{"id":21409,"date":"2022-09-24T08:59:43","date_gmt":"2022-09-24T13:59:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-ezekiel-371\/"},"modified":"2022-09-24T08:59:43","modified_gmt":"2022-09-24T13:59:43","slug":"exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-ezekiel-371","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-ezekiel-371\/","title":{"rendered":"Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 37:1"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3 align='center'><b><i> The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of the valley which [was] full of bones, <\/i><\/b><\/h3>\n<p> <strong> 1<\/strong>. <em> The hand of the Lord<\/em> ] The prophetic ecstasy from the Lord, ch. <span class='bible'>Eze 1:3<\/span>. On &ldquo;spirit&rdquo; of the Lord cf. <span class='bible'>Eze 3:14<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 8:3<\/span>, Ezek. 9:24. The &ldquo;valley&rdquo; is probably that mentioned early in the Book, <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> 1 14<\/strong>. The vision of Israel&rsquo;s resurrection from the dead<\/p>\n<p> The vision seems suggested by the saying current among the people, &ldquo;our bones are dried, our hope is lost; we are wholly cut off.&rdquo; This idea and feeling of the people takes form in the vision which the prophet saw in the valley. The language of the people is figurative: they speak of the nationality, which is no more, it is dead and its bones scattered and dry. And this idea regarding the nationality, figuratively expressed by the people, is embodied to the prophet in a vision. Hence the passage is not a literal prophecy of the resurrection of individual persons of the nation, dead or slain; it is a prophecy of the resurrection of the nation, whose condition is figuratively expressed by the people when they represent its bones as long scattered and dry. Perfect consistency is not maintained by the prophet: in <span class='bible'><em> Eze 37:1-2<\/em><\/span> the dry bones are represented as lying on the face of the valley, very many and very dry; in <span class='bible'><em> Eze 37:12<\/em><\/span> they are represented as buried and brought up out of their graves. Hosea had already used the figure of resurrection for the resuscitation of the nation (<span class='bible'>Eze 6:2<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 13:4<\/span>); but, though the language used both here and by Hosea shews familiarity with the idea of the raising again of individuals, this is not what is prophesied. In <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Daniel 12<\/span> the actual resurrection of individual members of Israel is predicted, cf. <span class='bible'>Job 14:13<\/span> <em> seq<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P STYLE=\"text-indent: 0.75em\"><B>The valley &#8211; <\/B>The same word as the plain <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 8:4<\/span>. The dry bones represented the Israelites dispersed abroad, destitute of life national and spiritual.<\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Albert Barnes&#8217; Notes on the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span><\/p>\n<p><em>Son of man, can these bones live?<\/em><\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The vision of a true revival<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>Such a revival often seems utterly hopeless. The condition of a nation in some of its eras of misfortune; the condition of the human race in their graves; the condition of men who have lapsed into low spiritual life;&#8211;are all conditions whose striking emblem would be a valley full of dry bones. There seems nothing to promise better things. There is no effort, no struggle upwards. Hope is lost.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>Such a revival is deeply interesting to good men. By a dialogue Ezekiel is interested in the present condition, the possible future, of these bones, is taught his own weakness, and has revealed to him the source of strength and the methods of renewal. So always some Divine influence comes to interest good men in the recovery to higher life of those with whom He has to do. By His Spirit too, and by the, discipline of life, and by the Scriptures, God, as in a dialogue with such a mans soul, teaches him all he needs to know about such a renewal as He sees is deeply needed.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>Such a revival is partly wrought by creature agency. For political regeneration there are appointed heroes of the State; for the resurrection of the body there is appointed the angel with the trumpet, that shall sound when the dead are to be raised; for revival of the Church of God, earnest-souled men are appointed.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>Such a revival is gradual in its progress. There were several stages in the accomplishment of the revival in this valley of vision. So in every revival. First, a noise. This is the least important of all, yet often seems to be a needful accompaniment, an indication of awakening life. Then a shaking. This politically finds its fulfilment in revolution, and often in war. In spiritual things it finds its fulfilment in throes of spirit, sometimes the agonies of doubt. Then the bones came together, bone to his bone. This surely points to right organisation and consolidation, whether of the nation or of the individual character. Then the sinews and the flesh came upon them, and the skin covered them from above. Here is the accomplishing of all that can be accomplished of merely external order and beauty. But how poor are all! For there was no breath in them.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>V. <\/strong>Such a revival requires Gods special operation. From the four winds the breath came, that is the symbol of the Divine Spirit. So only righteousness exalts a nation, and without the Spirit of God there will not be righteousness: so the dead at the last day will be raised by God.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>VI. <\/strong>Such a revival produces sublime results. Instead of a valley of dry bones, there is an army, living, united, loyal, mighty. So, by their true regeneration, nations rise from being abject, poor, immoral, to kingdoms of liberty, prosperity, virtue. So human characters shall be elevated: the man no longer dead in sin, shall have a heart united to fear God, a nature that reveals the Divine in spiritual harmony, strength, and glory. (<em>Urijah R. Thomas.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Can these bones live<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel differs from the other prophets in this: that he stands before us as half prophet and half priest. He has been described by a great authority as a priest in a prophets mantle. In him the two streams met and parted. In this passage, however, Ezekiel is not a priest, but a pure prophet, and he is in the direct prophetic line. We are perhaps in a position to trace the growth of this famous allegory and to reconstruct the process by which it took shape in the prophets thought. It had taken fire from a spark, and that spark was a phrase he had heard from his fellow exiles in Babylon&#8211;Our bones are dried and our hope is lost. The metaphor swelled in his imagination to a vision and became one of the great dreams of the world&#8211;so much more a dream because its explanation is the sleepless purpose of Almighty God with man. Ezekiel stands up among the prevailing lassitude and indifference, and he is a prophet because he is a man of hope, because he has faith in God. What we have here is an allegory; it is an allegory of resurrection, but not the resurrection of the body, nor perhaps of the dead as individuals, but of the nation. The resurrection of the individual dead was perhaps no part as yet of the Hebrew faith.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>As to the scene, it was the scene of so many visions&#8211;the valley by the river Chebar. Now it wore a hideous aspect, and to the prophet its face was a scene of desolation; it was ghastly with dry ruin, with the chronic leprosy of death. And it was death grown grey and sere, death that was hopeless of any life to come; death settled down into possession; death that was privileged, enthroned and secure. That was Israel&#8211;defeated, destroyed, and dismembered, crumbling into paganism, some not hoping, not wishing to revive. The bones were many and they were very dry. Death always has the majority on its side. The dryness and death of a dead multitude is something more than the death of the same number scattered up and down the community. The dead city is always worse than so many dead people scattered about the country; therefore pull down the infested places; erase the slums, destroy the hotbeds of vice, however difficult, and get rid of the ferment of corruption.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>As to the prophets acting. He passed by them round about; he did not tread upon them as the lout upon the cemetery graves. The Spirit moving among them was God; He is God of these bones also, and, therefore, Ezekiel is reverent to them. May the Spirit of God make us reverent towards all human wrecks&#8211;whether black or white. The Christian preacher has no right to be anything else. Can he be otherwise than respectful towards those whose hope and joy are gone? Who acts otherwise does it from a low heart. Can these dry bones live? Well, they are relics, things with memories, things once wedded to life although now in such tragic divorce from it. A mere mummy of a man, living under the wrath and curse of God, may not be the object of Gods neglect. Gods anger is not out of all relation to His love; not beyond His pity; not foreign to His grace. To have the anger of God, I venture to say, is at least some melancholy dignity. Son of man, can these bones live? This question is put every time we review the past. Is there not often in the dead past life for the present? Can these bones live? It is the question God is asking us by the mouth of history today. Why, these Gospels which have done so much are comparatively meagre&#8211;they are His bones&#8211;when you compare them with the fulness of the whole historic Christ, who takes ever a saving relation to Him as a historic revelation of God. The faith of Pentecost makes a great difference in the meaning of the historical creed. Then the Christ within us can take full measure of the Christ without. His evidence is Himself, and the history of the Risen One, with the experience of the Church during these two thousand years, must interpret and supplement the historic evidence of His Resurrection. Experience verifies the Gospels. The living evidence is not confined to the first, second, and third centuries. It is vital and mighty in every century, and not least in the century in which we live. The Spirit which quickens is as essential as the vision which sees. The faith which felt what these bones could be was as real as the eyesight which saw them on the plain. There can be, indeed, no new revelation of the Father: Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today, and forever. But the future may reveal more of the revelation which is fixed in the history of the past, and elicit its infinite resources. By way of history will come the extraction of the resources of that revelation. The circumstances of history must work ever with the relics of history&#8211;personal history and public history&#8211;that is the way of Gods Spirit. And the coming revival which is to move no mere sect or coterie, which is to change the whole of our national life&#8211;that revival will show its genius also in this: it may recast here and there the history of the Church, but it will enlarge by new races the Christianity of the future. From age to age God confounds the pessimists. He takes the man of little faith, carries him back through history to the dark ages and asks him, Can these bones live? God puts you into the valley of the fifteenth century when paganism was even settling in the Church itself, when the faithful had almost ceased to believe. Could these bones live? You see not how, but Gods answer was the wonderful sixteenth century with the rediscovery of Paul and the coronation of faith, with all that followed. Once more He plants you in the Church early in the eighteenth century. Can that thing live? Gods answer is Wesley, the Oxford Club, and the Evangelical Revival. Do you doubt if any such answer can be given to the question now? We have the answer before our eyes, and the world has it, and it is often like smoke in the worlds eyes. But the men who first faced the missionary problem had it not before their eyes, they had it before their faith only. They were prophets, truly, and they had the answer more surely by faith than many of us have it even by sight. They saw men trooping from their living graves, they saw the races around them rescued and civilised by the Gospel. They saw the Church reconverted because they had within them the spirit that makes it to be so and they felt the first flutterings of its breath. What preacher does not sometimes despair when he looks at the spiritual skeletons around him? Or, perhaps, the preacher himself preaches only because it is a duty and prophesies in obedience rather than in belief. What of these? Well, preach hope until you have it, and then preach it because you have it&#8211;you have heard something of that sort before. Today the preacher is a man of parts and affairs. Often the congregation looks well and comfortable, but there is something lacking. It lacks life. It is a congregation and not a church. It may be cultured, but it is not kindled. There is more religion than regeneration. It has been clothed but not quickened. It knows about sacred things but little about the Holy Ghost. Oh, prophesy once more, prophesy till the Spirit of life comes. Preach, but still more pray. And how can you do that if your appeal to man be not inspired by your residing with God? Pray to the Spirit of God and preach to the spirit in men. Never mind current literature, but preach the deep things of God and remember that it is possible to lose your souls by mistaken efforts to gain others. Preach character by all means&#8211;more than has been done&#8211;but preach it through the Gospel that makes it. It is the demands of life that make men of us. Ask of them great sacrifices. Leave them not at ease. There are those who have not got beyond,, human, nature and its kindnesses, who care more for culture and to have something going on than for the Gospel. Rouse them to conflict, call on the Spirit to seize them and do with them what you never could do. Does not the Spirit do for us what no man can ever do?<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>As to the result. Ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves, O My people, and brought you up out of your graves. The true insight and knowledge comes by way of resurrection. We know what must rule others by knowing what has changed and ruled us. This is the source of true conquest and dominion in the world. The power of the final lordship is one of which we know nothing until we have saved men. And we cannot use the power until we ourselves have experienced it. The world is to be ruled at last only by those men and that society that knows the laws and powers of the new soul. We cannot know Gods way with the mighty world unless we give our own manhood as the pledge and lay ourselves down before Him. Spiritual power makes its own procedure, and human society must finally take its shape from the light of the redeemed soul. I suppose there never was a time when&#8211;for good or ill&#8211;organisation meant so much as today. It has been called into being until it threatens to oust the home and submerge the Church. But is there no danger in this passionate desire for an organised state of existence? As we perfect the form, what is to become of the spirit? Can we organise ourselves into eternal life? Where are we to find that life which is to save our organisation from becoming our grave? Ye shall know that I am the Lord when I have brought you out of your graves. The efficiency of the world can only be secured by the sufficiency of the Spirit. It is Christs power and courage and resource we need to face the perils around us, and the trouble is that these do not occur to our common thoughts, our common Press, and our common Parliament. What we need is to know ourselves for what we are, for the moral laggards and traitors and rebels we are. We want a power that will enable us to go on when robust assurance fails and disillusionment comes and we find ourselves out. If we have no such discovery, no Redeemer, no Quickener, then there is no God, no future. It is in His redemption we must find our power and our methods to rule the world. The life of a people depends not merely on magnanimity or devotion, but on the righteousness whose source is Christ. Our ethics are suffering today because we think of love and sacrifice for their own sake. We hear so much about them that they have become self-conscious. They fancy themselves, as we say, and dress themselves for the public gaze. They should be lost in moral inspiration. Before I admire any sacrifice or ardour I wish to know how it has been inspired. It is not idealism but sanctity that saves a nation. The greatest power we know is holiness. It was the first care of Christ not to sacrifice Himself for an ideal; it was that He might glorify the holiness of God. He died to bless man, but still more to glorify God. The first charge on us must be not the happiness of men, but the holiness of God. Then people will be called from their graves. There is no future for Godless commerce or Godless ardour of any sort. The missionary spirit is the spirit that brings nations out of their graves and resurrects them to Godliness. If you ask me whether all the human wrecks of this world can live, I am sure of it; first, because God has made something out of my shipwreck, and secondly, because I know that when He died He died for the whole world. And God knows, if I do not know, the worlds future and the worlds possibilities; it is He who still commands and has told me to act and pray till every man is saved, and therefore every man shall be saved. It would not be so hard to believe in the black races if we were sound in our belief about the white races. We are straitened within ourselves, and when there is lack of power what can we do but pray? We are bound in our passions and our sins: our bones are dried up, we are weary and too easily weighted down. These things lie upon us like the weight of earth. We can live only in Thee, O Lord of life. Clothe our bones, quicken our flesh, and the valley of Death shall be one of hope, because though we have fallen we rise to holier love and a nobler life. (<em>T. P. Forsyth, D. D.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Lessons from the valley of vision<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The primary object of this chapter was to encourage the Jews to expect their restoration from the Babylonish captivity. At the time of the utterance of this prophecy they were scattered among the cities of the Babylonish dominions without any existence as an independent nation. But as the bones in the valley of Ezekiels vision only needed the quickening process described in the narrative to become a living army, so the Jews only needed the interposition of God on their behalf to become again an independent nation. The meaning of the vision is explained in verses 11 to 14. But there are three other meanings that it is regarded as conveying. Applying the vision to the nominal Christian Church, it teaches that if any of Gods people have lost their spiritual life, and so their capacity for usefulness, the Holy Spirit can quicken them, and so restore to them their power for efficiency, making them an army for Immanuel. Applying the vision to the human race, it shows us Gods method of awakening into spiritual life the dead in trespasses and sins. A third view looks upon the vision as teaching the resurrection of the body at the last day, especial reference being had to the bodies of believers.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>The text presents us with a picture of the spiritual state of our race; dead in trespasses and sins. The scene presented to Ezekiels sight in vision was a valley full of bones. They were very dry. For a long time they had lain under the scorching heat of an eastern sun, until they were ready to crumble into dust. Here we have symbolised the condition of our race. Men are dead in trespasses and sins. Spiritual life is departed. Sad as the picture may appear, it is not overdrawn. Scripture testimony is true. All flesh is corrupt, Man is born in sin and shapen in iniquity. There is none righteous, naturally, no, not one. It is all-important for us to maintain this doctrine now. For there are those who would persuade us that man is not wholly corrupt; that the race is improving; that there are germs of good in us; that by the cultivation of his faculties, a man may subdue vicious propensities and become virtuous and holy. Why did Christ come to this world? Not simply to leave us an example of perfect holiness, but to atone for sin. He died to save us from a death from which we could not save ourselves. But take away any necessity for the atonement of Christ, and the love of God does not appear so great as the doctrine of mans depravity makes it appear. This doctrine of original sin is one too humbling to mans pride to be received without remonstrance, and the deep-rooted opposition to it is one proof of its truth. Who likes to be told that by nature he is wholly corrupt, and void of spiritual life? Christianity is the great civilising power in the world today, but in the most Christianised countries there is ample evidence of the universal prevalence of sin. There is no hope for the world from itself. As Ezekiel looked forth upon the valley of desolation, God said to him, Son of man, can these bones live? and he answered, O Lord God, Thou knowest. We ask, Is it possible for the millions of our race now in ignorance of the Gospel, in darkness about a future state, never having heard of the only way of salvation, to be enlightened and all brought at last to worship the same Lord and trust in the same Saviour as ourselves? We look around us: we see that in a Christian land, like our own, the masses of our fellow creatures, with all the spiritual advantages they possess, are careless about salvation and treat the Gospel as if it were some cunningly devised fable. Can these dry bones live? They cannot save themselves; they are powerless to procure themselves spiritual life. Looked at from a human standpoint, the work is an impossibility. To Him who created a world out of nothing, there is no impossibility in restoring to life, whether the dead in sins or the dead in body. Be it ours to follow the directions of Divine Providence, and patiently to wait for the exertion of Gods almighty power.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The text presents us with an illustration of the human instrumentality God generally employs in the work of quickening the dead in sins; the preaching of the Gospel. Ezekiel was commanded to prophesy unto the bones, and say, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. Thus it appears that the dry bones were fit subjects for prophecy. They could hear the Word of God and understand it. Remembering that the dry bones primarily represented the Jewish nation, we see the propriety of the command. And taking the dry bones as representing the human family, we see an equal propriety in the vision. Our business is with the command, not the results. We are to use the means, and leave it to God to prosper them. Ezekiels was a message of life (verses 5, 6). The Gospel is a message of life. We are told to go and preach to every creature. This preaching has been the human instrumentality chiefly employed. Yet Christianity triumphed over the religions of heathen Greece and Rome; it superseded the subtle philosophies and hoary idolatries of the East; it destroyed the worship of the barbarous Gauls and Germans, and rough savages of Northern and Eastern Europe, and has ever since maintained its hold. Yet the world still speaks of the foolishness of preaching, and wonders that such simple means should accomplish such great results. Let people say what they will, the power of the pulpit is the greatest of human instrumentalities employed to bring about the conversion of the world. The press cannot supersede it, and never will; for in the living voice of a man in sympathy with his mission and burning to save souls, there is a power that the lifeless page can never exercise. It is a divinely appointed institution. God honours it. In this valley of vision, there was one prophet commissioned to declare Gods will. Now it is different. One was enough then for the work to be done. But the command to preach Christs Gospel was given to all His disciples. Ezekiel was prepared to deliver his message, and it would have been grievous sin in him to refuse to do so. So now the disciples of Christ, who are called to preach His Gospel, are prepared for their work. God gives physical, mental, and spiritual gifts to His servants. Ezekiel had the message which he was to deliver, given him, and he dared not announce any other. Had he done so, punishment from God would have been richly deserved, and speedily inflicted, and there would have been no resurrection of the army. And if a preacher preaches any other Gospel than that of Christ crucified, not only does he expose himself to the punishment of unfaithfulness in a matter of such transcendent importance, but also he will be of no use in saving souls. Many are the ways in which Gods servants, divinely commissioned to preach the Gospel, perform their task. Each man for himself must give up his account to God of the way in which he has fulfilled his commission, and ought to do his duty unmoved by the frowns or favour of men. All are not learned as Apollos, or zealous as Paul, or loving and persuasive as John in later life. Like the diversity in the plumage of the feathered tribes; like the variety in the hues of flowers; like the perpetual variation in the shapes of the fleeting clouds, so is the variety endless in the gifts and manner of the divinely commissioned preachers of the Gospel. So long as God owns His servants labours, let us stand by, and murmur not against His ambassadors.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The text presents us with a view of the Divine agency employed in the work of quickening the dead in trespasses and sins: the power of the Holy Spirit. What was the result of Ezekiels prophecy (verses 7, 8)? Ezekiel might prophesy, but all his prophesying could not give them life. The change which had been accomplished was not done by Ezekiels prophesying, but by the power of God. Thus it was the Holy Spirits power that made that army of slain men to live. Similarly, when Gods servants preach the Gospel message to the spiritually dead around them, they feel their utter helplessness to quicken them into spiritual life. As the bodies of Ezekiels vision had the form of living beings before the breath entered into them, so men may be like Christians in their outward behaviour, but lack their spiritual life. To give this is the work of the Spirit. Oh, recognise the power of the Spirit, Third Person in the ever-blessed Trinity. All the preaching in the world will he useless to give spiritual life to a single soul unless He put forth His power. Trust not in the preacher whoever he may be, but in the Spirit. Already in answer to faithful prayer the Spirit has descended, and dead souls have been quickened, and are an army for Christ doing His work For the vision of Ezekiel showed that the dead when raised became a living army. Their life was given them that they might fight against and subdue Gods enemies: they were not simply to enjoy life themselves. And when by the Holy Spirits working, sinners are led to trust in Jesus and gain spiritual life; they are at once effective soldiers for Christ, and able to lead others to serve under the same gracious King. (<em>T. D. Anderson, B. A.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The valley of dry bones<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In the galleries of Versailles the history of France is written in colour. Passing from corridor to corridor, the observer reads from those pictured pages of the centuries, the fortune of ideas, institutions, and dynasties. It is an impressive method of teaching. Many passages of Scripture are marvellous specimens of colour writing. The truth is not taught in dry formulas, but is flashed upon the mind, from parable or symbol or picture. Inspiration is the highest art. Who paints truth like God? Burning bush, pillar of fire and cloud, visions of patriarchs and prophets, splendours of the Transfiguration mount, flaming canvas of the Apocalypse,&#8211;what is there that equals these limnings of the Divine pencil? The passage before us is one of these colour sketches of inspiration. It is clear that God designed to teach desolate Israel, by this vision, three things.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>That there was hope for them. In the judgment of men, they were past help. They were utterly destroyed, their land ravaged, their capital overthrown, themselves captives in Babylonia. Where on the horizon was there a morning ray of promise? God still lived. God had not been carried away into captivity, and in the Lord Jehovah there is everlasting strength.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The lesson of self-distrust. They could not deliver themselves. The wisest heads among them might scheme, the boldest conspirators might plot, but it would avail nothing. Those bleaching bones in the valley were the symbol of utter impotence.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Entire dependence upon God. It was the Word of the Lord, at whose utterance bones knit themselves to bones, and covered themselves with flesh. It was the Word of the Lord, at whose bidding the inspiration of life came into the motionless bodies, and transformed the valley of sepulture into an amphitheatre crowded with a host of stalwart men. Israels hope was Israels God. The history of Israel was a microcosm, the worlds history in type and miniature. The principles on which God governed that people, are the principles on which He governs the race. His arguments and appeals and instructions to them are for all men and all time. This is a lost world. By many that statement is branded as unwarrantable. How wonderful is the march of our modern civilisation! How it hunts out and subsidises the hidden forces of earth and sea and sky, how it annihilates distance, and accelerates the transit of human thought! What beneficent changes it has wrought in ideas and institutions! But there is another side to the matter. It is a universally confessed fact that there is a vast amount of moral and spiritual inertia, which the so-called progress of the race does not overcome, nor sensibly abate. Humanity grows bigger, rather than better. There is not a well-balanced correspondence between the growing intelligence, and the increasing righteousness, of the race. The intellectual outstrips the moral advance. The discoveries of curiosity outnumber and outweigh the accretions of character.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>That human expedients will prove ineffectual. There has been no stinting of effort to reclaim the world, on the part of good men. The utmost that human effort can compass in this matter is reform, and what a lost world needs is a remaking. Reform alters the shape, but not the nature of things. Mans wisdom has as yet found no way of renewing mankind.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The instrumentality to be used is the preaching of the Gospel. As a matter of history, the preaching of the Gospel has proved the most efficient method of reaching a lost world. The little company of the apostles, by the simple proclamation of Christ and the resurrection, dealt the deathblow to Greek and Roman superstition, entrenched in the stronghold of centuries. Cyril and Chrysostom moved two continents with their message. The earth shakes with the tread of the millions who are mustering at the Gospel call. In the jungles of India, under the shadow of the great wall of China, in thronged and eager Japan.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>The efficient agent is the Spirit of God. The bleaching relics became the bodies of men, but there was no breath in them. There is a certain measure of influence in the simple utterance and acknowledgment of the claims of Divine truth. Christian governments, Christian institutions, Christian ethics are the result of the confessed sovereignty of the Gospel teachings. But this is not the last power of the Gospel of Christ. It is only when, and only as, the Spirit of God takes of the things of God, and shows them unto men, that wonderful transformations are wrought in nature, and character. No masterly eloquence, no exhaustive learning, can supply His place. Paul may plant and Apollos water, but God giveth the increase. The consolidation of all human agencies is comparatively inoperative in the work of mans renewal, and uplift to spiritual life. It is not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord. We are to concern ourselves less about our intellectual greatness, and more about our fitness to be instruments, through which and with which the Divine power can work.<\/p>\n<p>Certain inferential teachings of this passage are worth noting.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Some of the methods by which churches and Sabbath schools endeavour to enlarge their influence are weak and wicked. Eternal well-being is at stake, and the fair, the sociable, the concert, the drama cannot lift men dead in trespasses and sin, into newness of life in Christ Jesus.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The passage is full of encouragement to Christian workers. The spiritually dead are not beyond their reach. The same power that peopled that silent valley with hosts of stalwart men, that transformed blaspheming Saul into fervent Paul, is at their command.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>The general and concentrated outcome of this portion of Scripture is to urge all who work for God to rely entirely upon God. The invincible Spirit, if He be for us, who can be against us? (<em>Sermons by the Monday Club.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Ezekiels vision<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>A striking description of the religious state of the heathen world.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>The persons made the subject of this prophetic vision are represented as dead. To be dead is to be in a state which excites reset and sympathy. To lose the image of God is to die; because as death destroys the human form, sin destroys truth, holiness, and love, in which the image of God in man consists. This is the unhappy case of the heathen. The heathen world is judicially dead, under the wrath and curse of Almighty God. To counteract generous feelings, and to stop the stream of pity in its very fountain, we are aware that the doctrine of the safety of the heathen has been confidently affirmed. The true question is among such persons often mistaken. It is not, whether it is possible for heathens to be saved,&#8211;that we grant: but that circumstance proves the actual state of the heathen world to be more dangerous than if no such possibility could be proved; for the possibility of their salvation indisputably shows them to be the subjects of moral government, and therefore liable to an aggravated punishment in case of disobedience. The true question is, Are the heathens, immoral and idolatrous as they are, actually safe?<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The number of the dead forms another part of the picture,&#8211;the valley was full of bones. The slain of sin are innumerable. The valley as we trace it seems to sweep to an unlimited extent, and yet everywhere it is full! The whole earth is that valley. Where is the country where transgression stalks not with daring and destructive activity? where it has not covered and polluted the soil with its victims? If we turn to the east, there the peopled valleys of Asia stretch before us; but peopled with whom? With the dead! That quarter of the earth alone presents five hundred millions of souls, with but few exceptions, without a God, save gods that sanction vice; without a sacrifice, save sacrifices of folly and blood.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>To the number of the dead the prophet adds another circumstance,&#8211;they were unburied: the destructive effects of sin, the sad ravages of death, lay exposed and open to the sun. So open and exposed have been the unbelief and blasphemies of the Jews, and the idolatry and vices of the Gentiles.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>The prophet closes his description by adding, that the bones were very dry. Under this strong figure the hopelessness of their condition is represented. Thus the Jews, introduced in verse II, are made to say, Our bones are dried up, our hope is lost; and the state of the heathen must, at least, be equally hopeless. As far as mere human means and human probabilities go, there is no hope. From themselves it is certain there is none.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The means by which its mystical resurrection is to be effected: Prophesy upon these bones, etc.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>This direction intimates that the ministry of the Word is the grand means appointed by God for the salvation of the world. Others have looked for the amelioration of the human race from the progress of science. Another class of speculatists would wait until wars and revolutions have broken up old systems of despotism, and introduced political liberty, before any means are taken to spread the Gospel. Here is another attempt to build the pyramid upon its point. In vain do men expect liberty without virtue.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The words may be considered as an injunction on the ministers of the Gospel. But to whom is the message directed? To missionaries only? Nay; but to all who are called to preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>The injunction, Prophesy, respects not only ministers, but you also who have a private station in the Church. In the society of Christians the particular work of every member is his own salvation; but he owes a duty to the whole body, which is to promote, by all the means in his power, the common end of the association. That common object is to bring the wickedness of the wicked to an end, and to establish the just.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The prophecy expresses the certain success which should follow the application of the appointed means. We are engaged in no doubtful cause: the kingdom of Christ must prevail; and the Word which has given Him the heathen for His inheritance is forever settled in heaven. Our confidence rests&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>On the power of the Gospel. We are not to consider the Gospel as a mere system of doctrines, and duties, and hopes, offered coldly to the reason of mankind. It is this system, but it is more; it is the source of a Divine influence which exerts itself upon the faculties of those who hear it. The Word is never sent without its Author. Go, and preach My Gospel, and lo, I am with you. The same union subsists between the Spirit and the Word.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>Our confidence in the certain success of the Gospel rests also upon experience. Christianity is not a novelty; and its efficacy is not now to be put, for the first time, to the test of experiment. It is that powerful and Divine instrument which has for ages been wielded with glorious success in the cause of God and truth.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Prophecy confirms the certainty of success. (<em>R. Watson.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The valley of dry bones and the true preacher<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>This preacher had a fine church to preach in. It is in the midst of the valley. The true preacher of Christ has open nature for his temple. He need not be confined to the buildings of mans hands, or tied to the conventionalities of society. Wherever men are, on the valley, the hilltops, the seashore, the high road, or in the market place, he can open his mission, he can deliver his message. Thus Christ and His Apostles preached.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>This preacher had an affecting congregation to address. The valley was full of bones, very many and very dry. Unregenerate souls are like dead bodies in many respects.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>They are the creatures of the outward. While there is life in the human body it has a power to appropriate the external to its own use; but when life has departed, the external elements make it their sport. It is so with unregenerate souls. They are the creatures of circumstances.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>They are loathsome to the eye. The human frame that is beautiful in life becomes so offensive in death, that love seeks a place to bury it out of sight. Unregenerate souls are loathsome to the eyes of all who are truly and spiritually alive.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>This preacher had a Divine sermon to deliver.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>He appealed to his dead auditory. This showed his strong faith in God. His own reason would suggest to him the absurdity of his work, but he trusted God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>He appealed to Heaven. Come from the four winds, O breath, etc. From Heaven the power came, and that power he invoked with all the earnestness of his nature. Thus with the true preacher of Christ. His words will be powerless unless made powerful by the mighty Spirit.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>This preacher had marvellous results to witness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>The results were what he worked for. The efforts he exerted were for resuscitation, and resuscitation came. Every true preacher will get, to some extent, that for which he earnestly labours.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>The results were gradually developed. Here is&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> Motion&#8211;bones moving.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Organisation&#8211;bones knitted together and covered with flesh.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> Vitality&#8211;the organisation animated.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> Exertion&#8211;stood on their feet a great army.<\/p>\n<p>Under every true preacher the work in a congregation goes on something in this way. (<em>Homilist.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The vision of dry bones<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>The representation given us in this vision of the moral condition of our world. Bones&#8211;dry bones&#8211;unburied bones&#8211;very many of them&#8211;what a crowd of suggestive thoughts seem to be called up by this picture! A bone&#8211;who likes to look on this dishonoured relic of life? What a recoil do youth and beauty feel at being told that to this complexion they must come at last! But the bones the prophet saw were, on our spiritual interpretation, yet more painful to contemplate; they represented the bones, not of a dead body, but, so to speak, of a dead soul, scattered members of the immortal part&#8211;Gods image defaced, corrupted, broken into dust and fragments. Furthermore, to complete the picture of death and desolateness, the prophet adds, and they were very dry. They had not only remained a long time in this state, they were bleached and crumbled in the sun, and all vestige of the human thing was gone. The application of this lies upon the surface. God made us men, but sin has changed us into skeletons. Observe, further, the vision seems to point to the utter shamelessness of the unconverted state. The bones were in an open valley, or champaign. There may be those who sin in secret, those who defraud and plunder by means of locked up and secret ledgers, who concoct their mendacious schemes in chambers dark as the unsunned and unfrequented sepulchre; but the many hardly care to hide their iniquity, they leave the pestiferous breath of corruption to go up from the valley, and seem to glory in their shame. And how unblushingly does vice walk our streets, and lying enter into our commerce, and sinful and foolish jesting dishonour our entertainments, and the offer of cheap excursions affront the sanctities of Gods holy day! And whey justify themselves who do such things. Even concealment&#8211;that homage which bad men pay to the divinity of virtue&#8211;is deemed uncalled for. They are dead in trespasses and sins, and desire that none should bury them out of our sight. Another mournful spectacle which the vision exhibits of spiritual death reigning around us is its universality. It is not in the midst of the valley only, in the crowd of cities, and in the feverish stir of courts, the haunts of dissipation, or amidst the thickly nestling families of the outcasts that we meet with these relics of spiritual corruption. Wherever we pass, with the prophet, round about, in the retirement of the village, in the seclusion of the cloister, in the calm privacies of family and domestic intercourse&#8211;sweet Auburn, mighty London&#8211;it is all one&#8211;there is not a house in which there is not one dead.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The means to be employed for the recovery of the world from its spiritually dead condition. Can these dry bones live? Can your faith grasp the great fact of these bones becoming men? And the answer which the downcast man of God would return, would be in substance Ezekiels answer&#8211;O Lord God, Thou knowest. Judging by past results, judging by present evidences, judging by any standards of human likelihood, I should say these bones will continue bones. I see not hope or sign of life among them. Every form of moral inducement fails. Mark here, the ministry of the Word is Gods great agency for the worlds conversion. The days we live in are fertile of expedient and project and bold thought. Every sun that rises finds a thousand busy minds planning and devising something for the good of mankind, The philanthropists calling is absolutely overdone; and by education, by cultivation of e taste for the arts, by shortened labours for the sons of toil, and open doors for the repentant criminal, by reformatories, dormitories, penitentiaries, and industrial schools, everybody has his scheme for mending the worlds present condition. Amidst this multitudinous assemblage of human remedies, all good in their way however, it is a great repose to the mind just to see what is Gods remedy. He interferes not with our social machinery, our commerce, our science, our philanthropy, or our laws&#8211;these may all go on as before; but He has His own cure for the moral disorders of mankind; and where that cure is left out of sight, God will bless no other. And that is, to prophesy upon these bones and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear ye the word of the Lord! And at this part of the vision the minister of God finds his lesson, He has a pardonable preference for the great promising fields of labour. True, he must go where he is sent, but he would not choose a valley of bones if he could get an auditory of living things. But the tenor of his commission runs&#8211;Preach to the most ignorant, and dark, and hopeless; speak to the dead; even in the place of tombs and at the very mouth of graves; prophesy upon these bones. Neither are we to be tellers of smooth things when we prophesy, to shrink from calling people by their right names and addressing many among them as spiritually dead; for you see there Gods own instructions to the preacher&#8211;Say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear ye the word of the Lord. And this is our confidence when we speak&#8211;that it is the word of the Lord.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The success which shall attend the use of all heavenly-appointed means for the conversion of souls. We may not omit to observe here, how, under every dispensation the dead and the hopeless are the objects of the Almightys care. They are the tempted among disciples, the heavy laden among sinners, the weeping among the prodigals; it is among the reeds the sorest bruised, and among bones the very dry, that mercy finds occasion for its most tender and bright displays. Let us see this principle acted out in the vision. There was a noise and a shaking. To two out of the three proposed interpretations of the vision suggested at the outset these effects seem applicable enough. Thus we can have no difficulty in imagining that a great political commotion should be stirred up on the first proclamation of Cyrus for the return of the Jews to their own land; whilst for the other interpretation, or that which applies the vision to the resurrection of the body, we have the later New Testament confirmation, that the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the powers of heaven shall be shaken. But what fitness have these terms for our spiritual rendering? Much every way. There is no resurrection to spiritual life, whether in a nation, in a family, or in an individual soul, without both a noise and a shaking. Yes, the chariots of the Redeemer never have been noiseless chariots. There was a noise in Judea when John preached the baptism of repentance; there was a noise at Athens when Paul preached the doctrines of the resurrection; there was a noise at Ephesus when the craftsmen saw the danger which threatened their silver shrines. And is there not often a noise in families when the prophesying is just beginning to take effect, when some solitary member of a household comes out from the rest, and with a lofty disregard of the results, resolves to cast in his lot with the people of God? Ask yourselves, have you ever been shaken from these sandy and unstable foundations on which so many are building their immortal house? Have you over been shaken from those unscriptural and hollow creeds which are the only answer many have to make to the fears of death, the terrors of the grave, and the heavy indictment to be preferred against them at the last day? Or, lastly, have you ever felt a shaking in yourselves? Have you ever known what it is to have the heart to sink, and the knees to smite, and the tongue to falter through an oppressive sense of your souls danger and urgent need? If so, be of good cheer; at this time there was a shaking in you, the bones were beginning to move, and flesh was beginning to come up, and over the face of your regenerate soul the Spirit of God was moving and imparting to you the first breathings of spiritual life.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>The last scene of this imposing spectacle. See in this feature of the prophets vision, a type of that halting stage in the Christian life, in which all external forms of godliness are kept up without any growing experience of its power; living, indeed, in shape, but having no breath in them. Seeing there was no breath in these risen forms, the voice said unto Ezekiel, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord God; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as He commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army. We want more breath in our body, more of that which distinguishes the skeleton from the man and the religious automaton from the thing of life&#8211;and this is to be obtained only by our prophesying to the wind; by one and all in the church and in their closet offering that fervent petition, Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. (<em>D. Moore, M. A.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The vision of the dry bones<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Like many other visions before and since, it is partly shaped by the circumstances of the times. The horrors of the Chaldean invasion, which had resulted, in carrying away the Jewish people into Babylon, were still fresh in the memories of men. In many a valley, on many a hillside in Southern Palestine, the track of the invading army as it advanced and retired would have been marked by the bones of the unoffending but slaughtered peasantry. In a work written some years ago, Mr. Layard has described such a scene in Armenia, an upland valley, covered by the bones of the Christian population who had been plundered and murdered by Kurds. Ezekiel, wrapt in a spiritual ecstasy, was set down in a valley that was full of bones. But what are we to understand by the dry bones of the vision of Ezekiel? This is plainly a picture of a resurrection, not, indeed, of the general resurrection, because what Ezekiel saw was clearly limited and local, but at the same time it is a sample of what will occur at the general resurrection. It may be urged that this representation is presently explained to refer to something quite distinct&#8211;namely, the restoration of the Jewish people from Babylon, and therefore that what passed before the prophets eye need not have been regarded by him as more than an imaginary or even impossible occurrence intended to symbolise a coming event. But if this were the case, the vision, it must be said, was very ill adapted for its proposed purpose. The fact is that the form of Ezekiels vision, and the popular use which Ezekiel made of it, shows that at this date the idea of the resurrection of the body could not have been a strange one to religious views. Had it been so Ezekiels vision would have been turned against him. The restoration from the captivity would have been thought more improbable than ever if the measure of its improbability was to be found in a doctrine unbelieved in as yet by the people of revelation. We know, in fact, from their own scriptures, that the Jews had had for many a century glimpses more or less distinct of this truth. Long ago the mother of Samuel could sing that the Lord bringeth down to the grave and bringeth up, and Job could be sure that though worms destroy his body yet in his flesh he would see God; and David, speaking for a Higher Being than himself, yet knows that God will not leave His soul in hell nor suffer His Holy One to see corruption; and Daniel, Ezekiels contemporary or nearly so, foresees that many who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt, and later on the courageous mother of the seven Maccabean Martyrs cries to her dying sons that the Creator of the world, who formed the generations of men, and thought out the beginning of all things, will also of His mercy give you life and breath again if you regard not yourselves for His sake. Undoubtedly there was among the Jews a certain belief in the resurrection of the body, a belief which this very vision must have at once represented and confirmed. Ezekiels vision, then, may remind us of what Christ our Lord has taught us again and again in His own words of the resurrection of the body. But its teaching by no means ends with this. For the dry bones of Ezekiels vision may well represent the conditions of societies of men at particular times in their history, the condition of nations, of Churches, of less important institutions. Indeed, Ezekiel was left in no kind of doubt about the Divinely intended meaning of his vision. The dry bones were pictures of what the Jewish nation believed itself to be, as a consequence of the captivity in Babylon. All that was left of it could be best compared to the bones of the Jews which had been massacred by the Chaldean invader, and which bleached the hillsides of Palestine. He said unto me, These bones are the whole house of Israel; behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost; we are cut off. Certainly in the captivity little was left of Israel beyond the skeleton of its former self. There were the sacred books, there were Royal descendants of the race of Jacob, there were priests, there were prophets, there was the old Hebrew and sacred language not yet wholly corrupted into Chaldean, there were precious traditions of the past days of Jerusalem, these were the dry bones of what had been earlier. There was nothing to animate them, they lay on the soil of heathenism, they lay apart from each other as if quite unconnected. To the captive people Babylon was not merely a valley of dry bones, but socially and politically it was fatal to the corporate life of Israel, Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, O My people, I will open your graves. And this is what actually did happen at the restoration of the Jews from Babylon. Each of the promises in Ezekiels vision was fulfilled. The remains of the past history, its sacred books, its priests, its prophets, its laws, its great traditions, its splendid hopes, these once more moved in the soul of the nation as if with the motion of reviving life. It was a wonderful restoration, almost if not altogether unique in history. We see it in progress in the 119th Psalm, which doubtless belongs to this period, which exhibits the upward struggle of a sincere and beautiful soul at the first dawn of the national resurrection, and we read of its completion in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah; it was completed when the Temple, the centre of the spiritual and national life, was fully rebuilt, and when the whole life of the people in its completeness was thus renewed in the spot which had been the home of their fathers from generation to generation. And something of the same kind had been seen in portions of the Christian Church. As a whole, we know the Church of Christ cannot fail, the gates of hell shall not prevail against it; but particular Churches may fail in their different degrees,&#8211;national churches, provincial churches, local churches. These, like the seven churches in Asia, which stand as a warning for all the ages of Christendom, these may experience their varying degrees of corruption and ruin and the moral insensibility which precedes death. And some of us may have noted a like resurrection in some institution, neither as defined as a church nor yet so broad or inclusive as a nation, in a school, a college, a hospital, a charitable building, a company. It is the creation, it is the relic of a distant age, it is magnificent in its picturesqueness, it lacks alone nothing but life. It persists in statutes that are no longer observed, it observes ceremonies and customs which have lost their meaning, it constantly holds to a phraseology which tells of a past time and of which the object has been forgotten. But certain it is in each year its members meet, they go through the accustomed usages, they signalise their meeting, it may be by splendid banquets, by commanding oratory, but in their heart of hearts they know they are meeting in a valley of dry bones. The old rules, usages, phrases, dresses, these are scattered around them like the bones of Ezekiels vision, a life which once animated and clothed has long since perished away. Lastly, the dry bones of Ezekiels vision may be discovered, and that not seldom, within the human soul. When the soul has lost its hold of truth or grace, when it has ceased to believe or ceased to love all the traces of what it once has been, do not forthwith despair. There are survivals of the old believing life, fragments and skeletons of the old affection, bits of stray logic which once created phrases which express the feeling which once won to prayers, there may remain amid the arid desolation of every valley full of dry bones the aspirations which have no goal, the actions which have no real basis, no practical consequences, the friendships which we feel to be holy and which are still kept up, the habits which have lost all meaning, we meet with writers, with talkers, with historians, with poets whose language shows that they have once known what it is to believe, but for whom all living faith has perished utterly and left behind it only these dried-up relics of its former life. Can these bones live? Can these phrases, these forms, these habits, and these associations which once were part of the spirit life, can they ever again become what they were? A man may have ceased to mean his prayers, his prayers may now be but the dry bones of that warm and loving communion which he once held with his God, but do not let him on that account give them up, do not let him break with the little that remains of what once was life. It is easy enough to decry habit, but habit may be the scaffolding which saves us from a great fall, habit may be the arch which bridges over a chasm which yawns between one height and another on our upward road; habit without motive is sufficiently unsatisfactory, but habit is better, better far, than nothing. Some of us it may be surveying the shrivelled elements of our religious life cannot avoid the question which comes in upon us from heaven, Can these bones live? They seem to us, even in our best moments, so hopelessly dislocated, so dry, so dead, but to this question the answer always must be, O Lord God, Thou knowest. Yes, He does know; He sees, as He saw of old into the grave of Lazarus; He sees as He saw into the tomb of the Lord Jesus, so He sees into the crypt of a soul of whose faith and love only these dry bones remain, and He knows that life is again possible. (<em>Canon Liddon.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The restoration and conversion of the Jews<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I. <\/strong>There is to be a political restoration of the Jews. Israel is now blotted out from the map of nations; her sons are scattered far and wide; her daughters mourn beside all the rivers of the earth. But she is to be restored; she is to be restored as from the dead. She is to be reorganised; her scattered bones are to be brought together. There will be a native government again; there will again be the form of a body politic; a state shall be incorporated, and a king shall reign. I will place you in your own land, is Gods promise to them, They shall again walk upon her mountains, shall once more sit under her vines and rejoice under her fig trees. And they are also to be reunited. There shall not be two, nor ten, nor twelve, but one&#8211;one Israel praising one God, serving one king, and that one king the Son of David, the descended Messiah. They are to have a national prosperity which shall make them famous; nay, so glorious shall they be that Egypt, and Tyre, and Greece, and Rome shall all forget their glory in the greater splendour of the throne of David.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>Israel is to have a spiritual restoration or a conversion. Both the text and the context teach this. The promise is that they shall renounce their idols, and, behold, they have already done so. Weaned forever from the worship of all images, of whatever sort, the Jewish nation has now become infatuated with traditions or duped by philosophy. She is to have, however, instead of these delusions, a spiritual religion: she is to love her God. They shall be My people, and I will be their God. The unseen but omnipotent Jehovah is to be worshipped in spirit and in truth by His ancient people; they are to come before Him in His own appointed way, accepting the Mediator whom their sires rejected; coming into covenant relation with God, for so our text tells us, I will make a covenant of peace with them, and Jesus is our peace, therefore we gather that Jehovah shall enter into the covenant of grace with them, that covenant of which Christ is the federal head, the substance, and the surety. They are to walk in Gods ordinances and statutes, and so exhibit the practical effects of being united to Christ who hath given them peace.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>The means of that restoration. Observe that there are two kinds of prophesying spoken of here. First, the prophet prophesies to the bones&#8211;here is preaching; and next, he prophesies to the four winds&#8211;here is praying.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>It is the duty and the privilege of the Christian Church to preach the Gospel to the Jew, and to every creature, and in so doing she may safely take the vision before us as her guide.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> She may take it as her guide, first, as to matter. What are we to preach? The text says we are to prophesy, and assuredly every missionary to the Jews should especially keep Gods prophecies very prominently before the public eye. Every man has a tender side and a warm heart towards his own nation, and if you tell him that in your standard book there is a revelation made that that nation is to act a grand part in human history, and is, indeed, to take the very highest place in the parliament of nations, then the mans prejudice is on your side, and he listens to you with the greater attention. But still the main thing which we have to preach about is Christ. Preach His hallowed life, the righteousness of His people; declare His painful death, the putting away of all their sins. Vindicate His glorious resurrection, the justification of His people; tell of His ascent on high, their triumph over the world and sin; declare His second advent, His glorious coming, to make His people glorious in the glory which He hath won for them, and Christ Jesus, as He is thus preached, shall surely be the means of making these bones live. Let this preaching resound with sovereign mercy; let it always have in it the clear and distinct ring of free grace. Man has a will, and God never ignores that will, but by His almighty grace He blessedly leads it in silken fetters. Preach, preach, preach, then, but let it be the preaching of Christ, and the proclamation of free grace. The Church, I say, has a model here as to the matter of preaching.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> And I am certain that she has also a model here as to her manner of preaching. The manner of our preaching is to be by way of command, as well as by way of teaching. Repent and be converted, every one of you. Lay hold on eternal life. Seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> We have a model here, moreover, as to our audience. We are not to select our congregation, but we are to go where God sends us; and if He should send us into the open valley, where the bones are Very dry, we are to preach there. Do not say, Such-and-such a man is too bigoted; the case rests not with him, nor with his bigotry, but with God. These bones were very dry, but yet they lived. Let not, therefore, the greater viciousness of a people, or their greater hardness of heart, ever stand in our way, but let us say to them, dry as they are, Ye dry bones, live.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> And here, again, we have another lesson as to the preachers authority. If you will observe, you will see the prophet says, Hear the Word of the Lord. Always put to your fellowman the truth which you hold dear, not as a thing which he may play with or may do what he likes with, which is at his option to choose or to neglect as he sees fit; but put it to him as it is in truth, the Word of God; and be not satisfied unless you warn him that it is at his own peril that he rejects the invitation, and that on his own head must be his blood if he turns aside from the good word of the command of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(5)<\/strong> I cannot leave this point without noticing how the prophet describes the effect of his preaching&#8211;there was a voice, and there was a noise. Is this stir, then, the stir of opposition, or is it the stir of inquiry? Anything is better than stagnation: of a persecutor I have quite as much hope as of a quiet despiser.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>After the prophet had prophesied to the bones, he was to prophesy to the winds. He was to say to the blessed Spirit, the Life-giver, the God of all grace, Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. Preaching alone doth little; it may make the stir, it may bring the people together, but there is no life-giving power in the Gospel of itself apart from the Holy Spirit. The breath must first blow, and then these bones shall live. Let us betake ourselves much to this form of prophesying. Observe that this second prophesying of Ezekiel is just as bold and as full of faith as the first. He seems to have no doubt, but speaks as though he could command the wind. Come, saith he, and the wind cometh. Little faith, Mender harvests; much faith, plenteous sheaves. Let your prayer, then, be with a sense of how much you need it, but yet with a firm conviction that the Holy Spirit will most surely come in answer to your prayers. And then let it be earnest prayer. That Come from the four winds, O breath, reads to me like the cry, not of One in despair, but of one who is full of a vehement desire, gratified with what he sees, since the bones have come together, and have been mysteriously clothed with flesh, but now crying passionately for the Immediate completion of the miracle&#8211;Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. (<em>C. H. Spurgeon.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The prospects of Christianity when brought to bear on the lower races<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I propose to concentrate our attention on the prospects of Christianity when brought to bear on the lower races and more grovelling religions that form so large a section of our Empire, and to endeavour to answer the commonly alleged objection to missionary effort, namely, that the dry bones cannot live. It is a waste of power, they say, alike in money and in men; a waste of power which might be so much more usefully employed in elevating and Christianising our virtual heathen at home. Those who assert this maintain<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> on <em>a priori <\/em>grounds, that ethnological inferiority makes them unreceptive of the highest civilisation, and incapable of appreciating Christian truth or recognising Christian obligation; and<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> <em>a posteriori, <\/em>they assert that missionary effort among them has, as a matter of fact, proved a failure. Let us consider first whether the <em>a priori <\/em>argument is conclusive. We may frankly in the outset recognise the reality of race differences; we are fully alive to all that is denoted by the expression, national idiosyncrasy; nor can we question the relative inferiority of race as compared with race. God hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth. That is to say, that all who bear on them the stamp of man&#8211;all who, by that unaccountable intuition which leads the mastiff, the greyhound, the terrier, the Newfoundland, despite their utter dissimilarity of contour, pursuits, and habits, to recognise each other as alike dogs, feel and cannot divest themselves of the feeling that they have a common humanity&#8211;do, as a matter of fact, and in right of that feeling, stand in a fraternal relation one to the other. Once recognise this common humanity, and the Christian, who believes in the Incarnation, must also recognise that every human unit is potentially redeemed in Christ, whose glorious title is not the King of the Jews but the Son of Man; so that according to the Christian idea race distinctions, however characteristic, fade away, and are merged in the glorified humanity of the second Adam, in whom there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; but Christ is all and in all. And on this hypothesis there is nothing to startle us in Christs words taken in their literal significance, make disciples of all nations; preach the Gospel to every creature. I say in their literal significance, though we well know that to do this often sacrifices the spirit to the letter. But once concede the postulate of universal redemption, once accept the truth, Christ tasted death for every man, and the systematic evangelisation of all men becomes a necessary corollary. We pass on to the <em>a posteriori <\/em>argument that missionary work among the heathen is a recognised failure. Is it so? This is a question of evidence. Whom shall we first summon into the witness box? We will cite our own selves. We English people of today are a standing reply to the supposed uselessness of missionary effort. It is true our Christianity is of long standing; but let our minds dart back to the <em>origines <\/em>of Christianity in these islands. What manner of persons were they to whom the first Christian missionaries came? Were they, think you, a promising field for Gospel labour? Were our skin-clad and tatooed Keltic predecessors hopeful material for the first mission priests from Gaul to work on; or, a few centuries later on, were our rude Saxon forefathers, debased in drunkenness and gluttony, patently and obviously receptive of a religion which inculcated righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come? But the Kelt and Saxon, it is replied, in spite of their savagery and rudeness, belonged to better breeds; were they not members of the great Aryan family? Granted, yet have we any right to assert that when they first passed under the mild yoke of Christianity they were on any higher level, morally or spiritually, than the New Zealand Maori or the West Indian Charaib? And may we not with justice assume that hereditary, <em>i.e. <\/em>transmitted Christianity, has been a perceptible factor in their moral and spiritual elevation? At least, is it possible so to eliminate this factor as to be safe in pronouncing that they were originally better breeds, and naturally more receptive of Christian influences? But we may go a step further, and boldly assert that it has not been a failure even with the savage, that is to say with races of a confessedly low organisation, given two necessary conditions,&#8211;sufficient time and favourable surroundings. If you wish to know what the Gospel can do for the savage pure and simple, study the Moravian mission records. The darkest and dreariest corners of heathendom are the field of labour of their choice. Thibet, Greenland, the Mosquito Coast, Surinam, Aboriginal Australia&#8211;these are their principal mission stations. Their records and reports are worth reading; they have in them the ring of veracity; they faithfully chronicle ill-success and disappointment; but they can point to tangible results of all this patient effort; they have confessedly achieved what had been deemed impossible&#8211;the elevation of the Australian native, where they have been able to bring him within the range of continuous Christian influence, from his depth of degradation, through the power of the Gospel, and through the magic which resides unimpaired in that name which is above every name, the saving name of Jesus Christ our Lord, and in the power of His Cross. Or read the life and letters of John Coleridge Patteson, first missionary Bishop of Melanesia. In his first cruise among those islands, which were destined afterwards to be his scattered diocese, and subsequently the scene of his martyrdom, he thus describes his visit to Bauro: The house of Iri was long, low, and open at the ends; along the ridge pole were ranged twenty-seven skulls not yet blackened with smoke; and bones were scattered outside, for a fight had recently taken place near at hand. Yet, later on, he writes thus of his youngsters that he had gathered round him from this very Golgotha: I have quite learned to believe that there are no savages anywhere, at least among black or coloured people; Id like to see anyone call my Bauro boys savages. From the savage pure and simple we pass to those races which are admittedly inferior to the higher types of humanity, but which, either through contact more or less continuous with those higher races, or because they do not naturally fall very low in the scale, have manifested some receptivity of Christian teaching and Christian influences. Of these the West Indian negro furnishes a good example; an example, too, the more instructive, because it is possible to compare the negro who has lived thus under Christianity with his heathen congener in Africa. It so chances that this comparison can be made in more places than one; and the juxtaposition is startling from the force of contrast. On the West Coast of Africa, about a hundred miles from Sierra Leone, is a little missionary settlement near the mouth of the river Pongas. It was started mainly through the zeal and energy of Bishop Rowle, of Trinidad, while principal of Codrington College, in Barbadoes, with the object of repaying spiritually the vast debt of material wrong inflicted mainly on that portion of the Dark Continent by the West Indian slave trade. It is a mission mainly supported by the West Indian Church, with the assistance of a committee in England, and manned now for some time exclusively by West Indians of colour trained at Codrington, or by native West Africans from Sierra Leone. It is, indeed, a striking contrast between the degraded Susus, grovelling in abject superstition, and these patient, loving, self-denying priests&#8211;men of their own race and complexion&#8211;who have come to live among them, and to elevate them, not merely by Christian teaching, but by Christian example. Just such another negro mission exists and flourishes under the auspices of the Church Missionary Society in the Niger Valley, governed and directed by the saintly Bishop Crowther, himself a negro of pure African descent, born and bred on the soil whereon he now labours. Well might he exclaim, as on a memorable occasion he did, with proud humility, to the Church Missionary Society gathered together in Exeter Hall, I am your result; you are asked what comes of all your expenditure and all your effort; I am your result. And he was right. But what has been the effect of Christianity upon the rank and file of the negro population? for we have confessedly been dealing hitherto with only its best representatives. We must in all frankness reply very great, and yet very little. If we were asked what has been the practical result of Christianity upon the civilised European nations, we should have, I fear, to make a similar reply, Watchman, what of the night? The morning cometh, the night cometh also. But in the case of negro Christianity, at least of West India negro Christianity, the uneradicated faults and vices are much more palpable and apparent, and perhaps more generally diffused than those of European Christianity. They are the vices that either have come down to them from the days of their African heathenism or were incident to their condition in the West Indies previous to emancipation and Christianity. Besides being enslaved by iniquitous superstitions, the negro Christian has too often a very limited practical belief in the sanctity of truth and honesty; many a habitual church-goer is prone to lying, cheating, and petty pilfering. He fails too often to bridle his tongue, and to the sins of evil-speaking and lying many and many a one adds slandering. And yet, while he allows himself in this unlovely catalogue of unchristian sin, the Christianised negro values his religion. In the West Indies religious services, when hearty, and accompanied by plain outspoken preaching from a man who is patiently trying to live up to what he preaches, are always thronged. The ordinances of religion are eagerly sought. They read and know and love their Bibles. Above all, they give the best test of sincerity; they are willing to deny themselves considerably to secure to themselves the means of grace. Out of their deep poverty they contribute freely to Church support. If we would learn the cause of the imperfection of negro Christianity in the isles of the West, let us remind ourselves of the two necessary conditions for Christianity to take effect, sufficient time and favourable surroundings. I doubt whether those who deny or question the reality or possibility of mission work among inferior races have ever reflected how much of their own Christianity, or at least their receptivity of Christian principles, is an inherited peculiarity, a transmitted idiosyncrasy, as entirely as many of those other moral qualities on which as a race we pride ourselves; and whether they realise how much of it is due to the presence everywhere among us of patterns, imperfect it may be, but none the less valuable, of a high ideal of Christian conduct, and to the restraining force from childhood upwards of a generally sound public opinion in respect of Christian obligation. Can these dry bones then live? The answer still must be, O Lord God, Thou knowest. The bones are exceeding many and very dry; centuries of superstition and oppression and degradation have driven all the vital moisture from them. They must reform themselves gradually. Gradually each bone must adjust itself to his bone; gradually the flesh must clothe them and the skin cover them above. Gradually (that is to say) must the outward decencies and proprieties of Christianity be developed among them. And even then till the wind of God has been wafted to them, and in His capacity as the Life-giver has inspired the as yet inanimate forms, there can be no vital religion; there can be no general bringing forth of the fruits of the spirit, which are love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance. (<em>Bp. Mitchinson.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>The valley of the dead<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>The natural deadness of humanity. It goes without saying that there are some people in the world whom you would describe as morally and spiritually dead. If you go down, for example, men and women so lost to all to the lowest dregs of society, you will always find nobleness, and purity, and goodness that they are dead&#8211;dead to God, dead to humanity, dead even to their own better self. Now, if the Gospel of Christ confined this word dead to such wrecks of humanity, I suppose no one would be surprised; certainly no one would have a word to say in objection to the term. But here is the remarkable thing; this Book steadily refuses to limit this term dead to these moral outcasts; it takes it in all its dark and terrible meaning, and it declares it is true of all men without exception, and that whatever else conversion may be, before all things else it is this&#8211;passing from death unto life. Take, for example, one illustrated fact. It was not without the profoundest significance that the one man selected by Christ to hear the discourse on the supreme necessity of the new birth was not an abandoned profligate, nor the publican smiting on his breast and crying, God be merciful to me, a sinner, but Nicodemus, the respectable and apparently blameless Pharisee. There is a tendency in some of the theological thinking to paint a picture of human nature with the darkest lines all left out. Do you tell me that the kindlier view of human nature which is taken today is not only in itself a truer view, but is a healthy reaction from the exaggerated statements of the Calvinistic theology of a past age? I am not careful to deny there is some truth in what you say. Be it so; but do not forget the pendulum of human thought is always swinging from one extreme to the other, and if there was once danger from an unscriptural severity, there may be equal danger today from an unscriptural charity of statement. Too little shadow will spoil a picture quite as much as too little light. Or do you again remind me that there is something good to be found even in the worst of men; that the hardest heart has a tender spot somewhere if only we knew where to find it; that, in a word, there are some movements of moral life in all men, and that so far they are certainly not dead, I will not dispute the fact. If there was no conscience in man, there would be nothing left to which Christ could appeal; but do not forget the occasional movements of this conscience towards virtue may be associated with the profoundest indifference to God. Beneath the muttering of the lips of the sleeper the soul may lie in the sleep of death. It is not immorality that is the universal sin, it is a deeper, darker, deadlier sin&#8211;it is ungodliness! You may be alive to man, but dead to God. Just as the moon has that part of her surface which is turned to the earth all radiant with light, whilst the opposite hemisphere turned towards the distant heavens is dark as midnight, and is wrapped in the silence of eternal death, so the heart of man is lighted up with gleams of human goodness, whilst it is utterly dark and dead to God. At the surface of the sea there may be some dim, imperfect light penetrating the water; but as you go deeper down the light grows fainter and fainter, until in the depths it is quenched in the darkness of an everlasting night. It is a great, it is a fatal mistake to imagine you will commend the Gospel by concealing any part of its message. Speak, I say, all you find in your heart to say of the honour and glory of man, but when you have said all do not end there. Add another word. Say&#8211;say it with tears in your eyes: This glorious temple is all in ruins. This child of the Eternal is a lost child, a dead son.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The process of quickening. The prophet is commanded by God to prophesy unto these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord, and then follows that word. The first act&#8211;that is, of any prophet&#8211;in the quickening of the dead is the utterance of a Divine message that is intrusted to him. The Gospel is called in the New Testament the Message, and a message only asks to be delivered. We are not discoverers of truth, we are only witnesses to a truth given to us to declare. It is the Word of the Lord, not the word of the man, which we have to speak. And on this fact depend two things&#8211;first, the authority of the messenger, and next the power of his message. You are an ambassador for Christ, with all the responsibility, but with all the authority of an ambassador. And as this truth confers authority on the messenger of Christ, so it creates all the power of His message. For some thirty years, wrote the late Dr. Pusey in the preface to his learned and laborious work on Daniel, this has been a deep conviction of my soul, that no book can be written on behalf of the Bible like the Bible itself; and what Pusey said of the Book we may say of the message the Book contains, and which is given us to speak. The power of the Word is more in the message than in the messenger who delivers it. I do not forget because I say this how much, how very much, depends on the man; how just as an instrument out of tune may mar the noblest music, so an unworthy or unfit messenger may spoil all the sweetness of the message. But for all this, the message is the first thing, the great thing, and the messenger is only of value as he speaks the message. Who then is Paul, or who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed? Here, then, I repeat, is the secret of our power so far as our word to man is concerned&#8211;we have to speak the Word of the Lord. There is nothing else to speak. You may, if you please, try to substitute other things for it; you may give to your people ingenious speculations on science, lectures on art. There is no power in them to reach the deepest needs of the sin and sorrow of the world. There is only one theme for the Christian preacher, but it is an infinite theme; it is Christ Himself&#8211;Christ, Son of God and Son of man, Christ in all the immeasurable meaning of that glorious Name&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>Well worth all languages on earth or heaven.<\/p>\n<p>Christ crucified, Christ risen, Christ ascended to the eternal throne, Christ Friend, Brother, Saviour, Lord, Judge of men, and only as that mighty Name is on our lips will the music, of the message touch the heart of man.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>Fruitless preaching. The prophet has prophesied over the bones, and now mark the result: Them was a noise, and behold an earthquake, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. And I beheld, and lo! there were sinews upon them, and flesh came up, and skin covered them above, but&#8211;but there was no breath in them. How often is this experience repeated in our own work. We preach the Word of the Lord&#8211;preach it, perhaps, fervently and earnestly&#8211;and then what follows? There is some excitement in the congregation, there is movement, there is interest; some eyes am filled with tears; here and there there are impressions created&#8211;there is what looks like the first stirrings of the Divine life. Alas! alas! it is not so. The congregation disperses, the eyes are soon dry again, the heart has not been touched, the depths have never been moved, God has not yet come to those dead souls, there is no breath in them. It was the semblance&#8211;not the reality of life we had produced. It takes some of us a long time to learn this humbling, but most salutary lesson. We can do so much, or what seems so much; we have the Word of God on our lips, we can preach it faithfully, we can toil hard, very hard, all the night, and it seems impossible all this toil should end in nothing. Yet it does. When we have done all, we have failed, utterly failed, to quicken the dead. It is only when He comes who is the Lord and Giver of Life that in a moment our unfruitful toil is crowned with abundant and overflowing success. Do you ask me how we are to gain this power? how this Divine breath may come breathing on the slam? I answer in the words of the vision, Prophesy unto the wind, and prophecy, which spoken to man is preaching, uttered to God is prayer. It is prayer, only prayer, that holds in its upstretched hands the secret of the power of God. (<em>G. S. Barrett, B. A.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>A moral resurrection<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>I.<\/strong><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong>The multitude of its dead.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>II. <\/strong>The apparent hopelessness of the dead.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>III. <\/strong>A startling command.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>It is the Lord who speaks.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>In His words, are&#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> Life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Power.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>IV. <\/strong>A glorious promise.<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>V. <\/strong>The resurrection.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>A noise.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2. <\/strong>A reunion.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3. <\/strong>Harmony in this reunion.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4. <\/strong>Elastic strength for action.<\/p>\n<p><strong>5. <\/strong>A human form.<\/p>\n<p><strong>6. <\/strong>Life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> God, the Source.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> The Spirit, the Agent.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> His Word, the instrument.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(4)<\/strong> Man, the medium. (<em>J. Gill.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong>Faith refers all possibility to God<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Then comes the Divine challenge to the man who is willing honestly, and without any disguise, to contemplate the facts: And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? God will have the sympathy and the hope and the eager anticipation of His servant for His enterprise before He will openly pledge Himself to it. Ponder the situation&#8211;God and His servant all alone, and together gazing at that valley very full of very dry bones! Thus do begin the things which thrill earth and heaven! No life, no promise, no hope, anywhere but in Him who searches us with His challenge. There can be no mighty commerce between earth and heaven except through the faith which believeth Him who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were. It is a chief peril of our creaturehood to make ourselves&#8211;not the living God&#8211;the law and measure and explanation of all things. We were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight&#8211;wailed the unbelieving spies! And what could grasshoppers achieve against giants? Yet the Word of Jehovah had pledged victory. Two dominions are ever open to us&#8211;self or God, our creature thoughts or our Creators Word. In that momentous testing hour it was not in self and its thinkings that Ezekiel took his stand, but in God and His greatness: O Lord God, Thou! Let us follow his example, and so become men of God the highest dignity open to us&#8211;men who ever account the living God the first and chief factor in every problem of thought and conduct. The miserable alternative is the grasshopper manner&#8211;grasshopper fears, grasshopper thinkings, grasshopper doings! And of what avail is a grasshopper in a valley of dry bones? (<em>C. G. Macgregor.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\"> CHAPTER XXXVII <\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">  <I>This chapter treats of the same subject with the preceding, in<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>a beautiful and significant vision. Under the emblem of the<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>open valley being thickly strewed with very dry bones is<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>represented the hopeless state of the Jews when dispersed<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>throughout the provinces of the Chaldean empire. But God,<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>contrary to every human probability, restores these bones to<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>life, thereby prefiguring the restoration of that people from<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>the Babylonish captivity, and their resettlement in the land of<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>their forefathers<\/I>, 1-14.<\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">  <I>The prophet then makes an easy and elegant transition to the<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>blessedness of the people of God under the Gospel dispensation,<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>in the plenitude of its manifestation, when the genuine<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>converts to Christianity, the<\/I> spiritual <I>Israel, shall be no<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>longer under the domination of heathen and anti-christian<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>rulers, but shall be collected together into one visible<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>kingdom, and constitute but one flock under one Shepherd<\/I>, 15-28.<\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">  <I>The vision of the dry bones reviving is considered by some as<\/I><\/P> <P STYLE=\"margin-left: 0.9em\">   <I>having a remote view to the general resurrection.<\/I> <\/P> <P>                     NOTES ON CHAP. XXXVII<\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> Verse <span class='bible'>1<\/span>. <I><B>The hand of the Lord was upon me<\/B><\/I>] The prophetic influence was communicated.<\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> <I><B>And carried me out in the spirit<\/B><\/I>] Or, And the Lord brought me out in the spirit; that is, a spiritual vision, in which all these things were doubtless transacted.<\/P> <P> <\/P> <P> <I><B>The valley which<\/B><\/I><B> was <\/B><I><B>full of bones<\/B><\/I>] This vision of the <I>dry bones<\/I> was designed, <I>first<\/I>, as an emblem of the then <I>wretched<\/I> state of the Jews; <I>secondly<\/I>, of the general resurrection of the body.<\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Adam Clarke&#8217;s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P> <B>The hand; <\/B>either the prophetic Spirit, as <span class='bible'>Eze 1:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>8:1<\/span>, moving him to prophesy by this emblem; or else the Spirit of God carrying him visionally, not corporeally, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 8<\/span>, into such a prospect or landscape. <\/P> <P><B>In the spirit; <\/B>either in the power of the Spirit of God, or it may refer to the prophets own spirit, he was in his spirit, or mind and apprehension. <\/P> <P><B>Set me down; <\/B>so it seemed to me in the vision, that I was set gently down. <\/P> <P><B>In the valley; <\/B>it is vain to inquire what valley this should be, which was visional, not corporeal or real. <\/P> <P><B>Full of bones:<\/B> it is as vain to inquire whose bones these were, they are visional, and hieroglyphics of Israels present condition. <\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><P><B>1. carried . . . in the spirit<\/B>Thematters transacted, therefore, were not literal, but in vision. <\/P><P>       <B>the valley<\/B>probablythat by the Chebar (<span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>).The valley represents Mesopotamia, the scene of Israel&#8217;s sojourn inher state of national deadness.<\/P><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown&#8217;s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible <\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong>The hand of the Lord was upon me<\/strong>,&#8230;. The Spirit of the Lord, a powerful impulse of his upon the prophet; the Targum interprets it a spirit of prophecy; <span class='bible'>[See comments on Eze 1:3]<\/span>:<\/p>\n<p><strong>and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord<\/strong>: out of the place where he was to another; not really, but visionally, as things appeared to him, and as they were represented to his mind by the Spirit of God:<\/p>\n<p><strong>and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones<\/strong>: of men, as the Targum adds: this valley, Kimchi thinks, was the same by the river Chebar, where the prophet had his visions at first. R. Jochanan says it was the valley of Dura, and these the bones of them that were slain by Nebuchadnezzar there, <span class='bible'>Da 3:1<\/span>. Rab says these were the children of Ephraim, slain by the men of Gath, <span class='bible'>1Ch 7:20<\/span>. Some of the Jewish Rabbins think there was a real resurrection at this time. R. Eliezer says, the dead Ezekiel quickened stood upon their feet, sung a song, and died. R. Eliezer, the son of R. Jose the Galilean, says, they went up into the land of Israel, married wives, and begat sons and daughters. R. Judah ben Bethira stood upon his feet, and said, I am of their children&#8217;s children, and these are the &#8220;tephillim&#8221; my father&#8217;s father left me r; but these are all fabulous and romantic: others of them understand the whole in a parabolical way: these bones, and the quickening of them, were an emblem of the restoration of the Jews from their captivity, who were in a helpless and hopeless condition, as appears from <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>, and of the conversion of that people in the latter day, which will be as life from the dead; and of the revival of the interest and church of Christ, when the slain witnesses shall rise, and ascend to heaven; and of the resurrection of the dead at the last day; and may be applied unto and be used to illustrate the quickening of dead sinners, by the efficacious grace of the Spirit of God.<\/p>\n<p>r T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 92. 2. Vid. Kimchi &amp; Abendana in loc.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: John Gill&#8217;s Exposition of the Entire Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>. <em> There came upon me the hand of Jehovah, and Jehovah led me out in the spirit, and set me down in the midst of the valley; this was full of bones. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>.<em> And He led me past them round about; and, behold, there were very many on the surface of the valley, and, behold, they were very dry. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>.<em> And He said to me, Son of man, will these bones come to life? and I said, Lord, Jehovah, thou knowest. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>.<em> Then He said to me, Prophesy over these bones, and say to them, Ye dry bones, hear ye the word of Jehovah. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>.<em> Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to these bones, Behold, I bring breath into you, that ye may come to life. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>.<em> I will create sinews upon you, and cause flesh to grow upon you, and cover you with skin, and bring breath into you, so that ye shall live and know that I am Jehovah. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>.<em> And I prophesied as I was commanded; and there was a noise as I prophesied, and behold a rumbling, and the bones came together, bone to bone. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>.<em> And I saw, and behold sinews came over them, and flesh grew, and skin drew over it above; but there was no breath in them. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>.<em> Then He said to me, Prophesy to the breath, prophesy, son of man, and say to the breath, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Come from the four winds, thou breath, and blow upon these slain, that they may come to life. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>.<em> And I prophesied as I was commanded; then the breath came into them, and they came to life, and stood upon their feet, a very, very great army. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>.<em> And He said to me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel; behold, they say, our bones are dried, and our hope has perished; we are destroyed! <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>.<em> Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I will open you graves, and cause you to come out of your graves, my people, and bring you into the land of Israel. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span>.<em> And ye shall know that I am Jehovah, when I open your graves, and cause you to come out of your graves, my people. <\/em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>.<em> And I will put my Spirit into you, and will place you in your land, and ye shall know that I, Jehovah, have spoken and do it, is the saying of Jehovah.<\/em> &#8211; This revelation divides itself into two sections. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span> contain the vision, and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> give the interpretation. There are no particular difficulties in the description of the vision, so far as the meaning of the words is concerned. By a supernatural intervention on the part of God, Ezekiel is taken from his own home in a state of spiritual ecstasy into a valley which was full of dead men&#8217;s bones. For the expression &#8216;     , see the comm. on <span class='bible'>Eze 1:3<\/span>. In the second clause of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>  is the subject, and is not to be taken as a genitive in connection with  , as it has been by the Vulgate and Hitzig in opposition to the accents.  stands for   (<span class='bible'>Eze 11:24<\/span>), and  is omitted simply because  follows immediately afterwards.  , to set down, here and <span class='bible'>Eze 40:2<\/span>; whereas in other cases the form  is usually employed in this sense. The article prefixed to  appears to point back to <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>, to the valley where Ezekiel received the first revelation concerning the fate of Jerusalem and its inhabitants. That  are dead men&#8217;s bones is evident from what follows.   , not &ldquo;He led me over them round about,&rdquo; but past them, in order that Ezekiel might have a clear view of them, and see whether it were possible for them to come to life again. They were lying upon the surface of the valley, i.e., not under, but upon the ground, and not piled up in a heap, but scattered over the valley, and they were very dry. The question asked by God, whether these bones could live, or come to life again, prepares the way for the miracle; and Ezekiel&#8217;s answer, &ldquo;Lord, Thou knowest&rdquo; (cf. <span class='bible'>Rev 7:14<\/span>), implies that, according to human judgment, it was inconceivable that they could come to life any more, and nothing but the omnipotence of God could effect this.<\/p>\n<p> After this introduction there follows in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>. the miracle of the raising to life of these very dry bones, accomplished through the medium of the word of God, which the prophet addresses to them, to show to the people that the power to realize itself is inherent in the word of Jehovah proclaimed by Ezekiel; in other words, that Jehovah possesses the power to accomplish whatever He promises to His people. The word in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>, &ldquo;Behold, I bring breath into you, that ye may come to life,&rdquo; announces in general terms the raising of them to life, whilst the process itself is more minutely described in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>. God will put on them (clothe them with) sinews, flesh, and skin, and then put  in them.  is the animating spirit or breath =   (<span class='bible'>Gen 6:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 7:17<\/span>). ,  .  . in Syriac <em> incrustare, obducere<\/em>. When Ezekiel prophesied there arose or followed a sound (  ), and then a shaking (  ), and the bones approached one another, every bone to its own bone. Different explanations have been given of the words  and  .  signifies a sound or voice, and  a trembling, and earthquake, and also a rumbling or a loud noise (compare <span class='bible'>Eze 3:12<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Isa 9:4<\/span>). The relation between the two words as they stand here is certainly not that the sound (  ) passes at once into a loud noise, or is continued in that form; whilst  denotes the rattling or rustling of bones in motion. The fact that the moving of the bones toward one another is represented by  (with <em> Vav consec.<\/em>), as the sequel to  , is decisive against this. Yet we cannot agree with Kliefoth, that by  we are to understand the trumpet-blast, or voice of God, that wakes the dead from their graves, according to those passages of the New Testament which treat of the resurrection, and by  the earthquake which opens the graves. This explanation is precluded, not only by the philological difficulty that  without any further definition does not signify either the blast of a trumpet or the voice of God, but also by the circumstance that the  is the result of the prophesying of Ezekiel; and we cannot suppose that God would make His almighty call dependent upon a prophet&#8217;s prophesying. And even in the case of  , the reference to <span class='bible'>Eze 38:19<\/span> does not prove that the word must mean earthquake in this passage also, since Ezekiel uses the word in a different sense in <span class='bible'>Eze 12:18<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 3:12<\/span>. We therefore take  in the general sense of a loud noise, and  in the sense of shaking (sc., of the bones), which was occasioned by the loud noise, and produced, or was followed by, the movement of the bones to approach one another.<\/p>\n<p> The coming together of the bones was followed by their being clothed with sinews, flesh, and skin; but there was not yet any breath in them (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>). To give them this the prophet is to prophesy again, and that to the breath, that it come from the four winds or quarters of the world and breathe into these slain (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>). Then, when he prophesied, the breath came into them, so that they received life, and stood upright upon their feet. In <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>  is rendered by some &ldquo;wind,&rdquo; by others &ldquo;spirit;&rdquo; but neither of these is in conformity with what precedes it.  does not mean anything else than the breath of life, which has indeed a substratum in the wind, perceptible to the senses, but it not identical with it. The wind itself brings no life into dead bodies. If, therefore, the dead bodies become living, receive life through the blowing of the  into them, what enters into them by the blowing cannot be a symbol of the breath of life, but must be the breath of life itself &#8211; namely, that divine breath of life which pervades all nature, giving and sustaining the life of all creatures (cf. <span class='bible'>Psa 104:29-30<\/span>). The expression   points back to <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>. The representation of the bringing of the dead bones to life in two acts may also be explained from the fact that it is based upon the history of the creation of man in Gen 2, as Theodoret<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> (Note: &ldquo;For as the body of our forefather Adam was first moulded, and then the soul was thus breathed into it; so here also both combined in fitting harmony.&rdquo; &#8211; Theodoret.)<\/p>\n<p> has observed, and serves plainly to depict the creative revivification here, like the first creation there, as a work of the almighty God. For a correct understanding of the vision, it is also necessary to observe that in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> the dead bones, clothed with sinews, flesh, and skin, are called  , slain, killed, and not merely dead. It is apparent at once from this that our vision is not intended to symbolize the resurrection of all the dead, but simply the raising up of the nation of Israel, which has been slain. This is borne out by the explanation of the vision which God gives to the prophet in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span>, and directs him to repeat to the people. The dead bones are the &ldquo;whole house of Israel&rdquo; that has been given up to death; in other words, Judah and Ephraim. &ldquo;These bones&rdquo; in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> are the same as in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>, and not the bodies brought to life in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>; though Hitzig maintains that they are the latter, and then draws the erroneous conclusion that <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> do not interpret the vision of the first ten verses, but that the bones in the valley are simply explained in these verses as signifying the dead of Israel. It is true that the further explanation in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>. of what is described in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5-10<\/span> as happening to the dead bones is not given in the form of an exposition of the separate details of that occurrence, but is summed up in the announcement that God will open their graves, bring them out of their graves, and transport them to their own land. But it does not follow from this that the announcement is merely an application of the vision to the restoration of Israel to new life, and therefore that something different is represented from what is announced in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-14<\/span>. Such a view is at variance with the words, &ldquo;these bones are the whole house of Israel.&rdquo; Even if these words are not to be taken so literally as that we are to understand that the prophet was shown in the vision of the bones of the slain and deceased Israelites, but simply mean: these dead bones represent the house of Israel, depict the nation of Israel in its state of death, &#8211; they express so much in the clearest terms concerning the relation in which the explanation in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-14<\/span> stands to the visionary occurrence in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4-10<\/span>, namely, that God has shown to Ezekiel in the vision what He commands him to announce concerning Israel in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-14<\/span>; in other words, that the bringing of the dead bones to life shown to him in the vision was intended to place visibly before him the raising of the whole nation of Israel to new life out of the death into which it had fallen. This is obvious enough from the words: these bones are the whole house of Israel.   points forward to the reunion of the tribes of Israel that are severed into two nations, as foretold in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span>. It is they who speak in <em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span><\/em>. The subject to  is neither the bones nor the dead of Israel (Hitzig), but the   already named, which is also addressed in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>. All Israel says: our bones are dried, i.e., our vital force is gone. The bones are the seat of the vital force, as in <span class='bible'>Psa 32:3<\/span>; and  , to dry up, applied to the marrow, or vital sap of the bones, is substantially the same as  in the psalm (<em> l.c.<\/em>). Our hope has perished (cf. <span class='bible'>Eze 19:5<\/span>).  is here the hope of rising into a nation once more.   . : literally, we are cut off for ourselves, sc. from the sphere of the living (cf. <span class='bible'>Lam 3:54<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 53:8<\/span>), equivalent to &ldquo;it is all over with us.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p> To the people speaking thus, Ezekiel is to announce that the Lord will open their graves, bring them out of them, put His breath of life into them, and lead them into their own land. If we observe the relation in which <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span> stand to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>, namely, that the two halves of the 14th verse are parallel to the two <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span>, the clause &#8216;    in <em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span><\/em> to the similar clause in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span>, there can be no doubt that the contents of <em> <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span><\/em> also correspond to those of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> &#8211; that is to say, that the words, &ldquo;I put my breath (Spirit) into you, that ye may live, and place you in your own land&rdquo; (bring you to rest therein), affirm essentially the same as the words, &ldquo;I bring you out of your graves, and lead you into the land of Israel;&rdquo; with this simple difference, that the bringing out of the graves is explained and rendered more emphatic by the more definite idea of causing them to live through the breath or Spirit of God put into them, and the  by  , the leading into the land by the transporting and bringing them to rest therein. Consequently we are not to understand by    either a divine act differing from the raising of the dead to life, or the communication of the Holy Spirit as distinguished from the imparting of the breath of life.  , the Spirit of Jehovah, is identical with the  , which comes, according to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>, into the bones of the dead when clothed with sinews, flesh, and skin, i.e., is breathed into them. This spirit or breath of life is the creative principle both of the physical and of the ethical or spiritual life. Consequently there are not three things announced in these verses, but only two: (1) The raising to life from a state of death, by bringing out of the graves, and communicating the divine Spirit of life; (2) the leading back to their own land to rest quietly therein. When, therefore, Kliefoth explains these verses as signifying that for the consolation of Israel, which is mourning hopelessly in its existing state of death, &ldquo;God directs the prophet to say &#8211; (1) That at some future time it will experience a resurrection in the literal sense, that its graves will be opened, and that all its dead, those deceased with those still alive, will be raised up out of their graves; (2) that God will place them in their own land; and (3) that when He has so placed them in their land, He will put His Spirit within them that they may live: in the first point the idea of the future resurrection, both of those deceased and of those still living, is interpolated into the text; and in the third point, placing them in their land before they are brought to life by the Spirit of God, would be at variance with the text, according to which the giving of the Spirit precedes the removal to their own land. The repetition of  in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span> is also worthy of notice: you who are my people, which bases the comforting promise upon the fact that Israel is the people of Jehovah.<\/p>\n<p> If, therefore, our vision does not set forth the resurrection of the dead in general, but simply the raising to life of the nation of Israel which is given up to death, it is only right that, in order still further to establish this view, we should briefly examine the other explanations that have been given. &#8211; The Fathers and most of the orthodox commentators, both of ancient and modern times, have found in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span> a <em> locus classicus <\/em> for the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, and that quite correctly. But their views differ widely as to the strict meaning and design of the vision itself; inasmuch as some regard the vision as a direct and immediate prophecy of the general resurrection of the dead at the last day, whilst others take the raising of the dead to life shown to the prophet in the vision to be merely a figure or type of the waking up to new life of the Israel which is now dead in its captivity. The first view is mentioned by Jerome; but in later times it has been more especially defended by Calov, and last of all most decidedly by Kliefoth. Yet the supporters of this view acknowledge that <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> predict the raising to life of the nation of Israel. The question arises, therefore, how this prediction is to be brought into harmony with such an explanation of the vision. The persons noticed by Jerome, who supported the view that in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4-10<\/span> it is the general resurrection that is spoken of, sought to remove the difficulties to which this explanation is exposed, by taking the words, &ldquo;these bones are the whole house of Israel,&rdquo; as referring to the resurrection of the saints, and connecting them with the first resurrection in <span class='bible'>Rev 20:5<\/span>, and by interpreting the leading of Israel back to their own land as equivalent to the inheriting of the earth mentioned in <span class='bible'>Mat 5:5<\/span>. Calov, on the other hand, gives the following explanation of the relation in which <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> stand to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>: &ldquo;in this striking vision there was shown by the Lord to the prophet the resurrection of the dead; but the <em> occasion<\/em>, the <em> cause<\/em>, and the <em> scope<\/em> of this vision were the <em> resurrection of the Israelitish people<\/em>, not so much into its earlier political form, as for the restoration of the ecclesiastical hierarchy and the establishment of the worship of God, both of which were indeed restored in the time of Zerubbabel, but were first brought to perfection at the coming of Jesus Christ.&rdquo; He also assumes that the raising of the dead is represented in the vision, &ldquo;because God would have this representation exhibited for a <em> figure and confirmation<\/em> of the restitution of the people.&rdquo; And lastly, according to Kliefoth, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> do not furnish a literal exposition of the vision, but simply make an application of it to the bringing of Israel to life. &#8211; We cannot regard either of these views as correct, because neither of them does justice to the words of the text. The idea of the Fathers, that <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> treat of the resurrection of the saints (believers), cannot be reconciled either with the words or with the context of our prophecy, and has evidently originated in perplexity. And the assumption of Calov and Kliefoth, that <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> contain simply an application of the general resurrection of the dead exhibited in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span> to the resurrection of Israel, by no means exhausts the meaning of the words, &ldquo;these bones are the whole house of Israel,&rdquo; as we have already observed in our remarks on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>. Moreover, in the vision itself there are certain features to be found which do not apply to the general resurrection of the dead. In proof of this, we will not lay any stress upon the circumstance that Ezekiel sees the resurrection of the dead within certain limits; that it is only the dead men&#8217;s bones lying about in one particular valley, and not the dead of the whole earth, though a very great army, that he sees come to life again; but, on the other hand, we must press the fact that in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> those who are to be raised to life are called  , a word which does not signify the dead of all kinds, but simply those who have been slain, or have perished by the sword, by famine, or by other violent deaths, and which indisputably proves that Ezekiel was not shown the resurrection of all the dead, but simply the raising to life of Israel, which had been swept away by a violent death. Kliefoth would account for this restriction from the purpose for which the vision was shown to the prophet. Because the design of the vision was to comfort Israel concerning the wretchedness of its existing condition, and that wretchedness consisted for the most part in the fact that the greater portion of Israel had perished by sword, famine, and pestilence, he was shown the resurrection of the dead generally and universally, as it would take place not in the case of the Israelites alone, but in that of all the dead, though here confined within the limits of one particular field of dead; and stress is laid upon the circumstance that the dead which Ezekiel saw raised to life <em> instar omnium <\/em>, were such as had met with a violent death. This explanation would be admissible, if only it had been indicated or expressed in any way whatever, that the bones of the dead which Ezekiel saw lying about in the  represented all the dead of the whole earth. But we find no such indication; and because in the whole vision there is not a single feature contained which would warrant any such generalization of the field of the dead which Ezekiel saw, we are constrained to affirm that the dead men&#8217;s bones seen by Ezekiel in the valley represent the whole house of Israel alone, and not the deceased and slain of all mankind; and that the vision does not set forth the resurrection of all the dead, but only the raising to life of the nation of Israel which had been given up to death.<\/p>\n<p> Consequently we can only regard the figurative view of the vision as the correct one, though this also has been adopted in very different ways. When Jerome says that Ezekiel &ldquo;is prophesying of the restoration of Israel through the parable of the resurrection,&rdquo; and in order to defend himself from the charge of denying the dogma of the resurrection of the dead, adds that &ldquo;the similitude of a resurrection would never have been employed to exhibit the restoration of the Israelitish people, if that resurrection had been a delusion, and it had not been believed that it would really take place; because no one confirms uncertain things by means of things which have no existence;&rdquo; &#8211; Hvernick very justly replies, that the resurrection of the dead is not to be so absolutely regarded as a dogma already completed and defined, or as one universally known and having its roots in the national belief; though Hvernick is wrong in affirming in support of this that the despair of the people described in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> plainly shows that so general a belief cannot possibly be presupposed. For we find just the same despair at times when faith in the resurrection of the dead was a universally accepted dogma. The principal error connected with this view is the assumption that the vision was merely a parable formed by Ezekiel in accordance with the dogma of the resurrection of the dead. If, on the contrary, the vision was a spiritual intuition produced by God in the soul of the prophet, it might set forth the resurrection of the dead, even if the belief in this dogma had no existence as yet in the consciousness of the people, or at all events was not yet a living faith; and God might have shown to the prophet the raising of Israel to life under this figure, for the purpose of awakening this belief in Israel.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> (Note: No conclusive evidence can be adduced that the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead was not only known to Ezekiel, but was regarded by the people as indisputably sure, as both Hengstenberg (<em> Christology<\/em>, vol. III p. 51, transl.) and Pareau (<em> Comment. de immortal<\/em>. p. 109) assume. Such passages as <span class='bible'>Isa 25:8<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>, even if Ezekiel referred to them, merely prove that the belief or hope of the resurrection of the dead could not be altogether unknown to the believers of Israel, because Isaiah had already declared it. But the obvious announcement of this dogma in <span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span> belongs to a later period than our vision; and even Daniel does not speak of it as a belief that prevailed throughout the nation, but simply communicates it as a consolation offered by the angel of the Lord in anticipation of the times of severe calamity awaiting the people of God.)<\/p>\n<p> In that case, however, the vision was not merely a parable, but a symbolical representation of a real fact, which was to serve as a pledge to the nation of its restoration to life. Theodoret comes much nearer to the truth when he gives the following as his explanation of the vision: that &ldquo;on account of the unbelief of the Jews in exile, who were despairing of their restoration, the almighty God makes known His might; and the resurrection of the dead bodies, which was much more difficult than their restoration, is shown to the prophet, in order that all the nation may be taught thereby that everything is easy to His will;&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> (Note: His words are these:                 ,         ,                      ,      .)<\/p>\n<p> and when, accordingly, he calls what occurs in the vision &ldquo;a type not of the calling to life of the Jews only, but also of the resurrection of all men.&rdquo; The only defect in this is, that Theodoret regards the dead bones which are brought to life too much as a figurative representation of any dead whatever, and thereby does justice neither to the words, &ldquo;these bones are the whole house of Israel,&rdquo; which he paraphrases by     , nor to the designation applied to them as  , though it may fairly be pleaded as a valid excuse so far as  is concerned, that the force of this word has been completely neutralized in the Septuagint, upon which he was commenting, by the rendering    . &#8211; Hvernick has interpreted the vision in a much more abstract manner, and evaporated it into the general idea of a symbolizing of the creative, life-giving power of God, which can raise even the bones of the dead to life again. His exposition is the following: &ldquo;There is no express prediction of the resurrection in these words, whether of a general resurrection or of the particular resurrection of Israel; but this is only though of here, inasmuch as it rests upon the creative activity of God, to which even such a conquest of death as this is possible.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> (Note: The view expressed by Hofmann (<em> Schriftbeweis<\/em>, II 2, pp. 507ff.) is a kindred one, namely, that it is not the future resurrection of the dead, or the resurrection of the deceased Israelites, which is indicated in the vision, and that it does not even set forth to view the unconditioned power of God over death, or an idea which is intended as a pledge of the resurrection of the dead; but that by the revelation made manifest to the prophet in the state of ecstasy, the completeness of that state of death out of which Israel is to be restored is exhibited, and thus the truth is set before his eyes that the word of prophecy has the inherent power to ensure its own fulfilment, even when Israel is in a condition which bears precisely the same resemblance to a nation as the state of death to a human being.)<\/p>\n<p> The calling to life of the thoroughly dried dead bones shown to the prophet in the vision, is a figure or visible representation of that which the Lord announces to him in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span>, namely, that He will bring Israel out of its graves, give it life with His breath, and bring it into its own land; and consequently a figure of the raising of Israel to life from its existing state of death. The opening of the graves is also a figure; for those whom the Lord will bring out of their braves are they who say, &ldquo;Our bones are dried,&rdquo; etc. (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>), and therefore not those who are deceased, nor even the spiritually dead, but those who have lost all hope of life. We are not, however, to understand by this merely <em> mors civilis <\/em> and <em> vita civilis <\/em>, as Grotius has done. For Israel was destroyed, not only politically as a nation, but spiritually as a church of the Lord, through the destruction of its two kingdoms and its dispersion among the heathen; and in a very large number of its members it had also been given up to the power of physical death and sunk into the grave. Even then, if we keep out of sight those who were deceased, Israel, as the people of God was slain (  ), without any hope of coming to life again, or a resurrection to new life. But the Lord now shows the prophet this resurrection under the figure of the raising to life of the very dry bones that lie scattered all around. This is fulfilled through the restoration of Israel as the people of Jehovah, to which the leading of the people back into the land of Israel essentially belongs. The way was opened and prepared for this fulfilment by the return of a portion of the people from the Babylonian captivity under Zerubbabel and Ezra, which was brought to pass by the Lord, by the rebuilding of the cities of Judah and the temple which had been destroyed, and by the restoration of political order. But all this was nothing more than a pledge of the future and complete restoration of Israel. For although the Lord still raised up prophets for those who had returned and furthered the building of His house, His glory did not enter the newly erected temple, and the people never attained to independence again, &#8211; that is to say, not to permanent independence, &#8211; but continued in subjection to the imperial power of the heathen. And even if, according to Ezra, very many more of the exiles may have returned to their native land, by whom, for example, Galilee was repopulated and brought into cultivation again, the greater portion of the nation remained dispersed among the heathen. The true restoration of Israel as the people of the Lord commenced with the founding of the new kingdom of God, the &ldquo;kingdom of heaven,&rdquo; through the appearing of Christ upon the earth. But inasmuch as the Jewish nation as such, or in its entirety, did not acknowledge Jesus Christ as the Messiah foretold by the prophets and sent by God, but rejected its Saviour, there burst afresh upon Jerusalem and the Jewish nation the judgment of dispersion among the heathen; whereas the kingdom of God founded by Christ spread over the earth, through the entrance of believers from among the Gentiles. This judgment upon the Jewish people, which is hardened in unbelief, still continues, and will continue until the time when the full number of the Gentiles has entered into the kingdom of God, and Israel as a people shall also be converted to Christ, acknowledge the crucified One as its Saviour, and bow the knee before Him (<span class='bible'>Rom 11:25-26<\/span>). Then will &ldquo;all Israel&rdquo; be raised up out of its graves, the graves of its political and spiritual death, and brought back into its own land, which will extend as far as the Israel of God inhabits the earth. Then also will the hour come in which all the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and come forth out of their graves to the resurrection (<span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 5:25-29<\/span>); when the Lord shall appear in His glory, and descend from heaven with the trump of God (<span class='bible'>1Th 4:16<\/span>), to call all the dead to life, and through the judgment upon all the nations to perfect His kingdom in glory, and bring the righteous into the Canaan of the new earth, into the heavenly Jerusalem, to the imperishable life of everlasting blessedness.<\/p>\n<p> All these several factors in the restoration of Israel, which has been given up to the death of exile on account of its sins, though far removed from one another, so far as the time of their occurrence is concerned, are grouped together as one in the vision of the coming to life of the dead bones of the whole house of Israel. The two features which are kept distinct in the visionary description &#8211; namely, (1) the coming together of the dry bones, and their being clothed with sinews, flesh, and skin; and (2) the bringing to life of the bones, which have now the form of corpses, through the divine breath of life &#8211; are not to be distinguished in the manner proposed by Hengstenberg, namely, that the first may be taken as referring to the restoration of the civil condition &#8211; the external <em> restitutio in integrum <\/em>; the second, to the giving of new life through the outpouring of the Spirit of God. &#8211; Even according to our view, the vision contains a prophecy of the resurrection of the dead, only not in this sense, that the doctrine of the general resurrection of the dead is the premiss, or the design, or the direct meaning of the vision; but that the figurative meaning constitutes the foreground, and the full, literal meaning of the words the background of the prophetic vision, and that the fulfilment advances from the figurative to the literal meaning, &#8211; the raising up of the people of Israel out of the civil and spiritual death of exile being completed in the raising up of the dead out of their graves to everlasting life at the last day.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Keil &amp; Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><TABLE BORDER=\"0\" CELLPADDING=\"1\" CELLSPACING=\"0\"> <TR> <TD> <P ALIGN=\"LEFT\" STYLE=\"background: transparent;border: none;padding: 0in;font-weight: normal;text-decoration: none\"> <span style='font-size:1.25em;line-height:1em'><I><SPAN STYLE=\"background: transparent\"><SPAN STYLE=\"text-decoration: none\">The Vision of the Dry Bones.<\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/I><\/span><\/P> <\/TD> <TD> <P ALIGN=\"RIGHT\" STYLE=\"background: transparent;border: none;padding: 0in\"> <SPAN STYLE=\"text-decoration: none\"><SPAN STYLE=\"font-style: normal\"><SPAN STYLE=\"font-weight: normal\"><SPAN STYLE=\"background: transparent\"><SPAN STYLE=\"text-decoration: none\">B. C.<\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><SPAN STYLE=\"text-decoration: none\"><SPAN STYLE=\"font-style: normal\"><SPAN STYLE=\"font-weight: normal\"><SPAN STYLE=\"background: transparent\"><SPAN STYLE=\"text-decoration: none\"> 586.<\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/P> <\/TD> <\/TR>  <\/TABLE> <P>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 1 The hand of the <B>LORD<\/B> was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the <B>LORD<\/B>, and set me down in the midst of the valley which <I>was<\/I> full of bones, &nbsp; 2 And caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, <I>there were<\/I> very many in the open valley; and, lo, <I>they were<\/I> very dry. &nbsp; 3 And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord G<B>OD<\/B>, thou knowest. &nbsp; 4 Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the <B>LORD<\/B>. &nbsp; 5 Thus saith the Lord G<B>OD<\/B> unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: &nbsp; 6 And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I <I>am<\/I> the <B>LORD<\/B>. &nbsp; 7 So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. &nbsp; 8 And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but <I>there was<\/I> no breath in them. &nbsp; 9 Then said he unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord G<B>OD<\/B>; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. &nbsp; 10 So I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army. &nbsp; 11 Then he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts. &nbsp; 12 Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord G<B>OD<\/B>; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. &nbsp; 13 And ye shall know that I <I>am<\/I> the <B>LORD<\/B>, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, &nbsp; 14 And shall put my spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the <B>LORD<\/B> have spoken <I>it,<\/I> and performed <I>it,<\/I> saith the <B>LORD<\/B>.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Here is, I. The vision of a resurrection from death to life, and it is a glorious resurrection. This is a thing so utterly unknown to nature, and so contrary to its principles (<I>a privatione ad habitum non datur regressus&#8211;from privation to possession there is no return<\/I>), that we could have no thought of it but <I>by the word of the Lord;<\/I> and that it is certain by that word that there shall be a general resurrection of the dead some have urged from this vision, &#8220;For&#8221; (say they) &#8220;otherwise it would not properly be made a sign for the confirming of their faith in the promise of their deliverance out of Babylon, as the coming of the Messiah is mentioned for the confirming of their faith touching a former deliverance,&#8221; <span class='bible'>Isa. vii. 14<\/span>. But,<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 1. Whether it be a confirmation or no, it is without doubt a most lively representation of a threefold resurrection, besides that which it is primarily intended to be the sign of. (1.) The resurrection of souls from the death of sin to the life or righteousness, to a holy, heavenly, spiritual, and divine life, by the power of divine grace going along with the word of Christ, <span class='bible'>Joh 5:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 5:25<\/span>. (2.) The resurrection of the gospel church, or any part of it, from an afflicted persecuted state, especially under the yoke of the New-Testament Babylon, to liberty and peace. (3.) The resurrection of the body at the great day, especially the bodies of believers that shall rise to life eternal.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2. Let us observe the particulars of this vision.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; (1.) The deplorable condition of these dead bones. The prophet was made, [1.] to take an exact view of them. By a prophetic impulse and a divine power he was, in vision, carried out and set <I>in the midst of a valley,<\/I> probably that plain spoken of <span class='bible'><I>ch.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> iii. 22<\/span>, where God then <I>talked with him;<\/I> and it was <I>full of bones,<\/I> of dead men&#8217;s bones, not piled up on a heap, as in a charnel-house, but scattered upon the face of the ground, as if some bloody battle had been fought here, and the slain left unburied till all the flesh was devoured or putrefied, and nothing left but the bones, and those disjointed from one another and dispersed. He <I>passed by them round about,<\/I> and he observed not only that they were very many (for there are multitudes gone to the congregation of the dead), but that, <I>lo, they were very dry,<\/I> having been long exposed to the sun and wind. The bones that have been <I>moistened with marrow<\/I> (<span class='bible'>Job xxi. 24<\/span>), when they have been any while dead, lose all their moisture, and are dry as dust. The body is now fenced with bones (<span class='bible'>Job x. 11<\/span>), but then they will themselves be defenceless. The Jews in Babylon were like those dead and dry bones, unlikely ever to come together, to be so much as a skeleton, less likely to be formed into a body, and least of all to be a living body. However, they lay <I>unburied<\/I> in the <I>open valley,<\/I> which encouraged the hopes of their resurrection, as of the two witnesses, <span class='bible'>Rev 11:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 11:9<\/span>. The bones of Gog and Magog shall be buried (<span class='bible'>Eze 39:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 39:15<\/span>), for their destruction is final; but the bones of Israel are in the <I>open valley,<\/I> under the eye of Heaven, for there is <I>hope in their end.<\/I> [2.] He was made to own their case deplorable, and not to be helped by any power less than that of God himself (<span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 3<\/span>): &#8220;Son of man, <I>can these bones live?<\/I> Is it a thing likely? Cast thou devise how it should be done? Can thy philosophy reach to put life into dry bones, or thy politics to restore a captive nation?&#8221; &#8220;No,&#8221; says the prophet, &#8220;I know not how it should be done, but <I>thou knowest.<\/I>&#8221; He does not say, &#8220;They cannot live,&#8221; lest he should seem to limit the Holy One of Israel; but, &#8220;Lord, thou knowest whether they can and whether they shall; if thou dost not put life into them, it is certain that they cannot life.&#8221; Note, God is perfectly acquainted with his own power and his own purposes, and will have us to refer all to them, and to see and own that his wondrous works are such as could not be effected by any counsel or power but his own.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; (2.) The means used for the bringing of these dispersed bones together and these dead and dry bones to life. It must be done by prophecy. Ezekiel is ordered to <I>prophesy upon these bones<\/I> (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>), to <I>prophesy to the wind.<\/I> So he <I>prophesied as he was commanded,<\/I><span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>. [1.] He must preach, and he did so; and the dead bones lived by a power that went along with the word of God which he preached. [2.] He must pray, and he did so; and the dead bones were made to live in answer to prayer; for <I>a spirit of life<\/I> entered into them. See the efficacy of the word and prayer, and the necessity of both, for the raising of dead souls. God bids his ministers <I>prophesy upon the dry bones.<\/I> Say unto them, <I>Live;<\/I> yea, say unto them, <I>Live;<\/I> and they do as they are commanded, calling to them again and again, <I>O you dry bones! hear the word of the Lord.<\/I> But we call in vain, still they are dead, still they are very dry; we must therefore be earnest with God in prayer for the working of the Spirit with the word: <I>Come, O breath!<\/I> and breathe upon them. God&#8217;s grace can save souls without our preaching, but our preaching cannot save them without God&#8217;s grace, and that grace must be sought by prayer. Note, Ministers must faithfully and diligently use the means of grace, even with those that there seems little probability of gaining upon. To prophesy upon dry bones seems as great a penance as to water a dry stick; and yet, whether they will hear or forbear, we must discharge our trust, must <I>prophesy as we are commanded,<\/I> in the name of him who raises the dead and is the fountain of life.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; (3.) The wonderful effect of these means. Those that do as they are commanded, as they are commissioned, in the face of the greatest discouragements, need not doubt of success, for God will own and enrich his own appointments. [1.] Ezekiel looked down and prophesied upon the bones in the valley, and they became human bodies. <I>First,<\/I> That which he had to <I>say to them<\/I> was that God would infallibly raise them to life: <I>Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones, You shall live,<\/I><span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>. And he that speaks the word will thereby do the work; he that says, They <I>shall live,<\/I> will make them alive: He will <I>clothe them with skin and flesh<\/I> (<span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 6<\/span>), as he did at first, <span class='bible'>Job x. 11<\/span>. He that made us so fearfully and wonderfully, and curiously wrought us, can in like manner new-make us, for <I>his arm is not shortened. Secondly,<\/I> That which was immediately done for them was that they were moulded anew into shape. We may well suppose it was with great liveliness and vigour that the prophet prophesied, especially when he found what he said begin to take effect. Note, The opening, sealing, and applying of the promises, are the ordinary means of our participation of a new and divine nature. As Ezekiel prophesied in this vision <I>there was a noise,<\/I> a word of command, from heaven, seconding what he said; or it signified the motion of the angels that were to be employed as the ministers of the divine Providence in the deliverance of the Jews, and we read of the <I>noise of their wings<\/I> (<span class='bible'>Ezek. i. 24<\/span>) and the <I>sound of their going,<\/I><span class='bible'><I> 2 Sam. v. 24<\/I><\/span>. <I>And, behold, a shaking,<\/I> or commotion, among the bones. Even dead and dry bones begin to move when they are called to hear the word of the Lord. This was fulfilled when, upon Cyrus&#8217;s proclamation of liberty, those whose spirits God had stirred up began to think of making use of that liberty, and getting ready to be gone. When <I>there was a noise, behold, a shaking;<\/I> when David heard <I>the sound of the going on the tops of the mulberry-trees<\/I> then he <I>bestirred himself;<\/I> then there was <I>a shaking.<\/I> When Paul heard the voice saying, <I>Why persecutest thou me?<\/I> behold, a shaking of the dry bones; he <I>trembled<\/I> and was <I>astonished.<\/I> But this was not all: <I>The bones came together bone to his bone,<\/I> under a divine direction; and, though there is in man a multitude of bones, yet of all the bones of those numerous slain not one was missing, not one missed its way, not one missed its place, but, as it were by instinct, each knew and found its fellow. The dispersed bones came together and the displaced bones were knit together, the divine power supplying that to these dry bones which in a living body <I>every joint supplies.<\/I> Thus shall it be in the resurrection of the dead; the scattered atoms shall be ranged and marshalled in their proper place and order, and <I>every bone come to his bone,<\/I> by the same wisdom and power by which the bones were first <I>formed in the womb of her that is with child.<\/I> Thus it was in the return of the Jews; those that were scattered in several parts of the province of Babylon came to their respective families, and all as it were by consent to the general rendezvous, in order to their return. By degrees <I>sinews<\/I> and <I>flesh<\/I> came upon these bones, and the <I>skin covered them,<\/I><span class='_0000ff'><I><U><span class='bible'> v.<\/span><span class='bible'> 8<\/span><\/U><\/I><\/span>. This was fulfilled when the captives got their effects about them, and the <I>men of their place helped them<\/I> with <I>silver,<\/I> and <I>gold,<\/I> and whatever they needed for their remove, <span class='bible'>Ezra i. 4<\/span>. But still there was <I>no breath in them;<\/I> they wanted spirit and courage for such a difficult and hazardous enterprise as this was of returning to their own land. [2.] Ezekiel then looked up and prophesied to the <I>wind,<\/I> or <I>breath,<\/I> or <I>spirit,<\/I> and said, <I>Come, O breath! and breathe upon these slain.<\/I> As good have been still dry bones as dead bodies: but as for God <I>his work is perfect;<\/I> he is not the God of the dead, but of the living; therefore <I>breathe upon them that they may live.<\/I> In answer to this request, <I>the breath<\/I> immediately came <I>into them,<\/I><span class='_0000ff'><I><U><span class='bible'> v.<\/span><span class='bible'> 10<\/span><\/U><\/I><\/span>. Note, the spirit of life is from God; he at first in the creation breathed into man the breath of life, and so he will at last in the resurrection. The dispirited despairing captives were wonderfully animated with resolution to break through all the discouragements that lay in the way of their return and applied themselves to it with all imaginable vigour. And then they <I>stood upon their feet, an exceedingly great army;<\/I> not only living men, but effective men, fit for service in the wars and formidable to all that gave them any opposition. Note, With God nothing is impossible. He can <I>out of stones raise up children unto Abraham<\/I> and out of dead and dry bones levy an exceedingly great army to fight his battles and plead his cause.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; II. The application of this vision to the present calamitous condition of the Jews in captivity: <I>These bones are the whole house of Israel,<\/I> both the ten tribes and the two. See in this what they are and what they shall be.<\/P> <P> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 1. The depth of despair to which they are now reduced, <span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 11<\/span>. They all give up themselves for lost and gone; they say, &#8220;<I>Our bones are dried,<\/I> our strength is exhausted, our spirits are gone, <I>our hope is<\/I> all <I>lost;<\/I> every thing we looked for succour and relief from fails us, and <I>we are cut off for our parts.<\/I> Let who will cherish some hope, we see no ground for any.&#8221; Note, When troubles continue long, hopes have been often frustrated, and all creature-confidences fail, it is not strange if the spirits sink; and nothing but an active faith in the power, promise, and providence of God will keep them from quite dying away. 2. The height of prosperity to which, notwithstanding this, they shall be advanced: &#8220;<I>therefore,<\/I> because things have come thus to the last extremity, <I>prophesy to them,<\/I> and tell them, now is God&#8217;s time to appear for them. <I>Jehovah-jireh&#8211;in the mount of the Lord it shall be seen,<\/I><span class='_0000ff'><I><U><span class='bible'> v.<\/span><span class='bible'> 12-14<\/span><\/U><\/I><\/span>. Tell them,&#8221; (1.) &#8220;That they shall be brought out of the land of their enemies, where they are as it were buried alive: <I>I will open your graves.<\/I>&#8221; Those shall be restored, not only whose <I>bones<\/I> are <I>scattered at the grave&#8217;s mouth<\/I> (<span class='bible'>Ps. cxli. 7<\/span>), but who are buried in the grave; though the power of the enemy is like the <I>bars of the pit,<\/I> which one would think it impossible to break through, strong as death and cruel as the grave, yet it shall be conquered. God can <I>bring<\/I> his people <I>up from the depths of the earth,<\/I><span class='bible'><I> Ps. lxxi. 20<\/I><\/span>. (2.) &#8220;That they shall be brought into their own land, where they shall live in prosperity: <I>I will bring you into the land of Israel<\/I> (<span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 12<\/span>) and <I>place you there<\/I> (<span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 14<\/span>), and will <I>put my spirit in you<\/I> and then <I>you shall live.<\/I>&#8221; Note, <I>Then<\/I> God puts spirit in us to good purpose, and so that we shall indeed live, when he puts his Spirit in us. And (<I>lastly<\/I>) in all this God will be glorified: <I>You shall know that I am the Lord<\/I> (<span class='bible'><I>v.<\/I><\/span><span class='bible'> 13<\/span>), and that I have <I>spoken it and performed it,<\/I><span class='_0000ff'><I><U><span class='bible'> v.<\/span><span class='bible'> 14<\/span><\/U><\/I><\/span>. Note, God&#8217;s quickening the dead redounds more than any thing to his honour, and to the honour of his word, which he has magnified above all his name, and will magnify more and more by the punctual accomplishment of every tittle of it.<\/P> <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Matthew Henry&#8217;s Whole Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong><\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:7.68em'>EZEKIEL &#8211; CHAPTER 37<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:9.055em'>VISION OF DRY BONES<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verses 1-14:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:2.3em'><strong>RESURRECTION OF A DECOMPOSED NATION&#8211;ISRAEL<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Verses 1, 2 declare <\/strong>that &#8220;The hand of the Lord,&#8221; power and influence of the Lord, was upon Ezekiel. This indicates that what he had to say was by the overruling hand of Divine Providence. This revival of Israel is viewed as a valley of very many dry bones, in three ways: 1) <strong>First, <\/strong>v. 1-14 describes the awakening of the dry bones from the dead; 2) <strong>Second, <\/strong>v. 15-28 describes the reunion of the former hostile ones whose contentions had influenced others, and 3) <strong>Third, <\/strong>Israel, restored, was strong enough to withstand the assault of Gog, further described, chs. 38, 39.<\/p>\n<p>The vision Ezekiel saw, in the Spirit of the Lord, when carried out and sat down in the open valley, in the midst of very many, very dry bones, perhaps took place near his Chebar residence. The bones were bleached by long exposure to the dry sun and blistering winds, <span class='bible'>Eze 3:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Luk 4:1<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 3 recounts <\/strong>the Lord&#8217;s question to Ezekiel, as &#8220;Son of man,&#8221; whether or not these bones could live, come to life, be revived. To this Ezekiel responded, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; The implication is that they certainly could not, on natural grounds. But on supernatural grounds, &#8220;all things are possible with God,&#8221; <span class='bible'>Deu 32:39<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Sa 2:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 5:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rom 4:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Co 1:9<\/span>. And in His integrity He has promised the resurrection.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 4 relates <\/strong>that the Lord commanded Ezekiel to prophesy upon these bones, upon their future; And command or exhort these dry bones to hear, or give attention to the word of the Lord. He was to declare to them the quickening power of God, the giver, restorer, and sustainer of life, <span class='bible'>Num 20:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Ki 13:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 55:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Mat 21:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 2:5<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rom 10:17<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 5 declares <\/strong>that the Lord promised to cause breath to enter into these bones that they should live, even as He breathed breath into Adam and he became a living soul, <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>. These bones represented the barren hope of Israel. Yet God the giver and sustainer of covenant grace was to make Israel live again. This is Blessed Hope for the house of Israel, even as it is for the church of Jesus Christ, <span class='bible'>Tit 2:13<\/span>. See also <span class='bible'>Psa 104:30<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 20:22<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rom 8:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eph 2:5<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 6 promises <\/strong>to the valley of dry bones (the house of Israel) that the Lord will lay sinews or muscles upon their bones, cause flesh to come upon them, put breath in the dead bodies, <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>, and cover them with skin, that they may live. They will then know, recognize, or comprehend that He is the Lord, the living God over all the universe, <span class='bible'>Deu 29:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Ki 20:28<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 49:23<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joe 2:27<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joe 3:17<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verses 7, 8 then <\/strong>witness that when Ezekiel had prophesied to the valley of very dry bones, there was a noise, a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone, or fit together as they should. He then stood and gazed in awe at the bones that came each to his own skeleton, with sinews, flesh, and skin; But each body was dead, without life, as they lay in dead-corpse form before him. For there was no breath in them, evidently symbolizing Israel&#8217;s regathering to her land, without the Spirit of God within her at first, <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 13:8-9<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 9 tells <\/strong>of the Lord&#8217;s command for Ezekiel to prophesy to the four winds, or spirit of life, and call them to come and breathe on these lifeless, slain corpses, that they might live, <span class='bible'>Act 2:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 104:30<\/span>. They are to be regathered from the four winds, even as they were scattered there, <span class='bible'>Isa 43:5-6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 31:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 5:10<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 12:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 17:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 7:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 7:4<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 10 recounts <\/strong>that Ezekiel did prophesy as God commanded. Breath of life came into each corpse and each arose and stood upon his feet, constituting a great army in the valley, <span class='bible'>Rev 11:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 5:25-29<\/span>. This alludes to the certain restoration of Israel to her homeland, at the end of this age; See <span class='bible'>Isa 25:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 26:10<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos 6:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos 13:14<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 11 recounts <\/strong>the explanation or interpretation of this vision, as given by the Lord to Ezekiel. The bones are certified (by the Lord) to be the &#8220;whole house of Israel,&#8221; not the divided house of Judah and Israel any more. The people were lamenting that their bones were dried up, and their hopes of national life again were lost, and that they had been cut off. And they were, but not forever, because of God&#8217;s covenant of Grace toward them, <span class='bible'>Psa 141:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 49:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 12:1-2<\/span>; See also <span class='bible'>Rom 11:25-27<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verse 12 continues <\/strong>God&#8217;s further promise, or hope for them, as related through Ezekiel. He said, &#8220;O my people,&#8221; my people of promise, &#8220;I will open your graves, cause you to come up out of them, and bring you into the land of Israel,&#8221; <span class='bible'>Eze 28:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Amo 9:14<\/span>. They were to be brought alive politically, from their national graves, as &#8220;restoration&#8221; from the dead, <span class='bible'>Rom 11:15<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Verses 13, 14 declare <\/strong>that the house of Israel will know with certainty that the Lord is God, when He has brought them out of their international graves, from among the nations, put His spirit in them and placed them alive in their own land, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:36<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 14:1<\/span>; See too <span class='bible'>Eze 17:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 22:14<\/span>.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong>THE VISION OF THE VALLEY OF DRY BONES<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'><strong>Eze 37:1-10<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p>AS we have often had occasion to remark, in the course of this whole Bible study, we are not attempting to produce another commentary; nor is our objective an expositors Bible.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>The title of this series declares its clear intent Bible of the Expositor and the Evangelist.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>There are times when we give ourselves largely to exposition, and there are other times when our definite objective is evangelism, and then there come occasions when we combine the two. This discourse is of the last sort.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>We hope by exposition of these ten verses to make evangelistic appeal.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>This day begins the two weeks of 1932 pre-Easter services in the First Baptist Church of Minneapolis; and, again, it is one of those striking illustrations of Biblical wealth that we find in this Book Ezekiel, in the study of which we are now engaged, just such Scriptural appeal as is adapted to the task in hand.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>From time immemorial great outstanding evangelists have employed this exact text in soul-winning services, and that with good occasion, for it is marvelously suggestive.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>We ask you then to think with us on<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:5.4em'>The Valley of Death,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:5.4em'>The Reviving Voice,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:5.4em'>The Divine Visitation.<\/p>\n<p><strong>THE VALLEY OF DEATH<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.975em'><em>The hand of the Lord was upon me, and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord, and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:1<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>)<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>These bones were the symbols of death! Of course the reader understands that this is a vision, not a verity. Ezekiel, the Prophet, was not literally carried into a valley where death had left men to rot before the face of the sun; but in the spirit, and in a figure, his vision or dream so situated him. Men do not see everything they see with natural eyes, nor hear everything they hear with natural ears. There is an eye of the soul and an ear of the spirit, and these contribute to the experiences of life equally, if not even more, than do the eyes and ears of the body.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>This text is to be interpreted in the light of what has preceded it.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>The nation of Israel is <em>dead in trespasses and sins,<\/em> but God has in mind its eventual redemption, marvelously symbolized by a resurrection; and it is that fact to which this vision refers; and yet, Israel herself, steeped in sin, is only another type of the souls of men, <em>dead in trespasses.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Just as it was difficult in that day to bring Israel to believe the sentence of death had been passed upon her, so it is difficult in our day to get those men and women and children who continue in trespasses and in sin to realize that spiritual death is their estate; and yet, Christ was not only clear, but extremely emphatic in His teaching on this subject.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him (<span class='bible'><em>Joh 3:36<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Again Jesus said,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly (<span class='bible'><em>Joh 10:10<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Jesus said,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>I am the Resurrection, and the Life: he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live (<span class='bible'><em>Joh 11:25<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>It is very difficult for the man who is alive in body to consent that he is dead in spirit; and yet it is Scripturally asserted in every conceivable form that those who have not Christ are <em>dead in trespasses and in sins (<span class='bible'><em>Col 2:13<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>But in the further study of the Scriptures I mark the additional fact<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'><strong>The dry bones suggest long-continued death.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, lo, they were very dry (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:2<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>That is one of the hardest of all New Testament doctrines to accept, namely, that the multitudes are dead. There are certain passages of Scripture that my heart would feign change, because they contain statements that violate my interests and increase my grief. This is one of them<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat:<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it (<span class='bible'><em>Mat 7:13-14<\/em><\/span><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>We sometimes forget that this vision relates to a people who professed Faith in God, and yet their spiritual condition was symbolized not only by the valley of death, but by multiplied <em>dry bones.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>The Church of God holds a great many of the dead.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Dr. Agar, the Baptist expert, who came out from New York to Minneapolis to address its Baptist ministers and laymen on last Lords Day, called attention to the usual condition of the churches of this country, saying that only about 30% of them give evidence of life by Christian activity and service.<\/p>\n<p>At the meeting of the Advisory Board this week it was brought out that only 50% of this church, famed throughout the length and breadth of the land as a living and effective church,are doing aught for the cause of Jesus Christ, so far, at least, as reports of their endeavors ever reach the pastors office. In other words, of the 3,400 names on the church roll there are 1,700 of them that give no account of themselves whatever.<\/p>\n<p>Moody once said, It is a sad day when the professed convert goes into the church and that is the last you hear of him.<\/p>\n<p>There are a great many people who have a notion that ones name on the church roll is a sort of promise for ones name on the Lambs Book of Life, but it was not so in Israel, and it is not so in Christianity.<\/p>\n<p>When, therefore, the company of dead inside the church is added to that greater company of dead outside the church, the figure of our text is fit, <em>There were very many in the open valley; and, la, they were very dry,<\/em> or dead.<\/p>\n<p>In Belgium I looked on rows upon rows of markers and head-stones, each of them indicating the place where a dead man lay; but when I turned from this scene of physical cemeteries, back to the streets of Brussels, Paris, and London, I walked among the millions who were living in body, but dead in spirit!<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>If the Belgian scene: was depressing, the metropolitan scene was far more so.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Lost bodies bring sadness to those who know about it; but lost souls should excite a deeper sadness still and should stir the sympathies and move to service all them that are alive.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'><strong>This death condition was a challenge to faith.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:3<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>That same challenge comes to the saints of this century. When one studies the moral, ethical and religious conditions of the day, he is discouraged. Unsaved who are members of churches seldom visit the sanctuary. The unregenerate from the outside give to the House of God and to His Gospel a wider berth.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>The time used to be when the people of this country, at least, went to church; even the most sinful saw the sanctuary with a good degree of regularity. But that time is past. <\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Skepticism, that heads up in our schools and finds voice also in many magazines and newspapers and even from so-called Christian pulpits, is producing this natural result. Reverence for holy things is passing. Regard for the Word of God is gone from the hearts of multitudes. Convictions about immortality and the final judgment have slowly but certainly passed.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Church-lessness, Christ-lessness, and crime are comfortable companions. The day has come when ir-religion is not a badge of dishonor; but rather the basis of boastfulness; and, to such an extent has skepticism and sin prevailed that even the saints are losing heart and hope, and we fear not a few of them, as they study the valley, are saying, No! to Gods question, <em>Can these bones live?<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>But, if so, it is a faithless answer, and becomes the criticism of Him who makes it.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Ezekiel answered, <em>O Lord God, Thou knowest! <\/em>That was not the answer of faith; but neither was it the answer of infidelity. It still left certain the sentence of Holy Writ, <em>All things are possible with God.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>These bones would seem to say, Resurrection is impossible! Their exceeding dryness would seem to indicate their eternal deadness; but who shall lay limitations upon God?<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>How easy it is for us to do this thing, and how often we fall into that feature of infidelity!<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>When Christ came to Bethany, Martha, who met Him, said, <em>Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.<\/em> But let it be remembered, to her eternal credit, that she added, <em>But I know, that even now, whatsoever Thou wilt ask of God, God will give it Thee.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>In other words, Martha believed that God could raise the dead.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>How many of us fall short at that point! We know some man whose sins are so black, or some woman whose spirit is so scornful, that we say, Even God can do nothing for that man, or with that woman! But more than once does He, by matchless Grace and Power, rebuke our unbelief.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Canon Aitken, the Church of England missionary, tells the story of a certain man known as Captain Jim whose neighbors believed him to be beyond the reach of even Divine power. At the hotel of the neighboring town, where a revival was beginning, one of these men said, I say, Captain Jim, when I hear of your being converted, I shall begin to think there is something in religion. The very incredulity of his neighbor concerning the possibility of his salvation convicted him of his need, and that very night he sought the meeting; on his knees in penitent form, he cried for mercy, and found God.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Dr. Dawson tells us that when Stanley started to Africa in search of Livingstone he was the biggest atheist known to London, and the very notion that he would become a Christian was sufficiently absurd to start a laughter of his intimates; and yet, the life of Livingstone Reached Stanleys heart and brought him to God.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Yes, the dead bones can live; even the very driest of them can take on flesh and form, and, breathed upon by the Almighty God, can become His active servants, yea, His devoted saints. <\/p>\n<p><span><\/span><strong>THE REVIVING VOICE<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Again He said unto me, Prophesy upon these hones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the, Word of the Lord (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:4<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'><strong>The Prophet was sent to speak to the dead.<\/strong> In that respect his experience was not even exceptional. When Carey went to India he spoke to the dead, and to the dead only. It was seven long years before there was a sign of spiritual life.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>When Morrison went to China he talked to the dead, to men and women <em>dead in trespasses and sins!<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>When Moody and Clark went to Africa they stood in the midst of the dead, and in the faces of those who assembled to give audience there was no sign of spiritual life. It was absolutely unpromising at the first, as with the dry bones of Ezekiels valley, and yet, the commission of Carey, the commission of Morrison, the commission of Moody and Clark was clear,<strong>Go, preach!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>There are a great many men who think they have to have a pulpit before they can preach. They think they have to be called as pastor of a church before they can preach. Why so? The dead are everywhere. The streets are full of them. The farms and the shops are lined with them; and wherever the dead are, there exists the prophets opportunity.<\/p>\n<p>When Chas. Darwin visited Tierra del Fuego in 1883, he found a people so low and so bestial in both character and conduct, that he considered them hopeless. He wrote home, The Fuegians are in a more miserable state of barbarism than I ever expected to have seen any human being. Later he said, I certainly should have predicted that not all the missionaries in the world could have done what has been done.<\/p>\n<p>In other words, he counted them beyond human reach, but later he confessed, It shames me as I remember my prophecy of failure for the missionaries there. Their endeavors met with grand success.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>He wrote to the London Missionary Society, I shall feel proud if your committee shall think fit to elect me as honorary member of your society, and to prove both his surprise and his appreciation of what the prophets of God had wrought among the most abased, he enclosed twenty-five pounds to be used for Gospel Missions.<\/p>\n<p>Again, the message for dead men was Divinely appointed.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the Word of the Lord! (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:4<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>One day Jesus Christ reminded His auditors of this fact. He said,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>The Words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life (<span class='bible'><em>Joh 6:63<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Upon that certainty every Divinely appointed spokesman rests.<\/p>\n<p>Paul wrote to the Romans,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth (<span class='bible'><em>Rom 1:16<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Even old Isaiah, that mighty evangelist of Old Testament times, penned his confidence after this manner,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>For as the rain cometh down, and the snow from heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower, and bread to the eater:<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>So shall My Word be that goeth forth out of My mouth: it shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it (<span class='bible'><em>Isa 55:10-11<\/em><\/span><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Paul, in the synagogue of Antioch in Pisidia, preached to the Israelites one Sabbath Day, and to them he said,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Men and brethren, children of the stock of Abraham, and whosoever among you feareth God, to you is the Word of this salvation sent (<span class='bible'><em>Act 13:26<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Once in a long while some man is found in heathen lands, searching vainly for God, under deep conviction over sin, but in spite of his search, failing to find the way. The reason is that he is without the Word. The Word is Life and Light. It is quick and powerful.<\/p>\n<p>By the perusal of its pages, by the preaching of its Truths, thousands and millions of men, women and children have been turned from darkness to light, quickened from death unto life. There is never a day passes but some text from this Holy Book takes hold of the heart of some unbeliever, and turns him to God. There are thousands of instances, such as the one of the wealthy woman who found her chambermaid reading the Bible, and reproving the poor, melancholy soul for finding pleasure in such a Book, she took it from her hands to lay it away. As she went away the pages were open, and she saw one word.<\/p>\n<p>The next morning she went back to the maid, and said, I want that Book. I want to read it myself. I saw one word only as I laid it aside, and that was the word eternity. Will it tell me where I will spend it?<\/p>\n<p>John Svenson was a young miller in Sweden, and he was a Christian. Andrew Peterson was his comrade and partner in the mill, and was an unbeliever. John, who had been converted by reading the Bible, always left the Book where he hoped his co-laborer might pick it up. Sure enough, Andrew, seeing it, said in his secret soul, I will fling that Book into the whirlpool.<\/p>\n<p>He picked it up with that intent, when, lo, his eyes rested upon the words in <span class='bible'>Mat 24:41<\/span>, <em>Two shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>It was like a voice from another world, and he read the context. He was brought under convection over sin and finally yielded his heart to Christ. Gods Word is His instrument of salvation. <strong>Gods breath is life itself.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>As I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone.<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but there was no breath in them.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>Then said He unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord God; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>So I prophesied as He commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army (<span class='bible'><em>Eze 37:7-10<\/em><\/span><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>In both the Old and the New Testament the wind is the type of the Holy Spirit, through whom God breathes life into men.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit (<span class='bible'><em>Joh 3:8<\/em><\/span><\/em><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Originally when Adam was created he was but animal in body, but <em>God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. <\/em>Death is the very breath of the adversary. Life is the breath of God.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps never in Americas history has its heart been torn by a single episode as it bled over the kidnaping of the Lindbergh baby. No single individual, including even our greatest and martyred Presidents, has ever succeeded in exciting the same public interest, and securing such public admiration as this comparatively young man accomplished while yet in his tenderest youth.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>In the selection of a wife he took to himself a young woman who has proven to be a helpmeet indeed, worthy to share with him both honors and ardors. It is natural, therefore, that their baby should have been the subject of popular affection, and when it was snatched from its cradle by men or women, or both, who put paltry gold above every human interest and humane instinct, and who reckoned its possession as more important than peace of body or mind, or interests of heart on the part of others, and who to save their own worthless skins, slew it, the entire land revolted at the deed, and perhaps never in human history have as many tears been shed and as many prayers been offered for any child, living or dead, as succeeded that infamous banditry.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>As I was thinking upon this, this past week, I fell upon an incident happening in the state of my youth that provides an illustration of the thought with which I want to conclude this discourse.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Mr. and Mrs. Mansfield and their little baby girl were among the early settlers of the State of Kentucky. One day a drunken Indian came to the log cabin and demanded fire water.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>When it was not instantly handed to him he attacked Mr. Mansfield and was much worsted in the fight that followed.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Quitting the house, he slunk away into the woods again. Mr. Mansfield, knowing the revengeful nature of the Indian, feared to leave his house for many days. By and by the barking of his dog some distance away, at the river bank, called him down to see what game the dog had found.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>When he was about one hundred yards from the house he heard his wife scream, and turning back he saw the Indian, his little girl in his arms, run into the woods. Hurrying to the house he grabbed down the rifle and fired; but in his excitement the aim was poor and the bullet went wide of its mark.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>At that moment a man, appeared back of him, and said, Shall I save your child?<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Without even waiting for an answer he drew down a long-barrelled rifle, and as his keen eye rested finally upon the sight thereof, he touched the trigger; a keen report, a little volume of smoke, and the Indian, with a wild death cry, threw the child from him and fell prone upon the ground.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>The parents, running, swept the child into their arms, and carrying it back to the strange visitor, said, Thank God; you came just in time. What is your name? A smile came into the kindly face, and he answered, Daniel Boone, and went away.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>That day Daniel Boone became the destroyer of the enemy, and saved a life.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Has it ever occurred to you that Jesus Christ, our Lord and Saviour, took upon Himself human flesh that He might be able to fill the kindred office?<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:0.075em'>Paul, in his Epistle to the Hebrews says,<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of the same; that through death He might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil;<\/em><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'>And deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage (<span class='bible'><em>Heb 2:14-15<\/em><\/span><em>).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Thank God that His Son is come, the Saviour of man!<\/p>\n<p>Thank God that it is His to snatch them from the very power of the enemy!<\/p>\n<p>Thank God that it is possible for Him to speak the word only, and the soul shall live!<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:4.35em'><em>He that hath the Son hath life, and the Son Himself hath said, Him that cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Who will come?<\/p>\n<p><span><\/span><strong><\/strong><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Bible of the Expositor and the Evangelist by Riley<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>THE VISION OF THE DRY BONES REVIVIFIED A SYMBOL OF THE DEATH AND RESURRECTION OF ISRAEL. (Chap. 37.)<\/p>\n<p>EXEGETICAL NOTES.<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1<\/span>. <strong>The hand of the Lord was upon me.<\/strong> The abrupt commencement without <em>and<\/em>, points out that the fact here related is extraordinary and out of connection with the usual prophetic activity. The hand of the Lord denotes the overruling Divine influence.<em>Hengstenberg<\/em>. <strong>The valley<\/strong>the plain or valley near Tel Abib, familiar to Ezekiel as the scene of the vision of the cherubim. Now, however, to his horror, he found it full of dry, withering bonesthe wreck of a vast host slain by the sword. Wandering over the wide expanse, the multitude of these ghastly relics of mortality and their bleached dryness, the very embodiment of death, filled him with awe.<em>Geikie<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:3<\/span>. <strong>Can these bones live?<\/strong> Implying that, humanly speaking, they could not; but faith leaves the question of possibility to rest with God, with whom nothing is impossible (<span class='bible'>Deu. 32:39<\/span>). An image of Christian faith which believes in the coming resurrection of the dead, in spite of all appearances against it, because God has said it (<span class='bible'>Joh. 5:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rom. 4:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Co. 1:9<\/span>).<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:4<\/span>. <strong>Prophesy upon these bones<\/strong>prophesy <em>over<\/em> them; proclaim Gods quickening word to them.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:6<\/span>. <strong>Ye shall know that I am the Lord<\/strong>by the actual proof of My Divinity which I will give in reviving Israel.<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:7<\/span>. <strong>And as I prophesied there was a noise.<\/strong> Gods voice of power is followed by a rustling caused by the bones coming rustling up from the surface <em>of<\/em> the valley.<em>Lange<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:8<\/span>. <strong>The sinews and the flesh came upon them, and the skin covered them; but there was no breath in them.<\/strong> So far, they were only co-hering in order as unsightly skeletons. The next step, that of covering them successively with sinews, skin, and flesh, gives them beauty; but still no breath of life in them. This may imply that Israel hereafter, as at the restoration from Babylon was the case in part, shall return to Judea unconverted at first (<span class='bible'>Zec. 13:8-9<\/span>). Spiritually a man may assume all the semblances of spiritual life, yet have none, and so be dead before God.<em>Fausset<\/em>. There is reference to the first creation of man. There also the lower element comes first into being, then the higher. The prophet is penetrated with the thought that the real misery of the people is the moral ruin. The remedy, therefore, cannot stop at the restoration of the civic state. The main thing is a renewed outpouring of the Spirit and the restoration of union with God thereby effected, which was originally accomplished by God breathing into man the breath of life.<em>Hengstenberg<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9<\/span>. <strong>Prophesy unto the wind<\/strong>the spirit of life, or life-breath. For it is distinct from the four winds from which it is summoned. <em>Lange<\/em> says what is here spoken of isthe universal spirituality which pervades all creation. The Spirit is evidently here referred to under the symbol of the wind. His influence is supreme and operates in all parts of the earth.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:10<\/span>. <strong>So I prophesied, and the<\/strong> <strong>breath came into them<\/strong>such honour God gives to the Divine word even in the mouth of a man: how much more when in the mouth of the Son of God! (<span class='bible'>Joh. 5:25-29<\/span>). Though this chapter does not directly prove the resurrection of the dead, it does so indirectly, for it takes for granted the future fact as one recognised by believing Jews, and so made the image of their national restoration (<span class='bible'>Isa. 25:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa. 26:10<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Dan. 12:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos. 6:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos. 13:14<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11<\/span>. <strong>Our bones are dried.<\/strong> We are undone<em>Gesenius<\/em>. Reduced to ourselves<em>Hitzig<\/em>. It is over with us<em>Delitzsch<\/em>. We are cut off for us. The <em>for us<\/em> points out how grievous the sad fact is for those concerned, how painfully they were affected by it<em>Hengstenberg<\/em>. There is nothing in us to give hope, like a withered branch cut off from a tree, or a limb from the body. The national state was as hopeless of revival as marrowless bones of reanimation. Cut off, separated, shut out from Gods help.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:12<\/span>. <strong>I will open your graves<\/strong>the abodes of the exile, since the Jews who were in exile considered themselves like dead men.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:14<\/span>. <strong>And shall put My Spirit in you, and ye shall live.<\/strong> The inspiriting and quickening for a home system which is to have permanence, and especially in the case of a people like Israel, will of necessity be spiritual and religious (<span class='bible'>Isa. 14:1<\/span>; chap. <span class='bible'>Eze. 17:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze. 22:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze. 36:36<\/span>).<em>Lange<\/em>. Wherever within the Christian Church a new state of death arises, there this prophecy always comes again into force, until at the end of days death be fully overcome.<em>Hengstenberg<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:16<\/span>. <strong>Take thee one stick.<\/strong>alluding to <span class='bible'>Num. 17:2<\/span>, the tribal rod. The union of the two rods was a prophecy in action of the brotherly union which is to reunite the ten tribes and Judah. As their severance under Jeroboam was fraught with the greatest evil to the covenant people, so the first result of both being joined by the Spirit of life to God is, they become joined together under the one Covenant King, MessiahDavid.<strong>Write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions<\/strong>his associates: <em>i.e.,<\/em> For Judah and, besides Benjamin and Levi, those who had joined themselves to him of Ephraim, Manasseh, Simeon, Ashur, Zebulun, Issachar, as having the temple and lawful priesthood in his borders (<span class='bible'>2Ch. 11:12-13<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch. 11:16<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch. 15:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch. 30:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch. 30:18<\/span>). The latter became identified with Judah after the carrying away of the ten tribes, and returned with Judah from Babylon, and so shall be associated with that tribe at the future restoration. <strong>Then take another stick, and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim and for all the house of Israel his companions.<\/strong> Ephraims posterity took the lead, not only of the other descendants of Joseph, but of the ten tribes of Israel. For 400 years, during the period of the Judges, with Manasseh and Benjamin, its dependent tribes, it had formerly taken the lead: Shiloh was its religious capital, Shechem its civil capital. God had transferred the birthright from Reuben, for dishonouring his fathers bed, to Joseph, whose representative his son Ephraim, though younger than his brother Manasseh, was made by his grandfather Jacob (<span class='bible'>Gen. 48:19<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Ch. 5:1<\/span>). From the pre-eminence of Ephraim, Israel is attached to him as companions. The all in this case, not in that of Judah, which has attached as companions only <em>some<\/em> of the children of Israel, implies that the <em>bulk<\/em> of the ten tribes did not return at the restoration from Babylon, but is and shall continue distinct from Judah until the coming union at the restoration.<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:19<\/span>. <strong>And they shall be one in mine hand.<\/strong> The interpretation keeps firm hold of the symbolic actionthe union by and in God, as opposed to the separation by and in Ephraim.<em>Lange<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22<\/span>. <strong>I will make them one nation.<\/strong> The now plainly expressed signification of the stick: the one nation will be one kingdom. <strong>And one king shall be king to them all.<\/strong> Not Zerubbabel, who was not a king either in fact or name, and who ruled over but a few Jews, and that only for a few years, whereas the king here reigns for ever. <strong>Messiah<\/strong> is meant (chap. <span class='bible'>Eze. 34:23-24<\/span>). The union of Judah and Israel under King Messiah symbolises the union of Jews and Gentiles under Him, partly now, perfectly hereafter (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh. 10:16<\/span>).<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:23<\/span>. <strong>Neither shall they defile themselves with idols.<\/strong> Since sin, and especially idolatry, had contributed to the separation spoken of, the discourse turns to that. The worship of idols is localised transgression.<em>Lange<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:24<\/span>. <strong>David My servant shall be king over them.<\/strong> See note on <span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:25<\/span>. <strong>They shall dwell therein for ever<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Isa. 60:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joe. 3:20<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Amo. 9:15<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26<\/span>. <strong>I will make a covenant of peace<\/strong>better than the old legal covenant, because an unchangeable covenant of grace (chap. <span class='bible'>Eze. 34:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa. 55:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer. 32:40<\/span>). Will guarantee them security from all hostile enemies. <strong>And I will place them.<\/strong> God now Himself orders and determines everything concerning themsets them, in opposition to their former fluctuating, because self-ordered, condition.<em>Fairbairn<\/em>. <strong>I will set My sanctuary in the midst of them.<\/strong> The essence of the sanctuary is the presence of God among them.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:28<\/span>. <strong>The heathen shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel.<\/strong> This separation and preference, this marking-off from the profane world, which constitutes the idea of sanctification, follows from this, that Gods sanctuary is in Israel, that He dwells among them with all the fulness of His blessings and gifts. The natural consequence of this recognition compelled by facts is, that the heathen seek for admittance among this people.<em>Hengstenberg<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><em>HOMILETICS<\/em><\/p>\n<p>THE RESUSCITATION OF AN EFFETE NATION<\/p>\n<p>(<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-14<\/span>.)<\/p>\n<p>In this paragraph we have another example of the bold and startling imagery familiar to the genius of Ezekiel, and of his vivid insight into the possibilities of Divine power. To his realising faith, the bleached and desiccated skeletons of the valley are a formidable army of living and moving forces. The conception of the resurrection of the dead on so vast a scale indicates a remarkable advance in that age of the revelation of what God can do for His people. Observe<\/p>\n<p><strong>I. That the resuscitation of an effete nation seems a physical impossibility<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The nation is lifeless and hopeless<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-2<\/span>). The skeletons are dislocated and scattered; the bones are very dry and crumbling into dust. Though not actually buried, they are slowly burying themselves in their progressive decay. The evidence of death is complete. It is beyond the power of any known physical law to breathe the ghastly fragments into life. A nation, or an individual, so utterly defunct seems beyond the possibility of recovery. Saith the proverb, <em>From privation to possession there is no return.<\/em> Well might Israel say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost; we are cut off from our parts (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>Its resurrection not impossible to God<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:3<\/span>). If Ezekiel had been asked the question by any other than Jehovah, Can these bones live? he would have promptly answered, No; it is impossible. It is beyond the reach of human philosophy to put life into dry bones, and it passes the wit of human politics to restore a captive and scattered nation. But the prophet had already learned not to limit the power of God, and he reverently and falteringly answered, Lord, Thou knowest: if it can be done and is to be done, Thou alone must do it. All things are possible to God. His power is limited only by His will.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II. That the resuscitation of an effete nation is accomplished only by Divine power<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>By Divine power working through authorised human agency<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:4-8<\/span>). The prophet was directed to prophesy over the bones; the terms of the message were put into his lips, and the results of his preaching were Divinely indicated to him. He obeyed the Divine mandate; he preached; the silent valley rustled and rattled with the noise of bone fitting into bone, and while he gazed there grew as from the soil an innumerable mass of perfected human forms. But here the limitation of human agency, even when acting under Divine supervision, is plainly indicated. The bodies were prone and lifeless: there was no breath in them. While startled and terrified at the effect of his words, as if an army of Frankensteins had been summoned from the dust, the prophet felt his own utter helplessness. He was powerless to advance the development a single step further. It was an experience that is often familiar to the earnest preacher. He may sway his audience with his impassioned eloquence till they are roused into boisterous enthusiasm or dissolved in tears; but there his power ends. To create a moral and spiritual change is beyond his province. It is said that on one occasion, when Chrysostom was greeted by his congregation with a storm of delighted applause because of his overwhelming eloquence, he besought them with tears to forget the preacher and look to God, who alone can renew the heart and reform the life. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>By the direct inspiration of the Divine breath<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9-10<\/span>). Life is the breath of God. Still, under Divine direction, the prophet invokes the help of the life-giving Spirit. A mysterious breath passes over the prostrate forms; they move and leap to their feet, an exceeding great army. The Spirit that renews the face of the earth, robing it with velvet verdure and decorating it with nodding flowers, can alone raise the dead to life and adorn the soul with spiritual beauty. A lady who recently visited the Fijian Archipelago writes:As I lived for two years in the midst of this kindly, courteous people, and marked the reverent devoutness of their lives and the simple earnestness of their bearing at the never-failing morning and evening family worship and frequent church services, I found it hard to believe the facts related to me by reliable eye-witnesses of the appalling scenes of carnage, fighting, human sacrifices, debasing idolatry, and loathsome cannibal feasts which five, ten, or fifteen years previously formed the incidents of daily life in districts where now English ladies and their children may travel or settle in perfect security. What had wrought this change? The breath of the Divine Spirit had blown through those lovely islands and transformed the moral wastes.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III. That the resuscitation of an effete nation is a suggestive revelation of the Divine character<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11-14<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>That God alone has absolute power over life and death<\/em>. It is the vanity of man to set too high a value upon his own works. He imagines he can work out his own regeneration; but when he touches the mysterious edge of life and death he is baffled and compelled to confess his helplessness. It is the solitary and incommunicable prerogative of the Godhead to educe life out of death. The supreme greatness of God is evidenced in the exercise of His resurrection power. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>That the nations should<\/em> <em>learn to acknowledge and adore the true God<\/em>. Ye shall know that I am the Lord: that I the Lord have spoken it and performed it (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:13-14<\/span>). The deities of the heathen could do nothing for their votaries, either to prevent their ruin or to rescue them from it. There is but one living and true God, and the only hope of moral revival and salvation for humanity is in Him. Thou hast made us for Thyself, wrote Augustine, and our hearts can have no rest until they rest in Thee.<\/p>\n<p>LESSONS.<\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The nation that ignores God must perish<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>One nation is Divinely favoured that other nations may be blessed<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>God will be glorified either in the rise or fall of nations<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><em>GERM NOTES ON THE VERSES<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-14<\/span>. Seized by the hand of the Spirit, Ezekiel is borne aloft. He is carried away through mid-air and set down in a lonely valley among the hills of a distant land. At some former period it appears to have been the scene of a great battle. There hosts had sustained the charge of hosts, and crowns perhaps were staked and won. The peace of these solitudes had been rudely broken by the shrieks of the wounded, the wild shouts of the victors, the clash of arms, and the savage roar of war. It was silent, calm now. The storm was down; but the tempest that swept over it had left it strewn with wrecks. The dead had been left unburied. They mouldered where they fell, the skull rattled in the cloven helmet, the sword of the warrior lay rusting beside his skeleton, and the handle was still in the relaxed grasp of the bony fingers. On these unsepulchred corpses the birds of the air had summered and the wild beasts of the field had wintered. The rain had washed and the sun had bleached the bones which the ravens had picked barethey were white and dry. In these grim and ghastly skeletons a doleful picture of death was spread out before the prophet. In all the scene which he surveyed there was neither sign nor sound of life, but, it may be, the croak of the raven, the howl of the famished wolf, or the echo of his own solitary footfall. Here Ezekiel was standing, a lonely man, amid the mouldering dead, when a voice made him start. It came from the skies, charged with the strange questionSon of man, can these bones live? So soon as, after addressing the bones, the prophet addresses his God, there came from heaven a living, life-giving breath. It blows down the valley, and as, in passing, it kisses the icy lips of the dead, and stirs their hair and fans their cheek, man after man springs to his feet, until the field which Ezekiel found covered with ghastly skeletons is crowded with a mighty army, all armed for battle and warthe marshalled host of God.<em>Guthrie<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>There can be no reasonable doubt as to the leading scope and purpose of this remarkable vision. It is intended to counteract the feeling of despair which had succeeded to the opposite one of carnal security and presumptuous confidence which at an earlier period had wrought so disastrously among the people. Now that they were reduced to so hapless and shattered a condition, the glowing delineations the prophet had been drawing of a happy future seemed as visionary to their minds as formerly had appeared his dark forebodings of impending distress and ruin. They felt as if they had become like bones dried and scattered at the graves mouth, and destitute of everything on which they could build any reasonable prospect of restored felicity. The prophet therefore meets them on their own ground. He admits that, as compared with the elevated prospects he had been unfolding, they were in themselves no better than lifeless skeletons, but at the same time shows that even this could raise no barrier against the realisation of the better future, since they had to do with the word of Him who is equally able to make alive as to kill. And it must have been impossible for any thoughtful and pious Israelite to enter into the application made of this vision to the temporal resuscitation of Israels prostrate condition, without perceiving how it also involved, for all true believers, the future resurrection of their bodies from the power of death.<em>Fairbairn<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Besides the deliverance of the Jews from Babylon, this vision is a lively representation of a threefold resurrection. <\/p>\n<p>1. Of the resurrection of souls from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, to a holy, heavenly, spiritual, and Divine life by the power of Divine grace accompanying the word of Christ (<span class='bible'>Joh. 5:24-25<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>2. The resurrection of the Gospel Church, or any part of it, from an afflicted state to liberty and peace. <br \/>3. The resurrection of the body at the great day, especially the bodies of believers, to life eternal.<em>Benson<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-10<\/span>. <strong>Lessons from the Valley of Vision<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The text presents us with a picture of the spiritual slate of our race<\/em>dead in trespasses and sins. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>With an illustration of the human instrumentality God generally employs in the work of quickening the dead in sin<\/em>the preaching of the Gospel. <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>With a view of the Divine agency employed in the work of quickening the dead in trespasses and sins<\/em>the power of the Holy Spirit.<em>T. D. Anderson, B.A<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Secret of Successful Preaching and True Revival<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The first thing necessary is a Divinely appointed sphere<\/em>. The prophet had to speak his message in a particular place. One reason why men are not successful to-day is because they are not where God designed them to be. Not ministers simply, but Christian men in business, for secular professions are as much in Gods hands as religious ones. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>A second requirement is contact with the misery to be removed<\/em>. The prophet was not commanded to stand a great distance off and proclaim his message. The Spirit of the Lord set him down in the midst of the valley and caused him to pass by them round about, and thus he was brought into close contact with his work. We must not say, The people must come up to us; we must go down to them, sympathise with them, identify ourselves with them. <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>The next requirement is confidence in God<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:3<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>4. <em>A fourth requirement is an inspired message<\/em> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:4-6<\/span>). We ought always to listen for what God says; and if the vision tarry we should agonise in prayerLord, tell us what to say and how to say it. <\/p>\n<p>5. <em>There must be a willingness to declare the message given<\/em>. So I prophesied as I was commanded. <\/p>\n<p>6. <em>When all these requirements are met, the result must be a manifestation of Divine power<\/em>. We have, in the mode in which this power was manifested, the indication of a true revival. It is gradual. There was <\/p>\n<p>(1.) an effect produced. There was a noise. <br \/>(2.) The effect became visible. Behold a shaking. <br \/>(3.) The visible effect took a particular form. The bones came together, &amp;c. <br \/>(4.) The Holy Ghost came down and life is given. The breath came into them, and they lived and stood up on their feet.<em>The Lay Preacher<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Spiritual Resurrection<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The condition of the world<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) Spiritually deadBones. <br \/>(2.) Hopelessly soDry bones. <br \/>(3.) Universally soA valley full. <br \/>2. <em>The means for its recovery<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) A Divine appointmentpreaching. <br \/>(2.) The claim of attention. <br \/>(3.) The offer of salvation. <br \/>3. <em>The wonderful result<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) The Gospel is accompanied by Divine power. <br \/>(2.) The Spirit is essential to complete success. <br \/>(3.) In the use of the means success is certain.<em>Pulpit Analyst<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-2<\/span>. <strong>In the Presence of Death<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. A humbling spectacle. <br \/>2. A solemn reminder of our own mortality. <br \/>3. An occasion of sorrow. <br \/>4. We see the superficiality of all things earthly. <br \/>5. We are taught the necessity of a moral and spiritual preparedness. <br \/>6. Find our true consolation in the loving and eternal God.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1<\/span>. This valley is found indeed everywhere. In other words, Is there not plenty of dead bones? The best thing is, that God still cares even for such.<em>Lange<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:2<\/span>. As Christ often improved His miracles by a spiritual turn of thought, so we may improve this astonishing restoration of the Jews to illustrate the conversion of sinners. Man in his fallen state is dead in trespasses and sins; he has lost the life of God. He is dry and parched, for in his flesh dwelleth no good thing. He has lain a long time in that most piteous situation, so that he is not only dry, but with man there is no hope of his conversion. The calamity is not solitary but universalBehold there were very many in the open valley. To raise and recover fallen man, ministers must not only be impelled with the spirit of faith and love, but they must mix among the wicked, as the physicians with the sick. We may stay in our closets learning our Masters wisdom till we neglect to do our Masters work. We must mix among the dry bones, watch their passions, trace their habits, and learn their evasions of conscience and of the Gospel. Ministers must not despair, though the cases may seem hopeless.<em>Sutcliffe<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:3<\/span>. O Lord, Thou knowest. <strong>Human Perplexity<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Finds refuge in the Divine omniscience. <br \/>2. Reverently acknowledges the illimitableness of the Divine power. <br \/>3. Teaches the soul to render unquestioning obedience to the Divine command.<\/p>\n<p>The Russians in a difficult question are accustomed to answerGod and our great Duke know all this.<em>Trapp<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Since God is omniscient and omnipotent, the resurrection of the dead is possible; but since He has also promised it and cannot break His word, it is also certain (<span class='bible'>Joh. 5:25<\/span>).<em>Starke<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:4<\/span>. O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. <strong>An Urgent Message<\/strong>. Addressed<\/p>\n<p>1. To a dead nationality. <br \/>2. To a dead Church. 3. To a dead faith. <br \/>4. To dead souls.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:5<\/span>. Neither need the resurrection of the dead be held a thing incredible concerning Gods power and truth (<span class='bible'>Act. 26:8<\/span>). The keeping green of Noahs olive-tree in the time of the flood, the blossoming of Aarons dry rod, the flesh and sinews coming to these dry bones and the breath entering into them, what were they all but so many lively emblems of the resurrection?<em>Trapp<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:6<\/span>. Sinews tie the bones together. Flesh fills up the hollownesses, and being full of muscles, helps motion. Skin, as the upper silken garment, covers all with a clear and blushing colour. Breath lastly must be added. All this God declares He will do.<em>Pool<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:7-10<\/span>. <strong>The Successful Preacher<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Is Divinely commissioned. <\/p>\n<p>2. Is careful to declare only the message God reveals to Him. So I prophesied as I was commanded (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze. 37:10<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>3. Recognises the necessity of prayer for the inspiration of the Spirit. Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>4. Is honoured in seeing the fruit of his labours. The breath came into them, and they lived (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:10<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>Three degrees or processes have been remarked in this mystic vision. When the prophet was commanded to prophesy, to foretell, on the authority of God, that there should be a restoration to their own land<\/p>\n<p>1. There was a noise, which was followed by a general shaking, during which the bones became arranged and united. <br \/>2. The flesh and skin came upon them, so that the dry bones were no longer seen. <br \/>3. The spirit or soul came into them, and they stood up perfectly vivified. Perhaps these might be illustrated by three periods of time which marked the regeneration of the Jewish polity:<\/p>\n<p>1. The publication of the edict of Cyrus in behalf of the Jews, which caused a general shaking or stir among the people, so that the several families began to approach each other and prepare for their return to Judea (<span class='bible'>Ezr. 1:2-3<\/span>). But though partially restored, they were obliged to discontinue the rebuilding of the Temple. <\/p>\n<p>2. The edict published by Darius in the second year of his reign (<span class='bible'>Ezr. 4:23-24<\/span>), which removed the impediments thrown in the way of the Jews (<span class='bible'>Ezr. 6:6-7<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>3. The mission of Nehemiah with orders from Artaxerxes to complete the building of the Temple and the city (<span class='bible'>Neh. 2:7<\/span>). Then the Jews became a great army, and found themselves in sufficient force to defend themselves and city from all their enemies.<em>A. Clarke<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The vision secondarily sets forth the spiritual resurrection of the people of God now through the regenerating power of the Holy Ghost; and then hereafter their literal resurrection also, through the same Spirit (<span class='bible'>Rom. 8:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Php. 3:20<\/span>). It needs the same Almighty power to raise a sinner from his natural state of spiritual death as it does to raise a corpse to life. To man both alike are impossible. But faith believes in the power and will of God to quicken the dead where to sense the case would seem hopeless. The spiritual resurrection is not instantaneously complete, but is progressive. At first there is the outward and inward preparation for the reception of the Spirit of life, and then at last the breath of life enters the man, and he becomes truly born again of the Spirit. Let us never be satisfied with the outward semblances of spiritual lifethe bones, sinews, flesh, and skinwhich give the <em>form<\/em> of beauty and life, but which are not the <em>life<\/em> itself. None but living believers shall stand before the living God. Prayer is the means whereby to obtain the breath of spiritual life, both for ourselves and for others (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9<\/span>; Sol. <span class='bible'>Son. 4:16<\/span>).<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:7<\/span>. If the voice of the Holy Ghost is heard in the heart, then there is a movement of the heart, and blessed is he who obeys the impulse.<em>Starck<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:8<\/span>. The spirit and not the uniform is that which truly unifies, and the consciences of men are not to be dealt with as the regimental tailor deals with soldiers.<em>Lange<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9<\/span>. When ministers succeed in promoting a law-work on the mind, always in due time mixing comfort with terror, they must turn their eyes to heaven and become advocates and intercessors for the promised Comforter. Our sermons have too much of the didactic; we divide, explain, and teach. We dwell on words and truths already understood. But after setting good things before an audience, why may we not assist piety in uttering the wishes of their hearts to obtain them? The frequent prayers which St. Paul mixes with his discourses are the most pathetic and touching parts of his writings.<em>Sutcliffe<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Vision of the Dry Bones<\/strong>a theme for a missionary sermon. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>A striking description of the religious state of the heathen world<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) The persons made the subject of this prophetic vision are represented as dead. <br \/>(2.) The number of the dead forms another part of the picturethe valley was full of bones. <br \/>(3.) They were unburied. The destructive effects of sin, the sad ravages of death, lay exposed and open to the sun. <br \/>(4.) The state of the deadthe bones were very dry. Under this strong figure the hopelessness of their condition is represented. <br \/>2. <em>The means by which its mystical resurrection is to be effected<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) The ministry of the Word is the grand means appointed by God for the salvation of the world. <br \/>(2.) The words may be considered as an injunction on the preachers of the GospelProphesy unto these dry bones. <br \/>(3.) The injunction Prophesy respects not only ministers, but you also who have a private station in the Church. 3. <em>The certain success which should follow the application of the appointed means<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) Our confidence rests on the power of the Gospel. <br \/>(2) Our confidence in the certain success of the Gospel rests also on experience. <br \/>(3.) Prophecy confirms the certainty of success.<em>R. Watson<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:10<\/span>. An exceeding great army. A power, or army of strong, courageous, and well-ordered soldiers. The phrase in the Hebrew is very fulla power, or great host, very, very great. Thus they rise that the prophet and we might know how safe they would be in themselves, and how terrible to their enemies.<em>Pool<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11-14<\/span>. <strong>National Life<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Dependent on God for its worth and permanence. <br \/>2. Sinks into decay and oblivion when it ignores God. <br \/>3. Indebted for its revival to the goodness and power of God.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11<\/span>. Our hope is lost. Let them hope as hope can: we have hanged up all our hopes now that the city and Temple are destroyed. Thus carnal confidence, as it riseth up into a corky, frothy hope when it seeth sufficient help, so it sitteth down into a faithless, sullen discontent and despair when it can see no second causes.<em>Trapp<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>The language of unbelief makes the calamity great, and Gods power to help little.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:12-13<\/span>. Though your captivity be as death, your prisons and confinements close as the grave, yet I will open those graves. I will lift you out, lend you a hand to bring you out with life and strength. And I will be your guide, that you may know the way; be your support, that you may be able to go; and your guard and defence against dangers of the way, that you may certainly come into your own land. When your restitution to your own land and your prosperity in it, when your growth to strength and power shall be so miraculously effected, then you shall acknowledge and publish the glory of My power, faithfulness, goodness, and wisdom.<em>Pool<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><em>HOMILETICS<\/em><\/p>\n<p>THE UNITY OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD<\/p>\n<p>(<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:15-28<\/span>.)<\/p>\n<p><strong>I. Promoted by the blending of hostile nationalities into a universal brotherhood<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:15-22<\/span>). We have here another example of the realism of Ezekiels method of teaching. By the bringing together of two separate rods, or sceptres, till they appeared as one in the hand of the prophet, he illustrated the approaching union of the rival kingdoms of Judah and Israel. The misfortunes of the past had been intensified by the rupture of the kingdom of David. Internecine wars had weakened both North and South and left the exhausted tribes an easy prey to the heathen invaders. The removal of the ten tribes into Assyrian exile more than a century and a half before toned down the bitterness of ancient animosities in the breasts of the two tribes still left in the land; and when they, in their turn, suffered the miseries of exile, a spirit of brotherhood was awakened among all the tribes, and they yearned for the time when they should again become a united nation. The prophets no less than the people looked forward to this desirable consummation. They saw that the fires of affliction were already fusing the broken and scattered elements into a strongly welded national unity. But in the wider scope of the prophetic vision, the union of Israel and Judah was regarded as a type of the future union of all nations in the universal kingdom of Messiah. In the march of the centuries and the advancement of knowledge the nations are being drawn closer to each other; war, hatred, and jealousy will ultimately disappear, and peace and righteousness everywhere prevail:<\/p>\n<p>O scenes surpassing fable, and yet true,<br \/>Scenes of accomplished bliss! Which who can see,<br \/>Though but in distant prospect, and not feel<br \/>His soul refreshed with foretaste of the joy?<br \/>Antipathies are none. In the heart<br \/>No passion touches a discordant string,<br \/>But all is harmony and love.<em>Cowper<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II. Acknowledges the supreme authority of the one Divine King<\/strong>. I will make them one nation, and one king shall be king to them all. David My servant shall be king over them, and they all shall have one shepherd. My servant David shall be their prince for ever (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22-25<\/span>). It was plainly revealed that the coming Messiah-King was to be a descendant of David, the Jewish hero, and both prophets and people expected that he would restore the kingdom on the lines of its ancient constitution, for they knew nothing higher. The conception of a purely spiritual kingdom was altogether beyond the range of human thought, and was not dreamed of till proclaimed by the lips of our Lord. Even then the idea was but slowly comprehended by the best-instructed Jewish minds; and the rejection of the true Messiah by the bulk of the Jewish nation shows how unwilling or incapable they were to take in the sublime notion. It is only by the light of the New Testament that a later age has been able to realise the far-reaching significance of the prophetic vision. The true Israel is not a political but a spiritual community, gathered out of all nations under heaven, compacted and unified into a spiritual kingdom, acknowledging and serving one Divine Ruler, who is King of kings and Lord of lords.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III. Established by the Divinely imparted righteousness of its subjects<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:23-24<\/span>). Sin disintegrates and scatters, as the chequered history of the Jewish nation proves. But the stability and permanent unity of the Messianic kingdom will be ensured in the fact that it is built up and established in righteousness. It is composed of sanctified natures from which the enfeebling defilement of iniquity will be cleansed, and the changed lives of its subjects will be evidenced in practical holiness. They shall walk in My judgments, and observe My statutes and do them. It is:<\/p>\n<p>The kingdom of established peace,<\/p>\n<p>Which can no more remove;<\/p>\n<p>The perfect power of godliness,<\/p>\n<p>The omnipotence of love.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV. Confirmed by a perpetual covenant<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26-27<\/span>). The terms of the covenant have a Divine origin and sanctionI will be their God, and they shall be My people. Here is the guarantee of its inviolability. Had it rested on political or any human considerations, it would have been insecure. God is ever faithful to His part of the covenant, notwithstanding the infidelity and ingratitude of His people. It is, moreover, a covenant of <em>peace<\/em>the moral breach occasioned by sin is healed by pardon and reconciliation through the intervention of Messiah, who by His offered and accepted sacrifice has made it possible to subdue the inveterate enmity of the human heart and bring man into spiritual union with God. The reality and perpetuity of the covenant are assured by the abiding presence of God with His people. I will set up My sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore. The unity of the Divine kingdom will be maintained by incessant worship and the loftiest spiritual fellowship.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V. Demonstrates the Divine faithfulness<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:28<\/span>). Israel had sinned and had defamed the reputation of Jehovah, and in their sufferings, which rendered them a spectacle of wonder and a theme of derision, their enemies entertained false and distorted views of the God of Israel. But in the moral reform of Israel and the unmistakable evidence of Gods presence and working amongst them, the heathen are compelled to own that He is the only true God, and unalterably faithful in word and deed. The growing unity of the kingdom of righteousness is an ever-present object-lesson to the universe, teaching the indefectible faithfulness of Jehovah.<\/p>\n<p>LESSONS.<\/p>\n<p>1. <em>The unity of the kingdom of God is founded in spiritual affinity to the Divine<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>Is in process of organisation wherever Christ is embraced and worshipped<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>Will one day be a grand reality<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><em>GERM NOTES ON THE VERSES<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:15-28<\/span>. The whole people of Israel had been represented as participating in the regenerating efficacy of the spirit of life which was to be given from above; and as the direct result of this was to unite them to God, so its secondary operation could not fail to be to unite them in brotherly concord with each other. For the true covenant-people must form but one body, as they can only have one Head; and hence, as the necessary shell for preserving this great truth, it was so strictly enjoined of old that they should have but one Temple, one high-priest, one king, and one commonwealth. The breaking-up of this united brotherhood by the revolt of the ten tribes under Jeroboam, however needful at the time as a salutary chastisement to the house of David, is constantly represented as a sad dismemberment of the household of God, and the source, to a large extent, of the more overwhelming tide of evils which thenceforth set in upon the land, and at last laid it desolate. As soon, therefore, as there might be produced a revived and healthful condition among the covenant-people, there must be a return to brotherly union, and that in connection with the house of David; for to this house had been committed the right to rule over the heritage of God, and to abide in separation from it was to continue in rebellion against Heaven. That there has been no adequate fulfilment of this prophecy in what may be called the literal sense of its terms is too plain to require any lengthened proof. The most characteristic part of the descriptionthe cementing, strengthening, benignant rule of Davidhad not even the appearance of a literal fulfilment in the post-Babylonish history of Israel; and, with so strong and prominent a feature of an ideal sort as the eternal presidency of David, it seems amazing that any one should expect it to be realised after that manner in the ages to come.<em>Fairbairn<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:15-17<\/span>. <strong>Joining the Sticks<\/strong>. <\/p>\n<p>1. <em>Learn the sad condition of the people of Israel at the time the prophet wrote<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) It was contrary to nature. <br \/>(2.) Displeasing to God. <br \/>(3.) Disastrous to themselves. <br \/>2. <em>The happy condition to which the people of Israel were about to be restored<\/em>. That of unity, harmony, oneness. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) Union is of great importance to the Church itself. <br \/>(2.) It is an immense advantage to the surrounding community. <br \/>(3.) It is well-pleasing and highly honouring to God. <br \/>3. <em>The agency by which this delightful change was to be effected<\/em>. <\/p>\n<p>(1.) God breathed into them a principle of spiritual life. <br \/>(2.) He sent them wise advisers and earnest intercessors. <br \/>(3.) He visited them with a sore trialcaptivity. <br \/>(4.) He appointed them a common workthe rebuilding of the city and Temple of Jerusalem. <br \/>(5.) He makes His residence in their midst. Christ in the midst of a Church acts like a magnet in the midst of steel particles: He attracts all to Himself.<em>Pulpit Analyst<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:16<\/span>. A cleft stick is a poor business in itself, but if God please to make use of so slender a thing, it may serve for a very great purpose; as here by the uniting of two sorry sticks in the hands of the prophet is prefigured the uniting of Judah and Israel, yea, of Jews and Gentiles, in the hand of the Lordthat is, in Christ Jesus, who is the hand, the right hand and the arm of God the Father.<em>Trapp<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:17<\/span>. Join them one to another. Some would have this done miraculously; but I do not think God bade the prophet work a miracle. Were it so, God would rather have said, I will make them one, for He can do miracles. It was enough if glued together, or but held in his hand, so that in his hand they were one.<em>Pool<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:18-20<\/span>. <strong>The Unity of the People of God<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. <em>Has its basis in their united love of God. <\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>2. Strengthened by Divinely ordered events<\/em>. I will make them one stick, and they shall be one in mine hand (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:19<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>Admits of great diversity of individual character<\/em>. Each tribe had its distinctive peculiarity. <\/p>\n<p>4. <em>Shall be openly recognised<\/em>. The sticks shall be in thine hand before their eyes (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:20<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:19<\/span>. I will once more bring them all under one King and make them of one mind. Religion is the only best bond of affection. The very heathens honoured the primitive Christians for their unanimity. As the curtains of the Tabernacle were joined by loops, so were they by love; and as the stones of the Temple were so closely cemented together that they seemed to be but one stone, so was it among them. Neither need we wonder, since Christs Church is but one; neither is there any such oneness or entireness anywhere as among the saints. Other societies are but as the clay in the toes of Nebuchadnezzars image: they may cleave together, but not incorporate one into another.<em>Trapp<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:20<\/span>. As the separation of Judah and Ephraim was the punishment of apostasy, and led to still further evils, religious and political, so hereafter, when both are one with God, through the spirit of life uniting them to the one Covenant-Head, Messiah-David, they shall be united to one another as no longer two but one people. In respect to the spiritual Israel, the Church, nothing has more impeded the progress of the Gospel than the mutual divisions of professing Christians. Let us pray for the blessed time when all Christians shall be one inwardly and outwardly, as the Lord Jesus prayed (<span class='bible'>Joh. 17:21<\/span>). Meanwhile, if in non-essentials we differ for a time, let us endeavour at least to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.<em>Fausset<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:21-25<\/span>. <strong>National Unity<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. <em>Conditioned by geographical environment<\/em> I will gather them on every side, and make them one nation in the land, upon the mountains of Israel (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:21-22<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>Confirmed by the suppression of tribal feuds and animosities<\/em>. They shall be no more two nations (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>Cemented by good government. <\/em>One king shall be king to them all. David, my servant, shall be king over them, and they all shall have one shepherd (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze. 37:24<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>4. <em>Has a solid foundation in practical piety<\/em>. Neither shall they defile themselves any more with idols: they shall walk in My judgments, and do them (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:23-24<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>5. <em>Secures permanency of national life<\/em>. They shall dwell in the land, they and their childrens children for ever (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:25<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:22<\/span>. Politically speaking, they never had a king from that day to this, and the grand junction and government spoken of here must refer to another timeto that in which they shall be brought into the Christian Church with the fulness of the Gentiles, when Jesus, the King of kings and Lord of lords, shall rule over them.<em>A. Clarke<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:23<\/span>. Idolatry is a very defiling sin, and the Jews in both kingdoms were exceedingly addicted to it, pertinacious in it, to the utter ruin of both kingdoms; but after the return from Babylonish captivity, we find nowhere that they fell into idolatry.<em>Pool<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:24<\/span>. No Christian is a bad man, unless he be a counterfeit.<em>Athenagoras<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26-28<\/span>. <strong>The Presence of God with His People<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. <em>Guaranteed by covenant relationship<\/em>. I will make a covenant of peace with them: I will be their God, and they shall be My people (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26-27<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>2. <em>An assurance of stability and increase<\/em>. I will place them and multiply them (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>3. <em>A motive fur loftiest worship<\/em>. I will set My sanctuary in the midst of them: My tabernacle shall be with them (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26-27<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p>4. <em>A testimony to the Divine faithfulness<\/em>. The heathen shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:28<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze. 37:26<\/span>. It shall be an everlasting covenant with them, may be fitly explained of the Gospel, being such a covenant as shall never be abolished or give way to any new dispensation. It is certain that the expression, a covenant of peace, could not at all agree with the ancient covenant; for when was there an age, half an age, or twenty years peace in Israel? The whole history of the Jewish nation is nothing more than a recital of wars and continual divisions. And if we understand it of peace between God and His people, where shall we find this people faithfully attached to the Lord during one century only? We have only to open the books of the prophets and the other sacred records to remark their infidelities and perpetual rebellions against God. This expression, therefore, can only respect the new covenant whereof Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, is the Mediator, and who gives us that true peace which surpasses all conceptions.<em>Benson<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>In closing this section, we present a brief outline of the view that has been taken of the prophecies contained in the three closely related chapters, 34, 35, 37, and which in substance applies equally to many other portions of the prophetical Scriptures. <\/p>\n<p>1. They were originally given to revive and animate the hearts of Gods covenant-people, by holding out to them the assured prospect of a reversion from the present evil, and their still certain destination in Gods purpose to the highest and most honourable place on the earth. <br \/>2. It was the duty of those to whom such prophecies were delivered at once to believe the word spoken to them, and apply themselves in earnest to do what was needed to secure its accomplishment. <br \/>3. But there being manifestly ideal features introduced into the delineation, clearly betokens a kind and degree of blessing which could not have been completely fulfilled under the old covenant. <br \/>4. The new things thus to be looked for in the future could only meet with their full and adequate accomplishment in Christ, who is certainly the David of the promise. <br \/>5. Therefore, in forming ones conceptions now of the real import of such prophecies, we must throw ourselves back upon the narrower and more imperfect relations amid which they were written, and thence judge of what is still to come. Those who would find a literal Israel and a non-literal David, or a literal restoration in Christian times, and a non-literal Tabernacle and ritual of worship, arbitrarily confound together things dissimilar and incongruous, and render certainty of interpretation absolutely impossible. <br \/>6. The view thus given is confirmed by the reproduction of some of these prophecies in the field of the New Testament Church, set free, as was expected, from the outward distinctions and limits of the Old. <br \/>7. The common interpretation which understands Christ by David, and takes all the rest literally, must inevitably tend to justify the Jew in his unbelief.<em>Fairbairn<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Preacher&#8217;s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>II. THE REBIRTH OF THE NATION 37:128<\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel had been promising Gods people a bright future with new leadership and a new Canaan. However, these promises were met with as much skepticism as his earlier message announcing the 587 B.C. overthrow of Jerusalem. The destruction of their Temple meant the shattering of their faith. They were absolutely convinced that their dead and disjointed nation could never live again. By means of a vision (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1-14<\/span>) and a symbolic action and an oracle (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:15-28<\/span>) Ezekiel responded to their despondency. In the vision Ezekiel learns that Gods Spirit had the power to turn what looked like a host of skeletons into an effective army. In the oracle and accompanying symbolic act Ezekiel points out that the old divisions between Israel and Judah would disappear in the day of restoration.<\/p>\n<p>A. The Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones 37:114<\/p>\n<p><strong>TRANSLATION<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>(1) The hand of the LORD was upon me, and the LORD brought me out in the Spirit, and set me down in the midst of the valley, and it was full of bones; (2) and He caused me to pass by them round about, and, behold, there were very many upon the surface of the valley; and, behold, they were very dry. (3) And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live again? And I said, O Lord GOD, You know. (4) And He said unto me, Prophesy over these bones, and say unto them, O dry bones, hear the word of the LORD. (5) Thus says the Lord GOD to these bones, Behold, I am about to cause spirit to enter into you, and you shall live. (6) And I will put sinews upon you, and I will bring upon you flesh, and I will cover you with flesh, and put spirit in you, and you shall live; and you shall know that I am the LORD. (7) So I prophesied as I was commanded, and as I prophesied there was a sound, and, behold, a shaking, and bones came together, bone to its bone. (8) And I saw, and, behold, sinews and flesh came upon them, and flesh covered them above; but no spirit was in them. (9) And he said unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus says the Lord GOD: Come from the four winds, O spirit, and breath on these slain ones that they may live. (10) So I prophesied as He commanded me, and the spirit, came on them, and they lived, and they stood on their feet, an exceeding great host. (11) And he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel; behold, they are saying, Our bones are dry, our hope has perished, we are cut off. (12) Therefore, prophesy and say unto them, Thus says the Lord GOD: Behold, I am about to open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O My people; and I will bring you unto the land of Israel. (13) And you shall know that I am the LORD when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O My people. (14) And I will put My Spirit in you, and you shall live, and I will place you in your own land; and you shall know that I the LORD have spoken, and done it (oracle of the LORD).<\/p>\n<p><strong>COMMENTS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Thanks to the Negro spiritual, Ezekiels vision of the dry bones is perhaps the best known passage in the book. The prophet felt the hand of the Lord, i.e., Gods power overwhelmed him. He was carried in spirit, i.e., mentally, to the middle of a valley, perhaps the same valley where Ezekiel earlier saw a vision (cf. <span class='bible'>Eze. 3:22<\/span>). The floor of that valley was littered with the bones of dead men (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:1<\/span>). The Lord caused His prophet to move about in that valley. As he did so Ezekiel was impressed with two facts: (1) the bones were numerous; and (2) they were very dry, having lain exposed to the elements for many long years (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:2<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>In order to heighten the prophets interest and give him a foregleam of what was about to transpire, God asked Ezekiel a question: Can these bones live? From the human standpoint nothing seemed more remote. But Ezekiel would not underestimate the power of God. If He so willed those mouldering bones could live (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:3<\/span>). Then Ezekiel was told to prophesy to those bones, and bid them to hear Gods word (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:4<\/span>). God would resurrect those skeletons by means of a process which He describes in reverse order. Life-giving spirit would be imparted to those corpses (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:5<\/span>). Perhaps this is mentioned first so as to underscore the point that God is the source of life for His people. Of course sinew, flesh and skin must first cover those skeletons. This miraculous and mass resurrection would once again underscore the deity of the only God who would dare to make such a prediction (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:6<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel did as he was told. As he prophesied he heard a sound. Suddenly a commotion  a shaking  erupted all over the valley as the bones began to unite (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:7<\/span>). Then over those naked skeletons flesh began to appear. But still there was no life in the corpses (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:8<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>Again Ezekiel was told to prophesy, this time to the spirit or breath. The breath of life which once had animated those corpses is thought of as having been scattered in all directions. Ezekiel through this mighty prophetic prayer summoned the life-giving spirit to return from wherever it may be[461] (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:9<\/span>). The prophet again did as he was told, and the breath of life returned to the corpses and they lived. A great host all over that valley rose to their feet (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:10<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p>[461] Another possible interpretation The wind from the four corners of the earth is but a symbol of the universal life-giving spirit of God.<\/p>\n<p>There can be no doubt as to the meaning of this vision. The dry and disjointed bones are a sad symbol of the entire people of Israel. The Northern Kingdom of Israel and now the Southern Kingdom of Judah as well had been destroyed and left desolate. The scattered survivors of the two kingdoms could in no sense be considered a nation any longer. Our bones are dried up, they cried. The hope of ever again existing as a nation had been lost. They compare themselves to limbs severed from the body  cut off never again to be united in a living organism (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:11<\/span>). Nationally they were dead and disjointed with no prospect of anything better.<\/p>\n<p>God had a positive word for those discouraged exiles. The graves (i.e., the foreign lands) where Gods people were languishing in captivity would be opened. Israel would be resurrected from those metaphorical graves and restored to Canaan (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:12<\/span>). This stupendous miracle of national resurrection would cause the peoples faith in the Lord to be firmly established (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:13<\/span>). Only the impartation of Gods life-giving Spirit could effect such a revival; only the action of God could bring them back to their own land. The God of Israel not only has the prescience to predict the future, He has the power to perform His word (<span class='bible'>Eze. 37:14<\/span>).<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>(1) <strong>In the midst of the valley.<\/strong>The word is the same as in <span class='bible'>Eze. 3:22<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze. 8:4<\/span>, and having the definite article prefixed, is very probably the same plain, now seen in spirit, in which Ezekiel had seen his former visions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Which was full of bones.<\/strong>It is better, with the Hebrew, to put a stop after plain (valley), and then read, <em>this was full of bones.<\/em> The bones, as the subsequent verses show, were not heaped together, but thickly strewn upon the face of the plain. After the prophets mind had so long dwelt upon the desolating campaigns of Nebuchadnezzar, these ghastly reminders of the loss of human life might naturally enter into his thoughts.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Ellicott&#8217;s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> 1-14<\/strong>. <strong> <\/strong> This is one of the most marvelous visions of the Old Testament. The companions of Ezekiel were in hopeless despair. Israel had been moldering in an Assyrian grave nearly one hundred and fifty years, and now all Judah, excepting a small and unworthy remnant, was buried in Babylon, without any hope of resurrection (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>),while Jerusalem and the holy temple had been totally destroyed. Ezekiel had tried to awaken his fellow-captives from their dull and voiceless stupor (<span class='bible'>Eze 24:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 24:22<\/span>) by a bright vision of a future when they should return to their home land and enjoy the fullness of temporal and churchly prosperity (36), but all his hopeful prophecies had proved ineffectual. They could not believe. Then God lifted his prophet &ldquo;by the power of the Spirit&rdquo; into ecstatic vision, and he found himself alone in the midst of a deserted battlefield (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:9-10<\/span>) strewn with bones. He passed through this desolation and noticed that every vestige of life had disappeared from the dried-up remains. There was nothing left for even the vultures to feed upon. Long ago every skeleton had been cleaned by the jackals&rsquo; teeth and the broken parts scattered far and wide. The bones were many and they were very dry. The valley was a charnel house, visibly displaying the absolute victory of death over life. Then came the question from heaven, &ldquo;Can these bones live?&rdquo; and the humble answer, &ldquo;O Adoni Jehovah, thou knowest.&rdquo; Then the prophetic impulse came upon the prophet, and with faith that the Almighty was still able to breathe the breath of life into the lifeless (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>) he cried unto the withered and dislocated skeletons, &ldquo;O bones, hear the word of the Lord,&rdquo; and even as he began to speak the words which to any listener would have seemed a mere sound in the air there came a mysterious noise followed by a groaning as of an &ldquo;earthquake&rdquo; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>, R.V., Kautzsch), and the prophet saw a terrifying sight, for each bone was rushing toward its fellow; and when he dared to look again &ldquo;lo, there were sinews upon them, and flesh came up and skin covered them&rdquo; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>, R.V.). They were no longer skeletons, for all the organs of life were there, but they were still dead bodies. Then the prophet once more took heart and finished the prophecy (compare <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>), crying to the universal life-giving divine Spirit to breathe life into these slain, and even as he spake, so was it done! It must be remembered that the same word in Hebrew may be translated either &ldquo;wind,&rdquo; &ldquo;breath,&rdquo; or &ldquo;spirit.&rdquo; Jehovah himself interpreted the vision. Israel and Judah were not only dead corpses, but their bones were &ldquo;dried up&rdquo; and they were &ldquo;clean cut off,&rdquo; as they themselves declared (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>); yet, since Jehovah still lived, the case was not entirely hopeless, for God could raise the dead. Out of the graves of the Assyrian and Babylonian captivity those fragments of a people should surely come forth through his power (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-13<\/span>), and not only receive again the social and civil institutions, which were the organs of national life, but should be spiritually regenerated (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:26-27<\/span>; compare Godet, <em> Studies in the Old Testament; <\/em> Maurice, <em> The Prophets; <\/em> Cornill, <em> Das Buch Ezechiel<\/em>). Cornill has called this &ldquo;one of the noblest passages the Old Testament can show.&rdquo; Its influence upon the national thought was incalculable. Darmesteter tells of the rabbi whom he met in India who referred to a village, named Gilead, which he had visited in an obscure part of Persia, the population of which he believed to be descended from the bones resurrected by Ezekiel! ( <em> Les Prophetes D&rsquo;Israel, <\/em> p. 107.) But the fact is that all Israel is descended from these bodies re-animated by prophecy. If it had not been for the resurrection trumpet-note of hope which Ezekiel blew it looks as if the whole nation would have perished in despair. It may be added that while this vision teaches a national, not an individual, resurrection (as <span class='bible'>Hos 6:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos 13:14<\/span>), yet the idea of a personal resurrection was even then not unknown. (Compare <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Job 14:13<\/span>, etc.; and especially note <span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span>.)<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Whedon&#8217;s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> &lsquo;The hand of Yahweh was on me, and he carried me out in the Spirit of Yahweh and set me down in the midst of a valley (or &lsquo;plain&rsquo;), and it was full of bones. And he made me pass by around them and behold there were a great many in the open valley, and behold they were very dry.&rsquo;<\/p>\n<p> Once again Ezekiel experienced a remarkable vision, resulting from &lsquo;the hand of Yahweh&rsquo; being on him, connected with the Spirit (compare <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22-23<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 8:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 8:3<\/span>). He was borne to a battlefield. We can possibly presume that it was one where many Israelites had died, although it may have been simply a visionary battlefield. The valley or plain was full of the remains of skeletons. And the bones were very dry. They represented a totally dead and desolate Israel, without a shred of life in it. It was a valley of hopelessness.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> The Vision of The Valley Of Dry Bones (<span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:1-14<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> ).<\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> This vision is not directly an illustration or promise of physical resurrection. Ezekiel nowhere gives any indication of expecting a resurrection of the dead. It is a pictorial representation of the coming spiritual revival of Israel, given to spur on the doubting, fearful and disillusioned people to whom Ezekiel was ministering..<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:1-28<\/strong><\/span> <strong> The Restoration of Israel as a Nation <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-28<\/span><\/strong> tells us of the first of three end-time prophetic events that will usher Israel back into the forefront of world history. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-28<\/span> describes the restoration of Israel, which prophecy was fulfilled in 1948 when Israel was officially recognized as a nation again. This event was also prophesied in <span class='bible'>Joe 3:1<\/span> &ldquo;For, behold, in those days, and in that time, when I shall bring again the captivity of Judah and Jerusalem.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p> Here is a proposed outline:<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 1. Ezekiel Prophesies to the Valley of Dry Bones <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 2. The Prophecy of Northern Israel Reuniting with Southern Judah <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-25<\/span><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 3. The Restoration of the Temple and Its Services <span class='bible'>Eze 37:26-28<\/span><\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:1-14<\/strong><\/span> <strong> Ezekiel Prophesies to the Valley of Dry Bones <\/strong> In <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span> Ezekiel is taken in the spirit to a valley which was full of dry bones. He is commanded to prophesy to the bones so that they will be resurrected as the nation of Israel.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:2<\/strong><\/span> <strong> And caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, lo, they were very dry.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:2<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> &ldquo;and, lo, they were very dry&rdquo; &#8211; <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments &#8211; <\/em><\/strong> John Hagee understands the phrase &ldquo;and, lo, they were very dry&rdquo; to mean that the nation of Israel has been dead for a very long time. They were dispersed two thousand years ago. In 1948 the nation of Israel was reborn. [30]<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:3em'> [30] John Hagee, <em> John Hagee Today <\/em> (San Antonio, Texas: John Hagee Ministries), on Trinity Broadcasting Network (Santa Ana, California), 24 November 2008, television program.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:11<\/strong><\/span> <strong> Then he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:11<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments &#8211; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span><\/em><\/strong> interprets the dry bones to symbolize the hopelessness of the children of Israel. <\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:15-25<\/strong><\/span> <strong> The Prophecy of Northern Israel Reuniting with Southern Judah &#8211; <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments &#8211; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-25<\/span><\/em><\/strong> tells us that God will reunite northern Israel with the southern kingdom of Judah when the nation of Israel is reborn (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>). This has taken place in 1948 in fulfillment of this prophecy. God will appoint David as king over all twelve tribes (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:24<\/strong><\/span> <strong> &nbsp;And David my servant shall be king over them; and they all shall have one shepherd: they shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes, and do them.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:24<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> <\/strong> <strong><em> Scripture Reference &#8211; <\/em><\/strong> Note <\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> <span class='bible'>Joh 10:16<\/span>, &ldquo;And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd .&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:25<\/strong><\/span> <strong> And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, even they, and their children, and their children&#8217;s children for ever: and my servant David shall be their prince for ever.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:25<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> &ldquo;And David my servant shall be king over them&rdquo; &#8211; <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments &#8211; <\/em><\/strong> The Jews were looking for a restored kingdom and a king of the lineage of David who would again rule over them. Therefore, the title &ldquo;David my servant&rdquo; is given to Jesus Christ so that they can identify with the Messiah, Jesus Christ, when He comes to be their king. In contrast, to the Gentiles the Messiah was not the son of David, but rather, the Saviour of the World.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:26-28<\/strong><\/span> <strong> The Restoration of the Temple and Its Services &#8211; <\/strong> The Sanctuary, or Tabernacle, that is referred to in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:26-28<\/span> will soon be described in the upcoming chapters (40-46).<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:28<\/strong><\/span> <strong> And the heathen shall know that I the LORD do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 37:28<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments <\/em><\/strong> Although Gog and its assembly of nations will try to destroy the re-established nation of Israel (Ezekiel 38-39), the Lord will destroy their armies and glorify Himself in their midst (<span class='bible'>Eze 38:16<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 38:23<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 39:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 39:13<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 39:21<\/span>).<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Everett&#8217;s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> Israel&rsquo;s Glorification <\/strong> <span class='bible'>Eze 35:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 48:35<\/span> deals with the topic of Israel&rsquo;s glorification. The description of the restored land of Israel and the new Temple and its worship (36-48) reveals a building and nation more majestic and beautiful that that found during the time of Solomon. These passages reveal the glorification that God has in planned for His people Israel. This glorification is different than what He has planned for the Church. The prophecies of this passage signify the fact that God has a much greater blessing in store for His people than any earthly kingdom in the past, even greater than Israel in its golden age of King Solomon. The future glories of the heavenly kingdom will far exceed the earthly. <em> The Book of Jubilees<\/em> (4.26-27) tells us that this Mount Zion will be sanctified in the new creation for a sanctification of the earth; through it will the earth be sanctified from all (its) guilt and its uncleanness throughout the generations of the world.<\/p>\n<p> From these last chapters in the book of Ezekiel we know that the full restoration of Israel involves three key events that will take place in order to make their restoration complete and everlasting. These events will involve the restoration of Israel as a nation (36-37), the battle against Gog and its allies (38-39), and the restoration of the Temple and its worship (40-46) and its land (47-48).<\/p>\n<p> Here is a proposed outline:<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 1. Judgment upon Edom <span class='bible'>Eze 35:1-15<\/span><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 2. The Restoration of Israel as a Nation <span class='bible'>Eze 36:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 3. The Battle against Gog and its Allies <span class='bible'>Eze 38:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 39:23<\/span><\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:1.8em'> 4. The Restoration of the Temple and its Worship and Land <span class='bible'>Eze 40:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 48:35<\/span><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Everett&#8217;s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> The Restoration of Israel<\/strong> <span class='bible'>Eze 36:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span> tells us about the time when the nation of Israel will be restored. This event took place in 1948 when Israel was officially recognized as a nation again. <\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 36:5<\/strong><\/span> <strong> Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Surely in the fire of my jealousy have I spoken against the residue of the heathen, and against all Idumea, which have appointed my land into their possession with the joy of all their heart, with despiteful minds, to cast it out for a prey.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 36:5<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> &ldquo;Surely in the fire of my jealousy have I spoken against the residue of the heathen, and against all Idumea&rdquo; <\/strong> <strong><em> Word Study on &ldquo;Idumea&rdquo; <\/em><\/strong> The Hebrew name &ldquo;Idumea&rdquo; &ldquo;edom&rdquo; (  ) (<span class='strong'>H123<\/span>) in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:5<\/span> is actually &ldquo;Edom&rdquo; in the Hebrew text. The <em> Enhanced Strong <\/em> says this word is used 100 times in the Old Testament, being translated in the <em> KJV<\/em> as &ldquo;Edom 87, Edomites 9, Idumea 4; 100.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p><em> Comments &#8211;<\/em> <strong><em> <\/em><\/strong> The region of Edom came to be known by the name &ldquo;Idumea&rdquo; during the time of the Greeks. But with the fall of Judah under the Romans the name Idumea disappeared from history.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em> Comments &#8211; <\/em><\/strong> The Lord has just spoken against the heathens in <span class='bible'>Eze 25:1<\/span> to <span class='bible'>Eze 32:32<\/span>, and against Edom in <span class='bible'>Eze 35:1-15<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 36:26<\/strong><\/span> <strong> A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.<\/p>\n<p> <span class='bible'><strong> Eze 36:26<\/strong><\/span><\/strong> <strong> <\/strong> <strong><em> Comments &#8211; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:26<\/span><\/em><\/strong> reflects the fact that the Mosaic Law and the Levitical priesthood with its Temple services had failed to produce a people of righteousness. Therefore, Jeremiah was sent to prophesy the doom of the nation of Israel, judged by God because of their disobedience and idolatry; and Ezekiel prophesies of their future restoration. The covenant that God made with Israel at Sinai had failed. Because the Law could not bring redemption to men, a new way was found. In His divine foreknowledge, God was preparing to make a new and better mankind covenant with men, which would be through the blood of His Son Jesus Christ. This time, the Holy Spirit would be poured out in the men&rsquo;s hearts, so that the Law could be written in their hearts, transforming them from within, enabling them to stand righteous before Him in the heavenly Tabernacle.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Everett&#8217;s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong><\/p>\n<p>The Vision of the Resurrection<\/p>\n<p> v. 1. The hand of the Lord was upon me and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord,<\/strong> in a state of ecstasy in which the prophet was inwardly transported from the things around him, <strong> and set me down in the midst of the valley, which was full of bones,<\/strong> one representing a huge grave, in which, however, the corpses had not been covered, <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 2. and caused me to pass by them round about,<\/strong> so that Ezekiel received a very close view of them, observed them most carefully; <strong> and, behold, there were very many in the open valley,<\/strong> not in heaps, but scattered over the ground, <strong> and, lo, they were very dry,<\/strong> bleached by long exposure to the elements, without sap and vitality. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 3. And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live?<\/strong> Did it seem possible to human eyes that these dry bones would be restored to life again? <strong> And I answered,<\/strong> properly leaving the answer of the question to the Lord&#8217;s almighty power, <strong> O Lord God, Thou knowest. <\/strong> With God nothing is impossible, and therefore the believers trust in Him to perform His mighty deeds at His own time. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 4. Again He said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones,<\/strong> that is, over or concerning them, <strong> and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord,<\/strong> which is the bearer of life, the mediator of the salvation of Jehovah. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 5. Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones, Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you,<\/strong> His creative divine power, as in the beginning, <strong> and ye shall live;<\/strong> <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 6. and I will lay sinews upon you,<\/strong> literally, &#8220;binding matter,&#8221; for the tendons and sinews hold the bones together and serve as a foundation for the flesh, <strong> and will bring up flesh upon you,<\/strong> causing it to fill out the human forms, <strong> and cover you with skin and put breath in you, and ye shall live,<\/strong> Cf <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>; <strong> and ye shall know that I am the Lord,<\/strong> by this proof of His almighty power. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 7. So I prophesied as I was commanded,<\/strong> without consulting with flesh and blood, simply at the command of the Lord; <strong> and as I prophesied, there was a noise,<\/strong> a voice, or sound, <strong> and behold a shaking,<\/strong> a louder rustling from the field of bones, <strong> and the bones came together, bone to his bone,<\/strong> those of the individual skeletons being assembled in their proper relation. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 8. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above,<\/strong> so that they were like corpses from which life had but recently fled; <strong> but there was no breath in them,<\/strong> there was no life in the members. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 9. Then said He unto me, Prophesy unto the wind,<\/strong> announcing to it the command of the Lord, <strong> prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord God,<\/strong> the sovereign Ruler of the universe, <strong> Come from the four winds, O breath,<\/strong> the spirit or power of life, <strong> and breathe upon these slain,<\/strong> the victims of bloody warfare, <strong> that they may live. <\/p>\n<p>v. 10. So I prophesied as He commanded me, and the breath came into them,<\/strong> just as in the beginning of creation, Genesis 2; <strong> and they lived and stood up upon their feet,<\/strong> an exceeding great army. The vision, therefore, evidently does not concern the resurrection of the dead in general, but only a restoration of the Lord&#8217;s people in the ideal sense. The Jews who returned from the four winds of the earth, in so far as they were believers, again formed the nucleus of the Church of God, which later included the believers from all over the world. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 11. Then He said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel,<\/strong> those who were properly included in the Lord&#8217;s people, the spiritual Israel. <strong> Behold, they say,<\/strong> on account of the tribulations of the exile, <strong> Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost; we are put off for our parts,<\/strong> they were undone. The condition of Israel was such that the believers in its midst felt that there was as little hope of restoration as there was a chance for marrowless bones to regain their vigor and to be surrounded once more with flesh and blood. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 12. Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, O My people, I will open your graves,<\/strong> the countries in which they were, in a manner of speaking, buried, <strong> and cause you to come up out of your graves and bring you into the land of Israel,<\/strong> to the place where His people could once more enjoy the fullness of His spiritual blessings. <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 13. And ye shall know that I am the Lord,<\/strong> be established and strengthened in their conviction that Jehovah was truly the God of the covenant, <strong> when I have opened your graves, O My people, and brought you up out of your graves,<\/strong> <strong><\/p>\n<p>v. 14. and shall put My Spirit in you,<\/strong> the breath of life with the power of the Holy Ghost, <strong> and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land,<\/strong> once more establishing them as His people; <strong> then shall ye know that I, the Lord, have spoken it,<\/strong> promised to do it, <strong> and performed it, saith the Lord. <\/strong> While this passage is not a direct proof-text teaching the resurrection of the dead, it furnishes a very vivid picture of the method in which God will call all men back to life on the Last Day. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong>EXPOSITION<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This chapter embraces, in its earlier section (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span>), the concluding portion of the &#8220;word of God&#8221; begun at <span class='bible'>Eze 36:16<\/span>; in its later section (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:15-28<\/span>), an additional &#8220;word,&#8221; to which the former naturally leads. The earlier, under the figure of a resurrection of dry bones, beheld by the prophet in vision, describes the political and religious reawakening of Israel; in the later is depicted, by means of a symbolic action, the reunion of its two branches. The first divides itself into two partsthe vision (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:1-10<\/span>) and its interpretation (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:11-14<\/span>). The vision was to all appearance designed to meet the objections the preceding picture of Israel&#8217;s future glory might naturally be expected to call forth. It was true that in the past Israel had often suffered a decline in her national life, and as often experienced a revival. But with the fall of her capital, the burning of her temple, the slaughter of her people, and the expatriation of her nobles, her life was henceforth extinct; and to speak of returning prosperity to her in such a condition was like talking of the restoration of vitality to withered bones. Besides, the exiles were, comparatively speaking, only a handful, and to picture Judah&#8217;s waste cities as being filled with flocks of men was like mocking the dejected with hopes certain to be dashed to the ground. The Exposition will show how the vision was fitted to dispel such despondent reflections. Yet diversity of sentiment prevails as to whether the vision was intended to predict an actual resurrection of the physically dead at the end of time, or merely to symbolize an ideal resurrection of Israel, then nationally dead.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> The view, that <em>what the prophet beheld in vision was the final resurrection of mankind<\/em>,<em> <\/em>though favored by Jerome, Calovius, and Kliefoth, must be abandoned, not because the doctrine of a general resurrection would not have been a powerful consolation to the pious-hearted in Israel, or because that doctrine was not then known, but because, in the prophet&#8217;s own explanation, the bones are declared to be those, not of the whole family of man, but merely of the house of Israel. At the same time, those interpreters are right who, like Hengstenberg, Keil, and Plumptre, hold that, even if the doctrine of a general resurrection had not been current in Ezekiel&#8217;s time, this vision was enough to call it into existence, and even to lend strong probability to its truth.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> Accordingly, the view is commonly preferred that, while an objective reality to the prophet&#8217;s mind, and by no means a mere rhetorical garb for its conceptions, <em>the vision was designed as a symbolic representation of Israel<\/em>&#8216;<em>s resuscitation; <\/em>though here again opinions diverge both as to what formed the mental background for the prophet&#8217;s use of such a symbol, and as to how it served to suggest the thought of Israel&#8217;s revival. While some, like Jerome and Hengstenberg, as above indicated, regard &#8220;the doctrine of the proper resurrection&#8221; as &#8220;the presupposition of the expanded figurative representation,&#8221; others, with Havernick, find its historical basis in such instances of raising from the dead as were performed by Elijah and Elisha, and perhaps also in such passages as <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>. If Smend thinks the vision was intended to assist Israel merely by suggesting that &#8220;the unbelievable might happen,&#8221; and Havernick that it was designed to inspire hope by presenting to the mind a lively picture of the creative, life-giving power of God, &#8220;which can raise even dead bones to life again,&#8221; Ewald finds its chief power to console in the thought &#8220;that the nation or individual which does not despair of the Divine Spirit will not be forsaken of this Spirit in any situation, but will always be borne on by it to new life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The hand of the Lord was upon me<\/strong>. The absence of the customary &#8220;and&#8221; (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 1:1<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 1:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 3:14<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>), wanting only once again (<span class='bible'>Eze 40:1<\/span>), appears to indicate something extraordinary and unusual in the prophet&#8217;s experience. In the words of Ewald, such a never-beheld sight one sees freely (by itself) in a moment of higher inspiration or never;&#8221; and that in this whole vision the prophet was the subject of a special and intensified inspiration is evident, not alone from the contents of the vision, but also from the language in which it is recorded. <strong>And carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord.<\/strong> So the Vulgate and Hitziga translation which Smend thinks might be justified by an appeal to <span class='bible'>Eze 11:24<\/span>, in which the similar phrase, &#8220;Spirit of God (<em>Elohim<\/em>),&#8221;<em> <\/em>occurs; though, with Grotius, Havernick, Keil, and others, he prefers the rendering of the <strong>LXX<\/strong>; &#8220;And Jehovah carried me out in the Spirit.&#8221; The Revised Version combines the two thus: &#8220;And he carried me out in the Spirit of the <em>Lord<\/em>.&#8221;<em> <\/em>Keil suggests that the words, &#8220;of God,&#8221; in <span class='bible'>Eze 11:24<\/span>, were omitted here because of the word &#8220;Jehovah&#8221; immediately following. <strong>And set me down in the midst of the valley.<\/strong> As the article indicates, the valley in the neighborhood of Tel-Abib, where the prophet received his first instructions concerning his mission (<span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>); although Hengstenberg holds, wrongly we think, that &#8220;the valley here has nothing to do with the valley in <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>.&#8221; <strong>Which<\/strong> (literally, <em>and it<\/em>)<em> <\/em><strong>was full of bones<\/strong>; <em>i.e.<\/em> of men who had been slaughtered there (<span class='bible'>Eze 3:9<\/span>; comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 39:11<\/span>), and whose corpses had been left unburied upon the face of the plain (<span class='bible'>Eze 3:3<\/span>), so that they were seen by the prophet. Whether these bones were actually in the valley, or merely formed part of the vision, can only be conjectured, though the latter opinion seems the more probable. At the same time, such a plain as is here depicted may well have been a battle-ground on which Assyrian and Chaldean armies had often met.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>And he caused me to pass by them round about<\/strong>. Not over, as Keil, Klie-foth, and Plumptre translate, but round about them, so as to view them from every side. The result of the prophet&#8217;s inspection of the bones was to excite within him a feeling of surprise which expressed itself in a twofold behold; the first occasioned by a contemplation of their number, <strong>very many<\/strong>, and their situation, <strong>in the open valley<\/strong>, literally, <em>upon the face of the valley; i.e.<\/em> not underground, where they could not have been seen, but upon the surface of the soil, and not piled up in heaps, but scattered over the ground; and the second by a discernment of their condition as <strong>very dry<\/strong>, so bleached and withered as to foreclose, not the possibility alone, but also the thought of their resuscitation.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Son of man, can these bones live? <\/strong>Whether or not this question was directed, as Plumptre surmises, to meet despairing thoughts which had arisen in the prophet&#8217;s own mind, it seems reasonable to hold, with Havernick, that the question was addressed to him as representing &#8220;ever against God the people, and certainly as to this point the natural and purely human consciousness of the same,&#8221; to which Israel&#8217;s restoration appeared as unlikely an occurrence as the reanimation of the withered bones that lay around. The extreme improbability, if not absolute impossibility, of the occurrence, at least to human reason and power, is perhaps pointed at in the designation &#8220;Son of man&#8221; here given to the prophet. The prophet&#8217;s answer, <strong>O Lord God, thou knowest<\/strong>, is not to be interpreted as proving that to the prophet hitherto the thought of a resurrection had been unfamiliar, if not completely absent, or as giving a direct reply either affirmative or negative to the question proposed to him, but merely as expressing the prophet&#8217;s sense of the greatness of the wonder suggested to his mind, with perhaps a latent acknowledgment that God alone had the power by which such a wonder could, and therefore alone also the knowledge whether it would, be accomplished (comp. <span class='bible'>Rev 7:14<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Prophesy upon<\/strong> (or, over) <strong>then bones<\/strong>. This instructionwhich shows Jehovah regarded the prophet&#8217;s answer as equivalent to an admission that the revivification of the bones lay within his (Jehovah&#8217;s) powerwas not a mere command to predict, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 6:2<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 11:4<\/span>, but an injunction to utter the Divine word through which the miracle (of creation, as it really was) should be performed. &#8220;The significance of the command lies in the fact that it taught the prophet that he was himself to be instrumental in the great work of resuscitation. He who had been so often troubled with the sense of impotence and failure, who had heard the people say of him, &#8216;Both he not speak parables?&#8217; who had been to them as the lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice, and nothing more than that, was at last to learn that the word of the Lord,&#8217; spoken by his lips, was mighty, and would not return to him void&#8221; (Plumptre).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I will cause breath to eater into you<\/strong>; literally,<em> I am causing breath <\/em>(or, <em>spirit<\/em>)<em> to enter into you<\/em>. The real agent, therefore, in the resuscitation of the bones was to be, not the prophet or the word, but Jehovah himself; and that the end aimed at by the Divine activity was &#8220;life&#8221; shows the breath spoken of (ruach) was not to be the wind, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>, or the Spirit, but the breath of life, as in <span class='bible'>Gen 6:17<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Gen 7:22<\/span> (comp. <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 104:30<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The process of revivification is now divided into two stagesa preliminary stage which should effect the reconstruction of the external skeleton, by bringing together its different parts and clothing them with <strong>sinews, flesh, and skin<\/strong> (comp. <span class='bible'>Job 10:11<\/span>); and a finishing stage, which should consist in animating, or &#8220;putting breath in&#8221; the reconstructed skeleton; corresponding so the two stages into which the process of man&#8217;s original creation was divided (<span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>). The result would be that the resurrected and reanimated bones, like newly made man, would know the Lord.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span><\/strong><strong>, <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>So I prophesied as I was commanded<\/strong>. The words uttered were without doubt those of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4-6<\/span>. The effect produced is depicted in its various steps. First, there resulted a noiseliterally, a <em>voice<\/em>which the Revisers take to have been &#8220;a thundering;&#8221; and Havernick, Keil, Smend, and others, &#8220;a sound&#8221; in general; but which Ewald, Hengstenberg, and Schroder, with more propriety, regard as having been an audible voice, if not, as Kliefoth supposes, the trumpet-blast or &#8220;voice of God,&#8221; which, according to certain New Testament passages, shall precede the resurrection and awaken the dead (<span class='bible'>Joh 5:25<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Joh 5:28<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Co 15:52<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Th 4:16<\/span>); perhaps, as Plumptre suggests, the &#8220;counterpart&#8221; thereof. <strong>Next, a shaking<\/strong>,  (<strong>LXX<\/strong>.); which the Revisers, following Kliefoth, understand to have been an earthquake, as in <span class='bible'>1Ki 19:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Amo 1:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 1:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 14:5<\/span> (comp. <span class='bible'>Mat 27:51<\/span>), and Ewald explains as &#8220;a peal of thunder running through the entire announcement,&#8221; as in <span class='bible'>Eze 3:12<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 3:13<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 38:19<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 38:20<\/span>; but which is better interpreted by Keil, Smend, and others as a rustling proceeding from a movement among the bones. Thirdly, <strong>the bones came together<\/strong> in the body as a whole, and in particular bone to his bone; <em>i.e.<\/em> each <strong>bone to the bone<\/strong> with which it was designed to be united, as e.g. &#8220;the upper to the lower part of the arm&#8221; (Schroder). <strong>Lastly, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above<\/strong>; or, as in the Revised Version, <em>there were sinews upon them<\/em>,<em> and flesh came up and skin covered them above; <\/em>precisely as Jehovah had announced to the prophet would take place (<span class='bible'>Eze 38:6<\/span>). Yet, though the external framework of the bodies was finished, there was <strong>no breath in them<\/strong><em>ruach<\/em> having still the same import as in <span class='bible'>Eze 38:5<\/span>. With this the preliminary stage in the reanimating process terminated.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The finishing stage began by the prophet receiving a command to <strong>prophesy unto the wind<\/strong> (better, <em>breath<\/em>,<em> <\/em>or <em>spirit<\/em>),<em> <\/em>and to summon it from the four &#8220;breaths,&#8221; or &#8220;winds&#8221; (in this case the preferable rendering), that it might breathe upon the slain. &#8220;Four winds&#8221; are mentioned, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 40:20<\/span>, to indicate the four quarters of heaven (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 5:10<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 5:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 12:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 17:21<\/span>), and perhaps also to suggest the immense quantity of vitalizing force demanded by the multitude of the dead (Smend), &#8220;the fullness and force of the Spirit&#8217;s operations&#8221; (Hengstenberg), or the notion that the Spirit, in resuscitating Israel, would make use of all the varied forces that were then working in the world (Plumptre). The designation of the dead as slain reveals that the resurrection intended was not that of men in general, but of the nation of Israel.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>An exceeding great army<\/strong>. This harmonizes with the feature in the vision which describes the bones as those of slain men, while also it may be viewed as foreshadowing the future destiny of Israel. &#8220;The bones of the slain on the field of battle, having been brought together, clothed with flesh, and a new life breathed into them, now they stand up, not as &#8216;a mixed multitude,&#8217; but as &#8216;an exceeding great army&#8217; prepared to take their part in the wars of Jehovah under new and happier conditions&#8221; (Plumptre). (On the phrase, &#8220;to stand upon the feet,&#8221; comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 2:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 14:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 11:11<\/span>.)<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> contain, according to most commentators, the Divine interpretation of the vision, Kliefoth alone contending that they furnish, not so much an exposition of the visionwhich, he thinks, must be explained independently, and which he regards as teaching the future resurrection of God&#8217;s peopleas an application to Israel&#8217;s ease of the doctrine contained in the vision.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>These bones are the whole house of Israel<\/strong>. On the principle that &#8220;God is his own best interpreter,&#8221; it should not be difficult to see that, whatever foreshadowings of the final resurrection of the just may be contained in the vision, its primary intention was to depict the political and national restoration of Israel (Ephraim and Judah) whose condition at the time the field of withered bones appropriately represented. That Hitzig errs in supposing the &#8220;bones&#8221; alluded to in this verse symbolized the portions of Ephraim and Judah then dead, instead of the portions still living (in exile), who considered themselves as practically dead, is apparent from the words that follow. <strong>Behold, they say<\/strong>. The complaint was manifestly taken from the popular sayings current among the people of the exile. Broken up, dispersed, expatriated, and despairing, the members of what had once been &#8220;the whole house of Israel&#8221; felt there was no hope more of recovering national life and unity. The cheerless character of the outlook they expressed by saying, Our bones (not the bones of the dead, but of the living) are driedmeaning, &#8220;The vital force of our nation is gone&#8221; (the bones being regarded in Scripture as the seat of the vital force comp. <span class='bible'>Psa 32:3<\/span>)<strong>our hope is lost<\/strong>our hope, <em>i.e; <\/em>of ever again returning to our own land or regaining national existenceand <strong>we are out off for our parts<\/strong>; literally, <em>we are cut off for ourselves; <\/em>which Gesenius explains to mean, &#8220;We are <em>lost<\/em>,&#8221;<em> <\/em>taking  as a <em>dativus pleonastteus ; <\/em>Hitzig, &#8220;We are reduced to ourselves;&#8221; Delitzsch and Keil, &#8220;We are cut off from the land of the living,&#8221; <em>i.e. <\/em>it is all over with us; Hengstenberg, &#8220;We are cut offa sad fact for us;&#8221; Revised Version, &#8220;We are clean cut off;&#8221; any one of which renders the force of the words (scrap. <span class='bible'>Lam 3:54<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-14<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I will open your graves<\/strong>. That this is not exact interpretation of the foregoing symbol may be argued from the fact that in the vision no mention is made of graves; yet the discrepancy to which it is supposed to point is more apparent than real. If the prophet was to see the bones, it was requisite that these should be above ground rather than beneath. On the other hand, when one speaks of a grave, it is not needful to always think of an underground tomb. To all intents and purposes a person is in his grave when, life being extinct, his body has returned to the dust. So, the opening of graves promised in Scripture is not so much, or always, the cleaving asunder of material sepulchers, as the bringing back to life of those whose bodies have returned to the dust. Hence the opening of Israel&#8217;s graves could only signify the reawakening of the politically and religiously dead people to national and spiritual life. This was the first step in the restoration of the future held up before the minds of the despairing people. The second, indicated by the clause, and allah put my Spirit in you, pointed, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:26<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span>, to their future endowment with higher moral and spiritual life than they had previously possessed, and not merely, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:5<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:6<\/span>, to their political and national resuscitation (Smend). The last step, the re-establishment of the reconstructed nation in Palestine, was guaranteed by the word, <strong>I will place you in your own land.<\/strong> The circumstance that this is twice repeated (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:12<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:14<\/span>) shows that whatever view be entertained of the ultimate occupation of Canaan by Israel, this was the goal towards which the vision looked. That it received partial, limited, and temporary fulfillment of a literal kind in the restoration under Zerubbabel and Ezra, is undeniable; that it will ever obtain historical realization of a permanent sort is doubtful; that it will eventually find its highest significance when God&#8217;s spiritual Israel, the Church of Christ, takes possession of the heavenly Canaan, is one of the clearest and surest announcements of Scripture.<\/p>\n<p><strong>NOTE<\/strong>.On the above nine verses (6-14) Plumptre writes, &#8220;We can scarcely fail to find, in our Lord&#8217;s words in <span class='bible'>Joh 5:1-47<\/span>; something like an echo of Ezekiel&#8217;s teaching. There also, though the truth of the general resurrection is declared more clearly, the primary thought is that of a spiritual resurrection. Further, we may note that the complement of Ezekiel&#8217;s message is found in the language of <span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span>. Taking the two together, we find both reproduced in the teaching of <span class='bible'>Joh 5:1-47<\/span>.&#8221; (manuscript notes).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;word&#8221; embodied in this section was probably communicated to the prophet at the close of the preceding vision. Its connection with this is apparent, treating as it does of the union of the then severed branches of the house of Israel, and of the subsequent prosperity which should attend united Israel under the rule of the Messianic King of the future. That this oracle, like the former, had only a temporary and partial accomplishment in the return from captivity is so obvious as to stand in no need of demonstration. Its true fulfillment must be sought in the future ingathering of Israel to the Christian Church.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:16<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Take thee one stick, and write<\/strong>. The symbolic action thus prescribed to the prophet was manifestly based on the well-known historical fact that the tribes of Israel, in Mosaic times, had been represented by a rod, on which was inscribed the name of the tribe (<span class='bible'>Num 17:2<\/span>); but whether the stick Ezekiel was instructed to take was a staff,  (<strong>LXX<\/strong>; Hirernick, Hitzig, Kliefoth, and Smend), or a block (Ewald), or simply a piece (Keil, Schroder) of wood on which a few words might be traced, cannot be decided. On the first stick the prophet was directed to write, <strong>For Judah, and the house of his companions<\/strong>; <em>i.e.<\/em> for the southern kingdom and those of the northern tribes who adhered to it, as <em>e<\/em>.<em>g<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Benjamin, Levi, and part of Simeon, with those devout Jehovah-worshippers who from time to time emigrated from other tribes and settled in the land of Judah (<span class='bible'>2Ch 11:12-16<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch 15:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ch 30:11<\/span>, 2Ch 30:18, 31; <span class='bible'>2Ch 31:1<\/span>; though by Wellhausen, Smend, and others, such passages are pronounced unhistorical). On the second stick also the prophet was directed to write; but whether <strong>For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim and <\/strong>for (or, <em>of<\/em>)<em> <\/em><strong>all the house of Israel his companions <\/strong>(Authorized and Revised Versions), or &#8220;For Joseph and the whole house of Israel&#8221; (Keil), or simply &#8220;For Joseph&#8221; (Ewald, Havernick, Smend), cannot be determined. Each interpretation can be supported by quite reasonable considerations. For the first may be pleaded that it best accords with the natural sense of the text; for the second, that the phrase, <em>the stick of Ephraim<\/em>,<em> <\/em>appears to be explanatory of and in opposition to &#8220;For Joseph;&#8221; for the third, that <em>all the house of Israel <\/em>stands, like &#8220;Ephraim,&#8221; under the regimen of &#8220;stick.&#8221; The introduction of Joseph as the representative of the northern kingdom rests, not on the fact that Joseph&#8217;s was the most honorable name among the ten tribes (Havernick), but on the circumstance that the tribe of Joseph, as represented by Ephraim and Manasseh, constituted the main body of the northern kingdom. The addition of Ephraim&#8217;s name is best accounted for by remembering that in his hand lay the hegemony of the kingdom. &#8220;All the house of Israel his companions&#8221; signified the rest of the ten tribes. That the two sticks, when joined together in the prophet&#8217;s hand, were to become one cannot signify that they were then and there to be miraculously united.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:18-20<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Wilt thou not show us what thou meanest by these<\/strong>? literally, what these (two pieces of wood) <em>are to thee<\/em>.<em> <\/em>The suggestion that such a request would be preferred to Ezekiel makes it clear he was meant to perform the symbolic action in public. That his countrymen should fail to understand this action accorded with their proverbial dullness of apprehension (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 12:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 24:19<\/span>). In explanation, the prophet was enjoined to <strong>say unto them<\/strong>, while holding the sticks in his hand, that just as he had made the sticks one in his hand, so would God make one in his hand the two kingdoms symbolized by the sticks. The union of the sticks was to be Ezekiel&#8217;s work (verse 17, &#8220;in thy hand&#8221;); the union of the kingdoms should be Jehovah&#8217;s (verse 19, &#8220;in my hand&#8221;). The separation of the kingdoms had been Ephraim&#8217;s doing (&#8220;in the hand of Ephraim&#8221;); their combination should be God&#8217;s (&#8220;in my hand&#8221;). Their severance had been effected, on the part of Ephraim, by an unlawful breaking off from the house of Judah, and the establishment of an independent kingdom; their unification should be brought about by the putting down of Ephraim, and the confirming of the crown rights of Judah. The translation, <strong>And will put them with him, even with the stick of Judah<\/strong>, signifying &#8220;And will put the tribes of Israel with him.&#8221; <em>i.e.<\/em> the tribe of Judah, supported by the <strong>LXX<\/strong>; and preferred by Ewald, Smend, and others, is superior to that of the Revised Version margin, &#8220;And will put them together with it, unto [or, &#8216; to be&#8217;] the stick of Judah.&#8221; Keil s rendering, &#8220;I will take the stick of Joseph  and the tribes of Israel his companions, which I put thereon [literally, &#8216;and I put them,&#8217; viz. the tribes, &#8216;upon <em>it<\/em>,&#8217;<em> i.e. <\/em>the stick of Joseph] with the stick of Judah,&#8221; is too involved.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21-28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>explain how the unification of the two kingdoms should be brought about. The first step should be the bringing of the people home to their own land (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>); the second, their purification from idolatry (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>); the third, the installation over them, thus united and purified, of one King, the ideal David of the future, or the Messiah (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span>); the fourth, the establishment with them of Jehovah&#8217;s covenant of peace (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span>), and the permanent erection amongst them of Jehovah&#8217;s temple (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span><\/strong><strong>, <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen<\/strong>. That tills promise was intended to find an initial and partial fulfillment in the return from Babylon is undoubted. That it was also designed to look across the centuries towards the final ingathering of God&#8217;s spiritual Israel into their permanent inheritance, the heavenly Canaan, an examination of its terms shows. These clearly presuppose a wider dispersion of Israel than had then, <em>i.e.<\/em> in Ezekiel&#8217;s day, taken place; and that Israel has never yet been made <strong>one nation upon the mountains of Israel<\/strong>, is incontestable. Nor is there ground for expecting she ever will be. Not even after the exile closed did all Israel return to Palestine. Nor did it ever come true in their experience that one king was king to them all, since, in point of fact, they never afterwards had an earthly sore-reign at all who was properly independent. If, therefore, the prince who in the future should shepherd them was not to be a temporal monarch, but the Messiah, the probability is that the Israel he should shepherd was designed to be, not Israel after the flesh, but Israel after the spirit, who should walk in his judgments and observe his statutes, and <em>who<\/em>,<em> <\/em>in the fullness of the times, should develop out into the Christian Church. Hence it seems reasonable to conclude that <strong>their own land<\/strong>, into which they should eventually be brought, would be not so much the veritable soil from which their ancestors had been expelled, as the country or region in which the new, rejuvenated, reunited, and reformed Israel should dwell, which, again, should be n territory cleansed from sin and idolatry, so as to render it a fit abode for a people devoted to righteousness. Viewed in this light, <em>their own land <\/em>was first Canaan, in so far as after the exile it was cleansed from idolatry; now it is those portions of the earth in which the Christian Church has been planted, so far as these are influenced by the holy principles of religion; finally, it will be the new heavens and the new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness (scrap. <span class='bible'>Eze 34:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:24<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The dwelling-places wherein they have sinned<\/strong>, from which Jehovah premises to save them, are in accordance with the views expressed above, not, as Hengstenberg and Hitzig conjecture, the dwelling-places of the exile in which the people then were, but the dwelling-places in Canaan in which they had formerly transgressed, but would in future be preserved from transgressing. The idea is, as Schroder suggests, the localization of transgression which is viewed as proceeding from the dwelling-places in which it is committed; or, according to Plumptre, the conception is that, as their habitations had formerly been contaminated by their detestable things, &#8220;the worship of teraphim and such like, if not worse,&#8221; so Jehovah would save them from that contamination. The proposal to alter the text by the transposition of a letter, converting <em>moshbhothehem<\/em>, &#8220;dwelling-places,&#8221; into <em>meshubhothehem<\/em>,&#8221; defections,&#8221; as in <span class='bible'>Jer 3:22<\/span> (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 36:29<\/span>), though adopted by some ancient versions and favored by Ewald and Smend, is not necessary.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The phrase, <strong>my servant David<\/strong> (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 34:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 33:21<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Jer 33:22<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Jer 33:26<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 78:70<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 89:3<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Psa 89:20<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 144:10<\/span>), goes back to the Messianic promise of <span class='bible'>2Sa 7:12-16<\/span>, and cannot be satisfactorily explained as signifying the Davidic house (Smend), or as pointing to &#8220;a line of true rulers, each faithfully representing the ideal David as the faithful Ruler, the true Shepherd of his people&#8221; (Plumptre, on <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23<\/span>), inasmuch as Israel, after Ezekiel&#8217;s day, never possessed any such line of rulers, and certainly no such line continued <strong>forever<\/strong>. The only feasible exegesis is that which understands Jehovah&#8217;s servant David to be Messiah, or Jesus Christ, of whom the writer to the Hebrews (<span class='bible'>Eze 1:8<\/span>) says. &#8220;Thy throne, O God, is forever and ever.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span><\/strong><strong>, <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>With the people thus gathered (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span>), united (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>), purified (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>), and established under the rule of Messiah (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span>), Jehovah makes a <strong>covenant of peace<\/strong> (see on <span class='bible'>Eze 34:25<\/span>; and comp. <span class='bible'>Psa 89:3<\/span>), further characterized as <strong>an everlasting covenant<\/strong>; or, <em>covenant of eternity <\/em>(see on <span class='bible'>Eze 16:60<\/span>; and comp. <span class='bible'>Gen 17:7<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 55:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 32:40<\/span>); which guarantees the continuance between him and them of undying friendship, conjoined with the bestowment on his part and the enjoyment on theirs of the highest social and religious blessings. First, national existence and secure possession of the soil. <strong>I will place<\/strong> (literally, <em>give<\/em>)<em> <\/em><strong>them<\/strong>, either to their land, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 17:22<\/span> (Smend), or to be a nation (Keil), or perhaps both (Kliefoth). Next, steady increase of population<strong>I will multiply them<\/strong> (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 36:37<\/span>; Le <span class='bible'>Eze 26:9<\/span>). Thirdly, perpetual residence of Jehovah amongst them, I will set (or, <em>give<\/em>)<em> <\/em><strong>my sanctuary<\/strong> (<em>mikdashi<\/em>,<em> <\/em>conveying the idea of sanctity) <strong>in the midst of them for evermore <\/strong>(comp. Le <span class='bible'>Eze 26:11<\/span>); <strong>my tabernacle<\/strong> (<em>mishkani<\/em>, the idea being that of residence or dwelling) <strong>also shall be with them<\/strong>; or, <em>over <\/em>themthe figure being derived from the elevated site of the temple, which overhung the city (<span class='bible'>Psa 69:29<\/span>), and intended to suggest the idea of Jehovah&#8217;s protecting grace. That this promise was in part implemented by the erection of the second temple in the days of Zerubbabel may be conceded, and also that Ezekiel himself may have looked forward to a literal restoration of the sanctuary; but its highest realization must be sought for, first in the Incarnation (<span class='bible'>Joh 1:14<\/span>), next in God&#8217;s inhabitation of the Church through the Spirit (<span class='bible'>2Co 6:16<\/span>), and finally in his tabernacling with redeemed men in the heavenly Jerusalem (<span class='bible'>Rev 21:3<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Rev 21:22<\/span>). The last blessing specified is the intimate communion of God with his people, and of them with him<strong>Yea, I will be their God, and they shall be my people. <\/strong>This, which formed the kernel of the old covenant with Israel (Le <span class='bible'>Eze 26:12<\/span>), became the essence of the new covenant with the Israel of the restoration (<span class='bible'>Eze 11:20<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:28<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 30:22<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 31:33<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 32:38<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 8:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 13:9<\/span>), but only attained to complete realization in the relation of Christian believers to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ (<span class='bible'>2Co 6:16<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> describes the effect which such a glorious transformation of Israel&#8217;s character and condition, should produce upon the heathen world. They should recognize from his presence amongst his people, symbolized by the establishment in their midst of his sanctuary, that he had both the power and the will to sanctify them, by making them inwardly as well as outwardly holy; and, recognizing this, they would seek admittance to the congregation and fellowship of God&#8217;s spiritual Israel. <\/p>\n<p><strong>HOMILETICS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The valley of dry bones.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> A <strong>VISION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>RESTORATION<\/strong>. Undoubtedly, the restoration of Israel is the immediate thought in the mind of Ezekiel. He sees his people stricken to death. The nation is virtually dead. The exiled citizens of Jerusalem have lost all spirit and energy. But with the restoration will come a restored energy to the people. The nation also will once more rise up as from the dead. These resurrections of communities have been seen more than once in history; <em>e<\/em>.<em>g<\/em>.<em> <\/em>when papal Rome rose on the ashes of imperial Rome, when Germany was reunited under the Emperor William, when France astonished the world by her renewed strength and prosperity after the terrible invasion of 1870. But while this material form of national resurrection is not infrequent, a moral resurrection is more rare. Byron was enthusiastic for the liberation of Greece, and our age has witnessed the establishment of a free Greek kingdom at Athens. But it remains to be seen whether the genius of ancient Greece will ever return to its old seat. Athens may be rebuilt, and yet Athene (the goddess of intellect) may still slumber in the grave. A true national restoration is only possible as a work of God. Degenerate nations need more than liberation from external tyrannythey need national regeneration.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> A <strong>VISION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>REDEMPTION<\/strong>. The people could not be truly restored unless they were reformed and renewed in heart and character. Hence the strange and striking form in which the promise of restoration is given. It appears as a resurrection. What happened to ancient Israel happens to all the people of God. They are restored to true life and prosperity by means of a spiritual resurrection. Souls are dead in sin. The world is like a valley of dry bonesugly in its wickedness, helpless in its confusion, utterly unable to save itself. But Christ has come to give new life to the souls of men. His resurrection is a type of the soul&#8217;s resurrection. St. Paul assumes that Christians are &#8220;risen with Christ&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Col 3:1<\/span>). The gospel is thus supremely a message of life. It comes to us in our most degraded, desolate, despairing condition. It brings life and incorruptibility to light.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> A <strong>VISION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>RESURRECTION<\/strong>. A fair reading of this passage will not permit us to take it as a promise of an individual resurrection after natural death. It is a parable of the restoration of Israel. The notion that the very bones of the dead are to be pieced together and clothed with flesh, that the scattered dust of corpses is to be gathered from the four quarters of the earth, that the very same animal organism that once lived and died and decayed or was devoured by worms shall be built up again, is a coarse, degrading idea. It gives no suggestion of a future exalted, spiritual life. It is beset with monstrous difficulties when we look at it in the light or&#8217; the facts of nature. If this old conception of the resurrection be set forth as the only Christian idea, men will not accept it, and the glorious hope of any resurrection or future life at all will be endangered. But this idea is quite contrary to the profound teaching of St. Paul, who says expressly, &#8220;Thou sowest not that body that shall be,&#8221; and &#8220;Flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdom of heaven&#8221; (<span class='bible'>1Co 15:50<\/span>). The Bible teaches the resurrection of the <em>dead<\/em>,<em> <\/em>but not the resurrection of <em>flesh<\/em>.<em> <\/em>The old, coarse, impossible notion has no support in the passage before us. We have here a symbolical vision, and it is no more to be taken literally than the illustration of the two sticks that follows (verse 16). Still, as a figure and an image it is strikingly suggestive of the future resurrection. He who restores nations and souls by quickening grace will also awaken them that sleep in Jesus, and raise them up, a glorious army redeemed from death.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span><\/strong><strong>, <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Prophesying to the dry bones and to the wind.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>PROPHESYING<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>DRY<\/strong> <strong>BONES<\/strong>. Ezekiel beholds the dismal sight of a valley of dry bones. It is a scene of silent desolation. No picture of death could be more complete. The human remains are not even covered with flesh. He sees bones, not corpses. The bones are drythe vultures have picked them clean, and they have been left to bleach in the sun. They are not even lying in their natural order as ranks of complete skeletons. They are scattered about. The unclean scavengers that have been at work among them have ruthlessly torn them joint from joint, and mixed them up in apparently hopeless confusion. Was there ever a scene of more perfect and utter deadness? Yet the prophet is required to preach to these dry bones! St. Peter preaching to the fishes and St. Francis preaching to the birds had at least living audiences, though soulless ones. But here we have a preacher to dry bones. What is most remarkable is that the preaching is effective. An awful scene is witnessedthe bones shake and move and fit themselves together, and flesh, sinews, and skin cover them. All this is illustrative of much preaching to men, and it contains a great encouragement for the preacher. Some audiences are almost like Ezekiel&#8217;s valley. They are cold, dead, utterly indifferent. These people are, indeed, as so many dry bones. The preacher despairs of doing any good to them. So long as he despairs he will do no good. If Ezekiel had not had obedience, faith, and energy, he would not have taken the trouble to preach to the bones; and then the great resurrection would not have taken place. It is our duty to preach to aft, despairing of no one. We are to sow beside all waters. God can quicken the dead. Note that Ezekiel&#8217;s preaching was prophesying, <em>i.e; <\/em>it was speaking as God&#8217;s messenger and in his power. This is the only preaching that will succeed with the indifferent. The preacher to the godless must be a prophet. He must speak God&#8217;s truth in God&#8217;s strength. Mere reasoning or persuading is not sufficient. But prophesying does succeed again and again with the most obdurate. It stirs dry bones.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>PROPHESYING<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>WIND<\/strong>. Ezekiel had a measure of successa wonderful success it appeared to be. The bones fitted themselves together and were clothed with flesh. Still they were not alive. All the result attained hitherto is that the scattered skeletons have become compact corpses. But this is but a valley of death. Now, the first preaching has done its work. It is useless merely to repeat it. A new thing must be tried. Ezekiel must prophesy to the wind to breathe on the slain, and make them live. When he does this the wind comes, and there stands up an exceeding great army of living men. The wind is here regarded as the power of life. It is typical of the Spirit of God (<span class='bible'>Joh 3:8<\/span>). Life can only come from God&#8217;s Spirit. The most stirring preaching will not create it. We may preach God&#8217;s truth in God&#8217;s strength, and good results may follow, but not the new birth of the Divine life unless the Spirit of God comes and produces it. Preaching does not regenerate. After prophesying to the bones Ezekiel must prophesy to the wind. Preaching must be followed by prayer. The preacher must call down the power of God to his aid if his work is to issue in living results. We need more prophesying to the wind. If life is to take possession of dead souls, we must pray more for the coming of the quickening Spirit. He does come in response to prayer. If the first kind of prophesying is not barren, assuredly the second will not be. When God&#8217;s Spirit is invoked in the preaching of God&#8217;s Word, exceeding great armies of souls may rise from the death of sin.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-22<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The two sticks.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Under the image of two sticks that are joined together, Ezekiel is to symbolize the reunion of Israel and Judah that is to take place in the great restoration. We may see here illustrated a great principle, viz. that <em>reunion accompanies restoration<\/em>.<em> <\/em>It was so as a fact in the history of Israel After the restoration we no longer meet with the rivalry of the two nations that made the previous history one long quarrel. The people return to their land as one nation, for no doubt there were representatives of the ten tribes (<span class='bible'>Luk 2:36<\/span>) as well as people of Judah in the caravans that traveled back from the Captivity. This must have been understood in Christian times. Thus St. James writes to &#8220;<em>the<\/em> <em>twelve tribes<\/em>&#8220;<em> <\/em>(<span class='bible'>Jas 1:1<\/span>; cf. also <span class='bible'>1Pe 1:1<\/span>). Christ restores man to himself and to God. In doing go he reunites man to his fellow-men. Let us see how this happy result is brought about, observing some of its causes.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> A <strong>COMMON<\/strong> <strong>SORROW<\/strong>. Here the foundation of the reunion was laid. Both of the rival nations were driven into captivity.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> <em>Sorrow should soften animosity<\/em>.<em> <\/em>In our proud prosperity we may foolishly imagine that we can afford to quarrel. There then seems to be an immense reserve of resources, and we can be lavish in squandering what should be regarded as the riches of friendship. But in truth we need friends, and we desire to cherish them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>Trouble subdues pride<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> <em>Trouble elicits sympathy<\/em>.<em> <\/em>They who have passed through the deep waters of affliction are usually most ready to sympathize with their sorrowing brethren. If we are &#8220;partners in distress,&#8221; we are the more naturally drawn together. Perhaps this result will give us one explanation of the mystery of sorrow.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> A <strong>COMMON<\/strong> <strong>BLESSING<\/strong>. The call to return is for all Israel. All men are called to share in the restoring mercies of Christ. Christians who have responded to the gracious invitation of the gospel and entered into the joy of the new life have all one experience in common. That was a happy day in which hearts leaped for joy when the beloved hills of Palestine came into sight in the blue distance. Surely all old feuds would be forgotten as the restored captives actually walked on their own land and built the cities and planted the vineyards while their gladness overflowed. &#8220;When the Lord turned again the captivity of Zion,&#8221; they said, &#8220;we were like them that dream. Then was our mouth filled with laughter, and our tongue with singing: then said they among the heathen, The Lord hath done great things for them. The Lord hath done great things for us; whereof we are glad&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Psa 126:1-3<\/span>). That was no time for reviving old feuds. Sharing the common blessings of the gospel, we should forget our old quarrels.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> A <strong>COMMON<\/strong> <strong>RELIGION<\/strong>. Religion, which should be the great bond of union, has become the great divider of men. People who could agree to live together peaceably on all other accounts fall out about their religion and stand apart in hopeless divisions on this one ground. Thus Israel and Judah were divided by their religion. Israel was jealous of the temple privileges of Jerusalem, and Judah was indignant at the calf-worship of Israel. But now the idolatry is over, and a new temple is to be built at which all parties can work. Christ is our Peace (<span class='bible'>Eph 2:14<\/span>). He breaks down distinctions of race and party. It is the Christlessness of religion that makes religious differences. If we all had more of Christ we should all be more united; for he is the one center of union in the Christian Church.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The fascination of idolatry.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Idolatry was a besetting sin of Israel. No sooner were the people delivered from Egypt by the great unseen God than they made a golden calf. Intercourse with the Moabites led to idolatry in a later stage of the wilderness-wanderings (<span class='bible'>Num 25:2<\/span>). The story of Micah and his god gives us a glimpse of the gross popular superstition that was to be found in Israel during the days of the judges (<span class='bible'>Jdg 17:4<\/span>) Solomon in all his glory was lured to idolatry by foreign heathenish wives (<span class='bible'>1Ki 11:4<\/span>). The separated northern tribes emphasized their schism by setting up calves at Dan and Bethel. The prophets were compelled to denounce idolatry, and the doom of the Captivity was largely earned by this sin (<span class='bible'>Eze 14:7<\/span>). What is its essential character? and whence does it draw its singular fascination?<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SURVIVAL<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>ANTIQUITY<\/strong>. Joshua reminded the people that their fathers worshipped &#8220;other gods&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Jos 24:2<\/span>). The Hebrews cannot be described as an originally and naturally monotheistic race. Monotheism does not seem to be innate in any branch of the Semitic family. On the contrary, it is much more readily traced in the early history of the Aryan races. The Semitic instinct rather points to cruel and lustful nature-worship, accompanied by gross idolatry, although by the inspiration of their prophets the Hebrews were called out of this low form of religion to the worship of the holy Jehovah. Superstitions of idolatry linger long after a more spiritual worship is established. This is seen in missionary lands; and even in Europe heathenish customs are mixed up with Christian belief. Much of the corruption of Christianity in Romanism is just the perpetuation of the old paganism under Christian names.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>CONTAGION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>EXAMPLE<\/strong>. The Jews were surrounded by heathen peoples. They were called to a lonely destiny of separation. But they did not always realize their vocation. Their later idolatry was an importation from their neighbors. Men are much influenced in religion by what is called &#8220;the spirit of the times,&#8221; by the fashion of the day, by the stream of prevalent customs. It is hard to make our religion a continual protest against popular ideas and practices.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>CHARM<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SENSUOUS<\/strong>. Idols were visible, tangible objects. It was so much easier to offer worship to such things than to the unseen God of heaven. It is our perpetual temptation to neglect the spiritual for the material. We do not prostrate ourselves before calves of gold; but we are tempted to worship coins of gold. Our idol-temples are the marts of commerce. The British Parthenon is the Bank of England. The whole tendency of life is towards absorption in things temporal, concrete, visibleeating and drinking, clothing and building, merry-making and&#8217; amusements. Even in religion we tend to degenerate to the sensuous, and music and pageantry threaten to supersede worship and meditation. The visible ritual endangers the invisible devotion. All this is idolatry.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>COMFORT<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> A <strong>LOW<\/strong> <strong>IDEAL<\/strong>. The intellectual strain of spiritual worship is not its most exacting characteristic. God is not only unseen; he is holy, and he can only be approached with clean hands and a pure heart. The religion of Israel was a religion of holiness. This was its most marked feature in contrast with heathenism. It was possible to satisfy all the demands of idolatry and yet to remain in sin. Nay, much of the monstrous ritual of idol-worship consisted in the indulgence of licentious passions. It was much easier to worship idols than to worship the holy God. A worldly life is compatible with a low moral standard. Hence the temptation to be satisfied with this life. But Christ calls us to the loftiest ideal and to a warfare against sin. We must take up the cross if we would follow him.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span><\/strong><strong>, <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Christ the King.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>KINGSHIP<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CHRIST<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> A <strong>GLORIOUS<\/strong> <strong>FACT<\/strong>. In Ezekiel it is only predicted. To Christians it is an accomplished fact. Christ has come and has realized the ideal of ancient prophecy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> He is of the <em>line of David<\/em>.<em> <\/em>He was welcomed as the Son of David (<span class='bible'>Luk 18:38<\/span>). He gathers up the old traditions of Israel&#8217;s golden age, and lifts their promises to a higher fulfillment.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> He is a <em>Shepherd<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Aristotle quoted Homer to show that the true king should be a shepherd. Christ rules tenderly and with regard to the welfare of his people, not like the cruel, selfish, despotic monarchs of heathen empires.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> He is God&#8217;s <em>Servant<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Therefore<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> it is God&#8217;s will that we should have Christ as our King, and<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Christ rules according to the will of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>KINGSHIP<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CHRIST<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> A <strong>CENTER<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong>. &#8220;And they all shall have <em>one<\/em> Shepherd.&#8221; Judah and Israel are to have but one King, and are to be united under the reign of this new David. &#8220;The envy also of Ephraim shall depart,&#8221; etc. (<span class='bible'>Isa 11:13<\/span>) The supreme advantage of the institution of a monarchy is that it cements the people under it into a consolidated unity. Christ is the Head of the body, and as such he harmonizes the movements of all the limbs. It is strange that Christendom should be broken up into innumerable mutually antagonistic factions. But Christ is not responsible for those divisions. On the contrary, it is just the loss of Christ in the Churches that leads to their severance.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>KINGSHIP<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CHRIST<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>AN<\/strong> <strong>INSPIRATION<\/strong> <strong>FOR<\/strong> <strong>OBEDIENCE<\/strong>. &#8220;They shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes to do them.&#8221; It is more difficult to obey an abstract law than to serve a living person. Christianity by no means gives us a dispensation from the obligation of obedience. Our Lord expects his disciples to &#8220;exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Mat 5:20<\/span>), and it is possible to do this by his new method. No longer painfully toiling along the dreary road of formal legalism, Christians are inspired by an enthusiasm for their Master which fires their love and zeal to do or suffer on his behalf; and this glorious, loving service of Christ is just the obedience and righteousness transformed into a new and attractive shape.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>KINGSHIP<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CHRIST<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> A <strong>FOUNDATION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>SOLID<\/strong> <strong>PROSPERITY<\/strong>. Under the new David the people will live at peace in the possession of their land. The service of Christ introduces all Christians to a splendid inheritance. The Christian life is not a wild knight-errantry. It is the enjoyment of a happy and peaceful kingdom. When Christ&#8217;s reign is universal, society will be happy and prosperous. Even now inward peace and rich treasures of Divine grace are the portion of his people on earth, while they are cheered with the prospect of entering into a wonderful &#8220;inheritance of the saints in light&#8221; when the present life is over.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>KINGSHIP<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CHRIST<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>BE<\/strong> <strong>ETERNAL<\/strong>. &#8220;My Servant David shall be their Prince forever.&#8221; The reign of Christ was never so widespread as it is in this nineteenth century. His sun dawned nearly two thousand years ago. It is still climbing to its meridian. Sunset Christ shall never have. The Light of the world is the light of the ages&#8221;Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and today, and forever&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Heb 13:8<\/span>). <\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>God&#8217;s tabernacle.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>MIDST<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong>. He is not a distant divinity seated on cloud-capped Olympus or hidden in remote heavenly regions. He visits the earth and even dwells there. We recognize his presence in the beauty of spring and the wealth of autumn; we hear his voice in the thunderstorm, and we see his glory in the sunshine. He haunts the cathedral aisles of the forest; he unveils his glory beneath the blue dome that covers the fair fields of nature. Assuredly he is in our homes shedding peace and love; he draws very near to our souls in the night of sorrow; and he smiles upon us in our innocent joys. Moreover, while God is thus universally present, he manifests himself especially to his people as he does not unto the world (<span class='bible'>Joh 14:22<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Joh 14:23<\/span>). This is not on account of any unreasonable partiality, any unfair favoritism. He says justly, &#8220;I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Pro 8:17<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> A <strong>PROTECTION<\/strong> <strong>FOR<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong>. He says that his tabernacle shall be not merely &#8220;with them,&#8221; but &#8220;over them,&#8221; as the phrase should be rendered. We think of a sheltering tent protecting the people from the heat of the sun by day and from the frosts by night. In the olden times the tabernacle was planted in the midst of the camp, but the people generally were not admitted to its covered shrine, which was reserved for a privileged priesthood. Now, however, the veil is rent, and now all God&#8217;s people are priests, as the apostle to the Jews declared (<span class='bible'>1Pe 2:9<\/span>). Now, therefore, God&#8217;s tabernacle is not only in the midst of the camp, gazed at with admiration by a surrounding host. It is spread over the people of God, because they are allowed to enter its most holy place. Our safety lies in our nearness to God, and when we truly seek to enter into close communion with Heaven we find that there is a sense of security and peace that can be found in no other way.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> God then <em>protects from trouble<\/em>,<em> <\/em>even when the blow falls, by strengthening us to bear it.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> He protects <em>from temptation <\/em>by giving us a joy greater than that of the pleasures of sin.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> He protects from <em>the guilt of the past<\/em>,<em> <\/em>by taking away our sins and giving free forgiveness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4.<\/strong> He protects from <em>the fear of the future<\/em>,<em> <\/em>by assuring us that he will never leave us nor forsake us.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.  GOD<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong> <strong>SECURES<\/strong> <strong>THEIR<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>HIM<\/strong>. &#8220;Yea, I will be their God, and they shall be my people.&#8221; It is difficult to love and trust an absent Being, but nearness stimulates affection and confidence.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> The <em>people own God<\/em>.<em> <\/em>He is &#8220;their God.&#8221; This signifies willing acceptance following deliberate choice. No man has a true experience of religion until he can say from his heart, &#8220;The Lord is <em>my <\/em>God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>God owns his people<\/em>.<em> <\/em>They are his by right of creation; they are still more his by right of redemption&#8221; bought with a price.&#8221; God&#8217;s ownership implies<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> his right to do as he will with his people;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> his care to preserve his possession;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> his joy in dwelling among his children.<\/p>\n<p>Observe, in conclusion:<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> <em>Sin removes the tabernacle of God from our midst<\/em>.<em> <\/em>When Israel sinned, the tabernacle was pitched outside the camp.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>Christ brings Goal back into closest association with us<\/em>.<em> <\/em>In Christ he &#8220;pitches his tent among us&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Joh 1:14<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The sanctification of the Church a gospel for the world.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SANCTIFICATION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>CHURCH<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> <em>Its form<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Sanctification is essentially a being set apart for God. This involves two ideas.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> Separation. The Jews were separated from the heathen. Christians are called out from the world. Christ founded the Church partly in order that Christians might realize the brotherhood of a family within its borders, and partly that they might be divided from the heathenish world. The superficial Christianizing of the world, and the more than superficial worldliness of the Church, have combined to obscure the old lines of demarcation. But we cannot afford to neglect them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> Dedication. The separated people are set apart for God, as young Samuel was separated from his house and given to the Lord. This is the explanation of the separation; here we see its purpose. The separation does not take place for the sake of making a difference, but in order that the people of God may wholly give themselves to his service.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>Its character<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Though the pure idea of sanctification is formal rather than moral, and means essentially a setting apart for God, it is only realized in the experience of personal holiness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> We can only be separated from the world by giving up the sin of the world. The mark of separation is purity of character.<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> We can only be devoted to God by purity of heart. Only thus can we see God (<span class='bible'>Mat 5:8<\/span>). Only thus can our service be acceptable in his sight. Thus sanctification comes to be equivalent to making pure and holy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> Its cause. God sanctifies his people. They must desire and seek the sanctification, but they cannot create it. Men may separate themselves from the world in external profession and habit, living as hermits in the wilderness, immuring themselves in cloistered monasteries, repudiating conventional manners with Puritan precision; and all the while they may remain worldly at heart. They may offer themselves formally for the service of God, and take office in the Church, and yet be only self-seekers and servants of sin. As purification is essential to sanctification, sanctification must be a Divine act. This is the great work of the Holy Spirit. God separates, consecrates, and purifies his people through the action of his Spirit in them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>INFLUENCE<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SANCTIFICATION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>CHURCH<\/strong> <strong>ON<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>WORLD<\/strong>. The heathen shall know that God sanctifies Israel. This fact will be a witness to the pagan world of the power and character of God. It will be a great sermon in history, a preaching in events. No preaching can be more powerful. The greatest hindrance to missionary work consists in the wicked conduct of persons from Christian lands who visit heathen countries. The example of the Christian life is its best help. Christ preached by his life more than by his words. His cross on Calvary is more eloquent than his Sermon on the Mount. If we desire to give a new impulse to missionary enterprises we must begin at home. We must first of all consecrate our own hearts and lives afresh to our Master; we must seek a new baptism of the Holy Ghost for the sanctification of the Church. The Pentecost that brought a spiritual blessing to the little company in the upper room at Jerusalem started the great evangelistic triumphs of the apostolic age. While it may be well to discuss missionary methods, we much more need to seek a spiritual revival of the home Churches, that a new impulse may be given to the most fruitful form of missionizingthe living influence of a consecrated people.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HOMILIES BY J.R. THOMSON<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-3<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The valley of death.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The picture so impressively presented in these verses is a picture of the Israelitish people in their Eastern captivity. The national life is for a period suspended. The people are dead and dry as bones scattered upon the surface of an open valley which has been the scene of carnage in battle. Yet the description is always and justly held to portray the moral condition of our sinful humanity apart from the quickening interposition of the <em>Lord <\/em>and Giver of life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>SPIRITUAL<\/strong> <strong>ENLIGHTENMENT<\/strong> <strong>REVEALS<\/strong> <strong>WHAT<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>REAL<\/strong> <strong>BENEATH<\/strong> <strong>WHAT<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>APPARENT<\/strong>. To other eyes no such vision as that which broke upon the sight of the inspired prophet was accorded. On the contrary, men might have looked upon Israelpart of the people in captivity, and part still occupying the land of their fathersand have seen nothing but such misfortune and calamity as are incident to human history. To the prophetic, quickened, illumined mind of Ezekiel the real state of the nation was manifest. In like manner, a superficial observer might direct his attention to the human race without apprehending its spiritual condition as one of deprivation, of gloom, of death; he might be dazzled by external splendor and prosperity, and it might not occur to him that beneath the fair and glittering outside there was concealed from his eyes what, after all, is the most important characteristic of humanity, regarded spiritually.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>REALITY<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>BE<\/strong> <strong>RECOGNIZED<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>POWER<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>SPIRITUAL<\/strong> <strong>DEATH<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> The cause of this is sin. Life flows from communion with him who is the ever-living Fountain of life. Severed from God, the soul cannot live.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> The effects and signs of this death are numerous and evident. Insensibility to Divine truth, to virtue, to immortality, may be mentioned as most impressively brought before us in the vision which Ezekiel saw. The dry bones lay scattered about the plain, insensible to everything, to every presence about them, neither affected by any occurrence nor initiating any movement. Such is the state of the spiritually deadthe &#8220;dead in trespasses and sins.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>HOPELESSNESS<\/strong> <strong>DISTINGUISHES<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>STATE<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SPIRITUALLY<\/strong> <strong>DEAD<\/strong>. &#8220;Son of man, can these bones live?&#8221; If the answer depended upon human sagacity, if the means to awaken life were such as are available to human wisdom alone, such as are known by human experience, there can be but one answer &#8220;Life is impossible! &#8216; Who that locked upon pro-Christian society could cherish the hope that from that necropolis there could start into vitality and activity a host of living, consecrated beings, filled with the life of God, eager to do the work of God? Could the Church have grown out of the world? The supposition is an absurdity. The prophet&#8217;s reply to the inquiry was the only reply that was reasonable. All depended upon God; man was powerless and hopeless for revival. &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest!&#8221;T.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4 -10<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The call to life.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The sublimity of this vision is the sublimity, not of imagination, but of truth. But it was truth that was not open to every mind; it was truth discerned by an intellect quickened into supernatural insight and comprehension by the Divine Source alike of truth and of life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>MINISTRY<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>PROPHECY<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> It presumes intelligent natures to which the appeal is made.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> It presumes a Supreme Authority by which the prophet is selected, fitted, and guided in the discharge of his &amp;rice.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> It presumes a ministerial nature and character, on the one side open to communications from God, on the other side sympathetic with those for whose benefit such communications are vouchsafed.<\/p>\n<p><strong>4.<\/strong> It presumes an occasion and circumstances, suggesting the fulfillment of a spiritual mission.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>POWER<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>AUTHORITY<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>LIVING<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong> <strong>ACCOMPANYING<\/strong> <strong>TRUE<\/strong> <strong>PROPHECY<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> The prophet speaks at the Divine command. There are times when he is silent, and times when he utters the thoughts, the warnings, the exhortations, that are in him. When the command is given, then the silence is broken.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> The prophet utters a Divine message. He speaks for God, and they who listen to him hear the voice of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> His utterances are therefore altogether without regard to what men would call probabilities or even possibilities. Nothing could have been further from all human likelihood than that anything should follow upon such a ministry as that here described. The prophet was directed to address &#8220;dry bones,&#8221; and to summon dry bones to &#8220;hear the word of the Lord!&#8221; Had he been other than a prophet, he would have deemed such a mission an absurdity. &#8220;God&#8217;s ways are not our ways, neither our thoughts his thoughts.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>4.<\/strong> A higher than human wisdom and might breathe in the utterances of the prophet. The dignity of his attitude, the sublimity of his thoughts, are not of this world. He must be either a pretender and a fanatic, or else a representative of God himself, who can make use of such language as Ezekiel records himself to have used: &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>MOVEMENT<\/strong> <strong>EFFECTED<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>AGENCY<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>PROPHECY<\/strong>. In this impressive vision the prophet witnessed the power of the words he was directed to utter. A thundering noise and an earthquake followed his prophesying, and to his own amazement he saw bones come togetherbone to his bone; he saw the bones clothed with sinews, flesh, and skin. This marvelous transformation was still unaccompanied by life. Surely a revelation to us of the great things that may be and are effected through the instrumentality of a personal and spiritual agency, which yet fall short of the highest and most beautiful and blessed of all effects, viz. spiritual vitality itself. Is it not still and ever the case that by human agencies men are taught, admonished, trained to habits of rectitude, encouraged in a useful life, by a Divine Power indeedfor all good of every grade is from Godbut by an exercise of power which is yet inferior to the highest of all?<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>NEW<\/strong> <strong>LIFE<\/strong> <strong>WHICH<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong>, <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>CONSONANCE<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>PROPHECY<\/strong>, <strong>BREATHED<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>DIVINE<\/strong> <strong>SPIRIT<\/strong>. The result of the summons to the breath from the four winds was at once and most wonderfully apparent. The dry bones lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army! It is impossible to believe that the significance of this glorious conclusion to the vision is exhausted by the restoration of the sons of Israel to their native soil and ancient inheritance. We have the authority of the prophet himself for believing that in this event there was a fulfillment of the vision. And it probably seemed to many observers almost as incredible that the Jews should be bought back from their captivity and should as a nation again live and prosper, as that the bones of the dead, strewn upon a battle-field, should be restored to life and should become again an army of mighty warriors. To the mind that thinks deeply and justly it will seem still more surprising that our humanity, sunk in the slumber and the death of sin, should awake to newness of life, should receive the Spirit of God, and should become his living army of truth and righteousness. It was the purpose of Christ&#8217;s coming that we might have life, and that in abundance. It is the Spirit that quickeneth. Thus it may be said that the production, fullness, and increase of spiritual life is the main result of the advent of the Savior and the gift of the Holy Ghost.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>TRANSFORMATION<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>CONTRAST<\/strong> <strong>BROUGHT<\/strong> <strong>ABOUT<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>FULFILMENT<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>PROPHECY<\/strong>. God speaks by his herald and representative, and his word is a word of power. The disjointed and sundered are united, the dry bones are clothed with flesh, the dead live, movement and the glad sound of life follow the stillness and the silence of the grave. An army of the living God is fashioned out of material the most unlikely. Thus the presence and operation of the Eternal is made manifest, the flagging faith of men is revived, and the future of humanity is irradiated with immortal hope.T.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The Divine Restorer.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The interpretation of the vision of the valley of dry bones was given by the prophet himself. It was intended that the Israelites, when restored to their own land and to national unity and vigor, should discern in this restoration the hand of Divine Providence. A most unlikely event was about to happen, and Ezekiel desired that those in whose favor the great interposition was about to be wrought should be mindful, both of the condition of hopelessness into which they had been plunged by their own sins, and of the marvel of the Divine mercy to which they owed their deliverance, renewal, and revival.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>DEATH<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>DESPONDENCY<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>CAPTIVITY<\/strong>. The Jewish people had endured many afflictions and chastisements; but the Captivity was the sorest disaster which had overtaken them, the profoundest humiliation into which they had been plunged. To so earnest a patriot as Ezekiel the case seemed, apart from Divine commiseration and help, one utterly depressing to contemplate. Human deliverer there was not; way of deliverance opened not up; the prospect was dark. The whole house of Israel, contemplating the situation, summed it up in the mournful exclamation, &#8220;Our hope is lost; we are clean cut off.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>COMPASSIONATE<\/strong> <strong>INTERPOSITION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>DIVINE<\/strong> <strong>DELIVERER<\/strong>. When human help there was none, the Lord looked in pity upon his own. &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, O my people.&#8221; Their state was as that of those dead and buried out of men&#8217;s sight. But with God nothing is impossible. His voice can summon even the dead to life. The hearts of kings and rulers are in his hands. He deviseth means whereby his banished ones may return.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>SPIRITUAL<\/strong> <strong>ENERGY<\/strong> <strong>CONDITIONING<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>RECOVERY<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>RENEWAL<\/strong>. Providential intervention is not all that is necessary. An internal as well as an external condition is requisite. No great work on behalf of a nation can, any more than a great work on behalf of an individual, be effected apart from the state, the character, the purposes, the voluntary cooperation of those who are to be benefited. We have an intimation of this in the present case in the promise, &#8220;I will put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live.&#8221; To put a people in their own territory would be of no avail to the national life were not the people gifted with a spirit of patriotism, of unity, of hopefulness, above all, of true religion. A restoration such as that effected for Israel, in order to be a real thing, must be accompanied by the new heart, the new national endeavor and patience, the new devotedness to the higher aims of social and political existence. God, who gives the boon, gives also the preparation by which the boon may be appropriated and used.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>RESTORATION<\/strong> <strong>ITSELF<\/strong>. This was mainly, at all events in the general apprehension, a political movement. The capital was reoccupied, the temple services were restored in something like their former dignity and beauty; the reputation of the nation was in some measure retrieved. But beyond all this, in the apprehension of the more thoughtful there was a religious reformation of greater interest and importance. The life from the dead was life unto Jehovah and unto his laws and ordinancesa life not ceremonial, but spiritual. Idolatry, at all events, was forever abandoned; many of the temptations of former times were for ever outgrown. Some good was thus effected, and good of such a nature as to confer a real service and blessing upon mankind.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>GIVING<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>GLORY<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>WHOM<\/strong> <strong>IT<\/strong> <strong>WAS<\/strong> <strong>DUE<\/strong>. In two respects especially the Lord assured the Israelites, by his prophets, honor should accrue to himself through the return of his chosen people.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> His power should be recognized as the true cause of the redemption.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> His faithfulness should be adored by those to whom the promise had been given, and by whom the fulfillment of the promise was enjoyed.T.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Unity.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>As in many other instances, so here Ezekiel propounds a great moral and prophetical lesson by means of symbol. The two sticks which he is directed to join one to another into one stick represent the two divisions, the two kingdoms, of Judah and of Northern Israel, and their union represents the abolition of the distinction, the schism, which had been so injurious to the national welfare, and the formation of one people, one in brotherly love, one in mutual helpfulness, one in the unity of national and political life, and one in religious faith, worship, and observance. This exhibition of the beauty and value of unity is worthy of the consideration of Christians in our own time, when divisions are so abundant and are thought of so lightly, whilst they are most injurious to the interests of Christianity and most pernicious in their influence upon the unbelieving world. General lessons underlie the special exhortations and promises of this passage of prophecy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>BROUGHT<\/strong> <strong>ABOUT<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong> <strong>HIMSELF<\/strong>. He is the God of peace, and delights in peace. &#8220;I,&#8221; says he, &#8220;will make them one nation in the land.&#8221; The kind of unity which is effected by the action of common human sympathy or interest is neither valuable nor permanent. True unity needs a Divine basis.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>MANIFEST<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>BROTHERLY<\/strong> <strong>LOVE<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>SYMPATHY<\/strong>. That is to say, it is, first of all, unity of heart. When the same Divine Spirit works in many natures he produces similar effects in all; and his handiwork is nowhere more evident than in the prevalence of mutual love. The members of the same body, being obedient to the one Head, render one to another the tribute of mutual interest and kindly willingness to serve and help.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>CONSISTS<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>COMMON<\/strong> <strong>SUBJECTION<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>ONE<\/strong> <strong>KING<\/strong>. &#8220;One King shall be king to them all; My Servant David shall be King over them, and they shall all have one Shepherd.&#8221; The political unity of the Jews seems lost sight of m the Messianic reference of the prediction. The Church of Christ is one because there is over it but one Head, even Christ himself. All true Christians, every true Christian community in every place, acknowledge his sole sovereignty and confess allegiance to his sole authority.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>DISPLAYED<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>ABANDONMENT<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>REPUDIATION<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>ALL<\/strong> <strong>UNFAITHFULNESS<\/strong>. When some of the children of Israel worshipped Jehovah, and others some one or other of the various hateful deities of the heathen, it was impossible that there should be unity. &#8220;How can two walk together except they be agreed?&#8221; There is <em>thus a negative <\/em>condition of spiritual oneness. The minds of men must be turned away from error and sin, in order that they may with one accord be turned Godwards and heavenwards. The unfaithful to God cannot be faithful one to another. They must have the same loathing and the same liking.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>DISPLAYED<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> A <strong>COMMON<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>CONJOINT<\/strong> <strong>OBEDIENCE<\/strong>. This is <em>a positive <\/em>condition of spiritual oneness. &#8220;They shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes to do them.&#8221; They who are one in heart will not find it difficult to be one in life. The laws are one, although the obedient are scattered far and wide, although the forms of obedience vary with varying circumstances.<\/p>\n<p><strong>VI.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>EVERLASTING<\/strong>. This can be true only of a unity which is Divine in its basis and its bonds. The language used in this portion of prophecy must refer to the spiritual kingdom of Christ. &#8220;David my Servant shall be their <em>Prince forever;<\/em>&#8220;<em> <\/em>&#8220;They shall dwell in the <em>land for ever<\/em>;&#8221; &#8220;<em>I <\/em>will make an <em>everlasting <\/em>covenant with them;&#8221; &#8220;I will set my sanctuary in the midst of <em>them for evermore<\/em>.&#8221;<em> <\/em>Such expressions are true. and they are true only of the kingdom which is &#8220;righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.&#8221; No national, probably no ecclesiastical, unity upon earth is permanent. But the Son of God is King forever, and the subjects of his spiritual empire are bound together by the common ties which unite them to their Lordties which time cannot weaken and death cannot dissolve.T.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The tabernacle of God with men.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There can be no question that one great purpose of the appointment, first of the tabernacle, and then of the temple, as the center of the national and religious life of Israel, was to familiarize the people with the thought of God&#8217;s constant presence in the midst of them, as well as to provide means and opportunities for special intercommunion between the Divine King and his subjects. The coming of Christ whose body was the temple of Deity, the coming of the Holy Spirit whose abiding indwelling constitutes the temple, the Church, of God, did away with the necessity for a local and temporary dwelling-place of God upon earth, but secured the permanent reality of the fellowship of which such a dwelling-place was the symbol and the means.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>TABERNACLE<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>MEN<\/strong> <strong>REMINDS<\/strong> <strong>US<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>UNIVERSAL<\/strong> <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>DEITY<\/strong> <strong>UPON<\/strong> <strong>EARTH<\/strong> <strong>THROUGHOUT<\/strong> <strong>ALL<\/strong> <strong>TIME<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>SPECIAL<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>CONGENIAL<\/strong> <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong> <strong>AMONG<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>OWN<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>GRACIOUS<\/strong> <strong>PURPOSE<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>REVEAL<\/strong> <strong>UNTO<\/strong> <strong>THEM<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>OWN<\/strong> <strong>CHARACTER<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>WILL<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>CONSTANT<\/strong> <strong>WILLINGNESS<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>RECEIVE<\/strong> <strong>THEIR<\/strong> <strong>WORSHIP<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>HOMAGE<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>DESIRE<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>MAINTAIN<\/strong> <strong>CLOSE<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>UNBROKEN<\/strong> <strong>RELATIONS<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>CORDIALITY<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>KINDNESS<\/strong> <strong>WITH<\/strong> <strong>HIS<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>APPLICATION<\/strong>. The privilege of fellowship with God should be reverently cherished, prized, and cultivated. The means and occasions of such fellowship should not be mistaken for the fellowship itself. The truest dignity and sacredness of this earthly life consists in the opportunity it offers of communion with the unseen but ever-present God and Savior. The strongest attraction of the life to come lies in the prospect of a closer approach to God, a more uninterrupted fellowship with God, and a nearer assimilation to his perfect and glorious character.T.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HOMILIES BY J.D. DAVIES<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The vision of dry bones.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>As an architect, before erecting a mansion, sketches accurately all his plan on papera guide to himself and to his co-workersso, prior to God&#8217;s resuscitation of Israel, he sketches out his plan before the mental eye of Ezekiel. By a mighty influence from God, the prophet is borne away in spirit to a great valley in Chaldea, devoted to the burial of Israel&#8217;s dead. The spot possibly was sadly familiar to the prophet&#8217;s eye. The loose sand had been swept aside by some violent tornado. The bones of the buried were exposed, and were dry and bleached by the tropical sun. It was a pitiable and repulsive spectacle. That such vestiges of human beings could be reclothed in flesh and raised again to life seemed, to human view, impossible; and Ezekiel did wisely to refer the matter back to God. The man of God is commanded to address these silent remnants of human nature, and to announce to them God&#8217;s high design; and while he spake, lo! a noise, a movement, bone sought its fellow-bone. Flesh silently grew upon these skeletons, and a fair covering of skin veiled the rugged flesh. Still, it was a valley of deatha spectacle more revolting than before. Again Ezekiel is summoned to prophesy, and this time to prophesy to the winds. Then the breath of life passed into those ghastly forms; the dead stood erect and strongan army of living men, a nation. Such was the visiona vivid picture imprinted on the mind.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>MARK<\/strong> <strong>ISRAEL<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>DESPERATE<\/strong> <strong>CONDITION<\/strong>. Whatever may have been the fortunes of some individuals, as a <em>nation <\/em>their fortunes were deplorable. All that was distinctive about Israel had vanished. Tithings, temple ritual, priesthood, Passover, distinction in meats,all had disappeared. They were fast becoming amalgamated, in language, habits, and occupation, with their conquerors. As a body, they were utterly dislocated. Their several orders had vanished. The organism was broken up. Their national life was destroyed. Their condition was deplorable, fitly symbolized by dry and dissevered bones. Prospect of restoration there was none. The faithful few were sinking into despair. Vivid picture this of human nature severed from the living God. Compared with the purity and nobleness that might be, the condition is aptly figured by death. Filial love and trust are dead. Conscience, the sense of right, is dead. Heavenly aspirations are dead. The hope of immortality is dead. Departing from God, men become &#8220;earthly, sensual, devilish.&#8221; The captivity of the grave aptly symbolizes their <em>estate<\/em>.<em> <\/em>The high design of their being is frustrated. Severance from God is followed by the rupture of social ties, mutual discords, and mutual hate.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>ISRAEL<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>PROSPECT<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>NEW<\/strong> <strong>ORGANIZATION<\/strong>. The prospect is due solely to the interposition of God. He proposes a tremendous question to his servant, &#8220;Can these bones live?&#8221; Devoutly the prophet refers the question back to God. By proposing difficult questions to his servants, God stimulates them to reflection, concentrates their attention upon salient points, teaches them a modest estimate of their powers.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong><em>In<\/em> <em>elevating mankind there is need for the prophet<\/em>&#8216;<em>s mission<\/em>.<em> <\/em>As the greatest enemy of mankind is man, so man can be a real friend and helper to his race. The world is deeply indebted to its teachers. All the ages are indebted to Moses, to Solon, to Socrates, and to St. Paul. The man who can lay his finger upon a plague-spot and. announce a remedy, the man who can lead a nation up to a higher level of life, is a benefactor to the face. Most of all, the man who can reveal to us God, who can unveil to us his character, his designs <em>concerning <\/em>us, our duty to him, he is of all men the most influential, the most kingly.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>No<\/em> <em>real improvement in human nature can be achieved without God<\/em>&#8216;<em>s power<\/em>.<em> <\/em>Although the man of God was charged to prophesy, his message simply declared what God was about to do. &#8220;I will lay sinews upon you; I will bring up flesh upon you; I will cover you with skin,&#8221; saith the Lord God. No amelioration is abiding that does not come from God. All political organization that is to produce benefit to a nation must be full of God. Every step in the process of moral elevation must have God in it. We can only act successfully while we act in the line of his Law, and have all the channels we create filled with a Divine force. God deigns to take a practical interest in the minutest affairs of men.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>ORGANIZATION<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>IMPOTENT<\/strong> <strong>WITHOUT<\/strong> <strong>LIFE<\/strong>. To the prophet&#8217;s ecstatic vision the human organism was now complete. Every limb and member was articulatedwas in its allotted place. But the great want was yet unmet. The highest endowment was lacking. Everything waited, in silent yearning, for life. Then the prophet is summoned to another duty. Having spoken to men, he must speak to God. He must invoke the vital breath of Heaven. For this great undertaking there is required all the fullness and force of the Divine Spirit. &#8220;Come from all quarters, O breath of life! Wind of the north, come and rouse men from their long slumber! Wind of the east, come and brace men&#8217;s energies for new exertions. Wind of the west, come and bring fertilizing showers, that shall penetrate and soften the heart! Wind of the south, come, quicken the plants of grace and ripen the fruits of piety!&#8221; If only God be with us, the most difficult undertaking will succeed. If God did, at the first, create human nature out of nothing, the work of reconstruction cannot be more difficult. To God nothing is impossible. Omnipotence covers every task.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> A <strong>MAGNIFICENT<\/strong> <strong>RESULT<\/strong>. The prophet was not disobedient to the heavenly voice. As the echo responds to the speaker, so promptly did Divine influence attend the prophetic word. Under the direction and inspiration of God, human labor and prayer can produce prodigious effects. The scenes of death become scenes of life. A nation rises up as if out of its grave. By the manifested power of God&#8217;s grace the highest personal life appears; the Church&#8217;s life is created; national life is purged and elevated; and the resurrection to an imperishable life is assured. If God be on our side, no height of excellence is inaccessible; and if he has pledged his word, he will perform it in no stinted fashion. To have real childlike faith in God&#8217;s word and in God&#8217;s faithfulness brings the highest joy. To be in actual touch with God transfigures character and enriches human life. Heaven is begun on earth if we know God by personal and familiar experience. A grand climax of blessing is involved in the words, &#8220;Then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken it, and performed it.&#8221;D.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Union essential to highest prosperity.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It is clear that this series of prophecies had, at least, a twofold meaning. These predictions pointed to beneficial changes near, visible, temporal; they pointed also to grandee events more distant, more spiritual. The fulfillment of prophecy was also another prophecy. The immediate performance of God&#8217;s promise was a type of larger performance. As each harvest is a prophecy of the next, so one fulfillment of God&#8217;s covenant symbolizes a fulfillment on a larger and nobler scale. Time is a picture of eternity. What was really good in the past shall reappear in the future. Israel&#8217;s passage through the Red Sea was a symbol of later deliverances. The royal life of David shall be reproduced. As the secret principle of David&#8217;s power and David&#8217;s prosperity was that he ruled by a spirit of love, which knit the people in unity; so David shall be the emblem of Messiah&#8217;s person, and Messiah&#8217;s gentle sway. The passage now under consideration refuses to be confined within a local application; it embraces the renovated race and the immortal King. To make this announcement the more impressive, it was attended by a significant action. It is a prophecy both spoken and acted. It was an ancient custom, prevalent still in the East, to write on fiat sticks, and these were sometimes tied together after the simplest fashion of a book. Discord and division had been the first step in Israel&#8217;s retrogression and fall. Internal strife prepared the way for invasion and defeat. Now, reunion is a necessary step to the fulfillment of the Divine promisethe first step towards a new national life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>REAL<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>CAN<\/strong> <strong>ONLY<\/strong> <strong>BE<\/strong> <strong>EFFECTED<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>INWARD<\/strong> <strong>RENOVATION<\/strong>. Hence the gracious promise is repeated, &#8220;I will save them out of their dwelling-places wherein they have sinned, and will cleanse them.&#8221; This truth must be repeated times without number. So long as rebellion against God occupies the heart, so long there will be strife and hatred between man and man. Infidelity has always been hostile to society. But as men get nearer to God as their Center, the circumference diminishes, and they get nearer to each other. The uprooting of selfishness from the human heart is the removal of discord and war. If the fountain be made pure, pure will be the streams. Sin separates. Piety unites. After the descent of the Spirit at Pentecost, men were fused in brotherhood, and did not even count their goods their own. New-felt love swallowed up every other sentiment. &#8220;They had all things common.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>AMONG<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>PEOPLE<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>CEMENTED<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>ALLEGIANCE<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>ONE<\/strong> <strong>KING<\/strong>. &#8220;David my servant shall be King over them, and they all shall have one Shepherd.&#8221; The rivalry of opposing kings in Rehoboam&#8217;s day had been the root of endless mischief. &#8220;Like king, like people.&#8221; This new Monarch has such incomparable claims that a rival is out of the question. His august worth will win from his subjects intense loyalty and love; and in proportion to their intense love for him there will develop attachment to each other. In his pure presence mutual suspicion and distrust hide away abashed. It is a part of his royal mission to foster all right sympathies. To be like their King is the high ambition of each. To serve and please their King is the common purpose of every true Israelite. To love one another is but another form of loving him.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>IS<\/strong> <strong>FOSTERED<\/strong> <strong>BY<\/strong> <strong>DOING<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>WILL<\/strong>. &#8220;They shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes.&#8221; They that walk in the same road usually become good companions. And these new subjects of Messiah delight in these paths. They speak to each other of their joy. They delight to encourage each other to surmount such obstacles as appear, and to press on in the royal way. Their understandings being divinely illumined, they see such excellence in God&#8217;s will that their wills become conformed to his. So, in becoming conformed to God&#8217;s will, they become like each other. Among the children a common likeness appears. Fellow-soldiers on the same battle* field become fast friends. Common service and exposure to common dangers form a strong bond of union. In serving God we also serve one another.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>SECURES<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong>&#8216;S <strong>NEARER<\/strong> <strong>PRESENCE<\/strong>. &#8220;I will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore.&#8221; If men feel that it is&#8221; good for brethren to dwell together in unity,&#8221; God feels it still more to be both &#8220;good and pleasant.&#8221; Our God is a God of order. Amid scenes of discord he will not abide. If men prefer his foe-the fomenter of hatredshe will depart. But where true unity of spirit reins among men God will nearer come, wilt take up his abode, will make an everlasting covenant with them; his sanctuary is the sign of union and the security for union. Then the channel is open for the highest good to descend. God will become, in every practical respect, their God. His light shall be their light, his strength shall be their strength, his purity shall become their purity, his joy shall become theirs. God&#8217;s fullness shall replenish their emptiness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>UNION<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>TRUE<\/strong> <strong>ISRAEL<\/strong> <strong>SHALL<\/strong> <strong>PRODUCE<\/strong> A <strong>SALUTARY<\/strong> <strong>EFFECT<\/strong> <strong>UPON<\/strong> <strong>WORLD<\/strong>. &#8220;The heathen shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel.&#8221; Here is the germ of the truth which was fully expanded in the intercessory prayer of Christ, &#8220;That they all may be one, that the world may believe that thou didst send <em>me<\/em>.&#8221;<em> <\/em>It is little short of a miracle that the kingdom of our Lord should be maintained, much less grow, when so much division exists. That man contracts no light sin who uses his influence in keeping Christians apart. Real schism is a monstrous sin. And when the purity, the piety, the practical love, of the Church become eminent, these will produce a stupendous impression upon the world without. Holiness which is not austere, holiness expressed in its native form of sterling goodness, has an omnipotent charm which, once seen by men, fascinates all hearts. The love of money and of pleasure will fade and vanish when men discover the superior worth of true righteousness. God&#8217;s manifest residence in the Church will win the homage of all the nations. &#8220;Then shall the heathen know,&#8221; etc.D.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HOMILIES BY W. CLARKSON<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-12<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>From death to life.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The primary reference Of this prophecy is placed beyond all doubt by the passage itself (see <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong>Israel was in a forlorn and hopeless condition in her dispersion and captivity; she seemed to be irrecoverably lost; as a nation she was as one dead, if not buried.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> But God had a gracious purpose concerning her. He intended to exercise his Divine power on her behalf; the dead should be revived; the lost should be found; the scattered should be restored and united.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> That which seemed so hopeless is seen to be accomplished; instead of &#8220;a valley full of bones&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>) is &#8220;an exceeding great army&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>); instead of a &#8220;lost hope&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>) is a revived, and recovered nation (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>). The true analogue to this vision of the prophet is the revival of the lost and dead human soul under the renewing and inspiring power of the Spirit of God. What is suggested here on this vital theme is<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>FATAL<\/strong> <strong>AND<\/strong> <strong>HOPELESS<\/strong> <strong>CONDITION<\/strong> <strong>TO<\/strong> <strong>WHICH<\/strong> <strong>SIN<\/strong> <strong>REDUCES<\/strong> <strong>US<\/strong>. Could we see our sin-stricken humanity as it appears in the sight of God, then where now we look upon fair scenes and shows of beauty or activity, we should see a &#8220;valley full of dry bones&#8221;a valley of death. Let &#8220;the <em>dead <\/em>bury their dead,&#8221; said the Master. &#8220;She that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth,&#8221; said his apostle. To be separated from God in thought and sympathy; to be living in selfishness, in vanity, in sin; to be forfeiting our fair heritage of righteousness and holy service, and to lose our life in human gratifications or earthly acquisitions;this is to be lost to God and wisdom; it is to have entered at least the outer shadows of the valley of death; and when sin has (tone its worst, when it has led the man or the community down to its nethermost abyss, then is he (or it) in such a state of spiritual deathfulness and hopelessness that all recovery seems impossible, as impossible as for a great mass of dry and disparted bones scattered on some broad valley to be readjusted and to be reanimated with life. &#8220;Can these bones live? No,&#8221; human intelligence replies, &#8220;they are dead beyond all recovery.&#8221; Yet is it well to remember that &#8220;the things which are impossible to man are possible with God;&#8221; and it is well to make reply, as in the text, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; For God&#8217;s reply is not in the negative. He summons to activity; and we have<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>THREEFOLD<\/strong> <strong>AGENCY<\/strong> <strong>CALLED<\/strong> <strong>INTO<\/strong> <strong>EXERCISE<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>1. <\/strong><em>The<\/em> <em>human teacher<\/em>.<em> <\/em>&#8220;<em>He <\/em>said unto me, Prophesy,&#8221; etc. (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>). &#8220;So I prophesied as I was commanded&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>). It is the bounden duty, the sacred privilege, of the human teacherin the house, in the sanctuary, in the school, in the street, anywhere and everywhere that men will listento summon the lost ones to return, the fallen to rise, the slumbering to awake and to return unto the Lord their God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> <em>The sinful souls themselves<\/em>.<em> <\/em>&#8220;As I prophesied there was a noise, and behold a shaking,&#8221; etc. (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>). Men may seem as dead, and in a sadly serious sense they may be &#8220;dead in sin;&#8221; yet they are not so absolutely lifeless that there is no possible response in them when the word of Divine truth is spoken. On the contrary, they <em>will <\/em>respond; there is the spiritual movement which begins in being aroused, and which ends in the actual return of the heart unto its Divine Father, and its entrance into eternal life.<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> <em>The Divine Spirit<\/em>.<em> <\/em>&#8220;Prophesy unto the wind, breathe upon these slain, that they may live&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>). What the breathing wind in the prophet&#8217;s image wrought, that now works the Holy Spirit of God. Vain the words of the teacher, the movement of the fallen and lost spirit, without the renewing and reviving energy that comes from God. But that does come. God waits to work with us and for us; and when there is honest effort accompanied&#8217; with earnest prayer, the breath of the Divine Spirit is not wanting; then comes<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>BLESSED<\/strong> <strong>ISSUE<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>NEWNESS<\/strong> <strong>OF<\/strong> <strong>LIFE<\/strong>. &#8220;They lived, and stood up  an exceeding great army [or &#8216;force&#8217;]&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>). The glorious issue of this agency, human and Divine, is<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> <em>life<\/em>,life in God&#8217;s view, life in God, life unto God, life now and evermore with God; it is<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> <em>largely extended <\/em>life,an exceeding great army, innumerable, stretching over all lands and through all the centuries; it is<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> <em>powerful<\/em> life,the word translated army might be rendered force. The multitude of them that believe,&#8221; and that have life by faith in Jesus Christ, should be a great force or power for good. If it did but realize its resources, and knew how strong it was in Christian truth and the power of God which is at command, it would do far &#8220;greater works&#8221; than any it has yet accomplished for its Master and for mankind.C.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The cry of the hopeless.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Our hope is lost: we are cut off to ourselves&#8221; (Fairbairn&#8217;s translation); <em>i.e.<\/em> we are &#8220;cut off from the source of power and influence, and. abandoned to ourselves.&#8221; Taking these words apart from their connection (though quite in accordance with their spirit and tenor), our attention is directed to<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>HOPELESS<\/strong>, <strong>BECAUSE<\/strong> <strong>THE<\/strong> <strong>ABANDONED<\/strong>. Many are they who have had, or still have, occasion to utter this most sad exclamation. It has been:<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> The remnant of a moribund race; or a dishonored community (like Israel in Egypt or in Babylon); or a people held in hopeless slavery or a company of men and women doomed to lifelong exile (Cayenne or Siberia).<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> Individuals, or families, or small groups of those who have once cherished hopes, perhaps high hopes, of a happy life, but who find themselves hopeless, cut off, away from all their resources, abandoned to themselves, with nothing but misery and death in view; it may be the marooned or castaway, left on some lonely island to pine and die; or it may be the condemned felon when the last effort to obtain a reprieve has failed; or it may be the family in the great city allowed to perish for lack of food; or it may be the helpless straggler whom the army has left behind to fall into the hands of a barbarous enemy. Sad and pitiable in the last degree is the fate of those who have to lament that they are &#8220;cut off (and abandoned) to themselves.&#8221; Distinguished from these are:<\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> The spiritually hopeless. Those who are perplexed and distressed in heart, because<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> they cannot satisfy their minds as to the reality of sacred truths, as to the soundness of Christian doctrine; or because<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> they cannot find the peace and. rest of heart they have been long seeking; or because<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> they fancy that they have sinned beyond forgiveness and restoration. These souls cannot find the help they need; it seems to them that &#8220;no man careth for their soul,&#8221; or can enter into their feelings, or go down to the dark depths of their necessity. They do not know what to do in their extremity; everything and every one has failed them; their &#8220;hope is perished;&#8221; they are &#8220;cut off&#8221; and abandoned.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>THEIR<\/strong> <strong>ONE<\/strong> <strong>RESOURCE<\/strong>. When man fails us, we can turn to God and trust in him. In him the helpless and the hopeless find their Refuge. &#8220;I am alone, and yet not alone, for the Father is with me,&#8221; said our Lord. And many thousands of his disciples have gained relief where their Master sought and found it. The great and supreme fact that God &#8220;remembered us in our low estate;&#8221; that when we were as a race utterly undone, &#8220;cut off&#8221; from all resources, with no hope whatever in man, he had compassion on us, and stooped to save us;this is the strong, unfailing assurance that God will not desert us, even though we abandon one another. However low be our condition, and in whatever sense we may be hopeless, we may confidently count upon<\/p>\n<p><strong>(1)<\/strong> the near presence of God;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(2)<\/strong> the tender sympathy of our Divine Friend;<\/p>\n<p><strong>(3)<\/strong> his gracious and timely succor.<\/p>\n<p>His will come to us, indeed, in his own time and way, which may not be after our choice or according to our expectation. But <em>it will <\/em>come; for it is quite impossible that the eternal Father will abandon his children, that the once-crucified and now exalted Savior will leave to their fate those for whom he died, and who turn earnest eyes to him for help and for salvation.C.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21-28<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The blessed kingdom.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Understanding this Divine promise to find its true and complete fulfillment in the kingdom of Christ, we may recognize some of the features of that kingdom as it will one day be constituted.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I.<\/strong> <strong>ITS<\/strong> <strong>ONE<\/strong> <strong>ACKNOWLEDGED<\/strong> <strong>HEAD<\/strong>. The ideal &#8220;<em>David<\/em>&#8220;<em> <\/em>(<span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span>) is found, not in any future ruler like Judas Maccabaeus, but in Jesus Christ; in him who is exalted &#8220;to<em> <\/em>be a Prince and a Savior,&#8221; the Lord and Sovereign of his people everywhere. A far Greater than David is he (see homily on <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 34:24<\/span>). He will have no rival in the day of the Lord, when all the Churches of Christ shall know and love the truth, and exalt him in the eyes of the world.<\/p>\n<p><strong>II.<\/strong> <strong>ITS<\/strong> <strong>UNITY<\/strong>. (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>.) The time will come when the Divine Head of the Church will look down upon a united people. There may be a great variety of organizations, but there wilt be no discord or disunion; none, because, while there will be no uniformity of method, but every order of spiritual life, there will be everywhere prevalent the <em>spirit of a benignant charity<\/em>,<em> <\/em>of Christ-like confidence, and love; all Churches and air hearts owning one Savior, teaching one redeeming truth, breathing one spirit, living one life, moving towards one goal, and looking for one prize.<\/p>\n<p><strong>III.<\/strong> <strong>ITS<\/strong> <strong>HOLINESS<\/strong>. (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>.) There shall be nothing to defile. What the entire absence of idolatry signified in the case of Israel is realized by the Church in the absence of all worldliness and iniquity of every kind from its pale. It is &#8220;cleansed&#8221; by the truth and power of God, so that vice and violence, oppression and injustice, covetousness and selfishness, uncharitableness and inconsiderateness, are banished from its midst.<\/p>\n<p><strong>IV.<\/strong> <strong>ITS<\/strong> <strong>GLORIOUS<\/strong> <strong>MAGNITUDE<\/strong>. &#8220;I will multiply them.&#8221; If the largest promises made to Israel had been fulfilled to the letter, that fulfillment would have been small and slight indeed when compared with the realization they have had in the establishment and the growth of the Church of Christ. And it is extending its borders still, indeed much more rapidly now than in any century but the first. It has attained to a noble magnitude, and wilt &#8220;multiply and still increase,&#8221; until that little stone of Nebuchadnezzar&#8217;s dream shall have rolled and grown till it &#8220;fills the whole earth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><strong>V.<\/strong> <strong>ITS<\/strong> <strong>JOY<\/strong> <strong>IN<\/strong> <strong>GOD<\/strong>. God&#8217;s &#8220;sanctuary is to be in the midst.&#8221; His &#8220;tabernacle shall be with them.&#8221; He will &#8220;be their God, and they shall be his people&#8221; (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span>, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span>). The picture is one of happy, holy converse between God and man. It is a great thing for a nation to rejoice because the Holy One is near, is known and felt to be near. In the &#8220;glorious future time,&#8221; when the kingdom of Christ shall be established on the earth, it will be the very near presence of God that will be felt to be the source of the deepest satisfaction, of the largest and truest enrichment. To be with him, coming into his nearer presence in all the ordinances of religion, to live in the spirit and habitude of devotion, to walk with God all the day long, to be guests at his table, to lift up the face unto him as unto the heavenly Father, to lean on Christ as on the unfailing Friend of the heart and life,this is the heritage of the good in the blessed kingdom of our Lord.C.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Complete Pulpit Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong><em><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span><\/em><\/strong><strong>. <\/strong><strong><em>The hand of the Lord was upon me<\/em><\/strong><strong><\/strong> It is the general opinion of the best commentators, that all this passed in vision. The first and great object of this prophesy seems evidently to be, the restoration of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity. Bishop Warburton observes, that the messengers of God prophesying for the people&#8217;s consolation in disastrous times, frequently promise a restoration to the former days of felicity; and, to obviate all distrust from unpromising appearances, they put the case even at the worst, and assure the people in metaphorical expressions, that though the community were as intirely dissolved as a dead body reduced to dust, yet God would raise up that community again to life. Though the generality of commentators, says Mr. Peters, regard this vision and prophesy as no other than a figurative representation and prediction of a return of the Jews from the captivity of Babylon, or some other of their captivities and dispersions; yet, perhaps, we shall find upon a more attentive consideration, that whatever hopes it might give them of a temporal and national deliverance or prosperity, yet there was evidently something farther designed; and that to comfort them in their distressed situation, with the prospect of a future resurrection in a proper sense, was at least as much intended by the Spirit of God, or rather more so than the other. See on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> 3. The Vision of the Resurrection and Re-quickening of the Dead Bones, and the Symbolical Action with the One Stick out of the Two Sticks, along with the Interpretation (Ch. 37)<\/p>\n<p>1The hand of Jehovah was upon me, and [as] Jehovah took me out in the Spirit and made me rest [brought me, set me down] in the midst of the 2valley, and it was full of bones. And He led me over by them round about, and behold, [there were] very many on the surface of the valley, and behold, 3[they were] very dry. And He said to me, Son of man, will these bones 4live [become alive]? And I said, Lord Jehovah, Thou knowest. And He said to me, Prophesy over these bones, and say to them, Ye dry bones, hear the 5 word of Jehovah, 5Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to these bones, Behold, I 6bring spirit into you, and ye live. And I give sinews on you, and make flesh to come up over you, and cover you with skin, and give breath in you, and 7ye live, and know that I am Jehovah. And I prophesied as I was commanded; and there came a voice as I prophesied, and behold, a rustling, and 8the bones drew near, bone to his bone. And I looked, and behold, sinews and flesh came up on them, and skin covered them from above, yet breath 9[was] not in them. And He said to me, Prophesy to the Spirit; prophesy, son of man, and say to the Spirit, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Come from the four winds, thou Spirit, and breathe into these slain, that they may live 10[become alive]. And I prophesied as He commanded me, and the Spirit came into them, and they lived [became alive], and stood upon their feet a very great 11army. And He said to me, Son of man, these bones [are] the whole house of Israel; Behold, they say, our bones were dried and our hope perished, for us, 12we are undone. Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I open your graves, and lead you up out of your graves, 13My people, and bring you to the land of Israel. And ye know that I am Jehovah, when I open your graves and lead you up out of your graves, My 14people; And I give My Spirit in you, and ye live, and I bring you to rest upon your land, and ye know that I, Jehovah, spoke and didsentence of 15,16Jehovah. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, And thou, son of man, take to thee a stick, and write on it, For Judah and for the sons of Israel, his associates; and take another stick, and write on it, For Joseph, the 17stick of Ephraim, and of the whole house of Israel, his associates. And bring them near the one to the other for thee into one stick, that they may be 18[become] one in thy hand. And when the sons of thy people shall speak to 19thee, saying, Wilt thou not show us what these [sticks] are to thee? Then say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his associates, and put them on it, that is, the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, that they may be one in My hand. 20And the sticks on which thou shalt write are 21in thy hand before their eyes. And say to them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I take the sons of Israel out from among the heathen, whither they went, and gather them from round about, and bring them to 22their land. And I make them one people in the land, on the mountains of Israel, and one king shall be king to them all; and they [there] shall no more be two peoples, and they shall never again be divided into two kingdoms. 23And they shall no more defile themselves with their foul idols, and with their detestable things, and with all their transgressions; and I help them from all their dwelling-places where they have sinned, and cleanse them, and they 24shall be My people, and I will be their God. And My servant David shall be king over them, and one shepherd shall be to them all; and they shall 25walk in My judgments, and shall keep My statutes, and do them. And they dwell upon the land which I gave to My servant Jacob, in which your fathers dwelt, and they dwell on it, they and their sons, and their sons sons, for ever, 26and David My servant [is] prince to them for ever. And I make for them a covenant of peace, an everlasting covenant [covenant of eternity] shall be with them; and I give them and multiply them, and give My sanctuary in their 27midst for ever. And My dwelling is over them, and I am their God and they shall be My people. 28And the heathen know that I, Jehovah, sanctify Israel, in that My sanctuary is in their midst for ever.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>. Vulg.: <em> in spiritu domini<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>. Sept.: &#8230;    .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>. &#8230;      <\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>.    (Another reading:  , Syr., Vulg., Arabs.)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>. &#8230; .   .   . .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>.    .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>.  .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>.  .    .  <\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:16<\/span>.       .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:17<\/span>. &#8230;  .     .   .  . (Another reading: plur. .)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span>. Sept.: &#8230;          .      .  . Vulg.: <em> et dabo eas pariter cum ligno J.  in manu ejus.<\/em> (Anoth. reading: .)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span>. Sept.: &#8230;       .<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>.     .  <\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>. &#8230;        , .  .   .    .     (Another reading:  <em>et<\/em> Arabs.)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>.       <\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span>.    <\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span>. Sept.: &#8230;   <\/p>\n<p><strong>EXEGETICAL REMARKS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The two sections of the chapter, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span>, are already distinguished by the introductory formula (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span>); still more decidedly by their difference of form,first a vision, and then a symbolic action; as also by their contents, which, however, with all their diversity, show the most intimate connectionwhat in the first section is prophesied of the whole of Israel is in the second ratified by promise in relation to the parts. [Hengst.: the restoration of Israel as a covenant-people, and the restoration of Israel as a brotherhood.] The re-quickening and reunion of Israel. The interpretation is connected with both prophetic sections of our chapter, appended (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span>) to the first, while in the second it is given along with the prophecy. The connection with <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 30<\/span>. is apparent from the close of that chapter, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span> sq.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>. <em>The Quickening of the Bones in the Valley<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>. , comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 1:3<\/span> ( ) and <span class='bible'>Eze 33:22<\/span> ( ). Although not the stronger introductory formula (as in <span class='bible'>Eze 8:1<\/span>), yet the description given of Ezekiels condition is sufficient simply to set aside a mere product of poetical intuition (Hitzig). The abrupt commencement without <em>and<\/em> is, according to Hengstenberg, meant to point out that the fact here related is extraordinary, and out of connection with the usual prophetic activity. [As the subject itself is a quite unusual one, so also the description is such as Ezekiel never elsewhere draws. Such a never-seen sight is seen by itself in a moment of higher inspiration, or never, Ewald.] As the Vulgate, so also Hitzig, against the accent: in the Spirit of Jehovah; but  is subject, and  simply:   (<span class='bible'>Mat 22:43<\/span>), in contrast to   (<span class='bible'>2Co 12:2<\/span>), to which it is easy to supply  (<span class='bible'>Eze 11:24<\/span>), which (as Keil justly observes) was omitted because of the  (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 8:3<\/span>). Ecstatic state in which he was inwardly transported from the things around him.The <strong>valley<\/strong> can only be the one mentioned in <span class='bible'>Eze 3:22<\/span>, when we consider that those who speak in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> were settled there in the neighbourhood, and consequently could be represented as the <strong>bones<\/strong> in the valley. At all events, it is not a valley in general, but a certain valley; and if nothing else, that () which was full of bones. Hengstenberg points out the contrast to the mountain (<span class='bible'>Eze 17:22<\/span>), the lowness of condition! Hitzig: The valley is fitted to represent a huge grave; but the thought is less of graves than of their opposite (, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>), namely, that the slain (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>) have remained unburied, their bones bleach and dry there.The <strong>bones<\/strong> are mens bones (<span class='bible'>Isa 66:14<\/span>); in the connection here: <em>the remains of the slain<\/em>, abundance of which might be in the disturbed districts of Judah; according to the Talmudists: slain Ephraimites, <span class='bible'>1Ch 7:20<\/span> sq. Looking from the <strong>midst<\/strong> of the valley, he could warrant that it was <strong>full<\/strong> of bones.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>. , <strong>over by them<\/strong>, or over past them; hence not: over, to tread them with the feet, or to hover over them, but: <strong>round about<\/strong>, so that he might be able to view them exactly, as the repeated , as the result of such inspection, brings to view the <strong>very many<\/strong> and their being <strong>very dry<\/strong>, neither sap nor strength in them. Comp. moreover, <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 6<\/span>. [Ewald refers for the rapid narration, with its constant fall into the present, to his <em>Grammar<\/em>,  342 b.]<\/p>\n<p>The question in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span> is fitted to bring the prophet, and, through him, his hearers and readers, to the consciousness of the impossibility presented to human eyes (<strong>son of man<\/strong>); and considering the words uttered by Israel (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>), its intention doubtless is to bring out the despair of the people, in order to make room in their hearts for the prophecy of salvation (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>). Ezekiels answer refers the matter to God (<span class='bible'>Rev 7:14<\/span>), for with God there is no impossibility, unless He wills it, and that God alone can know. Comp. on this point <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>. When Ezekiel is summoned to prophesy <strong>over<\/strong> the bones, their future, asked (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>) by Jehovah in relation to them, comes to view as an affair of Jehovahs, of His counsel, will, and purpose; they may therefore be addressed ( ), however <strong>dry<\/strong> they are. Grotius observes: so much the more as the prisoners in the exile are to be understood.The <strong>word of Jehovah<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:1<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:4<\/span>) mediates the salvation, the life to be prophesied. Hence not <em>see<\/em>, for then death, and nothing but death, will come to view. In Ezekiels vision all depends on hearing; recognise Gods word, and trust to it (<span class='bible'>Joh 4:48<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 20:19<\/span>). This, at the same time, legitimates as divine the word of Ezekiels prophetic announcement. The tenor, however, of the divine wordJehovah announces what will take place, what He purposes to do (<span class='bible'>Amo 3:7<\/span>)follows in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>. What is said <em>to<\/em> them is, from the certainty of its being accomplished, in reality said <em>of<\/em> them, as  already formally points to the accomplishment., although followed by  of the effect generally on the whole, is yet not exactly   of <span class='bible'>Gen 6:17<\/span>, or   of <span class='bible'>Gen 7:22<\/span>, breath; for it is just that which is in a living being that is here left out of view, and, in contrast to that which is dried up, above all, simply the creative divine power, hence <strong>spirit<\/strong> quite objectively and generally is contemplated. (The Spirit of God is the principle of all real life in the creaturely existence, Hv.) That we have here another order (Hengst.) than in the execution (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span> sq.) is not the case, for the more detailed description which follows immediately in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span> presents the same order as the execution follows. The <strong>Spirit<\/strong> also does not press forward at the beginning as the (Hitzig) chief thing, without which the rest, the merely bodily resurrection, is of no importance (Hengst.), but as  implies: to live in genera], without separation for the present into political and spiritual, so     introduces the divine causality simply as first, as <em>conditio sine qua non<\/em>. The more special is expressed<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>by a parallel ; and afterwards by , the binding matter, the <strong>sinews<\/strong>, and by the making of flesh to come up, and by the  (a word only found in Ezekiel), with <strong>skin<\/strong>, the outward form of life is completed, from which the spirit which enlivens the flesh is distinguished, but is as yet to be considered as natural, now as <strong>breath<\/strong>, the individual life, in consequence of which it certainly can be said: . But the spiritual element, although intimated in this, is first expressly stated in the interpretation (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>), with reference back to <span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>The prophecy, in accordance with the command given to Ezekiel (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span>), is not limited (as Hengst.) in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span> to the summons to the bones to hear, sq., but comprehends also what Jehovah says to these bones in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5-6<\/span>; for that He is the speaker makes the saying a prophecy, although to prophesy in general may be said to mean the same as: to speak in the Spirit.The <strong>voice<\/strong> which <strong>came<\/strong> was audible; its simplest interpretation is in accordance with <span class='bible'>Eze 1:25<\/span>. The prophet was to prophesy; what Jehovah purposed to say to the bones (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:4-6<\/span>), the prophet now prophesies; and since he prophesies according to the command, Thus saith Jehovah, that which was prophesied to the bones is from God, and the voice is to be understood as <em>Jehovahs<\/em>, from which the New Testament representation is perhaps coloured (<span class='bible'>Joh 5:28<\/span>), and neither a noise nor sound in general-anything like a thunder-clap would be out of place in this sublime and orderly connectionnor in particular: the sound of a trumpet. Keils position, that it cannot be supposed that God should bind His voice of power to the prophecy of the prophet, has in reality no significance. On the other hand, he is right in referring  (<span class='bible'>Eze 3:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 12:18<\/span>) to the noise by which the effect of the word of Jehovah announced itself to the bones, now coming together in consequence thereof. [Hvernick makes the sound pass into a mighty peal. Hitzig, in order to have the fitting impulse from the ground, translates: earthquake (<span class='bible'>Mat 27:51<\/span>), under reference to <span class='bible'>Eze 38:19<\/span>.] Gods voice of power is followed by a rustling, caused by the bones coming rustling up from the surface of the valley. Thereafter ( consecutive) the bones come together, which may be thus distinguished from what follows, that it refers to whatever belongs to one body, while   specializes a single bone in relation to another, <em>e.g.<\/em> the upper to the lower part of the arm (on the form , see Ewald, <em>Gr.<\/em> p. 505). [This may also be interpreted of the first movements of the scattered Israelites in the various settlements in Chaldea, and their assembling for quiet consultation, where the members of the people met again in secret, Schmieder.]<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>, as was promised in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>. [May be interpreted of Israels first growth in hope, conscious strength, and vigour, Schmieder.] The remark that yet <strong>breath was not in them<\/strong> may serve formally for the dramatic colouring of the event in the representation; as to actual fact, it sets forth the creative power of God in the action, which is in this way twofold. That thereby is shown that the restoration is first pre-eminently an external, political one (Hengst.), is not of necessity contained in the text, but the original creation of man, as related in <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>, forms a pattern for the text. (<span class='bible'>Joh 7:39<\/span> makes the deepest application of the .)Correspondingly, therefore, Ezekiel has in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> to prophesy once more,this time to the <strong>Spirit<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>), that is, not to the breath, for that is  only in a living person, as we have already said, and still less to the wind, which is the sensuous natural symbol of the Spirit. And from what follows it is still clearer that the outpouring of the Spirit cannot be spoken of here, but what is spoken of is <em>the universal spirituality which pervades all creation<\/em>. Hence the Spirit is to come <strong>from the four winds;<\/strong> not without reference, moreover, to <span class='bible'>Eze 5:10<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 5:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 12:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 17:21<\/span> (<span class='bible'>Mat 24:31<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 7:1<\/span>).  makes clear the distinction between  and . Our passage has nothing to do with the breathing on in <span class='bible'>Joh 20:22<\/span>, and just as little is the fulness and force of the Spirits operations, <span class='bible'>Act 2:2<\/span> (Hengst.), indicated by the wind from the four winds.  makes a very plain allusion to <span class='bible'>Gen 2:7<\/span>. [The quickening Spirit of God awakens the resolution to return to Gods covenant and to the land of their fathers, Schmieder.]<strong>Slain:<\/strong> killed, not deceased (Doct. Reflect. 5). The colouring is taken from those condemned and executed by the Chaldeans (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>). Regarding , comp. on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>. Exchanging Hithp.  (Ewald, <em>Gr.<\/em> p. 331) for Niphal of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>, and  Piel in place of Pual in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>. The <strong>Spirit<\/strong>, in order to become the breath of life in them (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 2:2<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 3:24<\/span>).<span class='bible'>2Ki 13:21<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 11:11<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span>.<em>The Divine Interpretation of the Vision<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The process in the vision <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span> is symbolical, as shown by the phrase in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> : <strong>these bones are<\/strong>, etc., which refers to the whole vision as it treated of the bones. Hence the bones, which lay there <strong>very dry<\/strong>, but at Jehovahs word became alive, which were <strong>very many<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>), <strong>a very great army<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>), bear the sense of and signify <strong>the whole house of Israel;<\/strong> and this already prepares for the second section of our chapter. According to Hitzig, Judah and Israel combined denote the State broken up by the war, and also the generation cut off by it; against which view we observe that the dead cannot be saying here any more than the bones, but, as in <span class='bible'>Eze 11:15<\/span> sq., the Israel in exile must be contemplated, who now indeed compared themselves to the dead, but to whom, on the contrary, life is immediately (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span>) to be proclaimed and promised. In what they say (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 33:10<\/span>) is contained the so frequently overlooked <em>tertium comparationis<\/em>, and the cause for the vision in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>. Hence the divine interpretation does not primarily start from the outward condition of the people in general, and still less from that of a part of them, the dead of Israel, but from what the despair of those in exile says, hence from the frame of mind which thus found voice: <strong>our bones are dried<\/strong>, etc. The relation of  and  (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>) to each other is evident., properly: cut off, separated, shut out from Gods help (<span class='bible'>Psa 88:6<\/span> [5], 31:23 [22]; <span class='bible'>Isa 53:8<\/span>)., according to Gesenius, a superfluous pronominal dative, as much as to say: We are undone. Hitzig: Reduced to ourselves. [Delitzsch: It is over with us. Hengst.: We are cut off for us, referring the for us to the sadness of the fact for those concerned.] The language which they employ corresponds thoroughly to the question in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>. That which, believing themselves abandoned, without any <strong>hope<\/strong> (<span class='bible'>Eze 19:5<\/span>) of again rising up to be a nation, they say of themselves, Ezekiel beheld in the valley,merely <strong>very dry bones<\/strong>. So much the more, and the more literally, can what was done with these bones, a procedure which the prophet had to prophesy, and was afterwards permitted to behold, avail as a promise to them.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> therefore parallel to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span> sq., but still keeping primarily in view the despairing speech of the exiles:  , not yet, however,     (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>), as <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span> hereafter, but first: <strong>behold, I open your graves<\/strong>, meaning thereby the <em>abodes of the exile<\/em>, since the Jews who were in exile considered themselves like dead men. The accommodating interpretation changes the valley with the many bones on its surface into many <strong>graves<\/strong>, which have to be opened, etc. <strong>My people<\/strong>, here and in the following a very comforting title. Israel, however, ought always to be so, and therefore also to have constantly been so. Consequently we have at the same time prominence given to the contrast between Israels destiny and its deadly despair, and hence a notification of its unbelief and offences in general.What in the vision the clothing with sinews, flesh, and skin was in relation to the bones (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span> sq.), could in the interpretation applying to the living be regarded as political restoration, as this has to begin with leading out of Babylon and bringing back to Canaan.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:13<\/span>.  reminds of  in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span> takes up    of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span> and the rest of the vision, pointing, however, by  to <span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span>, as by  to  in the following, for which comp. <span class='bible'>Ezekiel  28:26<\/span>, 34. The inspiriting and quickening for a home system which is to have permanence, and especially in the case of a people like Israel, will of necessity be spiritual and religious.<span class='bible'>Isa 14:1<\/span>.<span class='bible'>Eze 17:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 22:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:36<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-18<\/span>. <em>The Reunion of Israel and Judah<\/em><\/p>\n<p>After the vision thus interpreted, there follows in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:16<\/span>accompanied by an interpretationa <em>symbolic action<\/em>, the outward reality of which there is no difficulty in admitting. Both the contents (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>) and the transition with  connect what follows with the first section of the chapter, of which it forms the continuation and completion. Israel again become a nation, must, overcoming the separation which had taken place, also again become <em>one<\/em> nation. What follows draws the consequence from what has preceded., board (tablet), or staff, or simply wood, <strong>stick.<\/strong>For the writing, comp. <span class='bible'>Numbers 17<\/span>.The <strong>sons of Israel, his associates<\/strong> (while the text reads the singular for association), are, according to Hengstenberg, a small part of Benjamin, Simeon, and Levi, and the members of the kingdom of the ten tribes who had attached themselves to Judah; according to Keil: the greater part of Benjamin and Simeon, the tribe of Levi, and the pious Israelites who had at various times immigrated into Judah from the kingdom of the ten tribes, <span class='bible'>2Ch 11:13<\/span> sq., 15:9, 30:11, 18, 31:1.Joseph is placed first, as Hengstenberg says, because Ephraims equality with Judah rests upon him in consequence of the blessing of Jacob; more simply, because it is the <em>genealogical title of the patriarch.<\/em> That <strong>the stick of Ephraim<\/strong> (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span>), which has been looked on as a later interpolation, is subjoined, is an addition taken from historical reality, for Ephraim was the head of the kingdom of the ten tribes.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:17<\/span>.     reminds of     in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span>. illustrates , corresponding to the symbolic actionhere in the hand of Ezekiel, as hereafter in his word. In order to make them appear as one <strong>stick<\/strong>, they must hare been adapted for that, and could scarcely have been staves.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:18<\/span>. Comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 24:19<\/span>. The purpose of the symbolic action, what it was meant to incite, on which account it is to be conceived of as externally real (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:20<\/span>).<strong>What<\/strong> (are) <strong>these sticks to thee<\/strong>? that is: what is their signification?<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span>, the interpretation. Where <span class='bible'>Eze 37:16<\/span> has <strong>the stick of Ephraim<\/strong>, we have now <strong>the stick of Joseph<\/strong>, which first of all implies exactly the same as the stick described for Joseph. In what respect it is designated the <strong>stick of Ephraim<\/strong> is then made plain by the Words: <strong>which is in the hand of Ephraim<\/strong> (the expression  doubtless suggested by , <span class='bible'>Eze 37:17<\/span>); and thereby, at the same time, the transition is made from the sign to the thing signified, for to be <strong>in the hand<\/strong> = to be in the possession, in the power, hence it denotes the supremacy of this tribe. Hence, too, instead of  , more expressly   (staves, sticks, as tribes).If the noun is anticipated by , it would certainly be better to read, with Hitzig, , than : to it, to the stick of Judah. It lies away, however, from , as Keil connects, to combine , namely, the tribes, after they have been put on the stick of Joseph (), by  with the stick of Judah; besides, one does not see why the tribes already joined to Joseph should still have to be united with him. The taking is ended with the <strong>tribes of Israel, his associates;<\/strong> the giving relates to those () taken together (), that is, Joseph-Ephraim and his tribes, for the purpose of union ( ) with Judah, and it is only to this that  can refer. Hengstenberg explains : the stick of Judah, I mean, to indicate that Judah is the proper stem of the people of God. The interpretation still keeps a firm hold of the symbolic action ( ), and   evidently expresses an antithesis to Ephraims hand,<em>the union by and in God<\/em>, as opposed to the <em>separation by and in Ephraim<\/em> (comp. <span class='bible'>Isa 11:13<\/span>).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:20<\/span>. The symbolic sign which the prophet is to perform (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:16<\/span>) is expressly designed for the eyes of those concerned, and, with the repetition of the thing to be done, at the same time mediates the connection with what follows.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span> sq. treats of the effecting of the reunion of the nation, after first glancing back to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> sq. Comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 36:24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 11:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 20:34<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 20:41<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 34:13<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>.     is the    of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span>. The now plainly expressed signification of the stick.<span class='bible'>Eze 34:13-14<\/span>.The one nation will be one kingdom. Comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24-25<\/span>; comp. <span class='bible'>Hos 3:5<\/span>. [According to Hvernick, the unity of the kingdom testifies to its truth, that it represents Jehovah.] Qeri , but  might also serve as subject to . Strong and effective negation of the old, <em>that<\/em> has passed away for ever.Since sin, and especially idolatry, had contributed to the separation spoken of, the discourse turns to that, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>. Comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 14:11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 5:11<\/span>. ought not, after <span class='bible'>Eze 6:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 6:14<\/span>, to cause so much difficulty to expositors. The worship of idols, which is the subject of discourse, is just localized transgression. The relief consists in this, that idolatry disappears, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:29<\/span>. To think with Hengstenberg of the places of abode in the exile, so that the earlier sins in Canaan did not come into accountthat they, as it were, left their sins behind them in the foreign land, etc., neither suits the present connection,is a thought here postponed, as Hitzig justly observes,nor harmonizes with <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> sq., according to which the exile, on the contrary, localizes the wages of sin, <em>i.e.<\/em> death. Alteration of the text is equally unnecessary, just as Keils preserving from, and Kliefoths idea of leading out into the glorified Canaan, are imported into the text. Comp. besides, <span class='bible'>Eze 34:13<\/span>.<span class='bible'>Eze 36:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 33:28<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 34:24<\/span>. The closing statement, recurring in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span>, only in reverse order, seems to interrupt the consecution of the verses, so that the prophecy forms itself into two sections<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21-23<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24-27<\/span>with one conclusion. What the first section contains more as to the thing done and generally, is given in the second Messianically and as to the individual, for the full completion of the thought.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>. See on <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>.<span class='bible'>Eze 11:20<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:25<\/span>.<span class='bible'> Eze 36:28<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 28:25<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 34:24<\/span>., so that the <em>terminus ad quem<\/em> is concealed, cannot be seen; hence for an interminable future, is to be understood Messianically, that is, in Christ, as shown by the immediately following , and all that comes after. As we find expressed here without interruption (this is the peculiarity of the whole prophecy here, in distinction to that repeated from Ezekiel 34, 36) the unity of the nation, its continued possession of Canaan, and that very plainly of the earthly Canaan, so just as plainly is all conceived of <em>under the dominion of the King Messiah<\/em>. Israels nationality in Canaan is bound up (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>) with this one kingdom. As to the moral and spiritual condition of the people, their position towards God (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>), <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span> connects likewise with the one shepherd, the King David = Messiah, the walking in, sq., keeping, and doing. And in the same connection occurs <span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span> (likewise , and also  ), for which comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 34:25<\/span> (<span class='bible'>Isa 55:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Jer 32:40<\/span>). As shown by comparing <span class='bible'>Eze 34:25<\/span>, and confirmed by the connection with <span class='bible'>Eze 37:21-23<\/span>, especially <span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>, as that is the peculiar, the leading idea of the divine covenant, to which the  corresponds, and by the whole mode of expression here, including the repeated giving, the making of the covenant proceeds from God in the most manifest exhibition of grace. The fact that   is alike explained and completed by  , expresses the Messianic character of this covenant; for the <em>terminus ad quem<\/em> () of Israel, still hid to appearance, is just the Messiah. In the salvation (), when it embraces time and eternity, eternity in time, alongside of the ideal reference in the whole, the real side in the particular cannot be wanting; hence what is the daily bread for a nation, namely, putting them in the position of increase, cannot be wanting; therefore: <strong>And I give them<\/strong> [Keil: to be a nation] <strong>and multiply them<\/strong>, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:10-11<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:37<\/span>. But with the giving of the <strong>sanctuary<\/strong> of Jehovah <strong>in their midst for ever<\/strong>, <em>another Messianic type<\/em>, now in close preparation for <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 40<\/span> sq., is presented to us in the text, in addition to the one king and shepherd for all, the servant of Jehovah, David. Comp. on <span class='bible'>Eze 11:16<\/span>. The reference to <span class='bible'>Lev 26:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Lev 26:11<\/span> is shown by the harmony of the prophecy with the promise given by Moses. And although the  there in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> (as  is said of the symbol of Jehovahs presence in the wilderness) does not so much signify the outward building, and in Ezekiel too (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span>) it is regarded as , yet , which stands beside , points to the midst of the people; comp. <span class='bible'>Exo 25:8<\/span>. Hitzig is right in this, and also as to what distinguishes this passage from <span class='bible'>Eze 11:16<\/span>. But he overlooks the express reference to each other of    and  , <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span>. There is, at all events, expressed a visible national unity in Canaan as formerly, one political government, which, however, as mediated by the one King Messiah, exhibits itself as a national life purified from idolatry and conformed to law, hence moral, so also an outward serving of God by Israel is here prophesied, the sanctuary of Jehovah in the midst of Israelthat this cannot be Zerubbabels temple is triumphantly proved to the Jews by Keil, from the fact conceded by themselves, that the Shechinah was wanting to it;but the heathen see therein (, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span>) something yet different, namely, the continuing (particip.) sanctification of Israel by God, hence religious-moral conditions. [Not merely <em>gratiosa Dei habitatio in cordibus eorum<\/em>, as Piscator.] We remember here, where what is prophesied of the <strong>sanctuary<\/strong> is so evidently connected with the promised <strong>servant David<\/strong> as <strong>king<\/strong> and <strong>prince<\/strong>, that the kingship is specially prominent in Ezekiels figure of the Messiah (Introd.  9); and besides this, the passage here shows that, as likewise observed in the Introduction,  9, with Ezekiel the main point of view continues to be the Messianic nation, the Messianic salvation of the nation. And so the phrase: <strong>My sanctuary in their midst for ever<\/strong>,  explaining itself in  (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span>), appears essentially as prophesied of the future church of salvation, the realized kingdom of priests (Introd.  9). (Comp. Zech. 2:14 [<span class='bible'>Zec 2:10<\/span>]; <span class='bible'>Joh 1:14<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 21:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 7:15<\/span>; 1Co 3:16; <span class='bible'>1Co 6:19<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Co 6:16<\/span>.) [This promise has, at all events, come to be gloriously fulfilled in the election which forms the stem of the Christian Church. It is again taken up in the saying of Christ: Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world, Hengst.]<\/p>\n<p>At this point of the understanding of our prophecyand herein its most important advance, in distinction to <span class='bible'>Eze 11:16<\/span>, is perhaps announcedthe certainly not unintentional exchange of: <strong>My sanctuary in their midst<\/strong>, of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span>, for: <strong>My dwelling over them<\/strong>, in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span>, must decidedly be taken more spiritually than is done when Hengstenberg refers it to the protecting power which is afforded in the house of God (<span class='bible'>Psa 68:29<\/span> [30]), or Keil, to the position of the temple towering up over the city. Hitzig comes nearer the truth when he directs attention to Gods dwelling in heaven, directly (?) over the temple of Jerusalem (<span class='bible'>Isa 33:5<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 29:9<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 104:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Ki 8:33-34<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 28:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Psa 7:7<\/span> [8]). The sanctification of Israel before the world, as connected with the Kingship of the Messiah, and the establishing of the eternal sanctuary of God in Israels midst, as effected by the founding of the Church of Christ, serve for illustration and fulfilment of the  in Ezekiel here, as is very clear from Acts <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 2<\/span>, to which is prefixed a repeated (comp. <span class='bible'>Luk 24:50<\/span> sq.) and circumstantial account of the exaltation of the Son of man, <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 1<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span>.<span class='bible'> Eze 11:20<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Gen 17:7<\/span>.<span class='bible'>Eze 34:30<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span> (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:23<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 36:36<\/span>). Although the mention of the heathen is still confined to the knowing of the sanctification of Israel, yet such knowledge cannot remain without result, without fruit; comp. <span class='bible'>Isa 44:5<\/span>.Indication of the participation of the heathen in the promised salvation (Hengst.).<span class='bible'>Eze 20:12<\/span>. To sanctify is to purge from sin as well as to consecrate, hence embracing forgiveness of sin, and quickening. The former must become clear to the heathen from the latter, and so much the clearer as they have seen the judgment of God executed on His peoplehave even executed it themselves. Comp. for the harmony with the promises in the Pentateuch, <span class='bible'>Exo 31:13<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Lev 22:32<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>ADDITIONAL NOTE ON <\/strong><strong><span class='bible'>Ezekiel 37<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>[In closing this section, we present a brief outline of the view that has been taken of the prophecies contained in the three closely related chapters, 34, 36, 37, and which in substance applies equally to many other portions of the prophetical Scriptures. 1. They were originally given to revive and animate the hearts of Gods covenant-people, by holding out to them the assured prospect of a reversion from the present evil, and their still certain destination in Gods purpose to the highest and most honourable place on the earth. 2. It was the duty of those to whom such prophecies were delivered at once to believe the word spoken to them, and apply themselves in earnest to do what was needed to secure its accomplishment; and had they only done this, a far larger measure of the promised good would have been reaped than they actually experienced: this later prospect of blessing, like the earlier, given before entering Canaan, greatly failed through their own sinful unbelief. 3. But there being manifestly ideal features introduced into the delineation, especially the good spoken of being so peculiarly connected with the rule and presidency of David, clearly betokens a kind and degree of blessing which could not have been completely fulfilled under the Old Covenant, nor intended to be altogether fulfilled any time according to the letter. It shows the prophecies in question to be, like several of an earlier kind in Ezekiel, descriptions of the future under the form and image of the pastnot as if the past were actually to return again, but that its general spirit and character were to revive. 4. The new things thus to be looked for in the future could only meet with their full and adequate accomplishment in Christ, who is certainly the David of the promise. They are consequently of a higher and more comprehensive nature than any that could be enjoyed under the Old Covenant, when the kingdom of God was so straitened in its dimensions, and so outward and earthly in its visible constitution. But still they were of necessity described under the hue and aspect of the things belonging to the Old Covenantas if it were these only returning again, or these with certain alterations and improvements, such as might give the future a pre-eminence in glory over the past. For only by means of what belonged to existing or previous dispensations of God could the prophet have given any detailed exhibition of what might be expected under another and higher dispensation. The details of the future <em>must<\/em> have been cast into the mould of things already perceived or known. 5. Therefore, in forming ones conceptions now of the real import of such propheciesnow that the transition has been made into the new and higher dispensationwe must throw ourselves back upon the narrower and more imperfect relations amid which they were written, and thence judge of what is still to come. Thus, as the David of the promise is Christ, so the covenant-people are no longer the Jews distinctively, but the faithful in Christ; and the territory of blessing no longer Canaan, but the region of which Christ is king and lord. What was spoken immediately of the one class of personages and relations, may most fully be applied to the other; and by such a method of interpretation alone do we get a uniform and consistent principle to carry us through the whole. While those, on the other hand, who would find a literal Israel, and a non-literal David, or a literal restoration in Christian times, and a non-literal tabernacle and ritual of worship, arbitrarily confound together things dissimilar and incongruous, and render certainty of interpretation absolutely impossible. 6. Sixthly, the view thus given is confirmed by the reproduction of some of these prophecies in the field of the New Testament Church, set free, as was to be expected, from the outward distinctions and limits of the Old. Thus, in particular, the resurrection-scene of this 37th chapter substantially recurs in the 20th chapter of Revelation, and is followed precisely as here by the attack from the embattled forces of Gog and Magog; while not a word is said which would confine the things spoken to the land of Canaan, or the literal Israel; it is the Church and people of Christ at large that are discoursed of. We say nothing respecting the probable time and nature of the events there referred to, but simply point to the identity in character of what is written with the prophecies before us. In those visions of the Apocalypse, the inspired evangelist stretches out the hand to Ezekiel, and shows how the word spoken so long before by that servant of God, freed from the peculiarities of its Jewish form, is to find its application to the Christian Church. The shell has gone, but the substance remains. 7. We may add, lastly, that the common interpretation, which understands Christ by David, and takes all the rest literally, must inevitably tend to justify the Jew in his unbelief. For he naturally says, Your Messiah has not done the thing you yourselves hold must be doneto fulfil the prophecy; He has not set up His throne in Canaan, and gathered Israel there, and re-established the old worship in its purity; this was the very purpose for which He was to appear, and we must wait till He comes to do it. On the basis of the literal interpretation, there seems no satisfactory answer to this; and it is well known that since it has become prevalent, many Jews believe that Christians are coming over to their view of the matter. We are not surprised to hear, as we have heard, of converted Jews declaring that such a mode of interpretation would carry them back to Judaism.Fairbairns <em>Ezekiel<\/em>, pp. 412414.W. F.]<\/p>\n<p><strong>DOCTRINAL REFLECTIONS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. What has Jehovah caused, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>, to be prophesied for comfort to His people (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-13<\/span>)? The resurrection of the dead in the literal sense Kliefoth still maintains, a view which is the older ecclesiastical one, shared by Jews and Christians, so that Jerome, when expressing a different opinion regarding <em>famosam hanc visionen, omnium ecclesiarum Christi lectione celebratam<\/em>, thought it necessary to state that he did not therefore by any means wish to deny the doctrine of the resurrection. How little the connection in Ezekiel says in favour of the dogma of the general resurrection of the dead is best seen from the artificial way in which <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> sq. is disposed of. Kliefoth interprets the prophesied bringing of Israel into their own land (as already, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:28<\/span>) of the final introduction of the people of God into the eternal Canaan, and the quickening in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>, of inward renewal by the Spirit of God; an interpretation which he has also put upon <span class='bible'>Eze 36:25<\/span> sq. From similar perplexity, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> has been combined with the first resurrection of <span class='bible'>Revelation 20<\/span>, and the bringing of Israel into their own land understood in accordance with <span class='bible'>Mat 5:5<\/span>. Hengstenberg, holding that all the other comforting words of the prophet relate to things of this world, insists upon this connection in general, and singles out in particular <span class='bible'>Eze 36:8<\/span>, which was soon to take its beginning, and the connection of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span> sq. and the vision. If the relation is this, that the house of Israel of the vision, reanimated by the Spirit of God, is the whole (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>), and hence is to experience the reunion symbolized (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span> sq.), then this union, which cannot be sought for among the last things, will also not suppose the re-quickening of Israel past. But in addition to the contradiction between the wider and the narrower connection, comes also the contrariety of the picture drawn here to the doctrine laid down in <span class='bible'>1 Corinthians 15<\/span>; those who rise again in Ezekiels vision simply return into earthly existence, with skin and flesh and bones. If the doctrine of the general resurrection is maintained in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span> sq., then <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> sq. must more or less, as also Kliefoth gives to understand, he denied to be in the proper sense an interpretation and explanation of the significant occurence: we must content ourselves with an application for an express purpose, namely, in order to comfort and raise up the hope of Israel with the prospect in question (see above, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>). Against this Hengstenberg, appealing at the same, time to analogies in Daniel, Zechariah, and Ezekiel himself, justly observes: Whosoever feels himself constrained to take <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span> not as an interpretation, even thereby expresses judgment concerning his view of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> begins expressly with an explanation of the signification of these bones, which formed the subject of discourse, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>2. A question which, unless one dismisses entirely the doctrine of the <em>resurrectio mortuorum<\/em> from the text before us, comes into consideration is, whether this dogma already existed in the time of Ezekiel? Hengstenberg, for example, denies indeed the express application of the doctrine to our passage, but makes the dogma serve as figure. Hence he must answer the question put in the affirmative. It is a necessary supposition, not onlyas already Tertullian, <em>de resurr. carnis<\/em>, points out to the Gnostics, and Jerome expresses himselfthat the typical application of the resurrection of the dead by Ezekiel implies the actual taking place of that resurrection, and consequently its truth must be beyond doubt, but also that the doctrine of the resurrection was already at that time a common property of religious popular knowledge in Israel, if it could thus be figuratively applied in Ezekiel. Hengstenberg (<em>Christology<\/em>, vol. 3 p. 51, Clarks trans.) cites Pareaus <em>Comment. de Immortal<\/em>. p. 109, and refers to <span class='bible'>Isa 25:8<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Isa 26:19<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Dan 12:2<\/span>. The raising of the dead (1Ki 17:22; <span class='bible'>2Ki 4:35<\/span>; <span class='bible'>2Ki 13:21<\/span>) can, as isolated cases, prove nothing in its behalf; and passages like <span class='bible'>Deu 32:39<\/span>, <span class='bible'>1Sa 2:6<\/span>, attest only the omnipotence of the living God. Comp. Hvern. <em>Vorles. ber die Theol. des A. T.<\/em> p. 109, and his <em>Comment<\/em>, p. 581; Oehler, <em>V. T. sententia de rebus p. mort. fut<\/em>. p. 37 sq., 42 sq. Furthermore, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span> of our vision, where the prophet leaves to the Lord the answering of the question put to him, says nothing in favour of the consciousness of the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead. If there was such a consciousness, we should certainly expect a corresponding answer from the prophet. Comp. <span class='bible'>Joh 11:23-24<\/span>. (Hvernick: If the prophet could have supposed such a general belief, he would necessarily (?) have appealed to it in order to establish thereon the restoration of the people, etc. But in such a hopeless case as <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> the prophet cannot make suppositions, nor will he; he will just build anewestablish firmly anew hope in the heart.)<\/p>\n<p>3. Hengstenberg says: The prophet, however, does not merely set out from this doctrine and use it as a means of representation; his primarily figurative representation, and the historical confirmation which it received, must also have served to awaken powerfully the belief in the resurrection. If God proves Himself the master of death in the figurative sense, if He redeems His people from outward and the spiritual misery into which they had fallen during the exile, how should the death of the body set a limit to His grace? And again: The salvation announced here under the figure of the resurrection is completed in the resurrection; comp. <span class='bible'>1Co 15:19<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>4. But the text protests also against this merely typical acceptation of the doctrine of the resurrection. There are indeed (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>) very many, according to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span> a very great army, sufficient to suggest all the dead, at any rate sufficient for the interpretation in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> of the whole house of Israel. They are, however, not the bones of deceased men, but of slain men, as expressly stated in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>. The open surface of the valley, moreover, hardly corresponds to the situation of the resurrection of the dead; the graves in the interpretation, still closed and yet to be opened, would be more suitable. Finally, the twofold transaction in regard to the re-quickening in the vision (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span> sq., <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> sq.) can hardly set before the eye the representation of the awakening of the dead; but as the direct design of the vision is to make prominent the creative in what is prophesied, the thing that is possible with God alone (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>), so the first and the second act, especially the observation after the first in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>, that yet breath was not in them, serves from the outset to make prominent the point of the interpretation, namely, Gods putting His Spirit in them, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>5. Hitzigs view of the vision takes more account of the noteworthy circumstance that it treats of slain men. But how? He makes (as already in <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 34<\/span>, King David) the Israelites slain in the destruction of the two kingdoms be called upon by the prophet to rise again. Thus the vision is a vision of a partial resurrection. There was already a similar opinion among the Talmudists (Sanhedr. xcii. 2)comp. on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>; and it is also maintained that such a resurrection did actually take place, and even that those who rose again begot offspring in Canaan; thus one Talmudist expressly declares his descent from one of them.<span class=''>1<\/span> To say nothing of the strangeness of such a view,for which certainly the supernatural character of the Hebrew system offers, as Hitzig must grant, no sufficient support,the idea itself of the resurrection proves nothing, but it must be maintained in <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23-24<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24-25<\/span>, in order that it may be referred to for the vision before us; moreover, as to the context, such a resurrection prophecy does not fit in excellently before and after, as Hitzig supposes. For the multiplication of the people promised in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:37-38<\/span> (comp. <span class='bible'>Eze 36:10<\/span>) surely points to something else than specially a multiplication by resurrection of the slain; and the combination of the vision in the chapter here with <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 38<\/span>, however ingenious and plausible, is by no means the necessary combination imperatively required by the text. Comp. the exegesis <em>in loc<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>6. Thus the dogma of the resurrection of the dead, as well as the announcement of a first resurrection of Israel, or of his slain, literally understood, must be dismissed from our chapter. So also the parabolical application of that dogma is not the sense of the text. If the view is put forward that the whole is figurative, then a mere poetical figure excogitated by Ezekiel cannot certainly be harmonized with the express character of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>; comp. on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>. We have before us a divine vision, which the Lord in express revelation gave His prophet to behold. Hence there must be more to find in this vision than the clothing of an idea, well conceived and carried out with dramatic effect (Philipps.). The objection raised by Hvernick against the view of only outward liberation of the people and the flourishing of the State anew already under Zerubbabel (Grotius, Vatablus, Ammons <em>Bibl. Theol.<\/em>), and also against Ewalds deeper penetration into the matter, the objection, namely, that it is not permissible to repeat this idea from <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 36<\/span>, cannot be maintained. But we have first to deal with the form, and then we will have to remember that the conformation of the thought as contained in the vision cannot be suggested by what is known and suitable for restoration of any kind, as is coming to life again out of a state of death, but on the contrary will have to be accounted for on other grounds. The visionand this is the reason why it proceeds in the form before usis intended to afford to Israel a strong ground for what is already prophesied to him, a specially strong encouragement against his hopelessness. The ground on which what is promised to the people is based is the creative power of God (comp. on <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eze 37:8<\/span>). God Himself appears to the prophet as the quickener of the bones, as Hvernick justly observes. A thoroughly real relation is treated of, namely, the relation of God to death. Then, as regards the encouragement to Israel on this ground, it must speak so much the more powerfully to their hearts, when, taking them at their word, it borrows from their despairing words the answer against all doubts. The vision (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>) is such a thorough answer in a matter-of-fact form, because He who answers, the Promiser, is the Almighty God of Israel, who speaks and does, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>. Comp. how very near Calvin (<em>Inst.<\/em> ii. 10) came to this understanding. Only because Kliefoth is so confused in the exposition of our chapter does it appear that he could gather nothing from Hvernicks remarks, which so often hit the sense, and who refers with far better right than the expositors of the literal resurrection of the dead to <span class='bible'>Deu 32:39<\/span>; <span class='bible'>1Sa 2:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos 13:14<\/span>, etc.<\/p>\n<p>7. The vision of Ezekiel in our chapter takes, as has been said, the discouraged of the Israelites at their word. Already in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>, where the question put to the prophet tends in this direction, the way is opened up for the after interpretation. At the very outset in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>, where the bones filling the valley (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span>), which are very many, are described as very dry, the whole house of Israel lies before us, namely, those who say, Our bones were dried, as the interpretation (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>) puts beyond all doubt. By their speaking thussince their perished hope was Jerusalem and the people in the land of Judahthe exiles in their despondency compare themselves to those who had perished in their native land; and this explains the designation slain given in the vision, which takes them for what they give themselves out to be, as, on the other hand, from the close interweaving of <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span> and <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-14<\/span>, the interpretation speaks of their places of residence in exile as their graves. At the same time, by the bones which He places before the prophet in the valley, the judgment formerly (comp. <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 6<\/span>) threatened by Jehovah is conceded to have taken place. Since this judgment was executed as killing,<span class=''>2<\/span> to which death what of Israel still exists has given itself up (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span>) with full sympathy, if there is still prospect of salvation after the judgment and arising out of the judgment, this salvation can only be life, Gods act of salvation, and consequently nothing but re-quickening.<span class=''>3<\/span> And because the slain, to whom Israel in exile compare themselves, are to be supposed in Canaan, the bringing back of Israel to their own land is connected repeatedly (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> sq.) with the re-quickening of the nation. Thus the salvation to be prophesied is externally restoration of the nationIsrael is again in his own land. There is one element which the vision could not set forth (unless, perhaps, it is hinted at by the expression: and stood upon their feet, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>), but which the interpretation brings in felicitously through the dead bones of the vision, by the bringing of them out of the graves. The vision has chiefly in view the inward side, namely, the quickening by the Spirit, in general the national life as such, although, as is clear from the interpretation (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>), not without spiritual reference back to <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 36<\/span>; comp. the exposition.<\/p>\n<p>8. The faith of Israel in his redemption was to rest not so much on the belief in a resurrection of the dead, as on belief in God the Creator, who brings being out of nothing, who awakens life out of death, even in its most fearful form, the annihilation of all existence (Hvern.). It may be said more generally regarding the significance of hope for faith, that hope demonstrates the blessedness of faith, yet is not the ground of its knowledge or certainty, but as certainly as I believe, so certainly shall I also beholdthe future, which hope expectantly anticipates.<\/p>\n<p>9. As has been above remarked, <span class='bible'>Revelation 20<\/span> was early introduced into the discussion. Kliefoth recently, while making the resurrection of the dead generally, limited, however, to a single definitely bounded field of dead (), be shown to the prophet (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-10<\/span>), because it is afterwards to be referred to the appointed resurrection of the people of God, borrows from Revelation 22 a very peculiar confirmation of this exposition of his. The    in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:5<\/span> there, namely, is based on our passage, and the proof of this he makes to be that the souls of the  there (who are the  here) are seen, and that both here and there Gog and Magog follow on the resurrection. He who is constrained to recognise in the first section of our chapter the re-quickening of Israel as a nation, will not be thereby hindered from conceding that it will be followed by the re-quickening of all Israel, that is, as Paul expresses it in <span class='bible'>1Co 15:23<\/span>, of      . If this  is likewise meant in <span class='bible'>Rev 20:4<\/span> (), then the reference of our passage to it can as little be denied as that the    may be prefigured in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:23<\/span> sq., the repeated  here can be interpreted by   there, the       in <span class='bible'>Rev 20:3<\/span> compared with <span class='bible'>Eze 37:28<\/span> here, and that the , <span class='bible'>Rev 20:4<\/span>, refers to <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 38<\/span>. But the beheaded witnesses of the Apocalypse of John by no means harmonize with the slain of Ezekiel; and although Gog and Magog make their appearance in <span class='bible'>Rev 20:8<\/span> sq., as here in <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 38<\/span>, yet already <span class='bible'>Rev 19:17<\/span> sq. makes reference to Ezekiel 39, 38 in Ezekiel. Moreover, <span class='bible'>Rev 20:6<\/span> also can be compared to the so often used  of our chapter.<\/p>\n<p>10. Since God as the self-existent life in itself is Spirit, all life in its various grades and forms originates and subsists only through the Spirit, which proceeds from God; the possession of spirit forms the universal ground of life, connecting the whole creation with God (Beck.).<\/p>\n<p>11. We have here  and  together, the full and entire conception of the sovereignty of the Father and of the working of the Son in the Holy Ghost; comp. <span class='bible'>Joh 5:21<\/span> sq.<\/p>\n<p>12. In regard to the religious spirit which animated the returned exiles, reference has been rightly made to the prophecies of Haggai and Zechariah, and also to the psalms belonging to this period.<\/p>\n<p>13. The truth of the section <span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span> is not so well expressed by saying with Ewald, that the individual or the nation that does not despair of the Divine Spirit is never in any situation forsaken by that Spirit, but is always borne onward to new life, as by saying that it has its expression in the eternity of the Church of God. We need not, says Hengstenberg, extend our prophecy to the unbelieving Jewish people and their future conversion. As expressly stated in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-13<\/span>, it applies only to Israel as the people of God, and the dispensation of grace grows out of this relation.<\/p>\n<p>14. It is doubtless the power of his people which the prophet sees in this vision rising up to new life; it is the sons of Israel, held in captivity and scattered, who are destined to return to the soil of their beloved heritage. But on the ground of the deep word of typical representation we read the joyous announcement: I live, and ye shall live also (Umbreit).<\/p>\n<p>15. The reunion of Israel and Judah has, in consequence of the pronounced heathenizing character (still continuing in the Samaritans) or the former (Doct. Reflec. 4 on <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 20<\/span>.), a co-reference to the heathen; and this is more to be thought of than the separation between believers and unbelievers, which Hengstenberg makes ensue after the coming of Christ, as a still worse separation. Yea, the less Israel-Judah has become one in the Messiah, who is Christ, the more has the heathen world come into consideration for the fulfilling of the prophesied union, <span class='bible'>Rom 11:26<\/span> : .   .<\/p>\n<p>16. As the exile of the Jews ceases in Christ, so the alienship of the heathen ends in Christ, <span class='bible'>Ephesians 2<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>17. A continued separate existence of the ten tribes in some unknown region is a fable (Hengst. ).<\/p>\n<p>18. Why could not the Jews, like other nations of the sinking world-dominion of Rome, preserve their nationality in a distinct state? Think of the Maccabees. Not only their exclusive national habits, but still more the Messianic hope in the heart of the nation, fitted the Jews for this above other nations. From within and from without everything was here conjoined for building up a strong and important nationality among the fluctuating nations and gods of the Old World. In both respects there was given with the return from exile a new tone to their history. (On the characteristic peculiarities of Israel, their particular national disposition, comp. the Doct. Reflec. on <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 34<\/span>) Their greater zeal for the law of Jehovah, the more decided antithesis of the national life to the heathen world-form after the exile, has been often remarked on; and also that a more definite expectation of the Messiah is clear consciousness of the pious of the land, and not of the prophetic circle alone. The Jewish people have, in the great part of them scattered through all nations, served to prepare the heathen for Christianity. Consider the importance of Jewish Hellenism; think of the net of the proselytism of the gate drawn through the heathen world; and do not overlook the Septuagint. How much might their gathering together in Christ into a Christian people and state have contributed to the ingathering of the heathen! When the kingdom of priests which Israel should have been became contracted to the number twelve of the apostles (<span class='bible'>Mat 19:28<\/span>), still the effect of this mission into the world is the fulness of the Gentiles. What the emphasizing of Judah (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span>) already signifies, is expressly uttered in a Messianic sense by the repeated naming of the one king (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>) as David the servant of Jehovah (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:24-25<\/span>). Our promise can relate only to Christian Israel, for the Jewish nation either completed itself in the Messiah by receiving Christ, or deprived itself of Him, as may be read in <span class='bible'>Joh 19:15<\/span>. Then with the perishing of its spirit, its flesh also perished; what still remained in form of Israel was therefore broken up by the false Messiahs, the Romans, etc. It is a fundamental mistake still to seek at the present day to see in the Jews a nation, especially when the remains of nationalitythe offspring of pridewhich still manifested themselves in the Middle Ages in the individual members of the race, are being ever more and more spiritualized, or even materialized, by the spirit of indifference, into cosmopolitanism. Because they are My people (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:12-13<\/span>), Jehovah makes the leading out of exile and the return to Canaan to he prophesied to them. In view of the Messiah, He promises them a united nationality (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:21<\/span> sq.), and the inhabiting of Canaan for ever, the peaceable possession of the land. The promise here has nothing to do with individuals, and what Hengstenberg says of its conditionality in this respect is superfluous. After the people of Israel relinquished their claim to nationality in presence of the manifested Messiah, there can he no further talk of their conversion as a nation to Christ (Keil); and so much the less as the kingdom of God over Israel as a nation has passed over for fulfilment to the idea of humanity given in Israel. In this last and at the same time highest respect, the unity and eternity, kingly and priestly, under the one shepherd, here prophesied, have in Christianityalike as regards the kingship and as regards the sanctuary (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span> sq.)their universal and also their progressive realization (<span class='bible'>Joh 10:16<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 1:6<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 21:3<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Rev 21:22<\/span> sq., 22:3 sq.).<\/p>\n<p>19. The literally verbal interpretation of our prophet has been repeatedly spoken against. For in whatever way the prophets may prophesy the glorious future of Israel, the popular form of their discourse, expressed in accordance with the times, must not keep out of view the eternal hope of Israel, the Spirit-anointed One. Since the beginning and the end of Gods march in history through the world is man, is humanity, it must seem childish to believe that the millennial kingdom will be centralized at Jerusalem, that this will be its capital under the Jews brought back to Palestine, that the Lord will at His coming again dwell in a real temple, and that the law of Moses, and even the ceremonial and the civil law of Moses, will be the law of the kingdom, etc. This is realistic exposition indeed; and while people cross and bless themselves with it against spiritualism, the thought never troubles them that they are borne along by the materialistic current of the age. The New Testament has not thus understood, not thus expounded the Old. Comp. moreover, the penetrating and partially conclusive arguments of Keil <em>in loc<\/em>. against the Chiliasm of the modern Apocalyptic. From Gods covenant with Abraham onward, the development of Israel moves in the direction of the formation of a nation and the possession of a land, the land of Canaan. The prophets would have been unintelligible to Israel had they prophesied to it a future without regard to these two particulars. How far that which after the judgment of the exile was prophesied, as restitution of people, land, and cultus, had to serve the purpose of affording the historical nexus and point of departure for the Messiahto what extent what was prophesied on these points would have political earthly reality, could be discerned from the very character of the coming Messianic kingdom. A kingdom which, according to the confession before Pilate, is not of this world, could not fail to show that the apparent, sensuousness of the prophecies portraying the future of the people and land of Israel is in reality spiritual allegory. In the history of the nation, in its institutions, etc., the vessels were sufficiently well placed for types and symbols, in order in due time to change the water in them into the wine of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>[See additional note above, at the close of the <strong>Exegetical Remarks<\/strong>.W. F.]<\/p>\n<p>20. The New Testament, says Hengstenberg, knows nothing of a future possession of the land of Canaan. If the fulfilment is sought in this, then the interruption of two thousand years is inconceivable, since a constant possession is here placed in prospect. With respect to the perpetual possession, we must rather look to <span class='bible'>Mat 23:37<\/span>, etc. For supplementing Ezekiel we have Zechariah, one of his immediate successors, who soon after the return from the exile predicts (<span class='bible'>Ezekiel 11<\/span>.) a desolation of the land in consequence of the rejection of the Good Shepherd.<\/p>\n<p>21. The two powers which in the second section of our chapter (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span> sq.) are destined to. realize the idea of the symbolized unity of the nation, are the royal power (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span>) and the sanctuary (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span>). As these express that which from the commencement Israel was appointed to be (<span class='bible'>Exo 19:6<\/span>), Israels destiny as a nation, they are the two pillars of its unity. When the kingdom was divided, and the sanctuary was no longer the one sanctuary for all, then there came an end, first to Israel, and then to Judah. As without the raising up again of the kingdom of David, and without the restoration of the sanctuary of Jehovah, there can be no re-quickening, so there can be no reunion of Israel. That which the last destruction of the temple, on the one hand, gives to the Jews to ponder to this very hour, Pilate on the other, by his question (<span class='bible'>Joh 19:15<\/span>), laid on the consciences of their national representatives of that time, and in such a manner that we feel reminded of verses like <span class='bible'>Eze 37:22<\/span> and others here.<\/p>\n<p>22. In relation to <span class='bible'>Eze 11:16<\/span> it has to be observed, 1st, that where  occurs there we find here in contrast to the temporary the completion appears in a permanent form; 2d, that where we have there   , we have here   ; hence, instead of the I, the temple of the exile, which also appeared in Christ (<span class='bible'>John 2<\/span>.), the perfect and also the final will be (<span class='bible'>Rev 21:22<\/span>)as Paul saysthe temple of God are ye. As the latter will be an enduring, an eternal one, inasmuch as it forms the other side of the final tabernacle (<span class='bible'>Rev 21:3<\/span>), so it is explained in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span> by this, that the presence of the Eternal, formerly represented by the angel of the covenant in the cloud, will now as our flesh be exalted to heaven, in consequence of which Christ by His Holy Spirit pours out the heavenly gifts into us, His members, as He also protects and preserves us by His power against all enemies (Heidelb. Cat. Question 51).<\/p>\n<p><strong>HOMILETIC HINTS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1<\/span> sq. The hope of the Israelites lay quite prostrate; but the hope of the people of God shall never cease, because God will assuredly reveal and glorify His grace on us. Therefore God by His word always furnishes fresh courage in every affliction, etc. (Diedrich.)This valley is found indeed everywhere. In other words, is there not plenty of dead bones? The best thing is, that God still cares even for such (Berl. Bib.).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span>. When our state seems to us so extremely miserable that none of Gods promises will apply to it, then we should remember these bones (Starck).The Church of Christ, too, may at times look like such a field of the dead.What else are we, too, through our corrupt nature, than dry bones, empty and alienated from the life of God and from the righteousness of Jesus Christ, until the Lord gives us His Spirit of life ? (Berl. Bib.)It is the Lord who makes the dead to live, who visits His people in grace and raises them again from the dust, who redeems us by His Spirit from spiritual bondage, yea, who will also in the last days awaken the dead, etc. (Tb. Bib.)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span>. God asks counsel of us, that we may learn to acknowledge our ignorance, <span class='bible'>Joh 6:6-7<\/span> (Cr.).Would that all theologians had thus confessed their ignorance, and not sought to cover it with a semblance of knowledge! (Schmieder.)It is God Himself who gives in us the first presentiments of regeneration and resurrection (Diedrich).Not only, however, in that which is impossible with men, but in all things should we look to God.The recourse of faith when assailed to the divine omnipotence.Since God is omniscient and omnipotent, the resurrection of the dead is possible; but since He has also promised it, and cannot break His word, it is also certain, <span class='bible'>Joh 5:25<\/span> (Starke).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-3<\/span>. Faith in the field of the dead world and of the dead church; what it sees (death, and with men the impossibility of life); on what it trusts (on the Lord alone).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4<\/span> sq. As God here addresses the bones by the prophet, so He also by the gospel speaks to the dead in sin. He says, namely, that He can quicken from death in sin; and commands the dead to hear, and to arise from the dead, or to repent, that is, to believe that they are dead in sins, and in want of divine illumination and sanctification, and to lift up their eyes to the truth which is in Christ, etc.; <span class='bible'>Rom 4:17<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Joh 5:28-29<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Eph 5:14<\/span> (Cocc.).Even the dead must hear the word of God from the lips of men; the man of God speaks to them (Diedrich).We are in our whole life and in death directed above all to the word of the Lordentirely to the Lord who is the Word, <span class='bible'>John 1<\/span>.The wretched state of sin dominant in a man cannot be more forcibly typified than by the state of the dead, <span class='bible'>1Ti 5:6<\/span> (Lange).From this we may draw an important lesson both for ourselves and others, namely, that however worn out, however unconscious and dead to our Condition we may be, yet God is able to redeem us from it, and to impart a life so much the greater the less hope of life there is apparent. This makes the soul still hope against all hope, <span class='bible'>Rom 4:18<\/span>. The worse and the more hopeless the prospect around the soul, the more is it aware that it is well with it, and that God is able of stones to raise up children to Abraham, <span class='bible'>Mat 3:9<\/span>. Although the soul esteems all as lost, yet it troubles not itself about that, and does not say, I am lost and shall never come back, which is the language of self-love, etc. (Berl. Bib.)Without God there is only death, whether natural or spiritual, whereas Gods Spirit is able to quicken all and everything (Starck).We have, however, chiefly to see to it that we ourselves are alive, and so, above all, may have part in the first resurrection. For blessed and holy, etc. (Berl. Bib.)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:4-5<\/span>. The word of God over the dead bones, how it <em>is<\/em> spirit, and <em>promises<\/em> life.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:6<\/span>. In the resurrection of the dead it will not, however, be as the hymn says: Then shall this very skin, as I believe, surround me.As this spiritual resurrection here is a gradual process, so also in conversion and renewal, the man proceeds from glory to glory, until he stands fast in the Lord, and in the power of His might, in order to walk henceforth in the ways of the Lord (Starck).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span> sq.: When it is prophesied according to Gods word, there are still always voices, noise, movement, and things that belong to one another come together.If the voice of the Holy Ghost is heard in the heart, then there is a movement of the heart, and blessed is he who obeys the impulse (Starck).The wonderful experiences on the field of the dead in the churches.But what do bones, sinews, flesh, and skin, all brought together and fitted to one another, avail without the spirit? This remark applies not so much to the confessions of the churches, as to the attempts at revival through constitutions and liturgies. Certainly the coming together of members of each bodyif the passage is made to apply to reunion (as by Richter)is Gods work; but not when the bodies, taken from different bodies, are as a matter of compulsion bound together promiscuously. The spirit, and not the uniform, is that which truly unifies; and the consciences of men are not to be dealt with as the regimental tailor deals with soldiers. The fact that an army is spoken of, <span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>, cannot certainly give the tone to our view of the Church of Christ.Pure doctrine is not skin and bones, flesh and sinews, but spirit, which has and brings life. But those who teach their own wisdom and holiness still seek life where it cannot be found.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span>. Thou mayest prophesy to the wind, provided thou prophesiest only Gods word: Thus saith the Lord, and not: Thus must ye do.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span>. Richter suggests of this very great army, that, consisting of those drawn from restored Israel, it will serve for the spiritual conquest of all the Gentile nations, and especially for the gaining over of the Mohammedans to the kingdom of Christ.All (?) Scripture announces that the children of Israel, once converted, will be full of zeal to subject to the gentle rule of Jesus Christ and His grace those nations which will not be extirpated as anti-Christian (!) by divine justice. These dry bones, still scattered at present upon the earth, shall be changed into preachers and apostles, etc. (Where is it said that the army has to conquer the world?)One needs no power or army when there is nothing to fight with and conquer, and no enemy to overcome. But this conversion of the world will first take place in the kingdom of the Lord when, <span class='bible'>Revelation 20<\/span>, the devil shall be bound in the bottomless pit, etc. The spirit of grace and of supplication will, however, make them invincible; and the blood of the New Covenant, which their fathers shed with blind fury, will so inspire them, that they would, if necessary, drink even the cup which their Saviour drank (<span class='bible'>Mat 20:22<\/span>). By the confession of their sin, above all, will they work to procure entrance for His name and His mysteries into the remotest lands, etc. In this the natural ability, warmth, and activity of this people will be exceedingly useful, especially, however, through the Spirit of God, <span class='bible'>Zec 9:15<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Zec 9:13-14<\/span>.The Berleburg Bible subjoins to <span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span> sq. the prayer: Would that it might also please our great prophet Jesus Christ to prophesy with power, and by His intercession and mission compel the Spirit to come! Oh, what a great army will then come forth to do battle against the beast and the whore!<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> sq. These bones are, that is, <em>signify, sq<\/em>., and yet: this bread is my body, etc., is held <em>not<\/em> to signify!We see the foolishness of our flesh when we are pressed by afflictions which go quite contrary to our expectations; we then either forget the divine promises, or accord to them scarcely a half faith (Luther).The language of unbelief makes the calamity great, and Gods power to help little.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> sq. But He opens the graves of despair, and makes the light of a better state arise to the house of Israel, to which all the elect belong. As the spirit of life is given to the bones from all the four corners of the world, so must the true Israelites be brought together by the same spirit out of the four corners of the world, from all places, to the unity of the faith, and these obtain the inheritance that passeth not away (Heim-Hoffmann).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span>. Only let us not forget that heaven is our fatherland, and that we should delight to be with Christ.The Lord has always shown Himself such a God in His people. His people remain for ever, and have already often experienced resurrection (Diedrich).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:15<\/span> sq. How often does God repeat His promises! how many seals does He append to them! Is it not wonderful that men doubt not withstanding? <span class='bible'>Isa 11:12<\/span>; <span class='bible'>Hos 1:11<\/span> (Starke).(We may mention here the wooden alphabets of the ancient Britons, <em>e.g.<\/em> the runes written or engraved upon wood.)<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span> sq. That was a type of the union of all believers in the whole world, Jews and Gentiles, through one spirit and faith, under one Head, King, and Saviour, the promised Messiah (Tossanus).Thus the kingdom of Israel was to cease entirely, and not to rise up again (Starke).Unity is a mark of the Spirit (Heim-Hoffmann).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:22-23<\/span>. The union which is not merely two sticks in one hand (above all in a secular hand): (1) That which is preceded by separation from the State, it is a purely ecclesiastical, and <em>e.g.<\/em> not a military one; (2) Where the unifying Head in everything is seen ever more and more to be Christ, and not the king, as bishop of the country; (3) Where the essential thing is: to be Gods people, and not so much a German Established Church.The separation arose from the worship of idols, and the earthly-minded never ask after unity and purity of doctrine(Diedrich).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span>. Comp. on <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 34<\/span>.The royal dominion of the Anointed One as the fulfilment of Gods promises, as the pledge rich in promise of eternity.Of the kingdom of Christ there shall be no end (Starck).<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:26<\/span> sq. Jesus is the temple of the Godhead, through which we obtain what we ask (Heim-Hoffmann).The covenant of peace, an everlasting covenant and a holy covenant.The everlasting priestly kingdom of the Messiah (<span class='bible'>Psa 110:4<\/span>), the revelation for the heathen.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Footnotes:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class=''>[1]<\/span>It may be remarked in passing, that Hvernick misapprehends the dealings between Pharisees and Sadducees in the Talmud regarding the resurrection, for the Sadducees there do not, when appealing to <span class='bible'>Ezekiel 37<\/span>, claim the figurative as the received explanation of our passage, but only suppose in the passage not the <em>resurrectio futuri sculi<\/em>, but on the contrary a merely particular, and not the general resurrection.<\/p>\n<p><span class=''>[2]<\/span>It is from the beginning a fundamental law for all human development, that death is decreed for the transgression of the divine commandment; holding good in the first instance for the individual life, but also for the national domain, where the law lays hold of Jehovahs Israel as an individual personality, and sets in view before it life and death, particularly the latter, for the decision of the nation from the beginning onward takes always more plainly the similitude of Adams decision. Captivity, or the separation of Israel from their land, announced as the last and worst punishment, is, according to the law, to be conceived of as the death of the nation. This the Old Testament consciousness looks upon as death, for the individual is related to his body as the nation to its land, and the land separated from the nation is subjected to the most fearful desolation and devastation (<span class='bible'>Ezekiel 36<\/span>), like the human body bereft of the soul. Or, as death dissolves into dust, so the captivity of Israel is its dissolution into the primal elements out of which it was at first formed, etc.Baumgarten.<\/p>\n<p><span class=''>[3]<\/span>Hofmann rightly observes, that what is illustrated in Ezekiel is not so much the newness of the life <em>into which<\/em>, as rather the completeness of the state of death <em>out of which<\/em> Israel is to be restored.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures, Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical by Lange<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong>DISCOURSE: 1120<br \/>UNIVERSAL RESTORATION OF THE JEWS<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-6<\/span>. <em>The hand of the Lord was upon me, and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord, and set me down in the midst of the valley which teas full of bones, and caused vie to pass by them, round about: and, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, lo, they were very dry. And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord God, thou knottiest. Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live. And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am the Lord<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>WHILST the Jews at large, and the generality of Christians also, believe that the dispersed of Israel will one day be restored to their own land, there is an assured expectation, both amongst the one and the other, that the Messiah will in due time reign over the face of the whole earth. But, whilst this blessed event is expected by all, there lurks in the minds of the generality a persuasion, that in the present state of the Jews their conversion to Christ is impracticable; and that, whenever it shall be effected, it will be by some miraculous interposition, like that which took place at their deliverance from Egypt: and hence all attempts to convert them to Christianity are thought nugatory at least, if not presumptuous. In opposition to these discouraging apprehensions, which would paralyze all exertions in their behalf, I have selected this portion of Holy Writ, which meets the objections in the fullest possible manner, and shews, beyond all doubt, that we are bound to use the means which God has appointed for their conversion, and that in the diligent use of those means we may reasonably hope for Gods blessing on our labours.<br \/>In the preceding chapter are plain and express promises relative to the restoration and conversion of the Jews. In the chapter before us, the same subject is continued in an emblematic form. The Jews in Babylon despaired of ever being restored to their native land. To counteract these desponding fears, there was given to the Prophet Ezekiel a vision, in which the extreme improbability of such an event is acknowledged, whilst the certainty of it is expressly declared. And, lest the import of the vision should be mistaken, it is explained by God himself, and the event predicted in it is foretold in plain and direct terms: Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel. Behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost; we are cut off for our parts. Therefore prophesy, and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, and shall put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken it, and performed it, saith the Lord [Note: ver. 1114.].<\/p>\n<p>We cannot but admire the goodness and condescension of God, in so accommodating himself to the weaknesses and wants of men. His people were slow of heart to understand his word; and therefore he gave them line upon line, and precept upon precept, and exhibited truth to them under every form, if so be they might be able to receive it at last, and to obtain the blessings which he held forth to them in his Gospel.<br \/>The restoration promised in the chapter before us does not merely relate to the deliverance of the Jews from Babylon. To that indeed is its primary reference; but it manifestly has respect to a recovery from their present state of dispersion, and to a spiritual deliverance from their bondage to sin and Satan: for, not only are the expressions too strong to be confined to a mere temporal deliverance, but the emblem mentioned in the subsequent part of this chapter, of uniting two sticks in the prophets hand, shews that the whole is to be accomplished, when all the tribes of Israel, as well those which were carried captive to Assyria as those of Judah and Benjamin, shall be reunited under one head, the Lord Jesus Christ.<br \/>That this period is yet future, you cannot doubt, when you hear the words of God to the prophet: Son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions. Then take another stick, and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his companions: and join them one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand. And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not shew us what thou meanest by these? say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen whither they be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land. And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel, and one King shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at allAnd David my servant shall be king over them; and they shall have one Shepherd [Note: ver. 1625.]. These things have never yet been fulfilled; but they shall be fulfilled in their season. What though the Jews be like dry bones scattered over the face of the whole earth? Shall any word that God has spoken respecting them fall to the ground? No: the scattered bones shall be reunited, each to its kindred bone, and they shall rise up an exceeding great array, as the Lord has said.<\/p>\n<p>In explanation of this vision, I will endeavour to set before you,<\/p>\n<p>I.<\/p>\n<p>The present state of the Jews;<\/p>\n<p>II.<\/p>\n<p>Our duty towards them; and<\/p>\n<p>III.<\/p>\n<p>Our encouragement to perform it.<\/p>\n<p>Let us consider, First, The present state of the Jews<br \/>Certainly nothing can be well conceived more unpromising than this. The obstacles to their conversion do indeed appear almost insurmountable. One most formidable barrier in their way is, <em>the extraordinary blindness and hardness of their hearts<\/em>. From the very beginning they were, as Moses himself tells them, a stiff-necked people: and their whole history is one continued confirmation of the truth of Ins assertion; insomuch that any one who is conversant with the sacred records, but unacquainted with the plague of his own heart, would be ready to imagine, that their very blood had received a deeper taint than that of others. Certainly we should have scarcely supposed it possible that human nature should be so corrupt, as they have shewn it to be. We should never have conceived that persons who had witnessed all the wonders which were wrought in their behalf in Egypt, and at the Red Sea, and in the wilderness, should be so murmuring, so rebellious, so atheistical as they were during their forty years continuance in the wilderness; and indeed, with the exception of some occasional and partial reformations, even till their final dispersion by the Romans. It really appears incredible, that, with the Holy Scriptures in their hands, and with the life and miracles of our blessed Lord exhibited before their eyes, they could evince such malignant dispositions towards him, and with such deliberate cruelty imbrue their hands in his blood. Yet such is their state at this hour, that I can have no doubt but that they would reject him again with all the same virulence as before, if he were again to descend from heaven, and to place himself within the reach of their power. His meek and holy conduct would not be sufficient to disarm their malice; nor could all his benevolent miracles conciliate their regard: they would still, as before, cry, Away with him! crucify him! crucify him! The same veil is upon their hearts at this day as there was then: and, as far as they can, they actually repeat all the iniquities of their fathers, sanctioning and approving all which they did towards him, and in their hearts transacting it afresh. Such being almost universally the predominant features of their minds, we must acknowledge, that their restoration to life is as improbable as any event that can be contemplated. But whilst I say this, let it not be thought that I mean to cast any uncharitable reflections upon them, or needlessly to asperse their character: for I well know that by nature they are no worse than others. They labour under peculiar disadvantages. From their earliest infancy they are filled with prejudice against the religion of Jesus: they hear him designated by the most opprobrious titles; and are taught to regard him as a vile impostor. This constitutes the chief difference between them, and multitudes who bear the Christian name: ungodly Christians are as averse to real piety as they; but having been taught to reverence the name of Christ, they can hear of it without disgust; whilst the Jews, who have been educated in the most envenomed hatred of it, spurn at it with indignation and abhorrence; and consequently, are proportionably hardened against all his overtures of love and mercy.<\/p>\n<p>Another obstacle in their way is <em>the contempt in which they are held<\/em>. It had been foretold by Moses concerning them, that they should become an astonishment and a proverb, and a bye-word among all nations [Note: <span class='bible'>Deu 28:37<\/span>.]; and such they have been ever since their dispersion by the Romans. There is not a quarter of the globe where this prediction is not verified. Mahometans and Heathens of every description pour contempt upon them, and load them with all manner of indignities. Nor have Christians been at all more kindly disposed towards them: on the contrary, we have been foremost in executing upon them the Divine vengeance, just as if our religion, instead of prescribing acts of mercy and love, had dictated nothing but cruelty and oppression. To this hour, the very name of a Jew is amongst us a term of reproach, a symbol of every thing that is odious and contemptible. And what is the natural effect of this? Can we wonder that it should excite resentment in their breasts? Has it not a necessary tendency to embitter them against us, and to make them detest the principles we profess? What can they think of Christianity, when they see such conduct universally practised by its professors? We complain of their blindness and obduracy; but can we wonder at their state, when we ourselves have done, and are yet continually doing, so much to produce it? And what effect has it on ourselves, but to weaken any kind dispositions which may be cherished in the hearts of a few towards them, and to make us despair of ever effecting any thing in their behalf? This effect, I say, it does produce: for, whilst we make extensive efforts for the conversion and salvation of the Heathen, we pass by the Jew with utter disdain, and deride as visionary all endeavours for his welfare. If we saw but a beast fallen into a pit, our bowels of compassion would move towards him, and we should make some efforts for his deliverance: but we behold millions of Jews perishing in their sins, and we never sigh over their lamentable condition, nor use any means for the salvation of their souls. They are not allowed even the contingent benefits of social intercourse with us: the wall of partition which God has broken down in his Gospel, is built up by us; as if by general consent they were proscribed, and debarred all access to the light that we enjoy. Their fathers, in the apostolic age, laboured and died for us, when we were sunk in the depths of sin and misery: but we will not stretch out a hand for them, or point them to the rock, on which they may be saved from the overwhelming surge. Thus they are left to famish, whilst the heavenly manna lies around our tents; and they are immured in darkness, whilst we are enjoying all the blessings of the noon-day sun. Say, then, whether this be not a formidable barrier in their way, so as to render their access to the true Messiah beyond measure difficult?<\/p>\n<p>But a yet further obstacle to their conversion arises from <em>the efforts which they themselves use to prevent the introduction of Christianity among them<\/em>. The Rulers of their Church exercise authority over them with a strong hand: and the first appearance among them of an inclination to embrace the Gospel of Christ is checked with great severity. Every species of threatening is used to intimidate those who have begun to ask the way to Zion, and to deter them from prosecuting their inquiries: and, if a person yield to his convictions, and embrace the Gospel, he is instantly loaded with all the odium that can be heaped upon him: every kind of employment is withheld from him; and he would be left to perish with hunger, if he were not aided by those whose principles he has embraced. An apprehension of those evils deters vast multitudes from free inquiry; and constrains not a few to stifle their convictions, because they cannot prevail on themselves to sacrifice their all for Christ.<\/p>\n<p>Such being the present state of the Jews, it may well be asked, <em>Can<\/em> these bones live? Can it be hoped that the feeble efforts which we are using should succeed? If, when in Babylon, they despaired, saying, Our bones are dried; our hope is lost; we are cut off for our parts: may they not with far greater propriety adopt the same language now? and may not we regard all attempts for their conversion as altogether hopeless, even as hopeless as the resuscitation of dry bones, that have been for ages crumbled into dust?<\/p>\n<p>Yet hopeless as their state appears, we should not be discouraged from performing,<\/p>\n<p>II.<\/p>\n<p>Our duty towards them<\/p>\n<p>The command which God gave to the prophet in my text was <em>not personal<\/em> to him, <em>but general<\/em> to all who are partakers of superior light and liberty. The whole was not a real transaction, but a vision, intended for the instruction of the Church of God in all ages, and especially for those who should be alive at the period destined for the accomplishment of the prophecy. We may consider therefore the directions here given as applicable to ourselves, and as comprising our duty towards the house of Israel. It consists in these two things, <em>The communicating of instruction to them<\/em>, and <em>The praying unto God for them<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>We should, as far as lies in our power, <em>communicate instruction to them<\/em>. The word prophecy does not necessarily import an utterance of predictions; it is often used for the conveying of instruction in the name of God: and this is what we are bound to do to the Jewish people, each of us according to the abilities we possess, and the opportunities that are afforded us. We are not all called to exercise the ministerial office; but we are to impart in conversation the knowledge we have received. No Christian whatever is to put his light under a bushel or a bed, but on a candlestick, that it may give light to those who are within the sphere of its influence. If we have but one talent, we are to use it for the honour of our God, and the benefit of our fellow-creatures.<\/p>\n<p>But here it is to be regretted, that the generality of Christians are themselves destitute of the information which they are called upon to communicate. Nor is this true of the laity only: even those who bear the ministerial office are by no means so well instructed in the points at issue between the Jews and us, as to be competent to the task of entering into controversy with the more learned Jews. Even those ministers who have somewhat of a deeper insight into the mysteries of the Gospel, are for the most part but ill furnished with that species of knowledge which qualifies them for instructing the Jews. They are not aware of the principal objections of the Jews to Christianity, nor of the answers which ought to be given to them. Even the peculiar excellencies of the Christian system, as contradistinguished from Judaism, are not so familiar to them as they ought to be. With Heathens they can argue, and with different sects of Christians they can maintain their stand: but so utterly have they disregarded and despised the Jew, that they have thought it not worth their while to furnish themselves with knowledge suited to his case. This is greatly to the shame of Christians in general, and of Christian Ministers in particular. Nor does it offer any just excuse for our continuing to neglect the Jews, since we ought instantly to make ourselves acquainted with all that is necessary for the conviction of our Jewish Brother; and in the mean time should procure for him, from others, the instruction which we ourselves are unable to impart. This is what we should do, if we saw a brother perishing of wounds that had been inflicted on him: we should not account our want of medical skill as any reason for neglecting his case; but we should endeavour to procure for him from others the aid he stood in need of. And this is what we should do for his soul, procuring for him such books as are suited to his capacity, and bringing him into contact with such persons as are better qualified than ourselves to enlighten and instruct his soul.<br \/>To withhold these efforts under an idea that God will convert them without the instrumentality of man, is to belie our consciences, and to deceive our own souls. Such an excuse is nothing but a veil to cover our own supineness. Where has God told us that he will convert them without means? He did not do so even on the day of Pentecost. He has commanded that his Gospel should be preached in all the world, to every creature. Where has he made them an exception? This I say, then, that our duty towards them is, to use all possible means for the illumination of their minds, and for the conversion of their souls to the faith of Christ.<br \/>But it is our duty at the same time to <em>pray for them<\/em>. The prophet was not only to prophesy to the dry bones, but to say, Thus saith the Lord God, Come from the four winds, O breath! (O thou eternal Spirit!) and breathe upon these slain, that they may live [Note: ver. 9.]. Whoever may attempt to convey instruction, it will be attended with little benefit, if God do not accompany the word with power from on high. Paul may plant, and Apollos may water; but it is God alone that can give the increase. If we set about any thing in our own strength, and expect any thing from the means, without looking directly to God in and through the means, we shall be rebuked, and left without success; just as Elisha was, when he expected his staff to raise to life the widows child [Note: <span class='bible'>2Ki 4:29-31<\/span>.]. Like the prophet in our text, we are to pray for the influences of the Holy Spirit to give efficacy to the word. To this effect we are taught by God himself; I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night: Ye that make mention of the Lord, keep not silence, and give him no rest, till he establish, and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth [Note: <span class='bible'>Isa 62:6-7<\/span>.]. If we conscientiously combine our personal exertions with fervent prayer, there is not any thing which we may not hope for. Wonderful is the efficacy of fervent and believing prayer: and, if we employ it diligently in behalf of the Jews, desperate as their condition to all appearance is, it shall prevail, to the bringing forth of their souls from the prison in which they are immured, and for the introducing of them into the light and liberty of Gods dear children.<\/p>\n<p>True it is, we may without any saving influences of the Spirit effect a previous work, like that of bringing together the kindred bones, and causing the flesh and skin to come upon them: but God alone can breathe life into them. We may bring them possibly to a form of godliness; but God alone can give the power: and it is only when our word comes to men in demonstration of the Spirit, that it ever proves the power of God to the salvation of their souls.<br \/>Such is our duty towards them: and that we may not draw back from it through despondency, let us consider,<\/p>\n<p>III.<\/p>\n<p>Our encouragement to perform it<\/p>\n<p><em>We have the express promise of God to render it effectual<\/em>. What can we want more? The promise is repeated again and again; Ye <em>shall<\/em> live; Ye <em>shall<\/em> live; I will bring you up out of your graves, and ye <em>shall<\/em> live [Note: ver 5, 6, 12, 14.]. And is not God able to do it? Look at the heavens and the earth: Hath he created all these out of nothing? hath he spoken them into existence by the word of his mouth, and is he not able to effect the conversion of the Jews? Has he declared that he will raise the dead at the last day, and bring into judgment every child of man; and cannot he, who shall accomplish that in its season, effect this also at the appointed time? True, the bones are, as he has said, dry, very dry but they are not beyond the reach of his power. What if the resuscitation of them be marvellous in our eyes, must it therefore be marvellous in Gods eyes? (<span class='bible'>Zec 8:6<\/span>.) His word in the mouth of Jews has been effectual for the conversion of the Gentiles; and that same word in the mouth of Gentiles shall be effectual for the conversion of the Jews: for his hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither is his ear heavy, that it cannot hear. Hath he said, and shall he not do it? hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good? Tell me, Did he not bring out his people from Egypt at the appointed time? Yes, at the self-same hour did he bring them forth, with a mighty hand, and a stretched-out arm. In like manner he delivered them also in due season from Babylon, according to his word: and these are sure pledges, that he will in due season fulfil all his promises towards them, and not suffer one jot or tittle of his word to fail.<\/p>\n<p><em>In dependence on his promise, then, we should address ourselves to the work assigned us<\/em>. We should go forth feeling the utter hopelessness of our task, and say, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord! The greater the difficulty appears, the more should we hold fast our confidence in God, with whom nothing is impossible. We should go, as it were, into the midst of that vast theatre, and lift up our voice with-out either distrust or fear. If the means already used have proved ineffectual, we should, like Elisha, exert ourselves with the more earnestness, and labour more fervently in prayer with God for his blessing on our endeavours. In order to raise the son of the Shunamite, he cried mightily to the Lord, and went in and stretched himself upon the child, applying his mouth, his eyes, his hands, to the mouth, the eyes, the hands of the child [Note: <span class='bible'>2Ki 4:33-35<\/span>.]: and thus should we go in to our Jewish Brethren: we should address ourselves to the work in the length and breadth of all our powers, accommodating ourselves to the measure and capacity of every individual amongst them, and labouring in every possible way to inspire them with love to Christ: and, if we see as yet but little effect, (as was at first the case with that holy prophet,) let us not despise the day of small things, but let us look upon the smallest success as an earnest of greater things, as the first-fruits before the harvest, and as the drop before the shower. Two things in particular I wish you to notice in the text: the one is that God wrought nothing till the prophet used the appointed means; and the other is, that he wrought effectually as soon as the means were used. This is twice noticed by the prophet in the verses following my text: So I prophesied as I was commanded; and <em>as I prophesied, the bones came together:<\/em> and again, <em>So I prophesied as he commanded me; and the breath carne into them, and they lived<\/em> [Note: ver. 7, 10.]. Let this, I pray you, sink down into your ears: only let this be understood and felt, and acted upon; and I shall have gained a point of the utmost importance to the Jewish cause: for, however inadequate to the end our efforts be, God requires us to put them forth; and when they are put forth in humility and faith, he will bless them to the desired end. To expect the blessing without using the means, or to despair of success in the use of them, is equally wrong. What he has commanded, we must do: and what he has promised, we must expect. Be the difficulties ever so great, we must not stagger at the promises through unbelief, but be strong in faith, giving glory to God. Our blessed Lord, when Mary imagined that her brother was gone beyond a possibility of recovery, said to her, Said I not unto thee, that, if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest see the glory of God? so to you I say, Be not discouraged by thinking how long our brother has been dead, or how corrupt he is; but expect assuredly, that at the sound of Jesus voice he shall rise out of his grave and come forth to life.<\/p>\n<p>Permit me now to address myself to you in a more particular manner: and,<br \/>1.<\/p>\n<p><em>To those whose exertions are paralyzed by despondency<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>I object not to a full consideration of all the difficulties that obstruct the conversion of the Jews. I wish them to be viewed in their utmost extent: but then they should be viewed, not as grounds for relaxing our efforts, but as motives to the most strenuous exertion. With the generality, these desponding fears are only excuses for their own supineness: they have no compassion for their perishing fellow-creatures, no zeal for the honour of their God, and therefore they cry, A lion is in the way. But this is a very unworthy recompence for all the exertions which the Jews of former ages made for us. What if they had said respecting the Gentiles, They are bowing down to stocks and stones, and it is in vain to attempt their conversion? we should have continued in our ignorance and guilt to the present hour. It was by their unremitting labours that the Gospel was spread; and to them we owe all the light and peace that we at this moment enjoy. Let us then imitate them: let us employ our talents and our influence in their service: let us combine together for the purpose of promoting their welfare more extensively than we could do by individual exertion: and whilst we go forward in dependence on the promises of our God, let us remember, that what he has promised, he is able also to perform.<br \/>As for the idea that the Lords time is not come, who is authorized to declare that? The great events that are going forward in the world give us reason to think that the time is come, or at least is very near at hand. The prophecies themselves, in the judgment of many wise and sober interpreters, appear to point to the present times, as the season for their approaching accomplishment. And certainly the attention now paid to the subject by the Christian world, and the success that has hitherto attended their efforts, are encouraging circumstances to confirm our hopes, and stimulate our exertions. We may add too, that the zeal that has been manifested of late for the universal diffusion of the Holy Scriptures, and for the conversion of the heathen, is a call from God to the Christian world, to consider the wants of his ancient people: and the general expectation of the Jews at this time, that their Messiah will soon appear, is a still further call to us to point out the Saviour to them. Nor can I pass by without notice two most astonishing events; one of which has lately occurred in a foreign country, and the other is at this moment arising in our own. In Russia, God has raised up a friend for his people, another Cyrus, in the head of that vast empire; who has assigned one, if not more places in his dominions, where the Jews who shall embrace Christianity may find a safe asylum, and enjoy all necessary means of providing for themselves, agreeably to their former habits. In our own land, an unprecedented concern begins to manifest itself in behalf of all the nations of the earth who are lying in darkness and the shadow of death. The duty of sending forth missionaries to instruct them, is now publicly acknowledged by all our governors in Church and State; and in a short time will the whole community, from the highest to the lowest, be invited to unite in this blessed work [Note: In the Prince Regents Letter, read in all the Churches through the kingdom, in 1815.]. And in this ebullition of religious zeal, can we suppose that the Jew shall be forgotten? Shall those to whom we ourselves are indebted for all the light that we enjoy, be overlooked? Will it not be remembered, that our blessed Lord and Saviour was a Jew; and that it is a Jew who is at this moment interceding for us at the right hand of God? Shall not our obligations to him and his Apostles be requited by a due attention to those who were the first in his estimation, and are yet beloved by him for their fatherssakes? We must on no account overlook them: we must consider them as comprehended in the general commission: and let us hope that there will be a simultaneous effort through the land, to carry into effect the pious and benevolent designs of our governors.<\/p>\n<p>An erroneous idea has obtained, that because it is said by St. Paul, that blindness in part is happened unto Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in [Note: <span class='bible'>Rom 11:25<\/span>.], the great harvest of the Gentiles must be reaped before the sickle is put to the Jewish field. But this is directly contrary to what the same Apostle says in the very same chapter, where he represents the fulness of the Jews as being the riches of the Gentiles [Note: <span class='bible'>Rom 11:12<\/span>.]. It is the commencement, and not the completion, of the in-gathering of the Gentiles, that marks the season for the conversion of the Jews: and therefore the stir which there is at this moment amongst the Gentile world, is, amongst other signs of the times, a proof, that the time for the conversion of the Jews is near at hand. Away then with all desponding fears; and to every obstruction that presents itself in your way, say, Who art thou, O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain [Note: <span class='bible'>Zec 4:6-7<\/span>.].<\/p>\n<p>Let me next address myself,<br \/>2.<\/p>\n<p><em>To those who desire to be accomplishing this great work<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>You will reasonably ask, What shall we do in order to advance this blessed cause? To this I answer, Be much in prayer to God for them. Were the Christian world more earnest in prayer to God for the restoration and salvation of his people, I feel no doubt but that God would arise and have mercy upon Zion, and that a great work would speedily be wrought among them. When the angel interceded for Jerusalem, saying, O Lord God, how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem? Jehovah, we are told, answered him with good and comfortable words [Note: <span class='bible'>Zec 1:12-13<\/span>.]. And, if a spirit of intercession for them prevailed amongst us, God would answer, not by good and comfortable words only, but by great and powerful acts, even by the displays of his pardoning grace, and the manifestations of his long-suspended love. United prayer brought Peter out of his prison: and united prayer would bring the Jews also out of their graves; and they should arise before us an exceeding great army.<\/p>\n<p>Still however, as human means also are to be used, I would say, Form yourselves into societies and associations for the advancement of this work. Much may be done by united and systematic exertion, which cannot possibly be done without it: funds will be raised; and many will be stirred up to join with you, who would neither have inclination nor ability to do much in a way of solitary effort: and, if God has given to any one a talent of wealth or influence, let him improve it to the uttermost. It is scarcely to be conceived how much a single individual may effect, provided he set himself diligently to the work. God has said he will bring his people one of a city and two of a family, yea, that he will bring them to Zion one by one. And if only <em>one<\/em> be brought from darkness unto light, and from death to life, it is worth all our efforts: for one single soul is of greater value than the whole world. Let us up then, and be doing; for the Lord is with us: and if we see not immediately all the effect we could wish, we have the satisfaction of knowing that God approves of the desire, and that, like David, we are gathering stones which our successors shall erect into a temple of the Lord.<\/p>\n<p>But let it not content us to proselyte the Jews to mere nominal Christianity. It is to no purpose to bring their bones together, and cover them with flesh, unless their souls be made alive to God, and they become living members of Christs mystical body. In the close of the chapter from whence our text is taken, God informs us what is to characterize the conversion of the Jews to Christ: David, my servant, (that is, the Lord Jesus Christ,) shall be King over them; and they shall all have one Shepherd: my servant David shall be their Prince for ever. Moreover, I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them: and my tabernacle also shall be with them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. [Note: ver. 2427.] Yes, this is vital Christianity; this is the only true religion that can benefit <em>us;<\/em> and therefore it is that to which we must endeavour to convert <em>them<\/em>. I ask of you, my Brethren, What is it that comforts you, but a view of the everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure? What is it that enables you to live above the things of time and sense, and to look forward with joy to the eternal world; what is it, I say, but a hope, that you stand in this near relation to a reconciled God, and a persuasion, that that Saviour, whose you are and whom you serve, will bruise Satan under your feet, and make you more than conquerors over all your enemies? Bear this in mind then, I pray you, in all your conversations with Jews, and in all your efforts for their good. Aim at nothing short of this. To convince them by argument is nothing, unless you bring them to a life of faith upon the Son of God, and to a life of entire devotedness to his service. This you must first experience in your own souls, else you can never hope to effect it in theirs. Let them see in you how truly blessed a life of faith is; and what a sanctifying efficacy it has on your hearts and lives. Let them see, that it is not a merely speculative opinion about the Lord Jesus Christ, to which you would convert them, but to the enjoyment of his love, to a participation of his image, and to a possession of his glory. In a word, be yourselves among them as living epistles of Christ, that in you they may read the excellency of his salvation: then may you hope to prevail with them; and that they will gladly unite themselves to you, when they shall see that God is with you of a truth.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/><\/strong><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Charles Simeon&#8217;s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> CONTENTS<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> The Prophet is here by vision instructed of the Lord, in order that he might preach yet more pointedly to the house of Israel. Many blessed views are here opened of Christ&#8217;s kingdom.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Hawker&#8217;s Poor Man&#8217;s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> In this vision the mind of Ezekiel seems to have been so carried out, that like the Apostle Paul, be hardly knew whether he was in the body or not. <span class='bible'>2Co 12:1-3<\/span> . The Prophet is here led by the Spirit into a valley, probably, thereby signifying this lower world. He is brought to see the valley full of bones; to show, perhaps, the universal state of all men by the fall. The lifeless state the whole was in, no doubt intimated their dead and ruined circumstances. And the Prophet is caused to take leisurely service of the whole, by being directed to pass around them, that the impression on his mind might be strong. Reader! observe when the Lord is the teacher, how he teacheth to profit.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Hawker&#8217;s Poor Man&#8217;s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:2<\/span><\/p>\n<p> Dean Stanley, in the introduction to his <em> Eastern Church,<\/em> observes: &#8216;It is sometimes said, that of all historical studies that of Ecclesiastical History is the most repulsive. We seem to be set down in the valley of the Prophet&#8217;s vision strewn with bones, and behold they are very many and very dry: skeletons of creeds, of churches, of institutions; trodden and traversed by the feet of travellers again and again; craters of extinct volcanoes, which once filled the world with their noise, and are now dead and cold.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:3<\/span><\/p>\n<p> That vision of the dry bones&#8230; perhaps is the best-known passage of the Old Testament. &#8216;Son of man, can these dry bones live?&#8217; must have often been the self-questioning of Ezekiel, and when he thought on the shattered nation he could give no answer more confident than the conviction, &#8216;O Lord God, Thou knowest&#8217;.<\/p>\n<p> Miss Wedgwood.<\/p>\n<p> Think of the sublimity, I should rather say the profundity, of that passage in Ezekiel, <em> Son of man, can these bones live<\/em> ? <em> and I answered, O Lord God, Thou knowest.<\/em> I know nothing like it.<\/p>\n<p> Coleridge, <em> Table-Talk.<\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p> Describing Dr. Donne&#8217;s preaching in London during his last illness, Izaak Walton remarks that &#8216;when, to the amazement of some beholders, he appeared in the pulpit, many of them thought he presented himself not to preach mortification by a living voice, but mortality by a dying body. And doubtless many did ask that question in Ezekiel, &#8216;Do these bones live? or, can that soul organize that tongue, to speak so long time as the sand in that glass will move toward its centre, and measure out an hour of this dying man&#8217;s unspent life? Doubtless it cannot.&#8217; And yet after some pauses in his zealous prayer, his strong desires enabled his weak body to discharge his memory of his preconceived meditations, which were of dying; the text being, &#8216;To God the Lord belong the issues from death.'&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> References. XXXVII. 3. W. Lee, <em> University Sermons,<\/em> p. 187. G. S. Barrett, <em> Christian World Pulpit,<\/em> vol. xliii. 1893, p. 267. P. T. Forsyth, <em> ibid.<\/em> vol. lxi. 1902, p. 312. H. P. Liddon, <em> Outlines of Sermons on the Old Testament,<\/em> p. 260. J. Mitchinson, <em> Can the Dry Bones Live, Sermons,<\/em> 1881-88.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span><\/p>\n<p> Every shaking among the bones, everything which seems at first a sign of terror men leaving the churches in which they have been born, forsaking all the affections and sympathies and traditions of their childhood infidel questionings, doubts whether the world is left to itself or whether it is governed by an evil spirit are themselves not indeed signs of life, but at least movements in the midst of death which are better than the silence of the charnel-house, which foretell the approach of that which they cannot produce.<\/p>\n<p> F. D. Maurice.<\/p>\n<p> Speaking, in the tenth chapter of <em> Chartism,<\/em> of the vice and misery in country districts of England, Carlyle cries: &#8216;Ah, it is bitter jesting on such a subject. One&#8217;s heart is sick to look at the dreary chaos and valley of Jehoshaphat, scattered with the limbs and souls of one&#8217;s fellow-men; and no Divine voice, only croaking of hungry vultures, inarticulate, bodeful ravens, horn-eyed parrots, that do articulate, proclaiming, Let these bones live!&#8217;<\/p>\n<p> Reference. XXXVII. 7. C. Perren, <em> Revival Sermons in Outline,<\/em> p. 341.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:9<\/span><\/p>\n<p> What precise meaning we ought to attach to expressions such as that of the prophecy to the four winds that the dry bones might be breathed upon, and might live, or why the presence of the vital power should be dependent on the chemical action of the air, and its awful passing away materially signified by the rendering up of that breath or ghost, we cannot at present know, and need not at any time dispute. What we assuredly know is that the states of life and death are different, and the first more desirable than the other, and by effort attainable, whether we understand &#8216;born of the spirit&#8217; to signify having the breath of heaven in our flesh, or its power in our hearts.<\/p>\n<p> Ruskin in <em> The Queen of the Air,<\/em> 55.<\/p>\n<p> &#8216;About noon, Friday 5th, I called on William Row, in Breage, on my way to Newlyn. &#8220;Twelve years ago,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I was going over Gulval Downs, and I saw many people together; and I asked what was the matter; and they told me a man was going to preach: and I said, To be sure it is some mazed man, but when I saw you I said, Nay, this is no mazed man: and you preached on God&#8217;s raising the dry bones; and from that time I could never rest till God was pleased to breathe on me and raise my dead soul.&#8221;&#8216;<\/p>\n<p> Wesley&#8217;s <em> Journal<\/em> for 1755.<\/p>\n<p> References. XXXVII. 9. Spurgeon, <em> Sermons,<\/em> vol. xxxviii. No. 2246. H. Scott Holland, <em> Christian World Pulpit,<\/em> vol. lxi. 1902, p. 33. W. H. Hutchings, <em> Sermon-Sketches<\/em> (2nd Series), p. 296. XXXVII. 9, 10. R. C. Trench, <em> Sermons New and Old,<\/em> p. 219. W. Howell Evans, <em> Sermons for the Church&#8217;s Year,<\/em> p. 146.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:10<\/span><\/p>\n<p> We seem to have in some degree lost a principle of cohesion between the work done and the work doing; and thus the events with which the Gospel narrative makes us acquainted, instead of being, every one of them, &#8216;very nigh&#8217; to us, bound up and interleaved within the volume of our personal experience, have to be fetched, as we want them, from the remote distance where they lie, like the bones in the valley of prophetic vision, dry and sapless, detached from each other, and from all connexion with the life that we are now living upon earth. When we receive along with each of these facts the sign that was given to Moses, and learn that it is I AM which hath sent it to us, a breath of life is infused within all that has been formal and historical; across the statements of the letter, of which, taken singly and apart, we may have said that &#8216;they are very dry,&#8217; a spirit passes, they <em> come together,<\/em> and behold they live, and stand up on their feet an exceeding great army, fighting for and with us in the battle.<\/p>\n<p> Dora Greenwell, <em> A Present Heaven,<\/em> pp. 53, 54.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:11-12<\/span><\/p>\n<p> No right and no power to disbelieve in the arm of Hercules or the voice of Jesus can rationally remain with those who have seen Garibaldi take a kingdom into the hollow of his hand, and not one man but a whole nation rise from the dead at the sound of the word of Mazzini.<\/p>\n<p> Swinburne, <em> A Study of Victor Hugo,<\/em> p. 113.<\/p>\n<p> Reference. XXXVII. 11, 12, 13. Spurgeon, <em> Sermons,<\/em> vol. xxviii. No. 1676.<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:19<\/span><\/p>\n<p> Compare the closing sentences of Tolstoy&#8217;s <em> What is Art?<\/em> &#8216;Universal art, by uniting the most different people in one common feeling, by destroying separation, will educate people to union, will show them, not by reason but by life itself, the joy of universal union reaching beyond the bounds set by life. The destiny of art in our time is to transmit from the realm of reason to the realm of feeling the truth that well-being for man consists in being united together, and to set up, in place of the existing reign of force, that kingdom of God, i.e. of love, which we all recognize to be the highest aim of human life. Possibly, in the future, science may reveal to art yet new and higher ideals, which art may realize; but, in our time, the destiny of art is clear and definite. The task for Christian art is to establish brotherly union among men.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p><span class='bible'>Eze 37:21-27<\/span><\/p>\n<p> After quoting this passage, Miss Wedgwood, in <em> The Message of Israel<\/em> (pp. 231 f.) observes: &#8216;The words belong to that region of vast soothing hope which seems akin to the influence of music. All that is pathetic, all that is tragic in history, seems gathered up in the mere existence of such aspirations, and the consciousness that they were futile as far as human eye can see. But national aspirations soar into the region where they become as it were luminous, and cast their glow even on the fate they have not had the strength to mould. &#8220;Desire of heaven itself is heaven,&#8221; says a poet of our own day, and the vision of a united Israel seems almost to justify the exaggeration, if exaggeration it be. The glowing hopes expressed in this passage are evidently as the bow in the cloud a gleam upon a gloomy background.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p> Victor Hugo also, in his <em> Shakespeare<\/em> (chap. ii.), after quoting from the prophecy of the Wind and the Bones, cites this twenty-seventh verse loosely, and then asks: &#8216;Is not everything there? Search for a higher formula, you will not find it: a free man under a sovereign God. This visionary eater of filth is a resuscitator. Ezekiel has offal on his lips, and the sun in his eyes.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p> The first act of theft, falsehood, or other immorality, is an event in the life of the perpetrator which he never forgets. It may often happen that no account can be given of it; that there is nothing in the education, nor in the antecedents of the person, that would lead us, or even himself, to suspect it. In the weaker sort of natures, especially, suggestions of evil spring up we cannot tell how.<\/p>\n<p> Jowett.<\/p>\n<p> Reference. XXXVIII. 11, 12. J. M. Neale, <em> Sermons on the Prophets,<\/em> vol. ii. p. 44.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expositor&#8217;s Dictionary of Text by Robertson<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> Dry Bones<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:6.12em'><span class='bible'>Eze 37<\/span><\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> All this is seen, not in literal reality, but in spiritual dream and vision. Again we ask the question, What is reality? It may be that the things which we call real are not things at all; they may be but transient and misleading shadows. Let us be careful how we talk about reality. Vision is the larger life. A man is still a man in his dreams. He may not be able to put them together well, or to read their enigmas fluently and precisely; but they are still efforts of the mind, hints of sublime possibility, indications that we are not walled in with stones, but limited by skies. Let us, therefore, once more remind ourselves that reality is a term which has not yet been exhaustively defined.<\/p>\n<p> When Ezekiel saw the bones, and knew that &#8220;there were very many in the open valley,&#8221; and that &#8220;they were very dry,&#8221; a circumstance put in to indicate that if there were a miracle at all it would be a supreme effort of divine power, the Lord said unto Ezekiel, &#8220;Adam [the Hebrew of son of man], can these bones live?&#8221; There was a time when Ezekiel might have answered, No, certainly not; there can be no doubt about that; the bones are so dry that live they never can. Men are not so fluent in their older age as in their youth. Ezekiel had been educated by visions, not educated into frivolity, but educated into adoration, reverence, wonder, expectation. So this most dazzling of the prophets answered, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest&#8221; A finer answer than the rattle and gabble of fluent youth. We are made to see that there are possibilities which did not enter into our earlier calculations in life. Men are gradually trained to see the eloquence of hesitation. Youth is impatient with all things that stop; the great conception of youth is to go on, to quicken, to hasten, to fly, never to stand still. It is of no use endeavouring to exhort youth to take another view; only time can work that miracle. By-and-by older men begin to see that the speaker who halts may be the prophet; the man who never stopped for a word was but a reciter of his own nothings. May Ezekiel typify us in this present attitude and in this eloquent hesitation! Ezekiel the man, looking upon the bones, would say, No, they can never live, for they are very dry: I could stake a universe on that declaration. But Ezekiel the prophet says, I must speak whisperingly, reverently; no one can tell what God can do: I will therefore reply, O Lord God, thou knowest.<\/p>\n<p> This is an answer which becomes a world educated as ours has been. We should be very careful now how we say that we have reached the limit of things. Rather have we been educated to say that in things there is no limit; in other words, we never can overtake the omnipotence of God, or forecast Omniscience, or tell what the Eternal will do. God is never short of resources. We have misspent our time and lost the very bloom and perfectness of our education if we do not now hesitate before denying anything that is grand, sublime, beneficent, wonderful in majesty and tender in goodness. After all our tragedy and sorrow and stress we ought to be able at this moment to say regarding any grand proposition, however unlikely it appears on the surface, Yet even this thing of wonder may become one of the commonplaces of life. Education tends to larger faith, or it is a false education. The liberalisation of the mind means larger imagination, larger trust in the Infinite: deep, complete spiritual education, when told that mountains may be carried into the midst of the sea, says, Yes, it may be so; only ignorance flatly denies. Obstinate, self-worshipping minds draw boundaries and live within geometric lines and limits; but the imagination that has been schooled in the divine sanctuary, the faith that has been trained through the wilderness, the trust that has seen the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living, all these combine to say, We have seen nothing yet compared with the glory that is to be revealed.<\/p>\n<p> Ezekiel at this moment is not on his wings of fire. He often flies away from us, and we cannot overtake him in all his airy course; but at this moment he stands with bent head, and with voice subdued he answers God, saying, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; Let us keep by that answer. That fits all the great situations of life; within the sanctuary of that reply we may enjoy a sense of security, in other words, a sense of ineffable peace. God is always addressing great questions to us either audibly or typically or inferentially. But for these great questions the world would stagnate: along all the winds there come, whirling, thundering, the great inquiries that keep the world fresh, pure, masculine, hopeful. Can dead men live? What is the answer? &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest&#8221; Once we should have said, No; they are dead and buried; their native earth has devoured them, and there is no deliverance from the grasp and the greed of the grave: but now, having seen such wonders in other directions, we hesitate and say, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; Are not God&#8217;s questions God&#8217;s answers? Does God mock the universe by interrogation? Does he not rather by interrogation suggest that other miracles are coming? Interrogations are alarum-bells rung in the sleeping chambers of the race to rouse us to gaze upon the morning of undreamed beauty. Is there an unseen world? is a question that rings in the audience-chamber of every soul. What is the answer? We know what it would have been once. Men mock the unseen, men taunt the invisible; that is, when they are fat and prosperous and full of gain many of whom dare not go up a green lane alone at midnight: these be thy gods, O unbeliever! Now we say, in reply to the inquiry, &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; There may be a world unseen; we begin to believe there is; we ourselves are unseen; no man has seen himself; we have not seen our selves, there may therefore be a world unseen: O Lord God, thou knowest. Then we ask ourselves questions. Taught by the great interrogations of the divine, we have learned to put deep inquiries to ourselves and about ourselves, and sometimes we say, Do the dead visit the living? do they take no notice of us? are they clean gone for ever? are we not mentally touched by their influence? how otherwise do we account for sudden thought, startling inspiration, the upsetting of plans well calculated and exquisitely moulded? Why that flashing thought? whence that new impulse? Do the dead come to us in unseen whiteness, in ineffable silence? &#8220;O Lord God, thou knowest.&#8221; Hear our little prayer, and send them to us more and more. We are not afraid of the sainted dead.<\/p>\n<p> How is this great miracle to be wrought out? As usual, by human instrumentality. The Lord employed the prophet: &#8220;Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones.&#8221; Why did not the Lord himself order the bones to live? Because we live under a mediatorial economy. It hath pleased God so to construct all the kingdoms we know about that one thing is done through another: instrumentality is the key of progress: we live for God and for one another. There is no lone soul; there is no isolated life: every touch sends a thrill through the universe. We were not asked how kingdoms were to be builded and related; we find this great mediatorial economy prevailing everywhere: God seems to do nothing now directly. He came into direct service, so to say, in the first chapter of Genesis; then he hurled his fiat from his burning throne, and all things addressed answered him. Since then he has controlled one thing by another; he has made large use of man. What does the word &#8220;Prophesy&#8221; here mean? It does not mean predict. The word &#8220;prophesy&#8221; is too often limited to mere foretelling; here &#8220;prophesy&#8221; may mean, Speak on my behalf: represent me: be God&#8217;s vicar. What was the prophet to say?<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:6.12em'><em> &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live&#8221; (<\/em> Eze 37:5 <em> ).<\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p> The great prophet always brings life. The true preacher is never associated with mere death, which is negation, which is darkness, which is night without a star or a hope. The prophets have kept the world young. The poets keep us young in heart, yet men in understanding and dreamers in hope. Herein the Bible takes the supreme position in literature: it is the leading book. The Bible never ends; when it says Amen, it is only that we may take breath before beginning again. It is the book of prophecy, it is the book of prediction; the book of transfiguration, the book of divine emphasis and representation. Take the Bible in this sense, and it enlarges with every reading, and glorifies with every new experience. The Church therefore ought to be the leading institution in the world. All music ought to be there, all beauty ought to find its housing in the sanctuary; all nobleness of life, all sweetness of charity, all greatness of view and effort and enterprise for the good of man should originate at the altar. There is but one tree the healing of which is for the healing of the nations, and the name of that tree is the Cross; it is rooted in Calvary.<\/p>\n<p> What did Ezekiel do when called upon to utter words that were unlikely ever to be fulfilled? He gives the answer in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:7<\/span> : &#8220;So I prophesied as I was commanded.&#8221; That is the right spirit, and that is the right method. This is all we have to do. Ministers do not make their own sermons; if they do, the people never hear them, or at once forget them. They do not get down to the heart&#8217;s great needs; they have no sphere in the valley of dry bones. Such sermons have no music for shattered lives, and broken fortunes, and dead souls. Poets do not make their own poems. The poet does not know what he has written: he reads his own lines with wonder. The great intercessor does not know what he is praying. He is carried away by prayer; he is taken, as it were, by invisible hands and lifted into unmeasured altitudes, and there he talks with God; and if some hand has caught the words and fastened them to the steadfast page the suppliant reads these words as if he had never spoken them. The prophet does not invent his own prophecy. He is entranced, filled with enthusiasm, divinely infatuated, mad; and when he reads he wonders, and often weeps. Only Materialists know what they are doing as to beginnings and endings.<\/p>\n<p> Sometimes men have to prophesy under distressing circumstances the valley was &#8220;full of bones,&#8221; and the bones &#8220;were very dry,&#8221; and Ezekiel prophesied as he was &#8220;commanded.&#8221; We are not to be disheartened; we are to speak to the deadest men as if they could hear us; we are to address bones as if they could reply; in the churchyard we are to find an audience; among the dead we are to constitute an assembly of eager listeners. It is not for us to control the circumstances, and to say, Give me a fit audience, give me a kingdom for a stage. It is for us to prophesy according to the bidding of God, in the village, full of dull heads and lifeless eyes, and weary, dispirited hearts; in the city, mammon-driven and mammon-cursed; among the ignorant, who have no sublime ambitions; among the rich, who are trusting to uncertain riches; among the atheists, who have said, There is no God: wherever our field is appointed, there we are to prophesy in gladness of heart. God will do the rest. &#8220;My word shall not return unto me void&#8221; is an assurance that goes ringingly through all the winds that circulate round the globe, breathing their blessed inspiration upon every sick-visitor, every Sunday-school teacher, every missionary toiling under difficult circumstances, every pastor and preacher and prophet. If it were man&#8217;s word it would go forth void and come back void; it is God&#8217;s word, and therefore it cannot fail.<\/p>\n<p> While Ezekiel prophesied, what happened?<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:6.12em'><em> &#8220;As I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but there was no breath in them&#8221; (<\/em> Eze 37:7-8 <em> ).<\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p> That is the first miracle. Here is a miracle by instalments. When we come to the New Testament the work is done at once; Christ commands, and the work is done. Some of us are in this department of God&#8217;s miracle: we are mere outlines, we are not yet men; we stand, articulately we are right, joint is attached to joint, and the figure is complete; but we are mere spectres, skeletons, anatomically perfect. How many persons of this kind we meet! We say, The figure is good, the stature is right, the anatomy is perfect; but there is no breath in them. Afterwards another prophecy was delivered, and the wind was bidden to come, and to breathe into the standing bones; and it came, &#8220;and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army.&#8221; Some of us have not got into that second department of the miracle, do not let us therefore be discouraged; some of us are in that second department of the miracle, let us not therefore be boastful, let us abstain from contemning those who are not so far advanced as we are. The miracle is one, and God is one.<\/p>\n<p style='margin-left:6.12em'><em> &#8220;Then he said unto me, Son of man these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts. Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. And ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, and shall put my spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the Lord have spoken it, and performed it, saith the Lord&#8221; (<\/em> Eze 37:11-14 <em> ).<\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p> Here we have the literal explanation of the miracle, the literal boundary of God&#8217;s thought in this vision. But who is to limit the spiritual? The material is only given to us as a suggestion; what we have is to lead us on to what we have not; the known is to point with steady index-finger to the unknown. We may have the literal interpretation given, but that does not bar the action of the great sublime and tender and reverent imagination. Here we have all the kingdom of miracles in one act. Resurrection why, that is almost declared in the text. We sometimes say the doctrine of resurrection is not to be found in the Old Testament: here in this very chapter we have God promising to open graves; in this vision we have the resurrection prefigured. If God could do this miracle, what miracle is there that lies beyond his omnipotence? We take the act of eating food: does it end in itself? then it were a beast&#8217;s act. When the poet eats bread he eats poetry; when the prophet nourishes himself at the common table he performs a sacramental act; every draught of water drunk by the true man acts upon his soul like the wine of God. Do not be imprisoned by the material and the literal and the geometrical. Your home is meant to signify heaven; every height points to some sublimer altitude. Who can fix the issues of any one action? What then is our hope amid the dry bones, the shattered fortunes, the fatal diseases, the moral pestilence of the world? What is our hope? Our hope is the hope of Ezekiel. That God who has brought him to see the reality of the desolation will make him the instrument through which shall come the rush, the surging life, the resurrection immortality<\/p>\n<p><strong> Prayer<\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> Almighty God, we come to an altar not made with hands. We come to the unseen, the ineffably holy, the divinely complete; we come to the altar of the Cross, a Cross for ever towards us, a crown beyond. We come to confess our sin, but if we confess our sin where shall we begin the appalling recital? We remember no moment that bore not its own stain. Yet we will confess that we have done the things we ought not to have done, we have left undone the things we ought to have done; with our whole soul we will say, each for himself, God be merciful to me a sinner! Wash us, and we shall be clean; sanctify us, and there shall be no stain upon our souls. The blood of Jesus Christ, thy Son, cleanseth from all sin. It finds its cleansing way into the inmost recesses of the soul; may we know what is meant by the cleansing of the blood of Christ, and rise and follow after holiness with eager and ardent hearts. Thou hast called us to sanctification; thou hast set apart thy Church. She is not one of many, she is not in the great crowd; thou hast called her and elected her and sanctified her, and all these processes are promises of the final and everlasting crown. May we be in the Church of Christ which he hath redeemed with his own blood; may we bear the name that is new on the palms of our hands and on our forehead; in all our life may we show that we have been with Jesus, not in the sunshine only, but in the darkest night of sorrow. The Lord look upon us; comfort the downcast, the broken-hearted, the bereaved, and such as are called upon to walk in long darkness: dry the tears of sorrow, that the vision of the soul may once more behold, and the heart exclaim, How good, how gracious is the Lord! Pity us in our low estate; have mercy upon us because of manifold infirmity; and bring us, life&#8217;s journey done, to the river which flows fast by the throne of God. Amen.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The People&#8217;s Bible by Joseph Parker<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><strong> XVIII<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> PROPHECIES OF THE RESTORATION<\/p>\n<p> Ezekiel 33-39<\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> The subject of this chapter is Ezekiel&#8217;s prophecies of the restoration of Israel. Jeremiah (Jeremiah 30-33) gave a similar group of prophecies, and in the book of Isaiah (40-66) we find this same theme: The restoration of Israel and its future glory. Here Ezekiel discusses the same theme.<\/p>\n<p> We saw in the last chapter that Ezekiel had, in a prophetic way, disposed of the foreign nations, the enemies of Israel, having predicted the entire overthrow of all those who had been the means of Israel&#8217;s downfall with the exception of Babylon. He gave no direct prophecy of the downfall of Babylon, only an indirect one prophesying her rule over Egypt for about forty years, which implied that he believed that Babylon would fall at the end of that period. Thus it may be seen that these chapters on the restoration of Israel are in their logical place in his prophecies. He had predicted the fall of Jerusalem, the capital, and the scattering of the people among all the nations. Then he predicted the fall of all the nations that were her enemies, and having finished with them, the way was made clear for his predictions regarding the future of Israel. He devotes these seven chapters to the blessed age, the messianic age, which follows the return of Israel from her exile in these foreign lands.<\/p>\n<p> The great function of the prophet is here set forth. He is to be a watchman (<span class='bible'>Eze 33:1-20<\/span> ). The figure, of course, is an Oriental one. It was the custom in those lands to build a watchtower on the border of their territories, or at the approaches to their cities, or near their great centers, and appoint a man to stand upon the watchtower and when he saw an army coming he was to blow his trumpet and warn the people. There were many throughout Israel and all Oriental lands. The prophet transfers the figure to spiritual functions as regards the people of Israel.<\/p>\n<p> The duty and responsibility of the watchman are set forth in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:1-6<\/span> , which are easy to comprehend and which need not be commented upon except that the watchman has the responsibility for the lives of those over whom he watches. If he sees the foe coming and warns, his duty is done. If he sees the foe coming and does not warn and any of the inhabitants lose their lives, their blood shall be required at his hands because he had failed in his duty. He shall suffer as a result of that failure.<\/p>\n<p> This duty and responsibility were impressed upon Ezekiel thus: The Lord speaks unto Ezekiel and says, &#8220;So thou, son of man, I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel. &#8230;. When I say unto the wicked, O wicked man, thou shall surely die, and thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way; that wicked man shall die in his iniquity, but his blood will I require at thy hand. Nevertheless, if thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it, and he turn not from his way; he shall die in his iniquity, but thou hast delivered thy soul.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> A glance at the situation will explain this more clearly. Ezekiel in <span class='bible'>Eze 18<\/span> , prophesied and brought before the people that great doctrine of individual responsibility and liberty. He exploded the old theory that a man is the slave of his environment and must necessarily suffer for the sins of his fathers. It is not necessary that he should perish because of the sins of his fathers. Ezekiel brought before them the great doctrine that Jehovah does not will the death of any man; that Jehovah has given to all men the privilege and possibility of repenting and if they repent and turn, the penalties of their past sins or their father&#8217;s sins are forever abrogated and they are free from them. The doctrine of individualism is there set before us, and this chapter is an application of that principle.<\/p>\n<p> Ezekiel now realizes that, since his nation is destroyed, their capital in ruins, the center of religious worship is gone, that his duty is to speak to individuals; that now it is with individual Israelites. His duty is to warn them of their own sins and the dangers that are consequent upon their sins. He is not to speak to the nation in the mass any more, but he is to deal with individuals and put each individual upon his own personal responsibility and relationship to God. He can thereby prepare the people to return to the land and begin anew the nation God has purposed they should become.<\/p>\n<p> The condition of the minds of the people is that of despondency, making the prophet&#8217;s appeal of no effect. <span class='bible'>Eze 33:10-20<\/span> , especially in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:10<\/span> , we have the condition of their minds set forth: &#8220;Thus ye speak, saying, Our transgressions and our sins are upon us, and we pine away in them; how then can we live?&#8221; This indicates at once that the people were in a state of despair. They had no hope; they believed that their doom was inevitable; that it was useless for them to think of enjoying fellowship with God and life any more. To counteract that complaint and that condition of mind, Ezekiel brings before them four great principles which are found in the remainder of this section, and I will embody the substance of these verses in these four statements:<\/p>\n<p> 1. That Jehovah desires that men shall live.<\/p>\n<p> 2. That man is not irrevocably bound by the past, but may repent.<\/p>\n<p> 3. That men are to come to God individually and thus come into the new Israel.<\/p>\n<p> 4. That men are judged more by what they are than by what they have been.<\/p>\n<p> Let us now discuss the theme, occasion, and date of the prophecy of Ezekiel in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:21-33<\/span> . On hearing of the fall of Jerusalem, Ezekiel announces the conditions of return. These conditions are moral and religious. In <span class='bible'>Eze 33:21<\/span> we have the date of this prophecy: the twelfth year, that is one year after the fall of Jerusalem, tenth month and fifth day of the month, almost eighteen months after the fall. He says, &#8220;One that had escaped out of Jerusalem came unto me, saying, The city is smitten.&#8221; Some find a chronological difficulty here. Some of the ancient versions say it was in the eleventh year and tenth month, which means that Ezekiel heard of the fall of Jerusalem six months after that event occurred. According to this account of Ezekiel it was a year and six months. It seems to them almost incredible that it would require eighteen months for the news of that great event to reach the prophet and much more likely, he received the news at the end of six months, that being ample time for the caravans to reach Babylon and the news to spread. But it is better to take it as it stands, allowing for probable delays on the part of this messenger in getting to Babylon.<\/p>\n<p> Now, after he received news that the city was smitten, he had a word to say to the people that remained in Palestine; that remnant spoken of in Jeremiah (40-44), Ezekiel addresses in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:23-29<\/span> . Note verse <span class='bible'>Eze 33:24<\/span> : &#8220;Son of man, they that inhabit those wastes of the land of Israel speak, saying, Abraham was one, and he inherited the land: but we are many; the land is given us for inheritance,&#8221; which seems to refer to the miserable remnant that was left at Mizpah, Bethlehem, and various other places. They say, &#8220;Abraham was one, only one, and he inherited the land, but we are many and the land is given us for an inheritance.&#8221; Their idea is that since to Israel was given this land, and they were the nucleus of Israel, and since Abraham being only one, developed into such a large nation, they who are many have as many more chances of developing into a great nation, and therefore they remain in Palestine believing that they will become a great nation and possess the land for all the future. The people who said that were still practicing their idolatry. Ezekiel says, &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God: As I live, surely they that are in the waste places shall fall by the sword; and him that is in the open field will I give to the beasts to be devoured; and they that are in the strongholds and in the caves shall die of the pestilence.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> In <span class='bible'>Eze 33:30-33<\/span> , we have the effect of Ezekiel&#8217;s prophecies upon the people with whom he dwelt, there by the river Chebar in Babylon. Here is a passage of great comfort to a preacher sometimes. Ezekiel has now become popular and he is drawing fine congregations; the people are flocking to hear him, and they say, verse <span class='bible'>Eze 33:30<\/span> : &#8220;And as for thee, son of man, the children of thy people talk of thee by the walls and in the doors of the houses, and speak one to another, every one to his brother, saying, Come, I pray you, and hear what is the word that cometh forth from the Lord.&#8221; And he goes on to say how they came and heard the words but did them not, for with their mouth they show much love but their heart goeth after their gain. They have a great many good things to say to their preacher but their hearts go after their gain. &#8220;And, lo, thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice, and can play well on an instrument; for they hear thy words, but they do them not.&#8221; &#8220;Fine sermon, very lovely song, prayed splendidly,&#8221; they say but they never think of heeding what the preacher says.<\/p>\n<p> The evil shepherds are described (<span class='bible'>Eze 34:1-10<\/span> ). They feed themselves, not the flock. Jeremiah had something to say regarding those evil shepherds. Ezekiel has a strong denunciation of them in these ten verses. These shepherds feed themselves and care for themselves, but care nothing for the sheep, and the sheep wander through the forests and the deserts and upon every high hill and are scattered among all the nations of the earth and there are none that seek after them to bring them back. As a result the shepherds are denounced verse <span class='bible'>Eze 34:10<\/span> : &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I am against the shepherds; and I will require my sheep at their hand, and cause them to cease from feeding the sheep; neither shall the shepherds feed themselves any more; and I will deliver my sheep from their mouth, that they may not be food for them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> But Jehovah takes care of his sheep after disposing of the evil shepherds. Jehovah will undertake the care of the flock in the restoration period (<span class='bible'>Eze 34:11-19<\/span> ). Notice particularly verse <span class='bible'>Eze 34:11<\/span> : &#8220;Behold, I myself, even I, will search for my sheep, and will seek them out.&#8221; Latter part of verse <span class='bible'>Eze 34:12<\/span> : &#8220;So I will seek out my sheep; and I will deliver them out of all places whither they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day.&#8221; Verse <span class='bible'>Eze 34:15<\/span> : &#8220;I myself will be the shepherd of my sheep, and I will cause them to lie down, saith the Lord God.&#8221; Jehovah says that he will be the shepherd. He makes no reference here to a messianic Saviour, the Christ, or King that is to come. He himself is going to do it. And then in <span class='bible'>Eze 34:17-22<\/span> , Jehovah says that he is going to separate and distinguish between different parts of the flock.<\/p>\n<p> Verse <span class='bible'>Eze 34:17<\/span> : &#8220;I judge between sheep and sheep, the rams and the he-goats.&#8221; He is going to see that the leaders among the people of Israel are not like cattle that go down to the stream and drink and muddy the water, thus making it unfit for the others to drink. Jehovah is going to distinguish between them and see that they are in their proper places. Then from <span class='bible'>Eze 34:23-31<\/span> it says that Jehovah will raise up David as Shepherd and there shall be great prosperity. He said before, &#8220;I will be the Shepherd,&#8221; but now he says, &#8220;I will set up one shepherd over them, and he shall feed them, even my servant David; he shall feed them, and he shall be their shepherd.&#8221; This is messianic and refers to the work of Christ. In the latter part of <span class='bible'>Eze 34:26<\/span> , he describes the prosperity that shall come: &#8220;There shall be showers of blessing.&#8221; Here is where the words of the song, &#8220;There Shall Be Showers of Blessing,&#8221; came from. The prophet continues the magnificent description of the prosperity of the country and how all shall flourish under the rule and care of this great Shepherd, David, not David himself in person, but a member of his dynasty and of his family, who is Christ, our Lord.<\/p>\n<p> There is a prophecy against Edom in <span class='bible'>Eze 35<\/span> . The substance of this chapter is this: Mount Seir, or Edom, had sinned against Judah and Jerusalem at the time of her calamity (<span class='bible'>Eze 35:5<\/span> ). He charges Edom with two sins: (1) &#8220;Thou hast had a perpetual enmity&#8221;; (2) &#8220;Thou hast given over the children of Israel to the power of the sword in the time of their calamity.&#8221; When Edom, or Mount Seir, found Israel down, they trampled on her as hard as they could. <span class='bible'>Eze 35:10<\/span> mentions a third sin, and that is (3) &#8220;Thou hast said, These two nations and these two countries (northern and southern Israel) shall be mine, and we will possess it.&#8221; The point is this: When Israel was deported to Babylon and the country left desolate, the Edomites came from the south and took possession of all the land of Judah they possibly could and began to inhabit and make it their possession. Because of that the prophet&#8217;s denunciation is buried against them, prophesying the downfall of their capital and their country. It was necessary for the prophet to do this. They were encroaching upon Israel, and they must be driven forth from the land to make way for Israel.<\/p>\n<p> Then there is a prophecy concerning the land of Israel in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:1-15<\/span> . This is the counterpart, or the other side, of the prophecy (6) where he denounced the mountains of Israel because they were the high places of worship and predicted their desolation and overthrow. In the future age, the mountains of Israel shall be delivered out of the hand of the enemies, and they shall become abundantly fruitful. Notice, especially, verse <span class='bible'>Eze 36:8<\/span> : &#8220;But ye, O mountains of Israel, ye shall shoot forth your branches, and yield your fruit to my people Israel; for they are at hand to come,&#8221; i.e., &#8220;Ye shall till and sow and I will multiply men upon you; all the house of Israel, and the cities shall be inhabited and the waste places shall be builded.&#8221; Then he says, &#8220;And I will multiply upon you man and beast,&#8221; carrying forward his glowing description of the prosperity and fruitfulness of the land.<\/p>\n<p> In <span class='bible'>Eze 36:16-23<\/span> the prophet says that Jehovah will do this thing for his name&#8217;s sake and in honor of his own holy name: &#8220;Therefore say unto the house of Israel, Thus saith the Lord God: I do not this for your sake, O house of Israel, but for my holy name which ye have profaned among the nations whither ye went.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> In <span class='bible'>Eze 36:24-38<\/span> , we have the restoration and regeneration of Israel. Here we come to the New Testament ground, in the gospel dispensation. This is Ezekiel&#8217;s deepest, sweetest, and best prophecy. This passage calls to mind a notable challenge of Alexander Campbell, substantially in these words: &#8220;The whole world is challenged to produce even one passage in any part of God&#8217;s Word, from Genesis to Revelation, proving that God ever commanded prophet, priest, preacher, or layman to sprinkle or pour water just water pure water, on man, beast, or thing as a moral ceremonial or religious rite.&#8221; In response to the challenge the one passage cited was this scripture, <span class='bible'>Eze 36:25<\/span> . Of course it was easy for Mr. Campbell to show the irrelevancy of this passage. It does not meet the requirements of the challenge because:<\/p>\n<p> (1) It is not a command of God to any man to do any sprinkling whatever, but an express declaration of some kind of sprinkling that God himself will do.<\/p>\n<p> (2) The clean water of the text was not even in its type just water, but was a compound called the water of purification whose recipe is found in <span class='bible'>Num 19:1-10<\/span> . This was a liquid compound of ashes and water. A red heifer was burned. Into the burning was cast cedar wood, hyssop, and scarlet cloth. The ashes of this burning were gathered up and mingled with water and this mixture was called the water of cleansing, or of purification.<\/p>\n<p> (3) The typical efficacy of this mixture was in the ashes of the red things burned: the red heifer, the red cedar wood, red hyssop, and scarlet cloth; red signified blood. The antitype is the blood of Christ, <span class='bible'>Heb 9:13-14<\/span> : &#8220;For if the ashes of a heifer sprinkled on the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal spirit offered himself without spot to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> (4) The whole passage in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:21-38<\/span> refers to those last gospel days when the Jews, long disobedient, blinded, and scattered, will be gathered and saved, as set forth by Paul (<span class='bible'>Rom 11:25-36<\/span> ). This salvation will be of grace (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:22<\/span> ). It will be by regeneration (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:25-26<\/span> ). This regeneration will produce a spirit of obedience (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:27<\/span> ). This regeneration consists of at least two parts, cleansing and renewal. The cleansing (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:25<\/span> ) is effected by the application of Christ&#8217;s blood typified by the water of purification, the antitype of which is the blood of Christ (<span class='bible'>Heb 9:13-14<\/span> ; <span class='bible'>1Jn 1:7<\/span> ). The renewal (<span class='bible'>Eze 36:26<\/span> ) is the change of man&#8217;s nature. Both of these ideas appear in <span class='bible'>Joh 3:5<\/span> : &#8220;Except one be born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.&#8221; This is one birth. It is the Spirit birth. The water signifies cleansing; the Spirit, renewal. The same ideas appear in <span class='bible'>Tit 3:5<\/span> : &#8220;The washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit, which he poured out upon us richly, through Jesus Christ our Lord.&#8221; In none of these passages is there the slightest reference to baptism.<\/p>\n<p> Now let us consider the vision of dry bones (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span> ) and its interpretation. What are these dry bones? Is this a literal resurrection from the dead, or is this a conversion, a spiritual resurrection? It is not either. <span class='bible'>Eze 37:11<\/span> gives the clue to the interpretation. These bones are the house of Israel. What makes them so dry? &#8220;Behold, they say, Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are clean cut off.&#8221; They have no hope whatever as to the resurrection, or renewal of their national existence. They were saying, &#8220;We are scattered among all the nations. Our city and our capital is gone and there is no hope for our nation and our people any more.&#8221; Nationally or religiously, they were as dry bones which had no hope of a resurrection. Now there is no distinct reference to any resurrection of the body, nor of any spiritual regeneration. It is national.<\/p>\n<p> The prophet was required to preach to them. He preached and the bones began to come together and he kept on preaching and flesh came upon them, and by and by they stood up. The whole house of Israel raised to a new national life and existence! Then he kept on preaching and the result was as we see in verse <span class='bible'>Eze 37:14<\/span> : &#8220;I will put my spirit within you and ye shall live and I shall place you in your own land and ye shall know that I am Jehovah.&#8221; That was fulfilled to some extent in the return of the 50,000 after the decree of Cyrus, but it was never completely fulfilled. An army of about 50,000 whose spirit Jehovah stirred up, returned at first, and that stirring up was the result of the preaching of Ezekiel and Jeremiah and the study of the latter part of the book of Isaiah. The figure of the resurrection is used in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:12<\/span> , thus: &#8220;I will open your graves and cause you to come out of your graves,&#8221; but the graves are national graves, not literal. This is referred to by Paul (<span class='bible'>Rom 11:15<\/span> ) as a resurrection and contemplates the final gathering of the Jews before the millennium.<\/p>\n<p> The union of Judah and Israel is symbolized in <span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span> : &#8220;Take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick, and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim.&#8221; These two sticks he joined together. This is a symbolic action similar to many other actions of Ezekiel which we have already considered. The meaning of it is this: &#8220;Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his companions; and I will put them with it, even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in my hand.&#8221; Jeremiah prophesied the same thing; so did Isaiah in substance; so did Hosea; so did Amos, Micah, and Zephaniah.<\/p>\n<p> It was the belief of all the prophets that when Israel returned from exile it would be one nation, a united nation. Ezekiel goes on, &#8220;I will make them one nation in the land, upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be to them all; and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all.&#8221; In <span class='bible'>Eze 37:24<\/span> the king is called &#8220;David my servant,&#8221; that is, one of his descendants; a member of his dynasty shall be king over them and they shall have one shepherd. Then he says, &#8220;I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them.&#8221; Verse <span class='bible'>Eze 37:27<\/span> : &#8220;My tabernacle also shall be with them; and they shall be my people,&#8221; all of which has its fulfilment in the millennial age. This reminds us of <span class='bible'>Rev 21:3<\/span> .<\/p>\n<p> An account of the invasion of Gog and Magog is found in Ezekiel 38-39. This is the picture of the last and final struggle of all the nations with God. We find that John refers to the same struggle in <span class='bible'>Rev 20:7-9<\/span> : &#8220;When the thousand years are finished, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, and shall come forth to deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to the war: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea. And they went up over the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire came down out of heaven and devoured them.&#8221; Ezekiel says, <span class='bible'>Eze 38:2<\/span> : &#8220;Son of man, set thy face toward Gog, of the land of Magog, the chief prince of Rosh, Meshech and Tubal, and prophesy against him,&#8221; nations lying probably away to the north of Israel on the borders of the Caspian and Black Seas representing the great barbarian hordes that infested central Asia and northern Armenia on the very outskirts of the then known world. &#8220;I will bring thee forth, and all thine army, horses and horsemen, all of them clothed and in full armor, a great company with buckler and shield, all of them handling swords.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> What does this mean? Ezekiel is picturing the millennial age, the messianic age, and away in the future after the glorious age has been in progress, for how long we cannot tell, he sees this vision of the final struggle. Israel has been enjoying the blessedness of that age for centuries and the nations around her have been destroyed. The nations lying far off on the outskirts of the world now rouse themselves for a final onslaught on God&#8217;s kingdom. &#8220;And thou shalt say, I will go up to the land of unwalled villages; I will go to them that are at rest, that dwell securely, all of them dwelling without walls, and having neither bars nor gates.&#8221; Thus the people are unprotected; they are living in the messianic age when all is peace and harmony. &#8220;I will go to them that are at rest.&#8221; What for? &#8220;To take the spoil and to take the prey.&#8221; This is the final conflict of the barbarian nations of the world with their vast hosts, against the messianic kingdom.<\/p>\n<p> What is to be the result? We find in <span class='bible'>Eze 38:17-23<\/span> , Ezekiel says the prophets have for a long time been prophesying of this very thing, though we do not have any distinct reference to the prophecy. As Gog, with his hosts, encompasses the whole land of Israel and surrounds the city, then Ezekiel says in the latter part of <span class='bible'>Eze 38:18<\/span> , &#8220;My wrath shall come up into my nostrils . . . I will rain upon him, and upon his hordes, and upon the many peoples that are with him, an overflowing shower, and great hailstones, fire, and brimstone.&#8221; That is to be the end of Gog and his innumerable hordes.<\/p>\n<p> Then we have this statement, <span class='bible'>Eze 39:4<\/span> : &#8220;Thou shalt fall upon the mountains of Israel, thou, and all thy hordes and the peoples that are with thee: I will give thee unto the ravenous birds of every sort, and to the beasts of the field to be devoured.&#8221; And in <span class='bible'>Eze 39:9<\/span> , he says, &#8220;And they that dwell in the cities of Israel shall go forth, and shall make fires of the weapons and burn them, both the shields and the bucklers, the bows and the arrows, and the handstaves, and the spears, and they shall make fires of them seven years.&#8221; <span class='bible'>Eze 39:12<\/span> says that the people of Israel are going to bury all those that fall and they are to be seven months burying the dead, and are to have a rule that when any person finds a bone he is to set up a mark by it until the body has been buried outside in the valley. Then we have the feast of all the birds of the air and the beasts of the field upon the slain. The chapter closes with a description of Israel&#8217;s restoration (<span class='bible'>Eze 39:28-29<\/span> ). The best commentary on the destruction of Gog is found in that short passage, in <span class='bible'>Rev 20<\/span> , where John pictures Satan as raising an insurrection among all the nations of the world at the close of the millennium. Ezekiel pictures it as taking place a long while after the restoration and the blessed messianic age. (See the author&#8217;s discussion of this subject in his book on Revelation.)<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><strong> QUESTIONS<\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> 1. What is the theme of this section and where do we find the same subject discussed in Jeremiah and Isaiah?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 2. Show the logical order of these prophecies.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 3. What is the great function of the prophet and how is it here set forth?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 4. What is the duty and responsibility of the watchman?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 5. How was this duty and responsibility impressed upon Ezekiel?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 6. What is the condition of the minds of the people and how does the prophet meet it?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 7. What is the theme, occasion, and date of the prophecy of Ezekiel in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:21-33<\/span> , and what is the chronological difficulty here and its solution?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 8. Whom does the prophet address in <span class='bible'>Eze 33:23-29<\/span> , what the occasion of this address and what the prophet&#8217;s message to them?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 9. What is the effect of Ezekiel&#8217;s preaching on the people in exile (<span class='bible'>Eze 33:30-33<\/span> )?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 10. How are the evil shepherds described in <span class='bible'>Eze 34:1-10<\/span> , what the prophet&#8217;s denunciation of them and how does Jehovah take care of his sheep?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 11. What is the prophecy against Edom in <span class='bible'>Eze 35<\/span> and why?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 12. What is the prophecy concerning the land of Israel in <span class='bible'>Eze 36:1-15<\/span> ?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 13. What is the motive of Jehovah in doing all this (<span class='bible'>Eze 38:16-23<\/span> )?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 14. Expound <span class='bible'>Eze 36:24-38<\/span> , showing the controversy about it, and its true interpretation in the light of the New Testament.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 15. What the vision of dry bones (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:1-14<\/span> ) and what its interpretation?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 16. How is the union of Judah and Israel symbolized and what the glorious picture that follows (<span class='bible'>Eze 37:15-28<\/span> )?<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p> 17. Give an account of the invasion of Gog and Magog and the result (Ezekiel 38-39). Discuss fully.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: B.H. Carroll&#8217;s An Interpretation of the English Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> Eze 37:1 The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of the valley which [was] full of bones,<\/p>\n<p> Ver. 1. <strong> The hand of the Lord,<\/strong> ] <em> i.e., <\/em> The force and impulse of the Holy Spirit, fitly called &#8220;the hand of the Lord&#8221;; <em> a<\/em> because holy men of old spake and acted as they were moved or carried out by the Holy Ghost. 2Pe 2:22 <\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/p>\n<p> In the spirit,<\/strong> ] <em> i.e., <\/em> In a spiritual rapture. <\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/p>\n<p> And set me down.<\/strong> ] Not really, but visionally. <\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/p>\n<p> In the midst of the valley.<\/strong> ] That same valley, some think, where Eze 1:3 he saw that glorious vision. Prophecies were often received, and prayers are best made, in one and the same place. <\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/p>\n<p> Which was full of bones.<\/strong> ] So it appeared to him in his ecstasy. <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><em> a<\/em> <em> Manus est impellere; manus est organum agendi.<\/em> &#8211; <em> Theodoret.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: John Trapp&#8217;s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> <strong> Ezekiel Chapter 37<\/p>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p> This section contains a striking vision and a plain explanation of it. It is a question neither of the conversion of the soul nor of the resurrection of the body, but of God&#8217;s causing Israel to live once more by-and-by as a people. They were at that time swept away and without a political existence; and greater troubles than those inflicted by Assyrian or Babylonian were before them, of which law and prophets clearly forewarned; but the word of Jehovah shall stand. And here again it was revealed to the sorrowing captives for their consolation after their earlier exile and before the later that they might be sustained in presence of such overwhelming disasters by the sure hope of their national revival under the gracious working of the Lord.<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;The hand of Jehovah was upon me, and carried me out in the Spirit of Jehovah, and set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones, and caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, [there were] very many in the open valley; and, lo, [they were] very dry.&#8221; (Vers. 1, 2) There is no disguise as to the estimate intended of those meant by the bones in the valley. There was not only no strength, but not even life. In order to bring out this the more we read, &#8220;And be said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord Jehovah, thou knowest.&#8221; (Ver. 3) The impotence thus implied and confessed opens the way for the word of the Lord. &#8220;Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: and I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live, and ye shall know that I [am] Jehovah.&#8221; (Ver. 4-6)<\/p>\n<p> Truly it was man&#8217;s extremity and God&#8217;s opportunity. He is the God that quickens the dead; and where should He exercise His glorious power if not on behalf of His people? And the prophet was given to see as well as to hear and speak. &#8220;So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but [there was] no breath in them.&#8221; (Vers 7, 8) Still more solemnly is this followed up in verses 9, 10: &#8220;Then said he unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet an exceeding great army.&#8221; (Vers. 9, 10) It is impossible to apply such a statement as this with any show of propriety to the return of less than 43,000 from Babylon: especially as the armies of old far exceeded those usual in modern times. The returning remnant was a very small army compared with that of Judah alone under their kings. And we shall find later on that Ephraim as well as Judah are expressly contemplated: indeed it is implied immediately after in &#8220;the whole house of Israel.&#8221; The past return from captivity is therefore out of the question.<\/p>\n<p> But we are not left to reasoning of ours on the scope of this book and the general aim of Ezekiel. He who gave us the vision through His servant has added the most explicit interpretation. &#8220;Then he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts. Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. And ye shall know that I [am] Jehovah, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, and shall put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I Jehovah have spoken [it], and performed [it], saith Jehovah.&#8221; (Ver. 11-14)<\/p>\n<p> To a mind simple and subject to scripture there can be no hesitation here. To whatever use or application we may turn the vision, its direct and express meaning is God&#8217;s revival of His ancient people Israel then utterly destroyed, dead and buried, but yet to quit their graves according to the word of Jehovah &#8220;These bones are the whole house of Israel.&#8221; And God would comfort His people as well as rebuke the unbelief which said, &#8220;Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts.&#8221; His own faithful grace will undertake to do what is manifestly beyond the power of man. He declares that He will not only disinter them from the graves wherein they now lie buried as a nation, but will bring them into the land of Israel &#8211; an issue suitable neither to those risen from the dead nor to souls converted to God now by the gospel, for what have we to do with the land of Israel? But restoration to their land is the simple and necessary complement of the national resuscitation of Israel. And so all the Old Testament testifies. Continually we see the people and their land bound up: blessing by-and-by on both, as now alas! a curse on both.<\/p>\n<p> The meaning therefore seems incontestable, save to men whose minds have been corrupted by the Patristic or Puritan schools, who can see none of the ways of God in Israel for the earth, any more than they read aright His heavenly counsels for the church; and this because the starting-point of both, though in different forms, is the substitution of self for Christ. Their interpretation of prophecy in particular is vitiated by this fatal mistake, which practically razes the hopes of Israel from the Bible and lowers ours to a mere succession to their hope and inheritance with somewhat better light and privilege. It is a part of the first and widest and most tenacious corruption of Christianity against which the apostle fought so valiantly. And it comes in the more insidiously, because it seems to those under its influence that they are of all men the most distant from the false brethren Paul denounced. To their minds the truest guard against judaising is to deny that the Jews will ever be reinstated as a people, or be restored consequently to their own land. All the predictions of future blessedness and glory to Israel they turn over to Christendom now or to the church in glory. Most pernicious error! For this is exactly to judaise the Christian and the church by making them simply follow and inherit from Israel. The truth is thus swamped; Israel&#8217;s bright prospects are denied; Gentile conceit is engendered; and the Christian is rendered worldly, instead of being taught his place of blessing on high in contrast with Israel&#8217;s on the earth.<\/p>\n<p> But there is another and connected revelation. The revival of Israel as a people is not all that the prophet here learns and communicates. This was given in the first half of the chapter, not their quickening individually, however true it may be, but their national resuscitation under the operation of the Spirit, not of man&#8217;s will or the world&#8217;s politics, as becomes the people chosen and now finally to be blessed of Jehovah. There was a distinct fresh blessing to be conferred on them, the disappearance of an old reproach which had long dishonoured Israel from the days of Rehoboam as long as it had subsisted in the land. When God sets to His hand for their restoration in the latter day, He will re-unite them as they were of old under David and Solomon, never to have their unity broken or even threatened again; This is reserved for the true Beloved when He reigns as the Prince of peace.<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;The word of Jehovah came again unto me, saying, Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and [for] the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick, and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and [for] all the house of Israel his companions: and join them one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand.&#8221; (Ver. 15-17)<\/p>\n<p> It is indeed no obscure proof of human perverseness that words like these should ever have been mistaken. Yet they have been and are, not among the despised Jews who cleave to their future hopes, but in contempt of their present responsibility by Christians under the gospel of God&#8217;s indiscriminate grace in the dead and risen Christ to every soul that believes, be he Jew or Gentile. Thus it is then that Satan deceives all. The Jews are right in maintaining that Israel are yet to be blessed in their land under Messiah and the new covenant, and this, not vaguely nor partially, but after apostasy as well as divine judgments shall have thinned them down, all Israel that shall then be saved, gathered and united, Judah and Joseph as one whole. They are utterly, fatally, wrong now in not seeing their Messiah, the Saviour, in Jesus of Nazareth, and consequently perish because they obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. But Satan deceives Christendom in this that, while they rightly confess the Crucified One to be the Son of God, they not only mix up the law with the gospel and so lose all the comfort and power and certainty of God&#8217;s salvation in Christ, but yearn after the predicted glories of Israel on earth as if they were descriptive of their own privileges to the almost total ignoring of their heavenly standing as well as to the denial of God&#8217;s faithfulness and future mercy to Israel.<\/p>\n<p> There is indeed no excuse for misunderstanding a symbol so plain as that in verses 16, 17. But, as if to clench the application, we have as before an explanation appended. &#8220;And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not show us what thou [meanest] by these? say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah; Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which [is] in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his fellows, and will put them with him, [even] with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in mine hand. And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes. And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah; Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen, whither they be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land: and I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all: neither shall they defile themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their transgressions: but I will save them out of all their dwelling-places, wherein they have sinned, and will cleanse them: so shall they be my people, and I will be their God.&#8221; (Ver. 18-23)<\/p>\n<p> It is as vain to wrest such language to the remnant of Jews that returned from Babylon as to the church at Pentecost. There is not even analogy. It is a union of the two long-divided houses of Israel, and nothing else. Not even a shadow of its accomplishment has appeared yet. Words cannot be conceived more explicit. Every sense but the future ingathering and union of all Israel as a single nation under one king is excluded. Never more shall they be divided, never more defiled. Nay more, they shall be Jehovah&#8217;s people, and He their God. As the Jew cannot say that this has yet been, so it is absurd for any Gentile to say it of or for them. Still more absurd is it for the Gentile to claim it for himself. In no case is it applicable to the christian body. A remnant of Jews returned from Babylon to be defiled not merely with transgressions, but with a more detestable thing than their old idolatry, even the rejection and crucifying of their Messiah: was this a fulfilment of Ezekiel&#8217;s glowing words?<\/p>\n<p> But further it is added, &#8220;And David my servant [shall be] king over them, and they all shall have one shepherd: they shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes, and do them.&#8221; (Ver. 24) Here again what confirmation if this were needed! For no sober believer can doubt that Christ only can be meant, and Christ, not as Head of the church in heaven, but as king of Israel when He reigns over the earth. Never, since the prophecy was uttered, has there been an approach to its accomplishment. Never since have they all had one shepherd; nor have Israel walked in His judgments, nor observed His statutes and done them. Christians all over the world cannot be meant here, still less when they go to heaven, but Israel only. &#8220;And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, [even] they, and their children, and their children&#8217;s children, for ever; and my servant David [shall be] their prince for ever.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p> It is, as Isaiah says, the sure mercies of David &#8211; that everlasting covenant Jehovah makes with Israel; and this the resurrection of Christ explains. Thus was He to reign &#8211; not merely to ascend and become the beginning and Head of a new work on high, but to reign &#8211; over Israel in their land. Indeed, in language strongly resembling the prophet referred to, Ezekiel follows with the assurance of Jehovah. &#8220;Moreover I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them: and I will place them, and multiply them, and will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore. My tabernacle also shall be with them: yea, I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And the heathen shall know that I Jehovah do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore.&#8221; (Ver. 26-28) The humbling thought is that Christians could question what is here meant. Only one thing explains it all &#8211; the deep and wide-spread departure of men in Christendom from an adequate or indeed any real sense of their own blessings. From the peace and joy proper to the Christian, they have through judaizing and the influence of Babylon slipped away into doubt and darkness and error; and in their lack of comfort in the Holy Ghost, through unbelief of the grace in which the Christian stands, they are tempted to covet their neighbours&#8217; goods to the ruin of truth and to the confusion of relationship with God, whether of the church now or of Israel by-and-by. The issue of the prophecy is of so plain and positive and glorious a nature that the very heathen shall know that Jehovah sanctifies His people, when His sanctuary shall be in their midst for ever. Who can affirm that this is true now, either of Israel, of whom it is said, or of the church, of whom it is not?<\/p>\n<p> *It is to the shame of Christians that they who know the truth and grace of God in Christ should be so beguiled, in reading the prophecies at least, as to be justly rebuked for their dark unbelief by a Jew &#8211; himself so prejudiced as Don Balthasar Orobio. I am indebted to another for the following extract: &#8211; <\/p>\n<p> &#8220;If it be Israel mentioned in the passages they quote, it is the spiritual (that is, the nations who have embraced the christian religion), and not the temporal, or in other words the Jewish seed of Abraham. If the text affirm that Israel and Judah shall return to the land of their fathers to possess it for ever, they uphold that this land is heaven, and those who have acknowledged Messiah are Israel and Judah. The wars and desolation of which the prophet speaks are also taken in a metaphorical sense. We must believe, according to them, that it is the struggle of vice with virtue &#8211; impiety with justice. Thus to annihilate the proofs which we expect will mark the fulfilment of the Almighty&#8217;s promises, they confound heaven with earth, this world with paradise, the holy city with the assemblings of Christians; Israel, Jacob, and Judah, with the Gentiles; the disorder of war with the spiritual opposition of vice to virtue; the temple, evidently temporal as it is, with the salvation of souls, the religion they profess, etc.<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;The prophet Ezekiel completely destroys all these chimerical opinions. The true Israelites, he says, will be redeemed &#8211; the real need of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and not the Gentiles. He does not say that the land which they will re-possess will be the church or heaven, but that same land which they had inhabited before they were scattered, and wherein they will dwell for ever. The Lord commands him to take two sticks; on the one to write the name of Judah and his companions; and on the other the name of Ephraim, son of Joseph, and all the house of Israel; that is to say, the remnant of the tribes which were divided into two kingdoms after the death of Solomon: and to say to the children of Israel that at the time of the redemption the kingdoms shall be united never to be divided again. He was then to show these two sticks to the people and say to them, &#8216;Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will take the children from among the nations whither they be gone, and will gather them from every side, and bring them unto their own land: and I will make them but ONE nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel: and one king shall be king to them all: they shall be no more two nations neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more. And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein their fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, even they and their children&#8217;s children for ever. And the nations shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;Can the Gentiles who have embraced the christian faith believe that they are the Israelites to whom the prophet alludes? Are the nations ever termed Judah and Ephraim? Or have they been divided into two kingdoms? Neither reason nor plain sense is the foundation of the persuasion that the land of which the prophet speaks is spiritual; that it is the church signified when he assures the people of Israel of their return to their own land &#8211; to that happy country which they had before possessed in the land of Canaan, that which the Lord had given to their ancestors. Can the mountains where the people were to assemble be spiritual? Fiction never went so far in metamorphosis.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: William Kelly Major Works (New Testament)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p> Ezekiel<\/p>\n<p><strong> THE DRY BONES AND THE SPIRIT OF LIFE<\/p>\n<p> Eze 37:1 &#8211; Eze 37:14 <\/strong> .<\/p>\n<p> This great vision apparently took its form from a despairing saying, which had become a proverb among the exiles, &lsquo;Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost: we are clean cut off&rsquo; Eze 37:11. Ezekiel lays hold of the metaphor, which had been taken to express the hopeless destruction of Israel&rsquo;s national existence, and even from it wrings a message of hope. Faith has the prerogative of seeing possibilities of life in what looks to sense hopeless death. We may look at the vision from three points of view, considering its bearing on Israel, on the world, and on the resurrection of the body.<\/p>\n<p><strong> I. The saying, already referred to, puts the hopelessness of the mass of the exiles in a forcible fashion. <\/strong> The only sense in which living men could say that their bones were dried up, and they cut off, is a figurative one, and obviously it is the national existence which they regarded as irretrievably ended. The saying gives us a glimpse into the despair which had settled down on the exiles, and against which Ezekiel had to contend, as he had also to contend against its apparently opposite and yet kindred feeling of presumptuous, misplaced hope. We observe that he begins by accepting fully the facts which bred despair, and even accentuating them. The true prophet never makes light of the miseries of which he knows the cure, and does not try to comfort by minimising the gravity of the evil. The bones <em> are<\/em> very many, and they <em> are<\/em> very dry. As far as outward resources are concerned, despair was rational, and hope as absurd as it would have been to expect that men, dead so long that their bones had been bleached by years of exposure to the weather, should live again.<\/p>\n<p> But while Ezekiel saw the facts of Israel&rsquo;s powerlessness as plainly as the most despondent, he did not therefore despair. The question which rose in his mind was God&rsquo;s question, and the very raising it let a gleam of hope in. So he answered with that noble utterance of faith and submission, &lsquo;O Lord God, Thou knowest.&rsquo; &lsquo;With God all things are possible.&rsquo; Presumption would have said &lsquo;Yes&rsquo;; Unbelief would have said &lsquo;No&rsquo;; Faith says, &lsquo;Thou knowest.&rsquo;<\/p>\n<p>The grand description of the process of resurrection follows the analogy of the order in the creation of man, giving, first, the shaping of the body, and afterwards the breathing into it of the breath which is life. Both stages are wholly God&rsquo;s work. The prophet&rsquo;s part was to prophesy to the bones first; and his word, in a sense, brought about the effect which it foretold, since his ministry was the most potent means of rekindling dying hopes, and bringing the <em> disjecta membra<\/em> of the nation together again. The vivid and gigantic imagination of the prophet gives a picture of the rushing together of the bones, which has no superior in any literature. He hears a noise, and sees a &lsquo;shaking&rsquo; by which is meant the motion of the bones to each other, rather than an &lsquo;earthquake,&rsquo; as the Revised Version has it, which inserts a quite irrelevant detail, and the result of all is that the skeletons are complete. Then follows the gradual clothing with flesh. There they lie, a host of corpses.<\/p>\n<p>The second stage is the quickening of these bodies with life, and here again Ezekiel, as God&rsquo;s messenger, has power to bring about what he announces; for, at his command, the breath, or wind, or spirit, comes, and the stiff corpses spring to their feet, a mighty army. The explanation in the last verses of the text somewhat departs from the tenor of the vision by speaking of Israel as buried, but keeps to its substance, and point the despairing exiles to God as the source of national resurrection. But we must not force deeper meaning on Ezekiel&rsquo;s words than they properly bear. The spirit promised in them is simply the source of life,-literally, of physical life; metaphorically, of national life. However that national restoration was connected with holiness, that does not enter into the prophet&rsquo;s vision. Israel&rsquo;s restoration to its land is all that Ezekiel meant by it. True, that restoration was to lead to clearer recognition by Israel of the name of Jehovah, and of all that it implied in him and demanded from them. But the proper scope of the vision is to assure despairing Israelites that God would quicken the apparently slain national life, and replace them in the land.<\/p>\n<p><strong> II. We may extend the application of the vision to the condition of humanity and the divine intervention which communicates life to a dead world, but must remember that no such meaning was in Ezekiel&rsquo;s thoughts. <\/strong> The valley full of dry bones is but too correct a description of the aspect which a world &lsquo;dead in trespasses and sins&rsquo; bears, when seen from the mountain-top by pure and heavenly eyes. The activities of godless lives mask the real spiritual death, which is the condition of every soul that is separate from God. Galvanised corpses may have muscular movements, but they are dead, notwithstanding their twitching. They that live without God are dead while they live.<\/p>\n<p> Again, we may learn from the vision the preparation needful for the prophet, who is to be the instrument of imparting divine life to a dead world. The sorrowful sense of the widespread deadness must enter into a man&rsquo;s spirit, and be ever present to him, in order to fit him for his work. A dead world is not to be quickened on easy terms. We must see mankind in some measure as God sees them if we are to do God&rsquo;s work among them. So-called Christian teachers, who do not believe that the race is dead in sin, or who, believing it, do not feel the tragedy of the fact, and the power lodged in their hands to bring the true life, may prophesy to the dry bones for ever, and there will be no shaking among them.<\/p>\n<p>The great work of the gospel is to communicate divine life. The details of the process in the vision are not applicable in this respect. As we have pointed out, they are shaped after the pattern of the creation of Adam, but the essential point is that what the world needs is the impartation from God of His Spirit. We know more than Ezekiel did as to the way by which that Spirit is given to men, and as to the kind of life which it imparts, and as to the connection between that life and holiness. It is a diviner voice than Ezekiel&rsquo;s which speaks to us in the name of God, and says to us with deeper meaning than the prophet of the Exile dreamed of, &lsquo;I will put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live.&rsquo;<\/p>\n<p>But we may note that it is possible to have the outward form of a living body, and yet to have no life. Churches and individuals may be perfectly organised and perfectly dead. Creeds may be articulated most correctly, every bone in its place, and yet have no vitality in them. Forms of worship may be punctiliously proper, and have no breath of life in them. Religion must have a body, but often the body is not so much the organ as the sepulchre of the spirit. We have to take heed that the externals do not kill the inward life.<\/p>\n<p>Again, we note that this great act of life-giving is God&rsquo;s revelation of His name,-that is, of His character so far as men can know it. &lsquo;Ye shall know that I am the Lord&rsquo; Eze 37:13 &#8211; Eze 37:14. God makes Himself known in His divinest glory when He quickens dead souls. The world may learn what He is therefrom, but they who have experienced the change, and have, as it were, been raised from the grave to new life, have personal experience of His power and faithfulness so sure and sweet that henceforward they cannot doubt Him nor forget His grace.<\/p>\n<p><strong> III. As to the bearing of the vision on the doctrine of the resurrection little need be said. <\/strong> It does not necessarily presuppose the people&rsquo;s acquaintance with that doctrine, for it would be quite conceivable that the vision had revealed to the prophet the thought of a resurrection, which had not been in his beliefs before. The vision is so entirely figurative, that it cannot be employed as evidence that the idea of the resurrection of the dead was part of the Jewish beliefs at this date. It does, however, seem most natural to suppose that the exiles were familiar with the idea, though the vision cannot be taken as a revelation of a literal resurrection of dead men. For clear expectations of such a resurrection we must turn to such scriptures as Dan 12:2 , Dan 12:13 .<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Eze 37:1-6<\/p>\n<p> 1The hand of the LORD was upon me, and He brought me out by the Spirit of the LORD and set me down in the middle of the valley; and it was full of bones. 2He caused me to pass among them round about, and behold, there were very many on the surface of the valley; and lo, they were very dry. 3He said to me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord GOD, You know. 4Again He said to me, Prophesy over these bones and say to them, &#8216;O dry bones, hear the word of the LORD.&#8217; 5Thus says the Lord GOD to these bones, &#8216;Behold, I will cause breath to enter you that you may come to life. 6I will put sinews on you, make flesh grow back on you, cover you with skin and put breath in you that you may come alive; and you will know that I am the LORD .&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1 The hand of the LORD was upon me This has been a recurrent literary marker of a new revelation (cf. Eze 1:3; Eze 3:14; Eze 3:22; Eze 8:1; Eze 33:22; Eze 37:1; Eze 40:1).<\/p>\n<p>SPECIAL TOPIC: HAND (ILLUSTRATED FROM EZEKIEL) <\/p>\n<p> by the Spirit of the LORD The word Spirit in Eze 37:1; Eze 37:14 and the word breath in Eze 37:5-6; Eze 37:8-9 (twice), and 10 and the word wind in Eze 37:9 all relate to one Hebrew term, Ruah (BDB 924), which means wind, breath, spirit and is a play on this word throughout this chapter.<\/p>\n<p>SPECIAL TOPIC: SPIRIT IN THE BIBLE <\/p>\n<p> the valley This seems to refer to the place of slaughter (cf. Jer 7:32 to Jer 8:2). The place of idolatry and judgment (i.e., Jerusalem, the Valley of Topheth, Valley of the Sons of Hinnom, Gehenna) will become the very place of resurrection and restoration.<\/p>\n<p>The real question is to whom does this refer?<\/p>\n<p>1. past idolatrous leaders and Israelites (cf. Jer. 7:37-8:2)<\/p>\n<p>2. current Judeans<\/p>\n<p>3. the righteous remnant (see Special Topic: The Remnant, Three Senses )<\/p>\n<p>4. future Jews<\/p>\n<p>5. symbol of God&#8217;s people (cf. Eze 37:11)<\/p>\n<p>but not previous idolaters. It seems to me in context that #4 fits best. It is texts like this that cause some to say all Jews will be saved, but this violates too many NT texts, even the Jews of Romans 9-11 (as well as those of Zec 12:10) must be repentant believers (cf. Jer 3:22 to Jer 4:2). There is no biblical support for the restoration of unbelieving, unrepenting descendants of Abraham. Only the people of faith are his true seed (cf. Rom 2:28-29; Gal 6:16). Remember that chapter 36 (i.e., new heart, new spirit) sets the contextual stage for chapter 37.<\/p>\n<p>The term valley in Eze 37:1 is BDB 132, while Jer 7:32 is BDB 161. However, they may still relate to one another.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:4 Notice that the Spirit (wind, breath) and the Word (note Eze 37:14) of the Lord are parallel (cf. Isa 59:21). As God (i.e., Jesus, cf. Joh 1:3; Joh 1:10; Rom 11:36; 1Co 8:6; Col 1:16; Heb 1:2; Heb 2:10) breathed into the newly formed human body (cf. Gen 2:7) to create persons for fellowship, so He does again!<\/p>\n<p>This emphasizes the power of the Word of God (cf. Eze 6:3; Eze 13:2; Eze 13:6; Eze 16:35; Eze 20:47; Eze 25:3; Eze 34:7; Eze 34:9; Eze 36:1; Isa 45:23; Isa 55:11; Mat 24:35). This is a re-creation event!<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:5 This is parallel to Gen 2:7 (notice Eze 37:8); there by God (i.e., Jesus) and here by His Spirit (cf. Eze 37:14). Only God can give and sustain life! Only He has life! Here the life is national restoration to the Promised Land. The reversal of exile (national death) is the renewal of the covenant promises (conditional on covenant obedience, cf. Leviticus 26; Deuteronomy 27-28).<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:6 This is a recurrent theme, usually connected to judgment (i.e., Eze 35:9; Eze 38:23; Eze 39:6), but here to symbolic resurrection of a whole people (i.e., Joe 2:27; Joe 3:17). In Isaiah 49 this phrase is linked to the inclusion of the Gentiles (cf. Eph 2:11 to Eph 3:13). This has always been God&#8217;s plan! See Special Topic: YHWH&#8217;s Eternal Redemptive Plan .<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>the LORD. Hebrew. Jehovah. App-4. <\/p>\n<p>in the spirit = by the spirit. Compare Eze 1:1, Eze 1:3; Eze 8:3; Eze 11:24, Eze 11:25; Eze 40:2, Eze 40:3. These expressions show the meaning of Rev 1:10. <\/p>\n<p>spirit. Hebrew. ruach. App-9. <\/p>\n<p>valley = plain. Some word as in Eze 3:22, Eze 3:23, and Eze 8:4. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Chapter 37<\/p>\n<p>Now in chapter 37, again, a prophecy of the restoration of the nation of Israel, the rebirth of the nation.<\/p>\n<p>The hand of the LORD was upon me, carried me out in the Spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of a valley which was full of bones ( Eze 37:1 ),<\/p>\n<p>So Ezekiel taken now by the Spirit in this vision to this valley that was filled with these bones.<\/p>\n<p>And he caused me to pass by them all around: and, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and they were very dry. And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord GOD, you know ( Eze 37:2-3 ).<\/p>\n<p>In other words, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know. I can&#8217;t see it. But You know, God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Again he said unto me, Prophesy unto these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the LORD. Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: And I will lay sinews upon you, and bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am the LORD. So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to bone. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came upon them, and the skin covered them above: but there was no breath in them. Then said he unto me, Prophesy to the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as he commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army ( Eze 37:4-10 ).<\/p>\n<p>Now the Lord explained the vision.<\/p>\n<p>Then he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts ( Eze 37:11 ).<\/p>\n<p>They&#8217;ve been cut off and separated from each other. Little bands of Jews in Germany and Europe, in France, in England, in the United States, in China, in Yemen, and all, in Russia, all over the world, little scatterings of Jews, but they&#8217;ve been scattered throughout the entire earth.<\/p>\n<p>Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel. And ye shall know that I am the LORD, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, And shall put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the LORD have spoken it, and performed it, saith the LORD ( Eze 37:12-14 ).<\/p>\n<p>So the promise that God would give them national life again, that which had been dead for nineteen centuries would come alive and they would be a nation once more. &#8220;I&#8217;ll bring you back into the land.&#8221; The marvelous prophecy of the rebirth of the nation Israel.<\/p>\n<p>Then the LORD came again and said unto me, Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick, and write on it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his companions: And join them one to another into one stick; that they shall become one in thy hand ( Eze 37:15-17 ).<\/p>\n<p>So he took the two sticks and then joined them together so they became just one stick. One was to be marked Joseph, the other was to be marked Judah.<\/p>\n<p>And when the children of the people shall speak unto you, saying, What are you trying to show us? What do you mean by this? Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his fellows, and will put them with him, even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in my hand. And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes. And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen, whither they be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land: And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king unto them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all ( Eze 37:18-22 ):<\/p>\n<p>Now, very obvious what God is saying. Extremely obvious. In fact, it&#8217;s about as obvious as any scriptures can be. What the Lord is seeking to say to the people, when the nation is reborn, re-gathered, rather than being a divided nation as it was when they went into captivity, the Northern Kingdom with the capital Samaria, and the Southern Kingdom with the capital Jerusalem, rather than being two nations, Judah and Israel, when they come back in the last days and are brought back into the land and made a nation again, rather than two nations there will only be one nation. Judah and Joseph, or Ephraim, the tribes of Israel will be gathered together as one nation, no longer as a double nation. Very obvious.<\/p>\n<p>It is almost laughable it is so ridiculous and idiotic for Joseph Smith to claim that his name is in the Bible and he was prophesied in the book of Ezekiel for the stick of Joseph was to be the Book of Mormon that God would give to him and joined together with the Bible would be the continuation of the Bible and God&#8217;s Word for man in these last days. That is so completely farfetched that a person would have to lay his brains on the shelf to accept any kind of an interpretation of the scripture that way. I mean, God told us what He was talking about. God said, &#8220;These two sticks are the two nations and when they come, join them together because there will only be one nation when they come back into the land.&#8221; Now I would have to say that anybody that can interpret that into the scripture I would not want to be following their Biblical expositions or trust myself to their teaching. When you can gather that kind of stuff out of this scripture, you can make red read green. I mean, that&#8217;s as farfetched as anything could ever be. And if you&#8217;re a Mormon here tonight, it&#8217;s just straight from the shoulder. Look at it and question in your mind the things that you&#8217;re being taught. For you know that they have taught you that this stick with Joseph on it was actually a prophecy concerning Joseph Smith. But if you can find that in this verse or in this passage or in its context, then you can find snow in hell. I mean, it&#8217;s just not there.<\/p>\n<p>So God plainly declares, &#8220;I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Neither shall they defile themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their transgressions: but I will save them out of their dwelling places, wherein they have sinned, and will cleanse them: so shall they be my people, and I will be their God. And David my servant ( Eze 37:23-24 )<\/p>\n<p>This, of course, goes into the future when Jesus Christ comes to establish the kingdom and He will sit upon the throne of David to order and to establish it in righteousness and in judgment from henceforth even forever.<\/p>\n<p>shall be king over them; and they all shall have one shepherd [the Good Shepherd]: and they shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes, and do them. And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and ye shall dwell therein, even they, and their children, and their children&#8217;s children for ever: and my servant David shall be their prince for ever. Moreover I will make a covenant of peace with them; and it shall be an everlasting covenant with them: and I will place them, and multiply them, and will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore. My tabernacle also shall be with them: yea, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people ( Eze 37:24-27 ).<\/p>\n<p>So God is going to dwell amongst His people. &#8220;I will tabernacle among them. My dwellingplace will be there.&#8221; So Christ living here upon the earth in the Kingdom Age.<\/p>\n<p>And the heathen shall know that I the LORD do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore ( Eze 37:28 ).<\/p>\n<p>Now when we get to chapter 40, he begins to describe for us the sanctuary that is to be built. &#8220;<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Through the Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:1. The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, <\/p>\n<p>Gods servants learn nothing until they have an experience similar to that of Ezekiel. They must be led by the Spirit of the Lord, and they must have their eyes and mouths opened by him, and then they can both see the vision, and tell the vision to others.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1. And set me down in the midst of the valley which was full of bones,<\/p>\n<p>Like a huge grave, or charnel-house, or battle-field where the slain had not been buried. No servant of God would go without being sent to such a place, yet it was needful that Ezekiel should be there in order that he might understand and speak the message of God.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:2. And caused me to pass by them round about:<\/p>\n<p>He had to make a thorough survey of this grim and ghastly charnel -house.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:2. And, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, lo, they were very dry.<\/p>\n<p>They had lain there so long that the wind had dried up the juices of the marrow-bones, and they were turned to dust.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:3. And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live?<\/p>\n<p>God did not ask this question for his own information, but for the prophets. The Lord wanted him to realize the difficulties of the work to which he was called that he might be driven the more completely to rely upon God, and not upon himself.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:3-4. And I answered, O Lord GOD, thou knowest. Again he said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of the LORD.<\/p>\n<p>We have heard of a Romanist who had, as a penance from his priest, to go and water a dry stick. Ezekiels task of preaching to dry bones seemed to be as useless as that; yet, if God bids us do the same, we need no other justification for doing it. What is foolish in the sight of reason is wisdom in the judgment of faith.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:5-6. Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live: And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am the LORD.<\/p>\n<p>He had to tell these bones the unconditional purposes and promises of God: I will, and ye shall; and this is the way in which God works out his eternal purposes concerning the sons of men. He bids his servants proclaim his message, and then he fulfills his own purposes and promises.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:7. So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, <\/p>\n<p>A rustle, <\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:7. And behold a shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone.<\/p>\n<p>Here was divine power bringing the bones to their proper position in the various bodies, and forging the separated anatomy to re-form itself.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:8. And when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and the skin covered them above: but there was no breath in them.<\/p>\n<p>So there was no very great improvement so far; there were only dead bodies instead of dry bones; there was something more to look at, but nothing more agreeable, and really no more of life than there was before.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:9. Then said he unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man,<\/p>\n<p>Prophesy unto the wind. That seems a very absurd thing to do, but there are no absurdities where God gives his commands.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:9-10. And say to the wind, Thus saith the lord GOD; Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as he commanded me,-<\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel was very obedient; he only wanted to know his Lords will, and then he raised no question, but did at once just as he was told to do: So I prophesied as he commanded me. It is a prime qualification in a servant of God that he should do exactly as he is bidden-not to think how he would like to do it, nor to follow the plan that his own wisdom suggests, but just to do as he is told, as Ezekiel did: So I prophesied as he commanded me,  <\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:10-11. And the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army. Then he said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts.<\/p>\n<p>There is no hope for us; we are dead, and worse than dead. Our case is hopeless; there is no possibility of restoration for us.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:12. Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the lord GOD; Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel.<\/p>\n<p>There was to be a house of Israel after all. The nation seemed to be dead and buried, but God would revive and restore it. This is a promise which may apply to a church when she gets into a very low spiritual state, and it looks as if she could never do any more good: Behold, O my people, I will open your graves. And to you, dear friends, who are very heavy of heart, full of despair, and who seem as if you were as good as dead and buried, God speaks in this promise. Therefore believe his Word as though it had been directed to you personally, Behold, O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:13. And ye shall know that I am the LORD, when I have opened your graves, O my people, and brought you up out of your graves, <\/p>\n<p>Great deliverances and almighty quickenings reveal God to us, and make us know how gloriously great Jehovah is.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:14. And shall put my spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I shall place you in your own land: then shall ye know that I the LORD have spoken it, and performed it, saith the LORD.<\/p>\n<p>When the Jews get back to Canaan again,-as they will do,-they will then not only know that Jehovah is God, but also that Jesus Christ is the true Messiah. May the Lord hasten that blessed consummation in his own time!<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:15-16. The Word of the LORD came again unto me, saying, Moreover, thou son of man, <\/p>\n<p>Notice how the Lord constantly calls the prophet son of man. When God uses his servants much, and greatly honours them, he always takes care to keep them humble by reminding them of what they are in themselves. So, Ezekiel, you have prophesied to the dry bones, and they have lived through your prophecy but it was not by your own power that you did this. You are nothing but a son of man, God must have all the glory of this wondrous work.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:16. Take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick,-<\/p>\n<p>Or, rod, <\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:16. And write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his companions:<\/p>\n<p>They were divided into separate companies, they first wandered away from God, and then they wandered away from one another.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:17. And join there one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand.<\/p>\n<p>As he held them in his hand, they were to grow into one; and, when all the churches get into the hand of Christ, there will be perfect unity between them. Things that are near to the same thing are near to one another; but, until the Lord shall come, and take his divided Judah and Ephraim into his own hand, there will be no true unity between them; but there will be then.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:18-19. And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not shew us what thou meanest by these? Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his fellows, and will put them with him, even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in mine hand.<\/p>\n<p>No church will long continue in the enjoyment of the blessing of unity unless it continues in nearness to Christ. Communion with Christ means the communion of Christians with one another; we can only get true union and true communion in that way.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:20-22. And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes. And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the heathen, whither they be gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land: And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all:<\/p>\n<p>When Christ cometh, there shall be this true unity in Israel. Where Christ has already come, there is this true unity in his Church; and as Christ cometh to all of us, he will take away the evil that divides us from himself, and divides us from the rest of the people, and so we shall be one in his hand.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:23. Neither shall they defile themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their transgressions: but I will save them out of all their dwellingplaces, wherein they have sinned, and will cleanse them: so shall they be my people, and I will be their GOD.<\/p>\n<p>This applies first to Israel literally, and then spiritually to all the chosen. What a weighty and comprehensive promise it is! We are to be saved from our idols, to be saved from the most loathsome sins: detestable things; to be saved from our household sins: I will save them out of all their dwellingplaces wherein they have sinned. Where do we go, my brethren, without finding sin? Sin in our bed, and sin at the board, sin in the shop, and sin in the street, sins when we are in company, and sins when we are alone in the field, sins everywhere; yet the Lord Jesus Christ is able to meet us in every place, and to cleanse us.<\/p>\n<p>So shall they be my people, and I will be their God. What a wonderful declaration this is,-we are the Lords people, he is our God! We are his portion, and he is one portion. Oh, that every one of us might have a share in this double blessing!<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:24. And David my Servant shall be king over them; and they all shall have one shepherd: they shall also walk in my judgments, and observe my statutes, and do them.<\/p>\n<p>Oh, for the one king to reign over the one people, who shall keep the one law, and walk in holiness and humility before the one Lord!<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:25. And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, even they, and their children, and their childrens children for ever: and my servant David shall be their prince for ever.<\/p>\n<p>Surely God does not treat the saints now worse than he treated Israel in the days of old; so we may go to him in prayer for our children and for our childrens children.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:26. Moreover, I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them:<\/p>\n<p>Oh, that blessed word everlasting! A salvation which is not everlasting is not worth having; any promise that is not fulfilled, any grace that can fail, is not Gods promise or Gods grace.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:26-27. And I will place them, and multiply them, and will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore. My tabernacle also shall be with them: yea, I will be their God, and they shall be my people.<\/p>\n<p>In the 23rd verse, the Lords promise was, They shall be my people, and I will be their God, and here, grace seems to ring the changes by reversing the order: I will be their God, and they shall be my people. God is evidently so pleased with this declaration that he repeats it, only turning the sentences round the other way.<\/p>\n<p>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.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Spurgeon&#8217;s Verse Expositions of the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:1-6<\/p>\n<p>THE VALLEY OF DRY BONES;<\/p>\n<p>THE RESTORATION AND REUNION OF<\/p>\n<p>JUDAH AND EPHRAIM UNDER MESSIAH<\/p>\n<p>Here is a remarkable prophecy of the ingathering of scattered, discouraged, and disillusioned Israel from the nations to which they had been dispersed, the repatriation of them in their homeland, and also of the unification of Ephraim and Joseph under the benign government of the Lord Jesus Christ. &#8220;This is a plain forecast of the conversion of the Jews to Christ.<\/p>\n<p>The first part of the chapter (Eze 37:1-14) employs the vision of the valley of dry bones to teach the return of captive Israel to Palestine, an event which is appropriately illustrated here as a whole army which had been slain with their bones left to bleach in the sun, being suddenly raised to full life and strength! The return of any ethnic people from the borders of any conqueror who had captured and deported the whole people would have been viewed throughout the world of that era as a totally unimaginable and impossible happening. Under the will of God, however, it occurred; and nothing could have any more appropriately symbolized such a development than does this vision of the resurrection of a valley of dry bones.<\/p>\n<p>The remainder of the chapter is devoted to a prophecy of the reunion of Judah and Ephraim under one king, called here &#8220;God&#8217;s servant David,&#8221; the scriptural name of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Messiah.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1-6<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The hand of Jehovah was upon me, and he brought me out in the Spirit of Jehovah, and set me down in the midst of the valley; and it was full of bones. And he caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, io, they were very dry. And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord Jehovah, thou knowest. Again he said unto me, Prophesy over these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah unto these bones: Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live. And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>THE VISION OF THE VALLEY OF DRY BONES<\/p>\n<p>(Eze 37:1-6)<\/p>\n<p>As we understand this, it was an experience that came to Ezekiel in an inspired vision. It is not necessary to suppose that there was actually a whole valley of bleaching, unburied bones. It was the picture that came to Ezekiel in this vision. As we learn from the divine interpretation given a little later, &#8220;This prophecy does not refer to a literal resurrection of dead Israelites, but to a revival of the dead nation.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It almost surpassed conception in those days that a restoration of Israel was even possible.  Their state had been destroyed; their king had been captured, blinded and carried away to Babylon to die; countless thousands of the people had been slaughtered; the heart of the nation had been carried to captivity in Babylon; their beloved Jerusalem was destroyed; even the Holy Temple of God had been plundered and burned. No language could adequately describe how dead and hopeless were the peoples&#8217; dreams and ambitions.<\/p>\n<p>The people themselves expressed this hopelessness, saying, &#8220;Our bones are dried; our hope is lost; we feel ourselves cut off.&#8221; (Eze 37:11). Skinner believed that this expression by the people might have suggested the figure of the valley of the dry bones.  Our own opinion is that God needed no help from the people in his choice of a metaphor.<\/p>\n<p>Scholars are divided over the question of whether or not there are eschatological overtones here relating to the general resurrection at the end of time. Some believe that the meaning is limited to the resurrection and reconstituting of Israel as a unified and visible people.<\/p>\n<p>It appears to this writer that the primary thrust of the passage regards the bringing of new hope and life to the discouraged and defeated Israel.<\/p>\n<p>However, we strongly agree with Plumptre who stated that, &#8220;Even if the doctrine of a general resurrection had not been current in Ezekiel&#8217;s times, this vision was enough to have called it into existence and to have lent strong probability to its truth.<\/p>\n<p>It has seemed very strange to us that several scholars have gone out of their way to affirm that Ezekiel had no knowledge or conviction with reference to life after death. Daniel believed in a general resurrection, and he was contemporary with Ezekiel (Dan 12:2-4). The ante-Nicene fathers, Tertullian particularly referred this passage to the final resurrection, as did also Jerome.<\/p>\n<p>It has been affirmed, and we believe it, that no orthodox Hebrew ever lived who did not believe that God was able to raise the dead. Certainly Abraham believed it, as it is dogmatically declared in Heb 11:19; and it appears to us extremely unlikely that the prophets of God would not also have believed it. In fact Isaiah eloquently confirmed faith in the resurrection of the dead in his great prophecy of Isa 25:6-8. (See my comments on this in Vol. 1 of the Major Prophets, pp. 230,231.) Also, Hos 13:14 speaks of victory over death and the grave, a passage quoted by the apostle Paul in 1Co 15:55.<\/p>\n<p>It would therefore be an incredible mystery if Ezekiel had been ignorant of the writings of the other prophets, and of the conviction of his illustrious ancestor Abraham, and was himself without conviction regarding the resurrection. We cannot accept such a notion.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Son of man, can these bones live &#8230;&#8221; (Eze 37:3)? &#8220;This indicates that Ezekiel had learned a lesson which few learn. Situations such as this are better left to Yahweh&#8217;s providence and knowledge.  &#8220;This answer by Ezekiel implies that, according to human judgment, it was inconceivable that the dry bones could come to life again.  It is noteworthy that the apostle John when confronted with a question regarding his inspired vision in the Apocalypse responded in these same words (Rev 7:14).<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>The wonderful vision of the valley filled with bones was now granted to the prophet. As he gazed on them, he was asked, &#8220;Son of man, can these bones live?&#8221; His utter abandonment to God, even in the matter of his conception, was evident in his reply, &#8220;O Lord God, Thou knowest.&#8221; Over these bones he was then told to prophesy, commanding the people to hear the word of the Lord, proclaiming to them the promise that breath should enter into them and flesh be restored to them. He obeyed, and beheld the bones coming together, and being clothed with sinews and with flesh. As yet the wonder had proceeded only so far as the restoration of dry and scattered bones to corpses.<\/p>\n<p>Again he was commanded to prophesy to the wind, calling it to come and breathe on the slain so that they might live. He obeyed, and beheld the corpses standing on their feet, a living army. This vision was the outcome of a proverb current among the people, &#8220;Our bones are dried up and our hope is lost, we are clean cut off.&#8221; The application of the vision was made in the declaration that God would bring His people from their graves, and make them live.<\/p>\n<p>Having thus foretold the renewal of the people, the prophet was instructed to take two sticks and inscribe on them for Judah and for Joseph, and all the house of Israel. These he was to join together, so that they should be one stick in his hand. When the people inquired what he meant by this, he was to tell them that the purpose of God was not only renewal, but also reunion.<\/p>\n<p>The prophet then repeated the promise of the coming of the one Shepherd, under whose rule Jehovah&#8217;s original intention for His people would be fulfilled. With them He would make a covenant of peace, and, as symbolized in the ancient economy, would dwell in the midst of them forevermore.<\/p>\n<p>Again the underlying purpose of the whole history of Israel is revealed in the final promise, &#8220;The nations shall know that I am Jehovah.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: An Exposition on the Whole Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>the Resurrection of a Dead Nation <\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1-14<\/p>\n<p>A marvelous chapter-the vision is so graphic. Time does not rob it of its significance. Indeed every sign points to speedy fulfillment. The Jewish nation has long resembled those dry and bleaching bones; and the state of sinners generally may truly be described in the same terms. The condition of many souls and neighborhoods is comparable to the harrowing scenes of a recent battlefield. We may preach so as to effect an outward revolution, but there can be no life until the divine breath passes over them. We must preach the Word, instant in season and out; but we must also call on the Spirit of Life. Those that are in their graves must hear the voice of the Son of God. The promises of Eze 37:13-14 await literal fulfillment in the case of the Jews, but let us plead that they may be also realized in our own congregations and neighborhoods. Revival will assuredly end in unity. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: F.B. Meyer&#8217;s Through the Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Chapter Thirty-seven<\/p>\n<p>The Valley Of Dry Bones<\/p>\n<p>This vision brings before us the spiritual condition of Israel nationally during all the long centuries of the dispersion. Having turned away from God they are characterized no longer, as a people, by divine life. Not only has blindness in part happened to them so that they find it difficult, even when reading their own Scriptures, to discern the mind of God, but also they are actually dead in trespasses and in sins, as are the Gentiles whom once they despised, because of their ignorance of the law and of the true God.<\/p>\n<p>In vision Ezekiel found himself set down in a deep valley filled with dry bones. He says:<\/p>\n<p>The hand of Jehovah was upon me, and He brought me out in the Spirit of Jehovah, and set me down in the midst of the valley; and it was full of bones. And He caused me to pass by them round about: and, behold, there were very many in the open valley; and, lo, they were very dry. And He said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I answered, O Lord Jehovah, Thou knowest. Again He said unto me, Prophesy over these bones, and say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah unto these bones: Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live. And I will lay sinews upon you, and will bring up flesh upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and ye shall live; and ye shall know that I am Jehovah-vers. 1-6.<\/p>\n<p>Commanded by Jehovah to look all about him, he noticed that in every part of the valley these bones were seen, and they were very many and very dry; in other words, there was not the slightest evidence of spiritual life. Then came the question, asked by God Himself, Son of man, can these bones live? Surely none but He who asked the question could answer it. So far as human power is concerned it must have seemed impossible that they would ever be revived. As we come in contact with individual Israelites today we find that the most discouraging work in the world is that of trying to bring them to a saving knowledge of their own Messiah, our Lord Jesus Christ. So utterly dead are they to the great truths of their own Scriptures that it is only as the Spirit of God moves upon them that they can apprehend in any sense these tremendous verities. We are told in the New Testament, It pleased God by the foolishness (or the simplicity) of preaching to save them that believe (1Co 1:21). And so Ezekiel was commanded to prophesy over these bones: that is, to proclaim the message of God, saying to them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah. He Himself declared that the day would come when He would cause breath to enter into them and they should live, for He would put sinews upon them and bring flesh upon them, and cover them with skin, and put breath in them, that they might once more respond to His love and know that He is Jehovah. We are reminded of the prayer of David in Psa 119:25, Quicken Thou me according to Thy word; and the Lord Jesus has told us, The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life (Joh 6:63). So when the life-giving Word goes forth in the energy of the Holy Spirit even poor, dead, dry Israelites will be revived and will know that God has spoken.<\/p>\n<p>Immediately upon hearing the divine command Ezekiel began to prophesy or preach to the bones, and the results were manifest at once.<\/p>\n<p>So I prophesied as I was commanded: and as I prophesied, there was a noise, and, behold, an earthquake; and the hones came together, bone to its bone. And I beheld, and lo, there were sinews upon them, and flesh came up, and skin covered them above; but there was no breath in them. Then said he unto me, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as He commanded me, and the breath came into them, and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army-vers. 7-10.<\/p>\n<p>As Ezekiel proclaimed the word there was a noise as of thunder and a tremendous shaking of the earth; and then, before the prophets startled eyes, the bones came together, each one fitted to the other, until they formed complete human skeletons. In another moment sinews and flesh came upon them and skin covered them, and they became perfect human bodies, but there was no breath or life in them. Again the word of the Lord came to the prophet, saying, Prophesy unto the wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live. So far as I have been able to discern this is the only place in sacred Scripture where we have prayer addressed directly to the Holy Spirit. Ordinarily, as we see in Eph 2:18, prayer is by or in the energy of the Spirit to the Father in the name of the Son; but here we have a definite case where one was commanded to speak directly to the Holy Spirit, for the term wind here can mean no other than He who is the blessed life-giving Spirit of God. It is He who quickens the dead; and in answer to this prayer, breath came into these resurrected bodies, and they stood up upon their feet an exceeding great army.<\/p>\n<p>We need to remember that all this was in vision and is not to be taken as referring to a literal physical res- urrection of the dead. That Scripture does teach such a resurrection-in fact, two resurrections: one of the just, and the other of the unjust-is perfectly clear; but that is not what is contemplated here. This is rather a fulfilment in vision of what is predicted in Dan 12:2, Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. These words might be applied to the two resurrections just referred to: the one before, and the other after the millennial reign of our Lord Jesus Christ, but the connection in which they are found in Daniel 12 makes it evident, in my judgment, that the resurrection there depicted is a national resuscitation, such as we have in our present chapter.<\/p>\n<p>For long centuries Israel has been a dead nation, sleeping among the Gentiles. In the day of Jehovahs power, they will be brought out from their graves, gathered from the countries into which they have been dispersed, and appear as an exceeding great host: those in whose hearts faith is found entering into everlasting life, and those who refuse to believe the message of that day given over to shame and everlasting contempt.<\/p>\n<p>The explanation of Ezekiels vision is given very clearly in the next few verses:<\/p>\n<p>Then He said unto me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are clean cut off. Therefore prophesy, and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Behold, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, O My people; and I will bring you into the land of Israel. And ye shall know that I am Jehovah, when I have opened your graves, and caused you to come up out of your graves, O My people. And I will put My Spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I will place you in your own land: and ye shall know that I, Jehovah, have spoken it and performed it, saith Jehovah-vers. 11-14.<\/p>\n<p>The identification is complete. These bones are the whole house of Israel. In their distress they have said, Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are clean cut off. But they are yet to learn that Jehovah has better things in store for them: He is going to open their graves; that is, cause them to come up out of the condition in which they have been for so long as scattered over the world, suffering under the hand of the Gentiles, and He will bring them into the land of Israel. Then indeed they shall know that they have to do with Jehovah when He has renewed them as a nation and delivered them from the hopeless condition that has been theirs for so long. At that time, as we have seen in the previous chapter, they will be regenerated as a people. God will put His own Spirit within them, and they shall live, and He will place them securely in their own land, thus fulfilling all that He has spoken concerning them.<\/p>\n<p>The word of Jehovah came again unto me, saying, And thou, son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his companions: and join them for thee one to another into one stick, that they may become one in thy hand. And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not show us what thou meanest by these? say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his companions; and I will put them with it, even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in My hand. And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thy hand before their eyes. And say unto them, Thus saith the Lord Jehovah: Behold, I will take the children of Israel from among the nations, whither they are gone, and will gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land: and I will make them one nation in the land, upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all; and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all; neither shall they defile themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their transgressions; but I will save them out of all their dwelling-places, wherein they have sinned, and will cleanse them: so shall they be My people, and I will be their God-vers. 15-23.<\/p>\n<p>Following the death of Solomon the nation had been divided into two parts, the northern kingdom going by the name of Israel, and the southern kingdom by the name of Judah. That difference continued until the dispersion of both peoples, but when God restores them to Himself again the two houses of Israel will be united in one, nevermore to be separated. So the prophet was commanded to take sticks, or pilgrim rods, and to write upon one the name Judah, and upon the other the name Israel. These were to be joined one to another so that both could be held with a single hand; and in this way he was to picture the union of the two kingdoms in the coming day. When the people of the captivity inquired of him what was meant by his carrying the two sticks in one hand thus united to each other, he was to declare the truth that God had revealed to him, and tell them that Jehovah had said He would take the children of Israel from among the nations whither they had gone, and gather them on every side, and bring them into their own land, and make them one nation in that land upon the mountains of Israel, and set one king over them all. Moreover, they would be divided no more into two kingdoms; nor should they be denied by idolatry and other detestable things, but they would be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation, and cleansed from their sins, and openly acknowledged by God as His people, even as they would own Him as their God.<\/p>\n<p>This is the glorious future which, according to the universal testimony of the Prophets, is yet in store for Israel. In that day Messiah, the Son of David, will be recognized as their King and Shepherd.<\/p>\n<p>And My servant David shall be king over them; and they all shall have one shepherd: they shall also walk in Mine ordinances, and observe My statutes, and do them. And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob My servant, wherein your fathers dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, they, and their children, and their childrens children, for ever: and David My servant shall be their prince for ever. Moreover I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them; and I will place them, and multiply them, and will set My sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore. My tabernacle also shall be with them; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people. And the nations shall know that I am Jehovah that sanctifieth Israel, when My sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore-vers. 24-28.<\/p>\n<p>My servant David, God says, shall be king over them. I do not understand this to mean that David himself will be raised and caused to dwell on the earth as king. Some have thought this. It may be true, but it seems to me as one considers other scriptures, that the implication is that He who was Davids Son, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, is to be the King, and thus Davids throne will be re-established. The Lord Jesus, when here on earth, declared Himself to be the Good Shepherd, and spoke of the gathering together of the children of God scattered abroad, and said there should be one flock. This is true now concerning Jews and Gentiles who put their trust in Him; it will be true also in millennial days when He will feed His flock like a shepherd, and those of Israel and those from among the Gentiles will together own His righteous sway and rejoice in His shepherd care. No man will then rebel against the law of God, but they will walk in obedience to His ordinances and observe His statutes, glorying in the fact that they belong to Him. Nor shall they ever again be driven out of the land which God gave by covenant to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. They shall dwell in the land with none to make them afraid, and under the benign sway of Messiah, the Son of David, who will be their Prince forever, they will delight in obedience to God. At that time a covenant of peace will be made with the people in accordance with Gods promise through Jeremiah, to confirm a new covenant with Israel and Judah; this will be an everlasting covenant with no possibility of its ever being broken because of the fact that it will be a covenant of pure grace. The blood of that covenant has been shed already on Calvarys cross, but not until the time of the end will Israel come into the good of it. Then after restoration to God and to their land, Jehovah will set His sanctuary in the midst of them. When He brought them out of Egypt He put into their hearts the desire to make a dwelling-place for Him that He might live among them. The tabernacle in the wilderness was such a dwelling-place but only for a short time. Solomons temple was owned of God in this way but soon became defiled. When the day of restoration comes the tabernacle of the Lord will again be set up in the midst of Israel, and He will be their God, and they shall be His people. Then they will understand that He is Jehovah the Sanctifier who shall set Israel apart for Himself and dwell in the sanctuary which will be rebuilt in Palestine, never to be destroyed so long as the world lasts.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Commentaries on the New Testament and Prophets<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:3<\/p>\n<p>I. We may take Ezekiel&#8217;s vision as a pledge that God does not abandon a good cause, however dark may appear its prospects at any particular time. There are in the world evils so great that we are tempted to think their cure hopeless. God knows when and how the difficulties which beset holy enterprises will be cleared away. The Maker of mankind does not despise the work of His own hand; the day will come in His own good time when there will be a shaking, and the bones will come together, and a breath will pass into the lifeless forms, and they will live and stand upon their feet.<\/p>\n<p>II. Still more deep and impressive should be the comfort derived from this prophetic vision when we apply it not to any outward or professional work in which we are engaged, but to the personal work of bringing over our hearts and lives into conformity with Christ&#8217;s will. When we look within ourselves and consider our own state before God, we may well repeat the question, Can these bones live? Fallings away, humiliating defeats, abandonment or forgetfulness of holy purposes in the presence of temptation are no doubt sufficiently depressing; and the true remedy is to have faith in God, to believe that His Spirit will breathe a new life into our failing energies, and in that belief diligently to seek Him.<\/p>\n<p>III. This great passage implies the current belief of the resurrection of the body, all the more as the application is figurative, and made to strengthen a disheartened people. Thus, though the passage was not intended to teach the Jewish captives the truth of the Resurrection, yet it is interesting as one of the signs that the hope of immortality was gradually unfolded and made clear to God&#8217;s people under the Old Testament. We may receive the vision as a Divine pledge that God&#8217;s blessing reaches beyond the grave, that His power will still surround us, and His Spirit be breathed into us, in that unknown world to which we all are hastening.<\/p>\n<p> G. E. Cotton, Sermons to English Congregations in India, p. 332.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:3<\/p>\n<p>I. All men are spiritually dead. (1) They are destitute of the principle of spiritual life. (2) They are insensible to the beauties and attractions of the spiritual world. (3) They are incompetent to discharge the functions of holy beings. (4) They are under the dominion of sinful propensities.<\/p>\n<p>II. No created power can communicate spiritual life to men.<\/p>\n<p>III. It is the prerogative of the Holy Spirit to quicken the spiritually dead. (1) His influence is obtained in answer to prayer. (2) It operates through the instrumentality of the word. (3) It produces faith in Christ. (4) The mode of His working is inscrutable.<\/p>\n<p> G. Brooks, Outlines of Sermons, p. 294.<\/p>\n<p>References: Eze 37:1-10.-Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. x., No. 582; Homiletic Magazine, vol. xii., p. 74; Preacher&#8217;s Monthly, vol. i., p. 427. Eze 37:1-14.-Homiletic Quarterly, vol. ii., p. 384. Eze 37:3.-Preacher&#8217;s Monthly, vol. vi., p. 209; H. P. Liddon, Expository Sermons and Outlines on the Old Testament, p. 278; G. Brooks, Outlines of Sermons, p. 294. Eze 37:10.-J. Budgen, Parochial Sermons, vol. ii., p. 236. Eze 37:11-12, Eze 37:13.-Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxviii., No. 1676. Eze 37:15-17.-Pulpit Analyst, vol. ii., p. 457. 37-G. Matheson, Moments on the Mount, p. 103. Eze 40:4.-Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxvii., No. 1578. Eze 43:12.-Ibid., No. 1618. Eze 43:15.-J. Irons, Thursday Penny Pulpit, vol. xiii., p. 185.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Sermon Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>CHAPTERS 37-48 <\/p>\n<p>The Future Blessings of Israel, the Nation Regathered,<\/p>\n<p>Their Enemies Overthrown, the Millennial Temple, and the Division of the Land<\/p>\n<p>1. The vision of the dry bones and Judah and Israel reunited (Eze 37:1-28) <\/p>\n<p>2. Gog and Magog and their destruction (Eze 38:1-23; Eze 39:1-29) <\/p>\n<p>3. The millennial temple, its worship, and the division of the land (Eze 40:1-49; Eze 41:1-26; Eze 42:1-20; Eze 43:1-27; Eze 44:1-31; Eze 45:1-25; Eze 46:1-24; Eze 47:1-23; Eze 48:1-35) <\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1-28. The future restoration of Israel, both nationally and spiritually, is now shown to the prophet in a vision. What these dry bones represent and what their revival mean, is explained by the Lord Himself. It may be used in application in different ways, to illustrate certain truths, but the true and only interpretation is the one which is given by the Lord in Eze 37:11-14. But there is an erroneous interpretation of a serious nature which is widely taught and believed among many Christians. Because graves are mentioned, beside the dry bones and their resurrection, it is being taught that the vision means physical resurrection. Systems, like Millennial Dawnism, alias International Bible Student Association and others, which teach the so-called larger hope, a second chance for the impenitent dead, the restitution of the lost, teach that all the Israelites who have died in their sins will be brought out of their graves and then be saved. They use this vision to confirm this invention. An advocate of this theory declared that all the Christ-hating Pharisees and Sadducees who lived when our Lord was on earth would be raised up when He comes and then believe on Him.Mat 23:39 was used by him as an argument. These restitution teachers also teach that inasmuch as Israel will have a second chance when they are raised from the dead, the Gentile dead will share also in the same. It needs no argument to refute this. The Word of God teaches a twofold resurrection: A first resurrection and a second resurrection, a resurrection of the just and a resurrection of the unjust Joh 5:28-47. According to the above theory, there would have to be a third resurrection, a resurrection for a second chance and ultimate salvation of those who died in their sins. Of such a resurrection the Bible knows nothing.<\/p>\n<p>In this vision of the dry bones, physical resurrection is used as a type of the national restoration of Israel. It is used in the same way in Dan 12:2. In that passage the sleep in the dust of the earth is symbolical of their national condition. And when their national sleep ends there will be an awakening. When we read here in Ezekiel of graves, it must not be taken to mean literal graves; the graves are symbolical of the nation as being buried among the Gentiles. If these dry bones meant the physical dead of the nation, how could it be explained that they speak and say, Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost? The same figure of speech is used in the New Testament. Of the prodigal it is said, For this my son was dead, and is alive again Luk 15:24. Yet he was not physically dead, nor was he made alive physically. Therefore, this vision has nothing whatever to do with a physical resurrection. The late Dr. Bullinger, whose erroneous suggestions have led astray some, also taught that the vision of the dry bones includes resurrection as well as restoration.<\/p>\n<p>Equally bad is that spiritualizing method which takes a vision like this, as well as the hundreds of promises of a coming restoration, and applies it all to the Church, ignoring totally the claims of Israel and their promised future of glory. This is the general trend of commentators.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:15-28 predict the reunion of Judah and Israel with one king over them. That King is our Lord. Then the angelic message given to the Virgin when the coming incarnation was announced will be fulfilled: The Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His Father David, and He shall reign over the house of Jacob forever and of His Kingdom there shall be no end Luk 1:32-80).<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Gaebelein&#8217;s Annotated Bible (Commentary)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>bones <\/p>\n<p>Having announced Eze 36:24-38 the restoration of the nation, Jehovah now gives in vision and symbol the method of its accomplishment. Eze 37:11 gives the clue. The &#8220;bones&#8221; are the whole house of Israel who shall then be living. The &#8220;graves&#8221; are the nations where they dwell. The order of procedure is: <\/p>\n<p>(1) the bringing of the people out Eze 37:12-14; Eze 37:19-27 <\/p>\n<p>(2) the bringing of them in (Eze 37:12); <\/p>\n<p>(3) their conversion (Eze 37:13) <\/p>\n<p>(4) the filling with the Spirit (Eze 37:14). <\/p>\n<p>The symbol follows. The two sticks are Judah and the ten tribes; united, they are one nation (Eze 37:19-21). Then follows (Eze 37:21-27) the plain declaration as to Jehovah&#8217;s purpose, and Eze 37:28 implies that then Jehovah will become known to the Gentiles in a marked way. This is also the order of Act 15:16; Act 15:17 and the two passages strongly indicate the time of full Gentile conversion. See also Isa 11:10. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>hand: In this vision, the dry bones aptly represent the ruined and desperate state of both Israel and Judah; and the revivification of these bones signifies their restoration to their own land after their captivity, and also their recovery from their present long dispersion. Although this is the primary and genuine scope of the vision, yet the doctrine of a general resurrection of the dead may justly be inferred from it; for &#8220;a simile of the resurrection,&#8221; says Jerome, after Tertullian and others, &#8220;would never have been used to signify the restoration of the people of Israel, unless such a future resurrection had been believed and known; because no one attempts to confirm uncertain things by things which have no existence.&#8221; Eze 1:3, Eze 3:14, Eze 3:22, Eze 33:22, Eze 40:1, Rev 1:10 <\/p>\n<p>carried: Eze 8:3, Eze 11:24, 1Ki 18:12, 2Ki 2:16, Luk 4:1, Act 8:39 <\/p>\n<p>Reciprocal: 2Ki 13:21 &#8211; touched Job 14:14 &#8211; shall he live Psa 53:5 &#8211; scattered Psa 88:10 &#8211; shall Isa 11:11 &#8211; set his hand Isa 26:19 &#8211; dead men Isa 66:14 &#8211; your bones Jer 8:1 &#8211; General Eze 8:1 &#8211; that the Eze 11:1 &#8211; the spirit Eze 37:11 &#8211; Our bones Eze 43:5 &#8211; the spirit Dan 12:2 &#8211; many Mar 12:24 &#8211; because Joh 5:28 &#8211; for Joh 11:24 &#8211; I know Rom 11:15 &#8211; but 2Co 1:9 &#8211; in God Col 2:13 &#8211; dead Heb 6:2 &#8211; resurrection<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:1. Various imagery has been used in course of the prophetic writings to describe the predictions being made. Some of them are related to the departure from Palestine and others to the return. There were always some people who doubted the truth of these predictions and even proclaimed loudly that they would never come to pass. We have seen the exposure of the false prophets who made light of the idea that any foreign force coaid take Israel into captivity. Now at this writing the thing has occurred and the nation is actually languishing in a foreign land. But many of them seem to have forgotten all those predictions notwithstanding they are actually fulfilling them by their own situation. Now then, they are just as doubtful about the prophecies of the return and are sighing and bemoaning their fate and saying that they Will never get out of their lost estate. Hence the Lord is going to do some &#8220;acting&#8221; with the co-operation of the prophet, and demonstrate that even a nation that is dead can he brought to life again. He is going to do so by putting life and fleall on some dead bones. In the spirit means that Ezekiel will see in a vision the things that are about to happen.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:1. The hand of the Lord was upon me  I was actuated by a divine power; and carried me out in the Spirit of the Lord  Or, by the Spirit of the Lord. It is highly probable that all this passed in vision. And set me down in the midst of the valley full of bones  The first and great object of this prophecy seems evidently to be the restoration of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity. A nation carried into captivity ceases to be a nation, and therefore may be fitly compared to bones, or dead bodies; so that by the valley of bones was first signified, the Babylonish dominions filled with captive Jews. Bishop Warburton observes, that the messengers of God, prophesying for the peoples consolation in disastrous times, frequently promise a restoration to the former days of felicity; and, to obviate all distrust from unpromising appearances, they put the case even at the worst, and assure the people, in metaphorical expressions, that though the community were as entirely dissolved as a dead body reduced to dust, yet God would raise that community again to life. But besides the deliverance of the Jews from Babylon, this vision is a lively representation of a three- fold resurrection: 1st, Of the resurrection of souls, from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, to a holy, heavenly, spiritual, and divine life, by the power of divine grace accompanying the word of Christ, Joh 5:24-25. 2d, The resurrection of the gospel church, or of any part of it, from an afflicted state to liberty and peace. 3d, The resurrection of the body at the great day, especially the bodies of believers, to life eternal. This last seems to be one thing particularly designed. Though the generality of commentators, says Mr. Peters, regard this vision and prophecy as no other than a figurative representation and prediction of a return of the Jews from the captivity of Babylon, or some other of their captivities and dispersions, yet, perhaps, we shall find, upon a more attentive consideration, that whatever hopes it might give them of a temporal and national deliverance or prosperity, yet there was evidently something further designed; and that to comfort them in their distressed situation, with the prospect of a future resurrection in a proper sense, was as much intended by the Spirit of God, or rather more so, than the other.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:14. I will put my Spirit in you, and ye shall live. A moral resurrection shall pass upon the people of Israel; the Lord shall bring them up out of their graves, where they have long been buried in unbelief, and quicken those who were dead in trespasses and sins. By his Spirit he will illuminate the understanding, renew and sanctify the heart, and build them up a holy temple for the Lord.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:19. I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim with the stick of Judahand they shall be one in my hand. Some critics make much to do about the ten lost tribes. My opinion is, that there are no such tribes in existence, because they were reduced so low by various wars as to be able to bring into the field against the Syrians only seven thousand infantry, and about two hundred and thirty cavalry. Many of the captives being intermarried with the heathen, they were again planted in Samaria; and those of the ten tribes who were more pure, united themselves with Judah under Zerubbabel. Thus excepting the Samaritans, whom we find excommunicated, John 4., the two sticks literally became one. Dr. Buchanan found a town of jews in India, who had lost their colour. A nation of white Indians is found on the southern shore of the Missouri. Both the Welsh and the Jews are solicitous to know more of their language, their manners and customs.<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:24. And David my servant shall be king over them, as is illustrated in chap. 34.<\/p>\n<p>REFLECTIONS.<\/p>\n<p>Between the mount of Olives and Jerusalem was the valley of the son of Hinnom, or of striking children; called also the valley of Tophet or drums, which were employed to deafen the cries of the infants burnt to Moloch. In this valley the angel slew the hundred and eighty five thousand Assyrians, for which reason it is called the valley of dead bodies. Jer 31:40. Here Solomon, having superinduced a premature dotage by an excess of connubial indulgence, built a high place to the abomination of Moab, and another to the abomination of Ammon. 1Ki 11:7. Here Judah were ensnared by habitual idolatry, and forfeited the covenant protection of the Lord. Hence they are repeatedly menaced, that in this valley God would purge their pollutions with the blood of their sons and daughters; for the Chaldeans had no pity on the young man, or the maiden; on the sucking child, or him that stooped for age. 2 Chronicles 36. Hence also Ezekiel, from the prodigies of death and slaughter in this tragic valley and field, seems to have conceived the idea of a valley full of dry bones; and in a moral view, to have transferred the idea to the parched and desponding situation of his brethren in captivity. But they were revived as with a resurrection from the dead by his ministry, and by the proclamations of the Persians for their restoration. Prophecy and promise, when embraced by faith, have the happy effects of diminishing present sufferings, and of anticipating future salvation.<\/p>\n<p>With these views the hand of the Lord was on the prophet, which seemed to reach him from under the wing of the cherub, and he was carried out by the Spirit, not in reverie of thought, but in the visions of God. He walked through the dreadful field where the remains of human nature laid profuse as the leaves of autumn; where the prince and the peasant reposed undisturbed by rank, and where the whitened bones of inveterate foes were strewed in friendly society. Here the fond hope of innumerable houses had fallen without having power to utter their bleeding anguish in the ear of parent or of love. Oh cursed effects of war, to hurry a host into eternity in the fury of passion, and the career of vengeance.<\/p>\n<p>After viewing the tragic field, Ezekiel seemed to stand on the rising ground, crying, Oh ye dry bones, hear ye the word of the Lord! And crying in the Spirit of Him who said to the chaos, Let there be light, behold the slumbering world awoke. Every bone found his fellow, the ligaments united the frame, terminating in muscles of flesh, which gave form and figure to man. An infinitude of rivers and rivulets intersected the little world. Skin of the finest texture and vermilion tints on the youthful cheeks, gave a covering to the whole; but there was no breath in them. Then turning his views to heaven, that the Father of spirits would finish the work he had begun, he implored life from the living God, and Israel lived, and returned to Zion, an army of the Lord of hosts. Now as Christ often improved his miracles by a spiritual turn of thought, so we may improve this astonishing restoration of the jews, to illustrate the conversion of sinners.<\/p>\n<p>Man in his fallen state is dead in trespasses and sins, he has lost the life of God. He is dry and parched, for in his flesh dwelleth no good thing. He has lain a long time in that most piteous situation, so that he is not only dry, but with man there is no hope of his conversion. The calamity is not solitary, but universal: behold there were very many in the open valley.<\/p>\n<p>To raise and recover fallen man, ministers must not only be impelled with the spirit of faith and love, but they must mix among the wicked, as the physicians with the sick. We may stay in our closets learning our Masters wisdom till we neglect to do our Masters work. We must mix among the dry bones, watch their passions, trace their habits, and learn their evasions of conscience, and of the gospel.<\/p>\n<p>Ministers thus acquainted with their mission must cry aloud in the power of the Spirit. Oh ye dry bones, ye dead and lifeless souls, hear ye the word of the Lord: and when ministers preach, and the people pray in the spirit, a degree of the same power still attends the word as when God created the universe. Through faith we know that the worlds were framed by the word of God; and by the same word a new and spiritual world is called into existence. The deaf are made to hear, the blind open their eyes, the slumbering conscience awakes with the pungency of returning life. Alarm and terror seize the guilty.<\/p>\n<p>Now the silence of conviction reigns in the assembly, next the noise and shaking follow, and the cry, what must I do to be saved? What a noise; what a shaking; what a conflict to shun hell, and to gain heaven.<\/p>\n<p>The awakened passions, having for a time occasioned tumult and terror in the soul, are composed by the seasonable and consoling application of the promises. Behold, saith the Lord, I will lay sinews and flesh upon you, and will cover your skin. I will pardon all your sins, I will cleanse and sanctify your nature, I will open your graves of darkness and corruption, will quicken you to an immortal life, and restore you to the bosom of Zion, the habitation of my holiness. Here perturbation settles into the calm and sweetness of genuine repentance. The soul relying on the promises, brings forth all the fruits of reformation, and seeks the Lord in all the appointed means of grace. The dry bones at first resumed the appearance of men wanting life; and the awakened sinner has the form of godliness, but wants the witness of Gods converting love shed abroad in his heart. Rom 5:5.<\/p>\n<p>When ministers succeed in promoting a law-work on the mind, always in due time mixing comfort with terror, they must turn their eyes to heaven, and become advocates and intercessors for the promised Comforter to descend on a contrite people. Come from the four winds, oh breath, as on the day of Pentecost, and breathe upon these slain that they may live. Our sermons have too much of the didactic: we divide, explain, and teach. We dwell on words and truths already understood. But after setting good things before an audience, why may we not assist piety in uttering the wishes of their heart to obtain them? The frequent prayers which St. Paul mixes with his discourses, are the most pathetic and touching parts of his writings.<\/p>\n<p>After the restoration of Israel, Ezekiel launches forth into the latter day glory, when David should be their king, and all divisions healed: and he enlarges on this subject throughout all the succeeding chapters. The christian who doubts of a glorious time expected in the earth, goes, however undesignedly, more than half way to meet the infidel world. We do assuredly expect the times of restitution, Act 3:21; when religious sects will be so taken up, and elated with the glory of Christ, as to forego the badges of peculiarity and distinction. <\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Sutcliffe&#8217;s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>Eze 37:1-14. The Resurrection of the People.Those fair ideals, however, cannot abolish the melancholy reality. The truth is that the exiled people are as good as dead and in their graves (Eze 37:11 f.). Over their despondent words the imagination of Ezekiel broods till once, in an ecstatic mood (Eze 37:1), he seemed to see a valley filled with bones, multitudinous, dry, and loosely scatteredfor they have not even the coherence of skeletonsso that there seemed no promise or possibility of life. He hears a Divine voiceit is the voice of his own heartasking, Can these bones live? and gradually it is borne in upon him that the resuscitation of the national life is not beyond the power of God. If the breath of the Divine life be breathed through it, then the people may yet rise to their feet. It is of deep significance that the Divine resuscitating word has to be spoken by the prophet himself. This is historically true of the place of Ezekiel in the revival of Jewish nationalism, and profoundly suggestive also of the place of the modern preacher in national life. With weird dramatic power the quickening of the dead valley is described, step by step, until the once dry bones, brought together, clothed with flesh and vivified by the mysterious power of God, stand like an organised armya telling symbol, as Eze 37:12-14 explain, of the coming revival of Israels national life, and her restoration to her own land. (The mystery of this powerful passage is heightened by the use of the same word in Hebrew for wind, breath, and spirit.)<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:15-28. But the nation, thus quickened and restored, must be divided no more into two kingdoms (Judah and Israel) as it had been since the rupture in 937 B.C. The unity, so dear to the prophets heart, is symbolically indicated by joining one stick marked Judah and the associated tribes (i.e. Benjamin and Simeon) to another marked. Joseph, i.e. Ephraim and the associated tribes of the northern kingdom. Just as there is to be one undivided kingdom, so there must be one king, ruling in the spirit and power of David, over a cleansed and obedient people, devoted to the true religion, and abhorring idolatry. The land will be theirs for ever and the dynasty everlasting; and the guarantee of the covenant of peace between Israel and her God will be the presence of His sanctuary in the midst of them, which would prove to the world at large that Yahweh had sanctified them, i.e. chosen them out of all nations and set them apart. (In Eze 37:23, for dwelling places, read, with LXX, backslidings. With Eze 37:24; cf. Eze 34:23.)<\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel 38 f. The Final Triumph of Yahweh and Establishment of Israel.Now that Israel is regenerated and restored, and her nearer neighbours annihilated, her future security might seem to be guaranteed, and the power, holiness, uniqueness, and Godhead of Yahweh abundantly and permanently vindicated. But another act in the great drama of revelation and redemption has yet to take place. The more distant heathen peoples must also be brought to the conviction that Yahweh is Lord. So they are representedand in this Ezekiel is uniqueas at some future day attacking the holy land and perishing to a man ingloriously. Thus Israels future is permanently guaranteed and Yahwehs uniqueness vindicated.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Peake&#8217;s Commentary on the Bible<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>37:1 The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of the valley which [was] full of {a} bones,<\/p>\n<p>(a) He shows by a great miracle that God has power and will deliver his people from their captivity, in as much as he is able to give life to the dead bones and bodies and raise them up again.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">An illustration of Israel&rsquo;s restoration 37:1-14<\/span><\/p>\n<p>This well-known apocalyptic vision of the valley of dry bones pictures the manner in which Yahweh would restore His people.<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: For a review of apolcalyptic as a literary genre, of which this passage is an example, see the Introduction section of these notes, or Alexander, &quot;Ezekiel,&quot; p. 924.] <\/span> This may be the best-known section of the Book of Ezekiel.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;Few other passages have suffered more from the extremes of interpreters who see either too much or too little in both meaning and application of the figures, symbols, and types.&quot;<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: Cooper, p. 319.] <\/span><\/p>\n<p>&quot;The New Covenant involves a new heart and a new spirit, to be sure, but it is deeply rooted in history and land. The promise to Abraham was unconditional and included in its benefits a geographical inheritance-indeed, not just any territory but specifically the land of Canaan (Gen 12:1; Gen 12:7; Gen 13:15-17; Gen 15:18-19; Gen 17:8). It is that land that is in view throughout Ezekiel&rsquo;s historical and eschatological purview, for unless that land is the focus of God&rsquo;s covenant fulfillment the ancient promises lose their intended significance.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;The coalescence of the New Covenant and the renewed land is nowhere in the Old Testament better explicated than in Ezekiel 37.&quot;<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: Merrill, p. 379.] <\/span><\/p>\n<p>&quot;On the surface, New Testament references to the realization of the new covenant in the present era are problematic, for Jeremiah and Ezekiel spoke of this covenant being made with Israel, not the Gentiles. Some argue that the church is the new &rsquo;Israel&rsquo; through which the Old Testament promise is fulfilled. Others, insisting on a sharp distinction between Israel and the church, propose that the new covenant mentioned in the New Testament is distinct from the one promised in the Old Testament. A better solution is to propose an &rsquo;already\/not yet&rsquo; model, which sees a present realization of the promises in the church and a future fulfillment for ethnic Israel. Only this mediating view does justice to the language of both the Hebrew prophets and the New Testament. Just because the Hebrew prophets mention only Israel as the recipient of the covenant does not mean that others could not be recipients as well; just because the New Testament focuses on a present realization through the church does not preclude a future fulfillment for Israel.&quot;<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: Chisholm, Handbook on . . ., pp. 280-81.] <\/span><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>The Lord lifted Ezekiel up by His Holy Spirit and transported him in a vision to the middle of a valley full of dry bones (cf. Eze 1:3; Eze 8:1; Deu 28:25-26). This may have been the same valley (or plain, Heb. <span style=\"font-style:italic\">biq&rsquo;a<\/span>) in which Ezekiel saw his vision of God&rsquo;s glory (cf. Eze 3:22). In this vision, the prophet walked around among the many very dry bones that littered this valley. They represent the Israelites slain during the conquest of the land and now in exile for a very long time.<span style=\"color:#808080\"> [Note: Davidson, p. 267; Taylor, p. 234. Stuart, pp. 342-43, wrote a helpful description of ancient burial customs that illuminates this passage.] <\/span><\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n<p>LIFE FROM THE DEAD<\/p>\n<p>Eze 37:1-28<\/p>\n<p>The most formidable obstacle to faith on the part of the exiles in the possibility of a national redemption was the complete disintegration of the ancient people of Israel. Hard as it was to realise that Jehovah still lived and reigned in spite of the cessation of His worship, and hard to hope for a recovery of the land of Canaan from the dominion of the heathen, these things were still conceivable. What almost surpassed conception was the restoration of national life to the feeble and demoralised remnant who had survived the fall of the state. It was no mere figure of speech that these exiles employed when they thought of their nation as dead. Cast off by its God, driven from its land, dismembered and deprived of its political organisation, Israel as a people had ceased to exist. Not only were the outward symbols of national unity destroyed, but the national spirit was extinct. Just as the destruction of the bodily organism implies the death of each separate member and organ and cell, so the individual Israelites felt themselves to be as dead men, dragging out an aimless existence without hope in the world. While Israel was alive they had lived in her and for her; all the best part of their life, religion, duty, liberty, and loyalty had been bound up with the consciousness of belonging to a nation with a proud history behind them and a brilliant future for their posterity. Now that Israel had perished all spiritual and ideal significance had gone out of their lives; there remained but a selfish and sordid struggle for existence, and this they felt was not life, but death in life. And thus a promise of deliverance which appealed to them as members of a nation seemed to them a mockery, because they felt in themselves that the bond of national life was irrevocably broken.<\/p>\n<p>The hardest part of Ezekiels task at this time was therefore to revive the national sentiment, so as to meet the obvious objection that even if Jehovah were able to drive the heathen from His land there was still no people of Israel to whom He could give it. If only the exiles could be brought to believe that Israel had a future, that although now dead it could be raised from the dead, the spiritual meaning of their life would be given back to them in the form of hope, and faith in God would be possible. Accordingly the prophets thoughts are now directed to the idea of the nation as the third factor of the Messianic hope. He has spoken of the kingdom and the land, and each of these ideas has led him on to the contemplation of the final condition of the world, in which Jehovahs purpose is fully manifested. So in this chapter he finds in the idea of the nation a new point of departure, from which he proceeds to delineate once more the Messianic salvation in its completeness.<\/p>\n<p>The vision of the valley of dry bones described in the first part of the chapter contains the answer to the desponding thoughts of the exiles, and seems indeed to be directly suggested by the figure in which the popular feeling was currently expressed: &#8220;Our bones are dried; our hope is lost: we feel ourselves cut off&#8221; (Eze 37:11). The fact that the answer came to the prophet in a state of trance may perhaps indicate that his mind had brooded over these words of the people for some time before the moment of inspiration. Recognising how faithfully they represented the actual situation, he was yet unable to suggest an adequate solution of the difficulty by means of the prophetic conceptions hitherto revealed to him. Such a vision as this seems to presuppose a period of intense mental activity on the part of Ezekiel, during which the despairing utterance of his compatriots sounded in his ears; and the image of the dried bones of the house of Israel so fixed itself in his mind that he could not escape its gloomy associations except by a direct communication from above. When at last the hand of the Lord came upon him, the revelation clothed itself in a form corresponding to his previous meditations; the emblem of death and despair is transformed into a symbol of assured hope through the astounding vision which unfolds itself before his inner eye.<\/p>\n<p>In the ecstasy he feels himself led out in spirit to the plain which had been the scene of former appearances of God to His prophet. But on this occasion he sees it covered with bones-&#8220;very many on the surface of the valley, and very dry.&#8221; He is made to pass round about them, in order that the full impression of this spectacle of desolation might sink into his mind. His attention is engrossed by two facts-their exceeding great number, and their parched appearance, as if they had lain there long. In other circumstances the question might have suggested itself, How came these bones there? What countless host has perished here, leaving its unburied bones to bleach and wither on the open plain? But the prophet has no need to think of this. They are the bones which had been familiar to his waking thoughts, the dry bones of the house of Israel. The question he hears addressed to him is not, Whence are these bones? but, Can these bones live? It is the problem which had exercised his faith in thinking of a national restoration which thus comes back to him in vision, to receive its final solution from Him who alone can give it.<\/p>\n<p>The prophets hesitating answer probably reveals the struggle between faith and sight, between hope and fear, which was latent in his mind. He dare not say no, for that would be to limit the power of Him whom he knows to be omnipotent, and also to shut out the last gleam of hope from his own mind. Yet in presence of that appalling scene of hopeless decay and death he cannot of his own initiative assert the possibility of resurrection. In the abstract all things are possible with God; but whether this particular thing, so inconceivable to men, is within the active purpose of God, is a question which none can answer save God Himself. Ezekiel does what man must always do in such a case-he throws himself back on God, and reverently awaits the disclosure of His will, saying, &#8220;O Jehovah God, Thou Knowest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is instructive to notice that the divine answer comes through the consciousness of a duty. Ezekiel is commanded first of all to prophesy over these dry bones; and in the words given him to utter the solution of his own inward perplexity is wrapped up. &#8220;Say unto them, O ye dry bones, hear the word of Jehovah Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live&#8221; (Eze 37:4-5). In this way he is not only taught that the agency by which Jehovah will effect His purpose is the prophetic word, but he is also reminded that the truth now revealed to him is to be the guide of his practical ministry, and that only in the steadfast discharge of his prophetic duty can he hold fast the hope of Israels resurrection. The problem that has exercised him is not one that can be settled in retirement and inaction. What he receives is not a mere answer, but a message, and the delivery of the message is the only way in which he can realise the truth of it: his activity as a prophet being indeed a necessary element in the fulfilment of his words. Let him preach the word of God to these dry bones, and he will know that they can live; but if he fails to do this, he will sink back into the unbelief to which all things are impossible. Faith comes in the act of prophesying.<\/p>\n<p>Ezekiel did as he was commanded; he prophesied over the dry bones, and immediately he was sensible of the effect of his words. He heard a rustling, and looking he saw that the bones were coming together, bone to his bone. He does not need to tell us how his heart rejoiced at this first sign of life returning to these dead bones, and as he watched the whole process by which they were built up into the semblance of men. It is described in minute detail, so that no feature of the impression produced by the stupendous miracle may be lost. It is divided into two stages, the restoration of the bodily frame and the imparting of the principle of life.<\/p>\n<p>This division cannot have any special significance when applied to the actual nation, such as that the outward order of the state must be first established, and then the national consciousness renewed. It belongs to the imagery of the vision and follows the order observed in the original creation of man as described in the second chapter of Genesis. God first formed man of the dust of the ground, and afterwards breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, so that he became a living soul. So here we have first a description of the process by which the bodies were built up, the skeletons being formed from the scattered bones, and then clothed successively with sinews and flesh and skin. The reanimation of these still lifeless bodies is a separate act of creative energy, in which, however, the agency is still the word of God in the mouth of the prophet. He is bidden call for the breath to &#8220;come from the four winds of heaven, and breathe upon these slain that they may live.&#8221; In Hebrew the words for wind, breath, and spirit are identical; and thus the wind becomes a symbol of the universal divine Spirit which is the source of all life, while the breath is a symbol of that Spirit as, so to speak, specialised in the individual man, or in other words of his personal life. In the case of the first man Jehovah breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the idea here is precisely the same. The wind from the four quarters of heaven which becomes the breath of this vast assemblage of men is conceived as the breath of God, and symbolises the life-giving Spirit which makes each of them a living person. The resurrection is complete. The men live, and stand up upon their feet, an exceeding great army.<\/p>\n<p>This is the simplest, as well as the most suggestive, of Ezekiels visions, and carries its interpretation on the face of it. The single idea which it expresses is the restoration of the Hebrew nationality through the quickening influence of the Spirit of Jehovah on the surviving members of the old house of Israel. It is not a prophecy of the resurrection of individual Israelites who have perished. The bones are &#8220;the whole house of Israel&#8221; now in exile; they are alive as individuals, but as members of a nation they are dead and hopeless of revival. This is made clear by the explanation of the vision given in Eze 37:11-14. It is addressed to those who think of themselves as cut off from the higher interests and activities of the national life. By a slight change of figure they are conceived as dead and buried; and the resurrection is represented as an opening of their graves. But the grave is no more to be understood literally than the dry bones of the vision itself; both are symbols of the gloomy and despairing view which the exiles take of their own condition. The substance of the prophets message is that the God who raises the dead and calls the things that are not as though they were is able to bring together the scattered members of the house of Israel and form them into a new people through the operation of His life-giving Spirit.<\/p>\n<p>It has often been supposed that, although the passage may not directly teach the resurrection of the body, it nevertheless implies a certain familiarity with that doctrine on the part of Ezekiel, if not of his hearers likewise. If the raising of dead men to life could be used as an analogy of a national restoration, the former conception must have been at least more obvious than the latter, otherwise the prophet would be explaining obscurum per obscurius. This argument, however, has only a superficial plausibility. It confounds two things which are distinct-the mere conception of resurrection, which is all that was necessary to make the vision intelligible, and settled faith in it as an element of the Messianic expectation. That God by a miracle could restore the dead to life no devout Israelite ever doubted. (Cf. 1Ki 17:1-24; 2Ki 4:13 ff; 2Ki 13:21.) But it is to be noted that the recorded instances of such miracles are all of those recently dead; and there is no evidence of a general belief in the possibility of resurrection for those whose bones were scattered and dry. It is this very impossibility, indeed, that gives point to the metaphor under which the people here express their sense of hopelessness. Moreover, if the prophet had presupposed the doctrine of individual resurrection, he could hardly have used it as an illustration in the way he does. The mere prospect of a resuscitation of the multitudes of Israelites who had perished would of itself have been a sufficient answer to the despondency of the exiles; and it would have been an anti-climax to use it as an argument for something much less wonderful. We must also bear in mind that while the resurrection of a nation may be to us little more than a figure of speech, to the Hebrew mind it was an object of thought more real and tangible than the idea of personal immortality.<\/p>\n<p>It would appear therefore that in the order of revelation the hope of the resurrection is first presented in the promise of a resurrection of the dead nation of Israel, and only in the second instance as the resurrection of individual Israelites who should have passed away without sharing in the glory of the latter days. Like the early converts to Christianity, the Old Testament believers sorrowed for those who fell asleep when the Messiahs kingdom was supposed to be just at hand, until they found consolation in the blessed hope of a resurrection with which Paul comforted the Church at Thessalonica. {1Th 4:13 ff} In Ezekiel we find that doctrine as yet only in its more general form of a national resurrection; but it can hardly be doubted that the form in which he expressed it prepared the way for the fuller revelation of a resurrection of the individual. In two later passages of the prophetic Scriptures we seem to find clear indications of progress in this direction. One is a difficult verse in the twenty-sixth chapter of Isaiah-part of a prophecy usually assigned to a period later than Ezekiel-where the writer, after a lamentation over the disappointments and wasted efforts of the present, suddenly breaks into a rapture of hope as he thinks of a time when departed Israelites shall be restored to life to join the ranks of the ransomed people of God: &#8220;Let thy dead live again! Let my dead bodies arise! Awake and rejoice, ye that dwell in the dust, for thy dew is a dew of light, and the earth shall yield up [her] shades.&#8221; {Isa 26:19} There does not seem to be any doubt that what is here predicted is the actual resurrection of individual members of the people of Israel to share in the blessings of the kingdom of God. The other passage referred to is in the book of Daniel, where we have the first explicit prediction of a resurrection both of the just and the unjust. In the time of trouble, when the people is delivered &#8220;many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.&#8221; {Dan 12:2}<\/p>\n<p>These remarks are made merely to show in what sense Ezekiels vision may be regarded as a contribution to the Old Testament doctrine of personal immortality. It is so not by its direct teaching, nor yet by its presuppositions, but by the suggestiveness of its imagery; opening out a line of thought which under the guidance of the Spirit of truth led to a fuller disclosure of the care of God for the individual life, and His purpose to redeem from the power of the grave those who had departed this life in His faith and fear.<\/p>\n<p>But this line of inquiry lies somewhat apart from the main teaching of the passage before us as a message for the Church in all ages. The passage teaches with striking clearness the continuity of Gods redeeming work in the world, in spite of hindrances which to human eyes seem insurmountable. The gravest hindrance, both in appearance and in reality, is the decay of faith and vital religion in the Church itself. There are times when earnest men are tempted to say that the Churchs hope is lost and her bones are dried-when laxity of life and lukewarmness in devotion pervade all her members, and she ceases to influence the world for good. And yet when we consider that the whole history of Gods cause is one long process of raising dead souls to spiritual life and building up a kingdom of God out of fallen humanity, we see that the true hope of the Church can never be lost. It lies in the life-giving, regenerating power of the divine Spirit, and the promise that the word of God does not return to Him void but prospers in the thing whereto He sends it. That is the great lesson of Ezekiels vision, and although its immediate application may be limited to the occasion that called it forth, yet the analogy on which it is founded is taken up by our Lord Himself and extended to the proclamation of His truth to the world at large: &#8220;The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and they that hear shall live.&#8221; (John 25; Cf. Joh 20:28-29). We perhaps too readily empty these strong terms of their meaning. The Spirit of God is apt to become a mere expression for the religious and moral influences lodged in a Christian society, and we come to rely on these agencies for the dissemination of Christian principles and the formation of Christian character. We forget that behind all this there is something which is compared to the imparting of life where there was none, something which is the work of the Spirit of which we cannot tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth. But in times of low spirituality, when the love of many waxes cold, and there are few signs of zeal and activity in the service of Christ, men learn to fall back in faith on the invisible power of God to make His word effectual for the revival of His cause among men. And this happens constantly in narrow spheres which may never attract the notice of the world. There are positions in the Church still where Christs servants are called to labour in the faith of Ezekiel, with appearances all against them, and nothing to inspire them but the conviction that the word they preach is the power of God and able even to bring life to the dead.<\/p>\n<p>II.<\/p>\n<p>The second half of the chapter speaks of a special feature of the national restoration, the reunion of the kingdoms of Judah and Israel under one sceptre. This is represented first of all by a symbolic action. The prophet is directed to take two pieces of wood, apparently in the form of sceptres, and to write upon them inscriptions dedicating them respectively to Judah and Joseph, the heads of the two confederacies out of which the rival monarchies were formed. The &#8220;companions&#8221; (Eze 37:16)-i.e., allies-of Judah are the two tribes of Benjamin and Simeon; those of Joseph are all the other tribes, who stood under the hegemony of Ephraim. If the second inscription is rather more complicated than the first, it is because of the fact that there was no actual tribe of Joseph. It therefore runs thus: &#8220;For Joseph, the staff of Ephraim, and all the house of Israel his confederates.&#8221; These two staves then he is to put together so that they become one sceptre in his hand. It is a little difficult to decide whether this was a sign that was actually performed before the people, or one that is only imagined. It depends partly on what we take to be meant by the joining of the two pieces. If Ezekiel merely took two sticks, put them end to end, and made them look like one, then no doubt he did this in public, for otherwise there would be no use in mentioning the circumstance at all. But if the meaning is, as seems more probable, that when the rods are put together they miraculously grow into one, then we see that such a sign has a value for the prophets own mind as a symbol of the truth revealed to him, and it is no longer necessary to assume that the action was really performed. The purpose of the sign is not merely to suggest the idea of political unity, which is too simple to require any such illustration, but rather to indicate the completeness of the union and the divine force needed to bring it about. The difficulty of conceiving a perfect fusion of the two parts of the nation was really very great, the cleavage between Judah and the North being much older than the monarchy, and having been accentuated by centuries of political separation and rivalry.<\/p>\n<p>To us the most noteworthy fact is the steadfastness with which the prophets of this period cling to the hope of a restoration of the northern tribes, although nearly a century and a half had now elapsed since &#8220;Ephraim was broken from being a people.&#8221; {Isa 7:8} Ezekiel, like Jeremiah, is unable to think of an Israel which does not include the representatives of the ten northern tribes. Whether any communication was kept up with the colonies of Israelites that had been transported from Samaria to Assyria we do not know, but they are regarded as still existing, and still remembered by Jehovah. The resurrection of the nation which Ezekiel has just predicted is expressly said to apply to the whole house of Israel, and now he goes on to announce that this &#8220;exceeding great army&#8221; shall march to its land not under two banners, but under one.<\/p>\n<p>We have touched already, in speaking of the Messianic idea, on the reasons which led the prophets to put so much emphasis on this union. They felt as strongly on the point as a High Churchman does about the sin of schism, and it would not be difficult for the latter to show that his point of view and his ideals closely resemble those of the prophets. The rending of the body of Christ which is supposed to be involved in a breach of external unity is paralleled by the disruption of the Hebrew state, which violates the unity of the one people of Jehovah. The idea of the Church as the bride of Christ is the same idea under which Hosea expresses the relations between Jehovah and Israel, and it necessarily carries with it the unity of the people of Israel in the one case and of the Church in the other. It must be admitted also that the evils resulting from the division between Judah and Israel have been reproduced, with consequences a thousand times more disastrous to religion, in the strife and uncharitableness, the party spirit and jealousies and animosities, which different denominations of Christians have invariably exhibited towards each other when they were close enough for mutual interest. But granting all this, and granting that what is called schism is essentially the same thing that the prophets desired to see removed, it does not at once follow that dissent is in itself sinful, and still less that the sin is necessarily on the side of the Dissenter. The question is whether the national standpoint of the prophets is altogether applicable to the communion of saints in Christ, whether the body of Christ is really torn asunder by differences in organisation and opinion, whether, in short, anything is necessary to avoid the guilt of schism beyond keeping the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. The Old Testament dealt with men in the mass, as members of a nation, and its standards can hardly be adequate to the polity of a religion which has to provide for the freedom of the individual conscience before God. At the worst the Dissenter may point out that the Old Testament schism was necessary as a protest against tyranny and despotism, that in this aspect it was sanctioned by the inspired prophets of the age, that its undoubted evils were partly compensated by a freer expansion of religious life, and finally that even the prophets did not expect it to be healed before the millennium.<\/p>\n<p>From the idea of the reunited nation Ezekiel returns easily to the promise of the Davidic king and the blessings of the Messianic dispensation. The one people implies one shepherd, and also one land, and one spirit to walk in Jehovahs judgments and to observe His statutes to do them. The various elements which enter into the conception of national salvation are thus gathered up and combined in one picture of the peoples everlasting felicity. And the whole is crowned by the promise of Jehovahs presence with the people, sanctifying and protecting them from His sanctuary. This final condition of things is permanent and eternal. The sources of internal dispeace are removed by the washing away of Israels iniquities, and the impossibility of any disturbance from without is illustrated by the onslaught of the heathen nations described in the following chapters.<\/p>\n<h4 align='right'><i><b>Fuente: Expositors Bible Commentary<\/b><\/i><\/h4>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The hand of the LORD was upon me, and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of the valley which [was] full of bones, 1. The hand of the Lord ] The prophetic ecstasy from the Lord, ch. Eze 1:3. On &ldquo;spirit&rdquo; of the Lord cf. &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/exegetical-and-hermeneutical-commentary-of-ezekiel-371\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ezekiel 37:1&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-21409","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-commentary"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/21409","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=21409"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/21409\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=21409"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=21409"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/bible-commentary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=21409"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}