Living Life [Mon., 8/11/2025]

Ezekiel 16:15-34 / Adulterous Souls


📖 Scripture

15 “‘But you trusted in your beauty and used your fame to become a prostitute. You lavished your favors on anyone who passed by and your beauty became his.
16 You took some of your garments to make gaudy high places, where you carried on your prostitution. You went to him, and he possessed your beauty.
17 You also took the fine jewelry I gave you, the jewelry made of my gold and silver, and you made for yourself male idols and engaged in prostitution with them.
18 And you took your embroidered clothes to put on them, and you offered my oil and incense before them.
19 Also the food I provided for you—the flour, olive oil and honey I gave you to eat—you offered as fragrant incense before them. That is what happened, declares the Sovereign Lord.
20 “‘And you took your sons and daughters whom you bore to me and sacrificed them as food to the idols. Was your prostitution not enough?
21 You slaughtered my children and sacrificed them to the idols.
22 In all your detestable practices and your prostitution you did not remember the days of your youth, when you were naked and bare, kicking about in your blood.
23 “‘Woe! Woe to you, declares the Sovereign Lord. In addition to all your other wickedness,
24 you built a mound for yourself and made a lofty shrine in every public square.
25 At every street corner you built your lofty shrines and degraded your beauty, spreading your legs with increasing promiscuity to anyone who passed by.
26 You engaged in prostitution with the Egyptians, your neighbors with large genitals, and aroused my anger with your increasing promiscuity.
27 So I stretched out my hand against you and reduced your territory; I gave you over to the greed of your enemies, the daughters of the Philistines, who were shocked by your lewd conduct.
28 You engaged in prostitution with the Assyrians too, because you were insatiable; and even after that, you still were not satisfied.
29 Then you increased your promiscuity to include Babylonia, a land of merchants, but even with this you were not satisfied.
30 “‘I am filled with fury against you, declares the Sovereign Lord, when you do all these things, acting like a brazen prostitute!
31 When you built your mounds at every street corner and made your lofty shrines in every public square, you were unlike a prostitute, because you scorned payment.
32 “‘You adulterous wife! You prefer strangers to your own husband!
33 All prostitutes receive gifts, but you give gifts to all your lovers, bribing them to come to you from everywhere for your illicit favors.
34 So in your prostitution you are the opposite of others; no one runs after you for your favors. You are the very opposite, for you give payment and none is given to you.


📌 Scripture Summary

Jerusalem trusts in her beauty and becomes unfaithful. She offers her adornments to idols and builds high places to engage in prostitution. She sacrifices her children and fails to remember the misery of her youth. In His anger, the Lord reduces her territory and gives her over to her enemies, but she acts worse than a prostitute, paying lovers instead of receiving payment.


💡 Memory Verse

“I gave you my solemn oath and entered into a covenant with you, declares the Sovereign Lord, and you became mine.” – Ezekiel 16:8b


📝 Reflection

The Days Before Redemption (16:15–22)

God accuses Jerusalem of squandering His gifts to pursue adulterous relationships and, in doing so, mocking His love. Even more horrifically, she engages in child sacrifice, killing God’s own children. What makes this even more tragic is that Jerusalem is not unaware that this is sin because she was once a victim of the same abuse. She has forgotten what it was like to be mistreated, and in her forgetfulness, became the very thing she was rescued from. When we forget the depths from which God saved us, we are at risk of reverting to our sinful ways. When we begin to take His grace for granted, we may even perpetuate the very evils we once suffered.

Reflection Question: Recall what God rescued you from. Reflect on what life is like for you now that you are free in His grace.

Cheating on God (16:23–34)

Ezekiel bluntly portrays Jerusalem as a promiscuous spouse, not merely for shock value, but to highlight the depth of betrayal and heartbreak God experiences. Marriage is meant to be a covenant of mutual self-giving, and there is nothing more unsettling than witnessing a relationship where one partner exploits the other’s love. Yet we so often do so in our relationship with the Lord. While God gives endlessly out of His abundant grace, we often take His blessings and spend them trying to win the world’s approval. Like Ezekiel’s prophecies, our reflection on such a betrayal should stir in us a holy discomfort at how easily we abuse the love God so freely offers us, not so we will wallow in self-condemnation, but so we will run back to God in repentance.

Reflection Question: Ask God to show you the ways in which you have squandered His blessings in pursuit of other things. Spend time repenting.


🌟 Today’s Inspiration

“In how many ways have we been unfaithful to Christ, and to the light and privileges which God has entrusted to us! How refreshing, then, . . . to lift our eyes above this scene of ruin, and behold One who is faithful, faithful in all things, faithful at all times.” – Arthur W. Pink


🙏 Prayer

Faithful God, I thank you for Your unfailing love. Even though I constantly fall short and so easily get entangled by the same sins, You are a gracious Father who leads me back to You. Keep my heart so that I will always remain in Your love. In Jesus’ name, amen.


✍️ Essay

Remembering Our Youth

There was a dark time in my youth when I isolated myself, listening to alternative rock and cursing bitterly at a world that I believed could never understand me. Looking back now, I chuckle at how dramatic I was, but I also pity the younger me because at the time, what I was going through was no laughing matter. What could I have said to help my younger self out of that place? Honestly, nothing. Because the truth is, there were adults and friends around me who were kind and loving. But it didn’t stop me from spiraling into darkness.

What happened to get me out of that place? I am not entirely sure. But I have come to realize that even in my darkest moments, God was always watching over me. The change I experienced is deeper than just a “phase,” because I experienced God’s saving grace rescuing me from my own demons. I still remember the promise I made to myself back then: “I will not forget what it was like to be young.” I meant this not in a nostalgic sense but as a commitment to remember what the struggle of adolescence felt like.

When I see kids today struggling like I once did, I wonder if there is anything I can do to help. Sometimes I can help but more often, I can’t. Yet through it all, I see God watching over them, just as He watched over me. It is a quiet reminder of His faithfulness in my own life. We pray for our young ones, not to fix them, but because we remember that God loves them just as He loved us.

Written by John Bak

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