Ezekiel 48
God specifies the final division of the restored land: seven tribes receive land north of the sacred district, five tribes receive land south of it, with the sacred district in the center containing the sanctuary, and the land is named "The LORD is There" (Yahweh-Shammah). The tribal arrangement mirrors the original conquest division while maintaining the sacred district's centrality, suggesting that restoration reestablishes covenant order. The sacred district contains not merely the sanctuary and priestly portions but also spaces for Levites and the city, integrating spiritual and communal life. The city in the restored territory receives twelve gates named after the twelve tribes, establishing communal inclusion in the restored order despite the sanctuary's centrality. The land's division is precisely measured with boundaries clearly established; restoration involves ordered, just distribution of inherited territory. The name "The LORD is There" (Yahweh-Shammah) summarizes the entire restoration vision: the fundamental problem (divine absence necessitated by judgment) is solved through God's renewed, permanent presence. The promise that the Lord dwells in the restored community represents the climactic theological affirmation; covenant relationship is fundamentally restored. The precise measurements and tribal distributions demonstrate that Ezekiel's vision addresses concrete community reorganization, not merely spiritual abstraction. The book's conclusion with the affirmation of God's presence among the people completes the narrative arc: exile constitutes judgment for covenant violation, and restoration constitutes the permanent reestablishment of divine presence. This chapter's theodicy concludes with the affirmation that justice and mercy, judgment and restoration, exile and return all serve the ultimate purpose of securing God's permanent, undeniable presence with the covenant people.