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Difference between revisions of "Hoshea"

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== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70236" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70236" /> ==
<p> [[Hoshea]] (''Ho-Shç'Ah'' ), ''Salvation.'' 1. The 19th, last and best king of Israel. He succeeded Pekah, whom he slew in a successful conspiracy, thereby fulfilling a prophecy of Isaiah. &nbsp;Isaiah 7:16. In the third year of his reign (b.c. 726) Shalmaneser cruelly stormed the strong caves of Beth-arbel, &nbsp;Hosea 10:14, and made [[Israel]] tributary, &nbsp;2 Kings 17:3, for three years. At the end of this period Hoshea entered into a secret alliance with So, king of Egypt, to throw off the Assyrian yoke. The alliance did him no good; it was revealed to the court of Nineveh by the Assyrian party in Ephraim, and Hoshea was immediately seized as a rebellious vassal, shut up in prison, and apparently treated with the utmost Indignity. &nbsp;Micah 5:1. Nothing is known of Hoshea after this event. 2. The son of Nun, ''I.E.,'' Joshua, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:44; and also in &nbsp;Numbers 13:8, R. V., though there the A.V. has Oshea. 3. Son of Azaziah, &nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:20; like his great namesake, a man of Ephraim, ruler of his tribe in the time of king David. (b.c. 1019.) 4. One of the heads of the people who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah. &nbsp;Nehemiah 10:23. (b.c. 410.) </p>
<p> [[Hoshea]] ( ''Ho-Shç'Ah'' ), ''Salvation.'' 1. The 19th, last and best king of Israel. He succeeded Pekah, whom he slew in a successful conspiracy, thereby fulfilling a prophecy of Isaiah. &nbsp;Isaiah 7:16. In the third year of his reign (b.c. 726) Shalmaneser cruelly stormed the strong caves of Beth-arbel, &nbsp;Hosea 10:14, and made [[Israel]] tributary, &nbsp;2 Kings 17:3, for three years. At the end of this period Hoshea entered into a secret alliance with So, king of Egypt, to throw off the Assyrian yoke. The alliance did him no good; it was revealed to the court of Nineveh by the Assyrian party in Ephraim, and Hoshea was immediately seized as a rebellious vassal, shut up in prison, and apparently treated with the utmost Indignity. &nbsp;Micah 5:1. Nothing is known of Hoshea after this event. 2. The son of Nun, ''I.E.,'' Joshua, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:44; and also in &nbsp;Numbers 13:8, R. V., though there the A.V. has Oshea. 3. Son of Azaziah, &nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:20; like his great namesake, a man of Ephraim, ruler of his tribe in the time of king David. (b.c. 1019.) 4. One of the heads of the people who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah. &nbsp;Nehemiah 10:23. (b.c. 410.) </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31889" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31889" /> ==
<li> The last king of Israel. He conspired against and slew his predecessor, Pekah (&nbsp;Isaiah 7:16 ), but did not ascend the throne till after an interregnum of warfare of eight years (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:1,2 ). Soon after this he submitted to Shalmaneser, the Assyrian king, who a second time invaded the land to punish Hoshea, because of his withholding tribute which he had promised to pay. A second revolt brought back the Assyrian king Sargon, who besieged Samaria, and carried the ten tribes away beyond the Euphrates, B.C. 720 (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:5,6; &nbsp;18:9-12 ). No more is heard of Hoshea. He disappeared like "foam upon the water" (&nbsp;Hosea 10:7; &nbsp;13:11 ). <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 'Hoshea'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/h/hoshea.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<li> The last king of Israel. He conspired against and slew his predecessor, Pekah (&nbsp;Isaiah 7:16 ), but did not ascend the throne till after an interregnum of warfare of eight years (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:1,2 ). Soon after this he submitted to Shalmaneser, the Assyrian king, who a second time invaded the land to punish Hoshea, because of his withholding tribute which he had promised to pay. A second revolt brought back the Assyrian king Sargon, who besieged Samaria, and carried the ten tribes away beyond the Euphrates, B.C. 720 (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:5,6; &nbsp;18:9-12 ). No more is heard of Hoshea. He disappeared like "foam upon the water" (&nbsp;Hosea 10:7; &nbsp;13:11 ). <div> <p> '''Copyright Statement''' These dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton [[M.A., DD]]  Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> '''Bibliography Information''' Easton, Matthew George. Entry for 'Hoshea'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/h/hoshea.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_66475" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_66475" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_44323" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_44323" /> ==
<p> (Heb. the same name as "Hosea," q.v.), the name of several persons. </p> <p> '''1.''' The original name (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:44, Sept. Ι᾿ησοῦς '','' Vulg. ''Josue;'' A.V. in &nbsp;Numbers 13:8; &nbsp;Numbers 13:16, "Oshea," Sept. Αὐσὴ,Vulg. Osee) of the son of Nun, afterwards called JOSHUA (See Joshua) (q.v.), by the more distinct recognition of the divine name ''Jah.'' '''2.''' (Sept. ᾿Ωσή; Vulg. ''Osee).'' A son of [[Azariah]] in the time of David; also an Ephraimite and prince of his people (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:20). B.C. 1014. </p> <p> '''3.''' The prophet Hosea (q.v.). </p> <p> '''4.''' Hosea (Sept. ᾿Ωσηέ '','' Vulg. ''Osee),'' the son of Elah, and last king of Israel. In the twentieth (posthumous) year of Jotham (&nbsp;2 Kings 15:30), i.e. B.C. 737-6, he conspired against and slew his predecessor Pekah, thereby fulfilling a prophecy of Isaiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 7:16). Although [[Josephus]] calls Hoshea ''A Friend'' of Pekah (φίλου τινὸς ἐπβουλεύσαντος αὐτῷ, Ant. 9, 13, 1), we have no ground for calling this "a treacherous murder" (Prideaux, 1, 16). But he did not become established on the throne he had thus usurped till after an interregnum of warfare for eight years, namely, in the twelfth year of [[Ahaz]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:1), i.e. B.C. 729-8. "He did evil in the sight of the Lord." but not in the same degree as his predecessors (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:2). According to the Rabbis, this superiority consisted in his removing from the frontier cities the guards placed there by his predecessors to prevent their subjects from worshipping at [[Jerusalem]] (Seder Olam Rabba, cap. 22, quoted by Prideaux, 1, 16), and in his not hindering the [[Israelites]] from accepting the invitation of [[Hezekiah]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:10), nor checking their zeal against idolatry (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1). The compulsory cessation of the calf-worship may have removed his greatest temptation, for Tiglath Pileser had carried off the golden calf from Dan some years before (Sed. 01. Rab. 22), and that at Bethel was taken away by Shalmaneser in his first invasion (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:3; &nbsp;Hosea 10:14). [[Shortly]] after his accession (B.C. 728) he submitted to the supremacy of Shalmaneser, who appears to have entered his territory with the intention of subduing it by force if resisted (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:3), and, indeed, seems to have stormed the strong caves of Beth-arbel (&nbsp;Hosea 10:14), but who retired pacified with a present. </p> <p> This peaceable temper, however, appears not to have continued long. The intelligence that Hosea, encouraged perhaps by the revolt of Hezekiah, had entered into a confederacy with So, king of Egypt, with the view of shaking off the Assyrian yoke, caused Shalmaneser to return and punish the rebellious king of Israel by imprisonment for withholding the tribute for several years exacted from his country (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:4), B.C. cir. 725. He appears to have been again released, probably appeasing the conqueror by a large ransom; but a second relapse into revolt soon afterwards provoked the king of Assyria to march an army into the land of Israel, B.C. 723; and after a three-years' siege Samaria was taken and destroyed, and the ten tribes were sent into the countries beyond the Euphrates, B.C. 720 (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:5-6; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12). The king no doubt perished in the sack of the city by the enraged victor, or was only spared for the torture of an Assyrian triumph. He was apparently treated with the utmost indignity (&nbsp;Micah 5:1). That he disappeared very suddenly, like "foam upon the water," we may infer from &nbsp;Hosea 13:11; &nbsp;Hosea 10:7. His name occurs on the Assyrian monuments. The length of the siege was owing to the fact that this "glorious and beautiful" city was strongly situated, like "a crown of pride" among her hills (&nbsp;Isaiah 28:1-5). During the course of the siege Shalmaneser must have died, for it is certain that Samaria was taken by his successor Sargon, who thus laconically describes the event in his annals: "Samaria I looked at, I captured; 27,280 men (families?) who dwelt in it I carried away, I constructed fifty chariots in their country ... I appointed a governor over them, and continued upon them the tribute of the former people" (Botta, p. 145, 11, quoted by Dr. Hincks, ''Journ. Of Sacr. Lit.'' Oct. 1858; Layard, Nin. and Bab. 1, 148). For an account of the subsequent fortunes of the unhappy Ephraimites, the places to which they were transplanted by the policy of their conqueror and his officer, "the great and noble Asnapper" (&nbsp;Ezra 4:10), and the nations by which they were superseded, (See Samaria). </p> <p> Hoshea came to the throne too late, and governed a kingdom torn to pieces by foreign invasion and intestine broils. Sovereign after sovereign had fallen by the dagger of the assassin; and we see from the dark and terrible delineations of the contemporary prophets, (See Hosea); (See [[Micah]]); (See [[Isaiah]]), that murder and idolatry, drunkenness and lust, had eaten like "an incurable wound" (&nbsp;Micah 1:9) into the inmost heart of the national morality. Ephraim was dogged to its ruin by the apostate policy of the renegade who had asserted its independence (2 Kings 17; Joseph. ''Ant. 9,'' 14; Prideaux, 1, 15 sq.; Keil, ''On Kings, 2,'' 50 sq., English ed.; Jahn, ''Hebr. Corn. §'' 40; Ewald, ''Gesch.'' 3. 607-613; Rosenmü ller, Bibl. Geogr. chap. 1, English translated; Rawlinson, Herod. 1, 149). (See [[Kingdom Of Israel]]). </p> <p> '''5.''' HOSHEA (Sept. ᾿Ωσηέ '','' Vulg. ''Osee),'' one of the chief Israelites who joined in the sacred covenant after the [[Captivity]] (&nbsp;Nehemiah 10:23). B.C. cir. 410. </p>
<p> (Heb. the same name as "Hosea," q.v.), the name of several persons. </p> <p> '''1.''' The original name (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:44, Sept. '''''Ι᾿Ησοῦς''''' '','' Vulg. ''Josue;'' A.V. in &nbsp;Numbers 13:8; &nbsp;Numbers 13:16, "Oshea," Sept. '''''Αὐσὴ''''' ,Vulg. Osee) of the son of Nun, afterwards called JOSHUA (See Joshua) (q.v.), by the more distinct recognition of the divine name ''Jah.'' '''2.''' (Sept. '''''᾿Ωσή''''' ; Vulg. ''Osee).'' A son of [[Azariah]] in the time of David; also an Ephraimite and prince of his people (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:20). B.C. 1014. </p> <p> '''3.''' The prophet Hosea (q.v.). </p> <p> '''4.''' Hosea (Sept. '''''᾿Ωσηέ''''' '','' Vulg. ''Osee),'' the son of Elah, and last king of Israel. In the twentieth (posthumous) year of Jotham (&nbsp;2 Kings 15:30), i.e. B.C. 737-6, he conspired against and slew his predecessor Pekah, thereby fulfilling a prophecy of Isaiah (&nbsp;Isaiah 7:16). Although [[Josephus]] calls Hoshea ''A Friend'' of Pekah ( '''''Φίλου''''' '''''Τινὸς''''' '''''Ἐπβουλεύσαντος''''' '''''Αὐτῷ''''' , Ant. 9, 13, 1), we have no ground for calling this "a treacherous murder" (Prideaux, 1, 16). But he did not become established on the throne he had thus usurped till after an interregnum of warfare for eight years, namely, in the twelfth year of [[Ahaz]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:1), i.e. B.C. 729-8. "He did evil in the sight of the Lord." but not in the same degree as his predecessors (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:2). According to the Rabbis, this superiority consisted in his removing from the frontier cities the guards placed there by his predecessors to prevent their subjects from worshipping at [[Jerusalem]] (Seder Olam Rabba, cap. 22, quoted by Prideaux, 1, 16), and in his not hindering the [[Israelites]] from accepting the invitation of [[Hezekiah]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 30:10), nor checking their zeal against idolatry (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 31:1). The compulsory cessation of the calf-worship may have removed his greatest temptation, for Tiglath Pileser had carried off the golden calf from Dan some years before (Sed. 01. Rab. 22), and that at Bethel was taken away by Shalmaneser in his first invasion (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:3; &nbsp;Hosea 10:14). [[Shortly]] after his accession (B.C. 728) he submitted to the supremacy of Shalmaneser, who appears to have entered his territory with the intention of subduing it by force if resisted (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:3), and, indeed, seems to have stormed the strong caves of Beth-arbel (&nbsp;Hosea 10:14), but who retired pacified with a present. </p> <p> This peaceable temper, however, appears not to have continued long. The intelligence that Hosea, encouraged perhaps by the revolt of Hezekiah, had entered into a confederacy with So, king of Egypt, with the view of shaking off the Assyrian yoke, caused Shalmaneser to return and punish the rebellious king of Israel by imprisonment for withholding the tribute for several years exacted from his country (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:4), B.C. cir. 725. He appears to have been again released, probably appeasing the conqueror by a large ransom; but a second relapse into revolt soon afterwards provoked the king of Assyria to march an army into the land of Israel, B.C. 723; and after a three-years' siege Samaria was taken and destroyed, and the ten tribes were sent into the countries beyond the Euphrates, B.C. 720 (&nbsp;2 Kings 17:5-6; &nbsp;2 Kings 18:9-12). The king no doubt perished in the sack of the city by the enraged victor, or was only spared for the torture of an Assyrian triumph. He was apparently treated with the utmost indignity (&nbsp;Micah 5:1). That he disappeared very suddenly, like "foam upon the water," we may infer from &nbsp;Hosea 13:11; &nbsp;Hosea 10:7. His name occurs on the Assyrian monuments. The length of the siege was owing to the fact that this "glorious and beautiful" city was strongly situated, like "a crown of pride" among her hills (&nbsp;Isaiah 28:1-5). During the course of the siege Shalmaneser must have died, for it is certain that Samaria was taken by his successor Sargon, who thus laconically describes the event in his annals: "Samaria I looked at, I captured; 27,280 men (families?) who dwelt in it I carried away, I constructed fifty chariots in their country ... I appointed a governor over them, and continued upon them the tribute of the former people" (Botta, p. 145, 11, quoted by Dr. Hincks, ''Journ. Of Sacr. Lit.'' Oct. 1858; Layard, Nin. and Bab. 1, 148). For an account of the subsequent fortunes of the unhappy Ephraimites, the places to which they were transplanted by the policy of their conqueror and his officer, "the great and noble Asnapper" (&nbsp;Ezra 4:10), and the nations by which they were superseded, (See Samaria). </p> <p> Hoshea came to the throne too late, and governed a kingdom torn to pieces by foreign invasion and intestine broils. Sovereign after sovereign had fallen by the dagger of the assassin; and we see from the dark and terrible delineations of the contemporary prophets, (See Hosea); (See [[Micah]]); (See [[Isaiah]]), that murder and idolatry, drunkenness and lust, had eaten like "an incurable wound" (&nbsp;Micah 1:9) into the inmost heart of the national morality. Ephraim was dogged to its ruin by the apostate policy of the renegade who had asserted its independence (2 Kings 17; Joseph. ''Ant. 9,'' 14; Prideaux, 1, 15 sq.; Keil, ''On Kings, 2,'' 50 sq., English ed.; Jahn, ''Hebr. Corn. '''''§''''' '' 40; Ewald, ''Gesch.'' 3. 607-613; Rosenm '''''Ü''''' ller, Bibl. Geogr. chap. 1, English translated; Rawlinson, Herod. 1, 149). (See [[Kingdom Of Israel]]). </p> <p> '''5.''' HOSHEA (Sept. '''''᾿Ωσηέ''''' '','' Vulg. ''Osee),'' one of the chief Israelites who joined in the sacred covenant after the [[Captivity]] (&nbsp;Nehemiah 10:23). B.C. cir. 410. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==