| HOSHEA, (TWENTIETH) KING OF ISRAEL.
					Summary of this History 
					— Accession of Hoshea — Religious Character of his Reign — 
					Death of Tiglath-pileser and Accession of Shalmaneser IV. — 
					Expedition into Palestine and Submission of Hoshea — 
					Attempted Alliance of Israel with Egypt — Hoshea made a 
					Prisoner — Siege of Samaria — Account of it in the Assyrian 
					Inscriptions — Accession of Sargon — Capture of Samaria — 
					Deportation of Israel — Localities of their Exile — The new 
					Colonists of Samaria and their Religion — Lessons of this 
					History. 
					 (2 KINGS 17) 
					     There is a strange Jewish tradition to the effect that 
					from the time when 
					Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh were deported, 
					the 
					observance of Jubilee years ceased 1 (Arakh. 32 b;
					Fer. Shebh. 39 c; Fer. 
					Gitt. 45 d). Whatever of truth there may be in this 
					notice, other 
					peculiarities connected with this period are of such 
					interest and importance 
					in this history, alike retrospectively and prospectively, 
					that we group 
					them together in an orderly form before proceeding with our 
					narrative. 
2      
					When we turn to the first and most prominent factor in this 
					history, Israel, 
					we are impressed with this, that now, for the first time 
					since the 
					separation of the brother-nations, the northern kingdom had 
					entered into a 
					formal league against Judah with a heathen nation, and that 
					its hereditary 
					foe, Syria. And the significance of this fact deepens as we 
					remember that 
					the final object was not merely to conquer Judah, but to 
					dethrone the 
					house of David, and substitute for it a Syrian, presumably a 
					heathen ruler. 
					So forgetful had Israel become of its great hope, and of the 
					very meaning of 
					its national existence. For the first time also, at least in 
					the Biblical record, 
					does the Assyrian power now appear on the scene of 
					Palestine, first to be 
					bought off by Menahem (2 Kings 15:19, 20); then to be 
					invoked by Ahaz, 
					with the result of rendering Judah tributary, and finally of 
					overthrowing 
					Israel. 
					
					
					
					
      
					When we pass from Israel to Judah, we find that the country 
					had now 
					attained a state of national prosperity greater even than in 
					the time of 
					Solomon. But in its train had come luxury, vice, idolatry, 
					and heathen 
					thoughts and manners, to the utter corruption of the people. 
					In vain did 
					the prophets call to repentance (Joel 2:12-14; Isaiah 1:2-9, 
					16-20); in vain 
					did they speak of nearing judgment (Micah 2:3; Isaiah 1:24; 
					3:1-8; 3:16- 
					4:l:5:5-to end); in vain seek to woo by promises of mercy 
					(Micah 4:1-5; 
					Isaiah 2:2-5). Priests and people boasted in an outward and 
					formal 
					observance of ritual ordinances, as if these were the 
					substance of religion, 
					and in this trust set lightly by the warning of the prophets 
					(Isaiah 1:11- 
					15). In their overweening confidence as to the present, and 
					their worldly 
					policy as regarded the future, they brought on themselves 
					the very evils 
					which had been predicted, but from which they had deemed 
					themselves 
					secure. And so it came that a people who would not turn to 
					their God 
					while they might, had in the end this as their judgment of 
					hardening, that 
					they could no longer turn to Him (Isaiah 6:9-13). 
      
					Indeed, Judah had so declined that not only idolatry of 
					every kind, but 
					even the service of Molech — nay, witchcraft and necromancy, 
					expressly 
					denounced in the law (Deuteronomy 18:10-13), were openly 
					practiced in 
					the land (Isaiah 8:19). The Divine punishment of all this 
					has already 
					appeared in the preceding history. For if, at the beginning 
					of the reign of 
					Ahaz, Judah had attained its highest state of prosperity, it 
					had sunk at its 
					close to the lowest level yet reached. In truth all the 
					three nations engaged 
					in the war described in the previous chapter received meet 
					punishment. 
					The continuance of the northern kingdom was now only a 
					question of 
					time, and the exile of Israel had actually begun. Judah had 
					become 
					dependent on Assyria, and henceforth was only able fitfully 
					and for brief 
					periods to shake off its yoke, till it finally shared the 
					fate of its sister- 
					kingdom. Lastly, Syria ceased to exist as an independent 
					power, and 
					became a province of Assyria. 
      
					But in the history of the kingdom of God every movement is 
					also a step 
					towards the great goal, and all judgment becomes larger 
					mercy. So was it on 
					this occasion also. Henceforth the whole historical scene 
					was changed. The 
					prophetic horizon had enlarged. The falling away of Israel 
					had become 
					already initially the life of the world. The fullest 
					predictions of the Person 
					and work of the Messiah and of His universal kingdom date 
					from this 
					
					
					
					
					
					period. Even the new relations of Israel formed the basis 
					for wider 
					conceptions and spiritual progression. Those petty wars with 
					Syria, 
					Edom, Moab, Amnion, and Philistia, which had filled the 
					previous history, 
					now ceased to be factors in it, and Israel found itself face 
					to face with the 
					great world-power. This contact gave new form and shape to 
					the idea of a 
					universal kingdom of God, wide as the world, which had 
					hitherto only 
					been presented in dim outline, and of which only the germ 
					had existed in 
					the religious consciousness of the people. Thus in every 
					respect this was 
					the beginning of a new era, an era of judgment indeed, but 
					also of larger 
					mercy; an era of new development in the history of the 
					kingdom of God; a 
					type also of the final hardening of Israel in the rejection 
					of their Messiah, 
					and of the opening of the kingdom of heaven to all 
					believers. 
      
					Hoshea, the son of Elah, the last king of Israel, ascended 
					the throne in the 
					twelfth year of Ahaz, king of Judah. His reign extended, at 
					least nominally, 
					over nine years (2 Kings 17:1). Of its religious character 
					we have this brief 
					notice, that "he did that which was evil in the sight of the 
					Lord, but not as 
					the kings of Israel that were before him." In the absence of 
					details, we can 
					only conjecture that this indicates decrease in the former 
					active opposition 
					to the worship of Jehovah. This seems implied in the 
					circumstance that 
					apparently no official hindrance was offered to the later 
					invitation of 
					Hezekiah to attend the Passover in Jerusalem (2 Chronicles 
					30:1-12). The 
					Talmud has it that after the deportation of the golden 
					calves to Assyria 
					(Hosea 10:5, 6), Hoshea had abolished the military posts 
					which since the 
					time of Jeroboam 1 . had been set to prevent Israelites from 
					going up to the 
					feasts at Jerusalem (Gitt. 88 a; Babh. Q. 121 b; 
					comp. Seder 01. R. 22). 
      
					Tiglath-pileser died probably five years after Ahaz had 
					"met" him in 
					Damascus. He was followed on the throne by Shalmaneser IV. 
					3 
					Although 
					special records and inscriptions of his reign do not exist, 
					we learn from 
					fragmentary notices that in the third year of his reign the 
					Assyrian 
					monarch undertook expeditions against the west — presumably 
					Phoenicia 
					and Israel. Further light, comes to us from Josephus (Ant 
					9. 14, 2), who 
					reproduces an extract from the historical work of Menander, 
					itself derived 
					from the Tyrian archives. Thence we learn that the Assyrian 
					king invaded 
					Phoenicia, and on the same occasion no doubt also Samaria, 
					which was in 
					league with it. As Shalmaneser was not a successful leader, 
					we can easily 
					understand that the allies may have cherished a hope that 
					the heavy yoke 
					
					
					
					
					
					of Assyria might be shaken off. But on the appearance of 
					Shalmaneser 
					Hoshea had to submit — in the language of Scripture, he 
					"became his 
					servant and rendered him tribute" 
					4 (2 Kings 17:3). 
					Similarly, according to 
					the Tyrian annals, most of the Phoenician cities seem to 
					have surrendered 
					or made terms with him, with the exception of Tyre, which 
					held out for 
					five years, and was only taken by Sargon, the successor of 
					Shalmaneser. It 
					is probably to this that the prophecy in Isaiah 23: refers. 
					5 The Tyrian 
					annals, and even the Assyrian inscriptions, mutilated as 
					they are, lead us 
					to regard this campaign as consisting of several expeditions 
					into Phoenicia. 
					This renders it difficult to know at what precise period the 
					first 
					submission of Hoshea was made. 
      
					It seems likely that the protracted resistance offered by 
					Tyre may have 
					encouraged the hope that Shalmaneser might after all prove 
					unsuccessful 
					against a powerful combination. Accordingly, Hoshea entered 
					into 
					negotiations with Seve, 6 "the king of Egypt." The king of 
					Israel had good 
					reason for looking hopefully to an alliance with this 
					monarch. He was the 
					first Pharaoh of the twenty-fifth Ethiopian dynasty. Under 
					him Egypt, 
					which before had been pressed in the north by the Assyrians 
					and in the 
					south by the Ethiopians, and suffered from internal 
					dissensions, became 
					strong, peaceful, and independent. This is not the place for 
					details of a 
					reign which was not only signally beneficial to his country, 
					but elevated in 
					character. Seve was too wise a monarch to be persuaded by 
					the 
					ambassadors, or seduced by the "presents" which Hoshea sent, 
					into an 
					active alliance with Israel against Assyria. 
					7 The attempted 
					"conspiracy" 8 
					became known to Shalmaneser. He turned against Hoshea, who 
					in the 
					meantime had ceased to pay his tribute, seized and cast him 
					into prison (2 
					Kings 17:4). 
      
					The further progress of this war is only briefly summarized 
					in the Biblical 
					record (2 Kings 17:5, 6), which is chiefly concerned with 
					the issue of the 
					struggle, and its spiritual import and lessons. It only 
					relates that the siege 
					of Samaria lasted three years; that at the end of them — 
					that is, in the 
					ninth (or last) year of Hoshea — the city was taken; and, 
					lastly, that 
					"Israel" was "carried away" to certain places which are 
					mentioned. 
					Happily, the Assyrian inscriptions enable us to fill up this 
					bare outline. 
					From them we learn that after the siege of Samaria had 
					continued about 
					two years, Shalmaneser was succeeded by Sargon, who took the 
					city (after 
					
					
					
					
					
					a siege of altogether three years) in the first year of his 
					reign — that is, in 
					the year 722 B.C. 9 Strictly speaking, the sacred text does 
					not expressly 
					attribute the capture of Samaria to Shalmaneser himself 
					(comp. 2 Kings 
					17:6; 18:10, 1 1) 10 , although Sargon is not mentioned. And 
					for this silence, 
					or even the ascription of this campaign wholly to 
					Shalmaneser, there may 
					be reasons, unknown to us, connected with the relation 
					between Sargon 
					and Shalmaneser, and the part which the former may have 
					taken in the 
					military operations or the conduct of the siege. Certain it 
					is that Sargon 
					was not the son of Shalmaneser, although apparently of 
					princely descent 
					— perhaps the scion of a collateral branch of the royal 
					family. Nor do we 
					know the circumstances of his accession — possibly in 
					consequence of a 
					revolution, easily accounted for by dissatisfaction with the 
					king's failure 
					both before Tyre and Samaria. In any case, the inscriptions 
					distinctly 
					inform us that Sargon captured Samaria, led away 27,280 of 
					its inhabitants, 
					took fifty chariots, leaving his subordinates to take the 
					rest of the 
					property found in the city, and appointing a governor, with 
					the same 
					tribute as Hoshea had paid. 
      
					Similarly, the Biblical account of the deportation of Israel 
					into exile is 
					supplemented and confirmed by the Assyrian records. The 
					places to 
					which they were carried are not indeed enumerated in the 
					Assyrian 
					inscriptions, but their location can mostly be ascertained. 
					"Halah" (or 
					rather "Chalah"), the first place mentioned in 2 Kings 17:6, 
					was, judging 
					from its conjunction with "the river Chabor" and with 
					"Gozan" (comp. 1 
					Chronicles 5:26), a district contiguous to them, called 
					Chalcitis, where a 
					mound called Gla may represent the city. 
					11 There cannot be 
					any doubt in 
					regard to the other localities to which the Israelites were 
					carried. They 
					were "placed" "on the Chabor, the river of Gozan, 
					12 and in 
					the cities of the 
					Medes." "Gozan" — Gausanitis — the Assyrian Gu-za-nu, is a 
					district in 
					Mesopotamia traversed by the Chabor (Ass., Ha-bur), the 
					"great" river, 
					with "verdant banks," which springs near Nisibis, and is 
					navigable long 
					before it drains the waters of Gozan into the Euphrates. The 
					last district 
					mentioned lies east of the others. "Media" is the province 
					stretching east 
					of the Zagros Mountains, and north to the Caspian Sea, or 
					rather to the 
					Elbur mountain-chain, which runs parallel to its southern 
					shore. Its "cities" 
					had only lately been overrun by the Assyrian conqueror. In 
					them the 
					legendary book of Tobit still places these exiles 
					13 (Tobit 
					1:14; 3:7). The 
					
					
					
					
					
					account of the Ten Tribes by Josephus adds little to our 
					knowledge. He 
					describes them as "an immense multitude, not to be estimated 
					by 
					numbers," and as located "beyond the Euphrates" (Ant. 
					11.5, 2). Equally, 
					if not even more vague, are the later references to them in 
					4 Esdras, and in 
					Rabbinic writings. 14 From all this we may infer that there 
					was no longer 
					any reliable historical information on the subject. 
      
					On another point, however, we have important information. We 
					know that 
					with these exiles went their priests (2 Kings 17:27), 
					although not of 
					Levitical descent (2 Chronicles 11:14). Thus the strange 
					mixture of the 
					service of the Lord and foreign rites must have continued. 
					In the course of 
					time the heathen elements would naturally multiply and 
					assume greater 
					prominence, unless, indeed, the people learned repentance by 
					national 
					trials, or from higher teaching. Of this there is not any 
					evidence in the case 
					of Israel; and if the footsteps of these wanderers shall 
					ever be clearly 
					tracked, we expect to find them with a religion composed of 
					various rites, 
					but prevailingly heathen, yet with memories of their 
					historical past in 
					traditions, observances, and customs, as well as in names, 
					and bearing the 
					marks of it even in their outward appearance. 
      
					On yet another point does the testimony of the Assyrian 
					records confirm 
					the Biblical narrative. From the inscriptions we learn that 
					Sargon 
					transported to Samaria, in room of the exiled Israelites, 
					inhabitants of 
					countries conquered by him. And when in 2 Kings 17:24 we 
					read that 
					these new colonists were "brought from Babylon, and from 
					Cuthah, and 
					from Ava and from Hamath, and from Sepharvaim," we recognize 
					the 
					names of places which, according to the Assyrian 
					inscriptions, were 
					conquered by Sargon, and whence, as was his wont, he 
					deported the 
					inhabitants. 15 From the inscriptions we further learn that 
					these 
					transportations were successive, and that even the earliest 
					of them did not 
					take place immediately on the removal of the Israelites. 
					Thus we 
					understand how lions, so numerous in Palestine at one time, 
					but gradually 
					diminished with the growth of the population, once more 
					increased among 
					the scanty and scattered settlers. The sacred historian 
					recognizes in this 
					the hand of the Lord. 16 And rightly so, since all who are 
					in sympathy with 
					things Divine must by the spiritual instinct of their new 
					nature rise to the 
					recognition of Him Who ruleth, and of Whose government and 
					purposes all 
					events are the unbidden means, and all men the unconscious, 
					yet free, 
					
					
					
					
					
					agents. But especially do we mark this realization of the 
					eternal Presence 
					of the living God as the distinguishing characteristic of 
					Old Testament 
					teaching, whose first and last utterance it is- "Jehovah 
					reigneth.." 
      
					But we have more than merely a general confirmation of the 
					Biblical 
					account. From the Assyrian records we learn that in the 
					first year after his 
					accession Sargon vanquished Merodach-Baladan of Babylon, and 
					deported 
					of the people to "Chatti," which is the designation for Syro-Palestine,
					
					inclusive of Samaria. Again, the Biblical expression 
					"Babylon" includes 
					besides the capital other cities of Babylon, and 
					transportations from some 
					of them to "the land of Beth Omri," or Samaria, are 
					expressly recorded. 
					According to the inscriptions, these took place not only in 
					the first but in 
					other years, notably in the seventh after the accession of 
					Sargon and the 
					taking of Samaria. Among the cities mentioned as furnishing 
					colonists, 
					"Cuthah," which has been re-discovered in the modern 
					Tell-Ibrahim, lay 
					about fifteen miles north-east of Babylon. "Ava" has not yet 
					been 
					identified. Sepharvaim, or "the twin Sipar" (Sipphara), so 
					called because 
					the city was built on both banks of the Euphrates, has been 
					recognized in 
					the ruins of Abu-Habba, about twenty miles north of Babylon, 
					where the 
					celebrated Temple of the Sun has been laid bare. Lastly, 
					Hamath is the 
					well-known Syrian city which rebelled against Assyria under 
					a king 
					Jahubi'd, who was vanquished in the battle of Karkar, when 
					Hamath was 
					taken, and its people deported. The other cities mentioned 
					in Scripture 
					were conquered by Sargon at a later period, in his final 
					wars against 
					Merodach-Baladan, in the twelfth and thirteenth years after 
					his accession 
					(710, 709 B.C.). 17 Hence the transportation of their 
					inhabitants to Samaria 
					must have been as many years after the taking of the capital 
					of Israel. 
      
					As the sacred text informs us (2 Kings 17:25-33), the new 
					colonists 
					brought with them the worship of their national deities. 
					Among these, 
					"Succoth-benoth" 18 — mentioned as the deity of "the men of 
					Babylon" — 
					is probably a corruption 19 of the name of the well-known 
					Babylonian 
					goddess, Zir-banit, 20 "She who gives seed 
					[posterity]." As the god of Cuth, "Nergal" is mentioned, and this is confirmed by the 
					Assyrian 
					inscriptions. Nergal seems to have been the lion- god 
					represented by the 
					colossal winged lions at the entrance to the palaces. 
					21 
					Concerning 
					"Ashima," the deity of Hamath, and Nibhaz and Tartak, the 
					gods of the 
					Avites, we possess not any definite information. On the 
					other hand, 
					
					
					
					
					
					"Adrammelech" ["Adar is king"] and Anammelech ["Anu is 
					king"], the 
					gods of Sepharvaim, represent well-known Assyrian deities. 
					Adar 
					(originally A-tar) means "father of decision." 
					22 In the 
					inscriptions this god 
					bears among others the designation of "lord of fire," which 
					accords with 
					the Biblical notice that the worshippers "burnt" to him 
					"their children in 
					fire." He is represented as a winged bull, with human head 
					and a man's 
					face. Anu was represented as a man clothed in the skin of a 
					fish, 
					culminating in a tiara. After the two supreme gods, II and 
					Asur, he 
					occupied the first rank in the Triad [Anu, Bel, Nisroch]. He 
					is also 
					described as "the good god," and as "lord of the night." His 
					female 
					counterpart bore the name Anat or, Anatuv. 
					23
					
      
					The perils which the new settlers experienced from the 
					increase of wild 
					beasts, which, in true heathen manner, they ascribed to 
					their ignorance of 
					"the manner of the God of the land," led to an appeal to the 
					king. Entering 
					into their views, S argon dispatched to Samaria one of the 
					priests who had 
					accompanied Israel into exile. He settled in Bethel, the 
					traditional 
					metropolis of Israelitish worship, such as Jeroboam I. had 
					remodeled it. 
					And it was this corrupt form of Jehovah worship which he 
					taught the new 
					settlers. The result was a mixture of Israelitish truths, 
					traditions, and 
					corruptions, with the pagan rites which they had brought 
					with them. Thus 
					their new religion bore a strange similarity to the mixed 
					new, partly 
					Israelitish, partly foreign, population. And such, according 
					to the writer of 
					the Book of Kings, continued substantially the character of 
					the religion of 
					Samaria to his own days. 
      
					Yet another transportation of foreign colonists to Samaria 
					seems to have 
					taken place in the reign of Esar-haddon, or rather of his 
					son — possibly in 
					consequence of an attempted rising on the part of the 
					Israelitish 
					population (comp. Ezra 4:2, 10). But what most deeply 
					impresses us in 
					the Biblical narrative of these events is the spirit and 
					manner in which at 
					the close of Israel's national history the writer passes in 
					review the leading 
					characteristics. The Divine calling of Israel; their 
					defection, rapidly growing 
					into open idolatry; the warnings of the prophets sent to 
					them, and their 
					neglect; the hardening of heart, leading up to the utmost 
					corruption in 
					religion, morals, and life — such, with a brief reflection 
					on Judah's kindred 
					guilt and danger, is the summary presented to us of this 
					history in its 
					spiritual aspect. Scarcely on any other occasion does the 
					sacred writer 
					
					
					
					
					
					allow himself reflections of this kind. But they are 
					appropriate, and almost 
					needful, at the close of a history which relates events in 
					their bearing on 
					the kingdom of God, and views Israel as a nation called to 
					be the servants 
					and the messengers of the Lord. They explain the inner 
					meaning of God's 
					dealings in the past, and the deeper causes of a rejection 
					and an exile which 
					cannot end till Israel and Judah, no longer hostile nor 
					separate, shall in one 
					common repentance turn to seek Jehovah their God and the Son 
					of David 
					their King. 
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