Ezekiel 44 4

My Notes Authors Matthew Henry - Commentary on the Whole Bible This is much to the same purport with what we had in the beginning of ch. xliii. As the prophet must look again upon what he had before seen, so he must be told again what he had before heard. Here, as before, he sees the house filled with the glory of the Lord, which strikes an awe upon him, so that he falls prostrate at the sight, the humblest posture of adoration and the expression of a holy awe: _I fell upon my face, _v. 4. Note, The more we see of the glory of God the more low we shall lie in our own eyes. Now here,

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