Ezekiel — A Prophecy of Glory, Judgment, and Unshakeable Hope
1. God Appears When Everything Seems Lost
Ezekiel begins in a refugee camp by the River Chebar — a place of defeat, dislocation, and despair. The people felt abandoned, their city destroyed, their temple burned, their future gone. Yet there, in the dust of exile, God breaks through.
Ezekiel doesn’t see a God crushed by circumstances but a God riding above them, enthroned in glory, unbound by geography, politics, or human failure.
God still comes to people who feel defeated. Christ steps into our exile — our sin, our brokenness, our hopelessness — and reveals that God has not abandoned us.
Key Verses
• “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.” — John 1:5
• “But God, being rich in mercy… made us alive together with Christ.” — Ephesians 2:4–5
When everything collapses, God is not absent.
2. God’s Glory Is Above Every Circumstance
Ezekiel’s opening vision is not a puzzle to decode but a message to absorb: God is not trapped in Babylon, nor defeated by Babylon. His throne has wheels — He moves, He reigns, He is sovereign everywhere.
Ezekiel learns that God is not overwhelmed by the chaos of life. He is above it, ruling over it, working through it.
The Lord Jesus Christ shows us the same truth. Even the cross — the darkest moment in history — was not a defeat but the place from which salvation flowed.
Key Verses
• “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me.” — Matthew 28:18
• “He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.” — Colossians 1:17
Ezekiel’s vision lifts our eyes. Christ lifts our hearts.
3. Ezekiel’s Message of Judgment Is a Message of Love
Ezekiel speaks plainly about sin, idolatry, and rebellion. God’s people had wandered far, and judgment was not cruelty but clarity — a call to return.
Judgment in Ezekiel is never the last word. It is the doorway to restoration.
The cross shows the same pattern. God takes sin seriously — so seriously that Christ bears it. Judgment becomes the pathway to mercy.
Key Verses
• “For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him.” — John 3:17
• “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures.” — 1 Corinthians 15:3
God confronts us not to crush us but to bring us to repentance.
4. God Can Change Not Only Our Circumstances but Our Hearts
Ezekiel is full of transformation — dry bones become an army, a ruined temple becomes a pl
ace of glory, a scattered people become a restored nation.
But the greatest miracle is internal: God promises a new heart, a new spirit, and His own Spirit dwelling within His people.
This promise is fulfilled in Christ. Through His death and resurrection, and through the gift of the Holy Spirit, God changes us from the inside out.
Key Verses
• “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.” — 2 Corinthians 5:17
• “I will put My laws in their hearts.” — Hebrews 10:16
Ezekiel shows that God doesn’t just fix situations — He renews people.
5. God Never Gives Up on Those Who Trust Him
Despite their failures, God promises Israel a future — a shepherd, a covenant of peace, a restored land, a renewed temple, and a river of life flowing from His presence.
Ezekiel ends not with despair but with a name: “The LORD is there.”
Christ is the Good Shepherd, the Prince of Peace, and the source of living water. In Him, God’s presence is not a distant hope but a daily reality.
Key Verses
• “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep.” — John 10:11
• “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” — John 1:14
• “He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion.” — Philippians 1:6
God’s faithfulness outlasts our failures.
Conclusion — Ezekiel’s Gospel Thread
Ezekiel teaches us that:
• God appears in the darkest places
• God reigns above every circumstance
• God confronts sin to restore us
• God transforms hearts by His Spirit
• God never abandons those who trust Him
In Christ, every one of these truths shines even brighter.
When we sit by our own “River Chebar” — confused, defeated, or displaced — the God of Ezekiel still comes to us. He still speaks. He still saves. He still restores. And He still reigns.
All photos courtesy of Unsplash



