Ezekiel 43
The glory of the Lord enters the temple from the east, filling the sanctuary with the radiance of the Lord, returning the divine presence that departed in chapters 10-11 and reversing Israel's fundamental theological crisis. The description of the glory's return echoes the departure imagery but in reverse: God's presence is restored, and the community is reunited with the divine presence that sustained Israel's covenant relationship. God instructs Ezekiel to communicate the sanctuary's laws to the exiled house of Israel, establishing that the vision's purpose is not merely personal experience but communal instruction. The priest's role in maintaining the sanctuary's holiness—neither permitting the unclean to approach nor allowing idolatrous practices—establishes that restoration includes purification and spiritual discipline. God announces that the temple will be the place of God's throne and the place of God's footstool, establishing the sanctuary as the cosmic center where divine and human realms intersect. The promise that God's holy name will not be profaned again in the restored sanctuary emphasizes the eradication of idolatry; the covenant violation that necessitated judgment will not recur. The instructions regarding the altar and priestly service establish that worship will continue with renewed commitment to holiness standards. This chapter represents the culmination of the restoration narrative: the glory returns, the sanctuary is established, and the covenant relationship is renewed. The vision's movement from the glory's departure to its return structures the entire Ezekiel prophecy as a narrative of exile and restoration. This chapter establishes that restoration is fundamentally about the renewal of God's presence with the covenant people.