Ezekiel 31

Ezekiel 31

Ezekiel uses the allegory of a majestic cedar tree to describe the glory and ultimate destruction of Assyria, warning Egypt that the same fate awaits them. The cedar was magnificent, towering over all the trees of the field, so beautiful that even the trees in the Garden of Eden envied it. Yet, because of its arrogance, God allowed a foreign nation (Babylon) to cut it down. God declares that Pharaoh and his multitude will share the same fate, being cast down to the pit of the grave like the fallen Assyrians.

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Jeremiah 32

Jeremiah is commanded to wear a wooden yoke as a sign that God has placed King Nebuchadnezzar in charge of all the nations, warning them not to resist Babylonian rule.

Jeremiah 33

The false prophet Hananiah publicly breaks Jeremiah’s wooden yoke, prophesying that the exile will end in two years. Jeremiah rebukes him, and Hananiah dies two months later, confirming Jeremiah's truth.

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