A Fresh Vision of God (Ezekiel 1–3)
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Fear has a way of sounding timeless. A line from 1857 calls it a gloomy moment in history, and that mood could describe our feeds today—yet Ezekiel meets that same anxiety on the banks of the Kebar Canal with a vision that reframes everything. We follow the story from Babylon’s invasions through the lives of Daniel and Jeremiah to a young priest turning thirty, interrupted by a whirlwind, living creatures, wheels full of eyes, and a throne that moves with purpose.
We unpack what Ezekiel actually saw and why it matters: cherubim as guardians of divine presence, a chariot-throne able to surge any direction without turning, and a human-like figure robed in fire and ringed with a rainbow of promise. The language strains because glory is hard to contain, but the takeaway is clear—God’s sovereignty is not static, and his attention is total. That vision sets the stage for Ezekiel’s hard assignment. Called “son of man” to stress his need, he’s given a scroll filled with lament and woe, told to eat it, and finds it sweet as honey. Truth can confront and still be sweet when it’s God’s. From there, the watchman mandate lands: warn faithfully, release the outcomes.
Along the way, we connect the exile timeline, the overlap between Jeremiah’s warnings in Judah and Ezekiel’s ministry in Babylon, and the courage that flows when worship comes first. If you’ve felt undercut by uncertainty, this journey offers a way forward: see the King before you speak, taste the message before you teach, and remember that the throne still moves. We close with a charge to serve under the soon-coming King of kings and Lord of lords with grounded hope rather than brittle optimism.
If this helped you lift your eyes and steady your steps, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What part of Ezekiel’s vision stayed with you most?
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