Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 8:12

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 8:12

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Every man, etc. And this, after all, was but a sample of the prevalence of the Egyptian influence. Other elders had, in the dark, a like adytum, a like chamber of imagery, like the Latin lararium, filled.

with a like cloud of incense. And though the name of the leader of the band might have warned them that the Lord was listening, they boasted, in their blindness, that Jehovah did not see them; he had forsaken the temple, and had fiche elsewhere.

They thought of Jehovah as of a local deity who had abdicated. They were free to do as they liked without fear. The words are worth noting further as the first of a series of popular half proverbs, in which the thoughts of the people clothed themselves (see ; ; , ; ; ).

All these imply some personal knowledge of what was passing in Jerusalem.

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