TyndaleStudyNotes
Isa.38.1
38:1 About that time (literally in those days): This is a very general time statement. Hezekiah’s illness and subsequent healing probably preceded Jerusalem’s rescue (chs 36–37), even though Isaiah places it afterward. Merodach-baladan’s reign in Babylon (39:1) ended before Sennacherib’s invasion in 701 BC. The order in the text indicates a connection betwee...
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38:1 About that time (literally in those days): This is a very general time statement. Hezekiah’s illness and subsequent healing probably preceded Jerusalem’s rescue (chs 36–37), even though Isaiah places it afterward. Merodach-baladan’s reign in Babylon (39:1) ended before Sennacherib’s invasion in 701 BC. The order in the text indicates a connection between these two events (see 38:6).
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TyndaleStudyNotes
Isa.38.10
38:10 enter the place of the dead? (literally enter the gates of Sheol?): This image comes from an ancient idea that people enter death through gates (see 14:9). Old Testament believers did not understand the afterlife as the New Testament reveals it. It was a shadowy place where all the dead were together and where no praise of God existed (see 38:18; Pss 8...
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38:10 enter the place of the dead? (literally enter the gates of Sheol?): This image comes from an ancient idea that people enter death through gates (see 14:9). Old Testament believers did not understand the afterlife as the New Testament reveals it. It was a shadowy place where all the dead were together and where no praise of God existed (see 38:18; Pss 88:10; 115:17).
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TyndaleStudyNotes
Isa.38.11
38:11 Hezekiah lamented that if he died, he would not enjoy fellowship with God, his family, and his friends.
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TyndaleStudyNotes
Isa.38.12
38:12 These images depicted the brevity of life (cp. 2 Cor 5:1).
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