Friday, August 20, 2010

Week 34: Ezekiel 12 - 36

This week it's all Ezekiel in the reading plan:

* Weekend: Ezekiel 12 - 15
* Monday: Ezekiel 16 - 19
* Tuesday: Ezekiel 20 - 24
* Wednesday: Ezekiel 25 - 28
* Thursday: Ezekiel 29 - 32
* Friday: Ezekiel 33 - 36

Ezekiel is one of the most remarkable prophets, if not THE most remarkable prophet, and the book of Ezekiel is one the most remarkable books in the Bible. It is probably also one of the lesser-known prophets. For me personally, the prophet and the book had to "grow" on me over time. Isaiah is known and read for its many prophesies regarding the Messiah. Jeremiah is known for prophesying and lamenting the fall of Jerusalem (in the Netherlands we even have a verb "jeremiering", which means as much as "wining"). Daniel is another famous prophet because of its famous stories of the lion's den, the fiery oven, etc. But who in the world is Ezekiel??

Well, as you have already read this past week, Ezekiel is an incredibly faithful servant. In chapter 4, God asked him to bear the sin of the people of Israel, one day for every year the people have sinned for a total of 390 days. Ezekiel has to lay down on his left side for 390 days, bearing the sin of the people!! After he's done with that, he has to lay down on his other side for 40 days, to bear the sin of the tribe of Judah. Not just laying down, but tied down with ropes, to symbolize the siege of Jerusalem. And if that is not all, God gives him only bread to eat and water to drink, and He asks them to bake the bread on human faeces!!!!! Can you believe that???!!! Ezekiel pleas with the Lord to prevent him from defiling himself, and so the Lord grants him to bake the bread on a cow pie instead of human excrements... Wow...

When I read that, I'm first of all stunned by the things that God is asking of Ezekiel, and secondly, I'm stunned by how faithful Ezekiel responds and executes the things God asks of him. Who of us would do this if the Lord would ask something like this today?? No, He won't ask these specific things, but what if He asks you to go through a time of trial that lasts more than a couple days, a couple weeks, a couple months or a couple of years? Maybe you feel like you have been 'tied down with a rope' for a long time.

Read a little further, and we see God's outrage against the sin of Israel and Judah, symbolized in the story of two sisters who commit adultery. God passionately loved them, but they rejected him time and time again (chapter 23). In this chapter, God uses some very explicit language to describe the situation, so be warned (reader discretion advised!). It is obvious that God is very upset, and does not dance around the subject.

And then... God asks an even more unbelievable thing from Ezekiel in chapter 24. God says: "With one blow I am about to take away from you the delight of your eyes. Yet do not lament or weep or shed any tears." (24:15,16). And then we read in verse 18: "So I spoke to the people in the morning, and in the evening my wife died. The next morning I did as I had been commanded."

When I read that, tears come to my eyes. I cannot believe God is asking that from someone who has been so faithful to him. I think of my own wife and family, and secretly hope God will never ever ask such a sacrifice from me. But I also know people who have experienced this, maybe not quite like Ezekiel, but most definitely a sacrifice that was hard to understand why God would allow that to happen. And I have experienced my own hardships with losses of dear people as well, some of them very untimely it seemed.

Yet... as we read the Bible more and more, we get to understand the heart of God better and better. We do not understand everything, but we do get a glimpse of the bigger picture God has in mind. We see His vision in chapter 18 verse 23:

"Do I take any pleasure in the death of the wicked? declares the Sovereign LORD. Rather, am I not pleased when they turn from their ways and live?"

and in 18:32:

"For I take no pleasure in the death of anyone, declares the LORD. Repent and live!"

That is what God wants for each us, and not just each of us, but for the entire world! That is why Ezekiel had to do what he did, to bring a message of repentance and hope to an entire nation. That's why we sometimes have to go through the dark times in life... so that God can accomplish the big picture, not just for us, but for the entire world.

I encourage you to appreciate reading the book of Ezekiel. It's not easy to read, but so rewarding if you catch the big picture as well.

In Him,

Dick

2 comments:

  1. In Ezekiel 14, God holds up three men as being "righteous", Noah, Daniel and Job. Why these three? What about Abraham, Joseph, and David? It seems that righteousness, in this case, is based on faithfulness, especially since that is what Ezekiel is preaching about, but are there not others in Israel's history with great faithfulness? I guess I don't understand why these three were selected out of the whole of Israel's history to this point. Yes, they were faithful in difficult, almost impossible, circumstances, but so were others.

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  2. That's a great question, Steve. My NIV study bible says these men were selected because of their 'proverbial righteousness'. Perhaps among the jews there is a proverb something like 'being as righteous as Noah, Daniel and Job'... What we do know about these men, is that they stood out from their generation: Noah was the only one who found favor in God's eyes (Gen.6:8). There was no one on earth like Job, blameless and upright (Job 1:8). From Daniel we also know he stood out among his contemporaries, although not as explicit as Noah & Job.

    I agree with you, though, other names would have worked too, Abraham being one of the first that comes to mind.

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