Charles Ellicott Commentary Ezekiel 7:26

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Ezekiel 7:26

1819–1905
Anglican
Charles Ellicott
Charles Ellicott

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Ezekiel 7:26

1819–1905
Anglican
SCRIPTURE

"Mischief shall come upon mischief, and rumor shall be upon rumor; and they shall seek a vision of the prophet; but the law shall perish from the priest, and counsel from the elders." — Ezekiel 7:26 (ASV)

Then shall they seek a vision. — Compare to Ezekiel 20:1-3. The three chief sources of counsel—the prophets, the priests, and the elders—are all represented as sought in vain. God had forsaken the people who had rejected Him. (Compare to Proverbs 1:28, and the story of Saul’s despair at his abandonment by God, 1 Samuel 28:15.) In the following verse, the trouble is described as affecting all classes alike: the king, the prince, and the people of the land. Furthermore, it is described as the fitting consequence and retribution of their own chosen way.

Here closes the first series of Ezekiel’s prophecies, extending from the beginning of the fourth to the end of the seventh chapter. They were all uttered within the period of a year and two months. Like the following series (Ezekiel 8–19), they begin with a remarkable series of symbolic acts, or rather descriptions of such acts, and are continued by plain prophecies.

Ezekiel and his fellow captives had now been in exile for five to six years. They still looked to Jerusalem and the Temple as their pride and the strength of their nation; undoubtedly, many of them hoped to be able to return there to resume their former lives.

There could be no hope of bringing about a thorough and lasting reformation among the people except by utterly dashing these hopes to the ground, and showing that the people must be led to repentance through thorough humiliation and heavy punishment. Such is the purpose of these prophecies, and it is carried out with extraordinary vigour and power of language.