Ezekiel 15
God presents Jerusalem as a useless vine whose wood is not strong enough for construction, suitable only for burning in the fire as fuel, establishing that the city's destruction is inevitable because it has become spiritually worthless. The vine metaphor connects to Israel's election language (vine planted by God in Psalm 80 and Isaiah 5), suggesting that chosenness establishes accountability; a fruitless vine has forfeited its reason for existence. The rhetorical form—multiple questions establishing the vine's unsuitability for anything—creates overwhelming logical inevitability: if the wood is useless and the vine is barren, burning is the only fitting end. This chapter's extreme condemnation establishes the theological depth of judgment; it is not arbitrary punishment but the appropriate consequence of thorough spiritual failure. The fire metaphor prepares for the siege's literal fulfillment and foreshadows purgative judgment themes throughout exile theology. This brief chapter's concentrated intensity emphasizes that judgment is not a temporary setback but an absolute reckoning with fundamental spiritual bankruptcy. The vine metaphor connects Ezekiel's judgment theology to the broader prophetic tradition while establishing that even elect Israel loses protective status through systematic covenant violation. This chapter completes the judgment cycle begun in chapters 8-12, establishing that comprehensive judgment is theologically appropriate.