Video Transcript: God's Continuing Work with Dry Bones
I've titled this lecture God's continuing work with dry bones. You may recognize in that title the allusion to Ezekiel 37, which speaks of an important vision Ezekiel had. But before we get to the vision, a little background, Ezekiel was the son of a priest, and a member of Jerusalem's aristocracy, who lived in a very turbulent time in Jewish history, namely the time of the exile. When he was 25 years old, the Babylonians laid siege to Jerusalem and took many of the Jewish people into exile. Ezekiel was one of them. He had to leave his wife behind at the time, it was a second deportation of Jews into Babylon. The first one had taken place about seven or eight years before that was a one in which Daniel and his friends had been taken to Nebuchadnezzar's court. When Ezekiel got to Babylon and saw the physical, emotional and spiritual condition of his fellow Jews. Ezekiel 3:15 says he just sat for seven days he was overwhelmed by what he saw. It was during this time that the Lord called Ezekiel to be a prophet to the exiles, the Lord one had a two part message for him to give to the people. The first part was letting the people know that their suffering, their exile, their subsequent suffering was a judgment of God for their sin in refusing to be the people he had called them to be. But Part Two was more hopeful. God told them through Ezekiel that after judgment, He would restore his people. But that restoration was not to come quickly. 10 years after Ezekiel had been taken to Babylon, the exiles were given the report that that the city of Jerusalem itself along with the temple had been completely destroyed. And so then, the mood among the exiles was the discouraged mood and the dejected mood, the helpless and hopelessness was magnified. That's when God set Ezekiel down in the middle of a graveyard. This wasn't a well treed grassy meadow headstone marked cemetery but a desolate valley full of the dry bones of the dead. It was a mass grave. The dead lay where they had fallen, their flesh had been eaten by scavengers and their bones scoured by the wind and rain and bleached by the hot sun. Ezekiel probably understood right away, at least part of the message God was giving him this valley of dry bones was a good illustration of a visual metaphor of the of the condition of the people of God. In fact, God said as much to Ezekiel, he said, Son of Man, these bones are the whole house of Israel, they say our bones are dried up, our hope is gone, we are cut off. Remember, the people were in a state of spiritual sight, stagnation and even despair. They felt spiritually and emotionally dry and they doubted that anything would or even could be done about it. Although they recognize their spiritual need, to this, to a certain extent, it was as if they were dead to any hope of spiritual vitality. And they all knew Ezekiel included, they knew there was nothing they could do about it. But that's when God asks Ezekiel an interesting question. Son of Man, can these bones live? Well, the obvious answer was no. No way. How could these lifeless these gnawed on these mixed up bones find their mates and reattach with the vertebrae finding their proper place with the cartilage between and the ball of the femur not only fitting into the socket of the right pelvis but reattaching
with limb ligaments and on the other end, matching up with the right tibia and fibula and growing hamstrings and quadriceps and along with nerves, and with foods and oxygen supplying but blood vessels they couldn't. More to the point there's no earthly way that the people of God, either dead or in exile with their government, their holy city, their temple, their civilization destroyed, no earthly way they can live again. Except that with God all things are possible. And so Ezekiel says, in answer to God's question, oh, Sovereign Lord, you alone know. Who is he to say that the Lord cannot make dry bones live? He's not actually making a statement of faith that the Lord will do this. But just a cautious I'll be it reverent confession that only the Lord knows what he's able and willing to do. And with that comes God's command to Ezekiel, prophesy to these bones, speak the word of the Lord to these bones, because that's what prophesy means. Previously, Ezekiel had prophesied to mountains and forests at God's command, now he prophesied to the dry bones in the valley. He says, dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. The Sovereign Lord says, I will make breath enter you and I'm summarizing here and attach tendons and make flesh and cover you with skin, and you will come to life. Is God's word really that powerful? I suppose it would be one thing if God himself stood in that valley and said, in sort of a reenactment of the creation story said dry bones come to life. Or however God says such things but how can a mere mortal like Ezekiel speak with the same effect. But look, the bones are moving, they're coming together, they're forming into skeletons. And even now the bones are becoming covered over with flesh and skin. Yes, the word of God really is that powerful. As yet, however, the reformed bodies are still corpses. They're lifeless, without the breath of life. But God continues to imitate his original creation of man when he first formed man out of the dust of the earth, and then blew into his nostrils the breath of life. And so God says that the next step for Ezekiel in this recreation is to prophesy to the breath. And when he does that, the flesh over bones become alive and recreation is completed. It's a symbolic message from God to illustrate the word that he's giving you, his desperate people, oh, my people, I'm going to open your graves and bring you up from them. I will put my spirit in you, and you will live and I will settle you in your own land, then you will know that I the Lord have spoken. And I have done it. This prophecy was fulfilled in initial way at least after 70 years when some of the exiles were allowed to return home. That's when Israel came back to life as a nation. Some people today think that a similar but more complete fulfillment happened in 1948. After the II World War, when the nation of Israel was reconstituted again, and people from all around the world flooded to the promised land. And they think, moreover, that Revelation predicts an important role for Israel in times that's something about which other Christians are, including myself are more skeptical. Yet, to this day, Israel's glory days have not returned. It's possible I suppose that such a day could still be coming for the nation of Israel. When as God says in verse 23, of
chapter 37, they will no longer defile themselves with their idols and vile images or with any of their offenses, for I will save them from all their sinful backsliding, and I will cleanse them they will be my people, and I will be their God as possible, but actually the message to Ezekiel has already been fulfilled in a more complete way, in Jesus Christ. When Christ came, the life and hope of the Jewish people was fully as dead as it had been in the exile. Nor did many have an eye for the self sacrificing and humble Messiah that God was sending. That's why they with the help of their Gentile masters ended up killing Jesus on a cross. But it was that very murder in God's reversal of it on Easter, by which God has given and continues to give life to people who are the spiritual equivalent of old dried out bones. And it's these people born again Jews and Gentiles alike, who make up spiritual Israel. Even so, those who have put their trust for life and death in their savior, Jesus Christ may sometimes still feel like old dried out bones. We all see a fair amount of suffering close to home personally or those we care about and that takes its toll. And besides that we live in the information age, which means that we have more access and we can sometimes handle to sad stories, featuring one or another variety of suffering, each of which might remind us of Ezekiel's bone graveyard. People living under strict dictatorships, especially those who dissent civilly or religiously, people in every country have become the victims of fraud or violent crime, accident victims. So those who have become welfare dependent as well as those who can't make ends meet for themselves and their family. Those who have been hurt emotionally by other people, especially by those they love, through abuse, separation, infidelity, divorce, and so on. There are lots of people who feel like dried or drying bones. In some too, though they may not recognize it who have lost their way and who either can't or don't want to find their way out of the deceit of sin. So what does all this mean? And where do you find yourself? Where do we find ourselves? In this story of old bones? Are you more like the pile of old bones Ezekiel saw at the beginning, or are like the bones put back together and covered with flesh and made alive by the Spirit of God? Sometimes it's not easy to tell, is it? There are people who look who are something like corpses, they look right. Kind of but they have no spirit in life, maybe they don't even know they're dead. There are others who appear to be in worse shape, rather like old piles of bones or are in worse shape than those with flesh on them. Ironically, however, it's probably the latter who are the closest to help because they're saying my hope and what I can do is gone. I've made a mess of things, I need the supernatural help of God to rebuild my life. Indeed, the end of self reliance is the first step to new life. The people of Israel had been in terrible shape. Long before Ezekiel was brought by the Lord into this valley of dry bones. They were spiritually dead a long time before they actually came to the realization in exile, that their bones were dried up and their hope gone. But that realization was the context in which God gave them his message of hope. It's always says, as it always is, God's message of
hope cannot even be heard by those who are full of themselves, but only by those who have the honesty to admit that they're dead without him. And then even a little faith will be enough. Ezekiel didn't give a ringing testimony of faith in God's intentions, he simply acknowledged that the Lord was sovereign and able to do the impossible. And everyone who hears Ezekiel's message can do the same. Whether in a troubled marriage or family where hope has died or whether vocationally Frustrated, emotionally depressed, financially exhausted, physically handicapped or politically oppressed. Whatever the problem, the Sovereign Lord, the one who made heaven and earth can address our needs. In the first place, God has given us Jesus to answer all our needs, and by that gift, he teaches us moreover, that his consistent character is to be loving and helpful. He's always interested in reaffirming his original creative impulse. His spirit is available and powerful to fix what's wrong, and to restore life. This may not happen according to our timetable, or in the manner we prefer. But what Ezekiel did with the bones remember speaking the Word of God to them? What Ezekiel did to the bones every child of God can do with every need, because God's Word brings spirit and life. Through His Word, God Himself comes into our troubled lives to fully revive us, no matter what our needs. Revival is not just glorious life and hope, but its glorious life and hope against a backdrop of need, and death and loneliness and poverty and hopelessness. We help keep our faith alive by constantly reviewing the whole story and most notably what God did on Easter when he made Jesus drying bones alive, and thus opened the door to life for all who are dead in sin. Nor should we forget that all who are so regenerated and revived are part of one community. God works with a people that's more than one set of revived bones. As important as individual revival is a much bigger theme in Ezekiel's experience, and in the whole biblical experience, is the revival of the people of God as a whole. All who have found life by Christ's sacrificial death, resurrection and ascension are the new house of Israel, in whom the Spirit lives today. The book of Acts is nothing less than the story of God putting flesh on dry bones, and then breathing life into them and doing it again and again all over the then civilized world. And the continuing spread of the gospel today and to to into new language and people groups is the same thing. It's a fulfillment of Ezekiel 37. Wherever people come to the end of themselves, and look to God for help, and receive His spirit is where dry bones become living souls, and souls and community also with each other. But there is a danger in this beautiful picture. It says some such communities apparently think that one's dry bones become a living soul so pleasing of their Reviver God continues automatically. It's not so long before Ezekiel's time God had created Israel as his special people, he had taken them out of Egyptian slavery and given them life in the Promised Land. But through their disobedience, they lost their life and became this pile of dry bones. You see, revival must be ongoing. Because life is a moment by moment affair. Physically speaking, if our body
stopped breathing and performing the other functions of life for only a few moments, they die. Spiritually speaking, if there's any point in which we do not depend on God's Spirit, we begin to die. Our God is a gracious God, a patient God, he certainly was with Israel. But what is the point at which we we become dry bones again, we do believe that God will preserve those who are truly His and yet there is also the truth that all around us are individuals and churches, which we thought were alive, and which now seem to be little more than dry bones, or maybe corpses. But without life. There are churches who meet and conduct business and everyone thinks they're a success, maybe because of the money, or no money problems or the number of people meeting there, but they're never heard talking about what God is doing in the lives of people. That secularized compromised version of the church is not what God has in mind. He wants His church filled with His Spirit, evidencing the fruit of the Spirit, following the words inspired by his Spirit, God's Church and all the branches of it is in need of continuing renewal to sustain and develop the life God has given us. You can learn a lot in a graveyard, that God can change everything, despair, into hope, doubt into faith, and even spiritual death into spiritual life. That happens when we reach the end of ourselves, look to God and receive His Spirit all on a continuing basis. God has made a way to revive us and it should be no surprise that he wants all his revive people to stay revived. And not to become like dry bones again. This is a life and death matter for ourselves, but also for our world. Because right now God is working and he's calling for co workers to transform the spiritual graveyards of our world into places teeming with life. That's how it was in the beginning. That's what God tried to do with Israel and wanted to do with Israel. That's what Jesus did with his life. That's the kind of community God calls his people to be right now. And one more thing that's how it will be at the end of time in perfection. How long that will be we have to confess with Ezekiel only you know, Lord only you know, however long it is, God wants us to work on it. Let me conclude with a song based on Ezekiel's vision you know, I found I found a song called Dry Bones with lyrics by Philip Doddridge and revised by Rev/ Brian Penney that I thought I'd like to use but the more I looked at it the more I thought I wanted to do some more revising. And so what I'm giving you is this song dry bones with a couple of verses as I found them. One more that I revised somewhat and three more verses that I added the song can be sung if desire to the tune of just as I am. It is Ezekiel's vision and the fulfillment of it. In song. Look down O Lord with gracious eyes see Adam's race in ruin lie. Sin spreads its misery all around and dead men's bones pollute the ground. Oh can these dead become alive and can the sun parched bones revive? That Sovereign Lord to you is known that wonders work is all your own. But by your words these bones aren't done. You give them flesh and make them one. Dry Bones obey your mighty voice. They move. They waken. They rejoice. These bones, they stand for Israel held captive since the nation fell. The Life was hard
and hope was spent God brought them home with heart's content. But this return was just a taste of what would come through Jesus grace. His sacrifice has conquered death and offers all new life and breath. He is our home with him we'll stay and share the news of endless day where he will be by all adored All Glory to our Sovereign Lord.