I’ve discussed this before, but now I’d like to add one more
consideration. It takes less time to see something than read about it. During
Ezekiel’s guided tour, he would have taken in the temple complex at a glance.
But writing down what he saw automatically bogs down in many minute details.
There’s a fundamental difference between his original visionary experience and
his verbal description of what he saw. Doing a walk-through of the temple
complex wouldn’t be tedious or time-consuming. That could happen in a few
minutes.
But converting that into extended word-pictures for the
benefit of the reader, for someone who didn’t see what he saw, is necessarily
more cumbersome. These are two different media. It may seem excessive to have 8
close-packed chapters describing something which will never be built, but
that’s a misleading comparison. For it fails to take into account the
disproportion between the original visionary experience and translating that
experience into a wordy medium. Pictures aren’t propositions.
Maybe Herod and the other Jews who expanded and improved the second temple for 46 years were trying to duplicate/follow the details of the Ezekiel temple?
ReplyDelete20 They replied, “It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and you are going to raise it in three days?” 21 But the temple he had spoken of was his body. 22 After he was raised from the dead, his disciples recalled what he had said. Then they believed the scripture and the words that Jesus had spoken.
John 2:20-22