Ezekiel 17

Ezekiel 17

God tells a riddle about two great eagles and a vine to symbolize the relationship between Judah, Babylon, and Egypt. The first great eagle (Nebuchadnezzar) takes a branch (King Jehoiachin) and plants it in a fertile field (Babylon). The second great eagle (Pharaoh) is sought by the remaining vine (King Zedekiah). God condemns Zedekiah for breaking his solemn oath to Babylon. God concludes by promising to take a tender, high branch (the Messianic King) and plant it on the high mountain of Israel, where it will grow into a magnificent cedar.

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Leviticus 13

God provides lengthy and detailed laws for diagnosing and isolating those afflicted with skin diseases (often mistranslated as leprosy) and how priests must examine them for quarantine.

Leviticus 14

God outlines the elaborate and two-stage process for the cleansing of a healed leper, involving birds, cedar wood, scarlet yarn, and hyssop, followed by bathing and specific sacrifices.

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