News

“Erich von Daniken wrote in ‘Chariots of the Gods?’ in 1968 that Ezekiel’s visions were of a space ship. Ezekiel did say some amazing things, but I don’t think it was about a space ship.
The prophet Ezekiel experienced a prophetic vision of the Divine chariot. Ezekiel’s detailed description of the divine chariot included four animals with four faces, “wheels” beneath them ...
The merkaba, a captivating symbol with roots stretching back millennia, has long captivated the imaginations of mystics, philosophers, and spiritual seekers alike. This intricate three-dimensional ...
The word Merkavah literally means “chariot,” and this mystical study is named after the surreal vision at the beginning of the biblical Book of Ezekiel, in which “the heavens were opened ...
Ezekiel’s vision of a merkavah, or chariot, the foundation of a whole school of kabbalistic thought called Merkavah mysticism, is perhaps the best-known Bible story that can be read as an ...
I liked the image, which I had learned about in Sunday School, Ezekiel's vision of the chariot of God, and wheels within wheels. I tried to draw a picture of it once." Ezekiel's Wheels is, in fact ...
Ezekiel is something of the Wild Man of Tanach: he sees the Celestial Chariot; he subverts Torah law. Little wonder that the rabbis tried to suppress his book. (Haggigah 13a).
As a “sentinel for the house of Israel” (Ezekiel 3:17), Ezekiel had repeatedly warned of God’s pending penalty for Judah’s transgressions, including its fondness for idolatry (Ezekiel 5:7-10).