Look at the term, U F O; are you trying to tell me that you can identify the object Ezekiel saw? Your effort to assign to me assertions I am not making is indicative of someone who cannot think straight, or has an agenda not openly acknowledged. That is deception, whether you can acknowledge it or not is not my problem, but it is a signal to me that you are not going to be able to carry on a rational discussion. Have nice day
re: “Look at the term, U F O; are you trying to tell me that you can identify the object Ezekiel saw?”
Ezekiel identified himself what the object(s) was/were - cherubim. Look it up yourself in Ezekiel 10. The fact that he used terms that we don’t understand, and that Ezekiel probably couldn’t fully describe doesn’t make it a UFO in the traditional sense of that word.
The Book of Daniel as well as Revelation records personages in highly symbolic and apocalyptic language. These are not beings from another planet in the universe, which is the traditional definition of what people mean by extra-terrestrials or the vehicles they travel in, UFOs.
Look, when you expand/create your own definition of what an ET is or a UFO is (to include Biblical or spiritual beings), you get to frame the argument to your liking and lo, and behold - you get to win the argument!
But, the fact remains that Ezekiel clearly identifies the wheel of fire as cherubim and that they symbolize God’s presence leaving the temple in Jerusalem. And another thing, this was a “vision” that only Ezekiel saw. This was not a physical, literal event that anyone else could see. That’s why these things are called visions. Ezekiel was a prophet of God and God showed him things that He didn’t show anyone else.
But look, do what you want. I just doesn’t matter to me - except when someone takes Scripture and tries to twist it into saying something that it is NOT saying.