Ezekiel 29 confronts Egypt’s self-exalting claims and Israel’s reliance on it by announcing Egypt’s defeat, a period of desolation and scattering, and then a limited restoration that prevents it from becoming a dominant refuge again.
Ezekiel 29 confronts Egypt’s self-exalting claims and Israel’s reliance on it by announcing Egypt’s defeat, a period of desolation and scattering, and then a limited restoration that prevents it from becoming a dominant refuge again.
Context Snapshot
Date
Exilic ministry in Babylon, c. 593-571 BC
Genre
Prophetic visions and oracles
Setting
Babylon
Audience
Exiled Judeans in Babylon
World Stage
c. 593-571 BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire
Nebuchadnezzar II 605-562 BC
Ezekiel prophesies among Judean exiles in Babylon while Jerusalem moves toward collapse and later hope. Visions, symbolic acts, judgment oracles, and restoration promises answer the crisis of exile and temple loss.