Ezekiel 38-39 J. Vernon McGee
LINGUISTIC PHENOMENON
And the word of the LORD came unto me, saying,
Son of man, set thy face against Gog, the land of Magog, the chief prince of
Meshech and Tubal, and prophesy against him [Ezek. 38:1–2].
Gog is a word for ruler, meaning roof, which actually means “the man on top.” I
can’t think of a better name for a dictator than Gog. If he is not on top, he is
not a dictator, and if he is on top, he is a dictator.
Magog means “head”; it is the Hebrew word Rosh, which means head. Dean Stanley,
in his exhaustive History of the Eastern Church, published half a century ago,
has a note founded on Gesenius, the great Hebrew scholar, to the effect that the
word Rosh should be Russia. Then Dean Stanley adds that this is the only
reference to a modern nation in the entire Old Testament. This is indeed
remarkable.
Bishop Lowther made the statement that Rosh taken as a proper name in Ezekiel
signified the inhabitants of Scythia from whom the modern Russians derive their
name. You see, Russia was first called Muscovy, derived from Meshech. Ivan the
Fourth, a czar of Russia, who was called Ivan the Terrible, came to the
Muscovite throne in 1533. He assumed the title of Czar, which was the first time
the title was used. I am sure you detect that the names Meshech and Tubal
certainly sound like Moscow, and Tobolsk, which is way over in Siberia. The
linguistic phenomenon certainly leads us to believe that Ezekiel is talking
about Russia in this passage.
GEOGRAPHIC PHENOMENON
Now the second proof that identifies Russia is the geographic position. Here we
have mentioned the nations which will be with Russia in the last days: “Gomer,
and all his bands: the house of Togarmah of the north quarters, and all his
bands: and many people with thee” (v. 6). “Gomer” is Germany, and “the house of
Togarmah” is Turkey. “Of the north quarters” gives us the geographic location.
Again in verse 15 we read: “And thou shalt come from thy place out of the north
parts,” and in chapter 39 verse 2 the same location is given: “and will cause
thee to come up from the north parts.” Whenever I give an illustrated message on
this passage in Scripture, I always show a map of Israel and Russia. The literal
meaning here is the “uttermost parts of the north.” If you look at a map, you
will find that Russia is directly north and northeast. In fact, it covers Israel
just like that picture you have seen of the fellow under a great big sombrero.
That hat covers him just like Russia covers the nation Israel. When you start
going north of Israel, you end up in Russia, and when you get through Russia you
will be among the icebergs. You and the polar bears are going to be the only
ones there.
Directions in the Bible are in relation to the land of Israel. North in the
Bible does not mean north of California or north of where you live. In the Bible
north is north of the land of Israel. South is south of the land of Israel. West
is west of the land of Israel, and east is east of the land of Israel. In other
words, Israel is the geographical center of the earth as far as the Word of God
is concerned.
PHILOSOPHICAL PHENOMENON
Finally we come to the philosophical or ideological phenomenon which helps us
identify Gog and Magog with Russia.
And say, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I am against thee, O Gog, the chief
prince of Meshech and Tubal [Ezek. 38:3].
This is strange language. Here in the Book of Ezekiel God has said several times
that He is against certain nations. He said it about Babylon; He said it about
Egypt; and He said it about the nations which were against His people and
against His person. Now here is a nation that is to arise in the last days, a
nation which is against God. The reason we know it is against God is because God
says, “I’m against you.” This makes it different from any other nation, because
God has said this about nations already in existence that have exhibited enmity
and rejection of Him, but this nation hadn’t even come into existence when
Ezekiel gave this prophecy. Yet God says He is against it.
My friend, you and I have seen something that no generation in the past has
seen. We have seen a nation arise whose basic philosophy is atheism. The
political economy of Russia rests upon the premise that there is no God. It is
atheistic. No other nation has assumed the dominant position of atheism.
Someone may be thinking, “What about the heathen, pagan nations of the past?
Weren’t they atheistic?” No, they were not. They were polytheistic. They
believed in many gods. In the beginning men went off the track, but they did not
become atheists. The reason they did not become atheists is, I think, easy to
understand. They were too close to the mooring mast of revelation. After all, in
Noah’s day you did not have atheists. That was not the problem with that crowd
at all. The problem with them was that they had gone off into sin, and they
worshiped many gods. Man at that point was polytheistic. All the great nations
of the past were polytheistic, and the judgments God has pronounced in this book
are against polytheistic nations. He said of Memphis that all of the idols would
disappear, and they have disappeared. There were probably no people so given
over to idolatry—with the possible exception of the Babylonians. Polytheism
characterized the ancient world. But Russia is a nation whose basic philosophy
is atheistic, a nation that is against God.
Do you realize that God did not give a commandment against atheism at the
beginning? He did, however, give the first two commandments against polytheism:
“Thou shalt have no other gods before me” (Exod. 20:3); and “Thou shalt not make
unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven
above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth”
(Exod. 20:4). So, you see, there are commandments against polytheism, but none
against atheism.
When you reach the time of David, atheism is beginning to appear. In Psalm 14:1
we read, “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.” How ridiculous
atheism is! It is almost an untenable position for little man, and here is a
nation that says there is no God! Concerning Russia, men in high places have
warned, “You cannot negotiate with them.” Mr. Churchill said of Russia, “A
riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” Rube Goldberg, who drew one of
those crazy cartoons years ago, called Joe Stalin, “The Great Upside–down
Philosopher.” Underneath the cartoon was written: “Top is bottom, black is
white, far is near, and day is night. Big is little, high is low, cold is hot,
and yes is no.” Unreasonable? Insane? But that has been the basic philosophy of
Russia, and it is a nation that has risen in our day.
Mr. Stalin once said, “We have deposed the czars of the earth, and we shall now
dethrone the Lord of heaven.” When Russia put a rocket past the moon, called the
Sputnik, and when it was nearing the sun, the following was heard on the radio
in Russia: “Our rocket has bypassed the moon. It is nearing the sun. We have not
discovered God. We have turned out lights in heaven that no man will be able to
put on again. We are breaking the yoke of the gospel, the opiate of the masses.
Let us go forth and Christ shall be relegated to mythology.” I have often
wondered what they had in mind when they said that. Did they think that God was
playing peekaboo on the other side of the moon? Because they got a glimpse of
the other side of the moon and did not see God, did that prove He did not exist?
That is the reasoning of the upside–down philosopher. God, however, has beaten
them to the draw. Before Russia even came into existence, God said, “I am
against thee.”
You can see how Gog and Magog may be identified with Russia by this threefold
reason: (1) the linguistic phenomenon; (2) the geographic phenomenon; and (3)
the philosophical or ideological phenonemon. These are the three points of
identification, and when we get to chapter 39 of Ezekiel, God repeats once again
that He is against Russia.
This chapter will tell us that this nation in the north with other nations with
him will come down against Israel.
WHY RUSSIA WILL INVADE ISRAEL
Now the question is: Why will they come against the land of Israel?
And I will turn thee back, and put hooks into thy jaws, and I will bring thee
forth, and all thine army, horses and horsemen, all of them clothed with all
sorts of armour, even a great company with bucklers and shields, all of them
handling swords [Ezek. 38:4].
God says, “I will … put hooks into thy jaws, and I will bring thee forth.” This
has been interpreted to mean that God was going to put hooks in their jaws to
get them out of Israel after they had invaded it. But that is not what He says.
He makes it clear that He is going to judge them in the land of Israel, and that
they will not come out alive. In chapter 39, verse 11, He says, “And it shall
come to pass in that day, that I will give unto Gog a place there of graves in
Israel.” As we read this section, it becomes obvious that God is not going to
lead out the invading nations, but there will be a slaughter the like of which
probably has not been seen in the history of the world.
Then what does God mean by saying that He will put hooks in their jaws? Well, it
seems obvious to me that He is saying, “I am going to put hooks in your jaws and
bring you down into the land of Israel.” When this time comes, Israel will be
back in their own land. For centuries that land was not occupied by them. After
the destruction by Titus the Roman in A.D. 70, the Jewish people were sold into
slavery throughout the world, and they were scattered throughout the world.
The land was no longer a land of milk and honey. We have seen in the Book of
Ezekiel that even the Negev was at one time covered with forest. God said that
He was going to burn that out, and He did. That is the place where Elijah went
when Jezebel threatened to kill him. He kept going until he was so tired he
stopped and crawled under a juniper tree. If Elijah were here today, he would
have trouble finding a juniper tree to crawl under; he would have to find
something else. The forests are gone.
Mark Twain said concerning the land of Israel, “Palestine sits in sackcloth and
ashes, desolate and unlovely. It is a hopeless, dreary, heartbroken land. And
why should it be otherwise? Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land?
Palestine is no more of this work–day world. It is sacred to poetry and
tradition. It is dreamland.”
Dr. Theodor Herzl, the playwright from Austria who began the tremendous Zionist
movement back to the land of Palestine, made this statement: “There is a land
without a people. There is a people without a land. Give that land without a
people to the people without a land.”
Dr. Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel, speaking before the
Anglo–American Commission of Inquiry, said, “The Jewish nation is a ghost
nation. Only the God of Israel has kept the Jewish people alive.”
David Ben–Gurion, the first prime minister and minister of defense in Israel,
made this statement: “Ezekiel 37 has been fulfilled, and the nation Israel is
hearing the footsteps of the Messiah.”
Today Israel has turned from this thinking. I have a picture, taken on Israel’s
twenty–first anniversary, of a motto in the auditorium at Tel Aviv, written in
Hebrew and English. It said, “Science will bring peace to this land.” The Old
Testament says that Messiah will bring peace to that land, so apparently they
are chasing a new messiah today.
Russia will invade the land of Israel. Lord Beverly made the statement that
Russia would not move into western Europe but would move into Asia and the Near
East. General Douglas MacArthur concurred with him in that viewpoint. At the
time Lord Beverly made that statement almost everyone thought that Russia would
move into western Europe after World War II, but they did not move into that
area at all. In fact, up to this day they have not moved into that area.
God says, “I will put hooks into thy jaws, and I will bring thee forth.” Today I
believe that we can already see three of the hooks that God could use to bring
them down into that land:
1. Russia needs a warm–water entrance into the waterways of the world. Israel
offers that, and Russia is moving in this direction. A few years ago I sat in
the dining room on the top floor of the Hilton Hotel in Istanbul and watched
Russian ships coming out of the Black Sea, moving through the Bosporus, and
heading for the Mediterranean Sea. This took place after the Six–Day War, and
Russian naval strength had increased tremendously. What are the Russians looking
for? They are looking for a warm–water port. Admiral Sergei Gorshkov made this
statement, “The flag of the Soviet navy now proudly flies over the oceans of the
world. Sooner or later the United States will have to understand that it no
longer has mastery of the seas.” Russia is looking for a warm–water port. Where
are they going? All I know is that they are headed for the Mediterranean Sea.
What nation along the east side of the Mediterranean would be suitable as a
port? Israel certainly would be. Russia is interested in moving southward today.
God has put a hook in their jaw.
2. God has a second hook—oil. The oil deposits of the Near East are essential
for the survival of modern nations. Russia needs oil. Today we are being
constantly reminded that the world is running short of energy. Oil is one of the
resources in short supply. As a result the world is turning to the places where
they can get oil. There is oil in the Near East. Whether or not the oil is
actually in the land of Israel is not the important thing. The important
consideration is that, in spite of the strained relations between the Arabs and
the Jews, a great deal of that oil is going through the land of Israel. When
ships were not able to go through the Suez Canal, they put the oil off at a port
which had been taken by Israel, and then the oil was taken across the land of
Israel to the Mediterranean ports. As far back as 1955 I delivered a message
stating that Russia was hungering for the Arabian oil. An editor of a paper in
downtown Los Angeles heard my message and disagreed with it. Sometime later he
made a trip over to the Near East area. When he returned, he wrote an article
(and I have a copy of it) in which he said, “Russia hungers for Arabian oil.” He
changed his viewpoint after he had been to the Near East and had seen things
with his own eyes. It is a pretty good hook God has in Russia’s jaws because any
modern nation must have oil.
3. The third hook concerns the Dead Sea. The mineral deposits in the Dead Sea
are so great that they cannot be evaluated on today’s market. Chemicals
saturated in the water represent untold wealth. It is estimated that the Dead
Sea contains two billion tons of potassium chloride, which is potash—needed to
sweeten and enrich the soil that is readily being depleted around the world,
including our own area. The Dead Sea also contains twenty–two billion tons of
magnesium chloride, twelve billion tons of sodium chloride, and six billion tons
of calcium chloride. The Dead Sea, in addition to all of this, contains cerium,
cobalt, manganese, and even gold. Believe me, friend, there is much effort being
made today to extract this wealth from the Dead Sea.
If you had been around a few million years ago and had seen the Lord forming
this earth, particularly the Dead Sea, you would probably have asked Him, “Why
are you damming up that sea? You are going to have a pretty salty place.” He
would have replied, “I am baiting a hook.” Then you would have said, “Baiting a
hook for what?” Then the Lord would have said, “In a few million years there
will be a nation in the north that I am going to bring into the land of Israel.
I am just baiting one of the hooks of a little ahead of time.” And that is what
God has been doing—baiting a hook.
WHEN RUSSIA WILL INVADE ISRAEL
The question is: When will Russia come down? This is where many expositors
disagree. There are those who believe that Russia will invade the land of
Palestine at the end of this age, before the church is raptured. Others believe
that Russia will come against Israel at the beginning of the Tribulation period,
and others believe it will be at the end of the Tribulation. There are some who
believe this will take place at the beginning of the Millennium. I am not going
to discuss these different viewpoints in detail. My particular viewpoint is
this: Russia will come in the “latter days” (v. 16); these “latter days” (as we
have seen in the other prophets) is a technical term that specifically refers to
the Tribulation period. These will be the days when the Antichrist comes to
power, and he is going to come to power on a peace platform. As a result there
will be a false peace for the first part of the Tribulation period; then in the
midst of the seven years, Russia will come down from the north into the land of
Israel. Russia will trigger the Great Tribulation by breaking the false peace
made by the Antichrist and invading Israel.
After many days thou shalt be visited: in the latter years thou shalt come into
the land that is brought back from the sword, and is gathered out of many
people, against the mountains of Israel, which have been always waste: but it is
brought forth out of the nations, and they shall dwell safely all of them [Ezek.
38:8].
When Israel is back in the land, they will be under the domination of the
Antichrist, who will make them believe that peace has come to the earth, that
all of the problems of the earth are settled and they are entering the
Millennium. But this is not true, and they will find in the midst of the
Tribulation period that out of the north will come their enemy, Russia.
And thou shalt come up against my people of Israel, as a cloud to cover the
land; it shall be in the latter days, and I will bring thee against my land,
that the heathen may know me, when I shall be sanctified in thee. O Gog, before
their eyes [Ezek. 38:16].
Since Israel is dwelling in peace, and Antichrist has deceived everyone, God is
Israel’s only source of help. He Himself will deal with Russia. War will break
out. The Great Tribulation will begin (which is the final three and one–half
years of the Tribulation period) in all of its frenzied fury. The whole earth
will be a holocaust. Judgments, one right after the other, will come upon the
earth. War will reign. Christ said concerning this brief period, “… except those
days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved …” (Matt. 24:22).
I recommend that you read in your Bible the remainder of this chapter. This is
God’s judgment upon the invading armies of Russia.
RESULTS OF THE INVASION
Chapter 39 continues the prophecy against Gog and furnishes added details about
the destruction of this formidable enemy.
And I will turn thee back, and leave but the sixth part of thee, and will cause
thee to come up from the north parts, and will bring thee upon the mountains of
Israel [Ezek. 39:2].
“Leave but the sixth part of thee” is literally “I will six thee,” or better
still, “I will afflict thee with six plagues.” These plagues are listed in
chapter 38 verse 22 as pestilence, blood, overflowing rain, great hailstones,
fire, and brimstone. This is the way God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah. According
to the record, “Then the LORD rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire
from the LORD out of heaven” (Gen. 19:24). And this is exactly the way God
intends to destroy this army which will come out of the north against His people
to destroy them. You must remember that Russia has always been anti–Semitic. At
the present writing the largest population of Jews—outside the land of Israel
and the United States—is over there in Russia. We are hearing a great deal of
criticism of Russia for not permitting the Jews to leave. Well, in these last
days God will deal with Russia for its treatment of His people.
There is a message for us here. When God was ready to destroy Sodom and
Gomorrah, Abraham thought He was being unjust. He asked God, “Will you destroy
the righteous with the wicked? Will you spare the city if there are fifty
righteous—forty–five—forty—thirty—twenty—ten?” God said no, He would not destroy
the city if ten righteous were found there. But there were not ten, and God sent
His angels to get Lot out of the city, saying that they could not destroy the
city until Lot was out of it. My friend, this is one reason I believe that God
will not let the Tribulation come until He takes His church—that is, all
born–again believers—out of the world. Let me illustrate this with the following
diagram:
To put it very bluntly, all hell will break loose on the earth during the
Tribulation period. It will be a frightful, terrible time. I don’t understand
the folk who insist that God’s redeemed ones, which we designate as the church,
will go through the Tribulation. The Bible makes it clear that those who will be
witnessing on the earth during this time will be the 144,000 Jews.
God, having dealt in judgment with the enemy that invaded Israel from the north,
allows Antichrist to be the world ruler for the remainder of the Tribulation
period. Then the Lord Jesus Christ will come to the earth to establish His
Kingdom; we have that pictured in chapter 19 of Revelation. In chapter 20 of the
Book of Revelation the Kingdom, the Millennium, begins.
With these tremendous events in mind, it would be well to pause a moment and
consider the material we have studied. After a careful examination of three of
the four major prophets: Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, certain great principles
emerge which the fourth prophet, Daniel, will confirm. These principles have an
ageless application for nations of the world and for believers (when I say
“believers,” I am speaking about those who have trusted the Lord Jesus Christ as
Savior and believe that the Bible is the Word of God). In Ezekiel we have seen
God dealing with Israel. My friend, when God says “Israel” He means Israel; He
does not mean the church. How some can believe that God means the church when He
says Israel is a flip on the flying trapeze of theology that is beyond me. Let’s
allow God to mean what He says and realize that He has been dealing in these
prophecies with the literal people of Israel. That is the correct
interpretation. However, there is an application we can make since God’s dealing
with Israel is a microcosm of His dealings with the world in which we live. The
principles God has used in dealing with His own people Israel are eternal, for
they are linked to the character and attributes of God. I have stated some of
them in the Books of Isaiah and Jeremiah, and now I am prepared to draw certain
conclusions from Ezekiel.
No prophet emphasizes the glory and the holiness of God more then Ezekiel. He
saw the glory of God—that was the great vision he had at the beginning of his
book. He never forgot it. And we should not forget it either. His emphasis,
therefore, is upon God’s judgment. God is longsuffering, not willing that any
should perish, and He warned His people again and again that, if they did not
turn to Him, He would judge Jerusalem. Then Jerusalem was destroyed, and Ezekiel
offered the people encouragement as they looked into the future. “But,” he said,
“another enemy is coming.” When the Lord Jesus Christ was on earth, He wept over
the city of Jerusalem because He knew that Titus the Roman would be around in a
few years to destroy the city, just as Nebuchadnezzar had done in the past.
Things were wrong in Jerusalem; and, if that city was to enjoy the blessings of
God, those things had to be made right. The liars should cease lying; the
thieves should cease stealing; the lawless should become law–abiding; and
righteousness should prevail in the city. Only when God was acknowledged and
respected in the land could blessing rest upon Jerusalem. Righteousness must
prevail before any nation or individual can experience the love, mercy, and
goodness of God. Jerusalem was wrong—the people were thinking wrong; they were
acting wrong. They were in sin, and God was right in judging them. God never
blesses that which is wrong.
This is made evident when we contrast Ezekiel with Jeremiah. I want you to
notice this again because I consider it rather important. Jeremiah reveals the
heart of God. God does not want to judge. As He said in Isaiah, judgment is
strange work. He would rather save—that is His business. He is not willing that
any should perish. He is very much involved with the human race. The great
statement in John’s Gospel is that He became flesh and came down here among us.
This reveals His love and concern for us. It broke His heart that Jerusalem
would be destroyed. Jesus wept over it just as Jeremiah had wept over it
centuries before.
In Ezekiel we have something altogether different. At the very time Jerusalem
was being destroyed, Ezekiel’s wife died, and God forbad him to mourn or sorrow
for her. He was to act like nothing happened. God wept over Jerusalem, but He
did not mourn. He did not repent for what He had done, because He was right in
doing it. God, with tears in His eyes, punished Jerusalem and destroyed the
city, but He was doing that which was in keeping with His character. He did what
was right because what God does is right. Paul asks, “… Is there unrighteousness
with God? God forbid” (Rom 9:14). Of course there is no unrighteousness with
God. Whatever God does is right. His glory is manifested in judgment. His grace
is manifested in redemption. If God had not provided redemption for us, there
would be no salvation for man whatsoever.
In chapters 38 and 39 of Ezekiel we saw that the kingdom in the north which is
going to invade Israel (which I believe is Russia) will be destroyed in the
future. The question is: Why will God destroy Russia? Let’s read this verse
again: “And thou shalt come up against my people of Israel, as a cloud to cover
the land; it shall be in the latter days, and I will bring thee against my land,
that the heathen may know me, when I shall be sanctified in thee, O Gog, before
their eyes” (Ezek. 38:16). What is God going to do? He is going to destroy them.
I can hear someone exclaim, “Do you mean God will actually do such a thing?”
Certainly He will. The liberal theologian has a problem with the Creator
destroying what He chooses, such as the Lord Jesus cursing a fig tree and also
destroying a few pigs. I was in a conference one time when a man who was a
liberal in his theology almost wept because Jesus destroyed those pigs (Matt.
8:30–32)! Yet every morning he ate bacon for breakfast! He was like the Walrus
and the Carpenter who wept, but were busy eating oysters as fast as they could.
I am not impressed with these people who get upset with God because He judges. I
have a notion that God gets me a little upset with them.
Now let me cite two other verses:
And I will send a fire on Magog, and among them that dwell carelessly in the
isles: and they shall know that I am the LORD.
So will I make my holy name known in the midst of my people Israel; and I will
not let them pollute my holy name any more: and the heathen shall know that I am
the LORD, the Holy One in Israel [Ezek. 39:6–7].
Is God going to destroy Russia? He says that He will send fire on Magog and
among those that dwell securely in the coastlands. The question is: Where is God
today? Why doesn’t He move in defense of His people in our day? I shall never
forget watching a newscast on television several years ago when a group of
Christians appeared at the American Embassy in Moscow and appealed, actually
weeping, for permission to leave Russia because of being persecuted. Our country
did nothing. And the Russian soldiers came and took these people away. I waited
for a long time to hear what had happened to them, but there was never a further
word in the media. The Soviet authorities were never dealt with. And Russia has
been guilty of more anti–Semitism than any other nation over a period of years.
Oh, the injustice in the world! I see very little fear of God throughout the
world. The feeling is that He is a jolly old Man who shuts His eyes to the
injustice in the world. Why doesn’t God move against injustice? Well, He will
move when it is time. He will vindicate His glory, but He will not do it in a
vindictive, revengeful, and petulant manner. He will judge, and when He does,
there will be a respect and reverence for God in this world, and little man will
bow before Him.
Romans 2:3 tells us, “And thinkest thou this, O man, that judgest them which do
such things, and doest the same, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God?”
Man is not going to escape judgment. He thinks he will get away with his sin,
but he will not. In Hebrews 2:3 we read, “How shall we escape if we neglect so
great salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was
confirmed unto us by them that heard him.” My friend, do you realize that this
is a question which even God cannot answer? How shall we escape, if we neglect
so great salvation? Well, we can’t escape. There is no answer to that question.
Now let me use an old–fashioned expression that gags the liberal preachers (and
also some evangelicals who are attempting to make the world a better place for
people to go to hell in). Here it is: Hell, my friend, is an awful reality. You
can interpret it any way you want to, but it is a place where a holy God puts
those who are in rebellion against Him, those who sin with impunity, those who
blaspheme God and His holy name at will, those who live like animals in the name
of freedom but who are indulging in gross immorality. My friend, God’s holy name
is going to be vindicated.
How will God’s holy name be vindicated? In love? He is demonstrating His love
today in giving His Son. Those of us who name His name need to learn a lesson.
We need to learn that we cannot trifle with Him. We cannot get familiar with
Him. We cannot live as we please and then get buddy–buddy with Him. Our God is
holy. Neither can we presume upon Him. We cannot sin and get by with it. If that
were possible, then God would be no better than we are. Man is only a creature.
The will of God will prevail, and our proper position is to bow before Him. Our
only liberty today is in the will of God. He remembers that we are dust, but I
can say with Paul, “… I obtained mercy …” (1 Tim. 1:13). My friend, if you deny
Him, He will trample you under His feet. He has loved you enough to give His
Son, but if you reject His mercy and grace, He will reject you. This is His
universe, this is His earth, and He is running it according to His perfect plan.
My friend, we need to get in step with Him.
McGee, J. V. (1991). Thru the Bible commentary: The Prophets (Ezekiel)
(electronic ed., Vol. 25, pp. 191–205). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.