HolyStudy
Bible IndexRead BibleNotesChurchesMissionPrivacyTermsContact
© 2026 HolyStudy
HomeRead BibleBible NotesChurchesSign in
HolyStudy
HomeRead BibleBible NotesChurches
Sign in

Ezekiel 18

1

The word of the Lord came unto me again, saying,

2

What mean ye, that ye use this proverb concerning the land of Israel, saying, The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge?

1
3

As I live, saith the Lord God, ye shall not have occasion any more to use this proverb in Israel.

4

Behold, all souls are mine; as the soul of the father, so also the soul of the son is mine: the soul that sinneth, it shall die.

5

But if a man be just, and do that which is lawful and right,

6

And hath not eaten upon the mountains, neither hath lifted up his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, neither hath defiled his neighbour’s wife, neither hath come near to a menstruous woman,

7

And hath not oppressed any, but hath restored to the debtor his pledge, hath spoiled none by violence, hath given his bread to the hungry, and hath covered the naked with a garment;

8

He that hath not given forth upon usury, neither hath taken any increase, that hath withdrawn his hand from iniquity, hath executed true judgment between man and man,

1
9

Hath walked in my statutes, and hath kept my judgments, to deal truly; he is just, he shall surely live, saith the Lord God.

1
10

If he beget a son that is a robber, a shedder of blood, and that doeth the like to any one of these things,

11

And that doeth not any of those duties, but even hath eaten upon the mountains, and defiled his neighbour’s wife,

12

Hath oppressed the poor and needy, hath spoiled by violence, hath not restored the pledge, and hath lifted up his eyes to the idols, hath committed abomination,

13

Hath given forth upon usury, and hath taken increase: shall he then live? he shall not live: he hath done all these abominations; he shall surely die; his blood shall be upon him.

1
14

Now, lo, if he beget a son, that seeth all his father’s sins which he hath done, and considereth, and doeth not such like,

15

That hath not eaten upon the mountains, neither hath lifted up his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, hath not defiled his neighbour’s wife,

16

Neither hath oppressed any, hath not withholden the pledge, neither hath spoiled by violence, but hath given his bread to the hungry, and hath covered the naked with a garment,

17

That hath taken off his hand from the poor, that hath not received usury nor increase, hath executed my judgments, hath walked in my statutes; he shall not die for the iniquity of his father, he shall surely live.

18

As for his father, because he cruelly oppressed, spoiled his brother by violence, and did that which is not good among his people, lo, even he shall die in his iniquity.

19

Yet say ye, Why? doth not the son bear the iniquity of the father? When the son hath done that which is lawful and right, and hath kept all my statutes, and hath done them, he shall surely live.

20

The soul that sinneth, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him.

21

But if the wicked will turn from all his sins that he hath committed, and keep all my statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die.

22

All his transgressions that he hath committed, they shall not be mentioned unto him: in his righteousness that he hath done he shall live.

23

Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die? saith the Lord God: and not that he should return from his ways, and live?

24

But when the righteous turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live? All his righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned: in his trespass that he hath trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned, in them shall he die.

25

Yet ye say, The way of the Lord is not equal. Hear now, O house of Israel; Is not my way equal? are not your ways unequal?

26

When a righteous man turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and dieth in them; for his iniquity that he hath done shall he die.

27

Again, when the wicked man turneth away from his wickedness that he hath committed, and doeth that which is lawful and right, he shall save his soul alive.

28

Because he considereth, and turneth away from all his transgressions that he hath committed, he shall surely live, he shall not die.

29

Yet saith the house of Israel, The way of the Lord is not equal. O house of Israel, are not my ways equal? are not your ways unequal?

30

Therefore I will judge you, O house of Israel, every one according to his ways, saith the Lord God. Repent, and turn yourselves from all your transgressions; so iniquity shall not be your ruin.

31

Cast away from you all your transgressions, whereby ye have transgressed; and make you a new heart and a new spirit: for why will ye die, O house of Israel?

32

For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God: wherefore turn yourselves, and live ye.

← Previous ChapterNext Chapter →

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.

Ezekiel 18:1

The word of God comes to Ezekiel concerning a proverb among the exiles: the fathers have eaten sour grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge, expressing the exilic community's sense of unjust punishment for ancestral sins. This proverb reflects a fatalistic understanding of corporate judgment, where the current generation bears consequences for past transgressions they did not commit. The theological problem posed by this saying requires direct divine clarification to reorient Israel's understanding of individual accountability.

Ezekiel 18:2

God commands that the proverb shall no longer be used in Israel, as He will challenge the doctrine of inevitable inherited punishment that sustains the exile community's despair. The prohibition of the proverb signals a fundamental reorientation of Israel's theological self-understanding away from corporate determinism toward individual moral responsibility. This divine prohibition becomes the foundation for the chapter's extended teaching on personal accountability.

Ezekiel 18:3

The assertion that all souls belong to God—both father and son—establishes the theological basis for individual accountability: because all persons directly belong to God as His creatures, each person stands alone before Him for judgment. The soul that sins shall surely die, establishing the fundamental principle that death results inevitably from personal transgression. This principle displaces the communal and inherited understanding of judgment with direct personal consequence.

Ezekiel 18:4

Elaboration of the foundational principle establishes that the soul belongs absolutely to God, removing any intermediary standing between the individual and divine judgment. The death that results from sin is presented as the natural consequence of transgression against the divine person, not as arbitrary punishment imposed externally. This verse establishes the intimate connection between the soul's belonging to God and its accountability before Him.

Ezekiel 18:5

Description of the righteous person begins with one who walks in God's statutes, keeping His rules, and avoiding idolatry through steadfast refusal to worship other gods. The righteous person represents the covenant-faithful individual whose internal spiritual orientation manifests in external obedience to revealed divine law. This comprehensive righteousness encompasses both cultic fidelity and internal spiritual orientation.

Ezekiel 18:6

The righteous person does not eat on the mountains and does not lift his eyes to the idols of the house of Israel, maintaining ritual purity and spiritual separation from the surrounding idolatrous culture. Such deliberate separation from idolatrous practice demonstrates active commitment to covenant faithfulness rather than passive avoidance. The mountain sanctuaries and idolatrous shrines represented the pervasive alternative religious culture that threatened covenant loyalty.

Ezekiel 18:7

The righteous person does not oppress anyone but restores the pledge to the debtor and commits no robbery, dealing honestly in economic relationships and respecting the dignity of those in vulnerable positions. Economic justice forms an essential component of righteousness, as faithful covenant relationship extends to equitable treatment of the economically weak. The specific prohibitions against oppression and robbery target systemic injustice that violates communal relationships.

Ezekiel 18:8

The righteous person gives his bread to the hungry and covers the naked with a garment, actively responding to the material needs of the poor and vulnerable through concrete assistance. Active compassion toward the destitute represents the positive dimension of righteousness, moving beyond mere avoidance of wrongdoing to constructive care for the vulnerable. The provision of bread and clothing addresses basic human needs, establishing righteousness as fundamentally relational.

Ezekiel 18:9

The righteous person does not lend at interest or take profit from the vulnerable, maintains God's rules and walks in His statutes, and will surely live as a result of this comprehensive covenant faithfulness. The prohibition against usury extends protection to the economically vulnerable, preventing exploitation of those desperate enough to accept predatory lending. The promise of life flows naturally from such faithful living.

Ezekiel 18:10

If the righteous person fathers a violent son who commits robbery, murders someone, or does any of these evil things, the son's wickedness represents a fundamental rupture with paternal example. The potential for rebellion against a righteous father's model establishes that paternal righteousness does not automatically transfer to the next generation; each person chooses independently. This possibility opens the way for discussing judgment on the unrighteous son.

Ezekiel 18:11

The violent son does not walk in his father's statutes but eats on the mountains, defiling himself with idols, oppressing the poor and destitute, taking pledges, and committing robbery. The son's comprehensive rebellion mirrors the righteous father's comprehensive obedience, but in inverted form: where the father keeps God's statutes, the son violates them; where the father shows mercy, the son oppresses. The son's actions represent deliberate rejection of his father's righteous example.

Ezekiel 18:12

The violent son lends at interest and takes profit, crimes that extend beyond personal immorality to include systemic economic exploitation of vulnerable populations. The accumulation of specific offenses demonstrates the son's comprehensive orientation toward evil, affecting every dimension of his relational and economic life. The concentration on economic injustice emphasizes how righteousness and wickedness manifest through relational practices.

Ezekiel 18:13

The rhetorical question establishes that such a wicked son will surely die for his transgressions, bearing responsibility for his own evil actions despite his righteous father's example. The son's death represents judgment on his personal choices and refusal to walk in righteous ways, establishing irreducibly individual accountability. The father's righteousness cannot shield the son from consequences of his own willful wickedness.

Ezekiel 18:14

The second scenario introduces a wicked father whose son sees all the father's sins and reflects morally, refusing to imitate paternal wickedness despite growing up in its shadow. The righteous son's deliberate rejection of paternal example demonstrates genuine moral agency: the son is not trapped by familial corruption but can choose an alternative path. This scenario establishes that children are not automatically bound by parental moral status.

Ezekiel 18:15

The righteous son does not eat on the mountains or lift his eyes to idols, does not oppress others, does not take pledges, and does not commit robbery. The righteous son's comprehensive obedience to God's statutes directly mirrors the righteous father of verses 5-9, establishing that righteous conduct can emerge even from wicked paternal origins. The son's righteousness becomes his own achievement, not inherited blessing.

Ezekiel 18:16

The righteous son gives bread to the hungry and covers the naked, refusing to exploit the vulnerable through economic systems, maintaining moral integrity in every dimension of social interaction. The positive virtues of compassion and concrete care for the vulnerable characterize the son's righteousness, moving him beyond mere avoidance of his father's sins into active pursuit of just relationships. His moral vision exceeds negative constraint to embrace constructive justice.

Ezekiel 18:17

The righteous son refrains from iniquity, does not lend at interest or take profit, keeps God's rules and walks in His statutes, and will surely live because of these righteous deeds. Despite paternal wickedness and the corrupting influence of growing up in an unjust household, the son's commitment to righteousness ensures his life. The promise of life represents God's blessing on personal righteousness independent of familial status.

Ezekiel 18:18

The rhetorical question addresses the wicked father's potential objection, asking why the son should not bear the father's iniquity alongside him, since the father's transgression was costly. This question articulates the exilic assumption that children should inherit parental punishment, setting up the direct rebuttal of communal accountability doctrine. The question reveals the underlying theology that God's justice must be corporate and hereditary.

Ezekiel 18:19

God's response asserts that the son has not borne his father's iniquity because the son has kept God's rules, walked in His statutes, and acted with moral integrity. The absolute refusal to hold the son accountable for paternal sins establishes the inviolable principle of individual accountability: each person stands alone before God for judgment based on his own moral choices. The son's righteousness absolves him of paternal culpability.

Ezekiel 18:20

The soul that sins shall surely die, and the righteousness of the righteous shall be credited to him alone while the wickedness of the wicked shall be charged to him alone. The formulation establishes absolute moral individuation: righteousness and wickedness are personal moral realities that cannot be transferred, inherited, or imposed across persons. This principle reverses the entire framework of corporate judgment and hereditary punishment.

Ezekiel 18:21

If a wicked person turns from all his sins, keeps all God's statutes, and practices justice and righteousness, he will surely live and not die. The possibility of moral transformation through repentance establishes that present wickedness does not foreclose future righteousness; moral status remains open to change until death. God's justice permits redemption for the wicked who genuinely repent and commit to righteous living.

Ezekiel 18:22

None of the wickedness committed shall be remembered against the repentant person; rather, he shall live because of his righteousness. God's judicial memory is reset by genuine repentance, as if the past transgressions no longer exist as grounds for judgment. This radical forgiveness reflects divine willingness to credit moral transformation as more significant than past transgression.

Ezekiel 18:23

God explicitly denies taking pleasure in the death of the wicked, asking rhetorically whether His concern is not rather that the wicked turn from their ways and live. The divine emotional stance toward human death contrasts sharply with the exilic assumption of inevitable punishment; God desires life for His people and welcomes genuine repentance. This affirmation of God's life-affirming posture toward creation establishes repentance as always welcome.

Ezekiel 18:24

If a righteous person turns away and commits all the abominations the wicked person does, none of his righteous deeds shall be remembered but he shall die for the treachery and sin he commits. The reversal of righteousness demonstrates that moral status is not fixed or permanently secured; the righteous who subsequently chooses wickedness forfeits the protection of prior righteousness. Apostasy from righteousness carries the same lethal consequences as persistent wickedness.

Ezekiel 18:25

The exiles accuse God of being unfair in principle, claiming that His way is not fair or balanced in requiring such absolute personal accountability. The accusation reflects the communal assumptions about justice that God is addressing throughout the chapter: if justice is truly fair, why should individuals bear full responsibility rather than sharing punishment communally? This objection articulates the emotional difficulty of accepting individual accountability.

Ezekiel 18:26

God reaffirms that when the righteous person turns from righteousness to wickedness, he dies for the wickedness he commits; his prior righteousness provides no protection. The reassertion of the principle demonstrates God's consistency: the same standard applies equally to the righteous falling into wickedness and the wicked falling into righteousness. Fair judgment requires such impartial accountability.

Ezekiel 18:27

When the wicked person turns away from wickedness and does what is lawful and right, he preserves his life through this transformation. The emphasis on the wicked person's agency in turning establishes repentance as volitional moral change rather than passive external forgiveness. Life flows naturally from righteous conduct regardless of prior wickedness.

Ezekiel 18:28

Because the wicked person sees the consequences of his wickedness, turns away from all his transgressions, and keeps God's statutes, he will surely live and not die. The appeal to consequences as motivation for repentance suggests that moral instruction and warning serve to prompt recognition of the destructive path and reorientation toward life. Genuine repentance involves both fear of death and genuine moral commitment.

Ezekiel 18:29

The house of Israel continues to protest that God's way is not fair, but God challenges this assertion by asking whether their way is fair. The shift from abstract principle to concrete accusation establishes that Israel's complaint about divine unfairness disguises their own refusal to accept moral responsibility. God's justice appears unfair only to those who expect communal escape from personal accountability.

Ezekiel 18:30

God calls on the house of Israel to repent and turn away from all their transgressions, so iniquity will not become a stumbling block to them. The command to repent constitutes the ultimate point of the entire chapter's teaching: individual accountability exists not to condemn but to invite personal transformation. Repentance removes the obstacle that personal sin creates to life with God.

Ezekiel 18:31

Israel is called to cast away all their transgressions and get themselves a new heart and new spirit, requesting the moral and spiritual transformation that God desires and enables. The language of new heart and new spirit suggests that genuine repentance requires internal reorientation, not merely behavioral modification. This appeal to transformation establishes the existential depth of what repentance entails.

Ezekiel 18:32

God declares that He takes no pleasure in anyone's death and calls all who hear to turn and live, establishing His ultimate desire as the covenant people's life and flourishing. The final affirmation of God's life-affirming posture provides the emotional and theological foundation for the entire chapter: divine justice serves life, not death. The invitation to repent remains open and genuine for all who will hear.