A Visual Guide to Ezekiel
Readers who want a clear overview of Ezekiel
Ezekiel is easier to follow when readers see how vision, warning, judgment, and restoration move through the prophet's long ministry.
A visual guide helps readers notice the book's repeated movement from hard judgment to hope-filled restoration imagery.
Storyline Charts
Charts that follow covenant, kingdom, and the unfolding story of Scripture.
Chart: Ezekiel at a Glance
| Section | Main emphasis | What it shows |
|---|---|---|
| Ezekiel 1-24 | Judgment and prophetic calling | The prophet sees God's glory and warns of coming judgment on a stubborn people |
| Ezekiel 25-32 | Oracles against the nations | The judgment widens beyond Judah to the surrounding nations |
| Ezekiel 33-48 | Watchman, restoration, and new temple vision | The book turns toward renewed responsibility, dry bones, and restored worship |
What This Chart Shows
- Ezekiel is a prophetic book because it joins vision, warning, and restoration imagery in one large ministry arc.
- The repeated glory language matters because the book keeps showing God's holiness and presence.
- The final temple vision matters because the book widens toward renewed worship and ordered hope.
Why This Matters
Many readers know the topic names but do not always know how to organize them into a clear structure.
This chart helps by showing:
- The opening vision establishes Ezekiel's prophetic calling.
- The middle oracles extend judgment to the nations.
- The closing sections move toward restoration, dry bones, and temple vision.
That matters because Bible reading becomes clearer when we see the whole structure instead of isolating one passage from the rest of Scripture.
Source Notes
The structure and flow of Ezekiel
Ezekiel is easier to read when vision, judgment, and restoration are mapped together.
- Do not reduce Ezekiel to strange imagery only.
- Do not miss the way the book keeps moving toward renewed worship and hope.
Final Observation
Ezekiel rewards chart-based reading because it joins vision, judgment, and restoration into one sweeping prophetic collection.
Save this chart and explore more

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.