Hezekiah - Chronological Interpretation

Chronological Interpretation

Understanding the Biblically recorded sequence of events in Hezekiah’s life as chronological or not is critical to the contextual interpretation of his reign. According to scholar Stephen L. Harris, chapter 20 of 2 Kings does not follow the events of chapters 18 and 19 (161). Rather, the Babylonian envoys precede the Assyrian invasion and siege. Chapter 20 would have been added during the exile, and Harris says it “evidently took place before Sennacherib’s invasion” when Hezekiah was “trying to recruit Babylon as an ally against Assyria.” Consequently, “Hezekiah ends his long reign impoverished and ruling over only a tiny scrap of his former domain.” Likewise, The Archaeological Study Bible says, “The presence of these riches” that Hezekiah shows to the Babylonians “indicates that this event took place before Hezekiah’s payment of tribute to Sennacherib in 701 B.C.” (564). Again, “Though the king’s illness and the subsequent Babylonian mission are described at the end of the accounts of his reign, they must have occurred before the war with Assyria. Thus, Isaiah’s chastening of Hezekiah is due to his alliances made with other countries during the Assyrian conflict for insurance, if you will. To a reader who interprets the chapters chronologically, it would appear that Hezekiah ended his reign at a climax, but with a scholarly analysis, his end would contrarily be interpreted as a long fall from where he began.

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