XVII.

This chapter contains a “riddle” or “parable “(Ezekiel 17:3), with its explanation (Ezekiel 17:11), closing with a clear Messianic prophecy couched in language taken from the parable (Ezekiel 17:22). While it is a distinct communication, it belongs to the same series of prophecies which began with the vision of Ezekiel 8-11, and is continued through Ezekiel 19. The meaning of the parable is made entirely clear by the explanation the first eagle (Ezekiel 17:3) is Nebuchadnezzar; “the top of his young twigs” is Jehoiachin, carried to Babylon; the “vine of low stature” is Zedekiah; the second eagle is Pharaoh (Ezekiel 17:7). The historical facts on which the parable is based are recorded in 2 Kings 24:8; 2 Chronicles 36:9; Jeremiah 37 and Jeremiah 52:1.

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