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The prophet with the wildest visions in the Bible — wheels within wheels
A priest taken to Babylon in the first wave of exile who received intense, symbolic visions from God. He saw four-faced creatures, spinning wheels full of eyes, a valley of dry bones coming to life, and a massive Temple rebuilt. His ministry lasted over 20 years and addressed both the judgment of Jerusalem and the future restoration of Israel.
God gives Ezekiel a full architectural blueprint for a future temple — every measurement included
Ezekiel's Valley of Dry BonesThe ProphetsGod takes Ezekiel to a valley full of skeletons and brings them back to life
Ezekiel's Wild VisionsThe ProphetsEzekiel sees wheels within wheels, four-faced creatures, and God's glory — it's a lot
49 chapters across 2 books
Ezekiel is actively recording the precise date and setting of his vision — his specificity about the thirtieth year and the Chebar canal gives the supernatural event a grounded, eyewitness quality.
The Sapphire Throne and the Burning CoalsEzekiel 10:1-2Ezekiel is the witnessing prophet who looks up and sees the sapphire throne blazing above the cherubim — he is the sole human observer of this cosmic judicial scene unfolding overhead.
The Corrupt Leaders ExposedEzekiel 11:1-4Ezekiel is transported in the vision to Jerusalem's east gate, where the Spirit shows him twenty-five corrupt leaders and commands him to prophesy against them.
The Packed Bag PerformanceEzekiel 12:1-7Ezekiel receives God's specific instructions here — pack a bag, dig through a wall, carry it out at dusk — a humiliating and confusing public act designed to provoke questions from the neighbors watching.
Jackals in the RuinsEzekiel 13:1-7Ezekiel is commanded to pivot from general prophecy and aim his message specifically at the false prophets — God is using him as the mouthpiece for a targeted public exposure.
Caught in 4KEzekiel 14:1-5In the Caught in 4K section, Ezekiel receives God's word before the consultation even begins — God intercepts the session to expose the elders rather than answer them, making Ezekiel the vessel through whom the confrontation is delivered.
The Vine That Can't Do AnythingEzekiel 15:1-5Ezekiel is the direct recipient of God's rhetorical question about the vine — he's being walked through the logic that will justify Jerusalem's coming judgment.
The Worst Glow-Up-to-Fall-Off Story Ever ToldEzekiel is commissioned here to deliver God's most personal and devastating indictment — not a military warning but an extended metaphor exposing Jerusalem's spiritual betrayal from her very origins.
The Riddle of Two EaglesEzekiel 17:1-10Ezekiel is the messenger commanded to deliver this riddle to Israel — he is not interpreting it yet, simply conveying the symbolic story of eagles, cedars, and a vine that reaches for the wrong source of life.
The Proverb Gets CancelledEzekiel 18:1-4Ezekiel is the recipient of God's word in verses 1-4, the prophet through whom God formally declares the sour-grapes proverb cancelled and establishes the principle that each soul answers for itself.
+ 38 more chapters in ezekiel
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