Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 40:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 40:3

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

The word "thither" carries the thought back to . When the prophet had been brought into the land of Israel, to the mountain and to the building, he perceived a man, whoso appearance was like the appearance of brass, or, according to the LXX; "shining or polished brass," χαλκοῦ στίλβοντος, as in —a description recalling those of the likeness of Jehovah in , , of the angel who appeared to Daniel (), and of the glorified Christ (), and suggesting ideas of strength, beauty, and durability.

In his hand he carried a line of flax and a measuring-reed (kaneh hammidah, or "reed of measuring," reed having been the customary material out of which such rods were made; compare the Assyrian for a measuring-reed qanu, the Greek κανών, and the Latin canna).

Possibly he carried these as "emblems of building activity" (Hengstenberg), and because "he had many and different things to measure" (Kliefoth); but most likely the line was meant to measure large dimensions (comp.

) and such as could not be taken by a straight stick, as e.g. the girth of pillars, and the rod to measure smaller dimensions, like those of the gates and walls of the temple. Hitzig's conjecture, that the line was linen because the place to be measured was the sanctuary, whose priests were obliged to clothe themselves in linen, Kliefoth rightly pronounces artificial and inaccurate, since the line was made, not of manufactured flax, or linen, but of the raw material.

That the "man" was Jehovah or the Angel of the Presence (comp. ) the analogy of , and the statement of Ezekiel in , would seem to suggest; only it is not certain in the last of these passages that the speaker was "the man" and not rather "the God of Israel," who had already taken possession of the house (see ), and whose voice is once at least distinguished from that of the man (see ).

Accordingly, Kliefoth, Smend, and others identify the "man" with the ordinary angelus interpres (cf. ). The gate in which he stood "waiting for the new comer" was manifestly the north gate, since Ezekiel came from the north, though Havernick and Smend put in a plea for the east gate, on the grounds that it was the principal entrance to the sanctuary, and the distance between it and the north gate, five hundred cubits, was too great to be passed over so slightly as in verse 6.

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