“And He said to me, ‘Son of man, can these bones live?’ “(Ezekiel 37:3). God asks us questions that He alone is able to answer. We try our 

best to understand how a possibility of hope may arise out of an impossible situation. What we see are circumstances that appear to be beyond hope. God placed the prophet there. And God continues to communicate to him at that place for which he has been prepared. The valley is a lonely place if you are alone. But God is in the valley in order to teach valley lessons. There we learn to raise others above their lowly state. He allowed him to see the ruins of what once was vibrant and alive. Then He asked him the question that sounds like a mockery of his intelligence, adding insult to injury. “Can these bones live?” Not just any bones, but the bones of the defeated army; an army that must rise from death then rise from defeat. Life would be meaningless if defeat was to be continual. His will is that we live on purpose. God must answer His own question, but if He is asking us, then He must have more in mind than we at this present moment are able to see. Ezekiel’s answer was, “Thou knowest.” He is looking at the end of our faith to see if our confidence is in what He knows rather than what we may think or even see.