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Text -- Ezekiel 21:24 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Against God, and against the king of Babylon.

Wesley: Eze 21:24 - -- As birds, or beasts in the net, are taken with the hands, so shall you, and be carried into Babylon.
As birds, or beasts in the net, are taken with the hands, so shall you, and be carried into Babylon.
JFB: Eze 21:24 - -- Their unfaithfulness to Nebuchadnezzar was a type of their general unfaithfulness to their covenant God.
Their unfaithfulness to Nebuchadnezzar was a type of their general unfaithfulness to their covenant God.
TSK -> Eze 21:24
TSK: Eze 21:24 - -- your transgressions : Eze 16:16-22, Eze 22:3-12, Eze 22:24-31, 23:5-21, Eze 24:7; Isa 3:9; Jer 2:34, Jer 3:2; Jer 5:27, Jer 5:28, Jer 6:15, Jer 8:12, ...
your transgressions : Eze 16:16-22, Eze 22:3-12, Eze 22:24-31, 23:5-21, Eze 24:7; Isa 3:9; Jer 2:34, Jer 3:2; Jer 5:27, Jer 5:28, Jer 6:15, Jer 8:12, Jer 9:2-7; Hos 4:2; Mic 3:10-12

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 21:18-32
Barnes: Eze 21:18-32 - -- The third word of judgment. The king of Babylon’ s march upon Judaea and upon the Ammonites. Destruction is to go forth not on Judah only, but ...
The third word of judgment. The king of Babylon’ s march upon Judaea and upon the Ammonites. Destruction is to go forth not on Judah only, but also on such neighboring tribes as the Ammonites (compare Jer 27:2-3).
Appoint thee - Set before thee.
Choose thou a place, choose it - Rather, "mark a spot, mark it,"as upon a map, at the head of the two roads, one leading to Jerusalem, the other to Ammon. These were the two roads by one or other of which an invading army must march from Babylon to Egypt.
The Chaldaean king is depicted standing at the entrance of the holy land from the north, meditating his campaign, using rites of divination that really belonged to the Akkadians, a primitive race which originally occupied the plains of Mesopotamia. The Accadians and the Etruscans belong through the Finnish family to the Turanian stock; this passage therefore shows a characteristic mode of divination in use among two widely separated nations; and as the Romans acquired their divination from the conquered Etruscans, so the Chaldaeans acquired the same art from the races whose soil they had occupied as conquerors.
He made his arrows briqht - Rather, he shook his arrow; a mode of divination much in practice with the Arabians. It was usual to place in some vessel three arrows, on one of which was written, "My God orders me;"on the other, "My God forbids me;"on the third was no inscription. These three arrows were shaken together until one came out; if it was the first, the thing was to be done; if the second, it was to be avoided; if the third, the arrows were again shaken together, until one of the arrows bearing a decided answer should come forth.
Images - Teraphim (Gen 31:19 note).
He looked in the liver - It was the practice both of the Greeks and the Romans (derived from the Etruscans) to take omens from the inspection of the entrails (especially the liver) of animals offered in sacrifice.
The divination for Jerusalem - The lot fixing the campaign against Jerusalem.
It shalt be unto them - The Jews in their vain confidence shall look upon the hopes gathered from the divinations by the Babylonians as false and groundless.
To them that have sworn oaths - According to some, "oaths of oaths are theirs;"i. e., they have the most solemn oaths sworn by God to His people, in these they trust, forgetful of the sin which broke the condition upon which these promises were given. More probably the allusion is to the oaths which the Jews had sworn to Nebuchadnezzar as vassals Eze 17:18-19; therefore they trust he will not attack them, forgetting how imperfectly they had kept their oaths, and that Nebuchadnezzar knew this.
But he will call to remembrance the iniquity - The king of Babylon will by punishment remind them of their perjury 2Ki 25:6-7; 2Ch 36:17.
Profane - Rather, "wounded,"- not dead but - having a death-wound. The prophet, turning from the general crowd, addresses Zedekiah.
When iniquity shall have an end - i. e., at the time when iniquity shall be closed with punishment. So in Eze 21:29.
The diadem ("the mitre,"the unique head-dress of the high priest) shall be removed, and the crown taken off (this shall not be as it is), the low exalted, and the high abased. Glory shall be removed alike from priest and king; the present glory and power attached to the government of God’ s people shall be quite removed.
It shall be no more - Or, "This also shall not be;"the present state of things shall not continue: all shall be confusion "until He come"to whom the dominion belongs of right. Not Zedekiah but Jeconiah and his descendants were the rightful heirs of David’ s throne. Through the restoration of the true line was there hope for Judah (compare Gen 49:10), the promised King in whom all power shall rest - the Son of David - Messiah the Prince. Thus the prophecy of destruction ends for Judah in the promise of restoration (as in Eze 20:40 ff).
The burden of the Song of the Sword, also in the form of poetry, is again taken up, directed now against the Ammonites, who, exulting in Judah’ s destruction, fondly deemed that they were themselves to escape. For Judah there is yet hope, for Ammon irremediable ruin.
Their reproach - The scorn with which they reproach Judah (marginal references).
The sword ... the glittering - Or, "the sword is drawn for the slaughter; it is furbished that it may detour, in order that it may glitter."In the Septuagint (and Vulgate) the sword is addressed; e. g., Septuagint, "Arise that thou mayest shine."
Whiles ... unto thee - A parenthesis. The Ammonites had their false diviners who deluded with vain hopes.
To bring thee upon the necks of them that are slain - To cast thee (Ammon) upon the heap of slaughtered men.
Shall have an end - Shall have its final doom.
Shall I cause it to return ... - Or, Back to its sheath! The work of the sword is over.
Poole -> Eze 21:24
Poole: Eze 21:24 - -- Either referring to God, who saw still their wicked perjuries, and other sins which they persisted in, or rather referring to Nebuchadnezzar, and hi...
Either referring to God, who saw still their wicked perjuries, and other sins which they persisted in, or rather referring to Nebuchadnezzar, and his ministers of state and war, to whose memory all the falsehood of the Jews was still kept fresh by repeated disloyalty, with reproach to God, whose oath the king and inhabitants of Jerusalem had violated.
Your transgressions against God, and against the king of Babylon, whose yoke you submitted to with promised obedience.
Discovered visibly to all in court, city, and country.
All your doings public management of matters of the kingdom, and private too; you add sin to sin, and that without blushing for them, or hiding them.
Because the whole summed up for confirming the threats.
Taken with the hand as birds or beasts taken in the net, encompassed therein that they cannot get away, are taken with the hand, so shall you, and be carried into Babylon.
Haydock -> Eze 21:24
Haydock: Eze 21:24 - -- Remembered. Hebrew, "caused....to be remembered," (Haydock) sinning publicly. (Calmet)
Remembered. Hebrew, "caused....to be remembered," (Haydock) sinning publicly. (Calmet)
Gill -> Eze 21:24
Gill: Eze 21:24 - -- Therefore thus saith the Lord God,.... Because of their vain confidence, added to their perjury and perfidy:
because ye have made your iniquity to ...
Therefore thus saith the Lord God,.... Because of their vain confidence, added to their perjury and perfidy:
because ye have made your iniquity to be remembered; their old sins, by committing new ones, both against the Lord, and against the king of Babylon:
in that your transgressions are discovered, so that in all your doings your sins do appear; both in their religious and civil actions; in the worship of God, and in their covenants and agreements with men; their sins were exposed and manifest to all, not only to God, who was provoked thereby, but to men, to the nations round about; particularly to Nebuchadnezzar, who was enraged by them:
because, I say, that they are come to remembrance; both before the Lord, and the king of Babylon:
ye shall be taken with the hand; as easily as a bird is, when in the snare. The Targum is,
"ye shall be delivered into the hand of the king of Babylon;''
which is no doubt the sense of the passage.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 21:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Eze 21:1-32 - --1 Ezekiel prophesies against Jerusalem with a sign of sighing.8 The sharp and bright sword;18 against Jerusalem;25 against the kingdom;28 and against ...
MHCC -> Eze 21:18-27
MHCC: Eze 21:18-27 - --By the Spirit of prophecy Ezekiel foresaw Nebuchadnezzar's march from Babylon, which he would determine by divination. The Lord would overturn the gov...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 21:18-27
Matthew Henry: Eze 21:18-27 - -- The prophet, in the verses before, had shown them the sword coming; he here shows them that sword coming against them, that they might not flatter t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 21:23-27
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 21:23-27 - --
This announcement will appear to the Judaeans, indeed, to be a deceptive divination, but nevertheless it will be verified. - Eze 21:23. And it is l...
Constable: Eze 4:1--24:27 - --II. Oracles of judgment on Judah and Jerusalem for sin chs. 4-24
This section of the book contains prophecies th...

Constable: Eze 20:1--23:49 - --D. Israel's defective leadership chs. 20-23
This section of the book is the final collection of propheci...

Constable: Eze 20:45--22:1 - --2. Judgment of Judah's contemporary leaders 20:45-21:32
A new chapter in the Hebrew Bible begins...




