How does Ezekiel 9:10 demonstrate God's justice in dealing with sin? Setting the Scene • Ezekiel receives a vision of Jerusalem under judgment. • God commissions six executioners and a man with an inkhorn. The righteous are marked; the unrepentant face punishment. • Verse 10 is God’s own explanation for the severity of the sentence. A Closer Look at Ezekiel 9:10 “As for Me, My eye will not spare, nor will I show pity; I will bring their deeds upon their own heads.” Key phrases: • “My eye will not spare” – no partiality, no overlooking of evil. • “Nor will I show pity” – compassion withheld when sin persists. • “I will bring their deeds upon their own heads” – perfect correspondence between act and outcome. Four Facets of Divine Justice Shown 1. Perfect Awareness ‑ God’s “eye” sees every deed (Proverbs 15:3). Nothing is hidden; therefore judgment is fully informed. 2. Impartiality ‑ He will “not spare” based on status, heritage, or outward religiosity (Romans 2:11). 3. Proportionality ‑ Punishment matches “their deeds.” Sin’s wages are exactly earned (Romans 6:23). 4. Moral Certainty ‑ Justice is not an option but a necessity of God’s nature (Psalm 89:14; Nahum 1:3). Connections to the Broader Biblical Witness • Genesis 18:25 – “Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?” Ezekiel 9:10 answers with a resounding yes. • Galatians 6:7 – “Whatever a man sows, he will reap.” Identical principle applied nationally in Ezekiel. • Revelation 20:12 – Final judgment mirrors Ezekiel’s scene: “The dead were judged according to their deeds.” Why This Matters for Us Today • God’s justice assures that evil is neither ignored nor forgotten. • It underscores the necessity of genuine repentance; mercy is plentiful for the penitent (Isaiah 55:7), nonexistent for the defiant. • The cross satisfies this same justice, as Christ bears the penalty “upon His own head” for all who trust Him (Isaiah 53:5; 2 Corinthians 5:21). |