Chapter 14:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Lamentations Daniel
Ezekiel 14
Complete Concise
Hearing the word, and prayer, are two great ordinances of God,
in which we are to give honour to him and may hope to find favour and acceptance
with him; and yet in this chapter, to our great surprise, we find some waiting
upon God in the one and some in the other and yet not meeting with success as
they expected. I. The elders of Israel come to hear the word, and enquire of the
prophet, but, because they are not duly qualified, they meet with a rebuke
instead of acceptance (v. 1-5) and are called upon to repent of their sins and
reform their lives, else it is at their peril to enquire of God (v. 6-11). II.
Noah, Daniel, and Job, are supposed to pray for this people, and yet, because
the decree has gone forth, and the destruction of them is determined by a
variety of judgments, their prayers shall not be answered (v. 12-21). And yet
it is promised, in the close, that a remnant shall escape (v. 22, 23).
Verses 1-11
Here is, I. The address which some of the elders of Israel made
to the prophet, as an oracle, to enquire of the Lord by him. They
came, and
sat before him, v. 1. It is probable that they were not of those who were
now his fellow-captives, and constantly attended his ministry (such as those we
read of ch. 8:1), but some occasional hearers, some of the grandees of Jerusalem
who had come upon business to Babylon, perhaps public business, on an embassy
from the king, and in their way called on the prophet, having heard much of him
and being desirous to know if he had any message from God, which might be some
guide to them in their negotiation. By the severe answer given them one would
suspect they had a design to ensnare the prophet, or to try if they could catch
hold of any thing that might look like a contradiction to Jeremiah's
prophecies, and so they might have occasion to reproach them both. However, they
feigned themselves just men, complimented the prophet, and sat before him
gravely enough, as God's people used to sit. Note, It is no new thing for bad
men to be found employed in the external performances of religion.
II. The account which God gave the prophet privately concerning
them. They were strangers to him; he only knew that they were
elders of
Israel; that was the character they wore, and as such he received them with
respect, and, it is likely, was glad to see them so well disposed. But God gives
him their real character (v. 3); they were idolaters, and did only consult
Ezekiel as they would any oracle of a pretended deity, to gratify their
curiosity, and therefore he appeals to the prophet himself whether they deserved
to have any countenance or encouragement given them:
"Should I be
enquired of at all by them? Should I accept their enquiries as an honour to
myself, or answer them for satisfaction to them? No; they have no reason to
expect it;" for, 1. They
have set up their idols in their heart;
they not only have idols, but they are in love with them, they dote upon them,
are wedded to them, and have laid them so near their hearts, and have given them
so great a room in their affections, that there is no parting with them. The
idols they have set up in their houses, though they are now at a distance from
the
chambers of their imagery, yet they have them in their hearts, and they are
ever and anon worshipping them in their fancies and imaginations.
They have
made their idols to ascend upon their hearts (so the word is); they have
subjected their hearts to their idols, they are upon the throne there. Or when
they came to enquire of the prophet they pretended to put away their idols, but
it was in pretence only; they still had a secret reserve for them. They kept
them
up in their hearts; and, if they left them for a while, it was
cum
animo revertendiwith an intention to return to them, not a final
farewell. Or it may be understood of spiritual idolatry; those whose affections
are placed upon the wealth of the world and the pleasures of sense, whose god is
their money,
whose god is their belly, they
set up their idols in
their heart. Many who have no idols in their sanctuary have idols in their
hearts, which is no less a usurpation of God's throne and a profanation of his
name.
Little children, keep yourselves from those
idols. 2. They
put
the stumbling-block of their iniquity before their face. Their
silver and
gold were called
the stumbling-block of their iniquity (ch. 7:19),
their
idols of silver and gold, by the beauty of which they were allured
to idolatry, and so it was the block at which they stumbled, and fell into that
sin; or
their iniquity is their
stumbling-block, which throws them
down, so that they fall into ruin. Note, Sinners are their own tempters
(every
man is tempted when he is drawn aside of his own lust), and so they are
their own destroyers.
If thou scornest, thou alone shalt bear it; and
thus
they put the stumbling-block of their iniquity before their own
faces,
and stumble upon it though they see it before their eyes. It intimates that they
are resolved to go on in sin, whatever comes of it.
I have loved strangers,
and after them I will go; that is the language of their hearts. And
should
God
be enquired of by such wretches? Do they not hereby rather put an
affront upon him than do him any honour, as those did who
bowed the knee
to Christ in mockery? Can those expect an answer of peace from God who thus
continue their acts of hostility against him? "Ezekiel, what thinkest thou
of it?"
III. The answer which God, in just displeasure, orders Ezekiel
to give them, v. 4. Let them know that it is not out of any disrespect to their
persons that God refuses to give them an answer, but it is laid down as a rule
for
every man of the house of Israel, whoever he be, that if he continue
in love and league with his idols, and come to enquire of God, God will resent
it as an indignity done to him, and will answer him according to his real
iniquity, not according to his pretended piety. He
comes to the prophet,
who, he expects, will be civil to him, but God will give him his answer, by
punishing him for his impudence:
I the Lord, who
speak and it is done,
I will answer him that cometh, according to the multitude of his idols.
Observe, Those who
set up idols in their hearts, and set their hearts
upon their idols, commonly have a multitude of them. Humble worshippers God
answers
according to the multitude of his mercies, but bold intruders he
answers
according to the multitude of their idols, that is, 1. According
to the desire of their idols; he will give them up
to their own hearts'
lust, and leave them to themselves to be as bad as they have a mind to be,
till they
have filled up the measure of their iniquity. Men's
corruptions are
idols in their hearts, and they are of their own setting
up; their temptations are
the stumbling-block of their iniquity, and they
are of their own putting, and God will answer them accordingly; let them take
their course. 2. According to the desert of their idols; they shall have such an
answer as it is just that such idolaters should have. God will punish them as he
usually punishes idolaters, that is, when they stand in need of his help he will
send them to the gods whom they have chosen, Jdg. 10:13, 14. Note, The
judgment of God will dwell with men according to what they are really (that is,
according to what their hearts are), not according to what they are in show and
profession. And what will be the end of this? What will this threatened answer
amount to? He tells them (v. 5):
That I may take the house of Israel in their
own heart, may lay them open to the world, that they may be ashamed; nay,
lay them open to the curse, that they may be ruined. Note, The sin and shame,
and pain and ruin, of sinners, are all from themselves, and their own hearts are
the snares in which they are taken; they seduce them, they betray them; their
own consciences witness against them, condemn them, and are a terror to them. If
God take them, if he discover them, if he convict them, if he bind them over to
his judgment, it is all by
their own hearts. O Israel! thou hast destroyed
thyself. The house of Israel is ruined by its own hands,
because they are
all estranged from me through their idols. Note, (1.) The ruin of sinners is
owing to their estrangement from God. (2.) It is through some idol or other that
the hearts of men are estranged from God; some creature has gained that place
and dominion in the heart that God should have.
IV. The extent of this answer which God had given themto all
the
house of Israel, v. 7, 8. The same thing is repeated, which intimates God's
just displeasure against hypocrites, who mock him with the shows and forms of
devotion, while their hearts are estranged from him and at war with him.
Observe, 1. To whom this declaration belongs. It concerns not only every one of
the house of Israel (as before, v. 4), but
the stranger that sojourns in
Israel; let him not think it will be an excuse for him in his idolatries
that he is but a stranger and a sojourner in Israel, and does but worship the
gods that his father served and that he himself was bred up in the service of;
no, let him not expect any benefit from Israel's oracles or prophets unless he
thoroughly renounce his idolatry. Note, Even proselytes shall not be
countenanced if they be not sincere: a dissembled conversion is no conversion.
2. The description here given of hypocrites: They
separate themselves from
God by their fellowship with idols; they cut themselves off from their relation
to God and their interest in him; they break off their acquaintance and
intercourse with him, and set themselves at a distance from him. Note, Those
that join themselves to idols separate themselves from God; nor shall any be for
ever separated from the vision and fruition of God, but such as now separate
themselves from his service and wilfully withdraw their allegiance from him. But
there are those who thus separate themselves from God, and yet come to the
prophets with a seeming respect and deference to their office,
to enquire of
them concerning God, in order to satisfy a vain curiosity, to stop the mouth
of a clamorous conscience, or to get or save a reputation among men, but without
any desire to be acquainted with God or any design to be ruled by him. 3. The
doom of those who thus trifle with God and think to impose upon him:
"I
the Lord will answer him by myself; let me alone to deal with him; I will
give him an answer that shall fill him with confusion, that shall make him
repent of his daring impiety." He shall have his answer, not by the words
of the prophet, but by the judgments of God.
And I will set my face against
that man, which denotes great displeasure against him and a fixed resolution
to ruin him. God can outface the most impenitent sinner. The hypocrite thought
to save his credit, nay, and to gain applause, but, on the contrary, God
will
make him a sign and a proverb, will inflict such judgments upon him as shall
make him remarkable and contemptible in the eyes of all about him; his misery
shall be made use of to express the greatest misery, as when the worst of
sinners are said to have
their portion appointed them with hypocrites,
Mt. 24:51. God will make him an example; his judgments upon him shall be for
warning to others to take heed of mocking God: for
thus shall it be done to
the man that separates himself from God, and yet pretends to
enquire
concerning him. The hypocrite thought to pass for one of God's people, and
to crowd into heaven among them; but God
will cut him off from the midst of
his people, will discover him, and pluck him out from the thickest of them;
and by this, says God,
you shall know that I am the Lord. By the
discovery of hypocrites it appears that God is omniscient: ministers know not
how people stand affected when they come to hear the word, by God does. And by
the punishment of hypocrites it appears that he is a jealous God, and one that
cannot and will not be imposed upon.
V. The doom of those pretenders to prophecy who give countenance
to these pretenders to piety, v. 9, 10. These hypocritical enquirers, though
Ezekiel will not give them a comfortable answer, yet hope to meet with some
other prophets that will; and if they do, as perhaps they may, let them know
that God permits those lying prophets to deceive them in part of punishment:
"If
the prophet that flatters them
be deceived, and gives them hopes
which there is no ground for,
I the Lord have deceived that prophet, have
suffered the temptation to be laid before him, and suffered him to yield to it,
and overruled it for the hardening of those in their wicked courses who were
resolved to go on in them." We are sure that God is not the author of sin,
but we are sure that he is the Lord of all and the Judge of sinners, and that he
often makes use of one wicked man to destroy another, and so of one wicked man
to deceive another. Both are sins in him who does them, and so they are
not
from God; both are punishments to him to whom they are done, and so they
are
from God. We have a full instance of this in the story of Ahab's prophets, who
were deceived by a lying spirit, which God put into their mouths (1 Ki. 22:23),
and another in those whom God
gives up to strong delusions, to believe a lie,
because they received not the love of the truth, 2 Th. 2:10, 11. But read
the fearful doom of the lying prophet:
I will stretch out my hand upon him
and will destroy him. When God has served his own righteous purposes by him
he shall be reckoned with for his unrighteous purposes. As, when God had made
use of the Chaldeans for the wasting of a sinful people, he justly punished them
for their rage, so when he had made use of
false prophets, and afterwards
of
false Christs, for the deceiving of a sinful people, he justly
punished them for their falsehood. But herein we must acknowledge (as Calvin
upon this place reminds us) that God's
judgments are a great deep, that
we are incompetent judges of them, and that, though we cannot account for the
equity of God's proceedings to the satisfying and silencing of every caviller,
yet there is a day coming when he will be justified before all the world, and
particularly in this instance, when
the punishment of the prophet that
flattereth the hypocrite in his evil way shall be as the punishment of the
hypocrite that seeketh to him and bespeaks
smooth things only, Isa.
30:10. The ditch shall be the same to the blind leader and the blind followers.
VI. The good counsel that is given them for the preventing of
this fearful doom (v. 6):
"Therefore repent, and turn yourselves from
your idols. Let
this separate between you and them, that they
separate between you and God; because they set God's face against you, do you
turn
away your faces from them," which denotes, not only forsaking them, but
forsaking them with loathing and detestation: "Turn from them as from
abominations that you are sick of; and then you will be welcome to enquire of
the Lord.
Come now, and let us reason together."
VII. The good issue of all this as to the house of Israel;
therefore
the pretending prophets, and the pretending saints, shall perish together by the
judgments of God, that, some being made examples, the body of the people may be
reformed,
that the house of Israel may go no more astray from me, v. 11.
Note, The punishments of some are designed for the prevention of sin, that
others may hear, and fear, and take warning. When we see what becomes of those
that go astray from God we should thereby be engaged to keep close to him. And,
if
the house of Israel go not astray, they will not be polluted any more.
Note, Sin is a polluting thing; it renders the sinner odious in the eyes of the
pure and holy God, and in his own eyes too whenever conscience is awakened; and
therefore they shall
no more be polluted, that they may be my people and I
may be their God. Note, Those whom God takes into covenant with himself must
first be cleansed from the pollutions of sin; and those who are so cleansed
shall not only be saved from ruin, but be entitled to all the privileges of God's
people.
Verses 12-23
The scope of these verses is to show,
I. That national sins bring national judgments. When virtue is
ruined and laid waste every thing else will soon be ruined and laid waste too
(v. 13):
When the land sins against me, when vice and wickedness become
epidemical,
when the land sins by trespassing grievously, when the
sinners have become very numerous and their sins very heinous, when gross
impieties and immoralities universally prevail,
then will I stretch forth my
hand upon it, for the punishment of it. The divine power shall be vigorously
and openly exerted; the judgments shall be extended and stretched forth to all
the corners of the land, to all the concerns and interests of the nation.
Grievous sins bring grievous plagues.
II. That God has a variety of sore judgments wherewith to punish
sinful nations, and he has them all at command and inflicts which he pleases. He
did indeed give David his choice what judgment he would be punished with for his
sin in numbering the people; for any of them would serve to answer the end,
which was to lessen the numbers he was proud of; but David, in effect, referred
it to God again:
"Let us fall into the hands of the Lord; let him
choose with what rod we shall be beaten." But he uses a variety of
judgments that it may appear he has a universal dominion, and that in all our
concerns we may see our dependence on him.
Four sore judgments are here
specified:1.
Famine, v. 13. The denying and withholding of common
mercies is itself judgment enough, there needs no more to make a people
miserable. God needs not bring the staff of oppression, it is but
breaking
the staff of bread and the work is soon done; he
cuts off man and beast
by cutting off the provisions which nature makes for both in the annual products
of the earth. God
breaks the staff of bread when, though we have bread,
yet we are not nourished and strengthened by it. Hag. 1:6,
You eat, but you
have not enough. 2. Hurtful
beasts, noisome and noxious, either as
poisonous or as ravenous. God can make these
to pass through the land (v.
15), to increase in all parts of it, and to bereave it, not only of the tame
cattle, preying upon their flocks and herds, but of their people, devouring men,
women, and children, so
that no man may pass through because of the beasts;
none dare travel even in the high roads for fear of being pulled in pieces by
lions, or other beasts of prey, as the children of Beth-el by two bears. Note,
When men revolt from their allegiance to God, and rebel against him, it is just
with God that the inferior creatures should rise up in arms against men, Lev.
26:22. 3. War. God often chastises sinful nations by bringing a sword upon them,
the sword of a foreign enemy, and he gives it its commission and orders what
execution it shall do (v. 17): he says,
Sword, go through the land. It is
bad enough if the sword do but enter into the borders of a land, but much worse
when it goes through the bowels of a land. By it God
cuts off man and beast,
horse and foot. What execution the sword does God does by it; for it is his
sword, and it acts as he directs. 4.
Pestilence (v. 19), a dreadful
disease, which has sometimes depopulated cities; by it God
pours out his fury
in blood (that is, in death); the pestilence kills as effectually as if the
blood were shed by the sword, for it is poisoned by the disease,
the sickness
we call it. See how miserable the case of mankind is that lies thus exposed to
deaths in various shapes. See how dangerous the case of sinners is against whom
God has so many ways of fighting, so that, though they escape one judgment, God
has another waiting for them.
III. That when God's professing people revolt from him, and
rebel against him, they may justly expect a complication of judgments to fall
upon them. God has various ways of contending with a sinful nation; but if
Jerusalem, the holy city,
become a harlot, God will send upon her all his
four sore judgments (v. 21); for the nearer any are to God in name and
profession the more severely will he reckon with them if they reproach that
worthy name by which they are called and give the lie to that profession. They
shall be punished
seven times more.
IV. That there may be, and commonly are, some few very good men,
even in those places that by sin are ripened for ruin. It is no foreign
supposition that, even in a land that has
trespassed grievously, there
may be
three such
men as
Noah, Daniel, and Job. Daniel was
now living, and at this time had scarcely arrived at the prime of his eminency,
but he was already famous (at least this word of God concerning him would
without fail make him so); yet he was carried away into captivity with the first
of all, Dan. 1:6. Some of the better sort of people in Jerusalem might perhaps
think that, if Daniel (of whose fame in the king of Babylon's court they had
heard much) had but continued in Jerusalem, it would have been spared for his
sake, as the magicians in Babylon were. "No," says God, "though
you had him, who was as eminently good in bad times and places as Noah in the
old world and Job in the land of Uz, yet a reprieve should not be obtained."
In the places that are most corrupt, and in the ages that are most degenerate,
there
is a remnant which God reserves to himself, and which
still hold fast
their integrity and stand fair for the honour of
delivering the land,
as
the innocent are said to do, Job 22:30.
V. That God often spares very wicked places for the sake of a
few godly people in them. This is implied here as the expectation of Jerusalem's
friends in the day of its distress: "Surely God will stay his controversy
with us; for are there not some among us that are emptying the measure of
national guilt by their prayers, as others are filling it by their sins? And,
rather than God will
destroy the righteous with the wicked, he will
preserve
the wicked with the righteous. If Sodom might have been spared
for the sake of ten good men, surely Jerusalem may."
VI. That such men as Noah, Daniel, and Job, will prevail, if any
can, to turn away the wrath of God from a sinful people. Noah was a perfect man,
and kept his integrity when all flesh had corrupted their way; and, for his
sake, his family, though one of them was wicked (Ham), was saved in the ark. Job
was a great example of piety, and mighty in prayer for his children, for his
friends; and God turned his captivity when he prayed. Those were very ancient
examples, before Moses, that great intercessor; and therefore God mentions them,
to intimate that he had some very peculiar favourites long before the Jewish
nation was formed or founded, and would have such when it was ruined, for which
reason, it should seem, those names were made use of, rather than Moses, Aaron,
or Samuel; and yet, lest any should think that God was partial in his respects
to the ancient days, here is a modern instance, a living one, placed between
those two that were the glories of antiquity, and he now a captive, and that is
Daniel, to teach us not to lessen the useful good men of our own day by
over-magnifying the ancients. Let the children of the captivity know that
Daniel, their neighbour, and
companion in tribulation, being a man of
great humility, piety, and zeal for God, and instant and constant in prayer, had
as good an interest in heaven as Noah or Job had. Why may not God raise up as
great and good men now as he did formerly, and do as much for them?
VII. That when the sin of a people has come to its height, and
the decree has gone forth for their ruin, the piety and prayers of the best men
shall not prevail to finish the controversy. This is here asserted again and
again, that,
though these three men were in Jerusalem at this time, yet
they should
deliver neither son nor daughter; not so much as the little
ones should be spared for their sakes, as the little ones of Israel were upon
the prayer of Moses, Num. 14:31. No;
the land shall be desolate, and God
would not hear their prayers for it, though
Moses and Samuel stood before
him, Jer. 15:1. Note, Abused patience will turn at last into inexorable
wrath; and it should seem as if God would be more inexorable in Jerusalem's
case than in another (v. 6), because, besides the divine patience, they had
enjoyed greater privileges than any other people, which were the aggravations of
their sin.
VIII. That, though pious praying men may not prevail to deliver
others, yet
they shall deliver their own souls by their righteousness, so
that, though they may suffer in the common calamity, yet to them the property of
it is altered; it is not to them what it is to the wicked; it is unstrung, and
does them no hurt; it is sanctified, and does them good. Sometimes
their
souls (their lives) are remarkably
delivered, and
given them for a
prey; at least
their souls (their spiritual interests) are secured.
If their bodies be not
delivered, yet
their souls are.
Riches
indeed
profit not in the day of wrath, but
righteousness delivers from
death, from so great a death, so many deaths as are here threatened. This
should encourage us to keep our integrity in times of common apostasy, that, if
we do so, we shall be
hidden in the day of the Lord's anger.
IX. That, even when God makes the greatest desolations by his
judgments, he reserves some to be the monuments of his mercy, v. 22, 23. In
Jerusalem itself, though marked for utter ruin, yet
there shall be left a
remnant, who shall not be cut off by any of those
sore judgments
before mentioned, but shall be carried into captivity, both
sons and
daughters, who shall be the seed of a new generation. The young ones, who
had not grown up to such an obstinacy in sin as their fathers had who were
therefore cut off as incurable, these
shall be brought forth out of the
ruins of Jerusalem by the victorious enemy, and
behold they shall come forth
to you that are in captivity, they shall make a virtue of a necessity, and
shall come the more willingly to Babylon because so many of their friends have
gone thither before them and are there ready to receive them; and, when they
come,
you shall see their ways and their doing; you shall hear them make
a free and ingenuous confession of the sins they had formerly been guilty of,
and a humble profession of repentance for them, with promises of reformation;
and you shall see instances of their reformation, shall see what good their
affliction has done them, and how prudently and patiently they conduct
themselves under it. Their narrow escape shall have a good effect upon them; it
shall change their temper and conversation, and make them new men. And this will
redound, 1. To the satisfaction of their brethren:
They shall comfort you
when you see their ways. Note, It is a very comfortable sight to see people,
when they are under the rod, repenting and humbling themselves, justifying God
and accepting the punishment of their iniquity. When we sorrow (as we ought to
do) for the afflictions of others, it is a great comfort to us in our sorrow to
see them improving their afflictions and making a good use of them. When those
captives told their friends how bad they had been, and how righteous God was in
bringing these judgments upon them, it made them very easy, and helped to
reconcile them to the calamities of Jerusalem, to the justice of God in
punishing his own people so, and to the goodness of God, which now appeared to
have had kind intentions in all; and thus
"You shall be comforted
concerning all the evil that I have brought upon Jerusalem, and, when you
better understand the thing, shall not have such direful apprehensions
concerning it as you have had." Note, It is a debt we owe to our brethren,
if we have got good by our afflictions, to comfort them by letting them know it.
2. It will redound to the honour of God:
"You shall know that I have not
done without cause, not without a just provocation, and yet not without a
gracious design,
all that I have done in it." Note, When afflictions
have done their work, and have accomplished that for which they were sent, then
will appear the wisdom and goodness of God in sending them, and God will be not
only justified, but glorified in them.
Chapter 14:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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