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Devotional: Ezekiel 11:14-25

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 11:14-25

Helpful thoughts:

  • In today’s passage, God answers Ezekiel’s question from verse 13.  He will preserve a remnant.
  • Two important truths are contained in this passage:
    • No one suffers the wrath of God against sin who has not chosen to sin against Him (Verse 21).
    • Those who follow God do so because He has given them a new heart.  Conversion is a gift of grace (Verses 19-20).
  • Upon the completion of this sequence of visions (Starting in chapter 8), Ezekiel is now ready to tell the exiles all that God gave Him to tell.

Questions to consider:,

  1. What is the true sanctuary of God? Or…where?  Is it the Temple? Or…who is it? (Verse 16)  With this being true, how does one pursue “sanctuary” in God (Verse 20)?
  2. What do we learn from these promises about conversion?  Do people achieve it through trial and error or through increased effort in religion?  What has to happen for a sinner to want to follow God?
  3. How does the wording at the end of verse 20 compare with that of Revelation 21:3?  What might this teach us concerning what we also learn from Romans 11:25-27?  When will the remnant of Israel be saved?

February 1, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 11:1-13

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 11:1-13

Helpful thoughts:

  • Ezekiel’s prophecy now moves to the political leaders of the people.  The elders had not trusted that God would not protect them from “the sword” of other nations and sinned against Him, now God is going to bring “the sword” of other nations against them.  Their fears would be realized.
  • The illustration of the cauldron/cooking pot and meat seems to be related to the city of Jerusalem being under siege.  As the siege is being built up, the “temperature” is rising…cooking the “meat” inside.
    • But God tells the political leaders they will not be defeated the way they expect, so that they will know that He is the Lord!
  • Pelatiah’s judgment came instantly (Verses 1 and 13).
    • Peletiah’s name means, “The LORD delivers” and he was the son of Benaiah which means, “The LORD builds.”

Questions to consider:

  1. To whom does God attribute the responsibility of the number of the slain in Jerusalem (Verse 6)?  Why might the people and leaders have wanted to blame God or their enemies?  How does God’s justice, sovereignty and providence validate His claim?
  2. If God is doing all of these things so that the people would know that He is the LORD, what would have been the right response?  What does God’s identity and His attributes have to do with our repentance?
  3. What changes happen in the life of a person who surrenders to the Lordship of God and Christ?  How does this match what we learn happens to a person who is saved from passage like 2 Corinthians 5:17 and Ephesians 2:8-10?

January 31, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 10

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 10

Helpful thoughts:

  • After the judgment of God is depicted in chapter 9, we see the glory of the Lord departing the temple in chapter 10.
  • God gives Ezekiel this similar vision to what he saw in chapter one, therefore Ezekiel is now well aware of what is taking place.
  • This vision of the glory departing contrasts from the account of the glory of God coming to the temple in 2 Chronicles 5.

Questions to consider:

  1. If the elders who had come to Ezekiel were hoping to hear good news or instructions from God to fix their problems, how saddened or angered might they have been?  What news is Ezekiel going to be giving them?  What have the last few chapters declared concerning Jerusalem and Israel?
  2. Besides what the cherubim look like, what are we learning about these angels?  What seems to be their purpose?
  3. By God’s grace, what will happen one day in the future (Sneak ahead and peek at Ezekiel 43:1-5)?

January 30, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 9

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 9

Helpful thoughts:

  • Today’s chapter is a continuation of the vision from chapter 8.  Angels are presumably sent out by God to bring judgment.
  • Judgment is commanded on all who had rejected God (And yet sought His favor).  Ezekiel asks about the remnant being saved, but they are.  Those who “sigh and groan over all the abominations” are those who believe and fear the Lord (Verse 4).
  • The sin that brought so much offense to God was that the people (Who had been living in sinful idolatry) blamed the Lord for forsaking the land and not seeing their troubles!
    • The people wanted to reject God and call on false idols to meet their needs, but when their needs were left unmet, it was perceived to be God’s fault.

Questions to consider:

  1. Even when the people received all they needed, and even if they had prayed to false gods to give any good thing to them, where had their provisions come from?  Who alone deserved all praise and thanksgiving? (James 1:17)
  2. Who had come to Ezekiel for help in the previous chapter (8:1)?  Who were to be the first to suffer under God’s wrath (The last sentence of 9:6)?  Why would God command the judgment to begin with the leadership?
  3. If Ezekiel knew an angel had been sent to mark and preserve the faithful, what does his impassioned plea to God tell us about his knowledge of the people of Jerusalem?  How can we know however that there will be a remnant (Both then and forever)?

January 29, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 8

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 8

Helpful thoughts:

  • Prior to Babylon’s defeat of Jerusalem, the elders of Judah come to the prophet Ezekiel for wisdom.  Instead, God shows Ezekiel the grave sins of the Jewish people.
  • Tammuz was a false god from Mesopotamian culture.  All of these visions have to do with idolatry in various forms.
    • There seems to be an increasing of shock and severity with each vision as names of families and locations within the temple are mentioned.
  • God’s jealousy is right and without sin (Exodus 20:4-5).

Questions to consider:

  1. What is ironic about the fact that these elders of Judah would seek out Ezekiel for guidance if they had previously been busy with all this idolatry?  What would have made them decide to seek out the Lord?
  2. If they were worshipping many false gods simultaneously, would their trip to Ezekiel have been evidence of repentance or were they simply imploring God to fix their present situation?  How would we have been able to know the difference?
  3. How does the world use false gods?  Why are they worshipped?  What do people want or expect from them?  How and why is worshiping the one true God different than all other forms of worship?

January 28, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 7

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 7

Helpful thoughts:

  • In the ESV Study Bible, this chapter is considered to be a “sermon” based on Amos chapter 8.
  • Verse 26 depicts a people who want to continue in sin, and when hardship and consequences come, they want God to swoop in and take the hardship away.
  • God would do no such thing any longer.  Jerusalem was going to fall.  Judgment was coming.

Questions to consider:

  1. What is sinful man prone to do with the mercy of God?  Do people immediately appreciate it and turn from their sin, or do they begin to count on it and continue in their sin?  How would we know if this despair was truly repentant versus being in anguish over consequences?
  2. What does the last sentence in verse 27 remind us about this judgment from God?  How far would the judgment go (Why so severe)? And, why was the judgment necessary?  Why is judgment and knowledge of the Lord better than carrying on in sin without consequences?
  3. Where does Christ stand for us as sinners in need of rescue?  How might a Christian be prone to take the mercy and grace of God for granted?  How was our sin justly punished?

January 27, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 6

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 6

Helpful thoughts:

  • The Israelites had worshipped false idols and committed terrible sin on their mountains (“High places”). (e.g. 1 Kings 14:23)
  • This prophecy of judgment is against those who have been committing this idolatry.
  • God promises a remnant who will survive this judgment.  Through their observation of the judgment of God against Israel, those who remain will know that God is the true Lord.

Questions to consider:

  1. Besides the judgment, righteous anger and jealousy of God against this idolatry, what more do we learn about His heart in this prophecy?  What does verse 9 tell us about His heart’s response to His people’s sin against Him?
  2. It can be tempting to see God as harsh and violent in reading these judgments, but how might it help to remember that this idolatry being done by the Jews would include things like human sacrifice, cutting/bleeding, adultery and other sexual sins, etc.?  Was God being unjust?
  3. God had been patient and longsuffering with His people since the beginning of the nation’s existence, what might His patience have to do with the warning at the end of verse 10?  If God shows patience and mercy to a people for a time, does that mean He can never bring judgment?  When people start to question God’s justice, what are they really doing?  Who is truly the Lord?

January 26, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 5

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 5

Helpful thoughts:

  • In the next prophetic picture portrayed, Ezekiel’s hair represents the people of Israel/Jerusalem.
  • God’s people were placed in the “center” of the world, where nations travelled through on a regular basis.  They were placed there to tell the world about their God, but instead they rejected Him in favor of the world’s ways.
  • Through these judgments, God would use Israel to proclaim Himself to the world after all (Verse 13).

Questions to consider:

  1. How does verse 12 describe the meaning of what God told Ezekiel to do with his hair?
  2. Why are chapters and prophesies like this so hard to read?  What has God promised to do here?  What was going to happen to Israel?  Why was it going to happen?  What would the world know about God?
  3. How do we balance this information with our knowledge of the love of God given to us through Christ?  How might it help us to understand more what happened to Christ at the cross and why His suffering was necessary?  How can all of this help us to better understand the terrible nature of our sin, the holiness and justice of God, and then motivate us toward repentance and righteous living?

January 25, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Sermon: John 19:1-16

January 24, 2022 Category: John, New Testament, Sermons

Devotional: Ezekiel 4

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 4

Helpful thoughts:

  • In Chapter 4, Ezekiel’s prophetic ministry begins…and in quite a peculiar way.
    • Instead of being given words to say, Ezekiel is given responsibility to act out what is going to happen to Jerusalem.
  • This prophecy would have been given approximately six years before the Babylonians laid siege against Jerusalem.
  • In the visuals, God tells the Jewish people of the coming destruction of Jerusalem, the accounting of how long they had been in sin as a nation, the issues they would have with food and water, and (With Ezekiel’s bared arms) God is letting His people know that it is His outstretched arms that are bring this punishment.
    • Handling human dung rendered a person “Unclean” and Ezekiel, having been raised in the priestly line, would have been particularly sensitive to this.
  • Ezekiel probably went out and laid by the replica of the siege and ate and drank as God prescribed each day for an allotted amount of time.  780 days was quite the commitment to share this prophecy, even if he only had to lay down for a third of the day (Or however long it was).

Questions to consider:

  1. Why, does God state, is the reason for this coming siege against Jerusalem?  What had Israel/Judah done?  What were some of the consequences?  How did the physical consequences compare to the spiritual consequences?  Which ones are worse…and yet which ones are often perceived to be worse?
  2. Given the nature and details of what God commanded Ezekiel to do, our focus might be on the difficulty of his task ahead (The 780 days of laying on the ground, etc.).  But what did this prophecy symbolize?  What might have been on the forefront of Ezekiel’s mind as he prophesied against his own people?
  3. Ezekiel’s calendar had just radically changed for the next 26 months.  God isn’t going to command you to lay on your side and eat bread cooked on cow dung next to a model of a major city (Phew!), but He has given us much to do in His Word.  How do our days get scheduled?  Where does God “fit in?”  How are we doing at being flexible when opportunities to serve arise?

January 24, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

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