Both good and
bad trees appear in this prophetic parable recorded in Judges nine. In symbol the inanimate objects represented the following :
The olive tree
in the parable symbolically pictured Gideon, Christ Jesus, the Greater Gideon, and the faithful remnant.
The fig tree
symbolically
pictured Jether, the first-born of Gideon, and the “holy nation”.
The vine symbolically
pictured Jehovah’s royal house, Christ Jesus the Head thereof in charge of the royal house, together with the others who will have a part in the vindication of Jehovah’s name.
The bramble, or
thorn tree, in the parable symbolically pictured the visible rulers of this world that constitute the official element of Satan’s organization in the earth.
Abimelech, the bastard
son of Gideon by his concubine, played in the drama the part of the active and visible ruling elements of the world since 1914.
Shechem, the city
and the residents thereof, particularly the Levites, pictured the religious element, that is, the clergy element of “Christendom”, including “the man of sin” class.
The “seventy sons”
of Gideon pictured the followers of Christ Jesus engaged in doing the Elijah work of the church prior to and up to 1918.
Jotham, the son
of Gideon who uttered the prophecy of the trees, pictured the remnant.