-
2 Kings 19:1-37 open_in_new
The Deliverance of Jerusalem
2. Isaiah the prophet] This is the first mention of Isaiah in this book, but his own writings show that he had been an active teacher and statesman not only during the earlier years of Hezekiah himself, but also during the reign of Hezekiah's predecessor Ahaz: see on 2 Kings 16:7; 2 Kings 18:7. The Chapter s in the prophet's writings which relate to the present occasion are 2 Kings 10:5 to 2 Kings 12:6; 2 Kings 14:24-27; 2 Kings 17:12-14; 2 Kings 17:22; 2 Kings 17:29-33; 2 Kings 17:36-37 (the last two of which substantially repeat 1 Kings 18:19).
-
2 Kings 19:3 open_in_new
Blasphemy] RV 'contumely': such as the nation was experiencing at the hands of the invader. The children.. bring forth] a figure for powerlessness in the time of peril.
-
2 Kings 19:4 open_in_new
Remnant] cp. 2 Kings 19:30; Isaiah 10:20. A large number of the Judaean cities had been captured (see on 2 Kings 18:13), so that the population of the capital might well be thus described.
-
2 Kings 19:7 open_in_new
Send a blast upon him] RV 'put a spirit in him': i.e. an impulse of fear. A rumour] Ill tidings respecting his army, whieh was destined shortly to perish in its advance against Egypt.
-
2 Kings 19:8 open_in_new
Returned] to Sennacherib. Libnah.. Lachish] in southern Judah.
-
2 Kings 19:9 open_in_new
Tirhakah] an Ethiopian, who was at first the general and subsequently the successor of the Egyptian king Shabako (2 Kings 18:21). He was contemporary not only with Sennacherib, but with his two successors, Esarhaddon and Asshurbanipal.
-
2 Kings 19:12 open_in_new
Gozan, etc.] These places were all in the neighbourhood of the Euphrates. Gozan is mentioned in 2 Kings 17:6; Haran in Genesis 11:31; Eden in Ezekiel 27:23.
-
2 Kings 19:13 open_in_new
Hamath] see on 2 Kings 17:24; It had revolted against Sargon in 720 b.c., but the insurrection was crushed and its king Jahubidi slain.
-
2 Kings 19:15 open_in_new
Thou.. even thou alone] Whereas Sennacherib had counted the God of Israel among a number of deities all equally unable to withstand him (2 Kings 18:33-35), Hezekiah here asserts that the Lord (Jehovah) is the only God, and implies that whatever the Assyrian had accomplished had been done by His permission.
-
2 Kings 19:19 open_in_new
That all.. may know] If a small kingdom like Judah successfully resisted Assyria, it could only be through the supremacy of its God.
-
2 Kings 19:21 open_in_new
The daughter of Zion] For the personification of a city as a woman cp. Micah 4:10; Isaiah 23:10; Isaiah 23:12; Isaiah 47:1.
-
2 Kings 19:23 open_in_new
The lodgings, etc.] RV 'his farthest lodging place, the forest of his fruitful field.'
-
2 Kings 19:24 open_in_new
I have digged.. waters] Sennacherib implies that the progress of his armies on foreign soil could not be hindered by the enemy stopping up the water-springs: he at once digs fresh wells. Besieged places] RV 'Egypt.' The numerous channels of the Nile were ordinarily a means of defence to Egypt (cp. Nahum 3:8), but Sennacherib implies that they were inadequate to stay his advance.
-
2 Kings 19:25 open_in_new
Hast thou.. done it] This begins the Lord's response to Sennacherib's boastings. The Assyrian king had in reality only been an agent deputed to carry out the divine purposes: cp. Isaiah 10:12; Isaiah 47:6; Zechariah 1:15.
-
2 Kings 19:28 open_in_new
My hook] cp. Ezekiel 38:4. The expression may be an allusion either to the method adopted for controlling wild animals (cp. Ezekiel 19:4), or to a practice employed by the Assyrians towards their captives: see 2 Chronicles 33:11; RM.
-
2 Kings 19:29 open_in_new
A sign unto thee] i.e. unto Hezekiah. The occurrence of the earlier and harsher part of the prophet's prediction would be a warranty for the fulfilment of the later and more cheerful portion of his message, viz. that the land should be free from invasion and cultivated in peace. This year.. the third year] The reckoning is inclusive, 'this year' meaning the year of the invasion, and 'the third year' being the second year after it.
-
2 Kings 19:30 open_in_new
The remnant] cp. 2 Kings 19:3. The population, so sadly thinned by the war, would again recover its strength and numbers.
-
2 Kings 19:31 open_in_new
Out of Jerusalem, etc.] The country folk that had been driven into the capital by the invasion would again return to their homes.
-
2 Kings 19:32 open_in_new
Cast a bank] a mound of earth with an inclined surface, raised against the wall of a besieged city to enable the besiegers to reach the top.
-
2 Kings 19:34 open_in_new
Mine own sake] God's intentions towards His people could not be foiled altogether through the sins of the latter; so that though the divine justice had demanded the chastisement of the nation, the divine faithfulness required that it should be preserved from complete destruction.
-
2 Kings 19:35 open_in_new
The angel of the Lord] cp. Exodus 12:23. In 2 Samuel 24:15-16 the pestilence that punished David's numbering of the people is attributed to an angel; and it is probable that it was a similar calamity that destroyed Sennacherib's army. It seems more likely that the disaster occurred in the low-lying ground on the Egyptian frontiers than in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem; and the Greek historian, Herodotus, who gives a fanciful account of an overthrow sustained by the Assyrians in a campaign against Egypt, places it near Pelusium. But wherever and however it happened, it was a signal confirmation of Isaiah's faith in the Lord and a striking vindication of his prescience.
-
2 Kings 19:36 open_in_new
Nineveh] its ruins have been found opposite the modern Mosul.
-
2 Kings 19:37 open_in_new
His sons smote him] Sennacherib's death did not occur until some 20 years after the destruction of his army, as described in 2 Kings 19:35 but though he took part in several expeditions subsequent to his invasion of Judah, he never again molested the Hebrew state. Esarhaddon] reigned from 681 b.c. to 668.