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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 20:43

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 20:43

And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled; and ye shall loathe yourselves in your own sight for all your evils that ye have committed.

43. The goodness of Jehovah in restoring them shall fill their hearts with abhorrence of their own past doings, cf. Eze 16:61.

lothe in your own sight ] Omit in your own sight, ch. Eze 6:9.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Eze 20:43-44

And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled; and ye shall loathe yourselves in your own sight.

Gods method of mercy used or abused by man


I.
The method of mercy was very remarkable in the case of Israel. The loving kindness of God is infinite. Christ commanded that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. Surely this single circumstance, viewed in connection with Gods ancient dealings with Israel, as brought before us in this chapter, is a proof that Christianity is the religion of the same God, and that His mercy endureth forever. And have not His dealings with the Christian Church been so similar as to show that He is still pursuing a method of mercy and of grace? He has not cut us off in our sins; He still follows us with invitations, He quite presses us with entreaties, to be reconciled to God. Is not Christ able and willing to save to the uttermost, any or all of us, who come unto God by Him? Have not some of us found already–and may not the rest find soon–that with the Lord there is mercy, and with Him there is plenteous redemption?


II.
But suppose it so found; then what will be the gracious effect on us? Is it carelessness, or indifference, or licentiousness of living? Not so; surely the goodness of God leadeth to repentance. Then, when thus restored to the Divine favour–then, when this method of mercy shall have been successful–then shall ye remember your ways, etc. Here is work for the mind and memory. Do ye not remember some of your ways in former years–ways which certainly were wrong, perverse, and corrupt? Have ye forgotten all those doings, which certainly were not right? Do ye not remember the circumstances of your sins–how many things concurred to aggravate them in your cases? Therefore exercise your mind and memory, with prayer for the Holy Spirit, in recalling our was and doings. But if truly penitent, ye will also exercise the heart and soul on this subject; and ye shall loathe yourselves, etc. And if you loathe yourselves for having sinned, you will not return to sin. Men do not return willingly to look on a loathsome object. What they abhor they shun. (John Hambleton, M. A.)

Conversion: in its commencement and progress


I.
In its commencement God accomplishes it in a variety of ways.

1. By the dispensations of His providence.

2. By the conversion of some pious friend.

3. By the public ministry of the Word.

4. By the secret operation of His Spirit upon the soul.


II.
In its progress.

1. He reveals that covenant to us.

2. He enables us to lay hold on it.

3. He confers upon us all the blessings.

Remarks–

1. How sovereign God is in the dispensations of His mercy.

2. How mysterious are His dealings with the children of men.

3. How you may best answer all the purposes of His grace. (C. Simeon, M. A.)

Awakened memory of past sins

Manton says: Old bruises may trouble us long after, upon every change of weather, and new afflictions revive the sense of old sins. We know one who broke his arm in his youth, and though it was well set, and soundly healed, yet before a rough season the bones cry out bitterly; and even so, though early vice may be forsaken, and heartily repented of, and the mind may be savingly renewed, yet the old habits will be a lifelong trouble and injury. The sins of our youth will give us many a twist fifty years after they have been forgiven. How happy, then, are those who are preserved from the ways of ungodliness, and brought to Jesus in the days of their youth, for they thus escape a thousand regrets. It is well to have a broken bone skilfully set, but far better never to have had it broken. The fall of Adam has battered and bruised us all most sadly; it is a superfluity of naughtiness that we should incur further damage by our own personal falls. The aches and pains of age are more than sufficient when every limb is sound, and recklessly to add the anguish of fractures and dislocations would be folly indeed. Young man, do not run up bills which your riper years will find it hard to pay; do not eat today forbidden morsels, which may breed you sorrow long after their sweetness has been forgotten. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have wrought with you for My names sake.

Moral Tower: its Divine source

There is a force which fashions suns and impels the movements producing their huge stores of heat; a force which sustains the march of constellations through terms of time that mock our little earthly history, a force which drives the tides and sweeps through the tempests, a force which vivifies and upholds the restless and ever-extending mystery of life, a force which rules the rise and fall of empires and civilisation–and that force is infinite. But from the same spring there issues a less obtrusive force belonging to another order of operations–the force which detaches man from idols; the force which frees him from the legion evils that have trampled his greatness in the dust, which makes sympathies and antipathies strangely change places in his nature, so that he comes to hate what he loved, and to love what he once hated; the force which works out the new creation of the Gospel–and that force is no less infinite though it is dealing with persons rather than things. In the realms of thought, morals, human conduct, Gods power is just as far-reaching as in the realm of physics. (T. G. Selby.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 43. And there shall ye remember your ways] Ye shall be ashamed of your past conduct, and of your long opposition to the Gospel of your salvation.

These promises may, in a certain limited sense, be applied to the restoration from the Babylonish captivity; but they must have their proper fulfilment when the Jews shall accept Jesus as their Saviour, and in consequence be brought back from all their dispersions to their own land.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

In your restored state, and in your prosperity, in the land whither you are returned, ye shall review your former ways with sorrow; remember, and grieve.

Your ways of your folly, explained by their doings, which defiled them, i.e. all their more notorious sins.

Loathe: see Eze 6:9.

In your own sight; your own heart and conscience shall see what you have done, and they shall take shame, and be humbled, though none else see it.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

43. therenot merely in exilewhen suffering punishment which makes even reprobates sorry for sin,but when received into favor in your own land.

remember (Eze 16:61;Eze 16:63). The humiliation ofJudah (Ne 9:1-38) is atype of the future penitence of the whole nation (Hos 5:15;Hos 6:1; Zec 12:10-14).God’s goodness realized by the sinner is the only thing that leads totrue repentance (Hos 3:5; Luk 7:37;Luk 7:38).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And there ye shall remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled,…. Their rejection of the Messiah; their continued disbelief of him; their obstinacy, hardness, and impenitence; their adherence to the traditions of the elders, to the making void the word of God; together with the most flagrant immoralities that ever any people were guilty of, and which are of a very defiling nature, and made them abominable in the sight of God; these now the Spirit of God convincing them of, they will remember with shame and confusion, and mourn over them in an evangelical way; and the more so, when they shall find themselves reinstated in their own land, enjoying all civil and religious privileges and liberties under Christ their King, whom they will now know, own, and serve; see Zec 12:10:

and ye shall loath yourselves in your own sight for all your evils that ye have committed; against God and Christ; against the law of the one, and the Gospel of the other. Sin is a loathsome thing to God; and it is so to his people When they are thoroughly convinced of it, and they loath themselves for it; and never more so than when they have the greatest instances and clearest discoveries of the love and grace of God in Christ to them; then they blush, are ashamed of themselves and their sins, and are confounded when they perceive the Lord is pacified towards them, and their sins are forgiven for Christ’s sake: sin never appears more odious and loathsome than when viewed in the glass of pardoning love; see Ezr 9:6.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Here God shows that he would at length be propitious to his elect when they repented. Thus he signifies that there was no other means of reconciliation than by the intervention of repentance. And we must carefully remark this, as I have previously mentioned. For we know with what security all men usually indulge themselves, nor are the pious themselves affected with grief sufficiently serious, when God invites them to the hope of safety and at the same time offers pardon. They embrace indeed greedily what they hear, but meanwhile they bury their sins. But God wishes us to taste his goodness, that the remembrance of our crimes should be bitter, and also that every one should judge himself that he may obtain pardon from him. Now, therefore, we understand the Prophet’s intention. We saw a similar passage in Jeremiah: this teaching occurs throughout the Prophets, there, says he, you shall remember me. The circumstance of place is to be noticed, because the Prophet means that after the elect shall have returned to God’s favor, and he shall account them as true Members of his Church, then they thought to be mindful of their former life and to repent of their sins. As if he had said, as long as God afflicts you and you remain under the tyranny of the Gentiles in exile, the sense of your evils will compel you to groan, so the remembrance of your sins should return, since, whether you will or not, their punishment will ever be before your eyes, since they would be easily persuaded that their sentence was usual and common. But he shows them that the sons of God were not only mindful of their sins, when they feel themselves chastised by him, and experience shows his hostility, but when received into favor and in the enjoyment of their inheritance, they live under God’s wings, and he cherishes them as a tender offspring: when, therefore, the faithful are treated so humanely by God, yet the Prophet shows that in their condition they ought to be mindful of their sins, and all your works in which you have been polluted, says he. He now shows to what purpose they were to be mindful. For the wicked are compelled to call their sins to remembrance when God, by forcibly turning their attention to them, draws them to consider what they desire to bury in oblivion. But it is here said, you shall be confounded in your own sight. Since the Hebrew word קוט, kot, signifies to cut off, many interpreters take it for “ye shall be cut off;” that is, you shall judge yourselves worthy of destruction among those whom God will cut off and blot out of the earth. But this seems forced. Since the same word sometimes signifies to litigate, and to become abominable, I willingly take this meaning, that they shall be abominable, or contemptible, in their own sight: that is, they shall be so ashamed, as willingly and fully to acknowledge themselves utterly disgraced. Hence Ezekiel means that the faithful should suffer voluntary disgrace, that they may glorify God by the pure and genuine confession of their shame. If any one prefers to expound it, you shall be condemned or convinced, that sense will suit well enough; but I have already brought forward what seemed more simple. For I said that this was the fruit of penitence, when we he confounded before God and are vile and despicable in our own eyes, and when we not only suffer ourselves to be condemned by others, but inwardly reflect upon our own disgrace, and so of our own accord prostrate ourselves before God. This then is the fruit of penitence, this is true humility, flowing from genuine shame. At length it follows —

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(43) Ye shall lothe yourselves.The especial sin above all others for which Israel had been reproved in past ages, and which still formed the burden of Ezekiels denunciations, was idolatry; from this they were weaned, once for all, at the restoration, and whatever other sins may have been committed by them, into this, as a nation, they have never since relapsed.

With Eze. 20:44 this prophecy ends, and here the chapter closes in the Hebrew and in the ancient versions.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

Eze 20:43 And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled; and ye shall lothe yourselves in your own sight for all your evils that ye have committed.

Ver. 43. Ye shall remember your ways. ] Recognition is the first thing in reformation. See Eze 16:61 .

And ye shall loathe yourselves. ] Dissecabimini in faciebus vestris. a Ye shall be, as it were, slashed with a sword over your faces, like as those Act 2:37 were pricked at heart: they felt their sins as so many daggers at their hearts.

a Percutietis facies vestras. Sept.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

ye shall lothe yourselves. Compare Eze 16:61-63.

evils. Same word as “wicked”, Eze 20:44.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

shall ye: Eze 6:9, Lev 26:39-41, Neh 1:8-10, Hos 5:15

and ye shall: Eze 16:61-63, Eze 36:31, Job 42:6, Jer 31:18, Zec 12:10-14, Luk 18:13, 2Co 7:11

Reciprocal: Lev 26:41 – humbled Deu 9:7 – Remember Job 7:5 – loathsome Psa 106:39 – defiled Pro 13:5 – is Jer 31:19 – I was ashamed Eze 14:22 – ye shall see Eze 37:23 – shall they defile Zec 1:6 – according to our ways Eph 2:11 – remember Rev 2:5 – Remember Rev 3:3 – Remember

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Eze 20:43, The outstanding effort of the captivity was to rid the Jewish nation of the corruption of idolatry. (See the historical note on this subject in connection with comments on Isa 1:25, volume 3 of this Commentary.)

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Eze 20:43-44. And there shall ye remember your ways There, in my holy mountain, in Zion, when you are restored to your own land; and more especially in the Christian Church, when, in consequence of your conversion, you enter into it, and enjoy the privileges of it, ye shall remember and be humbled on account of your doings, whereby you have been defiled. When you find how gracious I am to you, notwithstanding your long-continued disobedience and repeated rebellions, you will be overcome with my kindness, and blush to think of your refractory conduct toward so good a God. And ye shall loathe yourselves in your own sight See notes on Eze 6:9; Eze 16:63. Thus the prophet fore-tels that the restoration of the Jews to their own land would be accompanied with a general repentance, and a deep remorse for their former mis-doings. And we find, from the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, that this was in fact the case with multitudes of them: they fasted and made public confessions of their sins upon their returning to Judea, and entered into a general and solemn engagement to be obedient to God, and observe his laws for the future. And, undoubtedly, this humiliation, godly sorrow, and true repentance, will more especially take place, and be more abundantly manifested in and among that people, when they shall be converted to Christianity in the latter days.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

20:43 And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, in which ye have been defiled; and ye {u} shall lothe yourselves in your own sight for all your evils that ye have committed.

(u) Your own consciences will convict you after you have felt my mercies.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Back in the land then the Israelites would remember their past sins and loathe themselves. They would also come to know the Lord for the kind of God He is because they would recognize how graciously He had dealt with them as a people.

The prospect of future grace, restoration, and blessing has always been the strongest motivation for present holiness (Rom 2:4). This is why this message ends as it does.

"The prophet Ezekiel straddled two eras, the grim era of the past and present which culminated in double exile and-in prospect at least-a glorious era to be inaugurated by a new work of God. In this chapter both these aspects are set side by side so that it presents an epitome of his total message." [Note: Allen, Ezekiel 20-48, p 15.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)