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Ezekiel 23: Donkeys and Horses

Author
Brandon Cannon
Published
Mon 28 Apr 2025
Episode Link
None

Tackling one of the Bible's most uncomfortable passages, we journey through Ezekiel 23 with its shocking metaphor of two prostitute sisters representing Israel and Judah's spiritual unfaithfulness. This chapter contains some of Scripture's most graphic language—a deliberate choice by God to convey the ugliness and depravity of sin as He sees it.

The vivid allegory portrays Oholah (Samaria) and Oholibah (Jerusalem) as sisters who engage in spiritual prostitution with foreign nations and their idols. Unlike earlier prophecies where God expresses heartbreak, here we witness divine anger—the raw emotion of one betrayed repeatedly by those He loves. Through Ezekiel's unflinching delivery, we see what happens when covenant relationships are violated beyond the point of reconciliation.

What makes this difficult passage so valuable is how it reveals God's perspective on sin. When He prohibits certain behaviors, it's not because He's establishing arbitrary boundaries—it's because He sees the destruction these actions bring into our lives. As we work through this challenging text together, we discover a profound truth: God describes sin in the most repulsive terms possible because He wants to protect us from its devastating consequences. He loves us too much to let us destroy ourselves through behaviors that separate us from His presence.

Looking for more biblical insights that don't shy away from difficult passages? Subscribe to the Bible Breakdown Podcast for a chapter-by-chapter journey through Scripture. Leave a five-star review and join our discussion group where we dig deeper into God's Word together. Remember—the more we dig, the more we find!

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