the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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2 Kings 20:8
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Concordances:
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- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- CondensedContextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
What shall be: 2 Kings 20:5, 2 Kings 19:29, Judges 6:17, Judges 6:37-40, Isaiah 7:11, Isaiah 7:14, Isaiah 38:22, Hosea 6:2
Reciprocal: Genesis 15:8 - General Genesis 24:14 - thereby 1 Kings 13:3 - General 2 Chronicles 32:31 - the wonder Isaiah 38:7 - General
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And Hezekiah said unto Isaiah,.... Or "had said", w before the plaster of figs was directed to, or, however, laid on, and as soon as he was told he should be healed:
what shall be the sign that the Lord will heal me, and that I shall go up into the house of the Lord the third day? not that he disbelieved the promise of God, or doubted of a cure, but this he requested for the confirmation of his faith; which good men sometimes asked, when they doubted not, as Gideon; and Ahaz, Hezekiah's father, was bid to ask a sign for the like purpose, and it was resented in him that he did not, see Judges 6:17.
w ויאמר "dixerat autem", V. L. Vatablus.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And Hezekiah said - Previous to the actual recovery, Hezekiah, who at first may have felt himself no better, asked for a “sign” that he would indeed be restored to health.
Asking for a sign is a pious or a wicked act according to the spirit in which it is done. No blame is attached to the requests of Gideon Judges 6:17, Judges 6:37, Judges 6:39, or to this of Hezekiah, because they were real wishes of the heart expressed humbly. The “evil generation” that “sought for a sign” in our Lord’s days did not really want one, but made the demand captiously, neither expecting nor wishing that it should be granted.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 2 Kings 20:8. What shall be the sign — He wished to be fully convinced that his cure was to be entirely supernatural; and, in order to this, he seeks one miracle to prove the truth of the other, that nothing might remain equivocal.