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Dr. Michael Heiser delivers a detailed presentation debunking the notion that Ezekiel's visions in chapters 1 and 10 depict a UFO or extraterrestrial craft, asserting instead that they represent a heavenly chariot throne familiar from ancient Near Eastern iconography and literature. He defines iconography as the artwork—sculptures, reliefs, and images—of the era, akin to "polaroids of the day," which abundantly feature cherubim (four-faced, four-winged humanoid creatures with fused legs, calf-like hooves, and bronze sparkle) supporting a firmament platform bearing a sapphire throne with a divine figure, all elements precisely matching Ezekiel's descriptions without modern embellishments like silver discs or windows, terms available in Hebrew but unused. Heiser acknowledges ancient high technology in texts like the Vedic Vimanas or Book of Enoch's Watcher-derived warfare knowledge but rules it out here due to mismatched details, flawed novel translations by UFO proponents, and logical absurdities like flame-powered interstellar travel or coal-scooping cherubim, emphasizing that Ezekiel's vision amalgamates common motifs without a single matching image, evolving slightly in chapter 10 (with eyes covering creatures and wheels) and paralleling Daniel 7's fiery wheeled throne and Revelation's eyed beasts. Heiser illustrates with examples from Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Syrian-Palestinian, and Phoenician art—such as four-faced deities, winged cherubim in square formation under round or square platforms, calf-hooved figures with touching wings, eye-covered wheels beneath feet, and deities atop cherubim-borne thrones (e.g., Hiram of Tyre's coffin)—drawn from scholarly works by Othmar Keel and Martin Metzger, arguing biblical authors routinely adapted such imagery polemically, as in supplanting Baal's cloud-riding with Yahweh's. He critiques inconsistencies in UFO interpretations that borrow Near Eastern literary parallels while ignoring visual ones, notes cherubim as known temple guardians (e.g., mercy seat footstool in Exodus, Solomon's temple), and speculates—crediting Dave Flynn—that the vision symbolizes cosmic procession via zodiacal cardinal points (man/lion/ox/eagle), with wheels, eyes (euphemism for stars), and firmament evoking ancient flat-earth/domed-sky cosmography where heaven is God's throne and earth his footstool, linking to prophetic timelines across Ezekiel, Daniel, and Revelation for epochs like exile's end. During Q&A, Heiser clarifies the vision as a theophany (possibly Christophany), not necessarily a flying vehicle but a prophetic assurance of God's sovereignty over time via astral markers, not horoscopic astrology; he views it as real yet symbolic, aligned with ancient Jewish synagogue zodiacs and early church astral prophecy traditions lost post-Origen and Augustine, urging a return to Israelite cosmology for biblical clarity without unchecked allegory or typology. #Ezekiel #Heiser #ThroneChariot #Cherubim #UFO #AncientIconography #BiblicalMystery #NearEastArt #DivineCouncil #PropheticVision #Ezekiel1 #NakedBible #MichaelHeiser #HeavenlyThrone #AncientCosmology #ZodiacProphecy #WatchersTech #BiblicalUFO #Theophany #IsraelExile