HE SENT ELIAKIM THE PALACE ADMINISTRATOR, SHEBNA THE
SECRETARY, AND THE LEADING PRIESTS, ALL WEARING SACKCLOTH, TO THE PROPHET ISAIAH
SON OF AMOZ: Then the king sent some of his highest officials and some of
the leading priests, who were also in mourning, to visit Isaiah. Notice that
Hezekiah did not summon Isaiah into his presence. This reflects the respect that
the king felt for the prophet (cp 2Ki 6:12).
2Ki 19:3
AS WHEN CHILDREN COME TO THE POINT OF BIRTH AND THERE IS NO
STRENGTH TO DELIVER THEM: A common picture in the days of this writing, and
one of the worst of human tragedies -- a very apt description for Hezekiah to
use of the people who were no longer able to bring forth fruit to God, due to
lack of spiritual strength through their total lack of spiritual exercise.
Isaiah uses this language in two places (Isa 26:17,18; 66:9). This lament is in
fact answered by God in Isa 66:9: "Do I bring to the moment of birth and not
give delivery?"
2Ki 19:12
GOZAN: A region along the Habor River near the
Euphrates where the Israelites deported from Samaria were settled (2Ki 17:6;
18:11).
HARAN: An ancient city in Mesopotamia, west of
Ur.
REZEPH: A city in eastern Syria, an oasis c 80 mi north
of Palmyra. Sennacherib's commander, in a message to Hezekiah (2Ki 19:12; Isa
37:12), mentioned it as an example of cities captured by the Assyrians. The city
at the time of this message had been in Assyrian hands for at least a century.
It was probably incorporated as a part of Assyria by Shalmaneser III after his
campaign in that region in 838 BC.
TEL ASSAR: One of the cities in northern Mesopotamia
inhabited by the people of Eden (Heb "bene Eden", abbreviation of
"bene-Beth-Eden"; cf Amos 1:5; Eze 27:23) -- mentioned in the letter of
Sennacherib to Hezekiah as conquered by the previous Assyrian kings (cp 2Ki
19:12). In the area of Akkadian Bit-Adini (Beth-eden) along the middle Euphrates
was situated Til Ashuri, "mound of Ashur," mentioned in inscriptions of
Tiglath-pileser III.
2Ki 19:13
HAMATH... ARPAD... SEPHARVAIM: Cp Isa 36:19n.
HENA: A city conquered by Assyria, its exact location
unknown. Since the name means "low" and the city is mentioned with two other
cities on the Orontes River, Hamath and Arpad, Hena probably was in the same
general area (2Ki 18:34; 19:13).
IVAH: A city conquered by the Assyrians, according to
the boast of Rabshakeh, a representative of Sennacherib (2Ki 18:34; 19:13).
Although its exact location has not been determined, it apparently was in
Babylonia and perhaps is to be identified with Ava (2Ki 17:24) from which the
Assyrians took people to occupy Samaria after its fall.
2Ki 19:14
Here is an example of a person who made a special effort to
bring his problem to God. He didn't just stop and pray where he was. He went up
to the House of the Lord, and he took the letter with him and presented it
before God. He made a special effort to arrange circumstances that he felt God
would accept. God is there for those who arrange their hearts in humility, and
make the effort to present themselves a living sacrifice before Him. Our 'House
of the Lord' is embodied in Jesus. This is where we must meet with
God.
2Ki 19:15
ENTHRONED BETWEEN THE CHERUBIM: God's presence above
and with the Ark of the Covenant: Num 7:89; Psa 68:33; 18:10. Here, God dwelt
with Judah as their real king, who fought their battles -- as Hezekiah here
acknowledges.
YOU ALONE ARE GOD OVER ALL THE KINGDOMS OF THE EARTH:
Here is the crux of the matter: is Yahweh God of Israel the ONLY true God, or
not?
2Ki 19:16
Vv 16-19: Hezekiah began his prayer -- did Isaiah witness it?
-- by acknowledging Yahweh's uniqueness; He was not like the gods of the nations
but the only true God, who dwelt among His people, the creator who rules and
determines everything. He asked the living God to pay attention to the
reproachful blasphemies of the Assyrian king. He acknowledged the Assyrians'
superiority over the nations they had overrun, but he ascribed this to the fact
that those nations had only gods of wood and stone to defend them. Finally, he
asked God to deliver Jerusalem so the nations would know that Yahweh alone was
God. In short, he prayed for the glory of God.
2Ki 19:19
NOW, O LORD OUR GOD, DELIVER US FROM HIS HAND, SO THAT ALL
KINGDOMS MAY KNOW THAT YOU ALONE, O LORD, ARE GOD: Hezekiah viewed
deliverance as an occasion for Israel to fulfill the purpose for which God had
raised her up (cp Exo 19:5,6).
2Ki 19:21
THE DAUGHTER OF JERUSALEM: A phrase used almost
exclusively in the context of deliverance from the enemy (2Ki 19:21; Isa 37:22;
Lam 2:13,15; Mic 4:8; Zep 3:14; Zec 9:9).
2Ki 19:23
I HAVE CUT DOWN ITS TALLEST CEDARS: An allusion to
Solomon's "house of the forest of Lebanon" (1Ki 7:2), which became the armory of
Jerusalem. Cp also Jer 22:6,7,23; Isa 2:13; 10:34; Eze 17:3.
2Ki 19:26
LIKE GRASS, SPROUTING ON THE ROOF, SCORCHED BEFORE IT GROWS
UP: Cp Hezekiah's psalm: "May they be like grass on the roof, which withers
before it can grow" (Psa 129:6).
2Ki 19:28
I WILL PUT MY HOOK IN YOUR NOSE AND MY BIT IN YOUR
MOUTH...: On some monuments Assyrian conquerors pictured themselves as
leading their captives with a line that passed through rings that they had
placed in the victims' noses (cp Isa 30:28; Eze 38:4; Job 41:1,2). God promised
to do to them as they had done to others (cp Gal 6:7).
2Ki 19:29
THIS WILL BE THE SIGN FOR YOU, O HEZEKIAH: "THIS YEAR
YOU WILL EAT WHAT GROWS BY ITSELF, AND THE SECOND YEAR WHAT SPRINGS FROM THAT.
BUT IN THE THIRD YEAR SOW AND REAP, PLANT VINEYARDS AND EAT THEIR FRUIT": An
immediate sign helped Hezekiah believe in the long range deliverance God
promised (v 29). Signs were either predictions of natural events, which came to
pass and thus confirmed the prediction (cp Exo 3:12; 1Sa 2:34; Jer 44:29), or
outright miracles that proved God's work in history (cp Isa 7:14; 38:7) (KD).
The Israelites had not been able to plant crops around Jerusalem because of the
besieging Assyrians. God promised to feed His people for two years with what
came up naturally. This was a blessing of fertility for trust and obedience (cp
Deu 28:33). In the third year they would again return to their regular cycle of
sowing and reaping.
Reminiscent of the language of the year of release or Jubilee.
Thus an indication that this year was a seventh year, and that Israel's
experience of God's provisions for that year would indicate that they could
trust in His promise to deliver them from the Assyrian.
2Ki 19:30
2Ki 19:30.
ONCE MORE A REMNANT OF THE HOUSE OF JUDAH WILL TAKE ROOT
BELOW AND BEAR FRUIT ABOVE: Like the crops, the remnant of the people left
after the invasions of Israel and Judah would also multiply under God's
blessing.
2Ki 19:31
FOR OUT OF JERUSALEM WILL COME A REMNANT, AND OUT OF MOUNT
ZION A BAND OF SURVIVORS. THE ZEAL OF THE LORD ALMIGHTY WILL ACCOMPLISH
THIS: Yahweh would preserve a people for Himself from among the people of
Jerusalem. This would include the Davidic line of kings, as He had promised (2Sa
7:16; cp Isa 9:6). His own zeal to remain true to His word and to bless His
people would perform this (cp Isa 9:7; 59:17). It would not depend on the
faithfulness of His people (cp 2Ti 2:13).
2Ki 19:34
I WILL DEFEND THIS CITY AND SAVE IT: The deliverance of
God's city and His people there probably occurred at the time of Passover (cp
Isa 26:20,21; 30:29; 31:5,8).
Hezekiah's defenses (2Ch 32:3-5) were unimportant after
all!
2Ki 19:35
Vv 35-37: Isaiah had predicted that God would break Assyria's
power in the Promised Land (Isa 14:24-27). This short section records how He
miraculously fulfilled that promise. This divine act of massive proportions
settled the issue of Assyria's fate and provided the crowning demonstration that
Yahweh controls world history.
THE ANGEL OF THE LORD WENT OUT AND PUT TO DEATH A HUNDRED
AND EIGHTY-FIVE THOUSAND MEN IN THE ASSYRIAN CAMP: The Lord Himself slew
185,000 of the Assyrian soldiers in one night. Evidently this was an act of the
angel of the Lord similar to the slaying of the Egyptian firstborn before the
Exodus (Exo 12:12,1323; cp 2Sa 24:1,15,16; Luke 12:20).
And how would such an immense number of corpses be disposed
of? By burning with lime (Isa 33:11,12).
PUT TO DEATH: The verb "put to death" implies smiting
with a disease.
Things and circumstances can change, as it were, in a moment,
or as in this case, over night. What may be deemed most important and precious
one day can become trivial the next day.
In these closing days of Gentile times we should be keeping
our eyes, thoughts and actions on "the joy set before us" Or as Heb 10:25 tells
us: "Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some
is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day
approaching."
Three accounts have been left by the Assyrian monarch himself
of his campaign against Israel and Judah. The most famous is the six-sided prism
known as the Taylor Prism. Sennacherib described in detail how he came against
the cities of Israel and then Judah, and 'Hezekiah himself I shut up in
Jerusalem his capital city like a bird in a cage.' Many smaller towns and
villages fell. The might of all Assyria was marshaled against Hezekiah. But the
Taylor Prism does not record the defeat of Hezekiah or the fall of Jerusalem as
one would expect. Sennacherib returned to Nineveh his capital city. The boastful
account ends not in triumph but with an anticlimax. What had happened? What made
Sennacherib withdraw at the last moment? This v explains. In addition to the
evidence of Sennacherib's own account, in 1938 the archaeologist Starkey found a
mass grave outside the city of Lachish, which Sennacherib had conquered and
which was the base for the Assyrian move to Jerusalem. In the Lachish grave were
two thousand human skeletons evidently thrown in with great haste. Here was the
reason for Sennacherib's sudden withdrawal.
2Ki 19:36
SO SENNACHERIB KING OF ASSYRIA BROKE CAMP AND WITHDREW. HE
RETURNED TO NINEVEH AND STAYED THERE: Sennacherib, the great "king of
Assyria" (cp Isa 36:4,13), then returned to Assyria having lost a large part of
his army and having heard a rumor about the advancing Ethiopian king (vv 7-9).
He lived in Nineveh for 20 years before his death, and he conducted other
military campaigns, but none in Palestine.
2Ki 19:37
ONE DAY, WHILE HE WAS WORSHIPING IN THE TEMPLE OF HIS GOD
NISROCH, HIS SONS ADRAMMELECH AND SHAREZER CUT HIM DOWN WITH THE SWORD, AND THEY
ESCAPED TO THE LAND OF ARARAT. AND ESARHADDON HIS SON SUCCEEDED HIM AS KING:
Ironically, it was while worshipping in the temple of his idol in Nineveh that
God affected Sennacherib's assassination. "And so he died ignominiously in the
very shadow of a useless deity" (WIsa 62). By contrast, it was while worshipping
the true God in His temple in Jerusalem that God moved to spare Hezekiah's life.
The Babylonian royal chronicles recorded the assassination of Sennacherib and
the accession of Esarhaddon in 681 BC (Pritchard). It was not the Assyrian way
to record their national disasters, so it is understandable that archaeologists
have discovered no Assyrian accounts of Sennacherib's humiliations.
The same event was recorded for the library at Nineveh and the
clay tablet of the record is now in the British Museum: 'On the twentieth day of
the month Tebet Sennacherib king of Assyria his son slew him in rebellion...
Esarhaddon his son sat on the throne of Assyria.'