Ezekiel 36 binds land and life as God vindicates his name, restores Israel, and gives a new heart by the Spirit. The result is public recognition and changed people.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Ezekiel 36 binds land and life as God vindicates his name, restores Israel, and gives a new heart by the Spirit. The result is public recognition and changed people.
Ezekiel 34 indicts self-serving shepherds and reveals the Lord as the true Shepherd who searches, rescues, and rules through His servant David. Under His covenant of peace, showers fall, yokes break, and the flock learns again that He is with them.
Ezekiel 33 ties love to warning and mercy to justice. The watchman sounds the horn, God pleads for life, and hearers must turn today rather than admire sermons tomorrow.
Ezekiel 30 announces a near “day of the Lord” over Egypt. Alliances collapse, idols fail, and God strengthens Babylon while breaking Pharaoh so nations learn His name.
Pharaoh claims the Nile and meets the Lord who owns it. Ezekiel 29 recounts forty years of desolation, a humbled Egypt, Babylon’s wages, and a horn raised for Israel.
Ezekiel 28 humbles a sea-throne that claimed divinity, sings a lament over corrupted glory, judges a violent neighbor, and promises Israel secure life in the land.
Tyre’s gloat over Jerusalem meets God’s waves of judgment. Ezekiel 26 turns a proud harbor into a bare rock to teach nations who truly rules the sea.
Ezekiel 20 reviews Israel’s story to explain God’s judgment and mercy “for the sake of my name.” It ends with a robust promise of regathering and accepted worship on His holy mountain, so that all will know He is the Lord.
Ezekiel 10 captures the glory’s movement from threshold to east gate while coals of judgment fall on a city that refused cleansing. The scene is severe yet hopeful, pointing to the later return of glory to a purified house.
Ezekiel 3 moves the prophet from vision to vocation—eating the scroll, strengthened by the Spirit, charged as a watchman, and even bound to silence until God opens his mouth—teaching modern disciples courage, empathy, and trust in God’s timing.
God raises Ezekiel to his feet and sends him to a stubborn people with a scroll full of lament. The chapter redefines success as faithful speech by the Spirit’s power, sustaining hope that judgment serves mercy’s long plan.
Ezekiel 1 meets an exiled priest with a moving throne and blazing holiness. The vision declares God’s sovereign presence in exile and plants hope for the day his glory returns to dwell among his purified people.
Lamentations 5 gathers the city’s losses into a single prayer and fixes its eyes on the throne: “Restore us to yourself.” It shows how to confess, ask, and wait under the King whose reign endures.
Lamentations 4 catalogs the city’s reversals and names the holy reason for them. Yet the poem ends with a promise: Zion’s punishment will end, and the cup will pass to those who mocked her.
Lamentations 3 turns from darkness to hope without denying either. It teaches sufferers to remember God’s character, return to him, wait quietly, and pray for justice while trusting mercies new every morning.