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Introduction

A.M. 3416. B.C. 588.

In this chapter the prophet is directed to put Pharaoh in mind of the dreadful fall of the king of Assyria, whose capital city was Nineveh, and who was much superior to him in power and greatness. The prosperity and grandeur of the Assyrian monarch, his vast empire and mighty sway, are set forth under the metaphor of a lofty, spreading cedar, fair and flourishing, and overtopping all the trees of the field, Ezekiel 31:1-9 . He shows Pharaoh how much he resembled him in pride, carnal confidence, and security, and then reminds him how the mighty tree of that monarchy was cut down and destroyed, what a noise it made among the nations by its fall, and what a warning it gave to all potent princes, to beware of pride and confidence in themselves and their own power, Ezekiel 31:10-17 . He leaves it to the king of Egypt to apply all this to himself, and in the destruction of the Assyrian empire to foresee the ruin of his own kingdom, Ezekiel 31:18 .

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