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												Verses 1-3Ezekiel 11:1-3. Moreover the 
												spirit lifted me up — It seems 
												it should rather have been 
												rendered, And the spirit had 
												lifted me up, for here he 
												appears to go back to speak 
												about those twenty-five men of 
												whom he made mention Ezekiel 
												7:16, but had broken off from 
												speaking of them to speak of 
												things of greater importance; 
												but he now returns to them 
												again. And brought me unto the 
												east gate — Caused me to see 
												those parts in my vision just as 
												if I had been there. And behold 
												at the door five and twenty men 
												— The same who are represented 
												in Ezekiel 8:16, as worshipping 
												the sun. They were princes of 
												the people — That is, most 
												probably, members of the great 
												sanhedrim: compare Jeremiah 
												26:10. Among whom I saw Pelatiah, 
												&c. — Named here for that 
												dreadful, sudden death, whereby 
												he became a warning to others. 
												Then said he unto me — Namely, 
												the divine appearance which was 
												before my eyes. These are the 
												men that give wicked counsel — 
												They probably advised and 
												encouraged the people to use the 
												Chaldean rites of worship, in 
												order to please and gain the 
												favour of that nation. Or, they 
												persuaded the Jews that they had 
												no reason to fear future trouble 
												or mischief from the Chaldeans, 
												and therefore rendered them 
												secure in their sins. Which say, 
												It is not near — The threatened 
												danger and ruin by the 
												Chaldeans. These were such as 
												put the evil day far from them, 
												as is said Amos 6:3, and so went 
												on securely in building houses, 
												and making such like 
												improvements. This city is the 
												caldron, and we be the flesh — 
												Jeremiah had foretold the 
												destruction of Jerusalem under 
												the figure of a seething-pot, or 
												caldron, Jeremiah 1:13. And 
												Ezekiel himself uses the same 
												metaphor, Ezekiel 24:3-4, &c. So 
												these scoffers made use of the 
												same expression on purpose to 
												deride the menaces of the 
												prophets; as if they had said, 
												If this city be a caldron, we 
												are well content to be the flesh 
												that is boiled in it. “We will 
												share all fates with her, we 
												will either be preserved or 
												perish with her.” So Michaelis, 
												who thinks the words are a 
												proverb.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Ezekiel 11:4-5. Therefore 
												prophesy against them — Declare 
												to them how different things 
												shall happen to them from what 
												they expect. And the Spirit of 
												the Lord fell upon me — See note 
												on Ezekiel 3:24. And said unto 
												me, Speak; Thus have ye said — 
												Ye have advanced the assertion, 
												mentioned Ezekiel 11:3. “You 
												have rightly said what you say: 
												the city is the caldron, and we 
												are the flesh, shall be 
												fulfilled, but not as you 
												understand it. Many of you will 
												perish in the city. For those it 
												will be the caldron, and they 
												will be flesh boiled in it. But 
												yourselves shall not be the 
												flesh in the caldron: but you 
												shall be taken out and elsewhere 
												cut in pieces.” — Michaelis in 
												Newcome. For I know the things 
												that come into your mind —
 
 Here God declares that, however 
												much these men thought, and said 
												in their hearts, The Lord seeth 
												us not, yet still he not only 
												saw them, but knew the things 
												that came into their mind, every 
												one of them, and took particular 
												notice of that vain confidence 
												with which they supported 
												themselves, and endeavoured to 
												put a good face upon a matter 
												which they could not but know to 
												be bad. Remember, reader, God 
												perfectly knows not only the 
												things that come out of our 
												mouths, but the things that come 
												into our minds; not only all we 
												say, but all we think; even 
												those thoughts which are most 
												suddenly darted into our minds, 
												and as suddenly slip out of them 
												again, are perfectly known and 
												narrowly observed by God: he 
												knows us infinitely better than 
												we know ourselves; he 
												understands us afar off: the 
												consideration whereof should 
												oblige us to keep our hearts 
												with all diligence, that no vain 
												thoughts may come into them, or 
												lodge within them.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Ezekiel 11:6-7. Ye have 
												multiplied your slain in this 
												city — Ye have, without law or 
												justice, shed the blood of many 
												in your streets. From this, and 
												many other expressions in the 
												Scripture, we may conclude that 
												not only private murders were 
												extremely frequent among them, 
												but that they also frequently 
												put to death, under colour of 
												justice, those who were innocent 
												of every crime deserving of 
												death, but whom, for some wicked 
												purposes, they wanted to be 
												removed out of the way. And ye 
												have filled the streets thereof 
												with the slain — You have not 
												only committed many murders 
												yourselves, but you are 
												accountable to God for all those 
												whom the Chaldeans have slain, 
												seeing you persuaded your people 
												thus obstinately to stand out. 
												Your slain, they are the flesh, 
												&c. — You yourselves, therefore, 
												have made your city, as it were, 
												a caldron, by the murdered 
												bodies with which you have 
												filled the streets of it; many 
												of them cut in pieces, so that 
												they seem like flesh cut for the 
												caldron. And this city may 
												properly be called the caldron, 
												into which their flesh has been 
												thrown. But I will bring you 
												forth out of the midst of it — 
												Not in mercy, but in wrath, by 
												the conquering hand of the king 
												of Babylon. You shall not die 
												there, but I will reserve you 
												for another punishment: see 
												Ezekiel 11:9; Ezekiel 11:11.
 
 Verses 8-11
 Ezekiel 11:8-11. Ye have feared 
												the sword — Of the Chaldeans; 
												and have, to avoid it, courted 
												them, and left my worship to 
												follow their idolatrous rites: 
												but this very sword will I bring 
												upon you. And I will deliver you 
												into the hands of strangers — 
												Defeating all your projects for 
												escape; and I will execute 
												judgments among you — By the 
												hands of the Chaldeans, whom I 
												will make the instruments of my 
												just vengeance. I will judge you 
												in the border of Israel — 
												Namely, in Riblah, just upon the 
												borders of Judea. In this place 
												the king of Babylon, who is here 
												spoken of as God’s 
												representative, sat in judgment 
												on all the princes of Judah, and 
												slew them: see the margin. This 
												city shall not be your caldron — 
												The place of your sufferings; 
												greater are reserved for you 
												elsewhere.
 
 Verse 13
 Ezekiel 11:13. And when I 
												prophesied, Pelatiah died — 
												Mentioned Ezekiel 11:1, a 
												principal man among the 
												twenty-five princes, who made 
												all the mischief in Jerusalem: 
												see note on Ezekiel 11:2. It 
												seems this was done only in 
												vision now, (as the slaying of 
												the ancient men, Ezekiel 9:6,) 
												but it was an assurance, that 
												when this prophecy was published 
												it would be done in fact. And 
												the death of Pelatiah was a 
												pledge of the complete 
												accomplishment of the prophecy. 
												Then fell I down upon my face, 
												and cried — The prophet thought 
												this an earnest of the common 
												destruction which was coming 
												upon all the inhabitants of the 
												city, and thereupon he earnestly 
												deprecated so severe a judgment. 
												See chap. Ezekiel 9:8.
 
 Verse 14-15
 Ezekiel 11:14-15. Again the word 
												of the Lord came unto me — A 
												seasonable word, to stop the 
												mouths of the insulting 
												Jerusalemites, and to encourage 
												the captives at Babylon. Son of 
												man, thy brethren — The men of 
												thy kindred, or, of thy 
												redemption, as גאלתןmay be 
												rendered: that is, thy 
												fellow-captives, as Bishop 
												Newcome reads it; unto whom the 
												inhabitants of Jerusalem have 
												said, Get ye far from the Lord, 
												&c. — The Jews who were left in 
												Judea thought themselves more 
												the favourites of God than those 
												who had been carried away 
												captives, looking upon the 
												latter as outcasts, and such as 
												had no right, either to the 
												privileges of Jews or to the 
												land of Judea. The words, רחקו 
												מעל יהוה, rendered, Get you far 
												from the Lord, may be 
												translated, They have departed 
												far from the Lord, that is, they 
												have more grievously sinned and 
												offended God than we. So thought 
												and so said the inhabitants of 
												Jerusalem, concerning those who 
												had been carried into captivity. 
												Unto us is this land given in 
												possession — This promised, holy 
												land, where our fathers dwelt, 
												is exclusively ours, and we 
												shall never be put out of 
												possession of it, but it shall 
												always be our inheritance.
 
 Verse 16
 Ezekiel 11:16. Therefore say — 
												In vindication of the captives; 
												Although I have cast them far 
												off — Not from myself, but from 
												you and your polluted land, and 
												out of the way of the dreadful 
												judgments which are approaching; 
												among the heathen — The 
												Chaldeans, or those among whom 
												the Chaldeans have placed them; 
												and have scattered them among 
												the countries — Have separated 
												them from each other, and 
												dispersed them in many 
												countries; yet will I be to them 
												as a little sanctuary — A 
												sanctuary, or a refuge and 
												protection “for a short time,” 
												(so Bishop Newcome,) that is, 
												during the seventy years’ 
												captivity; or a little one in 
												opposition to the great temple 
												at Jerusalem; which, when its 
												inhabitants were in the greatest 
												need, should afford them the 
												least help. But I, says God, 
												will really be to my captives 
												what the proud, self-deceiving 
												Jews promise themselves from 
												their temple, namely, their 
												defence, support, and comfort. 
												To me shall they flee, and in me 
												shall they be safe, as he was 
												that took hold on the horns of 
												the altar. Or rather, they shall 
												have such communion with me in 
												the land of their captivity, as 
												it was thought could be had 
												nowhere but in the temple. They 
												shall have the tokens of my 
												presence with them, and my grace 
												in their hearts shall sanctify 
												their prayers and praises, as 
												truly as ever the altar at the 
												temple sanctified the gift. 
												Observe, reader, they that are 
												deprived of the benefit of 
												public ordinances, if it be not 
												their own fault, may have the 
												want of them abundantly supplied 
												in the immediate communications 
												of divine grace and comforts.
 
 Verses 17-20
 Ezekiel 11:17-20. I will even 
												gather you from the people — 
												This might be, in some degree, 
												fulfilled in those that returned 
												from captivity, but the perfect 
												completion of this promise must 
												be referred to the time of the 
												expected general restoration of 
												the Jewish nation. And they 
												shall come thither — They who 
												assemble upon Cyrus’s 
												proclamation first, and they who 
												afterward assemble upon 
												Darius’s, shall overcome all 
												difficulties, perform their 
												journey, and come safely to 
												their own land. And they shall 
												take away all the detestable 
												things thereof — Shall abolish 
												superstition and idolatry from 
												the temple, the city, and the 
												country, and shall live pure 
												from all the pollutions with 
												which the land had been formerly 
												defiled. But this promise also 
												ultimately respects the future 
												conversion of the Jews, as do 
												those contained in the next two 
												verses. And I will give them one 
												heart — A heart entire for me, 
												the living and true God, and not 
												divided, as their hearts were 
												formerly, among many gods; a 
												heart firmly fixed and resolved 
												for my worship and service, and 
												not wavering; steady and 
												uniform, and not inconstant, and 
												inconsistent with itself. And 
												hence they shall serve me with 
												one consent, Zephaniah 3:9. And 
												I will put a new spirit within 
												them — A disposition of mind 
												agreeable to the new 
												circumstances into which, in the 
												course of my providence, I will 
												bring them. Observe, reader, all 
												that are regenerated have a new 
												spirit: a spirit entirely 
												changed from what it was before: 
												they act from new principles, 
												walk by new rules, and aim at 
												new ends. A new name, a new 
												profession, new opinions, or new 
												modes of worship will not serve 
												without a new spirit. If any man 
												be in Christ he is a new 
												creature: see the margin. And I 
												will take away the stony heart 
												out of their flesh — Out of 
												their corrupt nature. Their 
												hearts shall no longer be dead 
												and dry, hard and unfeeling, but 
												tender and apt to receive good 
												impressions, and deeply sensible 
												of, and affected with, things 
												spiritual and divine. These are 
												the same evangelical promises as 
												we read in the other prophets, 
												particularly Jeremiah 32:39. 
												“The insensibility of men, with 
												regard to religious matters, is 
												often ascribed to the hardness 
												of their hearts. God promises 
												here to give them teachable 
												dispositions, and to take away 
												the veil from their hearts, as 
												St. Paul expresses it, 2 
												Corinthians 3:16; the same 
												temper being indifferently 
												expressed either by blindness or 
												hardness of heart.” — Lowth. 
												That they may walk in my 
												statutes — In their whole 
												conversation; and keep my 
												ordinances — In all acts of 
												religious worship. These two 
												particulars must go together, 
												and not be separated; and those 
												to whom God has given a new 
												heart, and a new spirit, will 
												make conscience of both, and 
												then the following promise shall 
												be fulfilled, They shall be my 
												people, and I will be their God: 
												the ancient covenant, which 
												seemed to have been broken and 
												forgotten, shall be renewed. By 
												their idolatry and other sins, 
												they appeared to have cast God 
												off; and by their being sent 
												into captivity, and divers other 
												punishments, God seemed to have 
												cast them off; but when they are 
												cured of their idolatry and 
												various vices, and delivered 
												from their captivity and other 
												calamities, God and Israel own 
												one another again: God, by his 
												good work in them, makes them 
												his people; and then, by the 
												tokens of his good-will toward 
												them, shows them that he is 
												their God.
 
 
 Verse 21
 Ezekiel 11:21. But as for them — 
												Whoever they be, and some there 
												will be in the best times, who 
												will refuse to own God for their 
												God, and truly to love and obey 
												him. Whose heart walketh after 
												their detestable things — Whose 
												judgment and choice, or whose 
												will and affections, go after 
												their idols and iniquities, 
												their lusts and vices. I will 
												recompense their way upon their 
												own heads — Their state shall 
												differ as much as their practice 
												does, from that of the people of 
												God: I will treat them according 
												to their ways.
 
 Verse 23
 Ezekiel 11:23. And the glory of 
												the Lord went up from the midst 
												of the city — The symbol of 
												God’s presence, which had before 
												departed from the temple, 
												(Ezekiel 10:18,) now quite left 
												the city, to signify that he 
												would acknowledge no longer his 
												relation to either, but deliver 
												them up to be profaned by the 
												heathen. It deserves to be 
												observed here, that God did not 
												quit the temple and city all at 
												once, but by little and little. 
												The cloud of his presence was 
												first withdrawn from the 
												mercy-seat in the holy of 
												holies, the usual place of its 
												residence, and removed to the 
												threshold of the house, (Ezekiel 
												9:1,) where it remained some 
												time waiting for their 
												repentance. Its second remove 
												was from this threshold, leaving 
												the house altogether, to settle 
												upon the cherubim, which were 
												hovering over the court, and 
												upon the wing to depart, Ezekiel 
												10:18. It then, with these 
												angelic ministers of the divine 
												will, and the accompanying 
												wheels of providence, withdrew 
												to the east gate of the inner 
												court, Ezekiel 10:19. And now at 
												last it quits Jerusalem 
												altogether, and fixes itself 
												upon the mountain on the east 
												side of the city. By withdrawing 
												himself from his people by slow 
												degrees, God gave them time for 
												consideration and repentance, to 
												which each remove of the 
												Shechinah was a fresh and solemn 
												call, and he thus also 
												manifested with what reluctance 
												he entirely abandoned the seed 
												of Abraham his friend. And even 
												his causing the symbol of his 
												presence, before his final 
												departure, to take its station 
												on the mount of Olives, where it 
												was, as it were, within call, 
												and ready to return, if now at 
												length in this their day they 
												would have understood the things 
												that made for their peace, was a 
												further manifestation of grace 
												as well as of justice; for while 
												the cloud of glory lingered 
												there, it gave fresh 
												encouragement to them to repent, 
												and a final warning so to do, at 
												the same time that it was 
												emblematical of the judgment 
												which, if their repentance did 
												not prevent, should begin to be 
												executed upon them from that 
												mount, from whence the city 
												would be annoyed by the darts of 
												the Chaldeans. Nor was this only 
												a figure of the calamities which 
												were to be brought on the Jews 
												by Nebuchadnezzar, but it was 
												also an emblem of the evils 
												which were to befall them in 
												consequence of their rejecting 
												and crucifying their own 
												Messiah, the Lord of glory. This 
												Divine Saviour, after exhausting 
												his patience in instructing, 
												correcting, and threatening 
												Jerusalem, at length forsook it, 
												and ascended to heaven from this 
												same mount of Olives, in the 
												presence of his apostles and 
												disciples, that he might 
												exercise his kingly office, and 
												inflict a just and exemplary 
												vengeance on this obstinately 
												wicked and irreclaimable people.
 
 Verse 24-25
 Ezekiel 11:24-25. The spirit 
												took me, and brought me in 
												vision into Chaldea — That is, 
												took away from before my eyes 
												the image of Jerusalem and the 
												temple, &c., and presented 
												nothing to my mind but what was 
												the real matter of fact, namely, 
												that I was a captive with many 
												others of my countrymen in the 
												land of Chaldea. So the vision 
												that I had seen went up from me 
												— Was at an end. In other words, 
												he recovered from his trance or 
												ecstasy. Then I spake unto them 
												of the captivity — He related 
												unto them all that had passed in 
												his vision, namely, all that is 
												contained in the last four 
												chapters.
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