Ezekiel 1:11

11 Leurs faces et leurs ailes étaient séparées par le haut; chacun avait deux ailes jointes l'une à l'autre, et deux qui couvraient leurs corps.

Ezekiel 1:11 Meaning and Commentary

Ezekiel 1:11

Thus [were] their faces: and their wings [were] stretched
upward
The former clause, "thus [were] their faces", either belongs to ( Ezekiel 1:10 ) ; and the meaning is, this, as now represented, was the likeness of their faces, and this the position of them: or it may be read in connection with the following clause, and be rendered, "and their faces and their wings were stretched upwards"; as they are in the Chaldee paraphrase, the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Arabic versions: "their faces were stretched upwards", showing that the ministers of the Gospel look up to Christ for fresh supplies of gifts and grace, of light, knowledge, wisdom, and strength, to enable them to perform their work: "and their wings were stretched upwards", that is, two of them; not four, as the Arabic version has it; for two covered their bodies, as is after said. Those that were stretched upwards answer to the two with which Isaiah's seraphim flew; for these were, as in the original text, "parted upwards" F16; though they were joined together at the bottom of them, as in ( Ezekiel 1:9 ) ; yet being spread in flying, they opened wider and wider, and were at a greater distance from each other in their extreme points. This may design the agility, swiftness, and readiness of ministers in the performance of their work; two [wings] of everyone [were] joined one to another:
with which they, covered their heads and faces, as did Isaiah's seraphim, as conscious of their unworthiness and infirmities; looking upon themselves to be less than the least of all saints, unfit to be ministers of the Gospel; acknowledging they have nothing but what they have received and therefore would not glory as though they had not received, and as ashamed of their poor performances and ministrations; and two covered their bodies;
their lower and secret parts called their feet in Isaiah; which however to others beautiful upon the mountains, running and bringing the good news of peace, righteousness, and salvation by Christ; yet sensible of their deficiencies, they cover them, and confess, when they have done all they can, they are but unprofitable servants; from hence it appears that these living creatures had six wings, as the seraphim in Isaiah, and the four beasts in John's vision.


FOOTNOTES:

F16 (twdwrp) "disjunctae", Montanus; "divisae", Calvin, Starckius. So Ben Melech.

Ezekiel 1:11 In-Context

9 Leurs ailes étaient jointes l'une à l'autre; quand ils marchaient, ils ne se tournaient point, mais allaient chacun droit devant soi.
10 Quant à la forme de leurs faces, ils avaient tous quatre une face d'homme, une face de lion du côté droit, tous quatre une face de bœuf du côté gauche, et tous quatre une face d'aigle.
11 Leurs faces et leurs ailes étaient séparées par le haut; chacun avait deux ailes jointes l'une à l'autre, et deux qui couvraient leurs corps.
12 Et chacun d'eux marchait droit devant soi; ils allaient partout où l'esprit les poussait à aller, et ne se détournaient point dans leur marche.
13 L'aspect de ces animaux était semblable à celui de charbons de feu ardents et de torches enflammées; et ce feu flamboyait entre les animaux avec une éclatante splendeur, et il en sortait des éclairs.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.