We live in a world where it often feels easier to stay quiet, especially when it comes to matters of sin or calling people back to God’s truth. Speaking up risks misunderstanding, rejection, even broken relationships. But in Ezekiel 3, God reminds us that silence isn’t safe. Silence is costly—not only for those who continue down a destructive path, but also for those who refuse to sound the alarm.

The Watchman’s Call

In Ezekiel 3:17–20, God gives the prophet a weighty assignment:

“Son of man, I have made you a watchman for the house of Israel…” (v.17)

Ezekiel is told that if he sees danger coming—the danger of sin and judgment—he must warn the people. If he doesn’t, their blood is on his hands. If he does, then he has been faithful, whether they listen or not.

But that raises a question:

Who Are the Wicked in Ezekiel 3?

It may surprise us to realize that the “wicked” in Ezekiel 3 are not outsiders who don’t know God. The context shows that God sent Ezekiel specifically to Israel itself:

“I am sending you to the people of Israel, to a rebellious nation that has rebelled against me” (Ezekiel 2:3).

That means the “wicked” are God’s own covenant people who are living in disobedience. They are not strangers to God’s commands; they are rebels against them.

And the passage doesn’t just speak to the wicked. It also warns of the righteous person who turns aside into sin. Even those who once walked faithfully can stumble. Ezekiel’s role was to speak to both groups:

  • The wicked – covenant people living in rebellion.
  • The righteous who turn – those drifting into sin after once living rightly.

Both are accountable to God. And Ezekiel’s faithfulness is measured by whether he warns them.

The Burden of Silence

This “watchman” role was heavy. Ezekiel wasn’t responsible for people’s ultimate choices—that was between them and God. But he was responsible for whether or not he gave the warning.

If he stayed silent, he shared in the guilt. If he spoke, he had done his duty, even if people ignored him.

Silence, in other words, is not neutral. It’s dangerous.

A New Testament Echo

This principle carries into the New Testament. Paul draws directly on the same imagery when he tells the Ephesian elders:

“I testify to you this day that I am innocent of the blood of all, for I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God.” (Acts 20:26–27)

Paul, like Ezekiel, saw himself as a watchman. He couldn’t control how people responded to the gospel, but he was responsible to faithfully proclaim it.

And while we aren’t prophets like Ezekiel, the principle still applies. God calls us to be faithful witnesses, speaking truth in love, even when it’s uncomfortable.

Why This Matters

It’s easy to read Ezekiel and imagine “the wicked” as people out there—the irreligious, the hostile, the people who have never known God. But in Ezekiel 3, the warning is actually for people in here—God’s own covenant community.

That should make us pause. God takes sin seriously, not only in the world, but also in His people. And He calls His watchmen—leaders, pastors, and everyday believers—to care enough to speak, even when silence feels easier.

Living This Out

So how do we live as faithful “watchmen” today?

  • It doesn’t mean walking around with a megaphone condemning others.
  • It means loving people enough to speak when God calls us to speak.
  • It means reminding one another of the truth when we see each other drifting.
  • It means pointing each other back to the grace and life found in Jesus Christ.

Faithfulness isn’t measured by the results we see. It’s measured by whether we are willing to speak when God says to speak.

Silence may feel safe—but in God’s eyes, sometimes silence speaks loudest.