Ezekiel 17
God presents an allegory of a great eagle carrying vine cuttings to a well-watered land, establishing a covenant with a young man who later seeks another great eagle, violating the covenant and causing withering. This political allegory represents Nebuchadnezzar (first eagle) bringing Judean royalty into Babylon, the Judean king attempting alliance with Egypt (second eagle), and the inevitable catastrophic failure of attempting to escape Babylonian dominance. The allegory establishes that rebellion against the Babylonian overlord violates the covenant arrangement and invites judgment. However, God promises to take a tender shoot from the cedar, plant it on a high mountain, and make it prosper—a promise of future restoration through God's direct action rather than human initiative. This chapter's vegetal and arboreal imagery connects to broader Israel tradition while establishing that true growth depends on divine action. The theological problem of submission to foreign powers is resolved by establishing that the Babylonian arrangement is divinely permitted, even commanded; rebellion against it constitutes rebellion against God. This chapter's historical application to Zedekiah's failed rebellion against Babylon illustrates prophetic specificity while maintaining theological universality about covenant violation and judgment. The restoration promise—God's personal action to plant and establish—foreshadows the messianic promise and establishes that future leadership will emerge from God's direct action, not human achievement.