Ezekiel
Ezekiel 18:14ESV·traditional attribution

“Now suppose this man fathers a son who sees all the sins that his father has done; he sees, and does not do likewise:

John Calvin Reformed

In this third example Ezekiel announces, that if a man be born of a wicked father, he may nevertheless be pleasing to God, if he be unlike his father and thus he refutes the proverb that was so common in Israel — that the father ate the sour grapes, and the children’s teeth were set on edge.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

A godly father's prayers and pains cannot compel his son's obedience. The child may have every advantage, instruction, discipline, example, yet still shake off all good and run to robbery and idolatry, becoming the grief of his family and the curse of his generation. Parentage changes nothing in God's reckoning.

AI summary

Commenting on Ezekiel 18:10-20

John Gill Reformed Baptist

Now, lo, if he beget a son,.... That is, the wicked man before mentioned; if he begets a son who proves a good man, which sometimes is the case, as Hezekiah the son of Ahaz, and Josiah the son of Amon: that seeth all his father's sins which he hath done; not every particular action, but the principal of them; however, the several sorts and...