Friday 28 December 2018

Ezekiel 3:16-29 (conclusion of the call narrative of Ezekiel)



Exegesis:
·       The stern tone of this speech and its brutally direct warning not to shirk professional duties confirm the reality of vv. 14-15. Ezekiel is a stubborn man, who sits there or seven days, until Yahweh’s patience has run out.[1]
·       This is a quasi-legal pronouncement, with four hypothetical cases, each spelling out different human responses and their consequences.[2] The heavy linguistic borrowing from the Mosaic Torah is not surprising given Ezekiel’s priestly heritage.[3]
·       Watchman: root sopheh, “to look out, to spy, to keep watch.” In the face of an imminent attack, he would blow his horn (shofar). Ezekiel’s ministry prior to 586BC consists largely in sounding alarm for his own people, under attack by Babylonians.[4]
·       V18: case 1 involves a situation in which Yahweh charges the prophet to deliver to the wicked person the legal death sentence: “You shall surely die!”
·       V19: case 2 is identical to case 1, except that the prophet has dutifully delivered the death sentence, and his warning has been rejected. Whereas the wicked person dies for his wickedness, the sentry has absolved himself of responsibility for his death. He may therefore keep his life.
·       V20: case 3 involves a formerly righteous person (saddiq) who has turned to practice evil. Yahweh brings about his death by placing an obstacle, a stumbling block, in his path.[5]
·       V21: case 4 describes the fate of a repentant backslidden person. The salvation of his own life for having been faithful is sufficient reward.[6]
·       There is obvious links with Jeremiah 6:16-21. Jeremiah commenced his ministry at approximately the time of Ezekiel’s birth. They may even have known each other.[7]
·       V22-27 is the most complex all narrative in all of Scripture concludes. Ezekiel’s speechless state lasted more than seven years.[8] This is where the depth of the prophet’s self-emptying becomes apparent. There is again an infusion of the divine Spirit.
·       Ezekiel is confined to his house and he will lose his power of free speech.
·       He is God’s prisoner: vividly depicted by the ropes that bind him and his tongue being bound to the roof of his mouth. His speech is totally restricted to the reproduction of Gods words of judgment.
·       The restriction on the prophet’s speech will make him unable to function as a mediator for the house of Israel. He may not intercede for the people. The time for appeals for mercy is past. The prophet’s role, at least up until the fall of Jerusalem, is restricted to the delivery of the divine sentence of judgment.[9]

Theological implications:
·       Those who reupdate the covenant stand under the judgment of God. “The wicked person” is singular: the accountability of the individual sinner is emphasised.
·       The wages of sin is death. Ezekiel’s task is to deliver to the accused the legal decision that Yahweh has determined: the death sentence.
·       The expression saddiq concerns members of the authentic covenant community, those who have in the past trusted Yahweh and submitted to his lordship. They can turn from their righteousness, practice evil, run into the stumbling block that God places in their paths, and be sentenced to death. This establishes the seriousness of perseverance in faith.[10]
·       The voice of a sentry symbolises the grace of God reaching out to those under the sentence of death. The previous evil of the sinner will not be held against him if he repents of the error of his way. After all, God is on the side of life.
·       The privilege of wearing the prophet’s mantle comes an awesome responsibility for the life and death of the people in one’s charge. To be negligent in the fulfillment of one’s prophetic duty is a capital crime.
·       The messenger of God is called not to success but to faithfulness. The prophet’s call is not “to save souls” (which is God’s affair), but to proclaim the message he receives from the divine Commissioner. Faithfulness in service is measured not by effectiveness but by fidelity to the divine charge.[11]
·       We see from the account of Ezekiel’s initiation into the prophetic office that:
1.     The Lord is present with his messenger.
2.     The ways of the Lord are often strange and inscrutable. First he calls the prophet to preach, then he closets him away in his own house and ties his tongue. The messenger’s role is like that of a puppet on a string. He dare not challenge the ways of God, or eve call for any explanation, any more than the clay may question the work of the potter.[12]
3.     At times the heart of the messenger may not interfere with his mouth. His resolve must match the determination of the one whose message he is to announce.
4.     The prophet bears in his own body the signs of his calling.[13]

Bridging:
·       Just as not everyone is called to be a prophet, so not every prophet is called to exercise his ministry in the way Ezekiel did. That means we will have to be careful in universalising the principles of Ezekiel’s calling.
·       The very strangeness of Ezekiel’s behaviour tends to make it difficult for us to bridge the gap.
·       To those without a relationship with the living God, the idea of someone giving oneself completely over to become God’s slave will inevitably seem nonsensical or abhorrent, a sign of certain mental disorder.[14]

Modern day:
·       Nowadays, we like to focus on the ”good news” aspect of the gospel. Yet, Ezekiel’s calling, at least during the first part of his ministry, is to be the bringer of bad news.[15]
·       Not all are called to fulfil the distinctive kind of prophetic ministry to which Ezekiel was called; yet as Christians, we too have a calling from God.
·       God’s message to the world contains both good news and bad news.
·       The first challenge for us is to present a balanced picture of who God is and who we are in relation to God.[16]
·       We are also called to bring the news to everyone, without distinction. We tend to sort our friends and family into “likely prospects” and “hard cases,” focusing our efforts on those who we think are most likely to listen. But who are you to say that one person is more likely to listen than another? The Bible is full of “hard cases”, eg. Paul.[17]
·       But to be such a channel of God’s good and bad news is often a costly, self-denying business. If you say to God, “Here am I, send me,” frequently he will. Sometimes, God sends his children to be his witnesses in uncomfortable situations, be it halfway around the world from where you are right now or around the corner in the jungles of the corporate world.
·       The self-sacrifice of Christ: While Ezekiel was confined to his house, Jesus was “despised and rejected by men” (Isaiah 53:3). While Ezekiel was made dumb, Jesus was “led like a lamb to the slaughter” (Isaiah 53:7). While Ezekiel was bound with ropes, Jesus was nailed to the cross and suffered there not for any transgressions of his own but for ours.
·       Thus, the greater “Son of Man” fulfilled the ministry of the earlier “son of man,” giving us the good news of the gospel, which is the antidote to the bad news of our natural state.[18]



[1] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 141.
[2] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 142.
[3] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 143.
[4] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 144.
[5] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 146.
[6] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 147.
[7] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 148.
[8] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 151.
[9] Duguid, Ezekiel, 80.
[10] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 149.
[11] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 150.
[12] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 161.
[13] Block, The Book of Ezekiel Chapters 1-24, 162.
[14] Duguid, Ezekiel, 81.
[15] Duguid, Ezekiel, 82.
[16] Duguid, Ezekiel, 83.
[17] Duguid, Ezekiel, 84.
[18] Duguid, Ezekiel, 86.