Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: These verses complete the investiture oracle, showing both Eliakim's security (v. 23) and his comprehensive responsibility (v. 24). The imagery shifts from keys to construction—Eliakim will be like a peg driven firmly into a wall, secure enough to bear the weight of the entire household's "glory."
OT-to-OT Development:
Connections:
Connection Method(s): Typology (Providential, Forward-Looking), Contrast — Eliakim as a peg bearing his household's glory prefigures Christ as the eternal foundation, while v. 25's warning that even Eliakim's peg will fail demonstrates by contrast the necessity of Christ's unshakable permanence.
Christological Connection: Where Eliakim was a "peg in a firm place," Christ is the eternal cornerstone (Isa 28:16; 1 Pet 2:6). Where all of Eliakim's father's house hung their glory on him (temporarily), all of God's household—the church—depends entirely on Christ eternally (Col 2:19). The warning in v. 25 that even Eliakim's peg will eventually fail demonstrates that no human mediator suffices. Christ alone is the foundation that "cannot be shaken" (Heb 12:28). Eliakim was a "throne of glory" for his household; Christ is "the throne of God and of the Lamb" for all eternity (Rev 22:3). The peg imagery finds ultimate fulfillment in Christ's resurrection—He was "driven into place" through death, but death could not hold Him. He is "alive forevermore" (Rev 1:18), the secure foundation upon which all believers' hope rests (Heb 6:19-20).
Trajectory Table: 049 - Eliakim (Key of David)