Ezekiel Chapter 1 verse 18 Holy Bible

ASV Ezekiel 1:18

As for their rims, they were high and dreadful; and they four had their rims full of eyes round about.
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BBE Ezekiel 1:18

And I saw that they had edges, and their edges, even of the four, were full of eyes round about.
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DARBY Ezekiel 1:18

As for their rims, they were high and dreadful; and they four had their rims full of eyes round about.
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KJV Ezekiel 1:18

As for their rings, they were so high that they were dreadful; and their rings were full of eyes round about them four.
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WBT Ezekiel 1:18


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WEB Ezekiel 1:18

As for their rims, they were high and dreadful; and they four had their rims full of eyes round about.
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YLT Ezekiel 1:18

As to their rings, they are both high and fearful, and their rings `are' full of eyes round about them four.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 18. - As for their rings, etc. The "rings" or "felloes" of the wheels impressed the prophet's mind with a sense of awe, partly from their size, partly from their being "full of eyes." These were obviously, as again in Ezekiel 10:12, and in the analogues of the "stone with seven eyes" in Zechariah 3:9; Zechariah 4:10, and the "four beasts [i.e. 'living creatures'] full of eyes," in Revelation 4:6, symbols of the omniscience of God working through the forces of nature and of history. These were not, as men have sometimes thought, blind forces, but were guided as by a supreme insight (comp. 2 Chronicles 16:9).

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(18) Their rings.--The same word is used twice in this verse, and means what we call the felloes. "They were both high and terrible," i.e., they had both these characteristics, but not, as seems to be implied in our translation, that one was the cause of the other. The height might be inferred from the fact that the wheel was "upon the earth," and yet was "by the living creatures" (Ezekiel 1:15) who were seen in the cloud (Ezekiel 1:5). The terribleness was in keeping with all other parts of the vision, and its reason is explained in the circumstances which follow.Full of eyes.--In Ezekiel 10:12 it is said of the living creatures, "their whole body, and their backs, and their hands, and their wings, and the wheels were full of eyes round about." It was the same vision in either case (Ezekiel 10:20-22), only in the effort to describe it, which the prophet evidently feels it impossible to do adequately, he mentions now one particular and now another. In the corresponding vision in the Apocalypse the four living creatures are represented as "full of eyes within" (Revelation 4:8). In both places alike the symbolism sets forth God's perfect knowledge of all His works: here as showing the absolute wisdom of all His doings (comp. 2Chronicles 16:9), there as resulting in perfect and harmonious praise from all His works. The Hebrew seers ever looked through all secondary causes directly to the ultimate force which originates and controls all nature, and which they represent as intelligent and self-conscious. To do this the more effectively, they often use in their visions such concrete imagery as this before us. . . .