11
Then the Spirit of the Lord lifted me up. He brought me to the east gate of the Lord's house. There were 25 men at the entrance of the gate. I saw Jaazaniah and Pelatiah among them. They were leaders of the people. Jaazaniah is the son of Azzur. Pelatiah is the son of Benaiah. 2 The Lord said to me, ‘Son of man, these men are making evil plans. They are giving bad advice to the city. 3 They say, “Haven't our houses just been built again? The city is like a pot used for cooking. And we are the meat in it.” 4 So prophesy against them. Prophesy, son of man.’ 5 Then the Spirit of the Lord came on me. He told me to tell them, ‘The Lord says, “You leaders in Israel, that is what you are saying. But I know what you are thinking. 6 You have killed many people in this city. In fact, you have filled its streets with dead bodies.”
7 ‘So the Lord and King says, “The bodies you have thrown there are the meat. And the city is the cooking pot. But I will drive you out of it. 8 You are afraid of the swords of war. But I will bring them against you,” announces the Lord and King. 9 “I will drive you out of the city. I will hand you over to outsiders. And I will punish you. 10 You will be killed by swords. I will judge you at the borders of Israel. Then you will know that I am the Lord. 11 This city will not be a pot for you. And you will not be the meat in it. I will judge you at the borders of Israel. 12 Then you will know that I am the Lord. You have not obeyed my rules. You have not kept my laws. Instead, you have lived by the standards of the nations around you.” ’
13 Pelatiah, the son of Benaiah, died as I was prophesying. Then I fell with my face towards the ground. I cried out in a loud voice. I said, ‘Lord and King, will you destroy all the Israelites who are still left alive?’
14 A message from the Lord came to me. The Lord said, 15 ‘Son of man, the people of Jerusalem have spoken about you. They have spoken about the others the Babylonians have taken away. They have also spoken about all the other people of Israel. The people of Jerusalem have said, “Those people are far away from the Lord. This land was given to us. And it belongs to us.”
16 ‘So tell them, “The Lord and King says, ‘I sent some of my people far away among the nations. I scattered them among the countries. But for a little while I have been their temple in the countries where they have gone.’ ”
17 ‘Tell them, “The Lord and King says, ‘I will gather you from the nations. I will bring you back from the countries where you have been scattered. I will give you back the land of Israel.’ ”
18 ‘They will return to it. They will remove all its statues of evil gods. I hate those gods. 19 I will give my people hearts that are completely committed to me. I will give them a new spirit that is faithful to me. I will remove their stubborn hearts from them. And I will give them hearts that obey me. 20 Then they will follow my rules. They will be careful to keep my laws. They will be my people. And I will be their God. 21 But some people have hearts that are committed to worshipping the statues of their evil gods. I hate those gods. Anything that happens to those people will be their own fault,’ announces the Lord and King.
22 Then the cherubim spread their wings. The wheels were beside them. The glory of the God of Israel was above them. 23 The glory of the Lord went up from the city. It stopped above the Mount of Olives east of the city. 24 The Spirit of God lifted me up. He took me to those who had been brought to Babylon as prisoners. These are the things that happened in the visions the Spirit gave me.
8:1–11:25 Ezekiel said that the power of the Lord came on him. God appeared to Ezekiel like a human figure of fire and glowing metal. Then the Spirit lifted Ezekiel up between earth and heaven. That is how Ezekiel described what having a vision was like. This vision included everything that Ezekiel recorded through chapter 11. Ezekiel's body remained sitting in his house in Babylon with the elders. The things he saw took place in the temple in the city of Jerusalem. Ezekiel saw men, women and the elders worshipping false gods. He saw the city's leaders making evil plans and giving bad advice. Ezekiel spoke God's words against them. The words had the power to put one of those leaders to death. Ezekiel cried out to God when he saw this. He also cried out when people in Jerusalem were being killed. Ezekiel didn't want God to destroy all the Israelites who were still left alive. But God made it clear that these people were choosing to do evil things. They weren't sad or sorry at all about what they were doing. They weren't going to stop. So God decided to stop them. These people had made the temple unclean by worshipping false gods there. God is holy and nothing evil or unclean can be near him. God had said that his name would be in the temple and in Jerusalem for ever (2 Chronicles 33:7). But he also warned that he would turn his back on the temple (1 Kings 9:7). This meant that God would no longer make his presence known there. He would do this if his people weren't faithful to him. Ezekiel saw this happen in the vision. The glory of God moved to the doorway of the temple. Then it left the temple and left Jerusalem. This was a sign that God's covenant with his people was broken for a time. Moses had warned the Israelites that this would happen (Deuteronomy 31:15–18). The glory of the Lord left the temple but Ezekiel had seen it in Babylon. This showed that God wasn't the ruler only of the land of Israel. The Jews in Babylon were far from the temple. But God said that he had been their temple. This meant that they could be with God and worship him wherever they were. This was part of the message of hope that Ezekiel shared. God promised to bring his people back from exile. He promised that they would be faithful to the Mount Sinai covenant. Instead of being stubborn, they would obey God. They would be able to do this because God would change their hearts.