DiscoverChristianityworks Official PodcastCan These Bones Live? // Taking God at His Word, Part 2
Can These Bones Live? // Taking God at His Word, Part 2

Can These Bones Live? // Taking God at His Word, Part 2

Update: 2025-10-12
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Sometimes, to be honest, life can feel really dry. You look out across the landscape of your life and all you can see is dry bones. You know there’s more out there, but right now you just can’t see how it’ll ever feel “alive” again.

 

Valley of Dry Bones

Have you ever noticed that some people seem to go on with God in a really powerful and exciting way and other people who say, "well I’m a Christian"; I don’t know, they tend to be, if I can use the term "puced", as you know, some people just don’t seem to be living out the joy and the power and the victory that a Christian life should represent. I wonder why that is?

Well ... Jesus called us to go and make disciples; He called us to be disciples, not just believers. I think there is a distinction; a difference. A disciple, well, there’s something resolute, there’s something firm in their direction, they have a sense of where God is taking them and they’re radical believers with their lives, in who Jesus is and what Jesus says. So they "hear" the Word of God but they also "do" the Word of God. Someone who’s a believer and yet not a disciple, well, that person can believe; that person can live the story of Christ intermittently, but there is a sense of floating, there’s a sense of they’re not really deeply committed to be followers of Jesus Christ.

There’s a wishy-washiness about just being a believer and not a disciple; being just a believer is like hearing but not doing and as I said, the Lord calls us to be His disciples. The Lord calls us to go on in strength and power and victory, to live an abundant and exciting and amazing life. I really get excited when I think about what God has called us to. Now I’m not saying that somehow, a disciple has it all together, but they’re on the path, they are committed to the journey with the Lord, wherever He wants to take them. A believer has a sort of an intellectual ascent to the Word of God but they are so often controlled by feelings and circumstances and we know that feelings are fickle; we know that circumstances blow an ill-wind today and a good wind tomorrow. We can’t predict circumstances – we can’t rely entirely on our feelings.

Jesus is about making disciples and not believers. That is why we are going through a series of teaching at the moment that I’ve called, “Taking God at His Word,” because it seems to me that someone who is committed to Christ, committed to walking the walk with Jesus, is someone who takes God at His Word. God has some amazing promises in His Word, the Bible.

Last week we looked at the promise that He will take us just as we are. He will take us with all our weaknesses and frailties and even despite that we can come boldly before His throne of grace. If you have a Bible, let’s go quickly back there because it’s an awesome Scripture; in Hebrews chapter 4, verses 15 and 16, where it says this.

We don’t have a High Priest who’s unable to sympathise with our weaknesses, but we have one, who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet was without sin. Let us therefore, approach the throne of grace with boldness so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. In other words, because Jesus knows what it is like; because He has walked in our shoes on this earth as a man, because of that He can sympathise with our circumstances and because of that, we should come boldly before the throne of grace.

In other words God’s having a party and it‘s come as you are. We don’t have to get all dressed up; we don’t have to get our lives sorted out to come before God. That’s what happens when we have a relationship with Him, through Jesus Christ.

Today we are going to get on with the next message, which is called, “Can these bones live?” Have you ever looked across at your life and thought, “My life is so dry, it shouldn’t be like this, but as I survey the landscape of my life, it’s like a valley of dry bones? It’s like – can it ever get any better, can I ever have a real sense of vibrant abundant life that I know my relationship with Jesus should bring me?” We all get to that point at sometime. We all get to that stage where we think – my life is just so dry. How’s that going to change? Well, it’s time to take God at His Word.

If you have a Bible, grab it and flip it open to Ezekiel chapter 37. Ezekiel is one of the books of the Old Testament and it comes just after Isaiah, Jeremiah and then the Book of Ezekiel. We are going to chapter 37 and we pick up the story of Israel here, when they have been in exile in Babylon for almost seventy years. This is about the third part of the Book of Ezekiel. The first couple of parts are oracles of judgement against Judah and all the other nations surrounding them but this passage that we’re about to look at, at the beginning of Ezekiel chapter 37, is really early on in the third part and the third part of the book is the book of hope. It’s about the restoration of Israel because as I said, at this point, Israel has been in exile in Babylon for almost seventy years.

God made them a promise; God promised them when He brought them up out of Egypt – remember they spent almost four centuries in slavery in Egypt, after Joseph, the son of Jacob, the son of Isaac, the son of Abraham. Joseph was a Jew who became Prime Minister of Egypt and so all the tribes of Israel thrived in Egypt and became so populous they were enslaved by Pharaoh and there they lived until they cried out and God heard their cry and sent Moses to bring them out of Egypt. But they lived four hundred years in Egypt and then went through the exodus of forty years through the desert and finally past into the Promised Land – the land of milk and honey, but they didn’t stick with what God called them to do – they didn’t obey God and God’s promise was, “I’ll bless you in your land if you obey me but if you don’t, you’ll lose your land.”

And sure enough, Babylon rose up against them and in 586/587BC, the Babylonian empire over-ran Jerusalem; burnt it, destroyed it, killed a lot of people and took the rest of them into slavery in exile in Babylon. And so these people were thinking, “Woe, what about God’s promises? The temple’s been destroyed – that’s where God lives. Now we’re exiled and Jerusalem is raised to the ground, what about God’s promises?”

So there’s a sense of hopelessness and despair after generations. Living again, in exile in another country, in Babylon and this is what God says into that situation. It’s got powerful implications for us today, but let’s just see what happens. Ezekiel was taken by God – have a listen. Chapter 37 beginning verses 1 and 2. Ezekiel says this:

The hand of the Lord came upon me and He brought me out by the Spirit of the Lord and set me down in the middle of a valley – it was full of bones. He led me all around them; there were very many lying in the valley and they were very dry.

And here’s this valley full of dry, dead bones. Ezekiel was a priest and he knew the importance of burial. I mean these bones weren’t buried and the reason it happen is they had a treaty with God and they disobeyed God and so the armies of Israel were killed and bodies were left to wild animals and it was God’s punishment. You can read about it – we won’t go there now but in Deuteronomy chapter 28, verses 25 and 26, it explicitly predicts that if Israel doesn’t obey God this will happen – their armies will be destroyed. We find out later in this passage, in verse 11, that these are the bones of the House of Israel.

But what about your house? What about your dry bones? What about the relationships and the sin and the wallowing and the drifting that we sometimes experience in our Christian walk? Sometimes we don’t even know why it is. The thing that God does here is He shows Ezekiel the dry bones, He walks him around. He says, “Get a grip on reality.” Well maybe He’s talking to us today – “Get a grip on reality! What are the dry bones in our lives; the things that are coming to ruin our walk and our relationship with God and the wonderful life that God has planned for us; the dead stuff? What are the dry bones? We are going to look at what God does with the dry bones next.

 

Life in His Word

Ok, so we’re living life and we feel that it’s like this valley of dry bones that Ezekiel is talking about here. Well, what does God do with those dry bones? Let’s pick it up in verse 3 of chapter 37. God says to Ezekiel:

"Mortal, can these bones live?” I answered, “Lord God, you know.” Then He said to me, “Prophesy to these bones and say to them, “Oh, dry bones, hear the Word of the Lord. Thus says the Lord God to these bones, “I will cause breath to enter you and you shall live, I will lay sinews on you and will cause flesh to come upon you and cover you with skin and put breath in you and you shall live and you shall know that I am the Lord you God.”

So this is the first recorded tennis match in the Bible. God serves up and says to Ezekiel, “Can these bones live,” and Ezekiel returns the ball across the net and says, “Well, God, it’s really up to you.” I mean, they’re dead, they’re dry, it’s devastated, it’s hopeless, they’re crunching around together,” God and Ezekiel in this death valley and the truth is that it looks impossible to Ezekiel, but he daren’t say that.

Well, let’s come back to our valley of dry bones; the broken relationships, the persistent sin, the dryness, the drudgery and God asks you or God asks me, “Can these bones live?” How do we answer that? I think we return that to God and say, “Lord, Lord you know.” Israel was in a hopeless situation, the world power of the day, Babylon, had them in sla

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Can These Bones Live? // Taking God at His Word, Part 2

Can These Bones Live? // Taking God at His Word, Part 2

Berni Dymet