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Text -- Ezekiel 18:9 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Eze 18:9
Wesley: Eze 18:9 - -- Shall be delivered from famine, pestilence, and sword, and shall see good days.
Shall be delivered from famine, pestilence, and sword, and shall see good days.
With integrity.
Clarke: Eze 18:9 - -- Hath walked in my statutes - Not only acknowledging them to be right, but acting according to them. Especially in every thing that relates to my wor...
Hath walked in my statutes - Not only acknowledging them to be right, but acting according to them. Especially in every thing that relates to my worship, changing nothing, neglecting nothing
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Clarke: Eze 18:9 - -- And hath kept my judgments, to deal truly - Has attended to my Divine direction, both with respect to things forbidden, and things commanded. These ...
And hath kept my judgments, to deal truly - Has attended to my Divine direction, both with respect to things forbidden, and things commanded. These concern men in their religious conduct
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Clarke: Eze 18:9 - -- He is just - צדיק הוא tsaddik hu . He is a righteous man; he has given to all their due; he has abstained from every appearance of evil, an...
He is just -
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He shall surely live - He has lived to me, and he shall live with me.
Calvin -> Eze 18:9
Calvin: Eze 18:9 - -- We yesterday explained why the Prophet says that no one is just unless he withdraw his hands from iniquity, because many occasions tempt us to inju...
We yesterday explained why the Prophet says that no one is just unless he withdraw his hands from iniquity, because many occasions tempt us to injure others: unless we restrain ourselves in a middle course we often hurt our neighbors. Now among the virtues of a just man he puts, to judge according to truth: to act truthfully, says he, between man and man. This seems indeed to be the proper duty of judges who discharge a public office, but yet it is suitable to private persons; for although no one argues his own cause except before some one endued with power to decide it, yet we see that the inclinations of men often pervert equity and rectitude in judgments. Again, many are chosen arbitrators who do not hold any public office. The meaning is, that what Ezekiel previously sought concerning equity is extended to the causes of others, that no one should turn aside from right and equity through private friendship. Afterwards it follows, if he has walked in my statutes and kept my judgments, in acting with truthfulness. Again, the Prophet returns to general remarks: for he has recorded certain kinds of justice, as we said yesterday, whence its nature may be more clearly perceived. Besides, because God’s law contains within it more than the prophet has thus far mentioned; hence it was necessary to add this clause, who has walked in my decrees, says he. It is too cold to restrict this to ceremonies, as is sometimes done; hence I interpret it of edicts or decrees. The metaphor of walking does not require a long explanation, as it is very common in Scripture. Hence, to walk in God’s precepts is nothing else than to form his life and morals according to the rule which has been prescribed by God; or, what is the same thing, so to conduct oneself, that in desiring to be deemed just a man should attempt nothing but what is agreeable to God’s precepts. But since the observance of the law is difficult, first, because we are not only of a frail disposition, but prone to sin; hence the word “serving” is added, by which the Prophet commends diligence. Whoever wishes to direct his life according to God’s precepts should attentively keep them, since nothing is more natural than to transgress and fall. He now adds, for acting truthfully. Integrity is here denoted by the word truthfulness. We gather, then, from this word the fruitful teaching, that the object of God’s whole law is to conduct ourselves without deceit or fraud, and study to assist one another in simplicity, and to conduct ourselves with sincerity in every duty. If any one, then, asks the object of the law, the Prophet here describes it to us — the performance of truth; and this is said rightly of the second table. But this may be adapted to the former table, since the Scripture teaches us that no dissembling can be pleasing to God. And we see also what Paul says when he briefly defines the end of the law to be charity out of any pure heart, and faith unfeigned. (1Ti 1:5.) But the word truth in this passage is, in my judgment, referred to that sincerity which we must cultivate, so that no one should deceive another, nor act fraudulently or knowingly, but be really simple and sincere. He adds, he is just, and in living he shall live, says the Lord Jehovah. At length he pronounces, as we said, that he is just who has faithfully observed God’s law; then that a recompense is prepared for all the just who thus sincerely worship God. Now let us come to the second example.
TSK -> Eze 18:9
TSK: Eze 18:9 - -- walked : Eze 18:17, Eze 20:13, Eze 33:15, Eze 36:27, Eze 37:24; Deu 4:1, Deu 5:1, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:2, Deu 10:12, Deu 10:13, Deu 11:1; Neh 9:13, Neh 9:14...
walked : Eze 18:17, Eze 20:13, Eze 33:15, Eze 36:27, Eze 37:24; Deu 4:1, Deu 5:1, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:2, Deu 10:12, Deu 10:13, Deu 11:1; Neh 9:13, Neh 9:14; Psa 19:7-11, Psa 105:44, Psa 105:45, Psa 119:1-6; Luk 1:6; Joh 14:21; Act 24:16; Jam 1:22-25
is just : Psa 24:4-6; Hab 2:4; Rom 1:17; Jam 2:18-26; 1Jo 2:29, 1Jo 3:7
he shall : Eze 20:11; Amo 5:4, Amo 5:14, Amo 5:24; Luk 10:27-29
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 18:9-13
Barnes: Eze 18:9-13 - -- Live ... die - In the writings of Ezekiel there is a development of the meaning of "life"and "death."In the holy land the sanctions of divine g...
Live ... die - In the writings of Ezekiel there is a development of the meaning of "life"and "death."In the holy land the sanctions of divine government were in great degree temporal; so that the promise of "life"for "obedience,"the threatening of "death"for "disobedience,"in the Books of Moses, were regarded simply as temporal and national. In their exile this could not continue in its full extent, and the universality of the misfortune necessarily made men look deeper into the words of God. The word "soul"denotes a "person"viewed as an "individual,"possessing the "life"which God breathed into man when he became a "living soul"Gen 2:7; i. e., it distinguishes "personality"from "nationality,"and this introduces that fresh and higher idea of "life"and "death,"which is not so much "life"and "death"in a future state, as "life"and "death"as equivalent to communion with or separation from God - that idea of life and death which was explained by our Lord in the Gospel of John John 8, and by Paul in Rom. 8.
Poole -> Eze 18:9
Poole: Eze 18:9 - -- Walked framed his life, and managed his conversation, conformed to the good, just, and holy ordinances of God. In my statutes; in matters of religion...
Walked framed his life, and managed his conversation, conformed to the good, just, and holy ordinances of God. In my statutes; in matters of religion, hath kept to the direction of God’ s law.
Kept my judgments in matters of civil concern between man and man.
To deal truly to act sincerely, with an honest heart, according to the best of his knowledge and judgment.
He is just is just comparatively, so far righteous that he shall not feel, nor need he fear, to suffer what others’ sins bring upon them, he shall not suffer what he hath not deserved.
Shall surely live shall be delivered from famine, pestilence, and sword, shall see good days, as Psa 34:12,13 ; his teeth shall not be set on edge, whatever quarrelling sinners say or think, but the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him.
Gill -> Eze 18:9
Gill: Eze 18:9 - -- Hath walked in my statutes,.... Respecting the worship of God and true religion; being observant of all laws and ordinances relating thereunto:
and...
Hath walked in my statutes,.... Respecting the worship of God and true religion; being observant of all laws and ordinances relating thereunto:
and hath kept my judgments to deal truly; in things moral and civil among men; regarding all such laws of God as oblige to such things:
he is just; such a man is a just man, at least externally; and if he does all these things from a right principle, without trusting to them for justification before God, and acceptance with him, but looking to the righteousness of Christ for these things, he is truly, and in the sight of God, a just man:
he shall surely live, saith the Lord God; spiritually and comfortably here, and an eternal life hereafter; or rather he shall not be distressed with famine, sword, or plague, or go into captivity; but shall live in his own land, and eat the good things of it; and this shall be his case, let his father have been what he will, ever so great a sinner.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 18:1-32
MHCC -> Eze 18:1-20
MHCC: Eze 18:1-20 - --The soul that sinneth it shall die. As to eternity, every man was, is, and will be dealt with, as his conduct shows him to have been under the old cov...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 18:1-9
Matthew Henry: Eze 18:1-9 - -- Evil manners, we say, beget good laws; and in like manner sometimes unjust reflections occasion just vindications; evil proverbs beget good propheci...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 18:5-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 18:5-9 - --
The Righteous Man Shall Not Die
Eze 18:5. If a man is righteous, and doeth right and righteousness, Eze 18:6. And doth not eat upon the mountai...
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...
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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...
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Constable: Eze 18:1-32 - --9. The importance of individual righteousness ch. 18
This chapter, like 12:21-28, corrected a co...
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