Tag Archives: Ezekiel 4

August 27, 2023 Bible Study — Listen and Obey the Words God Gives Us to Speak to Others Before We Speak Them

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Ezekiel 1-4.

I am always struck by Ezekiel’s call to prophecy.  I think many aspects of his call apply to each and every one of us.  When Ezekiel realized he was in the presence of the glory of the Lord, he fell on his face.  We also should prostrate ourselves before God.  God told him to stand up so that He could speak with him.  However, Ezekiel did not stand up, instead God’s Spirit raised him to his feet.  In the same way, we need God’s Spirit in us in order for us to stand in God’s presence.

Which brings us to the meat of God’s commission to Ezekiel.  God told Ezekiel that it did not matter if those He sent him to listened or did not listen to the message he spoke to them, so long as they knew that a man of God had been among them.  We, also, should not worry about whether people listen to the message God has given us, so long as they know that we choose to speak God’s message.  Then, before sending Ezekiel out to speak His words, God gave them to him on a scroll, telling him to eat it and fill his stomach with it.  I have always understood that to mean that Ezekiel was to first listen to and abide by the words which God was giving him to speak.  That of course is how the people would know that Ezekiel was a man of God, and how they will know that we are the people of God; when we live by words which we speak to them on behalf of God.

I almost stopped there, but I think we need to hear God’s call about being a watchman.  When God reveals to us that someone is doing something wicked which will lead to their death, we are under obligation to warn them against their wicked actions.  If they listen to us and change their ways, all can rejoice.  If they do not listen to us, God will hold us blameless because we warned them about the danger to themselves of their action.  However, if we do not warn them against the dangers of their wickedness, we will be held accountable for their suffering.  So, let us not let fear of people keep us silent when God tells us to call others to righteousness.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 27, 2022 Bible Study — Tell Others About God, Whether They Want To Hear It Or Not

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Ezekiel 1-4.

Every time I read Ezekiel’s description of his vision I feel like I am missing something important about the meaning of that description.  I realized today, and perhaps this has occurred to me before, that that is part of the point.  This vision occurs, and Ezekiel describes it, in order to demonstrate to us that there is more to God and what He does than we can possibly understand.  However, I want to focus on God’s message to Ezekiel, not the message God spoke through Ezekiel, but the one He directed to Ezekiel.  First, God instructed Ezekiel to listen to what He said to him and then to do it, to not be like the rebellious people to whom God was sending Ezekiel with a message.  Then God told Ezekiel that he needed to speak God’s word to the people, whether or not they listened.  So, I firmly believe that, for the most part, any message God gives us for others, He gives to us as well.  We must do what God tells us before we speak His message to others.  When God gives us a message to tell others to turn from their sins, we must make sure that we are not guilty of those same sins, whether those sins are of commission or omission.   But, here’s the other part of what God is telling us here: once we have internalized God’s word we need to share it with others, whether they want to hear it or not.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 27, 2021 Bible Study — Live According To God’s Words Before Speaking Them To Others

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Ezekiel 1-4.

Whenever I read Ezekiel’s descriptions of the living creatures in his visions I wish I had the artistic talent to draw out what those words describe.  It always feels to me like I am missing something significant because my mental picture is incomplete.  On the other hand, another part of my wonders if perhaps we make too much of the vision, that perhaps it was just intended to convey the glory, and majesty, of God as He called Ezekiel to his mission.  In any case, I do not want to get too caught up in the description of the four living creatures because the actual message of Ezekiel’s calling is worth our full attention.

I want to consider three elements of Ezekiel’s calling.  God gives Ezekiel a scroll which He tells him to eat, then to go speak to the people of Israel.   To use a modern idiom, God was telling Ezekiel to internalize His message before speaking to the people of Israel.  When God gives us a message for people, our first step should be to “eat” that message and make it part of us.  Before we preach God’s word to others we should live by it ourselves.

That first element (first in my relating, not in the passage itself) I believe applies to everyone who follows God.  The next two elements of Ezekiel’s call do not.  God called Ezekiel to speak His words to the people of Israel, not to people who spoke a different language from him, or lived in a far away land.  However, because those people spoke the same language as he did, they would be stubborn and refuse to truly listen to what he had to say.  So, God would make Ezekiel just as stubborn and hard-headed as they.  We often think that being called to go to a foreign land as a missionary is the more difficult calling, but this passage suggests that may not be true.  If we find ourselves with a ministry to the members of the society in which we were born, we must be prepared to be stubborn and obstinate..  And wherever we are called to minister, we must not allow the disapproval of those around us to silence us when God tells us to speak. If God gives us a message telling sinners of their sin, we dare not keep silent.  If we do not speak the message which God gives us, their blood will be on our hands.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 27, 2020 Bible Study God Calls Us to Be Watchmen

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 1-4.

I have long wished that I had the artistic talent to draw Ezekiel’s vision of the four living beings.  I have always imagined them flying in formation making a square, one on each face of the square, but when I did an Internet search for images of them some of those images showed them in a line.  My desire to be able to draw this is not because I think getting the image right is important, I’m just curious as to what this would look like (and a picture of what I imagine this to look like might reveal something I did not get from the word picture).

As much as I would like to see a drawing of this vision, the words spoken to Ezekiel are much more important.  God warned Ezekiel that those to whom he was called to preach were stubborn and would likely refuse to listen to his message.  However, God told Ezekiel that He had made him as obstinate and as hard-hearted as those to whom He was sending him to preach.  God’s instruction to Ezekiel was that he was to give the people God’s message whether they listened to him or not.  Further on in His instructions to Ezekiel God called him a watchman.  If God told Ezekiel that people were going to die because of their sins, and Ezekiel failed to warn them, he would be guilty of their deaths.  On the other hand, if Ezekiel warned them and they failed to listen, they would still die, but Ezekiel would be innocent regarding their deaths.  To one degree or another we are all held to this standard.  When we see people acting in self-destructive ways, and all sin is self-destructive, if we fail to warn them we bear some guilt for the suffering which will come their way.

August 27, 2019 Bible Study — Live By God’s Word Before Preaching God’s Word

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 1-4.

I wish I had the artistic talent to draw the image Ezekiel describes here at the beginning of his book.  In fact, I think it would be enlightening if someone were to draw each of the visions Ezekiel had throughout this book (and many of the other apocalyptic visions in other parts of the Bible as well).  I suspect that we would learn both from seeing what Ezekiel described and from seeing the differences between those descriptions.

From this amazing spectacle a voice spoke to Ezekiel and a Spirit took control of his body.  I had actually never noticed the second part of that before today.  When Ezekiel saw his vision, he threw himself face down on the ground.  Then he tells us that the Spirit which spoke to him out of the vision came into him and set him on his feet.  I am not sure how I overlooked this, nor why I never heard someone teach on the importance of it.  Much like Saul/Paul, Ezekiel was not exactly given a choice in the ministry he undertook.  Of course, both Saul/Paul and Ezekiel sought fervently to do God’s will.  But once they were called, neither felt like they had a choice in the matter.

Ezekiel was not sent to a foreign people on God’s behalf.  In fact, God tells Ezekiel that that would be an easier mission.  When God sends you to your own people you will struggle to overcome the fact that they think they know what you have to say without actually listening to what you say.  People in the United States think they know what the Christian Gospel is, but they are almost always wrong.  Even many of those who consider themselves Christian fail to listen to God’s words.  Here comes the most important part of God’s commission to Ezekiel.  Before speaking God’s words to others, Ezekiel must listen to, and act according to, those words.  We must hold ourselves to the standard to which God calls us to hold others.

August 27, 2018 Bible Study

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 1-4.

    Every time I read Ezekiel’s description of the four living beings I wish I had the artistic talent to draw what he describes. I wish I could draw it because none of the images I have found depicting it match what I picture in my mind as I read this. I picture these beings as having a face in every direction, human like bodies, except that their legs end in hooves rather than feet, and two sets of wings which are perpendicular to each other. And every time I read through my image changes slightly. Associated with each of these beings is a gyroscope (a wheel within a wheel). A further reason I wish I had the artistic talent to draw it is that there is a part of this description which sounds like a high technology machine and I would like to see if I could envision a machine which matched the description. Having said all of that, there is an element of this vision which reminds me of some dreams I have had. I have had dreams, which while I was dreaming made perfect sense but when I woke up had elements which were inconsistent with each other. I believe that Ezekiel’s description here felt that way to him.

    As part of this vision Ezekiel received his call. God told Ezekiel that his mission would be harder because he was being sent to people he understood and who understood him. In many ways this is contrary to what we tend to think. We tend to think that foreign missionaries have a more difficult time than those whose mission field is in their home town. I want to focus on the fact that Ezekiel was instructed to give God’s message whether or not people listened to him. In fact, God told him that they would not listen to him, that rather than listen to and heed his message, they would get angry with him and threaten him. If we are called to ministry among the people we grew up with we can expect to be treated similarly.

    I mentioned the other day that Ezekiel had a good passage on our responsibility to warn others of the consequences of their sins. God told Ezekiel that he was the watchman for the people of Israel. Just as a watchman was responsible to warn the city of invaders, so Ezekiel was responsible to warn people of God’s judgment. The same is true for us, when God makes us aware that people will suffer as a consequence of their sin, we are responsible to warn them. If we fail to give people God’s warning, God will hold us responsible for the suffering they experience. However, if we do warn people and they do not heed our warning, they will still suffer but God will not hold us accountable for their suffering. We are not responsible to convince people to change their behavior, merely to warn them of its consequences.

August 27, 2017 Bible Study — Called To Be Watchmen

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 1-4.

    I realized that my imagination of Ezekiel’s initial vision has long been incorrect. I have always attempted to picture the four “living beings” as forming a square with one of them on each side of the square facing out and a space in the middle between them. However, today I realized that Ezekiel was most likely describing them as being in a line all facing the same direction. Another thing I realized is that if someone made a drawing or painting of one of these in a context that did not evoke something from Ezekiel we would most likely think the image was a depiction of something demonic.

    I think it is important for us to look at Ezekiel’s commissioning. Like Ezekiel, most of us are not called to be missionaries to foreign lands. There are two sides to such a calling. On the one hand, it is easier because you already speak the language of those you are called to whom God calls you to speak. On the other hand, they are unlikely to be receptive to your message. God warns us that if our mission field is among our own people and culture that our target audience will be stubborn and hard-headed, intentionally misinterpreting the words we speak. Therefore we need to be just as hard-headed and obstinate. Further, God warns us that they will attempt to intimidate and frighten us into silence, but we must continue to speak up any way. There is one final piece of advice here regarding speaking God’s word to those of our own culture, perhaps the most important instruction. Before we attempt to speak God’s words to others we must take them to heart and let them shape our behavior.

    The final point in today’s passage that I want to highlight is God’s defining of the mission to which He was calling Ezekiel. God describes the task as being a watchman. His job, and in many cases our job, is to warn people about the consequences of their sins. If we fail to warn sinners and they do not change their ways, they will die and God will hold us accountable for their death. On the other hand, if we warn them and they do not change their ways, they will still die but god will hold us innocent of their deaths. This instruction applies to both those who are living in sin and those who were living righteously and fall into sin. However, we are not called to confront each and every person who sins, only those for whom God has given us a message. This passage does not give us any guidance on how we can distinguish for whom God has given us a message. Theoretically, it should be obvious, but in practice it can be difficult to distinguish if God has given us a message or perhaps we just want to use that person to gain attention for ourselves.