Isaiah 37

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21. Whereas thou hast prayed to me--that is, hast not relied on thy own strength but on Me (compare 2 Kings 19:20 ). "That which thou hast prayed to Me against Sennacherib, I have heard" ( Psalms 65:2 ).

22. Transition to poetry: in parallelism.
virgin . . . daughter--honorable terms. "Virgin" implies that the city is, as yet, inviolate. "Daughter" is an abstract collective feminine personification of the population, the child of the place denoted
shaken . . . head--in scorn ( Psalms 22:7 , 109:25 , Matthew 27:39 ). With us to shake the head is a sign of denial or displeasure; but gestures have different meanings in different countries ( Isaiah 58:9 , Ezekiel 25:6 , Zephaniah 2:15 ).

23. Whom--not an idol.

24. said--virtually. Hast thou within thyself?
height--imagery from the Assyrian felling of trees in Lebanon ( Isaiah 14:8 , 33:9 ); figuratively for, "I have carried my victorious army through the regions most difficult of access, to the most remote lands."
sides--rather, "recesses" [G. V. SMITH].
fir trees--not cypresses, as some translate; pine foliage and cedars are still found on the northwest side of Lebanon [STANLEY].
height of . . . border--In 2 Kings 19:23 , "the lodgings of his borders." Perhaps on the ascent to the top there was a place of repose or caravansary, which bounded the usual attempts of persons to ascend [BARNES]. Here, simply, "its extreme height."
forest of . . . Carmel--rather, "its thickest forest." "Carmel" expresses thick luxuriance

25. digged, and drunk water--In 2 Kings 19:24 , it is "strange waters." I have marched into foreign lands where I had to dig wells for the supply of my armies; even the natural destitution of water there did not impede my march.
rivers of . . . besieged places--rather, "the streams (artificial canals from the Nile) of Egypt." "With the sole of my foot," expresses that as soon as his vast armies marched into a region, the streams were drunk up by them; or rather, that the rivers proved no obstruction to the onward march of his armies. So Isaiah 19:4-6 , referring to Egypt, "the river--brooks of defense--shall be dried up." HORSLEY, translates the Hebrew for "besieged places," "rocks."

26. Reply of God to Sennacherib.
long ago--join, rather, with "I have done it." Thou dost boast that it is all by thy counsel and might: but it is I who, long ago, have ordered it so ( Isaiah 22:11 ); thou wert but the instrument in My hands ( Isaiah 10:5 Isaiah 10:15 ). This was the reason why "the inhabitants were of small power before thee" ( Isaiah 37:27 ), namely, that I ordered it so; yet thou art in My hands, and I know thy ways ( Isaiah 37:28 ), and I will check thee ( Isaiah 37:29 ). Connect also, "I from ancient times have arranged ('formed') it." However, English Version is supported by Isaiah 33:13 , Isaiah 45:6 Isaiah 45:21 , 48:5 .

27. Therefore--not because of thy power, but because I made them unable to withstand thee.
grass--which easily withers ( Isaiah 40:6 , Psalms 37:2 ).
on . . . housetops--which having little earth to nourish it fades soonest ( Psalms 129:6-8 ).
corn blasted before it be grown up--SMITH translates, "The cornfield (frail and tender), before the corn is grown."

28. abode--rather, "sitting down" ( Psalms 139:2 ). The expressions here describe a man's whole course of life ( Deuteronomy 6:7 , 28:6 , 1 Kings 3:7 , Psalms 121:8 ). There is also a special reference to Sennacherib's first being at home, then going forth against Judah and Egypt, and raging against Jehovah ( Isaiah 37:4 ).

29. tumult--insolence.
hook in . . . nose--Like a wild beast led by a ring through the nose, he shall be forced back to his own country (compare Job 41:1 Job 41:2 , Ezekiel 19:4 , 29:4 , 38:4 ). In a bas-relief of Khorsabad, captives are led before the king by a cord attached to a hook, or ring, passing through the under lip or the upper lip, and nose.

30. Addressed to Hezekiah.
sign--a token which, when fulfilled, would assure him of the truth of the whole prophecy as to the enemy's overthrow. The two years, in which they were sustained by the spontaneous growth of the earth, were the two in which Judea had been already ravaged by Sennacherib ( Isaiah 32:10 ). Thus translate: "Ye did eat (the first year) such as groweth of itself, and in the second year that . . . but in this third year sow ye," &c., for in this year the land shall be delivered from the foe. The fact that Sennacherib moved his camp away immediately after shows that the first two years refer to the past, not to the future [ROSENMULLER]. Others, referring the first two years to the future, get over the difficulty of Sennacherib's speedy departure, by supposing that year to have been the sabbatical year, and the second year the jubilee; no indication of this appears in the context.

31. remnant--Judah remained after the ten tribes were carried away; also those of Judah who should survive Sennacherib's invasion are meant.

33. with shields--He did come near it, but was not allowed to conduct a proper siege.
bank--a mound to defend the assailants in attacking the walls.

34. (See Isaiah 37:29 Isaiah 37:37 , Isaiah 29:5-8 ).

35. I will defend--Notwithstanding Hezekiah's measures of defense ( 2 Chronicles 32:3-5 ), Jehovah was its true defender.
mine own sake--since Jehovah's name was blasphemed by Sennacherib ( Isaiah 37:23 ).
David's sake--on account of His promise to David ( Psalms 132:17 Psalms 132:18 ), and to Messiah, the heir of David's throne ( Isaiah 9:7 , 11:1 ).

36. Some attribute the destruction to the agency of the plague narrated immediately after; but Isaiah 33:1 Isaiah 33:4 , proves that the Jews spoiled the corpses, which they would not have dared to do, had there been on them infection of a plague. The secondary agency seems, from Isaiah 29:6 , 30:30 , to have been a storm of hail, thunder, and lightning (compare Exodus 9:22-25 ). The simoon belongs rather to Africa and Arabia than Palestine, and ordinarily could not produce such a destructive effect. Some few of the army, as 2 Chronicles 32:21 seems to imply, survived and accompanied Sennacherib home. HERODOTUS (2.141) gives an account confirming Scripture in so far as the sudden discomfiture of the Assyrian army is concerned. The Egyptian priests told him that Sennacherib was forced to retreat from Pelusium owing to a multitude of field mice, sent by one of their gods, having gnawed the Assyrians' bow-strings and shield-straps. Compare the language ( Isaiah 37:33 ), "He shall not shoot an arrow there, nor come before it with shields," which the Egyptians corrupted into their version of the story. Sennacherib was as the time with a part of his army, not at Jerusalem, but on the Egyptian frontier, southwest of Palestine. The sudden destruction of the host near Jerusalem, a considerable part of his whole army, as well as the advance of the Ethiopian Tirhakah, induced him to retreat, which the Egyptians accounted for in a way honoring to their own gods. The mouse was the Egyptian emblem of destruction. The Greek Apollo was called Sminthian, from a Cretan word for "a mouse," as a tutelary god of agriculture, he was represented with one foot upon a mouse, since field mice hurt corn. The Assyrian inscriptions, of course, suppress their own defeat, but nowhere boast of having taken Jerusalem; and the only reason to be given for Sennacherib not having, amidst his many subsequent expeditions recorded in the monuments, returned to Judah, is the terrible calamity he had sustained there, which convinced him that Hezekiah was under the divine protection. RAWLINSON says, In Sennacherib's account of his wars with Hezekiah, inscribed with cuneiform characters in the hall of the palace of Koyunjik, built by him (a hundred forty feet long by a hundred twenty broad), wherein even the Jewish physiognomy of the captives is portrayed, there occurs a remarkable passage; after his mentioning his taking two hundred thousand captive Jews, he adds, "Then I prayed unto God"; the only instance of an inscription wherein the name of GOD occurs without a heathen adjunct. The forty-sixth Psalm probably commemorates Judah's deliverance. It occurred in one "night," according to 2 Kings 19:35 , with which Isaiah's words, "when they arose early in the morning," &c., are in undesigned coincidence.
they . . . they--"the Jews . . . the Assyrians."

37. dwelt at Nineveh--for about twenty years after his disaster, according to the inscriptions. The word, "dwelt," is consistent with any indefinite length of time. "Nineveh," so called from Ninus, that is, Nimrod, its founder; his name means "exceedingly impious rebel"; he subverted the existing patriarchal order of society, by setting up a system of chieftainship, founded on conquest; the hunting field was his training school for war; he was of the race of Ham, and transgressed the limits marked by God ( Genesis 10:8-11 Genesis 10:25 ), encroaching on Shem's portion; he abandoned Babel for a time, after the miraculous confusion of tongues and went and founded Nineveh; he was, after death, worshipped as Orion, the constellation

38. Nisroch--Nisr, in Semitic, means "eagle;" the termination och, means "great." The eagle-headed human figure in Assyrian sculptures is no doubt Nisroch, the same as Asshur, the chief Assyrian god; the corresponding goddess was Asheera, or Astarte; this means a "grove," or sacred tree, often found as the symbol of the heavenly hosts (Saba) in the sculptures, as Asshur the Eponymus hero of Assyria ( Genesis 10:11 ) answered to the sun or Baal, Belus, the title of office, "Lord." This explains "image of the grove" ( 2 Kings 21:7 ). The eagle was worshipper by the ancient Persians and Arabs.
Esar-haddon--In Ezra 4:2 he is mentioned as having brought colonists into Samaria. He is also thought to have been the king who carried Manasseh captive to Babylon ( 2 Chronicles 33:11 ). He built the palace on the mound Nebbiyunus, and that called the southwest palace of Nimroud. The latter was destroyed by fire, but his name and wars are recorded on the great bulls taken from the building. He obtained his building materials from the northwest palaces of the ancient dynasty, ending in Pul.