Anonymous

Difference between revisions of "Hezekiah"

From BiblePortal Wikipedia
492 bytes removed ,  09:49, 13 October 2021
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35809" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35809" /> ==
<
<
          
          
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18678" /> ==
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18678" /> ==
<p> At the time of Hezekiah’s accession to Judah’s throne, his country was in a sad condition. The policies of Ahaz had left Judah economically weak, politically dominated by Assyria, and religiously corrupted through false religions (see [[Ahaz).]] </p> <p> Upon becoming king, Hezekiah set out on the bold task of strengthening the nation’s economy, overthrowing Assyrian domination, and reforming Judah’s religion. This latter achievement won him praise as being Judah’s greatest king to that time (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-8). </p> <p> '''Religious reforms''' </p> <p> The prophets of Hezekiah’s time (he reigned from 716 to 687 [[Bc)]] were Hosea, Isaiah and Micah. Hosea was by this time very old (cf. &nbsp;Hosea 1:1), Isaiah was very influential around the palace (&nbsp;Isaiah 1:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1) and Micah was preaching with such authority that the king was taking good notice of him (&nbsp;Micah 1:1; &nbsp;Jeremiah 26:17-19). Yet none of the prophets records Hezekiah’s reforms. Perhaps this was because the prophets were more concerned with the spiritual attitudes of people than with the revised procedures for temple worship. </p> <p> Hezekiah began his reforms by assembling the priests and Levites and telling them plainly that neglect of the temple and its services was the reason for God’s anger with Judah (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1-11). He then sent them to cleanse and rededicate the temple. The common people responded to his reforms with such enthusiasm that the temple officials were unable to cope with all the sacrifices (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:12-36). </p> <p> After this, Hezekiah arranged a great Feast of Passover and [[Unleavened]] [[Bread]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:1-12). He insisted, however, that before joining in the festival, people ceremonially cleanse themselves and remove all traces of false religion from Jerusalem (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:13-22). </p> <p> Having cleansed Jerusalem of false religion, Hezekiah then cleansed the country areas (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1). His desire was that the nation as a whole follow the religious order laid down by Moses and developed by David. He therefore organized the priests and Levites according to David’s plan, and arranged for their proper financial support through the orderly payment and distribution of the people’s tithes and offerings (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:2-19). Some of Hezekiah’s leading officials made a collection of Solomon’s proverbs to instruct the people further (&nbsp;Proverbs 25:1). </p> <p> '''Political achievements''' </p> <p> Assyrian influence in [[Palestine]] was at its peak during the time of Hezekiah. In the early part of his reign Assyria conquered the northern kingdom Israel and carried the people into captivity (722 [[Bc;]] &nbsp;2 Kings 17:6; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12). Meanwhile in the south, Hezekiah was busy strengthening Judah’s independence. He improved its economy, increased its agricultural production, fortified its defences and improved Jerusalem’s water supply (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:27-30). He then revolted against Assyria by refusing to pay further tribute (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:7). </p> <p> As expected, Assyria sent its army to attack Judah, but Hezekiah had prepared Judah well and had equipped Jerusalem to withstand the siege (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-6). He had also made a defence agreement with Egypt that he hoped would guarantee success. Isaiah opposed this dependence on Egypt. Judah’s need was for quiet faith in God, not for military help from a foreign country (&nbsp;Isaiah 30:1-3; &nbsp;Isaiah 30:15; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:3; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:5; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:8). </p> <p> The Assyrian attack was far more damaging to Jerusalem than Hezekiah had expected. Even when the Assyrians had forced Hezekiah to pay them large amounts of money, they did not retreat. They were preparing to crush Jerusalem completely (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:14-37). On two occasions Hezekiah went in great distress to the temple to ask God’s help, and on both occasions Isaiah brought God’s reassuring answer (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:1-7; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:14-34). The outcome was that God intervened and dramatically overthrew the Assyrians (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35-37). </p> <p> Hezekiah had at one time become so sick that it appeared he would die. In answer to his prayers, God extended his life by fifteen years, enabling him to lead Judah through its period of conflict with Assyria (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-11). In gratitude to God, Hezekiah wrote a song of praise for his recovery (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:9-22). </p> <p> Throughout this period Babylon was increasing in power and was looking for allies to help it conquer Assyria. An illness of Hezekiah gave the [[Babylonians]] the opportunity to visit him, in the hope of persuading him to join them against Assyria. Hezekiah was easily persuaded. He was very anti-Assyrian and very proud that his achievements for Judah had attracted Babylon’s admiration (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:24-25; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:31). Once again Isaiah condemned Hezekiah’s willingness to enter into foreign alliances, for it would result in conquest by the allied nation (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:14-19). Hezekiah repented of his wrongdoing and completed his reign with Judah’s independence still intact (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:26). </p>
<p> At the time of Hezekiah’s accession to Judah’s throne, his country was in a sad condition. The policies of Ahaz had left Judah economically weak, politically dominated by Assyria, and religiously corrupted through false religions (see [[Ahaz]] ). </p> <p> Upon becoming king, Hezekiah set out on the bold task of strengthening the nation’s economy, overthrowing Assyrian domination, and reforming Judah’s religion. This latter achievement won him praise as being Judah’s greatest king to that time (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-8). </p> <p> '''Religious reforms''' </p> <p> The prophets of Hezekiah’s time (he reigned from 716 to 687 BC) were Hosea, Isaiah and Micah. Hosea was by this time very old (cf. &nbsp;Hosea 1:1), Isaiah was very influential around the palace (&nbsp;Isaiah 1:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1) and Micah was preaching with such authority that the king was taking good notice of him (&nbsp;Micah 1:1; &nbsp;Jeremiah 26:17-19). Yet none of the prophets records Hezekiah’s reforms. Perhaps this was because the prophets were more concerned with the spiritual attitudes of people than with the revised procedures for temple worship. </p> <p> Hezekiah began his reforms by assembling the priests and Levites and telling them plainly that neglect of the temple and its services was the reason for God’s anger with Judah (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1-11). He then sent them to cleanse and rededicate the temple. The common people responded to his reforms with such enthusiasm that the temple officials were unable to cope with all the sacrifices (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:12-36). </p> <p> After this, Hezekiah arranged a great Feast of Passover and [[Unleavened]] [[Bread]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:1-12). He insisted, however, that before joining in the festival, people ceremonially cleanse themselves and remove all traces of false religion from Jerusalem (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:13-22). </p> <p> Having cleansed Jerusalem of false religion, Hezekiah then cleansed the country areas (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1). His desire was that the nation as a whole follow the religious order laid down by Moses and developed by David. He therefore organized the priests and Levites according to David’s plan, and arranged for their proper financial support through the orderly payment and distribution of the people’s tithes and offerings (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:2-19). Some of Hezekiah’s leading officials made a collection of Solomon’s proverbs to instruct the people further (&nbsp;Proverbs 25:1). </p> <p> '''Political achievements''' </p> <p> Assyrian influence in [[Palestine]] was at its peak during the time of Hezekiah. In the early part of his reign Assyria conquered the northern kingdom Israel and carried the people into captivity (722 BC; &nbsp;2 Kings 17:6; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12). Meanwhile in the south, Hezekiah was busy strengthening Judah’s independence. He improved its economy, increased its agricultural production, fortified its defences and improved Jerusalem’s water supply (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:27-30). He then revolted against Assyria by refusing to pay further tribute (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:7). </p> <p> As expected, Assyria sent its army to attack Judah, but Hezekiah had prepared Judah well and had equipped Jerusalem to withstand the siege (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-6). He had also made a defence agreement with Egypt that he hoped would guarantee success. Isaiah opposed this dependence on Egypt. Judah’s need was for quiet faith in God, not for military help from a foreign country (&nbsp;Isaiah 30:1-3; &nbsp;Isaiah 30:15; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:3; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:5; &nbsp;Isaiah 31:8). </p> <p> The Assyrian attack was far more damaging to Jerusalem than Hezekiah had expected. Even when the Assyrians had forced Hezekiah to pay them large amounts of money, they did not retreat. They were preparing to crush Jerusalem completely (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:14-37). On two occasions Hezekiah went in great distress to the temple to ask God’s help, and on both occasions Isaiah brought God’s reassuring answer (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:1-7; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:14-34). The outcome was that God intervened and dramatically overthrew the Assyrians (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35-37). </p> <p> Hezekiah had at one time become so sick that it appeared he would die. In answer to his prayers, God extended his life by fifteen years, enabling him to lead Judah through its period of conflict with Assyria (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-11). In gratitude to God, Hezekiah wrote a song of praise for his recovery (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:9-22). </p> <p> Throughout this period Babylon was increasing in power and was looking for allies to help it conquer Assyria. An illness of Hezekiah gave the [[Babylonians]] the opportunity to visit him, in the hope of persuading him to join them against Assyria. Hezekiah was easily persuaded. He was very anti-Assyrian and very proud that his achievements for Judah had attracted Babylon’s admiration (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:24-25; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:31). Once again Isaiah condemned Hezekiah’s willingness to enter into foreign alliances, for it would result in conquest by the allied nation (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:14-19). Hezekiah repented of his wrongdoing and completed his reign with Judah’s independence still intact (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:26). </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51570" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51570" /> ==
<p> <strong> [[Hezekiah.]] 1 </strong> . One of the most prominent kings of Judah. He came to the throne after his father Ahaz, about b.c. 714. The assertions that Samaria was destroyed in his sixth year and that Sennacherib’s invasion came in his fourteenth year are inconsistent (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:10; &nbsp; 2 Kings 18:13 ). The latter has probability on its side, and as we know that Sennacherib invaded Palestine in 701 the calculation is easily made. </p> <p> Politically Hezekiah had a difficult task. His father had submitted to Assyria, but the vassalage was felt to be severe. The petty kingdoms of Palestine were restive under the yoke, and they were encouraged by the [[Egyptians]] to make an effort for independence. There was always an Egyptian party at the court of Jerusalem, though at this time Egypt was suffering from internal dissensions. In the East the kingdom of Babylon under Merodach-baladan was also making trouble for the Assyrians. Hezekiah seems to have remained faithful to the suzerain for some years after his accession, but when, about the time of Sennacherib’s accession (705), a coalition was formed against the oppressor he joined it. We may venture to suppose that about this time he received the embassy from Merodach-baladan (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:12 ff., &nbsp; Isaiah 39:1 ff.), which was intended to secure the co-operation of the Western States with Babylon in the effort then being made. Isaiah, as we know from his own discourses, was opposed to the Egyptian alliance, and apparently to the whole movement. The Philistines were for revolt; only Padi, king of Ekron, held out for his master the king of Assyria. For this reason Hezekiah invaded his territory and took him prisoner. If, as the Biblical account seems to intimate (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:8 ), he incorporated the conquered land in his own kingdom, the gain was not for a long time. In 701 Sennacherib appeared on the scene, and there was no possibility of serious resistance. The inscriptions tell us that the invaders captured forty-six walled towns, and carried 200,000 Judahites into slavery. The Egyptian (some suppose it to be an Arabian) army made a show of coming to the help of its allies, but was met on the border and defeated. Hezekiah was compelled to release the captive Padi, who returned to his throne in triumph. Sennacherib was detained at [[Lachish]] by the stubborn resistance of that fortress, and could send only a detachment of his troops to Jerusalem. With it went an embassy, the account of which may be read in &nbsp; 2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp; 2 Kings 19:1-37 and Is 36, 37. The laconic sentence: ‘Hezekiah sent to the king of Assyria at Lachish, saying: [[I]] have offended; that which thou puttest on me will [[I]] bear’ (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:14 ) shows that abject submission was made. The price of peace was a heavy one three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold. To pay it, all the gold and silver that could be found was gathered together, even the [[Temple]] doors (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:16 ) being stripped of their precious metal. </p> <p> In our accounts we read of a great destruction which came upon the Assyrian army (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35 , &nbsp; Isaiah 37:36 ). Whether Sennacherib was not satisfied with the submission of Hezekiah, or whether a second campaign was made which the historian has confused with this one, is not yet certainly known. There <em> was </em> a second expedition of Sennacherib’s to the west some years later than the one we have been considering. At that time, it may be, the pestilence broke out and made the army too weak for further operations. It is clear that the people of Jerusalem felt that they had had a remarkable deliverance. Hezekiah’s sickness is dated by the Biblical writer in the time of this invasion, which can hardly be correct if the king lived fifteen years after that experience. </p> <p> The account of Hezekiah’s religious reforms is more sweeping than seems probable for that date. There seems no reason to doubt, however, that he destroyed the brazen serpent, which had been an object of worship in the Temple (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:4 ). The cleansing of the country sanctuaries from idolatry, under the influence of Isaiah, may have been accomplished at the same time. The expansions of the Chronicler (&nbsp; 2 Chronicles 29:1-36 ff.) must be received with reserve. </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> An ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah (&nbsp; Zephaniah 1:1 ), possibly to be identified with the king of the same name. <strong> 3. </strong> Head of a family of exiles who returned, &nbsp; Ezra 2:16 = &nbsp; Nehemiah 7:21 (cf. &nbsp; Nehemiah 10:17 ). </p> <p> [[H.]] [[P.]] Smith. </p>
<p> <strong> HEZEKIAH. 1 </strong> . One of the most prominent kings of Judah. He came to the throne after his father Ahaz, about b.c. 714. The assertions that Samaria was destroyed in his sixth year and that Sennacherib’s invasion came in his fourteenth year are inconsistent (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:10; &nbsp; 2 Kings 18:13 ). The latter has probability on its side, and as we know that Sennacherib invaded Palestine in 701 the calculation is easily made. </p> <p> Politically Hezekiah had a difficult task. His father had submitted to Assyria, but the vassalage was felt to be severe. The petty kingdoms of Palestine were restive under the yoke, and they were encouraged by the [[Egyptians]] to make an effort for independence. There was always an Egyptian party at the court of Jerusalem, though at this time Egypt was suffering from internal dissensions. In the East the kingdom of Babylon under Merodach-baladan was also making trouble for the Assyrians. Hezekiah seems to have remained faithful to the suzerain for some years after his accession, but when, about the time of Sennacherib’s accession (705), a coalition was formed against the oppressor he joined it. We may venture to suppose that about this time he received the embassy from Merodach-baladan (&nbsp;2 Kings 20:12 ff., &nbsp; Isaiah 39:1 ff.), which was intended to secure the co-operation of the Western States with Babylon in the effort then being made. Isaiah, as we know from his own discourses, was opposed to the Egyptian alliance, and apparently to the whole movement. The Philistines were for revolt; only Padi, king of Ekron, held out for his master the king of Assyria. For this reason Hezekiah invaded his territory and took him prisoner. If, as the Biblical account seems to intimate (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:8 ), he incorporated the conquered land in his own kingdom, the gain was not for a long time. In 701 Sennacherib appeared on the scene, and there was no possibility of serious resistance. The inscriptions tell us that the invaders captured forty-six walled towns, and carried 200,000 Judahites into slavery. The Egyptian (some suppose it to be an Arabian) army made a show of coming to the help of its allies, but was met on the border and defeated. Hezekiah was compelled to release the captive Padi, who returned to his throne in triumph. Sennacherib was detained at Lachish by the stubborn resistance of that fortress, and could send only a detachment of his troops to Jerusalem. With it went an embassy, the account of which may be read in &nbsp; 2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp; 2 Kings 19:1-37 and Is 36, 37. The laconic sentence: ‘Hezekiah sent to the king of Assyria at Lachish, saying: I have offended; that which thou puttest on me will I bear’ (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:14 ) shows that abject submission was made. The price of peace was a heavy one three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold. To pay it, all the gold and silver that could be found was gathered together, even the [[Temple]] doors (&nbsp; 2 Kings 18:16 ) being stripped of their precious metal. </p> <p> In our accounts we read of a great destruction which came upon the Assyrian army (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35 , &nbsp; Isaiah 37:36 ). Whether Sennacherib was not satisfied with the submission of Hezekiah, or whether a second campaign was made which the historian has confused with this one, is not yet certainly known. There <em> was </em> a second expedition of Sennacherib’s to the west some years later than the one we have been considering. At that time, it may be, the pestilence broke out and made the army too weak for further operations. It is clear that the people of Jerusalem felt that they had had a remarkable deliverance. Hezekiah’s sickness is dated by the Biblical writer in the time of this invasion, which can hardly be correct if the king lived fifteen years after that experience. </p> <p> The account of Hezekiah’s religious reforms is more sweeping than seems probable for that date. There seems no reason to doubt, however, that he destroyed the brazen serpent, which had been an object of worship in the Temple (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:4 ). The cleansing of the country sanctuaries from idolatry, under the influence of Isaiah, may have been accomplished at the same time. The expansions of the Chronicler (&nbsp; 2 Chronicles 29:1-36 ff.) must be received with reserve. </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> An ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah (&nbsp; Zephaniah 1:1 ), possibly to be identified with the king of the same name. <strong> 3. </strong> Head of a family of exiles who returned, &nbsp; Ezra 2:16 = &nbsp; Nehemiah 7:21 (cf. &nbsp; Nehemiah 10:17 ). </p> <p> H. P. Smith. </p>
          
          
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80857" /> ==
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80857" /> ==
<p> king of Judah, was the son of Ahaz, and born in the year of the world 3251. At the age of five-and-twenty he succeeded his father in the government of the kingdom of Judah, and reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem, namely, from the year of the world 3277 to 3306, &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-2; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1 . The reign of his father Ahaz had been most unpropitious for his subjects. [[A]] war had raged between the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, in which Pekah, king of Israel, overthrew the army of Ahaz, destroying a hundred and twenty thousand of his men; after which he carried away two hundred thousand women and children as captives into his own country; they were, however, released and sent home again, at the remonstrance of the [[Prophet]] Oded. As idolatry had been established in Jerusalem and throughout Judea, by the command of Ahaz, and the service of the temple either intermitted, or converted into an idolatrous worship, the first object of his son Hezekiah, on his accession to the throne, was to restore the regal worship of God, both in Jerusalem and throughout Judea. He cleansed and repaired the temple, and held a solemn passover. He improved the city, repaired the fortifications, erected magazines of all sorts, and built a new aqueduct. In the fourth year of his reign, Salmanezer, king of Assyria, invaded the kingdom of Israel, took Samaria, and carried away the ten tribes into captivity, replacing them by different people sent from his own country. But Hezekiah was not deterred by this alarming example from refusing to pay that tribute to the Assyrians which had been imposed on Ahaz: this brought on the invasion of Sennacherib, in the fourteenth year of the reign of Hezekiah, of which we have a very particular account in the writings of the Prophet Isaiah, who was then living, Isaiah 36. </p> <p> Immediately after the termination of this war, Hezekiah "was sick unto death," owing, as the sacred historian strongly intimates, to his heart being improperly elevated on occasion of this miraculous deliverance, and not sufficiently acknowledging the hand of God in it. 2 Kings 20; Isaiah 38. Isaiah was sent to bid him set his house in order, for he should die and not live. Hezekiah had instant recourse to God by prayer and supplications for his recovery; and the prophet had scarcely proceeded out of the threshold, when the Lord commanded him to return to Hezekiah, and to say to him, "Thus saith the Lord, [[I]] have heard thy prayer, and [[I]] have seen thy tears; [[I]] will heal thee: on the third day thou shalt go up to the house of the Lord, and [[I]] will add unto thy days fifteen years." And to confirm to him the certainty of all these tokens of the divine regard, the shadow of the sun on the dial of Ahaz, at his request, went backward ten degrees. After his recovery, he composed an ode of thanksgiving to the God of all his mercies, which the Prophet Isaiah has recorded in his writings, &nbsp;Isaiah 38:10-11 . Yet, as an instance of human fickleness and frailty, we find Hezekiah, with all his excellencies, again forgetting himself, and incurring the divine displeasure. The king of Babylon having been informed of his sickness and recovery, sent ambassadors to congratulate him on his restoration: an honour with which the heart of Hezekiah was greatly elated; and, to testify his gratitude, he made a pompous display to them of all his treasures, his spices, and his rich vessels: and concealed from them nothing that was in his palace. In all this the pride of Hezekiah was gratified; and to humble him, Isaiah was sent to declare to him that his conduct was displeasing to God, and that a time should come when all the treasures of which he had made so vain a display should be removed to Babylon, and even his sons be made eunuchs to serve in the palace of the king of Babylon. Hezekiah bowed submissively to the will of God, and acknowledged the divine goodness toward him, in ordaining peace and truth to continue during the remainder of his reign. He accordingly passed the latter years of his life in tranquillity, and contributed greatly to the prosperity of his people and kingdom. He died in the year of the world 3306, leaving behind him a son, Manasseh, who succeeded him in the throne: a son every way unworthy of such a father. </p>
<p> king of Judah, was the son of Ahaz, and born in the year of the world 3251. At the age of five-and-twenty he succeeded his father in the government of the kingdom of Judah, and reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem, namely, from the year of the world 3277 to 3306, &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-2; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1 . The reign of his father Ahaz had been most unpropitious for his subjects. A war had raged between the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, in which Pekah, king of Israel, overthrew the army of Ahaz, destroying a hundred and twenty thousand of his men; after which he carried away two hundred thousand women and children as captives into his own country; they were, however, released and sent home again, at the remonstrance of the [[Prophet]] Oded. As idolatry had been established in Jerusalem and throughout Judea, by the command of Ahaz, and the service of the temple either intermitted, or converted into an idolatrous worship, the first object of his son Hezekiah, on his accession to the throne, was to restore the regal worship of God, both in Jerusalem and throughout Judea. He cleansed and repaired the temple, and held a solemn passover. He improved the city, repaired the fortifications, erected magazines of all sorts, and built a new aqueduct. In the fourth year of his reign, Salmanezer, king of Assyria, invaded the kingdom of Israel, took Samaria, and carried away the ten tribes into captivity, replacing them by different people sent from his own country. But Hezekiah was not deterred by this alarming example from refusing to pay that tribute to the Assyrians which had been imposed on Ahaz: this brought on the invasion of Sennacherib, in the fourteenth year of the reign of Hezekiah, of which we have a very particular account in the writings of the Prophet Isaiah, who was then living, Isaiah 36. </p> <p> Immediately after the termination of this war, Hezekiah "was sick unto death," owing, as the sacred historian strongly intimates, to his heart being improperly elevated on occasion of this miraculous deliverance, and not sufficiently acknowledging the hand of God in it. 2 Kings 20; Isaiah 38. Isaiah was sent to bid him set his house in order, for he should die and not live. Hezekiah had instant recourse to God by prayer and supplications for his recovery; and the prophet had scarcely proceeded out of the threshold, when the Lord commanded him to return to Hezekiah, and to say to him, "Thus saith the Lord, I have heard thy prayer, and I have seen thy tears; I will heal thee: on the third day thou shalt go up to the house of the Lord, and I will add unto thy days fifteen years." And to confirm to him the certainty of all these tokens of the divine regard, the shadow of the sun on the dial of Ahaz, at his request, went backward ten degrees. After his recovery, he composed an ode of thanksgiving to the God of all his mercies, which the Prophet Isaiah has recorded in his writings, &nbsp;Isaiah 38:10-11 . Yet, as an instance of human fickleness and frailty, we find Hezekiah, with all his excellencies, again forgetting himself, and incurring the divine displeasure. The king of Babylon having been informed of his sickness and recovery, sent ambassadors to congratulate him on his restoration: an honour with which the heart of Hezekiah was greatly elated; and, to testify his gratitude, he made a pompous display to them of all his treasures, his spices, and his rich vessels: and concealed from them nothing that was in his palace. In all this the pride of Hezekiah was gratified; and to humble him, Isaiah was sent to declare to him that his conduct was displeasing to God, and that a time should come when all the treasures of which he had made so vain a display should be removed to Babylon, and even his sons be made eunuchs to serve in the palace of the king of Babylon. Hezekiah bowed submissively to the will of God, and acknowledged the divine goodness toward him, in ordaining peace and truth to continue during the remainder of his reign. He accordingly passed the latter years of his life in tranquillity, and contributed greatly to the prosperity of his people and kingdom. He died in the year of the world 3306, leaving behind him a son, Manasseh, who succeeded him in the throne: a son every way unworthy of such a father. </p>
          
          
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_40782" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_40782" /> ==
&nbsp;2 Kings 16:7-20 <p> Hezekiah began his reign by bringing religious reform to Judah. Hezekiah was not willing to court the favor of the Assyrian kings. The Temple in Jerusalem was reopened. The idols were removed from the Temple. Temple vessels that had been desecrated during Ahaz's reign were sanctified for use in the Temple. The sacrifices were initiated with singing and the sounds of musical instruments. The tribes in the Northern [[Kingdom]] (Israel) had been subjected to Assyrian dominance. Hezekiah invited the Israelites to join in the celebration of the Passover in Jerusalem. Places of idol worship were destroyed. Hezekiah even destroyed the bronze serpent Moses had erected in the wilderness (&nbsp;Numbers 21:4-9 ) so the people would not view the bronze serpent as an object of worship. Hezekiah organized the priests and Levites for the conducting of religious services. The tithe was reinstituted. Plans were made to observe the religious feasts called for in the Law. </p> <p> In 711 [[B.C.,]] just a few years after Hezekiah had become king, Sargon [[Ii]] of Assyria captured Ashdod. Hezekiah anticipated the time when he would have to confront Assyrian armies. Hezekiah fortified the city of Jerusalem and organized an army. [[Knowing]] that a source of water was crucial, Hezekiah constructed a tunnel through solid rock from the spring of Gihon to the [[Siloam]] pool. The city wall was extended to enclose this important source of water. </p> <p> Isaiah warned Hezekiah not to become involved with Assyria (&nbsp;Isaiah 20:1-6 ). The critical time for Hezekiah came in 705 [[B.C.]] when Sennacherib became king of Assyria. From Hezekiah, Sennacherib obtained a heavy tribute of silver and gold. </p> <p> In 701 [[B.C.,]] Hezekiah became seriously ill (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:1-21 ). Isaiah warned the king to prepare for his approaching death, but Hezekiah prayed that God would intervene. God answered by promising Hezekiah fifteen more years of life and deliverance of Jerusalem from Assyria (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:4-6 ). </p> <p> In the meantime, Sennacherib had besieged Lachish. [[Aware]] that Hezekiah had trusted God for deliverance, Sennacherib sent messengers to the Jerusalem wall to urge the people to surrender. Sennacherib boasted of having conquered 46 walled cities and having taken 200,000 captives. Sennacherib's messengers taunted that God would not come to Judah's defense. Hezekiah, dressed in sackcloth and ashes, went to the Temple to pray. He also called for Isaiah, the prophet. Isaiah announced that Sennacherib would “hear a rumour” and return to his own land where he would die by the sword (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:7 ). </p> <p> Hezekiah's faith and physical recovery brought him recognition from the surrounding nations (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:33 ). The Babylonian leader, Merodachbaladan, even congratulated Hezekiah on his recovery. Hezekiah hosted this Babylonian leader at a reception, but Isaiah met this event with a warning that succeeding generations would be subjected to Babylonian captivity (&nbsp;Isaiah 39:1-8 ). </p> <p> Sennacherib destroyed the city of Babylon in 689 [[B.C.]] He then marched toward Egypt. [[Hoping]] to ward off any interference from Judah, Sennacherib sent letters to Hezekiah ordering him to surrender (&nbsp;Isaiah 37:9-38 ). Hezekiah took the letters to the Temple and prayed for God's help. From Isaiah came the message that Sennacherib would not prevail. In fact, Sennacherib's army was destroyed in a miraculous way (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35-37 ). In 681 [[B.C.,]] Sennacherib was killed by two of his sons as had been predicted by Isaiah in 701 [[B.C.]] Hezekiah died in 687/86 [[B.C.]] Manasseh, his son, succeeded him, although [[Manasseh]] had become co-regent with Hezekiah about 696 [[B.C.]] </p> <p> The [[Gospel]] of Matthew lists Hezekiah in the genealogy of Jesus (&nbsp;Matthew 1:9-10 ). </p> <p> Gary Hardin </p>
&nbsp;2 Kings 16:7-20 <p> Hezekiah began his reign by bringing religious reform to Judah. Hezekiah was not willing to court the favor of the Assyrian kings. The Temple in Jerusalem was reopened. The idols were removed from the Temple. Temple vessels that had been desecrated during Ahaz's reign were sanctified for use in the Temple. The sacrifices were initiated with singing and the sounds of musical instruments. The tribes in the Northern [[Kingdom]] (Israel) had been subjected to Assyrian dominance. Hezekiah invited the Israelites to join in the celebration of the Passover in Jerusalem. Places of idol worship were destroyed. Hezekiah even destroyed the bronze serpent Moses had erected in the wilderness (&nbsp;Numbers 21:4-9 ) so the people would not view the bronze serpent as an object of worship. Hezekiah organized the priests and Levites for the conducting of religious services. The tithe was reinstituted. Plans were made to observe the religious feasts called for in the Law. </p> <p> In 711 B.C., just a few years after Hezekiah had become king, Sargon II of Assyria captured Ashdod. Hezekiah anticipated the time when he would have to confront Assyrian armies. Hezekiah fortified the city of Jerusalem and organized an army. [[Knowing]] that a source of water was crucial, Hezekiah constructed a tunnel through solid rock from the spring of Gihon to the [[Siloam]] pool. The city wall was extended to enclose this important source of water. </p> <p> Isaiah warned Hezekiah not to become involved with Assyria (&nbsp;Isaiah 20:1-6 ). The critical time for Hezekiah came in 705 B.C. when Sennacherib became king of Assyria. From Hezekiah, Sennacherib obtained a heavy tribute of silver and gold. </p> <p> In 701 B.C., Hezekiah became seriously ill (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:1-21 ). Isaiah warned the king to prepare for his approaching death, but Hezekiah prayed that God would intervene. God answered by promising Hezekiah fifteen more years of life and deliverance of Jerusalem from Assyria (&nbsp;Isaiah 38:4-6 ). </p> <p> In the meantime, Sennacherib had besieged Lachish. [[Aware]] that Hezekiah had trusted God for deliverance, Sennacherib sent messengers to the Jerusalem wall to urge the people to surrender. Sennacherib boasted of having conquered 46 walled cities and having taken 200,000 captives. Sennacherib's messengers taunted that God would not come to Judah's defense. Hezekiah, dressed in sackcloth and ashes, went to the Temple to pray. He also called for Isaiah, the prophet. Isaiah announced that Sennacherib would “hear a rumour” and return to his own land where he would die by the sword (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:7 ). </p> <p> Hezekiah's faith and physical recovery brought him recognition from the surrounding nations (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:33 ). The Babylonian leader, Merodachbaladan, even congratulated Hezekiah on his recovery. Hezekiah hosted this Babylonian leader at a reception, but Isaiah met this event with a warning that succeeding generations would be subjected to Babylonian captivity (&nbsp;Isaiah 39:1-8 ). </p> <p> Sennacherib destroyed the city of Babylon in 689 B.C. He then marched toward Egypt. [[Hoping]] to ward off any interference from Judah, Sennacherib sent letters to Hezekiah ordering him to surrender (&nbsp;Isaiah 37:9-38 ). Hezekiah took the letters to the Temple and prayed for God's help. From Isaiah came the message that Sennacherib would not prevail. In fact, Sennacherib's army was destroyed in a miraculous way (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:35-37 ). In 681 B.C., Sennacherib was killed by two of his sons as had been predicted by Isaiah in 701 B.C. Hezekiah died in 687/86 B.C. Manasseh, his son, succeeded him, although [[Manasseh]] had become co-regent with Hezekiah about 696 B.C. </p> <p> The [[Gospel]] of Matthew lists Hezekiah in the genealogy of Jesus (&nbsp;Matthew 1:9-10 ). </p> <p> Gary Hardin </p>
          
          
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72676" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72676" /> ==
<p> '''Hezeki'ah.''' ''(the might of Jehovah).'' </p> <p> 1. Twelfth king of Judah, son of the apostate, Ahaz and Abi or Abijah, ascended the throne at the age of 25, [[B.C.]] 726. Hezekiah was one of the three most perfect kings of Judah. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:5. &nbsp;Sirach 49:4. His first act was to purge, repair and reopen, with splendid sacrifices and perfect ceremonial, the Temple. He also destroyed a brazen serpent, said to have been the one used by Moses, in the miraculous healing of the Israelites, &nbsp;Numbers 21:9, which had become an object of adoration. </p> <p> When the kingdom of Israel had fallen, Hezekiah invited the scattered inhabitants to a peculiar [[Passover]] , which was continued for the unprecedented period of fourteen days. &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:30-31. At the head of a repentant and united people, Hezekiah ventured to assume the aggressive camp[aign against the Philistines, and in a series of victories, not only rewon the cities which his father had lost, &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:18, but even dispossessed them of their own cities, except Gaza, &nbsp;2 Kings 18:8, and Gath. He refused to acknowledge the supremacy of Assyria. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:7. [[Instant]] war was imminent and Hezekiah used every available means to strengthen himself. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:20. </p> <p> It was probably at this dangerous crisis in his kingdom, that we find him sick and sending for Isaiah, who prophesies death as the result. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:1. Hezekiah's prayer for longer life is heard. The prophet had hardly left the palace when he was ordered to return and promise the king immediate recovery and fifteen years more of life. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:4. An embassy coming from Babylon ostensibly to compliment Hezekiah on his convalescence, but really to form an alliance between the two powers, is favorably received by the king, who shows them the treasures which he had accumulated. For this, Isaiah foretells the punishment that shall befall his house. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:17. </p> <p> The two invasions of Sennacherib occupy the greater part of the scripture records concerning the reign of Hezekiah. The first of these took place in the third year of Sennacherib, [[B.C.]] 702, and occupies only three verses. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16. Respecting the commencement of the second invasion, we have full details in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:17; seq.; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:9; seq.; &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1. Sennacherib sent against Jerusalem, an army under two officers and his cupbearer, the orator Rabshakeh, with a blasphemous and insulting summons to surrender; but Isaiah assures the king he need not fear, promising to disperse the enemy. &nbsp;2 Kings 19:6-7. Accordingly, that night "the angel of the Lord went out, and smote, in the camp of the Assyrians, a hundred fourscore and five thousand." </p> <p> Hezekiah only lived to enjoy for about one year more, his well-earned peace and glory. He slept with his fathers, after a reign of twenty-nine years, in the 56th year of his age, [[B.C.]] 697. </p> <p> 2. Son of Neariah, one of the descendants of the royal family of Judah. &nbsp;1 Chronicles 3:23. </p> <p> 3. The same name, though rendered in the Authorized Version [[Hizkiah]] , is found in &nbsp;Zephaniah 1:1. </p> <p> 4. [[Ater]] of Hezekiah. ''See '' [[Ater]] ''.'' </p>
<p> '''Hezeki'ah.''' ''(The [[Might]] Of Jehovah).'' </p> <p> 1. Twelfth king of Judah, son of the apostate, Ahaz and Abi or Abijah, ascended the throne at the age of 25, B.C. 726. Hezekiah was one of the three most perfect kings of Judah. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:5. &nbsp;Sirach 49:4. His first act was to purge, repair and reopen, with splendid sacrifices and perfect ceremonial, the Temple. He also destroyed a brazen serpent, said to have been the one used by Moses, in the miraculous healing of the Israelites, &nbsp;Numbers 21:9, which had become an object of adoration. </p> <p> When the kingdom of Israel had fallen, Hezekiah invited the scattered inhabitants to a peculiar [[Passover]] , which was continued for the unprecedented period of fourteen days. &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:30-31. At the head of a repentant and united people, Hezekiah ventured to assume the aggressive camp[aign against the Philistines, and in a series of victories, not only rewon the cities which his father had lost, &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:18, but even dispossessed them of their own cities, except Gaza, &nbsp;2 Kings 18:8, and Gath. He refused to acknowledge the supremacy of Assyria. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:7. [[Instant]] war was imminent and Hezekiah used every available means to strengthen himself. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:20. </p> <p> It was probably at this dangerous crisis in his kingdom, that we find him sick and sending for Isaiah, who prophesies death as the result. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:1. Hezekiah's prayer for longer life is heard. The prophet had hardly left the palace when he was ordered to return and promise the king immediate recovery and fifteen years more of life. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:4. An embassy coming from Babylon ostensibly to compliment Hezekiah on his convalescence, but really to form an alliance between the two powers, is favorably received by the king, who shows them the treasures which he had accumulated. For this, Isaiah foretells the punishment that shall befall his house. &nbsp;2 Kings 20:17. </p> <p> The two invasions of Sennacherib occupy the greater part of the scripture records concerning the reign of Hezekiah. The first of these took place in the third year of Sennacherib, B.C. 702, and occupies only three verses. &nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16. Respecting the commencement of the second invasion, we have full details in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:17; seq.; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:9; seq.; &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1. Sennacherib sent against Jerusalem, an army under two officers and his cupbearer, the orator Rabshakeh, with a blasphemous and insulting summons to surrender; but Isaiah assures the king he need not fear, promising to disperse the enemy. &nbsp;2 Kings 19:6-7. Accordingly, that night "the angel of the Lord went out, and smote, in the camp of the Assyrians, a hundred fourscore and five thousand." </p> <p> Hezekiah only lived to enjoy for about one year more, his well-earned peace and glory. He slept with his fathers, after a reign of twenty-nine years, in the 56th year of his age, B.C. 697. </p> <p> 2. Son of Neariah, one of the descendants of the royal family of Judah. &nbsp;1 Chronicles 3:23. </p> <p> 3. The same name, though rendered in the Authorized Version [[Hizkiah]] , is found in &nbsp;Zephaniah 1:1. </p> <p> 4. Ater of Hezekiah. ''See '' [[Ater]] ''.'' </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31938" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31938" /> ==
<li> Son of Ahaz (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:1; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1 ), whom he succeeded on the throne of the kingdom of Judah. He reigned twenty-nine years [[(B.C.]] 726-697). The history of this king is contained in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:20 , &nbsp;Isaiah 3639-39 , and &nbsp;2 Chronicles 2932-32 . He is spoken of as a great and good king. In public life he followed the example of his great-granfather Uzziah. He set himself to abolish idolatry from his kingdom, and among other things which he did for this end, he destroyed the "brazen serpent," which had been removed to Jerusalem, and had become an object of idolatrous worship (&nbsp;Numbers 21:9 ). [[A]] great reformation was wrought in the kingdom of Judah in his day (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:4; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:3-36 ). <p> On the death of Sargon and the accession of his son Sennacherib to the throne of Assyria, Hezekiah refused to pay the tribute which his father had paid, and "rebelled against the king of Assyria, and served him not," but entered into a league with Egypt (&nbsp;Isaiah 30; &nbsp;31; &nbsp;36:6-9 ). This led to the invasion of Judah by Sennacherib (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16 ), who took forty cities, and besieged Jerusalem with mounds. Hezekiah yielded to the demands of the Assyrian king, and agreed to pay him three hundred talents of silver and thirty of gold (18:14). </p> <p> But Sennacherib dealt treacherously with Hezekiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 33:1 ), and a second time within two years invaded his kingdom (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:17; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:9; &nbsp;Isaiah 36 ). This invasion issued in the destruction of Sennacherib's army. Hezekiah prayed to God, and "that night the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians 185,000 men." Sennacherib fled with the shattered remnant of his forces to Nineveh, where, seventeen years after, he was assassinated by his sons [[Adrammelech]] and [[Sharezer]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:37 ). (See [[Sennacherib]] .) </p> <p> The narrative of Hezekiah's sickness and miraculous recovery is found in 2Kings 20:1,&nbsp; 2 Chronicles 32:24 , &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1 . Various ambassadors came to congratulate him on his recovery, and among them Merodach-baladan, the viceroy of Babylon (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:23; &nbsp;2 Kings 20:12 ). He closed his days in peace and prosperity, and was succeeded by his son Manasseh. He was buried in the "chiefest of the sepulchres of the sons of David" (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:27-33 ). He had "after him none like him among all the kings of Judah, nor any that were before him" (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:5 ). (See [[Isaiah]] .) </p> <div> <p> '''Copyright Statement''' These dictionary topics are from [[M.G.]] Easton [[M.A.,]] [[D.D.,]] Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> '''Bibliography Information''' Easton, Matthew George. Entry for 'Hezekiah'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/h/hezekiah.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<li> Son of Ahaz (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:1; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1 ), whom he succeeded on the throne of the kingdom of Judah. He reigned twenty-nine years (B.C. 726-697). The history of this king is contained in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:20 , &nbsp;Isaiah 3639-39 , and &nbsp;2 Chronicles 2932-32 . He is spoken of as a great and good king. In public life he followed the example of his great-granfather Uzziah. He set himself to abolish idolatry from his kingdom, and among other things which he did for this end, he destroyed the "brazen serpent," which had been removed to Jerusalem, and had become an object of idolatrous worship (&nbsp;Numbers 21:9 ). A great reformation was wrought in the kingdom of Judah in his day (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:4; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:3-36 ). <p> On the death of Sargon and the accession of his son Sennacherib to the throne of Assyria, Hezekiah refused to pay the tribute which his father had paid, and "rebelled against the king of Assyria, and served him not," but entered into a league with Egypt (&nbsp;Isaiah 30; &nbsp;31; &nbsp;36:6-9 ). This led to the invasion of Judah by Sennacherib (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16 ), who took forty cities, and besieged Jerusalem with mounds. Hezekiah yielded to the demands of the Assyrian king, and agreed to pay him three hundred talents of silver and thirty of gold (18:14). </p> <p> But Sennacherib dealt treacherously with Hezekiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 33:1 ), and a second time within two years invaded his kingdom (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:17; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:9; &nbsp;Isaiah 36 ). This invasion issued in the destruction of Sennacherib's army. Hezekiah prayed to God, and "that night the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians 185,000 men." Sennacherib fled with the shattered remnant of his forces to Nineveh, where, seventeen years after, he was assassinated by his sons [[Adrammelech]] and [[Sharezer]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 19:37 ). (See Sennacherib .) </p> <p> The narrative of Hezekiah's sickness and miraculous recovery is found in 2Kings 20:1,&nbsp; 2 Chronicles 32:24 , &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1 . Various ambassadors came to congratulate him on his recovery, and among them Merodach-baladan, the viceroy of Babylon (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:23; &nbsp;2 Kings 20:12 ). He closed his days in peace and prosperity, and was succeeded by his son Manasseh. He was buried in the "chiefest of the sepulchres of the sons of David" (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:27-33 ). He had "after him none like him among all the kings of Judah, nor any that were before him" (&nbsp;2 Kings 18:5 ). (See [[Isaiah]] .) </p> <div> <p> '''Copyright Statement''' These dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> '''Bibliography Information''' Easton, Matthew George. Entry for 'Hezekiah'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/h/hezekiah.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70211" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70211" /> ==
<p> '''Hezekiah.''' (''hĕz'e-'ah'' ), ''whom God strengthens.'' [[A]] good king of Judah, who succeeded his [[Hither]] Ahaz about 726 b.c., and died about 698 b.c. For his history see &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:1-37; &nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-21; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1-36; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:1-27; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1-21; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-33. Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1-22; &nbsp;Isaiah 37:1-38; &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1-22. He tried to restore the worship of Jehovah, removing "high places," and destroying the brazen serpent; consult &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:22-25; for the final deportation of the Ten Tribes see &nbsp;2 Kings 17:1-41; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12; and for his revolt against the Assyrians compare &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-33. Hezekiah's payment of tribute is noted in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16. Assyrian annals of Sennacherib discovered at Nineveh agree with this account. [[A]] second invasion seems to have followed when Sennacherib, &nbsp;Isaiah 30:1-7, returned, &nbsp;Isaiah 33:1. Then came Sennacherib's letters from Lachish and Libnah, the destruction of a great part of his army, and the retreat of the rest to Assyria, in answer to Hezekiah's prayer. Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 31:8-9; &nbsp;Isaiah 37:33-37. Hezekiah's sickness, humiliation, and prolongation of life 15 years in peace, and the prediction that Babylon, then feeble and friendly, would one day carry his descendants into captivity are noticed in Old [[Testament]] history, &nbsp;Isaiah 39:1-8; &nbsp;Micah 4:10. Hezekiah collated the Proverbs of Solomon. &nbsp;Proverbs 25:1. The prophecies of Hosea and Micah were delivered partly in his reign; compare &nbsp;Jeremiah 26:17-19; and Nahum was perhaps his contemporary. </p>
<p> '''Hezekiah.''' (''Hĕz'E-'Ah'' ), ''Whom God Strengthens.'' A good king of Judah, who succeeded his [[Hither]] Ahaz about 726 b.c., and died about 698 b.c. For his history see &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:1-37; &nbsp;2 Kings 20:1-21; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 29:1-36; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:1-27; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1-21; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-33. Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1-22; &nbsp;Isaiah 37:1-38; &nbsp;Isaiah 38:1-22. He tried to restore the worship of Jehovah, removing "high places," and destroying the brazen serpent; consult &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:22-25; for the final deportation of the Ten Tribes see &nbsp;2 Kings 17:1-41; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12; and for his revolt against the Assyrians compare &nbsp;2 Kings 18:1-37; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 32:1-33. Hezekiah's payment of tribute is noted in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:13-16. Assyrian annals of Sennacherib discovered at Nineveh agree with this account. A second invasion seems to have followed when Sennacherib, &nbsp;Isaiah 30:1-7, returned, &nbsp;Isaiah 33:1. Then came Sennacherib's letters from Lachish and Libnah, the destruction of a great part of his army, and the retreat of the rest to Assyria, in answer to Hezekiah's prayer. Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 31:8-9; &nbsp;Isaiah 37:33-37. Hezekiah's sickness, humiliation, and prolongation of life 15 years in peace, and the prediction that Babylon, then feeble and friendly, would one day carry his descendants into captivity are noticed in Old [[Testament]] history, &nbsp;Isaiah 39:1-8; &nbsp;Micah 4:10. Hezekiah collated the Proverbs of Solomon. &nbsp;Proverbs 25:1. The prophecies of Hosea and Micah were delivered partly in his reign; compare &nbsp;Jeremiah 26:17-19; and Nahum was perhaps his contemporary. </p>
          
          
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47864" /> ==
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47864" /> ==
Line 27: Line 27:
          
          
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16328" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16328" /> ==
<p> [[A]] pious king of Judah, succeeded his father Ahaz about 726 [[B.]] [[C.,]] and died about 698 [[B.]] [[C.]] His history is contained in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:12-21 &nbsp; 2 Chronicles 29:1-32:33 . Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1-38:22 . His reign is memorable for his faithful efforts to restore the worship of Jehovah; for his pride and presumption towards the Assyrians; for the distractions of their invading host in answer to his prayer; for his sickness and humiliation, and the prolonging of his life fifteen years of peace. He was succeeded by the unworthy Manasseh. </p>
<p> A pious king of Judah, succeeded his father Ahaz about 726 B. C., and died about 698 B. C. His history is contained in &nbsp;2 Kings 18:12-21 &nbsp; 2 Chronicles 29:1-32:33 . Compare &nbsp;Isaiah 36:1-38:22 . His reign is memorable for his faithful efforts to restore the worship of Jehovah; for his pride and presumption towards the Assyrians; for the distractions of their invading host in answer to his prayer; for his sickness and humiliation, and the prolonging of his life fifteen years of peace. He was succeeded by the unworthy Manasseh. </p>
          
          
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_66529" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_66529" /> ==
Line 33: Line 33:
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56183" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56183" /> ==
<p> <b> [[Hezekiah.]] </b> —One of the kings of Judah, mentioned in Mt.’s (&nbsp;Matthew 1:9 f.) genealogy of our Lord. </p>
<p> <b> HEZEKIAH. </b> —One of the kings of Judah, mentioned in Mt.’s (&nbsp;Matthew 1:9 f.) genealogy of our Lord. </p>
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_44046" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_44046" /> ==
<
<
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15881" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15881" /> ==
<p> Hezekiah, son of Ahaz, and thirteenth king of Judah, who reigned from [[B.C.]] 725 to [[B.C.]] 696. </p> <p> From the commencement of his reign the efforts of Hezekiah were directed to the reparation of the effects of the grievous errors of his predecessors; and during his time the true religion and the theocratical policy flourished as they had not done since the days of David. The temple was cleared and purified; the utensils and forms of service were restored to their ancient order; all the changes introduced by Ahaz were abolished; all the monuments of idolatry were destroyed, and their remains cast into the brook Kidron. Among the latter was the brazen serpent of Moses, which had been deposited first in the tabernacle, and then in the temple, as a memorial of the event in which it originated: and it is highly to the credit of Hezekiah, and shows more clearly than any other single circumstance the spirit of his operations, that even this interesting relic was not spared when it seemed in danger of being turned to idolatrous uses. Having succeeded by his acts and words in rekindling the zeal of the priests and of the people, the king appointed a high festival, when, attended by his court and people, he proceeded in high state to the temple, to present sacrifices of expiation for the past irregularities, and to commence the reorganized services. [[A]] vast number of sacrifices evinced to the people the zeal of their superiors, and Judah, long sunk in idolatry, was at length reconciled to God (; 2 Chronicles 29). </p> <p> The revival of the great annual festivals was included in this reformation. The Passover, which was the most important of them all, had not for a long time been celebrated according to the rites of the law; and the day on which it regularly fell, in the first year of Hezekiah, being already past, the king, nevertheless, justly conceiving the late observance a less evil than the entire omission of the feast, directed that it should be kept on the 14th day of the second month, being one month after its proper time. [[Couriers]] were sent from town to town, inviting the people to attend the solemnity; and even the ten tribes which formed the neighboring kingdom were invited to share with their brethren of Judah in a duty equally incumbent on all the children of Abraham. Of these some received the message gladly, and others with disdain; but a considerable number of persons belonging to the northernmost tribes (which had more seldom than the others been brought into hostile contact with Judah) came to Jerusalem, and by their presence imparted a new interest to the solemnity. [[A]] profound and salutary impression appears to have been made on this occasion; and so strong was the fervor and so great the number of the assembled people, that the festival was prolonged to twice its usual duration; and during this time the multitude was fed abundantly from the countless offerings presented by the king and his nobles. Never since the time of Solomon, when the whole of the twelve tribes had used to assemble at the Holy City, had the Passover been observed with such magnificence (2 Chronicles 30). </p> <p> The good effect of this procedure was seen when the people carried back to their homes the zeal for the Lord which had thus been kindled, and proceeded to destroy and cast forth all the abominations by which their several towns had been defiled; thus performing again, on a smaller scale, the doings of the king in Jerusalem. Even the 'high places,' which the pious kings of former days had spared, were on this occasion abolished and overthrown; and even the men of Israel, who had attended the feast, were carried away by the same holy enthusiasm, and, on returning to their homes, broke all their idols in pieces . </p> <p> The attention of this pious and able king was extended to whatever concerned the interests of religion in his dominions. He caused a new collection of Solomon's proverbs to be made, being the same which occupy Proverbs 25-29 of the book, which bears that name. The sectional divisions of the priests and Levites were reestablished; the perpetual sacrifices were recommenced, and maintained from the royal treasure; the stores of the temple were once more filled by the offerings of the people, and the times of Solomon and [[Jehoshaphat]] seemed to have returned (2 Chronicles 31). </p> <p> This great work having been accomplished and consolidated (, etc.), Hezekiah applied himself to repair the calamities, as he had repaired the crimes, of his father's government. He took arms, and recovered the cities of Judah which the Philistines had seized. [[Encouraged]] by this success, he ventured to withhold the tribute which his father had paid to the Assyrian king; and this act, which the result shows to have been imprudent, drew upon the country the greatest calamities of his reign. Only a few years before, namely, in the fourth of his reign, the Assyrians had put an end to the kingdom of Israel and sent the ten tribes into exile; but had abstained from molesting Hezekiah, as he was already their tributary. [[Seeing]] his country invaded on all sides by the Assyrian forces under Sennacherib, and Lachish, a strong place which covered Jerusalem, on the point of falling into their hands, Hezekiah, not daring to meet them in the field, occupied himself in all necessary preparations for a protracted defense of Jerusalem, in hope of assistance from Egypt, with which country he had contracted an alliance . Such alliances were not favored by the [[Divine]] sovereign of Israel and His prophets, and no good ever came of them. But this alliance did not render the good king unmindful of his true source of strength; for in quieting the alarms of the people he directed their attention to the consideration that they in fact had more of power and strength in the divine protection than the Assyrian king possessed in all his host. Nevertheless, Hezekiah was himself distrustful of the course he had taken, and at length, to avert the calamities of war, sent to the Assyrian king offers of submission. Sennacherib, who was anxious to proceed against Egypt, consented to withdraw his forces on the payment of three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold; which the king was not able to raise without exhausting both his own treasury and that of the temple, and stripping off the gold with which the doors and pillars of the Lord's house were overlaid . </p> <p> But after he had received the silver and gold, the Assyrian king broke faith with Hezekiah, and continued to prosecute his warlike operations. While he employed himself in taking the fortresses of Judea, which it was important to secure before he marched against Egypt, he sent three of his generals, Rabshakeh, Tartan, and Rabsaris, with part of his forces, to threaten Jerusalem with a siege unless it were surrendered, and the inhabitants submitted to be sent into Assyria; and this summons was delivered in language highly insulting not only to the king and people, but to the God they worshipped. When the terms of the summons were made known to Hezekiah, he gathered courage from the conviction that God would not fail to vindicate the honor of His insulted name. In this conviction he was confirmed by the prophet Isaiah, who, in the Lord's name, promised the utter discomfiture and overthrow of the blasphemous Assyrian: 'Lo, [[I]] will send a blast upon him, and he shall hear a rumor, and shall return to his own land, and [[I]] will cause him to die by the sword in his own land' . The rumor which Sennacherib heard was of the advance of Tirhakah the Ethiopian to the aid of the Egyptians, with a force which the Assyrians did not deem it prudent to meet; but, before withdrawing to his own country, Sennacherib sent a threatening letter to Hezekiah, designed to check the gladness which his retirement was likely to produce. But that very night the predicted blast—probably the hot pestilential south wind—smote 180,000 men in the camp of the Assyrians, and released the men of Judah from all their fears (;;; Isaiah 36-37). </p> <p> It was in the same year, and while Jerusalem was still threatened by the Assyrians, that Hezekiah fell sick of the plague; and the aspect which the plague-boil assumed assured him that he must die. In this he was confirmed by Isaiah, who warned him that his end approached. The love of life, the condition of the country—the Assyrians being present in it, and the throne of David without an heir—caused him to grieve at this doom, and to pray earnestly that he might be spared. And his prayer was heard in heaven. The prophet returned with the assurance that in three days he should recover, and that fifteen additional years of life should be given to him. This communication was altogether so extraordinary, that the king required some token by which his belief might be justified; and accordingly the 'sign' which he required was granted to him. The shadow of the sun went back upon the dial of Ahaz the ten degrees it had gone down [[[Dial].]] This was a marvel greater than that of the cure which the king distrusted; for there is no known principle of astronomy or natural philosophy by which such a result could be produced. [[A]] cataplasm of figs was then applied to the plague-boil, under the direction of the prophet, and on the third day, as foretold, the king recovered (;; Isaiah 38) [[[Plague].]] </p> <p> The destruction of the Assyrians drew the attention of foreign courts for a time towards Judea, and caused the facts connected with Hezekiah's recovery, and the retrogression of the shadow on the dial, to be widely known. Among others, Merodach Baladan, king of Babylon, sent ambassadors with presents to make inquiries into those matters, and to congratulate the king on his recovery. Since the time of Solomon the appearance of such embassies from distant parts had been rare at Jerusalem; and the king, in the pride of his heart, made a somewhat ostentatious display to Baladan's ambassadors of all his treasures, which he had probably recovered from the Assyrians, and much increased with their spoil. Josephus (Antiq. x. 2. 2) says that one of the objects of the embassy was to form an alliance with Hezekiah against the Assyrian empire; and if so, his readiness to enter into an alliance adverse to the theocratical policy, and his desire to magnify his own importance in the eyes of the king of Babylon, probably furnished the ground of the divine disapprobation with which his conduct in this matter was regarded. He was reprimanded by the prophet Isaiah, who revealed to him the mysteries of the future, so far as to apprise him that all these treasures should hereafter be in the possession of the Babylonians, and his family and people exiles in the land from which these ambassadors came. This intimation was received by the king with his usual submission to the will of God; and he was content to know that these evils were not to be inflicted in his own days. He has sometimes been blamed for this seeming indifference to the fate of his successors; but it is to be borne in mind that at this time he had no children. This was in the fourteenth year of his reign, and Manasseh, his successor, was not born till three years afterwards (;; Isaiah 39). The rest of Hezekiah's life appears to have been peaceable and prosperous. No man before or since ever lived under the certain knowledge of the precise length of the span of life before him. When the fifteen years had expired, Hezekiah was gathered to his fathers, after a reign of twenty-nine years. He died sincerely lamented by all his people, and the public respect for his character and memory was testified by his corpse being placed in the highest niche of the royal sepulcher . </p>
<p> Hezekiah, son of Ahaz, and thirteenth king of Judah, who reigned from B.C. 725 to B.C. 696. </p> <p> From the commencement of his reign the efforts of Hezekiah were directed to the reparation of the effects of the grievous errors of his predecessors; and during his time the true religion and the theocratical policy flourished as they had not done since the days of David. The temple was cleared and purified; the utensils and forms of service were restored to their ancient order; all the changes introduced by Ahaz were abolished; all the monuments of idolatry were destroyed, and their remains cast into the brook Kidron. Among the latter was the brazen serpent of Moses, which had been deposited first in the tabernacle, and then in the temple, as a memorial of the event in which it originated: and it is highly to the credit of Hezekiah, and shows more clearly than any other single circumstance the spirit of his operations, that even this interesting relic was not spared when it seemed in danger of being turned to idolatrous uses. Having succeeded by his acts and words in rekindling the zeal of the priests and of the people, the king appointed a high festival, when, attended by his court and people, he proceeded in high state to the temple, to present sacrifices of expiation for the past irregularities, and to commence the reorganized services. A vast number of sacrifices evinced to the people the zeal of their superiors, and Judah, long sunk in idolatry, was at length reconciled to God (; 2 Chronicles 29). </p> <p> The revival of the great annual festivals was included in this reformation. The Passover, which was the most important of them all, had not for a long time been celebrated according to the rites of the law; and the day on which it regularly fell, in the first year of Hezekiah, being already past, the king, nevertheless, justly conceiving the late observance a less evil than the entire omission of the feast, directed that it should be kept on the 14th day of the second month, being one month after its proper time. [[Couriers]] were sent from town to town, inviting the people to attend the solemnity; and even the ten tribes which formed the neighboring kingdom were invited to share with their brethren of Judah in a duty equally incumbent on all the children of Abraham. Of these some received the message gladly, and others with disdain; but a considerable number of persons belonging to the northernmost tribes (which had more seldom than the others been brought into hostile contact with Judah) came to Jerusalem, and by their presence imparted a new interest to the solemnity. A profound and salutary impression appears to have been made on this occasion; and so strong was the fervor and so great the number of the assembled people, that the festival was prolonged to twice its usual duration; and during this time the multitude was fed abundantly from the countless offerings presented by the king and his nobles. Never since the time of Solomon, when the whole of the twelve tribes had used to assemble at the Holy City, had the Passover been observed with such magnificence (2 Chronicles 30). </p> <p> The good effect of this procedure was seen when the people carried back to their homes the zeal for the Lord which had thus been kindled, and proceeded to destroy and cast forth all the abominations by which their several towns had been defiled; thus performing again, on a smaller scale, the doings of the king in Jerusalem. Even the 'high places,' which the pious kings of former days had spared, were on this occasion abolished and overthrown; and even the men of Israel, who had attended the feast, were carried away by the same holy enthusiasm, and, on returning to their homes, broke all their idols in pieces . </p> <p> The attention of this pious and able king was extended to whatever concerned the interests of religion in his dominions. He caused a new collection of Solomon's proverbs to be made, being the same which occupy Proverbs 25-29 of the book, which bears that name. The sectional divisions of the priests and Levites were reestablished; the perpetual sacrifices were recommenced, and maintained from the royal treasure; the stores of the temple were once more filled by the offerings of the people, and the times of Solomon and [[Jehoshaphat]] seemed to have returned (2 Chronicles 31). </p> <p> This great work having been accomplished and consolidated (, etc.), Hezekiah applied himself to repair the calamities, as he had repaired the crimes, of his father's government. He took arms, and recovered the cities of Judah which the Philistines had seized. [[Encouraged]] by this success, he ventured to withhold the tribute which his father had paid to the Assyrian king; and this act, which the result shows to have been imprudent, drew upon the country the greatest calamities of his reign. Only a few years before, namely, in the fourth of his reign, the Assyrians had put an end to the kingdom of Israel and sent the ten tribes into exile; but had abstained from molesting Hezekiah, as he was already their tributary. [[Seeing]] his country invaded on all sides by the Assyrian forces under Sennacherib, and Lachish, a strong place which covered Jerusalem, on the point of falling into their hands, Hezekiah, not daring to meet them in the field, occupied himself in all necessary preparations for a protracted defense of Jerusalem, in hope of assistance from Egypt, with which country he had contracted an alliance . Such alliances were not favored by the [[Divine]] sovereign of Israel and His prophets, and no good ever came of them. But this alliance did not render the good king unmindful of his true source of strength; for in quieting the alarms of the people he directed their attention to the consideration that they in fact had more of power and strength in the divine protection than the Assyrian king possessed in all his host. Nevertheless, Hezekiah was himself distrustful of the course he had taken, and at length, to avert the calamities of war, sent to the Assyrian king offers of submission. Sennacherib, who was anxious to proceed against Egypt, consented to withdraw his forces on the payment of three hundred talents of silver and thirty talents of gold; which the king was not able to raise without exhausting both his own treasury and that of the temple, and stripping off the gold with which the doors and pillars of the Lord's house were overlaid . </p> <p> But after he had received the silver and gold, the Assyrian king broke faith with Hezekiah, and continued to prosecute his warlike operations. While he employed himself in taking the fortresses of Judea, which it was important to secure before he marched against Egypt, he sent three of his generals, Rabshakeh, Tartan, and Rabsaris, with part of his forces, to threaten Jerusalem with a siege unless it were surrendered, and the inhabitants submitted to be sent into Assyria; and this summons was delivered in language highly insulting not only to the king and people, but to the God they worshipped. When the terms of the summons were made known to Hezekiah, he gathered courage from the conviction that God would not fail to vindicate the honor of His insulted name. In this conviction he was confirmed by the prophet Isaiah, who, in the Lord's name, promised the utter discomfiture and overthrow of the blasphemous Assyrian: 'Lo, I will send a blast upon him, and he shall hear a rumor, and shall return to his own land, and I will cause him to die by the sword in his own land' . The rumor which Sennacherib heard was of the advance of Tirhakah the Ethiopian to the aid of the Egyptians, with a force which the Assyrians did not deem it prudent to meet; but, before withdrawing to his own country, Sennacherib sent a threatening letter to Hezekiah, designed to check the gladness which his retirement was likely to produce. But that very night the predicted blast—probably the hot pestilential south wind—smote 180,000 men in the camp of the Assyrians, and released the men of Judah from all their fears (;;; Isaiah 36-37). </p> <p> It was in the same year, and while Jerusalem was still threatened by the Assyrians, that Hezekiah fell sick of the plague; and the aspect which the plague-boil assumed assured him that he must die. In this he was confirmed by Isaiah, who warned him that his end approached. The love of life, the condition of the country—the Assyrians being present in it, and the throne of David without an heir—caused him to grieve at this doom, and to pray earnestly that he might be spared. And his prayer was heard in heaven. The prophet returned with the assurance that in three days he should recover, and that fifteen additional years of life should be given to him. This communication was altogether so extraordinary, that the king required some token by which his belief might be justified; and accordingly the 'sign' which he required was granted to him. The shadow of the sun went back upon the dial of Ahaz the ten degrees it had gone down [DIAL]. This was a marvel greater than that of the cure which the king distrusted; for there is no known principle of astronomy or natural philosophy by which such a result could be produced. A cataplasm of figs was then applied to the plague-boil, under the direction of the prophet, and on the third day, as foretold, the king recovered (;; Isaiah 38) [PLAGUE]. </p> <p> The destruction of the Assyrians drew the attention of foreign courts for a time towards Judea, and caused the facts connected with Hezekiah's recovery, and the retrogression of the shadow on the dial, to be widely known. Among others, Merodach Baladan, king of Babylon, sent ambassadors with presents to make inquiries into those matters, and to congratulate the king on his recovery. Since the time of Solomon the appearance of such embassies from distant parts had been rare at Jerusalem; and the king, in the pride of his heart, made a somewhat ostentatious display to Baladan's ambassadors of all his treasures, which he had probably recovered from the Assyrians, and much increased with their spoil. Josephus (Antiq. x. 2. 2) says that one of the objects of the embassy was to form an alliance with Hezekiah against the Assyrian empire; and if so, his readiness to enter into an alliance adverse to the theocratical policy, and his desire to magnify his own importance in the eyes of the king of Babylon, probably furnished the ground of the divine disapprobation with which his conduct in this matter was regarded. He was reprimanded by the prophet Isaiah, who revealed to him the mysteries of the future, so far as to apprise him that all these treasures should hereafter be in the possession of the Babylonians, and his family and people exiles in the land from which these ambassadors came. This intimation was received by the king with his usual submission to the will of God; and he was content to know that these evils were not to be inflicted in his own days. He has sometimes been blamed for this seeming indifference to the fate of his successors; but it is to be borne in mind that at this time he had no children. This was in the fourteenth year of his reign, and Manasseh, his successor, was not born till three years afterwards (;; Isaiah 39). The rest of Hezekiah's life appears to have been peaceable and prosperous. No man before or since ever lived under the certain knowledge of the precise length of the span of life before him. When the fifteen years had expired, Hezekiah was gathered to his fathers, after a reign of twenty-nine years. He died sincerely lamented by all his people, and the public respect for his character and memory was testified by his corpse being placed in the highest niche of the royal sepulcher . </p>
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_74528" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_74528" /> ==
<p> [[A]] king of Judah; reigned from 725 to 697 [[B.C.;]] distinguished for his zeal in the celebration of the worship of Jehovah and for his weakness in making a parade of his wealth; reigned in the golden age of Hebrew prophecy, Isaiah and Micah being his contemporaries. </p>
<p> A king of Judah; reigned from 725 to 697 B.C.; distinguished for his zeal in the celebration of the worship of Jehovah and for his weakness in making a parade of his wealth; reigned in the golden age of Hebrew prophecy, Isaiah and Micah being his contemporaries. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==