Ezekiel 18
God announces that each person bears responsibility for their own actions; the proverb that children eat sour grapes while parents' teeth are set on edge is invalidated as God establishes individual accountability regardless of ancestral sin. This chapter presents a legal case structure: the righteous person who follows God's statutes will live, while the wicked person will die, with intermediate cases showing how righteousness and wickedness can be assumed or abandoned within a single lifetime. God explicitly denies pleasure in the wicked's death and calls all people to repentance and transformation, establishing that judgment is not inevitable but conditional on spiritual response. This chapter represents a profound theological shift from collective judgment language to individual responsibility and possibility of transformation. The repetition of the righteous and wicked criteria establishes clarity: following God's law constitutes righteousness and ensures life, while idolatry and injustice constitute wickedness and ensure death. This chapter's emphasis on personal agency and divine willingness to accept repentance establishes the theological foundation for the later restoration chapters. The theodicy issue of whether children suffer for ancestral sins is addressed through establishing individual accountability; each person stands before God. This chapter's legal structure and repeated formulas create accessible, memorable ethical guidance for exilic communities. The shift from judgment (chapters 4-17) to individual responsibility (chapter 18) establishes the psychological and spiritual foundation for restoration possibilities explored in subsequent chapters.