Today's Scripture Reading (June 11, 2026): 2 Kings 19
Our modern society is built on the idea that no single
person should hold all the political power in a nation. Some kings boasted of
their all-powerfulness, especially in the ancient world. Still, as societies became
more advanced, we began to recognize that strength comes from two or more coequal
sources of power being forced to talk and negotiate with each other to get
something done. This concept of the division of powers is worked out in several
ways. Sometimes it was a Sovereign and the Senate or Parliament. Sometimes it
is found in the interplay between the House of Lords, or upper house, and the
House of Commons, literally a political house made up of elected common people
like you and me. It is often displayed in regional governments, where the
Federal and State or Provincial governments are forced to cooperate on specific
projects. But whatever the system, the division or separation of powers ensures
that no one person is all-powerful and can do whatever they want. It can be
frustrating, especially for the Sovereign or the Political leader, but the
system works. However, not only does it work, but it makes us strong.
In Judah, this division of power was structured around the
distinction between secular and religious authority. The King, with his
advisors, ran the earthly portion of the country. But Israel and Judah were
designed from the very beginning to be a nation with two Kings: a secular King
who sat on the throne of the country, and God, represented by his priests
serving in the Tabernacle and later the Temple. Both were essential to the
effective running of the nation.
Some Kings did not like that separation. They felt that
they should be able to go it alone; to rule the secular portion of the nation
as well as the religious part. Hezekiah probably knew well the story of Uzziah,
his great-grandfather. Uzziah was King, but his pride led him to enter the
Temple and burn incense before the altar, something only a priest was supposed
to do. Uzziah was the King and had come to believe that he was the ultimate
authority in Judah. But Uzziah was wrong, and the Bible says that his
disobedience caused him to be struck with leprosy, and for the rest of his
life, the King lived alone, away from all who mattered to him.
Hezekiah is disturbed by all that is happening around him.
And in his distress, he puts on the outward signs of mourning. But Hezekiah
does not allow his pain to carry him away from God. He also does not allow his
grief to drive him into sin the way that Uzziah's pride had caused him to sin.
In his pain, the King goes to the temple, but not into the holy place itself, a
space reserved for only the priests of the nation. The King of Judah enters
into the court as any worshipper would, and stands before the priests to ask
for intercession. And in doing so, Hezekiah honored God and recognized that
whenever any of us come and stand before the throne of God, we do so as equals.
The most powerful King and the poorest of supplicants share the same status –
they are worshippers of the living God.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Nahum 1
See
Also Isaiah 37:1