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10/01/2022 – Day 216 – Ezekiel 43 – 48 / We are amazed…


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Categories : Semikkah7 One Year

I will point y’all to our our two posts on 12/19/2020 , our last cycle for this reading. We are reading here the third temple, that is the future. But I would like to share with y’all at a minimum the footnote for the 47:1 – 48:35 in my Evidence Study Bible:

“Some interpreters consider this concluding section to be wholly symbolic. While the passage is saturated with symbolic spiritual truths of great importance, it may also be intended as a description of literal events. It is best to interpret this text allowing for both possibilities.”

Now 47:1 – 12:

“Ezekiel saw a stream of weather flowing from under the threshold of the temple toward the east, then under the south wall, increasing in breadth and depth as it flowed from the Dead Sea. Current topography of the area would preclude water flow as described here. Zechariah’s vision described a cleavage in the mount of Olives that will occur in the later days (Zechariah 14: 4-8); Ezekiel’s vision apparently presupposed such a topological restructuring of the region. On either side of the river grow fruit trees whose leaves perpetually provide healing (V6 , v 12). The water of the river brings life to everything it touches, including healing the uninhabitable waters of the Dead Sea, although the useful salt marshes will remain unchanged (vv. 8-11).

Ezekiel’s picture of the ‘river of living water’ forms part of the vision of the ‘New Jerusalem, coming down from heaven’ (Revelation 21:2) in the revelation to John (Rv 22: 1-3). Both passages envision a new quality of life governed by the influence of the worship of God. Water, a commodity not always easy to obtain in the Near East, is a biblical symbol of life — not only physical life but life in its deeper dimension of the fulfillment of God’s purpose in the human spirit. He invites all to come to the living waters available in unending supply (see Isaiah 55:1; John 4:14; 6:35; 7: 37-39). The water of life flows from the temple and from the ‘throne of God and of the Lamb’ (Rv. 22:1) in the heavenly city . Christian worship, which celebrates the sacrifice of Christ and exalts God the Father as King, can be a release of divine power in human life — the power of the Holy Spirit — for healing , spiritual sustenance, and productive activity that blesses others. Thus interpreters can see in Ezekiels’s vision a charter for the worshipping church, whose influence permeates and transforms the barrenness of surrounding cultures.”

Soli Deo Gloria!

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