954 lines
73 KiB
XML
954 lines
73 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Ez.xxi" n="xxi" next="Ez.xxii" prev="Ez.xx" progress="57.35%" title="Chapter XX">
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<h2 id="Ez.xxi-p0.1">E Z E K I E L.</h2>
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<h3 id="Ez.xxi-p0.2">CHAP. XX.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Ez.xxi-p1" shownumber="no">In this chapter, I. The prophet is consulted by
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some of the elders of Israel, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.1" parsed="|Ezek|20|1|0|0" passage="Eze 20:1">ver.
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1</scripRef>. II. He is instructed by his God what answer to give
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them. He must, 1. Signify God's displeasure against them, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.2-Ezek.20.3" parsed="|Ezek|20|2|20|3" passage="Eze 20:2,3">ver. 2, 3</scripRef>. And, 2. He must show
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them what just cause he had for that displeasure, by giving them a
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history of God's grateful dealings with their fathers and their
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treacherous dealings with God. (1.) In Egypt, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.5-Ezek.20.9" parsed="|Ezek|20|5|20|9" passage="Eze 20:5-9">ver. 5-9</scripRef>. (2.) In the wilderness, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.10-Ezek.20.26" parsed="|Ezek|20|10|20|26" passage="Eze 20:10-26">ver. 10-26</scripRef>. (3.) In Canaan,
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<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.27-Ezek.20.32" parsed="|Ezek|20|27|20|32" passage="Eze 20:27-32">ver. 27-32</scripRef>. 3. He must
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denounce the judgments of God against them, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.33-Ezek.20.36" parsed="|Ezek|20|33|20|36" passage="Eze 20:33-36">ver. 33-36</scripRef>. 4. He must tell them likewise
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what mercy God had in store for them, when he would bring a remnant
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of them to repentance, re-establish them in their own land, and set
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up his sanctuary among them again, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.37-Ezek.20.44" parsed="|Ezek|20|37|20|44" passage="Eze 20:37-44">ver. 37-44</scripRef>. 5. Here is another word
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dropped towards Jerusalem, which is explained and enlarged upon in
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the next chapter, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.45-Ezek.20.49" parsed="|Ezek|20|45|20|49" passage="Eze 20:45-49">ver.
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45-49</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20" parsed="|Ezek|20|0|0|0" passage="Eze 20" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.1-Ezek.20.4" parsed="|Ezek|20|1|20|4" passage="Eze 20:1-4" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p1.11">
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<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p1.12">The Prophet Consulted by the
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Elders. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p1.13">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p2" shownumber="no">1 And it came to pass in the seventh year, in
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the fifth <i>month,</i> the tenth <i>day</i> of the month,
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<i>that</i> certain of the elders of Israel came to enquire of the
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<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p2.1">Lord</span>, and sat before me. 2
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Then came the word of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p2.2">Lord</span> unto
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me, saying, 3 Son of man, speak unto the elders of Israel,
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and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p2.3">God</span>; Are ye come to enquire of me? <i>As</i> I
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live, saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p2.4">God</span>, I will not
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be enquired of by you. 4 Wilt thou judge them, son of man,
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wilt thou judge <i>them?</i> cause them to know the abominations of
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their fathers:</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p3" shownumber="no">Here is, 1. The occasion of the message
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which we have in this chapter. That sermon which we had <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.18.1-Ezek.18.32" parsed="|Ezek|18|1|18|32" passage="Eze 18:1-32"><i>ch.</i> xviii.</scripRef> was occasioned
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by their presumptuous reflections upon God; this was occasioned by
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their hypocritical enquiries after him. Each shall have his own.
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This prophecy is exactly dated, in the <i>seventh year of the</i>
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captivity, about two years after Ezekiel began to prophesy. God
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would have them to keep account how long their captivity lasted,
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that they might see how the years went on towards their
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deliverance, though very slowly. <i>Certain of the elders of Israel
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came to enquire of the Lord,</i> not statedly (as those <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.8.1" parsed="|Ezek|8|1|0|0" passage="Eze 8:1"><i>ch.</i> viii. 1</scripRef>), but, as it should
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seem, occasionally, and upon a particular emergency. Whether they
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were of those that were now in captivity, or elders lately come
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from Jerusalem upon business to Babylon, is not certain; but, by
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what the prophet says to them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.32" parsed="|Ezek|20|32|0|0" passage="Eze 20:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>), it should seem, their enquiry
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was whether now that they were captives in Babylon, at a distance
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from their own country, where they had not only no temple, but no
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synagogue, for the worship of God, it was not lawful for them, that
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they might ingratiate themselves with their lords and masters, to
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join with them in their worship and do <i>as the families of these
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countries</i> do, that <i>serve wood and stone.</i> This matter was
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palliated as well as it would bear, like Naaman's pleading with
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Elisha for leave to bow in the house of Rimmon, in compliment to
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the king; but we have reason to suspect that their enquiry drove at
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this. Note, Those hearts are wretchedly hardened which ask God
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leave to go on in sin, and that when they are suffering for it.
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They came and <i>sat</i> very demurely and with a show of devotion
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<i>before the prophet,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.33.31" parsed="|Ezek|33|31|0|0" passage="Eze 33:31"><i>ch.</i>
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xxxiii. 31</scripRef>. 2. The purport of this message. (1.) They
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must be made to know that <i>God is angry with them;</i> he takes
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it as an affront that they come to enquire of him when they are
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resolved to go on still in their trespasses: <i>As I live, saith
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the Lord God, I will not be enquired of by you,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.3" parsed="|Ezek|20|3|0|0" passage="Eze 20:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. Their shows of devotion
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shall be neither acceptable to God nor advantageous to themselves.
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God will not take notice of their enquiries, nor give them any
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satisfactory answers. Note, A hypocritical attendance on God and
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his ordinances is so far from being pleasing to him that it is
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provoking. (2.) They must be made to know that God is justly angry
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with them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.4" parsed="|Ezek|20|4|0|0" passage="Eze 20:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>):
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"<i>Wilt thou judge them, son of man, wilt thou judge them?</i>
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Thou art a prophet, surely thou wilt not <i>plead for them,</i> as
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an intercessor with God; but surely thou wilt <i>pass sentence</i>
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on them as a judge for God. <i>See, I have set thee over the
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nation;</i> wilt thou not declare to them the judgments of the
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Lord? Cause them therefore <i>to know the abominations of their
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fathers.</i>" So the orders run now, as before (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p3.7" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.16.2" parsed="|Ezek|16|2|0|0" passage="Eze 16:2"><i>ch.</i> xvi. 2</scripRef>) he must cause them to
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<i>know their own abominations.</i> Though their own abominations
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were sufficient to justify God in the severest of his proceedings
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against them, yet it would be of use for them to know the
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<i>abominations of their fathers,</i> that they might see what a
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righteous thing it was with God now at last to cut them off from
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being a people, who from the first were such a provoking
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people.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p3.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.5-Ezek.20.9" parsed="|Ezek|20|5|20|9" passage="Eze 20:5-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p3.9">
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<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p3.10">God's Gracious Dealings with
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Israel. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p3.11">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p4" shownumber="no">5 And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p4.1">God</span>; In the day when I chose Israel, and
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lifted up mine hand unto the seed of the house of Jacob, and made
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myself known unto them in the land of Egypt, when I lifted up mine
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hand unto them, saying, I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p4.2">Lord</span> your God; 6 In the day <i>that</i> I
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lifted up mine hand unto them, to bring them forth of the land of
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Egypt into a land that I had espied for them, flowing with milk and
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honey, which <i>is</i> the glory of all lands: 7 Then said I
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unto them, Cast ye away every man the abominations of his eyes, and
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defile not yourselves with the idols of Egypt: I <i>am</i> the
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<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p4.3">Lord</span> your God. 8 But they
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rebelled against me, and would not hearken unto me: they did not
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every man cast away the abominations of their eyes, neither did
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they forsake the idols of Egypt: then I said, I will pour out my
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fury upon them, to accomplish my anger against them in the midst of
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the land of Egypt. 9 But I wrought for my name's sake, that
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it should not be polluted before the heathen, among whom they
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<i>were,</i> in whose sight I made myself known unto them, in
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bringing them forth out of the land of Egypt.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p5" shownumber="no">The history of the ingratitude and
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rebellion of the people of Israel here begins as early as their
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beginning; so does the history of man's apostasy from his Maker. No
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sooner have we read the story of our first parents' creation than
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we immediately meet with that of their rebellion; so we see here it
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was with Israel, a people designed to represent the body of mankind
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both in their dealings with God and in his with them. Here is,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p6" shownumber="no">I. The gracious purposes of God's law
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concerning Israel in Egypt, where they were bond-slaves to Pharaoh.
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Be it spoken, be it written, to the immortal honour of free grace,
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that then and there, 1. He chose Israel to be a peculiar people to
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himself, though their condition was bad and their character worse,
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that he might have the honour of mending both. He <i>therefore</i>
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chose them, because they were <i>the seed of the house of
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Jacob,</i> the posterity of that prince with God, <i>that he might
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keep the oath which he had sworn unto their fathers,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.7.7-Deut.7.8" parsed="|Deut|7|7|7|8" passage="De 7:7,8">Deut. vii. 7, 8</scripRef>. 2. He <i>made
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himself known to them</i> by his name <i>Jehovah</i> (a new name,
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<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.6.3" parsed="|Exod|6|3|0|0" passage="Ex 6:3">Exod. vi. 3</scripRef>), when by reason
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of their servitude they had almost lost the knowledge of that name
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by which he was known to their fathers, <i>God Almighty.</i> Note,
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As the foundation of our blessedness is laid in God's choosing us,
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so the first step towards it is God's making himself known to us.
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And whatever distance we are at, whatever distress we are in, he
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that made himself known to Israel even in the land of Egypt can
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find us out, and follow us with the gracious discoveries and
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manifestations of his favour. 3. He made over himself to them as
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their God in covenant: <i>I lifted up my hand unto them,</i> saying
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it, and confirming it with an oath. "<i>I am the Lord your God,</i>
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to whom you are to pay your homage, and from whom and in whom you
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are to expect your bliss." 4. He promised to bring them out of
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Egypt; and made good what he promised. He <i>lifted up his
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hand,</i> that is, he swore unto them, that he would deliver them;
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and, they being very unworthy, and their deliverance very unlikely,
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it was requisite that the promise of it should be <i>confirmed by
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an oath.</i> Or, He <i>lifted up his hand,</i> that is, he put
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forth his almighty power to do it; he did it with an
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<i>outstretched arm,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.136.12" parsed="|Ps|136|12|0|0" passage="Ps 136:12">Ps. cxxxvi.
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12</scripRef>. 5. He assured them that he would put them in
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possession of the land of Canaan. He <i>therefore</i> brought them
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out of Egypt, <i>that he might bring them into a land that he had
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spied</i> out <i>for them,</i> a second garden of Eden, which was
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<i>the glory of all lands.</i> So he found it, the climate being
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temperate, the soil fruitful, the situation pleasant, and every
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thing agreeable (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.8.7 Bible:Deut.11.12" parsed="|Deut|8|7|0|0;|Deut|11|12|0|0" passage="De 8:7,11:12">Deut. viii. 7;
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xi. 12</scripRef>); or, however this might be, so he made it, by
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setting up his sanctuary in it.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p7" shownumber="no">II. The reasonable commands he gave them,
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and the easy conditions of his covenant with them at that time.
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Having told them what they might expect from him, he next tells
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them what was all he expected from them; it was no more than this
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(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.7" parsed="|Ezek|20|7|0|0" passage="Eze 20:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>): "<i>Cast you
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away every man</i> his images that he uses for worship, that are
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the adorations, but should be the <i>abominations, of his eyes.</i>
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Let him abominate them, and put them out of his sight, and
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<i>defile not yourselves with the idols of Egypt.</i>" Of these, it
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seems, many of them were fond; the golden calf was one of them. It
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was just, and what might reasonably be expected, that, being
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delivered from the Egyptian slavery, they should quit the Egyptian
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idolatry, especially when God, at bringing them out, <i>executed
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judgment upon the gods of Egypt</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.33.4" parsed="|Num|33|4|0|0" passage="Nu 33:4">Num. xxxiii. 4</scripRef>) and thereby showed himself
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above them. And, whatever other idols they might have an
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inclination to, one would think they should have had a rooted
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aversion to the gods of Egypt for Egypt's sake, which had been to
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them a house of bondage. Yet, it seems, they needed this caution,
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and it is backed with a good reason: <i>I am the Lord your God,</i>
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who neither need an assistant nor will admit a rival.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p8" shownumber="no">III. Their unreasonable disobedience to
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these commands, for which God might justly have cut them off as
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soon as ever they were formed into a people (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.8" parsed="|Ezek|20|8|0|0" passage="Eze 20:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>): <i>They rebelled against
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God,</i> not only refused to comply with his particular precepts,
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but shook off their allegiance, and in effect told him that they
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should be at liberty to worship what god they pleased. And even
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then when God came down to deliver them, and sent Moses for that
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purpose, yet they would not <i>forsake the idols of Egypt,</i>
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which perhaps made them speak so affectionately of the <i>onions of
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Egypt</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p8.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.11.5" parsed="|Num|11|5|0|0" passage="Nu 11:5">Num. xi. 5</scripRef>), for
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among other things the Egyptians worshipped an onion. It was
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strange that all the plagues of Egypt would not prevail to cure
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them of their affection to the <i>idols of Egypt.</i> For this God
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said he would <i>pour out his fury upon them,</i> even while they
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were yet <i>in the midst of the land of Egypt.</i> Justly might he
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have said, "Let them die with the Egyptians." This magnifies the
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riches of God's goodness, that he was pleased to work so great a
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salvation for them even when he saw them ripe for ruin. Well might
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Moses tell them, It is <i>not for your righteousness,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p8.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.9.4-Deut.9.5" parsed="|Deut|9|4|9|5" passage="De 9:4,5">Deut. ix. 4, 5</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p9" shownumber="no">IV. The wonderful deliverance which God
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wrought for them, notwithstanding. Though they forfeited the favour
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while it was in the bestowing, and when God <i>would have healed
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them</i> when their <i>iniquity was discovered</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Hos.7.1" parsed="|Hos|7|1|0|0" passage="Ho 7:1">Hos. vii. 1</scripRef>), yet <i>mercy rejoiced
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against judgment,</i> and God did what he designed purely <i>for
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his own name's sake,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.9" parsed="|Ezek|20|9|0|0" passage="Eze 20:9"><i>v.</i>
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9</scripRef>. When nothing in us will furnish him with a reason for
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his favours he furnishes himself with one. God <i>made himself
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known</i> to them <i>in the sight of the heathen</i> when he
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ordered Moses publicly to say to Pharaoh, Israel is <i>my son, my
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first-born,</i> let them go, <i>that they may serve me.</i> Now, if
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he had left them to perish for their wickedness as they deserved,
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the Egyptians would have reflected upon him for it, and his name
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would have been polluted, which ought to be sanctified and shall be
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so. Note, The church is secured, even when it is corrupt, because
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God will secure his own honour.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.10-Ezek.20.26" parsed="|Ezek|20|10|20|26" passage="Eze 20:10-26" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p9.4">
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<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p9.5">The Privileges and Sins of
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Israel. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p9.6">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p10" shownumber="no">10 Wherefore I caused them to go forth out of
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the land of Egypt, and brought them into the wilderness. 11
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And I gave them my statutes, and shewed them my judgments, which
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<i>if</i> a man do, he shall even live in them. 12 Moreover
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also I gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign between me and them,
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that they might know that I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p10.1">Lord</span> that sanctify them. 13 But the house
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of Israel rebelled against me in the wilderness: they walked not in
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my statutes, and they despised my judgments, which <i>if</i> a man
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do, he shall even live in them; and my sabbaths they greatly
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polluted: then I said, I would pour out my fury upon them in the
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wilderness, to consume them. 14 But I wrought for my name's
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sake, that it should not be polluted before the heathen, in whose
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sight I brought them out. 15 Yet also I lifted up my hand
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unto them in the wilderness, that I would not bring them into the
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land which I had given <i>them,</i> flowing with milk and honey,
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which <i>is</i> the glory of all lands; 16 Because they
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despised my judgments, and walked not in my statutes, but polluted
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my sabbaths: for their heart went after their idols. 17
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Nevertheless mine eye spared them from destroying them, neither did
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I make an end of them in the wilderness. 18 But I said unto
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their children in the wilderness, Walk ye not in the statutes of
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your fathers, neither observe their judgments, nor defile
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yourselves with their idols: 19 I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p10.2">Lord</span> your God; walk in my statutes, and keep my
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judgments, and do them; 20 And hallow my sabbaths; and they
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shall be a sign between me and you, that ye may know that I
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<i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p10.3">Lord</span> your God.
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21 Notwithstanding the children rebelled against me: they walked
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not in my statutes, neither kept my judgments to do them, which
|
||
<i>if</i> a man do, he shall even live in them; they polluted my
|
||
sabbaths: then I said, I would pour out my fury upon them, to
|
||
accomplish my anger against them in the wilderness. 22
|
||
Nevertheless I withdrew mine hand, and wrought for my name's sake,
|
||
that it should not be polluted in the sight of the heathen, in
|
||
whose sight I brought them forth. 23 I lifted up mine hand
|
||
unto them also in the wilderness, that I would scatter them among
|
||
the heathen, and disperse them through the countries; 24
|
||
Because they had not executed my judgments, but had despised my
|
||
statutes, and had polluted my sabbaths, and their eyes were after
|
||
their fathers' idols. 25 Wherefore I gave them also statutes
|
||
<i>that were</i> not good, and judgments whereby they should not
|
||
live; 26 And I polluted them in their own gifts, in that
|
||
they caused to pass through <i>the fire</i> all that openeth the
|
||
womb, that I might make them desolate, to the end that they might
|
||
know that I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p10.4">Lord</span>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p11" shownumber="no">The history of the struggle between the
|
||
sins of Israel, by which they endeavoured to ruin themselves, and
|
||
the mercies of God, by which he endeavoured to save them and make
|
||
them happy, is here continued: and the instances of that struggle
|
||
in these verses have reference to what passed between God and them
|
||
in the wilderness, in which God honoured himself and they shamed
|
||
themselves. The story of Israel in the wilderness is referred to in
|
||
the New Testament (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.1-1Cor.10.33 Bible:Heb.3.1-Heb.3.19" parsed="|1Cor|10|1|10|33;|Heb|3|1|3|19" passage="1Co 10:1-33,Heb 3:1-19">1
|
||
Cor. x. and Heb. iii.</scripRef>), as well as often in the Old, for
|
||
warning to us Christians; and therefore we are particularly
|
||
concerned in these verses. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p12" shownumber="no">I. The great things God did for them, which
|
||
he puts them in mind of, not as grudging them his favours, but to
|
||
show how ungrateful they had been. And we say, If you call a man
|
||
ungrateful, you can call him no worse. It was a great favour, 1.
|
||
That God <i>brought them forth out of Egypt</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.10" parsed="|Ezek|20|10|0|0" passage="Eze 20:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>), though, as it follows, he
|
||
<i>brought them into the wilderness</i> and not into Canaan
|
||
immediately. It is better to be at liberty in a wilderness than
|
||
bond-slaves in a land of plenty, to enjoy God and ourselves in
|
||
solitude than to lose both in a crowd; yet there were many of them
|
||
who had such base servile spirits as not to understand this, but,
|
||
when they met with the difficulties of a desert, wished themselves
|
||
in Egypt again. 2. That he gave them the law upon Mount Sinai
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.11" parsed="|Ezek|20|11|0|0" passage="Eze 20:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>), not only
|
||
instructed them concerning good and evil, but by his authority
|
||
bound them from the evil and to the good. He <i>gave them his
|
||
statutes,</i> and a valuable gift it was. <i>Moses commanded them a
|
||
law that was the inheritance of the congregation of Israel,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.33.4" parsed="|Deut|33|4|0|0" passage="De 33:4">Deut. xxxiii. 4</scripRef>. God <i>made
|
||
them to know his judgments,</i> not only enacted laws for them, but
|
||
showed them the reasonableness and equity of those laws, with what
|
||
judgment they were formed. The laws he gave them they were
|
||
encouraged to observe and obey; for, <i>if a man do them, he shall
|
||
even live in them;</i> in keeping God's commandments there is
|
||
abundance of comfort and a great reward. Christ says, <i>If thou
|
||
wilt into enter life,</i> and enjoy it, <i>keep the
|
||
commandments.</i> Though those who are the most strict in their
|
||
obedience are thus far unprofitable servants that they do no more
|
||
than is their duty to do, yet it is thus richly recompensed:
|
||
<i>This do, and thou shalt live.</i> The Chaldee says, <i>He shall
|
||
live an eternal life in them.</i> St. Paul quotes this (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.4" osisRef="Bible:Gal.3.12" parsed="|Gal|3|12|0|0" passage="Ga 3:12">Gal. iii. 12</scripRef>) to show that <i>the law
|
||
is not of faith,</i> but proposes life upon condition of perfect
|
||
obedience, which we are not capable of rendering, and therefore
|
||
must have recourse to the grace of the gospel, without which we are
|
||
all undone. 3. That he revived the ancient institution of the
|
||
sabbath day, which was lost and forgotten while they were
|
||
bond-slaves in Egypt; for their task-masters there would by no
|
||
means allow them to rest one day in seven. In the wilderness indeed
|
||
every day was a day of rest; for what need had those to labour who
|
||
lived upon manna, and whose raiment waxed not old? But one day in
|
||
seven must be a holy rest (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.12" parsed="|Ezek|20|12|0|0" passage="Eze 20:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>): <i>I gave them my sabbaths to be a sign between me
|
||
and them</i> (the institution of the sabbath was a sign of God's
|
||
good-will to them, and their observance of it a sign of their
|
||
regard to him), <i>that they might know that I am the Lord that
|
||
sanctify them.</i> By this God made it to appear that he had
|
||
distinguished them from the rest of the world, and designed to
|
||
model them for a peculiar people to himself; and by their
|
||
attendance on God in solemn assemblies on sabbath days they were
|
||
made to increase in the knowledge of God, in an experimental
|
||
knowledge of the powers and pleasures of his sanctifying grace.
|
||
Note, (1.) Sabbaths are privileges, and are so to be accounted; the
|
||
church acknowledges as a great favour, in that chapter which is
|
||
parallel to this and seems to have a reference to this (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p12.6" osisRef="Bible:Neh.9.14" parsed="|Neh|9|14|0|0" passage="Ne 9:14">Neh. ix. 14</scripRef>), <i>Thou madest known
|
||
unto them thy holy sabbaths.</i> (2.) Sabbaths are signs; it is a
|
||
sign that men have a sense of religion, and that there is some good
|
||
correspondence between them and God, when they make conscience of
|
||
keeping holy and sabbath day. (3.) Sabbaths, if duly sanctified,
|
||
are the means of our sanctification; if we do the duty of the day,
|
||
we shall find, to our comfort, <i>it is the Lord that sanctifies
|
||
us,</i> makes us holy (that is, truly happy) here, and prepares us
|
||
to be happy (that is, perfectly holy) hereafter.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p13" shownumber="no">II. Their disobedient undutiful conduct
|
||
towards God, for which he might justly have thrown them out of
|
||
covenant as soon as he had taken them into covenant (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.13" parsed="|Ezek|20|13|0|0" passage="Eze 20:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>): <i>They rebelled in
|
||
the wilderness.</i> There where they received so much mercy from
|
||
God, and had such a dependence upon him, and were in their way to
|
||
Canaan, yet there they broke out in many open rebellions against
|
||
the God that led them and fed them. They did not only not <i>walk
|
||
in God's statutes,</i> but they <i>despised his judgments</i> as
|
||
not worth observing; instead of sanctifying the sabbaths, they
|
||
polluted them, greatly polluted them; one gathered sticks, many
|
||
went out to gather manna on this day. Hereupon God was ready
|
||
sometimes to cut them off; he said, more than once, that he would
|
||
<i>consume them in the wilderness.</i> But Moses interceded, so did
|
||
God's own mercy more powerfully, and most of all a concern for his
|
||
own glory, that <i>his name might not be polluted and profaned
|
||
among the heathen</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.14" parsed="|Ezek|20|14|0|0" passage="Eze 20:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>), that the Egyptians might not say that for mischief
|
||
he brought them thus far, or that he was not able to bring them any
|
||
further, or that he had no such good land as was talked of to bring
|
||
them to, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.32.12 Bible:Num.14.13" parsed="|Exod|32|12|0|0;|Num|14|13|0|0" passage="Ex 32:12,Nu 14:13">Exod. xxxii. 12;
|
||
Num. xiv. 13</scripRef>, &c. Note, God's strongest reasons for
|
||
his sparing mercy are those which are fetched from his own
|
||
glory.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p14" shownumber="no">III. God's determination to cut off that
|
||
generation of them in the wilderness. He who <i>lifted up his
|
||
hand</i> for them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.6" parsed="|Ezek|20|6|0|0" passage="Eze 20:6"><i>v.</i>
|
||
6</scripRef>) now <i>lifted up his hand against them;</i> he who by
|
||
an oath confirmed his promise to bring them out of Egypt now by an
|
||
oath confirmed his threatenings that he would not bring them into
|
||
Canaan (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.15-Ezek.20.16" parsed="|Ezek|20|15|20|16" passage="Eze 20:15,16"><i>v.</i> 15,
|
||
16</scripRef>): <i>I lifted up my hand unto them,</i> saying, <i>As
|
||
truly as I live, these men who have tempted me these ten times
|
||
shall never see the land which I swore unto their fathers,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Num.14.22-Num.14.23 Bible:Ps.95.11" parsed="|Num|14|22|14|23;|Ps|95|11|0|0" passage="Nu 14:22,23,Ps 95:11">Num. xiv. 22, 23; Ps. xcv.
|
||
11</scripRef>. By their contempt of God's laws, and particularly of
|
||
his sabbaths, they put a bar in their own door; and that which was
|
||
at the bottom of their disobedience to God, and their neglect of
|
||
his institutions, was a secret affection to the gods of Egypt:
|
||
<i>Their heart went after their idols.</i> Note, The bias of the
|
||
mind towards the world and the flesh, the money and the belly
|
||
(those two great objects of spiritual idolatry), is the root of
|
||
bitterness from which springs all disobedience to the divine law.
|
||
The heart that goes after those idols despises God's judgments.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p15" shownumber="no">IV. The reservation of a seed that should
|
||
be admitted upon a new trial, and the instructions given to that
|
||
seed, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.17" parsed="|Ezek|20|17|0|0" passage="Eze 20:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. Though
|
||
they thus deserved ruin, and were doomed to it, yet <i>my eye
|
||
spared them.</i> When he looked upon them he had compassion on
|
||
them, and did not <i>make an end of them,</i> but reprieved them
|
||
till a new generation was reared. Note, It is owing purely to the
|
||
mercy of God that he has not long ago <i>made an end of us.</i>
|
||
This new generation is well educated. Moses in Deuteronomy reported
|
||
and enforce the laws which had been given to those that came out of
|
||
Egypt, that their children might have them as it were sounding in
|
||
their ears afresh when they entered Canaan (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.18" parsed="|Ezek|20|18|0|0" passage="Eze 20:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>): "<i>I said unto their
|
||
children in the wilderness,</i> in the plains of Moab, Walk in the
|
||
statutes of your God and <i>walk not in the statutes of your
|
||
fathers;</i> do not imitate their superstitious usages nor retain
|
||
their foolish wicked customs; away with their vain conversation,
|
||
which has nothing else to say for itself but that it was
|
||
<i>received by the tradition of your fathers,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.1.18" parsed="|1Pet|1|18|0|0" passage="1Pe 1:18">1 Pet. i. 18</scripRef>. <i>Defile not
|
||
yourselves with their idols,</i> for you see how odious they
|
||
rendered themselves to God by them. But <i>keep my judgments</i>
|
||
and <i>hallow my sabbaths,</i>" <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p15.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.19-Ezek.20.20" parsed="|Ezek|20|19|20|20" passage="Eze 20:19,20"><i>v.</i> 19, 20</scripRef>. Note, If parents be
|
||
careless, and do not give their children good instructions as they
|
||
ought, the children ought to make up the want by studying the word
|
||
of God so much the more carefully and diligently themselves when
|
||
they grow up; and the bad examples of parents must be made use of
|
||
by their children for admonition, and not for imitation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p16" shownumber="no">V. The revolt of the next generation from
|
||
God, by which they also made themselves obnoxious to the wrath of
|
||
God (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.21" parsed="|Ezek|20|21|0|0" passage="Eze 20:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>): <i>The
|
||
children rebelled against me</i> too. And the same that was said of
|
||
the fathers' rebellion is here said <i>of the children's,</i> for
|
||
they were a seed of evil-doers. Moses told them that he <i>knew
|
||
their rebellion and their stiff neck,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.31.27" parsed="|Deut|31|27|0|0" passage="De 31:27">Deut. xxxi. 27</scripRef>. And <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.9.24" parsed="|Deut|9|24|0|0" passage="De 9:24">Deut. ix. 24</scripRef>, <i>You have been rebellious
|
||
against the Lord from the day that I knew you. They walked not in
|
||
my statutes</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.21" parsed="|Ezek|20|21|0|0" passage="Eze 20:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>); nay, <i>they despised my statutes,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.24" parsed="|Ezek|20|24|0|0" passage="Eze 20:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>. Those who disobey
|
||
God's statutes despise them, they show that they have a mean
|
||
opinion of them and of him whose statutes they are. They
|
||
<i>polluted God's sabbaths,</i> as their fathers. Note, The
|
||
profanation of the sabbath day is an inlet to all impiety; those
|
||
who pollute holy time will keep nothing pure. It was said of the
|
||
fathers (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.16" parsed="|Ezek|20|16|0|0" passage="Eze 20:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>)
|
||
that <i>their heart went after their idols;</i> they worshipped
|
||
idols because they had an affection for them. It is said of the
|
||
children (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.7" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.24" parsed="|Ezek|20|24|0|0" passage="Eze 20:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>)
|
||
that <i>their eyes went after their fathers' idols;</i> they had
|
||
grown atheistical, and had no affection for any gods at all, but
|
||
they worshipped <i>their fathers' idols</i> because they were their
|
||
fathers' and they had them before their eyes. They were used to
|
||
them; and, if they must have gods, they would have such as they
|
||
could see, such as they could manage. And that which aggravated
|
||
their disobedience to God's statutes was that, <i>if they had done
|
||
them, they might have lived in them</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.21" parsed="|Ezek|20|21|0|0" passage="Eze 20:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>), might have been a happy
|
||
thriving people. Note, Those that go contrary to their duty go
|
||
contrary to their interest; they will not obey, will not come to
|
||
Christ, that they may have life, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.9" osisRef="Bible:John.5.40" parsed="|John|5|40|0|0" passage="Joh 5:40">John
|
||
v. 40</scripRef>. And it is therefore just that those who will not
|
||
live and flourish as they might in their obedience should die and
|
||
perish in their disobedience. Now the great instance of that
|
||
generation's rebellion and inclination to idolatry was the
|
||
<i>iniquity of Peor,</i> as that of their fathers was the <i>golden
|
||
calf.</i> Then <i>the anger of the Lord was kindled against
|
||
Israel,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.10" osisRef="Bible:Num.25.3" parsed="|Num|25|3|0|0" passage="Nu 25:3">Num. xxv. 3</scripRef>.
|
||
Then there was a plague in the congregation of the Lord, which, if
|
||
it had not been seasonably stayed by Phinehas's zeal, had cut them
|
||
all off; and yet they owned, in Joshua's time, We were not
|
||
<i>cleansed from that iniquity unto this day,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.11" osisRef="Bible:Josh.22.17 Bible:Ps.106.29" parsed="|Josh|22|17|0|0;|Ps|106|29|0|0" passage="Jos 22:17,Ps 106:29">Josh. xxii. 17; Ps. cvi.
|
||
29</scripRef>. Then it was that God said he would <i>pour out his
|
||
fury upon them</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.12" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.21" parsed="|Ezek|20|21|0|0" passage="Eze 20:21"><i>v.</i>
|
||
21</scripRef>), that he <i>lifted up his hand unto them in the
|
||
wilderness,</i> when they were a second time just ready to enter
|
||
Canaan, <i>that he would scatter them among the heathen.</i> This
|
||
very thing he said to them by Moses in his parting song, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.13" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.20" parsed="|Deut|32|20|0|0" passage="De 32:20">Deut. xxxii. 20</scripRef>. Because they
|
||
<i>provoked him to jealousy with strange gods,</i> he said, <i>I
|
||
will hide my face from them;</i> and (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.14" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.26-Ezek.20.27" parsed="|Ezek|20|26|20|27" passage="Eze 20:26,27"><i>v.</i> 26, 27</scripRef>) he said, <i>I would
|
||
scatter them into corners, were it not that I feared the wrath of
|
||
the enemy,</i> which explains this (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p16.15" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.21-Ezek.20.22" parsed="|Ezek|20|21|20|22" passage="Eze 20:21,22"><i>v.</i> 21, 22</scripRef>), <i>I said I would pour
|
||
out my fury upon them,</i> but <i>I withdrew</i> my hand <i>for my
|
||
name's sake.</i> Note, When the corruptions of the visible church
|
||
are such, and so provoking, that we have reason to fear its total
|
||
extirpation, yet then we may be confident of this, to our comfort,
|
||
that God will secure his own honour, by making good his purpose,
|
||
that while the world stands he will have a church in it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p17" shownumber="no">VI. The judgments of God upon them for
|
||
their rebellion. They would not regard the statutes and judgments
|
||
by which God prescribed them their duty, but despised them, and
|
||
therefore God <i>gave them statutes and judgments</i> which <i>were
|
||
not good,</i> and <i>by which they should not live,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.25" parsed="|Ezek|20|25|0|0" passage="Eze 20:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>. By this we may
|
||
understand the several ways by which God punished them while they
|
||
were in the wilderness—the plague that broke in upon them, the
|
||
fiery serpent, and the like—which, in allusion to the law they had
|
||
broken, are called <i>judgments,</i> because inflicted by the
|
||
justice of God, and <i>statutes,</i> because he gave orders
|
||
concerning them and commanded desolations as sometimes he had
|
||
commanded deliverances, and appointed Israel's plagues as he had
|
||
done the plagues of Egypt. When God said, <i>I will consume them in
|
||
a moment</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.16.21" parsed="|Num|16|21|0|0" passage="Nu 16:21">Num. xvi.
|
||
21</scripRef>), when he said, <i>Take the heads of the people and
|
||
hang them up</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.3" osisRef="Bible:Num.25.4" parsed="|Num|25|4|0|0" passage="Nu 25:4">Num. xxv.
|
||
4</scripRef>), when he threatened them with the curse and obliged
|
||
them to say <i>Amen</i> to every curse (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.27.28" parsed="|Deut|27|28|0|0" passage="De 27:28">Deut. xxvii. 28</scripRef>), then he gave them judgments
|
||
by <i>which they should not live.</i> More is implied than is
|
||
expressed; they are judgments by which they should die. Those that
|
||
will not be bound by the precepts of the law shall be bound by the
|
||
sentence of it; for one way or other the word of God will <i>take
|
||
hold</i> of men, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.5" osisRef="Bible:Zech.1.6" parsed="|Zech|1|6|0|0" passage="Zec 1:6">Zech. i. 6</scripRef>.
|
||
Spiritual judgments are the most dreadful; and these God punished
|
||
them with. The statutes and judgments which the heathen observed in
|
||
the worship of their idols were not good, and in practising them
|
||
they could not live; and God gave them up to those. He made their
|
||
sin to be their punishment, gave them up to a <i>reprobate
|
||
mind,</i> as he did the Gentile idolaters (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.24 Bible:Rom.1.26" parsed="|Rom|1|24|0|0;|Rom|1|26|0|0" passage="Ro 1:24,26">Rom. i. 24, 26</scripRef>), gave them up to their own
|
||
heart's lusts (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.81.12" parsed="|Ps|81|12|0|0" passage="Ps 81:12">Ps. lxxxi.
|
||
12</scripRef>), punished them for those superstitious customs which
|
||
were against the written law by giving them up to those which were
|
||
against the very light and law of nature; he left them to
|
||
themselves to be guilty of the most impure idolatries, as in the
|
||
worship of Baal-peor (he <i>polluted them,</i> that is, her
|
||
permitted them to pollute themselves, <i>in their own gifts,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p17.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.26" parsed="|Ezek|20|26|0|0" passage="Eze 20:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>), and of the
|
||
most barbarous idolatries, as in the worship of Moloch, when they
|
||
<i>caused their children,</i> especially their first-born, which
|
||
God challenged a particular property in (<i>the first-born of thy
|
||
sons shalt thou give unto me</i>), to pass <i>through the fire,</i>
|
||
to be sacrificed to their idols; that thus he might <i>make them
|
||
desolate,</i> not only that he might justly do it, but that he
|
||
might do it by their own hands; for this must needs be a great
|
||
weakening to their families and a diminution of the honour and
|
||
strength of their country. Note, God sometimes makes sin to be its
|
||
own punishment, and yet is not the author of sin; and there needs
|
||
no more to make men miserable than to give them up to their own
|
||
vile appetites and passions. Let them be put into the hand of their
|
||
own counsels, and they will ruin themselves and make themselves
|
||
desolate. And thus God makes them know that he is the Lord, and
|
||
that he is a righteous God, which they themselves will be compelled
|
||
to own when they see how much their wilful transgressions
|
||
contribute to their own desolations. Note, Those who will not
|
||
acknowledge God as the Lord their ruler shall be made to
|
||
acknowledge him as the Lord their judge when it is too late.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p17.9" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.27-Ezek.20.32" parsed="|Ezek|20|27|20|32" passage="Eze 20:27-32" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p17.10">
|
||
<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p17.11">The Rebellions of Israel. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p17.12">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p18" shownumber="no">27 Therefore, son of man, speak unto the house
|
||
of Israel, and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p18.1">God</span>; Yet in this your fathers have blasphemed
|
||
me, in that they have committed a trespass against me. 28
|
||
<i>For</i> when I had brought them into the land, <i>for</i> the
|
||
which I lifted up mine hand to give it to them, then they saw every
|
||
high hill, and all the thick trees, and they offered there their
|
||
sacrifices, and there they presented the provocation of their
|
||
offering: there also they made their sweet savour, and poured out
|
||
there their drink offerings. 29 Then I said unto them, What
|
||
<i>is</i> the high place whereunto ye go? And the name thereof is
|
||
called Bamah unto this day. 30 Wherefore say unto the house
|
||
of Israel, Thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p18.2">God</span>;
|
||
Are ye polluted after the manner of your fathers? and commit ye
|
||
whoredom after their abominations? 31 For when ye offer your
|
||
gifts, when ye make your sons to pass through the fire, ye pollute
|
||
yourselves with all your idols, even unto this day: and shall I be
|
||
enquired of by you, O house of Israel? <i>As</i> I live, saith the
|
||
Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p18.3">God</span>, I will not be enquired of
|
||
by you. 32 And that which cometh into your mind shall not be
|
||
at all, that ye say, We will be as the heathen, as the families of
|
||
the countries, to serve wood and stone.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p19" shownumber="no">Here the prophet goes on with the story of
|
||
their rebellions, for their further humiliation, and shows,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p20" shownumber="no">I. That they had persisted in them after
|
||
they were settled in the land of Canaan. Though God had so many
|
||
times testified his displeasure against their wicked courses, "yet
|
||
<i>in this</i> (that is, in the very same thing) <i>your fathers
|
||
have blasphemed me,</i> continued to affront me, that they <i>also
|
||
have trespassed a trespass against me,</i>" <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.27" parsed="|Ezek|20|27|0|0" passage="Eze 20:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>. Note, It is a great
|
||
aggravation of sin when men will not take warning by the
|
||
mischievous consequences of sin in those that have gone before
|
||
them: this is <i>blaspheming God;</i> it is speaking reproachfully
|
||
of his judgments, as if they were of no significancy and were not
|
||
worth regarding. 1. God had made good his promise: <i>I brought
|
||
them into the land</i> that I had sworn to give them. Though their
|
||
unbelief and disobedience had made the performance slow, and much
|
||
retarded it, yet it did not <i>make the promise of no effect.</i>
|
||
They were often very near being cut off in the wilderness, but a
|
||
step between them and ruin, and yet they came to Canaan at last.
|
||
Note, Even God's Israel get to heaven by hell-gates; so many are
|
||
their transgressions, and so strong their corruptions, that it is a
|
||
miracle of mercy they are happy at last; as hypocrites go to hell
|
||
by heaven-gates. <i>The righteous scarcely are saved. Per tot
|
||
discrimina rerum tendimus ad cœlum—Ten thousand dangers fill
|
||
the road to heaven.</i> 2. They had broken his precept by their
|
||
abominable idolatries. God had appointed them to destroy all the
|
||
monuments of idolatry, that they might not be tempted to desert his
|
||
sanctuary; but, instead of defacing them, they fell in love with
|
||
them, and when they <i>saw every high hill</i> whence they had the
|
||
most delightful prospects, and all the <i>thick trees</i> where
|
||
they had the most delightful shades (the former to show forth their
|
||
pompous idolatries, the latter to conceal their shameful ones),
|
||
<i>there they offered their sacrifices</i> and <i>made their sweet
|
||
savour,</i> which should have been presented upon God's altar only.
|
||
<i>There they presented the provocation of their offering</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.28" parsed="|Ezek|20|28|0|0" passage="Eze 20:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>), that is,
|
||
their offerings, which, instead of pacifying God, or pleasing him,
|
||
were highly provoking-sacrifices which, though costly, yet being
|
||
misplaced, were an abomination to the Lord. 3. They obstinately
|
||
persisted herein notwithstanding all the admonitions that were
|
||
given them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p20.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.29" parsed="|Ezek|20|29|0|0" passage="Eze 20:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>Then I told them,</i> by my servants the prophets, told them
|
||
<i>where the high place was, to which they went;</i> nay, I put
|
||
them upon considering it, and asking their own consciences
|
||
concerning it, by putting this question to them, <i>Which is the
|
||
high place whereunto you go?</i> What do you find there so inviting
|
||
that you will leave God's altars, where he requires your
|
||
attendance, to frequent such places as he has forbidden you to
|
||
worship in? Do you not know that those high places are of a
|
||
heathenish extraction, and that the things which the Gentiles
|
||
sacrificed they sacrificed to devils and not to God? Did not Moses
|
||
tell you so? <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p20.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.17" parsed="|Deut|32|17|0|0" passage="De 32:17">Deut. xxxii.
|
||
17</scripRef>. <i>And will you have fellowship with devils? What is
|
||
that high place to which you go</i> when you turn your back on
|
||
God's altars? <i>O foolish</i> Israelites, <i>who</i> or what
|
||
<i>has bewitched you,</i> that you will forsake the fountain of
|
||
life for broken cisterns, that worship which God appoints, and will
|
||
accept, for that which he forbids, which he abhors, and which he
|
||
will punish?" And yet <i>the name is called Bamah unto this
|
||
day;</i> they will have their way, let God and his prophets say
|
||
what they please to the contrary. They are wedded to their <i>high
|
||
places;</i> even in the best reigns those were not taken away; you
|
||
could not prevail to take away the name of <i>Bamah—the high
|
||
place,</i> out of their mouths, but still they would have that in
|
||
the place of their worship. The sin and the sinner are with
|
||
difficulty parted.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p21" shownumber="no">II. That this generation, after they were
|
||
unsettled, continued under the dominion of the same corrupt
|
||
inclinations to idolatry, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.30" parsed="|Ezek|20|30|0|0" passage="Eze 20:30"><i>v.</i>
|
||
30</scripRef>. He must <i>say to</i> the present <i>house of
|
||
Israel,</i> some of whose elders were now sitting before him,
|
||
"<i>Are you polluted after the manner of your fathers?</i> After
|
||
all that God has said against you by a succession of prophets, and
|
||
done against you by a series of judgments, yet will you take no
|
||
warning? Will you still be as bad as your fathers were, and commit
|
||
the same abominations that they committed? I see you will; you are
|
||
bent upon returning to the old abominations; you <i>offer your
|
||
gifts</i> in the high places, and you <i>make your sons to pass
|
||
through the fire;</i> either you actually do it or you do it in
|
||
purpose and imagination, and so you continue idolaters <i>to this
|
||
day.</i>" These elders seem now to have been projecting a coalition
|
||
with the heathen; their hearts they will reserve for the God of
|
||
Israel, but their knees they will be at liberty to bow to the gods
|
||
of the nations among whom they live, that they may have the more
|
||
respect and the fairer quarter among them. Now the prophet is here
|
||
ordered to tell those who were forming this scheme, and were for
|
||
compounding the matter between God and Baal, that they should have
|
||
no comfort or benefit from either. 1. They should have no benefit
|
||
by their consulting in private with the prophets of the Lord; for,
|
||
because they were hearkening after idols, God would have nothing to
|
||
do with them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.31" parsed="|Ezek|20|31|0|0" passage="Eze 20:31"><i>v.</i>
|
||
31</scripRef>): <i>As I live, saith the Lord God, I will not be
|
||
enquired of by you.</i> What he had said before (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.3" parsed="|Ezek|20|3|0|0" passage="Eze 20:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>), having largely shown how just
|
||
it was, he here repeats, as that which he would abide by. Let them
|
||
not think that they honoured him by their enquiries, nor expect an
|
||
answer of peace from him, as long as they continued in love and
|
||
league with their idols. Note, Those reap no benefit by their
|
||
religion that are not entire and sincere in it; nor can we have any
|
||
comfortable communion with God in ordinances of worship unless we
|
||
be inward and upright with him therein. We make nothing of our
|
||
profession if it be but a profession. Nay, 2. They should have no
|
||
benefit from their conforming in public to the practice of their
|
||
neighbours (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p21.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.32" parsed="|Ezek|20|32|0|0" passage="Eze 20:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>That which comes into your mind</i> as a piece of refined
|
||
politics in the present difficult juncture, and which you would be
|
||
advised to for your own preservation, and that you may not by being
|
||
singular expose yourselves to abuses, it <i>shall not be at
|
||
all,</i> it shall turn to no account to you. You say, <i>'We will
|
||
be as the heathen,</i> we will join with them in worshipping their
|
||
gods, though at the same time we do not believe them to be gods,
|
||
but <i>wood and stone,</i> and then we should be taken <i>as the
|
||
families of the countries;</i> they will not know, or in a little
|
||
while will have forgotten, that we are Jews, and will allow us the
|
||
same privileges with their own countrymen.' Tell them," says God,
|
||
"that this project shall <i>never prosper.</i> Either their
|
||
neighbours will not admit them to join with them in their worship,
|
||
or, if they do, will think never the better, but the worse, of them
|
||
for it, and will look upon them as dissemblers, and not fit to be
|
||
trusted, who are thus false to their God, and put a cheat upon
|
||
their neighbours." Note, There is nothing got by sinful
|
||
compliances; and the carnal projects of hypocrites will stand them
|
||
in no stead. It is only integrity and uprightness that will
|
||
preserve men, and recommend them to God and man.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p21.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.33-Ezek.20.44" parsed="|Ezek|20|33|20|44" passage="Eze 20:33-44" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p21.6">
|
||
<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p21.7">The Sins of Israel. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p21.8">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p22" shownumber="no">33 <i>As</i> I live, saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.1">God</span>, surely with a mighty hand, and with a
|
||
stretched out arm, and with fury poured out, will I rule over you:
|
||
34 And I will bring you out from the people, and will gather
|
||
you out of the countries wherein ye are scattered, with a mighty
|
||
hand, and with a stretched out arm, and with fury poured out.
|
||
35 And I will bring you into the wilderness of the people,
|
||
and there will I plead with you face to face. 36 Like as I
|
||
pleaded with your fathers in the wilderness of the land of Egypt,
|
||
so will I plead with you, saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.2">God</span>. 37 And I will cause you to pass
|
||
under the rod, and I will bring you into the bond of the covenant:
|
||
38 And I will purge out from among you the rebels, and them
|
||
that transgress against me: I will bring them forth out of the
|
||
country where they sojourn, and they shall not enter into the land
|
||
of Israel: and ye shall know that I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.3">Lord</span>. 39 As for you, O house of Israel,
|
||
thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.4">God</span>; Go ye,
|
||
serve ye every one his idols, and hereafter <i>also,</i> if ye will
|
||
not hearken unto me: but pollute ye my holy name no more with your
|
||
gifts, and with your idols. 40 For in mine holy mountain, in
|
||
the mountain of the height of Israel, saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.5">God</span>, there shall all the house of Israel, all of
|
||
them in the land, serve me: there will I accept them, and there
|
||
will I require your offerings, and the first-fruits of your
|
||
oblations, with all your holy things. 41 I will accept you
|
||
with your sweet savour, when I bring you out from the people, and
|
||
gather you out of the countries wherein ye have been scattered; and
|
||
I will be sanctified in you before the heathen. 42 And ye
|
||
shall know that I <i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.6">Lord</span>, when I shall bring you into the land of
|
||
Israel, into the country <i>for</i> the which I lifted up mine hand
|
||
to give it to your fathers. 43 And there shall ye remember
|
||
your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled; and
|
||
ye shall loathe yourselves in your own sight for all your evils
|
||
that ye have committed. 44 And ye shall know that I
|
||
<i>am</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.7">Lord</span>, when I have
|
||
wrought with you for my name's sake, not according to your wicked
|
||
ways, nor according to your corrupt doings, O ye house of Israel,
|
||
saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p22.8">God</span>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p23" shownumber="no">The design which was now on foot among the
|
||
elders of Israel was that the people of Israel, being scattered
|
||
among the nations, should lay aside all their peculiarities and
|
||
conform to those among whom they lived; but God had told them that
|
||
the design should not take effect, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.32" parsed="|Ezek|20|32|0|0" passage="Eze 20:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>. Now, in these verses, he shows
|
||
particularly how it should be frustrated. They aimed at the
|
||
<i>mingling</i> of the families of <i>Israel with the families of
|
||
the countries;</i> but it will prove in the issue that the wicked
|
||
Israelites, notwithstanding their compliances, shall not mingle
|
||
with them in their prosperity, but shall be distinguished from them
|
||
for destruction; for idolatrous Israelites, that are apostates from
|
||
God, shall be sooner and more sorely punished than idolatrous
|
||
Babylonians that never knew the way of righteousness. Read and
|
||
tremble at the doom here passed upon them; it is backed with an
|
||
oath not to be reversed: <i>As I live, saith the Lord God,</i> thus
|
||
and thus will I deal with you. They think to make both Jerusalem
|
||
and Babylon their friends by halting between two; but God threatens
|
||
that neither of them shall serve for a rest or refuge for them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p24" shownumber="no">I. Babylon shall not protect them, nor any
|
||
of the countries of the heathen; for God will cast them out of his
|
||
protection and then what prince, what people, what place, can serve
|
||
to be a sanctuary to them? God was Israel's King of old, and had
|
||
they continued his loyal subjects he would have <i>ruled over
|
||
them</i> with care and tenderness for their good, but now <i>with a
|
||
stretched-out arm, and with fury poured out, will I rule over
|
||
them,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.33" parsed="|Ezek|20|33|0|0" passage="Eze 20:33"><i>v.</i> 33</scripRef>.
|
||
That power which should have been exerted fore their protection
|
||
shall be exerted for their destruction. Note, There is no shaking
|
||
off God's dominion; rule he will, either with the golden sceptre or
|
||
with the iron rod; and those that will not yield to the power of
|
||
his grace shall be made to sink under the power of his wrath. Now
|
||
when God is angry with them, though they may think that they shall
|
||
be lost in the crowd of the heathen among whom they are scattered,
|
||
they will be disappointed; for (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.34" parsed="|Ezek|20|34|0|0" passage="Eze 20:34"><i>v.</i> 34</scripRef>) <i>I will gather you out of
|
||
the countries wherein you are scattered,</i> as, when the rebels
|
||
are dispersed in battle, those that have escaped the sword of war
|
||
are pursued and brought together out of all the places whither they
|
||
were scattered, to be punished by the sword of justice. They shall
|
||
be brought <i>into the wilderness of the people</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.35" parsed="|Ezek|20|35|0|0" passage="Eze 20:35"><i>v.</i> 35</scripRef>), either into Babylon,
|
||
which is called a <i>wilderness</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.19.13" parsed="|Ezek|19|13|0|0" passage="Eze 19:13"><i>ch.</i> xix. 13</scripRef>), and the <i>desert of
|
||
the sea</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.21.1" parsed="|Isa|21|1|0|0" passage="Isa 21:1">Isa. xxi. 1</scripRef>),
|
||
or into some place which, though full of people, shall be to them
|
||
as the wilderness was to Israel after they came out of Egypt, a
|
||
place where God will <i>plead with them face to face,</i> as he
|
||
<i>pleaded with their fathers in the wilderness of Egypt</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p24.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.36" parsed="|Ezek|20|36|0|0" passage="Eze 20:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>),—where
|
||
their carcases shall fall and where he will swear concerning them
|
||
that they shall never return to Canaan, as he did swear concerning
|
||
their fathers that they should never come into Canaan,—where he
|
||
will avenge the breach of his law with as much terror as that with
|
||
which he gave it in the wilderness of Sinai. Note, God has a good
|
||
action against apostates, and will find not only time, but a proper
|
||
place, to plead with them in upon that action, a wilderness even in
|
||
the midst of the people for that purpose.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p25" shownumber="no">II. Israel shall be no more able to protect
|
||
them than Babylon could; nor shall their relation to God's people
|
||
stand them in any more stead for the other world than their
|
||
compliance with idolaters shall for this world; nor shall they
|
||
stand <i>in the congregation of the righteous</i> any more than in
|
||
the congregation of evil-doers; for there will come a
|
||
distinguishing day, when God will separate between the precious and
|
||
the vile; he will <i>cause them,</i> as the shepherd causes his
|
||
sheep, to <i>pass under the rod,</i> when he tithes them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Lev.27.32" parsed="|Lev|27|32|0|0" passage="Le 27:32">Lev. xxvii. 32</scripRef>), that he may mark
|
||
which is for God. God will take particular notice of each of them,
|
||
one by one, as sheep are counted, and <i>he will bring them into
|
||
the bond of the covenant</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.37" parsed="|Ezek|20|37|0|0" passage="Eze 20:37"><i>v.</i> 37</scripRef>); he will try them and judge of
|
||
them according to the tenour of the covenant, and the difference
|
||
made between some and others by the blessings and curses of the
|
||
covenant. Or it may refer to those among them that repented and
|
||
reformed; he will cause them to pass under the rod of affliction,
|
||
and, having done them good by it, he will bring them again <i>into
|
||
the bond of the covenant,</i> will be to them a God in covenant,
|
||
and use them again as <i>heirs of promise.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p26" shownumber="no">1. He will separate the wicked from among
|
||
them (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.38" parsed="|Ezek|20|38|0|0" passage="Eze 20:38"><i>v.</i> 38</scripRef>): "<i>I
|
||
will purge out from among you the rebels,</i> who have been a grief
|
||
and scandal to you, and who have by their rebellions brought all
|
||
these calamities upon you." The judgments of God shall find them
|
||
out, and their naming the name of Israel shall be no shelter to
|
||
them. They shall be <i>brought out of the countries where they
|
||
sojourn,</i> and shall not have that rest in them which they
|
||
promised themselves. But they <i>shall not enter into the land of
|
||
Israel,</i> nor enjoy the benefit of that rest which God has
|
||
promised to his people. Note, Though godly people may share with
|
||
the wicked in the calamities of the world, yet wicked people shall
|
||
have no share with the godly in the heavenly Canaan; but it shall
|
||
be part of the blessedness of that world that they shall be
|
||
<i>purged out from among them,</i> the tares from the wheat, the
|
||
chaff from the corn, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.13.9" parsed="|Ezek|13|9|0|0" passage="Eze 13:9"><i>ch.</i> xiii.
|
||
9</scripRef>. But wherever these idolaters of <i>the house of
|
||
Israel</i> were contriving to worship both God and their idols,
|
||
thinking to please both, God here protests against it (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.39" parsed="|Ezek|20|39|0|0" passage="Eze 20:39"><i>v.</i> 39</scripRef>), as Elijah had done in
|
||
his name: "<i>If the Lord be God, then follow him, but, if Baal,
|
||
then follow him;</i> if you will serve your idols, do, and take
|
||
what comes of it; but then do not pretend relation to God and a
|
||
religious regard to him, nor <i>pollute his holy name with your
|
||
gifts</i> at his altar." Spiritual judgments are the sorest
|
||
judgments. Two of that kind of judgments are threatened in
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.39" parsed="|Ezek|20|39|0|0" passage="Eze 20:39">this verse</scripRef> against those
|
||
that were for dividing between the God of Israel and the gods of
|
||
the nations:—(1.) That they should be given up to the service of
|
||
their idols. To them he said ironically, "<i>Since you will not
|
||
hearken unto me, go you, serve every one his idols,</i> now that
|
||
you think it will be for your interest, <i>and hereafter also.</i>
|
||
You shall go on in it. <i>Ephraim is joined to idols, let him
|
||
alone;</i> let him take his course, and see what he will get by it
|
||
at last." Note, Those who think to serve themselves by sin will
|
||
find in the end that they have but enslaved themselves to sin. (2.)
|
||
That they should be cut off from the service of God and communion
|
||
with God: "You <i>shall not pollute my holy name</i> with your
|
||
<i>vain oblations,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.1.11" parsed="|Isa|1|11|0|0" passage="Isa 1:11">Isa. i.
|
||
11</scripRef>. You bring your gifts in your hands, wherewith you
|
||
pretend to honour me, but at the same time you bring your idols in
|
||
your hearts, and therefore you do but pollute me, which I will not
|
||
suffer any more," <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p26.6" osisRef="Bible:Amos.5.21-Amos.5.22" parsed="|Amos|5|21|5|22" passage="Am 5:21,22">Amos v. 21,
|
||
22</scripRef>. Note, Those are justly forbidden God's house that
|
||
profane his house.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p27" shownumber="no">2. He will separate them to himself again.
|
||
(1.) He will <i>gather them</i> in mercy <i>out of the countries
|
||
whither they were scattered,</i> to be monuments of mercy, as the
|
||
incorrigible were gathered to be vessels of wrath, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.41" parsed="|Ezek|20|41|0|0" passage="Eze 20:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>. Not one of God's
|
||
jewels shall be lost in the lumber of this world. (2.) He will
|
||
<i>bring them to the land of Israel,</i> which he had promised to
|
||
<i>give to their fathers;</i> and the discontinuance of their
|
||
possession shall be no defeasance of their right; it is the <i>land
|
||
of Israel</i> still, and thither God will bring them safely again,
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.42" parsed="|Ezek|20|42|0|0" passage="Eze 20:42"><i>v.</i> 42</scripRef>. (3.) He will
|
||
re-establish his ordinances among them, will set up his sanctuary
|
||
in his holy mountain, which is here called <i>the mountain of the
|
||
height of Israel;</i> for, though the Mount Zion was none of the
|
||
highest mountains, yet the temple there was one of the highest
|
||
honours of Israel. It is promised that those who preserved their
|
||
integrity, and would not serve idols, in other lands, shall return
|
||
to their prosperity and shall serve the true God in their own land:
|
||
<i>All of them in the land shall serve me.</i> Note, It is the true
|
||
happiness of a people, and a sure token for good to them, when
|
||
there is a prevailing disposition in them to serve God. Whereas God
|
||
had forbidden the idolaters to bring their gifts to his altar, of
|
||
these he will <i>require offerings and first-fruits,</i> and will
|
||
accept them, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.40" parsed="|Ezek|20|40|0|0" passage="Eze 20:40"><i>v.</i> 40</scripRef>.
|
||
What he does not require he will not accept, but what is done with
|
||
a regard to his precepts he will be well pleased with. He will
|
||
<i>accept them with their sweet savour,</i> or <i>savour of
|
||
rest</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.41" parsed="|Ezek|20|41|0|0" passage="Eze 20:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>),
|
||
as being very grateful to him and what he takes a complacency in;
|
||
whereas, to hypocritical worshippers, he says, <i>I will not smell
|
||
in your solemn assemblies.</i> (4.) He will give them true
|
||
repentance for their sins, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.5" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.43" parsed="|Ezek|20|43|0|0" passage="Eze 20:43"><i>v.</i>
|
||
43</scripRef>. When they find how gracious God is to them they will
|
||
be overcome with his kindness, and blush to think of their bad
|
||
behaviour towards so <i>good a God:</i> "There, in <i>my holy
|
||
mountain,</i> when you come to enjoy the privileges of that again,
|
||
<i>there</i> shall you <i>remember your doings,</i> wherein you
|
||
have been defiled." Note, The more conversant we are with God's
|
||
holiness the more we shall see of the odious nature of sin. There
|
||
<i>you shall loathe yourselves in your own sight.</i> Note,
|
||
Ingenuous evangelical repentance makes people loathe themselves for
|
||
their sins, as <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.42.5-Job.42.6" parsed="|Job|42|5|42|6" passage="Job 42:5,6">Job xlii. 5,
|
||
6</scripRef>. (5.) He will give them the knowledge of himself:
|
||
<i>They shall know</i> by experience that <i>he is the Lord,</i>
|
||
that he is a God of almighty power and inexhaustible goodness, kind
|
||
to his people and faithful to his covenant with them. Note, All the
|
||
favours we receive from God should lead us into a more intimate
|
||
acquaintance with him. (6.) He will do all this for his own name's
|
||
sake, notwithstanding their undeservings and ill-deservings
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.7" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.44" parsed="|Ezek|20|44|0|0" passage="Eze 20:44"><i>v.</i> 44</scripRef>); he has
|
||
<i>wrought with them,</i> that is, wrought for them, wrought in
|
||
favour of them, wrought in concurrence with them, they doing their
|
||
endeavour; he has wrought with them purely <i>for his name's
|
||
sake.</i> His reasons were all fetched from himself. Had he dealt
|
||
with them <i>according to their wicked ways and their corrupt
|
||
doings,</i> though they were the better and sounder part of the
|
||
house of Israel, he would have left them to be scattered and lost
|
||
with the rest; but he recovered and restored them for the sake of
|
||
his own name, not only that it might not be <i>polluted</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.14" parsed="|Ezek|20|14|0|0" passage="Eze 20:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>), but that
|
||
he might be <i>sanctified in them before the heathen</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.9" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.41" parsed="|Ezek|20|41|0|0" passage="Eze 20:41"><i>v.</i> 41</scripRef>), that he might
|
||
<i>sanctify himself</i> (so the word is); for it is God's work to
|
||
glorify his own name. He will do well for his people that he may
|
||
have the glory of it, that he may manifest himself to be a God
|
||
pardoning sin and so keeping promise, that his people may praise
|
||
him, and that their neighbours may likewise take notice of him, as
|
||
they did when God <i>burned again their captivity,</i> <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p27.10" osisRef="Bible:Ps.126.3" parsed="|Ps|126|3|0|0" passage="Ps 126:3">Ps. cxxvi. 3</scripRef>. <i>Then said they among
|
||
the heathen, The Lord has done great things for them.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ez.xxi-p27.11" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.45-Ezek.20.49" parsed="|Ezek|20|45|20|49" passage="Eze 20:45-49" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Ez.xxi-p27.12">
|
||
<h4 id="Ez.xxi-p27.13">Judgment and Mercy. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p27.14">b. c.</span> 592.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ez.xxi-p28" shownumber="no">45 Moreover the word of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p28.1">Lord</span> came unto me, saying, 46 Son of man,
|
||
set thy face toward the south, and drop <i>thy word</i> toward the
|
||
south, and prophesy against the forest of the south field;
|
||
47 And say to the forest of the south, Hear the word of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p28.2">Lord</span>; Thus saith the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p28.3">God</span>; Behold, I will kindle a fire in thee, and
|
||
it shall devour every green tree in thee, and every dry tree: the
|
||
flaming flame shall not be quenched, and all faces from the south
|
||
to the north shall be burned therein. 48 And all flesh shall
|
||
see that I the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p28.4">Lord</span> have kindled it:
|
||
it shall not be quenched. 49 Then said I, Ah Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ez.xxi-p28.5">God</span>! they say of me, Doth he not speak
|
||
parables?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p29" shownumber="no">We have here a prophecy of wrath against
|
||
Judah and Jerusalem, which would more fitly have begun the next
|
||
chapter than conclude this; for it has no dependence on what goes
|
||
before, but that which follows in the beginning of the next chapter
|
||
is the explication of it, when the people complained that this was
|
||
a parable which they understood not. In this parable, 1. It is a
|
||
forest that is prophesied against, <i>the forest of the south
|
||
field,</i> Judah and Jerusalem. These lay south from Babylon, where
|
||
Ezekiel now was, and therefore he is directed to <i>set his face
|
||
towards the south</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.46" parsed="|Ezek|20|46|0|0" passage="Eze 20:46"><i>v.</i>
|
||
46</scripRef>), to intimate to them that God had set his face
|
||
against them, was displeased with them, and determined to destroy
|
||
them. But, though it be a message of wrath which he has to deliver,
|
||
he must deliver it with mildness and tenderness; he must <i>drop
|
||
his word towards the south;</i> his doctrine must <i>distil as the
|
||
rain</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.2" parsed="|Deut|32|2|0|0" passage="De 32:2">Deut. xxxii. 2</scripRef>),
|
||
that people's hearts might be softened by it, as the earth by the
|
||
<i>river of God,</i> which <i>drops upon the pastures of the
|
||
wilderness</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.65.12" parsed="|Ps|65|12|0|0" passage="Ps 65:12">Ps. lxv.
|
||
12</scripRef>) and which a south land more especially calls for,
|
||
<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.4" osisRef="Bible:Josh.15.19" parsed="|Josh|15|19|0|0" passage="Jos 15:19">Josh. xv. 19</scripRef>. Judah and
|
||
Jerusalem are called <i>forests,</i> not only because they had been
|
||
full of people, as a wood of trees, but because they had been empty
|
||
of fruit, for fruit-trees grow not in a forest; and a forest is put
|
||
in opposition to a fruitful field, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.5" osisRef="Bible:Isa.32.15" parsed="|Isa|32|15|0|0" passage="Isa 32:15">Isa. xxxii. 15</scripRef>. Those that should have been
|
||
as the garden of the Lord, and his vineyard, had become like a
|
||
forest, all overgrown with <i>briers and thorns;</i> and those that
|
||
are so, that bring not forth the fruits of righteousness, God's
|
||
word prophesies against. 2. It is a fire kindled in his forest that
|
||
is prophesied of, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.47" parsed="|Ezek|20|47|0|0" passage="Eze 20:47"><i>v.</i>
|
||
47</scripRef>. All those judgments which wasted and consumed both
|
||
the city and the country-sword, famine, pestilence, and captivity,
|
||
are signified by this fire. (1.) It is a fire of God's own
|
||
kindling: <i>I will kindle a fire in thee;</i> the <i>breath of the
|
||
Lord</i> is not as a drop, but <i>as a stream, of brimstone</i> to
|
||
set it on fire, <scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.7" osisRef="Bible:Isa.30.33" parsed="|Isa|30|33|0|0" passage="Isa 30:33">Isa. xxx.
|
||
33</scripRef>. He that had been himself a protecting fire about
|
||
Jerusalem is now a consuming fire in it. <i>All flesh shall see</i>
|
||
by the fury of this fire, and the desolations it shall make,
|
||
especially when they compare it with the sins which had made them
|
||
fuel for this fire, that it is <i>the Lord</i> that <i>has kindled
|
||
it</i> (<scripRef id="Ez.xxi-p29.8" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.48" parsed="|Ezek|20|48|0|0" passage="Eze 20:48"><i>v.</i> 48</scripRef>), as
|
||
a just avenger of his own injured honour. (2.) This conflagration
|
||
shall be general: all orders and degrees of men shall be devoured
|
||
by it—young and old, rich and poor, high and low. Even <i>green
|
||
trees,</i> which the fire does not easily fasten upon, shall be
|
||
devoured by this fire; even good people shall some of them be
|
||
involved in these calamities; and <i>if this be done in the green
|
||
trees, what shall be done in the dry?</i> The dry trees shall be as
|
||
tinder and touch-wood to this fire. <i>All faces</i> (that is, all
|
||
that covers the face of the earth) <i>from the south</i> of Canaan
|
||
to the north, from Beer-sheba to Dan, shall be <i>burnt
|
||
therein.</i> (3.) The fire <i>shall not be quenched;</i> no
|
||
attempts to give check to the dissolution shall prevail. When God
|
||
will ruin a nation, who or what can save it?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ez.xxi-p30" shownumber="no">Now observe, 1. The people's reflection
|
||
upon the prophet on occasion of this discourse. They said, <i>Does
|
||
he not speak parables?</i> This was the language either of their
|
||
ignorance or infidelity (the plainest truths were as parables to
|
||
them), or of their malice and ill-will to the prophet. Note. It is
|
||
common for those who will not be wrought upon by the word to pick
|
||
quarrels with it; it is either too plain or too obscure, too fine
|
||
or too homely, too common or too singular; something or other is
|
||
amiss in it. 2. The prophet's complaint to God: <i>Ah, Lord God!
|
||
they say</i> so and so of me. Note, It is a comfort to us, when
|
||
people speak ill of us unjustly, that we have a God to complain
|
||
to.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |