Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 20:28
[For] when I had brought them into the land, [for] the which I lifted up mine hand to give it to them, then they saw every high hill, and all the thick trees, and they offered there their sacrifices, and there they presented the provocation of their offering: there also they made their sweet savor, and poured out there their drink offerings.
28. The prophet regards the worship on the high-places and under the evergreen trees as a Canaanitish usage adopted by Israel, as Deuteronomy 12. At the same time Israel usually employed the altars or chapels which they found for the service of Jehovah; but naturally many corruptions would creep into such service, and it might become little different from a service of Baal. In the oldest prophets, Amos and Hosea, it is the kind of worship at the high-places that is condemned, the revelry and heathenish merrymaking (Hos 9:1) the sensuousness (Hos 8:13; Amo 5:21), and the false conception Of deity implied in it (Hos 6:6). The mere localities or multitude of altars do not seem assailed, except that the more there were of them the more sin was committed, because the whole worship was sinful (Hos 8:11; Amo 4:4). Later this impure worship was perceived to be inseparable from the high-places and these themselves came under condemnation. Ezekiel does not go further in his condemnation of the high hills and green trees than his predecessor Jeremiah (Jer 2:20; Jer 3:6).
all the thick trees ] Evergreen and umbrageous trees appear to have been regarded as abodes of deity.
offered their sacrifices ] Four words are employed: offerings of flesh, particularly the peace or thank-offerings; what is called their “offering” or oblation, a general word used of bloodless sacrifices as well as of others, possibly first-fruits and the like; their “sweet savour,” usually said of the odour of the flesh or fat burnt upon the altar, but also of the odour of meal-offerings (ch. Eze 16:19); and finally, drink-offerings. The clause “and there provocation of their offering” is wanting in LXX. The term “offering” (Korban), found only in Lev., Numb., again in Eze 40:43 (see there).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
When; so soon as settled in the land promised to Abraham and his seed.
Lifted up mine hand: see Eze 20:5,23.
Saw; lookest after them, and, when seen, liked and prepared after the manner of the heathen; though this was forbidden, yet this thou didst, buildedst thy high places, and thou settest up thy groves every where.
There; not where God appointed, but where they listed.
Their sacrifices; either to God, as sometimes some did, or to their own idols, as the most did, which is here called the presenting the provocation of their offering.
Their offering; which being presented to their idol, was a provocation unto God.
Sweet savour; burnt sweet odours to their idols, which did stink in the nostrils of God.
Their drink-offerings; wine was a part of the offering that sacrificers offered, and so did these idolatrous Jews here, they violated the whole law of sacrifice, and did all that to idols they should have done only to God.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
28. provocation of their offeringanoffering as it were purposely made to provoke God.
sweet savourWhat oughtto have been sweet became offensive by their corruptions. Hespecifies the various kinds of offerings, to show that in allalike they violated the law.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
[For] when I had brought them into the land,…. Brought them out of Egypt through the wilderness into the land of Canaan, through so many difficulties, by such displays of power, goodness, and truth:
[for] the which I lifted up mine band to give it to them; which he swore he would give unto them, and which he did, and so fulfilled his word and oath; and which was an instance of his bounty and goodness; and not owing to any merits of theirs; which he did, and so fulfilled his word and oath; and which was an instance of his bounty and goodness, and not owing to any merits of theirs:
then they saw every high hill, and all the thick trees; as soon as they had got into the land, and took a view of it, they at once fixed their eyes upon the high hills and groves, as proper places to set up their idols on, and perform idolatrous worship in; in the one place more openly, and in the other more secretly, as they might judge proper and necessary; in which they imitated the Heathens, who had their temples, idols, altars, and sacrifices, amidst groves and thick trees. So Herodotus n relates of the temple of Diana at Bubastis in Egypt, that at the entrance of it there were rivulets from the Nile, which flowed about it here and there, shaded with trees; and within were a vast grove of the largest trees, planted about the temple; and which he afterwards calls trees reaching to heaven:
and they offered there their sacrifices; either to the God of Israel, as some of them sometimes did, and which was sinful; for though they might offer sacrifices, as were commanded, to a right object, yet not in the proper place: or rather to their idols; and so the Septuagint and Arabic versions,
to their own gods; which they had made to themselves, and had chose and approved of:
and there they presented the provocation of their offering; or their offering which provoked the wrath of God against them; being such as either he had not appointed, or was offered in a wrong place, or the wrong object; than which nothing could be more provoking to him; it was giving his glory to another, and his praise to graven images:
there also they made their sweet saviour; incense to their deities. The Targum is the worship of their sacrifices:
and poured out there their drink offerings; libations of wine: all kind of sacrifices were offered up here by them; which shows to what lengths in idolatry they ran, and how dreadfully guilty they were.
n Euterpe: sive l. 2. c. 138.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Hence, after I had brought them into the land for which, or concerning which, I had lifted up my hand to give it them, they saw, says he, every high hill, and every green or branching tree, and there they sacrificed. God wished to have one altar built for himself, and sacrifices to be offered in one place; nay, before the people had any certain and fixed station, God was unwilling that any altar should be built to him of polished stones, that no trace of it should remain; but a mound only was to be made of either turf or rough stones. (Exo 20:25; Deu 27:5.) Now he says, whenever hills and branching trees were lying before them, there they found enticements to superstition. This, therefore, is the reproach which God now complains was offered to him. But this passage, like many others, teaches, that not only is God’s worship corrupted when his honor is transferred to idols, but also when men heap up their own fictions, and contaminate God’s commands by the mixture. We must remember, then, that there are two kinds of idolatries; the one being grossest when idols are worshipped openly, and Moloch, or any Baal, is substituted for the living God: that is a palpable superstition, because God is in some sense cast down from his throne. But the other kind of idolatry, although more hidden, is abominable before God, namely, when, under the disguise of a name, men boldly mingle whatever comes into their minds, and invent various modes of worship; as at present we see in the papacy statues adored, and dead men invoiced, and God’s honor violated in various ways. Hence, however, the papists chatter, they are self-convicted, and the wonder is that they are not utterly silenced, since their superstitions are so gross that even boys perceive them. But there are other superstitions more specious and refined; for when they have invented many things in honor of God, they will not bring forward the names of either St. Barbara or St. Christopher, but the name of God covers all those abominations. But we see that this excuse is frivolous, when men assert that they have nothing else in their mind than the worship of God. Not only does God wish worship to be offered to himself alone, but that it should be without any dependence on human will: he wishes the law to be the single rule of true worship; and thus he rejects all fictitious rites. Hence the Prophet deservedly excuses the Israelites, because they turned their eyes towards every high hill and every branching tree, and there offered the provocation of their offering. He calls it the provocation of their offering, since they not only foolishly poured forth much money on those vitiated rites, but also provoked God to anger. We see, therefore, that men not only lose their labor when they decline from God’s commands, and rashly fatigue themselves with their own superstitions, but they provoke God to a contest, because they snatch from him the right of a lawgiver: for it is in his power to determine how he ought to be worshipped; and when men claim this power to themselves, it is like ascending to the very throne of God. But if they follow the inventions of others, still it is setting them up as lawgivers, while God is degraded from his tribunal. Thus it is not surprising if God’s wrath is provoked by any sacrifices, besides those which the law prescribes. And this is expressed very clearly by Isaiah, when God announces that he will do what will frighten them all as an unexpected prodigy: I will blind the eyes of the wise, says he, and I will take away prudence from the aged. (Isa 29:14.) And why so? because they worship me by the precepts of men.
It follows, And they offered their sweet odor, or agreeable fragrance. These two things seem contrary to each other, that their offerings inflamed God’s wrath, and yet their savor was sweet. But the Prophet. speaks ironically when he says, their incense was sweet-smelling. By conceding this he derides them, since they falsely supposed God was appeased in this way, although he reproves them at the same time for defiling, by their corruption’s, that incense which ought to have been of delightful fragrance. For the language of Moses is repeated: The scent shall reach God’s nostrils, and he shall be appeased. (Deu 33:10.) Since, then, the incense of the law was sweet-smelling, God here bitterly reproaches the Jews for infecting that good odor with their foulness. Hence the phrase is used in a sense contrary to its direct meaning. Lastly, he says, they have poured out their drink-offerings there. Here God reviews the various kinds of oblations which he had fully prescribed in the law but he shows that the Jews were rebellious against them all; and he further detects their unbridled petulance, since they had not only violated the law in one point, but had left no part untouched by their superstitions. God had commanded sacrifices, but these they rendered polluting: he added various oblations, yet all these they defiled: he desired libations to be made, and will to be poured out, but this part of the service was not kept pure from superstitions. Thus he shows that the people purposely took all means of declaring war against God, when they falsely pretended that nothing more was prescribed than to worship him as they pleased. It follows —
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
28. They offered there their sacrifices They were enticed into the evil Canaanitish worship against which they were ever being warned (Hos 8:11; Hos 8:13; Hos 9:1; Amo 4:4; Amo 5:21; Jer 2:20; Jer 3:6). It is now seen from the Baal sacrifice tablets (600-500 B.C.) recently discovered, that in many details the form of the ritual closely resembled that of the Hebrews. (See MacDonald’s Massera-Carthago, 1897.) This made it easier for unspiritual and sensually inclined Israelites to forget the essential differences between these sacrificial cults. (See also notes Eze 6:13; Eze 8:14-15.)
The provocation of their offering Disobedient or heathenish offerings were an insult to the one true God.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Eze 20:28 [For] when I had brought them into the land, [for] the which I lifted up mine hand to give it to them, then they saw every high hill, and all the thick trees, and they offered there their sacrifices, and there they presented the provocation of their offering: there also they made their sweet savour, and poured out there their drink offerings.
Ver. 28. For when I had brought them into the land. ] It hath been already observed that good turns aggravate unkindnesses, and men’s sins are much increased by their obligations.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
I polluted them, &c. See note on Eze 20:25. The con = trast is with their pollution of God’s gifts (Eze 20:16). pass through: or, pass over. The firstborn were to be passed over to Jehovah (Exo 13:12); but they passed them (through the fire) over to Moloch (Lev 18:21. Deu 18:10). Note the references to Pentateuch here. App-92.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
when I: Jos 23:3, Jos 23:4, Jos 23:14, Neh 9:22-26, Psa 78:55-58
the which: Eze 20:6, Eze 20:15, Gen 15:18-21, Gen 26:3, Gen 26:4, Psa 105:8-11
they saw: Eze 6:13, Psa 78:58, Isa 57:5-7, Jer 2:7, Jer 3:6
their sweet: Eze 16:19
Reciprocal: Exo 6:8 – swear Exo 10:2 – that ye Exo 29:40 – a drink Lev 1:9 – a sweet Lev 17:5 – in the open Deu 12:2 – possess Deu 12:30 – that thou 1Ki 11:7 – build an high 1Ki 14:23 – built 2Ki 16:4 – on the hills 2Ki 18:4 – removed 2Ch 21:11 – Moreover Psa 78:57 – But Psa 106:36 – And Isa 57:7 – General Isa 65:3 – that sacrificeth Isa 65:7 – blasphemed Jer 2:20 – when upon Jer 3:2 – unto Jer 3:23 – in vain Jer 7:18 – to pour Jer 13:27 – abominations Jer 17:2 – their altars Jer 22:21 – This Jer 32:30 – children Eze 6:9 – their eyes Eze 16:24 – thou hast Eze 18:6 – not Eze 20:41 – with your Eze 44:12 – therefore Eze 47:14 – lifted up mine hand Hos 4:13 – sacrifice Mal 3:7 – from the Rev 10:5 – lifted
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Eze 20:28. This verse is a description of the idolatrous conditions the Israelites found in Palestine when they entered it. They had been warned against just such things and hence had no reason to be taken by surprise. However, they fell right in with the situation and participated in all the abominable practices of the heathen.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
20:28 {n} [For] when I had brought them into the land, [for] which I lifted up my hand to give it to them, then they saw every high hill, and all the thick trees, and they offered there their sacrifices, and there they presented the provocation of their offering: there also they made their sweet savour, and poured out there their drink offerings.
(n) Not only in the wilderness, when I brought them out of Egypt, but since I placed them in this land: which declares how prompt man’s heart is to idolatry seeing that by no admonitions can he be drawn back.