Ezekiel was enjoying a season of popularity. He was benefiting from positive word of mouth advertising, maybe even on the way to going viral. His audience was telling others about him: Come and hear the message that has come from the Lord (v. 30).
In spite of his growing celebrity and the exuberance with which he was received, there was no evidence of changed lives among his listeners: [They] sit before you to listen to your words, but they do not put them into practice (v. 31). Ezekiel was a rock star. The people received him with surface enthusiasm, but his message never made the journey from their heads to their hearts.
But God had a somber assignment for the prophet. Give the people the news about Jerusalem's defeat, and let them know Judah will become a wasteland, and make sure they know these are the consequences of their own behavior (vv. 23-29).
God didn't call Ezekiel to be popular. He called him to prophesy. When all this comes true - and it surely will - then they will know that a prophet [and not a rock star] has been among them (v. 33).
Speaking the truth can be difficult. Have you ever pulled a punch to preserve your own popularity?
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