Ezekiel 2
The Lord addresses the overwhelmed prophet, calling him to rise and receive his prophetic commission, acknowledging the difficult and rebellious nature of his audience—the exiled house of Israel. God provides Ezekiel with a scroll inscribed with "lamentation, mourning, and woe" to consume, symbolizing the integration of God's word into his being and the bitter content of his message. The emphasis on Israel's stubbornness and resistance frames the prophet's task as inherently confrontational; he must speak whether people listen or refuse, establishing the watchman motif central to his role. This chapter establishes the theological paradox of prophecy: divine word transcends human receptivity, so the prophet's duty is proclamation rather than successful persuasion. The scroll-eating imagery connects to later Jewish and Christian mystical traditions of interiorizing scripture. Ezekiel is commissioned as an advocate for divine justice despite communal opposition, prefiguring the New Testament's understanding of prophetic suffering and faithful witness.
Ezekiel 2:1
Command to stand upon feet inverting Ezekiel's prostration establishes fundamental relationship—address son of man emphasizes humanity and dependence rather than autonomous authority. Standing posture required for receiving commission; prophet must compose himself and assume messenger's stance. I will speak with you connects overwhelming visual theophany to prophetic speech—Ezekiel granted vision to contemplate and message to transmit. Core pattern established: reception of divine vision and speech (often overwhelming) followed by imperative to stand and convey message regardless of audience reception.
Ezekiel 2:2
Spirit entering and setting prophet on feet upon divine speech establishes prophet's capacity to stand depends entirely on divine spirit rather than personal resources. Spirit animating creatures and wheels now enters prophet, integrating Ezekiel into heavenly apparatus serving YHWH's purposes. Ezekiel becomes conduit through which divine intention reaches terrestrial realm. Spirit's enablement suggests prophetic ministry is divine gift and empowerment, not human achievement; prophet's role is availability as vessel. For exile-fractured prophet, spirit's entry restores coherence and purpose as medium of divine action.
Ezekiel 2:3
Commission directly from YHWH to rebellious people establishes Ezekiel's audience fundamentally characterized by rebellion against divine authority. Sending language echoes earlier prophets; despite audience's compromised willingness, prophetic commission remains non-negotiable. Expectation of resistance established before prophet speaks; fidelity cannot depend on visible success. Address to people of Israel emphasizes despite diaspora, Ezekiel's fundamental identity remains rooted in covenant people; dispersed Israel remains YHWH's people deserving prophetic address. Nation and surrounding peoples both rebel; Ezekiel sent to intractable audience with message likely rejected.