From the web site, Prophet as Artist (http://www.prophetasartist.com)
Here is Lawrence Boadt’s commentary on Ezekiel
40-48….
These [chapters] are written in a prose style
that may be from a disciple of Ezekiel but certainly follow the master’s thought.
Once the people have returned to the covenant, made possible by God’s power
alone and not by their own good will, then he shall give the land its order—a
new temple at the center of a renewed nation in which everyone has his or her
place. At the center of this vision, parallel to the new heart in the first
part of the plan, are life-giving waters that flow from the temple to touch
every living thing in the land (Ez 47:1-12). The source of hope and prosperity
will be God alone truly worshiped. [Does any of this remind you of the book of
Revelation?]
Ezekiel’s importance should not be
underestimated. Many modern writers give the impression that he was more
interested in legal questions than in the true spirit of the covenant. But this
is not true. He shared many of the ideals of Jeremiah and was profoundly
influenced by oracles and sermons that came from Jeremiah; but Ezekiel, unlike
Jeremiah, was in exile and lived on to speak to a people who had no chance to
escape the punishment. He had to face the task of picking up the pieces. His
answer was to show that Israel’s entire history had been a failure to heed the
everyday living out of the covenant. Israel’s political history had shown how
often the chosen people had fallen into injustice and idolatry while claiming
devotion to kingly rule and possession of the land. A new way had to be found
now that these had been lost, a better way to that the violations and failures
would not happen again.
Ezekiel found a key for understanding the new
covenant to be written on the hearts of the people in its interior-ness. No longer was religion to be a matter of what the
community did externally, but was to be really from the heart. Ezekiel stressed
the roles of the Sabbath as a day of rest, reflective meditation on the
covenant, personal uprightness, purity, and holiness. The temple and the land
would have a place only when people acknowledged that “the Lord is God.” They
first must take on the spirit of the
covenant, and for that prayer and study would be more important than
bloodlines. God would no longer accept people because they were born
Israelites; now they must decide for God in order to live (see chapter 18).
Ezekiel’s new vision was priestly insofar as it
stressed the union of the moral demands of the covenant with personal devotion
to the daily practices of worship in the temple. His program had an important
effect on the Priestly school’s arrangement of the Pentateuch which placed the
law on Mount Sinai at its center point. In more than one way, Ezekiel was the last
of the great prophets and the first of the new priestly visionaries that would
create modern Judaism as we know it today.
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