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Text -- 2 Kings 20:7 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
20:7 Isaiah ordered, “Get a fig cake.” So they did as he ordered and placed it on the ulcerated sore, and he recovered.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Isaiah a son of Amoz; a prophet active in Judah from about 740 to 701 B.C.,son of Amoz; a major prophet in the time of Hezekiah


Dictionary Themes and Topics: TEXT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | Prayer | KINGS, BOOKS OF | JUDAH, KINGDOM OF | Israel | Isaiah | ISRAEL, HISTORY OF, 3 | ISAIAH, 1-7 | Hezekiah | HOSEA | HEZEKIAH (2) | HEAL | Fig | Faith | FOOD | FIG, FIG-TREE | Disease | DIAL OF AHAZ | Boil | Blessing | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Clarke: 2Ki 20:7 - -- Take a lump of figs - and laid it on the boil - We cannot exactly say in what Hezekiah’ s malady consisted. שחין shechin signifies any i...

Take a lump of figs - and laid it on the boil - We cannot exactly say in what Hezekiah’ s malady consisted. שחין shechin signifies any inflammatory tumour, boil, abscess, etc. The versions translate it sore, wound, and such like. Some think it was a pleurisy; others, that it was the plague; others, the elephantiasis; and others, that it was a quinsey. A poultice of figs might be very proper to maturate a boil, or to discuss any obstinate inflammatory swelling. This Pliny remarks, Omnibus quae maturanda ant discutienda sunt imponuntur . But we cannot pronounce on the propriety of the application, unless we were certain of the nature of the malady. This, however was the natural means which God chose to bless to the recovery of Hezekiah’ s health; and without this interposition he must have died.

TSK: 2Ki 20:7 - -- Take a lump : 2Ki 2:20-22, 2Ki 4:41; Isa 38:21 the boil : The word shechin , from the Arabic sachana , to be hot, signifies an inflammatory tumour...

Take a lump : 2Ki 2:20-22, 2Ki 4:41; Isa 38:21

the boil : The word shechin , from the Arabic sachana , to be hot, signifies an inflammatory tumour, or burning boil; and some think that Hezekiah’ s malady was a pleurisy; others, that it was the plague; and others, the elephantiasis, a species of leprosy, as one of the Hexapla versions renders in Job 2:7. A poultice of figs might be very proper to maturate a boil, or dismiss any obstinate inflammatory swelling; but we need not discuss its propriety in this case, because it was as much the means which God chose to bless for his recovery, as the clay which Christ moistened to anoint the eyes of the blind man; for in both cases, without Divine interposition the cure could not have been effected.

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Ki 20:7 - -- A lump of figs - The usual remedy in the East, even at the present day, for ordinary boils. But such a remedy would not naturally cure the dang...

A lump of figs - The usual remedy in the East, even at the present day, for ordinary boils. But such a remedy would not naturally cure the dangerous tumor or carbuncle from which Hezekiah suffered. Thus the means used in this miracle were means having a tendency toward the result performed by them, but insufficient of themselves to produce that result (compare 2Ki 4:34 note).

Poole: 2Ki 20:7 - -- Take a lump of figs: though the deliverance was certainly promised, yet means must be used, and those suitable; for this hath naturally a power of ri...

Take a lump of figs: though the deliverance was certainly promised, yet means must be used, and those suitable; for this hath naturally a power of ripening and softening boils or sores, though that power was altogether insufficient to produce so sudden and so complete a cure. The boil seems to have been a plague-sore.

Haydock: 2Ki 20:7 - -- Figs; dried. They are very serviceable in various disorders of the throat, to mullify, &c. (Pliny, [Natural History?] xxiii. 3.) (Aldrov. ii.) ---...

Figs; dried. They are very serviceable in various disorders of the throat, to mullify, &c. (Pliny, [Natural History?] xxiii. 3.) (Aldrov. ii.) ---

St. Jerome (in Isaias xxxviii.) acknowledges that they might help to removed the disorder. Grotius is of a contrary opinion; (Calmet) and this would enhance the miracle. See Vales. xxxix. (Menochius) ---

At any rate, the discovery of this remedy to the prophet, and its sudden efficacy, were miraculous. (Calmet)

Gill: 2Ki 20:7 - -- And Isaiah said, take a lump of figs,.... Not moist figs, but a cake of dried figs, as the word used signifies, and so the less likely to have any eff...

And Isaiah said, take a lump of figs,.... Not moist figs, but a cake of dried figs, as the word used signifies, and so the less likely to have any effect in curing the boil:

and they took, and laid it on the boil, and he recovered; made a plaster of it, and laid it on the ulcer, and it was healed. Physicians observe u, that as such like inflammations consist in a painful extension of the fibres by the hinderance of the circulation of the blood, through the extreme little arteries, which may be mitigated, or dissipated, or ripened, by such things as are emollient and loosening, so consequently by figs; and, in a time of pestilence, figs beaten together with butter and treacle have been applied to plague of boils with great success; yet these figs being only a cake of dry figs, and, the boil not only malignant, but deadly, and the cure so suddenly performed, show that this was done not in a natural, but in a supernatural way, though means were directed to be made use of.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Ki 20:7 Heb “and he lived.”

Geneva Bible: 2Ki 20:7 And Isaiah said, Take a ( f ) lump of figs. And they took and laid [it] on the boil, and he recovered. ( f ) He declares that though God can heal wit...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Ki 20:1-21 - --1 Hezekiah, having received a message of death, by prayer has his life lengthened.8 The sun goes ten degrees backward for a sign of that promise.12 Be...

MHCC: 2Ki 20:1-11 - --Hezekiah was sick unto death, in the same year in which the king of Assyria besieged Jerusalem. A warning to prepare for death was brought to Hezekiah...

Matthew Henry: 2Ki 20:1-11 - -- The historian, having shown us blaspheming Sennacherib destroyed in the midst of the prospects of life, here shows us praying Hezekiah delivered in ...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 20:1-11 - -- Hezekiah's Illness and Recovery. - Compare the parallel account in Isa 38 with Hezekiah's psalm of thanksgiving for his recovery (Isa 38:9-20 of Isa...

Constable: 2Ki 18:1--25:30 - --III. THE SURVIVING KINGDOM chs. 18--25 In this third major section of 1 and 2 Kings the writer showed that the c...

Constable: 2Ki 18:1--20:21 - --A. Hezekiah's Good Reign chs. 18-20 The writer of Kings devoted more attention to Hezekiah than to any H...

Constable: 2Ki 20:1-11 - --6. Hezekiah's illness and recovery 20:1-11 "In those days" (v. 1) refers to the year Sennacherib...

Guzik: 2Ki 20:1-21 - --2 Kings 20 - God Extends Hezekiah's Life A. Hezekiah's recovery. 1. (1) Isaiah's announcement to Hezekiah. In those days Hezekiah was sick and nea...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) THE FIRST AND SECOND BOOKS OF KINGS, in the ancient copies of the Hebrew Bible, constitute one book. Various titles have been given them; in the Septu...

JFB: 2 Kings (Outline) MOAB REBELS. (2Ki 1:1) AHAZIAH'S JUDGMENT BY ELIJAH. (2Ki 1:2-8) ELIJAH BRINGS FIRE FROM HEAVEN ON AHAZIAH'S MESSENGERS. (2Ki 1:9-16) AHAZIAH DIES, A...

TSK: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) The events detailed in these books (Kings) are highly interesting and important. The account of the wisdom, magnificence, and extended commerce of So...

TSK: 2 Kings 20 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Ki 20:1, Hezekiah, having received a message of death, by prayer has his life lengthened; 2Ki 20:8, The sun goes ten degrees backward fo...

Poole: 2 Kings 20 (Chapter Introduction) KINGS CHAPTER 20 Hezekiah receiving a message of death, by prayer hath his life lengthened; for a sign the sun goeth backward, 2Ki 20:1-11 . The ki...

MHCC: 2 Kings 20 (Chapter Introduction) (2Ki 20:1-11) Hezekiah's sickness, His recovery in answer to prayer. (2Ki 20:12-21) Hezekiah shows his treasures to the ambassadors from Babylon, His...

Matthew Henry: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Book of Kings This second book of the Kings (which the Septuagint, numbering from Samuel, ca...

Matthew Henry: 2 Kings 20 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. Hezekiah's sickness, and his recovery from that, in answer to prayer, in performance of a promise, in the use of means...

Constable: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) Introduction Second Kings continues the narrative begun in 1 Kings. It opens with the translation of godly Elijah to hea...

Constable: 2 Kings (Outline) Outline (Continued from notes on 1 Kings) 3. Ahaziah's evil reign in Israel -1 Kings 22:51-2...

Constable: 2 Kings 2 Kings Bibliography Ackroyd, Peter R. "An Interpretation of the Babylonian Exile: A Study of 2 Kings 20, Isaia...

Haydock: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) THE FOURTH BOOK OF KINGS. INTRODUCTION. This Book brings us to the conclusion of the kingdom of Israel, (chap. xvii.) and to the captivity of ...

Gill: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 KINGS This, and the preceding book, are properly but one book divided into two parts, because of the size of it, as the book of S...

Gill: 2 Kings 20 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 KINGS 20 In this chapter is an account of Hezekiah's sickness, and of the means of his recovery, and of the sign given of it, 2Ki...

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