a34:1–37:28
c35–36
e34:1-24
f1 Pet 5:2-4
gHeb 13:20
h34:2-6
iExod 1:13-14

‏ Ezekiel 34:1-6

Summary for Ezek 34:1-31: 34:1–37:28  a These chapters show us the blessings that would flow from the Lord’s return to his people. He would be their shepherd and provide them with better leadership (ch 34  b); he would restore the fruitfulness of the land and thus vindicate his own honor (chs 35–36  c); he would restore his people to life and unity (ch 37  d).
Summary for Ezek 34:1-24: 34:1-24  e This chapter contains declarations of judgment and salvation. There would be judgment on the shepherds (the former kings of Judah) because they failed to care for their flocks (the people of Judah). The Lord would also judge the fat sheep, but he would intervene as a good shepherd to feed the remainder of the flock. The image of the shepherd perfectly conveys the toughness and tenderness of God’s dealings with his people. The shepherd was also a common metaphor for a king in the ancient Near East. The earthly king was understood to represent the divine shepherd who had set him over his people. Shepherds had to protect their flocks against beasts, including lions and bears, while also knowing their sheep by name and tenderly leading them to good pasture and quiet waters. They had to endure cold, heat, wind, rain, and snow out on the hills with their charges. Good kings who led their people strongly and wisely resembled shepherds. The same image is used in the New Testament to describe pastors and elders, who are to oversee the flock assigned to their care without lording it over them (1 Pet 5:2-4  f). Jesus perfectly combines toughness and tenderness as the “great Shepherd of the sheep” (Heb 13:20  g).
Summary for Ezek 34:2-6: 34:2-6  h What sorrow awaits you shepherds: Israel’s leaders had not taken care of the weak or gone looking for those who had wandered away and were lost. They had pursued their own interests, feeding themselves at their flock’s expense. They ruled the sheep with harshness and cruelty, recalling how the Egyptians treated the Israelites in Moses’ time (Exod 1:13-14  i). The neglect and abuse of these cruel shepherds had scattered the Lord’s flock across the face of the earth.
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