Ezekiel

Week of 11/22/20 - Pages 367 - 372

Thought it was interesting that each time a message came to Ezekiel from the Lord, it is addressed to “son of man”

God is definitely relaying how He will deal with the people, according to how they have lived their lives (the righteous behavior of righteous people will not save them if they turn to sin, conversely if they no longer do evil, none of their past sins will be brought up again for they have done what is just and right and they will surely live)

The Lord further  identifies how He will treat them, on page 373, “I will search for my lost ones who strayed away and I will bring them safely home again, but I will destroy those who are fat and powerful:”

The Lord gives Ezekiel a pretty clear synopsis of a watchman’s duties.  If the watchman sees the enemy coming and warns the people but they ignore him, it is the people’s fault, but if the watchman sees the enemy coming and doesn’t warn the people, it is the watchman’s fault.

Then The Lord lowers the boom: Now, son of man, I am making you a watchman for the people of Israel.

I believe this is telling us that we (sons (and daughters) of man) are the watchmen, not for the people of Israel necessarily, but for the non-believers.  Puts evangelism in a whole new light, doesn’t it. No time like the present.

Week of 11/15/20 - Pages 341 - 366

In this week’s reading I was struck by the assertions on pages 241 and 242 that people will be rewarded or punished for their own righteousness or their own sin. God establishes his right to determine this, he says “all people are mine to judge.” And he goes on to say that “the person who sins is the one who will die.” 

My first reaction to this was gladness, almost approval (as if I have the right to bestow approval on God’s administration of justice). In Exodus 20 and Numbers 14 it says that God punishes children for the sins of the father for three and four generations. That’s never seemed particularly “fair” to me, so I appreciate how clearly it states here that “The child will not be punished for the parent’s sins, and the parent will not be punished for the child’s sins.”

Without diverging to much from my main point, I do want to say that I think that the kind of repercussions in Genesis and Numbers may refer more to the damage and consequences that are wrought upon our families when we sin, and the kinds of generational sin patterns that are so often perpetuated through families: abuse, addiction, deceit. Too often these sin patterns (and others) not only inflict damage on subsequent generations, but the behavior itself is picked up and perpetuated. 

Here though, in Ezekiel, I think it’s pretty clear what God is saying: “Righteous people will be rewarded for their own righteous behavior, and wicked people will be punished for their own wickedness.”

Furthermore, we’re told that “if wicked people turn away from all their sins and begin to obey my decrees and do what is just and right, they will surely live and not die.” Yea! There is the promise of forgiveness with repentance. Yet, yikes, there’s a flip side: “if righteous people turn from their righteous behavior and start doing sinful things and act like other sinners…all their righteous acts will be forgotten, and they will die for their sins.” Oh dear. (Remember, as Pastor Lee has taught us, usually when the Bible talks about death, it is referring to spiritual death.)

This passage stirs up my balance-sheet thinking: that running tally I’m all too tempted to keep in my head, wherein if I do enough “good” things, it balances out the bad things and I’m okay. I read my Bible yesterday, prayed, turned away from the temptation to lose my temper: check, check, check. Yea me! But today I overslept and didn’t do my devotions, I said a bad word, and I spread some gossip. All those demerits wipe out any progress I made. 

The glorious truth of the gospel is that we are freed from living this way: There is no condemnation for those in Christ (Romans 8:1). We are forgiven because of what Jesus did, not because of our own efforts. There is no balance sheet.

What, then, do we do with this chapter of Ezekiel? Is this the pre-cross, sacrifice-based system of keeping the law to be right with God? Do we get to throw out this Old Testament teaching?

Elsewhere in the Old Testament we’re told that our sins are removed as far as the east is from the west (Ps 103), and that though are sins were once scarlet as blood, we are now white as snow (Is 1). We cling to those truths when we talk about forgiveness, so I don’t think we get to toss this. 

I think God speaking through Ezekiel here is not talking about tit-for-tat recordkeeping, but heart change. For the sinner who repents, there is forgiveness. Conversely, then, can one who walks in righteousness and then rejects (“turns from”) that path be lost? I don’t like that thought. But neither do I think that salvation is a one-and-done, get your rubber stamp and then live as you please. Paul says to “continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling” (Phil 2:12). Taken in context with all the assurances in the New Testament that salvation is by grace, through faith, we can be certain that we don’t work to earn our salvation. But we are in relationship with God, through Jesus, and that should inform the way we live. Just like the Israelites were the chosen people of God, his special nation, but they didn’t live that way, and there were consequences. 

And one thing is certain, God was incredibly clear with the Israelites, for generations, for centuries, about what a covenant relationship with him required, and what disobedience would cost. I think he’s just as clear with me about what the life walking with him looks like, and the spiritual death that would ensue from turning away. I think that kind of clarity is pretty fair.  

Week of 11/8/20 - Pages 317 - 341

Ezekiel was a prophet who had been exiled out of Judea to the land of Babylonia. He was foretelling of the impending judgement of God against his people, who have turned away from God, giving into their sin.  The first part of this this book is what we cover this week.  Parts of it are very hard to read;  God calls Ezekiel to give his people messages of judgement and coming famine, death, disease, and tells Ezekiel that they will not listen to him because their hearts are hard, and they are completely rebellious.  The result of their sin, of all sin, is death.   A few things that stuck out for me:

God’s expectation for Ezekiel is only that he obey and relay the message he has been given to tell the people.  He is not responsible for their rebellion, only for his own obedience. (p 321)

A message of warning, one of the things God judges the people for is that “you have refused to obey my degrees and regulations;  instead, you have copied the standards of the nations around you.” (p 331).  God’s desire for us is for our heart to be completely focused on him.  How easy is it for us to become engrossed in the world’s standards of good, evil, right, wrong?  We need to turn to God’s word regularly to be in tune to His degrees and regulations.  God’s law is good, he wants the best for us. 

One phrase that is repeated throughout this section is “Then you will know that I am the Lord.”  God’s judgement and the fulfillment of the prophecy of Ezekiel will serve as a testament of who God is to the people of Judea. 

Ultimately God longs for their repentance:    “And the Lord called to the man dressed in linen who was carrying the writers’ case.  He said to him, “ Walk through the streets of Jerusalem and put a mark on the foreheads of all who weep and sigh because of the detestable sins being committed in their city.” (p328).  Only those with the mark are spared from death.  Also, on page 331, Ezekiel’s message to the exiles includes a promise for them:

“This is what the Sovereign Lord says:  although I have scattered you in the countries of the world, I will be a sanctuary to you during your time in exile.  I, the Sovereign Lord, will gather you back from the nations where you have been scattered, and I will give you the land of Israel once again. When the people return to their homeland, they will remove every trace of their vile images and detestable idols.  And I will give them singleness of heart and put a new spirit within them.  I will take away their stony, stubborn heart, and give them a tender, responsive heart, so they will obey my degrees and regulations.  Then they will truly be my people, and I will be their God.”  

Even in the horrors of being taken from their land and under the rule of the Babylonians, God promises to be a sanctuary for them and bring them back home, giving them a new heart and spirit.  Only by God’s love and grace.  The same God that made these promises of deliverance to his people so long ago, offers us deliverance and salvation.  May we repent and accept this beautiful gift of God.  Thanks be to God!