In this section YHWH addresses the question of individual responsibility for sin, which was mentioned in
chapter 9 when the righteous people in Jerusalem were 'marked so as to escape the city's destruction' (
Ezekiel 9:4; cf. ), and whether a few righteous individuals might suffice to save an entire city (cf. Abraham in ) or at least members of their own family (cf. Abraham for Lot in Genesis 19:29). The number of citizens to be spared was apparently quite small, as Ezekiel protests that YHWH is destroying the last remnant of
Israel (). YHWH posits that should the three 'legendary paragons of virtue':
Noah,
Dan'el, and
Job, inhabit this land, even 'they would be helpless to save their own children from YHWH's punishment of famine, wild beasts, sword, and plague', which recalls the scenario in
chapter 5 and
7 that YHWH is about to bring 'four levitically prescribed punishments against Jerusalem and Israel'. The conclusion of this chapter is clear: Jerusalem ('which is patently not inhabited by Noah, Dan'el, or Job') will not be spared, even 'for the sake of some few righteous citizens, or by the righteousness of those exiles whose children will now share in the city's doom' (). YHWH adds an ironic note that there will be survivors of the city's destruction who will be brought into exile to show the exiles of 'their obvious wickedness', so people will know that 'YHWH did not destroy the city without reason' ().
Verse 14 :
Though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, ::
they should deliver but their own souls by their righteousness, :
saith the Lord God. • "Three men": These three men are selected as they had pled in different "worlds", according to Rashi, that is Noah witnesses the world destroyed and rebuilt, Daniel the temple destroyed and rebuilt, Job the prosperity/"greatness" destroyed and rebuilt. These three Israel's righteous spiritual heroes "could not have prevailed with God in prayer to save the people" from the coming disasters.
Verse 20 :
Though Noah, Daniel, and Job were in it, as I live, saith the Lord God, ::
they shall deliver neither son nor daughter; :
they shall but deliver their own souls by their righteousness. • "They shall but deliver their own souls by their righteousness": The city of Sodom could be saved with a minimum number of righteous people (), but the righteous people can only save one's own soul in the case of determined judgment on Jerusalem. ==See also==