2 Kings 19 is the nineteenth chapter of the second part of the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible or the Second Book of Kings in the Old Testament of the ChristianBible. The book is a compilation of various annals recording the acts of the kings of Israel and Judah by a Deuteronomic compiler in the seventh century BCE, with a supplement added in the sixth century BCE. This chapter records the invasion of Assyrian to Judah during the reign of Hezekiah, the king of Judah, a part of the section comprising 2 Kings 18:1 20:21, with a parallel version in Isaiah 36–39.
and this chapter form a subunit in the account of king Hezekiah focusing on YHWH's deliverance of Jerusalem from Sennacherib's invasion. It begins on with a conjunctive waw and a reference to the fourteenth year of Hezekiah's reign, proceeding with 'a form of prophetic confrontation narrative' featuring Sennacherib, represented by his officers who tried to intimidate Jerusalem to surrender, against Hezekiah and YHWH, represented by the prophet Isaiah. The whole narrative is presented in a parallel structure:
Isaiah's First Oracle (19:1–8)
This section records the response of king Hezekiah and prophet Isaiah to the speeches of Rabshakeh in the previous chapter. Aware of the serious predicament of the Assyrian attack, Hezekiah sent a delegation to Isaiah for advice from YHWH. The answer from Isaiah is the classic opening, 'Do not be afraid', followed by a positive oracle that YHWH will send a 'spirit' to the Assyrian king, so the king will be in panic after merely hearing a rumor and retreat to Assyria, then there he will be murdered. Each part of this oracle is recorded as "fulfilled" in 2 Kings 19:8, 9a, 36–37. The Bible text states that an Egyptian army appeared and forced Sennacherib to retreat. In his annals, the Assyrian king also mentions the advance of an Egyptian army, though he claims to have defeated them at Eltekeh, near the border of Philistine and Egypt.
Verse 2
"The elders of the priests" or "the leading priests".
Verse 7
"Spirit": from רוּחַ, ruakh, may refer to "a spiritual being who will take control of one's mind", or "a disposition of concern and fear"; either case shows the Lord’s sovereignty over the king.
Verse 8
After capturing Lachish, the big city in the region, Sennacherib attacked to smaller targets, such as Libnah, identified with 'Tell Bornat', northeast of Lachish.
Sennacherib's letter and Hezekiah's prayer (19:9–19)
The Assyrians were still in Syria-Palestine, and even after hearing a report of Taharqa's attack, Sennacherib became bolder than Rabshakeh in mocking YHWH to be at the same level as the useless gods of other defeated nations. Hezekiah appeared more pious than in verses:1–4, acknowledging that YHWH is only one that exists, as opposed to all other gods.
Verse 9
Cross references:
"The king": the actual Hebrew word means “he”; referring to Sennacherib.
Nelson suggests that the narrator exploits the ambiguity of the Hebrew verbshub to 'tease the readers' of the impending confrontation, because it would be expected that when the Assyrian king heard a "report", as prophesied, he soon '"returned'" home, but, instead, he "once more" sent messengers to Hezekiah. Therefore it would not be a 'relatively uneventful withdrawal' as in, but a more pronounced retreat.
Isaiah's Second Oracle and Jerusalem's libera-tion (19:20–37)
The second response from Isaiah is much more detailed than his first, containing three oracles in Isaiah's message this time:
speaking against Sennacherib's arrogance and god-like pretentious, in a 'long taunting poem'
offering a sign to Hezekiah that the word of God will come true
promising that the siege will end as God will act for His own sake or for David's sake
The speech has an ABCBA structure, bracketed by an introductory and a concluding formula , containing a central message with a double assurance that the enemy shall not enter this city: his weapons will not harm Jerusalem and he shall retreat in failure. Verse 34 is thought to be a late-Deuteronomistic inclusion. The song of scorn in verses 21–28 that YHWH himself challenges the king of Assyria for his faulty theological logic:
the king boast about his power
although it was God who granted it to him
now God will take it away from him
The prophecy took an immediate effect: in one night, a plague-bringing angel kills 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in their camp, forcing Sennacherib to retreat and never to return. The "great army" was destroyed overnight, leaving behind dead bodies. Even Sennacherib's own god "NIsroch" cannot protect him in his own temple.
Verse 35
The account of Sennacherib invasion into Judah is corroborated by some extrabiblical sources:
The Assyrian literature: including prisms, cylinder, and the Lachish reliefs from the period of Sennacherib. Naturally, the loss of many soldiers in Jerusalem is omitted from the record, but the siege in Jerusalem is clearly noted in Sennacherib's Annals.
The Greek literature, based on Egyptian narratives, in the writing of Herodotus, Histories, mentions the swarm of mice in the Assyrian camp at one night, chewing the weapons of the soldier, so they suffered a huge loss the next day, although he placed the location of the destruction in Pelusium, not Jerusalem, and the opponent of Sennacherib being Sethos the Egyptian, instead of Hezekiah. His statements were considered by some biblical scholars as an allusion that the Assyrian army was decimated by a mouse or rat borne disease such as bubonic plague.
The Jewish literature, such as Babylonian Talmud, attributes the destruction of the Assyrian army to the lightning, as repeated by some Targums, referring to the combination of hot winds and lightning that often destroyed caravans in the Arabian area.
Flavius Josephus, the Jewish Roman historian, wrote in the Antiquities of the Jews, that Sennacherib withdrew his army because of the plague or pestilence that God sent them.
Verse 36
This point marks the end of the Assyrian threat against the kingdom of Judah, although the Assyrians claimed to control Judah through the mid-seventh century BCE. Sennacherib indeed decorated his palace in Nineveh with the image of his invasion, in particular, his victory over Lachish in a stone relief and described Hezekiah's desperate situation, although somehow was left alive, on several victory monuments : Sennacherib never claimed to have captured Jerusalem or forced Hezekiah from the throne, uncharacteristic for a king who led a revolt against the Assyrian empire, but his records are still showing successes as typical in Assyrian annals. On the other hand, Judah's records emphasize the protection of YHWH over Jerusalem and the house of David.
Verse 37
Cross references:
According to Assyrian records, Sennacherib was assassinated in 681 BCE, twenty years after the 701 BCE invasion of Judah.
"Adrammelech": Identified as the murderer of his father Sennacherib in an Assyrian letter to Esarhaddon, in which he is called Arda-Mulissi.
Extra-biblical sources specify Hezekiah by name, along with his reign and influence. "Historiographically, his reign is noteworthy for the convergence of a variety of biblical sources and diverse extrabiblical evidence often bearing on the same events. Significant data concerning Hezekiah appear in the Deuteronomistic History, the Chronicler, Isaiah, Assyrian annals and reliefs, Israelite epigraphy, and, increasingly, stratigraphy". Archaeologist Amihai Mazar calls the tensions between Assyria and Judah "one of the best-documented events of the Iron Age" and Hezekiah's story is one of the best to cross-reference with the rest of the Mid Eastern world's historical documents. Several bullae bearing the name of Hezekiah have been found:
a royal bulla with the inscription in ancient Hebrew script: "Belonging to Hezekiah Ahaz king of Judah".
seals with the inscription: "Belonging to servant of Hezekiah"
Other artifacts bearing the name "Hezekiah" include LMLK stored jars along the border with Assyria "demonstrate careful preparations to counter Sennacherib's likely route of invasion" and show "a notable degree of royal control of towns and cities which would facilitate Hezekiah's destruction of rural sacrificial sites and his centralization of worship in Jerusalem". Evidence suggests they were used throughout his 29-year reign and the Siloam inscription.
An inscription bearing the name "Shebnayahu" was discovered on the lintel above the entrance of a rock-cut tomb which suggests the connection to Shebna, the court officer mentioned in and.
Sennacherib
The accounts of Sennacherib of Assyria, including his invasion into the Kingdom of Judah, especially the capture of Lachish and the siege of Jerusalem, are recorded in a number of ancient documents and artifacts:
Lachish reliefs from his palace in Nineveh
Prisms containing the annals of the Assyrians
Traces of Assyrian siege around the location of ancient Lachish.and the uncovered walls near the Tel Lachish digs, which fit the descriptions shown in the Lachish reliefs.