
Text -- Ezekiel 14:17-23 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
What land soever it be.

In death and destruction, not by the sword.

Wesley: Eze 14:21 - -- If they could not be able to keep off one of the four, how much less would they be able to keep off all four, when I commission them all to go at once...
If they could not be able to keep off one of the four, how much less would they be able to keep off all four, when I commission them all to go at once.

Wesley: Eze 14:23 - -- That is, you will be comforted, when you compare their case with your own: when they tell you how righteous God was, in bringing these judgments upon ...
That is, you will be comforted, when you compare their case with your own: when they tell you how righteous God was, in bringing these judgments upon them. This will reconcile you to the justice of God, in thus punishing his own people, and to the goodness of God, who now appeared to have had kind intentions in all.
JFB: Eze 14:15-21 - -- The argument is cumulative. He first puts the case of the land sinning so as to fall under the judgment of a famine (Eze 14:13); then (Eze 14:15) "noi...
The argument is cumulative. He first puts the case of the land sinning so as to fall under the judgment of a famine (Eze 14:13); then (Eze 14:15) "noisome beasts" (Lev 26:22); then "the sword"; then, worst of all, "pestilence." The three most righteous of men should deliver only themselves in these several four cases. In Eze 14:21 he concentrates the whole in one mass of condemnation. If Noah, Daniel, Job, could not deliver the land, when deserving only one judgment, "how much more" when all four judgments combined are justly to visit the land for sin, shall these three righteous men not deliver it.

Not literally. In Hebrew, "blood" expresses every premature kind of death.

JFB: Eze 14:21 - -- Literally, "Surely shall it be so now, when I send," &c. If none could avert the one only judgment incurred, surely now, when all four are incurred by...
Literally, "Surely shall it be so now, when I send," &c. If none could avert the one only judgment incurred, surely now, when all four are incurred by sin, much more impossible it will be to deliver the land.

JFB: Eze 14:22 - -- Not of righteous persons, but some of the guilty who should "come forth" from the destruction of Jerusalem to Babylon, to lead a life of hopeless exil...
Not of righteous persons, but some of the guilty who should "come forth" from the destruction of Jerusalem to Babylon, to lead a life of hopeless exile there. The reference here is to judgment, not mercy, as Eze 14:23 shows.

JFB: Eze 14:22 - -- Ye, the exiles at the Chebar, who now murmur at God's judgment about to be inflicted on Jerusalem as harsh, when ye shall see the wicked "ways" and ch...
Ye, the exiles at the Chebar, who now murmur at God's judgment about to be inflicted on Jerusalem as harsh, when ye shall see the wicked "ways" and character of the escaped remnant, shall acknowledge that both Jerusalem and its inhabitants deserved their fate; his recognition of the righteousness of the judgment will reconcile you to it, and so ye shall be "comforted" under it [CALVIN]. Then would follow mercy to the elect remnant, though that is not referred to here, but in Eze 20:43.

JFB: Eze 14:23 - -- Not in words, but by your recognizing in their manifest guilt, that God had not been unjustly severe to them and the city.
This chapter represents, i...
Not in words, but by your recognizing in their manifest guilt, that God had not been unjustly severe to them and the city.
This chapter represents, in the way of a brief introduction, what the sixteenth chapter details minutely.
Clarke: Eze 14:21 - -- My four sore judgments - Sword, war. Famine, occasioned by drought. Pestilence, epidemic diseases which sweep off a great part of the inhabitants of...
My four sore judgments - Sword, war. Famine, occasioned by drought. Pestilence, epidemic diseases which sweep off a great part of the inhabitants of a land. The Noisome Beast, the multiplication of wild beasts in consequence of the general destruction of the inhabitants.

Clarke: Eze 14:22 - -- Behold, they shall come forth unto you - Though there shall be great desolations in the land of Judea, yet a remnant shall be left that shall come h...
Behold, they shall come forth unto you - Though there shall be great desolations in the land of Judea, yet a remnant shall be left that shall come here also as captives; and their account of the abominations of the people shall prove to you with what propriety I have acted in abandoning them to such general destruction. This speech is addressed to those who were already in captivity; i.e., those who had been led to Babylon with their king Jeconiah.

Clarke: Eze 14:23 - -- Ye shall know that I have not done without cause - There is no part of the conduct of God towards man that is not dictated by the purest principles ...
Ye shall know that I have not done without cause - There is no part of the conduct of God towards man that is not dictated by the purest principles of justice, equity, and truth. He does nothing but what is right; and whatever is right to be done, that ought to be done. In God’ s justice there is no severity; in God’ s mercy there is no caprice. He alone doth all things well; for he is the Fountain of justice and mercy.
Calvin: Eze 14:17 - -- The Prophet now descends to the third kind of punishment. Hence God says, if he send a sword upon a land, he cannot be entreated so as not to consum...
The Prophet now descends to the third kind of punishment. Hence God says, if he send a sword upon a land, he cannot be entreated so as not to consume it utterly, neither will he admit any man’s intercession, although the most holy dwell there, namely, Job, Noah, and Daniel. But the phrase used must be marked: if I shall say to the sword, pass through to exterminate and blot out the whole land, or cut off from it, both man and beast, because we here gather the great power of God’s secret government. For we think that wars are stirred up at random: and as men are in agitation, so also we imagine war to be nothing but confusion and turbulence. But God governs even wars by his inestimable wisdom, and also men and their swords: men are enraged, their swords fly about in their hands, and they seem to go hither and thither at random by blind impulse. But God here announces that he permits swords to pass through a land, and to destroy both men and cattle. If he had said, after the language used in many places, that he would arm men, it would not have been very wonderful: for everywhere throughout the Prophets he calls the Chaldaeans and Assyrians executors of his judgment. Hence that sentence of Jeremiah, Cursed is he who has done God’s work negligently. (Jer 48:10.) But that work of God was the slaughter at Jerusalem. So also Nebuchadnezzar is called God’s servant and minister when he laid waste Egypt, and God promises him the reward of his labor. (Eze 29:20.) So here Ezekiel proceeds further, not only that the hands of men are directed as God wishes, but also that their swords listen to his secret command, so that they neither pass by nor strike any man or animal except as far as God pleases. But if God so commands the swords, let us know that whenever men rise up against us, that our patience is exercised and our sins chastised in this way: and that the impious are God’s agents: and let us determine that we shall never profit by noise and resistance, since there is but one remedy, to humble ourselves under God’s strong hand. Now the fourth kind of punishment follows —

Calvin: Eze 14:19 - -- He now affirms of the fourth kind of punishment, what he has hitherto pronounced of the rest. He says, then, If I shall have sent a pestilence, and h...
He now affirms of the fourth kind of punishment, what he has hitherto pronounced of the rest. He says, then, If I shall have sent a pestilence, and have devoted a land to devastation, that Job, Daniel, and Noah, should be safe if they dwelt there: but that their righteousness should not profit even their sons and their daughters. Nay, he seems to speak with greater restriction, since he has substituted the singular number for the plural: for he had just said, they shall not free either sons or daughters. He now says, not even a son or a daughter, that is, they shall not prevail with me by their intercession so much as to save from death even a single son or daughter. We must also remember what I have said, that God does not always act in the way related here: for he has manifold and various methods of carrying out his judgments. Hence it would not be just to impose a law not to liberate any one, and according to his own will either to hear or reject their prayers. But here he only means, that when he has determined to destroy a land, there is no hope of pardon, since even the most holy will not persuade him to desist from his wrath and vengeance. But now the conclusion follows —

Calvin: Eze 14:21 - -- He now reasons, as we said in the beginning, from the less to the greater. Hitherto he has said, If I shall have sent forth only one weapon to take v...
He now reasons, as we said in the beginning, from the less to the greater. Hitherto he has said, If I shall have sent forth only one weapon to take vengeance upon men, no one will oppose my following out my decree: then he enumerated four weapons, one after another. Now he adds, What then, when I shall have heaped together all punishments, and not only shall have sent pestilence or sword or famine, but as it were when I have four armies prepared and drawn up, and shall command them to attack and destroy mankind, how shall even one person escape? If Job, Daniel, and Noah, cannot snatch away even their sons and daughters from a single scourge, how shall they snatch them from four at once! We see, then, that God here cuts away the false and specious hopes by which the false prophets deluded the miserable exiles when they promised them a return to their country, and daily proclaimed how impossible it was that the sacred city, the earthly dwelling-place of God, could be taken by the enemy, and the religion which God had promised should be eternal could perish. Since, therefore, the false prophets so deceived these miserable exiles, here God shows how greatly they erred while they cherished any hope in their minds; because he had not only held one kind of scourge over Jerusalem, but approached it with a whole heap of them to destroy and cut off both man and beast. This then is the full meaning.
Now he says, If I shall have sent my four evil judgments. Here God calls his judgments evils, in the sense in which he says in Isaiah, that he creates good and evil, (Isa 45:7,) since immediately afterwards he expresses his meaning by saying life and death. Hence what is against us is here called evil, and so this epithet ought to be referred to our perceptions. For our natural common sense dictates that whatever is desirable and useful to us is good: food and life and peace are good, and whatever is conducive to life, and what we naturally wish for, we call good. So also, on the other hand, death and famine are evils: so are nakedness, want, and shame: why so? since we dread whatever is not useful to us; and because we fly from evils as soon as reason dawns. In fine, evil here is not opposed to justice and right, but, as I have said, to men’s opinion and our natural senses. He now confirms what we before said, namely, that these are God’s judgments when enemies rage against us, pestilence attacks us: poverty assails us, and wild beasts break in upon us. When therefore we suffer under these afflictions, let us learn immediately to descend into ourselves and to discover the cause why God is so angry with us. For if we turn our attention towards the sword, and pestilence, and famine, we are like dogs which gnaw and bite what is thrown at them, and do not regard the hand which threw it, but only vent their rage upon the stone. For such is our stupidity when we complain of famine being injurious to us, wild beasts troublesome, and war horrible. Hence this passage should always be borne in mind that, these are God’s evil judgments, that is, scourges by which he chastises our sins, and thus shows himself hostile and opposed to us.

Calvin: Eze 14:22 - -- He now adds, there shall be a remnant in that escape. They explain this verse parenthetically, as if God by way of correction engaged to act more m...
He now adds, there shall be a remnant in that escape. They explain this verse parenthetically, as if God by way of correction engaged to act more mercifully towards that city, than if he struck any land with only one scourge. They explain it thus: although these four scourges should meet together, yet I will mitigate the rigor of my vengeance, since some shall go out safely, and reach even to you. Almost all agree in this sense; but when I weigh the Prophet’s intention more accurately, I cannot subscribe to it: because God seems to me to confirm what he had said before, that he would be a just avenger of wickedness while he treats the Jews so harshly. To discover the most suitable sense, we must consider the condition of the exiles: it was surely worse than if they had been destroyed by a single death for they were dying daily; and at length, when cast out of the sacred land, they were like the dead. Hence that exile was more sorrowful than death, since it was better to be buried in the holy land than among the profane. Since, then, they had been mixed with dog’s, it was no life to them to protract a wretched existence amidst constant languor; and if the hope of restoration had been taken away, concerning which we are not now treating, and to which not a single syllable applies, exile was by itself like death. Since, then, the Prophet here says, that some should be left, to escape, he does not mean that they should be safe: hence this is not a mitigation of their punishment. For as we saw before, and especially in Jeremiah, those who died quickly were less to be deplored. (Jer 22:10.) Finally, when the Prophet here says that some should come to Babylon, he does not promise them pardon, as if God was propitious to them, or noticed them favorably; no such thing: for he speaks of the reprobate, and of those who bore on their forehead the manifest sign of their impiety, and show by their whole life that they are abandoned, and most worthy of final destruction.
For he says, a departure of those who go forth shall come: sons as well as daughters shall come to you, says he, and you shall see their ways and their work: that is, you shall see that the men are so wicked, that their ungodliness shall compel you to confess the city to be worthy of perishing, and the people deserving destruction. For the word consoling, which the Prophet uses immediately afterwards, refers here to the acknowledgment of their wickedness appeasing the minds of those who formerly roared and murmured against God. Neither does he mean that consolation which, according to the common proverb, has many friends; but only the calm acknowledgment of God’s just vengeance, in which the ten tribes acquiesced. For before they saw the state in which the inhabitants of Jerusalem were, they thought that God was too severe, and hence their outcry and complaint against God. The Prophet, therefore, now says, that the sight of your wickedness will bring you consolation; for you shall see that it could not be otherwise, and that you deserved such punishment: hence, when you have acknowledged your abandoned wickedness, you will regard my justice with peaceful and tranquil minds; and you will so finish and cease your complaints which now agitate your minds in different directions. The rest, to-morrow.

Calvin: Eze 14:23 - -- He now puts the verb for comforting in the third person, but in the same sense, because after the Jews shall have been led captive, they will bear su...
He now puts the verb for comforting in the third person, but in the same sense, because after the Jews shall have been led captive, they will bear sure and special marks of God’s justice against their sins. This, then, is the consolation, as I explained it yesterday, while the exiles acknowledge that cruelty cannot be ascribed to God, as if he had exceeded moderation in exacting punishment; for the desperate wickedness of the people demanded it. But this passage contains a useful doctrine, since we collect from it that we are never tranquil in our minds unless when the greatest equity and justice appears in God’s judgments, and become present to our minds. As long, therefore, as we do not acknowledge God to be severe in just cases, our minds must necessarily be disturbed and disarranged: hence the word “consolation” is opposed to those turbulent thoughts. But since nothing is more miserable than to be distracted and drawn hither and thither, and to be anxiously disturbed, let us learn that those profit most who acquiesce in God’s judgments, although they do not perceive the reason of them, yet modestly adore them. But when God shows why he treats either us or others so severely, this is a special favor, since he offers us material for joy and tranquillity. Let us proceed.
Defender -> Eze 14:20
Defender: Eze 14:20 - -- The historicity of each of these three men has been denied by Bible critics. Ezekiel, however, confirms both their historical existence and their exem...
The historicity of each of these three men has been denied by Bible critics. Ezekiel, however, confirms both their historical existence and their exemplary lives."
TSK: Eze 14:17 - -- I bring : Eze 5:12, Eze 5:17, Eze 21:3, Eze 21:4, Eze 21:9-15, Eze 29:8, Eze 38:21, Eze 38:22; Lev 26:25; Jer 25:9, Jer 47:6
so that : Eze 14:13, Eze ...

TSK: Eze 14:19 - -- if I : Eze 5:12, Eze 38:22; Num 14:12, Num 16:46-50; Deu 28:21, Deu 28:22, Deu 28:59-61; 2Sa 24:13, 2Sa 24:15; 1Ki 8:37; 2Ch 6:28, 2Ch 7:13, 2Ch 20:9;...

TSK: Eze 14:20 - -- Noah : Eze 14:14, Eze 14:16
Daniel : Daniel, says Abp. Newcombe, was ""taken captive in the third year of Jehoiakim (Dan 1:1). After this, Jehoiakam ...
Daniel : Daniel, says Abp. Newcombe, was ""taken captive in the third year of Jehoiakim (Dan 1:1). After this, Jehoiakam reigned eight years (2Ki 23:36). And this prophecy, as appears from Eze 8:1, was uttered in the sixth year of Jehoiachin’ s captivity, who succeeded Jehoiakim, and reigned only three months (2Ki 24:6, 2Ki 24:8). Therefore, at this time, Daniel had been fourteen years in captivity;""and was, as is generally supposed, about thirty years of age.
by : Eze 18:20,Eze 18:22; Job 5:19-24; Psa 33:18, Psa 33:19; Isa 3:10; Hos 10:12; Zep 2:3; Act 10:35; 1Jo 2:29, 1Jo 3:7, 1Jo 3:10

TSK: Eze 14:21 - -- How much more when : or, Also when
my four : Eze 14:13, Eze 14:15, Eze 14:17, Eze 14:19, Eze 5:12, Eze 5:17, Eze 6:11, Eze 6:12, Eze 33:27; Jer 15:2, ...

TSK: Eze 14:22 - -- therein : Eze 6:8; Deu 4:31; 2Ch 36:20; Isa 6:13, Isa 10:20-22, Isa 17:4-6, Isa 24:13, Isa 40:1, Isa 40:2; Isa 65:8, Isa 65:9; Jer 4:27, Jer 5:19, Jer...
therein : Eze 6:8; Deu 4:31; 2Ch 36:20; Isa 6:13, Isa 10:20-22, Isa 17:4-6, Isa 24:13, Isa 40:1, Isa 40:2; Isa 65:8, Isa 65:9; Jer 4:27, Jer 5:19, Jer 30:11, Jer 52:27-30; Mic 5:7; Mar 13:20; Heb 12:6-11
ye shall see : Eze 6:9, Eze 6:10, Eze 16:63, Eze 20:43, Eze 36:31; Jer 31:17-21
ye shall be : Jer 3:21-25

TSK: Eze 14:23 - -- that I have not : Eze 8:6-18, Eze 9:8, Eze 9:9; Gen 18:22-33; Deu 8:2; Neh 9:33; Pro 26:2; Jer 7:17-28; Jer 22:8, Jer 22:9; Dan 9:7, Dan 9:14; Rom 2:5...
that I have not : Eze 8:6-18, Eze 9:8, Eze 9:9; Gen 18:22-33; Deu 8:2; Neh 9:33; Pro 26:2; Jer 7:17-28; Jer 22:8, Jer 22:9; Dan 9:7, Dan 9:14; Rom 2:5; Rev 15:4, Rev 16:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 14:12-23
Barnes: Eze 14:12-23 - -- Jer. 14; 15 is a remarkable parallel to this prophecy. Here, as elsewhere, Ezekiel is commissioned to deliver to the exiles the same message which J...
Jer. 14; 15 is a remarkable parallel to this prophecy. Here, as elsewhere, Ezekiel is commissioned to deliver to the exiles the same message which Jeremiah conveys to the inhabitants of Judaea. The answer discovers the nature of the questions which had been expressed or implied.
\tx720 \tx1080 (1) Can God cast out a people who are holy unto Himself?
(2) Is it just to punish them with utter desolation?
The prophet answers:
\tx1080 (1) That when a people is so corrupt as to call down national judgment, individual piety shall save none but the individuals themselves.
(2) The corrupt condition of the people shall be made so manifest, that none will question the justice of God in dealing thus severely with them.
Or, "When a land"- the case is first put in a general form, and then ism brought with increased force home to Jerusalem - "sinneth against me by trespassing grievously,"and I stretch out "mine hand upon it,"and break the staff of bread "thereof,"and send famine "upon it and"cut off "man and beast: though these three men"etc.
Noah, Daniel, and Job - Three striking instances of men who, for their integrity, were delivered from the ruin which fell upon others. Some have thought it strange that Daniel, a contemporary, and still young, should have been classed with the two ancient worthies. But the account of him Dan. 2 shows, that by this time Daniel was a very remarkable man (compare Eze 28:3), and the introduction of the name of a contemporary gives force and life to the illustration. There is in the order in which the names occur a kind of climax. Noah did not rescue the guilty world, but did carry forth with him his wife, sons, and sons’ wives. Daniel raised only a few, but he did raise three of his countrymen with him to honor. To Job was spared neither son nor daughter.
Ye shall be comforted ... - By a truer estimate of the dispensations of the Almighty. This visitation will be recognized as inevitable and just.
Poole: Eze 14:17 - -- He is Lord of hosts, and hath the militia of all the world in his hand, the sword is the right of the King of kings.
Bring a sword raise war, and ...
He is Lord of hosts, and hath the militia of all the world in his hand, the sword is the right of the King of kings.
Bring a sword raise war, and send enemies to invade it. That land; what land soever it be.
Go through the land: though inanimate things have not ears to hear, yet God speaks of them sometimes as if they had ears to hear, and understanding to discern; hereby intimating to us his overruling power, wisdom, justice, and sovereignty.
So that I cut off man: men cut off men in war, yet here God takes it to himself, he doth it by men.
And beast: though wars chiefly destroy men, yet the beasts of the field go to wreck too, the beasts that are serviceable in wars are waste, as horses and beasts of burden. The Eastern nations have brought store of camels and many elephants into the wars; beside the slaughter of these in fight, the spoiler wasting his enemy doth often destroy whole herds and flocks.

Poole: Eze 14:19 - -- Diseases are sent whenever they come, especially wasting diseases, which empty nations and cities apace.
Pestilence God’ s arrow that flies f...
Diseases are sent whenever they come, especially wasting diseases, which empty nations and cities apace.
Pestilence God’ s arrow that flies from God’ s bow.
Pour out not drop or distil on a people in small measures, and by leisure, but in great measures, and hastily, as waters are poured out of a vessel all at once almost.
In blood: sometimes blood does denote war, but here, and in many other places, it denotes death and destruction of men, though not by the sword.
Man and beast not that beasts die of the same pestilential disease which kills man, but either death of men by pestilence emptieth the nation, that there are not men to take care and provide for the beasts; or rather, because when pestilence wasteth men, murrains and plague of cattle, from the same infected air, and from the hand of God, waste the beasts also.

Poole: Eze 14:20 - -- Their own souls their person, their life.
By their righteousness not meriting the deliverance, but yet the justice and mercy of God shall surely ke...
Their own souls their person, their life.
By their righteousness not meriting the deliverance, but yet the justice and mercy of God shall surely keep them from falling in the punishment who were kept from the sin.

Poole: Eze 14:21 - -- Those three men, with their best interest, should not be able to keep off one of the four, much less able to keep off all four when I commission the...
Those three men, with their best interest, should not be able to keep off one of the four, much less able to keep off all four when I commission them all to go at once, as I will, nay, have done, against Jerusalem, to cut off the obstinate, incorrigible ones amidst it.

Poole: Eze 14:22 - -- Therein in Jerusalem itself, and in the land.
A remnant some that escape, for though none could prevail with God to prevent the emptying the city a...
Therein in Jerusalem itself, and in the land.
A remnant some that escape, for though none could prevail with God to prevent the emptying the city and the land, and cutting off the most, yet this was not to extend to the utter cutting off and destruction of all.
Brought forth by the proud, cruel, and barbarous conqueror bringing them in nakedness, chains, and in contempt more grievous than death itself.
Unto you those naked, hunger-starved, derided captives, through heats and colds, through sands and tedious travels, shall come, though with great regret to you, to Babylon, whose condition they will either envy, or wish it their own.
Ye shall see see them, and consider and know their way; what it hath brought them, how sinfully evil it was against God in their own land, and how miserably evil it is and must be with them in the enemies’ land.
Ye shall be comforted not rejoice in your brethren’ s misery, but comforted in remembrance of the good hour you resolved to obey God, in yielding up to the Chaldeans; comforted in the sense of your state much better then theirs, and in the vindication of you from the black aspersions the false prophets and their followers cast on you; and finally, comforted, in that your return, at set time promised, shall in its time be as surely made good as you see the threats are made good. God will be as true in his mercies as he hath been in his judgments; this is matter of great affliction and grief, that of comfort and hope.

Poole: Eze 14:23 - -- They that survive the siege, famine, and ruin of Jerusalem, and are brought to Babylon,
shall comfort you either confessing their faults in not doi...
They that survive the siege, famine, and ruin of Jerusalem, and are brought to Babylon,
shall comfort you either confessing their faults in not doing as you had done, justifying the wise course they took who yielded, condemning the folly of hardening themselves against God, his judgments, and his prophets; or be matter of comfort, affording to you just ground of comforting yourselves.
When ye see their ways: understand it in the effects of it upon the ruined Jews; or, in the relation which they will make both of their sins and sufferings in the land of Canaan.
Ye you of the first captivity, you that obeyed my voice, and submitted to the Babylonian yoke,
shall know be fully satisfied, that I have had but too much cause, and most just reason, for all that I have done against Jerusalem and its land, and inhabitants of both; you shall know my hand, and as you feel the weight, so you shall see the justice of it too against them, and the mercy of it towards you.
Haydock -> Eze 14:19
Gill: Eze 14:17 - -- Or if I bring a sword upon that land,.... The land which had grievously sinned; the same land into which a famine should come, and through which evil...
Or if I bring a sword upon that land,.... The land which had grievously sinned; the same land into which a famine should come, and through which evil beasts should pass; to which, if the Lord should add, as he would, a third judgment, the sword; suffer a foreign enemy to come in among them, and destroy them. So the Targum,
"or if those that slay with the sword I should bring upon that land;''
the Chaldean army, as he did; the sword has its commission from God; war is not by chance; the invasion of a foreign enemy is from the Lord; and all the mischiefs and ravages of a tumultuous army are all by divine order:
and say, sword, go through the land; not only enter the borders of it, or proceed far in it, but even go through it; which is terrible indeed! but if the Lord bids it go, it must go, and does; it is a servant of his, and punctually obeys his commands; that is, such are those that use it, however profane and wicked they may be in themselves, as generally armies consist of dissolute persons; yet these are under a divine direction, and are obedient to the will of God, though they may know it not. So the Targum,
"and I say that they that kill with the sword pass through the land:''
so that I cut off man and beast from it; by the sword; the one being destroyed as an enemy, the other for food.

Gill: Eze 14:18 - -- Though these three men were in it,.... Before mentioned:
as I live, saith the Lord God, they shall deliver neither sons nor daughters: believe me...
Though these three men were in it,.... Before mentioned:
as I live, saith the Lord God, they shall deliver neither sons nor daughters: believe me no more, or be it so and so, if they do; it is in the form of an oath, and in the same manner it is expressed in Eze 14:16;
but they only shall be delivered themselves; their own souls or lives, and by their righteousness, as in Eze 14:14.

Gill: Eze 14:19 - -- Or if I send a pestilence into that land,.... Or the plague, which is the destruction that wastes at noon day; this is from the Lord, and a sore judg...
Or if I send a pestilence into that land,.... Or the plague, which is the destruction that wastes at noon day; this is from the Lord, and a sore judgment it is:
and pour out my fury upon it in blood; or, "by blood" y; by corrupting the blood, which is done when a man is seized with the pestilence. The Targum renders it, "with slaughter"; by slaying a great number of persons by that disease, as a token of fury and wrath, because of their transgressions. It may be rendered, "because of blood" z; and so express the cause and reason of the judgment, the shedding of innocent blood:
to cut off from it man and beast; man by the pestilence, and beast by some contagious distemper or another.

Gill: Eze 14:20 - -- Though Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it,.... Who are again mentioned by name, as in Eze 14:14; and are the three men referred to in Eze 14:16;
a...
Though Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it,.... Who are again mentioned by name, as in Eze 14:14; and are the three men referred to in Eze 14:16;
as I live, saith the Lord God, they shall deliver neither son nor daughter; not so much as an only son, or an only daughter, no, not even a single child: the plural number is used before, as in Eze 14:16; here the singular, to show how resolutely determined the Lord was upon the destruction of the land; that even the prayers of the best of men among them should not prevail with him to save a single person, no, not a single infant: they
shall but deliver their own souls by their righteousness; See Gill on Eze 14:14.

Gill: Eze 14:21 - -- For thus saith the Lord God, how much more,.... If the Lord would not be entreated by such good men as those mentioned, for a land that had sinned aga...
For thus saith the Lord God, how much more,.... If the Lord would not be entreated by such good men as those mentioned, for a land that had sinned against him, to whom he only sends some one of the above judgments, either famine, or noisome beasts, or the sword, or the pestilence, how much more inexorable and deaf to all entreaties must he be; or if anyone of those judgments makes so great a desolation in the land, then how much greater must that detraction be,
when I send my four sore judgments on Jerusalem: or "evil" a ones; as they are to men, though righteously inflicted by the Lord; when all these four are sent together, what a devastation must they make! namely,
the sword, and the famine, and the, noisome beast, and the pestilence,
to cut off from it man and beast; three of them, it is evident, were sent upon Jerusalem at the time of its siege by Nebuchadnezzar, the sword, famine, and pestilence; and no doubt the other, even the noisome beasts; and if not literally, yet figuratively, for Nebuchadnezzar himself is compared to a lion, Jer 4:7.

Gill: Eze 14:22 - -- Yet, behold, therein shall be left a remnant,.... That is, in Jerusalem, on which God's four sore judgments should be sent: though in a sinful land, a...
Yet, behold, therein shall be left a remnant,.... That is, in Jerusalem, on which God's four sore judgments should be sent: though in a sinful land, as before described, where only one judgment was sent, there was no escape, not so much as a son or a daughter were delivered; yet here, where four sore judgments came together, there is a remnant that are saved; and which being wonderful, and beyond all expectation, is introduced with a "behold", not only as a note of attention, but of admiration:
that shall be brought forth, both sons and daughters; that is, which should be brought forth out of Jerusalem when taken, and should not be destroyed either by famine, or by noisome beasts, or by the sword, or by the pestilence; and these, many of them, both sons and daughters; some of each sex, that should be the means of propagating a posterity, that should return again, and repeople the land, and continue for many ages, as they have done: this is said with respect to Eze 14:16;
behold, they shall come forth unto you; come out of Jerusalem, and their own land, into Babylon, to the captives already there; with whom Ezekiel now was, and to whom he is speaking:
and ye shall see their way and their doings; their wicked course of life and evil actions; which now being convinced of, and humbled for, they shall ingenuously acknowledge and confess to their brethren in captivity: though some think this is to be understood of wicked and reprobate men, that should be not at all reformed by the judgments of God, but continue in their wicked course; which the godly captives seeing, would conclude from thence their manner of life before, and so the righteous judgment of God upon them; and their being a remnant preserved is thought not to be in a way of mercy, but judgment; who though they escaped each of the four sore judgments, yet had a worse inflicted on them, even captivity:
and ye shall be comforted concerning the evil that I have brought upon Jerusalem, even concerning all that I have brought upon it; that is, they should be satisfied with the justice of God, and be reconciled to the providence of God, in bringing destruction upon Jerusalem; which perhaps before they murmured at, or had hard thoughts of God concerning it; but now hearing the confessions of those that were brought from thence to them, or seeing their wicked lives and conversations, they would now be fully satisfied that God was righteous in all that he had done; and that, instead of being rigorous and severe, he had been kind and merciful.

Gill: Eze 14:23 - -- And they shall comfort you, when ye see their ways and their doings,.... Not that their sinful ways and doings would be comfortable to them, but eithe...
And they shall comfort you, when ye see their ways and their doings,.... Not that their sinful ways and doings would be comfortable to them, but either their acknowledgments of them, and repentance for them; or, seeing their dissolute manner of life, it would be a means of composing their minds, and making them easy under the providence; being now satisfied that God was just in bringing upon them all the evils he had, and that they were punished according to their deserts, and less than their sins deserved:
and ye shall know that I have not done without cause all that I have done in it, saith the Lord God; that there was just reason for it; that he was sufficiently provoked to do it; and that it was necessary it should be done, for his own honour, and the good of others.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Eze 14:21
NET Notes: Eze 14:21 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
Geneva Bible -> Eze 14:22
Geneva Bible: Eze 14:22 Yet, behold, in it shall be left a ( l ) remnant that shall be brought forth, [both] sons and daughters: behold, they shall come forth to you, and ye ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 14:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Eze 14:1-23 - --1 God answers idolaters according to their own heart.6 They are exhorted to repent, for fear of judgments, by means of seduced prophets.12 God's irrev...
MHCC -> Eze 14:12-23
MHCC: Eze 14:12-23 - --National sins bring national judgments. Though sinners escape one judgment, another is waiting for them. When God's professing people rebel against hi...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 14:12-23
Matthew Henry: Eze 14:12-23 - -- The scope of these verses is to show, I. That national sins bring national judgments. When virtue is ruined and laid waste every thing else will soo...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 14:12-23
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 14:12-23 - --
The Righteousness of the Godly will not Avert the Judgment
The threat contained in the preceding word of God, that if the idolaters did not repent,...
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 12:1--19:14 - --C. Yahweh's reply to the invalid hopes of the Israelites chs. 12-19
"The exiles had not grasped the seri...
