The LORD's Judgment on Those Who Mock His People's Fall
The Lord judges those who gloat over His people's chastening, proving that even foreign nations must answer to His holiness and sovereign rule.
A teaching guide through Ezekiel, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
A teaching guide through Ezekiel, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
Teaching paths help you move through the book with a clear purpose. Use the right rail to focus the chapter plan, or stay in the full book view to read every passage in canonical order.
Best for: church-wide formation, annual series, big-picture discipleship.
Each week can point to Study, and some weeks also link to an outline when one is available.
Ezekiel 25
The Lord judges those who gloat over His people's chastening, proving that even foreign nations must answer to His holiness and sovereign rule.
When people interpret God's discipline as proof that His people and purposes are ordinary, the Lord exposes their pride and makes His holiness known through righteous judgment.
The Lord judges not only violent actions but the old hatreds that feed them; when a nation seeks destruction through malicious revenge, God answers with righteous judgment and makes Himself known.
Ezekiel 26
God judges the nations when they treat another people's calamity as a doorway to their own prosperity, because the downfall of Jerusalem is not permission for arrogant exploitation but an arena in which the Lord reveals His sovereign justice.
God can use even imperial powers as instruments of judgment to strip proud cities of their defenses, wealth, music, and imagined permanence, until all that remains proves that His word is stronger than human splendor.
Tyre's overthrow shakes the coastlands because the fall of one proud sea-city exposes the instability of every power that trusted in maritime wealth, civic renown, and terror-producing influence rather than the Lord.
Tyre's judgment is complete because the Lord Himself will make the city desolate, cover it with the deep, bring it down to the pit, and render it sought but never found.
Ezekiel 27
The Lord teaches His people to lament the fall of proud worldly splendor without admiring it as ultimate, because commercial greatness, strategic connections, and cultural beauty are fragile before the sovereign God.
Ezekiel 28
God humbles rulers who turn wisdom, wealth, and influence into self-deification, proving that no human throne, treasury, or mind can make a mortal creature into God.
God brings down corrupted splendor: when beauty, wisdom, privilege, and commerce are twisted into pride and violence, the Lord strips away false glory and exposes the creature's ruin before the nations.
God displays His glory by judging malicious neighboring hostility: the Lord proves Himself holy among the nations and removes the briers and thorns that have wounded His people.
After judging the nations that wounded Israel, the Lord promises to gather His people, restore them to their land, and make His holy identity known through their secure dwelling.
Ezekiel 29
When Egypt boasts as if its life-source belongs to Pharaoh and tempts Israel to lean on false security, the Lord answers by judging Egypt, breaking its pretensions, and leaving it diminished rather than dominant.
God governs the accounts of history: Babylon's hard labor against Tyre is not forgotten, Egypt is assigned as wages, and Israel receives a promise that the Lord will raise up strength and open prophetic speech among His people.
Ezekiel 30
When the day of the Lord comes against Egypt, every layer of false security is exposed: armies fall, allies tremble, wealth is carried away, idols are destroyed, cities burn, and the nations learn that the Lord alone is God.
The Lord breaks the arms of Pharaoh, strengthens the arms of Babylon, and makes Egypt know that the sword, the battle, the empire, and the outcome belong to Him.
Ezekiel 31
Ezekiel 31 teaches that Egypt must read Assyria's downfall as its own warning: the proud empire that seems like a towering cedar over the nations will be felled by the Lord and brought down with the dead.
Ezekiel 32
Ezekiel 32:1-16 laments Egypt’s fall by portraying Pharaoh as a beastly power dragged from the waters, displayed in death, darkened before the nations, and struck by Babylon so that Egypt’s violent greatness gives way to desolation and the knowledge of the Lord.
Ezekiel 32:17-32 laments Egypt’s descent among the slain nations, showing Pharaoh that Assyria, Elam, Meshek-Tubal, Edom, the northern princes, and Sidon all lie powerless in death, and that Egypt’s terror in the land of the living ends in disgrace among those killed by the sword.
Ezekiel 33
Ezekiel 33:1-20 renews the watchman commission and announces that life is found not in refusing warning, resting on former righteousness, or accusing God of injustice, but in hearing the Lord's word, turning from wickedness, and entrusting oneself to the justice and mercy of the God who says, 'Turn! Turn from Your evil ways! Why will You die?'
Ezekiel 33:21-22 records the long-awaited report, ‘The city has fallen,’ and shows that the Lord had already placed His hand upon Ezekiel and opened His mouth before the messenger arrived, turning Jerusalem’s devastation into the vindication of God’s word and the beginning of a new phase of prophetic speech.
Ezekiel 33:23-29 confronts survivors in the ruined land who argue that if Abraham, though one man, possessed the land, then they as many surely possess it. The Lord answers that inheritance cannot be claimed while His covenant is despised; eating blood, lifting eyes to idols, shedding blood, relying on the sword, committing abominations, and defiling a neighbor’s wife turn their land claim into presumption that will end in desolation.
Ezekiel 33:30-33 confronts listeners who treat prophetic revelation as compelling speech rather than covenant summons. They come near, sit before the prophet, and hear the Lord's words, but their mouths speak devotion while their hearts chase gain. The passage warns that the confirmed fulfillment of God's word will reveal both the prophet's authenticity and the hearers' guilt for listening without obedience.
Ezekiel 34
Ezekiel 34:1-10 exposes leadership failure at the heart of Israel's ruin. The shepherds have treated the flock as a resource to exploit rather than a charge to serve, so the sheep are weak, sick, injured, straying, lost, scattered, and preyed upon. The Lord answers by declaring Himself against the shepherds, demanding His flock from their hand, ending their rule over the sheep, and rescuing His people from being food for predatory leaders.
Ezekiel 34:11-16 turns the shepherd indictment into a divine promise. The Lord repeatedly places Himself as the acting Shepherd: He will search for His sheep, look after them, rescue them from scattered places, bring them out from the nations, gather them from the countries, bring them into their own land, pasture them on Israel's mountains, give them rest, search for the lost, bring back strays, bind the injured, strengthen the weak, and shepherd with justice. Restoration is therefore not sentimental optimism but the Lord's covenant faithfulness applied to a scattered, wounded, and endangered flock.
Ezekiel 34:17-24 moves from divine rescue to righteous order within the restored flock. The Lord addresses the sheep themselves, exposing those who feed on good pasture but trample the rest, drink clear water but muddy what remains, and shove the weak with flank, shoulder, and horns until they are driven away. The Lord promises to judge between the fat and lean, save His flock from further plunder, and appoint one shepherd, His servant David, who will feed and shepherd them under the Lord's own kingship. Restoration therefore requires both rescue from failed shepherds and deliverance from internal oppression under the promised Davidic shepherd.
The Lord promises His gathered flock a covenant of peace: danger removed, blessing poured down, bondage broken, reproach ended, and covenant belonging publicly restored.
Ezekiel 35
Mount Seir's ancient hatred will return upon its own head: the nation that loved bloodshed, rejoiced over Israel's desolation, and claimed the Lord's land will itself become desolate and know that the Lord heard every boast.
Ezekiel 36
The Lord speaks restoration to Israel's desolated mountains: the nations that mocked will bear their own reproach, but the land of Israel will be fruitful, rebuilt, inhabited, and secured for the Lord's people.