Summary
Ezekiel 5:1–4 – Shaving and dividing the hair
What happens: Ezekiel shaves his head and beard with a sword, weighs the hair, and divides it into thirds: burning one third, striking one third with the sword, and scattering one third to the wind while keeping a few hairs in his robe, then casting some of those into the fire.
What it means: The acted parable shows judgment by fire, sword, and scattering, with only a small remnant preserved. God’s justice is precise. The remnant theme shows mercy within judgment.
Ezekiel 5:5–12 – Why judgment falls on Jerusalem
What happens: God declares Jerusalem has rebelled more than the nations and rejected His rules. Therefore famine, pestilence, and sword come, even to the horror of cannibalism during siege. A third dies by plague and famine, a third by the sword, and a third is scattered.
What it means: Sin against greater light brings greater judgment. God is holy and impartial; covenant privilege does not cancel accountability. Justice fits the crime and vindicates God’s name.
Ezekiel 5:13–17 – God’s fury satisfied; desolation decreed
What happens: God says His anger will be spent and He will be comforted in His fury. He makes Jerusalem a ruin and a reproach before the nations. Wild beasts, famine, and sword finish the devastation.
What it means: God’s wrath is not a loss of control but a righteous response to persistent sin. His judgments defend His holiness and teach the nations that He is the Lord. The purpose is God’s glory and a return to true worship.
Application
- Do not presume on spiritual privilege; obey the light you have.
- Pray to be part of the faithful remnant who clings to God.
- Let God’s holiness shape your view of sin and justice.
