Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Ezekiel 26:1 - 26:1

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Ezekiel 26:1 - 26:1


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Eze 26:1-21. The judgment on Tyre through Nebuchadnezzar (twenty-sixth through twenty-eighth chapters).

In the twenty-sixth chapter, Ezekiel sets forth: -

(1) Tyre’s sin;

(2) its doom;

(3) the instruments executing it;

(4) the effects produced on other nations by her downfall. In the twenty-seventh chapter, a lamentation over the fall of such earthly splendor.

In the twenty-eighth chapter, an elegy addressed to the king, on the humiliation of his sacrilegious pride. Ezekiel, in his prophecies as to the heathen, exhibits the dark side only; because he views them simply in their hostility to the people of God, who shall outlive them all. Isaiah (Isa 23:1-18), on the other hand, at the close of judgments, holds out the prospect of blessing, when Tyre should turn to the Lord.

The specification of the date, which had been omitted in the case of the four preceding objects of judgment, marks the greater weight attached to the fall of Tyre.

eleventh year - namely, after the carrying away of Jehoiachin, the year of the fall of Jerusalem. The number of the month is, however, omitted, and the day only given. As the month of the taking of Jerusalem was regarded as one of particular note, namely, the fourth month, also the fifth, on which it was actually destroyed (Jer 52:6, Jer 52:12, Jer 52:13), Rabbi David reasonably supposes that Tyre uttered her taunt at the close of the fourth month, as her nearness to Jerusalem enabled her to hear of its fall very soon, and that Ezekiel met it with his threat against herself on “the first day” of the fifth month.