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												Verse 1Ezekiel 34:1. The word of the 
												Lord came unto me, saying — It 
												is probable that this prophecy 
												immediately followed the 
												preceding; and that at, or 
												immediately after, the arrival 
												of the news that Jerusalem was 
												conquered, the prophet was 
												commissioned to speak of the 
												tyranny and carelessness of the 
												governors and teachers, and to 
												point out their negligence as a 
												principal cause of the 
												incredulity and wickedness of 
												the people. Thus the transition 
												appears to be natural, and the 
												connection close, between this 
												prophecy and the foregoing one, 
												as also between the beginning of 
												this prophecy and its 
												conclusion. For considering 
												that, in parts at least, the 
												people suffered for the faults 
												of the shepherds, mercy now 
												urged the prophet to declare, 
												from God, that he would judge 
												between them, save the flock, 
												and set up one shepherd over 
												them, who should feed them, even 
												his servant David.
 
 Verse 2
 Ezekiel 34:2. 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 also use the 
												same expression; princes being 
												called shepherds of their 
												people, as well as those who 
												have the immediate care of their 
												souls: see Psalms 78:71-72. Thus 
												Homer calls Agamemnon, 
												ποιμεναλαων, the shepherd of the 
												people. And as the threatenings 
												here denounced extend to all 
												sorts of governors, so the 
												several sins of the princes, 
												priests, and prophets are 
												reproved, Ezekiel 22:25, &c. Wo 
												to the shepherds of Israel that 
												feed themselves — That regard 
												their own profit and advantage, 
												not the good of the people 
												committed to their charge. The 
												beauty of the original, רעי אשׂר 
												היו רעים אותם, may be expressed 
												in Latin or Greek, though not in 
												English: — pastoribus qui 
												pascunt semet ipsos: τοις 
												ποιμεσιν οι ποιμαινουσιν σαυτους. 
												Plato, in the first book of his 
												Commonwealth, describing the 
												office of a magistrate, saith, 
												“He should look upon himself as 
												sustaining the office of a 
												shepherd, that makes it his 
												chief business to take care of 
												his flock; not as if he were 
												going to a feast to fill himself 
												and satiate his appetite, or to 
												a market to make what gain he 
												can to himself.” Eusebius, in 
												his twelfth book De Preparatione 
												Evangelica, chap. 44., hath 
												transcribed the whole passage, 
												as an exact parallel to this 
												place of Ezekiel. See Lowth.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Ezekiel 34:3-4. Ye eat the fat — 
												Or, the milk, as the LXX. render 
												it. The Hebrew words chalab, 
												milk, and cheleb, fat, differ 
												only in their points, so that 
												the ancient versions take them 
												promiscuously one for the other. 
												These shepherds of the Lord’s 
												flock, these civil and 
												ecclesiastical rulers of the 
												people, used their power over 
												them, and exercised their 
												offices, merely for their 
												temporal advantage and 
												emolument. “They exacted their 
												tribute and taxes, their tithes 
												and perquisites, with great 
												earnestness; and they oppressed, 
												and even destroyed the people, 
												to enrich themselves: but they 
												bestowed no pains to provide for 
												the welfare of the state, or of 
												the souls of those intrusted to 
												them.” — Scott. Ye kill them 
												that are fed — Ye take away the 
												lives of the wealthy and 
												substantial by unjust means, in 
												order to enrich yourselves with 
												their estates. But ye feed not 
												the flock — Ye take no care for 
												their benefit, temporal or 
												spiritual. Ye are so ignorant 
												that ye know not how to feed 
												them, and ye are so indolent 
												that ye will not take any pains 
												to do it, and ye are so 
												treacherous and unfaithful that 
												ye never desired or designed it. 
												The diseased — The weak and 
												languishing; have ye not 
												strengthened — With your help, 
												counsel, or countenance. Ye have 
												not applied proper remedies to 
												the wants and necessities of 
												those committed to your charge. 
												The magistrates have not taken 
												care to relieve the needy and 
												defend the oppressed. The 
												priests and the prophets have 
												not been diligent in giving the 
												people proper instructions, in 
												rectifying the mistakes of those 
												that were in error, in warning 
												the unruly, or comforting the 
												disconsolate. Neither have ye 
												bound up that which was broken — 
												Ye have not given relief to the 
												afflicted and miserable: a 
												metaphor taken from surgeons 
												binding up wounds in order to 
												cure them. Neither have ye 
												brought again that which was 
												driven away, &c. — Or, which was 
												gone astray, as the word נדחה is 
												translated, Deuteronomy 22:1. Ye 
												have not, by your instructions 
												and exhortations, endeavoured to 
												reduce those who had wandered 
												from the way of truth, or to 
												reclaim those who were ready to 
												perish in their sins; but with 
												force and cruelty have ye ruled 
												them — Have endeavoured to 
												reduce and govern them by the 
												rough methods of compulsion and 
												cruelty, and not by the gentle 
												way of reason and argument, 
												longsuffering, meekness, and 
												love; and your government over 
												them has been exercised by 
												tyranny and oppression, instead 
												of justice, kindness, and 
												beneficence.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Ezekiel 34:5-6. And they were 
												scattered, &c. — Driven into 
												other parts of the land, or into 
												other countries, by the 
												severity, exactions, and 
												oppressions of their rulers. 
												Because there is no shepherd — 
												No one worthy of the name of a 
												shepherd; none that cared for or 
												properly watched over and fed 
												the flock. And they became meat 
												to all the beasts of the field — 
												They were made a prey to, and 
												were spoiled by, their enemies, 
												temporal and spiritual. My sheep 
												wandered through all the 
												mountains — As silly sheep, when 
												there is no one to look after 
												them, wander from one mountain 
												and hill to another; so my 
												thoughtless and infatuated 
												people, disregarded and 
												neglected, or treated with 
												cruelty by those that should 
												have protected and guided them, 
												have manifested their ignorance 
												and folly in following various 
												species of idolatry, and in 
												forming to themselves religions 
												after their own imaginations, 
												full of superstition and 
												impiety. And none did search or 
												seek after them — Their priests 
												and princes were so far from 
												calling them back from these 
												wanderings, that they were the 
												first to follow them; nay, and 
												even to go before, and set them 
												the example.
 
 Verse 10
 Ezekiel 34:10. Thus saith the 
												Lord, Behold, I am against the 
												shepherds — They have made me 
												their enemy by their negligence 
												and abuse of their power, and I 
												will appear and act as such. 
												They have been enemies to my 
												sheep, though pretending to be 
												their shepherds; I will be an 
												open enemy to them; and will 
												require my flock at their hands 
												— I will require a severe 
												account from their kings and 
												princes, their priests and 
												prophets, of the damage my 
												people have sustained through 
												their ill management; and I will 
												deprive them of the honour, 
												pre-eminence, and advantage of 
												which they have made such an ill 
												use.
 
 
 Verses 11-16
 Ezekiel 34:11-16. Behold, I, 
												even I, will search my sheep — I 
												myself will recall them from 
												their wanderings into the right 
												way; and will seek them out — 
												Hebrew, בקדתים, I will seek them 
												early, or, seek them in the 
												morning. As a shepherd seeketh 
												out his flock — With the 
												greatest care and diligence; as 
												he gathers them together, counts 
												them, brings them to the fold, 
												observes what they have 
												suffered, and, if lame or torn, 
												binds up and heals them, and 
												provides pasture for them; so 
												will I seek out my sheep, &c. — 
												Though magistrates and ministers 
												fail in doing their part for the 
												good of the church, yet God will 
												not fail in doing his; he will 
												take his flock into his own 
												hands, rather than it should be 
												deprived of any kindness he had 
												designed for it. The under 
												shepherds may prove careless, 
												but the chief Shepherd neither 
												slumbers nor sleeps. They may be 
												false, but he abides faithful. 
												And deliver them out of all 
												places where they have been 
												scattered — Will bring them home 
												from their several dispersions, 
												whither they have been driven; 
												in the cloudy and dark day — 
												Hebrew, ביום ענן וערפל, in the 
												day of clouds and darkness; in 
												the dark and dismal time of the 
												destruction of their country. 
												And will bring them out from the 
												people — This prophecy primarily 
												respected their restoration from 
												captivity in Babylon, and was in 
												part at least fulfilled when so 
												many thousands of them returned 
												to their own land under the 
												conduct of Zerubbabel, Ezra, and 
												others. It seems, however, to 
												look still further, even to the 
												general restoration of the whole 
												Jewish nation from their present 
												wide dispersion over the whole 
												world, which restoration most of 
												the prophets foretel shall be 
												effected in the latter days. But 
												there is no need to confine this 
												promise wholly to the Jews; when 
												those, in any age or nation, 
												that have gone astray from God 
												into the paths of sin are 
												brought back by repentance; when 
												those that erred come to the 
												acknowledgment of the truth; 
												when God’s outcasts are gathered 
												and restored, and religious 
												assemblies that were dispersed 
												are again collected and united 
												upon the ceasing of persecution; 
												and when the churches have rest 
												and liberty, then this 
												prediction has a true 
												accomplishment. I will feed them 
												in a good pasture — I will 
												supply all their wants, and make 
												ample provision for the support 
												both of their natural and 
												spiritual life. Upon the high 
												mountains of Israel shall their 
												fold be —
 
 There shall they have fixed 
												habitations upon their return, 
												and there shall they rest in 
												safety. There shall they lie in 
												a good fold, &c. — These 
												expressions denote both plenty 
												and security. But I will destroy 
												the fat and the strong — Those 
												who oppress and tyrannise over 
												the weak. I will feed them with 
												judgment — I will judge, 
												chastise, and punish them.
 
 
 Verses 17-19
 Ezekiel 34:17; Ezekiel 34:19. As 
												for you, O my flock — The 
												prophet, having finished what he 
												had to say to the shepherds, now 
												delivers God’s message to the 
												flock. God had before ordered 
												him to speak tenderly to them, 
												and to assure them of the mercy 
												which he had in store for them. 
												But now he is ordered to make a 
												difference between some and 
												others of them, to separate 
												between the precious and the 
												vile, and then to give them a 
												promise of the Messiah, by whom 
												this distinction would be 
												effectually made; partly at his 
												first coming, when for judgment 
												he should come into this world, 
												John 9:39; but completely at his 
												second coming, when he shall, as 
												it is here said, judge between 
												cattle as a shepherd divides 
												between the sheep and the goats, 
												and shall set the sheep on his 
												right hand and the goals on his 
												left, Matthew 25:32-33. Between 
												the rams and the he-goats — The 
												Hebrew, it seems, may be better 
												rendered, Between the small 
												cattle, and the cattle of rams 
												and of he-goats, between the 
												weak and the strong cattle; that 
												is, between the rich and the 
												poor, as the Chaldee Paraphrase 
												explains the sense upon Ezekiel 
												34:20. Seemeth it a small thing 
												unto you to have eaten up the 
												good pasture? &c. — This reproof 
												may be fitly applied to those of 
												the rich and great, who take no 
												care that the poor may enjoy the 
												benefit of their superfluities, 
												but will rather let them be 
												thrown away and lost, than they 
												will take the trouble of seeing 
												them disposed of for the relief 
												of those that stand in need. As 
												for my flock, they eat that 
												which ye have trodden, &c. — 
												They are compelled to live upon 
												the relics of what you have 
												spoiled and destroyed.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Ezekiel 34:21-22. Because ye 
												have thrust with side and 
												shoulder, &c. — Have molested 
												and vexed the poor and weak by 
												your unjust and violent 
												dealings; therefore will I save 
												my flock — I will interpose, and 
												rescue the poor of my people 
												from violence and oppression. 
												The reader will easily observe 
												that the metaphors used in these 
												verses are taken from two sorts 
												of cattle, the one of the larger 
												and stronger kind, the other of 
												the smaller and weaker sort, 
												which the larger ones are wont 
												to thrust aside and push at with 
												their horns.
 
 Verses 23-25
 Ezekiel 34:23-25. And I will set 
												up one Shepherd — That is, the 
												Messiah, “the true Shepherd, who 
												hath given himself this name 
												both in the prophets and in the 
												gospel, and who hath perfectly 
												fulfilled all the duties, the 
												characters whereof have been 
												before described. He is called 
												David, because he sprung from 
												David according to the flesh; 
												because he possessed eminently 
												and really all those qualities 
												which the Scriptures give to 
												David as the type of the 
												Messiah; and because he was the 
												person in whom all the promises 
												made to David were fulfilled. 
												Though this prophecy was in a 
												great measure completed when 
												Christ, by the preaching of the 
												gospel, gathered into one the 
												children of God, among whom were 
												many of the lost sheep of 
												Israel, yet it will receive a 
												further completion at the 
												general conversion of the Jews.” 
												— Calmet. I the Lord will be 
												their God — I will renew my 
												covenant with them, and receive 
												them again into my protection. I 
												will be a God all-sufficient for 
												them, and they shall not, as 
												formerly, have recourse to any 
												other. And my servant David a 
												prince among them — To reduce 
												them to their allegiance, to 
												receive their homage, and to 
												reign over them, in them, and 
												for them. Observe, reader, 
												those, and those only, that have 
												the Lord Jesus for their Prince, 
												have the Lord Jehovah for their 
												God. And I will make with them a 
												covenant of peace — The covenant 
												of grace is this covenant of 
												peace; in it God is at peace 
												with penitent and obedient 
												believers, speaks peace to them, 
												and assures them of peace with 
												him, and of all good, even all 
												the good they need to make them 
												happy. This peace is through 
												Jesus Christ, who hath procured 
												it for us by his merits, and 
												imparts it to us by his Spirit. 
												He is the peace predicted by 
												Micah 5:5. Peace to men was 
												announced at his birth; his 
												gospel is the gospel of peace, 
												and he himself is the God and 
												King of peace: in short, he it 
												is who pacifieth all things and 
												reconciles and unites in one 
												Jews and Gentiles, God and man, 
												heaven and earth. And I will 
												cause the evil beasts to cease 
												out of the land — Persecutors 
												shall no more distress my 
												church, nor infidels seduce 
												them. They shall dwell safely in 
												the wilderness, and sleep in the 
												woods — They shall be perfectly 
												safe, by night as well as by 
												day, under my protection. He 
												alludes to the circumstance of 
												the eastern shepherds frequently 
												lying abroad in the fields with 
												their flocks during the night, 
												without a tent to shelter them.
 
 Verses 26-28
 Ezekiel 34:26-28. I will make 
												them and the places round about 
												my hill a blessing — I will 
												there give remarkable instances 
												of my favour, and of the 
												happiness which flows from it. 
												God’s hill is the same with his 
												holy mountain, mentioned Ezekiel 
												20:40, where see the note. There 
												shall be showers of blessings — 
												Blessings in great abundance, 
												and of all sorts, temporal and 
												spiritual, earthly and heavenly. 
												The tree of the field shall 
												yield her fruit — There shall be 
												great fertility and plenty in 
												every part of the land. The 
												spiritual blessings of the 
												gospel are often described under 
												the emblems of fruitfulness and 
												abundance. And they shall be 
												safe in their land — In no 
												danger of being invaded and 
												enslaved, though their great 
												plenty might be supposed to be a 
												temptation to their neighbours 
												to desire their land. And they 
												shall know that I am the Lord — 
												They shall indeed know that I, 
												and I only, am the living and 
												true God, and their God and 
												Saviour; when I have broken the 
												bands of their yoke — Those 
												bands by which they had been 
												brought down, and long held 
												under oppression; had been made 
												slaves, and used as such. The 
												same expression is used of the 
												deliverance of Israel out of 
												Egypt, (Leviticus 26:13; 
												Jeremiah 2:20,) their final 
												restoration being represented as 
												the greater deliverance of the 
												two. And none shall make them 
												afraid — The experience of my 
												particular care over them, shall 
												inspire them with that 
												confidence in me which shall 
												preserve them from all 
												disquieting fears and anxieties.
 
 Verse 29-30
 Ezekiel 34:29-30. And I will 
												raise up for them a plant of 
												renown — The Messiah, the branch 
												from the root of David, so 
												frequently foretold by the 
												prophet. And they shall be no 
												more consumed with hunger — But 
												shall be blessed with plenty of 
												all things. Spiritual blessings, 
												the blessings peculiar to the 
												Messiah’s kingdom, are chiefly 
												intended. These his subjects 
												shall possess in abundance, and 
												shall be satisfied therewith, 
												whatever their lot may be as to 
												the things of this life. Neither 
												shall they bear the shame of the 
												heathen any more — By whom they 
												were formerly reproached, as if 
												their God had cast them off. 
												Then shall they know — The very 
												heathen shall be convinced by 
												these many and great blessings 
												bestowed upon my people; that I 
												the Lord — I, Jehovah, who can 
												perform what I promise; am with 
												them — Am reconciled to them, 
												and do bless and save them; and 
												that they — Whom these heathen 
												despised and injured, and 
												formerly made slaves, even the 
												house of Israel, are my people — 
												My peculiar people, above all 
												people in the world, and as such 
												shall be taken care of by me.
 
 Verse 31
 Ezekiel 34:31. And ye my flock, 
												&c., are men — These words at 
												the conclusion of the chapter, 
												explain the metaphor which runs 
												through the whole of it; namely, 
												that what was said of a flock 
												and its shepherds, is to be 
												understood of men and their 
												governors, and especially of 
												God’s people, whom their civil 
												and ecclesiastical governors 
												neglected, or misled and 
												oppressed, but whom God regards, 
												watches over, provides for, and 
												takes care of, as a shepherd 
												does his flock. It is justly 
												observed here by Mr. Ostervald, 
												that “this is a chapter which 
												both magistrates and rulers of 
												the church ought to meditate 
												upon very seriously. The 
												complaints that God here makes 
												of false shepherds, and the 
												curses he denounces against 
												them, show that it is the duty 
												of pastors, with their utmost 
												diligence, to watch over the 
												sheep with which they are 
												intrusted, and to provide with 
												care and readiness for all their 
												wants; and that if they fail 
												herein, they must give a severe 
												account to God for it. This too 
												lays an obligation upon princes 
												and magistrates, to govern 
												faithfully and justly the people 
												committed to their trust. What 
												befell the Jews, who, for the 
												unfaithfulness of their prophets 
												and magistrates, were utterly 
												destroyed, shows that it is the 
												greatest misfortune to a nation 
												to have wicked rulers; and that 
												all who are concerned for the 
												glory of God, and the happiness 
												and edification of the church, 
												have great reason to pray to 
												God, that he would always raise 
												up to his people faithful and 
												good pastors.”
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