| HEZEKIAH, (THIRTEENTH) KING OF 
					JUDAH. HOSHEA, (TWENTIETH) KING OF ISRAEL. Accession of Hezekiah — 
					Political Circumstances of the Times — Religion the only 
					True National Policy — The Position of Assyria in relation 
					to Judah — Religion the Central Principle of Hezekiah's 
					Reign — Idolatry Abolished in Judah — Restoration of the 
					Temple Services — Purification of the Temple — Services of 
					Re-Consecration — Celebration of the Pass-over — Invitation 
					to the Northern Tribes — Subsequent Festival — 
					Re-arrangement of the Temple-Services — Provision for 
					Priests and Levites — General Inferences — Activity of 
					Hezekiah in regard to the Canon of Scripture. 
					 (2 KINGS 18:1-6; 2 
					CHRONICLES 29-31) 
					     There is not a more striking instance of Divine mercy on 
					the one hand, 
					nor yet, on the other, of the personal character of religion 
					even under the 
					Old Testament, than that Ahaz should have been succeeded on 
					the throne 
					of Judah by Hezekiah. His name, 1 "Strength of Jehovah," or, 
					perhaps 
					better, "God is might," was truly indicative of the 
					character of his reign. In 
					every respect — not only as regarded the king personally, 
					but also in the 
					results of his administration, as affecting his country and 
					people — this 
					period was in complete contrast to that which had 
					immediately preceded 
					it. 
      
					Hezekiah, the son of Ahaz, ascended the throne at the age of 
					twenty-five, 
					towards the close 2 of the third year of Hoshea's reign in 
					Israel. He was 
					therefore a witness of the events which befell Samaria. From 
					a merely 
					political point of view, the position of a king of Judah 
					must have been one 
					of no small difficulty. In the northern kingdom Pekah had 
					sown the wind, 
					and Hoshea would reap the whirlwind. The one had brought 
					upon himself 
					the might of Assyria; the other would ultimately lose crown 
					and life in his 
					attempts to shake off the yoke of the conqueror. And in his 
					ruin would 
					Israel be involved. Assyria was the paramount power, not 
					only in Samaria, 
					
					
					
					
					
					which was so soon to become a province of that empire, but 
					in Judah also. 
					For Ahaz had made himself tributary to it, and held his 
					crown almost at 
					the mercy of the great world-empire. And, as will appear in 
					the sequel, 
					Hezekiah himself was to feel the power of Assyria even 
					before he came 
					into actual conflict with it. 
      
					All this succession of evils, and those which were still to 
					follow, were the 
					consequences of the disbelief and unbelief of Ahaz. As he 
					had discarded 
					the religion of Jehovah, so he despised His Word. In the 
					political 
					circumstances of the country, the only alternative before 
					him was either to 
					trust in the Lord for deliverance, or else to surrender to a 
					foreign power. 
					Against the admonitions and warnings of the great prophet, 
					who had 
					assured him of Divine help, Ahaz had chosen the second 
					alternative. His 
					resolve was not only sin: it was folly. His short-sighted 
					policy brought in 
					another power whose domination could never afterwards be 
					permanently 
					shaken off. Afterwards, when the kingdom of Israel came to 
					an end, the 
					two rival world-empires, Assyria and Egypt, stood face to 
					face, only 
					separated by little Judah — an object of ambition to both, a 
					help to 
					neither, yet whose subjection was absolutely necessary to 
					Assyria, not 
					only in view of its further projects, but even if previous 
					conquests were to 
					be preserved. And for an Assyrian monarch not to be 
					successful was, as 
					this history has shown, to lose crown and life. 
      
					So matters stood when Hezekiah ascended the throne. Of all 
					the political 
					combinations possible to him, he chose none. He returned to 
					the point 
					from which Ahaz had departed. His policy was not to have any 
					policy, 
					but to trust in the living God, to obey His Word, and to 
					follow His 
					guidance. His policy was his religion, and his religion was 
					true policy. The 
					only occasion on which he was tempted to deviate from it was 
					at a later 
					time, and it well-nigh proved fatal to him, as in the sequel 
					it certainly did 
					to his successors. Not that Hezekiah neglected to avail 
					himself of political 
					combinations as they arose. Indeed, this became the source 
					of his danger. 
					He may have argued that not to make use of the means placed 
					within his 
					reach was fatalism, not faith. In this he erred. Yet he did 
					not put his trust 
					in such alliances. He treated them rather as means for 
					defensive, than as 
					instruments sought for offensive purposes. The only real 
					help which he 
					sought was that of the living God. 
					
					
					
					
      
					Thus religion was the central principle of his reign and the 
					secret of his 
					success. The first act of his government was to abolish 
					every kind of 
					idolatry, whether of foreign or domestic origin. The "bamath" 
					or "high 
					places," were abolished; the matsebhoth, or stone 
					pillars and statues 
					erected for the worship of Baal, were broken down; and the
					Asherah, 3 or 
					wooden symbol of the lascivious worship of Astarte, was cut 
					down. Nay, 
					even the brazen serpent, which had apparently been preserved
					4 since the 
					time of Moses, and had, no doubt in degenerate times, become 
					almost an 
					object of worship, was now destroyed, having received the 
					appellation 5 
					which, when made an idol, it deserved — Nechushtan, 
					"brazen," a piece of 
					brass (2 Kings 18:4). In general, the sacred text describes 
					Hezekiah as 
					unequaled in religious earnestness and in conformity to the 
					Divine law by 
					any even of the pious kings that had preceded, or who 
					succeeded him, and 
					it places him on a level with "David his father." And this 
					is fully 
					vindicated by his abolition of even that form of Jehovah- 
					worship on 
					"heights" which Solomon, as well as Asa, Jehoshaphat, 
					Jehoash, Amaziah, 
					and Uzziah had tolerated (1 Kings 3:2;15:12, 14;22:43; 2 
					Kings 12:3; 14:4; 
					15:4, 35). 
      
					But the reformation initiated was not only negative, and 
					Hezekiah restored 
					the services of the Temple in their completeness and purity. 
					From the 
					detailed account in the Book of Chronicles, we learn that 
					"the house of the 
					Lord" had actually been closed (2 Chronicles 29:3, 7). By 
					this we 
					understand the closing of the Sanctuary itself, that is, of 
					the holy and most 
					holy places, since Ahaz continued to use the court of the 
					priests, although 
					for sacrifices at the heathen altar which he had reared. But 
					now the doors 
					of the Sanctuary were repaired, and once more thrown open. 
					Then 
					Hezekiah "gathered" the priests and Levites in "the wide 
					place on the 
					east," 6 probably some well-known locality in the eastern 
					part of the 
					Temple-buildings 7 (comp. Ezra 10:9; Nehemiah 8:1, 3, 16). 
					This for the 
					purpose of calling upon them to sanctify themselves, and to 
					remove the 
					heathen abominations which had defiled the Temple. And with 
					this object, 
					the king made in their hearing an earnest review of the 
					sinful past, with its 
					consequent judgments, and a declaration of his purpose "to 
					make a 
					covenant with the Lord." 
					
					
      
					The response to his appeal was immediate and hearty. In the 
					account of 
					the work now taken in hand by representatives of the Levites 
					they appear 
					
					
					
					
					once more according to their ancient division into the three 
					families of 
					Kohath, Merari, and Gershon, as David had arranged their 
					courses (1 
					Chronicles 23:6-23, comp. ver. 27). With these were 
					conjoined as a special 
					branch, probably on account of their pre-eminence (Numbers 
					3:30), the 
					representatives of the house of Elizaphan, a chief of the 
					Kohathites 
					(Exodus 6:18). Next in the enumeration we find the 
					representatives of the 
					three ancient divisions of Levite musicians — the sons of 
					Asaph, of 
					Heman, and Jeduthun (comp. 1 Chronicles 25:1-6; 2 Chronicles 
					5:12). 
					While these heads of Levite houses gathered their brethren 
					to do the work 
					assigned to them, the priests similarly cleansed the inner 
					part of the house, 
					when the Levites flung the remnants of past heathen 
					defilement into the 
					brook Kidron. It marks the zeal with which the work was 
					carried on that, 
					begun on the first day of the first month of the first year 
					of Hezekiah' s 
					reign — reckoning its ecclesiastical commencement from the 
					month Nisan 8 
					— it was completed on the sixteenth day. Then the vessels 
					which Ahaz 
					had cast away were restored, viz., the altar of 
					burnt-offering, the stands for 
					the brazen lavers, and that for "the sea" (comp. 2 Kings 
					16:14, 17). 9 
      
					The Temple having been thus purified, its services were 
					recommenced 
					with a grand function, when seven bullocks, seven rams, and 
					seven lambs 
					were offered for the congregation as burnt-offerings, and 
					seven he-goats as 
					sin-offerings 10 (comp. Leviticus 4:14; Ezra 8:35). In 
					strict accordance with 
					the Mosaic law, all the sacred functions were discharged by 
					the Aaronic 
					priesthood, with sprinkling of blood on the altar, and 
					imposition of hands 
					on the sacrifices, denoting their vicariousness (Leviticus 
					1:4; 4:4, 15, 24, 
					and Leviticus 4:7, 18, 30; 5:9). But what specially 
					distinguishes these 
					services is that the sin-offerings were brought not only for 
					Judah, but "for 
					all Israel" (2 Chronicles 29:24), indicating alike the 
					solidarity of "all Israel" 
					as the congregation of the Lord, and the representative 
					character of these 
					sacrifices. And in accordance with the institution of David, 
					the sacred 
					strains from Levite instruments, and the inspired hymns of 
					David and of 
					Asaph, 11 once more filled the Temple with the voice of 
					melody and of 
					praise, 12 while the king, the princes of Judah, and the 
					people responsively 
					bowed their heads in lowly worship. 
      
					The more direct sacrificial offerings for the people were 
					followed, at the 
					king's suggestion, by thankofferings (comp. Leviticus 7:11, 
					16), also of a 
					public character, to which "as many as were of upright 
					heart" — probably 
					
					
					
					
					
					they who had stood aloof from the idolatry of the previous 
					reign — added 
					burntofferings. As these thankofferings were brought by the 
					congregation 
					as a whole, the victims were not slain and flayed by the 
					offerers, as was 
					the case when brought by private individuals (Leviticus 1:5, 
					6); but this 
					part of the service devolved on the priesthood, who called 
					in, as in such 
					case they might, the assistance of the Levites. When we 
					remember that, 
					besides the special "burnt-offerings" of individuals (70 
					bullocks, 100 rams, 
					and 200 lambs), the "thankofferings" of the congregation 
					amounted to no 
					less than 600 oxen and 3,000 sheep (2 Chronicles 29:32, 33), 
					we scarcely 
					wonder that the priests alone should not have sufficed for 
					the service. And 
					as the text significantly marks, recalling the special 
					defection of the 
					priesthood, from the high-priest Urijah downwards (comp. 2 
					Kings 16:15), 
					the number of priests who had as yet sanctified themselves 
					was 
					proportionally smaller than that of the more faithful 
					Levites. "So the 
					service of the house of Jehovah was established. And 
					Hezekiah rejoiced 
					and all the people, because of that which God had prepared 
					to [for] the 
					people [probably referring to their willing participation 
					and contribution to 
					these services], for the thing had come suddenly" [without 
					long previous 
					preparation] (2 Chronicles 29:35, 36)- 
      
					What followed shows that, however sudden the impulse in this 
					religious 
					revival, it was neither transient nor superficial. Of all 
					the festivals in Israel, 
					the most solemn was that of the Passover. It commemorated 
					Israel's 
					national birthday as the redeemed of the Lord, and pointed 
					forward to that 
					better deliverance of which it was the emblem. Ordinarily 
					this feast 
					commenced on the evening of the 14th Nisan (Exodus 12:6, 8, 
					and 
					parallels). But in the present instance this was impossible. 
					Not only had 
					the cleansing of the Temple occupied till the 16th of the 
					month, but a 
					sufficient number of priests for the services had not yet 
					sanctified 
					themselves, while further time was required to make 
					announcement of the 
					Passover throughout all Israel. For, unlike the services at 
					the 
					reconsecration of the Temple, which seem to have been 
					confined to the 
					inhabitants of Jerusalem, this was to be observed as a great 
					national 
					festival. But it was possible to remove the difficulty thus 
					arising. The law, 
					while fixing the ordinary date of the Passover, had also 
					made provision for 
					an after-celebration of the feast on the corresponding day 
					of the second 
					month in cases of unavoidable hindrance (Numbers 9:6-13). 
					This is one of 
					
					
					
					
					
					the most instructive commendations on the character of the 
					Mosaic law. It 
					shows that the outward form was not of its essence, but was 
					flexible and 
					adaptable. Thus the law was not something rigidly outward 
					and absolutely 
					permanent, but gave indication of the possibility of an 
					enlargement by a 
					higher fulfillment of its spirit as distinguished from the 
					mere letter. Hence 
					such a provision seems like an unspoken pledge of a future 
					transformation 
					of the law, in accordance with the higher conditions and the 
					wants of new 
					circumstances. Lastly, it also affords a precedent and a 
					warrant for such a 
					change as that of the transference of the Sabbath from the 
					close of the 
					week to its beginning; from the day of rest to that of the 
					Resurrection of 
					Christ; from the memorial of the completion of the first 
					creation to that of 
					the second in the creation of the new heavens and the new 
					earth, wherein 
					dwelleth righteousness. 
      
					Of this legal provision of an after-Passover, Hezekiah 
					resolved to avail 
					himself. We mark as specially interesting in itself, and as 
					foreshadowing 
					great changes in the future political and ecclesiastical 
					organization of Israel, 
					that Hezekiah acted in this with the advice of "his princes 
					and all the 
					congregation in Jerusalem" (2 Chronicles 30:2). And yet more 
					interesting is 
					it to learn that the invitation to attend the Passover 
					addressed by the king 
					"and his princes" was sent not only to the cities of Judah, 
					but to all Israel, 
					"from Beersheba even to Dan." To this the text adds the 
					retrospective 
					notice that previous Paschal observances had been partial, 
					not general: "for 
					not in multitude [in large numbers] had they done it, as it 
					is written" 13 (2 
					Chronicles 30:5). 
      
					This brotherly invitation to the feast of Israel's birth and 
					the common 
					worship of their God and Redeemer was, so to speak, the 
					answer which 
					repentant Judah now made to that fratricidal war which 
					Israel had so lately 
					waged with the object of exterminating the kingdom of David. 
					And the 
					letters of the king and the princes bore such tender 
					references to past sin 
					and judgment, and to present national calamity, 
					14 and 
					breathed such a 
					spirit of religious hope for the future, as almost to rise 
					to the level of New 
					Testament sentiment. 
      
					In spite of the mockery with which at least at first the 
					invitation was 
					received by the majority in what still remained of the 
					northern kingdom, 
					the final response was truly encouraging (comp. vers. 10, 
					18). In Judah it 
					
					
					
					
					
					was both hearty and unanimous (2 Chronicles 30:12). From the 
					other parts 
					of the country "a multitude of people, even many," came from 
					out of five 
					of the tribes that still constituted the kingdom of Israel. 
					For Naphtali had 
					been annexed to Assyria, and Reuben and Gad been deported.
					15 The 
					festival in Jerusalem was followed by a spontaneous national 
					movement 
					against idolatry. For while the purification of the Temple 
					had been a public 
					act of reform initiated by the king, it was left to the 
					people gathered in 
					Jerusalem to remove the altars in the capital, whether in 
					private houses or 
					in more public places, which were the remnant of the 
					idolatrous worship 
					introduced by Ahaz (2 Chronicles 28:24). 
      
					The only drawback to the right observance of the Passover 
					festivities was 
					that many of the worshippers "were not sanctified." 
					Accordingly the 
					Levites had to offer for them the Paschal lamb, which, by 
					the law, each 
					offerer should have slain for himself and his house. This 
					applied specially 
					to those who had come from the northern kingdom (ver. 18). 
					If, none the 
					less, they were allowed to partake of the Paschal feast, 
					this was a 
					concession almost necessary in the circumstances, since 
					otherwise theirs 
					would not at all have been a Passover; and for this Hezekiah 
					implored and 
					obtained forgiveness from the Lord. 
16      
					How deeply this revival had struck its roots appears from 
					the voluntary 
					resolve of the people to follow up the seven days of the 
					Passover by other 
					seven days of festivity. For the wants of the people during 
					that time King 
					Hezekiah and the princes made liberal provision (vers. 23, 
					24). It was at 
					this time also that the removal of all traces of idolatry 
					from the land, 
					briefly noticed in 2 Kings 18:4, took place. This was 
					effected, as the fuller 
					account in the Book of Chronicles explains, by a spontaneous 
					popular 
					movement which extended beyond Judah to "Ephraim also and 
					Manasseh" 
					(2 Chronicles 31:1), although, as we may reasonably 
					conjecture, only in 
					districts from which the chief inhabitants had come to 
					Jerusalem. Closely 
					connected with the restoration of the Temple services were 
					the 
					arrangements now made for their orderly continuance. The 
					"courses" of 
					the priests and Levites were once more settled. The public 
					sacrifices of the 
					congregations — daily, Sabbatic, and festive — were provided 
					by the king 
					as his contribution, the "portion of his substance." The 
					latter was indeed 
					very large (comp. 2 Chronicles 32:27-29); but the number of 
					sacrificial 
					animals and other requisites furnished by the king according 
					to the 
					
					
					
					
					
					
					
					requirements of the law (Numbers 28, 29) was correspondingly 
					great. It 
					has been calculated to have amounted to "nearly 1,100 lambs, 
					1 13 
					bullocks, 37 rams, and 30 goats, besides vast quantities of 
					flour, oil, and 
					wine for the accompanying meat and drink-offerings." 
					17 
      
					For the personal support of the ministering priests and 
					Levites nothing 
					more was required than the re-enactment of the ancient 
					provision of 
					firstfruits, tithes, and firstlings (Exodus 23:19; Numbers 
					18:12, 21, etc.; 
					Leviticus 27:30-33). These, together with "the tithe of 
					dedicated things" 18 
					(Leviticus 27:30; Deuteronomy 14:28), were now offered in 
					such quantity 
					as not only to suffice for the wants of the priesthood, but 
					to leave a large surplusage, to the thankful joy and surprise of Hezekiah and 
					the princes. 
					In answer to the king's inquiry the high-priest Azariah 
					explained that the 
					large store accumulated was due to the special blessing 
					bestowed by the 
					Lord on a willing and obedient people (2 Chronicles 
					31:5-10). The 
					collection of this store began in the third month — that of 
					Pentecost — 
					when the wheat harvest was completed, and it ended in the 
					seventh month 
					— that of Tabernacles, which marked the close of the fruit 
					harvest and of 
					the vintage. And these contributions, or dues, came not only 
					from Judah, 
					but also from "the children of Israel" (ver. 6); that is, 
					from those in the 
					northern kingdom who had joined their brethren in returning 
					to the service 
					and the law of their Lord. 
      
					For the storage of these provisions, Hezekiah ordered that 
					certain 
					chambers in the Temple should be prepared, and he appointed 
					officials, 
					who are named in the sacred text, alike for the supervision 
					and the 
					administration of these stores (verses 11-19). Again and 
					again it is noted 
					with what "faithfulness" one and the other duty were 
					discharged by each 
					in the special department assigned to him (verses 12, 15, 
					18). 19 The 
					provision for the priesthood included not only those who 
					were for the 
					time actually on service in the Temple, 
					20 but also the 
					others in the priest 
					cities, together with their wives and children, and lastly 
					to those in the 
					country districts around these cities (vers. 16-19). These 
					and all kindred 
					arrangements were extended throughout all Judah. And the 
					detailed account 
					given of the religious activity of Hezekiah closes with the 
					twofold notice 
					that he "wrought the good, the right, and the truth before 
					Jehovah his 
					God;" and that in all he undertook, whether as matter of 
					public or private 
					
					
					
					
					
					religious arrangement, "he did it with all his heart, and 
					prospered" (2 
					Chronicles 31:20, 21). 
      
					To the description of the reformation inaugurated by the 
					piety of 
					Hezekiah, it seems desirable to add some further 
					particulars, either 
					illustrative of the text or derived from other notices in 
					Holy Scripture. As 
					regards the trustworthiness of the account of the 
					sacrificial worship in the 
					restored Temple — that it was not of later invention, and 
					designed to bear 
					out the priestly institutions first enforced in the time of 
					Ezra — we have 
					to point to the important fact that the number of sacrifices 
					and sin- 
					offerings in the time of Hezekiah notably differs from that 
					at the 
					dedication of the Temple in the time of Ezra (comp. 2 
					Chronicles 29:21, 32 
					with Ezra 6:17). This, considering especially the symbolism 
					of numbers, 
					shows that the one account could not have been framed upon 
					the other. It 
					follows that the Mosaic institutions must have existed in 
					and before the 
					time of Hezekiah, and could not, as a certain school of 
					critics contends, 
					have originated with the priesthood at a much later period. 
					Indeed, as we 
					follow the present line of argument, by a comparison of the 
					services in the 
					time of Hezekiah with the Mosaic institutions to which they 
					bear 
					reference, the conviction grows upon us not only of the 
					existence of the 
					latter, but of their general acknowledgment, since, keeping 
					in view the 
					circumstances of the previous reign, it is impossible to 
					suppose that all 
					this could have been "invented" in the first year of 
					Hezekiah' s reign. And 
					as connected with this we mark that not only were the 
					liturgical services 
					conformed to a previous model — the Davidic — but that the 
					hymns 
					chanted were in "the words of David and of Asaph the seer" 
					(2 Chronicles 
					29:30). This seems not only to imply the existence at the 
					time.of Davidic 
					and Asaphite psalms — the absence of any mention of other 
					Psalm- 
					collections here deserving special notice — but even to 
					indicate some 
					orderly collection of these Psalms in books. In short, it 
					casts light on the 
					beginning of the present arrangement of the Psalter in five 
					books. It may 
					well have been that, subject to later revision, the former 
					collection of 
					Psalms consisting, roughly speaking, of the two first books 
					of Psalms 
					(now Psalm 1-41; 42-72), was now enriched by the addition of 
					a further 
					collection — roughly speaking, the present third book of 
					Psalms (Psalm 
					73-89), which in its present form begins with an Asaphite 
					Psalm (Psalm 
					73), and has in succession eleven Psalms of the same 
					authorship 21 (Psalm 
					
					
					
					
					
					73-83). But whatever our view, or more accurately, our 
					conjectures, on 
					this subject, there cannot at least be doubt that Hezekiah 
					actively busied 
					himself, under competent guidance, with the collection and 
					arrangement of 
					the existing sacred literature of Israel. This is expressly 
					mentioned as 
					regards a part of "the Proverbs of Solomon, which the men of 
					Hezekiah, 
					king of Judah, collected" 22 (Proverbs 25:1). And to this, 
					as assuredly 
					among the most important parts of Hezekiah' s activity, the 
					closing notice 
					of his religious work done by him may also bear reference:
					
      
					"And in every work that he began in the service of the house 
					of 
      God, and in the law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, 
      he did it with all his heart, and prospered" (2 Chronicles 31:21). 
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