Eze 10:1-22. VISION OF COALS OF FIRE SCATTERED OVER THE CITY: REPETITION OF THE VISION OF THE CHERUBIM.
1. The throne of Jehovah appearing in the midst of the judgments
implies that whatever intermediate agencies be employed, He controls
them, and that the whole flows as a necessary consequence from His
essential holiness
(Eze 1:22, 26).
cherubim--in
Eze 1:5,
called "living creatures." The repetition of the vision implies that
the judgments are approaching nearer and nearer. These two visions of
Deity were granted in the beginning of Ezekiel's career, to qualify him
for witnessing to God's glory amidst his God-forgetting people and to
stamp truth on his announcements; also to signify the removal of God's
manifestation from the visible temple
(Eze 10:18)
for a long period
(Eze 43:2).
The feature
(Eze 10:12)
mentioned as to the cherubim that they were "full of eyes," though
omitted in the former vision, is not a difference, but a more specific
detail observed by Ezekiel now on closer inspection. Also, here, there
is no rainbow (the symbol of mercy after the flood of wrath) as
in the former; for here judgment is the prominent thought,
though the marking of the remnant in
Eze 9:4, 6
shows that there was mercy in the background. The cherubim, perhaps,
represent redeemed humanity combining in and with itself the highest
forms of subordinate creaturely life (compare
Ro 8:20).
Therefore they are associated with the twenty-four elders and are
distinguished from the angels
(Re 5:1-14).
They stand on the mercy seat of the ark, and on that ground
become the habitation of God from which His glory is to shine upon the
world. The different forms symbolize the different phases of the
Church. So the quadriform Gospel, in which the incarnate Saviour has
lodged the revelation of Himself in a fourfold aspect, and from which
His glory shines on the Christian world, answers to the emblematic
throne from which He shone on the Jewish Church.
JFB.
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