Ezekiel 37:13
God promises that when he opens Israel's graves and brings them up, they will know that he is the Lord—the knowledge of God becomes the fruit of restoration and the goal of divine intervention. This knowledge is not merely intellectual but experiential, the recognition of God's character and power demonstrated in concrete acts of deliverance. The pattern of judgment leading to knowledge characterizes much of Ezekiel's prophecy; Israel will understand God through the execution of his word. The promise of restored knowledge anticipates the new covenant's promise that all shall know the Lord. This verse establishes that the restoration narrative is not ultimately about political independence or territorial recovery but about the renewal of Israel's covenantal knowledge of God.