The promises of God are unshakeable—not because of who we are, but because of who He is.
In Ezekiel 35-37, we see something remarkable: God promises to restore Israel not because they deserved it, but because His name is holy and His word is sure. When the nations mocked God's people and claimed their land, when Israel had profaned God's name through their disobedience, God still said, "I will bring you back."
Why? "Not for your sake do I do this," God declares, "but for my holy name's sake."
This is the heart of the gospel. We don't earn God's favor. We don't manipulate His hand. God keeps His promises because He is faithful, even when we are faithless.
The vision of dry bones coming to life isn't just about Israel's future—it's a picture of what God does with dead things. He takes what is lifeless, scattered, and hopeless, and He breathes His Spirit into it. He restores. He rebuilds. He brings life where there was only death.
If God can promise restoration to a people who had profaned His name, scattered across nations, seemingly beyond hope—what can He do in your life? What situation looks too far gone? What relationship seems beyond repair? What dream appears dead and buried?
God's response to Ezekiel's question "Can these bones live?" should be our response too: "Lord, You know."
Because God is bigger than our imagination. His mercy extends beyond our comprehension. His promises stand firm regardless of circumstances.
The same God who will gather Israel from the nations, cleanse them, give them new hearts, and establish them forever is the God who works in your life today. Not because you've earned it, but because He is faithful.
That's a God worth trusting.