Ezekiel 43:6

6 et audivi loquentem ad me de domo et vir qui stabat iuxta me

Ezekiel 43:6 Meaning and Commentary

Ezekiel 43:6

And I heard him speaking unto me out of the house
The holy place, the prophet being in the inward court: this is Jehovah the Father, the God of Israel, whose glory entered into it; who utters his voice out of Zion; who speaks in his church by his word, and the ministers of it; and which is to be heard and regarded, not as the word of man, but as the word of God: and the man stood by me:
whom he saw at first with a measuring line in his hand, ( Ezekiel 40:3 ) , and with whom he had been all along, and had seen him measure the house, and all belonging to it: he stood by him as the Mediator between God and him; as the medium of communion with him; as the advocate with the Father: he stood by him to interpret what was said to him; to guide him further into the knowledge of divine things; to assist him, protect and defend him, to continue him in fellowship with God, and to preserve him in grace to glory. Here is an appearance of the three Persons in the Godhead; the Father speaking to the prophet out of the house; the Son in human form standing by him; and the Spirit of the Lord, who had took him up from the ground, and had brought him into the inner court.

Ezekiel 43:6 In-Context

4 et maiestas Domini ingressa est templum per viam portae quae respiciebat ad orientem
5 et levavit me spiritus et introduxit me in atrium interius et ecce repleta erat gloria Domini domus
6 et audivi loquentem ad me de domo et vir qui stabat iuxta me
7 dixit ad me fili hominis locus solii mei et locus vestigiorum pedum meorum ubi habito in medio filiorum Israhel in aeternum et non polluent ultra domus Israhel nomen sanctum meum ipsi et reges eorum in fornicationibus suis et in ruinis regum suorum et in excelsis
8 qui fabricati sunt limen suum iuxta limen meum et postes suos iuxta postes meos et murus erat inter me et eos et polluerunt nomen sanctum meum in abominationibus quas fecerunt propter quod consumpsi eos in ira mea
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.