Ezekiel 18:1-32
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| title = "Ezekiel 18:1–32" | ||||
| date = "2023-04-17" | ||||
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| 
 | ||||
| ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Ezekiel18.1-32) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| This message from the Lord concerns His justice as it applies to individuals. | ||||
| There was apparently a proverb in Israel that taught that the actions of a | ||||
| father affected his sons' lives. While that is true to an extent, the | ||||
| Israelites must have been using it in a way that made it seem that God was not | ||||
| just in His dealings with people. Just as a man eating sour grapes doesn't | ||||
| transfer the sour taste to his sons' mouths, neither does his iniquity get | ||||
| passed down from generation to generation. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| It is important to note the distinction between punishment and consequences. | ||||
| Many improper actions have natural consequences that occur simply because they | ||||
| have been done. Liars and traitors become mistrusted, heavy drinking causes | ||||
| health problems, the spendthrift doesn't have enough money. All of these are | ||||
| mere consequences. Punishments are consequences that are imposed by an external | ||||
| authority in order to get recompense for the crime committed and as a further | ||||
| discouragement from further infractions. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The Lord presents three case studies to help us understand, and they are all | ||||
| related to each other. The first man is righteous as we can see from the list | ||||
| of things he does and does not do, and the Lord says he will live. These are | ||||
| all things listed in the Law of Moses that God's people were to do or not do. | ||||
| The second man is the first's son, and he does the opposite of his father in | ||||
| every way. He is thoroughly worthless and wicked, and so the Lord says he shall | ||||
| die. The third man is the second's son, and after seeing all that his father | ||||
| did, he follows instead in the ways of his grandfather. Unlike his father who | ||||
| brought judgement upon himself through his wicked deeds, the third man lives. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Amazingly, the people of Israel did not think this was right. I can only think | ||||
| that they must have wanted to be pardoned because their fathers and | ||||
| grandfathers were rigtheous. Surely they wouldn't want their children to be | ||||
| punished for what they have done. It may be that they considered the whole | ||||
| community to be a moral unit, and everyone shared in blessings or curses | ||||
| together. Whatever the case, the Lord refutes their assertion and says He | ||||
| punishes individuals for their own sin. It doesn't matter who you are related | ||||
| to in terms of morality. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| The Lord then drops a bomb into the dialogue by saying that a wicked man can | ||||
| become righteous and a righteous man can become wicked. It is the last state | ||||
| that they persist in that the Lord considers, not the former way that he | ||||
| walked. The hypothetical Israelites also say that this is not just, but the | ||||
| Lord corrects this attitude as well. Since we have the whole, complete inspired | ||||
| Word of God, we can understand that everyone actually starts out wicked, under | ||||
| the curse of sin, but through the work of Jesus Christ we can repent and | ||||
| believe that He will work righteousness through us. The Lord has made a way, so | ||||
| repent. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| * * * | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| You do not take pleasure in the death of the wicked, but want all to come to | ||||
| repentence. | ||||
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