Book introduction

Ezekiel

Read Ezekiel in light of the larger biblical story, paying attention to covenant, redemption, and how the book advances God's purposes.

Old TestamentOld Testament history3 major themes
AuthorAuthor context still being expanded
AudienceReaders within the unfolding covenant story of Scripture
Approximate dateOld Testament period

Overview

How to enter this book well

Setting

This book belongs within the larger biblical storyline and benefits from nearby canonical context.

Why read it

Read Ezekiel with an eye for where it sits in the canon, what it reveals about God, and how it contributes to the larger story of redemption.

CovenantWorshipRedemption

Outline

Major movements in Ezekiel

Opening movement: note how the book introduces its main burden or story

Middle movement: watch repeated themes, promises, commands, or conflicts

Closing movement: notice how the book resolves, intensifies, or points forward

Opening chapter

Chapter 1 in context

Ezekiel 1 should be read within the larger movement of Ezekiel, paying attention to how this chapter advances the book's main themes of covenant, worship, redemption.

Look for repeated words, contrasts, promises, or commands.

Notice how this chapter connects to what comes before and after it.

Ask what the chapter reveals about God's character and His purposes.

Mid-book guidance

Chapter 24 in context

Ezekiel 24 should be read within the larger movement of Ezekiel, paying attention to how this chapter advances the book's main themes of covenant, worship, redemption.

Look for repeated words, contrasts, promises, or commands.

Notice how this chapter connects to what comes before and after it.

Ask what the chapter reveals about God's character and His purposes.