Lesson 2
Historical Background of Ezekiel
1. Hezekiah
A. King Hezekiah died in 687 BC. Between his death and the
destruction of Jerusalem by Babylon in 587 BC there was
precisely one century. “Seldom has a nation experienced so
many dramatically sudden reversals of fortune in so
relatively short a time.”
B. What had happened prior to 687 BC was that Shalmaneser
(shal’’-muh-nee’zer) IV, king of Assyria, had invaded
Israel in 722 BC when King Hoshea had refused to pay him
tribute. The ten Northern tribes were taken into captivity
by Assyria.
C. The Southern kingdom was spared through the influence of
righteous men like Isaiah.
D. In fact, Judah experienced a spiritual revival under
King Hezekiah, who was influenced both by what had happened
to Israel and by the preaching of Isaiah.
E. All was not well, however. A strong party in Jerusalem
advocated an alliance with Egypt against Assyia.
F. Isaiah rejected this plan just as he had rejected Ahaz’s
plan to make an alliance with Assyria. Isaiah’s advice was
to trust in the Lord.
G. Meanwhile, the Assyrians had a mutiny and Shalmaneser
was gone. In his place came Sargon, translated “legitimate
king” --- which of course means he was just the opposite!
H. When Sargon defeated Egypt at the Battle of Raphia,
Isaiah’s advice to Judah was shown to have been correct.
I. When Hezekiah died in 686, those who sought closer ties
with Assyria and its gods came into power.
2. Manasseh
A. Manasseh was Hezekiah’s son and became king in 686 when
Hezekiah died.
B. For nearly 60 years he and his son Amon turned the
people toward idolatry and wickedness.
C. The people repudiated the law of God and forgot that it
even existed.
D. Children were sacrificed to Moloch.
1. (2 Kings 21:16) “Moreover Manasseh shed very much
innocent blood, till he had filled Jerusalem from one end
to another.”
2. Indeed, Manasseh sacrificed his own son to Moloch in the
Valley of Hinnom near Jerusalem.
3. (2 Kings 21:6) Also he made his son pass through the
fire, practiced soothsaying, used witchcraft, and consulted
spiritists and mediums. He did much evil in the sight of
the Lord, to provoke Him to anger.
E. Hezekiah had resisted the Assyrians. Mannasseh abandoned
that resistance and declared himself a loyal vassal of
Assyria.
F. 2 Chronicles 33:10-13 tells us that at one point the
Assyrians took Manasseh captive to Babylon with hooks and
bronze fetters.
G. Manasseh prayed to God, was released, and returned a
changed man.
H. He tried to get rid of the idols, but the damage had
already been done.
1. As one commentator noted, Manasseh was able to get rid
of the idols everywhere except in the heart of his own son,
Amon.
3. Amon
A. Amon was Manasseh’s son and Hezekiah’s grandson.
B. His two year reign brought back of all Manasseh’s early
policies.
C. Amon ignored his father’s repentance and brought back
all of th idols and all of the evil.
D. Amon was assassinated by palace conspirators for reasons
unknown, leaving the throne to 8 year old Josiah.
4. Josiah
A. Josiah was the son of Amon and the King of Judah from
640 to 609 BC.
B. He was 8 when his father was killed and he became king
in his place.
C. Ezekiel grew up during the reforms of Josiah.
D. A copy of the Law was discovered by Hilkiah during
Josiah’s renovations of the temple.
E. Josiah read it and was determined to obey it fully.
F. He even dug up the bones of the idolatrous priests and
burned them on their altars.
G. The people however were corrupt and did not genuinely
repent.
1. (Jeremiah 3:10) “And yet for all this her treacherous
sister Judah has not turned to Me with her whole heart, but
in pretense,” says the Lord.
H. The Mosaic Law that they had just rediscovered said that
the people would be taken captive and dispersed if they
disobeyed the covenant.
1. Read, for example, Leviticus 26.
5. Assyria
A. Assyria was the dominant power in the Near East for 250
years.
B. While Josiah reigned, however, Assyria was too busy with
its own problems to pay any attention to him.
C. A new power struggle was beginning around this time.
D. When the Assyrian king, Ashurbanipal
(ah’’shoor-bah’nee-pal), died in 626 BC, the empire erupted
into chaos.
E. The Neo-Babylonian empire under Nabopolassar came into
existence that same year.
F. Jeremiah began his ministry a year earlier.
6. Scythians
A. The Scythians traveled in hordes, leaving desolation in
their wake.
B. They appeared in the Near East in the 7th century from a
region north of the Black Sea.
7. Medes and Persians
A. The Medes migrated from what is now southern Russia
about 1000 BC.
B. They settled in the Iranian plateau.
C. The Persians also came from that area, but settled
further south.
8. Egypt
A. Pharaoh Necho reigned from 609 to 594 BC.
B. Long a great power, Egypt was now in decline.
9. Babylon
A. Nabopolasser was king from 626 to 605 BC.
B. (His son, Nebuchadnezzar, reigned from 605 until 562
BC.)
C. Nabopolasser defeated Assyria in battle in 612 BC. It
was at this time that Nineveh (the Assyrian capital) fell
to a coalition of nations including the Medes and the
Babylonians.
1. Read Nahum 3:1ff (“Woe to the bloody city!”).
2. Two centuries later a Greek army passing that way had to
ask what that large mound of earth was. It was all that was
left of Ninevah.
D. The remnant of the Assyrian army retreated to Haran.
10. The Battle of Megiddo
A. Necho of Egypt marched to the aid of Assyria in 609 BC.
1. Why? Egypt did not like the Assyrians, but it liked the
growing Babylonian power even less.
B. Josiah tried to stop Necho at Megiddo and was killed in
battle.
C. Necho continued on to Haran to help the Assyrians, but
the delay caused by Josiah proved fatal to Necho’s plans.
D. Babylon defeated them both at the Battle of Megiddo.
1. From the most ancient times to the time of Napoleon,
Megiddo was one of the great battle-grounds of the world.
2. God chose this same famous battlefield to depict the
complete judgment and utter destruction of Rome in the book
of Revelation, where it is called Armageddon --- the Mount
or City of Megiddo.
11. Jehoahaz
A. Jehoahaz was Josiah’s second son and became King of
Judah in 609 BC.
B. The party in Judah that wanted political independence
was able to pass by Jehoiakim and instead put his younger
brother Jehoahaz on the throne.
C. After Necho was defeated by Babylon, he returned to
Egypt and began to consolidate his power in Palestine and
Syria.
D. He invited Jehoahaz to his headquarters at Riblah,
deposed him, and carried him off to Egypt, where he died
after having been king for only three months.
E. In his place, Necho placed Jehoiakim as a vassal king in
Judah.
12. Jehoiakim
A. Jehoiakim was Josiah’s eldest son and was King of Judah
from 609 BC until 597 BC.
B. He was known to be pro-Egyptian, which was why Necho put
him in charge.
C. The people of Judah knew what they were doing when they
passed over Jehoiakim and put his younger brother on the
throne.
D. The temple treasures had been removed and heavy tribute
was being paid to Egypt, yet Jehoiakim built for himself a
luxurious royal house with forced labor to make himself
appear a successful ruler.
1. Read Jeremiah 22:13-19. (Verse 15) “Shall you reign
because you enclose yourself in cedar?”
E. Jehoiakim was the king who cut and burned up the
prophecies of Jeremiah.
1. Read Jeremiah 36.
F. Also, he was the King mentioned in the opening verse of
Daniel.
13. Jeremiah’s Warnings
A. The lifetime of Jeremiah spanned the time from Josiah to
the Babylonian exile.
B. While Isaiah assured his generation that Assyria would
not enter Jerusalem, Jeremiah warned that destruction from
Babylon was imminent.
C. Jeremiah warned the people to submit to the Babylonians
and not to follow the enticements of Egypt -- but they did
not listen.
D. The writings of Jeremiah and Ezekiel converge at many
points, yet neither verbally acknowledges the work of the
other.
14. The Battle at Carchemish
A. In 605 BC, Nebuchadnezzar lead the armies of his father
Nabopolassar and attacked the combined Assyrian and
Egyptian forces at Carchemish on the Euphrates river.
1. Read Jeremiah 46.
B. This was one of the most important battles in history.
Babylon won overwhelmingly. Assyria passed away forever.
Egypt later aspired to power by never again rose to
international significance.
15. The First Deportation
A. Babylon continued southward after their conquest at
Carchemish and invaded Judah.
B. They deported a group of young nobles, including Daniel
and his friends.
16. Jehoiakim’s Revolt
A. Jehoiakim is still the King, but instead of being a
vassal to Egypt, he is now a reluctant vassal of Babylon.
B. After three years of unwilling submission to Babylon, he
revolted against Babylon in favor of Egypt. In doing so, he
ignored the warnings of Jeremiah.
C. Nebuchadnezzar retaliated against Judah in December 598
BC.
D. Jehoiakim died during the month that Babylon attacked,
apparently assassinated.
E. Jeremiah tells us that he received the burial of an ass.
(Jeremiah 22:19)
17. Jehoiachin
A. Jehoiachin was 18 when his father died and he became
king.
B. He surrendered the city of Jerusalem to Nebuchadnezzar 3
months after he became king.
18. The Second Deportation
A. After the surrender in 597 BC, Jehoiachin, his mother,
his wives, his officials, and the leading men were
deported.
B. Ezekiel was also deported at this time.
C. Ezekiel’s first message was in 592 BC, 5 years after the
second deportation.
19. Zedekiah
A. Zedekiah was Josiah’s youngest son (Jehoiachin’s uncle).
B. Nebuchadnezzar established him as a regent vassal over
Judah, a position he held from 597 until 586 BC.
C. Though in exile, Jehoiachin appears to have remained the
recognized king of Judah.
1. This is shown by administrative documents that have been
found in the excavations at Babylonia.
2. Also, Ezekiel provided dates based on the years of
Jehoiachin’s captivity.
3. Jehoiachin was well treated in Babylon. Clay tablets
record the quantity of oil that was delivered monthly to
“Ja’ukinu, king of the land of Jaudi.”
4. At one point, he had a position that was “above the
throne of the kings that were with him in Babylon.” (2
Kings 25:28)
D. Zedekiah, on the other hand, was a miserable and
pitiable figure.
1. He had Jeremiah imprisoned, yet secretly sent for him
and asked him for advice. (Jeremiah 37:16ff)
E. It was during Zedekiah’s regency that Ezekiel from
Babylon denounced the moral depravity of Judah and said
that the glory of God would leave the temple.
20. The Second Revolt
A. False prophets told Zedekiah that Nebuchadnezzar’s power
would soon be broken. They also said that the exiles would
soon triumphantly return.
1. Read Jeremiah 28:1-4 (Hananiah).
B. Also, the Pharaohs that ruled after Necho in Egypt
appeared to have renewed strength.
C. All of this prompted Zedekiak to listen to the
pro-Egyptian party and seek aid from the new Egyptian king
Hophra in 589. The final rebellion against Nebuchadnezzar
had begun.
D. The patience of Nebuchadnezzar was exhausted. Babylon
responded immediately and marched toward Jerusalem.
E. Babylon laid siege to Jerusalem in 588 BC.
F. Descriptions of the siege speak of pestilence, famine,
and cannibalism.
G. After 18 months and despite some Egyptian help, the city
was razed to the ground.
21. The Destruction of the City
A. Jerusalem was destroyed in 586 BC.
B. Zedekiah was captured trying to flee.
C. He was blinded after witnessing the execution of his
sons.
D. He was then led off to Babylon, where he died.
22. The Third Deportation
A. Many of the Jews were murdered by the Babylonians.
B. Others were deported to Babylonia.
C. Judah had fallen.
23. Judah after the Third Deportation
A. The Edomites watched with approval as the city was
destroyed.
1. Read Obadiah for God’s reaction to the Edomites.
2. Habakkuk also prophesied at this time, describing the
Babylonians as the rod of God’s wrath.
B. Jeremiah was treated well by Nebuchadnezzar and offered
complete freedom. He instead chose to stay in Judah with
the governor, Gedaliah, that Nebuchadnezzar had appointed.
C. Ishmael, a royal relative, staged a revolt and killed
Gedaliah.
D. Many of the remaining Jews wanted to flee to Egypt.
E. Jeremiah told them that Babylon would not give them
anymore trouble, but that Egypt would soon fall.
F. They rejected his prophecy, and they forced him and
Baruch to accompany them to Egypt.
G. Jeremiah delivers his final prophecy at Taphanes in
Egypt.
H. In 586, the word comes to Ezekiel that the city is
smitten.
I. From a state of undue optimism (dealt with by the first
third of Ezekiel), the Jews switch to feelings of despair
(dealt with by the last third of the book).
J. Read Psalm 137.
1. (Verse 1) “By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down,
yea, we wept when we remembered Zion.”