🐾 “Can these bones live again?” — Ezekiel 37:3
📜 The Setting
Ezekiel lived among the Jewish exiles in Babylon, beside the River Chebar. Once a priest, now a prophet, he was called to speak to a people far from home. While Jeremiah warned those left in Jerusalem and Daniel served in the royal court, Ezekiel carried God’s word to the captives.
Even in exile, God had not left His people.
🔥 Ezekiel at a Glance
- Title: The Priest-Prophet of the Exile
- Name Meaning: God Strengthens
- Dates: ~593–571 BCE
- Location: Babylon (River Chebar)
- Contemporaries: Jeremiah (in Judah), Daniel (in Babylon), Nebuchadnezzar II; later Cyrus of Persia
- Main Themes: God’s glory among the exiles · A new heart and Spirit · Hope of restoration
Famous Visions: God’s Chariot (1) · Departing Glory (10) · Dry Bones (37:1–14) · Two Sticks Reunited — Israel & Judah (37:15–28) · New Temple & River (40–48)
🪔 Key Passages to Read
- Ezekiel 1–3 — Call and Commission of the Prophet
- Ezekiel 8–11 — The Glory Departs Jerusalem
- Ezekiel 18 — Personal Responsibility and Repentance
- Ezekiel 33–37 — Watchman Call and Dry Bones Vision
- Ezekiel 37:15–28 — Two Sticks Reunited (Israel & Judah)
- Ezekiel 40–48 — The New Temple and River of Life
Cross-links: 2 Kings 24–25 · 2 Chronicles 36 · Jeremiah 29 · Daniel 1 · Psalm 137 · Ezra 1 · Revelation 22
🏺 Deeper Historical Background
The Long Road to Exile
- 722 BCE: Assyria destroys Samaria (North) → people scattered, foreigners imported.
- 605/597/586 BCE: Babylon takes Judah (South) in waves → elites, artisans, priests deported.
- 586 BCE: Jerusalem and the first temple fall — a crisis shaping Ezekiel’s message.
Life in Exile (Chebar Canal)
- Exiles settled in canal towns (Ezekiel mentions “Tel-Abib”).
- They kept elders, language, law; worked imperial projects; gathered for teaching.
- See Psalm 137 for grief; Jeremiah 29 for instructions to build, plant, seek the city’s welfare.
Why a Priest-Prophet?
- Ezekiel was trained for temple service but called to prophesy without a temple.
- Hence his focus on holiness, clean/unclean, and God’s mobile glory (the chariot-throne).
- Chs. 40–48 cast a hope of reordered worship, land, and God’s presence among a purified people.
Empires in the Background
- Assyria: break identities by scattering/mixing populations.
- Babylon: relocate intact elite communities to harness skills.
- Ezekiel addresses a community that still remembers its story — able to repent, be renewed, and be reunited.
🌿 Reunification of Israel and Judah
After the vision of the dry bones coming to life, God gave Ezekiel another picture of hope — two sticks becoming one in His hand (Ezekiel 37:15–28). The first represented the northern tribes of Israel, long scattered since Assyria’s conquest. The second stood for Judah, the southern kingdom now in exile in Babylon.
God told Ezekiel to join the sticks together as a sign that He would reunite His divided people. Though centuries of conflict and exile had split them apart, the Lord promised they would become one nation again under one King — a shepherd from David’s line who would lead them in peace and obedience.
This act symbolized more than politics; it was spiritual healing. The covenant people, once divided by sin and pride, would be restored with a single heart, one worship, and one homeland. God Himself would dwell among them forever, His sanctuary in their midst.
For followers of Jesus, this vision points forward to the Messiah who unites all people who trust in Him — no longer two nations, but one family of faith gathered under one Shepherd.
💬 Bible S O S (Self Discovery)
SAY — What stands out?
When you read Ezekiel 1 or 37, what pictures or words stay in your mind? What might God be showing His people through them?
OBEY — What does Ezekiel 36 say of a “new heart” and a “new spirit”?
How could that apply in your life or community today?
SHARE — What could you pass on?
Ezekiel’s visions were given in exile, away from everything familiar. Who might need to hear that God’s presence reaches them, even far from home?
📖 Summary Thought
Ezekiel’s story reminds us that God’s glory isn’t limited by place. He meets His people even in their lowest valley and breathes life where hope seems gone.
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