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Who is God?
What is he like?
Could there be a more important question than these?
Last week I argued that chapters 4-7 should be read as Ezekiel’s initiation into the prophetic vocation that God called him to do.
In chapters 6-7, there’s a phrase that comes up over and over again: “and you shall know that I am the LORD.”
It occurs first in Ezekiel 5:13 and over 70 times throughout Ezekiel, but 10% of those are right here in chapters 6-7.
Before Ezekiel can do his job, before he can go and speak for God, he needs to know who this God is.
So do you and I.
Scholars call this phrase the recognition formula.
And its use throughout Ezekiel communicates that the way to know who God truly is comes not by philosophy but by history.[1]The
reason for this is because God is the LORD, that is, he is Yahweh, the covenant-keeping God of Israel.
If we want to know God, we must see him acting in his steadfast commitment to the covenant he made with Israel.
What do we learn about him through his covenant with Israel?
We learn about his passion, his brokenness, and his justice.
The Passionate God
First, the God of the Bible is a passionate God.
The first time we see the recognition formula, in Ezekiel 5:13, it goes like this: “Thus shall my anger spend itself, and I will vent my fury upon them and satisfy myself.
And they shall know that I am the LORD—that I have spoken in my jealousy—when I spend my fury upon them.”
What kind of being is God?
What does he want us to know about him?
Here we are told that we are to know him as a God who is jealous.
God Cannot Be Ignored
Now that doesn’t paint a very positive image in our mind, does it?
No wonder many modern versions (e.g.
NIV, NASB) use the word zealinstead of jealousy.
Still, in the context of this verse, which speaks of God’s anger and fury, and of him seeking to satisfy himself, we are invited to ponder this aspect of God that God wants us to know about himself.
The Hebrew word is found 43 times in the Old Testament, and Ezekiel uses it the most, ten times.
There’s no doubt about it; this word gets your attention.
Call it jealousy or call it zeal, either way we’re talking about an aspect of God that cannot be ignored.
And that may be the point we should start with.
This is not a God that can be ignored.
He doesn’t sit quietly away somewhere in heaven or anywhere else, untouched or unmoved by the events on earth.
He isn’t disconnected from human history, or available to answer only if some person on earth decides he just might want to see if Someone is out there.
Detaching God from His World
But this is what so many of us in the West have come to think as the default disposition of God.
When it comes to our assumptions about God, we have probably been more influenced by the Enlightenment than we have by the Bible.
The God of the Enlightenment (if such a being even exists) is so high above the world that he can hardly be touched by the events here below.
Thus, to talk of God is to immediately enter into the realm of religion, a private spirituality of faith that has very little to do with the public realities of science and history, of politics and mathematics.[2]
We have yielded too much ground here, perhaps attracted by the way this view of God seems to exalt him above all created things.
Such a view fits well with the gods of ancient paganism which, judging by this default position of God in our modern and post-modern world, only demonstrates that these gods are alive and well in the public imagination.
Christians should know better.
The God of the Bible is Yahweh, quite simply not the kind of being we assume he must be.
This God is different than what any human being has ever conjured up, and his jealousy is a clear indication of this.
God’s Passionate Love
So back to the word jealousy.
This translation simply will not do when it is used in reference to God, since the word in our usage is entirely negative.
Zeal or zealous is better, though it still leaves much more to be said.
I’m not sure there is a word in English that will suffice.
But there is an analogy.
Throughout the Bible, this word finds its central meaning in the marriage relationship.[3]
It expresses the “entirely appropriate response” that “is aroused when a legitimate and wholesome relationship is threatened by interference from a third party.”[4]Ok,
we get that.
But do we get that when it comes to God?
The fact that God expresses this deep emotion and response does not tell us that God is capricious or reckless or out of control.
It tells us, amazingly, that God is deeply passionate, a God of passionate love.
God has made a promise to his people, a covenantal promise of love that the marriage relationship is meant to signify, and God is the most faithful lover there ever has been.
And as we read through chapter 6, we can see that this is the view of God that Ezekiel had to come face-to-face with.
God’s actions against Israel, his promise to destroy their high places (v.
3), to break down their altars (v.
4), and even this talk of laying “the dead bodies of the people of Israel before their idols” and scattering their bones around their altars (v. 5) must be seen as the entirely appropriate response of God’s passionate love.
I realize, of course, that no one could justify talk of killing an adulterous spouse as an entirely appropriate response” to infidelity.
But, before we come to that, let’s consider another revelation of God.
The Broken God
Take a look at verses 8-10.
After promising to act out of his passionate, zealous, covenant love for his people, God says this:
Yet I will leave some of you alive.
When you have among the nations some who escape the sword, and when you are scattered through the countries, then those of you who escape will remember me among the nations where they are carried captive, how I have been broken over their whoring heart that has departed from me and over their eyes that go whoring after their idols.
And they will be loathsome in their own sight for the evils that they have committed, for all their abominations.
And they shall know that I am the LORD.
I have not said in vain that I would do this evil to them (Ezek 6:8-10).
Notice that God says, right there in verse 9, that the time will come when the survivors of the Babylonian exile “will remember me among the nations where they are carried captive.”
They will remember, God says, “how I have been broken over their whoring heart.”
And the recognition formula follows in verse 10.
So, not only must we know that God is jealous, a passionate lover.
We also must know that he has been broken.
Broken Idols
The run up to this statement in the previous verses has God promising to do to Israel’s idols what Israel has done to him.
In verses 4 and 6 we find the same word, broken, as we find in verse 9. What has broken God is Israel’s worship of idols.
What are these idols?
We can answer that question from the word Ezekiel uses.
You see, there are various Hebrew words that translate to “idol,” but Ezekiel uses a very specific word.
Of its 48 occurrences of this word in the Old Testament, 39 of them are found in Ezekiel.
In his commentary on Ezekiel, Daniel Block says that this word for an idol appears to reflect God’s attitude toward them.
What is the word?
Well, let me quote Block here:
Modern sensitivities prevent translators from rendering this expression as Ezekiel intended it to be heard, but had he been preaching today, he would probably have identified these idols with a four-letter word for excrement.[5]
The use of this explicit term for idols is meant to signify that they are, Block says, “powerless figments of the human imagination.”
And God’s utter destruction of them and those who worship them testifies to the impotence of the idols to defend themselves or their devotees.[6]
Broken Heart
You can imagine God however you want him to be, or you can let him reveal himself as he actually is.
Far from God simply being jealous of his chosen people opting to worship some other god, he is broken hearted that they have gone after something which is worthless and powerless.
But it’s not like these idols are just unable to do anything good.
By worshiping them, Israel is becoming like them.
And that means these idols are not innocuous.
They are utterly destructive.
To see his people worship idols and to do nothing about it would mean that God is apathetic about the role his people are to have in his world.
Many people think of God like that.
Many Christians do.
They think of God’s sovereignty as necessarily meaning that God is essentially impassive or unfeeling since, in the end, he can ensure that everything works out exactly as he intended anyway.
There’s a long-standing doctrine of God’s essential nature that he is impassible, but few attributes of God have been more susceptible to confusion and misunderstanding than this one.[7]The
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