When God Breathes Life Into Dead Dreams: The Valley That Changed Everything
What’s Ezekiel 37 about?
This is the chapter where God takes His prophet on the strangest field trip ever – to a valley full of scattered bones – and then proceeds to put on the most spectacular resurrection demonstration in the Old Testament. It’s about hope when everything looks absolutely, utterly dead.
The Full Context
Picture this: it’s around 585 BC, and the Jewish people are scattered across Babylon like pieces of a shattered vase. Jerusalem lies in ruins, the temple is ash, and an entire generation has grown up in exile wondering if their God has abandoned them forever. Into this crushing despair comes Ezekiel, a priest-turned-prophet who’s been having some pretty intense visions from God – and this one tops them all.
Ezekiel has been faithfully delivering God’s messages to his fellow exiles for years, many of them warnings of judgment that have already come to pass. But now, in the middle of his prophetic book, the tone shifts dramatically. This vision in chapter 37 marks a pivotal moment where God moves from announcing judgment to promising restoration. It’s strategically placed here because the people desperately need to hear that their story isn’t over – that what looks like an ending is actually a new beginning waiting to happen.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The Hebrew word for “breath” that appears throughout this chapter is rûaḥ, and it’s one of those magnificently rich biblical words that refuses to be pinned down to just one meaning. It can mean breath, wind, or spirit – sometimes all three at once. When God asks Ezekiel to prophesy to the rûaḥ, He’s essentially saying, “Call on My life-giving power in all its forms.”
Grammar Geeks
The phrase “these bones” in verse 3 uses a Hebrew demonstrative that suggests Ezekiel is pointing directly at specific bones. This isn’t a general question about resurrection – God is asking about these particular bones, making the question intensely personal and immediate.
What’s fascinating is how the resurrection happens in stages. First, the bones come together with a supernatural rattling sound (imagine the acoustics in that valley!). Then sinews and flesh appear. But they’re still corpses until God breathes His rûaḥ into them. The Hebrew emphasizes that it’s not just any breath – it’s God’s own life-giving spirit that transforms corpses into “an exceedingly great army.”
The word “exceedingly” here is mĕ’ōd mĕ’ōd – literally “very very” – which is Hebrew’s way of saying “ridiculously, impossibly great.” This isn’t just any army; it’s a force that defies all natural explanation.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
To Ezekiel’s fellow exiles, this vision would have hit like a lightning bolt of hope. They knew their history – they knew that Israel had been called God’s army before. But right now, they felt exactly like those scattered bones: disconnected, dried up, forgotten.
The imagery would have been viscerally familiar too. Ancient battlefields were often left unburied, and valleys became collection points for bones bleached white by the sun. These exiles had probably seen such places on their journey to Babylon. They knew what death looked like on a massive scale.
Did You Know?
Archaeological evidence from this period shows that the Babylonians had a practice of deliberately scattering the bones of their enemies to prevent proper burial – which they believed would trap the spirits of the dead. God’s reassembly of these bones would have been seen as a direct reversal of this ultimate humiliation.
But here’s what would have shocked them: God doesn’t just resurrect individuals – He creates a unified army. The bones don’t become scattered people; they become an organized force. For a people who had been torn from their homeland, separated from their families, and scattered across an empire, this promise of coming together as one people again would have been almost too good to believe.
The phrase “my people” appears three times in God’s interpretation of the vision. After decades of wondering if they were still His chosen ones, this repeated affirmation would have been like water in a desert.
But Wait… Why Did They Ask “Can These Bones Live?”
Here’s something that might seem odd at first: when God asks Ezekiel if these bones can live, the prophet doesn’t give a confident “Yes!” Instead, he essentially says, “You tell me, Lord.” Why doesn’t Ezekiel immediately affirm God’s power to resurrect?
This isn’t doubt – it’s wisdom. Ezekiel has been in ministry long enough to know that God’s questions often have layers. The Hebrew construction here suggests that God is asking not just about possibility, but about timing and method. It’s like asking a master chef, “Can this meal be prepared?” The answer isn’t just yes or no – it depends on what ingredients you have, what tools are available, and what the purpose of the meal is.
Wait, That’s Strange…
Notice that God has Ezekiel prophesy twice – once to the bones and once to the breath. Why two separate prophetic acts? The Hebrew suggests these represent two distinct stages of restoration: physical regathering and spiritual renewal. You can have one without the other, but you need both for complete resurrection.
Ezekiel’s response, “O Lord GOD, you know,” is actually a sophisticated theological answer. He’s acknowledging that resurrection isn’t just about divine power – it’s about divine purpose and timing. The same God who can raise the dead also chooses when and how to do it.
Wrestling with the Text
This passage raises some beautiful tension about how God works in our world. On one hand, we see supernatural intervention that defies all natural law – bones flying through the air, flesh appearing from nothing, breath entering corpses. On the other hand, God accomplishes all of this through human partnership. He commands Ezekiel to prophesy, to speak His word into the situation.
The vision walks us through a process that mirrors how God often works in our lives: first, He brings together scattered pieces (the bones connecting), then He provides structure and strength (sinews and flesh), and finally He breathes His spirit into the situation to bring true life. It’s not usually instantaneous – it’s progressive.
“Sometimes what looks like death is just God clearing the stage for resurrection.”
But here’s what keeps me awake at night thinking about this text: God doesn’t just resurrect what was. He creates something new and better. These aren’t just living people – they’re “an exceedingly great army.” Death becomes the raw material for something more powerful than what existed before.
This challenges our tendency to want God to simply restore things to how they were. What if He has something bigger in mind? What if the valley experience isn’t just about getting back to where we started, but about being transformed into something we never imagined we could become?
How This Changes Everything
The most radical thing about this vision isn’t the miracle of resurrection – it’s the revelation that God specializes in using the driest, most hopeless situations as His starting point for something magnificent. The worse the situation looks, the more dramatic His intervention becomes.
But notice that the vision doesn’t end with individual resurrection. It culminates in corporate restoration – a unified people returning to their land under one shepherd-king. God’s ultimate goal isn’t just to fix broken individuals; it’s to restore broken communities, broken relationships, broken systems.
Did You Know?
The phrase “one shepherd” in verses 24-25 uses the Hebrew word rō’eh, which appears over 60 times in the Old Testament referring to both literal shepherds and to kings as shepherds of their people. David is specifically called Israel’s shepherd-king, making this a clear messianic promise.
The promise extends beyond the immediate restoration from Babylon to an eternal kingdom where God Himself will dwell among His people forever. What starts as a vision about national restoration becomes a preview of ultimate redemption.
This changes how we read our own valley experiences. When everything in our lives looks scattered and dead, we’re not seeing the end of the story – we’re seeing the raw materials God is about to use for resurrection. The darker the valley, the more spectacular the dawn.
Key Takeaway
When you’re standing in your own valley of dry bones – whether it’s a broken relationship, a failed dream, or a season of loss – remember that God doesn’t need ideal conditions to work miracles. He specializes in breathing life into what looks impossibly dead.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- The Message of Ezekiel by Christopher J.H. Wright
- Ezekiel by Daniel Block (NICOT Commentary)
- The Book of Ezekiel by Margaret Odell
Tags
Ezekiel 37:1, Ezekiel 37:3, Ezekiel 37:14, resurrection, restoration, exile, Spirit of God, prophecy, Israel, Babylon, hope, renewal, corporate restoration, messianic prophecy, breath of God, divine power