Ezekiel 17
“Son of man, propound a riddle, and speak a parable to
the house of Israel.” Ezekiel was called by God to teach the Lord's
people using a symbolic story about two eagles. The first great bird
stood for the King of Babylon. He took some of the young people of
Israel and “planted” them in his land. He then set up Zedekiah to
rule in Canaan under his authority, an arrangement to which Zedekiah
agreed.
A second eagle in this story was the Pharaoh in Egypt.
Zedekiah and the leaders of the Jews secretly put their hopes in the
Egyptians to deliver them from the hands of the Babylonians. Israel
was a vine that should have been fruitful in the service of the
emperor of Babylon. Instead the king in Jerusalem rejected the
arrangement that God had appointed. The “vine bent its roots
toward” Pharaoh assuming that this would be a more advantageous
alliance.
The Lord spoke against His own “low spreading vine”
because of her covenant unfaithfulness. He asked this important
question: “Will it thrive?” Israel's rebellion was not only
against the Babylonians, but was also a violation of the Lord's own
instruction. God would come against Zedekiah. “I will bring him to
Babylon and enter into judgment with him there for the treachery he
has committed against Me.” By this mighty act of judgment, the Jews
would “know that I am the Lord; I have spoken.”
Yet the Almighty also told one more story through
Ezekiel regarding His plan of grace for the distant future. God would
take “a sprig from the lofty top of the cedar.” He would plant “a
tender one” that would become a very mighty tree. “And under it
will dwell every kind of bird; in the shade of its branches birds of
every sort will nest.”
Ezekiel did not explain the meaning of this final tale,
but a parable in the New Testament helps us to confirm that it is
about Jesus and the eternal kingdom of God. In Matthew 13:31-32 Jesus
taught His disciples about His worldwide mission. It would start as
something so small, but would eventually provide shelter to all of
God's chosen people. “The kingdom of heaven is like a grain of
mustard seed that a man took and sowed in his field. It is the
smallest of all seeds, but when it has grown it is larger than all
the garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air
come and make nests in its branches.”
Isaiah 53:2 prepared the Jews for a Messiah who would be
“like a young plant.” It was the will of the Lord to bring about
His everlasting reign through very humble beginnings. The answer for
our salvation has never been in the most powerful empires known to
humanity. Our sovereign God has secured His kingdom in such a way
that He alone receives the glory for what will surely come to pass.
“I am the Lord; I have spoken, and I will do it.”
Prayer
from A
Book of Prayers
O Lord, there is
much that we do not understand. Speak to us clearly through Your
Word, and fill us with a Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Your Son. You have blessed us with so many wonderful
gifts. Cause Your church to be a fruitful plant with deep roots. You
know the secrets of our hearts. You know of the foolish schemes of
wicked leaders among Your church. Thank You for the perfection of our
One Head, the Lord Jesus Christ. He surely is a new tree of
righteousness for Your people. We find protection under His branches.
In Him, You have fully accomplished our rescue from sin and death.
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