Free yourselves from all the offenses you’ve committed, and receive a new heart and a new spirit. Why should you die, Israel?
Commentaries
18:1 - 18:32
Personal Responsibility.
Here we have one of the most important messages in this book, which is summarized more briefly in 14:12-14 and 33:10. The proverb that Ezekiel rejects expresses a reality: the generation of exiles is suffering the consequences of the mistakes and sins of previous generations. For Ezekiel’s contemporaries, this certainty justified a certain fatalism and a feeling of defeat regarding their current situation. They equated God’s justice with that of humans, being used to the punishment of the father’s sins through the massacre of all his family (cf. 2 Sm 21:4-6).
Now that they are far from their homeland and no longer observing the worship of the Lord, there is no remedy. Ezekiel speaks of a just God who considers people’s actions and gives everyone what they deserve. He emphasizes the possibility of repentance and receiving blessings from God that were lost through past actions; God only desires to give life, as long as they return to his Covenant.
Commentaries
Personal Responsibility.
Here we have one of the most important messages in this book, which is summarized more briefly in 14:12-14 and 33:10. The proverb that Ezekiel rejects expresses a reality: the generation of exiles is suffering the consequences of the mistakes and sins of previous generations. For Ezekiel’s contemporaries, this certainty justified a certain fatalism and a feeling of defeat regarding their current situation. They equated God’s justice with that of humans, being used to the punishment of the father’s sins through the massacre of all his family (cf. 2 Sm 21:4-6).
Now that they are far from their homeland and no longer observing the worship of the Lord, there is no remedy. Ezekiel speaks of a just God who considers people’s actions and gives everyone what they deserve. He emphasizes the possibility of repentance and receiving blessings from God that were lost through past actions; God only desires to give life, as long as they return to his Covenant.