Ezekiel 3:16
Context3:16 At the end of seven days the word of the Lord came to me: 1
Ezekiel 7:10
Context7:10 “Look, the day! Look, it is coming! Doom has gone out! The staff has budded, pride has blossomed!
Ezekiel 16:56
Context16:56 In your days of majesty, 2 was not Sodom your sister a byword in your mouth,
Ezekiel 21:25
Context21:25 “‘As for you, profane and wicked prince of Israel, 3
whose day has come, the time of final punishment,
Ezekiel 22:24
Context22:24 “Son of man, say to her: ‘You are a land that receives no rain 4 or showers in the day of my anger.’ 5
Ezekiel 24:26
Context24:26 On that day a fugitive will come to you to report the news. 6
Ezekiel 39:8
Context39:8 Realize that it is coming and it will be done, declares the sovereign Lord. It is the day I have spoken about.
Ezekiel 45:22
Context45:22 On that day the prince will provide for himself and for all the people of the land a bull for a sin offering.


[3:16] 1 sn This phrase occurs about fifty times in the book of Ezekiel.
[21:25] 3 tn This probably refers to King Zedekiah.
[22:24] 4 tc The MT reads “that is not cleansed”; the LXX reads “that is not drenched,” which assumes a different vowel pointing as well as the loss of a מ (mem) due to haplography. In light of the following reference to showers, the reading of the LXX certainly fits the context well. For a defense of the emendation, see L. C. Allen, Ezekiel (WBC), 2:32. Yet the MT is not an unreasonable reading since uncleanness in the land also fits the context, and a poetic connection between rain and the land being uncleansed may be feasible since washing with water is elsewhere associated with cleansing (Num 8:7; 31:23; Ps 51:7).