Ezekiel Chapter 3 verse 5 Holy Bible

ASV Ezekiel 3:5

For thou art not sent to a people of a strange speech and of a hard language, but to the house of Israel;
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BBE Ezekiel 3:5

For you are not sent to a people whose talk is strange and whose language is hard, but to the children of Israel;
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DARBY Ezekiel 3:5

For thou art not sent to a people of strange language, and of difficult speech, [but] to the house of Israel;
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KJV Ezekiel 3:5

For thou art not sent to a people of a strange speech and of an hard language, but to the house of Israel;
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WBT Ezekiel 3:5


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WEB Ezekiel 3:5

For you are not sent to a people of a strange speech and of a hard language, but to the house of Israel;
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YLT Ezekiel 3:5

For, not unto a people deep of lip and heavy of tongue `art' thou sent -- unto the house of Israel;
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 5. - Of a strange speech and of a hard language, etc.; literally, as in margin, both of Authorized Version and Revised Version, to a people deep of lip and heavy of tongue; i.e. to a barbarous people outside the covenant, Chaldeans, Assyrians, Scythians: not speaking the familiar sacred speech of Israel (compare the "stammering lips and another tongue" of Isaiah 28:11; Isaiah 33:19). The thought implied is that Ezekiel's mission, as to "the lost sheep of the house of Israel" (Matthew 15:24), was outwardly easier than if he had been sent to the heathen. With Israel there was at least the medium of a speech common both to the prophet and his hearers. In ver. 6 the thought is enlarged by the use of "many peoples."

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(5) To a people of a strange speech.--In Ezekiel 3:4-7 it is emphasised that Ezekiel's immediate mission is to be, like that of his great Antitype, to "the lost sheep of the house of Israel; "and yet that they would not give the heed to him which men far below them in spiritual privilege would have gladly yielded. Similar facts are continually encountered in the Scriptures, whether in its histories, as in those of Naaman the Syrian, of the faith of the Syro-Ph?nician woman (Matthew 15:21-28), and of the Roman centurion (Matthew 8:10-12), or in the express declarations of our Lord that the teaching and signs given to Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum in vain would have been more than sufficient for the conversion of Tyre, or Sidon, or even of Sodom (Matthew 11:21; Matthew 11:23; Matthew 12:41-42). If it be asked, Why then should so much of the Divine compassion be expended upon a nation which so generally refused to avail itself of its blessings? the answer must be that only thus could even a few be raised at all above the very lowest spiritual plane, and that the raising of these few leads ultimately to the elevation of many. As an accountable being, man must be left free to neglect the proffered grace; and, as in the case of the Israelites to whom Ezekiel was sent, there would always be many who choose to do so. The consequence of this neglect must be such a hardening of the heart as was now shown by these people, and every man is warned by their example of the responsibility attached to the enjoyment of religious privilege. But the same thing would have happened with any other nation; and that God's faithfulness should not fail, and that His purposes for man's salvation should be accomplished, more grace must yet be given and His people must still be pleaded with, that at least a remnant of them might be led to repentance and be saved from the impending ruin. Theodoret calls attention to the contrast between the restriction of the grace of the Old Dispensation to a single people, and the universal diffusion of the preaching of the Gospel. . . .