TODAY’S DAILY READING: Ezekiel 17-18 & Revelation 3
Old Testament: Ezekiel 17- I’ll Take The Low Place
Ezekiel 17:24
“And all the trees of the field shall know that I, the Lord, have brought down the high tree and exalted the low tree, dried up the green tree and made the dry tree flourish; I, the Lord, have spoken and have done it.”
The Bible is filled with seemingly paradoxical statements. Here God promises to bring the low… Read More
Ezekiel 18- The Blame Game
Ezekiel 18:14
“If, however, he begets a son who sees all the sins which his father has done, and considers but does not do likewise, he shall surely live.”
It seems we have become a generation who blames our faults on others. No one wants to take responsibility for their own actions. Attitudes of the heart, as well as sinful behavior, are often blamed on our upbringing or our genetics. As much as this may seem like a modern problem, Ezekiel reveals this is actually a… Read More
New Testament: Revelation 3- Amen
Revelation 3:14
“These things says the Amen, the Faithful and True Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God”
What a beautiful and insightful way Jesus describes Himself to the church. He tells us three things about Himself.
First, He is the Amen. In the…Read More
Ezekiel 15:2
Ezekiel 16:6
Revelation 2:4-5
Ezekiel 13:2
Ezekiel 14:5
Revelation 1:18
Ezekiel 11:16
Jude 4
Ezekiel 9:3-4
3 John 4
Ezekiel 7:2
Ezekiel 8:8-9
2 John 1:6
Ezekiel 6:11
1 John 5:16
Ezekiel’s message to Judah was not a new one. For years the prophets had been warning the people of the coming devastation upon Jerusalem if they did not turn back to God. The unique aspect of Ezekiel’s message was the way in which he declared it. In addition to traditional preaching, he used powerful visual aids. On this occasion he sharpened a sword, used it as a razor and shaved his head. Instead of sweeping up the hair and tossing it in with the rubbish, he divided it into three piles. Each of the piles were then used as props to help illustrate what would happen to the inhabitants of Jerusalem if they refused to surrender first to God and second to the Babylonian forces. The first pile of hair was burned while Ezekiel beat upon the second pile with his sword. These actions illustrated the fact that 2/3 of Jerusalem’s inhabitants would be killed in battle against the Babylonia forces. Ezekiel then took the third and final pile and threw it up into the air allowing the wind to take it away. This pile was used to illustrate that those who do not die in battle will be taken captive and spread throughout the Babylonian empire where they will live as prisoners of war.
Ezekiel 3:17
1 John 4:10-11
Ezekiel 1:28
Ezekiel 2:8
1 John 3:23