Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 36:5

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 36:5

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Surely. אִם־לא, the particle of adjuration, as in ; ; ; . The fire of my jealousy. Zephaniah (; ) uses the same phrase. Similar expressions occur in , "the fire of my wrath;" and , "in my jealousy and in the fire of my wrath" (comp. ). Against all Idumea. Edom. As in , so here, it is the wickedness, more especially of the Edomites, that excites the prophet's indignation. They had not only concluded that Israel's territory should be to them for a possession, but they had done so with the joy of all their heart, and with despiteful minds; or, with contempt of soul (comp. , ); i.e. with deadly (Ewald) or hearty (Smend) contempt. "The temper of the Edomites," writes Plumptre, "might almost serve as the regulative instance of the form of evil for which Aristotle ('Eth. Nit.,' 2, 7, 15) seems to have coined the word ἐπιχαιρεκακία, the temper which rejoices in the ills that fall on others." The concluding clause, to cast it out for a prey, has been differently rendered.

Because ye have borne the shame of the heathen (i.e. the shame cast upon you by the heathen, see )… surely the heathen that are about you, they shall bear their shame. Not the shame which should be cast upon them by Israel, which would be retaliation, but their own shame—the shame due to them in virtue of the Divine law of retribution (), their own curses come home to roost, Ezekiel seeming to distinguish between retaliation and retribution. "The law [of retribution] is demanded by the absolute righteousness of God. The judicial visitations of God cannot possibly be one-sided. Punishment can so much the less strike Israel alone, as precisely in its punishment the deep degradation of heathendom, its apostasy from God and its pride, has set itself forth in the most striking way" (Havernick). The certainty that this law would operate in the case of the heathen no less than in that of Israel, the prophet expresses by representing Jehovah as having lifted up his hand, or sworn that it should be so (comp. , , , , ; ; ; ; ; and Virgil, 'AEneid,' 12.195, "Teaditque ad sidera dextram").

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