AI-ASSISTED STUDY

Study scripture with guided help

Explore a Bible topic or bring in the passage you are already reading. Responses stay grounded in scripture and include references for continued study.

Ezekiel 12 (NIV)

Use the tools on this page to summarize, ask about, or reflect on the passage you opened from the reader.

Return to reader
Topic study

Study a Bible topic

Enter a topic, struggle, doctrine, or passage to receive an AI-assisted study guide with related Scriptures, key themes, and a concise explanation.

Search scripture
Enter a topic to study or search scripture.
Passage summary

Summarize this passage

Get the main movement of the selected chapter or verse range in plain language.

Passage question

Ask about this passage

Ask a focused question and keep the answer tied to the passage you opened.

Reflection

Generate reflection prompts

Create a few questions for observation, interpretation, and application.

Study Resources

Related Study Resources

Ezekiel 12 (NIV)
Commentary 1 source group
Tyndale Commentary 4 notes
TyndaleStudyNotes

Ezek.12.1-2

12:1-2 The inhabitants of Judah were not the only ones who had stony, stubborn hearts that were reluctant to hear the prophet’s message (11:19). The exiles among whom Ezekiel lived were also rebellious people who would refuse to see that their ways were evil and decline to hear his message, just like those left behind in Judah.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Ezek.12.12-13

12:12-13 King Zedekiah was unable to see the coming judgment, so he would be unable to see either the land he is leaving or the land of the Babylonians. This prophecy was fulfilled when the Babylonians captured Zedekiah as he fled from besieged Jerusalem. After making him watch while his sons were tortured to death, the Babylonians gouged out his eyes (2 Kgs...

Read source excerpt

12:12-13 King Zedekiah was unable to see the coming judgment, so he would be unable to see either the land he is leaving or the land of the Babylonians. This prophecy was fulfilled when the Babylonians captured Zedekiah as he fled from besieged Jerusalem. After making him watch while his sons were tortured to death, the Babylonians gouged out his eyes (2 Kgs 25:1-7). This terrible fate for Judah’s last king was not simply due to the Babylonians’ imperial expansionist ambitions. More fundamentally, the Lord wanted to capture him in his snare.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Ezek.12.1-24.27

12:1–24:27 This section collects diverse prophecies and sign acts that are united in their condemnation of Jerusalem and its leaders.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Ezek.12.16

12:16 The unhappy few survivors would confess all their detestable sins to their captors, not necessarily in repentance, but in recognition that the Lord had acted justly in judgment against them.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
People & Profiles1 item
TyndalePeople and Profiles

Ezekiel

Ezekiel

Read source excerpt

Ezekiel Ezekiel, a priest and prophet, was born around 623 BC. He was probably raised in Jerusalem, and he was married (24:16-18). He went into exile in Babylon with Jehoiachin in 597 BC, where he lived by the Kebar River. He was called to be a prophet in Babylon on July 31, 593 BC (1:1). All that we know of his personal life is from the book named after him. Ezekiel often reinforced his prophetic words with strange actions, such as illustrating his message about the dire lack of food in the final siege of Jerusalem by eating food cooked over dung (4:12). Another time, he lay motionless for 430 days, one day for each year of Israel’s and Judah’s sin (4:4-7). When Ezekiel’s wife died suddenly, he was forbidden to mourn her in public (24:16-18); her death was a solemn warning of what would happen in Judah (24:15-27). Ezekiel’s strange actions were designed to grab people’s attention. At first, Ezekiel’s messages were rejected, but his prophecies were later vindicated as they began to come true and the nation was purged of idolatry. His teaching emphasized holiness, purity, resurrection, and the ritual law. His message of hope encouraged the exiles to remain faithful during t...

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
Cross Reference6 items
TyndaleCross References

2 kings 25:1-7

2 kings 25:1-7

TyndaleCross References

jeremiah 24:1-8

jeremiah 24:1-8

TyndaleCross References

ezekiel 11:19

ezekiel 11:19

TyndaleCross References

ezekiel 12:1-27

ezekiel 12:1-27

TyndaleCross References

ezekiel 12:22

ezekiel 12:22