole temple
mount. If you want to see what this vision may have looked like, we'll link to a picture in the
show notes today. It's important to take any artist's rendering with a grain of salt, but there's
another reason you maybe shouldn't get too attached to this picture. We'll talk about that when we finish the descriptions in two days, so stay tuned.
Today's tour ends where it began, back at the Eastern Gate.
The Eastern Gate is also known as the Golden Gate and the King's Gate, and it's the
gate Jesus will come through when he returns.
We'll read about that tomorrow.
But it's also where I saw my God shot for today.
Ezekiel describes
an outer wall that runs along the perimeter of the whole massive temple complex. It's
a large wall as far as circumference is concerned, but it's not a tall wall. According to chapter
40 verse 5, it's only about 10 and a half feet high. So it's pretty clear right off
the bat that this wall isn't a defensive wall. The point of it isn't to keep people out.
According to 4220, the purpose of this wall is to be a line of demarcation between the
holy and the common.
One of the common accusations people make toward Christianity is they say it's exclusive.
But the gospel of Christ isn't exclusive, it's just specific.
It says, here is the truth. All who believe the
truth are invited in to everlasting life. The truth, the way in, the life
everlasting is Jesus. He's the only way to the Father. In John 14 6, Jesus said,
no one comes to the Father except through me. The walls aren't to keep
people out, they're to make a line of demarcation, and there's a gate right there.
If you wouldn't identify yourself as a Christian and can't figure out why you keep being drawn into these episodes
or why you spent 20 minutes today reading about dimensions but for some reason you can't stop reading and listening in,
then this is me, standing at the open door and saying, come inside, you belong on this side of the wall.
Come through the open gate, he's where the joy is.
It's weekly check-in time.
We are so close to finishing the book of Ezekiel.
I know these books of the prophets can be challenging.
So if you're a linear thinker and you'd like some help,
we've linked to a great graphic in the show notes today. We want to do all we can to help remove stumbling blocks for you here. And while we can't do it
completely or perfectly, we're always happy to give you some resources and tools that keep you
plugging along day by day. So keep plugging along. We'll see you here tomorrow.