Ezekiel 17:17
Neither shall Pharaoh with his mightie armie and great companie make for him in the warre by casting vp mounts, and building forts, to cut off many persons. Ezekiel 17:17 (KJV)
This verse belongs to a prophetic message delivered by Ezekiel to the exiled people of Judah in Babylon. God instructed Ezekiel to present a riddle involving two great eagles and a vine. The first eagle represents Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, who had carried Judah into captivity. The second eagle stands for Egypt, and the vine symbolizes the king of Judah, Zedekiah, together with his nation.
In the allegory the vine initially sends out branches toward the first eagle, seeking Babylon’s protection and a treaty. Yet Zedekiah and the people break their covenant with Babylon and turn to Egypt for support, hoping that Pharaoh’s mighty army and great company will deliver them from Babylonian domination. Ezekiel 17:17 declares that Pharaoh will not be able to help. He will not be able to cast up mounts or build forts that could cut off many persons or secure a decisive victory for Judah.
The passage underscores a central biblical theme: reliance on human strength, political alliances, or worldly powers cannot overturn God’s sovereign judgment. Babylon’s conquest was ordained as punishment for Judah’s disobedience and idolatry, and no foreign power, however formidable, can change that divine decree. The verse therefore serves as a stark warning against placing trust in Egypt’s military might instead of depending on God’s guidance.
For the original audience, the message was an invitation to recognize their wrongdoing, repent, and return to the Lord. It calls the people to acknowledge God’s sovereignty, seek His forgiveness, and abandon futile reliance on human alliances. The broader context of the parable, with the vine’s eventual breaking and the withering of its branches, reinforces the inevitable collapse that follows misplaced confidence in earthly powers rather than in the living God.
