COMMENTARIES
ON
THE
FIRST TWENTY CHAPTERS OF
THE
BOOK OF THE PROPHET
EZEKIEL
BY JOHN
CALVIN
NOW FIRST TRANSLATED FROM THE
ORIGINAL LATIN,
AND COLLATED WITH THE
FRENCH VERSION:
BY THOMAS
MEYERS, M.A.
VICAR OF SHERIFF-HUTTON,
YORKSHIRE
VOLUME
SECOND
CHAPTER 13
LECTURE
THIRTY-FOURTH.
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EZEKIEL
13:1-3
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1. And the word of the Lord came unto me,
saying,
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1. Et fuit sermo Iehovae ad me,
dicendo,
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2. Son of man, prophesy against the prophets
of Israel that prophesy, and say you unto them that prophesy out of their own
hearts, Hear you the word of the Lord;
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2. Fili hominis, prophetiza contra prophetas
Israel prophetizantes, et dic prophetizantibus ex corde suo, Audite sermonem
Iehovah.
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3. Thus says the Lord God, Woe unto the
foolish prophets, that follow their own spirit, and have seen
nothing!
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3. Sic dicit Dominator Iehovah, Vae super
prophetas stultos
f272 qui ambulant post spiritum suum:
et non viderunt.
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He speaks of the exiled prophets, as will be evident
from the context: for among the captives there were those who assumed the name
of God, boasting themselves endowed with the prophetic spirit: but meanwhile
they intruded into the office, and then vainly boasted in their deceptions. But
the end which they proposed to themselves was to promise the people a speedy
return, and so to will the favor of the multitude. For the captives were already
almost broken-hearted by weariness: and seventy years was a long period. When
therefore they heard of returning after three years, they easily suffered
themselves to be deceived by such blandishments. But although God is so
vehemently enraged against those impostors, it does not therefore follow that
when he charges them with their crime, he absolves the people, or even
extenuates their fault. Nor could the people object that they were deceived by
those falsehoods, since they willingly and knowingly threw themselves into the
snare. They were not destitute of true prophets; and God had distinguished his
servants from false prophets by well-known marks, so that no one could mistake
except willfully.
(<051303>Deuteronomy
13:3.) But in the midst of light they blinded themselves, and so God suffered
them to be deceived. But that was the just reward of their pride, since they
could not be subject to God and his servants. Then when they thought
enticements, as is evident from many passages, God also gave the reins to Satan,
that there should be a lying spirit in the mouth of all the prophets. Micah
reproves them because they desired prophets to be given them who should promise
large grape-gatherings and a plentiful harvest,
(<260201>Ezekiel
2:11;) meanwhile, when God chastised them severely, they roared and were
tumultuous. We see, therefore, that while God inveighs so sharply against false
prophets, the people’s fault was not diminished; but rather each thought
thus to reason with himself — if God spares not our prophets, what better
have we to hope for?
When therefore the Prophet turns his discourse to the
false prophets, there is no doubt of his intention to reprove the whole people
for attending to such fallacies while they despised the true doctrine, and not
only so, but even rejected it with fury.
Say therefore to the prophets of
Israel while prophesying, say to those prophesying out of their own
hearts. Here he concedes the name of prophets
of Israel to those who thrust themselves forward, and rashly boasted that they
were commanded to utter their own imaginations, or what the devil had suggested.
For then indeed no others thought to have been lawfully reckoned prophets,
unless divinely chosen. But because the wicked seized upon this title, they are
often called prophets, though God’s Spirit is a complete stranger to them:
but the gift of prophecy can only flow from that one fountain. This great
struggle then happened when the prophets, or those who assumed the title,
engaged with hostility among themselves: for we are commanded to acquiesce in
God’s truth alone: but when he is offered to us instead of truth, what can
we do but fluctuate and at length engage in conflict? There is no doubt, then,
that weak minds were thus vehemently shaken when they saw contests and
dissension’s of this kind between prophets. At this day God wishes to
prove the fidelity of his people by such an experiment, and to detect the
hypocrisy of the multitude. For, as Paul says, there must be heresies, that
those who are approved may be made manifest.
(<461119>1
Corinthians 11:19.) God therefore does not rashly permit so much license to
Satan’s ministers, that they should petulantly rise up against sound
doctrine: nor yet without a cause does he permit the Church to be torn asunder
by diverse opinions, and fictions to grow so strong sometimes, that truth itself
is buried under them: he wishes indeed in this way to prove the constancy of the
pious, and at the same time to detect the lightness of hypocrites who are tossed
about by every wind. Meanwhile, if the contention which we now perceive between
those who boast themselves pastors of the Church disturbs us, let this example
come to mind, and thus novelty will not endanger our faithfulness. What we
suffer the ancients have experienced, namely, the disturbance of the Church by
intestine disputes, and a similar tearing asunder of the bond of
unity.
Next, God briefly defines who the false prophets are;
namely, those who prophesy out of
their own hearts: he will afterwards add,
they have seen nothing, they only
boast in the name of God, and yet they are not
sent by him. The same thing is expressed in various ways, but I shall treat
other forms of speech in their own places. Here, as I have said, we may readily
decide at once who are the true and who the false prophets: the Spirit of God
pronounces every one who prophesies from his own heart to be an impostor. Hence
nothing else remains but for the prophets faithfully to utter whatever the
Spirit has dictated to them. Whoever, therefore, has no sure testimony to his
vision, and cannot truly testify that he speaks from God’s mouth and by
the revelation of his Spirit, although he may boast in the title of prophet, yet
he is only an impostor. For God here rejects all who speak from their own heart.
And hence we also gather the extreme vanity of the human mind: for God puts a
perpetual distinction between the human mind and the revelation of his Spirit.
If this be so, it follows that what men utter of themselves is a perverse
fiction, because the Spirit of God claims to himself alone, as we have said, the
office of showing what is true and right. It follows —
Woe to, the
foolish or disgraceful prophets.
lbn,
nebel, signifies “a vile person,” “a castaway,”
just as
hlbn,
nebeleh, means “foulness,” “crime,”
“wickedness,” although
lbn,
nebel, is oftener taken for folly, and I willingly embrace this sense as
it is generally received. He calls false prophets foolish, because they
doubtless fiercely insulted the true servants of God — just like upstarts
puffed up with wonderful self-conceit; for the devil, who reigns in them, is the
father of pride: hence they carry themselves haughtily, arrogate all things to
themselves, and wish to be thought angels come down from heaven. And when Paul
speaks of human fictions, he grants them the form of wisdom.
(<510223>Colossians
2:23.) Hence there is no doubt that these pretenders of whom Ezekiel speaks were
held in great esteem, and so, when swollen with bombast, they puffed forth
surprising wisdom; but meanwhile the Holy Spirit shortly pronounces them fools:
for whatever pleases the world under the mask of wisdom, we know to be mere
folly before God.
Now he adds,
who walk after their own spirit,
without seeing any thing: that is, when no
vision has been given them. Ezekiel explains himself more clearly, or rather the
Spirit who spoke through him. As, therefore, he has lately condemned all who
prophesy out of their own mind or heart, — for the noun
“heart” is here used for “intellect,” as in other
places, — as, therefore, the Spirit has lately condemned all such, so he
says that those who walk after
their own spirit wickedly abuse the prophetic
office. He here alludes to the prophetic gift when he speaks of
“spirit.” For, because they might object that false prophets did not
speak from their own heart, but had secret revelations, he concedes to them the
use of the word “spirit” by a rhetorical
figure,
f273 and thus refutes their boasting, as if
Ezekiel had said that those fictitious revelations are mere fancies: they have
indeed something in them more than common, but still they are fanatics. This
then is the sense of the word “spirit.” Meanwhile there is no doubt
that he repeats what he lately saw, and the contrast removes all doubt.
Without seeing any
thing, says he: thus vision is opposed to the
human heart and spirit; but what is vision but a supernatural gift? When,
therefore, God raises his servants above the capacity of human ability, and
makes them discern what no mortal power can bestow, that is a vision; and if a
vision is removed, nothing will remain but the spirit or heart of man. Hence
those who cannot really show that their utterance is evidently inspired, shall
be compelled to confess that they speak of their own minds. It follows
—
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EZEKIEL
13:4
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4. O Israel, thy prophets are like the foxes
in the deserts.
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4. Tanquam vulpes in locis solitaries
prophetae tui, Israel, fuerunt.
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Hence Ezekiel exposes the snares of the false
prophets. The ten tribes had been dispersed, just as if a field or a vineyard
had been removed from a habitable neighborhood into desert regions, and foxes
held their sway there instead. For they have many hiding-places; they insinuate
themselves through hedges and all openings, and so break into the vineyard or
field, and lay waste its fruits. Such, as I have said, was the condition of the
people from the time of its dispersion. While the Israelites dwelt at home, they
were in some way retained within their duty, as if fortified by certain
ramparts. At Jerusalem, too, the high Priest presided over spiritual trials,
that no impious doctrine should creep in: but now, since the people were so
dispersed, greater license was given to the false prophets to corrupt the
people, since the miserable exiles were exposed to these foxes; for they were
liable to injuries just as if desert regions surrounded them. Being thus
destitute of protection, it was easy for foxes to enter by clandestine arts, and
to destroy whatever good fruits existed. Meanwhile Ezekiel obliquely reproves
the people’s carelessness. Although they were dispersed, and were so open
to the snares of the false prophets, yet they thought to have been attentive and
cautious, and God would doubtless have afforded them aid, as he promises to his
people the spirit of discretion and judgment whenever they need it.
(<461210>1
Corinthians 12:10.) But when the Israelites were wandering exiles, and attention
to the law no longer flourished among them, it came to pass that foxes, meaning
their false prophets, easily entered. Whence it follows that the people were not
free from faults, since they exposed themselves to the snares of these false
prophets. It follows —
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EZEKIEL
13:5
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5. You have not gone up into the gaps, neither
made up the hedge for the house of Israel to, stand in the battle in the day of
the Lord.
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5. Non ascendistis ad
rupturas
f274 neque sepiverunt sepem super domum
Israel ad standum in praelio in die Iehovae.
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Hence he pursues the same sentiment, but presses the
false prophets harder. He has said generally that they were sacrilegious, making
a false use of God’s name when speaking entirely in their own. He now
separates them by another mark from the approved and faithful servants of God,
namely, they had not gone up into
the breach, nor built up a hedge to protect the house of Israel, that they might
stand in the battle in the day of Jehovah. This
verse is variously explained: some refer what is here said to prayer; others
twist it according to different imaginations, but I restrict it to their
teaching.
F275 Ezekiel not only blames their inner and
hidden perfidy, he not only strikes their minds, so as to convince them that
they had no desire for piety, and no zeal for God’s glory, but he shows
that their teaching must be altogether rejected, because they did not propose to
themselves the right object. But what is the mark at which all God’s
servants thought to aim? Surely to consult the public safety; and when they see
signs of God’s wrath, to meet them, and prevent the urgent calamity. These
impostors saw the people not only impious, but rebellious, so that there was no
hope of their repentance. On the other hand, they saw God threatening; and
although they were blind, yet they could behold the signs of God’s
reproaching vengeance. Hence it was their duty to go up to the breaches. Hence,
also, we understand what the Prophet means by “breaches,” namely, as
an approach is open to an enemy to storm a city when a breach is made in the
wall, so also, when the iniquity of the people overflows like a deluge, a
rupture is already made, by means of which God’s wrath is able to
penetrate immediately, and to lay everything waste till it is reduced to
nothing.
As often, then, as we see God offended by the
people’s wickedness, let us learn that a breach has been made, as if we
had been destined to destruction. Hence those who desire to discharge the office
of teaching faithfully ought to hasten to the breach, to recall the people from
their impiety, and to exhort them to repentance. Thus the wall becomes restored,
because God is appeased, and we are able to rest in quietness and security. What
follows has the same object —
they have not restored the
hedge. For when a people breaks through all
rights, and violates God’s law, it is just as if they laid themselves bare
in every part from the protection of God, as Moses reproves them when speaking
of the molten calf: Behold, says he, this day you are naked; that is, because
they had hurled themselves into destruction.
(<023225>Exodus
32:25.) So the Prophet says that these traitors did not run up to restore the
hedge when the house of Israel was exposed to robbers, thieves, and wild beasts,
because it was no longer protected by the hand of God. What follows has the same
object, that they should stand in
the battle in the day of the Lord; that is, to
oppose themselves to God’s vengeance. This relates to prayers, when
mention is made of Phinehas, in
<19A630>Psalm
106:30, and also in the same psalm,
<19A623>Psalm
106:23, where it is said of Moses, Unless Moses had stood in the breach to turn
away God’s wrath. Here also, as I have said, the Prophet looks rather to
doctrine. For here he sharply rebukes the folly of false prophets who had
promised wonderful things. Now, when God approached in earnest, all their
prophecies vanished: he says, therefore,
they stood not in the battle in
the day of Jehovah; for, if they had diligently
exhorted the people to repentance, those sinners had reconciled God to
themselves: for we turn aside his judgment beforehand when we turn to him in
time, as Paul teaches.
(<461131>1
Corinthians 11:31.) If, therefore, the people had been thus diligently advised,
they had stood in the battle; that is, their teaching would have been a bulwark
against the breaking out of God’s wrath to destroy them utterly. Now,
therefore, we see the meaning of Ezekiel, namely, to show how the fallacies of
the false prophets could be perceived, since by their blandishments and
flatteries they destroyed the people,. Now it follows —
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EZEKIEL
13:6
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6. They have seen vanity and lying divination,
saying, The Lord says; and the Lord has not sent them: and they have made
others to hope that they would confirm the word.
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6. Viderunt vanitatem, divinarunt mendacium,
dicentes, dicit Iehovah, et non misit eos Iehovah: et sperare
fecerunt
f276 ad stabihendum
sermonem.
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Here again he pronounces generally that those false
prophets were vain, and this assertion depends upon the principle that they had
spoken from their own heart or spirit, for nothing false or vain can proceed
from God. It follows, therefore, that they are here condemned of vanity and
lying, because they dared falsely to use the name of God when they uttered
nothing but their own dreams. He now confirms what we saw in the last verse,
when he says, they hoped to
establish their word. Hence they puffed up the
people with vain hope, when they said that God would not be so severe as to
exact continual punishment of the holy and elect nation. True prophets also
often recall sinners to the mercy of God, and magnify it so, that those who
wrestle with despair may not doubt God’s long-suffering, since he is said
to be slow to anger, and inclined to reconciliation; and his pity endures for a
life, while his anger passes away in a moment.
(<041418>Numbers
14:18;
<19A308>Psalm
103:8, and
<193005>Psalm
30:5.) True prophets indeed act thus; but they join two members which must not
be separated, otherwise God himself would be, as it were,
dissipated.
F277 Hence, when true prophets exhort sinners
to hope and predict God’s freeness to pardon, they likewise discourse
about penitence; they do not indulge sinners, but rouse them, nay, wound them
sharply with a sense of God’s anger, so as in some way to stir them up,
since God’s mercy is set before us for that end, that by it we may seek
life. Hence we must be dead in ourselves; but false prophets sever between the
two, and divide God, as it were, in half, since they speak only of his freeness
to forgive, and declare his clemency to be set before all, while they are
profoundly silent about repentance. Now, therefore, we see why the Prophet here
reproves these traitors
f278 who abused the name of God,
since they made the people to
hope. Without hope, indeed, the sinner could
not be animated to seek God: but they promised peace, as he will say directly,
when there was no peace. Therefore let us proceed with the
exposition.
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EZEKIEL
13:7
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7. Have you not seen a vain vision, and have
you not spoken a lying divination, whereas you say, The Lord says it; albeit I
have not spoken?
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7. An non visionem vanitatis vidistis? et
divinationem mendacii locuti estis? Et
loquentes
f279 dicit Iehovah: ego non fueram
locutus?
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Here God shows why he had formerly pronounced that
they brought forward nothing but vanity and falsehood, namely, because they used
his name falsely, and out of light created darkness; for by the feint of
speaking in God’s name, they darkened men’s minds. That sacred name
is, as it were, a fount of splendor, so as far to surpass the light of the sun;
nay, whatever light exists, is made apparent and refulgent by it. But, as I have
said, the servants of Satan turn light, into darkness, because they audaciously
boast that God has said so. This passage and similar ones show us how diligently
we ought to guard against Satan’s fallacies. This is their astounding
boldness to bring forward God’s name while they so wantonly trifle with
his judgments. For to boast that God has spoken is as if we wished, by impious
profanation, purposely to draw him into a dispute. For how can God bear us to
turn his truth into lie? But there have been impostors in all ages who have thus
thoughtlessly flown in the face of God. We are not surprised at the heathen
doing so; but in the chosen people, it was certainly an incredible prodigy and
an intolerable disgrace, when they had access to all heavenly doctrine for the
guidance of their conduct, and when God was daily calling forth prophets, as he
had promised by Moses, to see these impious dogs who barked so, and you
pretended so proudly to speak in God’s name.
(<051815>Deuteronomy
18:15-18.) Admonished, then, by this caution, let us be on our guard when we see
Satan’s servants endued with such arrogance. It follows
—
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EZEKIEL
13:8-9
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8. Therefore thus says the Lord God, Because
you have spoken vanity, and seen is, therefore, behold, I am against you,
says the Lord God.
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8. Propterea sic dicit Dominator Iehovah, eo
quod locuti estis vanitatem, et vidistis
mendacium,
f280 propterea ecce ego contra eos, dicit
Dominator Iehovah.
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9. And mine hand shall be upon the prophets
that see vanity, and that divine is: they shall not be in the assembly of my
people, neither shall they be written in the writing of the house of Israel,
neither shall they enter into the land of Israel; and you shall know that I
am the Lord God.
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9. Et erit manus mea contra prophetas qui
vident vanitatem, et qui divinant mendacium: in consilio populi mei non erunt,
et in scriptura f281
domus Israel non scribentur: et ad terram
Israel non redibunt: et cognoscitis quod ego Dominator Iehovah.
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Here at length he begins to pronounce judgment
against the false prophets. Hitherto, under the form of a complaint, he shows
how wickedly they had corrupted and profaned his sacred name: then how impiously
they had rendered prophecies contemptible by their lies, and how cruel they were
to the people whose safety ought to be their first care, and how they drew on
the miserable to destruction. For after God has so narrated their sins, he now
denounces punishment; and, first, generally he says that he was their adversary.
This clause is by no means superfluous, since such carelessness would not have
besotted the impious, unless they thought themselves free from all dealings with
God; hence they utterly reject all fear and sin with freedom. But this could not
happen, unless they determined that God either sleeps, or does not behold human
affairs or trifles as they do. Since, therefore, false prophets very
licentiously corrupt God’s word, when they pretend it to be a pleasant
sport; God, on the other hand, pronounces Himself their adversary; as if he
said, your contest shall not be with men, but I will be the avenger of so wicked
a profanation of my name.
Besides, he afterwards points out the punishment;
my hand, says he, shall be
against the prophets. For although God
threatens to become an adversary to the reprobate, yet this is not sufficient to
terrify them, they are so stupid. But it is necessary to use another stimulus,
namely, that God should display his power. This is the reason why he now adds,
his hand should be against the
false prophets. The hand is sometimes taken for
a blow: but because God sees the impious torpid amidst their sins, he says that
he would not only be their enemy and an avenger of his glory, but he brings
forward his own hand into the midst. It follows,
they shall not be in the counsel
of my people. Some explain the noun
dws,
sod, more subtlety than they need for that experience of God which is
offered to the elect for their salvation. But this explanation is forced, for
they are deceived in thinking that the Prophet’s meaning is different in
the second clause, where he adds, they shall not be written in the list of the
house of Israel: he repeats the same thing in different words: in the first
place he had said, they should not be in the secret of the people: for
dws,
sod, signifies a secret, but it is taken for counsel:
they shall not be therefore in
the assembly of the people: afterwards he adds,
they shall not be in the
catalogue of the house of Israel. He mentions a
catalogue, because judges and others elected to any office were written in a
list. We see, therefore, what the Prophet intends — for I am compelled to
break off here — namely, that those impostors who wished to enjoy the
prophetic title, were altogether without the Church, since God had cast them
off.
PRAYER.
Grant, Almighty God, since we are so
torpid in our vices that excitements are daily necessary to rouse us up, first,
that our destined pastors may faithfully call us to repentance; then, that we in
our turn may be so attentive to their exhortations, and so suffer ourselves to
be condemned, that we may be our own judges: Grant also, that when you chastise
us severely, the taste of thy paternal goodness may never be so lost to us, so
that a way may always be open to us to seek reconciliation in Jesus Christ our
Lord. — Amen.
LECTURE
THIRTY-FIFTH.
We explained yesterday what the Prophet meant when he
pronounces that the impostors who deceived the people
should not be in the counsel
of the pious nor in their catalogue, and we
said that this was twice repeated. Now the question arises, did the Prophet
speak of the secret election of God, or only of an external state? For although
these traitors were at the greatest distance from the Church, yet we know that
they boasted in a common title like Ishmael, who, until he was cast out of his
father’s house, proudly boasted in his right of birth.
(<012109>Genesis
21:9.) And at this day, we see how the Papists claim to themselves the name of
“the Church,” since they pretend to the perpetual succession: and
truly we are compelled to confess that the ordinary ministry is with them. But
because they have tyrannically abused their power, and have altogether
overthrown that method of governing the Church which the Lord had appointed, we
may safely laugh at their
boastings.
F282 There was the same haughtiness in the
false prophets of old, who asserted that they held no mean rank among the
people, because they were created prophets by God. Hence, therefore, we gather
that these words are not used of any external state, because a place among the
elect people was always conceded to them. Without doubt, then, we must
understand the contrast between the true members of the Church and hypocrites,
who pretend to the name of God. And for this reason it is said in
<191502>Psalm
15:2, as well as
<192404>Psalm
24:4, that not all who go up to the mount of God have a perpetual seat there,
unless they are pure in heart and hand. The sum of the whole then is, although
false prophets thunder forth their boasts with inflated cheeks, and claim the
prophetic name, yet they thought not to be reckoned in that rank, as they are
altogether without the elect people.
But a second question arises out of this. If the
Prophet denies their right to be included in the council of the pious, he ought
not to speak in the future tense: because as God’s election is eternal, so
his sons were written in the book of life before the creation of the world. But
he says they shall not be written, and this seems absurd. But Ezekiel here
accommodates his language to the usual custom of mankind. The language of the
psalm is harsher: let them be blotted from the book of life, since they are not
written among the just.
(<196928>Psalm
69:28.) For it cannot happen that he who is once written in the book of life can
ever be blotted out. But in the second clause the Prophet explains himself
— that they be not written with the just; that is, that they be not
written in the catalogue of the just. So also Ezekiel now says:
they shall not be in the secret
of my people, and they shall not be
written in the writing of the
house of Israel: because for a time they seemed
to be in the number of the pious: hence a change of expression is here used, but
only in accommodation to the rudeness of our mind.
This passage is useful in this sense. The Holy Spirit
admonishes us that it is not sufficient to suppose men members of the Church
because the greater number seem to excel others, just as the chaff is above the
wheat and suffocates it: thus hypocrites bury the sons of God whose number is
small, while they shine forth in their own splendor, and their multitude makes
them seem exclusively worthy of the title of the Church. Hence let us learn to
examine ourselves, and to search whether those interior marks by which God
distinguishes his children from strangers belong to us, viz., the living root of
piety and faith. This passage also teaches that nothing is more formidable than
to be rejected from God’s flock. For no safety is to be hoped for, except
as God collects us into one body under one head. First, all safety resides in
Christ alone; and then we cannot be separated from Christ without falling away
from all hope of safety: but Christ will not and cannot be torn from his Church
with which he is joined in all indissoluble knot, as the head to the body.
Hence, unless we cultivate unity with the faithful, we see that we are cut off
from Christ: hence I said that nothing was more to be feared than that
separation of which mention is here made. On the other hand, it is said in
<19A604>Psalm
106:4, Remember me, O God, in thy good will towards thy people: visit me with
thy salvation. When the author of the Psalm prays in this way, he at the same
time acknowledges that our true and solid happiness is placed in the
Lord’s embracing us with the rest of the faithful. For God’s good
will towards his people is that fatherly kindness by which he embraces his own
elect. If, therefore, God thinks us worthy of that fatherly favor, then we have
a sure confidence of safety.
Afterwards he adds,
And they shall not return to the
land of Israel: and ye shall know that I am
Jehovah. Ezekiel here places an outward mark as
the sign of reprobation, since, while a free return was permitted to others,
these were excluded. Hence Ezekiel signifies that God’s anger would be
manifest in the case of false prophets by their exclusion from the benefits
common to the people. For when God shall open the door, and promulgate an edict
concerning a free return: they shall remain exiles, and shall never enjoy that
native country to which they boasted that they should in a short time return. He
confirms then by an outward symbol what he has already said about reprobation.
For although many died in exile who were real members of the Church, as Daniel
and his allies, and many others, yet., as far as these deceivers were concerned,
it was a sure sign of their rejection that they boasted of their speedy return
to their country. Since, therefore, they were deprived of that advantage, God
openly shows that they were unworthy of being reckoned among the elect people.
It follows —
|
EZEKIEL
13:10-11
|
|
10. Because, even because they have seduced my
people, saying, Peace; and there was no peace; and one built up a wall,
and, lo, others daubed it with untempered, mortar:
|
10. Propterea et
propterea f283
quod deceperunt populum meum dicendo, pax et
non erat pax: et ipse aedificavit parietem, et ecce ipsi leverunt ipsum
insipido.
|
|
11. Say unto them which daub it with
untempered mortar, that it shall fall: there shall be an overflowing
shower; and you, O great hailstones, shall fall; and a stormy wind shall rend
it.
|
11. Dic ad linentes insipido,
cadet:
f284 erit pluvia vel imber inundans:
et dabo lapides grandinis,
f285 et spiritus turbinum vel
tempestatum scindet vel disrumpet.
|
Here Ezekiel pursues the same metaphor which he had
used with a very slight difference, for there is such an agreement that the
connection is apparent between the former and the present sentence. He had said
that the false prophets did not go up to the breaches, and did not restore the
hedges of the house of Israel: we have explained these words thus —
teachers who discharge their duties honestly and sincerely are like builders,
who, if they see a breach in a wall, instantly and carefully repair it: they are
like gardeners who do not allow either a field or a vineyard to be exposed to
wild beasts. As, then, he had formerly said that these false prophets did not go
up to the breach through their not being affected by the dispersion of the
people, but knowingly and willingly betrayed the people’s safety through
open and gross perfidy; so also he now says, that they built a wall indeed, but
without mortar. The word
lpt,
thephel, “untempered,” is variously explained, but I doubt
not the Prophet meant sand without lime. Jerome thinks it to be mortar without
chaff; but my view is better, namely, that they built only in appearance; and in
this the image which the Prophet now uses differs from the preceding one. He had
said before, they did not go up to the breach; he now grants them more —
that they really built; but it is easy to reconcile the two assertions: since
they did not go up to the breach to provide safety for the people; and yet they
feigned themselves anxious, and seemed as if they wished to restore the ruins.
But while the Prophet merely grants their intention, he adds that they were bad
builders, just as if any one should heap together a quantity of sand, and
moisten it with water, yet it would profit him nothing; for the sand disperses
by itself, and grows solid by lime alone, and thus becomes cement. Therefore the
Prophet means that those impostors accomplish nothing seriously; and when they
show great anxiety and care, that is in vain, because they only heap up sand and
dust when they ought to temper the mortar with sand and lime. We understand then
how these two places mutually agree:
because, even because they have
deceived my people: this is without a figure.
Now he adds figuratively, they
have built up a wall, but they have daubed it only with untempered
mortar, that is, sand.
The kind of fallacies are now mentioned:
because they said, Peace,
when there was no peace. We yesterday reminded
you that impostors have something in common with God’s true servants, just
as Satan transforms himself into an angel of light.
(<471114>2
Corinthians 11:14.) We know that all the prophets were always messengers of
peace: now this agrees chiefly with the good news, How beautiful are the feet of
those who preach the gospel of peace.
(<235207>Isaiah
52:7;
<451015>Romans
10:15.) Whenever God commends his own word, he adds its character of peace. For
when he is justly at enmity with us, there is one way of reconciliation and
remission of sin. This springs from the preaching of the gospel. The prophets
formerly discharged this duty; and when these impostors strove to deceive the
people, they stripped off their masks and deceived the simple through the
difficulty of discerning between themselves and the true servants of God. And
yet, as we said yesterday, no one could be deceived except through their own
fault. For God, indeed, offers us peace, and invites us to reconciliation by his
own prophets; but on this condition, that we make war with our own lusts. This,
then, is one way of being at peace with God by becoming enemies to ourselves,
and fighting earnestly against the depraved and vicious desires of the flesh.
But how do false prophets preach peace? Why! so that miserable and abandoned men
may sleep in the midst of their sins. We must diligently attend, then, to this
difference, that we may safely embrace the peace which is offered us by true
prophets, and be on our guard against the snares of those who fallaciously
flatter us with peace, because under promise of reconciliation they foment
hostilities between God and ourselves.
How, then, can it happen that we can be at rest while
God is opposed to us? Thou shalt
say, therefore, to those
who daub with untempered mortar,
it shall fall. Here the Spirit signifies that
the false prophets should be subject to the greatest ridicule, when they shall
be convicted by the event, and their is shall be proved by clear proof. Hence,
also, we may gather the utility of the doctrine which Paul teaches, that we must
stand bravely when God gives the reins to impostors to disturb or disperse the
Church. They shall not proceed any further, says he.
(<550309>2
Timothy 3:9.) He says elsewhere in the same epistle,
(<550313>2
Timothy 3:13,) They shall wax worse and worse; that is, as far as God pleases to
be patient with them. But meanwhile the end is at hand, when the Lord shall
shame all the impious false prophets, and detect their ignorance, rashness, and
audacity, because they dared to use his name in offering peace to the reprobate.
Thou shalt
say, therefore,
the wall shall
fall. He speaks here of doctrine.
There shall be an overflowing
shower, says he — a desolating rain. Here
the Spirit signifies that there shall be a violent concussion which shall
disperse all the artifices of the false prophets, and detect their frauds, when
the Lord should bring on the Chaldaeans, and deliver the city to them. Hence the
same meaning is intended by the
shower, by stones, by the rush of a whirlwind,
but it was necessary to express the same thing in many ways, because the
Israelites had grown torpid through their fallacies, and willingly seized upon
what the false prophets said — that God would be propitious to them. After
he had mentioned the shower, he goes on to hailstones. The more probable reading
is, Ye, O great hailstones, shall fall; unless perhaps it is better to take the
verb
hnlpt,
thephelneh, transitively, as I am inclined to do,
ye shall make
fall. This apostrophe is emphatic, because God
addresses the stones themselves, and thereby obliquely reproves the sloth of
those who thought to escape in safety through their blandishments. When God,
therefore, addresses the stones, he doubtless reproaches the Israelites for
hardening themselves so completely. He adds the violence of whirlwinds, or of
tempests, in the same sense. The
violence of the whirlwinds, then, shall
break
down or overthrow
the
wall. In conclusion, Ezekiel teaches that the
doctrine of the false prophets had no need of any other refutation, that the
arrival of the Chaldaeans, and their boasting, is like a storm and whirlwind to
devastate the whole land: and thus he derides those praters who used their
tongues so audaciously: he says that those strangers should come to refute these
lies, not by words only, but by a violent attack. It follows
—
|
EZEKIEL
13:12
|
|
12. Lo, when the wall is fallen, shall it not
be said unto you, Where is the daubing wherewith you have daubed
it?
|
12. Et ecce cadet
paries,
f286 annon dicetur ad vos, ubi
litura
f287 quam levistis.
|
He confirms the last sentence, namely, that the false
prophets would be a laughing-stock to all when their prophecies and divinations
came to nothing, for the event would show them to be liars. For when the city
was taken it sufficiently appeared that they were the devil’s ministers of
deceit, for they were trained in wickedness and boldness when they put forth the
name of God. Now the Prophet teaches that a common proverb would arise when the
wall fell; for by saying, shall
it not be said to them, he signifies that their
folly and vanity would be completely exposed, so that this proverb should be
everywhere current — where
is the daubing with which you daubed it? It
follows —
|
EZEKIEL
13:13
|
|
13. Therefore thus says the Lord God, I will
even rend it with a stormy wind in my fury; and there shall be an overflowing
shower in mine anger, and great hailstones in my fury, to consume
it.
|
13. Propterea sic dicit Dominator Iehovah.
Cadere faciam
f288 spiritum tempestatum in ira mea: et
imbre inundans in ira mea: et erit imber inundans in ira
mea,
f289 et lapides grandinis in excandescentia
ad consumptionem.
|
He still pursues the same sentiment; but he says he
will send forth storms and hail, and a whirlwind. He formerly spoke of hail, and
showers, and violent storms; but he now says, that those winds, storms, and
showers should be at hand to obey him. We see, therefore, that this verse does
not differ from the former, unless in God’s showing more clearly that he
would send forth storms, whirlwind, and hail to overthrow the empty building
which the false prophets had raised. It follows —
|
EZEKIEL
13:14
|
|
14. So will I break down the wall that you
have daubed with untempered mortar, and bring it down to the ground, so
that the foundation thereof shall be discovered, and it shall fall, and ye shall
be consumed in the midst thereof; and you shall know that I am the
Lord.
|
14. Et evertam parietem quem levistis
insipido, et projiciam in terram, et discooperietur fundamentum ejus, et cadet:
et consumemini in medio ejus: et cognoscetis quod ego Iehovah.
|
This verse ought to be united with the other: God
says, I will throw down the
wall. For the false prophets had acquired so
much favor, that their boasting was as much esteemed as an oracle. Hence the
people were persuaded that what even these impostors dreamt was uttered by God.
Since, therefore, they had so bound men’s minds to themselves, the Prophet
was obliged to inveigh vehemently against those impostures, since he would not
have succeeded by simple language. This language, indeed, may seem superfluous;
but if any one considers how greatly these miserable exiles were deluded by the
false prophets, he will easily acknowledge that God does not repeat the same
thing so often in vain: as in this place he brings forward nothing new; but he
so inculcates what we have already seen as to confirm it.
I will pull
down, therefore,
the wall which you have daubed
with untempered mortar, and I will lay it low on the ground, and its foundation
shall be uncovered, or discovered. Here the
Prophet signifies that God would so lay bare the fallacies of those who had
deceived the people with vain hopes, that no disguise should remain for them,
but their disgrace should be plain to every one. Now, such was the shamelessness
of these impostors, that if they were convicted on one point, yet they did not
desist on that account, but took credit to themselves if anything turned out
more fortunately than they could
expect,
f290 as if they had not prophesied in vain,
while a single thing came true. Since, therefore, the impious so turned their
backs when God detected their folly, the Prophet adds, that the false prophets
would have nothing left, because God will not only overthrow whatever they
seemed to build, but he will uncover even the foundations, so that the people
may understand that there was not a scruple or the least particle of truth in
them.
And it shall fall, and you shall be
consumed in the midst of it. He had just said
that it should be ruinously consumed: hailstones, he said, should fall to
consume it; by which word he understood that the final slaughter should be so
severe that no hope should be left. For as long as Jerusalem stood, the
Israelites always look forward to a return. But when they saw the kingdom not
only weakened, but utterly destroyed, the temple overthrown, and the city
ruined, whenever they heard of their dreadful dispersion, not the slightest
remnant of hope survived. Now this consumption is transferred to the false
prophets. As that consumption was final, and without a gleam of hope,
ye shall be
consumed, says
he, in the midst of it, and ye
shall know that I am Jehovah. He does not
inculcate this particular so often in vain; but he inveighs with indignation
against the wicked audacity of the false prophets, who dared so petulantly to
oppose themselves to the true servants of God, and to assume his name, and to
trifle with him like children. Such is the prodigious madness of mortals who
dare to set themselves against God: for this reason, he says, they shall at
length perceive with whom they have to do. It follows —
|
EZEKIEL
13:15
|
|
15. Thus will I accomplish my wrath upon the
wall, and upon them that have daubed it with untempered mortar; and will say
unto you, The wall is no more, neither they that daubed it.
|
15. Et complebo excandescentiam meam in
pariete et linentem ipsum insipido: et dicam illis non est paries, et non sunt
qui leverunt ipsum.
|
If the inveterate obstinacy of the people had not
been known to us, Ezekiel would seem too verbose, since he might have said in a
few words what he explains at such length. But if we bear in mind the perverse
and refractory disposition of the people, we shall find that there was need of
such continual repetition, I will
fulfill, says he,
my burning wrath upon the
wall; that is, I will show how detestable and
destructive to my people was this doctrine. Hence God fined up his anger on the
wall, when he reduced to nothing all the lies of the false prophets: afterwards
also he attacked them, since the mark of disgrace was attached to their
characters, and this rendered their doctrine detestable: afterwards, says he,
I will say, There is no wall;
those who daubed it are not. When God speaks
thus, he means that he will suffer the false prophets to triumph among the
people for only a short time. For even to the destruction of the city and temple
they always withstood God’s servants with a bold forehead, as if they
would thrust their horns against God and his announcements. Let us observe,
then, that while Jerusalem was standing, the appearance of a wall existed; for
there was the prop of false doctrine, and the people fed willingly on such
deceits. Their daubing, therefore, stood till it vanished with the ruin of the
city, and then their vanity was proved, for God took vengeance on these insolent
triflers. It follows —
|
EZEKIEL
13:16
|
|
16. To wit, the prophets of Israel,
which prophesy concerning Jerusalem, and which see visions of peace for her, aid
there is no peace, says the Lord God.
|
16. Prophetae Israel prophetarunt de
Hierusalem, et viderunt ei visionem pacis, et non est pax, dicit Dominator
Iehovah.
|
He now concludes this discourse, and shows what he
had hitherto intended by a building badly cemented, by using sand without lime.
The prophets of Israel prophesied
concerning Jerusalem. Here he does not mean
false prophets, with whom Jeremiah was continually contending, but those who in
exile still hardened the wretched. While they thought to make use of the
occasion, and so to humble the people who had been so grievously wounded by the
hand of God, they stirred them up to pride, as we have formerly seen. Our
Prophet was obliged to strive with them for the comfort of his exiles, for he
was peculiarly sent to the captives, as we have said, although the advantage of
his prophecies also reached Jerusalem.
The
prophets, those
of
Israel, that is, the ten tribes dispersed in
different directions, prophesied
concerning Jerusalem. Why then did they not
rather predict a happy result? For they were reduced to extremes, and meanwhile
promised victory to the Jews. And
they saw a vision, for it, says he. This clause
seems opposed to another, in which the Prophet says that they saw nothing. How,
then, do these two things agree — to see a vision, and yet to see
nothing’? What he now says as to
seeing a
vision refers to their false boasting. For they
were altogether without the Spirit of God, nor did they possess any revelation.
Yet when they boasted themselves to be endowed with the Spirit, and many had
faith in their words, the Prophet concedes to them the name of a vision,
although there was none, by accommodation. He says, therefore,
that they saw a
vision, that is, that they boasted in one since
they professed to be spiritual. As at this time the Papists deny that they utter
anything out of their own minds, and say that they have all those fictions, by
which they adulterate all piety, from the Holy Spirit; so these prophets said
they were spiritual: and as far as the title is concerned, the Prophet grants
what in reality he disallows when he adds,
there was no peace when they said
there was peace. Hence it appears that a vision
was in their mouth united with sacrilegious boldness: yet there was no vision;
because, if God had manifested anything by his Spirit, he would really have
proved it as he says by Moses.
(<051803>Deuteronomy
18:32.) Since, then, there was no peace, but the final overthrow of the city was
at hand, it is easily collected that they saw nothing, but made false use of
that sacred name of vision to acquire confidence for themselves. As to his
saying there is no peace, it extends to the future. They promised peace by
saying that the siege of the city was to be raised, and prosperity to await the
Jews. But God, on the other hand, pronounces there should be no peace, because
it will shortly be evident that Jerusalem is devoted to utter
destruction.
PRAYER.
Grant, Almighty God, since we do not
cease to provoke thee by our sins, that we may at length consider our wretched
condition, unless you govern us by thy Spirit, and subject us to thyself in true
obedience: and may we so desire to be reconciled to thee, that we may not
flatter ourselves, but being altogether humbled and emptied of self, may we fly
to thy mercy with a true feeling of piety: and so find what is prepared for us
in Christ Jesus our Lord. — Amen.
LECTURE
THIRTY-SIXTH.
|
EZEKIEL
13:17-18
|
|
17. Likewise, you son of man, set thy face
against the daughters of thy people, which prophesy out of their own heart; and
prophesy you against them,
|
17. Et tu fliesi hominis, pone faciem tuam
contra filias populi tui, quae prophetant ex corde suo: et propheta contra
eas.
|
|
18. And say, Thus saith, the Lord God, Woe to
the women that sew pillows to all arm-holes, and make kerchiefs upon the head of
every stature, to hunt souls! Will you hunt the souls of my people, and will you
save the souls alive that come unto you?
|
18. Et dices, sic dicit Dominator Iehovah, Vae
consuentibus pulvillos super omnes cubitos manus, et facientibus
pepla
f291 super caput omnis staturae ad venandum
animas: in animas venabimini a populo
meo,
f292 et animas quae vobis
sunt
f293 vivificabitis.
|
WE may gather from this passage that Satan’s
lies were not spread among the people so much by men as by women. We know that
the gift of prophecy is sometimes though rarely allowed to women, and there is
no doubt that female prophets existed whenever God wished to brand men with a
mark of ignominy as strongly as possible. I say as much as possible, because the
sister of Moses enjoyed the prophetic gift, and this never ceased to the
reproach of her brother.
(<021520>Exodus
15:20.) But when Deborah and Huldah discharged the prophetic office,
(<070404>Judges
4:4, and
<122214>2
Kings 22:14,) God doubtless wished to raise them on high to shame the men, and
obliquely to show them their slothfulness. Whatever may be the reason, women
have sometimes enjoyed the prophetic gift. And this is the meaning of
Joel’s second chapter,
(<290228>Joel
2:28,)Your sons shall see visions and your daughters shall prophesy. There is no
doubt that the Spirit transfers to the kingdom of Christ what had been customary
among the ancient people. For we know that Christ’s kingdom is described,
or rather depicted, under the image of that government which God formerly held
under the law. Since, then, certain women were gifted with the prophetic spirit,
Satan, according to his custom, abused this under a false pretense. We know that
he always emulates God and transforms himself into an angel of light, because if
he were to show himself openly, all would instantly flee from him: hence he uses
God’s name deceptively, to ingratiate himself among the simple and
incautious. And he not only sends forth false prophets to scatter abroad their
lies and impostures, but he turns even females to the same injurious
use.
Here we see how anxiously we ought to guard against
any corruption which may creep in to contaminate the pure gifts of God. But this
contest seems not to have been sufficiently honorable to the servant of God; for
it was almost a matter of shame when they engaged with women. We know that those
who desire praise for their bravery do not willingly engage with unequal
antagonists who have no strength to resist; since there is no praise in a
victory when it is too easy: so also Ezekiel could put away from him this
undertaking, since it was unworthy of the prophetic office. Hence it appears,
that God’s servants cannot faithfully discharge the duties assigned to
them, unless they strive to remove all impediments. This then is the condition
of all those to whom God assigns the office of teaching, that they may oppose
all false doctrines and errors, and never consider or wish for great praise from
their victory: it should suffice them to assert God’s truth against all
Satan’s devices. Thus we see Paul strove with a workman (Demetrius),
(<441924>Acts
19:24,) and that was all but ridiculous: and truly he might seem not
sufficiently to regard his dignity; for from the time when he saw secret things
which it was not lawful for him to utter, and was carried up to the third
heaven,
(<471204>2
Corinthians 12:4,) when he engages in a contest with a craftsman, he seems to
forget that dignity to which God had raised him. But we must remember the reason
which I have mentioned, that as the duty of teaching is assigned to God’s
servants, so they are appointed as his avengers and defenders of the doctrine of
which they are heralds. Hence if, so to speak, fleas were to come out of the
earth and rail at sound doctrine, none who are influenced by a desire of
edification will hesitate to contend even with those fleas. Thus the
Prophet’s modesty is conspicuous, because by God’s command he turns
to these weak women to refute even them.
It is said, then, woe to those
who sew pillows or
cushions; it is the same thing —
to all armholes, and to those who
make covers for the head of every stature.
There is no doubt that by these tricks they deluded the minds and eyes of the
simple. It is evident from the law that some ceremonies are useful, since God
commands nothing superfluous; but Satan by his cunning turns everything useful
to man’s destruction. Meanwhile we must remark that false prophets were
always immoderately fond of outward signs; for since they have nothing
substantial to offer, they have need of ostentation to dazzle all eyes. This
then is the reason why men and women who intend to deceive, always heap together
a number of ceremonies. Hence Ezekiel says,
that those women had sown
together pillows, and he adds, for all
armholes. Whence it appears that they laid them
under the armpits of those by whom they were consulted, although he afterwards
seems to hint that they themselves reclined upon these pillows. But now he is
treating of the people. The ancients were accustomed when they reclined at table
to have cushions under their arms, though this is not our habit. But there is no
doubt that they wished to represent a kind of sleep, like the foolish who
consult oracles, and think themselves in ecstasies, and snatched away beyond all
thoughts of this world. Then they had veils or coverings which they put over
their heads. In this way imposture flourished with the Roman augurs; for they
veiled their head when they wished to begin their incantations. Livy says, that
the augur stood at the threshold with his head covered, and uttered these words,
“O Jupiter, hear;”
f294 so that it is probable that veils
covered the heads of those who wished to consult God, that they might be as it
were separated from the world, and no longer look upon human things, but have
only spiritual eyesight. With this view these women used such ceremonies that
wretched men thought themselves caught up above the world, and all earthly
thoughts being laid aside, they dozed so as to receive the oracles, and at the
same time had the head covered to avoid everything which might call them off and
distract them, and to be wholly intent on spiritual
meditations.
As to his saying,
upon all arms, and upon the head
of every stature. I doubt not that the Prophet
teaches by these words that these women exercised a promiscuous trade, making no
distinctions, but, gratifying all without choice, so long as they brought their
money in their hands, as we shall by and by see. Hence this mark of universality
ought to be noticed emphatically, because these women did not attend to the
disposition with which persons came, but only grasped at their reward, and thus
the gate was as open to all as that of the market-place. For shops are open to
all, since all are expected to promote profit and make bargains, and merchants
by their allurements entice as many as they can to purchase their goods. So also
veils were provided for all heads and cushions for all arms, for there was no
difference except in reference to profit from these profane and base
transactions. With regard to the word “stature,” the opinion of
those who think it used, because the women ordered those who consulted the
oracles to stand, appears to me forced, and not in accordance with the
Prophet’s intention. I have no doubt that, the Prophet uses the word for
“age,” or person, as others correctly interpret it; as if he had
said, that they made no difference between old and young, tall and short, but
prostituted their answers to all from whom they looked for
gain.
It afterwards follows,
Is it not to hunt
souls? Here God reproves one crime, but he will
shortly add another, namely, the profanation of his sacred name. But he here
speaks only of the death of souls, as if he said that the women laid those
snares to deceive wretched souls. And because Ezekiel was commanded to, prophesy
against them, he here addresses them more vehemently —
Will ye hunt the souls of my
people? It is literally the souls which
belong to my people; but it will be more simple to receive it thus —
will ye hunt the souls of my
people, and will ye give life to your own
souls, unless any one wishes to interpret it so
as to make the Prophet repeat the same thing twice. For the souls of the people
were also their own. For as we shall afterwards see, no one is deceived by the
devil unless he offers himself of his own accord, and entangles himself in his
snares on purpose. Since then it is always true that wretched men who catch at
vain oracles devote themselves to the devil and his ministers, hence the passage
may be explained in this way. But the sense which I have proposed is more
simple, namely, that these women must not be yielded to
because they have hunted the
souls of the people; as if the Prophet had
said, the people are precious to God, who has undertaken the care of them. Thus
then he reasons; such is your audacity, nay, even fury, that you doubt not to
seize upon God’s people: since therefore your impiety is so licentious and
bold, will God suffer you to rage with impunity against the souls of which he is
the guardian? Lastly, he signifies that punishment is prepared for the women who
ensnare God’s people, because although those who are deceived are worthy
of death, yet God will still exact punishment of Satan’s ministers who
have endeavored to despoil him of his rights. It, follows
—
|
EZEKIEL
13:19
|
|
19. And will you pollute me among my people
for handfuls of barley, and for pieces of bread, to slay the souls that should
not die, and to save the souls alive that should not live, by your lying to my
people that hear your lies?
|
19. Et profanastis me erga populum meum in
pugillis hordeorum
f295 propter
frusta
f296 panis: ut occidaris animas quae non
moriebantur, et ad vivificandum animas quae non vivebant, decipiendo populum
meum audientes mendacium.
F297
|
Here God accuses these women of a double crime; one
crime was that which I have mentioned, cruelly to destroy the souls which were
sacred to God, and hence were destined to be saved; but he added a more
atrocious crime — that of sacrilege, because they had abused the name of
God to deceive. Nothing is less tolerable than when God’s truth is turned
into a lie, because this is like reducing him to nothing. God is truth; if,
therefore, that is abolished, what else will remain behind? God will be, as it
were, a dead specter. Hence the Prophet, in God’s name, complains of
both: ye have profaned
me, says he,
before my
people. For as the gift of prophecy was a rare
and remarkable pledge of God’s love and paternal anxiety towards the
Israelites, so when that gift was corrupted, the name of God was at the same
time polluted. For God was never willing to be disjoined from his word, because
he is himself invisible, and never appears otherwise than in a mirror. Hence
God’s glory, and sanctity, and justice, and goodness, and power, ought to
shine in the gift of prophecy; but when that gift is contaminated, we see how
such a disgrace becomes a reproach against God. In this way his holiness is
defiled, his justice, virtue, and fidelity, are corrupted, and his very
existence called in question. So it is not without cause that God pronounces
his own name to be
polluted. Then he adds,
among the
people. And this circumstance increases the
crime, since God’s name was profaned where he wished it to be peculiarly
worshipped; for it was also profaned among the Gentiles: but since God had never
made himself known there, their profanation was the less detestable. But,
because God erected his throne among the people of Israel, and wished his glory
to shine there, we see how sacrilege increases, while his name is profaned in
that sanctuary which he had chosen. This is one crime.
But he also adds,
on account of handfuls of barley
and pieces of bread. Here God shows how much
and how basely he was despised by those females, who sold their prophecies for a
piece of bread or a few grains of barley which any one could hold in his hand.
If they had demanded a great reward, their insatiable avarice would not have
extenuated their crime; but their impiety is the rather discovered, when on
account of a small reward they so prostituted themselves and the name of God.
They boasted themselves to be the organs of the Holy Spirit: but when by this
mask they deceived the people, injustice was done to the Holy Spirit, since for
so paltry a reward they vainly boasted in their prophecies. They prostituted
even God himself: and in fine, this was just as if; being corrupted by a small
bribe of no value, they did not treat God’s name with sufficient respect
to be withheld from the crime by the slightest of the recompense. A comparison
will make the matter clearer. If a person is tempted by a moderate reward to the
perpetration of any crime and refuses, and then when he is offered a far more
valuable reward, and thus yields to the temptation, this shows that his will was
upright, though not sufficiently firm. But if any one, for a single farthing,
undertakes to do what he is ordered, and refuses no crime, this shows his
readiness to all sorts of wickedness. If a girl rejects bribes when she knows
her modesty to be assailed, but yet yields for a large reward, here, as I have
said, virtue struggles with vice; but if she prostitutes herself for a morsel of
bread, here she manifests that depravity which all abominate. This, then, is
God’s intention, when he says that these women traded in their lies for
handfuls of barley and pieces of bread. If any one objects that prophecies were
anciently saleable, since it was customary with the people to offer the prophets
rewards, I answer, that the women are not condemned merely for receiving either
the handful of barley or the piece of bread, but because they did not hesitate
to corrupt God’s truth for a trifling gain, and then to turn it into a
lie. The Prophet afterwards points out the nature of their deceit, for it would
not have been sufficient to blame these women generally, unless Ezekiel had
pointed with his finger at their pestiferous impostures.
Now, therefore, he says,
that they slew the souls which
were not dying, and kept alive the souls which were not
living. We have said before, that by this mark
the true and righteous servants of God were distinguished from impostors. For
the servants of God, who faithfully discharge the duty enjoined upon them, kill
and make alive: for God’s word is life, and brings health to lost mankind;
but is a savor of death unto death in those who perish, as Paul says.
(<470215>2
Corinthians 2:15, 16.) Hence it is true that prophets who faithfully and
properly discharge their duty both kill and make alive: but they give life to
the souls which are to be freed from death, and slay the souls which are devoted
to destruction; for they denounce eternal death to all unbelievers unless they
repent; and whatever they bind on earth is also bound in heaven.
(<401818>Matthew
18:18.) Their teaching, therefore, is effective for destruction, as also Paul
elsewhere teaches. We have at hand, says he, vengeance against every high thing
which exalts itself against Christ,
(<471005>2
Corinthians 10:5, 6.) Hence honest teachers are armed by God’s vengeance
against all unbelievers who remain obstinate: but they convey life to those who
repent, since they are messengers of reconciliation; nay, they reconcile men to
God when they offer Christ to them as our peace, and by whom the Father is
propitious to us.
(<490216>Ephesians
2:16.) When false prophets desire to rival God’s servants, they omit the
principal part, namely, faith and repentance; hence it happens that they
proclaim life to souls already adjudged to destruction; for they give life to
the reprobate who are hardened in contempt of God by their flatteries; for they
do not require of men either faith or penitence, but only a reward. Hence also
it happens that they slay the souls which ought not to die, namely, because
nothing is prouder or more cruel than these false prophets. For they fulminate
according to their pleasure, and sink even to the lowest hell the whole world
when no hope of profit appears.
Here then we see the vices of these women of whom
Ezekiel treats so pointedly out, that no one need be any longer deceived by them
except through his own fault. Hence also we gather a perpetual rule in examining
doctrine, lest the deceits of Satan should surprise us for the word of God. Let
us learn, then, that the prophetic word is life-giving to us, if we are
dissatisfied with our sins, and fly to God’s pity with true and serious
penitence; for all souls are slain who do not receive this kind of life; and
whoever compares the papacy with that corruption which Ezekiel describes to us,
will see that, although Satan has many methods of deceiving men, yet they will
always be discovered like himself. Ezekiel spoke of veils and cushions. We see
many rites exhibited in the papacy, so that the incredulous, being snatched as
it were out of the world, are not only delirious, but suffer themselves to be
drawn in any direction like cattle by the grossest impostures. But in their
teaching we perceive what Ezekiel condemns, namely, that they give life to souls
devoted to death, and slay souls which thought to be kept alive. For what is the
meaning of their immense heap of laws, except to bury wretched consciences? For
any one who wishes to satisfy the laws of the papacy from his heart, must cut
himself to pieces, so to speak, through his whole life. We now perceive with
what intent our Prophet will elsewhere say that legislators of this kind are
implacable, since they remit nothing, and exact all their conditions with the
utmost rigor. Hence it happens that these miserable souls perish, because
despair oppresses them and overwhelms them in the deep. Meanwhile we see how
they give life to souls subject to death, since; pardon is prepared for
adulterers, robbers, manslayers, and all criminals, if they only buy themselves
off, as popish priests and monks pretend that God is appeased by satisfactions
and prayers. Hence they thrust expiation’s of no value upon God; and, to
speak more correctly, trifles and follies, which do not deceive even children,
they call expiation’s, as if God could change his nature. Hence we must
diligently remark this passage, that we may know how to distinguish between true
and false prophets, and may not despise the test which the Prophet puts before
us.
He says,
in deceiving my people by
listening to a lie. He accuses some of lying,
and others of willingly embracing is. For the noun
bzk,
kezeb, which is repeated, is derived from the same root. Here, again, God
undertakes the cause of his people; for though they were all worthy of being
drawn into exile by Satan, yet when God took care of them, it was like snatching
them out of Satan’s hand, and claiming them as his own peculiar people.
This is one point. But meantime these wretches are deprived of all excuse for
seeking false oracles. For the Prophet pronounces them deceived
because they listened to
vanity, that is, because they wished to be
deceived, since it was entirely their own fault, and they could not in any way
throw it off. It is true they were deceived under false pretenses through the
abuse of the prophetic name, and hence their vision was obscured by a darkened
cloud; but still they thought to have gone to the fountain, for no opening would
have been found for Satan if they had been properly fortified: for God had
surrounded them with ramparts by giving them a law to protect them from all
fallacies. Since, then, they thus exposed themselves of their own accord, it is
not surprising if God allowed them to be deceived.
|
EZEKIEL
13:20
|
|
20. Wherefore thus says the Lord God, Behold,
I am against your pillows, wherewith you there hunt the souls to make them fly,
and I will tear them from your arms, and will let the souls go, even the souls
that you hunt to make them fly.
|
20. Propterea sic dicit Dominator Iehovah,
Ecce, ego ad vestros pulvillos quibus vos venamini illic animas ad volandum; et
lacerabo eos desuper brachiis vestris, et eruam animas quas vos venamini, animas
ad volandum.
|
Here Ezekiel begins to threaten those women with what
would shortly happen, namely, that God would not only render them contemptible,
but also ridiculous, before the whole people, that their delusions and
impostures might sufficiently appear. This is the Prophet’s intention, as
we shall afterwards see; but the Prophet is verbose in this denunciation. God
therefore says, that he is an
enemy to those cushions, that is, to those
false ceremonies which were like cloaks to deceive miserable men: hence he says,
that those souls were a prey. He uses the comparison from hunting:
ye have
hunted, says he,
the souls of my
people. And this is the meaning of the word
used immediately afterwards for
flying. This word
jrp,
pherech, signifies also “to flourish;” but I here willingly
subscribe to the opinion of all who interpret it to fly: unless the paraphrast
is right in translating it “to perish;” for he thought the Prophet
was speaking metaphorically, as if he meant that those souls were ensnared, and
so vanished away. But I do not think this quite suitable, since it is more
probable that the Prophet is speaking of their lofty speculations. For we know
that false prophets boasted in this artifice, when they either raise, or pretend
they raise, men’s minds aloft, and curious men desire this only; and hence
it happens that the doctrines of the Law and the Gospel are insipid to them,
because subtleties alone delight them. And we see at this day how many embrace
the follies of Dionysius
f298 about the celestial hierarchy, who treat
all the prophets, and even Christ himself, as of no value. Hence the Prophet
says, that these women hunted the
souls of the people, because they had snares
prepared in which they entangled all who were subject to their impostures and
fallacies. Yet, in my opinion, he also alludes to birds. When, therefore, he has
said that all impostures were Satan’s method of hunting souls, he now adds
obliquely another simile, that all false prophecies are so many allurements to
catch birds. The sense of the passage now appears clear.
Behold,
therefore, says he, God will
arise against your cushions, by which you have hunted birds to make them
fly; that is, when you promised wonderful
revelations those wretched dupes whom their own curiosity urged on were deceived
by such enticements. Afterwards he adds,
I will free them from your arms,
and
I will let go the souls which you
have hunted to make them fly, says he. He
repeats again what we have already said about deep speculations, by the
sweetness of which false prophets are accustomed to entice all fools who cannot
be content with true doctrine, nor be wise with sobriety. Meanwhile it is by no
means doubtful that God here speaks peculiarly of his elect, who were left among
the people. For although they were but few, God was unwilling for them to
perish: and for this reason he announces that he would be their avenger, and
undeceive them, whether they had been already entrapped, or were just surrounded
by these allurements. Since, then, he uses the same word, we gather from this
that the phrase cannot be used indiscriminately. For God suffers many to perish,
as he says by the Prophet Zechariah, “Let what perishes perish,”
(<380909>Zechariah
9:9); but meanwhile he rescued a small number as the remnant of his choice, as
Paul says.
(<451105>Romans
11:5.)
PRAYER
Grant, Almighty God, since you show us
that our salvation is so precious in thy sight, that through our ingratitude we
may not cast away this testimony of thy favor, but be anxious to listen to thy
instructions: Grant also, that being gifted by thee with the spirit of
discretion, we may not be exposed to capture as a prey; but may we be so ruled
by the light of thy word that we may hold on in the right way, till after our
allotted time is finished we may arrive at that happy repose which is laid up
for us in heaven through Christ our Lord. — Amen.
LECTURE
THIRTY-SEVENTH.
|
EZEKIEL
13:21
|
|
21. Your kerchiefs also will I tear, and
deliver my people out of your hand, and they shall be no more in your hand to be
hunted; and you shall know that I am the Lord.
|
21. Et conscindam pepla
vestra,
f299 et eruam populum meum e manibus vestris:
et non erunt amplius in manibus vestris in praedam: et cognoscetis quod ego
Iehovah.
|
What the Prophet had said concerning the pillows he
now pronounces of the veils, by which they were accustomed to cover either their
own heads, or those of the persons who consulted them. The conclusion is, that
God would put an end to such follies. For the people were so fascinated by these
silly things, that it became necessary to strip away these masks, since these
women were always ready to deceive. He adds also, that he would do that for the
benefit of his own people. We have said that this ought not to be extended
generally to all the sons of Abraham according to the flesh. For God suffered
almost all to perish, as he had said by Isaiah:
“Even if thy people
had been as the sand of the sea-shore, a remnant only shall be saved,”
(<231022>Isaiah
10:22.)
When, therefore, God speaks here concerning his own
people, this sentence ought to be restricted to the elect: as when it is said in
the psalm, How soft and kind is God to his people Israel; and then he adds by
way of correction, to those who are upright in heart,
(<197301>Psalm
73:1,) Since many boasted themselves to be Israelites who are very unlike their
father, and through being degenerate deprived themselves of that honor: hence
the Prophet restricts God’s goodness peculiarly to the elect who are
upright in heart, after he had spoken of the whole people. Although Ezekiel did
not distinctly express what we have cited from the psalm, yet the sense is the
same; and this is easily gathered from the eleventh chapter of the Epistle to
the Romans
(<451105>Romans
11:5, 6), where God sets before us the remnant preserved according to
God’s gratuitous election. For the same sense it is added,
that they should no longer be
for a prey. We have said how these women hunted
these wretched souls, not only for purposes of gain, but also because Satan
abused their fallacies. So, therefore, it happened that these souls were enticed
to their destruction. For this reason God pronounces that they should no longer
be their prey. And he repeats what he had already said,
ye shall know that I am
Jehovah. Here God brings before us his power,
because we know how safely hypocrites allude his sacred name; and this easily
appears in the boldness and licentiousness of these women. Hence God here
threatens them: he says that they should feel at length who had spoken, since
they ridiculed Ezekiel and his other servants. There is, then, a silent
antithesis between God and the prophets; not that God separates himself from his
servants; for the truth, of which they are ministers and heralds, is an
indissoluble bond of union between them; but the language is adapted to the
senses of those with whom the Prophet treats. Now, since these women were so
wanton, he says that he was not despised by them, but God himself. It follows
—
|
EZEKIEL
13:22-23
|
|
22. Because with is you have made the heart of
the righteous sad, whom I have not made sad; and strengthened the hands of the
wicked, that he should not return from his wicked way, by promising him
life;
|
22. Quia contristastis cor justi
mendacio,
f300 et ego non contristaveram
ipsum;
f301 et roborastis manus impii, ut non
converteretur a via sua mala, vivificando ipsum.
|
|
23. Therefore you shall see no more vanity,
nor divine divinations: for I will deliver my people out of your hand; and you
shall know that I am the Lord.
|
23. Propterea mendacium non videbitis, et
divinationem non divinabitis amplius: et eruam populum meum e manu vestra: et
scietis quod ego Iehovah.
|
He explains in other words what we saw yesterday: but
the repetition adds to the weight of the matter. The Prophet therefore shows
that he had a just cause of complaint, because the women so deceived the people.
He says now that they made the
heart of the righteous sad, and strengthened the hands of the
wicked: the sentiment is the same, though the
words are changed. He had previously said that they gave life to those devoted
to death, and slew those destined to life; but now he shows more clearly the
meaning of killing the soul that should not, or ought not to die, when the heart
of the righteous is made sorrowful. By the righteous he means those whom the
false prophets inspired with causeless terror. But why, it is asked, does he say
that the righteous are grieved, since we have formerly taught that no others
were deceived unless those who spontaneously throw themselves into the snares
and traps of Satan? I answer, that the false prophets thundered so, and their
lies were so spread about here and there as to involve the simple: for they
scatter their threats so as to reach all men. Hence they wound weak consciences;
as at this day when the lies of Satan fly about; by which true religion is
corrupted, many simple ones are frightened, for they are destitute of judgment,
and do not distinguish whether God threatens, or man vaunts himself
rashly.
We see, then, how false prophets cause the righteous
sorrow, when they suggest scruples, and, under the penalty of mortal sin,
denounce first one thing and then another: then they deprive them of confidence
in God’s favor, and strike them with various terrors, as we discern
clearly in the papacy of this very day. Let us take that one point which is with
them without controversy, that our confidence springs from our works, and hence
that we cannot determine whether God is propitious to us or not., and thus they
overthrow all assurance of faith. They retain, indeed, the name of faith, but
meantime they wish wretched consciences to vacillate and be turned about with
disquiet, since no one can know whether he can invoke God as a
father.
F302 That confidence which Paul says is
common to all Christians, they call presumption and rashness.
(<490312>Ephesians
3:12.) We see, then, how that point not only grieves the righteous, but disturbs
innocent consciences: for a series of traditions is afterwards added, and the
penalty of eternal death is always annexed. hence it happens that those who wish
to worship God in any other way, when they are thus rendered spiritless, know
not which way to turn: hence also they lose all fear of God, since no one can
seriously reverence God unless he who feels him to be easily entreated, as we
learn from
<19D006>Psalm
130:6.
We now understand what the Holy Spirit means when he
reproves the women because they
made the heart of the righteous sad. It is
added, but I was unwilling to
grieve them. For God’s faithful servants
often inspire terror, but only when necessary. For they cannot otherwise subdue
those who exult in their lusts, and they cannot bring them to obedience unless
they overcome them with fear. Hence even true prophets and evangelists cause
pain, as Paul says: If I have caused you sorrow, I do not repent of it: for so I
thought to do: for there is salutary grief.
(<470708>2
Corinthians 7:8.) Besides, true prophets do not afflict men for nothing; they
only cause anxiety in the minds of those whom God wishes to grieve: hence they
do not fabricate the material for sorrow and pain in their own brain, but
receive it from God’s mouth and the spirit of revelation. Hence the word
righteous
is used, and
falsely
is added, by which particle the severity which true prophets are often compelled
to use is distinguished from the roughness, or rather savage rudeness, of false
prophets. For as I have said, they frighten wretched consciences. But by what
right? by transferring God’s power to themselves; just as at the present
day the Pope with swelling cheeks thunders forth that himself and his throne are
apostolic, and therefore infallible. Since, therefore, false prophets thus
contend by fallacies, the simple are overcome by fear.
It is now added,
that they strengthened the hands
of the impious (literally, of the impious man
in the singular). When the Prophet spoke of the righteous, he used the word
heart: he now uses the word hand, and not without reason. For the false terrors
in which the false prophets indulged, penetrate even to the intimate affections,
and as each is affected by the fear of God, so he becomes afraid of those
threats which he hears uttered in God’s name. We see, then, that it was
said with very good reason that the mind of the righteous was sadly grieved; and
now when he says that he had
strengthened the hands of the impious, he means
that audacity was added, so that not only the wicked always remain obstinate
against God, but they break out in unbridled license, and hesitate not openly to
violate God’s law: for strengthening the hands is more than grieving the
mind. For it may and it does happen, that a man may swell with pride and
contempt of God, and yet modesty may hinder him from basely contaminating
himself with many crimes. But when the hands themselves are engaged in
licentiousness, all evils are heaped together. Now, therefore, we understand the
reason of this difference. In fine, Ezekiel means that the impious had been
hardened by the blandishments of these women, so as not only to despise God in
their minds, but to bear witness through their whole life, that they were openly
and confessedly erecting the standard of war against God. In this sense, then,
he says, that they had
strengthened the hands of the impious.
He adds,
that he should not be
converted. Here he more clearly defines how
those souls which were devoted to
death
f303 were kept alive, since such confidence
was set before them as to lull and stupefy their consciences. He does not say,
then, that the hands of the
impious were strengthened, as in a conspiracy
of the wicked one often assists another, as if they mutually bound their hands
together. But the Prophet now speaks in another sense, namely, that these women
so hardened the wicked that they went on securely in their wickedness, and made
a laughing-stock of God and his law.
You have strengthened the hands
that they should not be converted: but how?
by affording them
life. Hence we gather that men cannot be
humbled otherwise than by placing death before them, because all willingly
indulge themselves, and hypocrisy is so ingrained in us by natural corruption,
that every one readily persuades himself that all things will turn out well.
Unless, therefore, death is presented before our eyes, and God himself appears
as a judge to destroy us, we remain like ourselves, and proceed to still greater
audacity. The Prophet signifies this when he says,
that by giving life to the
impious the false prophets strengthened their
hands, and opposed their repentance altogether.
How so? When the sinner thinks God propitious to him, he is not anxious about
reconciliation, but abuses God’s forbearance, and is daily rendered
bolder, until at last he puts off all sense of fear. Hence this is the true
preparation for conversion, when the sinner is slain; that is, acknowledges
himself liable to the judgment of God, and takes a formidable view of his wrath.
When, therefore, he sees himself lost, then he begins to think of conversion;
but when men sleep over their sins, as I have said, they persist till they
arrive at constant apathy, as Paul says when he remarks that they have no longer
any sense of sorrow.
(<490419>Ephesians
4:19.)
It follows,
you shall not see a lie any
more. He has hitherto explained the reason why
God grew so warm against these women, because they destroyed miserable souls
either by their cruelty or their flatteries, and thus were like false prophets:
now he adds, you shall not see a
lie any more. This ought not to be understood
as if God promised these women a sound mind, so that they should cease to hurt
the people by their lies: but he confirms the sentiment previously expressed,
namely, that they should be subject to the taunts of all men, as boys themselves
acknowledge that what they boasted to be oracles were mere imposture. It is just
as if he had said — I will make you ashamed, so that hereafter you may be
deprived of the use of the prophetic name, as you have hitherto used it.
Although these women persisted in their madness, yet they saw vanity no more,
since it became openly apparent that those wretched ones who trusted in them
were deceived. Lastly, this thought to be adapted not to any change of feeling
in these women, but rather to a failure in the effect. It is just as if any one
were to say to a foolish fellow boasting himself to be a Lawyer or a physician,
— I will take care that you profit no more as either a Lawyer or a
physician; and yet that foolish person should not be able to put away the
opinion which he had ever formed of his own skin. But this is said, because the
mere vanity of his boasting should be evident to all. So also God now speaks.
This addition has the same meaning:
you shall not divine divination
any more. And yet there is no doubt that they
desired by all means to invent new prophecies, and to boast in new revelations:
but they were despised, because God had detected their lies when Jerusalem was
taken, and the people dragged into exile: then because they promised the people
a speedy return, when the same God refuted them by prolonging their exile. When,
therefore, any one suffers the just penalty of his impiety, then the vanity of
those women was detected: in this way they ceased to divine. He repeats —
I will free my people from your
hand: and you shall know that I am Jehovah.
Since I have lately explained this phrase I now pass it by. It follows
—
CHAPTER 14
|
EZEKIEL
14:1-3
|
|
1. Then came certain of the elders of Israel
unto me, and sat before me.
|
1. Et venerunt ad me viri ex senioribus
Israel, et sederunt coram facie
mea.
F304
|
|
2. And the word of the Lord came unto me,
saying,
|
2. Et fuit sermo Iehovae ad me,
dicendo,
|
|
3. Son of man, these men have set up their
idols in their heart, and put the stumbling block of their iniquity before their
face: should I be inquired of at all by them?
|
3. Fili hominis, viri isti ascendere fecerunt
idola sua super cor suum, et offendiculum iniquitatis suae posuerunt coram facie
sua. An quaerendo quaerar
ipsis?
F305
|
Here Ezekiel relates an event worthy of notice. For
this was not a mere vision, but a real transaction, since some of the elders of
Israel came to him for the sake of consultation. He says
that he
sat, as men who are perplexed and astonished by
evils are accustomed to do, when they see no remedy. The gesture then which the
Prophet describes was a sign of anxiety and despair. A person wishing for an
answer is said to sit before another; but since it is probable that they
disputed among themselves about beginning, and did not immediately discover how
they should commence, hence they became anxious to consult the Prophet. Ezekiel,
indeed, might be touched and softened by pity when he saw them seeking God in
this way. For this was a sign of repentance when they turned to the true and
faithful servant of God. But since they had no sincerity, the Prophet is warned
in time against supposing them to come with cordiality. Hence God instructs his
servant not to give way with too much facility when he sees old men coming to be
disciples. But he shows their hypocrisy, because superstition still reigned in
their hearts; nay, they desired openly to violate God’s law, and they did
not disguise this feeling whenever occasion offered. First, he says they
have set up idols in their
hearts; by which words he means that they were
addicted to superstition, so that idols obtained a high rank in their hearts; as
Paul exhorts the faithful, that the peace of God which passes all understanding
may obtain the rule in their hearts
(<500407>Philippians
4:7;
<510315>Colossians
3:15); so on the other hand the Prophet says that these men had given supreme
sway to idols. And again an implied comparison must be remarked between God and
idols. For God has erected the seat of his empire in our hearts: but when we set
up idols, we necessarily endeavor to overthrow God’s throne, and to reduce
his power to nothing. Hence the most heinous crime of sacrilege is here shown in
those old men who caused idols to
rise above their hearts. For hence it follows
that all their senses were drowned in their superstitions.
He adds,
they placed the stumblingblock of
their iniquity before his face. By this second
clause he signifies their hardness and perverseness; as if he had said, although
the doctrine of the law was put before their eyes, yet they had no regard for
piety, and despised even God’s threats, as if he were not going to be
their judge. When, therefore, the sinner is not moved by any admonitions, and is
more than convicted of his impiety, and is compelled, whether he will or not, to
suffer God’s anger, and yet afterwards despises it, he is said
to put the stumbling block of his
iniquity before his face. For many slide away
by error and thoughtlessness, because they do not think they can attempt
anything against God. But here Ezekiel expresses that there was a gross contempt
of God in these old men, and even a professed rebellion against him. Now he
asks, Shall I by inquiring
be inquired of by them? Some translate,
Shall I, when consulted or asked, answer them? But this comment seems to me too
remote from the mind of the Prophet; and it is probable that they thought this
to be the sense, because they could not understand what else the Prophet meant.
But God shows that this was like a wonder, since these old men dared to break
forth, and to pretend to have some desire to inquire the truth. Hence their
impudence is shown here, because they did not hesitate to place themselves
before God’s servant, and to pretend a regard for piety when they had
none. God says, therefore, can it be done? For this question expresses the
absurdity of the thing, and that for the above mentioned purpose, that their
wickedness may be the more apparent in their daring to insult the face of God.
For what else is it than openly to reproach God when impure men approach him,
and wish to become partakers of his counsel? Meanwhile they show by their whole
life that they are most inveterate enemies of the whole heavenly doctrine.
Afterwards it follows —
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EZEKIEL
14:4
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4. Therefore speak unto them, and say unto
them, Thus says the Lord God, Every man of the house of Israel that setteth up
his idols in his heart, and putteth the stumbling- block of his iniquity before
his face, and cometh to the prophet, I the Lord will answer him that cometh
according to the multitude of his idols.
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4. Propterea loquere ad ipsos, et dic illis:
sic Dominator Iehovah, vir vir, domo
Israel,
f306 ascendere fecerit idola sua super cor
suum, et offendiculum iniquitatis suae posuerit coram facie sua: et venerit ad
prophetam: ego Iehovah respondebo
huic
f307 secundum multitudinem idolorum
ejus.
F308
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Here God seems to treat those hypocrites too
indulgently who pretend to ask his advice and yet despise his counsel. But God
here rather threatens what would be destructive to the wicked than promises
anything which they ought to expect. It is indeed a singular testimony of
God’s grace when he answers us: for prophecy is an image of God’s
paternal anxiety towards us and our salvation. But sometimes prophecy only ends
in destruction; and this is but an accident. Although, therefore, God’s
word by itself is naturally to be greatly desired, yet when God answers as a
judge, and takes away all hope of pardon and pity, no taste of his favor can
then be perceived. Thus this passage must be understood. God pronounces that he
would answer, but whom? The reprobate, and those who tauntingly inquired of the
Prophet what they should do. When he answers them, he only shows himself the
avenger of their perfidy; and thus his answer contains nothing else but the
fearful judgment which hangs over all the reprobate. For God does not here
impose a perpetual law on himse