Ezekiel Chapter 36 verse 29 Holy Bible
And I will save you from all your uncleannesses: and I will call for the grain, and will multiply it, and lay no famine upon you.
read chapter 36 in ASV
And I will make you free from all your unclean ways: and at my voice the grain will come up and be increased, and I will not let you be short of food.
read chapter 36 in BBE
And I will save you from all your uncleannesses; and I will call for the corn and will multiply it, and lay no famine upon you.
read chapter 36 in DARBY
I will also save you from all your uncleannesses: and I will call for the corn, and will increase it, and lay no famine upon you.
read chapter 36 in KJV
read chapter 36 in WBT
I will save you from all your uncleanness: and I will call for the grain, and will multiply it, and lay no famine on you.
read chapter 36 in WEB
And I have saved you from all your uncleannesses, And I have called unto the corn, and multiplied it, And I have put no famine upon you.
read chapter 36 in YLT
Ezekiel 36 : 29 Bible Verse Songs
Pulpit Commentary
Pulpit CommentaryVerse 29. - From all your uncleannesses. The same word as in ver. 25, though with difference in meaning. From their uncleanness of the past they have already been saved (ver. 25); the present promise guarantees preservation against future lapsing into uncleanness, i.e. the filthiness of idol-service. "With this," writes Plumptre, "the necessity for temporal chastisements as a corrective discipline should cease, and there would be nothing to check the full outpouring of all material as well as spiritual blessings." With the phrase, I will call for the corn, compare the similar expressions in 2 Kings 8:1; Hosea 2:23, etc.; Jeremiah 31:12; Zechariah 9:17.
Ellicott's Commentary
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(29) Your uncleannesses.--In Ezekiel 36:25 they had already been made clean, and in Ezekiel 36:26 a new heart had been given them; why, then, was there yet further need of cleansing? This cannot, therefore, refer to the idolatries from which they had been already purged, but is plain enough if understood of that ordinary sinfulness of man which, being continually renewed, needs continual forgiveness.