The Bible Recap - Day 254 (Ezekiel 46-48) - Year 5
Episode Date: September 11, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - To enter to win a trip to the Museum of the Bible, click here! ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: Life in the Dead Sea - Video: Prophecy about life in the Dead Sea *no longer available, sorry! - Article: New Life Forms at Bottom of the Dead Sea - Numbers 18:20-24 - Ezekiel 44:28 - The Bible Recap - Day 252 - The Bible Recap - Day 253 - 2 Corinthians 6:16 - Ezekiel 40:39 - Hebrews 10:1-18 - Article: What is the significance of Ezekiel's Temple? - Article: Ezekiel Sees a New Temple - Video: Joel Overview SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today, we finished our 30th book of the Bible.
Congratulations!
We've got a lot to cover in our vision tour wrap-up in addition to talking about the things
I've told you to put a pin-in for the last two days, so let's get to it.
In chapter 46, we read about the Feasts and Festivals.
On our Israel tours, when we sit on the steps of the Temple Mount, we talk about what God
says here in 46.9.
He who enters by the Northgate to worship shall go out by the Southgate, and he who enters
by the Southgate shall go out by the Northgate.
No one shall return by the way of the gate by which
he entered, but each shall go out straight ahead. Sure, this probably helps with traffic flow,
but because Hebrew culture is rich with symbolism, there's also symbolism in this not just efficiency.
It represents the fact that each person will exit different than they came. It represents the change
that takes place in us when we come before God to worship him.
In verses 16-18, God forbids the political leader from acquiring any more land. Remember how pre-exile
there was a major problem with the leadership being greedy, which led to them oppressing the poor in
order to acquire more land for themselves? Here, God raises the bar on this situation in a way that stops their greedy desires
before they become greedy actions. In chapter 47, Ezekiel sees a vision of water flowing from the
temple through what is currently desert and into the Dead Sea. By the way, the Dead Sea is called
the Dead Sea because nothing can live in it. It's 33% salt. That's 11 times saltier than our oceans. But in Ezekiel's vision,
the desert is blooming because of the water, and the water even purifies the dead sea base
and so that it's no longer dead. It's alive. How beautiful and symbolic is that?
But in addition to it being symbolic, it may also be literal. In 2011,
scientists started finding freshwater springs at the bottom of the Dead Sea, along
with new bacterial life forms.
And there are also reports that in 2018, people began noticing tiny fish swimming in sinkholes
that form by the sea.
In today's show notes, we'll link to one short scientific video and one longer video about
prophecy, as well as a National Geographic article, in case you want to look into this more. To be fair, this isn't a precise fulfillment
of the scripture, since Ezekiel's prophecy involves a river flowing from the temple
down to the desert. But some say it could be the early phases of that promise being put
into motion.
In chapter 48, we see God making other adjustments to things he commanded through Moses,
just like we saw yesterday.
Yesterday we saw him raising the bar on laws, and today we see him raising the bar on generosity.
Remember how in Numbers 18 he said the Levites would have no land inheritance because
he himself was their inheritance?
Here, in verses 10-14, we see Ezekiel portioning off land allotments for all the tribes, including the Levites.
In this restored land, the priest and the Levites
will have a plot of land, too.
They still don't get to possess it as an inheritance,
according to 4428, but they get to live there nonetheless.
This temple in Ezekiel's vision is magnificent,
but here's where you might get a little whiplash.
Remember how I told you two days ago
when we first started reading these temple descriptions
that you should hold all this loosely?
That's because this temple was never built.
When the Jews built the second temple,
it didn't meet with these specifications.
It was much smaller than Zekule's vision.
So what happened?
Why would they disobey God's vision?
Or did God lie?
Or was Ezekiel a false prophet? Who's to blame for what's going on here?
There are three primary views on how to interpret this text,
and they're each rooted in different beliefs about the end times.
Most people tend to interpret chapters 40 through 48 through the lens of their own eschatology,
which is just a fancy way of saying through their own perspective on the end times.
Here's a quick breakdown of those views.
But even within each view, some people
may view things with nuances that we don't have time
to go into here.
View A says this is literal, and that God
is going to build this temple at some point in the future.
He won't let this vision go unfulfilled,
so this is what the third temple will look like someday.
View A, people say God wouldn't describe things in such great detail
if he had no intention of this just being a metaphor.
View B says this vision is intentionally symbolic
and that the exact reason it's described in such detail
is to reveal that.
It's harder to see this through Western eyes,
but ancient Jews and even many modern ones
see imagery when they read words.
Everything is about word pictures, and they give special weight to numbers.
Every letter of the Hebrew alphabet has an assigned numerical value, and this
is really important to their culture. So they knew the meaning that these
specific dimensions held, and believe they weren't given to Ezekiel to be
literal, they were intended to convey the superior magnitude and beauty of God's dwelling place with mankind. View B people say the Jews of
that day recognized this in the descriptions, which is why they knew immediately that it wasn't
a blueprint they were supposed to follow, but a vision of hope for restoration. It also fits with
what we talked about yesterday where God didn't explicitly command them to build this temple vision.
And if the ancient Jews had somehow misunderstood and these instructions were intended to be taken literally,
then God would have rebuked them for not following his blueprint when they built the second temple.
Two other reasons Vubi is popular is because, first, it takes into account the fact that God calls us his dwelling place in 2 Corinthians 616,
which means there isn't a need for a third structure.
It's a moot point.
Second, this vision gives details in 4039 and elsewhere about the sin and guilt sacrifices,
and we definitely don't need sacrifices, because Hebrews 10 tells us Jesus was the final sacrifice.
We'll link to one article that gives both perspectives, then we'll
include one that goes more in-depth on the perspective that this is symbolic. So look for those
in the show notes. ViewC, which I haven't forgotten about, is that the text has some prophecies
that are literal and some that are symbolic and some that may be both. So if you were like,
I don't know when I was describing those options, you might be a VC kind of person.
But the articles in the show notes are worth checking out, for sure.
As we wrap up this book and this challenging section, it's important to remember which things are
clear and fundamental and which things it seems God has intentionally left unclear. Those are the
things we want to hold with an open hand, because Christ exalting spirit-filled people may not always view this text the same way,
and that's okay. Prophetic texts are hard to find clarity in sometimes, so we don't scream where
scripture whispers, and we don't whisper where scripture screams. My God shot today was in the final
words of the book. The name of the city from that time on shall be, the Lord is there. So whenever this comes to complete fruition, God says,
he's not going anywhere.
No more trekking through the wilderness,
no more captivity or exile.
And he promises to stay there forever.
So of course, that's where I wanna be
because he's there and he's where the joy is. [♪ Music playing, PLAYING [♪ Tomorrow we'll be reading the Book of Joel.
It's three chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes
to help make this book much easier to grasp.
So check it out if you've got six minutes to spare.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
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Thanks.