Ezekiel exhorted the exiles to acknowledge that—just as God was the cause of their captivity—He was also the hope of their restoration. Ezekiel 33-48 sounds this theme. The word of the prophet and his role as a watchman was confirmed when the exiles were informed that Jerusalem had fallen (2 Kings 25). Ezekiel likewise announced that the Lord’s jealousy for His own glory through His people in His land would lead to a time of favor and protection.
Ezekiel 33-39 establishes a paradigm for the storyline of Scripture. The prophet’s themes lay a foundation for understanding the character of the Messiah and His kingdom, the inauguration of the new covenant, the coming of the Spirit at Pentecost, and the final judgment of those who oppose God’s people.
(1) Ezekiel proclaimed the future messianic Kingdom. In Ezek 37:24, Ezekiel prophesied concerning the day when the Lord would gather His people to the Promised Land, saying, “My servant David will be king over them, and there will be one shepherd for all of them. They will follow My ordinances, and keep My statutes and obey them.” When Jesus saw the crowds gathering to hear Him, He felt compassion because they were like sheep without a shepherd (Matt 9:36//Mark 6:34). In John 10, Jesus employed Ezekiel’s shepherd motif to contrast His ministry with the leadership of the Pharisees, saying, “I am the good shepherd. I know My own sheep, and they know Me” (John 10:14); and, “My sheep hear My voice, I know them, and they follow Me” (John 10:27). In Ezek 37:26, Ezekiel prophesied concerning the future day of restoration when the Lord would make an everlasting covenant of peace with His people, multiplying them and dwelling among them forever. Paul and the author of Hebrews understood Jesus to have fulfilled that which Ezekiel foretold (2 Cor 6:16; Heb 8:7-12; 13:20). Ezekiel prophesied about God’s personal presence with His people in Ezek 37:27-28: “My dwelling place will be with them; I will be their God, and they will be My people. When My sanctuary is among them forever, the nations will know that I the LORD, sanctify Israel.” This prophecy lays the foundation for understanding God’s presence in Christ (John 1:14) and among His people in the eternal state (Rev 21:1-4, 22-27).
(2) Ezekiel announced that the Lord would restore the exiles to the Promised Land and transform their spiritual disposition. In Ezek 36:24-27, Ezekiel spoke God’s word of promise to the exiles, saying, “I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will remove your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. I will place My Spirit within you and cause you to follow My statutes and carefully observe My ordinances.” Moses had prophesied the same generations earlier (Deut 30:6). Similarly, in Ezek 37:14, the prophet recorded the declaration of the Lord concerning the future of His people: “I will put My Spirit in you, and you will live and I will settle you in your own land. Then you will know that I am the LORD. I have spoken, and I will do it.” When Paul defended his apostleship to the Corinthians, he did so in light of the fact that the expectations of Moses and Ezekiel had been fulfilled. Paul wrote, “You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, recognized and read by everyone, since it is plain that you are Christ’s letter, produced by us, not written with ink but with the Spirit of the living God; not on stone tablets but on tablets that are hearts of flesh” (2 Cor 3:2-3). How could this be? John understood the Spirit to have been given to believers after the time of Christ’s death and resurrection (John 7:39). Jesus Himself said, “I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Counselor to be with you forever. He is the Spirit of truth.” (John 14:16-17a); and, “When the Counselor comes, the One I will send to you from the Father—the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father—He will testify about Me” (John 15:26).
(3) Ezekiel foretold the final battle the Lord would wage against those who oppose Him and His people. Ezekiel’s description of the destruction of Gog in Ezekiel 38-39 provides a framework for understanding John’s visions at the conclusion of Revelation. Like Ezekiel, John understood the sovereignty of God over those who oppose God’s people. John wrote that Satan—the one who stands behind all evil—would receive a measure of God’s wrath appropriate for one who had deceived Eve in the Garden and so many nations throughout history. According to John, the Lord would bind Satan for 1,000 years, allowing the earth to experience a period of peace. At the end of 1,000 years, the Lord would release Satan for a time of war and then throw him to the lake of fire for eternal punishment (Rev 20:7-10).

Ezekiel 12-24
Ezekiel prophesied about Jerusalem to those who had already been taken from Jerusalem, exiled to Babylon. Why would God have the prophet speak words and perform symbolic acts in Ezekiel 12-24 that had little application to the immediate geographical situation of Ezekiel’s audience in Babylon? First, Ezekiel’s sermons and deeds reinforced God’s motive for judging His people. At every turn, the prophet reminded God’s people in the land of the Chaldeans that He was right for judging their idolatry and would finish the destruction He had announced concerning Jerusalem. Second, Ezekiel restated the obligations the exiles had to God for His grace on their lives. Ezekiel’s sermons were a word of mercy to the exiles; they were allowed to live—albeit under the rule of a foreign power—while many of their friends and family were not so blessed back in Jerusalem. Finally, Ezekiel set out the covenant loyalty God wanted from His people—even those who had been carried to the land of the Chaldeans. Ezekiel’s point for his immediate audience, to say nothing of how his sermons may have impacted those in Jerusalem, was that they should forsake all idolatry and live unto God alone.
The themes Ezekiel penned from Babylon contribute to the storyline of Scripture. Ezekiel’s prophecies helped the New Testament authors articulate how God’s people should live in a covenant relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.
(1) God judges in righteousness. In Ezek 18:20, Ezekiel described the righteous judgment of the Lord. Paul affirmed that God’s judgment is without partiality but clarified that God’s judgment is according to the gospel revealed in Jesus Christ (Rom 2:16; see Acts 17:30-31). Ezekiel described the severity of God’s judgment by reasoning from the lesser to the greater. Since a wicked nation could not be spared even if the likes of Noah, Daniel, and Job interceded for it, “how much worse will it be when I send My four devastating judgments against Jerusalem—sword, famine, dangerous animals, and plague—in order to wipe out both man and animal from it!” (Ezek 14:21). John envisioned that the Lord would employ these same means—sword, famine, plague, and wild animals—to destroy those outside of Christ (Rev 6:8).
(2) Those not bearing the fruit of a covenant relationship with God will be condemned. In Ezekiel 15, the prophet pictured Israel as a fruitless vine, culpable and worthless (see also Isaiah 5). In John 15, Jesus employed the metaphor of a vineyard to describe the new era of salvation history. Jesus described Himself as the true vine, the unique source of spiritual fruit. Any who did not remain in Him and bear the fruit of that union would be cast out and burned (John 15:6). But all who did abide in Him, Jesus said, would bear fruit in prayer and know of the Father’s love for them (John 15:7-10).
(3) God’s people express their covenant relationship with Him by relying upon Him. In Ezek 20:10-26, Ezekiel condemned Israel for rejecting God’s law, especially the Sabbath command. God gave Israel the Sabbath as a way of expressing to the nations that He led them out of Egypt and would sustain them (Exod 16:4ff; 20:8-11; Num 15:32-36; Deut 4:1-14; 5:12-15). For Ezekiel, the Sabbath was a sign of Israel’s righteousness. But in Rom 10:4, Paul wrote that Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes. When Christ came, Paul argued, He fulfilled and expanded the Sabbath such that those who believe in Christ express their faith by daily relying upon Him with fellow Jews or Gentiles (Col 3:16-19; Gal 4:8-11). The author of Hebrews urged his audience to labor after Sabbath rest in Christ, laboring to live wholly unto Him with the church (Heb 3:7-4:11).
(4) Those in covenant with the Lord are to live differently than those who do not know God. In Ezek 20:34, 41, the prophet spoke of a day when the Lord would gather the scattered from the nations, bring them to the Promised Land, and demonstrate His holiness through them to the nations. Paul expressed this theme when writing to the Corinthians—a congregation with too strong a worldly affinity. Paul’s concern was not that the Corinthians leave their place on the Achaian peninsula and go to Judea but that they separate themselves from pagan practices and return fully to the Lord Jesus Christ. Paul’s logic in 2 Cor 6:17, “Come out from among them and be separate,’ says the Lord; ‘do not touch any unclean thing, and I will welcome you,’” echoes Ezek 20:41, the prophet’s word of grace that the Lord would once again accept His people in Jerusalem. Paul went on to urge the Corinthians, “Dear friends, since we have such promises, we should wash ourselves clean from every impurity of the flesh and spirit, making our sanctification complete in the fear of the Lord” (2 Cor 7:1).
Commentary Ezekiel Major Prophets Old Testament