-
Verse Ezekiel 34:2. _PROPHESY AGAINST THE SHEPHERDS OF ISRAEL_] The
_shepherds_ include, first, the _priests_ and _Levites_; secondly, the
_kings,_ _princes_, and _magistrates_. The _flock_ means the...
-
SHEPHERDS - Not priests or prophets, but rulers and kings (see the
Jeremiah 2:8 note). The most ancient title for “ruler” is a
monogram which occurs on the oldest monuments discovered in the
cuneiform...
-
Ezekiel 34:1. The shepherds of Israel were the kings and princes and
all who had authority over them. The prophet Jeremiah had received a
similar message Jeremiah 23:1. These shepherds of Israel were...
-
IMPORTANCE OF GOOD GOVERNMENT. But besides moral excellence on the
part of its citizens (Ezekiel 33) a state needs good government. This
chapter is a very severe indictment of the rulers or kings of I...
-
SON OF MAN. See note on Ezekiel 2:1.
SHEPHERDS. rulers.
THE LORD GOD. Hebrew Adonai Jehovah. See note on Ezekiel 2:4....
-
_the shepherds_ i.e. the rulers. The term is chiefly used in later
writings (Jeremiah 2:8; Jeremiah 3:15); it occurs, however, in
Zechariah 9-11, the date of which is disputed. On Zedekiah cf. ch. 17,...
-
AGAINST THE SHEPHERDS OF ISRAEL— Hereby are meant the priests, the
Levites, and teachers of the law; the kings, princes, magistrates, and
judges; the prophet gives them here excellent instructions; sh...
-
II. REPLACEMENT OF CORRUPT LEADERS
34:1-31
Israel's past sin and punishment stemmed largely from corrupt and
selfish leadership. The first step in Ezekiel's program of
reconstruction for the nation...
-
Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel, prophesy, and
say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD unto the shepherds; Woe be to
the shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves! should not th...
-
THE NEW ISRAEL (EZEKIEL 33-48)
So long as the Jewish kingdom remained in existence Ezekiel's
prophecies (those in Ezekiel 1-24) dealt almost exclusively with the
nation's sin, and with the certainty o...
-
EZEKIEL: “THEY SHALL KNOW THAT I AM GOD”
GOD’S PLANS FOR *ISRAEL AND THE NATIONS
EZEKIEL CHAPTER S 25 TO 39
_IAN MACKERVOY_
CHAPTER 34
THE FALSE *SHEPHERDS OF *ISRAEL – EZEKIEL 34:1-10
v1
-
SHEPHERDS OF ISRAEL. — This is a common Scriptural expression for
rulers, and the whole context shows that these are the persons here
intended. In the passage in Jeremiah 23 they are treated under thi...
-
בֶּן ־אָדָ֕ם הִנָּבֵ֖א עַל ־רֹועֵ֣י
יִשְׂרָאֵ֑ל...
-
THE MESSIANIC KINGDOM
Ezekiel 34:1
The term "Messianic" as commonly applied to Old Testament prophecy
bears two different senses, a wider and a narrower. In its wider use
it is almost equivalent to t...
-
SELFISH SHEPHERDS
Ezekiel 34:1-16
The shepherds of this chapter were not the religious leaders of the
people, but rulers who sought in their government not the good of the
people but their own selfis...
-
The next prophecy dealt ultimately with the one Shepherd. It opened
with an indictment of the false shepherds through whom all these evil
things had happened to the people. Their sin had been that the...
-
Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel, prophesy, and
say to them, Thus saith the Lord GOD to the shepherds; Woe [be] to the
(a) shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves! should not t...
-
_Shepherds. That is, princes, magistrates, chief priests, and scribes.
(Challoner) --- Shepherds may lawfully take milk, (1 Corinthians ix.
7.) but the sheep and its wool belong to the master. (Worthi...
-
This Chapter begins with a woe, and an awful charge follows. Who are
particularly meant here by the Shepherds, is not said; perhaps both
Priests and Levites; the Elders, and all that had a charge; (fo...
-
The end of Jeremiah has given us an account of the fulfilment of
Ezekiel's words; but all these judgments give room for the
intervention of God in behalf of His people by means of sovereign
grace acco...
-
SON OF MAN, PROPHESY AGAINST THE SHEPHERDS OF ISRAEL,.... Or,
"concerning" p them; the governors of them, as the Targum and Jarchi;
their political governors, their kings, princes, and civil magistrat...
-
Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel, prophesy, and
say unto them, Thus saith the Lord GOD unto the shepherds; Woe [be] to
the shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves! should not t...
-
_Prophesy against the shepherds of Israel_ The word _shepherd_, in the
prophetical writings, comprehends both civil and ecclesiastical
governors. See notes on Isaiah 56:11; Jeremiah 2:8. Other writers...
-
Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel, the spiritual
leaders of the people, but especially their civil governors, the men
responsible for their welfare, set to guard the interests and p...
-
WOE UPON THE SHEPHERDS OF ISRAEL...
-
1-6 The people became as sheep without a shepherd, were given up as a
prey to their enemies, and the land was utterly desolated. No rank or
office can exempt from the reproofs of God's word, men who n...
-
Ezekiel 34:2 Son H1121 man H120 prophesy H5012 (H8734) shepherds H7462
(H8802) Israel H3478 prophesy H5012 ...
-
‘And the word of Yahweh came to me saying, “Son of man, prophesy
against the shepherds of Israel, and say to them, even to the
shepherds, Thus says the Lord Yahweh, Woe to the shepherds of Israel
who...
-
CONTENTS: Message to the faithless shepherds of Israel. Promise of
restoration of Israel, and setting up of the kingdom.
CHARACTERS: God, Ezekiel.
CONCLUSION: Those will have a great deal to answer...
-
Ezekiel 34:2. _Woe to the shepherds of Israel._ The character of the
pastors which follow, distinguishes the industrious from the idle
shepherds: the words apply to magistrates and ministers. A magist...
-
_Woe be to the shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves! should not
the shepherds feed the flocks?_
THE UNFAITHFUL SHEPHERDS
I. Human rulers stand in the same relation to the people whom they
rul...
-
EZEKIEL—NOTE ON EZEKIEL 34:1 As the move toward restoration
continues, Ezekiel describes the nation and its leaders as sheep and
shepherds. He addresses the shepherds (vv. Ezekiel 34:1) and then the
s
-
EZEKIEL—NOTE ON EZEKIEL 34:2 Describing rulers as SHEPHERDS was
widespread in the ancient Near East. David is the model of a
shepherd-king (2 Samuel 5:2;...
-
THE REPROOF OF THE FALSE SHEPHERDS AND A PROMISE OF THE GOOD AND TRUE
SHEPHERD (Chap. 34)
EXPLANATORY NOTES.— Ezekiel 34:1. “PROPHESY AGAINST THE
SHEPHERDS.” “The trouble which the prophet here encoun...
-
EXPOSITION
EZEKIEL 34:1
AND THE WORD OF THE LORD, etc. As no date is given, we may infer that
what follows came as an almost immediate sequel to that which precedes
it. The kernel of the chapter is f...
-
CHAPTER 34.
THE PROMISE OF THE TRUE SHEPHERD, AFTER THE FALSE SHEPHERDS HAVE BEEN
PUNISHED AND REMOVED.
IN the preceding chapter the prophet has announced the first condition
of an improved state of...
-
Now in chapter 34, God speaks out against those faithless shepherds of
Israel. Those men that were the spiritual leaders, those men to whom
the people looked for spiritual guidance, who had left the r...
-
1 Peter 5:2; 2 Peter 2:3; 2 Samuel 5:2; Acts 20:26; Acts 20:29;...
-
A PROPHECY AGAINST THE SHEPHERDS
Ezekiel 34:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
We have a pleasant task before us. We have been asked to present
Christ as the Good and Great and Chief Shepherd of the sheep, as ov...
-
The shepherds — The rulers of the people kings, magistrates, and
princes; as also priests, and prophets. Of Israel — The two tribes,
and the few out of the ten that adhere to the house of David. That...