Verses 1–7
The People Are Massacred
The word of the LORD comes to Ezekiel (Ezekiel 21:1). He is commanded to set his face on Jerusalem and to speak, or let his words flow, against the sanctuaries (Ezekiel 21:2; cf. Ezekiel 20:46). After the Negev in the previous verses (Ezekiel 20:45-Ephesians :), by which Judah is meant, it is now Jerusalem’s turn to hear words of judgment. Judgment is directed primarily against “the sanctuaries” by which, given the plural, is possibly meant the temple complex (cf. Leviticus 26:31; Matthew 24:1). Ezekiel is also to prophesy against the whole land of Israel.
The whole land has so departed from the LORD that He will cut off from it both the righteous and the wicked (Ezekiel 21:3). They are the green and the dry tree of the previous riddle (Ezekiel 20:47). The fire, spoken of there, has now become a sword. The LORD will draw His sword out of its sheath to exercise the judgment. This refers to the carnage that will be wrought by Nebuchadnezzar, who is His sword.
The word ‘sword’ occurs no less than thirteen times in the following verses. This does show the severity and certainty of the judgment. It is also a general judgment, for the sword will be against “all flesh” (cf. Ezekiel 20:48), “from south [to] north” (Ezekiel 21:4), including the princes (Ezekiel 21:12). The judgment will be unstoppable (Ezekiel 21:5).
As Ezekiel lets his words flow, he must “groan with breaking heart [literally: loins] and bitter grief” (Ezekiel 21:6). The groaning must be so deep that he is like a broken man, like someone bent or huddled with his hands on his stomach because of an excruciating stomachache. Strength to walk is not there. He has to show this dejection because there is no hope of recovery from the pain. When the people ask him why he is doing this, he must say that he is weighed down by the burden the LORD is placing on him (Ezekiel 21:7).
The prophet is committed to his message and he is deeply burdened by it himself. The inner feelings and expressions that show this show that he does not bring his message with pleasure. The suffering he has to announce that will come upon his people affects him deeply.
If we have to admonish someone, we must have the right inner mind for it and give it the right expression. Do we also know the groaning because of the disasters that will befall the world and Christianity?
Just as the imminent suffering coming upon his people deprives him of all strength already now at its announcement, so it will be with those over whom the sword of God’s judgment will soon come. Ezekiel uses four expressions to describe the physical and spiritual reaction to the news of the fall Jerusalem:
1. “And every heart will melt (cf. Psalms 22:15; Isaiah 13:7; Nahum 2:10),
2. all hands will be feeble (cf. 2 Samuel 4:1; Isaiah 13:7; Jeremiah 6:24; Ezekiel 7:17),
3. every spirit will faint (cf. Isaiah 61:3) and
4. all knees will be weak [literally: flow] as water” (Ezekiel 7:17).
When the news of the fall and destruction of Jerusalem comes, it will take away the courage of all who hear it. And it will surely come, for the LORD has said so. This is what Ezekiel needs to show and let hear to the exiles with whom he is.