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Ezekiel 9:9 meaning

In a time of intense wickedness in Jerusalem, the Lord conveyed a vision to Ezekiel, revealing the dire consequences of Israel's rampant sin, including bloodshed and moral decay. The people had deluded themselves into believing that God could not see their wicked deeds, thinking His silence signified abandonment. This profound disconnect between divine observation and human action is central in understanding the ensuing judgment pronounced upon the city. The message is clear: choices have consequences, particularly when those choices defy God's laws and inherent goodness. God's impending judgment, however, was not indiscriminate.

In this vision, Ezekiel was instructed to mark those who mourned the abominations and sought righteousness. The emphasis here is on the stark difference between the righteous and the wicked. This delineation serves as a powerful reminder that God takes note of those who seek after Him, providing hope even in judgment. The Lord declared that the wickedness in the land was exceedingly great, affirming that divine justice must prevail. This reflects the ongoing reality that those who strive for holiness and weep over sin are seen and preserved by God, even amid widespread judgment: The iniquity of the house of Israel and Judah is exceeding great, and the land is full of blood, and the city full of perverseness: for they say, The Lord hath forsaken the earth, and the Lord seeth not. (Ezekiel 9:9).

Other Relevant Commentaries:

  • Revelation 19:11-16 meaning. John sees the moment of Jesus’s second coming. In contrast to Christ’s first advent (that of a poor suffering servant, born in a stable, riding a donkey), now Christ comes down from Heaven on a white horse, His eyes flaming with fire, crowned with many crowns, His robe dipped in blood, and armies of heaven following Him on white horses. He comes to judge and to wage war on His enemies, a sword proceeding from His mouth. He will rule with a rod of iron, and will crush the antichrist and his followers like grapes in a wine press. He is the King of all kings, and the Lord over all lords.
  • Matthew 22:41-46 meaning. With aid of Psalm 110, Jesus asks the Pharisees a series of questions about how the Messiah is both the Lord of David and his son? The Pharisees have no response, and Jesus’s enemies are afraid to publicly confront Him.
  • Isaiah 37:21-32 meaning. God responds to Hezekiah’s petition through Isaiah the son of Amoz