Ezekiel 11:19

Ezekiel 11:19

And I will give them one heart, and I will put a new spirit within you; and I will take the stony heart out of their flesh, and will give them an heart of flesh:

King James Version (KJV)

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Context

Ezekiel prophesied among the Judean exiles in Babylon around 590 BC, before and after Jerusalem's fall. In chapter 11 he confronts the false security of those still in the city and then speaks tender promises to the scattered exiles, assuring them that God has not abandoned them and will gather, renew, and restore them.

What Does Ezekiel 11:19 Mean?

Ezekiel 11:19 is God's promise to replace a hard, unresponsive heart with a tender, living one and to put a new spirit within His people. The prophet Ezekiel speaks to a nation in exile, far from home, and to those still clinging to Jerusalem in false confidence. Into that despair God announces something He alone can do: He will reach inside a person and change the very center of who they are. The "stony heart" pictures a will that has grown cold, stubborn, and unable to feel the call of God. It does not bend, it does not respond, and it cannot heal itself.

The "heart of flesh" is not a weaker heart but a softer, sensitive one -- a heart that can be moved, instructed, and warmed toward God. Alongside it God gives "one heart," a unity that binds His scattered people together in a single devotion, and "a new spirit," an inward freshness that makes obedience desire rather than burden. Notice that the work begins with God: "I will give... I will put... I will take... will give." Yet the gift is meant to be welcomed and lived out. This verse looks forward to a renewal worked deep within, a foretaste of what God offers all who turn to Him: not merely corrected behavior, but a transformed heart.

In the Original Language

The Hebrew contrasts lev even (heart of stone) with lev basar (heart of flesh), and ruach (spirit, breath, wind) names the new inward principle God places within His people.

Application

When your own heart feels hard, cold, or unmoved by God, this verse points you to the One who can change it. Ask God to give you a heart of flesh -- tender, teachable, and alive to His voice. Lasting change starts not with willpower alone but with surrender to the God who renews us from within.

Keep Studying Ezekiel 11

Read the whole chapter in KJV, ASV, or WEB, or go deeper with the chapter study guide and key themes.