I don’t want to talk about it

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I don’t want to talk about it

Ezekiel 8:16-18 (JDV)

Ezekiel 8:16 So he brought me to the inner court of Yahveh’s house, and I noticed about twenty-five men at the entrance of Yahveh’s house, between the portico and the altar, with their backs to Yahveh’s house and their faces turned to the east. They were bowing to the east in the worship of the sun.
Ezekiel 8:17 And he said to me, “Do you see this, son of Adam? Is it not enough for the house of Judah to commit the repulsive acts they are doing here, that they must also fill the land with violence and repeatedly anger me, even – notice this – putting the branch to their nose?
Ezekiel 8:18 That is why I am responding with wrath. My eye will not look compassionately or spare them. Though they call loudly in my hearing, I will not listen to them.”

I don’t want to talk about it

I consulted numerous commentaries to get an idea of what Ezekiel meant by these idolaters putting the branch to their nose. Most of them claimed to know what it meant but were reluctant to share it because the practice was particularly vile. It represented an act so repulsive that even describing it would be a sin.

I understand that feeling. When we stop to think about the sins that people are committing all around us — and daring us to expose them — we feel reluctant to do so, because we don’t even want to talk about these things. Yet, sadly, that is what the world has come to.

I am not claiming to be sinless. All of us are sinners — all of us fall short of God’s glory. One thing these prophetic visions teach us is that God is not indifferent to our sin. It hurts him when we turn our back on him, and worship something unworthy of worship — even our glorious sun. It hurts him when we flaunt our sin.

No one will be protected from God’s wrath — even those who claim to be his. That is another lesson from the prophets. The prophets mostly spoke against the sin of God’s own people. Our only protection from God’s coming wrath is faith in his Son — who has taken the punishment for our sin on the cross.

LORD, use these words to draw sinners to the Savior before it is too late.

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when a tear is not a tear

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when a tear is not a tear

Ezekiel 8:14-15 (JDV)

Ezekiel 8:14 Then he brought me to the entrance of the north gate of Yahveh’s house, and I noticed women sitting there crying over Tammuz.
Ezekiel 8:15 And he said to me, “Do you see this, son of Adam? You will see even more repulsive acts than these.”

when a tear is not a tear

Why would weeping by these women be seen as a repulsive act? They were mourning the change of the seasons — the death of Adonis. It was nature worship to the extreme. It would be followed by equally passionate wild living and sexual promiscuity as these same women would celebrate the rebirth of Adonis. It was all an act — a pagan ritual designed to get the gods to increase fertility, and to disguise sexual immorality by giving it a religious mask.

A tear is not a tear when it is aimed at getting people to reject God and his standard of truth and morality. When the world comes to us with tears in their eyes — claiming that we are being unfair to homosexuals and those who practice abortion — those tears are not tears. They are sermons. They are sermons preached against God and against his word. They are repulsive acts.

LORD, give us wisdom to realize when a tear is not a tear.

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dig through the wall

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dig through the wall

Ezekiel 8:7-13 (JDV)

Ezekiel 8:7 Then he brought me to the entrance of the court, and when I looked, I noticed a hole in the wall.
Ezekiel 8:8 He said to me, “Son of Adam, dig through the wall.” So I dug through the wall and noticed a doorway.
Ezekiel 8:9 He said to me, “Go in and see the repulsive, guilty acts they are committing here.”
Ezekiel 8:10 I went in and looked, and there engraved all around the wall was every kind of repulsive thing – crawling creatures and beasts – as well as all the idols of the house of Israel.
Ezekiel 8:11 Seventy elders from the house of Israel were standing in front of them, with Jaazaniah son of Shaphan standing among them. Each had a fire-pan in his hand, and a fragrant cloud of incense was rising up.
Ezekiel 8:12 He said to me, “Son of Adam, do you see what the elders of the house of Israel are doing in the darkness, each at the shrine of his idol? You see, they are saying, ‘Yahveh does not see us. Yahveh has abandoned the land.'”
Ezekiel 8:13 Again he said to me, “You will see even more repulsive acts that they are committing.”

dig through the wall

The prophet was told to dig through the wall. If he just went beyond the surface, he would find all kinds of vile practices done not by the fringe of society, but by its religious leaders. They do these things away from the public, but they are not afraid of doing them before God. Why? They “are saying, ‘Yahveh does not see us.”

The secret sins are the result of a kind of atheism. They have abandoned a sincere faith in God and are doing everything for show.

What would happen today if we dug through a few walls, and exposed what our leaders are doing in secret? What would be the result if we exposed our leaders — religious, political, social — for what they truly believe?

LORD, give us the courage to expose the darkness — to dig through the wall.

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even more

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even more

Ezekiel 8:5-6 (JDV)

Ezekiel 8:5 He said to me, “Son of Adam, point your eyes north.” I pointed my eyes north, and noticed this offensive statue north of the Altar Gate, at the entrance.
Ezekiel 8:6 He said to me, “Son of Adam, do you see what they are doing here – more repulsive acts that the house of Israel is committing – so that I must distance myself from my sanctuary? You will see even more repulsive acts.”

even more

In this chapter, Ezekiel sees several visions of what is going on among the people of Israel, and they disgust him. But the LORD keeps telling him that he will see still greater abominations than these. It is not comforting to know that things are bad and they are going to get worse. But sometimes it is the truth. These were God’s people, and yet they had turned their back on him, and were engaging in the lewd and violent worship of pagan deities. The LORD promises to act in wrath, his eye not sparing, his ears not listening to their cries.

LORD, forgive us, and heal our land. Help us to reject the unfaithfulness of our generation, and turn back to you, before you strike in wrath.

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offensive and impressive

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offensive and impressive

Ezekiel 8:1-4 (JDV)

Ezekiel 8:1 It happened in the sixth year, in the sixth month, on the fifth day of the month, I was sitting in my house and the elders of Judah were sitting in front of me, and there the hand of the Lord Yahveh fell on me.
Ezekiel 8:2 Then I looked, and noticed someone who looked like a man. From what seemed to be his waist down was fire, and from his waist up was something that looked bright, like the gleam of amber.
Ezekiel 8:3 He stretched out what appeared to be a hand and took me by a lock of hair on my head. Then the Breath lifted me up between the land and the sky and carried me in visions of God to Jerusalem, to the entrance of the inner gate that faces north, where the offensive statue that provokes jealousy was located.
Ezekiel 8:4 I noticed the impressive appearance of the God of Israel there, like the vision I had seen in the plain.

offensive and impressive

Ezekiel saw the offensive statue that was provoking God to jealousy and the impressive appearance of God in the same place. He knew that things could not stay that way. One or the other must go. As long as his people continued to flirt with rebellion and evil, God would have to judge them.

Our society today wants to welcome all and defend all. It cannot happen. God’s glory will not stay where evil is welcomed. We will have to make a choice.

LORD, give us the wisdom to reject evilin all its forms.

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the most evil of nations

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the most evil of nations

Ezekiel 7:23-27 (JDV)

Ezekiel 7:23 Forge the chain, because the land is filled with crimes of bloodshed, and the city is filled with violence.
Ezekiel 7:24 So I will bring the most evil of nations to take possession of their houses. I will put an end to the pride of the strong, and their sacred places will be polluted.
Ezekiel 7:25 Anguish is coming! They will look for peace, but there will be none.
Ezekiel 7:26 Disaster after disaster will come, and there will be rumor after rumor. Then they will look for a vision from a prophet, but instruction will perish from the priests and counsel from the elders.
Ezekiel 7:27 The king will mourn; the prince will be clothed in grief; and the hands of the people of the land will tremble. I will deal with them according to their own conduct, and I will judge them by their own standards. Then they will know that I am Yahveh.

the most evil of nations

Judah was not the most evil of nations. But God was going to send the most evil of nations to punish them. Does that seem unfair? It is. Fairness would seem to be that God would a less evil nation — like Judah to conquer Babylon. But behind God’s words through Ezekiel here is a heart of a father, breaking because he must do something to punish the rebellion of the children he loves. This love is tough love. If it takes an exile and the domination of the most evil of nations to get his people to turn back to him — that is what he is going to do.

LORD, thank you for your love — even your tough love.

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silver stumbling blocks, dirty gold

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silver stumbling blocks, dirty gold

Ezekiel 7:14-22 (JDV)

Ezekiel 7:14 They have blown the trumpet and prepared everything, but no one is going to war, because my wrath is on her whole crowd.
Ezekiel 7:15 The sword is at the outside; epidemic and famine are at the inside. Whoever is in the field will die by the sword, and famine and epidemic will devour whoever is in the city.
Ezekiel 7:16 The survivors among them will escape and live in the mountains. Like doves of the valley, all of them will moan, each over his own violation.
Ezekiel 7:17 All their hands will become weak, and all their knees will run with urine.
Ezekiel 7:18 They will put on sackcloth, and terror will overwhelm them. Shame will cover all their faces, and all their heads will be bald.
Ezekiel 7:19 They will throw their silver into the streets, and their gold will seem like something dirty. Their silver and gold will be unable to save them on the day of Yahveh’s wrath. They will not satisfy their throats or fill their stomachs, because these were the stumbling blocks that brought about their violation.
Ezekiel 7:20 He appointed his beautiful ornaments for majesty, but they made their repulsive images from them, their repulsive things. Therefore, I have made these into something dirty to them.
Ezekiel 7:21 I will hand these things over to foreigners as plunder and to the guilty of the land as plunder, and they will profane them.
Ezekiel 7:22 I will turn my face from them as they profane my treasured place. Violent men will enter it and profane it.

silver stumbling blocks, dirty gold

The condemned people will suddenly discover that the silver and gold they had trusted in is useless to save them. Such will be the case on the day of final judgment as well. When we stand before the judge of all the earth on that day, if we had trusted in our wealth instead of in him, we will discover that that trust was treachery. That silver and gold will be useless to save us from his wrath. We will look at that money we had hoarded for ourselves and suddenly discover that our trust was placed in something dirty, something repulsive — and we will throw it to the ground. We will stand empty-handed, with nothing to show for our lives.

LORD, give us the wisdom to treasure the right things in this life. Things like a relationship with you, and the joy of serving you and others in your name.

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doomsday

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doomsday

Ezekiel 7:10-13 (JDV)

Ezekiel 7:10 Notice the day! Notice it is coming! Doom is on its way. The branch has blossomed; arrogance has bloomed.
Ezekiel 7:11 Violence has grown into a branch of guilt. None of them will remain: none of that crowd, none of their wealth, and none of the eminent among them.
Ezekiel 7:12 The time has come; the day has arrived. Let the buyer not be glad and the seller not mourn, because wrath is on her whole crowd.
Ezekiel 7:13 The seller will certainly not return to what was sold as long as he and the buyer remain alive because the vision concerning her whole crowd will not be revoked, and because of the violation of each one, none will feel his life strengthened.

doomsday

The prophet Ezekiel was not just being cynical. He was literally called to be a prophet of doom. We need people with the courage to stand up today and tell the world that the day is coming, and nobody is going to escape it. We might escape COVID-19, but none of us is going to miss the return of Christ. That day will be a day of joy only for those who follow Christ today. For all others, it will be doomsday.

LORD, give us the courage to stand up for your kingdom and your gospel today.

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the God who slaps

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the God who slaps

Ezekiel 7:5-9 (JDV)

Ezekiel 7:5 This is what the Lord Yahveh says: Notice, one disaster after another is coming!
Ezekiel 7:6 An end has come; the end has come! It has awakened against you. Notice, it is coming!
Ezekiel 7:7 Doom has come on you, residents of the land. The time has come; the day is near. There will be panic on the mountains and not celebration.
Ezekiel 7:8 I will pour out my wrath on you very soon; I will exhaust my anger against you and judge you according to your ways. I will punish you for all your repulsive practices.
Ezekiel 7:9 I will not look on you compassionately or spare you. I will punish you for your ways and for your repulsive practices within you. Then you will know that it is I, Yahveh, who slaps.

the God who slaps

I only remember one spanking from my dad, Buck Vann, but it was a doozy. He wailed on me with a belt. What did I do to incur his wrath? I had repeatedly acted up in church. After warning me for weeks, he met me at the steps of our house and commenced to punish me without pity.

The LORD gave his people fair warning that disasters would come upon them for their idolatry, and that when it happened, everybody would know that these disasters are from him. He is the God who slaps. But thank God for the slap. If it were not for God’s discipline, we would all turn away from him and do our own thing — resulting in permanent death.

But our God who disciplines the ones he loves also calls us back to himself. He is not going to take pity on a sinful son or daughter. He wants to restore them. So, he disciplines the way a truly loving father would.

LORD, thank you for loving us so much that you will not overlook our acts of rebellion and sin.

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the end is upon you

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the end is upon you

Ezekiel 7:1-4 (JDV)

Ezekiel 7:1 This word of Yahveh happened to me:
Ezekiel 7:2 “Son of Adam, this is what the Lord Yahveh says to the land of Israel: An end! The end has come on the four corners of the land.
Ezekiel 7:3 Now the end is upon you; I will send my anger against you and judge you according to your ways. I will punish you for all your repulsive practices.
Ezekiel 7:4 I will not look on you compassionately or spare you, but I will punish you for your ways and for your repulsive practices within you. Then you will know that I am Yahveh.”

the end is upon you

Ezekiel’s people had been living life like it had no end. Well, now God tells him to announce that their end had come. It is a scary thing to think that the bill is due, and you do not have enough to pay it. That is the prophet’s message.

Each of us should look carefully at our accounts as well. We cannot go our whole lives thinking that they will not come to an end. That is being irresponsible.

LORD, give us the wisdom to live every day like it was our last. Someday it will be.

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