12.  my  people--in  antithesis  to  "for  our  parts"  
  (Eze  37:11).
  The  hope  that  is  utterly  gone,  if  looking  at  themselves,  is  sure  
  for  them  in  God,  because  He  regards  them  as  His  people.  
  Their covenant relation  to  God  ensures  His  not  letting  death  
  permanently  reign  over  them. Christ makes  the  same  principle  the  ground  
  on  which  the  literal  resurrection  rests.  God  had  said,  "I  am  the  God  of  
  Abraham,"  &c.;  God,  by  taking  the  patriarchs  as  His,  undertook  
  to  do  for  them  all  that  Omnipotence  can  perform:  He,  being  the  ever  
  living  God,  is  necessarily  the  God  of,  not  dead,  but  living  persons,  
  that  is,  of  those  whose  bodies  His  covenant  love  binds  Him  to  raise  
  again.  He  can--and  because  He  can--He  will--He  must  [FAIRBAIRN].  He  calls  them  "My  people"  when  
  receiving  them  into  favor;  but  "thy  people,"  in  addressing  His  
  servant,  as  if  He  would  put  them  away  from  Him
  (Eze  13:17;  33:2;
  Ex  32:7).
  
         
  out  of  your  graves--out  of  your  politically  dead  state,  primarily  in
  Babylon,  finally  hereafter  in  all  lands  (compare
  Eze  6:8;
  Ho  13:14).
  The  Jews  regarded  the  lands  of  their captivity and  dispersion  as  their
  "graves";  their  restoration  was  to  be  as  "life  from  the  dead"
  (Ro  11:15).
  
  Before,  the  bones  were  in  the  open  plain
  (Eze  37:1,  2);
  now,  in  the  graves,  that  is,  some  of  the  Jews  were  in  the  graves  of  
  actual  captivity,  others  at  large  but  dispersed.  Both  alike  were  
  nationally  dead.
JFB.
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