Ezekiel 31:3-14

     3. He illustrates the pride and the consequent overthrow of the Assyrian, that Egypt may the better know what she must expect.

      cedar in Lebanon—often eighty feet high, and the diameter of the space covered by its boughs still greater: the symmetry perfect. Compare the similar image (Eze 17:3; Da 4:20-22).

      with a shadowing shroud—with an overshadowing thicket.

      top . . . among . . . thick boughs—rather [HENGSTENBERG], "among the clouds." But English Version agrees better with the Hebrew. The top, or topmost shoot, represents the king; the thick boughs, the large resources of the empire.

     4. waters . . . little rivers—the Tigris with its branches and "rivulets," or "conduits" for irrigation, the source of Assyria's fertility. "The deep" is the ever flowing water, never dry. Metaphorically, for Assyria's resources, as the "conduits" are her colonies.

     5. when he shot forth—because of the abundant moisture which nourished him in shooting forth. But see Margin.

     6. fowls . . . made . . . nests in . . . boughs—so Eze 17:23; Da 4:12. The gospel kingdom shall gather all under its covert, for their good and for the glory of God, which the world kingdoms did for evil and for self-aggrandizement (Mt 13:32).

     8. cedars . . . could not hide him—could not outtop him. No other king eclipsed him.

      were not like—were not comparable to.

      garden of God—As in the case of Tyre (Eze 28:13), the imagery, that is applied to the Assyrian king, is taken from Eden; peculiarly appropriate, as Eden was watered by rivers that afterwards watered Assyria (Ge 2:10-14). This cedar seemed to revive in itself all the glories of paradise, so that no tree there outtopped it.

     9. I . . . made him—It was all due to My free grace.

     10. thou . . . he—The change of persons is because the language refers partly to the cedar, partly to the person signified by the cedar.

     11. Here the literal supersedes the figurative.

      shall surely deal with him—according to his own pleasure, and according to the Assyrian's (Sardanapalus) desert. Nebuchadnezzar is called "the mighty one" (El, a name of God), because he was God's representative and instrument of judgment (Da 2:37, 38).

     12. from his shadowunder which they had formerly dwelt as their covert (Eze 31:6).

     13. Birds and beasts shall insult over his fallen trunk.

     14. trees by the waters—that is, that are plentifully supplied by the waters: nations abounding in resources.

      stand up in their height—that is, trust in their height: stand upon it as their ground of confidence. FAIRBAIRN points the Hebrew differently, so as for "their trees," to translate, "(And that none that drink water may stand) on themselves, (because of their greatness)." But the usual reading is better, as Assyria and the confederate states throughout are compared to strong trees. The clause, "All that drink water," marks the ground of the trees' confidence "in their height," namely, that they have ample sources of supply. MAURER, retaining the same Hebrew, translates, "that neither their terebinth trees may stand up in their height, nor all (the other trees) that drink water."

      to . . . nether . . . earth . . . pit— (Eze 32:18; Ps 82:7).

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