| AHAZ, (TWELFTH) KING OF JUDAH, 
					PEKAH (NINETEENTH), HOSHEA, (TWENTIETH) KING OF ISRAEL Import of the Changes 
					introduced by Ahaz — Purpose of the Syro-Israelitish League 
					— Taking of Elath, Success of Rezin, and Victory of Pekah — 
					Siege of Jerusalem — Appeal to Assyria — Message of Isaiah — 
					Withdrawal of the Allies — Danger from Assyria — The Prophet 
					Oded and Liberation of the Judaean Captives — Lessons of it 
					— The Name Shear Yashub — Assyrian March upon Israel — 
					Capture and Annexation of Naphtali — Further Campaign — 
					Taking of Samaria — Revolution, and Murder of Pekah — 
					Succession of Hoshea — Transportation of Israelites — Siege 
					and Capture of Damascus — Death of Rezin — Cessation of the 
					Syrian Power. 
					 (2 KINGS 15:29, 30; 16; 2 
					CHRONICLES 28) 
					     A religious change so complete as that which has been 
					described might 
					seem incredible if it had been sudden, or we were left in 
					ignorance of its 
					deeper causes. In truth, it was no less than a systematic 
					attempt to 
					substitute a complicated heathenism for the religion of the 
					Old Testament. 
					If its institutions had any deeper spiritual import, 
					everything in them must 
					have been symbolic. Hence, every alteration would 
					necessarily destroy the 
					symmetry, the harmony, and with them the meaning of all. To 
					substitute 
					for the altar of burnt- offering one after the heathen 
					pattern was not only to 
					infringe on the Divinely prescribed order, but to destroy 
					its symbolism. 
					More than this, it was to interfere with, and in a sense to 
					subvert, the 
					institution of sacrifices, which formed the central part in 
					the religion of 
					Israel. Again, to close the doors of the Holy and Most Holy 
					Places 1 was to 
					abolish what set forth Israel's fellowship with their Lord, 
					His gracious 
					acceptance of them, and His communication of pardon, light, 
					and life. The 
					temple of Ahaz was no longer that of Jehovah, and the 
					attempt to attach 
					the old services to the new altar would only aggravate the 
					sin, while it 
					exhibited the folly of the king. 
					
					
					
					
      
					Even more strange seems the mixture of heathen rites which 
					it was sought 
					to introduce by the side of the perverted Temple ritual. It 
					consisted of the 
					worship of the Syrian deities, of Baalim, of Ashtoreth, 
					2 of 
					the host of 
					heaven, and of Molech — in short, it combined Syrian, 
					Phoenician, and 
					Assyrian idolatry. 3 Yet in all this Ahaz found a servile 
					instrument in the 
					high priest Urijah (2 Kings 16:11-16). Assuredly the 
					prophet's description 
					of Israel's "watchmen" as "ignorant," "dumb dogs — loving to 
					slumber," 
					"greedy dogs," "insatiable shepherds," only bent on gain and 
					steeped in 
					vice, was true to the letter (Isaiah 56:10-12). And with 
					this corresponds 
					the same prophet's account of the moral and religious 
					condition of the 
					people (Isaiah 2:6-9; 5:7-23). In view of this, King Ahaz 
					can only be 
					regarded as the outcome of his time and the representative 
					of his people. 
					Accordingly the judgments announced in these prophecies of 
					Isaiah read 
					only as the logical sequence of the state of matters. 
      
					The account of these judgments comes to us equally from the 
					Books of 
					Kings and Chronicles, which here supplement one another, and 
					especially 
					from the prophecies of Isaiah, which in chapter 7 give the 
					most vivid 
					description of the condition of things. The Syro-Israelitish 
					league had been 
					formed at the close of the reign of Jotham (2 Kings 15:37), 
					although its full 
					effects only appeared when Ahaz acceded to the throne. In 
					its 
					development the confederacy embraced also the Edomites and 
					Philistines, 
					although probably at a later period — in all likelihood 
					after the early 
					victories of the Syrian and Israelitish armies (2 Chronicles 
					28:17, 18). The 
					purpose of the two chief allies is easily understood. No 
					doubt it was the 
					desire of Syria and Israel, which Tiglath-pileser had so 
					deeply humbled, to 
					shake off the yoke of Assyria. And as, after a period of 
					decadence, the 
					Assyrian power had only lately been restored by the usurper 
					Pul, a hope 
					may have been cherished that a powerful league might huff 
					Tiglath-pileser 
					from his throne. But for this object it was necessary first 
					to secure 
					themselves against any danger from the south, especially as 
					there is some 
					indication in the Assyrian inscriptions of a connection 
					existing between 
					Judah and Assyria since the days of Uzziah. 
      
					In point of fact, the expedition was rather against Ahaz 
					than against 
					Judah, 4 and we are distinctly informed that it was the 
					purpose of the allies 
					to depose the house of David, and to place on the throne of 
					Judah a person 
					of low origin, "the son of Tabheel," whose name indicates 
					his Syrian 
					
					
					
					
					
					descent 5 (Isaiah 7:6). It is only when realizing this 
					purpose of making a full 
					end of the house of David, with all the Messianic promises 
					and hopes 
					bound up with it, that we fully understand how it evoked, in 
					the case of Ahaz, that most full and personal Messianic prediction of 
					"the Virgin's 
					Son" (Isaiah 7:14). Not only would their plan not "come to 
					pass "(Isaiah 
					7:7), but looking beyond the unbelief and the provocations 
					of an Ahaz 
					(Isaiah 7:13), the Divine promise would stand fast. "The 
					house of David" 
					could not fail. For beyond the present was the final goal of 
					promised 
					salvation in Immanuel the Virgin-born And this was God's 
					answer to the 
					challenge of Rezin and of the son of Remaliah — His "sign" 
					as against their 
					plans: a majestic declaration also of His object in 
					maintaining "the house of 
					David," even when represented by an Ahaz. And when the hour 
					of 
					judgment came, it would be not by placing a Syrian king on 
					the throne of 
					David, but by carrying prince and people into a banishment 
					which would 
					open a new — the last — period of Israel's God-destined 
					history. 
      
					But as tidings of the "confederacy," with its avowed purpose 
					of taking all 
					the strongholds and cities which commanded the defenses of 
					Judah, 6 and of 
					setting up another king, reached "the house of David," in 
					the poetic 
					language of Isaiah, Ahaz' "heart shook, and the hearts of 
					his people, as the 
					trees of the forest shake before the wind" (Isaiah 7:2). And 
					in truth the 
					success of the allies was such as to account for such 
					feelings — at least on 
					the part of an unbelieving and craven king. Joining together 
					the narratives 
					in the Books of Kings and Chronicles, we have first, in 2 
					Kings 16:5, a 
					general account of the war — its purpose, beginning, and 
					final failure. To 
					this is added, in the next verse, a notice of the expedition 
					of Rezin, in 
					which he "restored Elath to Edom," 
					7 when "the Edomites came 
					to Elath," 
					and continued to occupy it to the time of the writer. This 
					brief account is 
					supplemented in 2 Chronicles 28:5. There we read of a 
					twofold success of 
					the allies — that achieved by Rezin, in consequence of which 
					a great 
					multitude of captives were carried to Damascus and a victory 
					gained by 
					Pekah. In all probability Rezin marched from Damascus 
					through the trans- 
					Jordanic territory straight into the south of Judah, 
					extending his march as 
					far as the latest conquest of Judah, Elath. This was now 
					restored to Edom. 
					Syria alone could scarcely have held such an isolated post, 
					nor could it 
					have been left in the rear in the hands of Judaeans. On the 
					other hand, its 
					restoration to Edom explains their active participation in 
					the league (2 
					
					
					
					
					
					Chronicles 28:17). The text leaves it somewhat doubtful 
					whether Rezin 
					actually fought a pitched battle against a Judaean army, 
					such as was 
					evidently won by Pekah (2 Chronicles 28:6), or else the 
					"smiting" of the 
					Syrians spoken of in ver. 5 only referred in a more general 
					sense to the 
					losses inflicted on Judah by Rezin. 8 As it is not likely 
					that an army of 
					Judah could have been opposed to Rezin, while another was 
					dispatched 
					against Pekah, we adopt the latter view. 
      
					While Rezin thus ravaged the south, Pekah attacked Israel 
					from the north. 
					In a pitched battle, no fewer than 120,000 Judaeans fell in 
					one day. 9 
					Among the slain were Maaseiah, a royal prince, Azrikam, 
					"prince of the 
					palace" — probably its chief official, or major-domo 
					— and Elkanah, "the 
					second to the king" probably the chief of the royal council 
					(comp. Esther 
					10:3). It is not easy to arrange the succession of events. 
					But we conjecture 
					that after the losses inflicted by Rezin in the south, and 
					the bloody victory 
					gained by Pekah in the north, the two armies marched upon 
					Jerusalem, (2 
					Kings 16:5), with the object of deposing Ahaz. But from the 
					strength of its 
					late fortifications the undertaking failed of success. It 
					was when Ahaz was 
					thus pressed to the uttermost, and the Edomites and 
					Philistines had 
					actively joined the hostile alliance (2 Chronicles 28:17, 
					18), that two 
					events of the gravest political and theocratic importance 
					occurred. The first 
					of these was the resolve of the king to appeal to Assyria 
					for help, with 
					abject submission to its ruler. The second was the 
					appearance, the 
					message, and the warnings of the prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 7; 
					8). As we 
					understand it, their inability to take Jerusalem, and the 
					knowledge that 
					Ahaz had resolved to appeal to Tiglath-pileser, induced the 
					kings of Syria 
					and Israel to return to their capitals. Rezin carried 
					probably at that time his 
					captives to Damascus; while the Israelitish army laid the 
					country waste, 
					and took not only much spoil, but no less than 200,000 
					captives, mostly 
					women and children ("sons and daughters") — as the sacred 
					text 
					significantly marks, to show the unprecedented enormity of 
					the crime' "of 
					their brethren" (2 Chronicles 28:8). Their ultimate fate 
					will be told in the 
					sequel. 
      
					We pass now to the second event referred to. While the fate 
					of Judah was 
					trembling in the balance, the prophet Isaiah was 
					commissioned to go with 
					his son, Shear Yashub 10 to meet the king "at the end of the 
					conduit of the 
					upper pool, at the highway of the fuller's field" (Isaiah 
					7:3). If this "upper 
					
					
					
					
					
					pool" was (as seems most likely) the present Birket-el-Mamilla, the 
					"dragon well" of Nehemiah 2:13, and "serpent's pool" of 
					Josephus (War, 
					V. 3, 2), it lay in the north-west of the city. The "pool," 
					which is only a 
					reservoir for rain-water, is partly hewn in the rock and 
					lined with stone. 
					From its eastern side an outlet channel or "conduit" opened, 
					winding 
					somewhat to the south of the Jaffa gate, eastwards into the 
					city, where at 
					present it debauches into "the Pool of the Patriarch" (the
					Hammam-el-Batrak), the Amygdalon [Tower] Pool of 
					Josephus. 11 From the manner in 
					which the locality is mentioned, we infer that the king was 
					wont to pass 
					that way, possibly on an inspection of the north-western 
					fortifications. 12 
					The prophet's commission to Ahaz was threefold. He was to 
					admonish 
					him to courage (Isaiah 7:4), and to announce that, so far 
					from the purpose 
					of the allies succeeding, Ephraim itself should, within a 
					given time, cease to 
					be "a people." 13 Lastly, he was to give "a sign" of what 
					had been said, 
					especially of the continuance of the house of David. This 
					was, in contrast 
					to the king's unbelief, to point from the present to the 
					future, and to 
					indicate the ultimate object in view — the birth of the 
					Virgin's Son, Whose 
					name, Immanuel, symbolized all of present promise and future 
					salvation 
					connected with the house of David. 14 
      
					The result was what might have been expected from the 
					character of Ahaz. 
					As, with ill-disguised irony, he rejected the "sign," 
					implying that his trust 
					was in the help of Assyria, not in the promise of God, so he 
					persevered in 
					his course, despite the prophet's warning. Yet it scarcely 
					required a 
					prophet's vision to foretell the issue, although only a 
					prophet could so 
					authoritatively, and in such terms, have announced it 
					(Isaiah 7:17-8:22). 
					Every Jewish patriot must have felt the wrong and 
					humiliation, every 
					clear-sighted politician have anticipated the consequences 
					of calling in — 
					and in such manner — the aid of Tiglath-pileser. For the 
					terms on which 
					Ahaz purchased it were the acknowledgment of the suzerainty 
					of Assyria 
					(2 Kings 16:7), and a present of the silver and gold in the 
					Temple, the 
					royal palace, and in the possession of the princes (2 Kings 
					16:8; 2 
					Chronicles 28:21.) If it led to the immediate withdrawal of 
					Rezin and 
					Pekah, yet the danger incurred was far greater than that 
					avoided. And in 2 
					Chronicles 28:20 we read: "And Tiglath-pileser, king of 
					Assyria, came 
					against him 15 [viz., against Ahaz], and distressed him, but 
					strengthened 
					him not." Although, even from its position in the text, 
					16 
					this seems a 
					
					
					
					
					
					general statement rather than the record of a definite 
					event, yet some 
					historical fact must underlie it. Further reference will be 
					made to it in the 
					sequel. But, while we do not read of an expedition of Tiglath-pileser 
					against Jerusalem, such may have been made, even if under 
					the guise of a 
					friendly visit. 17 And perhaps there may be some connection 
					between this 
					and the reported Temple alterations, "on account of the king 
					of Assyria" 
					(2 Kings 16:18). In any case Tiglath-pileset must have 
					desired to extend 
					his conquests further south than Samaria. He must have 
					coveted the 
					possession of such a city and fortress as Jerusalem; and the 
					suzerainty so 
					abjectly offered by. Ahaz would in his hands become a 
					reality. In fact, the 
					subjugation of Judea must have formed part of his general 
					policy, which 
					had the subjection of Egypt as its scope. And from 2 Kings 
					18:7, 14, 20, 
					and Isaiah 36:5, we infer that from the time of Ahaz to that 
					of Hezekiah 
					the kingdom of Judah was actually both subject and tributary 
					to Assyria. 
      
					An episode in the Syro-Israelitish war, hitherto only 
					alluded to, still 
					remains to be described. It will be remembered that the 
					Israelitish victors 
					had taken 200,000 prisoners. From the expressions used, we 
					infer that 
					these were brought to Samaria, not by the whole army — the 
					majority 
					having, after the Eastern manner, probably dispersed to 
					their homes — but 
					by a division, or armed escort, perhaps by those who formed 
					the standing 
					army. But even in Samaria God had not left Himself without a 
					witness. "A 
					prophet of Jehovah was there, whose name was Oded." As in 
					the days of 
					Asa, the prophet Azariah had met the victorious army of 
					Judah on its 
					return not with words of flattery, but of earnest admonition 
					(2 Chronicles 
					15:1-7), so now this otherwise unknown prophet of Samaria. 
					And his very 
					obscurity, and sudden and isolated message, as well as its 
					effect, are 
					instructive of the object and character of prophetism. Only 
					a prophet of 
					the Lord could have dared, in the circumstances, to utter 
					words so 
					humiliating to Israel's pride, and so exacting in their 
					demand. The defeat 
					and loss of Judah had been in Divine punishment of sin, and 
					would they 
					now add to their own guilt by making slaves of the children 
					of Judah and 
					Jerusalem? Or did they presume to regard themselves as 
					instruments of 
					God's judgments, forgetful of the guilt which rested upon 
					themselves? 
					Nay, let them know that wrath was already upon them, alike 
					for their sins, 
					for this fratricidal war, and now for their purpose of 
					enslaving their 
					brethren — and let them set their captives free. 
					
					
					
					
      
					There is not the least reason for questioning the accuracy 
					of this 
					narrative, 18 nor yet of that of the effectual intervention 
					on behalf of the 
					captives of four of the heads of houses in Ephraim, whose 
					names have 
					been handed down to honor. The latter is a further 
					confirmation of the 
					historical character of the report. Indeed, even if it had 
					not been recorded, 
					we should have expected some such intervention. The more 
					serious party 
					in Israel, whether friends or foes of Pekah, must have 
					disapproved of such 
					an undertaking as that of their king. There had previously 
					been wars 
					between Israel and Judah; but never one in which Israel had 
					joined a 
					heathen power for the purpose of overthrowing the house of 
					David, and 
					placing on its throne a Syrian adventurer. It must have 
					awakened every 
					religious and national feeling; and the sight of 200,000 
					Judean women and 
					children driven into Samaria, weary, footsore, hungry, and 
					in rags, to be 
					sold as slaves, would evoke not satisfaction, but abhorrence 
					and 
					indignation. It is to this that we understand the four 
					princes to refer when 
					speaking of the "trespass" already committed by this war, 
					and warning 
					against adding to it by retaining the captives as slaves. As 
					we realize the 
					scene, we do not wonder at the intervention of the princes, 
					nor at the 
					popular reaction when the words of the prophet roused them 
					to full 
					consciousness of their wrong. Nor, taking merely the 
					political view of it, 
					could princes or people have been blind to the folly of 
					weakening Judah 
					and entangling themselves in a war with Tiglath-pileser. 
      
					As so often in similar circumstances, the revulsion of 
					popular feeling was 
					immediate and complete. The spoil and the captives were 
					handed over to 
					"the princes;" those who had lately been prisoners were 
					tenderly cared for 
					as brethren and honored guests, 19 and brought back to the 
					Judean border- 
					city Jericho. 20 Without presuming to affirm that this 
					episode was in the 
					mind of our Lord when He spoke the parable of "the Good 
					Samaritan," 
					there is that in the bearing of these men who are expressed 
					by names 21 
					which reminds us of the example and the lessons in that 
					teaching of Christ. 
      
					Another suggestion we would venture to make. It will be 
					remembered that 
					when Isaiah was directed to meet King Ahaz he was to go not 
					alone, but 
					accompanied by his son, Shear Yashub (Isaiah 7:3). The 
					meaning of this 
					evidently symbolical name is "A remnant shall return." May 
					that name not 
					have been a symbolic prediction of the episode just related, 
					and intended 
					to show how easily the Lord could give deliverance, without 
					any appeal 
					
					
					
					
					
					for help to Assyria? 22 If so, it casts still further light 
					on the place occupied 
					by symbolism, not only in the Old Testament, but in Hebrew, 
					and in 
					measure in all Eastern thinking. Symbolism is, so to speak, 
					its mode of 
					expression — the language of its highest thinking. Hence its 
					moral teaching 
					is in parables and proverbs; its dogmatics in ritual and 
					typical institutions; 
					while in its prophecy the present serves as a mirror in 
					which the future is 
					reflected. To overlook this constant presence of the 
					symbolical and typical 
					in the worship, history, teaching, and prophecy of the Old 
					Testament is to 
					misunderstand not only its meaning, but even the genius of 
					the Hebrew 
					people. 
      
					We turn once more to the course of this history to trace the 
					results of 
					Ahaz' appeal to Assyria as against Syria and Israel. 
					23 
					Unfortunately, of 
					the two groups into which the Assyrian inscriptions of that 
					reign have 
					been arranged, that which is chronological and also 
					historically the most 
					trustworthy has in important parts been destroyed or 
					rendered illegible by 
					a later monarch of a different dynasty (Esarhaddon)
					24 
					Nevertheless we are 
					able to gather a sufficiently connected history at any rate 
					of twelve out of 
					the eighteen years of the reign of Tiglath-pileser. Its 
					beginning, and to the 
					period of the taking of Arpad, has been described in the 
					previous chapter. 
					And thus much may be added generally, that "the picture of 
					Tiglath-pileser derived from the Assyrian inscriptions entirely 
					corresponds with 
					what we know of him from the Bible. 
 25     
					Further, we learn that in Tiglath-pileser' s expedition 
					against the Syro-Israelitish league his first movement was against Israel and 
					the smaller 
					nations around Judah (2 Chronicles 28:17, 18). A brief 
					account of the 
					campaign against Israel is given in 2 Kings 15:29, 30, which 
					we cannot help 
					thinking is there out of its place. 
					26 But it correctly 
					indicates, in accordance 
					with the Assyrian inscriptions, the priority of the march 
					against Israel to 
					that upon Damascus, which is recorded in 2 Kings 16:9, and 
					it seems also 
					alluded to in 2 Chronicles 28:16, comp. ver. 17. From the 
					Assyrian 
					inscriptions we learn that Tiglath-pileser made an 
					expedition against 
					Philistia — that country being presumably named as the 
					utmost western 
					objective of a campaign which was equally directed against 
					Samaria, the 
					Phoenician towns, Edom, Moab, and Ammon, and even affected 
					Judah. To 
					the latter the notice in 2 Chronicles 28:20 may possibly 
					bear reference. 
					Judging from the order of the conquered cities mentioned in 
					the Assyrian 
					
					
					
					
					
					inscriptions, Tiglath-pileser had left Damascus aside, and 
					marched straight 
					on the old Canaanitish towns at the western foot of Lebanon, 
					which 
					commanded the road to Palestine. Two of these are specially 
					mentioned, 
					Arka 27 (Genesis 10:17), the modern Irka, about twelve miles 
					north-east 
					from Tripolis, and Zemar (Genesis 10:18), the modern Symra, 
					the ancient 
					Simyros. 28 After an unhappy break of two lines in the 
					inscription, we next 
					come upon the names of two of the cities which in 2 Kings 
					15:29 are 
					described as taken by Tiglath-pileser, Gilead and Abel-beth-Maachah, 
					with 
					express notice of their situation in the land of Beth-Omri 
					(Samaria), and of 
					their having been added to the territory of Assyria. The 
					inscription further 
					states that Tiglath-pileser had set his own officials and 
					governors over 
					these districts. Thence the victorious expedition is traced 
					as far as Gaza, 
					whence no doubt, after having subjugated all the 
					border-tribes to Northern 
					Arabia, it returned to the land of "Beth-Omri." It is added 
					that Tiglath- 
					pileser carried away to Assyria all its inhabitants, with 
					their chattels, and 
					killed Pekah their king, appointing Hoshea in his place (2 
					Kings 15:30). 
      
					We do not fail to perceive in this record boastful 
					exaggerations by the 
					Assyrian monarch, since, although the revolution which cost 
					Pekah his life 
					(2 Kings 15:30) was no doubt occasioned by the victories of 
					Tiglath- 
					pileser, yet the Israelitish king fell by the hand of Hoshea, 
					the leader of the 
					rising. At the same time Hoshea was absolutely dependent on 
					Assyria, to 
					which he became tributary. On the Assyrian inscription the 
					sum exacted 
					from him is said to have amounted to ten talents of gold 
					(67,500 pounds) 
					and 1,000 talents of silver (375,000 pounds). 
					29 The list of 
					the conquered Israelitish cities given in 2 Kings 15:29 enables us to 
					follow the course of 
					the campaign of Tiglath-pileset straight down from north to 
					south, through 
					Upper Galilee. The Assyrians took first Ijon, in the tribe 
					of Naphtali (2 
					Chronicles 16:4), a place formerly conquered by Ben-hadad (1 
					Kings 
					15:20), probably the modern Tell Dibbin, on a hill in a 
					"well watered" 
					district, on the road from Damascus to Sidon. Thence the 
					conquerors 
					passed to Abel-beth-Maachah, "the meadow" of Beth-Maacah (a
					
					neighboring small Syrian district), also called Abel 
					Mayim, "meadow of 
					waters" (2 Chronicles 16:4), a considerable town, known to 
					us from the 
					clays of David (2 Samuel 20:18) and of Ben-hadad (1 Kings 
					15:20), 
					situated about one and a half hours west-north-west from 
					Dan. The next 
					town occupied, Janoah (not that of Joshua 16:6), probably 
					the modern 
					
					
					
					
					
					Hunin, lay about midway between Abel-beth-Maachah and Kedesh, 
					the 
					place next captured. It was also in the possession of 
					Naphtali — and 
					indeed, to distinguish it from other places of the same 
					name, was known as 
					Kedesh-Naphtali, or Kedesh in Galilee (Joshua 20:7; 21:32; 1 
					Chronicles 
					6:76). This was one of the ancient Levitical cities, and the 
					birthplace of 
					Barak (Judges 4:6, 9). Although belonging to Upper Galilee, 
					it was at the 
					time of Christ held by the Tyrians (Jos. Wars, 2. 18, 
					1), whose territory 
					here bounded with Galilee. It still retains its old name, 
					and lies north-west 
					of the marshes that surrounded Lake Merom. The other three 
					names in 2 
					Kings 15:29 among the conquests of Tiglath-pileser seem 
					those of districts 
					rather than towns: Gilead, the later Gaulonitis, 
					30 the 
					northern portion of 
					the trans-Jordanic district whixch Jeroboam II had only 
					lately won back 
					for Israel (2Kings 15:25); Galilee, in the more restricted 
					sense of the term, 
					that is: the northern part of it, or "Galilee of the 
					Gentiles" (Isaiah 9:1; 
					compare 1 Kings 9:11) — in short, "all the land of Nephtali."
					
      
					The advance of Tiglath-pileser, marked by the occupation of 
					those towns 
					in a straight line from north to south, concerted Galilee 
					and the adjoining 
					trans-Jordanic district into an Assyrian province, which 
					served as a basis 
					for further operations. These terminated — perhaps after 
					passing near or 
					through Jerusalem — with the occupation of Samaria, where a 
					revolution 
					ensued, in which Pekah fell. He was succeeded by the leader 
					of the rising, 
					Hoshea, who became tributary to Assyria. The easier part of 
					his 
					undertaking accomplished, Tiglath-pileser turned his arms 
					against 
					Damascus. Here he met with a stubborn resistance. Holy 
					Scripture only 
					records (2 Kings 16:9) that Damascus was taken, Rezin 
					killed, and the 
					people carried captive to Kir — a district not yet certainly 
					identified, but 
					apparently belonging to Media (compare Isaiah 21:2; 22:6). 
					It was thence 
					that the Syrians had originally come (Amos 9:7), and thither 
					they were 
					again transported when their work in history was done (Amos 
					1:5). 
					Unfortunately, the Assyrian tablets which record this 
					campaign are 
					mutilated, that in which the death of Rezin was recorded 
					being lost. But 
					we learn that the siege of Damascus occupied two years; that 
					Rezin was 
					shut up in his capital, into which he had been driven; that 
					not only was 
					every tree in the gardens round Damascus cut down, but, in 
					the language of 
					the tablet, the whole land desolated as by a flood. With the 
					capture of 
					Damascus, the Damasco-Syrian empire, which had hitherto been 
					a scourge 
					
					
					
					
					
					for the punishment of Israel, came to an end. Henceforth it 
					was only a 
					province of Assyria. It is in the light of all these events 
					that we have to 
					read such prophecies as those in Isaiah 7 and the firs part 
					of chapter 8. 
					The majestic divine calm of these utterances, their lofty 
					defiance of man's 
					seeming power, their grand certitude, and the withering 
					irony with which 
					what seemed the irresistible might of these two "smoking 
					friebrands" is 
					treated — all find their illustration in the history of this 
					war. Such 
					prophecies warrant is in climbing the heights of faith, from 
					which Isaiah 
					bids us to look, to where, in the dim distance the morning 
					glow of the new 
					Messianic day is seen to fill the sky with glory. 
      
					But in Damascus the conquered did Tiglath-pileser gather, as 
					for an 
					Eastern durbar, the vanquished and subject priunces. 
					Thither also did King 
					Ahaz go "to meet" the king of Assyria; and thence, as the 
					outcome of what 
					he had learned from prophecy and seen as its fulfillment in 
					history, did 
					this king of Judah send the pattern of the heathen altar to 
					Jerusalem (2 
					Kings 16:10, 11). On the Assyrian monuments he is called 
					Joachaz (Ja-u-ha-zi). But scared history would not join the 
					name of the Lord with that of 
					the apostate descendent of David. For all time it points at 
					him the finger, 
					"This is that King Ahaz" (2 Chronicles 28:22); and he sinks 
					into an 
					unhonored grave, "not into the sepulchers of the kings of 
					Israel" (ver. 27). 
      
					And yet other and still wider-reaching lessons come to us 
					from this 
					history. 
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