Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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 5
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have a further, and no less terrible,
denunciation of the judgments of God, which were coming with all speed and force
upon the Jewish nation, which would utterly ruin it; for when God judges he will
overcome. This destruction of Judah and Jerusalem is here, I. Represented by a
sign, the cutting, and burning, and scattering of hair (v. 1-4). II. That sign
is expounded, and applied to Jerusalem. 1. Sin is charged upon Jerusalem as the
cause of this desolationcontempt of God's law (v. 5-7) and profanation of
his sanctuary (v. 11). 2 Wrath is threatened, great wrath (v. 8-10), a variety
of miseries (v. 12, 16, 17), such as should be their reproach and ruin (v. 13-15).
Verses 1-4
We have here the sign by which the utter destruction of
Jerusalem is set forth; and here, as before, the prophet is himself the sign,
that the people might see how much he affected himself with, and interested
himself in, the case of Jerusalem, and how it lay to his heart, even when he
foretold the desolations of it. he was so much concerned about it as to take
what was done to it as done to himself, so far was he from desiring the woeful
day.
I. He must
shave off the hair of his head and beard (v.
1), which signified God's utter rejecting and abandoning that people, as a
useless worthless generation, such as could well be spared, nay, such as it
would be his honour to part with; his judgments, and all the instruments he made
use of in cutting them off, were this
sharp knife and this
razor,
that were proper to be made use of, and would do execution. Jerusalem had been
the head, but, having degenerated, had become as the
hair, which, when it
grows thick and long, is but a burden which a man wishes to get clear of, as God
of the sinners in Zion.
Ah! I will ease me of my adversaries, Isa. 1:24.
Ezekiel must not cut off that hair only which was superfluous, but
cut it all
off, denoting the full end that God would make of Jerusalem. The hair that
would not be trimmed and kept neat and clean by the admonitions of the prophets
must be all shaved off by utter destruction. Those will be ruined that will not
be reformed.
II. He must
weigh the hair and
divide it into three
parts. This intimates the very exact directing of God's judgments
according to equity (by him men and their actions are
weighed in the
unerring balance of truth and righteousness) and the proportion which divine
justice observes in punishing some by one judgment and others by another; one
way or other, they shall all be met with. Some make the shaving of the hair to
denote the loss of their liberty and of their honour: it was looked upon as a
mark of ignominy, as in the disgrace Hanun put on David's ambassadors. It
denotes also the loss of their joy, for they shaved their heads upon occasion of
great mourning; I may add the loss of their Nazariteship, for the shaving of the
head was a period to that vow (Num. 6:18), and Jerusalem was now no longer
looked upon as a
holy city.
III. He must dispose of the hair so that it might all be
destroyed or dispersed, v. 2. 1. One
third part must
be burnt in the
midst of the city, denoting the multitudes that should perish by famine and
pestilence, and perhaps many in the conflagration of the city,
when the days
of the siege were fulfilled. Or the laying of that glorious city in ashes
might well be looked upon as a third part of the destruction threatened. 2.
Another third part was to be
cut in pieces with a knife, representing the
many who, during the siege, were slain by the sword, in their sallies out upon
the besiegers, and especially when the city was taken by storm, the Chaldeans
being then most furious and the Jews most feeble. 3. Another third part was to
be
scattered in the wind, denoting the carrying away of some into the
land of the conqueror and the flight of others into the neighbouring countries
for shelter; so that they were hurried, some one way and some another, like
loose hairs in the wind. But, lest they should think that this dispersion would
be their escape, God adds,
I will draw out a sword after them, so that
wherever they go evil shall pursue them. Note, God has variety of judgments
wherewith to accomplish the destruction of a sinful people and to make an end
when he begins.
IV. He must preserve a small quantity of the third sort that
were to be
scattered in the wind, and
bind them in his skirts, as
one would bind that which he is very mindful and careful of, v. 3. This
signified perhaps that little handful of people which were left under the
government of Gedaliah, who, it was hoped, would keep possession of the land
when the body of the people was carried into captivity. Thus God would have done
well for them if they would have done well for themselves. But these few that
were reserved must be taken and
cast into the fire, v. 4. When Gedaliah
and his friends were slain the people that put themselves under his protection
were scattered, some gone into Egypt, others carried off by the Chaldeans, and
in short the land totally cleared of them; then this was fulfilled, for out of
those combustions
a fire came forth into all the house of Israel, who, as
fuel upon the fire, kindled and consumed one another. Note, It is ill with a
people when those are taken away in wrath that seemed to be marked for monuments
of mercy; for then there is no remnant or escaping, none shut up or left.
Verses 5-17
We have here the explanation of the foregoing similitude:
This
is Jerusalem. Thus it is usual in scripture language to give the name of the
thing signified to the sign; as when Christ said,
This is my body. The
prophet's head, which was to be shaved, signified Jerusalem, which by the
judgments of God was now to be stripped of all its ornaments, to be emptied of
all its inhabitants, and to be set
naked and bare, to be
shaved with a
razor that is hired, Isa. 7:20. The head of one that was a priest, a
prophet, a holy person, was fittest to represent Jerusalem the holy city. Now
the contents of these verses are much the same with what we have often met with,
and still shall, in the writings of the prophets. Here we have,
I. The privileges Jerusalem was honoured with (v. 5):
I have
set it in the midst of the nations and countries that are round about her,
and those famous nations and very considerable. Jerusalem was not situated in a
remote obscure corner of the world, far from neighbours, but in the midst of
kingdoms that were populous, polite, and civilized, famed for learning, arts,
and sciences, and which then made the greatest figure in the world. But there
seems to be more in it than this. 1. Jerusalem was dignified and preferred above
the neighbouring nations and their cities. it was
set in the midst of
them as excelling them all. This
holy mountain was exalted above all the
hills, Isa. 2:2.
Why leap you, you high hills? This is the hill which God
desires to dwell in, Ps. 68:16. Jerusalem was a city upon a hill,
conspicuous and illustrious, and which all the neighbouring nations had an eye
upon, some for good-will, some for ill-will. 2. Jerusalem was designed to have a
good influence upon
the nations and countries round about, was set in the
midst of them as a candle upon a candlestick, to spread the light of divine
revelation, which she was blessed with, to all the dark corners of the
neighbouring nations, that from them it might diffuse itself further, even to
the ends of the earth. Jerusalem was set
in the midst of the nations, to
be as the heart in the body, to invigorate this dead world with a divine life as
well as to enlighten this dark world with a divine light, to be an example of
every thing that was good. The nations that observed what excellent
statutes
and judgments they had concluded them to be
a wise and understanding
people (Deu. 4:6), fit to be consulted as an oracle, as they were in Solomon's
time, 1 Ki. 4:34. And, had they preserved this reputation and made a right use
of it, what a blessing would Jerusalem have been to all the nations about! But,
failing to be so, the accomplishment of this intention was reserved for its
latter days,
when out of Zion went forth the gospel
law and the word
of the Lord Jesus
from Jerusalem, and there
repentance and
remission began to be preached, and thence the preachers of them
went
forth into all nations. And, when that was done, Jerusalem was levelled with
the ground. Note, When places and persons are made great, it is with design that
they may do good and that those about them may be the better for them, that
their
light may shine before men.
II. The provocations Jerusalem was guilty of. A very high charge
is here drawn up against that city, and proved beyond contradiction sufficient
to justify God in seizing its privileges and putting it under military
execution. 1. She has
not walked in God's statutes, nor
kept his
judgments (v. 7); nay, the inhabitants of Jerusalem had
refused his
judgments and his statutes (v. 6); they did not do their duty, nay, they
would
not, they said that they would not. Those
statutes and judgments
which their neighbours admired they despised, which they should have set before
their face they cast behind their back. Note, A contempt of the word and law of
God opens a door to all manner of iniquity. God's statutes are the terms on
which he deals with men; those that refuse his terms cannot expect his favours.
2. She had
changed God's judgments into wickedness (v. 6), a very high
expression of profaneness, that the people had not only broken God's laws, but
had so perverted and abused them that they had made them the excuse and colour
of their wickedness. They introduced the abominable customs and usages of the
heathen, instead of God's institutions; this was changing
the truth of God
into a lie (Rom. 1:25) and the
glory of God into shame, Ps. 4:2.
Note, Those that have been well educated, if they live ill, put the highest
affront imaginable upon God, as if he were the patron of sin and
his
judgments were
turned into wickedness. 3. She had been worse than the
neighbouring nations, to whom she should have set a good example:
She has
changed my judgments, by idolatries and false worship,
more than the
nations (v. 6), and she has
multiplied (that is, multiplied idols and
altars, gods and temples, multiplied those things the unity of which was their
praise)
more than the nations that were round about. Israel's God is
one, and his name one, his altar one; but they, not content with this one God,
multiplied their gods to such a degree that
according to the number of their
cities so were their gods, and their altars were
as heaps in the furrows
of the field; so that they exceeded all their neighbours in having
gods
many and lords many. They corrupted revealed religion more than the Gentiles
had corrupted natural religion. Note, If those who have made a profession of
religion, and have had a pious education, apostatize from it, they are commonly
more profane and vicious than those who never made any profession; they have
seven
other spirits more wicked. 4. She had
not done according to the judgments
of the nations, v. 7. Israel had not acted towards their God, as the nations
had acted towards their gods, though they were false gods; they had not been so
observant of him nor so constant to him. Has a nation
changed its gods,
or slighted them, so as they have? Jer. 2:11. or it may refer to their morals;
instead of reforming their neighbors, they came short of them; and many who were
of the
uncircumcision kept the righteousness of the law better than those
who were
of the circumcision, Rom. 2:26, 27. Those who had the light of
scripture did not
according to the judgments of many who had only the
light of nature. Note, There are those who are called
Christians who will
in the great day be condemned by the better tempers and better lives of sober
heathens. 5. The particular crime charged upon Jerusalem is profaning the holy
things, which she had been both entrusted and honoured with (v. 11):
Thou
hast defiled my sanctuary with all thy detestable things, with thy idols and
idolatries. The images of their pretended deities, and the groves erected in
honour of them, were brought into the temple; and the ceremonies used by
idolaters were brought into the worship of God. Thus every thing that is sacred
was polluted. Note, Idols are detestable things any where, but more especially
so in the sanctuary.
III. The punishments that Jerusalem should fall under for these
provocations:
Shall not God visit for these things? No doubt he shall.
The matter of the sentence here passed upon Jerusalem is very dreadful, and the
manner of expression makes it yet more so; the judgments are various, and the
threatenings of them varied, reiterated, inculcated, that one may well say,
Who
is able to stand in God's sight when once he is angry?
1. God will take this work of punishing Jerusalem into his own
hands; and
who knows the power of his anger and what
a fearful thing
it is to fall into his hands? Observe what a strong emphasis is laid upon it
(v. 8):
I, even I, am against thee. God had been for Jerusalem, to defend
and save it; but miserable is its case when he has turned to be its enemy and
fights against it. If God be against us, the whole creation is at war with us,
and nothing can be for us so as to stand us in any stead: "You think it is
only the Chaldean army that is against you, but they are God's hand, or rather
the staff in his hand; it is
I, even I, that
am against thee, not
only to speak against thee by prophets, but to act against thee by providence.
I
will execute judgments in thee (v. 10),
in the midst of thee (v. 8),
not only in the suburbs, but in the heart of the city, not only in the borders,
but in the bowels of the country." Note, Those who will not observe the
judgments of God's mouth shall not escape the judgments of his hand; and God's
judgments, when they come with commission, will penetrate into the midst of a
people, will enter into the soul,
into the bowels like water and
like
oil into the bones. I will execute judgments. Note, God himself undertakes
to execute his own judgments, according to the true and full intent of them;
whatever are the instruments, he is the principal agent.
2. These punishments shall come from his displeasure. As to the
body of the people, it shall not be a correction in love, but he will
execute
judgments in anger, and in fury, and in furious rebukes (v. 15), strange
expressions to come from a God who has said,
Fury is not in me, and who
has declared himself
gracious, and merciful, and
slow to anger.
But they are designed to show the malignity of sin, and the offence it gives to
the just and holy God. That must needs be a very evil thing which provokes him
to such resentments, and against his own people too, that had been so high in
his favour, and expressed with so much satisfaction (v. 13):
"My anger,
which has long been withheld,
shall now
be accomplished, and I will
cause my fury to rest upon them; it shall not only light upon them, but lie
upon them, and fill them as vessels of wrath fitted by their own wickedness to
destruction;
and, justice being hereby glorified,
I will be comforted,
I will be entirely satisfied in what I have done." As, when God is
dishonoured by the sins of men, he is said to be
grieved (Ps. 95:10), so
when he is honoured by their destruction he is said to
be comforted. The
struggle between mercy and judgment is over, and in this case judgment triumphs,
triumphs indeed; for mercy that has been so long abused is now silent and gives
up the cause, has not a word more to say on the behalf of such an ungrateful
incorrigible people:
My eye shall not spare, neither will I have any pity,
v. 11. Divine compassion defers the punishment, or mitigates it, or supports
under it, or shortens it; but here is
judgment without mercy, wrath
without any mixture or allay of pity. These expressions are thus sharpened and
heightened perhaps with design to look further, to the vengeance of eternal
fire, which some of the destructions we read of in the Old Testament were
typical of, and particularly that of Jerusalem; for surely it is nowhere on this
side hell that this word has its full accomplishment,
My eye shall not spare,
but
I will cause my fury to rest. Note, Those who live and die impenitent
will perish for ever unpitied; there is a day coming when
the Lord will not
spare.
3. Punishments shall be public and open:
I will execute
these
judgments in the sight of the nations (v. 8); the judgments
themselves shall be so remarkable that all the nations far and near shall take
notice of them; they shall be all the talk of that part of the world, and the
more for the conspicuousness of the place and people on which they are
inflicted. Note, Public sins, as they call for public reproofs
(those that
sin rebuke before all), so, if those prevail not, they call for public
judgments.
He strikes them as wicked men in the open sight of others (Job
34:26), that he may maintain and vindicate the honour of his government, for (as
Grotius descants upon it here)
why should he suffer it to be said, See what
wicked lives those lead who profess to be the worshippers of the only true God!
And, as the publicity of the judgments will redound to the honour of God, so it
will serve, (1.) To aggravate the punishment, and to make it lie the more
heavily. Jerusalem, being made
waste, becomes
a reproach among the
nations in the sight of all that pass by, v. 14. The more conspicuous and
the more peculiar any have been in the day of their prosperity the greater
disgrace attends their fall; and that was Jerusalem's case. The more Jerusalem
had been
a praise in the earth the more it is now
a reproach and a
taunt, v. 15. This she was warned of as much as any thing when her glory
commenced (1 Ki. 9:8), and this was lamented as much as any thing when it was
laid in the dust, Lam. 2:15. (2.) To teach the nations to fear before the God of
Israel, when they see what a jealous God he is, and how severely he punishes sin
even in those that are nearest to him:
It shall be an instruction to the
nations, v. 15. Jerusalem should have taught her neighbours the fear of God
by her piety and virtue, but, she not doing that, God will teach it to them by
her ruin; for they have reason to say,
If this be done in the green tree,
what shall be done in the dry? If
judgment begin at the house of God,
where will it end? If those be thus punished who only had some idolaters among
them, what will become of us who are all idolaters? Note, The destruction of
some is designed for the instruction of others. Malefactors are publicly
punished
in terrorem
that others may take warning.
4. These punishments, in the kind of them, shall be very severe
and grievous. (1.) They shall be such as have no precedent or parallel. Their
sins being more provoking than those of others, the judgments executed upon them
should be uncommon (v. 9):
"I will do in thee that which I have not done
in thee before, though thou hast long since deserved it; nay, that which I have
not done in any other city." This punishment of Jerusalem is said to be
greater
than that of Sodom (Lam. 4:6), which was more grievous than all that went
before it; nay, it is such as
"I will not do any more the like, all
the circumstances taken in, to any other city, till the like come to be done
again to this city, in the final overthrow by the Romans." This is a
rhetorical expression of the most grievous judgments, like that character of
Hezekiah, that there was
none like him, before or after him. (2.) They
shall be such as will force them to break the strongest bonds of natural
affection to one another, which will be a just punishment of them for their
wilfully breaking the bonds of their duty to God (v. 10):
The fathers shall
eat the sons, and the sons shall eat the fathers, through the extremity of
the famine, or shall be compelled to do it by their barbarous conquerors. (3.)
There shall be a complication of judgments, any one of them terrible enough, and
desolating; but what then would they be when they came all together and in
perfection? Some shall be taken away by the plague (v. 12); the
pestilence
shall pass through thee (v. 17), sweeping all before it, as the destroying
angel; others
shall be consumed with famine, shall gradually waste away
as men in a consumption (v. 12); this is again insisted on (v. 16):
I will
send upon them the evil arrows of famine; hunger shall make them pine, and
shall pierce them to the heart, as if arrows,
evil arrows, poisoned
darts, were shot into them. God has many arrows,
evil arrows, in his
quiver; when some are discharged, he has still more in reserve.
I will
increase the famine upon you. A famine in a bereaved country may
decrease
as fruits spring forth; but a famine in a besieged city will
increase of
course; yet god speaks of it as his act:
"I will increase it, and will
break your staff of bread, will take away the necessary supports of life,
will disappoint you of all that which you depend upon, so that there is no
remedy, but you must fall to the ground." Life is frail, is weak, is
burdened, so that, if it have not daily bread for its staff to lean upon, it
cannot but sink, and is soon gone if that staff be broken. Others
shall fall
by the sword round about Jerusalem, when they sally out upon the besiegers;
it is a
sword which God
will bring, v. 17. The sword of the Lord,
that used to be drawn for Jerusalem's defence, is now drawn for its
destruction. Others are devoured by
evil beasts, which will make a prey
of those that fly for shelter to the deserts and mountains. They shall meet
their ruin where they expected refuge, for there is no escaping the judgments of
God, v. 17. And,
lastly, those who escape shall be
scattered into
all parts of the world,
into all the winds (so it is expressed, v. 10,
12), intimating that they should not only be dispersed, but hurried, and tossed,
and driven to and fro, as
chaff before the wind. Nay, and Cain's curse
(to be fugitives and vagabonds) is not the worst of it neither; their restless
life shall be cut off by a bloody death:
"I will draw out a sword after
them, which shall follow them wherever they go."
Evil pursues
sinners; and the curse shall come upon them and overtake them.
5. These punishments will prove their ruin by degrees. They
shall be
diminished (v. 11); their strength and glory shall grow less and
less. They shall be
bereaved (v. 17), emptied of all that which was their
joy and confidence. God sends these judgments on purpose to destroy them, v. 16.
The arrows are not sent (as those which Jonathan shot) for their direction, but
for
their destruction; for god will
accomplish his fury upon them (v.
13); the day of God's patience is over, and the ruin is remediless. Though
this prophecy was to have its accomplishment now quickly, in the destruction of
Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, yet the executioners not being named here, but the
criminal only
(this is Jerusalem), we may well suppose that it looks
further, to the final destruction of that great city by the Romans when God made
a full end of the Jewish nation, and
caused his fury to rest upon them.
6. All this is ratified by the divine authority and veracity:
I
the Lord have spoken it, v. 15 and again v. 17. The sentence is passed by
him that is Judge of heaven and earth, whose
judgment is according to truth,
and the judgments of whose hand are according to the judgments of his mouth. he
has spoken it who can do it, for with him nothing is impossible. He has spoken
it who will do it, for
he is not a man that he should lie. He has spoken
it whom we are bound to hear and heed, whose
ipse dixitword commands
the most serious attention and submissive assent:
And they shall know that I
the Lord have spoken it, v. 13. There were those who thought it was only the
prophet that spoke it in his delirium; but God will make them know, by the
accomplishment of it, that he has spoken it in his zeal. Note, Sooner or later,
God's word will prove itself.
Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
