, early 13th century, showing part of
Ezekiel 30 Life and times of Ezekiel The Book of Ezekiel is described as the words of
Ezekiel ben-Buzi, a priest living in exile in the city of
Babylon between 593 and 571 BC. Most scholars today accept the basic authenticity of the book, but see in it significant additions by a school of later followers of the original prophet. According to Jewish tradition, the
Men of the Great Assembly wrote the Book of Ezekiel, based on the prophet's words. While the book exhibits considerable unity and probably reflects much of the historic Ezekiel, it is the product of a long and complex history and does not necessarily preserve the very words of the prophet. According to the book that bears his name, Ezekiel ben-Buzi was born into a priestly family of Jerusalem , during the reign of the reforming king
Josiah. Prior to this time, Judah had been a vassal of the
Assyrian empire, but the rapid decline of Assyria after led Josiah to assert his independence and institute a religious reform stressing loyalty to
Yahweh, the God of Israel. Josiah was killed in 609 and Judah became a vassal of the new regional power, the
Neo-Babylonian empire. In 597, following a rebellion against Babylon during the reign of
King Nebuchadnezzar II, Ezekiel was among the large group of Judeans taken into
captivity by the Babylonians. He appears to have spent the rest of his life in
Mesopotamia. A further deportation of Jews from Jerusalem to Babylon occurred in 586 when a second unsuccessful rebellion resulted in the destruction of the city and its Temple and the exile of the remaining elements of the royal court, including the last scribes and priests. The various dates given in the book suggest that Ezekiel was 25 when he went into exile, 30 when he received his prophetic call, and 52 at the time of the last vision .
Textual history The Book of Ezekiel, in contradistinction to the work of earlier prophets, is a prophecy—largely self-authored with the exception of a short interpolation by the
Zadokites at the very end of the scroll. There were two versions or parts of the book (or otherwise two copies with some differences between them), both written by Ezekiel at the time of his death according to an ancient tradition which has more recently been confirmed by source criticism. This does not necessarily indicate that Ezekiel did not deliver oral teachings or prophecies in the
Tel Abib community where he had been deported along with the other
Judean elites. According to Ezekiel's own account in the text of the book that he wrote, he did have a mission to the community and spoke to the people but he may or may not have done so in quite so transparently public a way as previous prophets who stood and spoke on their own soil had done, given the conditions of the exile, apart from his notable pantomime of the destruction of Judah described in the book which took place in public but is described as a gestural and prop-driven acting out of the devastation of the temple and of Jerusalem which took place over forty days. and possibly represents an earlier transmission of the book we have today (according to the Masoretic tradition) – while other ancient manuscript fragments differ from both.
Critical history During the first half of the 20th century, scholars such as
C. C. Torrey (1863–1956) and
Morton Smith placed its authorship and later redaction variously in the 3rd century BC and in the 8th/7th. The pendulum swung back in the
post-war period, with an increasing acceptance of the book's essential unity and historical placement in the Exile.
Walther Zimmerli's two-volume commentary appeared in German in 1969 and in English in 1979 and 1983, and traces the process by which Ezekiel's oracles were delivered orally and transformed into a written text by the prophet and his followers through a process of ongoing re-writing and re-interpretation. He isolates the oracles and speeches behind the present text, and traces Ezekiel's interaction with a mass of mythological, legendary and literary material as he developed his insights into Yahweh's purposes during the period of destruction and exile. As noted at the top of the section on textual history, the latter interpretation is fleshed out in the translation by
Moshe Greenberg and Stephen L. Cook in the
Anchor Edition of the Book of Ezekiel, recently completed in 2025 and embarked upon over forty years ago in the wake of Zimmerli's revision. == Themes ==