Ésaïe 36:2

2 Et le roi d'Assyrie envoya de Lakis à Jérusalem, vers le roi Ezéchias, Rabschaké avec une puissante armée. Rabschaké s'arrêta à l'aqueduc de l'étang supérieur, sur le chemin du champ du foulon.

Ésaïe 36:2 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 36:2

And the king of Assyria sent Rabshakeh from Lachish to
Jerusalem unto King Hezekiah with a great army
Notwithstanding he had taken Hezekiah's money to withdraw his army out of his country, yet sends it out to his very capital; along with this Rabshakeh he sent two other generals, Tartan and Rabsaris, ( 2 Kings 18:17 ) though they are not mentioned, only Rabshakeh, because he was the principal person, however the chief speaker. Lachish was a city in the tribe of Judah, ( Joshua 15:39 ) , which Sennacherib was now besieging, ( 2 Chronicles 32:9 ) . This message was sent, Bishop Usher says, three years after the former expedition: and he stood by the conduit of the upper pool, in the highway of the
fullers' field;
where they spread their clothes, as the Targum, having washed them in the pool, of which see ( Isaiah 7:3 ) . Ben Melech thus describes the pool, conduit, and highway: the pool is a ditch, built with stone and lime, where rainwater was collected, or where they drew water from the fountain, and the waters were gathered into this pool; and there was in this pool a hole, which they stopped, until the time they pleased to fetch water, out of the pool: and the conduit was a ditch near to the pool, and they brought water out of the pool into the conduit, when they chose to drink, or wash garments: the highway was a way paved with stones, so that they could walk upon it in rainy days; and here they stood and washed their garments in the waters of the conduit, and in the field they spread them to the sun. This pool lay outside the city, yet just by the walls of it, which showed the daring insolence of Rabshakeh to come so very nigh, for he was in the hearing of the men upon the walls, ( Isaiah 36:12 ) , this Rabshakeh is by the Jewish writers thought to be an apostate Jew, because he spoke in the Jews' language; and some of them, as Jerome says, will have him to be a son of the Prophet Isaiah's, but without any foundation, Procopius, in ( 2 Kings 18:18 ) , thinks it probable that he was a Hebrew, who either had fled on his own accord to the Assyrians, or was taken captive by them.

Ésaïe 36:2 In-Context

1 La quatorzième année du roi Ezéchias, Sanchérib, roi d'Assyrie, monta contre toutes les villes fortes de Juda et s'en empara.
2 Et le roi d'Assyrie envoya de Lakis à Jérusalem, vers le roi Ezéchias, Rabschaké avec une puissante armée. Rabschaké s'arrêta à l'aqueduc de l'étang supérieur, sur le chemin du champ du foulon.
3 Alors Eliakim, fils de Hilkija, chef de la maison du roi, se rendit auprès de lui, avec Schebna, le secrétaire, et Joach, fils d'Asaph, l'archiviste.
4 Rabschaké leur dit: Dites à Ezéchias: Ainsi parle le grand roi, le roi d'Assyrie: Quelle est cette confiance, sur laquelle tu t'appuies?
5 Je te le dis, ce ne sont que des paroles en l'air: il faut pour la guerre de la prudence et de la force. En qui donc as-tu placé ta confiance, pour t'être révolté contre moi?
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.