Ezekiel can seem like an intimating book of the Bible at first, with his many visions, odd heavenly creatures, acted-out sermons, and prophecies.
There’s much going on in Ezekiel’s 48 chapters. The basic idea of the book is that Israel has sinned, worshiping other gods and not living the way God told them to. They thought they were okay because they had the temple. After repeated warnings from various prophets, Israel is conquered and exiled by Babylon. Eventually Babylon destroys the temple in Jerusalem. Ezekiel was taken in the first wave of exiles and given the task of preaching to hard-hearted people who don’t listen to him. Some form of the phrase “You will know that I am the LORD” is used around seventy times in the book.
Eventually, God promises “I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you. And I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to obey my rules. You shall dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers, and you shall be my people, and I will be your God. And I will deliver you from all your uncleannesses (Ezekiel 36:26-29). The famous vision in chapter 37 of the valley of dry bones that comes to life is a dramatic picture of what God is going to do in their hearts.
God also promises a coming shepherd-king, the Messiah, and a new temple (with much debate over the years whether this temple is literal or symbolic).
During my last reading of Ezekiel, I used Warren Wiersbe’s Be Reverent (Ezekiel): Bowing Before Our Awesome God as an aide while reading the book in my ESV Study Bible with its notes. Last year, I finished the last of Warren Wiersbe’s 50 “Be” commentaries on different books of the Bible. So I wanted to use a different source this time.
I had enjoyed our ladies’ Bible study’s use of the Good Book Company’s Isaiah for You by Tim Chester and 2 Corinthians for You by Gary Millar so I checked to see if there was a “For You” book for Ezekiel. There wasn’t, but while looking I found Ezekiel: The God of Glory by Tim Chester. It’s a six-week, 63-page study guide providing what the publisher called a “whistle-stop tour” through Ezekiel’s 48 chapters.
Unfortunately, I don’t think this format worked for Ezekiel. Perhaps it’s just too big a book to be covered in six chapters. I’m sure Chester had good reasons or highlighting the chapters he did, but they seemed random. There were several key passages I was surprised weren’t covered in the study.
In Isaiah for You, even though Chester only spent thirteen chapters on Isaiah’s 66 books, he summarized the chapters that came between the ones he covered. That helped orient the passages we did study into the book as a whole. Of course, in a smaller study like the one on Ezekiel, there was not space to do that, but it would have helped.
Each chapter’s study seemed fragmented to me. In fact, I was not getting much out of the study at all and thought perhaps I should get the leader’s guide it referred to, only to discover the guide was included in the back of the book. That helped some.
There were individual nuggets throughout the study that ministered to me and brought out truths from Ezekiel, but I was disappointed in the study as a whole. I don’t think the problem is with Chester’s writing since he did such a good job with Isaiah. I just don’t think this format worked well for Ezekiel. It might do better for some of the Bible’s smaller books.
On a side note, I’d heard about The Bible Project’s videos giving animated summaries of different books of the Bible, but had not seen one until it was used in our ladies’ Bible study as an introduction to Hebrews. I looked up their videos on Ezekiel and found them both fascinating and helpful. Part 1 is here and part 2 is here.
(Sharing with Bookish Bliss Quarterly Link-Up)

I should read this, as our church is in the midst of a sermon series going through Ezekiel (rbcauburn.org if you want to listen to Ezekiel sermons!). It has really helped make a book understandable, since as you say it’s a bit intimidating. I guess some things I’m getting is the big emphasis on God’s holiness/majesty/in-chargeness (made up that word). For us, the importance of obedience. I’ll check out the Bible Project videos. Thank you!
I think Warren Wiersbe’s Be Reverent would be more helpful. Ezekiel: The God of Glory brings out some good things but only touches base here and there and leaves a lot unexplained.
God’s glory stood out to me, too, in reading through Ezekiel this time. Plus the ESV Study Bible notes that in many of the prophetical books when God speaks to or about different nations, it shows He is God of all, even though they claim other gods.
I thought the Bible Project videos were excellent. It took more than a month to read through Ezekiel, and I watched the videos afterward, so they helped bring it all together. In our ladies’ Bible study, we watched the one on Hebrews as an introduction.
Barbara, thank you for sharing about this book. Ezekiel is a hard book for me to read through. Would you recommend this particular book as a study guide?
It might be good for someone who just wants to hit some of the highlights, or to a new believer. But not for someone who wanted to study the whole book. Warren Wiersbe’s Be Reverent has much more, but it’s a commentary rather than a study guide. He does have a study guide that’s meant to be used in conjunction with Be Reverent, titled Ezekiel: The Wiersbe Bible Study Series. I completely forgot about it before starting Ezekiel this time.
I hope the Good Book Company does one of their “For You” studies on Ezekiel. I enjoyed the ones I’ve read on other books of the Bible.
This review was very helpful. I’ve always found Ezekiel as a very intimidating chapter so I think this book would be very helpful. The animated two-parters is really good. I’ve watched a bit of the first one and have them marked to watch later.
This book is okay if someone just wants the highlights, or maybe for a new believer for whom, the whole book of Ezekiel might be a bit much. But it’s not really good for studying Ezekiel as a whole.
Funny, I was just thinking about The Bible Project today! I’m in the midst of a Revelation study and I wondered how The Bible Project teaches that book. Their imagery is fantastic! I’ll be watching Ezkeil now too!
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Thanks for sharing your thoughts