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Study Section 12: Exilic Books of Prophecy (Major Prophets: 2
                             Books)


               12.1 Connect

                                 Why does God allow his people to go through suffering? This is one of the biggest
                                 questions asked by many people. The Book of Daniel and Ezekiel gives us a glimpse
                                 of what the children of God went through during the Exile. God makes it clear that
                                 he allowed them to be taken into exile because of their continuous rebellion.
                                 Sometimes God allows his children to suffer because He wants to discipline them.
               However, even in the midst of their suffering God revealed His presence among them and gave them
               hope that their suffering was not permanent….

               12.2 Objectives

                         1.  The student should be able to discuss what the two exilic books of Prophecy are all about.

                         2.  The student should be able to discuss the important questions such as: what, when, where,
                         how for each book.

                   3.  The student should be able to discuss the main message and main divisions of each individual
                   exilic book of Prophecy.

                   4.  The student should be able to discuss the applications from these books.

               12.3 EZEKIEL ‘May YHWH strengthens’ (priest)

                         Date/Setting: 592-572 B.C. (1:3, 40:1), last days of Judah, after 2nd exile (written from
                         Babylon)

                         Theme(s): Glory (YHWH leaves temple), Greatness (I am YHWH, 80+
                         times), Renewal (People and Covenant), Return (Temple and Glory)

               Main Message: Because of Zion’s sin, God removes His glory and promises
               judgment to purify remnant, punish Israel’s enemies and proclaim His
               greatness! In the future, God will renew His people and covenant, and return to
               His temple and glory!

               Call of Ezekiel (1:1-3:27) Ezekiel sees the likeness (28x) of YHWH’S glory enthroned on a vehicle carted
               by strange creatures (human-animal); he humbly bows, ready to listen (1) God calls Ezekiel to deliver His
               message, regardless of response. God satisfies and sustains him with message (2:1-3:3). Though Israel is
               hard, God will ‘harden’ Ezekiel to oppose their rebellion, but he must speak God’s word (4-15). As a
               watchman, he is to warn wicked or be accountable but only at time of God’s choosing (16-27).

               Concrete Examples (4:1-5:17) With two signs, Ezekiel symbolized siege and destruction of Zion. First, he
               etched map of the city on a brick and besieged it (1-3). He was to lie on his left side to bear Israel’s past
               iniquity (390 years, idolatry?) and on his right side as a symbol of Judah’s future exile (40 years,
               wilderness) (4-8); even his food evoked exile (9-17). Second, he shaved head/beard and divided hair into
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