Land of "milk and honey"???
It has been in the back of my mind for quite some time. When did the land of milk and honey turn into a wilderness? There had to be a period when it happened.
This morning I read Ezekiel and verses 13-14 reads: "And they will know that I am the Lord, when their people lie slain among their idols around their altars, on every high hill and on all the mountaintops, under every spreading tree and every leafy oak—places where they offered fragrant incense to all their idols. 14 And I will stretch out my hand against them and make the land a desolate waste from the desert to Diblah—wherever they live. Then they will know that I am the Lord.’"
V13 indicates to me that it was still furtile at that time and then in v14 Father curses the land and Jerusalem is descroyed.
Is my thinking correct or do you know of a different period that the furtility of the land was changed to become a wilderness?
GidgetsMom
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Chris Deweese
"So you are to know and discern that from the issuing of a decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem until Messiah the Prince there will be seven weeks and sixty-two weeks; it will be built again, with plaza and moat, even in times of distress. "Then after the sixty-two weeks the Messiah will be cut off and have nothing, and the people of the prince who is to come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. And its end will come with a flood; even to the end there will be war; desolations are determined.
(Dan 9:25-26)
https://firstcenturychristiani....ty.net/the-temple-an
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Cody Bond
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Rhy Bezuidenhout
And just as He called and they would not listen, so they called and I would not listen,” says the Lord of hosts; “but I scattered them with a storm wind among all the nations whom they have not known. Thus the land was desolate after they had gone, so that no one passed through or returned, for they [by their sins] had made the pleasant land desolate and deserted.”
It doesn't say that the land became a dessert, but desolate at the time of the exile. Desolate can be defined as "barren, lifeless" and along with the statement of "made the pleasant land desolate" it could mean that the pleasant land became unpleasant.
Or is my thinking wrong here?
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