The Book of Ezekiel records the visions and prophecies of a priest taken into exile during the fall of Jerusalem. Speaking from Babylon, Ezekiel announces God’s judgment on Israel’s sin and on the nations, then proclaims the promise of renewal. His visions—the chariot of glory, the valley of dry bones, and the future temple—reveal divine holiness restoring what sin destroyed. In Catholic interpretation, Ezekiel shows that God’s presence is not confined to a place but abides with His people wherever they are. His prophecy anticipates the sacraments, through which hearts of stone become hearts of flesh.
| Testament | Old Testament | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Section | 4. Prophets | ||
| Category | Field | Explanation | Ezekiel |
| Canonical Identity | Name | Official title of the book | Ezekiel |
| Testament | Old or New Testament | Old Testament | |
| Canonical Group | Section of Scripture | Major Prophets | |
| Order in Canon | Position in Catholic sequence | 33 | |
| Authorship and Origin | Attributed Author | Traditional writer | Ezekiel, son of Buzi, a priest and prophet among the Babylonian exiles |
| Approximate Date | Estimated time of composition | c. 593–571 BC | |
| Original Language | Primary written form | Hebrew | |
| Provenance | Cultural or geographic origin | Babylon during the Jewish exile | |
| Historical Context | Period Represented | Dates of events described | c. 593–571 BC |
| Dominant Powers | Civilizations or empires active | Babylonian Empire | |
| Social / Religious Setting | Cultural background | Jewish exile community struggling with identity, divine judgment, and hope for restoration | |
| External Influences | Neighboring cultural echoes | Mesopotamian visionary and symbolic imagery adapted for prophetic use | |
| Structure and Content | Chapters | Total number of canonical chapters | 48 |
| Genre | Literary type | Prophetic visions, symbolic actions, and apocalyptic imagery | |
| Major Sections | Core divisions or movements | 1. Call and Early Oracles of Judgment (1–24) 2. Prophecies against Foreign Nations (25–32) 3. Promises of Restoration and New Temple (33–48) | |
| Key Figures | Central characters | Ezekiel, the exiled elders, the personified “Son of Man,” Gog of Magog | |
| Setting | Main geographic focus | Babylon, Jerusalem (in visions), and Israel restored |
Ezekiel ends with a vision of the restored land and a new temple from which living waters flow—symbol of the life-giving Spirit. The final words, “The Lord is there,” express the goal of all prophecy: divine indwelling. For Catholics, Ezekiel’s closing vision foreshadows the Church as the new temple and Christ as the source of living water. Judgment gives way to restoration; exile to communion. The book concludes where salvation history itself moves—toward the abiding presence of God among His people.
The Book of Ezekiel presents the prophetic vision of a priest exiled to Babylon who became God’s messenger of judgment and restoration. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition), it is understood as both visionary and theological, uniting priestly concern for holiness with prophetic insight into divine glory. Ezekiel’s ministry begins with oracles of judgment against Jerusalem and concludes with an astonishing vision of renewal—the dry bones restored to life and a new Temple filled with God’s presence. The book’s central message is that God’s glory departs because of sin but returns when the people are cleansed and obedient. Through symbolic actions, parables, and visions, Ezekiel proclaims that exile is not the end but the beginning of re-creation.
| Section Name | Chapters | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | 1–24 | Ezekiel sees God’s glory and is commissioned as prophet. He denounces idolatry, injustice, and corruption, warning that Jerusalem will fall. | Ezekiel, elders of Judah | NABRE emphasizes the glory of God as both majestic and mobile—His holiness demands justice, yet His presence follows His people into exile. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | 25–32 | Prophecies against Ammon, Moab, Edom, Philistia, Tyre, Sidon, and Egypt, declaring that all nations are accountable to God. | Ezekiel, foreign kings | NABRE interprets this as universal judgment—no kingdom stands apart from divine authority. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | 33–39 | After Jerusalem’s fall, Ezekiel becomes prophet of hope. God promises a new heart, a new spirit, and national resurrection symbolized by the valley of dry bones. | Ezekiel, exiles of Israel | NABRE views this as turning point—repentance and divine initiative bring life from death. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | 40–48 | Ezekiel describes a renewed Temple, purified worship, and the return of God’s glory to dwell among His people forever. | Ezekiel, the Glory of the Lord | NABRE reads this as theological climax—God restores order, holiness, and communion; exile ends in divine indwelling. |
The Book of Ezekiel ends where it began—with the glory of the Lord. In NABRE interpretation, exile becomes the crucible of revelation: God is not confined to a place but sanctifies His people wherever they are. Ezekiel’s closing vision proclaims renewal in every dimension—spiritual, moral, and cosmic. The new Temple and restored land signify that God’s holiness once lost is now shared with His people. The final words—“The Lord is there” (Ezek 48:35)—express the book’s lasting hope: God’s presence is the true heart of redemption.
The Book of Ezekiel joins prophetic vision with priestly theology, bridging judgment and renewal. Written by the prophet-priest during exile in Babylon, it opens with visions of God’s glory—majestic and mobile—signifying divine presence beyond the ruined Temple. Ezekiel’s prophecies move from judgment on Judah and foreign nations to restoration of Israel, culminating in the vision of a new Temple and life-giving river. NABRE interprets Ezekiel as theology of divine holiness: God purifies His people through judgment, restores them by His Spirit, and dwells eternally among them.
| Section | Chapter | Title / Focus | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 1 | Ezekiel’s Vision of God’s Glory | Ezekiel beholds God’s glory in the form of living creatures and wheels full of eyes. | Ezekiel, the Glory of the Lord | NABRE emphasizes divine majesty and mobility—God’s presence transcends the Temple. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 2 | Ezekiel’s Call | God commissions Ezekiel as prophet to a rebellious people and gives him a scroll to eat. | Ezekiel, God | NABRE interprets prophetic vocation as union of divine word and human obedience. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 3 | The Watchman of Israel | Ezekiel is appointed watchman; his task is to warn the wicked and the righteous alike. | Ezekiel, God | NABRE stresses personal responsibility and faithful proclamation of truth. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 4 | The Siege of Jerusalem Portrayed | Ezekiel enacts symbolic acts predicting Jerusalem’s siege and famine. | Ezekiel | NABRE sees prophetic symbolism as visual preaching—judgment dramatized through obedience. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 5 | The Sword of Judgment | Hair divided into parts symbolizes destruction, plague, and exile. | Ezekiel | NABRE views symbolic actions as expressions of divine precision and justice. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 6 | Prophecy Against the Mountains of Israel | Idolatrous high places will be destroyed; a remnant will remember God. | Ezekiel | NABRE highlights hope amid judgment—memory of covenant restores relationship. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 7 | The End Has Come | Declares total collapse of Judah’s society and Temple because of corruption. | Ezekiel | NABRE underscores divine justice—sin reaches its full measure before restoration. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 8 | Idolatry in the Temple | Ezekiel sees visions of secret idol worship within the Temple. | Ezekiel, Elders of Judah | NABRE reveals spiritual corruption at the nation’s core—worship without holiness. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 9 | The Slaughter of the Guilty | Executioners mark the righteous and slay the wicked within Jerusalem. | Ezekiel, Executioners | NABRE interprets divine justice as purification distinguishing the faithful remnant. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 10 | God’s Glory Departs the Temple | The cherubim bear God’s glory out of Jerusalem; His presence withdraws. | Ezekiel, the Glory of the Lord | NABRE presents exile as both judgment and grace—God’s glory goes with His people into captivity. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 11 | Judgment and Promise | Corrupt leaders are condemned, but God promises a new heart and spirit for His people. | Ezekiel, Elders of Judah | NABRE identifies the new heart as foreshadowing spiritual regeneration through grace. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 12 | Symbolic Acts of Exile | Ezekiel enacts exile by packing his belongings and digging through a wall. | Ezekiel, Exiles | NABRE portrays prophetic gestures as dramatic signs of divine inevitability. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 13 | False Prophets Condemned | God denounces deceitful prophets and prophetesses who proclaim false peace. | Ezekiel, False Prophets | NABRE emphasizes truth as moral necessity—false hope deepens destruction. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 14 | Idolatry in the Heart | Elders harbor idols internally; God declares each person accountable for sin. | Ezekiel, Elders of Judah | NABRE shows holiness demanding inner conversion, not external observance alone. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 15 | The Useless Vine | Israel is compared to a vine burned for its worthlessness apart from faithfulness. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE uses this image to teach covenant identity dependent on fruitfulness. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 16 | Jerusalem the Unfaithful Bride | A long allegory portrays Jerusalem as an adulterous wife punished yet shown mercy. | Ezekiel, Jerusalem | NABRE interprets divine love as both jealous and redemptive—mercy follows judgment. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 17 | The Two Eagles and the Vine | A riddle depicts political alliances and God’s sovereign plan for restoration. | Ezekiel, Babylonian and Judean kings | NABRE views divine kingship as ultimate authority over human politics. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 18 | Personal Responsibility | Each person will be judged for their own deeds; repentance brings life. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE stresses moral freedom and justice—conversion always possible. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 19 | Lament for Israel’s Princes | A lament compares Judah’s kings to lion cubs destroyed for their corruption. | Ezekiel, Kings of Judah | NABRE underscores leadership’s moral accountability before God. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 20 | Israel’s Rebellion Remembered | God recounts Israel’s disobedience in Egypt, wilderness, and land, yet promises renewal. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE highlights divine patience sustaining covenant hope despite repeated betrayal. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 21 | The Sword of the Lord | God’s sword of judgment is drawn against Jerusalem and its rulers. | Ezekiel, Babylonian king | NABRE views divine judgment as instrument of purification and renewal. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 22 | Sins of Jerusalem Exposed | Corruption, bloodshed, and injustice pervade all classes of society. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE interprets this as moral collapse preceding divine cleansing. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 23 | The Two Sisters: Oholah and Oholibah | Samaria and Jerusalem are portrayed as adulterous sisters punished for idolatry. | Ezekiel, Samaria, Jerusalem | NABRE reads the allegory as history turned into theology—sin repeated invites ruin. |
| Oracles of Judgment against Judah and Jerusalem | Ezekiel 24 | The Boiling Pot and Ezekiel’s Wife | The parable of a pot symbolizes Jerusalem’s siege; Ezekiel’s wife dies as sign of Israel’s grief. | Ezekiel, the Exiles | NABRE highlights prophetic suffering as participation in God’s sorrow for His people. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 25 | Judgment on Israel’s Neighbors | Ammon, Moab, Edom, and Philistia condemned for rejoicing over Judah’s fall. | Ezekiel, Foreign Nations | NABRE presents God’s justice as universal—nations share moral accountability. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 26 | Oracle Against Tyre | Tyre’s pride and wealth lead to destruction by many nations. | Ezekiel, Tyre | NABRE views human arrogance and economic idolatry as self-destructive. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 27 | Lament over Tyre | A poetic dirge recounts Tyre’s commercial empire and its total ruin. | Ezekiel, Tyre’s Merchants | NABRE contrasts worldly success with inevitable collapse before divine truth. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 28 | Judgment on Tyre’s King | The ruler’s arrogance is condemned; a lament portrays his downfall like a fallen cherub. | Ezekiel, King of Tyre | NABRE interprets this as allegory of pride—rebellion against God dethrones itself. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 29 | Oracle Against Egypt | Pharaoh compared to a sea monster; Egypt’s downfall foretold. | Ezekiel, Pharaoh | NABRE highlights divine sovereignty over empire and nature alike. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 30 | The Day of Egypt’s Doom | A day of reckoning comes for Egypt and her allies. | Ezekiel, Pharaoh, Allies of Egypt | NABRE interprets this as symbol of all human power undone by divine judgment. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 31 | The Fall of Assyria as Warning to Egypt | Assyria’s downfall serves as example of divine judgment on the proud. | Ezekiel, Pharaoh | NABRE shows history as moral instruction—no empire stands above God’s rule. |
| Oracles against Foreign Nations | Ezekiel 32 | Lament for Egypt | Two laments describe Pharaoh’s descent into the pit with other fallen nations. | Ezekiel, Pharaoh | NABRE interprets the imagery as cosmic reversal—earthly glory reduced to silence before God. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 33 | The Watchman and the Fall of Jerusalem | Ezekiel renewed as watchman; news of Jerusalem’s fall confirms his prophecy. | Ezekiel, Exiles | NABRE sees this as prophetic vindication—truth now leads to mission of renewal. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 34 | The Good Shepherd | God condemns false shepherds and promises to shepherd His people Himself. | Ezekiel, Shepherds of Israel | NABRE connects this with Christ’s later fulfillment—God’s leadership born of mercy. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 35 | Oracle Against Mount Seir | Edom condemned for vengeance against Israel. | Ezekiel, Edomites | NABRE presents this as judgment against hatred that defies divine will. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 36 | Renewal of Israel | God promises cleansing, a new heart, and a new spirit for His people. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE identifies this as spiritual rebirth—the covenant written upon the soul. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 37 | The Valley of Dry Bones | Ezekiel’s vision of dry bones rising to life symbolizes Israel’s resurrection. | Ezekiel, House of Israel | NABRE interprets this as revelation of God’s power to restore life from despair. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 38 | Gog’s Invasion | Prophecy of Gog from Magog attacking restored Israel; God intervenes decisively. | Ezekiel, Gog | NABRE views Gog as symbol of ultimate evil defeated by divine sovereignty. |
| Prophecies of Restoration and Renewal | Ezekiel 39 | The Defeat of Gog | Gog’s armies destroyed; Israel purified; God’s glory made known to the nations. | Ezekiel, Gog, House of Israel | NABRE emphasizes eschatological hope—evil consumed in the fire of holiness. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 40 | Vision of the Temple | Ezekiel is shown a new, perfectly ordered Temple symbolizing divine presence. | Ezekiel, The Glory of the Lord | NABRE interprets the vision as blueprint of restored worship—holiness given structure. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 41 | The Inner Sanctuary | Ezekiel describes the inner Temple, its measurements, and ornamentation. | Ezekiel, The Glory of the Lord | NABRE emphasizes sacred precision—holiness expressed through divine order. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 42 | The Priestly Chambers | Details the chambers for priests and their sacred duties of purification. | Ezekiel, Priests | NABRE reads these chambers as signs of covenant intimacy—purity guarding God’s presence. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 43 | The Return of God’s Glory | God’s glory fills the new Temple; Ezekiel is given laws of holiness. | Ezekiel, The Glory of the Lord | NABRE identifies this as the book’s climax—divine presence restored among His people. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 44 | Regulations for the Priesthood | God reestablishes priestly order emphasizing faithfulness and separation from impurity. | Ezekiel, Priests, Levites | NABRE connects restored worship with moral reform—holiness begins in leadership. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 45 | Sacred Allotments and Offerings | Land divisions and ritual offerings are prescribed for justice and equity. | Ezekiel, Prince of Israel | NABRE interprets this as social holiness—divine law shaping daily life. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 46 | Temple Worship and Festivals | Describes worship patterns, Sabbaths, and festivals under renewed covenant. | Ezekiel, Prince, Priests | NABRE shows restored ritual as symbol of harmony between heaven and earth. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 47 | The River from the Temple | A life-giving river flows from the Temple, renewing the land and sea. | Ezekiel, The Glory of the Lord | NABRE views this as vision of divine renewal—grace flowing from God’s indwelling. |
| The Vision of the New Temple and Restored Land | Ezekiel 48 | Division of the Land | Final tribal allotments and the naming of the city: “The Lord is there.” | Ezekiel, Twelve Tribes | NABRE concludes with perfect restoration—God’s presence defines and sanctifies the new creation. |
Ezekiel ends where it began—with God’s glory. The exile that began with His departure concludes with His return to dwell forever among His people. The restored Temple, renewed covenant, and river of life reveal divine holiness transforming all creation. NABRE reads this finale as the fulfillment of prophetic hope: holiness restored, order renewed, and life flowing from God’s indwelling presence. The book’s last words, “The Lord is there,” summarize its entire message—God’s faithfulness made permanent in His people.