God utilised an object lesson with the children of Israel of two harlot sisters named Oholah and Oholibah (Samaria and Jerusalem). The people of Samaria and the northern kingdom committed spiritual adultery through idolatry, and the people of Jerusalem followed suit. In following her sister's lead, Oholibah was corrupted even further in her lust. Jerusalem should have been faithful to the LORD God who was "married" to her and dwelt with her, but she was unrestrained in her desires. This sort of thing plays out every day in our world facilitated by apps and websites--and it is nothing new. God exposed his people for swiping right and sliding into their DMs--when they imagined they had been faithful to Him.
Read Ezekiel 23:14-16 for yourself: "But
she increased her harlotry; she looked at men portrayed on
the wall, images of Chaldeans portrayed in
vermilion, 15 girded with belts around their waists, flowing
turbans on their heads, all of them looking like
captains, in the manner of the Babylonians of
Chaldea, the land of their nativity. 16 As soon as her eyes
saw them, she lusted for them and
sent messengers to them in Chaldea." What happened next I found most intriguing in Ezekiel 23:17-18: "Then the Babylonians came to her, into the bed of love, and they defiled her with their immorality; so she was defiled by them, and alienated herself from
them. 18 She revealed her harlotry and uncovered her nakedness. Then I alienated Myself from her, as I
had alienated Myself from her sister."
Oholibah liked what she saw and sent messengers to invite attractive, foreign men into her bed when she already had a husband. As a result she was defiled and alienated from them. She was left unfulfilled, dissatisfied and even disgusted by her encounters. Because of her spiritual harlotry, God alienated Himself from her even as He alienated Himself from her sister Samaria. To be "alienated" is to be estranged and isolated from someone. Oholibah's soul was alienated from what she lusted after, and God was alienated from her due to her adultery. The consequences of sin were unsatisfactory for both. The problem was Oholibah in the illustration kept chasing after men she idolised, false gods that resulted in dissatisfaction and disgust over her illicit loves.
David wrote in Psalm 101:3, "I will
set nothing wicked before my eyes; I hate the work of those
who fall away; it shall not cling to me." This is wisdom we ought to walk in. There is nothing intrinsically wicked about images of captains in Babylonian attire: the problem rested in the heart of God's people whose hearts were estranged from God. Oholibah was like a sow returning to the mire, even as Israel had embraced idolatry in Egypt centuries prior. God's people did not always remain faithful to Him, but He remained faithful to them and would pay the price to redeem all sinners to Himself through the Gospel. The children of Israel would be taken into captivity in Babylon and Jerusalem would fall, but God would see it rebuilt and His people restored. There is hope for people who stray from God, for our loving God does not remain estranged forever and draws near by grace with power to save and restore. By God's grace may we be faithful to Him as He is faithful, now free from bondage to lust and pride.
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