Daily Bread for Sep 13, Eze 37-39
Today’s readings are Eze 37-39.
Much has been said and written about Eze 37, the
"Dry Bones" chapter. Suffice it to say that God does something
amazing. The dry bones are regenerated in the exact opposite manner that they
decomposed. Their breath comes at the command of God. The bones, on a basic
level, represent the fallen Northern and Southern kingdoms. Having been
destroyed and carried away, they will be regathered and restored.
On another level, the entire vision is a new type of
creation as seen in Gen 1-2. God
produces matter, in Ezekiel’s case, muscle, sinew and flesh, out of nothing
other than the command of His voice. He forms a man by assembling the dead
bones, then breathes life into him the same way He breathed life into Adam.
In its most powerful application, the tale of the dry bones is a vivid image of salvation by grace. The bones are completely dead and unable to do anything to help themselves. Unless God moves in an entirely sovereign way, the bones will remain dead. God not only regenerates them, He also breathes life into them. Once they are reborn, they experience the blessing of God for having been chosen to receive His glory.
Those who understand the implications of Ezekiel’s vision
should have a better understanding of grace. All believers were once
spiritually as dead and hopeless as that pile of dirt from which God made Adam.
We were as totally incapable of bringing ourselves back to life as the dry
bones were. Regeneration can occur only by the hand and grace of God. That
Israel will be restored brings hope to the remnant in Ezekiel’s day. That the
dry bones can live brings hope to us all.
It is no coincidence that the following two chapters tell
of the judgment on those who oppose God. Those to whom He chooses to give life will
live. Those who oppose God shall be judged and condemned.
Israel and Judah will not only be restored, they will be
forgiven and reunited, their fortunes and blessing reinstated (Eze 37:15-28).
God will make good on His promises, once again.
Yet, in Eze 38, we see
that the rejuvenated Israel will come under attack. Bible scholars have been
unable to agree on the location of Gog. Some believe it is in the area of
Russia or China, but those perspectives may be speculation that ignores a
larger lesson being taught. What Ezekiel’s prophecies make clear is that, at
some point, all nations will come against God's people. It’s not a matter of
which nations they are or where they come from...it will be all nations. This
is a picture of the world coming against God’s people. Trying to boil this down
to geographic locations or political alliances misses the primary lesson of the
prophecy. In the final analysis, the great tipping point on who is saved and
who burns in Hell will not be nationality or geographical boundaries but
allegiance to God
From our text, what we can discern to be true is
this: Magog, Tubal, and Meshech are mentioned in Genesis 10:2 and 1
Chronicles 1:5 as sons of Japheth. In Ezekiel’s day, their descendants
inhabited what is now eastern Turkey. According to Eze 38:5–6 the allies of Gog
included Persia, Cush (modern Ethiopia), Put (modern Libya), Gomer (another son
of Japheth whose descendants resided to the far north of Israel), and Beth
Togarmah (according to Gen 10:3, Togarmah was a son of Gomer).
When the attack occurs, regardless of whoever is involved,
God's people will prevail. It will take months to bury the bodies of their
enemies. The spoils will be a blessing to the saved for years to come.
Clearly, the vision is of the future. A lot of time and
effort has been spent trying to define these ancient countries, many of which,
as we have seen, have already been defined by a careful reading of Scripture.
While some parallels to geographic areas can be drawn, it is best to view the
attacking nations as anyone that comes against God's people. The foundational
message applies regardless of location or nationality. These ominous passages
tell us that all those people who remain ungodly and refuse to repent will be
obliterated (Rev 20:8-9). The only victory, peace and salvation will be in
Him and His grace. Only those who are in Christ Jesus will prevail.
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