Verse 1
Ezekiel 37:1. The hand of the
Lord was upon me — I was
actuated by a divine power; and
carried me out in the Spirit of
the Lord — Or, by the Spirit of
the Lord. It is highly probable
that all this passed in vision.
And set me down in the midst of
the valley full of bones — The
first and great object of this
prophecy seems evidently to be
the restoration of the Jews from
the Babylonish captivity. A
nation carried into captivity
ceases to be a nation, and
therefore may be fitly compared
to bones, or dead bodies; so
that by the valley of bones was
first signified, the Babylonish
dominions filled with captive
Jews. Bishop Warburton observes,
“that the messengers of God,
prophesying for the people’s
consolation in disastrous times,
frequently promise a restoration
to the former days of felicity;
and, to obviate all distrust
from unpromising appearances,
they put the case even at the
worst, and assure the people, in
metaphorical expressions, that
though the community were as
entirely dissolved as a dead
body reduced to dust, yet God
would raise that community again
to life.” But besides the
deliverance of the Jews from
Babylon, this vision is a lively
representation of a three- fold
resurrection: 1st, Of the
resurrection of souls, from the
death of sin to the life of
righteousness, to a holy,
heavenly, spiritual, and divine
life, by the power of divine
grace accompanying the word of
Christ, John 5:24-25. 2d, The
resurrection of the gospel
church, or of any part of it,
from an afflicted state to
liberty and peace. 3d, The
resurrection of the body at the
great day, especially the bodies
of believers, to life eternal.
This last seems to be one thing
particularly designed. “Though
the generality of commentators,”
says Mr. Peters, “regard this
vision and prophecy as no other
than a figurative representation
and prediction of a return of
the Jews from the captivity of
Babylon, or some other of their
captivities and dispersions,
yet, perhaps, we shall find,
upon a more attentive
consideration, that whatever
hopes it might give them of a
temporal and national
deliverance or prosperity, yet
there was evidently something
further designed; and that to
comfort them in their distressed
situation, with the prospect of
a future resurrection in a
proper sense, was as much
intended by the Spirit of God,
or rather more so, than the
other.
Verse 2-3
Ezekiel 37:2-3. He caused me to
pass by them round about — To
take an exact view of them; and
behold, there were very many in
the open valley — As if it had
been a place where a great
battle had been fought, and a
vast multitude slain, who had
been left unburied till the
flesh was all consumed, and the
bones were divided and scattered
about. And lo, they were very
dry — Having been long exposed
to the sun and wind in the open
valley, and the marrow within,
as well as the flesh without,
being utterly wasted. This
circumstance was intended to
show how unlikely it was,
humanly speaking, that the Jews
should ever be delivered from
their dispersions and restored;
should ever be brought together
again, and formed into a body
politic, or even into the
skeleton of one. Still more
unlikely it is that the dead in
sin should be quickened, and
raised up into living
Christians; and most unlikely of
all, that the dead bodies of
men, after they have been turned
into dust, and scattered to the
four winds of heaven, should
live again, and become bodies of
light and glory. And he said,
Son of man, can these bones
live? — Namely, immediately, and
in your sight? Or, as Houbigant
renders it, Shall these bones
live? The question, as he justly
observes, is not concerning the
possibility of the fact, for the
prophet well knew that God could
do all things; but the Lord,
introductory to what follows,
asks him whether these bones
should now revive or not. And
though this be the right
interpretation of the place, yet
a resurrection from the dead is
very justly collected from it:
for “a simile of the
resurrection,” says St. Jerome,
“would never have been used to
signify the restoration of the
people of Israel, unless such a
future resurrection had been
believed and known; because
nobody ever confirms uncertain
things by things which have no
existence.” And I answered, O
Lord, thou knowest — Raising the
dead can only be an act of thy
power and good pleasure. The
prophet replies in a doubting
manner, because he knew not the
scope of the vision.
Verses 4-6
Ezekiel 37:4-6. Again he said,
Prophesy upon these bones — Here
sense and understanding are
attributed to the dry bones; and
as these bones signified the
captive Jews, they are with
strict propriety called upon to
hear the word of the Lord. But
this is also to be considered,
as has been intimated on Ezekiel
37:1, a prophetical
representation of that voice of
the Son of God which quickens
and raises to spiritual life
such as are dead in sin; and
which all that are in their
graves shall hear at the last
day, and shall come forth out of
them. Thus saith the Lord, I
will cause breath to enter into
you, &c. — The breath of life,
as it is expressed Genesis 2:7.
And I will lay sinews upon you,
&c. — All the expressions made
use of here are such as describe
the resurrection of a dead body.
Verses 7-10
Ezekiel 37:7-10. So I prophesied
as I was commanded — I declared
these promises or gracious
purposes of God concerning these
bones. And as I prophesied there
was a noise, &c. — Such a noise
as we may suppose would arise
from the motion of the bones.
And behold a shaking — A
trembling, or commotion among
the bones, enough to manifest a
divine presence working among
them. And the bones came
together, &c. — Glided nearer
and nearer, till each bone met
the bone to which it was to be
joined. Of all the bones of
those numerous slain not one was
wanting, not one missed its way,
not one missed its place, but
each knew and found its fellow.
Thus, in the resurrection of the
dead, the scattered atoms shall
be ranged in their proper place
and order, and every bone come
to its bone — By the same wisdom
and power by which they were
first formed in the womb of her
that was with child. And lo, the
sinews and the flesh came up
upon them — Gradually spreading
themselves. And the skin covered
them above — Enveloped the
bones, sinews, and flesh of each
body; but there was no breath in
them — Or spirit, rather; no
souls animated the bodies. Then
said he, Prophesy unto the wind
— Or rather, unto the spirit,
namely, the quickening spirit of
God, or principle of life,
issuing from him, and imparting
life to every creature that
possesses it. Come from the four
winds, O breath, O spirit — This
signified the gathering of the
Jewish people from the different
quarters of the world where they
were scattered; and breathe on
the slain — Animate these dead
bodies; that they may live — May
awake into living men. So I
prophesied, and the breath — The
spirit; came into them — A soul
animated each body; and they
lived, &c., an exceeding great
army — Not only living men, but
effective men, fit for service
in war, and formidable to all
that should give them any
opposition. Applied to the Jews,
released and returning from
captivity, the words signify
that they should amount to a
great multitude, when they
should be gathered from their
several dispersions, and should
be united in one body. Observe,
reader, with God nothing is
impossible: he can, out of
stones, raise up children to
Abraham, and out of dead and dry
bones an exceeding great army,
to fight his battles and plead
his cause.
Verse 11-12
Ezekiel 37:11-12. These bones
are the whole house of Israel —
These bones represent the
forlorn and desperate condition
to which the whole nation of
Israel is reduced; they say, Our
bones are dried, &c. — Our
affairs are in the most
desperate condition; there is
not so much as any hope left of
their being retrieved. We are
cut off for our parts — We are
separated and cut off from one
another, like a limb that is cut
off from the body. Therefore
prophesy, &c. — Inform these
poor, dejected, desponding
Israelites of their mistake, and
revive their hope by a new
promise and declaration of my
purposes of mercy toward them. O
my people, I will open your
graves — Though your captivity
be as death, your prisons and
places of confinement close as
graves, yet will I open those
graves. And cause you to come up
out of your graves — I will
bring you out of your state of
captivity, in which you are
little better than dead persons,
having no power or privileges of
your own, nor enjoying any thing
which can properly be called
life. The Jewish nation, in
their state of dispersion and
captivity, are called the dead
Israelites, by Baruch, chap.
Ezekiel 3:4 : and their
restoration is described as a
resurrection by Isaiah 26:19. In
like manner St. Paul expresses
their conversion, and the
general restoration which shall
accompany it, by life from the
dead, Romans 11:15. And the
foregoing similitude showed, in
a strong and beautiful manner,
that God, who could even raise
the dead, had power to convert
and restore them.
Verse 16-17
Ezekiel 37:16-17. Take thee one
stick — That is, one rod. The
expression seems to allude to
Numbers 17:2; where Moses was
commanded to take twelve rods,
one for each tribe, and to write
the name of the tribe upon the
rod; for Judah, and the children
of Israel his companions — That
is, the tribe of Benjamin, and a
part of that of Levi, who
adhered to the tribe of Judah.
Then take another stick — A
second, such as the first was;
and write upon it, For Joseph,
the stick of Ephraim — Upon
Reuben’s forfeiting his
birthright, that privilege was
conferred upon the sons of
Joseph, of whom Ephraim had the
precedence: see 1 Chronicles
5:1; Genesis 48:20; which made
him to be reckoned the head of
the ten tribes; Samaria, the
seat of that kingdom, being
likewise situate in the tribe of
Ephraim. Upon these accounts the
name of Ephraim, in the
prophets, often signifies the
whole kingdom of Israel, as
distinct from that of Judah. All
the rest of the tribes were the
companions of Ephraim, as the
tribes of Benjamin and Levi were
the companions of Judah. And
join them into one stick — A rod
was an emblem of power, (see
Psalms 110:2,) so joining these
two rods, or sticks, together,
denoted uniting the two kingdoms
under one prince, or governor.
Verses 18-20
Ezekiel 37:18-20. Wilt thou not
show us what thou meanest —
Ezekiel foretold many things by
signs; and the Jews were very
inquisitive into the meaning of
them: but sometimes their
curiosity proceeded rather from
a secret contempt of the prophet
and his predictions, than a real
desire of information. Say, I
will take the stick of Joseph —
On which Joseph’s name was
written, and which represents
Joseph, that is, the kingdom of
the ten tribes; which is in the
hand of Ephraim — Of which
Ephraim is the head. They shall
be one in my hand — I will make
them one nation, and appoint one
king to rule over them, namely,
Christ the Messiah. And the
sticks, &c., shall be before
their eyes — Thou shalt place
the sticks, or rods, thus joined
together, before their eyes, as
a visible token or pledge of the
truth of what I enjoin thee to
speak to them in the following
words.
Verses 21-25
Ezekiel 37:21-25. Behold, I will
take the children of Israel from
among the heathen — See the
margin. I will make them one
nation — They shall not be
divided any more into separate
kingdoms; the consequence of
which was, their setting up
separate ways of worship, and
espousing separate interests:
compare Isaiah 11:13. This
promise was in a great degree
fulfilled in the restoration of
the Jews to their own land from
their captivity in Babylon; for
then many of the house of Israel
returned with the house of
Judah, and were united in one
body with them, and were under
one and the same governor,
Zerubbabel; who, though he did
not (lest it should give umbrage
to the Persian kings) assume the
title of king, yet executed the
authority, and was looked upon
as a king by the Jewish people:
but the expressions here made
use of seem to imply something
further, and to refer, in their
full sense, to the final
restoration of the Jews, after
their conversion to
Christianity, when Christ, in a
peculiar sense, shall be their
king. The Messiah is described
as King of the Jews in most of
the prophecies in the Old
Testament, beginning with that
of Genesis 49:10, concerning
Shiloh. From David’s time he is
commonly spoken of as the person
in whom the promises relating to
the perpetuity of David’s
kingdom were to be accomplished.
This was a truth unanimously
owned by the Jews: see John
1:49, to which our Saviour bore
testimony before Pontius Pilate,
when the question being put to
him, Art thou a king? he made
answer, Thou sayest [the truth]
for I am a king: thus these
words should be translated, for
St. Paul, alluding to them,
calls them a good confession, 1
Timothy 6:13. The same truth
Pontius Pilate himself asserted,
in that inscription which he
providentially ordered to be
written upon the cross; (see
John 19:19-22;) so that the
chief priests impiously
renounced their own avowed
principles, when they told
Pilate that they had no king but
Cesar, Ezekiel 37:15. Neither
shall they defile themselves any
more with their idols — Or,
abominations, as the word
שׁקוציםis elsewhere translated,
and generally signifies idols:
see the margin. But I will save
them out of all their
dwelling-places — I will bring
them safe out of them; and will
cleanse them — Both justify and
sanctify them. And David my
servant — That is, the son of
David, who was also David’s
Lord; shall be king over them —
Shall reign over their hearts
and lives; and they shall all
have one shepherd — This king
shall be their one chief
shepherd; others that shall feed
and rule the flock shall be
shepherds by commission from
him. And they shall dwell in the
land that I have given unto
Jacob — A promise often repeated
in this prophecy: see Ezekiel
37:12; Ezekiel 37:21, and the
note on Ezekiel 28:25. Even they
and their children for ever —
The Jews, converted to Christ,
shall inherit Canaan till Christ
come to judgment at the end of
the world.
Verses 26-28
Ezekiel 37:26-28. I will make a
covenant of peace with them — I
will grant them the blessing of
peace and prosperity. Or rather,
the words are to be understood
in a spiritual sense, that God
will be reconciled to them
through Christ, and admit them
into that covenant of peace of
which Christ is the Mediator,
and therefore is called our
peace, Ephesians 2:14; and then
the following words, It shall be
an everlasting covenant with
them, may fitly be explained of
the gospel, being such a
covenant as shall never be
abolished, or give way to any
new dispensation. It is certain
that the expression, a covenant
of peace, could not at all agree
with the ancient covenant, for
when was there an age, half an
age, twenty years peace in
Israel? The whole history of the
Jewish nation is nothing more
than a recital of wars and
continual divisions. And if we
understand it of peace between
God and his people, where shall
we find this people faithfully
attached to the Lord during one
century only? We have only to
open the books of the prophets,
and the other sacred records, to
remark their infidelities and
perpetual rebellions against
God. This expression, therefore,
can only respect the new
covenant, whereof Jesus Christ,
the Prince of peace, is the
mediator, and who gives us that
true peace which surpasses all
conceptions: see Calmet. And I
will set my sanctuary in the
midst of them — I will set up a
spiritual, glorious temple and
worship among them; for evermore
— Never to be altered or
abolished on earth, but to be
consummated in heaven. My
tabernacle also shall be with
them — The tabernacle wherein I
will show my presence among
them, and my protection over
them. God’s placing first his
tabernacle, and then his temple
among the Jews, was a pledge and
token both of his presence and
protection. And we may
understand him as promising here
new and more valuable tokens of
his presence among them, by the
graces of his Holy Spirit, and
the efficacy of his word and
ordinances, if not also some
extraordinary appearances of the
divine majesty. I will be their
God, and they shall be my people
— By my grace I will make them
holy, as the people of a holy
God; and I will make them happy,
as the people of the
ever-blessed God. And the
heathen shall know that I do
sanctify Israel — The conversion
of the Jewish nation, and their
being restored to a state of
favour and acceptance with God,
will be a work of providence,
taken notice of by the heathen
themselves, who shall join
themselves to the Jews, as the
church of God and temple of
truth: see note on Ezekiel
36:23. |