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												Verse 1Ezekiel 8:1. And it came to pass 
												in the sixth year — Namely, of 
												Jehoiachin’s captivity. In the 
												sixth month — The LXX. read, in 
												the fifth month. As I sat in my 
												house, and the elders of Judah — 
												Men of note for their age or 
												authority, or the chief of those 
												who had been made captives with 
												Jehoiachin, sat before me — 
												Having come, probably, to 
												inquire of the Lord concerning 
												their present state of affairs, 
												what the issue would be; or what 
												would become of their brethren 
												who remained in Judea and 
												Jerusalem. It must be observed, 
												“that in Ezekiel 4:4-6, the 
												prophet is commanded to lie on 
												his left side three hundred and 
												ninety days, and on his right 
												side forty days; to which must 
												be added the seven days 
												mentioned Ezekiel 3:15. But the 
												interval between this vision, 
												and Ezekiel 1:1, is only one 
												year and two months, or four 
												hundred and twenty days, 
												reckoning thirty days in a 
												month. It would seem, therefore, 
												that this revelation was made to 
												the prophet during his typical 
												siege. ‘But Vignoles, 5. 2:447, 
												thinks, that the year was a 
												lunar one, with an intercalation 
												of thirty days.’ — Secker. And, 
												according to Michaelis, the 
												Jews, and in general the people 
												of Asia, were used to lunar 
												years of three hundred and 
												fifty-four days. Add to them two 
												months, or fifty-nine days, and 
												you have four hundred and 
												thirteen days. A whole month was 
												intercalated from time to time 
												into the lunar year, to make it 
												agree with the harvest year. Add 
												twenty-nine days, and you have 
												four hundred and forty-two 
												days.” — Newcome.
 
 
 Verse 2
 Ezekiel 8:2. I beheld, and lo a 
												likeness — Namely, of a man; the 
												man whom he had seen upon the 
												throne; as the appearance of 
												fire — This seems to have been 
												the same appearance as that 
												mentioned before, Ezekiel 1:27, 
												signifying that God was about to 
												inflict heavy judgments on the 
												Jewish nation, but so as not 
												entirely to destroy it. It is 
												probable, while those who are 
												here called the elders of Judah 
												were sitting before the prophet 
												with silence and attention, 
												waiting for an answer to some 
												inquiries they had made of him, 
												as God’s prophet, concerning 
												what was to be the future 
												condition of the Jewish nation, 
												that Ezekiel was on a sudden 
												seized with an ecstasy, and had 
												the things he gives an account 
												of in the following verses 
												presented before his eyes; or 
												such a strong impression of them 
												made upon his mind, that it 
												seemed to him as if he actually 
												saw them.
 
 Verses 3-6
 Ezekiel 8:3-6. And he put forth 
												the form of a hand — He appeared 
												so to do. This, and all that 
												follows, to the end of Ezekiel 
												8:16, was done in vision only, 
												as appears from the expression 
												here used: and brought me in the 
												visions of God, &c. — In a 
												similar manner, it was 
												represented to the Prophet 
												Elisha’s mind, (2 Kings 5:26,) 
												what Gehazi was doing when he 
												took the presents from Naaman, 
												which the prophet there calls 
												being present with Gehazi. To 
												Jerusalem, to the door of the 
												inner gate — To the entrance 
												that goes into the inner court, 
												called the court of the priests, 
												where the altar of 
												burnt-offerings stood; where was 
												the seat of the image of 
												jealousy — “An image set up 
												within the precincts of the 
												temple, to provoke God to 
												jealousy, by setting up a rival 
												against him in the place 
												dedicated to his own worship.” 
												This was most probably an image 
												of Baal, for that, we find, was 
												the idol they chiefly 
												worshipped. As it was 
												exceedingly provoking to God to 
												set up another object of worship 
												besides him; so it was still 
												more so to do this in the place 
												which had been built for, and 
												was dedicated to, his worship 
												only. To speak in the figurative 
												sense in which God is spoken of, 
												with regard to the Jewish 
												nation, namely, as being a 
												husband to it, it was just the 
												same as if the adulterer were 
												brought into the house of the 
												husband whom he had injured, in 
												his very sight; therefore it is 
												very properly called here, the 
												image of jealousy, or that 
												exciteth jealousy. That I should 
												go far off from my sanctuary — 
												Which are provocations 
												sufficient to cause me to 
												forsake my sanctuary, and 
												deliver it up to be profaned by 
												the heathen, Ezekiel 7:21-22. 
												This is significantly 
												represented by the departing of 
												the divine glory from the 
												threshold of the temple, Ezekiel 
												10:18.
 
 Verses 7-11
 Ezekiel 8:7-11. And he brought 
												me to the door of the court — 
												This, Dr. Lightfoot understands 
												of the east gate of the inner 
												court, called the gate of 
												Nicanor, over which was the 
												council chamber, where the 
												sanhedrim used to meet, and in 
												some of the rooms near it they 
												secretly practised idolatry, as 
												God discovered to the prophet, 
												Ezekiel 8:11. Behold a hole in 
												the wall — Through which I could 
												look in, and see what 
												abominations were committing 
												there. Then he said, Dig now in 
												the wall — This, and what 
												follows, was done only by 
												vision, during the prophet’s 
												trance or ecstasy, while the 
												elders sat before him. And when 
												I had digged in the wall, behold 
												a door — A private door, by 
												which the elders entered into 
												the chambers of their imagery, 
												to perform idolatrous worship to 
												the images. And he said unto me, 
												Go in, &c. — To give me the 
												fullest conviction, I not only 
												looked through the hole, 
												mentioned Ezekiel 8:7, but went 
												into the very room where these 
												idolatries were committed. 
												Behold the abominations that 
												they do here — Hebrew, are doing 
												here: even under the approach of 
												judgments, and under the walls 
												of my temple. So I went in, and 
												behold every form of creeping 
												things — It is probable that 
												they imitated the Egyptians in 
												this kind of idolatry; for the 
												Egyptians used to worship 
												several kinds of beasts and 
												reptiles. According to Diodorus 
												Siculus, 50. 1. p. 59, edit. 
												Wess., (referred to by Secker,) 
												“round the room in Thebes, where 
												the body of King Osymanduas 
												seemed to be buried, a multitude 
												of chambers were built, which 
												had elegant paintings of all the 
												beasts sacred in Egypt.” It is 
												not unlikely they imagined they 
												evaded the law against setting 
												up any image to worship, by 
												having them only portrayed, or 
												painted, on the wall; or, at 
												least, that it was not so great 
												an offence; for the Jewish 
												people in general seem to have 
												had little regard to any thing 
												but the strict letter of the 
												law, not regarding the spirit of 
												it. However, as to objects for 
												worship, pictures were 
												prohibited, as well as carved 
												images, as appears from Numbers 
												33:52. And there stood before 
												them seventy men of the 
												ancients, &c. — Heads of the 
												tribes or families, or, at 
												least, principal men, (according 
												to the number of the sanhedrim,) 
												who ought to have been examples 
												of true religion, not 
												ringleaders in idolatry. By this 
												the prophet was given to see, 
												that it was not the vulgar, or 
												the poor and ignorant only that 
												were guilty of idolatry, but the 
												leading men of the nation, and 
												those of the greatest knowledge, 
												power, and influence, who were 
												superior to, and had the 
												direction of the common people; 
												so that it was properly a 
												national guilt, and, as such, 
												loudly called for national 
												punishment. And in the midst of 
												them stood Jaazaniah — Probably 
												a prince of the people; the son 
												of Shaphan — Mentioned 2 Kings 
												22:9. Shaphan was forward in 
												reforming under Josiah, and his 
												son is as forward in corrupting 
												the worship of God.
 
 
 Verse 12
 Ezekiel 8:12. Hast thou seen 
												what the ancients do in the dark 
												— Do secretly; every man in the 
												chambers of his imagery — 
												Chambers so very private, that 
												the prophet is described as 
												obliged to dig a hole through 
												the wall before he could 
												discover their idolatrous 
												practices. For they say, The 
												Lord seeth us not — They either 
												deny the being and providence of 
												God, (Ezekiel 9:9,) or they say 
												in their hearts, God hath cast 
												us off, and withdrawn his wonted 
												protection from us. They seem to 
												have been of the same mind with 
												Ahaz, who resolved to worship 
												the gods of the Syrians, his 
												conquerors, 2 Chronicles 28:23. 
												So these men worshipped the 
												idols of their neighbours, whom 
												they saw to be more prosperous 
												than themselves. Observe here, 
												reader, a practical disbelief of 
												God’s omniscience and 
												superintending providence is one 
												chief cause of men’s treacherous 
												departures from him. The Lord 
												hath forsaken the earth — Looks 
												not after the affairs of it, and 
												therefore we had as well worship 
												any other god as him. Or, he 
												hath forsaken our land, and left 
												it to be a prey to its enemies, 
												and therefore it is time for us 
												to look out to some other god to 
												whom to commit the protection of 
												it. This was a blasphemous 
												reflection upon God, as if he 
												had forsaken them first, 
												otherwise they would not have 
												forsaken him. Those are indeed 
												ripe for ruin who are arrived to 
												such a pitch of impudence as to 
												lay the blame of their sins on 
												God himself.
 
 Verse 14
 Ezekiel 8:14. Then he brought me 
												to the door which was toward the 
												north — Dr. Lightfoot 
												distinguishes this door from 
												that mentioned Ezekiel 8:5; 
												this, he says, was the upper 
												north gate, and that the lower; 
												this being just over against the 
												temple itself; whereas that was 
												opposite the altar. Behold, 
												there sat women weeping for 
												Tammuz — “The prophet here 
												refers to a Phœnician or Syrian 
												superstition. Tammuz was an idol 
												of Chaldee extraction, as is 
												plain from his name; which also 
												is used for the tenth month, 
												reckoning from the autumnal 
												equinox, that is, the month of 
												June; and Tammuz, as the object 
												of worship, expresses the solar 
												light in its perfection, as in 
												the summer solstice. The Vulgate 
												renders Tammuz, by Adonis; and 
												that Adonis, according to the 
												physical theology of the 
												heathen, was the same as the 
												sun, there is no question. 
												Macrobius expressly affirms it, 
												Saturnal., lib. 1. cap. 21, and 
												says, that the tradition of 
												Adonis being killed by a boar, 
												means the diminution of the 
												sun’s light and heat by winter. 
												This departure of Adonis, or the 
												sun, was lamented in the most 
												frantic ceremonies of grief by 
												the Phœnician and Assyrian 
												women, who, on these occasions, 
												used to prostitute themselves in 
												honour of his vivifying power; 
												and thus the Jewish women are 
												described by our prophet, 
												weeping for Tammuz, on the fifth 
												day of the sixth month, that is, 
												of August; at which time his 
												death, by the winter boar, was 
												drawing on apace. Tammuz was 
												supposed to have been killed by 
												a wild boar in mount Lebanon, 
												whence flows the river Adonis, 
												concerning which Lucian relates 
												an opinion prevailing in these 
												parts, that its stream, at 
												certain seasons of the year, is 
												of a bloody colour, which the 
												heathen considered as proceeding 
												from a kind of sympathy in the 
												river for his death: see 
												Parkhurst and Uni. Hist., vol. 
												1. p. 342. Milton has touched 
												upon each of these particulars 
												in the following elegant lines:
 
 “ — — — Tammuz came next behind, 
												Whose annual wound in Lebanon 
												allured The Syrian damsels to 
												lament his fate, In am’rous 
												ditties all a summer’s day, 
												While smooth Adonis, from his 
												native rock, Ran purple to the 
												sea, supposed with blood Of 
												Tammuz, yearly wounded: the 
												love-tale Infected Sion’s 
												daughters with like heat, Whose 
												wanton passions, in the sacred 
												porch, Ezekiel saw, when by the 
												vision led His eye survey’d the 
												dark idolatries Of alienated 
												Judah — — — .” PARADISE LOST b. 
												1. 5:446.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Ezekiel 8:15-16. Turn thee yet 
												again, and thou shalt see 
												greater abominations — These 
												latter wickednesses may be 
												accounted greater, because they 
												were acted in a more sacred 
												place. And he brought me into 
												the inner court — The court next 
												the temple, namely, that of the 
												priests. And, behold, at the 
												door of the temple — At that 
												door through which there was an 
												entrance into the porch of the 
												temple, from the altar of burnt- 
												sacrifices. Before, he saw the 
												abominations committed in the 
												gates of the courts, now he is 
												come to the very house itself. 
												Were about five and twenty men 
												with their backs toward the 
												temple, &c. — In contempt of God 
												and his worship they turned 
												their backs toward his 
												sanctuary, and their faces 
												toward the sun; according to the 
												custom of the Chaldeans, 
												Persians, and other eastern 
												nations who worshipped the sun. 
												Lowth thinks Hezekiah might 
												allude to some idolatrous 
												practice of this kind, in that 
												confession of his, recorded 2 
												Chronicles 29:6, Our fathers 
												have forsaken him, and turned 
												away their faces from the 
												habitation of the Lord, and 
												turned their backs. They turned 
												their back to God, and not the 
												face, as Jeremiah expresses 
												their contempt toward him, 
												Jeremiah 2:27. To prevent even 
												the appearance of this, the 
												people were commanded to come 
												into the courts of the temple at 
												the north or southern gates when 
												they came to worship, that they 
												might not, at their return, turn 
												their backs upon God: see 
												Ezekiel 46:9. God ordered the 
												holy of holies, in his temple, 
												to be placed toward the west, in 
												opposition to this species of 
												heathen idolatry, which 
												consisted in worshipping the 
												rising sun. And the pious Jews 
												always turned their faces toward 
												the temple when they worshipped.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Ezekiel 8:17-18. Then he said — 
												After the prophet had seen all, 
												and had had time to consider all 
												he saw, God appeals to him 
												concerning the heinousness of 
												their crimes. Is it a light 
												thing to the house of Israel — 
												Who know and profess better 
												things, and are dignified with 
												so many privileges above other 
												nations? Is it excusable in 
												them, who have God’s oracles and 
												ordinances, that they commit the 
												abominations which they commit 
												here? — Do they not deserve to 
												suffer who thus sin? Should not 
												such abominations as these make 
												desolate? For they have filled 
												the land with violence — All 
												kinds of injustice are here 
												meant, toward all sorts of men, 
												whom they first despised and 
												then defrauded, oppressed, or 
												destroyed. And it is not strange 
												if they who wrong their Creator 
												make no conscience of injuring 
												their fellow- creatures, and 
												with all that is sacred, trample 
												also on all that is just. And 
												this wickedness of their conduct 
												toward each other would have 
												made their worship an 
												abomination, even if it had been 
												paid to the true God: see Isaiah 
												1:11, &c. And have returned to 
												provoke me, &c. — After having 
												filled the land with violence, 
												they return to the temple to 
												practise their idolatries: from 
												injustice against man they 
												return to impiety against God, 
												and thus, by fresh abominations, 
												add new aggravations to their 
												guilt. And lo, they put the 
												branch to their nose — This 
												obscure clause is supposed by 
												several commentators to relate 
												to some custom among the 
												idolaters of dedicating a branch 
												of laurel, or of some other 
												tree, to the honour of the sun, 
												and carrying it in their hands 
												at the time of their worship. 
												And Spencer, De leg. Hebrews, 
												lib. 4. cap. 5, observes, “that 
												the heathen, in the worship of 
												their deities, held forth the 
												branches of those trees which 
												were dedicated to them:” a rite 
												which was called among the 
												Greeks, οσχοφορια, θαλλοφρια: 
												that is, branch-bearing. And 
												Lewis, in his Origines Hebręę, 
												vol. 3. p. 4, observes, that the 
												most reasonable exposition is, 
												that the worshipper, with a wand 
												in his hand, was wont to touch 
												the idol, and then apply the 
												stick to his nose and mouth, in 
												token of worship and adoration. 
												The Jewish rabbins, however, 
												reckon this among the texts 
												which their wise men have 
												corrected, and say the original 
												reading was not אפם, their nose, 
												but אפי, my nose, or face; 
												according to which reading the 
												sense will be, They put a stick 
												to my face, namely, to mock, or 
												exasperate me: or, taking זמרהto 
												mean here, not a branch, but, as 
												Buxtorf renders it, odor malus 
												ventris, the words will mean, 
												they put an offensive smell to 
												my nose, that is, they put an 
												open affront upon me, namely, by 
												turning their back to me in the 
												place dedicated to my worship. 
												And to this sense the LXX. 
												interpret it, reading αυτοι ως 
												μυκτηριζοντες, they are as those 
												that mock me, or publicly 
												affront me. The Vulgate, 
												however, reads the clause as we 
												do. Dr. Lightfoot renders the 
												place, They put the branch to my 
												wrath, or their wrath; that is, 
												“they add more fuel to my wrath, 
												which will burst out like a 
												flame to consume them: just as 
												if one should lay a heap of dry 
												sticks upon a fire.” Therefore 
												will I deal in fury, &c. — 
												Hebrew, in anger, or wrath. Mine 
												eye shall not spare — Their 
												provocations are such, that my 
												justice cannot be satisfied 
												without bringing deserved 
												punishment upon them; and though 
												they cry, &c. — Their sins cry 
												louder for vengeance than their 
												prayers cry for mercy.
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