Ezekiel 11:1-12
This commit is contained in:
		
							parent
							
								
									7f756688b3
								
							
						
					
					
						commit
						71fd3789c8
					
				
					 1 changed files with 41 additions and 0 deletions
				
			
		
							
								
								
									
										41
									
								
								content/bible_journal/ezekiel_11:1-12.md
									
										
									
									
									
										Normal file
									
								
							
							
						
						
									
										41
									
								
								content/bible_journal/ezekiel_11:1-12.md
									
										
									
									
									
										Normal file
									
								
							|  | @ -0,0 +1,41 @@ | |||
| +++ | ||||
| title = "Ezekiel 11:1–12" | ||||
| date = "2023-03-26" | ||||
| +++ | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Ezekiel11.1-12) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Now Ezekiel is taken to the east gate of the temple, where another twenty-five | ||||
| men have gathered outside it. Don't confuse these twenty-five with the | ||||
| twenty-five priests worshipping the sun inside the temple court (who were | ||||
| supposed to be killed by the six destroying angels in chapter 9). Also don't | ||||
| confuse Jaazaniah the son of Azzur here with Jaazaniah the son of Shaphan from | ||||
| chapter 8. These men are described as "princes of the people" (_v. 1_) so they | ||||
| are the political leaders who rose up in Jerusalem after the first deportation. | ||||
| (This was the exile that Ezekiel himself and Daniel were part of.) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The Spirit of the Lord describes these men to Ezekiel as wicked counselors and | ||||
| arrogant in their position. They described Jerusalem as a cauldron and | ||||
| themselves as the meat in it. That is, the city has walls of irons and they are | ||||
| the best parts of what is in it. Since Nebuchadnezzar had deported most of the | ||||
| royal family, the military leaders, and the craftsmen, maybe these men | ||||
| considered those groups to be the offal and bones of a butchered animal while | ||||
| they were the parts that were valuable. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| As an aside, the Lord declares He knows their thoughts, which is not a fact | ||||
| that should be missed. When theologians talk about God's omniscience, they | ||||
| really do mean He knows _everything_. Repent of even your wicked thoughts that | ||||
| you never tell anyone. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The Lord indicts these wicked counselors by pointing out the people who have | ||||
| been slain in the streets of the city because of their leadership. He says that | ||||
| those are the real meat of the cauldron, and because of them He will bring | ||||
| these puffed-up leaders out of the cauldron to be judged at the border of | ||||
| Israel with the sword that they have feared. They had not followed in the | ||||
| statuse of the Lord but instead did wickedness according to the ways of the | ||||
| nations around them. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| * * * | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| No one can escape Your justice except through the gracious work of Jesus paying | ||||
| the penalty for our unrighteousness. | ||||
		Loading…
	
	Add table
		Add a link
		
	
		Reference in a new issue