Verse 2
Ezekiel 17:2. Son of man, put
forth a riddle — A continued
metaphor or figurative speech:
an allegory. The prophets
frequently delivered their
instructions in this way, as
being well calculated both to
engage the attention of their
hearers or readers, and to make
a deep and lasting impression on
their minds. It was a mode of
teaching peculiarly adapted to
the eastern people, and
therefore often adopted by their
instructers, whether inspired or
uninspired. It is well known
that our Lord frequently used it
in preaching his gospel.
Verses 3-6
Ezekiel 17:3-6. A great eagle
with great wings — The eagle is
the king of birds, swift,
strong, and rapacious. And this
great eagle, according to all
interpreters, represents
Nebuchadnezzar. Its “greatness,
long wings, beautiful, abundant,
and well-coloured plumage,
denote the force and greatness
of his empire, the rapidity of
his conquests, and the number of
his subjects. The Scripture has
in other places described this
prince under the figure of an
eagle. See Jeremiah 48:40-45;
Daniel 7:4. By his coming to
Lebanon, and taking the highest
branch of the cedar, is meant
his invasion of Judea, his
investing the city of Jerusalem,
and taking King Jehoiachin and
the princes captive.” — Calmet.
He cropped off the top of his
young twigs — Both the king of
Judah, now eighteen years old,
and the nobles and chief of the
land. And carried it into a land
of traffic — “Babylon, and the
country about it, being the seat
of a universal monarchy, must
needs have been a place of great
trade. Strabo takes notice that
the merchants who travelled by
land to Babylon went through the
country of the Abrabians, called
Scenitæ, lib. 16. p. 747; and
vessels of great burden came up
the river Euphrates to the walls
of it from the Persian gulf.”
See Pliny’s Nat. Hist., 50. 6.
c. 26; and Lowth. He took also
of the seed of the land — Of the
king’s seed, as it is explained
Ezekiel 17:13 : that is,
Zedekiah, whom the king of
Babylon made king of Judah
instead of Jehoiachin; first
exacting an oath of him, that he
would be true to him, and pay
him tribute. And he planted it
in a fruitful field — Hebrew,
בשׂדת זרע, in a field of seed,
that is, proper for seed: he
placed it by great waters, and
set it as a willow-tree — Judea
was a fruitful country and well
watered, (see Deuteronomy 8:7,)
where Zedekiah flourished as a
willow-tree, that thrives best
in moist ground, Isaiah 44:4.
And it became a spreading vine
of low stature, &c. — Though
Zedekiah flourished, yet he
enjoyed but a tributary kingdom
under the king of Babylon, and
acknowledged him as his lord and
sovereign: see Ezekiel 17:14.
Verse 7-8
Ezekiel 17:7-8. There was also
another great eagle — Namely,
Pharaoh, king of Egypt, with
whom Zedekiah made an alliance;
whereupon that king sent an army
to raise the siege of Jerusalem,
2 Chronicles 36:13; Jeremiah
37:5; Jeremiah 37:7. With great
wings and many feathers — Having
a great army and many people to
support him. And this vine
(namely, Zedekiah) did bend her
roots toward him, &c. — Zedekiah
sought the assistance and
protection of the king of Egypt.
Dr. Waterland renders this
clause, And shot forth her
branches under him, from the
furrows where she was planted,
that he might water it: that is,
give it assistance. The
auxiliary forces which Zedekiah
expected from Egypt are here
intended. It was planted in a
good soil, &c. — The words are
to the same purpose with Ezekiel
17:5, to show that Zedekiah’s
condition was so good under the
king of Babylon, that he needed
not to have broken his oath out
of a desire to better it,
whereby he involved himself and
his country in ruin: see notes
on 2 Kings 24:20; and Jeremiah
17:25.
Verse 9-10
Ezekiel 17:9-10. Say — Tell them
what shall be the issue of all
this, and tell it to them in my
name. Shall it prosper? — Can it
be that such breach of faith and
such ingratitude should prosper?
No, it cannot be: God will never
suffer it. Zedekiah, besides the
obligation of an oath, was bound
to the king of Babylon by the
ties of gratitude, as he owed
all he possessed to him. Shall
he not pull up the roots
thereof? — Shall not
Nebuchadnezzar, in return for
this perfidiousness, destroy him
and his kingdom? see 2 Kings
25:7. And cut off the fruit
thereof — Put his children and
those of his nobles to the
sword? It shall wither in all
the leaves of her spring — It
shall wholly wither: not only
the old branch shall wither, but
its young shoots also: and all
the promising hopes they had
shall vanish: even without great
power or many people — God shall
be on the side of the Chaldeans,
and he does not need great power
or many people to effect his
purpose. He can as easily
overturn a sinful king and
kingdom as a man can root up a
tree that cumbers the ground.
The king of Babylon, therefore,
God being with him, shall easily
subdue the land of Judah, and
shall not need a large human
force to assist him. Yea, shall
it not utterly wither when the
east wind toucheth it? — Here
the prophet compares the
Chaldean army, which should come
against Judea, to a parching
wind that blasts the fruits of
the earth, withers the leaves of
the trees, and makes every thing
look naked and bare.
Verses 12-14
Ezekiel 17:12-14. Say now to the
rebellious house — To the house
of Judah, which have been and
still are rebellious against me,
and are now entering into a
rebellion against
Nebuchadnezzar. This is God’s
order to his prophet to explain
the riddle. Know ye not what
these things mean? — Will you
not apply your minds to
understand what God speaks to
you? And that whether he directs
his speech to you in plain
words, or delivers his mind in
riddles and parables? Behold,
the king of Babylon is come — Or
rather, did come, or came to
Jerusalem — Namely, some time
before the delivery of this
prophecy: and hath taken the
king thereof, and the princes
thereof — Namely, Jeconiah and
all his princes and officers:
see 2 Kings 24:12. And hath led
them with him to Babylon —
Judging them unfit to be trusted
any more with any office or
power in their own country. And
hath taken of the king’s seed —
Hath taken from among the royal
seed Mattaniah, Jehoiakim’s
brother, and advanced him to the
throne in Jerusalem, 2 Kings
24:17; and made a covenant with
him — A solemn agreement, on
terms acceded to and approved by
Mattaniah; and hath taken an
oath of him — An oath of fealty:
when Nebuchadnezzar caused
Mattaniah to enter into this
covenant and oath, he changed
his name to Zedekiah, which word
signifies, the justice of God,
to express that God would avenge
the crime of this restored
captive, if he should break the
covenant into which he had
entered, and perjure himself:
see note on 2 Kings 24:17. He
hath also taken the mighty of
the land — Namely, as hostages
for Zedekiah’s performance of
the covenant agreed on. That the
kingdom might be base — Or
rather, humble; that it might be
kept in subjection and
obedience. Zedekiah being made
only a tributary king,
consequently was not in as
honourable a condition as his
predecessors had been in; but
yet the keeping of his covenant
was the only means, under
present circumstances, to
support himself and his
government.
Verse 15
Ezekiel 17:15. But he rebelled
in sending into Egypt, that they
might give him horses — Egypt
was a country abounding in
horses, of which there was great
scarcity in Judea. This was not
only a violation of his oath and
covenant, but likewise a breach
of that part of the Jewish law
which forbade their king to
fetch horses out of Egypt, or
strengthen himself with the
alliance of that nation. Shall
he escape that doeth such
things? — Shall not the divine
vengeance overtake such
ingratitude and perfidy? Shall
he break the covenant and be
delivered? — Can perjury and
covenant- breaking be the way to
any man’s deliverance? Can such
notorious sinning end in any
thing but misery? From what is
said on this occasion we learn,
that an oath ought not to be
violated though it was taken
under unfavourable
circumstances, and though the
things to which a man bound
himself by it were very
disagreeable to him.
Verses 16-21
Ezekiel 17:16-21. As I live,
saith the Lord, &c. — This
intimates how highly God
resented the crime, and how sure
and severe the punishment of it
would be. He swears in his
wrath, as he did, Psalms 95:11.
Observe, reader, as God’s
promises are confirmed with an
oath, for comfort to the saints,
so are his threatenings, for
terror to the wicked. Surely in
the place where the king
dwelleth — In Babylon, where
Nebuchadnezzar dwells, who made
him king, when he might have as
easily made him a prisoner.
Whose oath he despised — Made
light of, and perfidiously
violated. Even with him he shall
die — Shall be a prisoner in
Babylon the rest of his days,
and shall die there. Neither
shall Pharaoh make for him — See
Jeremiah 37:7. But the Hebrew,
יעשׂה אותו במלחמה, may be
properly rendered, as indeed it
is by Bishop Newcome, Pharaoh
shall not deal with him, namely,
with Nebuchadnezzar, in war: or,
shall not make war with him.
Accordingly the Vulgate
translates the clause, “Et non
in exercitu grandi, neque in
populo multo faciet contra eum
Pharaoh prælium:” neither with a
great army, nor with much
people, shall Pharaoh fight a
battle against him. By casting
up, &c. — Or rather, When he
hath cast up mounts, &c., that
is, when Nebuchadnezzar has
raised mounts and builded forts
to annoy Jerusalem, and destroy
its inhabitants, Pharaoh shall
not bring any assistance to it.
Seeing he despised, &c., when
lo, he had given his hand — In
token of entering into a mutual
league and covenant. It was a
ceremony used especially when an
inferior made profession of his
subjection to a superior. My
covenant that he hath broken —
God calls it his covenant,
because it was entered into, or
promised to be observed, by
taking an oath in his name. Even
it will I recompense upon his
own head — I will punish it as
it deserves, and it shall appear
by the punishment that my hand
doth execute it. And I will
spread my net, &c. — See on
Ezekiel 12:13, where this clause
occurs word for word. And will
plead with him there — God is
said to plead with men when he
places their sins before their
eyes, and convinces them of
their disobedience by manifest
tokens of his vengeance. And all
his fugitives — All the
companions of his flight; with
all his bands shall fall by the
sword — Every thing here
denounced by the prophet against
Zedekiah exactly came to pass,
as the reader may see by
comparing these threatenings
with the account given Jeremiah
52:8-11; 2 Kings 25:5-7.
Verse 22-23
Ezekiel 17:22-23. I will also
take of the highest branch, &c.
— God, having spoken of
Jerusalem, in the first part of
this chapter, under the figure
of a cedar, and the king of it
as the highest branch of the
cedar, here carries his view to
farther scenes, and, after
having acquainted his prophet
with the fate of Zedekiah,
informs him, that as
Nebuchadnezzar had taken of the
seed of the land, (or the king,)
and planted it, so he himself
would take of the highest branch
of the cedar and set it, &c.
This appears plainly to be a
prediction of the restoration of
the royal family of David; and
it was in some degree fulfilled
at the return from the
captivity, when Zerubbabel, of
the lineage of David, had a
shadow of kingly authority among
the Jews, and by his means their
state was again restored. But if
the words be properly examined,
the expressions will be found to
be such as, in their full sense,
can only belong to Christ and
his kingdom, which shall be
extended over all the world. I
will crop off from the young
twigs a tender one — This may
fitly be applied to our Saviour,
in respect to the low estate to
which the family of David was
then reduced, and the meanness
of Christ’s outward condition
and appearance: see Isaiah 53:2.
And will plant it upon a high
mountain — Upon mount Zion, a
type of the gospel church; and
eminent — Not for outward
splendour, but for spiritual
advantages. In the mountain of
the height of Israel — In
Jerusalem, the capital city of
my people, will I plant it — I
will make him ruler of my
church. He alludes to the temple
placed on mount Moriah, a part
of mount Zion, thence styled
God’s holy mountain; which
expression is often used in the
prophets to denote the Christian
Church, which is described as a
city set on a hill, and
conspicuous to all the world.
And it shall bring forth boughs
— Have many members and
subjects; and bear fruit — Do
much good. The living members of
the church are often compared to
fruitful trees and flourishing
branches. And be a goodly cedar
— The most happy society in the
world, Deuteronomy 33:29; Psalms
144:15. And under it shall dwell
all fowl of every wing — Persons
of all nations shall become
members of it. A powerful,
especially if it be a mild
government, is a shelter and
security to all its subjects:
compare Ezekiel 31:6; Daniel
4:12. Such shall the kingdom of
Christ be to all that submit
themselves to his laws.
Verse 24
Ezekiel 17:24. All the trees of
the field — All the nations of
the world; shall know that I the
Lord have brought down the high
tree — Have subdued and degraded
the enemies of my people; have
exalted the low tree — Have
advanced my church, and made it
flourish; have dried up the
green tree, &c. — The same thing
expressed in somewhat different
words. Although these
expressions may partly refer to
the overthrow of the mighty
Babylonian empire, and the
restoration of the Jewish state
by their return out of
captivity, yet they are so
magnificent, that they evidently
intend much more than this. The
Jewish kingdom did never, after
the captivity, arrive at such a
pitch of greatness as to give
occasion to these magnificent
expressions. Some more noble
kingdom is undoubtedly here
pointed at, namely, the kingdom
of Christ, as has been observed
above, which will at last be
exalted above all the kingdoms
of the world, and put an end to
them all, while it will continue
to all eternity: see Daniel
4:35, 44, and Daniel 7:27; Luke
1:33; 1 Corinthians 15:24. It is
under Christ’s kingdom only that
people of all nations, signified
here by fowls of every kind,
shall be gathered together. And
the subjects of that kingdom
only have a certain and eternal
protection, and a supply of
every thing necessary. There is
therefore no doubt that this was
spoken, in its full sense, of
the eternal and all-powerful
kingdom to be established in
Christ, one of the royal seed of
Judah according to the flesh. I
the Lord have spoken it, and
have done it — The prophets
often speak of future events as
if they were already
accomplished, to assure us that
they shall certainly come to
pass.
|