Answer:
In the opening chapter of Ezekiel, God the Word (to become Christ latter) comes to him while he is in Judean captivity, in one of the most stupendous and grand chariots. This is a far cry from the picture most have today of the baby Jesus in the manger.
Ezekiel's mission was not only dual in that he was to speak to the house of Judah in chapter 3:11, 'children of thy people' but was also sent as a watchman for the 'house of Israel' in verse 17. Yet, history strongly indicates that as a captive, Ezekiel did not go to the 'lost ten tribes' of the Assyrian captivity over 100 years earlier - he couldn't. But how is the watchman role and other tasks like to Temple to be completed? The Book of Ezekiel has many mentions of the latter days or end-times so it is a future prophecy.
After Christ established His Church and Gentiles were now grafted onto the branch of the tree of life via His sacrifice, there are spiritual Israelites - members of His true Church. The watchman and temple verses of Ezekiel refer to these last 2 ages of the Church of God - Laodicean and Philadelphian. They speak to not physical salvation alone, but spiritual as well. At the very end of Ezekiel, it shows the re-unification of the entire peoples of Israel in the lands they were to inherit and living in the Millennial rule of the Kingdom of God on Earth.
Ezekiel was mainly an end-time prophet.
In Ezekiel 1:1-3, we are told that on the fifth day of the month, the fifth year of King Jehoiachin's exile (593 BCE), Ezekiel saw a divine vision in the land of the Chaldeans by the river Chebar. He describes this vision in chapter 1 as something that came in the midst of fire and cloud, with four figures resembling people inside it, but each had four faces and four wings (2). One of those inside identifying himself as God, calls to Ezekiel, saying (2:3), "Son of man , I am sending you to the Israelites (3), rebels who have rebelled against me; they and their fathers have rebelled against me to this very day." God tells Ezekiel not to fear their words or their looks, but to obey him, and warns Ezekiel that the Israelites would not listen to him, since they do not listen to God (3:7).
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Yes he was , as he is considered as a major prophet.
the prophet, Ezekiel saw the vision. God sent Ezekiel the vision.
No. It was the prophet Jonah.
Yes prophet Ezekiel was a man.
yes
He was a prophet and a Kohen.
It was the prophet Ezekiel.
Ezekiel
Ezekiel
Ezekiel
all of them
Ezekiel was God's chosen man and messenger. Ezekiel proclaimed the Words of God to the children of God, the Israelites. Ezekiel was both a prophet and a priest. Ezekiel went into exile with the Israelites as decreed by King Nebuchadnezzar to the city of Babylon. Historians and scholars agree that Ezekiel was a highly intelligent man.