Life Breathed into Dry Bones
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“Thus says the Lord God to these bones: ‘Behold, I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live. And I will lay sinews upon you, and will cause flesh to come upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and you shall live, and you shall know that I am the Lord’” (Ezekiel 37:13-14).
“Thus says the Lord God to these bones: ‘Behold, I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live. And I will lay sinews upon you, and will cause flesh to come upon you, and cover you with skin, and put breath in you, and you shall live, and you shall know that I am the Lord’” (Ezekiel 37:13-14).
Grace and peace to you
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
It sounds almost like a
scene out of one of my favorite movies, “The Sixth Sense.” The young man talks
to his counselor, a ghost.
“I see dead people.”
“In your dreams?”
“No.”
“While you’re awake.”
“Yes.”
“Dead people like, in
graves? In coffins?
“No, they’re in a
valley, a valley of dry bones, dead and lifeless bones.”
But this is not a
Hollywood movie; it is a biblical account. The young man who sees dead people
is the thirty-year-old prophet, Ezekiel. And the Counselor with whom he speaks is
the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of the Lord, who has brought Elijah to this valley. And
the “dead people,” “the dry bones,” that Ezekiel sees are the Israelite refugees
returning from Babylonian exile.
As Ezekiel writes this, Israel
is, for all intents and purposes, dead and gone. The ten northern tribes were
conquered by Assyria 150 years earlier. They had been wiped out and replenished
with foreigners transplanted from other vanquished nations. Now the southern tribes
are captives in Babylon, far from the rubble that was once Jerusalem. That is
how nations and peoples disappear in the ancient world. Resistance is futile. You
will be assimilated.
Ezekiel is the prophet
called by God to speak to the remnant of Israel held captive in Babylon, and
one would think that it will be his job to pull the trigger and declare their final
judgment. That’s what they’ve got coming, isn’t it? All that God had given them
is gone because of their own stubborn refusal to trust Him and follow His Word.
But the Lord declares that He has different plans for His rebellious people. Even
if they are faithless to Him, He will remain faithful. He will not forget His
promises. That’s Good News, right?
Unfortunately, the
faith of the child of God is constantly threatened by two opposite dangers:
overconfidence and despair. This is certainly true of the people of Israel. In the
previous chapter, Ezekiel had to preach scathing Law to them in order to
convict them of their pride and self-conceit. Here, in our text, the prophet has
to overcome their reluctance to accept the Good News of restoration. It seems too
good to be true, so rather than rejoice, they have fallen into doubt and despair.
“Our hope is lost; we are indeed cut off,” they lament (Ezekiel 37:11).
In His mercy and grace,
the Lord grants Ezekiel a vision of a valley of dry bones that is to convince
his hearers that their despair grows out of their refusal to believe in a
Creator who “calls into existence the things that do not exist” (Romans 4:17). They
are struggling because they do not trust in the One for Whom “nothing will be
impossible” (Luke 1:37) according to His Word.
God’s question to
Ezekiel—“Can these bones live?”—normally would have to be answered in the
negative. Ezekiel’s reply is interesting. He says, “O Lord God, You know,”
implying that only the Person who made all those bones could make them alive
again. The Lord promises to do just that.
At His command, Ezekiel
prophesies to these lifeless bones the Word of the Lord, and there is a
rattling noise as bone comes together with bone. To Ezekiel the valley seems no
longer to be full of disconnected bones but of skeletons—an improvement to be
sure, but still not exactly the poster children for life.
Ezekiel prophesies
again, sinews and flesh fill out the bones. Now the valley resembles a
battlefield littered with corpses. Human bodies, yes, but still lifeless human
bodies. Dead people. They have no breath. Like Adam of old, they need the
Spirit of God to breathe life into them. So God tells Ezekiel to prophesy again.
The prophet obeys. Breath enters the army of corpses. They come to life and
stand up.
Through this vision,
God reveals how He will recreate His people now apparently lost in Babylon. Humanly
speaking, Israel’s hopes appear as unlikely as expecting a vast array of
skeletons, dried and dismembered, to come to life again on their own. It just
isn’t going to happen. Yet at God’s command, death must surrender its victims. Against
all odds, Israel will continue. The Lord will give life to the nation. He will
bring the people back to their land. He will raise them as a people from death
to life, to be a blessing to all people—to be a blessing for you.
That’s right… for you! You
see, the Lord has to bring Israel back so that a virgin might conceive and give
birth to a Son in Bethlehem. It is necessary that Jerusalem and the temple
might be rebuilt, so that the Son of David might enter the city triumphantly at
Passover, so that the King of the Jews might be led outside the city walls to a
cross. Simply put, the Lord raises that nation from the dead in Babylon so that
He might raise you from the dead for the sake of Christ.
In all of this we see the
creative power of the Holy Spirit at work through the Word of God. Don’t
underestimate the Word; don’t ignore it. By it all things hold together. The
Word creates, renews, sanctifies, and enlivens. Bodies long dead are
resurrected to life. All by the preached Word; yet not by the word of the
preacher, but by the power of the Holy Spirit who breathes life into dry bones.
Wouldn’t you love to
have been there to watch Ezekiel preach life into dry bones? Or maybe not? It’s
a little too weird, perhaps. I suspect many people today would find it easier
to believe in a zombie apocalypse. We’re certainly far too sophisticated to
think that dry, dead bones can come to life with a sermon.
The same could be said
of the conception of Jesus. A young virgin in some hick town in Galilee is told
by an angel that the Holy Spirit will come upon her? The power of the Most High
will overshadow her? She will conceive, and give birth to a son—the Son of God?
No way! That’s inconceivable!
Or how about Christ’s bodily
resurrection? It’s terribly inconvenient and uncomfortable to the old Adam in
us to think that the tomb of a dead man is empty, His body risen. Yet that’s
the point of Peter’s Pentecost sermon: Jesus was not abandoned to the grave. His
body did not see decay. God has vindicated Jesus by raising Him bodily from the
grave. “And we are all witnesses of the fact.”
Remember, this is the
same Peter who wept bitterly when he shamefully denied His Lord three times just
hours after he had proudly claimed: “Don’t worry, Jesus. I’ve got Your back. Even
if the rest of these guys fall away, I’ll stand beside You.” Now he’s boldly
proclaiming Christ’s death and resurrection and calling the crowd to “repent
and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the
forgiveness of sins and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.”
So what happened? What
happened that Peter and his brothers, who just fifty days earlier had been so
timid and frightened, would now preach boldly and fearlessly? Jesus had been
raised from the dead. Jesus had breathed on them, bestowed His Holy Spirit, forgiven
their sins, and then sent them out to forgive sins. And that made all the
difference in the world.
The creation of Adam. The
valley of dry bones restored to life. The nation of Israel returned to her land.
The annunciation and incarnation of Jesus. Christ’s resurrection. His equipping
the apostles for their ongoing work of testifying to His death and resurrection.
The Pentecost miracle. What do these all have in common? This: The Holy Spirit
breathes life where there was not life. And this is the case from creation all
the way to Pentecost. But the Holy Spirit didn’t stop on the day of Pentecost. He
continues to breathe life into dry bones like you and me.
Like the exiles
returning from Israel, there are times when we need to be shaken ourselves. We
need to have our bones rattled by the Word that says, “You are no more alive
than those dry and dusty bones. Dead in sin. Dead in iniquity. Dead in
transgression. Dead in lust and idolatry. If you persist in this state you will
be dead for eternity. Not just physically dead, but spiritually dead. Hellishly
dead.
But brought to contrition
and repentance, we also need to hear the life restoring Gospel: Those bones of
yours can live, and do live. Not by your efforts, of course. After all, what
can bones do to live? But God, being rich in mercy, has made you alive together
with Christ. You have been saved by grace through faith. And this is not your
own doing; it is the gift of God. And how does He do it? “Not by might, nor by
power, but My Spirit,” says the Lord—the Spirit who works through the Word. For
that is how the Spirit works—solely through the Word.
We confess the Holy
Spirit, “the Lord and giver of life.” By the Spirit-Breath of God, we breathe;
we have life. The Spirit and the Word; the Word and the Spirit—the two always
go together. You can’t have one without the other. The Holy Spirit is a
preacher—calling, gathering, enlightening, and sanctifying, stirring up faith,
forgiving sin, bearing fruit—all by the Word He causes to be preached, the
Sacraments through which He bestows His gifts.
When that little
congregation gathered together at Pentecost, there was the sound of rushing
wind—the breath of Jesus blowing over His Church. And there were tongues like
fire, separating and resting on all the disciples. Wind and fire were the
unique elements of that first Pentecost. They were like the fireworks and
balloons at a grand opening. God was inaugurating the Last Days. The time of
the end had come. Christ had died on the cross for the redemption of the world.
He was raised again to life, for forty days being seen by over 500 eyewitnesses.
Jesus had ascended to the right hand of the Father, disappeared into a heavenly
cloud, out of sight but not absent; rather, truly present by Word and Spirit.
Peter preached that day.
He preached boldly to thousands, where fifty days before he was afraid to even admit
to a servant girl that he was one of Jesus’ disciples. The resurrection of
Jesus and the Spirit will do that to you—turn cowards into courageous preachers
of good news. Filled with the Spirit, the disciples spoke in a variety of
languages and dialects, and everyone who was in Jerusalem for the feast of
Pentecost heard the preaching of Jesus in His own native tongue. It certainly
was a marvelous, miraculous sight to behold.
But most the time the
Holy Spirit flies under the radar. He does not seek to draw attention to
Himself, but to point to Christ. He operates discreetly—even hidden—hidden in
simple things like Word, water, and bread and wine. This is even true of the
day of Pentecost. The lasting gift of Pentecost is not rushing wind or tongues
of fire or speaking in fluent foreign languages. The lasting gift is the
Spirit-breathed Word of God. The Word of God preached out of the mouths of men
with the very breath of Jesus. “The sins you forgive are forgiven.”
At the end of that
Pentecost day, three thousand were baptized. Three thousand were born again by
water and the Spirit. Three thousand had the Word have its faith creating,
faith enlivening way with them. Three thousand became members of Christ’s body,
continuing in the teaching of the apostles, in the breaking of the Bread, and
in the prayers. Three thousand who were dead in their trespasses and sins, were
born to new life by the power of the Word and the Spirit.
Your personal Pentecost
is your baptismal day, whenever and wherever that was. There you were joined to
Jesus by the Word and Spirit in the water. And in a real sense, every Sunday is
Pentecost when you hear that your sins are forgiven in Jesus, that your death
is answered for in Jesus, that your life is hidden in Jesus, and His life—His
own Body and Blood—are hidden in you. Through these means of grace, the Holy
Spirit breathes life into your dry bones. You, who were once dead in your
trespasses and sins, are given new life, eternal life.
And this will be
brought to completion on the Last Day. The forgiveness of sin that the Spirit
applied to you in the Gospel will bear its ultimate fruit in you. The Lord and giver
of life, sent from the Father and the Son, will raise your body from the grave.
Your dry dead bones will not only be raised to life, but to everlasting life! Never
to die again! To be forever with the Lord!
Can these bones live? Yes,
they can! As surely as Christ is risen from the dead is sure, these bones can
live. As surely as the Word and breath of the Spirit blow over them, they will
live. As surely as the Holy Spirit breathes new life in Christ in you, you will
live—you will live forever. Just as surely as He brings you this Word of the
Lord to you today: “You are forgiven for all of your sins.”
In the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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