The Bible Recap - Day 244 (Ezekiel 18-20) - Year 6
Episode Date: August 31, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - TBR Start Page - TBR New Testament Reading Plan... (Step 1, Print Users) - Ezekiel 14 - Romans 7:7-25 - Romans 7:24-25 - Pre-order TBR in Forest Green! BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for The Bible Recap.
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There's a link to a printable version of the New Testament part of our reading plan,
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I'll say it again for the people in the back,
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when we start the New Testament on October 1st
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So invite your friends to join us.
When today's reading opens,
God starts out by addressing a common saying of the time
because it's starting to inform their theology and it's wrong.
The saying conveys the idea that children will be punished
for the sins of their parents.
And while children are certainly impacted
by the sins of their parents
and might even inherit some of those traits, they aren't punished for them. Despite the corporate impact
and effects of sin, God says He will judge each person individually. In the midst of wiping out
most of their generation, He lets them know He's provided a way out. He's preserving a remnant. So
who will be a part of that? Just because your dad was destroyed doesn't mean you have to be.
This is great news.
He lists out what righteous living looks like
and boils it down to demonstrating his character
to the world around them.
That's what life in the kingdom of God looks like.
And for the people who don't live according to God's ways,
that's what death looks like.
And just to make sure everyone gets the point,
God gives an illustration of a righteous father with a wicked son
and a wicked father with a righteous son.
He wants to make sure they understand that everyone will be judged individually.
Righteousness doesn't transfer genetically and wickedness doesn't either.
But one important caveat here,
the point of this passage is not that we're saved by doing good works
or being good people, whatever that means.
That would run contrary to the whole rest of the Bible.
The point of this passage is that our righteous works are evidence of our love for God and our faith in Him.
And that kind of faith is individual, not inherited.
Then, just in case anyone is discouraged, God reminds them in verse 21 that it's never too late to turn to him and have the debt of their sins paid for.
God wants to make sure they know this because he says he doesn't actually want to kill the wicked.
It's a much better scenario if they repent.
Unfortunately, for those who don't repent, his righteousness requires justice.
And Israel's response to all this great news is to object to everything God just said.
They think it's not fair for God to pardon
the wicked if they repent, which is incredibly ironic because that's Israel's only hope
at this point. They're objecting to the mercy he's extending to them.
I can't think of a better way to follow their response than with a lament from Ezekiel,
and that's what we get in chapter 19. In his lament, he portrays Judah as both a lioness and a vine.
The lioness raises one cub,
but he gets captured and taken to Egypt.
This is probably referring to Jehoahaz,
the fourth final king.
Then she raises up another cub,
probably Zedekiah, the final king,
but things don't go any better for him.
He's taken to Babylon.
You can see what a defeat this is
for the tribe
associated with such esteemed lion imagery. Next up, we have another vine metaphor. Judah
is like a vine that has grown so tall and strong that it gets turned into a scepter,
then eventually burned. And again, Ezekiel laments over Judah's demise.
In chapter 20, we get a recap of God's history
with the people of Israel.
Here's how it unfolds.
The leaders of Israel come to ask God questions.
Two days ago in chapter 14, God told the elders
that if they come to him to inquire of him
before repenting of their idolatry,
he would only speak to them about their idolatry.
And since they haven't repented yet,
he says, no, they can't ask anything
of him.
Then he's like, but while you're here, pull up a rock. I'm going to tell you a story.
He spends the next few paragraphs reminding them of how he's provided for them for years,
but they continue to rebel and disobey. It happened in Egypt. It happened in the wilderness.
It happened in the promised land. And now, of course, it's happening in Babylon. No matter their circumstances, enslaved, challenged, blessed or oppressed,
they reject God.
He says their hearts go after idols
and he speaks the truth to each new generation
and they do the same thing.
So no, he won't let them ask their questions.
And the text doesn't say this,
but in my opinion, hypothetically,
if he had let them ask him questions
and he responded by telling them the truth, chances are they'd just ignore what he said regardless. God doesn't say this, but in my opinion, hypothetically, if he had let them ask him questions
and he responded by telling them the truth,
chances are they'd just ignore what he said regardless.
So God reminds them how wicked they've been.
Then, because God is who he is,
he circles back around to remind them
that he's going to restore things in the end.
We can hardly go three chapters without him bringing it up.
He's pumped about restoration.
God does say something that could be confusing
in this chapter though.
And if you tend to zone out while you're reading,
you probably got jolted back somewhere around verses 25
through 26 where it sounds like God is saying
he misled them and ordered them to do a bunch
of terrible things.
It says, I gave them statutes that were not good
and rules by which they could not have life.
And I defiled them through their very gifts
in their offering up all their firstborn
that I might devastate them.
And if you were jolted back to the text when you read that,
that's fitting because it seems like
that's the exact response God wanted the Israelites to have
when they heard it too.
This statement he makes could either be sarcastic
or it could be God expressing the Israelites viewpoint
of his laws or even some combination of the two. But there is a deeper point to it, and that point is echoed in the New Testament,
in Paul's letter to the Romans. Romans chapter 7 goes on at length about the purpose and the
effect of the law. God's laws on their own don't bring life. They serve to reveal how broken and
helpless we are and how righteous God is. We can't keep the law even if we try.
The law does not lead to life.
It points to death.
And it is devastating.
But this is where my God shot comes in.
In both today's reading and in Paul's letter to the Romans, we see the rest of the story.
The law leads to death, but God pours out His mercy and His grace, which lead to life renewed.
In Ezekiel 20, 44, God says it like this,
You shall know that I am the Lord when I deal with you for my name's sake,
not according to your evil ways, nor according to your corrupt deeds, O house of Israel.
And in Romans 7, 24-25, Paul says it like this, Wretched man that I am, who will deliver me from this body of death?
Thanks be to God, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Trying to keep the law isn't the path to righteousness.
There's only one path to righteousness.
He calls himself the way, the truth, and the life.
The law is important and necessary, but keeping the
law isn't the gospel. The word gospel means good news, and the thought of
having to keep the law is certainly not good news because we can't. What's good
news is that God the Son, who kept it perfectly, paid the debt for those God
the Father has adopted into his family. The law acts like an MRI, revealing where
we're broken, but it can't heal us.
For that, we need a surgeon, and he gives us a new heart. And those new hearts know him
and praise him because he's where the joy is. Our TBR family of books keeps getting bigger.
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