This chapter proceeds in the history of Hezekiah.
Here is, I. His sickness, and the sentence of death he received
within himself,
1 In those days was Hezekiah sick unto death. And Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz came unto him, and said unto him, Thus saith the Lord, Set thine house in order: for thou shalt die, and not live. 2 Then Hezekiah turned his face toward the wall, and prayed unto the Lord, 3 And said, Remember now, O Lord, I beseech thee, how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart, and have done that which is good in thy sight. And Hezekiah wept sore. 4 Then came the word of the Lord to Isaiah, saying, 5 Go, and say to Hezekiah, Thus saith the Lord, the God of David thy father, I have heard thy prayer, I have seen thy tears: behold, I will add unto thy days fifteen years. 6 And I will deliver thee and this city out of the hand of the king of Assyria: and I will defend this city. 7 And this shall be a sign unto thee from the Lord, that the Lord will do this thing that he hath spoken; 8 Behold, I will bring again the shadow of the degrees, which is gone down in the sun dial of Ahaz, ten degrees backward. So the sun returned ten degrees, by which degrees it was gone down.
We may hence observe, among others, these
good lessons:—1. That neither men's greatness nor their goodness
will exempt them from the arrests of sickness and death. Hezekiah,
a mighty potentate on earth and a mighty favourite of Heaven, is
struck with a disease, which, without a miracle, will certainly be
mortal; and this in the midst of his days, his comforts, and
usefulness. Lord, behold, he whom thou lovest is sick. It
should seem, this sickness seized him when he was in the midst of
his triumphs over the ruined army of the Assyrians, to teach us
always to rejoice with trembling. 2. It concerns us to prepare when
we see death approaching: "Set thy house in order, and thy
heart especially; put both thy affections and thy affairs into the
best posture thou canst, that, when thy Lord comes, thou mayest be
found of him in peace with God, with thy own conscience, and with
all men, and mayest have nothing else to do but to die." Our being
ready for death will make it come never the sooner, but much the
easier: and those that are fit to die are most fit to live. 3. Is
any afflicted with sickness? Let him pray,
9 The writing of Hezekiah king of Judah, when he had been sick, and was recovered of his sickness: 10 I said in the cutting off of my days, I shall go to the gates of the grave: I am deprived of the residue of my years. 11 I said, I shall not see the Lord, even the Lord, in the land of the living: I shall behold man no more with the inhabitants of the world. 12 Mine age is departed, and is removed from me as a shepherd's tent: I have cut off like a weaver my life: he will cut me off with pining sickness: from day even to night wilt thou make an end of me. 13 I reckoned till morning, that, as a lion, so will he break all my bones: from day even to night wilt thou make an end of me. 14 Like a crane or a swallow, so did I chatter: I did mourn as a dove: mine eyes fail with looking upward: O Lord, I am oppressed; undertake for me. 15 What shall I say? he hath both spoken unto me, and himself hath done it: I shall go softly all my years in the bitterness of my soul. 16 O Lord, by these things men live, and in all these things is the life of my spirit: so wilt thou recover me, and make me to live. 17 Behold, for peace I had great bitterness: but thou hast in love to my soul delivered it from the pit of corruption: for thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back. 18 For the grave cannot praise thee, death can not celebrate thee: they that go down into the pit cannot hope for thy truth. 19 The living, the living, he shall praise thee, as I do this day: the father to the children shall make known thy truth. 20 The Lord was ready to save me: therefore we will sing my songs to the stringed instruments all the days of our life in the house of the Lord. 21 For Isaiah had said, Let them take a lump of figs, and lay it for a plaster upon the boil, and he shall recover. 22 Hezekiah also had said, What is the sign that I shall go up to the house of the Lord?
We have here Hezekiah's thanksgiving-song,
which he penned, by divine direction, after his recovery. He might
have taken some of the psalms of his father David, and made use of
them for his purpose; he might have found many very pertinent ones.
He appointed the Levites to praise the Lord with the words of
David,
I. The deplorable condition he was in when
his disease prevailed, and his despair of recovery,
1. He tells us what his thoughts were of
himself when he was at the worst; and these he keeps in
remembrance, (1.) As blaming himself for his despondency, and that
he gave up himself for gone; whereas while there is life there is
hope, and room for our prayer and God's mercy. Though it is good to
consider sickness as a summons to the grave, so as thereby to be
quickened in our preparations for another world, yet we ought not
to make the worse of our case, nor to think that every sick man
must needs be a dead man presently. He that brings low can raise
up. Or, (2.) As reminding himself of the apprehensions he had of
death approaching, that he might always know and consider his own
frailty and mortality, and that, though he had a reprieve for
fifteen years, it was but a reprieve, and the fatal stroke he had
now such a dread of would certainly come at last. Or, (3.) As
magnifying the power of God in restoring him when his case was
desperate, and his goodness in being so much better to him than his
own fears. Thus David sometimes, when he was delivered out of
trouble, reflected upon the black and melancholy conclusions he had
made upon his own case when he was in trouble, and what he had then
said in his haste, as
2. Let us see what Hezekiah's thoughts of himself were.
(1.) He reckoned that the number of his
months was cut off in the midst. He was now about thirty-nine or
forty years of age, and when he had a fair prospect of many years
and happy ones, very happy, very many, before him. This distemper
that suddenly seized him he concluded would be the cutting off
of his days, that he should now be deprived of the residue
of his years, which in a course of nature he might have lived
(not which he could command as a debt due to him, but which he had
reason to expect, considering the strength of his constitution),
and with them he should be deprived not only of the comforts of
life, but of all the opportunities he had of serving God and his
generation. To the same purport (
(2.) He reckoned that he should go to the
gates of the grave—to the grave, the gates of which are always
open; for it is still crying, Give, give. The grave is here
put not only for the sepulchre of his fathers, in which his body
would be deposited with a great deal of pomp and magnificence (for
he was buried in the chief of the sepulchres of the kings, and all
Judah did him honour at his death,
(3.) He reckoned that he was deprived of
all the opportunities he might have had of worshipping God and
doing good in the world (
(4.) He reckoned that the agonies of death
would be very sharp and severe: "He will cut me off with pining
sickness, which will waste me, and wear me off, quickly." The
distemper increased so fast, without intermission or remission,
either day or night, morning or evening, that he concluded it would
soon come to a crisis and make an end of him—that God, whose
servants all diseases are, would by them, as a lion, break all
his bones with grinding pain,
II. The complaints he made in this
condition (
III. The grateful acknowledgment he makes
of God's goodness to him in his recovery. He begins this part of
the writing as one at a stand how to express himself (
1. He promises himself always to retain the
impressions of his affliction (
2. He will encourage himself and others
with the experiences he had had of the goodness of God (
3. He magnifies the mercy of his recovery, on several accounts.
(1.) That he was raised up from great
extremity (
(2.) That it came from the love of God,
from love to his soul. Some are spared and reprieved in wrath, that
they may be reserved for some greater judgment when they have
filled up the measure of their iniquities; but temporal mercies are
sweet indeed to us when we can taste the love of God in them. He
delivered me because he delighted in me (
(3.) That it was the effect of the pardon of sin: "For thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back, and thereby hast delivered my soul from the pit of corruption, in love to it." Note, [1.] When God pardons sin he casts it behind his back, as not designing to look upon it with an eye of justice and jealousy. He remembers it no more, to visit for it. The pardon does not make the sin not to have been, or not to have been sin, but not to be punished as it deserves. When we cast our sins behind our back, and take no care to repent of them, God sets them before his face, and is ready to reckon for them; but when we set them before our face in true repentance, as David did when his sin was ever before him, God casts them behind his back. [2.] When God pardons sins he pardons all, casts them all behind his back, though they have been as scarlet and crimson. [3.] The pardoning of the sin is the delivering of the soul from the pit of corruption. [4.] It is pleasant indeed to think of our recoveries from sickness when we see them flowing from the remission of sin; then the cause is removed, and then it is in love to the soul.
(4.) That it was the lengthening out of his
opportunity to glorify God in this world, which he made the
business, and pleasure, and end of life. [1.] If this sickness had
been his death, it would have put a period to that course of
service for the glory of God and the good of the church which he
was now pursuing,
IV. In the