Read Ezekiel chapter 1 slowly. Don’t skip the details. What Ezekiel describes is not
What you see in children’s Bibles.
“I looked, and I saw a windstorm coming out of the north—an immense cloud with
flashing lightning and surrounded by brilliant light. The center of the fire looked like
glowing metal, and in the fire was what looked like four living creatures.”
These weren’t cute cherubs. They had four faces—human, lion, ox, and eagle. They
had straight legs with feet like calves’ hooves that gleamed like bronze. They had four
wings each. Under their wings were human hands. And wherever they moved, wheels
moved with them—wheels within wheels, covered entirely with eyes.
“When the living creatures moved, the wheels beside them moved; and when the living
creatures rose from the ground, the wheels also rose. Wherever the spirit would go,
they would go, and the wheels would rise along with them, because the spirit of the
living creatures was in the wheels.”
This is not poetic language. Ezekiel is struggling to describe something he has no
vocabulary for. He uses “looked like” and “appeared to be” because he’s seeing
technology or beings so advanced that ancient Hebrew has no words for them.
And here’s what the church doesn’t want to discuss: Ezekiel isn’t the only one. Isaiah
saw seraphim with six wings covering themselves and crying, “Holy, holy, holy.” Daniel
saw beings that made him physically ill and unable to stand. John in Revelation
describes creatures so bizarre that artists have been trying to depict them for centuries
and failing.
What if the “angels” of the Bible aren’t what we think? What if they’re interdimensional
beings operating on a level of reality we can barely perceive? The Bible never calls
them “angels” in these visions—that’s a translation choice. The Hebrew word is often
“malak,” which just means “messenger.”
The wheels covered with eyes aren’t decorative. Eyes represent awareness,
intelligence, and perception. These wheels were alive. They were conscious. They moved in
perfect sync with the creatures. Ezekiel says, “the spirit of the living creatures was in the
wheels”—they were connected, networked, operating as one system.
And the sound. Ezekiel says when they moved, it sounded like “the roar of rushing
waters, like the voice of the Almighty, like the tumult of an army.” This wasn’t gentle harp
music. This was an overwhelming, mechanical, powerful sound that made the earth shake.
The early church knew these visions were terrifying. They restricted who could study
them. Jewish tradition says you have to be over 30 and spiritually mature to read
Ezekiel’s vision. Why? Because it shattered comfortable assumptions about the nature
of reality.
Modern Christianity has domesticated the supernatural. We’ve turned cosmic beings
into greeting card images. But Ezekiel’s vision reminds us: the spiritual realm is far
stranger, far more complex, and far more powerful than we’ve been taught.
When Ezekiel saw the glory of God, he fell facedown. Not in worship alone—in
complete overwhelm. What he witnessed was so far beyond human comprehension that
it took him chapters to even attempt a description.
The question isn’t whether angels are real. It’s whether we’re ready to accept how alien
They actually are.
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