_SENNACHERIB INVADETH JUDAH. RABSHAKEH, SENT BY SENNACHERIB, BY
BLASPHEMOUS PERSUASIONS SOLICITETH THE PEOPLE TO REVOLT: HIS WORDS ARE
TOLD TO HEZEKIAH._
_Before Christ 714._
IN this and the three following Chapter s is contained the HISTORICAL
part of the book of Isaiah, relating a memorable tra... [ Continue Reading ]
NOW IT CAME TO PASS— This famous expedition happened in the year of
the world 4001, seven hundred and thirteen years before Christ.
Concerning Sennacherib, see Univ. Hist. vol. 2: p. 79 vol. iv. 162,
&c. _All the defenced cities,_ must mean all those which were in the
way; for it is plain that he ha... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE KING OF ASSYRIA SENT RABSHAKEH— The prophet omits what is
related in 2 Kings 18:14, that Hezekiah sent ambassadors to
Sennacherib at Lachish. What is here related probably happened after
Sennacherib returned from his Egyptian expedition. See Joseph. Antiq.
book 10: chap. 1: _Rabshakeh_ is th... [ Continue Reading ]
I SAY, &C.— _Thou hast said,_ (_but they are vain words,_) _I have
counsel and strength sufficient for the war._ Lowth.... [ Continue Reading ]
LO, THOU TRUSTETH IN THE STAFF OF THIS BROKEN REED— This comparison
is excellently adapted to denote an ally, who is not only weak and
unable to help, but also dangerous to those who rely upon him for
succour; and his representing the power of Egypt to be as brittle as
the reeds growing upon the ban... [ Continue Reading ]
BUT IF THOU SAY, &C.— It appears from this passage, what deep root
idolatry had taken in the time of Ahaz, when Hezekiah, the great
reformer of religion, seemed to have instituted a new one in the eyes
of foreigners and strangers. _Before this altar,_ means before the
altar of the Lord in Jerusalem.... [ Continue Reading ]
AND AM I NOW COME UP WITHOUT THE LORD— It is plain from the seventh
verse, that Rabshakeh, by _the Lord,_ meant that god whom himself or
his master the king of Assyria adored, and not the Jehovah of the
Jews; he boasts therefore that he did not come without the permission
of this god: His prophets a... [ Continue Reading ]
BUT RABSHAKEH SAID, &C.— This verse would be clearer, if read thus,
_Hath thy master sent me to my master and to thee_ [only] _to speak
these words? Hath he not sent me also to the men who sit upon the
wall,_ &c. The meaning is, that they may be reduced to such extremity
by a close and long siege, a... [ Continue Reading ]
MAKE AN AGREEMENT WITH ME.— _Make peace with me._ Vitringa. The full
meaning of the next phrase, _come out to me,_ is, _rejoice in your
liberty._ He invites the people, now shut up through fear within the
walls of Jerusalem, to make a treaty of peace with him, and thus to
enjoy their liberty without... [ Continue Reading ]
AND OF CORN AND WINE, &C.— It is added in 2 Kings 18:32 _a land of
oil-olive and of honey._ It is still usual among the Arabs to dip
their bread in oil of olives. Maillet tells us, that the poor people
of Egypt use, out of necessity, a sort of oil drawn from a plant
called _cirica,_ and that the Jew... [ Continue Reading ]
BEWARE, LEST HEZEKIAH PERSUADE— _Let not Hezekiah seduce you with
words of this kind._ Vitringa. Agreeably to the opinion of all the
Pagan nations, Rabshakeh considers and speaks of Jehovah as the
tutelary deity of the Jews: Now, as their tutelary deities had not
delivered the cities and nations her... [ Continue Reading ]
WITH THEIR CLOTHES RENT— In token of their grief and astonishment,
both for the blasphemy of Rabshakeh, and on account of their dread of
the approaching calamity. It was usual not only in cases of grief, but
also of blasphemy, to rend the clothes: a custom doubtless of great
antiquity, and very suit... [ Continue Reading ]