Loading…

2 Kings 19:20–37

Isaiah’s Message to the King

(Is 37:21–38)

20 Then Isaiah sent a message telling King Hezekiah that in answer to the king’s prayer 21the Lord had said, “The city of Jerusalem laughs at you, Sennacherib, and despises you. 22Whom do you think you have been insulting and ridiculing? You have been disrespectful to me, the holy God of Israel. 23You sent your messengers to boast to me that with all your chariots you had conquered the highest mountains of Lebanon. You boasted that there you cut down the tallest cedars and the finest cypress trees and that you reached the deepest parts of the forests. 24You boasted that you dug wells and drank water in foreign lands and that the feet of your soldiers tramped the River Nile dry.

25 “Have you never heard that I planned all this long ago? And now I have carried it out. I gave you the power to turn fortified cities into piles of rubble. 26The people who lived there were powerless; they were frightened and stunned. They were like grass in a field or weeds growing on a roof when the hot east wind blasts them.s

27 “But I know everything about you, what you do and where you go. I know how you rage against me. 28I have received the report of that rage and that pride of yours, and now I will put a hook through your nose and a bit in your mouth, and take you back by the same road you came.”

29 Then Isaiah said to King Hezekiah, “This is a sign of what will happen. This year and next you will have only wild grain to eat, but the following year you will be able to sow your corn and harvest it, and plant vines and eat grapes. 30Those in Judah who survive will flourish like plants that send roots deep into the ground and produce fruit. 31There will be people in Jerusalem and on Mount Zion who will survive, because the Lord is determined to make this happen.

32 “This is what the Lord has said about the Assyrian emperor: ‘He will not enter this city or shoot a single arrow against it. No soldiers with shields will come near the city, and no siege mounds will be built round it. 33He will go back by the same road he came, without entering this city. I, the Lord, have spoken. 34I will defend this city and protect it, for the sake of my own honour and because of the promise I made to my servant David.’ ” 35That night an angel of the Lord went to the Assyrian camp and killed 185,000 soldiers. At dawn the next day, there they lay, all dead! 36Then the Assyrian emperor Sennacherib withdrew and returned to Nineveh. 37One day, when he was worshipping in the temple of his god Nisroch, two of his sons, Adrammelech and Sharezer, killed him with their swords, and then escaped to the land of Ararat. Another of his sons, Esarhaddon, succeeded him as emperor.

Read more Explain verse



A service of Logos Bible Software