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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