Agreed.
I think you missed on this bit.
I find the "guardian cherub" of v.14 to be a callback to the story in Genesis 3, where God stationed a cherub with a flaming sword at the entrance of Eden, to prevent Adam and Eve from returning to the Garden. That doesn't come out of the blue, as the verse immediately preceding puts the Garden of Eden in the immediate context:
13 Thou hast been in Eden the garden of God
Providing you understand this symbol is not historical Eden but rather what Eden represented and signified to the King of Tyre.
I would suggest the holy mountain here is not Mt. Zion, but rather Mt. Hermon.
Evidence?
The king of Tyre did not visit Jerusalem. He sent craftsmen. He exported wood. He never saw Solomon's Temple. This is an argument from silence - if he had visited, the event would have been notable enough to be recorded.
Where did I say? You might be confused again by the symbol. The King (and his representatives) did trade within Israel.
You understand this, right?
He definitely visited Mt. Hermon. Not only does it lie within Tyre's territory, it's the single most important strategical site within it. There was a fortress there. It was also the seat of two different cults. My source in this paragraph is archaeology rather than the Bible.
I think you are looking at this too literally. The symbols speak to those things God allowed the King to do within the boundaries of Israel
You have it backwards - the Israelites were within the Phoenician's sphere of influence.
Not so - the protection was from God - He did the anointing! The whole chapter is about the removal of this protection both of Tyre and the King.
Before Israel ever existed, Phoenicia was the world's first sea-faring power. They invented navigation that didn't require staying within sight of the shore, and leveraged that to make themselves literally wealthy. They invented Phonetic language. They colonized the islands of the Mediterranean, the coast of North Africa (Carthage), and even sailed across the Atlantic. Artifacts of their civilization have been found alongside Native American relics in North America.
This has no relevance to the chapter. The prophecy focuses solely on what God permitted, Tyre’s prosperity through trade with Israel was allowed by God, but only up to a point (his pride). When that favor ended, so did their success.
God always acts according to his promise (bless or curse).
The symbols of the garden, the cherubim, and the high priest’s breastplate all point to the divine privilege the king was granted to engage in trade within Israel’s borders.All of that would have been the case around the time of David, Moses, and Abraham. But by the time of the time of the writing of Ezekiel, they were in decline. The Hittite empire was encroaching from the north, Pharoah had ridden north and exacted tribute from most of the Canaanite city-states, and the Assyrians were pushing into the Beqaa.
These 2 paragraphs are based on reconstructed history and archaeology; not the Bible.
One thing we can say from the Bible - the temple was full of engravings of cherubim, and the cherub is the symbol of the king of Tyre.
Agreed.
Yes, mostly. All kings are angels of a sort. Not divine angels, but angels nonetheless.
I look forward to your next post.
There isn’t a single word or shred of evidence in this chapter that supports fallen angel theology. The context aligns entirely with the historical account of Tyre and its interactions with Israel.
More to come...
