Verses 2-7
Ezekiel 6:2-7. Set thy face
toward the mountains of Israel —
Turn thy face to that part where
Judea is situated. Judea was a
hilly country; therefore that
whole land is expressed here and
elsewhere by the mountains of
Israel, Judah being called
Israel, because the ten tribes,
generally distinguished by that
name, had been long since
carried captive into Assyria,
and Judah possessed a great part
of their country. And prophesy
against them — Direct thy
discourse to them. The prophets
sometimes directed their
discourse to the inanimate parts
of the creation, thereby to
upbraid the stupidity of men.
Thus saith the Lord to the
mountains and to the hills —
Every part of the country had
been defiled with idolatry. The
altars built for idol-worship
were commonly placed upon
mountains and hills; the shady
valleys and river-sides were
likewise made use of for the
same purpose, particularly for
the sacrificing of children to
Moloch: see Isaiah 57:5;
Jeremiah 7:31. So by this the
prophet denounces a general
judgment upon the whole country.
And your altars shall be
desolate — See note on Leviticus
26:30, where Moses denounces
against the Israelites the same
judgments upon their
provocations. I will cast down
your slain men before your
idols, &c. — So that their sin
shall be read in the manner of
their punishment; and while the
idols are upbraided with their
inability to help their
worshippers, the idolaters are
reproached with the folly of
trusting in them. And ye shall
know that I am the Lord — “An
epiphonema, or conclusion of a
severe denunciation often
repeated by this prophet,
importing that the judgments
which God intended to bring on
the Jews, would make the most
hardened and stupid sinners
sensible that this was God’s
hand.” — Lowth.
Verses 8-10
Ezekiel 6:8-10. Yet will I leave
a remnant — “A gracious
exception that often occurs in
the prophets when they denounce
general judgments against the
Jews; implying that God will
still preserve a remnant of that
people; to whom he will fulfil
the promises made to their
fathers.” And they that escape
of you shall remember me, &c. —
Your afflictions shall bring you
to the knowledge of yourselves,
and a sense of your duty to me.
Because I am broken with their
whorish hearts — I am much
grieved, and my patience is
tired out with this people’s
idolatries, called in Scripture
spiritual whoredom. God is here
introduced as speaking after the
manner of men, whose patience is
tired out by the repeated
provocations of others,
especially when they see no
hopes of amendment. And with
their eyes go a whoring after
their idols — The eyes are the
seat of lascivious inclinations:
see 2 Peter 2:14. So, in pursuit
of the same metaphor, the eyes
are said to go a whoring after
idols, the people being often
tempted to idolatrous worship by
the costliness of the images,
and the fine show they made. And
they shall loathe themselves,
&c. — With a mixture of grief
toward God, of indignation
against themselves, and
abhorrence of the offence. And
they shall know I have not said
in vain, &c. — Without cause, as
the word חנם is more
significantly translated Ezekiel
14:22; the sufferers had given
him just cause to pronounce that
evil. Or, without effect: their
sins were the cause, and their
destruction is the effect of
their sufferings.
Verses 11-14
Ezekiel 6:11-14. Smite with thy
hand, and stamp with thy foot —
Join to thy words the gestures
which are proper to express
grief and concern at the
wickedness of thy people, and
for their calamities that will
ensue. For they shall fall by
the sword, &c. — See note on
Ezekiel 5:12. He that is far off
— And thinks himself out of
danger, because he is out of the
reach of the enemy; shall die of
the pestilence — The arrow that
I will shoot at him. And he that
is near — Who stays in his own
country, or who is near a place
of strength, which he hopes will
be to him a place of safety, yet
shall fall by the sword before
he can retreat to it. And he
that remaineth — Who is so
cautious as not to venture out,
but remains in the city; shall
die by the famine — The most
miserable death of all: thus
will I accomplish my fury — I
will satisfy my just
displeasure, and give them full
measure of punishment: I will do
all that against them which I
had purposed to do. Then shall
ye know — See note on Ezekiel
6:10. When their slain men shall
be among their idols — As was
threatened before, Ezekiel
6:5-7. Upon every high hill, &c.
— There, where they had
prostrated themselves in honour
of their idols, God will lay
them dead to their own reproach,
and the reproach of their idols:
they lived among them, and shall
die among them: they had offered
sweet odours to their idols, but
there shall their dead carcasses
send forth an offensive smell,
as it were, to atone for that
misplaced incense. So will I
stretch out my hand — Put forth
my almighty power; and make the
land desolate — שׁממה, a
desolation, a Hebraism, for most
desolate: that fruitful,
pleasant, populous country,
which has been as the garden of
Eden, the glory of all lands;
shall be more desolate than the
wilderness toward Diblath — Or
Diblathaim, as it is called
Numbers 33:46; the desert in the
borders of Moab, part of that
great and terrible wilderness,
described Deuteronomy 8:15. |