Ezekiel 28:7 and God's sovereignty link?
How does Ezekiel 28:7 connect with God's sovereignty in other Scripture passages?

Key verse

“Therefore I am about to bring strangers against you, the most ruthless of nations; they will draw their swords against the beauty of your wisdom and defile your splendor.” (Ezekiel 28:7)


What Ezekiel 28:7 shows about God’s sovereignty

• God Himself initiates the action—“I am about to bring” makes clear that history moves at His command, not at the whim of human rulers.

• He chooses the agents—“strangers… the most ruthless of nations.” Even pagan armies serve His purposes.

• He determines the outcome—Tyre’s “beauty” and “splendor” will be toppled exactly as the Lord declares.


Sovereignty echoed across Scripture

Isaiah 45:7—“I form the light and create darkness; I bring prosperity and create disaster; I, the LORD, do all these things.”

Daniel 4:35—“He does as He pleases with the army of heaven and the peoples of the earth. No one can restrain His hand…”

Proverbs 21:1—“A king’s heart is like a stream of water in the hand of the LORD; He directs it wherever He chooses.”

Acts 17:26—God “determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their lands.”

Job 42:2—“No plan of Yours can be thwarted.”

Romans 9:18—“God has mercy on whom He wants to have mercy, and He hardens whom He wants to harden.”


Common threads linking these passages

• God governs both blessing and judgment.

• Nations, kings, and circumstances remain instruments in His hand.

• Human pride never overrides divine purpose.

• The Lord’s decrees are certain; fulfillment is never in doubt.


Practical takeaways

• World events, however chaotic, unfold under God’s rule; nothing surprises Him.

• Personal security rests not in earthly power or wealth (Tyre’s mistake) but in submission to the sovereign Lord.

• Confidence grows as we align our plans with the One whose purposes cannot fail.

What lessons can we learn from God's use of foreign nations as instruments?
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