The last section of the book records the vision of the "structure like a city" seen by Ezekiel in . These verses apparently are added from a different source, focusing the city gates on each of the four sides, and each gate is named after a certain tribe (cf. f) to complete 'a picture of perfect order and harmony'. This new city is different from the Jerusalem in history, because the gates of the post-exilic Jerusalem in
Nehemiah time were carefully noted, yet none was named after the tribes (cf.
Nehemiah 3), although in the pre-exilic period there were a Benjamin gate and an Ephraim gate (; ), but both were on the north side, not the east side, of the city. Also, in the new city, Levi stands as one of the twelve tribes with its own gate, whereas Ephraim and Manasseh are represented by a single "Joseph" gate. The order of gate naming seems to have its own logic, with the children of Leah on the north (Judah, Levi and Ruben) and south sides (Simeon, Issachar and Zebulun), the children of Rachel on the east side (Joseph and Benjamin, together with Dan, the eldest son of
Bilhah, Rachel's handmaid) and the remaining children of the concubines (Gad, Asher and Naphtali) grouped together on the west. The arrangement recalls the order of tribal camps surrounding the
tabernacle, three on each of the four sides (), that brings the clear idea of "diverse but united people organized around a sacred point of reference," that is "the divine presence in its midst".
Verse 35 :
"All the way around shall be eighteen thousand cubits; and the name of the city from that day shall be: THE LORD IS THERE." • "18000 cubits": about 6 miles (9 km). • "THE LORD IS THERE": (Hebrew: יהוה ׀ שמה ), the new name of the city (; ; ; ; ; ; ). The city is not named until it is given this designation in the final verse of the book. ==See also==