| HEZEKIAH (THIRTEENTH) KING OF JUDAH
					Outward Events of the 
					Reign of Hezekiah — Victory over the Philistines — League 
					against Sargon Assyrian Advance, and Submission of Judah — 
					Sennacherib — The Assyrian Inscriptions Their Account of the 
					Assyrian Invasion of Judah — Victories of Sennacherib — 
					Assyrian Misrepresentation of Events — The Biblical Record — 
					Works in Defense of Jerusalem — The Various Scriptural 
					Narratives of these Events — The Assyrian Host before 
					Jerusalem — Its Leaders and the Representatives of Hezekiah 
					— The Conference between them. 
					 (2 KINGS 18:7-19; 2 
					CHRONICLES 32:1-26; ISAIAH 36:, 37) 
					     Although the beginning of Hezekiah's reign was mainly 
					devoted to the 
					first and most important task of religious reform, other 
					matters of pressing 
					necessity were not overlooked. The same wisdom which marked 
					his 
					restoration of the Temple services also guided his other 
					administration, and 
					the same happy results attended both. In fact, Hezekiah made 
					use of the 
					years of quiet to prepare against the troublous period which 
					he must have 
					felt to be at hand. And in the Book of Kings we have this 
					general notice: 
      
					"And Jehovah was with him; in all to which he proceeded 
      he prospered; 
					1 and he rebelled against the king of Assyria 
      and served him not" (2 Kings 18:7). 
					2 
      
					In truth, the relations between Hezekiah and the mighty 
					world-empire of 
					Assyria furnish the explanation of all the outward events of 
					his reign. Of 
					the first of these, the victory over the Philistines "unto 
					Gaza," and the 
					complete subjugation of their country, "from the tower of 
					the watchmen 
					to the fenced city" (2 Kings 18:8), it is impossible to fix 
					the date. To judge 
					from its position in the text, it seems to have taken place 
					during the reign 
					of Shalmaneser, before the accession of Sargon, by whom 
					Samaria was 
					taken. The apparent ill-success of Shalmaneser before Tyre 
					may have 
					rendered possible and encouraged such an undertaking on the 
					part of 
					
					
					
					
					
					Hezekiah. In any case, we have to bear in mind that 
					Philistia, so important 
					to Assyria as being the road to and from Egypt, always 
					formed an 
					objective point in the western expeditions of the "great 
					kings," and that its 
					cities seem to have been divided, some being disposed to 
					make cause 
					against Assyria, while others — notably Ashdod and Gaza, — 
					together 
					with Moab, Ammon, and Edom, were on the side of the eastern 
					empire. 3 
					Thus the period of Shalmaneser's weakness was being utilized 
					by 
					Hezekiah, not only for his religious reformation, but for 
					securing his flank 
					in any future contest with Assyria, as well as for works of 
					internal 
					defense, to which reference will be made in the sequel. 
      
					The aspect of matters changed with the accession of Sargon. 
					That monarch 
					did not indeed feel himself strong enough immediately, after 
					the taking of 
					Samaria, to advance south against Egypt. Besides troubles 
					nearer home, 
					especially the subdual of Merodach Baladan, engaged his 
					attention. But in 
					the second year after his accession we find him engaged in a 
					western 
					expedition. In this campaign the rebellion of Hamath was 
					crushed, and the 
					great battle of Karkar won. But what most concerns our 
					history is the 
					expedition of Sargon against the hostile league formed by 
					Seve of Egypt 
					and Hanno, king of Gaza — as we conjecture a dependent of 
					Hezekiah, 
					who sympathized with, though he does not seem actually to 
					have taken 
					part in the anti-Assyrian combination. Sargon was completely 
					successful. 
					In the battle of Raphia the allies were defeated; Seve fled, 
					and was allowed 
					to make his peace by paying tribute, while Hanno was taken 
					prisoner. On 
					this occasion Hezekiah appears to have been called to 
					account, and to have 
					been obliged to make submission. An Assyrian inscription 
					speaks of 
					Sargon as "the subduer of Judah," though without any added 
					mention of 
					battle or triumph. From its date we conclude that it refers 
					to something 
					that had taken place during the expedition of Sargon against 
					Seve and 
					Hanno. 4 
      
					Sargon reigned altogether seventeen years. 
					5 In the 
					defective condition of 
					the inscriptions, it is impossible to know for certain 
					whether or not he was 
					killed by an assassin. He was succeeded by his son 
					Sennacherib, who, after 
					a reign of twenty-four years, perished at the hands of his 
					own sons (2 
					Kings 19:37). 6 The long period of rest between the second 
					year of Sargon 
					and the accession of Sennacherib had, no doubt, been 
					employed by 
					Hezekiah in further improving the condition of the country, 
					possibly in 
					
					
					
					
					
					strengthening the defenses of Jerusalem, and preparing for 
					future 
					eventualities (comp. 2 Kings 20:20; 2 Chronicles 32:5-30, 
					and other 
					passages). This is not the place to give a detailed account 
					of the events of 
					the reign of Sennacherib, as we learn them from the Assyrian 
					inscriptions, 
					except in so far as they bear on the narrative of Scripture. 
					And even here 
					we have to bear in mind that admittedly the inscriptions 
					designedly give a 
					false impression of what had really occurred in that war, in 
					which Judaea 
					was overrun and Jerusalem first besieged, and then a second 
					time 
					summoned to surrender. It will be more convenient to give 
					the story of this 
					expedition, in the first place, as told in the Assyrian 
					records, before 
					referring to the Biblical account. 
      
					We have many inscriptions of the time of Sennacherib, in 
					Assyrian: Sin- 
					ahi-irib, or Sin-ahi-ir-ba ('Sin,' the lunar god, 'gives 
					many brethren') — 
					famed also for strengthening and fortifying his capital, 
					Nineveh ('Ninua'), 
					and building there two magnificent palaces, one on each side 
					of the river. 
					Among the various memorials of his reign four inscriptions 
					are of special 
					importance. 7 Summarizing their contents, which vary only in 
					details, we 
					infer that, in the fourth year of Sennacherib's reign, 
					another league had 
					been formed of the principal Philistine and Phoenician 
					cities of Judah and 
					of the Egypto-Ethiopian empire, for the purpose of shaking 
					off the 
					domination of Assyria. So far as the first-named cities are 
					concerned it 
					comprised Sidon, Ascalon, and Ekron, the inhabitants of 
					which city, 
					probably at the beginning of the war, if not before it, sent 
					Padi, their king, 
					who was faithful to Assyria, in chains to Hezekiah, who cast 
					him into 
					prison. On the other side, Ammon, Moab, and Edom, together 
					with a 
					number of the coast-cities in "the west country" — notably, 
					Ashdod and 
					Gaza — remained faithful to Assyria. Tidings seem to have 
					reached 
					Sennacherib before the confederates had time to carry their 
					plans into 
					execution. The Assyrian army rapidly advanced. Elulaeus, 
					king of Sidon, 
					fled to Cyprus, and Ethobal was appointed in his place, 
					while the cities 
					along the route of the Assyrian conqueror either submitted 
					to him or were 
					taken. Sennacherib next advanced against Ascalon, and took 
					it. Zidka, its 
					king, and the royal family, were transported into Assyria; 
					Sarludari, the 
					son of the previous king, was appointed in his place; the 
					whole country 
					overrun and, like Sidon, made tributary. It was probably on 
					his march from 
					Acco to Ascalon — perhaps from Jaffa — that Sennacherib 
					detached a 
					
					
					
					
					
					corps into Judah, which took all the "fenced cities" thereof 
					(comp. 2 Kings 
					18:13). The Assyrian inscriptions speak of the capture of 
					forty-six 
					fortified towns and of "innumerable castles and small 
					places," of the 
					transportation of 200, 150 of their captive inhabitants, men 
					and women; of 
					the taking of immense booty, and the annexation — probably 
					only 
					nominal, and, in any case, temporary — of the conquered 
					districts to the 
					domains of the small potentates on the sea-board, friendly 
					to Assyria. It is 
					to this expedition that Isaiah 10:28-34 refers, as indeed 
					the whole 
					prophecy in the tenth chapter of Isaiah applies to the war 
					of Sennacherib 
					against Judah. 8 
      
					Beyond Ascalon it was scarcely safe for Sennacherib to 
					advance much 
					further. The Egypto-Ethiopian army was expected in front; 
					behind him, 
					yet unconquered, was Ekron, and on his flank the strong 
					fortress of 
					Jerusalem, with the whole flower of the Judaean army and the 
					hired 
					auxiliaries to whom the Assyrian monuments refer. It was 
					therefore a wise 
					strategic movement on the part of Sennacherib to turn aside 
					and lay siege 
					to Lachish, the modern Umm Lakis. 9 It was still a 
					continuation of his 
					advance in the direction of Egypt, although a departure from 
					the straight 
					road to it, and it would oblige the Egyptian army to make a
					
					disadvantageous digression inland, thus removing it from the 
					main basis of 
					its operations. But in Lachish, Sennacherib also held a 
					strong position both 
					against Ekron and Jerusalem, the latter being at the apex of 
					an isosceles 
					triangle, of which Ekron and Lachish form the extremities of 
					the base. Thus 
					he would be able to turn upon either one or the other line 
					converging upon 
					Lachish, or else to move rapidly upon Gaza. On the other 
					hand, Hezekiah, 
					seeing the success of the Assyrian advance, and perhaps 
					despairing of a 
					timely approach of the Egyptian army, sought to make his 
					peace with 
					Sennacherib, and sent to Lachish the embassy and tribute of 
					which we read 
					in 2 Kings 18:14-16. It was, no doubt, on this occasion also 
					that Hezekiah 
					set at liberty the captive king of Ekron, according to the 
					Assyrian records, 
					and sent him to Sennacherib. 
      
					After this point the Assyrian inscriptions purposely become 
					confused, 
					and mix up a series of different events, with the evident 
					intention of 
					conveying a false impression and concealing the virtual, if 
					not the actual, 
					defeat of Sennacherib. As we infer from a comparison of the 
					Assyrian 
					account with the Biblical record, Sennacherib, who by that 
					time must have 
					
					
					
					
					
					been aware of the advance of an Egyptian army, detached a 
					large division 
					("a great host") against Jerusalem, which, however, held out 
					alike against 
					the power and the threats of the Assyrian leaders (2 Kings 
					18:17-19:7). 
					Meantime the Egyptian host was approaching, and the Assyrian 
					leaders 
					returned, and found Sennacherib in Libnah, somewhere east of 
					Lachish and 
					north of Eleutheropolis. This probably before the battle 
					which Sennacherib 
					fought with the Egyptians at Altaku, on a parallel line 
					between Jerusalem 
					and Ekron. This indicates a further retreat of Sennacherib 
					with his army. In 
					much vainglorious language the Assyrian monarch claims a 
					victory; but 
					from the wording of the account, it is evident that the 
					victory, if such it 
					was, could only have been nominal, and was a real defeat. 
					Instead, 
					therefore, of turning upon Jerusalem, the Assyrians advanced 
					against 
					Ekron and took it, having already previously failed in their 
					attempt to 
					obtain the surrender of Jerusalem by a second message full 
					of boastful and 
					blasphemous threats (comp. 2 Kings 19:9-34). Then followed 
					the 
					destruction of the Assyrian host (ver. 35), and 
					Sennacherib's return to 
					Nineveh (ver. 36). On the Assyrian monuments nothing is said 
					of these 
					disastrous events, while Sennacherib boasts that he had shut 
					up Hezekiah 
					in his capital "as a bird in a cage," and the deputation and 
					the tribute sent 
					to Lachish are represented as if Hezekiah had dispatched 
					them to Nineveh, 
					implying a triumph of Assyrian arms and the final submission 
					of Judah. 
					The real course of events is, however, perfectly clear, and 
					the accuracy of 
					the Biblical account of Sennacherib's ignominious failure 
					before Jerusalem 
					and of his final retreat has been universally admitted. 
      
					With these facts before us, we turn to the "prophetic" 
					narrative of them, in 
					their spiritual import on the theocracy. As regards the 
					history which we 
					have been hitherto reading from the Assyrian monuments, 
					10 
					the account in 
					2 Kings 18:13-19. keeps so parallel with what is written in 
					Isaiah 36, 37, 
					as similarly that in 2 Kings 20, with Isaiah 38 and 39 (with 
					the exception 
					of Hezekiah' s hymn of praise, Isaiah 38:9-20), that a 
					connection between 
					the two is apparent. Whether either of them, and which, was 
					derived from 
					the other, 11 are questions which have been differently 
					answered by critics. 
					Probably — for we are dealing in great measure with 
					conjectures — both 
					look back upon a common original, which, in the Book of 
					Kings and in the 
					prophecies of Isaiah, is presented respectively in a manner 
					accordant with 
					the spirit and object of each of those works.
					12 It is 
					another question 
					
					
					
					
					
					whether this original account "in the Book of the Kings of 
					Judah and 
					Israel" was not written by the prophet Isaiah himself, as 
					seems indicated 
					
					
					
					in 2 Chronicles 32:32 13 In any case, the narrative in the 
					Book of 
					Chronicles, which, in accordance with its general spirit, so 
					largely dwells 
					on the Temple reformation of Hezekiah, seems an abbreviated 
					summary of 
					the two other accounts, although containing some notable 
					peculiarities of 
					its own. 14 
      
					The Biblical narrative opens with a brief reference to the 
					first part of the 
					campaign, when Sennacherib detached a corps which laid waste 
					Judah and 
					took the principal towns along the route 
					15 (2 Kings 18:13; 
					Isaiah 36:1). In 
					2 Chronicles 32:1-8, the various preparations are also 
					noticed 16 which 
					Hezekiah had made, with advice of "his princes and mighty 
					men," when he 
					felt certain of the danger threatening Jerusalem. First 
					among them was the 
					cutting off of the water-supply for a besieging army. To the 
					west of 
					Jerusalem runs from north to south the valley of Gihon. The 
					rain-water 
					and that coming from the hills around was stored in two 
					pools, the upper 
					(Isaiah 22: 11 — the modern Birket Mamilla), and the lower 
					(Isaiah 22:9 — 
					the modern Pool of the Patriarch 17 ), which were connected 
					by an open 
					conduit. As the upper pool lay outside the city walls} and 
					would supply 
					the wants of a besieging army, Hezekiah covered it in, and 
					by an aqueduct 
					brought its waters into a large reservoir or "lake," 
					"between the two walls" 
					of the upper and the lower city (Isaiah 22: 11; comp. 2 
					Kings 20:20; 2 
					Chronicles 32:30). But some writers conjecture 
					18 that in 
					ancient times 
					(although not at present) there may have been a spring or 
					brook near the 
					upper port, which Hezekiah also covered in, diverting its 
					waters into the 
					city 19 (2 Chronicles 32:30). Further, he repaired all the 
					walls that were 
					broken down, "and raised (heightened) upon it (the) towers," 
					20 and 
					repaired (built?) "the other wall without" — probably that 
					which inclosed 
					the lower city — as well as "Millo, in the city of David," 
					probably a 
					strong tower with fortified buildings at the western side of 
					the Tyropoeon, 
					or Valley of Cheesemongers. Similarly, arms of defense were 
					prepared and 
					officers appointed. Best of all, he gathered his men and 
					captains, and 
					encouraged them with the chief of all comforts, the 
					assurance that Another, 
					greater and stronger than all the might of Assyria, was with 
					them, not "an 
					arm of flesh," but Jehovah their God, to help them and to 
					fight their 
					battles. 
					
					
					
					
      
					When from this account we turn to the prophetic narrative in 
					Isaiah 22, we 
					feel that it had not been always so (ver. 11), but that 
					through the 
					admonitions of the prophet, what had been at first 
					confidence in the 
					strength of their defenses, became transformed into trust in 
					the living God. 
					Indeed, the prophet could not have sympathized with the 
					whole previous 
					policy of Hezekiah, which led up to the humiliating embassy 
					to Lachish. 
					But now he could bring them the assurance of Divine 
					deliverance in that 
					mood of spiritual repentance which was the outcome of his 
					ministrations, 
					and which appeared most fully during the siege of Jerusalem, 
					and at the 
					later summons for its surrender. We shall have to revert to 
					this when 
					telling of Hezekiah' s bearing towards the ambassadors of Merodach- 
					Baladan, who visited the Jewish capital before these events, 
					probably 
					some time before the commencement of this campaign. 
      
					The second event recorded in Scripture is the embassy of 
					Hezekiah to 
					Lachish, and the tribute there imposed upon him of "three 
					hundred talents 
					of silver and thirty talents of gold" (2 Kings 18:14-16). 
					The impost, 
					although not greatly differing from that which Menahem had 
					to pay to 
					Tiglath-pileser (2 Kings 15:19), was heavy, amounting in 
					gold to 200,000 
					pounds, and in silver to 110,000 pounds 
					21 and it 
					necessitated the surrender 
					of all the treasures in the Temple and the palace. It is 
					remarkable that 
					
					
					
					neither in the prophecy of Isaiah nor in the Book of 
					Chronicles 22 do we 
					find any reference to the embassy of Hezekiah nor to the 
					tribute which he 
					sent. Probably both were viewed as the sequence of a course 
					disapproved, 
					which, however, had no real bearing on the events that 
					followed, and which 
					only because of their spiritual import, came within range of 
					the object of 
					the narrative. 
      
					The third event recorded in Holy Scripture is the detachment 
					of the "great 
					host" against Jerusalem, with all the events connected with 
					it. Of this we 
					have an account alike in the Book of Kings, in that of 
					Chronicles, and in 
					the prophecies of Isaiah. 23 The lead of the Assyrian 
					expedition and the 
					conduct of negotiations were entrusted to the "Tartan," 
					which was the 
					official title of the Assyrian commander-in-chief (comp. 
					Isaiah 20:1), "the Rabh- Saris" — probably the translation of an Assyrian 
					official title, which 
					in Hebrew means "chief of the eunuchs" — and "the 
					Rebh-Shakeh," 
					apparently a Hebrew adaptation of Rab-sak, the Assyrian 
					title of "chief 
					captain," which repeatedly occurs on the monuments, and 
					probably 
					
					
					
					
					
					represents the second in command, or chief of the staff 
					24 
					We mark that 
					appropriately the spokesman in summoning the city to 
					surrender was not 
					the general-in-chief, nor the chief eunuch (possibly the 
					political officer), 
					but the Rabh-Shakeh, or second in command. 
      
					The wisdom of Hezekiah's preparations, especially in 
					depriving the 
					Assyrians of the water supply, was soon apparent. For it was 
					at that very 
					place — the north-western angle of the city — that the 
					strength of the 
					Assyrian attack was delivered, and it was here, "by the 
					conduit of the 
					upper pool, which is in the highway of the fuller's field," 
					that the three 
					Assyrian leaders met the representatives of King Hezekiah, 
					whom they 
					had summoned to conference. Even had their spiritual 
					preparation been 
					less decisive, all must have felt there was something 
					specially significant in 
					the fact that a speech, such as that which the Rabh-Shakeh 
					made, should 
					have been delivered on the very spot where Isaiah had 
					uttered God's 
					message to Ahaz (Isaiah 7:3). It is impossible to determine 
					at what period 
					of the siege the conference between the two parties took 
					place. But it was 
					probably not long after the arrival of the besieging army. 
					For, although the 
					Rabh-Shakeh refers to the horrors of a protracted siege (2 
					Kings 18:27), his 
					coarse language sounds rather like a threat of future than 
					an indication of 
					present straits. Besides, Jerusalem may have been shut up 
					for some time 
					before the actual siege, while in any case that free 
					communication with the 
					country must have been interrupted which was necessary for 
					the supply 
					of provisions to the capital. On the other hand, it was of 
					the utmost 
					importance to the Assyrians to gain possession of Jerusalem 
					without 
					delay, and so to set the besieging army free to operate 
					against Egypt. Of 
					two among the three representatives of Hezekiah — no doubt 
					mentioned 
					in the order of their rank (2 Kings 18:18) — we have some 
					characteristic 
					notices in Isaiah 22:15-22. From these we are led to 
					conjecture that Shebna, "the scribe," or secretary — probably the chief 
					private adviser of 
					the king, 25 and who may possibly have been of Syrian descent
					26 — 
					was a 
					man actuated by ambition and selfish motives, to whom the 
					mistaken 
					policy of Hezekiah's anti- Assyrian alliance may have been 
					due. On the 
					other hand, we derive a correspondingly high impression 
					concerning the 
					first and chief representative of the king, Eliakim, the son 
					of Hilkiah. He 
					seems to have succeeded Shebna (comp. Isaiah 22:20, 21) in 
					the office of 
					major domo, which may be compared to that of the 
					modern chef du 
					
					
					
					
					
					cabinet, and as such probably stood nearest to the 
					king. Possibly this 
					transference of office may have been consequent on a change 
					of political 
					and religious views. Of Joab, the son of Asaph, the recorder 
					or analyst, we 
					know not anything farther, nor does he appear afterwards 
					among them 
					whom Hezekiah sent to the prophet Isaiah (2 Kings 19:1; 
					Isaiah 37:2). His 
					attendance on the present occasion was probably in his 
					capacity of 
					secretary of state. 
      
					Such were the representatives on the one side and the other, 
					who on that 
					eventful day met to set it clearly before Israel and before 
					all men with 
					whom was the might: whether with the arm of flesh, or with 
					Jehovah; and 
					whether or not the people had been right in resting 
					themselves upon the 
					words of Hezekiah, king of Judah (2 Chronicles 32:8). 
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