What does Ezekiel 7:13 mean?
What is the meaning of Ezekiel 7:13?

The seller will surely not recover what he sold

“The seller will surely not recover what he sold”.

• Under God’s law, land lost through poverty could be redeemed by a kinsman or restored in the Jubilee year (Leviticus 25:25-28, 13).

• Ezekiel announces a moment when even God-given safety nets will fail; economic expectations collapse under divine judgment (Isaiah 24:2-3).

• Nothing—money, contracts, or family rights—can undo what the Lord is bringing upon Jerusalem (Jeremiah 32:6-15 shows normal practice; Ezekiel 7 shows its suspension).


while both remain alive

“…what he sold while both remain alive.”

• Typically, buyer and seller could negotiate redemption at any time they were living (Leviticus 25:29-30).

• Here, even though the people would still be breathing, the siege and exile would make redemption impossible; life continues, but ownership and security do not (2 Kings 25:8-12).

• The statement underscores urgency: disaster arrives before death, cutting off every earthly hope.


For the vision concerning the whole multitude will not be revoked

“For the vision concerning the whole multitude will not be revoked”.

• God’s prophetic word is fixed; He is “not a man, that He should lie” (Numbers 23:19).

• Earlier scoffers claimed visions failed (Ezekiel 12:22-28), but the Lord insists this one stands—for every citizen from prince to peasant (Ezekiel 7:12).

• The coming catastrophe is comprehensive: no partial judgments, no last-minute reprieves, no exceptions.


and because of their iniquity, not one of them will preserve his life

“…and because of their iniquity, not one of them will preserve his life”.

• Sin is the solitary cause; God never punishes capriciously (Ezekiel 18:4).

• The nation’s idolatry, violence, and injustice (Ezekiel 7:23-24) invite a penalty that reaches every individual.

• The sober reality mirrors Romans 6:23—“the wages of sin is death”—while reminding believers of the supreme need for atonement and repentance (Hebrews 9:27-28).


summary

Ezekiel 7:13 declares an irreversible judgment: earthly systems of redemption will fail, life will continue under the weight of loss, God’s decree will not be withdrawn, and sin will bring unavoidable death. The verse calls readers to heed God’s warnings, abandon confidence in fleeting securities, and seek the only lasting redemption found in the Lord Himself.

What historical events might Ezekiel 7:12 be referencing with 'the day is near'?
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