Today's Scripture Reading (June 7, 2026): 2 Kings 18
There
was a day when Kings went out to war with their troops. They were armed, and
while the King was often positioned at the back of the battle formation, the
King's purpose on the battlefield was to send out commands to the soldiers
under their control in real time. King David is criticized at the beginning of
the Bathsheba saga for not being with his troops when they went to war. The
warrior King stayed home and sent his commander, Joab, to fight against the
Ammonites. Because he was home, he was tempted by the beauty of Bathsheba,
something that wouldn't have happened if he had been out in the field, fighting
with his men.
The
Book of Kings clarifies that King Sennacherib accompanied his men onto the
battlefield in Judah. "In the fourteenth
year of King Hezekiah's reign, Sennacherib king of Assyria attacked
all the fortified cities of Judah and captured them" (2 Kings 18:13). What
is less clear is whether Sennacherib went to Jerusalem for the siege of Judah's
capital city. In fact, it appears he didn't, at least not at the beginning of
the blockade against the Judean Capital. Isaiah argues that, as the siege
begins, Sennacherib decides to send a field commander with a large army rather
than go himself. Maybe Sennacherib understood that the blockade would be long
and boring, and he didn't need to be there for all of it. Or maybe Sennacherib
had more pressing duties elsewhere.
Whatever the reason, Sennacherib stayed behind, maybe in
Lachish. Lachish was an important city thirty miles southwest of Jerusalem.
During the First-Temple period, Lachish was Judah's second most important city,
second only to Jerusalem. Because of its importance, it appears that
Sennacherib led the effort to defeat Lachish and end the conquest in the area,
defeating Lachish just before he turned the full force of his military on the
Judean Capital.
Archaeologists have discovered a pit dating back to the
attack on Lachish by Sennacherib. The pit contained 1,500 casualties from the
attack. They also found a carving detailing how the Assyrians had laid siege to
the city.
The Siege of Lachish became the launching ground for the
attack on Jerusalem. Sennacherib may not have been at Jerusalem at the
beginning of the siege of the Capital, either because he was busy cleaning up
in Lachish, or because he was called back to Nineveh to deal with problems in
the Empire. Wherever Sennacherib was, Lachish was the last victory that Assyria
would experience in Judah. Jerusalem would be put under siege, but it would not
fall, at least not at the hands of Sennacherib and the Assyrian army. The
eventual fall of Jerusalem was still over a century away.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: 2 Chronicles 32
See
also Isaiah 36:2