Playing the Blame Game (Ezekiel 18–21) Podcast Por  arte de portada

Playing the Blame Game (Ezekiel 18–21)

Playing the Blame Game (Ezekiel 18–21)

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What if the excuse you trust most is the very thing keeping you stuck? We open Ezekiel 18–21 and confront the sour grapes proverb head-on, trading the comfort of blame for the power of personal responsibility. Through vivid images and piercing lines, Ezekiel shows why no one is saved by a family name, and no one is doomed by it either. The soul that sins shall die, yet the one who turns will live—justice and mercy meet here, offering a way forward that starts with honesty.

We move from the household to the throne room as Ezekiel’s poem of lion cubs reveals how Judah’s kings—Jehoahaz, Jehoiachin, and Zedekiah—fell under judgment for their own choices. Leadership carries weight, but it does not erase individual agency. Then the lens widens again as we trace Israel’s national story: rescued from Egypt, given the law, warned in the wilderness, and spared again and again by God’s grace. The pattern is sobering—rebellion, consequence, mercy—but it’s also profoundly hopeful, because a pattern can be broken. Ezekiel anchors that hope in a future when the Messiah reigns and the people return to wholehearted faithfulness.

The closing images are hard to miss: a consuming fire and a polished sword, the blunt reality of consequences. Yet right beside them stands an open door to restoration: confess and be cleansed; leave the dry land of disobedience and step into green pastures with a faithful Shepherd. If you’ve been saying, “My past made me do it,” this conversation offers a better script: name your choices, seek forgiveness, and begin again. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a nudge toward hope, and leave a review with one takeaway you’re acting on this week. What excuse are you laying down today?

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