Chapter 18: Individual Responsibility and the Call to Repentance
- Ending the False Proverb (Verses 1–4)
- G‑d rebukes the saying:
“The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge.” - This proverb will no longer be used in Israel.
- Principle:
- “All souls are Mine—the soul that sins, it shall die.”
- The Righteous Man Lives (Verses 5–9)
- A man who:
- Avoids idolatry and immorality.
- Does not oppress, returns pledges, avoids robbery.
- Gives bread to the hungry, clothes the naked.
- Does not take interest or increase, judges truthfully.
- Walks in G‑d’s statutes and ordinances.
- He shall surely live, says the Lord G‑d.
- The Wicked Son Dies (Verses 10–13)
- If such a righteous man fathers a son who:
- Sheds blood, commits robbery, idolatry, immorality.
- Oppresses the poor, takes interest and increase.
- He shall not live—he shall surely die; his blood is upon himself.
- The Righteous Grandson Lives (Verses 14–18)
- If this wicked man fathers a son who sees his father’s sins and does not follow them:
- He practices justice and righteousness.
- He shall live; his father shall die for his own iniquity.
- Principle of Personal Accountability (Verses 19–20)
- “The soul that sins, it shall die.”
- A son does not bear the father’s guilt, nor a father the son’s.
- Righteousness belongs to the righteous; wickedness to the wicked.
- The Power of Repentance (Verses 21–24)
- If a wicked man repents and keeps G‑d’s laws:
- His sins will not be remembered; he shall live.
- G‑d declares:
- “Do I desire the death of the wicked? Is it not rather that he turn from his ways and live?”
- Conversely, if a righteous man turns to sin, his former righteousness will not save him.
- G‑d’s Justice Affirmed (Verses 25–29)
- Israel protests: “The way of the Lord is not right!”
- G‑d responds:
- “Is it My way that is not right? Is it not your ways?”
- Each person is judged according to their own deeds.
- The Call to Repentance and Life (Verses 30–32)
- G‑d urges:
- “Repent and turn from all your transgressions; make yourselves a new heart and a new spirit.”
- Final appeal:
- “I do not desire the death of him who dies—turn away and live!”
Central Themes
- Personal responsibility: No inherited guilt; each soul answers for its own deeds.
- Repentance brings life: G‑d desires restoration, not destruction.
- Justice and mercy: G‑d’s ways are righteous, calling Israel to return.
