Ezekiel Chapter 5

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September 10, 2025

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🌟 The Most Amazing City Ever! 🌟

🌊 The River of Life

The angel showed John something incredible – a beautiful river that sparkled like diamonds! This wasn’t ordinary water, but the river of lifea that flowed right from God’s throne and Jesus the Lamb’s throne. Imagine the clearest, most beautiful water you’ve ever seen, but even more amazing than that!

🌳 The Amazing Tree of Life

Right in the middle of the golden street, and on both sides of this special river, grew the most wonderful tree ever – the tree of life!b This tree was so amazing that it grew twelve different kinds of delicious fruit, and it made new fruit every single month! And get this – the leaves on this tree could heal people from every nation on earth. How cool is that?

✨ No More Bad Things

In this perfect city, there will never be anything bad or scary ever again! God and Jesus will live right there with everyone, and all of God’s people will get to serve Him and be close to Him. The most amazing part? Everyone will get to see God’s facec – something that’s never happened before because God is so holy and perfect! And God will write His special name right on everyone’s forehead, showing they belong to Him.

☀️ Never Dark Again

There won’t be any nighttime in this city, and nobody will need flashlights or even the sun, because God Himself will be their light! It will be bright and beautiful all the time. And all of God’s people will get to be kings and queens who rule forever and ever with Jesus!

📖 God’s Promise is True

The angel told John something very important: “Everything you’ve heard is completely true! God, who gives messages to His prophets, sent His angel to show His servants what’s going to happen very soon.”
Then Jesus Himself spoke to John: “Look, I’m coming back soon! Anyone who remembers and follows what’s written in this book will be so blessed and happy!”

🙏 Don’t Worship Angels

John was so amazed by everything he saw that he fell down to worship the angel! But the angel quickly stopped him and said, “Don’t worship me! I’m just a servant like you and all the prophets and everyone who obeys God’s word. Only worship God!”

📚 Share This Message

The angel told John not to keep this message secret, but to share it with everyone because Jesus is coming back soon! He explained that people who want to keep doing wrong things will keep doing them, but people who want to do right things will keep doing them too. Everyone gets to choose!

🎁 Jesus is Coming with Rewards

Jesus said, “Look, I’m coming soon, and I’m bringing rewards with Me! I’ll give each person exactly what they deserve for how they lived. I am the Alpha and Omegad – the very first and the very last, the beginning and the end of everything!”

🚪 Who Gets to Enter

“The people who have washed their clothes cleane will be so blessed! They’ll get to eat from the tree of life and walk right through the gates into My beautiful city. But people who choose to keep doing very bad things – like hurting others, lying, and worshiping fake gods – will have to stay outside.”

⭐ Jesus, the Bright Morning Star

“I, Jesus, sent My angel to tell all the churches this amazing news! I am both the Root and the Child of King Davidf, and I am the bright Morning Star that shines in the darkness!”

💒 Come to Jesus

God’s Spirit and the bride (that’s all of God’s people together!) both say, “Come!” And everyone who hears this should say, “Come!” If you’re thirsty for God, come and drink! Anyone who wants to can have the free gift of life-giving water!

⚠️ Don’t Change God’s Words

John gave everyone a very serious warning: Don’t add anything to God’s words in this book, and don’t take anything away from them either! God’s words are perfect just the way they are, and changing them would bring terrible trouble.

🎉 Jesus is Coming Soon!

Jesus promised one more time: “Yes, I am coming soon!”
And John replied, “Amen! Come, Lord Jesus! Please come quickly!”
May the grace and love of the Lord Jesus be with all of God’s people. Amen!

📝 Kid-Friendly Footnotes

  • aRiver of life: This is special water that gives eternal life! It’s like the most refreshing drink ever, but it makes you live forever with God.
  • bTree of life: This is the same tree that was in the Garden of Eden with Adam and Eve. Now it’s back in God’s perfect city, and everyone who loves Jesus gets to eat from it!
  • cSee God’s face: Right now, God is so holy and perfect that people can’t look at Him directly. But in heaven, everyone who loves Jesus will get to see God face to face – like the best hug ever!
  • dAlpha and Omega: These are the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet (like A and Z in English). Jesus is saying He’s the beginning and end of everything!
  • eWashed their clothes clean: This means people who asked Jesus to forgive their sins. Jesus makes our hearts clean like washing dirty clothes!
  • fRoot and Child of King David: Jesus is both God (so He’s greater than King David) and human (so He’s from David’s family). This shows Jesus is the special King God promised to send!
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Footnotes:

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Footnotes:

  • 1
    And thou, son of man, take thee a sharp knife, take thee a barber’s rasor, and cause [it] to pass upon thine head and upon thy beard: then take thee balances to weigh, and divide the [hair].
  • 2
    Thou shalt burn with fire a third part in the midst of the city, when the days of the siege are fulfilled: and thou shalt take a third part, [and] smite about it with a knife: and a third part thou shalt scatter in the wind; and I will draw out a sword after them.
  • 3
    Thou shalt also take thereof a few in number, and bind them in thy skirts.
  • 4
    Then take of them again, and cast them into the midst of the fire, and burn them in the fire; [for] thereof shall a fire come forth into all the house of Israel.
  • 5
    Thus saith the Lord GOD; This [is] Jerusalem: I have set it in the midst of the nations and countries [that are] round about her.
  • 6
    And she hath changed my judgments into wickedness more than the nations, and my statutes more than the countries that [are] round about her: for they have refused my judgments and my statutes, they have not walked in them.
  • 7
    Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Because ye multiplied more than the nations that [are] round about you, [and] have not walked in my statutes, neither have kept my judgments, neither have done according to the judgments of the nations that [are] round about you;
  • 8
    Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I, even I, [am] against thee, and will execute judgments in the midst of thee in the sight of the nations.
  • 9
    And I will do in thee that which I have not done, and whereunto I will not do any more the like, because of all thine abominations.
  • 10
    Therefore the fathers shall eat the sons in the midst of thee, and the sons shall eat their fathers; and I will execute judgments in thee, and the whole remnant of thee will I scatter into all the winds.
  • 11
    Wherefore, [as] I live, saith the Lord GOD; Surely, because thou hast defiled my sanctuary with all thy detestable things, and with all thine abominations, therefore will I also diminish [thee]; neither shall mine eye spare, neither will I have any pity.
  • 12
    A third part of thee shall die with the pestilence, and with famine shall they be consumed in the midst of thee: and a third part shall fall by the sword round about thee; and I will scatter a third part into all the winds, and I will draw out a sword after them.
  • 13
    Thus shall mine anger be accomplished, and I will cause my fury to rest upon them, and I will be comforted: and they shall know that I the LORD have spoken [it] in my zeal, when I have accomplished my fury in them.
  • 14
    Moreover I will make thee waste, and a reproach among the nations that [are] round about thee, in the sight of all that pass by.
  • 15
    So it shall be a reproach and a taunt, an instruction and an astonishment unto the nations that [are] round about thee, when I shall execute judgments in thee in anger and in fury and in furious rebukes. I the LORD have spoken [it].
  • 16
    When I shall send upon them the evil arrows of famine, which shall be for [their] destruction, [and] which I will send to destroy you: and I will increase the famine upon you, and will break your staff of bread:
  • 17
    So will I send upon you famine and evil beasts, and they shall bereave thee; and pestilence and blood shall pass through thee; and I will bring the sword upon thee. I the LORD have spoken [it].
  • 1
    “As for you, son of man, take a sharp sword, use it as a barber’s razor, and shave your head and beard. Then take a set of scales and divide the hair.
  • 2
    When the days of the siege have ended, you are to burn up a third of the hair inside the city; you are also to take a third and slash it with the sword all around the city; and you are to scatter a third to the wind. For I will unleash a sword behind them.
  • 3
    But you are to take a few strands of hair and secure them in the folds of your garment.
  • 4
    Again, take a few of these, throw them into the fire, and burn them. From there a fire will spread to the whole house of Israel.
  • 5
    This is what the Lord GOD says: ‘This is Jerusalem, which I have set in the center of the nations, with countries all around her.
  • 6
    But she has rebelled against My ordinances more wickedly than the nations, and against My statutes worse than the countries around her. For her people have rejected My ordinances and have not walked in My statutes.’
  • 7
    Therefore this is what the Lord GOD says: ‘You have been more insubordinate than the nations around you; you have not walked in My statutes or kept My ordinances, nor have you even conformed to the ordinances of the nations around you.’
  • 8
    Therefore this is what the Lord GOD says: ‘Behold, I Myself am against you, Jerusalem, and I will execute judgments among you in the sight of the nations.
  • 9
    Because of all your abominations, I will do to you what I have never done before and will never do again.
  • 10
    As a result, fathers among you will eat their sons, and sons will eat their fathers. I will execute judgments against you and scatter all your remnant to every wind.’
  • 11
    Therefore as surely as I live, declares the Lord GOD, because you have defiled My sanctuary with all your detestable idols and abominations, I Myself will withdraw My favor; I will not look upon you with pity, nor will I spare you.
  • 12
    A third of your people will die by plague or be consumed by famine within you, a third will fall by the sword outside your walls, and a third I will scatter to every wind and unleash a sword behind them.
  • 13
    And when My anger is spent and I have vented My wrath against them, I will be appeased. And when I have spent My wrath on them, they will know that I, the LORD, in My zeal have spoken.
  • 14
    I will make you a ruin and a disgrace among the nations around you, in the sight of all who pass by.
  • 15
    So you will be a reproach and a taunt, a warning and a horror to the nations around you, when I execute judgments against you in anger, wrath, and raging fury. I, the LORD, have spoken.
  • 16
    When I shower you with the deadly arrows of famine and destruction that I will send to destroy you, I will intensify the famine against you and cut off your supply of food.
  • 17
    I will send famine and wild beasts against you, and they will leave you childless. Plague and bloodshed will sweep through you, and I will bring a sword against you. I, the LORD, have spoken.”

Ezekiel Chapter 5 Commentary

When God Uses a Razor and a Scale: The Shocking Drama of Ezekiel 5

What’s Ezekiel 5 about?

God commands Ezekiel to perform one of the most bizarre and disturbing prophetic acts in Scripture – shaving his head with a sword, weighing his hair, and burning most of it while Jerusalem watches. This isn’t ancient performance art; it’s a terrifying preview of Jerusalem’s coming destruction and the measured justice of a patient God pushed too far.

The Full Context

Picture this: it’s around 593 BC, and Ezekiel is living among Jewish exiles in Babylon, far from home. The first wave of deportations has already happened – the cream of Jerusalem’s leadership, craftsmen, and nobility are now refugees by the Kebar River. Back in Jerusalem, the remaining population is convinced they’re the chosen ones, the righteous remnant God has protected. Meanwhile, the exiles feel abandoned, questioning whether God has forgotten his promises. Into this tension, God gives Ezekiel a message that will shatter both groups’ assumptions.

This chapter sits in the heart of Ezekiel’s early ministry, following his dramatic call vision and the symbolic acts of chapters 3-4. What makes Ezekiel 5 particularly striking is how it escalates from symbolic siege warfare to personal, visceral demonstration. The prophet isn’t just talking about Jerusalem’s destruction – he’s literally embodying it with his own body. The hair-cutting ceremony functions as both prophecy and legal proceeding, with God serving as judge, jury, and executioner. The careful weighing and dividing of hair reflects ancient Near Eastern concepts of measured justice, where punishment fits the crime with mathematical precision.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew text of Ezekiel 5:1 opens with a command that would have made ancient readers gasp: “chereḇ – take a sword.” But here’s what’s fascinating – Ezekiel isn’t told to fight with it. Instead, he’s instructed to use it l’ta’ar (as a razor). Swords were instruments of war and death; razors were tools of purification and mourning. By combining them, God is saying something profound about Jerusalem’s fate.

The word māznayim (scales) in verse 1 carries legal weight – these aren’t kitchen scales but the precision instruments used in courts and temples. When God tells Ezekiel to “weigh and divide” the hair, he’s conducting a formal legal proceeding. The Hebrew verb ḥālaq means to divide with exactness, like inheritance portions or legal settlements.

Grammar Geeks

The phrase ba’esh taba’er (you shall burn with fire) uses an intensified form that literally means “you shall cause to burn completely.” This isn’t casual cremation – it’s total obliteration, the kind reserved for things so defiled they must be utterly destroyed.

Then comes verse 5, and the Hebrew hits like a thunderclap: “zō’t Yĕrūšālaim” – “This is Jerusalem!” Not “this represents Jerusalem” or “this symbolizes Jerusalem.” In Hebrew prophetic language, the symbol becomes the reality. Ezekiel’s head is Jerusalem, and what happens to his hair is what will happen to the city.

The geographical description that follows uses tāweḵ (center) twice – Jerusalem is at the center of the nations, and the nations are around her center. This isn’t just about location; it’s about purpose. Jerusalem was meant to be the spiritual center, the light to the nations. Instead, she became the center of rebellion.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

To understand the shock value of this performance, you need to know that cutting one’s hair was serious business in ancient Israel. Hair represented strength, dignity, and covenant status. When Samson’s hair was cut, he lost his power. When Job’s head was shaved, it signified ultimate mourning. For a priest – which Ezekiel was – to shave his head was virtually unthinkable except in cases of extreme defilement.

The exiles watching this spectacle would have been horrified. Here’s their priest, their spiritual leader, making himself ceremonially unclean with a weapon of war. They’re seeing their own story – how God’s people have been cut down and scattered. But there’s something else happening that they might have missed initially.

Did You Know?

Ancient Mesopotamian kings regularly performed symbolic acts with scale models of cities before military campaigns. Ezekiel’s hair-dividing ceremony would have looked eerily familiar to Babylonian observers – like watching their own siege rituals performed in reverse.

The watching Babylonians would have recognized the legal precision of the weighing process. In their culture, divine judgment was often portrayed as weighing actions on cosmic scales. But they would have been puzzled by one detail – why was the prophet doing this to himself? In Babylonian ritual, you performed these acts on representations of your enemies, not yourself.

That’s the genius of Ezekiel’s prophecy. He’s simultaneously priest (representing the people), city (being destroyed), and judge (carrying out the sentence). The exiles are watching their homeland’s destruction, but they’re also seeing their own spiritual condition laid bare.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where things get uncomfortable, and honestly, they should. Ezekiel 5:8-10 contains some of the harshest language in Scripture. God says he will execute judgments “in the sight of the nations” and that parents will eat children and children their parents. This isn’t metaphorical – it’s describing the literal horrors of siege warfare.

How do we wrestle with a God who speaks this way? The key lies in understanding what’s really being communicated here. This isn’t God being vindictive or cruel for the sake of cruelty. The Hebrew phrase “ka’ašer lō’-na’ăśâh kāmōhū” (such as has never been done) in verse 9 indicates we’re dealing with extreme circumstances requiring extreme measures.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Why does God emphasize that he’s never done anything like this before? If he’s truly sovereign, hasn’t he always had the power to act this way? The Hebrew suggests this level of judgment is so contrary to God’s nature that it requires special explanation – even God himself seems reluctant.

But here’s what’s easy to miss in our horror at the violence: the meticulous precision of it all. This isn’t random destruction or divine temper tantrum. Every third of the hair has a specific fate, every portion is carefully weighed. Even in judgment, God is maintaining order, justice, proportion.

The text also reveals something crucial about God’s heart. The phrase “gam-’ănî eḥsōḵ” (I also will withdraw) in verse 11 uses language typically reserved for broken relationships. God isn’t just angry – he’s heartbroken. The one who promised never to leave or forsake his people is being forced to step back because of their persistent rebellion.

How This Changes Everything

“Sometimes the most loving thing God can do is let us experience the consequences of our choices – not as punishment, but as education.”

This passage fundamentally reframes how we understand God’s patience and justice. Modern readers often struggle with Old Testament judgments, wondering how a loving God could be so harsh. But Ezekiel 5 reveals something profound: God’s judgment isn’t the absence of his love – it’s love’s last resort.

Consider the progression: God has sent prophets, allowed smaller consequences, provided warnings, offered chances to repent. The hair-cutting ceremony represents the end of a very long rope, not the beginning of divine cruelty. The careful weighing and dividing shows that even in judgment, God is precise, measured, intentional.

“The same hand that weighs our sins with perfect justice is the hand that weighed our Savior’s sacrifice with perfect love.”

This changes how we read the entire Bible. Every story of God’s patience takes on new weight when we realize where persistent rebellion ultimately leads. Every call to repentance becomes more urgent when we understand that God’s mercy, while limitless in scope, isn’t infinite in duration.

For the exiles, this prophecy would have been both devastating and liberating. Devastating because it confirmed their worst fears about Jerusalem’s fate. Liberating because it proved God hadn’t abandoned them – he had sent them into exile not as rejection but as rescue, saving them from the judgment to come.

Key Takeaway

God’s measured justice isn’t cruelty – it’s the final expression of love for a people who have systematically rejected every other form of divine intervention. When consequences finally come, they come with surgical precision, not random destruction.

Further Reading

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Tags

Ezekiel 5:1, Ezekiel 5:8-10, Ezekiel 5:11, Divine Judgment, Prophetic Acts, Jerusalem, Exile, Babylonian Captivity, Covenant Consequences, God’s Justice, Measured Punishment, Symbolic Prophecy, Ancient Near Eastern Culture, Priestly Ministry

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