The Pulpit Commentary - Ezekiel 28:10
The climax comes in the strongest language of Hebrew scorn. As the uncircumcised were to the Israelite ( 1 Samuel 17:36 ; 1 Samuel 31:4 ), so should the King of Tyro, unhonored, unwept, with no outward marks of reverence, be among the great cues of the past who dwell in Hades. Ezekiel returns to the phrase in Ezekiel 31:18 ; Ezekiel 32:24 . The words receive a special force from the fact that the Phoenicians practiced circumcision before their intercourse with the Greeks (Herod;... read more
The Pulpit Commentary - Ezekiel 28:8-9
The effect of the Chaldean invasion was to bring the king down to the nether world of the dead. In the use of the plural "deaths" we have a parallel to the "plurima morris imago" of Virgil (' AE neid,' 2.369). And this death was not to be like that of a hero-warrior, but as that of those who are slain in the midst of the seas , who fall, i.e; in a naval battle, and are cast into the waters. Would he then repeat his boast, I am God? read more