Wednesday, June 3, 2026

New Wine in New Wineskins

 

It began with a simple, sincere question. The disciples of John the Baptist approached Jesus and asked, "Why do we and the Pharisees fast, but your disciples do not fast?" (Matthew 9:14, ESV). This was not a hostile interrogation. John's followers were genuinely puzzled. Fasting was woven into the fabric of Jewish piety; it marked seasons of repentance, mourning, and earnest prayer. Why would the disciples of the long-awaited Messiah abandon such a practice?

Jesus' answer was astonishing. Rather than defending a schedule or explaining a loophole in the fasting laws, He told a story about a wedding banquet, and then He pivoted to two earthy parables about cloth and wine that carried the weight of an entire theological revolution. These parables, recorded in Matthew 9:14–17, Mark 2:18–22, and Luke 5:33–39, are not merely clever illustrations. They are Jesus' own announcement that something so fundamentally new had broken into human history that the old containers, the old ways of relating to God, could no longer hold it.

To understand these parables deeply, we must do more than read the English. We must enter the original Greek language in which the New Testament was written, where several key words carry freight that our translations can only partially convey.

The Bridegroom is Here: A Season Unprecedented

Before Jesus introduced the wineskin imagery, He responded to the question about fasting with a question of His own: "Can the wedding guests mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them?" (Matthew 9:15a, ESV). The phrase "wedding guests" translates the Greek οἱ υἱοὶ τοῦ νυμφῶνος, literally, "the sons of the wedding chamber." This was a Hebrew idiom for the closest companions of the bridegroom, the inner circle who shared in every joy of the celebration.

The word for "bridegroom" is νυμφίος (numphios), a word loaded with Old Testament resonance. The prophets had described God Himself as the bridegroom of Israel (Isaiah 62:5; Hosea 2:16). John the Baptist had already used this imagery, calling himself "the friend of the bridegroom" who rejoices to hear the bridegroom's voice (John 3:29). Now Jesus applied the title to Himself. He was not merely a prophet or a teacher, He was the divine Bridegroom who had arrived at His own wedding feast.

This is why mourning and fasting were incompatible with the present moment. The Greek verb πενθεῖν (penthein), translated "mourn" in the ESV, is used elsewhere in the New Testament for grief over death and loss (Revelation 18:11; 1 Corinthians 5:2). To fast and mourn while the Bridegroom was physically present among His disciples would be as absurd as weeping at a wedding while the groom stands at the altar. The time for fasting would come, Jesus alluded to His coming crucifixion in the phrase "when the bridegroom is taken away from them", but that hour had not yet arrived.

"Can the wedding guests mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them? The days will come when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast.", Matthew 9:15, ESV

The Torn Garment: When Old and New Cannot Mix

Immediately following this exchange, Jesus offered the first of two parables: "No one puts a piece of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch tears away from the garment, and a worse tear is made" (Matthew 9:16, ESV). The phrase "unshrunk cloth" translates ῥάκους ἀγνάφου, cloth that is ἄγναφος (agnaphos), meaning "uncarded" or "unprocessed." In the ancient world, new fabric would shrink significantly during the first wash. Sewing a patch of raw, uncarded cloth onto an old, pre-shrunk garment would be a disaster: when washed, the new patch would contract and pull violently at the aged fabric, turning a small tear into a catastrophic rip.

Luke's version adds a poignant detail. He notes that the piece is taken ἀπὸ ἱματίου καινοῦ, "from a new garment." You don't just ruin the old garment; you ruin the new one too. You cut a piece from something beautiful and whole, only to destroy both. The word καινός (kainos) appears here and throughout the wineskin parable, and it deserves careful attention. In Greek, two words are often translated "new": νέος (neos), which means new in the sense of being recent or young in age, and καινός, which means new in the sense of being of a different kind, unprecedented in quality or nature. When Jesus describes the new wine and new wineskins, He consistently uses καινός, not merely something recently made, but something qualitatively different, something that represents a new order of reality altogether.

This distinction is vital. The New Covenant Jesus was inaugurating was not a recent update to an aging system. It was a different kind of covenant, unprecedented, superior, and incompatible with the structures that preceded it.

The Wineskins: Why the Old Cannot Contain the New

The Parable Across Three Gospels

"And no one puts new wine into old wineskins. If he does, the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is destroyed, and so are the skins. But new wine is for fresh wineskins.", Mark 2:22, ESV

"And no one puts new wine into old wineskins. If he does, the new wine will burst the skins and it will be spilled, and the skins will be destroyed. But new wine must be put into fresh wineskins.", Luke 5:37–38, ESV

All three synoptic Gospels preserve this parable, each with slightly different nuances. The cultural backdrop would have been immediately legible to Jesus' audience. In first-century Palestine, wine was stored and transported in pouches made from animal skins, typically goat, sewn together and sealed to be airtight. A new wineskin had supple, elastic leather that could expand as the fermenting wine released διοξείδιο τοῦ ἄνθρακος (carbon dioxide) during fermentation. An old wineskin, however, had already been stretched to its limit by a previous batch of wine. The leather had dried, hardened, and lost its elasticity. Pour new, still-fermenting wine into such a container, and as the fermentation gases built up pressure, the rigid old skin could not flex. It would crack, then burst, destroying both the wine and the wineskin.

Key Words: Old and New

In Mark 2:22, Jesus contrasts ἀσκοὺς παλαιούς ("old wineskins") with ἀσκοὺς καινούς ("new wineskins"). The word παλαιός (palaios) means old in the sense of worn out, outworn by time, no longer adequate to its purpose, not simply ancient, but rendered obsolete. This is exactly the word used in Hebrews 8:13 when the writer declares that in speaking of a new covenant, God has made the first one παλαιός: "And what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away." The Old Covenant, with all its sacrificial system, ceremonial washings, and annual fasts, had served its purpose, but it was παλαιός. It could not contain what God was now doing in Christ.

Mark 2:22 contains another striking word. In describing what happens when new wine is put into old skins, he uses ῥήγνυσιν, the verb ῥήγνυμι (rhegnumi), meaning "to burst" or "to tear violently." This is not a slow leak or a gentle seepage. It is a catastrophic rupture. The image is visceral and urgent: the mismatch between new and old is not a minor inconvenience to be managed, it is a crisis that, left unaddressed, results in total destruction.

Luke adds a phrase found in neither Matthew nor Mark: οἶνον νέον εἰς ἀσκοὺς καινούς βλητέον, "new wine must be put into fresh wineskins." The word βλητέον is a verbal adjective indicating necessity, obligation, what is required. The pairing of νέος and καινός in Luke's formulation, the wine is νέος (newly made, freshly pressed) and the skins are καινός (qualitatively new, of a new kind), captures both the immediacy and the qualitative transformation that the Gospel demands.

What Was the "Old Wineskin"?

We must ask the exegetical question: what, exactly, did the old wineskin represent in Jesus' teaching? John's disciples were practicing fasting according to the traditions of Second Temple Judaism. The law prescribed fasting on the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16:29–31), and additional fasting practices had been layered on over the centuries (Luke 18:12). These rituals were not sinful; they were sincere expressions of devotion within the Old Covenant framework that God Himself had established.

But the Old Covenant was always meant to be preparatory, not permanent. The book of Hebrews develops this extensively: the sacrifices were a σκιά, a shadow, of the good things to come (Hebrews 10:1). The Greek word σκιά (skiaevokes a shadow cast by a solid object. The substance, the σῶμα, the body, belonged to Christ (Colossians 2:17). The law was not the reality; it pointed forward to the reality. The old wineskin was structurally incapable of containing the new wine, not because the old wineskin was evil, but because it had been stretched to its limit. It had done its work. Now something fundamentally different was required.

Jesus was not founding a reform movement within Judaism. He was not suggesting that a few modifications to the Pharisaic system would suffice. He was inaugurating a καινὴ διαθήκη, a new covenant, as He would later declare at the Last Supper: "This cup that is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood" (Luke 22:20, ESV). The word διαθήκη (diatheke) means covenant or testament, a binding agreement established by one party on behalf of another. This was not an amendment to the old agreement. It was a new one, established in the blood of the Son of God, fulfilling and superseding everything that came before it.

The Fulfillment, Not the Abolition, of the Law

At this point, a critical clarification is necessary. Jesus was not dismissing or discarding the Torah. He stated plainly in the Sermon on the Mount: "Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them" (Matthew 5:17, ESV). The verb translated "fulfill" is πληρόω (pleroo), to bring to fullness, to complete, to bring to the goal for which something was intended. The law and prophets were always pointing forward to Christ. He was their telos, their end and goal (Romans 10:4, where Paul says Christ is the τέλος of the law for righteousness to all who believe).

Think of an acorn. An acorn contains within it the entire blueprint for an oak tree. When an acorn germinates and grows into a towering oak, the acorn is not destroyed; it is fulfilled. Its entire purpose was to become what it is now. The acorn stage is gone, but nothing of its essential content has been lost; it has been gloriously expanded and realized. This is what Jesus did to the law. He did not throw out the old wineskin and pour the wine on the ground. He said: The old wineskin served its purpose. Now I am providing what the old wineskin has always pointed toward.

No human being could fulfill the law's demands, not the Pharisees with their scrupulous rule-keeping, not John's disciples with their rigorous fasting. "For all who rely on works of the law are under a curse" (Galatians 3:10, ESV). Only Jesus, the ἀμνὸς τοῦ θεοῦ, "the Lamb of God" (John 1:29), who knew no sin (2 Corinthians 5:21), could meet God's perfect standard. And in meeting it, He offers His righteousness to all who believe.

Grace Cannot Be Contained in a Legal Framework

What, then, is the new wine? It is the Gospel of grace, the good news that salvation comes not through human effort, ceremony, or religious performance, but through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul articulates this with crystalline precision: "For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast" (Ephesians 2:8–9, ESV). The word χάρις (charis), grace, is the defining characteristic of the New Covenant. It is God's unmerited, freely given favor toward those who deserve only judgment.

Grace cannot be contained within a legal framework because law and grace operate on fundamentally different principles. Law says: perform and be accepted. Grace says: be accepted, then live transformed. To pour grace into the structure of law, to say that salvation is partly of grace and partly of one's own religious performance, is to put new wine into an old wineskin. The container will not hold. "For if justification were through the law, then Christ died for no purpose" (Galatians 2:21, ESV).

This is what made the Gospel so difficult for many Jewish hearers, including, as Acts 10–11 recounts, many Jewish Christians who struggled to accept that Gentiles could receive the Spirit without first becoming Jews. The old wineskin was deeply familiar, deeply comforting, deeply tied to their identity. Luke notes this human dynamic in the final verse of his wineskin passage: "And no one after drinking old wine desires new, for he says, 'The old is good'" (Luke 5:39, ESV). The Greek χρηστός here is significant: it means good, useful, mellow, pleasant to the palate. Old wine is smoother, more refined, more comfortable on the palate than new wine, which is sharp and unfinished. It is human nature to prefer the comfortable and familiar. But preference is not the same as truth. The new wine of grace, though less immediately familiar to those weaned on the law, is the wine that gives life.

New Wineskins for Every Generation

The application of this parable extends beyond its first-century context. Throughout the history of the Church, the Holy Spirit has repeatedly moved in fresh, unexpected ways, and the religious structures of each era have sometimes proved to be the old wineskins that could not contain what God was doing.

The word for the Spirit, πνεῦμα (pneuma), carries connotations of wind and breath, something alive and dynamic and inherently difficult to confine. Jesus told Nicodemus: "The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit" (John 3:8, ESV). The Spirit is not domesticated. He cannot be scheduled, systematized, or institutionalized into rigid forms that substitute performance for presence.

This does not mean that all structure is wrong, or that any particular tradition is simply an "old wineskin" to be discarded. Jesus was not teaching contempt for religious form. He taught that no human structure can serve as the permanent container of a living God. The new wineskin of the early Church eventually became an old wineskin for some who encountered subsequent movements of the Spirit. What matters is this: is the container serving the wine, or has preserving the container become more important than the wine itself?

The Church in every age must ask: are we clinging to old religious structures, even good, Bible-based ones, out of comfort and familiarity, when God is calling us to receive what He is doing in new ways? Are we so committed to the forms of our particular tradition that we would miss the fresh work of the Spirit if it arrived in an unexpected vessel?

Both Are Preserved

The most hopeful phrase in the entire parable may be the simplest one. Jesus concludes in Matthew 9:17 with these words: "But new wine is put into fresh wineskins, and so both are preserved" (ESV). The Greek is ἀμφότεροι συντηροῦνται, "both are preserved together." The verb συντηρέω (suntereo) means to keep safe, to preserve, to maintain in safety. It is the same word used in Luke 2:19, where Mary "treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart."

This is the promise: when the new wine is received into a new, prepared, supple wineskin, nothing is lost. The wine is preserved. The wineskin is preserved. The Gospel of grace, received into a heart that is genuinely open, soft and flexible before God, not hardened by religious self-reliance, results not in destruction but in preservation and flourishing.

The old covenant was not wasted. Every sacrifice, every fast, every festival, every prophecy served its sacred purpose of pointing forward to Christ. But now that Christ has come, to cling to the old forms as though He had not arrived, to fast as though the Bridegroom were still absent when He has come, died, risen, and sent His Spirit, is to miss the entire point of the story. It is to prefer the shadow over the substance, the acorn over the oak, the old wine over the new.

The Invitation

The question Jesus left in the air above John's disciples is the question He leaves with us: What are you doing with the new wine? Are you attempting to pour the grace of Christ into the container of self-righteous religious performance? Are you adding fasting and ritual and rule-keeping to the work that Christ declared τετέλεσται, "finished" (John 19:30)? Or are you presenting yourself to God as a new wineskin, pliable, humble, emptied of self-sufficiency, ready to be stretched by the work of the Spirit?

The Gospel asks us to do what the old wineskin could not: to expand. To grow. To be made new, not merely improved but transformed. The Greek word for this transformation is μεταμορφόω (metamorphoo), the word from which we get our English "metamorphosis." Paul uses it in Romans 12:2: "Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind." This is what the new wine does to a new wineskin. It does not leave the container unchanged. The wine works from the inside, and the wineskin must expand to receive it.

Jesus came not to mend a torn garment, not to patch a leaking wineskin, not to reform a failing religious system. He came to inaugurate a covenant written not on stone tablets but on human hearts (Jeremiah 31:33; 2 Corinthians 3:3). He came to bring not religion but relationship. Not law but life. Not the shadow but the substance.

The Bridegroom has come. The feast has begun. The new wine is poured. May we be, in every generation, in every heart, ἀσκοὺς καινούς: fresh wineskins, ready to be filled.


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Stones of Fire in Heaven's Inner Court

 

There is a phrase tucked inside one of the most theologically rich and debated passages in the entire Hebrew Bible, a phrase so luminous and strange that readers have puzzled over it for millennia. It appears twice in Ezekiel 28, in a lamentation that begins as a condemnation of the prince and king of Tyre but quickly transcends any ordinary historical oracle. The phrase is this:

"...in the midst of the stones of fire you walked." (Ezekiel 28:14, ESV)

"...I destroyed you, O guardian cherub, from the midst of the stones of fire." (Ezekiel 28:16, ESV)

What are these "stones of fire?" Where are they? Who, or what, are they? And why does it matter for the theology of Scripture, the nature of the divine council, and our understanding of the figure who would become known as the great adversary of God?

This post will work through the Hebrew text carefully, exegeting the key terms and phrases from the original language (using the English Standard Version as our primary English translation), while drawing on the broader Biblical canon, the relationship between Ezekiel 28 and Isaiah 14, and some illuminating Second Temple literature that carries echoes of this passage forward into later Jewish thought.

A Lament Over the King of Tyre

Before we can understand the "stones of fire," we must understand where we are in the text. Ezekiel 28 contains two distinct oracles. The first (28:1–10) is addressed to the prince of Tyre, a human ruler whose hubris has led him to declare, "I am a god" (28:2, ESV). God's response is swift and devastating: "Yet you are a man, and not a god" (28:2, ESV). Judgment by foreign nations, almost certainly Babylon, is promised.

The second oracle (28:11–19) is addressed to the king of Tyre, and something in the language immediately shifts. The prophet is no longer speaking only of a human potentate. The description bursts outward into cosmic, primordial, heavenly territory. This figure was in Eden. He was covered in precious stones. He was an anointed cherub on the holy mountain of God. He was created blameless, until iniquity was found in him.

Many evangelical scholars, along with a substantial minority of critical scholars, read this second oracle as working on two levels simultaneously: on the surface, it is a lament for an arrogant earthly king; at depth, it draws on a backstory of primeval divine rebellion, a supernatural being of great glory and beauty who fell through pride. This is the figure whose story informs the later Biblical theology of Satan.

Others, the majority view, argue that the backstory here is not about a divine rebel at all, but about Adam. In this reading, the cherub language, the Eden setting, and the cosmic mountain imagery all describe the first human. The prophet is casting the king of Tyre as a latter-day Adam.

This debate about interpretation is not a sideshow. It is directly relevant to what the "stones of fire" mean. If Adam is the central figure, the "stones of fire" are features of the Garden of Eden. If a divine rebel is in view, the "stones of fire" may be something altogether more numinous, members of the heavenly host, the divine council, the celestial court of God.

I will argue for the divine rebel reading. But first, let us look at the Hebrew text of our key phrase.

The Hebrew Phrase: אַבְנֵי־אֵשׁ

The phrase translated "stones of fire" in the ESV is, in the Hebrew, אַבְנֵי־אֵשׁ (avnei-esh). It is a construct chain: the noun אֶבֶן (even), meaning "stone," in the plural construct form אַבְנֵי (avnei), bound to the noun אֵשׁ (esh), meaning "fire." Together: "stones of fire."

The word אֶבֶן (even) is one of the most ordinary words in Biblical Hebrew; it simply means stone, rock, or gem. It appears hundreds of times throughout the Hebrew Bible. In some contexts it refers to building stones (Genesis 11:3), in others to precious gems (Exodus 28:17), in still others to milestones, steles, or monuments. The basic meaning is inert, solid matter.

The word אֵשׁ (esh) is equally common and means "fire." But fire in the Hebrew Bible is far from mundane. It is the medium of divine presence: the burning bush (Exodus 3:2), the pillar of fire (Exodus 13:21), the fire on Sinai (Exodus 19:18), the fire of the divine throne chariot in Ezekiel 1 itself. Fire in Scripture is almost always theophanic; it signals the presence or activity of God.

The pairing of אֶבֶן and אֵשׁ, solid matter and divine fire, is jarring in the best possible way. Stones are of the earth; fire is of the divine. The phrase combines them into something that belongs neither simply to the earthly nor simply to the celestial; it evokes the very boundary between created matter and divine luminescence. This is intentional. Ezekiel is a master of boundary-dissolving imagery.

The Cherub: כְּרוּב הַסֹּכֵךְ

Before we proceed to interpret the "stones of fire," we must identify who is walking among them. Ezekiel 28:14 reads in the ESV: "You were an anointed guardian cherub." The Hebrew here is theologically loaded. The creature is called a כְּרוּב (keruv), a cherub, the highest order of angelic being in Ezekiel's theology. The prophet has already described the cherubim in extraordinary detail in Ezekiel 1 and 10: four-faced, four-winged creatures of fire and crystal, inseparable from the mobile divine throne, the מֶרְכָּבָה (merkavah).

The additional descriptor in verse 14 is הַסֹּכֵךְ (ha-sokhekh), "the covering" or "the guarding." This is the Qal active participle of the root סָכַךְ (sakhakh), which carries the sense of covering, screening, or overshadowing. The same root is used in Exodus 25:20 to describe the cherubim on the Ark of the Covenant, whose wings סֹכְכִים, "overshadow" or "cover", the mercy seat, the כַּפֹּרֶת (kapporet), the earthly representation of God's throne. This cherub is not a minor heavenly bureaucrat; he is the covering cherub, the guardian of the divine throne itself.

He is also described as מִמְשַׁח (mimsach), "anointed." The term for anointing in Hebrew is from the root מָשַׁח (masach), the same root from which מָשִׁיחַ, Messiah, derives. To be anointed is to be set apart, consecrated, appointed to a special office. Kings and priests are anointed. This cherub, uniquely among all the heavenly host, carries the designation of the anointed one. His position is not merely high; it is consecrated by God Himself.

This is a figure of almost incomprehensible dignity and status. And he walked among the stones of fire. The phrase is not incidental, it is a marker of his position of access, his proximity to the innermost sanctum of the divine presence.

The Holy Mountain of God: הַר קֹדֶשׁ אֱלֹהִים

In verse 14, the cherub is said to have been on "the holy mountain of God", in Hebrew, הַר קֹדֶשׁ אֱלֹהִים (har qodesh Elohim). The mountain of God is one of the fundamental images in the theology of the divine council across the ancient Near East and throughout the Hebrew Bible. It refers to the dwelling place of the deity, the cosmic center from which divine governance of the world emanates.

The Hebrew root קֹדֶשׁ (qodesh) means "holiness" in its core sense of being set apart, other, different in kind from the ordinary world. What is holy is not merely morally pure; it belongs to a different ontological register. The mountain is not simply elevated geographically, it is elevated ontologically. It is where heaven meets earth, where the divine council convenes, where the decisions that govern history are made.

In the Hebrew Bible, Sinai and later Zion function as earthly representations of this cosmic mountain. In Ezekiel's vision, the divine throne itself is a kind of mobile cosmic mountain, the heavens come down to earth when the glory departs from the temple in chapters 8–11. The "holy mountain of God" in Ezekiel 28 is the heavenly archetype of which every earthly mountain-sanctuary is only a shadow.

When we read that the anointed cherub walked on this mountain and among the stones of fire, we are reading about a being who inhabited the innermost chamber of divine authority. His fall from that place, his expulsion from the mountain and from the midst of the stones of fire, is therefore not merely a demotion. It is a cosmic catastrophe.

Two Interpretive Paths: Place or Persons?

Biblical scholars and theologians have proposed two main interpretive frameworks for understanding the "stones of fire." It is worth examining each carefully before reaching a conclusion.

The Stones as the Pavement of the Heavenly Court

The first view understands the "stones of fire" as describing the physical setting of God's heavenly throne room, a kind of shimmering, fire-infused pavement or foundation upon which the divine court is established. This reading is supported by a significant Biblical parallel.

In Exodus 24:9–10, Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders of Israel ascend the mountain and behold the God of Israel: "under his feet there was something like a pavement of sapphire stone, like the very heaven for clearness" (ESV). The divine throne rests on a luminous, gem-like surface. In Revelation 4:6, the apostle John sees before the throne "a sea of glass, like crystal." In both cases, the floor of the divine court is radiant, crystalline, reflective of divine glory, essentially, a pavement of fiery brilliance.

The word for sapphire in Exodus 24:10 is סַפִּיר (sappir), and this same word appears in Ezekiel 28:13 in the list of precious stones that adorned the anointed cherub, another connection between the two passages. On this reading, the "stones of fire" are the scintillating gems that compose the floor of the heavenly throne room, and to walk among them was to walk in the very innermost court of God's presence.

The Stones as Members of the Divine Council

The second view, and the one I find more compelling given the wider Biblical context, is that the "stones of fire" are not a place but persons: the members of the divine council, the sons of God, the heavenly host.

In the ancient world and in the Hebrew Bible, divine beings are consistently described in terms of fire and light. This is not metaphorical embellishment; it reflects the Hebrew understanding that luminosity, fire, and radiant brilliance are the native qualities of beings who dwell in the immediate presence of God. What is close to God burns. What is of God shines.

The clearest instance of this is the class of beings called שְׂרָפִים (seraphim) in Isaiah 6. The name literally means "burning ones" or "fiery ones," from the root שָׂרַף (saraph), to burn. These are the beings who surround the divine throne in Isaiah's vision, calling out the trisagion, "Holy, holy, holy is the LORD of hosts" (Isaiah 6:3, ESV). They are fire-beings attendant upon the enthroned deity. The connection between these fiery beings and the "stones of fire" of Ezekiel 28 is more than suggestive; it is structurally and linguistically resonant.

Isaiah 14 and the Stars of God: כּוֹכְבֵי אֵל

The interpretive key that most powerfully unlocks the "stones of fire" is the relationship between Ezekiel 28 and Isaiah 14. Almost every scholar across the critical and evangelical spectrum acknowledges that these two passages are in deep conversation with one another. Both describe a primordial being of great glory who fell through pride. Both use the language of being cast down, of being exposed before kings, of losing access to the highest places.

"How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn! How you are cut down to the ground, you who laid the nations low! You said in your heart, 'I will ascend to heaven; above the stars of God I will set my throne on high; I will sit on the mount of assembly in the far reaches of the north.'" (Isaiah 14:12–13, ESV)

In Isaiah 14:13, the rebellious figure desires to be "above the stars of God", כּוֹכְבֵי אֵל (kokhvei El). The word כּוֹכָב (kokhav) means "star," and in the Hebrew Bible star language is routinely applied to divine beings. In Job 38:7, the "morning stars" (כּוֹכְבֵי בֹקֶר, kokhvei boqer) "sang together” at the creation they are parallel to "all the sons of God" who "shouted for joy." Stars are divine beings. Divine beings are stars.

If Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28 are consistently read as parallel accounts of the same primordial rebellion, then the "stones of fire" of Ezekiel 28 and the "stars of God" of Isaiah 14 refer to the same entity. The divine rebel walked among them, was part of their company, their council, their celestial community. And when he sinned, God removed him from their midst.

This reading makes the language of expulsion in Ezekiel 28:16 particularly vivid and precise. God does not merely punish the cherub; He removes him from the community. He removes him from among the shining ones. He demotes him from the inner circle of the divine council to a radically different station. The expulsion is not just spatial, it is relational and ontological.

The Verb of Expulsion: אָבַד

Ezekiel 28:16 says God "destroyed" the cherub from the midst of the stones of fire. The ESV uses the English word "destroyed," but the Hebrew verb warrants careful examination. The root is אָבַד (avad), typically translated "to perish," "to be destroyed," or "to be lost."

But אָבַד has a broader semantic range than simple annihilation. In 1 Samuel 9:3, Saul's father's donkeys have "strayed" or "gone astray", the same root conveys the sense of being lost, having gone off course, wandering from where they should be. In this sense, to אָבַד is not necessarily to cease to exist but to be removed from one's proper place, to be put onto a different course, to be displaced from one's ordained station.

Applied to the anointed cherub, the word suggests not annihilation but displacement, a radical dislocation from the community of the stones of fire, a removal from the divine council, a sending off on a different trajectory. The cherub is not destroyed in the sense of ceasing to be; he is destroyed in the sense of being utterly removed from the position, the access, and the community that defined his existence. He is, in the deepest sense, lost.

This is consistent with the broader Biblical picture of the great adversary as a being who continues to exist and operate, accusing before God (Job 1–2), opposing Israel (Zechariah 3:1), tempting even the Son of God in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1–11), but who has been irrevocably displaced from his original station and will ultimately face final judgment (Revelation 20:10).

Iniquity Found: עַוְלָה

Ezekiel 28:15 provides the turning point of the passage: "You were blameless in your ways from the day you were created, till unrighteousness was found in you" (ESV). The Hebrew word translated "unrighteousness" here is עַוְלָה (avlah), which can also be translated as "iniquity," "wrongdoing," or "injustice." The root עָוַל (aval) conveys a sense of moral crookedness, of being bent or twisted away from what is straight and right.

What is theologically significant is the verb: the iniquity was "found", נִמְצָא (nimtza), the Niphal passive of the common verb מָצָא (matza), "to find." The passive voice here is deliberate and important. The iniquity was not put into the cherub by God; it was found in him, as though it emerged from within, as though it grew from the inside of a being who was otherwise created entirely good. God did not make this creature to rebel. The rebellion arose from within.

The next verse tells us something of the nature of that iniquity: "In the abundance of your trade you were filled with violence in your midst, and you sinned" (28:16, ESV). And verse 17 is even more direct: "Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; you corrupted your wisdom for the sake of your splendor."

Pride, Hebrew גָּבַהּ (gavah) in the Qal, meaning to be high, exalted, haughty, is the root of the fall. The cherub looked at his own glory, his own beauty, his own wisdom, and found in them grounds for placing himself above his station. He wanted to be exalted above the stars of God. He would not remain among the stones of fire as a member; he wanted to be their master.

This is the universal grammar of spiritual disaster, replicated across Scripture in every act of pride-driven rebellion: looking at what God has given and making it an occasion for self-exaltation rather than grateful worship.

The Precious Stones and the Garden: אֶבֶן יְקָרָה

Ezekiel 28:13 provides a catalog of the precious stones that covered the anointed cherub before his fall. In the ESV: "You were in Eden, the garden of God; every precious stone was your covering: sardius, topaz, and diamond, beryl, onyx, and jasper, sapphire, emerald, and carbuncle; and crafted in gold were your settings and your engravings." The Hebrew phrase for precious stone, אֶבֶן יְקָרָה (even yeqarah), uses the same root אֶבֶן we have already examined, even, stone. The stones of fire and the precious stones of the covering share the same root noun.

This verbal connection is significant. The stones that cover the cherub, gems of extraordinary beauty and brilliance, are themselves a kind of concentrated fire: compressed glory, hardened radiance. Gemstones capture and refract light. When the cherub was adorned with them, he was himself a kind of walking luminescence, a being of fire and brilliance clothed in the concentrated light of creation's rarest materials.

Many of these stones parallel those on the high priest's breastplate in Exodus 28:17–20, a deliberate connection to the priestly and mediatorial role of this being, he stood between the holy God and the rest of creation, clothed in the brilliance of sacred office. His covering was not mere decoration; it was a mark of consecrated function.

When he is expelled from the mountain of God and from the midst of the stones of fire, all of that covering is forfeited. The fire he walked among was the fire of his own commission, his own identity, his own community, and he lost it all.

Second Temple Echoes: 1 Enoch and the Flaming Mountains

Jewish literature of the Second Temple period, though later than Ezekiel and not part of the Biblical canon, reflects and expands on the imagery of the stones of fire in ways that help us trace how ancient readers understood the passage.

In 1 Enoch 17, the patriarch Enoch is lifted up and describes what he sees: "ones like flaming fire, and when they so desire they appear like men." These are angelic beings characterized by fire, beings who can adopt a human appearance but whose native form is luminous and burning. The language resonates directly with the fire-beings of the divine council in Ezekiel and Isaiah.

In 1 Enoch 18, Enoch describes seven mountains made of precious stones: "I kept moving in the direction of the west, and it was flaming day and night toward the seven mountains of precious stones." He goes on to describe burning mountains and then, in a pivotal move, identifies seven stars as "great burning mountains" whose place is a "prison house for the stars and the powers of heaven."

What Enoch does here, and it is architecturally brilliant, is fuse both interpretive possibilities for the "stones of fire." The mountains are stones; the stars are burning. The stones are mountains; the stars are heavenly powers. Place and persons collapse into a single image. The stones of fire are where the divine beings are, and the divine beings are themselves the stones of fire.

This fusion is suggestive rather than definitive for our reading of Ezekiel. But it confirms that ancient readers saw in the "stones of fire" language an intimate connection between the location of the divine council and the members of that council, and that both ideas were present simultaneously in the broader tradition to which Ezekiel belongs.

Wandering Stars and the New Testament

The New Testament picks up and extends the imagery, confirming the "stones of fire" as a reference to divine beings. In Jude 13, false teachers are compared to "wandering stars for whom the gloom of utter darkness has been reserved forever" (ESV). The Greek here is asteres planetai, literally, "wandering stars" or "planets," from planao, to wander astray. The connection to 1 Enoch's imprisoned stars is explicit; Jude has already referenced the Watchers of 1 Enoch 6–10 in verse 6.

Stars that wander, that have been knocked off their ordained course, are a metaphor for divine beings who have abandoned their proper station. These are not morally neutral astronomical observations; they are theological claims about beings who have, like the anointed cherub of Ezekiel 28, been displaced from their rightful place in the order of creation.

The darkness reserved for them mirrors the casting down language of both Ezekiel 28 and Isaiah 14, a descent from brilliance to gloom, from fire and light to shadow and imprisonment. The stones of fire that once surrounded the cherub in the holy mountain of God are replaced by the outer darkness into which he is cast.

The Masoretic Text and the Question of Adam

Before concluding, it is worth addressing the prevailing interpretive position that the backstory in Ezekiel 28 concerns Adam, not a divine rebel, and explaining why the textual and theological evidence points in a different direction.

The majority view depends significantly on following the Septuagint (the ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) rather than the Masoretic Text (the traditional Hebrew) at verse 14. The Septuagint reads something like: "I placed you with the cherub" rather than "You were the anointed guardian cherub." With this reading, there are two figures: the cherub, who is divine, and another figure who is with him, and that second figure becomes Adam.

The Masoretic Text, however, has only one figure, identified as the cherub. There are grammatical forms in the Masoretic Text of this passage that some scholars find difficult and even strange, leading them to prefer the Septuagint. But the great Old Testament linguist James Barr mounted a serious and sustained defense of the Masoretic Text readings, arguing that the unusual forms are rare but explicable within the range of Biblical Hebrew morphology. They do not need to be emended or replaced.

If we follow the Masoretic Text, Adam disappears from the passage entirely. There is no second figure accompanying the cherub. The cherub is the sole protagonist of the backstory, a divine being whose pride, beauty, and cosmic position mark him as far beyond a human king or the first human.

Additionally, and this is perhaps the most theologically decisive consideration, the Adam reading requires us to split apart what Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28 hold together. Both passages describe the same primordial pride, the same desire to ascend above one's station, the same catastrophic downfall, the same exposure before kings, the same descent toward the realm of the dead. Isaiah 14 is clearly about a supernatural being, not about Adam. If these two passages are as closely related as everyone acknowledges them to be, then Ezekiel 28 should be read in the same register.

Cast from the Midst of the Stones of Fire

The "stones of fire" in Ezekiel 28 are best understood as the shining, fiery members of the divine council, the heavenly host who surrounded the throne of God, burning with the radiant holiness of their proximity to the divine presence. They are the stars of God that the divine rebel of Isaiah 14 sought to ascend above. They are the burning ones, the luminous community of heaven's inner court.

To walk among the stones of fire was to occupy the highest imaginable station in created existence. The anointed, covering cherub moved among them as one of them, consecrated, adorned, privileged beyond description, tasked with the sacred function of covering the divine throne. No creature had been given more. No creature had been placed closer to the source.

And then iniquity was found in him. Pride corrupted wisdom. Beauty became grounds for self-exaltation. And God did what only God can do: He removed the rebel from among the stones of fire, displaced him from the holy mountain of God, set him on a different course, not into nothingness, but into a radically diminished station, from which he would work his opposition against God's purposes until the day of his final judgment.

The expulsion is not merely a historical moment. It is the first act in a great drama of cosmic conflict that runs through the entire Biblical narrative, from Genesis 3 to Revelation 20. The serpent in the garden, the adversary of Job, the accuser of Joshua the high priest, the tempter of Jesus in the wilderness, the dragon of the Apocalypse, all are shadows of that original fall, that first displacement from the midst of the stones of fire.

And the stones of fire remain. The divine council continues. The loyal sons of God still surround the throne, still burn with the holiness of their proximity to the Almighty. The Psalms call them to praise (Psalm 148:2). Job speaks of them singing at creation (Job 38:7). Revelation shows them encircling the throne without ceasing (Revelation 4:8).

The one who was cast out looks at what he has lost. And the rest of the story of Scripture is, in part, the story of what he does with his displacement, and how the God who cast him down will ultimately bring even that rebellion to its appointed end.


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