Ezekiel 27:24-34

24 They were paid with the best clothes, blue cloth, cloth with designs sewed on, carpets of many colors, and tightly wound ropes.
25 "'Trading ships carried the things you sold. You were like a ship full of heavy cargo in the middle of the sea.
26 The men who rowed you brought you out into the high seas, but the east wind broke you to pieces in the middle of the sea.
27 Your wealth, your trade, your goods, your seamen, your sailors, your workers, your traders, your warriors, and everyone else on board sank into the sea on the day your ship was wrecked.
28 The people on the shore shake with fear when your sailors cry out.
29 All the men who row leave their ships; the seamen and the sailors of other ships stand on the shore.
30 They cry loudly about you; they cry very much. They throw dust on their heads and roll in ashes to show they are sad.
31 They shave their heads for you, and they put on rough cloth to show they are upset. They cry and sob for you; they cry loudly.
32 And in their loud crying they sing a funeral song for you: "No one was ever destroyed like Tyre, surrounded by the sea."
33 When the goods you traded went out over the seas, you met the needs of many nations. With your great wealth and goods, you made kings of the earth rich.
34 But now you are broken by the sea and have sunk to the bottom. Your goods and all the people on board have gone down with you.

Ezekiel 27:24-34 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO EZEKIEL 27

This chapter contains a lamentation on Tyre; setting forth her former grandeur, riches, and commerce; her ruin and destruction; and the concern of others on that account. The prophet is bid to take up his lamentation concerning it, Eze 27:1,2, observing her situation and magnificence, of which she boasted, Eze 27:3,4, describing the excellency of her shipping and naval stores, Eze 27:5-7, declaring who were her mariners, pilots, and caulkers, Eze 27:8,9, her military men, Eze 27:10,11 her several merchants, and the things they traded in with her in her fairs and markets, Eze 27:12-25, then follows an account of her destruction, Eze 27:26,27, the lamentation of pilots and mariners because of it, Eze 27:28-32, and of the kings and inhabitants of the isles, and merchants of the people, Eze 27:33-36.

Scripture taken from the New Century Version. Copyright © 1987, 1988, 1991 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.