| HEZEKIAH, (THIRTEENTH) KING OF 
					JUDAH Date of Hezekiah's 
					Sickness — Announcement of his Death — The Prayer of 
					Hezekiah — The Divine Answer — Meaning and Lessons of it. — 
					The Embassy of Merodach-baladan and its Object — Reception 
					of the Envoys by Hezekiah — The Prophet and the King — 
					Prophecy of Babylon. 
					 (2 KINGS 20; ISAIAH. 38; 
					39) 
					     The narrative of Hezekiah's sickness and of the embassy 
					of Merodach- 
					baladan, which in an abbreviated form is also given in the 
					Book of Isaiah 1 
					(38:1-8, 21, 22; 39) must, on literary grounds 
					2 and from 
					its position in this 
					history, be regarded as an appendix similar to that added to 
					the account of 
					David's reign in the closing chapters of the Second Book of 
					Samuel. 3 
					Whether or not it was taken from a special and distinct 
					record, or else 
					inserted in this place in order not to break the continuity 
					of a narrative 
					which had a spiritual meaning and object of its own, it is 
					certain that the 
					events which it records could not have been posterior to the 
					final departure 
					of Sennacherib from the soil of Palestine. 
					4 After that 
					there could not have 
					been occasion for such anxiety in reference to the king of 
					Assyria as to be 
					met by the Divine promise in 2 Kings 20:6; nor could 
					Hezekiah have 
					shown such treasures to the ambassadors of Merodach-baladan, 
					since he 
					had previously stripped himself of them to Sennacherib 
					5 (2 
					Kings 18:14- 
					16), nor yet from what we know of the history of Merodach-baladan could 
					he then have sent such an embassy with the manifest purpose 
					of an 
					alliance against Assyria, nor, finally, would Hezekiah then 
					have encouraged 
					such overtures. 
      
					In these circumstances it is a question of historical 
					interest, rather than of 
					practical importance, 6 whether the sickness of Hezekiah or 
					rather the 
					embassy of Merodach-baladan had been during the reign of 
					Sargon or in 
					that of Sennacherib, whether they had preceded the campaign 
					of the former 
					in Palestine, or that of the latter. 7 The text itself seems 
					to point to the 
					period immediately before the invasion of Sennacherib, since 
					in the time of 
					
					
					
					
					
					Sargon Jerusalem was not in such danger as is indicated in 
					the reassuring 
					promise given concerning it (ver. 6). But this is not all. 
					On any theory, the 
					numeral "fifteen" years in the promised addition to the 
					spared life of 
					Hezekiah (ver. 6), must have crept into the text by some 
					mistake. 
					Admittedly, it would not synchronize with the period of 
					Sennacherib's 
					campaign; while on the other hand it is certain that Sargon 
					came into 
					hostile contact with Hezekiah in the second year of his 
					reign 8 (that after 
					the taking of Samaria), that is, in the sixth or seventh, 
					scarcely in the 
					eighth, year of Hezekiah' s reign (2 Kings 18:10). But 
					fifteen years added 
					to this would give at most twenty-two or twenty-three for 
					the reign of 
					Hezekiah, whereas we know that it lasted twenty-nine years 
					(2 Kings 
					18:2) If, therefore, it is impossible to date the illness of 
					Hezekiah and the 
					embassy in the time of Sargon, we have to assign these 
					events to the 
					period immediately preceding the campaign of Sennacherib in 
					Palestine. It 
					may have been that the number "fifteen," as that of the 
					years added to the 
					life of Hezekiah, had originally been a marginal remark. 
					9 
					With whomsoever 
					it originated or however it passed into the text, the 
					copyist, annotator, or 
					editor, who regarded the fourteenth year of Hezekiah as that 
					of 
					Sennacherib's invasion (2 Kings 18:13), would naturally 
					deduct this 
					number from twenty-nine, the total of the years of Hezekiah' 
					s reign, and 
					so arrive at the number fifteen as that of the years added 
					to the king's life. 
					But, on the other hand, this also implies that in the view 
					of this early 
					copyist, annotator, or editor, the sickness of Hezekiah and 
					the embassy of Merodach-baladan had immediately preceded the campaign of 
					Sennacherib. 
      
					The narrative itself offers no special difficulties. As 
					Hezekiah lay sick 10 
					the prophet Isaiah was directed to go and bid him set his 
					house in order (2 
					Samuel 17:23), since his illness would terminate fatally. 
					The announcement 
					was received by the king with the utmost alarm and grief. We 
					have here to 
					remember the less clear views entertained under the Old 
					Testament, before 
					the Lord by His coming and Resurrection had "brought life 
					and 
					immortality to light through the Gospel." Indeed, our own 
					experience 
					teaches the gradual unfolding of truth with our growing 
					capacity for its 
					perception. And any anticipation of fullest truth would 
					neither have been 
					in accordance with the character of the preparatory 
					dispensation and the 
					training under it, nor have done honor to the new Revelation 
					which was to 
					follow. Indeed, even now many of us learn slowly the joy of 
					"departing," 
					
					
					
					
					
					nor yet this without constant reference to that which is 
					joined to it, the 
					presence with the Lord, of which they of old knew not. Thus 
					it was 
					neither fatalism nor resignation to the inevitable, but 
					faith, when they laid 
					them down to sleep content with the assurance that sleeping 
					or waking 
					they were still with the Lord, and that it was well in this 
					also to leave 
					themselves implicitly in the hands of the covenant-keeping 
					God. And so 
					we can from every point of view understand it, that the 
					Psalmist should 
					have prayed, "O my God, take me not away in the midst of my 
					days" 
					(Psalm 102:24), and that Hezekiah "turned his face to the 
					wall 11 and 
					prayed. . .and wept with great weeping." 
      
					For, assuredly, this being taken away in the midst of his 
					days and of his 
					work, would seem to him not only a mark of God's disfavor, 
					but actual 
					punishment. It is from this point of view, rather than as 
					the expression of 
					self-righteousness, that we regard the language of Hezekiah' 
					s plea. And 
					apart from this there was not anything blameworthy either in 
					the wish that 
					his life should be spared, or in the prayer for it, although 
					here also we 
					cannot but mark the lower stand-point of those under the Old
					
					Testament. 12 The prayer of Hezekiah, as for the present we 
					simply note, 
					was heard. Before Isaiah had passed "the middle city" 
					13 he 
					was Divinely 
					directed to return to the king with the message that his 
					request was 
					granted, and to add to the promise of lengthened days the 
					assurance of the 
					safety of the kingdom of David and of Jerusalem 
					14 in 
					anticipation of those 
					dangers which must have been foreseen as threatening the 
					near future. 
      
					Thus far all had been as might have been looked for in the 
					course of this 
					history. But what followed suggests questions of the deepest 
					importance. 
					Isaiah had not only promised Divine healing, but that within 
					the briefest 
					period 15 Hezekiah should once more go up to the Temple — no 
					doubt to 
					return thanks. Yet he conjoined with this miraculous help 
					the application 
					of a common remedy, when he directed that a lump of figs 
					should be laid 
					on the boil. And as if still further to point the contrast, 
					Hezekiah asked for 
					"a sign" of the promise, and the prophet not only gave it, 
					but allowed him 
					a choice in that which from any point of view implied direct 
					Divine 
					interposition. For evidently Hezekiah asked for such "a 
					sign" as would be 
					a pledge to him of God's direct intervention on his behalf, 
					while, on the 
					other hand, the alternative proposed to him, that the shadow 
					on the steps 
					of the sun-clock of Ahaz, 16 might either move forwards or 
					backwards, 
					
					
					
					
					
					forbids any natural explanation of it, such as that of a 
					solar eclipse which 
					Isaiah had either naturally or supernaturally foreknown. 
					17 
					Hezekiah chose 
					what to him seemed the more difficult, or rather the more 
					inconceivable 
					alternative — that of the shadow receding ten steps. And in 
					answer to 
					Isaiah's prayer, the "sign" desired was actually given. 
      
					It is not difficult to perceive the symbolical significance 
					of this sign. As 
					Isaiah had been commissioned to offer to Ahaz "a sign" of 
					the promised 
					deliverance, and to leave him the choice of it, "either in 
					the depth or in the 
					height above" (Isaiah 7:1 1), so here a similar alternative 
					was presented to 
					Hezekiah. As Ahaz in his trust in natural means and his 
					distrust of 
					Jehovah had refused, so Hezekiah in his distrust of natural 
					means and trust 
					of Jehovah asked for a sign. And lastly, even as Hezekiah 
					had feared that 
					his life-day would have ended in its mid-day hour, so now, 
					when it was to 
					be lengthened, did the falling shadow climb up again the ten 
					steps to its 
					mid-day mark. 
      
					But there are also deeper lessons to be learnt from this 
					history. The change 
					in the announcement of what was to befall Hezekiah, in 
					answer to his 
					prayer, is of eternal meaning. It encourages us "always to 
					pray" — not 
					excluding from the range of our petitions what are commonly 
					called "things 
					temporal." And yet the very idea of prayer also excludes any 
					thought of 
					the absolute certainty of such answer as had been primarily 
					contemplated 
					in the prayer. For prayer and its answer are not 
					mechanically, they are 
					morally connected, just as between Isaiah's promised sign 
					and its 
					bestowal, the prayer of the prophet intervened (2 Kings 
					20:11). As miracle 
					is not magic, so prayer is not necessitarianism; and on 
					looking back upon 
					our lives we have to thank God as often for prayers 
					unanswered as for 
					prayers answered. 
      
					Yet another lesson connected with the change in the message 
					which Isaiah 
					was to bring to Hezekiah has been already noted by Jerome. 
					There is 
					widest bearing in this remark of his (on Ezekiel 33), that 
					it does not 
					necessarily follow because a prophet predicts an event that 
					what he had 
					predicted should happen. "For," as he adds, the prophet "did 
					not predict 
					in order that it might happen, but lest it should happen." 
					And the 
					immutability of God's counsels is not that of fatalism, but 
					depends on the 
					continuance of the circumstances which had determined them.
					
					
					
					
					
      
					This may help us to understand another and in some respects 
					more 
					difficult question. Evidently alike the announcement of 
					Hezekiah's 
					untimely death and its revocation were determined by his 
					relation towards 
					God. This would in turn have its important bearing upon the 
					conduct of 
					the king in the coming Assyrian war, which concerned not 
					only Hezekiah 
					personally, but the whole Davidic line and the fate of Judah 
					itself. But the 
					lessons taught the king first by his danger and then by his 
					restoration were 
					precisely those which Hezekiah needed to learn if, obedient 
					to the 
					admonitions of Isaiah, and believing the promise of the 
					Lord, he was 
					consistently to carry out the will of Jehovah amidst the 
					temptations and 
					difficulties of the Assyrian invasion. This, not only 
					because he had had 
					experience of the truth of prophetic promise, but because he 
					had learned, 
					as he could not otherwise have been taught, that God 
					answered prayer; 
					that He was merciful and forgiving, and able to turn aside 
					the most 
					threatening danger, even at the extreme moment. In truth, 
					what was 
					afterwards witnessed in the deliverance of Jerusalem was on 
					a large scale 
					the same that Hezekiah himself had experienced in his 
					healing. Thus the 
					lessons of his recovery were intended as spiritual 
					preparation for what 
					was so soon to follow. 
      
					It still remains to refer more particularly to "the sign" 
					itself on the sun- 
					clock of Ahaz. From the circumstance that in the original 
					account in the 
					Book of Kings there is no mention of alteration in the 
					relative position of 
					the sun (as in the poetic quotation in Joshua 10:12, 13), 
					but of a possible 
					descent or ascent of the shadow, 18 and that even this was 
					to be only 
					observable on the step-clock of Ahaz, we infer that, in the 
					view of the 
					writer, "the sign" was local, and hence could not have 
					implied an 
					interference with the regular order of Nature. The 
					Scriptural narrative 
					conveys only that in that particular place something had 
					occurred which 
					made the shadow on the dial to retrograde, although at the 
					same time we 
					can have no hesitation in saying that this something was 
					Divinely caused. 
					What this "something" of a purely local character was, we 
					have not the 
					means of ascertaining. Of the various suggestions most 
					probability 
					attaches to that of an extraordinary refraction of the 
					sun-rays, which has 
					been recorded to have produced similar phenomena in other 
					places. 19 If 
					such Divine intervention be called a miracle, we demur not 
					to the idea nor 
					to the designation — though we prefer that of "a sign." But 
					we add that, in 
					
					
					
					
					
					a modified sense, Divine interpositions as signs to us are 
					not so unfrequent 
					as some people imagine. 
      
					The fame of Hezekiah's healing spread far and wide, with a 
					rapidity not 
					uncommon in the East. It reached a monarch who, especially 
					at that time, 
					was sorely in need of help, Divine or human. Few chapters in 
					history 
					suggest more interesting episodes than that of 
					Merodach-baladan, 20 who 
					contended for the independence and supremacy and for the 
					crown of 
					Babylonia successively with Tiglath-pileser, Sargon, and 
					Sennacherib — 
					and who was by turns successful, vanquished, driven away and 
					restored, 
					and once more a fugitive. This is not the place to give such 
					outline of his 
					history as may be gathered from the notices of Berossus, the 
					Chaldee 21 
					
					
					
					historian, from the canon of Ptolemy, the Bible, and 
					Assyrian 
					inscriptions. 22 Suffice it here, that the date of his 
					embassy to Hezekiah 
					must have coincided with a brief period when at the 
					beginning of 
					Sennacherib's reign he once more occupied the throne of 
					Babylonia for six 
					months. It was only natural that in prospect of his conflict 
					with Assyria 
					he should have sought alliances in every quarter, and that 
					the fame of 
					Hezekiah's miraculous healing, of his great wealth and power 
					— all no 
					doubt exaggerated in Eastern fashion — should have induced 
					him to send 
					an embassy to Jerusalem. A diversion there, a possible 
					confederacy against 
					Assyria in the far west, such as was afterwards really 
					formed, would have 
					been of the greatest use to his cause. Equally natural was 
					it, alike with 
					reference to Assyria and to Hezekiah, that such an intention 
					should not 
					have been avowed, nor perhaps the possibility of an alliance 
					formally 
					discussed, till the ambassadors had been able to judge for 
					themselves of the 
					exact state of matters in Jerusalem. And so they went 
					ostensibly to bring 
					to Hezekiah congratulatory letters on his recovery, and "a 
					present." 23 But 
					all parties including Sennacherib on the one side, and the 
					prophet Isaiah on 
					the other — understood the real object of the embassy. 
      
					All this fully explains the Biblical narrative. It is not 
					necessary to suppose 
					that the question of a treaty against Assyria was actually 
					discussed 
					between Hezekiah and the envoys of Merodach-baladan. Indeed, 
					as this is 
					not stated in Scripture, it seems unlikely that a treaty had 
					been made or 
					even proposed. In any case, it could not have been carried 
					out, since long 
					before it could have been acted upon Merodach-baladan was 
					driven away. 
					On the other hand, it seems equally clear that Hezekiah, 
					however reticent 
					
					
					
					
					
					he may have been, secretly favored the design of the 
					embassy. It was with 
					this view — to give practical evidence of his might — that
					
      
					"Hezekiah hearkened 24 unto them, and shewed them all the 
					house 
      of his precious things, the silver, and the gold, and the spices, and
					
      the precious oil, and the house of his armor, and all that was found
					
      in his treasures; there was nothing in his house, nor in all his 
      dominion, that Hezekiah shewed them not" (2 Kings 20:13). 
      
					It was a disingenuous device when Hezekiah, in answer to the 
					questioning 
					of Isaiah, sought to divert him by a reference to the "far 
					country" whence 
					the ambassadors had come, as if flattering to Jewish 
					national pride, and 
					implying the acknowledged supremacy of Jehovah's power. Such 
					had not 
					been the object of the prophet in asking about the country 
					of these 
					strangers. By eliciting that they had come from Babylon, he 
					would indicate 
					to Hezekiah that his inmost purpose in showing them all his 
					treasures had 
					been read. But to know it was to pronounce the Divine 
					disapprobation of 
					any such alliance against Assyria. This explains the 
					severity of the 
					punishment afterwards denounced upon Hezekiah for an offense 
					which 
					otherwise might have seemed trivial. But this had clearly 
					appeared, that 
					Hezekiah had not learned the lessons which his late danger 
					and God- 
					granted recovery were intended to teach; nor did he learn 
					them otherwise 
					than in the school of extreme anguish, after all his worldly 
					policy had 
					ended in defeat, his land been desolated, and the victorious 
					host of Assyria 
					laid siege to Jerusalem. And this seems to be the meaning of 
					the reference 
					in 2 Chronicles 32:25, 26, to the ungratefulness and the 
					pride of the king 
					after his miraculous recovery, as well as of this other 
					notice (ver. 31), that 
					in the matter of the ambassadors, God had left Hezekiah to 
					himself, to try 
					him, and "know all that was in his heart." 
					25 
      
					But with God there was not any changeableness. As afterwards 
					Isaiah 
					denounced the alliance with Egypt, so now he spoke the 
					Divine judgment 
					on the hoped-for treaty with Babylon. So far from help being 
					derived from 
					such alliance, Israel's future doom and misery would come 
					from Babylon, 
					and the folly of Hezekiah would alike appear and be punished 
					in the exile 
					and servitude of his descendants. Thus in the sequence of 
					God this sowing 
					of disobedience should be followed by a harvest of judgment. 
					Yet for the 
					present would there be "peace and continuance" — till the 
					measure of 
					
					
					
					
					
					iniquity was filled. And Hezekiah acquiesced in the 
					sentence, owning its 
					justice and grateful for its delay. Yet here also we 
					perceive shortcoming. 
					Hezekiah did not reach up to the high level of his father 
					David in 
					circumstances somewhat similar (2 Samuel 24:17), nor was his 
					even the 
					humble absolute submission of Eli of old (1 Samuel 3:18).
					
 26     
					But as throughout this history Isaiah appeared as the true 
					prophet of God 
					by the consistency of his utterance of the Divine Will 
					against all heathen 
					alliances, by his resistance to all worldly policy, however 
					specious, and 
					even by his bearing on the twofold occasion which forms the 
					subject of the 
					present narrative, so did he now rise to the full height of 
					his office. Never 
					before had there been so unmistakable a prediction of the 
					future as when 
					Isaiah in the full height of Assyria's power announced that 
					the world- 
					empire of the future would not belong to it, but to 
					vanquished Babylonia, 
					and that Judah's judgment would not come from their present 
					dreaded 
					enemies, but from those who now had sought their alliance. 
					27 
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