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Text -- Ezekiel 42:5-20 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Eze 42:5 - -- At first view it should seem to refer to the length, but indeed it refers to the height of the chambers, of which the lowest chamber was highest, the ...
At first view it should seem to refer to the length, but indeed it refers to the height of the chambers, of which the lowest chamber was highest, the second lower pitched than the first, yet of greater height than the uppermost between the floor and ceiling.
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Wesley: Eze 42:7 - -- A wall at a distance from them, perhaps some wall that might keep up a terrace - walk.
A wall at a distance from them, perhaps some wall that might keep up a terrace - walk.
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Exactly uniform with the fabrick on the north - side.
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Framed in the same manner. In all things exactly alike.
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Wesley: Eze 42:13 - -- In some of these chambers the holy things that might be eat, were laid up as in a store - house; and those which were not for present use, were reserv...
In some of these chambers the holy things that might be eat, were laid up as in a store - house; and those which were not for present use, were reserved, 'till they were to be used.
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Wesley: Eze 42:20 - -- Each reed was above three yards and an half, so that it was about eight miles round. Thus large were the suburbs of this mystical temple, signifying t...
Each reed was above three yards and an half, so that it was about eight miles round. Thus large were the suburbs of this mystical temple, signifying the great extent of the church in gospel times. It is in part fulfilled already, by the accession of the Gentiles to the church: and will be throughly accomplished, when the fulness of the Gentiles shall come in, and all Israel shall be saved.
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Wesley: Eze 42:20 - -- To distinguish, and accordingly to exclude, or admit persons, for all might not go in.
To distinguish, and accordingly to exclude, or admit persons, for all might not go in.
JFB: Eze 42:5 - -- That is, the building became narrower as it rose in height. The chambers were many: so "in My Father's house are many mansions" (Joh 14:2); and beside...
That is, the building became narrower as it rose in height. The chambers were many: so "in My Father's house are many mansions" (Joh 14:2); and besides these there was much "room" still left (compare Luk 14:22). The chambers, though private, were near the temple. Prayer in our chambers is to prepare us for public devotions, and to help us in improving them.
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JFB: Eze 42:16 - -- The Septuagint substitutes "cubits" for "reeds," to escape the immense compass assigned to the whole, namely, a square of five hundred rods or three t...
The Septuagint substitutes "cubits" for "reeds," to escape the immense compass assigned to the whole, namely, a square of five hundred rods or three thousand cubits (two feet each; Eze 40:5), in all a square of one and one-seventh miles, that is, more than all ancient Jerusalem; also, there is much space thus left unappropriated. FAIRBAIRN rightly supports English Version, which agrees with the Hebrew. The vast extent is another feature marking the ideal character of the temple. It symbolizes the great enlargement of the kingdom of God, when Jehovah-Messiah shall reign at Jerusalem, and from thence to the ends of the earth (Isa 2:2-4; Jer 3:17; Rom 11:12, Rom 11:15).
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JFB: Eze 42:20 - -- No longer shall the wall of partition be to separate the Jew and the Gentile (Eph 2:14), but to separate the sacred from the profane. The lowness of i...
No longer shall the wall of partition be to separate the Jew and the Gentile (Eph 2:14), but to separate the sacred from the profane. The lowness of it renders it unfit for the purpose of defense (the object of the wall, Rev 21:12). But its square form (as in the city, Rev 21:16) is the emblem of the kingdom that cannot be shaken (Heb 12:28), resting on prophets and apostles, Jesus Christ being the chief corner-stone.
Everything was now ready for His reception. As the Shekinah glory was the peculiar distinction of the old temple, so it was to be in the new in a degree as much more transcendent as the proportions of the new exceeded those of the old. The fact that the Shekinah glory was not in the second temple proves that it cannot be that temple which is meant in the prophecy.
Clarke: Eze 42:14 - -- They shall lay their garments wherein they minister - The priests were not permitted to wear their roles in the outer court. These vestments were to...
They shall lay their garments wherein they minister - The priests were not permitted to wear their roles in the outer court. These vestments were to be used only when they ministered; and when they had done, they were to deposit them in one of the chambers mentioned in the thirteenth verse.
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Clarke: Eze 42:16-19 - -- He measured the east - north - south - west side - Each of which was five hundred reeds: and, as the building was square, the area must have been ne...
He measured the east - north - south - west side - Each of which was five hundred reeds: and, as the building was square, the area must have been nearly thirteen thousand paces. No wonder this was called a city. See Eze 40:2.
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Clarke: Eze 42:20 - -- It had a wall round about - to make a separation between the sanctuary and the profane place - The holy place was that which was consecrated to the ...
It had a wall round about - to make a separation between the sanctuary and the profane place - The holy place was that which was consecrated to the Lord; into which no heathen, nor stranger, nor any in a state of impurity, might enter. The profane place was that in which men, women, Gentiles, pure or impure might be admitted. Josephus says War, lib. vi., c. 14, that in his time there was a wall built before the entrance three cubits high, on which there were posts fixed at certain distances, with inscriptions on them in Latin and Greek, containing the laws which enjoined purity on those that entered; and forbidding all strangers to enter, on pain of death. See Calmet.
Defender -> Eze 42:13
Defender: Eze 42:13 - -- The various temple sacrificial offerings are to be restored in this millennial temple, with certain of the Levitical priests officiating again, even t...
The various temple sacrificial offerings are to be restored in this millennial temple, with certain of the Levitical priests officiating again, even though the Lord Jesus Christ, as "the Lamb of God" (Joh 1:29) had long before "offered one sacrifice for sins for ever" (Heb 10:12). These sacrifices obviously are memorial, rather than anticipatory in nature, designed to cause people to remember the sufferings of Christ for their sins and to demonstrate their saving faith in Christ's sacrifice by prayerfully observing the suffering and death of these innocent substitutes. Otherwise, as new generations are born and raised throughout many centuries, living in a world of peace and plenty and outward righteousness, it would be easy for them to forget about the awful wickedness of the natural state of man without Christ. It is significant that, not only the Israelites, but the Gentiles as well, will be required to make annual pilgrimages to Jerusalem "to worship the King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the feast of tabernacles" (Zec 14:16-19). This feast incorporates seven days of offerings (Lev 23:33-36). The logistics and details of these future observances are not revealed, but the principle of remembrance is the vital feature of these future sacrificial offerings."
TSK: Eze 42:5 - -- were higher than these : or, did eat of these, Eze 41:7
than the lower, and than the middlemost of the building : or, and the building consisted of th...
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TSK: Eze 42:8 - -- before : Passing from the north to the south side of the temple (Eze 42:11, Eze 42:12), the prophet was shewn that the space of ground, which was befo...
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TSK: Eze 42:9 - -- from under : or, from the place of, Eze 46:19
the entry : or, he that brought me
as one goeth : or, as he came
from under : or, from the place of, Eze 46:19
the entry : or, he that brought me
as one goeth : or, as he came
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TSK: Eze 42:10 - -- the thickness : Rather, ""the breadth of the wall,""that is, the breadth of ground which it enclosed. Eze 41:12
over against : These south chambers we...
the thickness : Rather, ""the breadth of the wall,""that is, the breadth of ground which it enclosed. Eze 41:12
over against : These south chambers were exactly like those on the north. Eze 42:1, Eze 42:13, Eze 41:13-15
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TSK: Eze 42:13 - -- they be holy : Exo 29:31; Lev 6:14-16, Lev 6:26, Lev 7:6, Lev 10:13, Lev 10:14, Lev 10:17, Lev 24:9; Num 18:9
approach : Eze 40:46; Lev 10:3; Num 16:5...
they be holy : Exo 29:31; Lev 6:14-16, Lev 6:26, Lev 7:6, Lev 10:13, Lev 10:14, Lev 10:17, Lev 24:9; Num 18:9
approach : Eze 40:46; Lev 10:3; Num 16:5, Num 16:40, Num 18:7; Deu 21:5
the most holy : Lev 2:3, Lev 2:10, Lev 6:14, Lev 6:17, Lev 6:25, Lev 6:29, Lev 7:1, Lev 7:6, Lev 10:13, Lev 10:17, Lev 14:13, Lev 21:22; Num 1:9, Num 1:10; Num 18:9, Num 18:10; Neh 13:5
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TSK: Eze 42:14 - -- they not go : Eze 44:19; Exo 28:40-43, Exo 29:4-9; Lev 8:7, Lev 8:13, Lev 8:33-35; Luk 9:62
and shall put : Isa 61:10; Zec 3:4, Zec 3:5; Rom 3:22, Rom...
they not go : Eze 44:19; Exo 28:40-43, Exo 29:4-9; Lev 8:7, Lev 8:13, Lev 8:33-35; Luk 9:62
and shall put : Isa 61:10; Zec 3:4, Zec 3:5; Rom 3:22, Rom 13:14; Gal 3:27; 1Pe 5:5
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TSK: Eze 42:16 - -- side : Heb. wind
the measuring reed : Estimating the reed at 10+ feet, 500 reeds will be nearly equal to a mile; so that from this statement we find t...
side : Heb. wind
the measuring reed : Estimating the reed at 10+ feet, 500 reeds will be nearly equal to a mile; so that from this statement we find the temple, with its outbuildings, was built on a square, nearly an English mile on each side, and four miles in circumference. This not only far exceeds the size of Solomon’ s temple, or that after the captivity, which was only 500 cubits, or a furlong, on each side, and exactly half a mile in circuit; but is nearly equal to the whole extent of Jerusalem itself, which, when greatest, was but 33 furlongs in circumference, somewhat less than 4+ miles. This seems clearly to intimate, that the vision cannot be explained of any temple that has hitherto been built, or indeed of any literal temple, but figuratively and mystically of the spiritual temple, the church under the gospel, and its spiritual glory. Eze 40:3; Zec 2:1; Rev 11:1, Rev 11:2
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TSK: Eze 42:20 - -- it had : Eze 40:5; Son 2:9; Isa 25:1, Isa 26:1, Isa 60:18; Mic 7:11; Zec 2:5
five hundred : Eze 45:2, Eze 48:20; Rev 21:12-17
a separation : Eze 22:26...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Eze 42:5 - -- Render: "And the upper chambers were"shortened, for galleries took off from them, from "the lower"and from "the middle-most, chambers, of the buil...
Render: "And the upper chambers were"shortened, for galleries took off from them, from "the lower"and from "the middle-most, chambers, of the building."The building rose in terraces, as was usual in Babylonian architecture, and so each of the two upper stories receded from the one below it.
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Barnes: Eze 42:6 - -- The front of the higher stories was not supported on pillars, but there was a narrowing from "the lowest"(chambers) "and"from "the middlemost"(chamb...
The front of the higher stories was not supported on pillars, but there was a narrowing from "the lowest"(chambers) "and"from "the middlemost"(chambers) "from the ground."
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Barnes: Eze 42:7 - -- The "wall"here must be one from north to south, fencing off from the outer court the passage along the east side of the chambers, and therefore fift...
The "wall"here must be one from north to south, fencing off from the outer court the passage along the east side of the chambers, and therefore fifty cubits long.
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Barnes: Eze 42:8 - -- The length - From north to south. Before the temple - This describes their position in a general way; more precisely they lay over agains...
The length - From north to south.
Before the temple - This describes their position in a general way; more precisely they lay over against partly the "separate place"and partly the "temple-court"Eze 42:1.
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Barnes: Eze 42:9 - -- The entry from these chambers to the temple-court was by a passage lying to the east fenced off by the "wall"Eze 42:7. This passage is described as ...
The entry from these chambers to the temple-court was by a passage lying to the east fenced off by the "wall"Eze 42:7. This passage is described as lying under the chambers, being on the basement, and also having access by steps to the temple-court, which was raised many steps above the outer court.
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Barnes: Eze 42:10 - -- Render it: Breadth-wise (was) the wall Eze 42:7 toward the east; in front of the separate place and of the building (were) the chambers: i. e., on t...
Render it: Breadth-wise (was) the wall Eze 42:7 toward the east; in front of the separate place and of the building (were) the chambers: i. e., on the east was "the wall"("geder"); along the boundary wall of "the separate place"and of the "building"(the temple) lay the "chambers."
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Barnes: Eze 42:11-12 - -- Translate: And along the front of them - like (literally as the appearance of) the chambers which were toward the north, as long as they and as broa...
Translate: And along the front of them - like (literally as the appearance of) the chambers which were toward the north, as long as they and as broad as they, and (like) all their goings out, and like their fashions, and like their doors, even so were the doors of the chambers which were toward the south; (with) a door at the head of the way, the way of the wall adjoined eastward as one entereth into them (the chambers).
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Barnes: Eze 42:13 - -- In Lev 10:13 it was prescribed that the priests should eat of the sacrifices in the "holy place."This was originally before the altar in the inner c...
In Lev 10:13 it was prescribed that the priests should eat of the sacrifices in the "holy place."This was originally before the altar in the inner court - now separate chambers are assigned, and these become "the holy place"for this purpose. Of the "trespass-offering"and "meat-offering"what was not consumed was eaten Lev 7:6, but the "sin-offering"was burned without the camp Eze 43:21. Probably the carcass was brought from the altar to the chamber before being carried out.
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Barnes: Eze 42:14 - -- Compare Lev 16:23. Those things which are for the people - namely, the outer court.
Compare Lev 16:23.
Those things which are for the people - namely, the outer court.
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Barnes: Eze 42:15-19 - -- The Precincts. The temple and its courts were surrounded by an area of exact dimensions 3,000 cubits (1,500 yards) square. See Plan IV. Eze 42:...
The Precincts. The temple and its courts were surrounded by an area of exact dimensions 3,000 cubits (1,500 yards) square. See Plan IV.
The inner house - The temple and its courts, all that lay within the "wall on the outside of the house Eze 40:5; the gate"is the eastern gate of the outer court.
Measured it round about - The precincts, into which he had brought the seer through the eastern gate of the outer court.
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Barnes: Eze 42:20 - -- The "sanctuary"proper is probably here the most holy place as distinguished from the rest of the temple Eze 41:23; Eze 45:3; but the term was capabl...
The "sanctuary"proper is probably here the most holy place as distinguished from the rest of the temple Eze 41:23; Eze 45:3; but the term was capable of extension first to the whole temple, then to all the ground that was separated to "holy"as distinguished from "profane,"i. e., common uses.
In the vision the courts rose on successive platforms, the outer court being raised seven steps above the precincts, the inner court eight steps above the outer, and the temple itself ten steps above the court of sacrifice.
Poole: Eze 42:5 - -- Were shorter: at first view it should seem to refer to the length, but indeed it refers to the height of the chambers, of which the lowest chamber wa...
Were shorter: at first view it should seem to refer to the length, but indeed it refers to the height of the chambers, of which the lowest chamber was highest pitched from the floor to the ceiling; the second lower pitched than the first, yet of greater height than the uppermost between the floor and ceiling.
The galleries were higher than these: possibly, there might be over the uppermost chambers a fiat roof, on which, as on a gallery, they might walk from one end to another, and therefore that floor was much lower than the middle or lowest, according to the rule of architecture, which directs that the upper rooms take not up so much in their height as the lower, that the weight of the timber be not too heavy for the walls..
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Poole: Eze 42:6 - -- In three stories built high one over another.
As the pillars of the courts as thick and strong as those were, but of the slenderer and weaker make....
In three stories built high one over another.
As the pillars of the courts as thick and strong as those were, but of the slenderer and weaker make.
The building the highest room of the building, was straitened; was laid at nearer distance than the middlemost from the lowest, or than the roof of the lowest from the ground.
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Poole: Eze 42:7 - -- The wall not of the chambers, but some wall at distance from them; perhaps some wall that might keep up a terrace-walk.
Over against the chambers t...
The wall not of the chambers, but some wall at distance from them; perhaps some wall that might keep up a terrace-walk.
Over against the chambers therefore was northward from the chambers.
The utter court the court of the men, or of Israel, which is called utter with respect to this, wherein this building stood, as this was called utter , Eze 42:1,3 , with respect to the court that was more inward.
On the forepart of the chambers which evidently shows that the wall of fifty cubits stood north from these chambers.
The length thereof was fifty cubits answerable to the length of this building from east to west.
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Poole: Eze 42:8 - -- This verse gives us a reason why the wall over against the chambers was but fifty cubits, it might not be more or less because it was to hold exact ...
This verse gives us a reason why the wall over against the chambers was but fifty cubits, it might not be more or less because it was to hold exact symmetry with these buildings, which it confronted: possibly this verse may give some light to the second verse, latter part.
The utter court: see Eze 42:1,7 .
And, lo, before the temple were an hundred cubits: some say the angel, conducting the prophet from these north chambers to the south, hath occasion given him to take notice of, and to measure a second time, this space before the temple; but what if the angel and the prophet were now on the roof of this fifty cubits’ building, as they seem to be Eze 42:5 , measuring it, and thence the angel might point to the hundred cubits’ space before the temple, and bid the prophet to mind it? The former, most received, suits best with the 11th and 12th verses.
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Poole: Eze 42:9 - -- I suppose this verse describes the entrance into the south chambers, that it was on the east point, and that whose would go into them must go up the...
I suppose this verse describes the entrance into the south chambers, that it was on the east point, and that whose would go into them must go up the stairs (which probably were winding stairs) at the east end of these buildings, whose front was toward the south.
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Poole: Eze 42:10 - -- The chambers galleries also with them, of this south building now measured.
The thickness or the breadth, of that wall of the court which was eastw...
The chambers galleries also with them, of this south building now measured.
The thickness or the breadth, of that wall of the court which was eastward, and as an enclosure of the building.
The separate place which was west from this building, whose length lay north and south, and its breadth east and west: what this separate place may be, see Eze 42:1 .
The building: see Eze 42:1 .
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Poole: Eze 42:11 - -- The way the walk, as Eze 42:4 .
Like the appearance exactly uniform with the fabric, on the north side.
All their goings out every window and doo...
The way the walk, as Eze 42:4 .
Like the appearance exactly uniform with the fabric, on the north side.
All their goings out every window and door.
Were both according to their fashions framed in the same manner.
According to their doors according to the number of the doors in the one was the number of the other, all in all things exactly like.
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Poole: Eze 42:12 - -- This verse is a particular description of the door and way that, from the east end of this south building, did lead either under the buildings, or t...
This verse is a particular description of the door and way that, from the east end of this south building, did lead either under the buildings, or through some part of them toward the west point, as before; such a way from the north buildings did lead to the south, nor do I think necessary to speak more of the words.
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Poole: Eze 42:13 - -- Then said he the measurer, Christ, man in appearance at that time.
The separate place: see Eze 42:1 .
Holy chambers set apart, consecrated to hol...
Then said he the measurer, Christ, man in appearance at that time.
The separate place: see Eze 42:1 .
Holy chambers set apart, consecrated to holy services and uses, as vessels, garments, and days may be holy.
The priests and Levites too,
that approach that were then in waiting, according to their courses; for this approach is not only mentioned as distinguished from the distance the people were kept at, but as including the present actual approaches of the priests, in their ministering before the Lord.
Shall eat together as in a public refectory.
The most holy things things devoted to God were these most holy, some parts whereof God gave to the priests to live on. In some of these chambers the holy things that might be eat were laid up as in a storehouse, and those which were not for present use were here to be reserved till they were to be used; and whether it were more or less that was allowed to the priests out of the offerings, here it was to be kept till used.
The meat-offering: see what this was, Lev 2:1-12 6:14-16 .
The sin-offering: see what this, Lev 6:26,29,30 .
The trespass-offering: see Lev 7:2,3 , &c.
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Poole: Eze 42:14 - -- When at the time of their service, the priests, and Levites also, who assisted, enter therein, come into the court of the temple or inmost court in t...
When at the time of their service, the priests, and Levites also, who assisted, enter therein, come into the court of the temple or inmost court in their priestly garments to offer sacrifice, or to do any other part of their office,
then when they have done their office,
shall they not go out in their priestly garments, of the holy place, the court of the priests, not of the temple, into the utter court, the court of the people.
There in some one of the chambers of south or north buildings, which is a wardrobe for them. Lay their garments; lay up, either for other priests, whose course came next, or for themselves against the next return of their course.
Wherein they minister expressly directed by God, Exo 28:40-43 .
They are holy consecrated, ceremonially and relatively holy, for they are not capable of inherent holiness.
Shall put on other garments when they go out of this court into the outer, or outmost, they must put on common garments.
Shall approach to those things and so they may, as they have occasion, and see good,
which are for the people which common people may meddle with, which the priests may in their ordinary garments intermeddle with, and not be guilty, but may not touch while in the garments of their ministration..
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Poole: Eze 42:15 - -- The inner house the holy of holies, the temple, and all the buildings that were in it, and its inner courts.
He brought me forth quite out to the o...
The inner house the holy of holies, the temple, and all the buildings that were in it, and its inner courts.
He brought me forth quite out to the outmost court, and wall of it, which compassed all the rest of the courts.
Toward the gate whose prospect is toward the east to the east gate of the outside wall, mentioned Eze 40:6 , which see.
Round about i.e. the four squares of the wall for this, as the other walls, was square, not round, and therefore this round about is to be understood of measuring all four equilateral sides or parallels.
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Poole: Eze 42:16 - -- He the angel, or Christ in the appearance of a man,
measured the east side from the two opposite angles of the inside north and south, with the mea...
He the angel, or Christ in the appearance of a man,
measured the east side from the two opposite angles of the inside north and south, with the measuring reed, which was of six cubits and one hand or three inches.
Round about as Eze 42:15 . The four square was five hundred reeds, that is, each wall was one hundred and twenty-five reeds, say some, yet this hath its difficulties, though I think it more likely than the conjecture of L. C.; and, for aught I see, the guess of Villalpandus may be admitted, that the whole square was four times measured round about, from the east round, from the north round, &c., as this: the 17th, 18th, and 19th verses repeat it.
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Poole: Eze 42:19 - -- Here is nothing new added but what is in the 16th verse. I observe that the 16th and 17th verses expressly mention the measuring round about, and wh...
Here is nothing new added but what is in the 16th verse. I observe that the 16th and 17th verses expressly mention the measuring round about, and why I should doubt it was twice done, when it is related twice, as done from different points, I know not; and then it is easy, and likely enough, that the double relation of this measuring in the 18th and 19th verses will be the relation of the same way of measuring from other points; which, I suppose, is the ground of Villalpandus’ s opinion, and is far more agreeable to the Hebrew text, and context, and account, and more agreeably to divinity, than that of L. C.
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Poole: Eze 42:20 - -- He measured it the whole wall, by the four sides, repeating the measure of the whole, according to the number of the sides.
It had a wall the whole...
He measured it the whole wall, by the four sides, repeating the measure of the whole, according to the number of the sides.
It had a wall the whole had such a wall: had each side been five hundred reeds, the prophet must in propriety of speech have said
they i.e. the sides, not
it i.e. the whole compass of the wall.
Five hundred reeds long: in such an equilateral square there is properly no length, for all sides are equal, but because in the temple structure there was length and breadth, therefore that latus , or side, which runs in straight line, parallel with the length of the temple, is here taken for the length; the other, which was parallel to the breadth of the temple, is the breadth of this isopleuron, or equilateral square.
Five hundred broad: he speaks not here of the thickness, though sometimes breadth and thickness are the same.
To make a separation to distinguish, and accordingly to exclude or admit persons, for all might not go in.
The sanctuary not the temple, this is not here meant; but we must remember here that the Jews accounted the whole earth profane, i.e. common or unclean, compared with Canaan, and Canaan common or less holy than Jerusalem, and every part nearer the temple the more holy; and so here the outward court was enclosed to distinguish it by its comparative holiness, it was more holy than all without it.
Thus, enveloped in clouds and darkness, thou hast, good reader, a conjecture at many things, which, I need not blush to confess, are more above mine own comprehension than above some others. The mystical sense I refer to thy thoughts.
Above. The higher stories are not so lofty.
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Haydock: Eze 42:6 - -- Fifty cubits. We only allow thirty, as this is not in Hebrew, &c. The text, ver. 10., and 12., seems incorrect. (Calmet)
Fifty cubits. We only allow thirty, as this is not in Hebrew, &c. The text, ver. 10., and 12., seems incorrect. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 42:13 - -- Holies. Hebrew, "who are very holy," and (Haydock) on duty. See Leviticus vi. 25.
Holies. Hebrew, "who are very holy," and (Haydock) on duty. See Leviticus vi. 25.
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Haydock: Eze 42:14 - -- People. Chap. xliv. 17., and Exodus xxxiii. 42. Christian priests use their vestments only when they are officiating. (Durand and Durant Rit. ii. ...
People. Chap. xliv. 17., and Exodus xxxiii. 42. Christian priests use their vestments only when they are officiating. (Durand and Durant Rit. ii. 9.) (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 42:16 - -- Five. Hebrew emoth should be meoth, "three hundred, as it is printed (yet not in the Protestant version. Haydock) thrice just after, and as it i...
Five. Hebrew emoth should be meoth, "three hundred, as it is printed (yet not in the Protestant version. Haydock) thrice just after, and as it is written here in Manuscript 4. Camb. 1. 2." (Kennicott) ---
Reeds. Septuagint, "cubits," as Hebrew, St. Jerome, &c., insinuate. The mountain was only five hundred paces square, even when it was enlarged in the time of Josephus. (Jewish Wars vi. 14.; Greek) ---
We must therefore read cubits. (Calmet) ---
If we retain reeds, (Haydock) the wall will be twelve thousand cubits, (Menochius) which seems improbable. (Tournemine) See chap. xlv. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Eze 42:20 - -- Cubits. This confirms the former correction, ver. 16. (Haydock) ---
Hebrew has only, "of five hundred." Maldonat and Cornelius a Lapide would und...
Cubits. This confirms the former correction, ver. 16. (Haydock) ---
Hebrew has only, "of five hundred." Maldonat and Cornelius a Lapide would understand reeds, to agree with what goes before. (Menochius) ---
Separation. Josephus mentions a wall three cubits high, on the pillars of which was written in Greek and Latin, that such as entered the temple must be pure, (Calmet) and no stranger. (Haydock) ---
Into this court all might come. (Philo) (Calmet)
Gill: Eze 42:5 - -- Now the upper chambers were shorter,.... The chambers were in three stories, as in the following verse, one above another; the middlemost were shorter...
Now the upper chambers were shorter,.... The chambers were in three stories, as in the following verse, one above another; the middlemost were shorter than the lowermost, and the upper shorter than either; just the reverse of the chambers in Eze 41:7, they were not so high from the floor to the ceiling, nor so broad from side to side. The reason follows:
for the galleries were higher than these; or, "ate out of these" w, "than the lower, and than the middlemost of the building"; the meaning is, that the galleries or balconies in the middlemost and upper chambers were taken, out of them, and so made them lesser than the lower ones, and the upper ones lesser than either; or the posts or pillars, as the word may be rendered, see Eze 42:3, which supported the chambers, took more out of the uppermost than the others, and so made them shorter. This may signify the diversity of gifts and grace, of light and knowledge, and of liberty and comfort, in the churches; and that, as those that are uppermost have most light, they are usually the least, and fewest members in them; who are the few names in Sardis, Rev 3:4, and are generally more straitened, afflicted, reproached, and persecuted.
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Gill: Eze 42:6 - -- For they were in three stories,.... Not only the galleries or posts, but the chambers; they were one over another; there were the lowermost, middlemos...
For they were in three stories,.... Not only the galleries or posts, but the chambers; they were one over another; there were the lowermost, middlemost, and uppermost; which, as before, may denote the difference in churches, and the different states, conditions, and characters of those that are in them; some being fathers, others young men, and others little children: or their different offices and relations; some being pastors, others deacons, and others private members: or their knowledge of and profession of faith in the doctrine of the Trinity, the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ; and their being baptized in the name of the three divine Persons; and their being built on Christ the foundation, a habitation for God through the Spirit:
but had not pillars as the pillars of the courts; those which supported the porticos and galleries in the courts of the temple, not pillars so thick and strong as they: so the churches represented by these chambers, though they have Gospel ministers, which are as pillars, and valuable members, which are as such, that shall not go out; yet they have not those external supports from great and rich men, but consist generally of the poor of this world, as churches on a civil establishment have, who are supported by the state:
therefore the building was straitened more than the lowest and the middlemost from the ground; the upper part of it, or the uppermost chambers, were more straitened, and had less room in them, than the middlemost, and the middlemost than the lowest; suggesting, that the more heavenly and spiritual men are, the farther they depart from the men of the world and their conversation, from the sentiments and practices of natural men, the more they are exposed to their scorn and contempt, and are the more afflicted and straitened by them.
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Gill: Eze 42:7 - -- And the wall that was without over against the chambers,.... This wall separated and distinguished the chambers from the outward court, as well as was...
And the wall that was without over against the chambers,.... This wall separated and distinguished the chambers from the outward court, as well as was a protection of them; and signifies the grace and power of God, which separates his true churches from the world, and is the security of them; See Gill on Eze 11:5.
this was towards the utter court, on the fore part of the chambers; or front of them, which seems to be to the north of them; since their doors were towards the north, Eze 42:4, though Cocceius makes it to be to the west, which better agrees with what follows:
the length thereof was fifty cubits; which answers to the breadth of the chambers, Eze 42:2 and what is called length here, with respect to the wall, is called the breadth with respect to the chambers. The wall of divine protection is equal to the length and breadth, and even the whole compass, of the churches of Christ.
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Gill: Eze 42:8 - -- For the length of the chambers that were in the utter court was fifty cubits,.... Which was the reason why the wall was of the same length, that it mi...
For the length of the chambers that were in the utter court was fifty cubits,.... Which was the reason why the wall was of the same length, that it might be answerable to them; here length is put for breadth; see Eze 42:2, this measure was from the north to south, as Lipman x observes:
and lo, before the temple were an hundred cubits; as the breadth of the wall and chambers was fifty, so in length, as they were over against the temple, they were an hundred cubits, as in Eze 42:2, unless the account is to be taken thus; that the row of chambers towards the north were fifty cubits long, and the row towards the south over against the other was fifty cubits, and so both made a hundred; to which sense is the Septuagint version,
"for the length of the chambers that look to the outward court was fifty cubits, and those (that is, those that looked to the temple, or were before that) answered to them, the whole a hundred cubits;''
that is, both rows made a hundred cubits; but rather, as Lipman y says, the chambers contained from east to west a hundred cubits.
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Gill: Eze 42:9 - -- And from under these chambers,.... Or, "from the lower part of these chambers" z; or, "from the lowest" of them there was a space, as may be supplied,...
And from under these chambers,.... Or, "from the lower part of these chambers" z; or, "from the lowest" of them there was a space, as may be supplied, and as is by Cocceius and Starchius; and as there was a wall to the west of them, so there was a void space to the east; and as follows:
the entry on the east side: or, "he that brought me from the east" a, as the Keri; and coming eastward to these chambers, one must needs go through this space:
as one goeth into them from the utter court; if a man went eastward into those chambers from the outward court he must go through this space, which lay to the east of the lowest chambers: or the sense is, that from under the north chambers to the south was an entry on the east side, which led from one to the other.
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Gill: Eze 42:10 - -- The chambers were in the thickness of the wall of the court toward the east,.... As there were chambers in the northern part of the outward court, som...
The chambers were in the thickness of the wall of the court toward the east,.... As there were chambers in the northern part of the outward court, some which looked to the north, and others to the south, so likewise some to the east; and these were built on the breadth, as it may be rendered, of the court wall to the east; signifying there will be churches raised in all the northern parts of the world:
over against the separate place, and over against the building; as the other chambers were; See Gill on Eze 42:1.
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Gill: Eze 42:11 - -- And the way before them was like the appearance of the chambers which were toward the north,.... The way before these eastern chambers was exactly lik...
And the way before them was like the appearance of the chambers which were toward the north,.... The way before these eastern chambers was exactly like to that of the northern chambers; which was either the way of one cubit into them, or the walk of ten cubits before them, or both; signifying that the way into Gospel churches is the same everywhere, and the walk and conversation of the saints the same in all places:
as long as they, and as broad as they; which seems to confirm that both the way and the walk are meant, which were the same in those eastern chambers as in the northern; the way being as long, of one cubit, and the walk as broad, of ten cubits:
and all their goings out were both according to their fashions, and according to their doors; the form and fashion of them were alike; they were built three stories high, were as long, and as broad, and the upper shorter than the middlemost and lowest; the way of going into them, and coming out of them, were just the same; their doors were in the same position: in Gospel churches there are the same ordinances of baptism and the Lord's supper; the same laws and rules; the same privileges and immunities; the same graces in the members of them, like precious faith, hope, and love; whatever difference there may be in temporal things, there is none in spiritual ones; be they rich or poor, their communion is equal, their benefits the same.
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Gill: Eze 42:12 - -- And according to the doors of the chambers that were toward the south,.... That is, the doors of these eastern chambers were exactly like to the doors...
And according to the doors of the chambers that were toward the south,.... That is, the doors of these eastern chambers were exactly like to the doors of the southern chambers, as well as to the northern ones:
was a door in the head of the way; or beginning of the way; the door opened into the way of one cubit, and that led into the walk of ten cubits; and such a way and walk were before these eastern chambers as were before the southern and northern ones:
even the way directly before the wall toward the east, as one entereth into them: or, "also a way before the wall direct, a way to the east, as one goes into them" b; which seems to describe such a way from under these eastern chambers as were from under the northern or southern chambers, Eze 42:9.
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Gill: Eze 42:13 - -- Then said he unto me,.... The divine Person that measured and described these chambers, and brought the prophet to take a view of them, said to him, a...
Then said he unto me,.... The divine Person that measured and described these chambers, and brought the prophet to take a view of them, said to him, as follows:
the north chambers, and the south chambers, which are before the separate place, they be holy chambers; these are the two rows of chambers before described, which were southward and northward to each other, though both in the northern part of the outward court; these were for holy persons to dwell in, and for holy things to be done in, as the churches of Christ are; they consist of holy persons, men called with a holy calling, and in them the holy word of God is preached, and holy ordinances administered:
where the priests that approach unto the Lord shall eat the most holy things; which is to be understood not of the ministers of the Gospel, for whom a proper maintenance is to be provided, and who should live of the Gospel they preach; but of all the saints, who are made priests to God by Christ; and who approach unto the Lord by him, in his name and righteousness, and by the faith of him, with true hearts, in a spiritual manner; and which is profitable to themselves, and acceptable to God; for whom spiritual provisions are made in his house: these have most holy things to eat of, the holy word of God, the law part of which is holy, just, and good; and the Gospel part is our most holy faith, which is food for faith, savoury and salutary, milk for babes, and meat for strong men; and which is found and eaten, and digested by them: also our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the most holy, and is the sum and substance of the word and ordinances, and the food of believers, the bread of life, the hidden manna, the Lamb of God, and fatted calf; whose flesh and blood are meat and drink indeed, and are eaten and fed upon by faith.
There shall they lay the most holy things; lay up the word of God in their minds and memories, and remember the love of God, his sufferings and death, and the benefits arising from them, particularly in the ordinance of the supper:
and the meat offering; the "minchah", or bread offering, made of fine flour, typical of Christ, the bread of life:
and the sin, offering, and the trespass offering; both typical of Christ, made sin for his people; and who, by one sacrifice of himself, has made atonement for it, and an end of it; See Gill on Eze 40:39, these were called the most holy things, and were laid up in the sanctuary for the priests and their families to live upon, Lev 6:17,
for the place is holy: the place of these chambers holy, as the temple itself, where these most holy things and holy persons were.
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Gill: Eze 42:14 - -- When the priests enter therein,.... Into the holy place, these holy chambers, and approach unto God, and eat of the most holy things, and minister the...
When the priests enter therein,.... Into the holy place, these holy chambers, and approach unto God, and eat of the most holy things, and minister therein to the Lord:
then shall they not go out of the holy place into the utter court; denoting, not that the ministers of the word should not concern themselves in secular employments, but give themselves up to the word and prayer, though so to do is right; but the perseverance of the saints in the house and worship of God, in grace and holiness, and in all the duties of religion; these should not relinquish their profession, desert their station and the service of God, and return to the world; but continue as pillars in the temple of God, and go no more out, but abide by the truths and ordinances of the Gospel:
but there they shall lay their garments wherein they minister, for they are holy; these signify Christ's robe of righteousness and garments of salvation, that fine linen, clean and white, which is the righteousness of the saints; and fitly represented by the linen garments of the priests, in which they ministered in their office, and were like them holy, pure, and spotless; in these only saints appear before God, and present their supplications to him, not for their own, but for Christ's righteousness sake, making mention of that only; and herein they have acceptance with God now, and shall be introduced into his presence hereafter, and behold his face, clothed with these garments, and serve him for ever:
and shall put on other garments, and shall approach to those things which are for the people; these are the conversation garments of the saints, which are not fit to appear in before God, being attended with imperfection and sin; but very proper to appear in before men, among whom their lights should shine, and their good works be seen, for the adorning of the doctrine of Christ, the recommending of the Christian religion, and the stopping of the mouths of gainsayers: for this respects not the different habits of ministers, when they are in their ministrations, and out of them; though the allusion is to the priests under the law, who wore their priestly garments only in the temple, and while ministering there, and never elsewhere, or when among the common people on civil accounts: so Josephus says c, the priests only wore their holy garments when they ministered; at other times they appeared in the habit of private persons; with which agrees what Maimonides d says, their garments are not upon them when they are not ministering in the priestly office, but then they are clothed as laymen; or when, as the Targum here has it,
"they were mingled with the people.''
There were places in the temple where they put on and off their clothes, and where they were laid up. So Adrichomius e says, speaking of the temple,
"there were rooms, otherwise called treasuries, and priests' apartments, which were houses on the side of it, like towers, long, broad, and high; in which the priests, when they went into the sanctuary, put off their common woollen garments, and put on their holy linen ones; and, when they had performed their holy services, laid them up there again.''
And another writer, quoted by Solomon Ben Virga f, observes, that
"here (that is, the temple) was a house for the priest whose office it was to clothe the rest of the priests at the time of service; and he gave to everyone of them four sorts of garments, as were commanded, and fetched them out of the chests of the wardrobe; and on every chest, which were at the walls of this house, that is, above everyone of them, was the name of the garment, that there might be no mistake nor confusion when they were wanted.''
And this agrees with what is said in the Misnah g, that there was one that was appointed over the priests' garments, and who might be properly enough called the master of the wardrobe; on which one of the commentators says h, his business was
"to clothe the priests at the time of service, and to unclothe them after service was done, and to keep the garments of the priesthood in the chambers made for that purpose.''
Very wrongly, therefore, is the learned Selden i charged by Mr. Shoringham k, with a mistake, in denying that the priests wore their holy garments at any other time but when they were at divine service.
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Gill: Eze 42:15 - -- Now when he had made an end of measuring the inner house,.... The holy place, and the holy of holies, with all the courts and chambers belonging to th...
Now when he had made an end of measuring the inner house,.... The holy place, and the holy of holies, with all the courts and chambers belonging to them; even the whole building within the compass of the outermost wall, and all that pertained unto it; the chambers last mentioned, as well as the rest, the dimensions of, which are given in this and the two preceding chapters:
he brought me forth toward the gate whose prospect is toward the east: not to the east gate of the outward wall, but to the east gate which led into the outward court; the gate he was first brought unto, and which was first measured, Eze 40:6, and measured it round about; not the east gate, nor the outward wall that went all round the house; though this was measured, and its dimensions given, last of all; nor the house itself, which had been measured already; or the figure of it, as the Septuagint and Arabic versions; but all that space that was between this building and the wall that surrounded it; the area or compass of ground on which the building stood.
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Gill: Eze 42:16 - -- He measured the east side,.... He began with that, being at the east gate: the building was foursquare, and so was the wall about it, and had each fou...
He measured the east side,.... He began with that, being at the east gate: the building was foursquare, and so was the wall about it, and had each four equilateral sides, which were separately measured; here the east side, from the two angles of it, the north and south points:
with the measuring reed; which consisted of six cubits, and which cubits were larger than the common sort by a hand's breadth; so that a measuring reed measured three yards and a half: and the whole measure of the east side were
five hundred reeds: which make one thousand seven hundred and fifty yards:
with the measuring reed round about; not round about the building, since only one side, as yet, was measured; but round about that side, or from angle to angle, or from one side to the other: having finished one side, he went to another, until he had measured all round; but did not go four times round it, only once.
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Gill: Eze 42:17 - -- He measured the north side, five hundred reeds,.... From the two angles of that side, east and west; and it was of the same dimension as the east side...
He measured the north side, five hundred reeds,.... From the two angles of that side, east and west; and it was of the same dimension as the east side, just five hundred reeds, or one thousand seven hundred and fifty yards:
with a measuring reed round about; he measured with the same reed, from point to point; and having measured this side, he went to another.
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Gill: Eze 42:18 - -- He measured the south side, five hundred reeds,.... From the two angles of that side, east and west; and it amounted to just the same number of reeds,...
He measured the south side, five hundred reeds,.... From the two angles of that side, east and west; and it amounted to just the same number of reeds, even five hundred reeds, or one thousand seven hundred and fifty yards:
with the measuring reed; the same as before; here, and in the next verse, the phrase "round about" is not used, but is to be understood; and having been repeated, there was no need of mentioning it again.
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Gill: Eze 42:19 - -- He turned about to the west side,.... And took the dimensions of that, from angle to angle, the south and north points of it:
and measured five hun...
He turned about to the west side,.... And took the dimensions of that, from angle to angle, the south and north points of it:
and measured five hundred reeds, with the measuring reed; and it was exactly of the same measure with the other three sides.
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Gill: Eze 42:20 - -- He measured it by the four sides,.... Which were equilateral, parallel to each other, each measuring five hundred reeds; which in all made up two thou...
He measured it by the four sides,.... Which were equilateral, parallel to each other, each measuring five hundred reeds; which in all made up two thousand reeds, or seven thousand yards: this shows that no material building can be designed; never was an edifice of such dimensions; this seems rather to describe a city than a temple; and denotes the largeness of the Gospel church state in the latter day, when the Jews will be converted, and the fulness of the Gentiles brought in:
it had a wall round about: the same with that in Eze 40:5,
five hundred reeds long, and five hundred broad; it was foursquare, as the building was, and exactly answered to that in its dimensions. The Jews say l the mountain of the house was five hundred cubits by five hundred; that is, a perfect square of five hundred cubits on every side, two thousand cubits in the whole compass about. Josephus m says the whole circuit was half a mile, every side containing the length of a two hundred and twenty yards. Now, says Doctor Lightfoot n, if any will take up the full circuit of the wall that encompassed the holy ground, according to our English measure, it will amount to half a mile and about one hundred and sixty six yards; and whosoever will likewise measure the square of Ezekiel, Eze 42:20, will find it six times as large as this, Eze 40:5, the whole amounting to three miles and a half, and about one hundred and forty yards, a compass incomparably larger than Mount Moriah divers times over; and by this very thing is showed that that is spiritually and mystically to be understood; wherefore these measures no doubt did, as Mr. Lee o observes, signify the great fulness of the Gentiles, and that compass of the church in Gospel days should be marvellously extended. The use of it was,
to make a separation between the sanctuary and the profane place: the church and the world; the world is profane, and lies in wickedness, and the men of it ought not to be admitted into the church of God, and partake of holy things in it; a difference must be made between the precious and the vile; and greater care will be taken in the latter day of the admission of members into Gospel churches, Isa 52:1; see Gill on Eze 40:5.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 42:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Eze 42:1-20 - --1 The chambers for the priests.13 The use thereof.15 The measures of the outward court.
MHCC -> Eze 42:1-20
MHCC: Eze 42:1-20 - --In this chapter are described the priests' chambers, their use, and the dimensions of the holy mount on which the temple stood. These chambers were ma...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 42:1-14; Eze 42:15-20
Matthew Henry: Eze 42:1-14 - -- The prophet has taken a very exact view of the temple and the buildings belonging to it, and is now brought again into the outer court, to observe t...
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Matthew Henry: Eze 42:15-20 - -- We have attended the measuring of this mystical temple and are now to see how far the holy ground on which we tread extends; and that also is here m...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 42:1-14; Eze 42:15-20
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 42:1-14 - --
The Cell-Building in the Outer Court for Holy Use
Eze 42:1. And he brought me out into the outer court by the way toward the north, and brought me...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 42:15-20 - --
Extent of the Holy Domain around the Temple
Eze 42:15. And when he had finished the measurements of the inner house, he brought me out by the way ...
Constable: Eze 33:1--48:35 - --IV. Future blessings for Israel chs. 33--48
"This last major division of the book focuses on the restoration of ...
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Constable: Eze 40:1--48:35 - --C. Ezekiel's vision of the return of God's glory chs. 40-48
The Book of Ezekiel begins with a vision of ...
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Constable: Eze 40:5--43:1 - --2. The millennial temple 40:5-42:20
Earlier Ezekiel hinted that there would be a future temple i...
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Constable: Eze 42:1-14 - --The priests' eating and dressing rooms 42:1-14
This is a very difficult section to interpret because the description of these structures is obscure in...
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