Chapter 38: The illness of Chizkiyah and his Cure
- The illness of Chizkiyah: During those days [three days prior to the fall of Sancheirev], Chizkiyah became deathly ill.
- Yeshayahu instructs Chizkiyah to write a will: Yeshayahu arrived to visit the sick king and he told him in the name of G-d that he should write a will for his family being that his death has already been decreed and therefore he will not recover from this illness.
- The prayer and tears of Chizkiyah: When Chizkiyah heard this news he turned to the wall and began praying to G-d [to nullify the decree]. He prayed as follows, “please oh G-d, remember and let it stand in my merit that I have served you with a true and complete heart and I’ve done the good in your eyes.” Chizkiyah then cried profusely.
- A prophecy for Chizkiyah-G-d accepts his prayers and saves Jerusalem: G-d then came to Yeshayahu and told him the following prophecy regarding Chizkiyah which he instructed Yeshayahu to tell Chizkiyah: I have heard your prayers and I have seen your tears and I have decided to add to your days 15 years of life. I’ve also decided to save you from the hands of Sancheirev and save and protect the city of Jerusalem.
- The omen for the truthfulness of the prophecy: The following is a sign from G-d that G-d will live up to the above prophecy. I will make the sun delay its daily orbit by 10 hours, making up for the 10 hours that I hastened its orbit in the time to your father Achaz [to prevent him from being eulogized as he was a very evil king].
- Chizkiyah writes a letter of thanks to G-d: The following is a letter written by Chizkiyah the king of Judah regarding his illness, after he recovered. “I thought that I would die from this illness at a young age and be doomed for purgatory, and instead I had years added to my life. I thought that I would no longer see the miracles of G-d, or the figure of people. I saw my life being taken from beneath me, and in the end, I was saved from my illness. I looked up to G-d like a dove and pleaded with him not to take me. I must praise G-d for all that He has done for me after I have fallen into illness and that He has saved me.
- The cure for the illness: Yeshayahu instructed king Chizkiyah to take for his cure a wheel of pressed figs and to smear it over the boils and it will get healed. Chizkiyah proclaimed with joy over the sign that G-d gave him that he will recover, and that all the nations will see the great miracle that happened to him.
Related Articles
📄 Daily Tanach –Amos Chapter 5: A Lament, a Call to Repentance, and the Rejection of Hollow Worship
Post Views: 23 A Lament Over Fallen Israel (Amos 5:1–3) Amos begins with a funeral lament for the house of Israel. He speaks of Israel as a fallen virgin who will not rise again, abandoned on her land with no one to lift her up. The devastation will be massive:
📄 Daily Tanach –Amos Chapter 4: Complacency, Ignored Warnings, and the Final Call to Prepare
Post Views: 10 Condemnation of the Oppressors of the Poor (Amos 4:1–3) The chapter opens with a sharp rebuke addressed to those Amos calls the “cows of Bashan” on Mount Samaria—a metaphor for the wealthy and indulgent elite, particularly women of privilege, who live in comfort while oppressing the poor
📄 Daily Tanach –Amos Chapter 3: Privilege, Prophetic Warning, and Inevitable Judgment
Post Views: 31 Subscribe to Receive PDF Chosen Status and Heightened Accountability (Amos 3:1–2) Amos opens by addressing all the children of Israel—the entire family whom G-d brought up from Egypt. G-d declares that Israel alone was chosen and known above all the nations of the earth. Yet this unique
📄 Daily Tanach – Amos Chapter 2 – Judgment Reaches Judah and Israel
Post Views: 40 Subscribe to Receive PDF 📄 Daily Tanach – Amos Chapter 2 – Judgment Reaches Judah and Israel Judgment on Moab (Amos 2:1–3) The chapter opens with God’s judgment against Moab. Moab is condemned not for idolatry, but for an act of extreme moral degradation: burning the bones
📄Daily Tanach – Amos Chapter 1: Divine Justice Against the Nations (Sunday 25th Nissan)
Post Views: 49 Amos Chapter 1 – The Roaring of the Lord and Judgment on the Nations The Prophet and the Divine Roar (Amos 1:1–2) The book opens by identifying Amos as a shepherd from Tekoa who prophesied during the reigns of Uzziah king of Judah and Jeroboam son of
📄Daily Tanach – Yoel Chapter 4: The Judgment of the Nations and the Eternal Restoration of Zion
Post Views: 54 Subscribe to Receive PDF 📄 Daily Tanach – Yoel Chapter 4: The Judgment of the Nations and the Eternal Restoration of Zion The Restoration of Judah and the Summoning of the Nations (Yoel 4:1–3) The chapter opens with G-d declaring that the events described will take place
Leave A Comment?
You must be logged in to post a comment.