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کتاب مقدس

اِشعيا 22:11

11 و درمیان‌ دو دیوار حوضی‌ برای‌ آب‌ بركه‌ قدیم‌ خواهید ساخت‌ امّا به‌ صانع‌ آن‌ نخواهید نگریست‌ و به‌ آنكه‌ آن‌ را از ایام‌ پیشین‌ ساخته‌ است‌ نگران‌ نخواهید شد.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Confidence;   False Confidence;   Gihon;   Godlessness;   Hezekiah;   Isaiah;   Israel, Prophecies Concerning;   Jerusalem;   Walls, of the Cities;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Pools and Ponds;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Isaiah;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Jerusalem;   Predestination;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Providence of God;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Baths;   Fish-Pools;   Pool;   Sennacherib;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Chronicles, the Books of;   Hezekiah;   Jerusalem;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Aqueducts;   Assyria, History and Religion of;   Gihon;   Isaiah;   Pool;   Reservoir;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Isaiah, Book of;   Prophecy, Prophets;   Siloam;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Bath, Bathing;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Ditch;   Fashion;   Isaiah;   Pool;   Reservoir;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Hezekiah;   Jerusalem;   Miḳweh;  

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

a ditch: Nehemiah 3:16

ye have: Isaiah 8:17, Isaiah 17:7, Isaiah 31:1, Isaiah 37:26, 2 Chronicles 6:6, 2 Chronicles 16:7-9, Jeremiah 33:2, Jeremiah 33:3, Micah 7:7

Reciprocal: Deuteronomy 32:18 - forgotten 2 Chronicles 11:11 - he fortified Psalms 28:5 - Because Zechariah 5:7 - talent John 5:2 - pool

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Ye made also a ditch between the two walls,.... The outward and the inward; for Hezekiah not only repaired the broken wall, but he built another without, 2 Chronicles 32:5 and between these two he made a ditch, or receptacle for water; for rain water, as Kimchi says; that the inhabitants might not want water during the siege; but the end for which it was made follows:

for the water of the old pool; which, being without the city, was by this means drained into this ditch or receptacle; and so the Assyrians were deprived of it, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem more abundantly supplied; this was wisely contrived to distress the enemy, and to enable themselves to hold out the siege the longer; and for this and other methods they took they are not blamed, but for what follows:

but ye have not looked unto the Maker thereof; either of the distress and calamity which came upon them for their sins, with the will and by the decree of God; or of the water of the pool, which is a creature of his; for who can give rain or water but himself? or rather of the city of Jerusalem, to build which he stirred up persons, and assisted them in it, and which he chose for the seat of his habitation and worship:

neither had respect unto him that fashioned it long ago; not in his own mind from eternity, which is the gloss of the Jewish Rabbins p; Jerusalem being one of the seven things, which, before the world was, came into the mind of God to create; but in time, many years ago, in the times of David, who built some part of it; and before, it being the ancient city of Salem. Now this was their fault, that they trusted in their warlike preparations, and prudential care and caution, for the defence of themselves, and looked not unto, nor trusted in, the Lord their God; for though Hezekiah did, yet many of his people did not; and very probably his principal courtiers and officers about him, concerned in the above methods, and particularly Shebna, hereafter mentioned.

p Vid. Kimchi in loc.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Ye made also a ditch - That is, they made a “reservoir” to retain the water. The word ‘ditch,’ however, will well describe the character of the pool of Gihon on the west side of the city (see the notes at Isaiah 7:3).

Between the two walls for the water of the old pool - Hezekiah built one of these walls himself (2 Chronicles 32:5, 2 Chronicles 32:30; compare 2 Kings 25:5, and Jeremiah 39:4). Between these two walls the water would be collected so as to be accessible to the inhabitants of the city in case of a siege. Before this, the water had flowed without the walls of the city, and in a time of siege the inhabitants would be cut off from it, and an enemy would be able easily to subdue them. To prevent this, Hezekiah appears to have performed two works, one of which was particularly adapted to the times of the siege, and the other was of permanent utility.

(1) He made a wall on the west side of Gihon, so as to make the pool accessible to the inhabitants of the city, as described here by Isaiah; and

(2) he ‘stopped the upper water-course of Gihon, and brought it straight down to the west side of the city of David’ 2 Chronicles 32:30.

By this is not improbably meant that he constructed the pool which is now known as the ‘pool of Hezekiah.’ This reservoir lies within the walls of the city, some distance northeastward of the Yafa Gate, and just west of the street that leads to the church of the Holy Sepulchre. Its sides run toward the cardinal points. Its breadth at the north end is 144 feet, its length on the east side about 240 feet. The depth is not great. The bottom is rock, and is leveled and covered with cement. The reservoir is now supplied with water during the rainy season by the small aqueduct or drain brought down from the upper pool, along the surface of the ground and under the wall at or near the Yafa Gate (compare Robinson’s “Bib. Researches,” vol. i. p. 487). This was deemed a work of great utility, and was one of the acts which particularly distinguished the reign of Hezckiah. It is not only mentioned in the Books of Kings and Chronicles, but the son of Sirach has also mentioned it in his encomium on Hezekiah: ‘Hezekiah fortified his city, and brought in water into the midst thereof; he digged the hard rock with iron, and made wells for water’ (Ecclus. 48:17).

But ye have not looked - You have not relied on God. You have depended on your own resources; and on the defenses which you have been making against the enemy. This probably described the “general” character of the people. Hezekiah, however, was a pious man, and doubtless really depended on the aid of God.

The maker thereof - God; by whose command and aid all these defenses are made, and who has given you ability and skill to make them.

Long ago - God had made this fountain, and it had “long” been a supply to the city. He had a claim, therefore, to their gratitude and respect.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Isaiah 22:11. Unto the maker thereof - "To him that hath disposed this"] That is, to God the Author and Disposer of this visitation, the invasion with which he now threatens you. The very same expressions are applied to God, and upon the same occasion, Isaiah 37:26: -

"Hast thou not heard of old, that I have disposed it;

And of ancient times, that I have formed it?"


 
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