HEBREW: 3169 hyqzxy Y@chizqiyah or whyqzxy Y@chizqiyahuw 2396 hyqzx Chizqiyah or whyqzx Chizqiyahuw also hyqzxy Y@chizqiyah or whyqzxy Y@chizqiyahuw
EBD: Hezekiah Hizkiah Jehizkiah
SMITH: HEZEKIAH HIZKIAH JEHIZKIAH
ISBE: HEZEKIAH (1) HEZEKIAH (2) HIZKIAH JEHIZKIAH
Hezekiah
In Bible versions:
Hezekiah: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEVHizkiah: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEV
Jechizkiah: NET
Jehizkiah: AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEV
son of Ahaz; king of Judah
forefather of the prophet Zephaniah
an Israelite chief who signed the covenant to obey God's law
son of Neariah, a descendant of Jeconiah
son of Shallum (Ephraim)
strength of the Lord
Greek
Strongs #1478: ezekiav Ezekias
Hezekiah = "the might of Jehovah"1) the twelfth king of Judah
1478 Ezekias ed-zek-ee'-as
of Hebrew origin (2396); Ezekias (i.e. Hezekeiah), anIsraelite:-Ezekias.
see HEBREW for 02396
Hebrew
Strongs #03169: hyqzxy Y@chizqiyah or whyqzxy Y@chizqiyahuw
Hezekiah or Jehizkiah = "Jehovah has made strong"1) son of king Ahaz by Abi or Abijah and the 12th king of Judah; his
reign was characterised by his godly conduct; reigned for 29 years
2) head of a family of returning exiles in the time of Nehemiah
3) an Ephraimite in the time of Ahaz
3169 Ychizqiyah yekh-iz-kee-yaw'
or Ychizqiyahuw {yekh-iz-kee-yaw'- hoo}; from 3388 and 3050;strengthened of Jah; Jechizkijah, the name of five
Israelites:-Hezekiah, Jehizkiah. Compare 2396.
see HEBREW for 03388
see HEBREW for 03050
see HEBREW for 02396
Strongs #02396: hyqzx Chizqiyah or whyqzx Chizqiyahuw also hyqzxy Y@chizqiyah or whyqzxy Y@chizqiyahuw
Hezekiah or Hizkiah or Hizkijah = "Jehovah is my strength"1) 12th king of Judah, son of Ahaz and Abijah; a good king in that
he served Jehovah and did away with idolatrous practices
2) great-great-grandfather of Zephaniah the prophet
3) son of Neariah, a descendant of David
4) head of a family of returning exiles in the time of Nehemiah
2396 Chizqiyah khiz-kee-yaw'
or Chizqiyahuw {khiz-kee-yaw'-hoo}; also Ychizqiyah{yekh-iz-kee-yaw'}; or Ychizqiyahuw {yekh-iz-kee-yaw'-hoo};
from 2388 and 3050; strengthened of Jah; Chizkijah, a king of
Judah, also the name of two other Israelites:-Hezekiah,
Hizkiah, Hizkijah. Compare 3169.
see HEBREW for 02388
see HEBREW for 03050
see HEBREW for 03169
Hezekiah [EBD]
whom Jehovah has strengthened. (1.) Son of Ahaz (
On the death of Sargon and the accession of his son Sennacherib to the throne of Assyria, Hezekiah refused to pay the tribute which his father had paid, and "rebelled against the king of Assyria, and served him not," but entered into a league with Egypt (
But Sennacherib dealt treacherously with Hezekiah (
The narrative of Hezekiah's sickness and miraculous recovery is found in
Hizkiah [EBD]
an ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah (1:1).
Jehizkiah [EBD]
Jehovah strengthens, one of the chiefs of Ephraim (
HEZEKIAH [SMITH]
(the might of Jehovah).- Twelfth king of Judah, son of the apostate Ahaz and Abi or Abijah, ascended the throne at the age of 25, B.C. 726. Hezekiah was one of the three most perfect kings of Judah. (
2 Kings 18:5 ) Ecclus. 49:4. His first act was to purge and repair and reopen with splendid sacrifices and perfect ceremonial the temple. He also destroyed a brazen serpent, said to have been the one used by Moses in the miraculous healing of the Israelites, (Numbers 21:9 ) which had become an object of adoration. When the kingdom of Israel had fallen, Hezekiah invited the scattered inhabitants to a peculiar passover, which was continued for the unprecedented period of fourteen days. (2 Chronicles 29:30,31 ) At the head of a repentant and united people, Hezekiah ventured to assume the aggressive against the Philistines and in a series of victories not only rewon the cities which his father had lost, (2 Chronicles 28:18 ) but even dispossessed them of their own cities except Gaza, (2 Kings 18:8 ) and Gath. He refused to acknowledge the supremacy of Assyria. (2 Kings 18:7 ) Instant war was imminent and Hezekiah used every available means to strengthen himself. (2 Kings 20:20 ) It was probably at this dangerous crisis in his kingdom that we find him sick and sending for Isaiah, who prophesies death as the result. (2 Kings 20:1 ) Hezekiah?s prayer for longer life is heard. The prophet had hardly left the palace when he was ordered to return and promise the king immediate recovery and fifteen years more of life. (2 Kings 20:4 ) An embassy coming from Babylon ostensibly to compliment Hezekiah on his convalescence, but really to form an alliance between the two powers, is favorably received by the king, who shows them the treasures which he had accumulated. For this Isaiah foretells the punishment that shall befall his house. (2 Kings 20:17 ) The two invasions of Sennacherib occupy the greater part of the scripture records concerning the reign of Hezekiah. The first of these took place in the third year of Sennacherib, B.C. 702, and occupies only three verses. (2 Kings 18:13-16 ) Respecting the commencement of the second invasion we have full details in (2 Kings 18:17 ) seq.; 2Chr 32:9 seq.; Isai 36:1 ... Sennacherib sent against Jerusalem an army under two officers and his cupbearer, the orator Rabshakeh, with a blasphemous and insulting summons to surrender; but Isaiah assures the king he need not fear, promising to disperse the enemy. (2 Kings 19:6,7 ) Accordingly that night "the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians a hundred fourscore and five thousand." Hezekiah only lived to enjoy for about one year more his well-earned peace and glory. He slept with his fathers after a reign of twenty-nine years, in the 56th year of his age, B.C. 697. - Son of Neariah, one of the descendants of the royal family of Judah. (
1 Chronicles 3:23 ) - The same name, though rendered in the Authorized Version HIZKIAH, is found in (
Zephaniah 1:1 ) - Ater of Hezekiah. [ATER]
HIZKIAH [SMITH]
(might of Jehovah), an ancestor of Zephaniah the prophet. (JEHIZKIAH [SMITH]
(Jehovah strengthens), son of Shallum, one of the heads of the tribe of Ephraim in the time of Ahaz. (HEZEKIAH (1) [ISBE]
HEZEKIAH (1) - hez-e-ki'-a (chizqiyah): (1) King of Judah. See 1 Ch 3:23, the Revised Version (British and American) "Hizkiah")">special article (2) A son of Neariah, of the royal family of Judah (
(3) An ancestor of Zephaniah (
(4) One of the returned exiles from Babylon (
HEZEKIAH (2) [ISBE]
HEZEKIAH (2) - (chizqiyah, "Yahweh has strengthened"; also written chizqiyahu, "Yah has strengthened him"; Hezekias): One of the greatest of the kings of Judah; reigned (according to the most self-consistent chronology) from circa 715 to circa 690 BC.Old Testament Estimate:
On the Old Testament standard of loyalty to Yahweh he is eulogized by Jesus Sirach as one of the three kings who alone did not "commit trespass" (Sirach 49:4), the other two being David and Josiah. The Chronicler represents him (
I. Sources for His Life and Times.
1. Scripture Annals:
The historical accounts in
2. View-point and Colouring:
Of these sources the account in 2 Kings is most purely historianic, originating at a time when religious and political values, in the Hebrew mind, were inseparable. In 2 Ch the religious point and coloring, especially in its later developed ritual and legal aspects, has the decided predominance. Sirach, with the mind of a man of letters, is concerned mainly with eulogizing Hezekiah. in his "praise of famous men" (compare Sirach 44 through 50), of course from the devout Hebrew point of view. In the vision of Isaiah (Isa 1 through 39), we have the reflection of the moral and spiritual situation in Jerusalem, as realized in the fervid prophetic consciousness; and in the prophecy of his younger contemporary Micah, the state of things in the outlying country districts nearest the path of invasion, where both the iniquities of the ruling classes and the horrors of war were felt most keenly. Doubtless also many devotional echoes of these times of stress are deducible from the Psalms, so far as we can fairly identify them.
3. Side-Lights:
It is in Hezekiah's times especially that the Assyrian inscriptions become illuminating for the history of Israel; for one important thing they furnish certain fixed dates to which the chronology of the times can be adjusted. Of Sennacherib's campaign of 701, for instance, no fewer than six accounts are at present known (see G.A. Smith, Jerusalem, II, 154, note), the most detailed being the "Taylor Cylinder," now in the British Museum, which in the main agrees, or at least is not inconsistent, with the Scripture history.
II. Events of His Reign.
1. His Heritage:
From his weak and unprincipled father Ahaz (compare
2. Religious Reform:
The sense of this unspiritual state of things furnishes the best keynote of Hezekiah's reforms in religion, which according to the Chronicler he set about as soon as he came to the throne (
3. Internal Improvements:
All this, on the king's part, was his response to the spiritual influence of Isaiah, with whose mind his own was sincerely at one. As a devout disciple in the school of prophetic ideas, he earnestly desired to maintain the prophet's insistent attitude of "quietness and confidence" (compare
4. The Assyrian Crisis:
Hezekiah's opportunity to rise against Assyrian domination seems to have been taken about 704. How so pious a king came to do it in spite of Isaiah's strenuous warnings, both against opposition to Assyria and alliance with other powers, is not very clear. The present writer ventures to suggest the view that the beginning was forced or perhaps sprung upon him by his princes and nobles. In the year before, Sargon, dying, had left his throne to Sennacherib, and, as at all ancient changes of sovereignty, this was the signal for a general effort for independence on the part of subject provinces. That was also the year of Hezekiah's deadly illness (
5. Invasion and Deliverance:
The critical moment came in 701, when Sennacherib, who the year before had reconquered Babylon and expelled Merodach-baladan (perhaps
through the coast lands, he speedily subdued the Philistine cities, defeating them and their southern allies (whether these were from Egypt proper or from its extension across the Sinai peninsula and Northern Arabia, Mutsri, is not quite clear) at Eltekeh; in which campaign, according to his inscription, he took 46 walled towns belonging to Judah with their spoil and deported over 200,000 of their inhabitants. This, which left Jerusalem a blockaded town (in fact he says of Hezekiah: "Himself I shut up like a bird in a cage in Jerusalem his royal city"), seems referred to in
6. The Second Summons:
A second summons to surrender, sent from Libnah by letter (
III. His Character.
Our estimate of Hezekiah's character is most consistently made by regarding him as a disciple of Isaiah, who was earnestly minded to carry out his prophetic ideas. As, however, these were to begin with only the initial ideas of a spiritual "remnant," the king's sympathies must needs be identified at heart, not with his imperious nobles and princes, but with a minority of the common people, whose religious faith did not become a recognizable influence in the state until after 701. In the meantime his zeal for purer worship and more just domestic administration, which made him virtually king of the remnant, made him a wise and sagacious prince over the whole realm. Isaiah's glowing prophecy (32:1-8) seems to be a Messianic projection of the saner and clearer-seeing era that his domestic policy adumbrated--a time when king and nobles rule in righteousness, when man can lean on man, when things good and evil are seen as they are and called by their right names. When it came to dealing with the foreign situation, however, especially according to the Isaianic program, his task was exceedingly difficult, as it were a pioneer venture in faith. His effort to maintain an attitude of steadfast trust in Yahweh, with the devout quietism which, though really its consistency and strength looked like a supine passivity, would lead his restlessly scheming nobles to regard him as a pious weakling; and not improbably they came to deem him almost a negligible quantity, and forced his hand into diplomacies and coalitions that were not to his mind. Some such insolent attitude of theirs seems to be portrayed in
IV. Reflection of His Age in Literature.
1. Complication and Revival:
The sublime and mature utterances of Isaiah alone, falling in this time, are sufficient evidence that in Hezekiah's age, Israel reached its golden literary prime. Among the idealists and thinkers throughout the nation a new spiritual vigor and insight were awake. Of their fellowship was the king himself, who emulated the activity of his predecessor Solomon as patron of piety and letters. The compilation of the later Solomonic section of the Proverbs (
2. Of More Creative Strain:
This literary activity of Hezekiah's time, though concerned largely with collecting and reviving the treasures of older literature, was pursued not in the cold scribal spirit, but in a fervid creative way. This may be realized in two of the psalms which the present writer ascribes to this period.
Such a didactic poem would not stand solitary in a period so instructed. As in Wisdom and psalmody, so in the domain of law and its attendant history, the literary activity was vigorous. This age of Hezekiah seems the likeliest time for putting into literary idiom that "book of the law" found later in the Temple (
John Franklin Genung
HIZKIAH [ISBE]
HIZKIAH - hiz-ki'-a (chizqiyah; Septuagint Ezekia, "strength of Yah"): (1) A son of Neariah, a descendant of David (
(2) An ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah (
See HEZEKIAH.
JEHIZKIAH [ISBE]
JEHIZKIAH - je-hiz-ki'-a (yechizqiyahu, "Yah strengthens"): One of the Ephraimite chiefs (

