Ezekiel Chapters - BBE Bible
Ezekiel records the visions and ministry of a priest-prophet exiled to Babylon with the first wave of deportees in 597 BC. His elaborate symbolic visions — the four living creatures (Ezekiel 1), the valley of dry bones (Ezekiel 37), and the detailed blueprint of a future Temple (Ezekiel 40-48) — make this one of the Bible's most visually stunning and theologically rich prophetic books. Ezekiel Bible chapters trace the departure of God's glory from the corrupt Temple, Israel's judgment, the oracles against surrounding nations, and ultimately God's promised return to dwell among His fully restored people.
About Ezekiel
Ezekiel is the twenty-sixth book of the Bible, written by Ezekiel the priest-prophet during the Babylonian exile, covering roughly 593 to 571 BC and spanning 48 chapters. Ezekiel ministered among the exiles in Babylon, receiving some of the most visually stunning and theologically complex visions in all of scripture. The book divides into three broad sections: oracles of judgment against Jerusalem (chapters 1-24), oracles against foreign nations (chapters 25-32), and oracles of restoration and hope (chapters 33-48). Major themes include the glory (kavod) of God, individual moral responsibility, the sin and restoration of Israel, and the spectacular vision of a new Temple and renewed land in the closing chapters. Key chapters include Ezekiel 1 (the vision of the living creatures and God's glory), Ezekiel 18 (individual responsibility), Ezekiel 34 (God as the true Shepherd), Ezekiel 36-37 (the new heart and the valley of dry bones), and Ezekiel 40-48 (the vision of the new Temple). Famous verses include Ezekiel 36:26 -- I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you -- and Ezekiel 37:4 -- Prophesy to these bones and say to them, Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord! Ezekiel KJV Bible reading rewards serious theological study. Read the Book of Ezekiel online here in full.