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Johann Peter Lange

Lange's Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Critical, Doctrinal and Homiletical - Ezekiel 6:1-14

3. The Two Discourses of Rebuke (Ch. 6 and 7).Ezekiel 6:1. And the word of Jehovah came unto me, saying: Son of man, set 2thy face toward the mountains of Israel, and prophesy to them. And say, 3Ye mountains of Israel, hear the word of the Lord Jehovah. Thus saith the Lord Jehovah to the mountains and to the hills, to the brook-channels and to the valleys: Behold, I, even I, cause a sword to come upon you, and I destroy your high places. 4And your altars are desolated, and your sun-pillars are... read more

G. Campbell Morgan

G. Campbell Morgan's Exposition on the Whole Bible - Ezekiel 6:1-14

These signs were followed by denunciations growing naturally out of what they had taught. In general terms, the prophet first foretold the coming judgment of the sword against the whole land, and the consequent scattering of the people. It was distinctly declared that in this process of judgment Jehovah would preserve a remnant of those who would escape from the destruction of Jerusalem, and in whose mind the judgment would remain, producing repentance, and the conviction that the word of God... read more

Peter Pett

Peter Pett's Commentary on the Bible - Ezekiel 6:8-10

“Yet I will leave a remnant in that you will have some who escape the sword among the nations, when you shall be scattered through the countries. And they who escape of you will remember me among the nations to which they will be carried captives, how that I have been broken with their whorish heart which has departed from me, and with their eyes, which go a whoring after their idols. And they will loathe themselves in their own sight for the evils which they have committed in all their... read more

Arthur Peake

Arthur Peake's Commentary on the Bible - Ezekiel 6:8-10

Ezekiel 6:8-2 Samuel : . The object of all this devastation is the vindication of God’ s insulted honour: “ ye shall know that I am Yahweh” (a very common phrase in Ezekiel), the just and mighty Yahweh, in comparison with the impotent idols. But that honour will be more completely vindicated by the penitence and conversion of sinners than by their destruction: and Ezekiel anticipates that a remnant in exile, smitten with self-loathing as they contemplate the fearful consequences of their... read more

Matthew Poole

Matthew Poole's English Annotations on the Holy Bible - Ezekiel 6:10

They shall know; see, acknowledge, and believe it too. The Lord; the only one whom they should worship or depend on, who can claim their hearts, their fear, love, and trust, as rightfully due; just in my ways, true both to threats and promises. In vain; either, 1. Without cause; the sufferers gave him just cause to pronounce all that evil. Or, 2. Without effect, and to no purpose; I told them that the evils I would bring should make them know that I am the Lord, and these sufferers at last find... read more

Joseph Exell

Preacher's Complete Homiletical Commentary - Ezekiel 6:1-14

4. FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS AS TO THE CONSEQUENCES OF ISRAEL’S CONDUCT (Chap. 6)EXEGETICAL NOTES.—The judgment on places of idolatry and the worshippers (Ezekiel 6:1-7). After asserting, in Ezekiel 6:1, his renewed consciousness that he was to speak from the inworking power of the Lord, Ezekiel unfolds the procedure which will be taken. Here he has special reference to the whole country, as in chaps. 4 and 5 the city Jerusalem was chiefly in view.Ezekiel 6:2. “Son of man, set thy face,” a frequent... read more

Chuck Smith

Chuck Smith Bible Commentary - Ezekiel 6:1-14

Shall we turn in our Bibles to Ezekiel the sixth chapter.Ezekiel here addresses himself to the mountains of Israel. The people of Israel had built places of worship on the tops of the mountains, but not worship to Jehovah God, but to Baal, to Molech, Mammon. And because the mountains were the places for these altars and groves and places of pagan worship, he addresses the prophesy against the mountain telling of the desolation that is going to come. How that they are going to be wasted without... read more

Joseph Sutcliffe

Sutcliffe's Commentary on the Old and New Testaments - Ezekiel 6:1-14

Ezekiel 6:3-4 . I will destroy your high places, all the necessaries of idolatry. במות bomoth, Βουνοι , thence Βωμοι . Your high altars. In Montfaucon’s Antiquities we have various views of heathen altars, all the devices of men. The druids preferred a tabular rock unhewn, supported by three pillars, usually called cromlechs. They had no idols; but the apostate jews had their idols in some adjacent temple or covering. Ezekiel 6:5 . I will scatter your bones round about your altars. ... read more

John Trapp

John Trapp Complete Commentary - Ezekiel 6:10

Eze 6:10 And they shall know that I [am] the LORD, [and that] I have not said in vain that I would do this evil unto them. Ver. 10. And they shall know. ] By woeful experience. He that trembleth not in sinning shall be crushed to pieces in feeling, said blessed Bradford. And that I have not said in vain. ] In terrorem only, read more

Samuel Bagster

Treasury of Scripture Knowledge - Ezekiel 6:10

Ezekiel 6:7, Ezekiel 14:22, Ezekiel 14:23, Jeremiah 5:12-2 Chronicles :, Jeremiah 44:28, Daniel 9:12, Zechariah 1:6 Reciprocal: Jeremiah 10:18 - that Ezekiel 5:13 - spoken Ezekiel 12:25 - I will Ezekiel 17:21 - shall know read more

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