Prophecy of Isaiah
Hezekiah himself prayed directly to God, but the answer comes via Isaiah (2 Kings 19:20). It is an exhaustive answer from the LORD. This answer applies to the end time.
The LORD begins by mocking the power of the king of Assyria (2 Kings 19:21). With this word of mockery of God about the enemies the people make themselves one. They are also the words of the people, presented here as “the virgin daughter of Zion” and “the daughter of Jerusalem”. These mocking words are put into the mouth of the remnant by the LORD. Only when the people really have the character of virgin and daughter they will be able to speak these words.
It is here a holy, a divine mocking (Psalms 2:4). That’s how we should learn to mock. Mocking is often an expression of the flesh or an expression of feelings of revenge. Feelings of gloating are also often present when we mock. None of this is present in the mockery of God and in divine mockery by His people.
The LORD takes the insults by the king of Assyria very serious (2 Kings 19:22). How audacious is it to speak in this way to the Holy One of Israel! The LORD can do only bring His wrath upon him.
The LORD knows exactly what the proud king has said and on which he boasts (2 Kings 19:23-Jeremiah :). Through Isaiah He lets know what lives in the heart of the enemy. It is the language of pride. He believes he can overcome the greatest powers of the world. He has indeed conquered a great deal, but in his pride he believes that he can also conquer God. The king of Assyria speaks as if he were God.
Then the LORD speaks to the conscience of the enemy (2 Kings 19:25). Has it never occurred to him that he is only an instrument of God, and that he only carries out His will? The enemy does not do anything but what God intended long ago. God governs history and not the mighty men of the world. If those in power realized this, they would come to conversion and perform their duties in fear of God and for the good of their subjects. Therefore we are exhorted to pray for all who are in authority (1 Timothy 2:1-Numbers :).
God lets the king of Assyria know that he could only get the conquered peoples in his power because God has given them in his power (2 Kings 19:26). In himself he is as one of the peoples conquered by him. For him, the conquered peoples have become like grass, but he himself is no different from the same grass. “All who hate Zion” will “be put to shame and turned backward”. They will “be like grass upon the housetops, which withers before it grows up” (Psalms 129:5-Joshua :). This judgment also includes the pruning king of Assyria.
God knows the enemy through and through. For the believer, this awareness is an encouragement, and at the same time he has the desire to be known through and through himself, so that he may be totally to God’s glory (Psalms 139:1-Leviticus :; Psalms 139:23-Jeremiah :). For the unbeliever, that thought is intolerable.
The LORD will deal with the enemy without being able to resist (2 Kings 19:28). The enemy will be removed by Him as an unwilling animal with means which He will use for this purpose and which are in accordance with his pride.
In 2 Kings 19:29 Isaiah suddenly turns to Hezekiah. The sign Hezekiah receives is a sign that God will not leave His people. The LORD will bless the fruit of the land again. There has been no opportunity to sow, but they will be able to eat what comes naturally. God will ensure that the people will have to eat. In the third year they will have to start sowing again and will be able to reap and eat again.
We can also apply this spiritually. Someone who has just been delivered from the power of sin, who has just been converted, does not know much yet, but the Lord will bless him richly. He gets all these blessings thrown into his lap, as it were, and is allowed to eat what is given to him in this way. But he must also read and study himself, he must sow himself and will also be allowed to reap. He goes looking for food himself.
The beautiful 2 Kings 19:30-Obadiah : are about the remnant. These verses correspond to what Isaiah said earlier: “Now in that day the remnant of Israel, and those of the house of Jacob who have escaped, will never again rely on the one who struck them, but will truly rely on the LORD, the Holy One of Israel. A remnant will return, the remnant of Jacob, to the mighty God.” (Isaiah 10:20-Ecclesiastes :). The mighty God is the Messiah (Isaiah 9:6). Here we see the connection between the events here and the future.
We must have this remnant character. Mighty enemies threaten us, but we are dependent on the Lord. We may look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus. For us He does not intervene by judging our enemies, but by taking us up from between our enemies to Himself.
The LORD concludes His answer to Hezekiah with the promise that the enemy will not enter the city. This promise is made repeatedly and in different ways in 2 Kings 19:32-Nahum :. The LORD does everything to convince Hezekiah of the certainty of the deliverance. The main reason that the enemy will not get possession of God’s city is that the LORD protects the city for His own sake and for His servant David’s sake.
The LORD has chosen this city, it is His city to which his name is connected forever. The LORD also has chosen David his servant to be his king. For the sake of the true David, the Man according to His heart, the Lord Jesus, God will in the future “defend this city to save it”. That salvation is given a pre-fulfilment in the following verses.