
Text -- 2 Kings 19:1-4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Ki 19:1 - -- _Great men must not think it any disparagement to them, to sympathize with the injured honour of the great God.
_Great men must not think it any disparagement to them, to sympathize with the injured honour of the great God.

Wesley: 2Ki 19:3 - -- We are like a poor travailing woman in great extremity, having no strength left to help herself, and to bring forth her infant into the world. We have...
We are like a poor travailing woman in great extremity, having no strength left to help herself, and to bring forth her infant into the world. We have attempted to deliver ourselves from the Assyrian yoke; and had carried on that work to some maturity, and as we thought, brought it to the birth; but now we have no might to finish. We have begun an happy reformation, and are hindered by this insolent Assyrian, from bringing it to perfection.

Wesley: 2Ki 19:4 - -- For Judah, which is but a remnant, now the ten tribes are gone: for Jerusalem, which is but a remnant, now the defenced cities of Judah are taken.
For Judah, which is but a remnant, now the ten tribes are gone: for Jerusalem, which is but a remnant, now the defenced cities of Judah are taken.
JFB -> 2Ki 19:1-3; 2Ki 19:4
JFB: 2Ki 19:1-3 - -- The rending of his clothes was a mode of expressing horror at the daring blasphemy--the assumption of sackcloth a sign of his mental distress--his ent...
The rending of his clothes was a mode of expressing horror at the daring blasphemy--the assumption of sackcloth a sign of his mental distress--his entrance into the temple to pray the refuge of a pious man in affliction--and the forwarding an account of the Assyrian's speech to Isaiah was to obtain the prophet's counsel and comfort. The expression in which the message was conveyed described, by a strong figure, the desperate condition of the kingdom, together with their own inability to help themselves; and it intimated also a hope, that the blasphemous defiance of Jehovah's power by the impious Assyrian might lead to some direct interposition for the vindication of His honor and supremacy to all heathen gods.

JFB: 2Ki 19:4 - -- "The living God" is a most significant expression taken in connection with the senseless deities that Rab-shakeh boasted were unable to resist his mas...
"The living God" is a most significant expression taken in connection with the senseless deities that Rab-shakeh boasted were unable to resist his master's victorious arms.
Clarke: 2Ki 19:2 - -- To Isaiah the prophet - His fame and influence were at this time great in Israel; and it was well known that the word of the Lord was with him. Here...
To Isaiah the prophet - His fame and influence were at this time great in Israel; and it was well known that the word of the Lord was with him. Here both the Church and the state unite in fervent application to, and strong dependence upon, God; and behold how they succeed!

Clarke: 2Ki 19:3 - -- The children are come to the birth - The Jewish state is here represented under the emblem of a woman in travail, who has been so long in the pangs ...
The children are come to the birth - The Jewish state is here represented under the emblem of a woman in travail, who has been so long in the pangs of parturition, that her strength is now entirely exhausted, and her deliverance is hopeless, without a miracle. The image is very fine and highly appropriate
A similar image is employed by Homer, when he represents the agonies which Agamemnon suffers from his wound: -
Il. xi., ver. 266
This, while yet warm, distill’ d the purple flood
But when the wound grew stiff with clotted blood
Then grinding tortures his strong bosom rend
Less keen those darts the fierce Ilythiae send
The powers that cause the teeming matron’ s throes
Sad mothers of unutterable woes
Pop
Better translated by Macpherson; but in neither well
"So long as from the gaping wound gushed forth, in its warmth, the blood; but when the wound became dry, when ceased the blood to flow amain, sharp pains pervade the strength of Atrides. Racking pangs glide through his frame; as when the Ilythiae, who preside over births, the daughters of white armed Juno, fierce dealers of bitter pains, throw all their darts on hapless women, that travail with child. Such pains pervade the strength of Atrides."

Clarke: 2Ki 19:4 - -- The remnant that are left - That is, the Jews; the ten tribes having been already carried away captive by the kings of Assyria.
The remnant that are left - That is, the Jews; the ten tribes having been already carried away captive by the kings of Assyria.
TSK: 2Ki 19:1 - -- when king : Isa 37:1-7
he rent : 2Ki 5:7, 2Ki 18:37; 1Sa 4:12; Ezr 9:3; Job 1:20; Jer 36:24; Mat 26:65
covered : 2Ki 6:30; Gen 37:34; 1Ki 21:27, 1Ki 2...

TSK: 2Ki 19:2 - -- he sent Eliakim : 2Ki 18:18, 2Ki 22:13, 2Ki 22:14; Isa 37:2-5
to Isaiah : 2Ch 26:22; Mat 4:14; Luk 3:4, Esaias
the son of Amoz : Isa 1:1, Isa 2:1

TSK: 2Ki 19:3 - -- This day : 2Ki 18:29; Psa 39:11, Psa 123:3, Psa 123:4; Jer 30:5-7; Hos 5:15, Hos 6:1
blasphemy : or, provocation, Psa 95:8; Heb 3:15, Heb 3:16
for the...

TSK: 2Ki 19:4 - -- the Lord : Gen 22:14; Deu 32:36; Jos 14:12; 1Sa 14:6; 2Sa 16:12
whom the king : 2Kings 18:17-35
reprove : 2Ki 19:22; 1Sa 17:45; Psa 50:21, Psa 74:18
l...
the Lord : Gen 22:14; Deu 32:36; Jos 14:12; 1Sa 14:6; 2Sa 16:12
whom the king : 2Kings 18:17-35
reprove : 2Ki 19:22; 1Sa 17:45; Psa 50:21, Psa 74:18
lift up : 2Ch 32:20; Psa 50:15; Jer 33:3; Eze 36:37; Rom 9:27; Jam 5:16, Jam 5:17
the remnant : 2Ki 17:5, 2Ki 17:6, 2Ki 18:13; 2Ch 28:5, 2Ch 28:6; Isa 8:7, Isa 8:8, Isa 10:6
left : Heb. found

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Ki 19:1 - -- Hezekiah, like his officers, probably rent his clothes on account of Rab-shakeh’ s blasphemies: and he put on sackcloth in self-humiliation and...
Hezekiah, like his officers, probably rent his clothes on account of Rab-shakeh’ s blasphemies: and he put on sackcloth in self-humiliation and in grief. The only hope left was in Yahweh, for Egypt could not be trusted to effect anything of importance. Rab-shakeh’ s boldness had told upon Hezekiah. He was dispirited and dejected. He perhaps began to doubt whether he had done right in yielding to the bolder counsels of Eliakim and Isaiah. He had not lost his faith in God; but his faith was being severely tried. He wisely went and strove by prayer to strengthen it.

Barnes: 2Ki 19:2 - -- Isaiah is here for the first time introduced into the history. His own writings show us how active a part he had taken in it for many years previous...
Isaiah is here for the first time introduced into the history. His own writings show us how active a part he had taken in it for many years previously. This was the fourth reign since he began his prophesyings; and during two reigns at least, those of Ahaz and Hezekiah, he had been a familiar counselor of the monarch. He had probably counseled the revolt from Assyria, and had encouraged the king and people to persevere in their resistance. The exact date of prophecies can seldom be fixed with any certainty; but we can scarcely he mistaken in regarding 2 Kings 10; 30; 31 as written about the time of Hezekiah’ s second revolt.

Barnes: 2Ki 19:3 - -- The "trouble"consisted in rebuke"(rather, "chastisement,") for sins at the hand of God, and "blasphemy"(rather, "reproach,") at the hands of man. ...
The "trouble"consisted in rebuke"(rather, "chastisement,") for sins at the hand of God, and "blasphemy"(rather, "reproach,") at the hands of man.
The children ... - i. e., "we are in a fearful extremity - at the last gasp - and lack the strength that might carry us through the danger."

Barnes: 2Ki 19:4 - -- Will hear - i. e., "will show that he has heard - will notice and punish." The living God - See 1Sa 17:26 note. And will reprove the...
Will hear - i. e., "will show that he has heard - will notice and punish."
The living God - See 1Sa 17:26 note.
And will reprove the words - Rather, "will reprove him for the words."
The remnant - i. e., for the kingdom of Judah, the only remnant of God’ s people that was now left, after Galilee and Gilead and Samaria had all been carried away captive.
Poole: 2Ki 19:3 - -- A day of trouble and of rebuke either,
1. From God, wherein God rebukes and chastens us sorely. Or rather,
2. From the Assyrian, who reviles and re...
A day of trouble and of rebuke either,
1. From God, wherein God rebukes and chastens us sorely. Or rather,
2. From the Assyrian, who reviles and reproacheth us; for his business here is to complain, not of God, but of the Assyrian. We are like a poor travailing woman in great extremity, and having no strength left to help herself, and to bring forth her infant into the world. We have attempted to deliver ourselves from the Assyrian yoke; and had carried on that work to some maturity, and, as we thought, brought it to the birth; but now we have no might to finish, unless thou assist us. We have begun a happy reformation, and are hindered by this insolent Assyrian from bringing it to perfection. See 2Ch 32:1 .

Poole: 2Ki 19:4 - -- It may be he speaks doubtfully, because he knew not whether God would not deliver them all up into the Assyrian’ s hand, as he and his people de...
It may be he speaks doubtfully, because he knew not whether God would not deliver them all up into the Assyrian’ s hand, as he and his people deserved. But sometimes this is not a word of doubt, but of good hope; as Num 22:33 Jos 14:12 .
The Lord thy God to whom thou art dear and precious. He saith not our God , because he seemed to have forsaken and rejected them; and they by their designs had forfeited all their interest in him.
Will hear i.e. will show by his actions that he hath heard them with just indignation.
Will reprove the words or rather, will reprove him (an ellipsis of the pronoun, which is frequent in the Hebrew tongue) for the words , as the Syria, and Arabic, and Chaldee render it.
Lift up thy prayer for the remnant: this he mentions as an argument to stir up Isaiah to pray, and to move God’ s compassion towards them; that they were but a small remnant, either of God’ s people, of whom ten tribes were now lost; or of the kingdom of Judah, which had been greatly wasted and depopulated in the days of Ahaz, and now lately by this Assyrian, 2Ki 19:13 .
Haydock: 2Ki 19:1 - -- Nesroch. Jospehus calls both the idol and the temple Araskes. Sennacherib persecuted the Israelites for 45 (Greek 55) days. (Tobias i. 21.) ---
S...
Nesroch. Jospehus calls both the idol and the temple Araskes. Sennacherib persecuted the Israelites for 45 (Greek 55) days. (Tobias i. 21.) ---
Sons, as the Jews suppose they were destined for victims by their father, and got beforehand with him. (St. Jerome, in Isaias x.) (Calmet) ---
Armenia. So the Protestant translate Ararath, (Haydock) where Noe's[Noah’s] ark rested. This nation has been esteemed very warlike, and has always asserted its liberty. ---
Asarhaddon. His two elder brothers were excluded, on account of their parricide. (Josephus) ---
This prince is called Sargon in Isaias xx. 1., and Achirdon in Tobias i. 24.

Haydock: 2Ki 19:3 - -- Blasphemy. The enemy insults over us (Calmet) and over God. (Haydock) ---
Birth. Hebrew, "the mouth of the womb." (Vatable) ---
This compariso...
Blasphemy. The enemy insults over us (Calmet) and over God. (Haydock) ---
Birth. Hebrew, "the mouth of the womb." (Vatable) ---
This comparison shews the utmost distress to which the people of Jerusalem were reduced. Any great anguish is denoted by a woman in travail, Deuteronomy ii. 25., and Psalm xlvii. 7. Homer (Iliad A) thus describes the uneasiness of Agamemnon. (Calmet) ---
Ezechias found himself unable to contend with the Assyrian, though he wished to do it. (Menochius) ---
Without courage, all hope of escaping is lost. (Du Hamel)

Haydock: 2Ki 19:4 - -- It may. Literally, "if perhaps the Lord hear." (Haydock) ---
Found. After such devastation has been made in the country, particularly by carryin...
It may. Literally, "if perhaps the Lord hear." (Haydock) ---
Found. After such devastation has been made in the country, particularly by carrying away the ten tribes, (Calmet) Ezechias recommends the kingdom to the prayers of the prophet; as we are exhorted to have recourse to the intercession of the saints. (Haydock)
Gill -> 2Ki 19:1-37
Gill: 2Ki 19:1-37 - -- And it came to pass, when King Hezekiah heard it,.... The report of Rabshakeh's speech, recorded in the preceding chapter:
that he rent his clothes...
And it came to pass, when King Hezekiah heard it,.... The report of Rabshakeh's speech, recorded in the preceding chapter:
that he rent his clothes, and covered himself with sackcloth; rent his clothes because of the blasphemy in the speech; and he put on sackcloth, in token of mourning, for the calamities he feared were coming on him and his people: and he went into the house of the Lord; the temple, to pray unto him. The message he sent to Isaiah, with his answer, and the threatening letter of the king of Assyria, Hezekiah's prayer upon it, and the encouraging answer he had from the Lord, with the account of the destruction of the Assyrian army, and the death of Sennacherib, are the same "verbatim" as in Isa 37:1 throughout; and therefore the reader is referred thither for the exposition of them; only would add what Rauwolff t observes, that still to this day (1575) there are two great holes to be seen, wherein they flung the dead bodies (of the Assyrian army), one whereof is close by the road towards Bethlehem, the other towards the right hand against old Bethel.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Ki 19:3 Heb “when sons come to the cervical opening and there is no strength to give birth.”

Geneva Bible: 2Ki 19:2 And he sent Eliakim, which [was] over the household, and Shebna the scribe, and the elders of the priests, covered with sackcloth, ( a ) to Isaiah the...

Geneva Bible: 2Ki 19:3 And they said unto him, Thus saith Hezekiah, This day [is] a day of trouble, and of rebuke, and blasphemy: for the children are come to ( b ) the birt...

Geneva Bible: 2Ki 19:4 It may be the LORD thy God will hear all the words of Rabshakeh, whom the king of Assyria his master hath sent to reproach the living God; and will re...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ki 19:1-37
TSK Synopsis: 2Ki 19:1-37 - --1 Hezekiah mourning, sends to Isaiah to pray for them.6 Isaiah comforts them.8 Sennacherib, going to encounter Tirhakah, sends a blasphemous letter to...
MHCC -> 2Ki 19:1-7
MHCC: 2Ki 19:1-7 - --Hezekiah discovered deep concern at the dishonour done to God by Rabshakeh's blasphemy. Those who speak from God to us, we should in a particular mann...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ki 19:1-7
Matthew Henry: 2Ki 19:1-7 - -- The contents of Rabshakeh's speech being brought to Hezekiah, one would have expected (and it is likely Rabshakeh did expect) that he would call a c...
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 19:1-2 - --
When Hezekiah had heard from his counsellors the report of Rabshakeh's words, he rent his clothes with horror at his daring mockery of the living Go...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 19:3 - --
"A day of distress, and of chastisement, and of rejection is this day." תּוכחה : the divine chastisement. נאצה : contemptuous treatment, ...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 19:4 - --
Perhaps Jehovah thy God will hear the blasphemies of the living God on the part of Rabshakeh. ישׁמע : hear, equivalent to observes, take notice...
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...
