The end has come
The chapter announces that Judah’s end has arrived and that YHWH will bring final, comprehensive judgment because of the people’s abominations, violence, and covenant unfaithfulness. Every human support collapses—wealth, commerce, military readiness, priestly guidance, prophetic counsel, and royal l
Commentary
7:1 The word of the Lord came to me:
7:2 “You, son of man – this is what the sovereign Lord says to the land of Israel: An end! The end is coming on the four corners of the land!
7:3 The end is now upon you, and I will release my anger against you; I will judge you according to your behavior, I will hold you accountable for all your abominable practices.
7:4 My eye will not pity you; I will not spare you. For I will hold you responsible for your behavior, and you will suffer the consequences of your abominable practices. Then you will know that I am the Lord!
7:5 “This is what the sovereign Lord says: A disaster – a one-of-a-kind disaster – is coming!
7:6 An end comes – the end comes! It has awakened against you – the end is upon you! Look, it is coming!
7:7 Doom is coming upon you who live in the land! The time is coming, the day is near. There are sounds of tumult, not shouts of joy, on the mountains.
7:8 Soon now I will pour out my rage on you; I will fully vent my anger against you. I will judge you according to your behavior. I will hold you accountable for all your abominable practices.
7:9 My eye will not pity you; I will not spare you. For your behavior I will hold you accountable, and you will suffer the consequences of your abominable practices. Then you will know that it is I, the Lord, who is striking you.
7:10 “Look, the day! Look, it is coming! Doom has gone out! The staff has budded, pride has blossomed!
7:11 Violence has grown into a staff that supports wickedness. Not one of them will be left – not from their crowd, not from their wealth, not from their prominence.
7:12 The time has come; the day has struck! The customer should not rejoice, nor the seller mourn; for divine wrath comes against their whole crowd.
7:13 The customer will no longer pay the seller while both parties are alive, for the vision against their whole crowd will not be revoked. Each person, for his iniquity, will fail to preserve his life.
7:14 “They have blown the trumpet and everyone is ready, but no one goes to battle, because my anger is against their whole crowd.
7:15 The sword is outside; pestilence and famine are inside the house. Whoever is in the open field will die by the sword, and famine and pestilence will consume everyone in the city.
7:16 Their survivors will escape to the mountains and become like doves of the valleys; all of them will moan – each one for his iniquity.
7:17 All of their hands will hang limp; their knees will be wet with urine.
7:18 They will wear sackcloth, terror will cover them; shame will be on all their faces, and all of their heads will be shaved bald.
7:19 They will discard their silver in the streets, and their gold will be treated like filth. Their silver and gold will not be able to deliver them on the day of the Lord’s fury. They will not satisfy their hunger or fill their stomachs because their wealth was the obstacle leading to their iniquity.
7:20 They rendered the beauty of his ornaments into pride, and with it they made their abominable images – their detestable idols. Therefore I will render it filthy to them.
7:21 I will give it to foreigners as loot, to the world’s wicked ones as plunder, and they will desecrate it.
7:22 I will turn my face away from them and they will desecrate my treasured place. Vandals will enter it and desecrate it.
7:23 (Make the chain, because the land is full of murder and the city is full of violence.)
7:24 I will bring the most wicked of the nations and they will take possession of their houses. I will put an end to the arrogance of the strong, and their sanctuaries will be desecrated.
7:25 Terror is coming! They will seek peace, but find none.
7:26 Disaster after disaster will come, and one rumor after another. They will seek a vision from a prophet; priestly instruction will disappear, along with counsel from the elders.
7:27 The king will mourn and the prince will be clothed with shuddering; the hands of the people of the land will tremble. Based on their behavior I will deal with them, and by their standard of justice I will judge them. Then they will know that I am the Lord!”
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
Ezekiel is prophesying from the exile, announcing irreversible judgment on the land of Israel/Judah and its center in Jerusalem. This oracle intensifies the warnings already given through sign-acts and follows the same covenant-curse logic that dominates the opening section of the book.
Historical setting and dynamics
This oracle belongs to the late pre-586 BC crisis in Judah, when Jerusalem, its temple, its economy, and its leadership still stood but were under imminent judgment. Ezekiel speaks as an exiled prophet to the land of Israel, announcing that the covenant curses are about to reach their climax: social order collapses, military defense fails, commerce is pointless, wealth cannot rescue, and the sanctuary itself will be defiled through foreign invasion. The passage assumes the covenantal structures of king, priests, elders, and temple, and declares that all of them are subject to YHWH’s judgment because of the nation’s abominations, violence, and idolatry.
Central idea
The chapter announces that Judah’s end has arrived and that YHWH will bring final, comprehensive judgment because of the people’s abominations, violence, and covenant unfaithfulness. Every human support collapses—wealth, commerce, military readiness, priestly guidance, prophetic counsel, and royal leadership—so that the people will finally know that YHWH is the one who judges them.
Context and flow
This unit stands in the first major judgment section of Ezekiel (chs. 4–7), where the prophet has already enacted the coming siege and doom against Jerusalem. Chapter 7 serves as a climactic pronouncement of “the end,” expanding the earlier warnings into a full picture of social, economic, military, and cultic collapse. It prepares for the later temple vision in chapters 8–11, where Ezekiel will show the reasons for judgment and the departure of YHWH’s glory from the sanctuary.
Exegetical analysis
The unit is built around relentless repetition of “the end,” “the day,” and “I will judge,” creating the rhetorical effect of inescapability. The oracle opens with a direct announcement to “the land of Israel,” showing that the coming disaster is covenantal and territorial: the land itself is under sentence because the people who occupy it have filled it with abominations. The formula “my eye will not pity, and I will not spare” expresses the removal of mercy in the judicial sense; it does not deny God’s compassion in general, but announces that the time for patient warning has passed.
Verses 5–9 intensify the verdict by describing the disaster as unique and near. The repeated phrases reinforce that this is no ordinary military setback. The covenant language is explicit: YHWH will repay the people according to their conduct, and the result will be that they know he is the Lord, meaning they will be forced to recognize his identity, authority, and covenant holiness through judgment.
Verses 10–13 use compressed imagery to show the futility and inevitability of collapse. The line about “the staff has budded, pride has blossomed” likely pictures violence as having come to full maturity and become the instrument of judgment; wickedness itself has become the rod that supports the nation’s pride. Commerce also loses meaning: buyer and seller alike are swallowed up by the same wrath, because the whole social order is marked for judgment. The point is not merely economic recession but the end of ordinary life as the people know it.
Verses 14–18 portray the total breakdown of defense and morale. Trumpets are sounded, but there is no effective response because divine anger stands against the whole community. Sword, famine, and pestilence invade both city and countryside, the standard covenant curses of siege and defeat. The survivors flee in grief and terror, clothed with shame and helplessness. The vivid description of trembling limbs and bodily humiliation is meant to communicate utter collapse, not to invite sentimental reflection.
Verses 19–22 expose the bankruptcy of wealth and the corruption of worship. Silver and gold cannot save because the nation’s riches became an obstacle to iniquity rather than a tool for faithful stewardship. The ornaments or treasures associated with the sanctuary are turned into pride and idolatry, so YHWH gives what was polluted into the hands of foreigners who will desecrate it. The central theological point is that the people have already profaned what was holy; therefore YHWH hands it over to further defilement as judgment.
Verses 23–24 move from wealth and worship to public violence and foreign invasion. The command to “make the chain” likely symbolizes captivity or the securing of prisoners, fitting the coming deportation and subjugation. The land is full of murder and the city full of violence, so the worst of the nations will inherit the houses and sanctuaries. This is not accidental imperialism but YHWH’s judicial action against arrogance and violence.
The closing verses return to the theme of dread and silence. Peace cannot be found, rumor multiplies, and the normal sources of guidance fail: prophet, priest, and elder all become ineffective. The loss of instruction is itself part of the judgment, because those institutions had been corrupted or rendered useless by the people’s rebellion. The king, prince, and people all tremble, showing that no social rank escapes the sentence. The final line summarizes the whole chapter: YHWH will act according to their behavior and judge by their own standard, so that they may know him as the holy Judge of Israel.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely in the Mosaic covenant setting, where disobedience brings the curses of judgment, siege, famine, sword, and exile. It also touches temple and land theology: the land is defiled, the sanctuary is desecrated, and covenant privilege does not shield an unfaithful people. In the larger redemptive storyline, Ezekiel announces the collapse of Judah’s present administration of the kingdom and prepares for the later promises of restoration, cleansing, and a renewed covenant in which knowledge of YHWH will be internalized rather than merely assumed.
Theological significance
The passage reveals YHWH as the holy and sovereign Judge who does not ignore abomination, violence, or idolatry. It also exposes the moral futility of trusting in wealth, civic order, priestly office, or royal power apart from covenant obedience. Human sin has social, economic, political, and cultic consequences, and divine judgment is both righteous retribution and a revelation of who YHWH is. The repeated goal statement, “then you will know that I am the Lord,” shows that judgment itself serves the manifestation of divine holiness and authority.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
This is direct prophetic judgment, not primarily typology. The “end,” the sword, famine, pestilence, the loss of guidance, and the desecration of the sanctuary are standard covenant-curse symbols in Ezekiel and the Torah. The imagery of wealth, ornaments, and the chain should be handled with restraint; they clearly signify collapse, captivity, and profanation, but they should not be over-allegorized.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The oracle uses covenant and honor-shame logic common to the ancient world: shame, shaved heads, trembling, and discarded wealth express utter public disgrace. The repeated collapse of king, priests, elders, merchants, and citizens shows a corporate view of society rather than an individualistic one. The line about buyer and seller indicates the breakdown of ordinary economic life under siege conditions, where normal contracts and transactions become meaningless. The city-versus-country and inside-versus-outside contrasts reflect a concrete, spatial way of describing comprehensive judgment.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage announces judgment on covenant infidelity in Judah and Jerusalem. Canonically, it contributes to the biblical pattern that God’s holy presence cannot be treated lightly and that sin brings real historical judgment. It also sharpens the need for a faithful king, a cleansed sanctuary, and a covenant that actually secures obedience and knowledge of the Lord. Later biblical revelation will answer those needs in the promised restoration and ultimately in the Messiah, who bears judgment and establishes the secure knowledge of God; but that later fulfillment must not be read back into Ezekiel in a way that erases the original historical warning to Israel.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s patience is real, but it is not permission to continue in abomination. External security, money, office, and religious privilege cannot protect people from divine judgment when covenant faithfulness is absent. Leaders are accountable, worship can be defiled, and social violence matters to God. The passage also warns against presuming upon religious forms while ignoring holiness, justice, and repentance.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The most notable crux is the imagery in verse 10, especially “the staff has budded, pride has blossomed,” which is best read as a poetic picture of violence maturing into the instrument of judgment. The command “make the chain” in verse 23 is also somewhat obscure, but in context it clearly points toward captivity or binding associated with siege and exile.
Application boundary note
This passage must be applied as a covenant judgment oracle against historical Judah, not as a free-floating template for modern political predictions. Readers should avoid collapsing Israel’s covenant setting into direct church application or turning every image into a personal allegory. The text teaches God’s holiness, justice, and the futility of trusting in wealth or institutions, but it should not be pressed beyond its prophetic-historical intent.
Key Hebrew terms
qēts
Gloss: end, extremity, termination
The repeated word drives the oracle’s structure and makes clear that this is not a mere setback but a decisive, divinely appointed terminus for Jerusalem’s present order.
ʿebrāh / ḥēmâ
Gloss: overflowing wrath / heat of anger
The passage emphasizes that judgment is not random political disaster but the outpouring of YHWH’s righteous anger against persistent covenant rebellion.
tôʿēbâ
Gloss: detestable thing, abomination
This term identifies the moral and religious corruption that has provoked judgment, especially idolatry and defiling practices incompatible with the holiness of YHWH.
ḥāmās
Gloss: violence, wrong, oppression
Violence is singled out as a social symptom of the nation’s deep iniquity and as a reason for the collapse of civic and covenant life.
mishpāṭ
Gloss: judgment, justice, legal decision
YHWH says he will judge them according to their behavior and their own standard, underscoring the judicial character of the oracle rather than mere catastrophe.
Related Bible Maps
These external map and atlas resources may help locate the places mentioned in this page. External resources open in a separate browser context and are not copied, embedded, altered, hotlinked, or rehosted by AI Bible Commentary.
Related BibleHub Atlas Links
These links open BibleHub Atlas pages in a small external reference window. AI Bible Commentary does not copy, embed, alter, hotlink, or rehost BibleHub map images or atlas content.