Verses 1-6
Ezekiel 33:1-6. Again the word
of the Lord came unto me — “It
is plain that Ezekiel uttered
what is contained in this
chapter to Ezekiel 33:20, before
Jerusalem was taken by the
Babylonians; but how long before
is uncertain.” — Bishop Newcome.
Son of man, speak to the
children of thy people — To the
Jews, to whom he had not spoken
since he declared what is
contained in chap. 24. The
reader will find in chap. 3.,
from Ezekiel 33:17-22, the
substance of what is repeated in
the first ten verses of this
chapter. The instruction is the
same in both passages; but the
subject is here more fully and
explicitly illustrated. “When
the prophet had confirmed his
predictions of evil, both to the
Jews and heathen, by
exemplifications of the like
predictions already fulfilled
among the latter, he proceeds to
apply home the conclusion
arising hence by an
expostulation and pathetic
address to the hearts and
consciences of the Jews. But to
what Jews is this addressed? To
the Jews who were already in
captivity. In order, then, that
this address might make the
stronger impression on them, and
produce its wished-for effect,
he immediately subjoins an
information, which he here
presents, as having been just
then received, of the actual
capture and destruction of the
city of Jerusalem, agreeably to
his foregoing prophecies against
it: the accomplishment of which
prediction against the Jews
themselves, joined to his
historic narrations before, of
the accomplishment of many
others against the heathen, both
completes his arguments in
favour of the credit and
veracity of his predictions
against Egypt, or other nations,
and also proves, by a
conspicuous example, the truth
of that maxim with which he had
concluded his late address to
the captive Jews, That God will
judge every one after his ways,
both Jews and heathen.” — Obs.
on Books, 2:196.
When I bring the sword upon a
land — When an enemy approaches
to any land, which never happens
without my appointment or
permission; if the people of the
land take a man of their coast —
Or, from among them, to which
sense the word מקצה, here used,
is translated, Genesis 47:2; and
set him for their watchman —
Such watchmen were placed upon
the turrets of their city-walls,
or upon high mountains near, to
give notice of the enemy’s
approach: see the margin. If
when he seeth the sword come
upon the land — If, when he
spies the enemy marching against
it, he blow the trumpet, sound
the alarm; and warn the people —
The sound of the trumpet is a
warning, yet it is sometimes
necessary to add a warning by
word of mouth, and tell the
people brought together by the
trumpet what he sees. Whosoever
heareth, &c., and taketh not
warning — Considers not, minds
not what he hears, nor will be
made sensible of the danger, so
as to provide for resisting or
fleeing from the sword; if the
sword come and take him away —
Destroy him; his blood shall be
upon his own head — His
destruction is owing to himself.
He heard the sound of the
trumpet — He heard as well as
others who escaped, and he might
have delivered himself as they
did who took warning. His blood
shall be upon him — The guilt
and blame of his death cannot be
charged on any but himself. But
he that taketh warning shall
save his soul — Shall save his
life from the danger that
threatens it. In like manner, he
that takes warning by the
prophet’s admonition shall
preserve himself from the
judgments threatened against
sinners. But if the watchman see
the sword come, and blow not the
trumpet — If he neglect his
charge, which is to give the
alarm; and the people be not
warned — But are surprised by
the enemy; if the sword take any
person from among them — Cut any
one off unexpectedly; he is
taken away in his iniquity —
Punished and cut off by the Lord
for his sins formerly committed,
and in consequence of the
present fault of not watching, a
great fault in every one that is
guilty of it in time of war. But
his blood will I require at the
watchman’s hands — The guilt of
that blood will I charge upon
the watchman, and punish him for
it, for he sinned in not giving
the necessary warning.
Verses 7-9
Ezekiel 33:7-9. So thou, O son
of man — The Lord here applies
the preceding account of the
watchman’s office to the
prophet, and shows that his duty
is illustrated thereby. As if he
had said, If a watchman,
appointed by his
fellow-citizens, is so highly
guilty, if he do not give
warning to the city, and shall
receive such punishment from my
hands; what must not thou
expect, who art appointed by me
to give warning to thy
countrymen of the terrible evils
which their sins will bring upon
them, if thou neglect to do it?
God has never left his people
without sufficient means of
instruction, but has vouch-safed
it to them more or less in every
age, from the beginning of the
world to this day. He has, from
time to time, and at all times,
set watchmen over them, raised
up good and holy men to
instruct, admonish, warn, and
reprove. “I have even sent unto
you all my servants the prophets
daily, rising up early and
sending them, but you have not
hearkened unto me, nor inclined
your ear,” Jeremiah 7:25. When I
say unto the wicked, &c. — See
notes on Ezekiel 3:18-19.
Verse 10-11
Ezekiel 33:10-11. If our
transgressions be upon us, &c. —
If the unpardoned guilt of our
sins lie upon us, and we be
punished for them in the wasting
of our country, the burning of
our city, the abolishing the
public worship of God, &c.; and
we pine away in them —
Experience their bitter
consequences in famine and
disease, and in a variety of
other calamities; how shall we
live? — How then can the
promises of life belong to us?
How can such assurances be true
as were given us Ezekiel
18:17-32? What ground can we
have to hope for a recovery of
our former condition? Or, how
canst thou promise the
continuance or restoration of
any mercy to us? How can it be
better with us than it is? If
thy threatenings be true, it
will be worse with us, and not
better; and if they be not true,
how can we trust thy promises of
recovery? These are supposed to
be the words of impious persons,
who, pretending to despair of
God’s mercies, take
encouragement from thence to
continue in their sins. Say, As
I live, I have no pleasure in
the death of the wicked — For an
elucidation of this and the
following verses to the 20th,
compare chap. 18.; and see the
notes there.
Verse 13
Ezekiel 33:13. When I shall say
to the righteous, that he shall
surely live — When I make him a
promise of life, peace, and
every blessing which he stands
in need of; if he trust to his
own righteousness — Formerly
performed, but now abandoned;
or, if he rely upon the good
works he hath done, and think
the worth of them will
overbalance the guilt of his
evil deeds; which seems to have
been the opinion of the later
Jews, who lay it down for a rule
in their Mishna, That all Israel
shall have a share in the world
to come. All his righteousness
shall not be remembered, &c. —
He shall come again under the
guilt of all his past sins, and
shall be exposed to condemnation
and wrath: see notes on Ezekiel
18:24-29. It is evidently
signified here, that to trust in
our own righteousness, whether
internal or external, whether
graces or virtues, past or
present, or to entertain high
thoughts of our own attainments
in religion, and to put
confidence therein, is one step
toward a fall, and generally
issues in apostacy.
Verse 15
Ezekiel 33:15. If the wicked
restore the pledge, give again
that he had robbed — It is a
necessary condition of obtaining
pardon, that men make
restitution of what they have
unjustly gotten from others. The
law is express to this purpose,
Leviticus 6:5, where the
offender is required to add a
fifth part to the principal, and
give it to him to whom it
appertaineth; see the note
there. To the same purpose is
that received rule among the
Christian casuists, taken from
St. Augustin, Epistle 54., Non
dimittitur peccatum, nisi
restituatur ablatum. The sin is
not forgiven, unless what is
taken away be restored. Lord
Clarendon’s observations on this
subject are peculiarly
excellent: “Robbery and violence
would be too gainful a trade, if
a man might quit all scores by
repentance, and detain all he
hath gotten; or if the father’s
repentance might serve the turn,
and the benefit of the
transgression be transmitted as
an inheritance to the son. If
the pledge remained it must be
restored; the retaining it is
committing a new iniquity, and
forfeits any benefit of the
promise. If he hath it not, nor
is able to procure it, his
hearty repentance is enough
without reparation: but to enjoy
the spoil, and yet to profess
repentance, is an affront to God
Almighty, and a greater sin than
the first act of violence, when
he did not pretend to think of
God, and so did not think of
displeasing him. Whereas now he
pretends to reconcile himself to
God, and mocks him with
repentance, while he retains the
fruit of his wickedness. He who
is truly penitent restores what
he hath left to the person who
was deprived of it, and pays the
rest in devout sorrow for his
trespass.”
Verse 21
Ezekiel 33:21. In the twelfth
year of our captivity, &c. —
According to this reading, the
news of the taking and burning
of Jerusalem was brought to that
part of the Babylonish dominions
where the Jewish captives were
placed in a year, five months,
and twenty-six days after the
calamity happened: see Jeremiah
52:12. But eight MSS. having
עשׁתיinstead of שׂתי, Bishop
Newcome, and some others, think
the preferable reading is, the
eleventh year. If this be
adopted, only about six months
passed between the taking of
Jerusalem and the communication
of that event to Ezekiel. One
that had escaped out of
Jerusalem came unto me —
According to what God had
foretold to him should be the
case, as is mentioned Ezekiel
24:26, and which was to be as a
new commission unto him to speak
unto the people; from doing
which, by the command of God, he
had ceased for near three years
before; the prophetic influence,
or impulse, not coming upon him
during that time.
Verse 22
Ezekiel 33:22. Now the hand of
the Lord was upon me in the
evening — I felt a sensible
impulse of the prophetic spirit:
see Ezekiel 1:3. And had opened
my mouth, until he came to me in
the morning — Had so influenced
my mind, that I found myself
disposed and prepared to speak
freely and with authority. Not
that he had been utterly dumb
before: for he had probably
“been able to converse with the
Jews concerning the predictions
formerly delivered to them, and
perhaps spake, or delivered in
writing to them, the prophecies
which he uttered concerning
other nations; but he had
received no further revelation
from God respecting their
affairs: in this sense he had
been dumb.” — Scott. But now the
Spirit moved him to speak, and
continued so to do till the
messenger came, whose
information concerning the
taking and burning of Jerusalem,
which had been repeatedly and
clearly foretold by the prophet,
would give an indisputable
authority and credit to all his
predictions, and prepare the
people’s minds to receive, with
faith and a due regard, every
future message which he was
commissioned to deliver to them.
Verse 24
Ezekiel 33:24. They that inhabit
those wastes of the land of
Israel — They that are left
behind in the land, that is now
wasted with fire and sword: see
the margin. Speak, saying,
Abraham was one, and inherited
the land — Had the privilege of
dwelling and feeding his flocks
in it; as if he had said, ‘If
Abraham, being only a single
person, had the whole country of
Judea given him, there is much
greater reason to conclude, that
God will preserve the possession
of it to us, who are a numerous
part of Abraham’s posterity.
These men speak after the vain
manner of the Jews, who fondly
presume that they have a right
to all the promises made to
Abraham, without considering the
vast difference between them and
Abraham, both in faith and
practice. The appellation of one
is given to Abraham in other
parts of Scripture, because he
was singled out from the rest of
his family, to be the original,
or head, of the Jewish nation.”
— Lowth.
Verse 25-26
Ezekiel 33:25-26. Say unto them,
Thus saith the Lord — Remove
from them this destructive
carnal confidence, and show them
what they do, and how far they
are from being Abraham’s genuine
seed. Ye eat with the blood —
Which was expressly forbidden in
the Jewish law, as appears from
Leviticus 7:26, as well as that
more ancient law ordained to all
mankind, Genesis 9:4; and lift
up your eyes toward your idols —
Offer up your prayers unto your
fictitious gods; and shed blood
— That is, commit murders; and
shall ye possess the land? —
When you do not perform the
conditions on which the land was
given, namely, that of being a
holy people, can you think that
you shall continue to enjoy it?
Ye stand upon your sword — You
make your strength the law of
justice, and, confiding in that,
you do whatsoever your
inclinations lead you to,
whether right or wrong;
according to the character given
of ungodly men, Wisdom of
Solomon 2:11, who say, “Let our
strength be the law of justice,
for that which is feeble is
found to be nothing worthy” &c.
Houbigant translates the clause,
You stand in your high way, or
the corners of your streets, and
commit your abominations,
considering the words as
referring to their public and
open profession of idolatry. Dr.
Spencer (De Legib. Hebrew, lib.
2. cap. 11) thinks that the
expression alludes to a custom
of the heathen, “who put the
blood of their sacrifices into a
vessel, or pit, in order to call
up and consult evil spirits, and
then stood with their swords
drawn, to keep the demons off
from doing them any harm.” Ye
defile every one his neighbour’s
wife — Ye universally commit
adultery; and shall ye possess
the land? — The question implies
a peremptory denial. Thus the
prophet shows how vain and
ill-grounded their expectations
were of being continued in the
possession of Judea, since they
did those things which were
contrary to the divine law, and
which consequently excluded them
from any right to the land.
Verse 27
Ezekiel 33:27. Surely they that
are in the wastes — They who
continue to dwell among the
desolations of Jerusalem and
Judea; shall fall by the sword —
This they accordingly did, both
through the civil dissensions
among them, in the conspiracy
formed against Gedaliah, and
likewise by the Chaldeans
revenging his death. And him
that is in the open field will I
give to the beasts — He shall be
a prey to lions and other
ravenous beasts, that will
multiply in the ruined country.
And they that be in the forts
and caves — Out of the reach of
men and beasts; shall die of the
pestilence — My hand shall reach
them, and send among them those
destructive disorders which
shall sweep them away. These
three judgments here mentioned,
the sword, destructive beasts,
and the pestilence, together
with famine, are often
threatened as the last and
finishing strokes of divine
vengeance upon the Jewish
nation: see Ezekiel 5:12;
Ezekiel 5:17; Ezekiel 6:12;
Ezekiel 14:21; Jeremiah 15:3. By
the forts and caves here spoken
of, are meant the strong holds
formed by nature in the rocks,
or cut out in the sides of the
mountains. Many of them were so
large that men might secure
themselves, their families, and
their goods in them. So David is
said, 1 Samuel 23:14, to abide
in strong holds, and remain in a
mountain in the wilderness of
Ziph. Such was the cave of
Adullam, where David had his
residence for some time, and was
there resorted to by his
relations, (1 Samuel 22:1,) and
at another time by his principal
officers, 2 Samuel 23:15.
Verse 28-29
Ezekiel 33:28-29. For I will lay
the land most desolate — I will
make the land destitute of
inhabitants, by the destruction
which shall be made of them by
the sword, by wild beasts, and
the pestilence, and by their
being carried into captivity.
And the pomp of her strength
shall cease — All that wealth
and magnificence wherein they
pleased themselves, as that
which gave them strength and
reputation in the eyes of the
world, are taken away: see
Ezekiel 7:24. Or the phrase may
denote the beauty and glory of
the temple, which they looked
upon as their chief strength and
protection; none shall pass
through — None shall choose even
so much as to pass through the
country, on account of its being
infested with wild beasts
through its desolateness, and
because the air of it shall be
rendered unwholesome, by means
of the effluvia arising from
dead and dying bodies, and the
pestilential diseases which rage
in the country, and sweep away
its inhabitants. Then shall they
know that I am the Lord — That I
am their Lord, their righteous
governor, and just judge. When I
have laid the land most
desolate, &c. — When I have
brought these destructive
calamities upon it, because of
the sins and abominations of its
inhabitants. Observe, reader,
those are untractable and
unteachable indeed, that are not
made to know their dependence
upon God when all their creature
comforts fail them, and they are
made desolate.
Verses 30-32
Ezekiel 33:30-32. The children
of thy people — Those of the
captivity; still are talking
against thee — Or rather, of
thee, as the LXX. rightly render
it; for with their mouths they
showed much love, as it follows
in the next verse. By the walls
and in the doors of their houses
— Both in their public places of
concourse, and in their private
meetings. And speak one to
another, saying, Come, &c. —
These were such as drew nigh to
God with their mouths, but their
hearts were far from him, as
Isaiah describes their
hypocrisy, Isaiah 29:13; and
they come unto thee as the
people cometh — Or, as disciples
flock to their teachers: so the
Chaldee paraphrase explains it.
They make a profession of great
regard to piety and virtue, and
express a great esteem for thee,
but at the same time they
indulge themselves in sin and
wickedness. And lo! thou art
unto them as a very lovely song,
&c. — They come to hear thee for
their entertainment, not for
their edification, in the spirit
in which many go to hear noted
and eloquent preachers. St.
Austin tells us, that he himself
was such an auditor of St.
Ambrose before he was converted,
Confess., 50. 5. c. 12; “I heard
him diligently when he
discoursed in the congregation,
but not with that application of
mind which I ought to have done;
but I came rather out of
curiosity, to know whether his
eloquence was answerable to the
opinion which the world had of
him. I was very attentive to his
style, and charmed with the
sweetness of his delivery, but
had little value or concern for
the subjects he treated of.”
Verse 33
Ezekiel 33:33. And when this
cometh to pass, (lo, it will
come) — Or, rather, lo, it is
come; for so the same phrase is
translated Ezekiel 6:2; Ezekiel
6:6; Ezekiel 6:10, the verb
being in the present tense; when
they shall see thy prophecies
concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem actually fulfilled,
and all the events predicted by
thee exactly brought to pass;
then shall they know that a
prophet hath been among them —
Then shall they be convinced of
the truth of thy mission, and of
their own inexcusable crime in
despising thy prophecies. The
words of this verse are
evidently spoken by the Lord to
his prophet. |