Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 37:28
And the heathen shall know that I the LORD do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them forevermore.
28. The presence of Jehovah makes the house wherein he dwells a sanctuary (holy place), and the presence of his sanctuary (he being there, Eze 48:35) among the people sanctifies them or makes them “holy” a term which expresses two things: being the possession of Jehovah, and being in disposition and life all that the people of Jehovah must be. The idea that Jehovah’s presence “sanctifies” the people is common. Jehovah’s dwelling-place being among the people for ever the nations shall know that he “sanctifies” them. To sanctify is not to protect, it is to make the people his own and worthy of him, but this implies protection. Jer 2:3, “Israel was a holy thing to the Lord, the first fruit of his increase, all that ate him up incurred guilt.” The ideas in this verse lead naturally over to the episode of Gog’s invasion, the issues of which so remarkably illustrate them.
The restoration of Israel includes the tribes of the north as well as Judah. All the prophets of this age regard the northern exiles as still existing, cf. Jer 3:12-15: Isa 49:5-6, and the strong passage Isa 43:5-7 “every one called by my name,” i.e. every member of the people of the Lord. Cf. the present prophet’s disposition of all the tribes in the holy land, ch. 48.
Ch. 38, 39 Invasion of the Restored Israel in the latter days by Gog and all the nations lying in the outskirts of the world, and Israel’s protection by Jehovah
These two chapters are closely connected with ch. Eze 37:28, “the nations shall know that I Jehovah do sanctify” Israel. This recalls to the prophet’s mind the invasion of Gog, a great and final attack on Israel by the nations, and he introduces the description of it here, as it illustrates so conspicuously what is said in Eze 37:21-28. For the invasion of Gog is an episode out of connexion with the restoration of the people, which has formed the theme of the preceding chapters (33 37). It lies far in the future ( Eze 37:8 ; Eze 37:16), long after Israel has been restored, and when it has dwelt long in peace in its own land ( Eze 37:8 ; Eze 37:11). The sedulous care with which the land is purified from the carcases of Gog’s host, every bone being carefully collected and the whole buried beyond the Jordan, is sufficient evidence of the holiness of Israel and the land at the time of Gog’s attack (Eze 39:11-16).
The prophet is not the author of the idea of this invasion. It has been predicted of old by the prophets of Israel, prophesying over long periods (Eze 38:17, Eze 39:8). Neither is it probable that the idea was one read out of certain prophecies merely by Ezekiel. More likely it was an idea widely entertained. The former prophecies on which the belief was founded are not to be supposed to have contained the name of Gog, any more than the prophecies applied by the author of Isaiah 40 seq. to the career of Cyrus need have referred to him by name.
The conception is rather shadowy and vague. The time is indefinite, it is far into the years to come; the nations who cluster around the standard of Gog, himself a somewhat nebulous personage, are those lying in the uttermost regions of the world, which, had been heard of but never seen. The most distant north and the most distant south send their contingents to swell the innumerable host, and the far-off commercial peoples Sheba and Dedan and Tarshish follow his camp ( Eze 37:3 ; Eze 37:5-6 ; Eze 37:13). The description seems almost a creation, the embodiment of an idea the idea of the irreconcilable hostility of the nations of the world to the religion of Jehovah, and the presentiment that this must yet be manifested on a grander scale than has ever yet been. Hence the supernatural magnitude of the outlines of the picture ( Eze 37:9 ; Eze 37:16 ; Eze 37:20). The main idea of the prophet, however, is quite perspicuous. With the exception of Ethiopia, a somewhat general name for the most distant south, none of the historical nations appear under Gog’s banner. These nations that came into connexion with Israel during her history have already learned to know Jehovah (ch. 25 32). They have not been exterminated, but his glory has been revealed to them and they no more trouble the peace of the restored Israel (Eze 36:36). But the nations lying in the outskirts of the earth, as another prophet expresses it, “have not heard Jehovah’s fame neither have seen his glory” (Isa 66:19), and he who is God alone must reveal himself to all flesh, for he has sworn by himself that to him every knee shall bow (Isa 45:23). Such is the meaning of this last act in the drama of the world’s history. As it is Jehovah’s final revelation of himself to all the nations of the earth, it is accompanied by all those terrors and convulsions in nature which in earlier prophets usually signalize the day of the Lord (Eze 38:19-23). This indeed is peculiar in Ezek. that he places Jehovah’s great and last revelation of himself after the restoration of his people to peace and felicity, while in the earlier prophets it precedes or accompanies their restoration; as it does even in prophets after him (Isa 40:5; Psa 102:16). In this order he is followed by the Apocalypse (Rev 19:11; Rev 20:7). Besides the display of Jehovah’s might in the overthrow of Gog and in the terrible convulsions of nature, his moral being and rule is also revealed through his people, for his protection of them now that they are holy and true casts light to the nations on his former dispersion of them (Eze 39:23).
Gog is styled prince of Rosh, Meshech and Tubal, nations lying in the extremities of the north ( Eze 37:15). Other nations are joined to these, lying in the furthest south ( Eze 37:5). And in the train of these warriors come the hosts of far-off commercial peoples, camp followers intent on gain ( Eze 37:13). It is, therefore, self-evident that the Chaldeans are not represented under the name of Gog. The Chaldeans are Jehovah’s mandatories, commissioned to chastise his people, and humble the ungodly pride of such nations as Egypt and Phenicia, and Ezekiel’s prophecies contain no threats against Babylon. He intimates indeed that the supremacy of that power is but temporary, naming 40 years as the term when a new condition of the world will arise, which presupposes her decline and fall. But the invasion of Gog appears to him to be far away in the indefinite future, long after the promises of the Lord to his people have been fulfilled, and this fulfilment must be preceded by the overthrow of the Chaldean power.
The passage extends to ch. Eze 39:24, where the prophet resumes the point of view occupied in ch. 33 7 prior to the Restoration of Israel.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Eze 37:28
I the Lord do sanctify Israel.
Sanctification
I. We shall view it as the Holy Spirits work to sanctify Israel. He gives a new, another, a spiritual life, yea, His own life, to sinners who were dead in trespasses and in sins. That is the religion of the Bible. That sanctification which becomes conspicuous and visible is the giving of life Divine, life spiritual, and into the soul of a sinner dead in trespasses and in sins. You hath He quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins. The Apostle John puts it in another form, and says to his brethren who were regenerated by the power of the Holy Ghost, We are of God–that is, we have a life obtained from God–we know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness. The Son of God Himself speaks of it in the third chapter of the Gospel of St. John as a new birth; and what is that but participation in a new, another nature? I, Jehovah, do sanctify Israel. Let me here glance at the identity of the covenant seed in this grand operation of grace. Wherever the Holy Ghost implants spiritual life, that soul is identified, at once, as an Israelite. The heathen shall know that I, the Lord, do sanctify Israel. And who are Israel? The seed of a covenant Head; a ransomed people; an emancipated people; a peculiar people. Oh! the vast importance of this distinction. I would to God that it were kept up and maintained among the followers of the Lamb. What is the first feature of their peculiarity? They are circumcised in heart, and love God, and are distinguished from the Egyptians. Light is in their dwellings, when all else is dark and dead. Look well to this point. Am I really sanctified by the Holy Ghost, set apart from the world, and made partaker of the Divine nature? Then am I Christs offspring. Then am I separated from the world for Him; redeemed by His precious blood; brought out of Egyptian bondage, and cannot live under the taskmasters and under the yoke any longer. Then am I made to serve Jehovah, and worship Him in spirit and in truth. Think of our daily and hourly dependence. Think of the matter of fact, that we cannot advance a step in the Divine life, that we cannot claim a promise even, or enjoy it, that we cannot surmount a difficulty, that we cannot meet an enemy, that we cannot sustain a trial, without communications of grace from on high. And therefore, says the apostle, when referring to Him in whom all is treasured up, Of His fulness have all we received, and grace for grace. Do not attempt to satisfy me, do not attempt to satisfy yourselves with a lazy religion. All Gods sanctified ones are employed; for He says to every one of them, Son, go work in My vineyard today. Dont stop till tomorrow. Go every day. The believing family of God are called upon to glorify Him with their bodies and spirits, because their bodies and spirits are the Lords. O God! employ Thy sanctified ones, and let every child of Thine be active and vigilant in extending the triumphs of the Cross! Do not tell me that you are incapable of doing anything. That is one of Satans falsehoods and artifices to allure you to indulge in laziness. Do not tell me that you have no talent. I can receive none of these excuses. All Gods sanctified ones have at least something to do in His vineyard for the glorifying of His name. And I would have them take a lesson from one of our old martyrs, picked up from the lowest walk of life, illiterate, and without a penny which he could call his own; and who when brought before a Roman pro-consul and sneeringly asked, What can you do for your Christ? replied, I cannot preach Him: I have no talent. I cannot support His cause; I have no money: but there are two things which I can do for Him; I can live for Him, and I can die for Him.
II. The heathen shall know that I, Jehovah, do sanctify Israel. The heathen shall know! What, do you mean to send all out as missionaries to foreign lands and barbarous tribes, to make known what God has done for our souls? I do not think, at any rate at present, that all should be employed thus, for you need not go out of England, or out of London, to find vast numbers of heathens. Now we would here come again to the subject of decision. Say, how is it with you? With a life so superior, with a dignity so supernatural, with prospects so bright, at an expense so vast as the atoning blood of Christ–will you degrade yourselves–will you suffer the heathen to triumph over you? Oh, to be able daily and hourly to put on the Lord Jesus Christ, that His likeness, His image, His mind, His Spirit may be exhibited by us, whilst we seek no provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof. This is the way to make it known, that the heathen shall know and see the contrast. Not a few worldlings, whom I have thus set down as heathens, have been brought to acknowledge that there is something very singular, something very strange, something very mysterious, which they cannot fathom, in the Christianity which we possess. They cannot discover what that something is; and they never will until God gives it to them; it is His to bestow. And this brings me to dwell for a moment on the absolute sovereignty of the grace which imparts it. I, Jehovah, do it. Oh, how I wish that I could be more familiar with His doings, and jealous about my own I Oh, how I wish that every spiritual act that a believer is able to perform, might be instantly traced, as the apostle did his, to the hand of God! Oh, the blessedness of subscribing to that article of the apostles creed, Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, etc. Then, having laid the foundation in absolute sovereignty, see how he goes on in the next verse to describe its operations:–Of His own will begat He us–not mans proud free-will–of His own will begat He us, by the word of truth, that we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures. Oh, the vast importance of having this distinction between us and the heathens, and the preservation of that distinction as the work of God–an act of the operation of His absolute power! I, the Lord, will do it, and the heathen shall know it. Now here is a glorious distinction–that the heathen shall know it. They must not only acknowledge that what is done is a good thing, but that it is supernatural and beyond the creatures power; and admit, as the heathen monarch of old did, in the case of the deliverance of Shadrach, Meshech, and Abednego, that it is the work of Him whose dwelling is not upon this earth–that it is a supernatural, Divine work. Another point which will be conspicuous to the heathen is, your circumspection; for, when God sanctifies, He makes the recipient of His sanctifying grace very circumspect. The heathen will not see the secret intercourse that is going on in your heart with God. They cannot see the hidden springs of life. They cannot see the secret purpose of predestinating love, from whence all proceeds; but they can see your circumspection. They can see how you walk; they can see what spirit, and mind, and temper you exhibit. They can see whether there is anything about you–in your whole conduct and deportment–which gives the lie to your profession; and they will not be backward in talking about it. They discover it in a moment. Oh, how important, therefore, is that solemn advice of the apostle!–Be ye therefore holy, even as he who hath called you is holy. One point more: it relates to the experimental enjoyment–which sanctifying grace imparts when we stand before the heathen as a distinguished people, and the heathen shall know it. (J. Irons.)
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Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
When Christ by his Spirit in gospel ordinances is among them, it shall appear they are a consecrated and a sanctified people.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
28. (Eze36:23).
sanctify Israelset itapart as holy unto Myself and inviolable (Exo 19:5;Exo 19:6).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And the Heathen shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel,…. Or the Gentiles, the converted Gentiles, shall observe and take notice of the gracious dealings of God with his people the Jews; that he calls them with an holy calling; implants principles of grace and holiness in them; separates and consecrates them for his service, and enables them to walk holily, soberly, and righteously:
when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore; when his worship shall be set up among them; his Gospel shall be preached unto them, and received by them; and his ordinances administered unto them; and which shall continue till the second coming of Christ.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
REFLECTIONS
READER! make a long pause over this most blessed Chapter; look up for the renewal of that Holy Spirit to shed his influences upon you, who put breath into those dry bones the Prophet saw; that so the glories of the doctrine here taught may appear fully to your view, and their saving effect be fully felt upon your mind. Consider this lower world! Is it not indeed a valley, and full of dead men’s bones, and all uncleanness? By nature, and by practice, the whole world is dead in trespasses and sins. Who then but God the Spirit can put life into those bones, that they may live? Come, Lord, we pray thee, with all thy sweet and genial influence upon the souls of thy people, and while they groan under a sense of sin, and the oppressions of the enemy, do thou, Lord, put thy blessed Spirit in them, that they may live!
Chiefly, ye ministers of my God! learn from this divine subject, and of the Lord’s own preaching by the Prophet; in whose strength all spiritual labours must be carried on with the least hopes of success; and on whose blessing depends the fruit of all your ministry. All the congregation of the faithful are in themselves, simply no other, than those bones of the valley. The dead in every Church-yard, long buried there, are no more dead to any bodily act, than the dead in trespasses and sins are to any spiritual exercise, And when we behold a minister of Christ addressing his flock, he is to all intents and purposes, as much as the Prophet in the valley, calling upon the dead to hear the word of the Lord; or as one in the Church-yard would be, in bidding the dead around him to arise at the sound of his voice. Both are alike incompetent to any energy. And the recovery of either must be a miracle. If these things were but properly impressed upon every Preacher’s mind, with what earnestness would he plead and wrestle with God in prayer, before he entered upon his labours, for a blessing from the Lord! Will such an one (if peradventure he should condescend to read these observations,) forgive me, if I close the Chapter with an earnest exhortation, that this solemn view of the subject may have its proper weight upon his mind. And oh! that the Lord the Spirit may induce every heart, so engaged in holy things, to be continually looking up to him for his blessing, both upon himself and his people. Lord, I would say! breath upon the dry bones of the valley, and bid them live; then shall we know that the Lord hath spoken it, and the Lord hath performed it!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Eze 37:28 And the heathen shall know that I the LORD do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore.
Ver. 28. Do sanctify Israel, ] i.e., Do set them apart for mine use, and will see to their safety.
When my sanctuary.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
shall know. See note on Eze 6:30.
when, &c. = by the existence of My sanctuary in, &c.
for evermore. Therefore this prophecy yet awaits its fulfilment.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
the heathen: Eze 36:23, Eze 36:36, Eze 38:23, Eze 39:7, Eze 39:23, Psa 79:10, Psa 102:15, Psa 126:2, Rom 11:15
sanctify: Eze 20:12, Exo 31:13, Lev 20:8, Lev 21:8, Joh 17:17-19, 1Co 1:30, Eph 5:26, 1Th 5:23
Reciprocal: Exo 40:18 – reared Psa 87:3 – Glorious Isa 27:3 – I the Isa 29:22 – Jacob shall Jer 29:11 – thoughts Lam 4:22 – he will no Eze 38:14 – shalt Hos 11:9 – the Holy One
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Eze 37:28. The literal heathen were shown that God was with Israel when He brought them out of the captivity, as may be observed in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah. And today the world may behold an institution, the church, that has stood for 19 centuries.