
Text -- Ezekiel 2:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

God opposes His command to all obstacles. Duties are ours; events are God's.

God opposes His name to the obstinacy of the people.
Clarke -> Eze 2:4
Clarke: Eze 2:4 - -- Thou shalt say unto them, Thus saith the Lord - Let them know that what thou hast to declare is the message of the Lord, that they may receive it wi...
Thou shalt say unto them, Thus saith the Lord - Let them know that what thou hast to declare is the message of the Lord, that they may receive it with reverence
Every preacher of God’ s word should take heed that it is God’ s message he delivers to the people. Let him not suppose, because it is according to his own creed or confession of faith, that therefore it is God’ s word. False doctrines and fallacies without end are foisted on the world in this way. Bring the creed first to the Word of God, and scrupulously try whether it be right; and when this is done, leave it where you please; take the Bible, and warn them from God’ s word recorded there.
Calvin -> Eze 2:4
Calvin: Eze 2:4 - -- God proceeds in the same discourse, but expresses in other words the great rebellion of the people, for they were not only obstinate and unbending in...
God proceeds in the same discourse, but expresses in other words the great rebellion of the people, for they were not only obstinate and unbending in heart, but also of a contumacious countenance: therefore he places hardness in face as well as in heart. The words indeed are different,
TSK -> Eze 2:4
TSK: Eze 2:4 - -- they : Eze 3:7; Deu 10:16, Deu 31:27; 2Ch 30:8, 2Ch 36:13; Psa 95:8; Isa 48:4; Jer 3:3; Jer 5:3, Jer 6:15, Jer 8:12; Mat 10:16
impudent : Heb. hard of...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 2:3-4
Barnes: Eze 2:3-4 - -- Nation - literally, as in the margin - the word which usually distinguishes the pagan from God’ s people. Here it expresses that Israel is...
Nation - literally, as in the margin - the word which usually distinguishes the pagan from God’ s people. Here it expresses that Israel is cast off by God; and the plural is used to denote that the children of Israel are not even "one nation,"but scattered and disunited.
Translate: "I send thee to the children of Israel, the rebellious nation that have rebelled against Me (they and their fathers have transgressed against Me, even to this very day), and the children impudent and stiff-hearted: I do send thee unto them."
Poole -> Eze 2:4
Poole: Eze 2:4 - -- Impudent children shameless, who cannot blush, else they could never have transgressed so highly, constantly, and obstinately. Sodom in her day did n...
Impudent children shameless, who cannot blush, else they could never have transgressed so highly, constantly, and obstinately. Sodom in her day did not hide her sin, nor blush; so did the Jews in Isaiah’ s times, so they did to the days of their captivity, and under the captivity.
Stiffhearted hard-hearted, resolute, and strongly bent to do whatever liked them. Of disposition that relenteth not, but rather more confidently going on in evil.
I who appeared in so much glory, and on the throne,
send thee unto them give thee authority that thou mayst, and I give thee charge that thou must, go to them, and say unto them what I shall say unto thee. They will scoff and persecute, but I command; and remember whom thou hast seen, who is with thee.
Thou shalt say unto them Thus saith the Lord God; be sure to tell them who sends thee, read the commission,
Thus saith & c.
Gill -> Eze 2:4
Gill: Eze 2:4 - -- For they are impudent children,.... "Hard of face" w; as is commonly said of impudent persons, that they are brasen faced; they had a whore's forehea...
For they are impudent children,.... "Hard of face" w; as is commonly said of impudent persons, that they are brasen faced; they had a whore's forehead, and refused to be ashamed, and made their faces harder than a rock, Jer 3:3; they declared their sin as Sodam, and hid it not; they sinned openly, and could not blush at it:
and stiffhearted; or, "strong of heart" x; whose hearts were like an adamant stone, and harder than the nether millstone; impenitent, obdurate, and inflexible; they were not only stiff-necked, as Stephen says they were in his time, and always had been; but stiff-hearted; they were not subject to the law of God now, nor would they submit to the Gospel and ordinances of Christ in his time, and in the times of his apostles, nor to his righteousness, Rom 10:3;
I do send thee unto them; even to such as they are: this is a repetition, and a confirmation, of his mission; and suggests, that though they were such, he should not refuse to go to them, since he had sent him:
and thou shalt say unto them, thus saith the Lord God: that what he said came from the Lord, and was spoken in his name.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 2:1-10
TSK Synopsis: Eze 2:1-10 - --1 Ezekiel's commission.6 His instruction.9 The roll of his heavy prophecy.
MHCC -> Eze 2:1-5
MHCC: Eze 2:1-5 - --Lest Ezekiel should be lifted up with the abundance of the revelations, he is put in mind that still he is a son of man, a weak, mortal creature. As C...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 2:1-5
Matthew Henry: Eze 2:1-5 - -- The title here given to Ezekiel, as often afterwards, is very observable. God, when he speaks to him, calls him, Son of man (Eze 2:1, Eze 2:3), S...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 2:3-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 2:3-7 - --
The calling of the prophet begins with the Lord describing to Ezekiel the people to whom He is sending him, in order to make him acquainted with the...
Constable: Eze 1:1--3:27 - --I. Ezekiel's calling and commission chs. 1--3
Four elements that mark the commission narratives in the prophets ...

Constable: Eze 2:1--3:27 - --B. The Lord's charge to Ezekiel chs. 2-3
Having seen a vision of God's glory, Ezekiel was now ready to r...
