Daily Bible Reading Sunday 16th March 2025
by William Moody
Ezekiel 19
A Lament for the Princes of Israel
19:1 And you, take up a lamentation for the princes of Israel, 2 and say:
What was your mother? A lioness!
Among lions she crouched;
in the midst of young lions
she reared her cubs.
3 And she brought up one of her cubs;
he became a young lion,
and he learned to catch prey;
he devoured men.
4 The nations heard about him;
he was caught in their pit,
and they brought him with hooks
to the land of Egypt.
5 When she saw that she waited in vain,
that her hope was lost,
she took another of her cubs
and made him a young lion.
6 He prowled among the lions;
he became a young lion,
and he learned to catch prey;
he devoured men,
7 and seized1 their widows.
He laid waste their cities,
and the land was appalled and all who were in it
at the sound of his roaring.
8 Then the nations set against him
from provinces on every side;
they spread their net over him;
he was taken in their pit.
9 With hooks they put him in a cage2
and brought him to the king of Babylon;
they brought him into custody,
that his voice should no more be heard
on the mountains of Israel.
10 Your mother was like a vine in a vineyard3
planted by the water,
fruitful and full of branches
by reason of abundant water.
11 Its strong stems became
rulers’ scepters;
it towered aloft
among the thick boughs;4
it was seen in its height
with the mass of its branches.
12 But the vine was plucked up in fury,
cast down to the ground;
the east wind dried up its fruit;
they were stripped off and withered.
As for its strong stem,
fire consumed it.
13 Now it is planted in the wilderness,
in a dry and thirsty land.
14 And fire has gone out from the stem of its shoots,
has consumed its fruit,
so that there remains in it no strong stem,
no scepter for ruling.
This is a lamentation and has become a lamentation.
Footnotes
[1] 19:7
Hebrew knew
[2] 19:9Or in a wooden collar
[3] 19:10Some Hebrew manuscripts; most Hebrew manuscripts in your blood
[4] 19:11Or the clouds (ESV)
The two lion cubs mentioned in this passage are the two kings of Judah Jehoahaz who was ten to Egypt (2 Kings 23 v31-35) and Jehoiachin (who was taken to Babylon (2 Kings 24 v12). Like lion cubs they appeared powerful for a time, but in the end they become captives. Man living in defiance of the Lord, will have a time of life and success, but in the end judgment will come.
A different picture now takes over to describe Jerusalem, and this is of a vine in a vineyard (v10-14). Initially it was very fruitful because of an abundant supply of water (v10-11). Here were a people who should have been so thankful because of God’s abundant blessing to them.
But because of their sin the vine was plucked up, an east wind dried its fruit and a fire consumed its stem (v12-13). This triple judgment speaks of the great fury that the Lord had towards them.
Sin is never to be treated lightly, God’s wrath is real and will come to all who are unrepentant and don’t hide under the shelter of Christ. God is love, but God is also just and needs to be feared. It is important to pray for a right perspective on God’s character and nature. In days of blessing, if we engage wilfully in sin, we need to realise our situation can change suddenly.
copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.