Ezekiel
18: is a marvelous chapter on the fairness and justice of God. Its
message is in an Old Testament setting, but it portrays an attribute
of God which is unchanged; and it should be read today — with care.
The
Israelites had a proverb: “The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and
the children’s teeth are set on edge” —by which they blamed their
troubles on an earlier generation. God said, yes, your fathers
sinned, but “ye have done evil more than your fathers.” “Every one
shall die for his own iniquity: every man that eateth the sour
grapes, his teeth shall be set on edge.” (Jer.
16:l0-f. 31:29-30)
“The
soul that sinneth, it shall die: the son shall not bear the iniquity
of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the
son.” The physical and environmental consequences of one
generation’s sin may affect generations to come
(Ex. 20:5, 34:7)
but God categorically denies that the guilt of one is passed to
another. By one man (Adam) sin entered the world, and so spiritual
death; but all die (spiritually) “for that all have sinned.”
(Rom. 5:12)
THE
death (see Greek) and THE righteousness (the extremes, viewed
metaphorically) are through or by Adam and Christ respectively. But
we are condemned as individuals, on the basis of individual sins;
and made righteous, through forgiveness, as we individually come to
Christ.
(Rom. 5:17-21, Acts 2:38-41)
As Ezekiel records: “Therefore I will judge you, O house of Israel,
every one according to his ways, saith the Lord Jehovah.” (v.30) We
have such a God now.
(Rom. 2:2-11)
Our
text also shows that man can change — from wicked to righteous and
from righteous to wicked. Free agency is not limited to a one-way
street. “If the wicked turn from all his sins that he hath
committed, and keep all my statutes...he shall surely live.” “But
when the righteous turneth away from his righteousness ... None of
his righteous deeds...shall be remembered in his trespass...and in
his sin… in them shall he die.”
(Vs. 21-24)
We are
not judged by our past performance. To put it in N.T. words, it is
not enough that we once came into: God’s light; we must continue
“walking in the light.” The Jew pointed to his ancestry and past
glory; and we drag out our baptismal certificate but God says, “What
are you now! Are you striving to follow me today?” If you have been
tempted to believe some sort of “cloak of righteousness” is spread
over the impenitent sinner that his past answers for today, read
Ezek. 18: carefully. (And study the subjunctive present “IF” we
“walk and “confess” of
1 Jn. 1:7-9.)
God
says, through Ezekiel, “For I have no pleasure in the death of him
that dieth,-- wherefore turn you selves, and live.”
(v. 32)
This idea is expressed in
2 Pet. 3:9
where
are told, “The Lord is… not willing that any should perish, but that
all should come to repentance.” The decision, in this life, is ours.
We say “Yes” or “No” to God — for a time! But we must meet Him in
final judgment, where He will determine our eternal destiny. Are we
doomed to repeat the errors of Ezekiel’s day despite our advantage
in Christ??
Other Articles by Robert Turner
Church Autonomy
The Last Fight
Toning It Down