Matthew Henry
Here we have,
He that leads into captivity shall go into captivity, Rev 13:10, Rev 18:6.
make an end to spoil, and to deal treacherously, not by repentance and reformation, which might prevent his ruin (Dan 4:27), but when he shall have done his worst, when he shall have gone as far as God would permit him to go, to the utmost of his tether, then the cup of trembling shall be put into his hand. When he shall have arrived at his full stature in impiety, shall have filled up the measure of his iniquity, then all shall be called over again. When he has done God will begin, for his day is coming.
O Lord! be merciful to us. Men are cruel; be thou gracious. We have deserved thy wrath, but we entreat thy favour; and, if we may find the propitious to us, we are happy; the trouble we are in cannot hurt us, shall not ruin us. It is in vain to expect relief from creatures; we have no confidence in the Egyptians, but
we have waited for theeonly, resolving to submit to thee, whatever the issue of the trouble be, and hoping that it shall be a comfortable issue.” Those that by faith humbly wait for God shall certainly find him gracious to them. They prayed,
Be thou their arm every morning. Hezekiah, and his princes, and all the men of war, need continual supplies of strength and courage from thee; supply their need therefore, and be to them a God all-sufficient. Every morning, when they go forth upon the business of the day, and perhaps have new work to do and new difficulties to encounter, let them be afresh animated and invigorated, and,
as the day, so let the strength be.” In our spiritual warfare our own hands are not sufficient for us, nor can we bring any thing to pass unless God not only strengthen our arms (Gen 49:24), but be himself our arm; so entirely do we depend upon him as our arm every morning, so constantly do we depend upon his power, as well as his compassions, which are new every morning, Lam 3:23. If God leaves us to ourselves any morning, we are undone; we must therefore every morning commit ourselves to him, and go forth in his strength to do the work of the day in its day.
Be thou our salvation also in the time of trouble, ours who sit still, and do not venture into the high places of the field.” They depend upon God not only as their Saviour, to work deliverance for them, but as their salvation itself; for, whatever becomes of their secular interests, they will reckon themselves safe and saved if they have him for their God. If he undertake to be their Saviour, he will be their salvation; for
as for God his work is perfect. Some read it thus: “
Thou who wast their arm every morning, who wast the continual strength and help of our fathers before us,
be thou our salvation also in time of trouble. Help us as thou helpedst them;
they looked unto thee and were lightened(Ps 34:5); let us then not walk in darkness.”
At the noise of the tumult, of the shrieks of the dying men (who, we may suppose, did not die silently), the rest of
the people fled, and shifted every one for his own safety. When God did thus lift up himself the several nations, or clans, of which the army was composed, were scattered. It was time to stir when such an unprecedented plague broke out among them. When God arises his enemies are scattered, Ps 68:1.
Your spoil shall be gatheredby the inhabitants of Jerusalem,
like the gathering of the caterpillar, and
as the running to and fro of locusts, that is, the spoilers shall as easily and as quickly make themselves masters of the riches of the Assyrians as a host of caterpillars, or locusts, make a field, or a tree, bare. Thus
the wealth of the sinner is laid up for the justand Israel is enriched with the spoil of the Egyptians. Some make the Assyrians to be the caterpillars and locusts, which, when they are killed, are gathered together in heaps, as the frogs of Egypt, and are run upon, and trodden to dirt.
The Lord is exalted. It is his honour thus to abase proud men, and hide them in the dust, together; thus he magnifies his own name, and his people give him the glory of it, as Israel when the Egyptians were drowned, Exod 15:1, Exod 15:2 He is exalted as one that dwells on high, out of the reach of their blasphemies, and that has an over-ruling power over them, and wherein they deal proudly delights to show himself above them-that does what he will, and they cannot resist him.
he has filled Zion with judgment and righteousness, not only with a sense of justice, but with a zeal for it and a universal care that it be duly administered. It shall again be called,
The city of righteousness, Isa 1:26. In this the grace of God is exalted, as much as his providence was in the destruction of the Assyrian army. We may conclude God has mercy in store for a people when he fills them with judgment and righteousness, when all sorts of people, and all their actions and affairs, are governed by them, and they are so full of them that no other considerations can crowd in to sway them against these. Hezekiah and his people are encouraged (Isa 33:6) with an assurance that God would stand by them in their distress. Here is,
Wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times, and strength of salvation. Here is a desirable end proposed, and that is
the stability of our times, that things be not disturbed and unhinged at home, and the
strength of salvation, deliverance from, and success against, enemies abroad. The salvation that God ordains for his people has strength in it; it is a horn of salvation. And here are the way and means for obtaining this end—
wisdom and knowledge, not only piety, but prudence. That is it which, by the blessing of God, will be the
stability of our times and the strength of salvation, that wisdom which is first pure, then peaceable, and which sacrifices private interests to a public good; such prudence as this will establish truth and peace, and fortify the bulwarks in defence of them.
The fear of the Lord is his treasure. It is God’s treasure in the world, from which he receives his tribute; or, rather, it is the prince’s treasure. A good prince accounts it so (that wisdom is better than gold) and he shall find it so. Note, True religion is the true treasure of any prince or people; it denominates them rich. Those places that have plenty of Bibles, and ministers, and serious good people, are really rich; and it contributes to that which makes a nation rich in this world. It is therefore the interest of a people to support religion among them and to take heed of every thing that threatens to hinder it.
for he has broken the covenantwithout any hesitation, as if it were below him to be a servant to his word), or by the preparations of war, for
he has despised the cities; he scorns to take notice either of their appeals to justice or of their petitions for mercy. He makes himself master of them so easily (though they are called
fenced cities), and meets with so little resistance, that he despises them, and has no relentings when he puts all to the sword; for he regards no man, has no pity or concern, no, not for those that he is under particular obligations to. He neither fears God nor regards man, but is haughty and imperious to every one. There are those that take a pride in trampling upon all mankind, and have neither veneration for the honourable nor compassion for the miserable.
The valiant ones of Jerusalem, being unable to make their parts good with him, must be contentedly run down with noise and insolence, which will make them cry without, because they cannot serve their country as they might have done against a fair adversary.
The ambassadorssent by Hezekiah to treat
of peace, finding him so haughty and unmanageable,
shall weep bitterlyfor vexation at the disappointment they had met with in their negotiations; they shall weep like children, as despairing to find out any expedient to pacify him.
The highways lie waste. While the fields lie waste, trodden like the highways, the highways lie waste, untrodden like the fields, for
the traveller ceases.
mourns and languishes; the country looks melancholy and the country people have misery in their countenances, wanting necessary food for themselves and their families; the wonted joy of harvest is turned into lamentation, so withering and uncertain are all worldly joys. The desolation is universal. That part of the country which belonged to the ten tribes was already laid waste: “
Lebanonfamed for cedars,
Sharonfor roses,
Bashanfor cattle,
Carmelfor corn, all very fruitful, have now become like wildernesses,
are ashamedto be called by their old names, they are so unlike what they were. They
shake off their fruitsbefore their time into the hand of the spoiler, which used to be gathered seasonably by the hand of the owner.”
now will I arise, saith the Lord; now will I appear and act, and therein I will be not only evidenced, but exalted.” He will not only demonstrate that there is a God that judges in the earth, but that he is God over all, and higher than the highest. “Now
will I lift up myself, will prepare for action, will act vigorously, and will be glorified in it.” God’s time to appear for his people is when their affairs are reduced to the lowest ebb,
when their strength is gone and there is none shut up nor left, Deut 32:36. When all other helpers fail, then is God’s time to help.
You shall conceive chaff, and bring forth stubble, which is not only worthless and good for nothing, but combustible and proper fuel for the fire, which it cannot escape, when
yourown
breath as fire shall devour you, that is, the breath of God’s wrath, provoked against you by the breath of your sins—your malignant breath, the threatenings and slaughter you breathe out against the people of God, this shall devour you, and your blasphemous breath against God and his name.” God would make their own tongues to fall upon them, and their own breath to blow the fire that should consume them; and then no wonder that the people are
as the burnings of limein a lime-kiln, all on fire together, and
as thorns cut up, which are dried and withered, and therefore easily take fire and are soon burnt up. Such was the destruction of the Assyrian army; it was like the burning up of thorns, which can well be spared, or the burning of lime, which makes it good for something. The burning of that army enlightened the world with the knowledge of God’s power and made his name shine brightly.