The glory departs from the temple
God’s glory departs from the defiled temple as an enacted sign of covenant judgment on Jerusalem. The vision also emphasizes that Yahweh remains enthroned, mobile, and sovereign over judgment; he is not defeated by the temple’s loss but withdraws in holiness and authority.
Commentary
10:1 As I watched, I saw on the platform above the top of the cherubim something like a sapphire, resembling the shape of a throne, appearing above them.
10:2 The Lord said to the man dressed in linen, “Go between the wheelwork underneath the cherubim. Fill your hands with burning coals from among the cherubim and scatter them over the city.” He went as I watched.
10:3 (The cherubim were standing on the south side of the temple when the man went in, and a cloud filled the inner court.)
10:4 Then the glory of the Lord arose from the cherub and moved to the threshold of the temple. The temple was filled with the cloud while the court was filled with the brightness of the Lord’s glory.
10:5 The sound of the wings of the cherubim could be heard from the outer court, like the sound of the sovereign God when he speaks.
10:6 When the Lord commanded the man dressed in linen, “Take fire from within the wheelwork, from among the cherubim,” the man went in and stood by one of the wheels.
10:7 Then one of the cherubim stretched out his hand toward the fire which was among the cherubim. He took some and put it into the hands of the man dressed in linen, who took it and left.
10:8 (The cherubim appeared to have the form of human hands under their wings.)
10:9 As I watched, I noticed four wheels by the cherubim, one wheel beside each cherub; the wheels gleamed like jasper.
10:10 As for their appearance, all four of them looked the same, something like a wheel within a wheel.
10:11 When they moved, they would go in any of the four directions they faced without turning as they moved; in the direction the head would turn they would follow without turning as they moved,
10:12 along with their entire bodies, their backs, their hands, and their wings. The wheels of the four of them were full of eyes all around.
10:13 As for their wheels, they were called “the wheelwork” as I listened.
10:14 Each of the cherubim had four faces: The first was the face of a cherub, the second that of a man, the third that of a lion, and the fourth that of an eagle.
10:15 The cherubim rose up; these were the living beings I saw at the Kebar River.
10:16 When the cherubim moved, the wheels moved beside them; when the cherubim spread their wings to rise from the ground, the wheels did not move from their side.
10:17 When the cherubim stood still, the wheels stood still, and when they rose up, the wheels rose up with them, for the spirit of the living beings was in the wheels.
10:18 Then the glory of the Lord moved away from the threshold of the temple and stopped above the cherubim.
10:19 The cherubim spread their wings, and they rose up from the earth while I watched (when they went the wheels went alongside them). They stopped at the entrance to the east gate of the Lord’s temple as the glory of the God of Israel hovered above them.
10:20 These were the living creatures which I saw at the Kebar River underneath the God of Israel; I knew that they were cherubim.
10:21 Each had four faces; each had four wings and the form of human hands under the wings.
10:22 As for the form of their faces, they were the faces whose appearance I had seen at the Kebar River. Each one moved straight ahead.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage belongs to the Babylonian-exile setting in the early sixth century BC, when Jerusalem’s temple still stood but was under divine judgment because of persistent covenant unfaithfulness. The temple had been the focal point of Yahweh’s covenant presence, yet Ezekiel’s vision shows that sacred space cannot be presumed on the basis of ritual alone. The cherubim and throne imagery draws on temple symbolism already known in Israel’s worship, especially the Holy of Holies, but here it is used to show that the Lord is not trapped in the building he has hallowed. The eastward movement is significant: the glory’s departure is not random but a judicial withdrawal from a defiled sanctuary, setting the stage for the city’s collapse and for later restoration hope.
Central idea
God’s glory departs from the defiled temple as an enacted sign of covenant judgment on Jerusalem. The vision also emphasizes that Yahweh remains enthroned, mobile, and sovereign over judgment; he is not defeated by the temple’s loss but withdraws in holiness and authority.
Context and flow
This unit completes and intensifies the temple-abomination sequence begun in chapter 8 and the judgment scene of chapter 9. Chapter 10 expands the throne vision from Ezekiel 1, then narrates the progressive movement of the glory from the cherub to the threshold and finally to the east gate. Chapter 11 will continue the judgment speech and explain the theological meaning of the departure, while Ezekiel 43 will later describe the glory’s return.
Exegetical analysis
The unit opens with Ezekiel seeing a throne-like platform above the cherubim, indicating that the whole scene is fundamentally royal and judicial rather than merely decorative. The Lord commands the linen-clad man from chapter 9 to take burning coals from among the cherubim and scatter them over the city. The coals likely signify coming judgment on Jerusalem, though the vision does not invite speculative allegory beyond that clear function. The man obeys immediately, underscoring the execution of divine command.
The next movement is crucial: the glory of the Lord rises from the cherub and moves to the threshold of the temple. This is a staged withdrawal, not an abrupt disappearance. The temple is still filled with cloud and brightness, which both reveals and conceals the presence of God; the scene evokes earlier theophanic patterns in Israel’s history, including Sinai and the tabernacle. Yet the movement from the inner sanctuary to the threshold signals that the divine presence is leaving the house that has been polluted by idolatry and violence.
The long central section returns to the cherubim and wheels, but it is not mere repetition. Ezekiel slows down to describe the throne-chariot in careful detail so the reader sees that the glory departs in sovereign majesty, not in panic or defeat. The wheels move in any direction without turning; they are full of eyes; the creatures have four faces and four wings. These features communicate exhaustive awareness, purposeful direction, and complete readiness. The text does not require that each face be assigned symbolic value in a rigid way; the overall point is the magnificence, intelligence, and mobility of the divine throne-bearers. In verse 14 the first face is described as 'the face of a cherub,' which differs from Ezekiel 1’s wording; the description likely reflects Ezekiel’s present identification of the living beings with cherubim rather than a different creature entirely.
The climax comes in verses 18–19: the glory moves from the threshold and stops above the cherubim, and then the cherubim rise and go to the east gate while the glory hovers above them. The eastward movement is deliberate and solemn. It marks Yahweh’s judicial withdrawal from the temple precincts and anticipates the later departure from the city. The final verses identify these living creatures with the beings Ezekiel saw at the Kebar River, confirming continuity with chapter 1. The vision therefore links Yahweh’s throne in heaven, his earlier appearance by the river, and his present judgment upon Jerusalem. The same God who dwells in glory is the one who departs in judgment.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant administration, where the sanctuary was the appointed place of Yahweh’s dwelling among a covenant people. But the covenant also included sanctions for persistent rebellion, and the departure of glory is a visible enactment of covenant curse. The scene signals that temple presence cannot be presumed apart from holiness and obedience. At the same time, Ezekiel’s later visions of return keep alive the hope that God will restore his presence after judgment, moving the storyline toward restoration and ultimately toward the greater fulfillment of God dwelling with his people.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God’s holiness, sovereignty, and freedom in relation to sacred space. He is not domesticated by the temple, and he does not tolerate covenant infidelity as though ritual privilege could cancel moral corruption. The vision also shows that divine judgment is not chaotic: it is ordered, purposeful, and administered by God’s own throne-chariot. The temple’s fall will not mean Yahweh’s defeat; rather, it will display his righteous response to sin. At the same time, the lingering glory and the eastward movement keep open the theme of eventual restoration.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
This is a symbolic vision with direct prophetic import: it enacts the departure of Yahweh’s glory from the temple and thus foretells impending judgment on Jerusalem. The cherubim, wheels, eyes, and throne-like platform are not to be decoded into a hidden system of speculative meanings; they serve the vision’s main theological purpose of portraying God’s kingship, mobility, and omniscience. The east gate is especially significant in the book’s larger movement because the glory later returns from the east in Ezekiel 43.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage draws on throne-room and royal procession imagery familiar in the ancient world, but it uses those conventions in a distinctly biblical way. Cherubim function as throne guardians, so their presence signals a holy royal audience chamber rather than mythic fantasy. The vision is also strongly concrete: Ezekiel does not abstractly discuss omniscience or sovereignty; he sees wheels, wings, hands, faces, and movement. That visual, embodied mode is typical of Hebrew prophetic revelation and should not be over-spiritualized.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In the OT setting, the vision explains why the temple will be left desolate: the covenant Lord departs because of sin. Later in Ezekiel, the glory returns, which sustains the canonical theme that God will again dwell among a purified people. In the wider canon, this prepares for the fuller revelation of God’s presence with his people, a trajectory that reaches its climax in the incarnate Son and the final dwelling of God with redeemed humanity. That said, the original force here is judgment and withdrawal, not immediate messianic promise.
Practical and doctrinal implications
The passage warns that religious institutions do not guarantee divine favor when covenant faithfulness is absent. It calls God’s people to reverence, repentance, and holiness, because the Lord who dwells among his people is also the Lord who judges them. It also comforts believers with the truth that God’s sovereignty is never threatened by human unfaithfulness: even in judgment, he remains enthroned and in control. Ministry and worship must therefore be shaped by the fear of God rather than by empty confidence in external forms.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive questions concern the exact relationship between this throne vision and Ezekiel 1, the meaning of the 'face of a cherub' in verse 14, and how literally to press the imagery of coals, wheels, and eyes. The broad meaning is clear even where some visual details remain debated.
Application boundary note
Readers should not flatten this vision into a general lesson about God being 'everywhere' in a vague sense or force the temple’s departure directly onto the church without regard for covenant distinction. The passage primarily addresses Israel’s temple under the Mosaic covenant and the consequences of defilement. The symbolic details should be handled with restraint rather than turned into a code.
Key Hebrew terms
kavod
Gloss: weight, glory, honor
The repeated phrase 'glory of the Lord' marks the central theological event: Yahweh’s manifest presence withdraws from the temple in judgment.
keruvim
Gloss: cherubim
These throne-bearers identify the vision as a divine throne-chariot scene and connect the temple to heavenly kingship.
ruach
Gloss: spirit, wind, breath
The statement that the spirit of the living beings was in the wheels explains their coordinated, living motion and reinforces the impression of animate divine mobility.
ofan / ofannim
Gloss: wheel, wheelwork
The wheels are part of the throne-chariot imagery and communicate readiness, mobility, and comprehensive direction under God's control.
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