Why Ezekiel Matters
Ezekiel sees the glory of God in exile, announces judgment, promises a new heart and Spirit, and pictures dry bones raised to life. The book is visionary, priestly, and fiercely hopeful.
The book's central themes include glory, exile, judgment, resurrection, and restored temple. Read inside the whole canon, those themes are not isolated topics but part of Scripture's unified witness to God's covenant work and to Christ.
Canonical Reception
Ezekiel is received across the Christian traditions and belongs to the Hebrew Scriptures. Its place in the canon anchors how the Church reads its witness to Christ. In this entry it is marked as recognized in the Protestant canon, the Roman Catholic canon, Eastern Orthodox canons, Oriental Orthodox canons, the Hebrew Bible.
Reading With The Church
A faithful reading of Ezekiel asks first what the text says in its own setting, then how its words are received in the full scriptural economy. The goal is not to flatten historical context into later theology, but to hear the book as part of the one biblical canon read by the Church.
- Ezekiel 1:26-28
- Ezekiel 36:25-27
- Ezekiel 37:1-14
- Ezekiel 47:1-12
