The Expositor's Bible: The Second Book of Kings
i. 65 "In all the books of the Old Testament written before the
Assyrian period no trace of star-worship is to be to found." 2 Kings xvii. 16.
[632] Jer. vii. 18, viii. 2, xix. 13; Zeph. i, 5.
[633] See Deut. iv. 19, xvii. 3.
[634] 2 Kings xxiii. 11, 12.
[635] See Jer. vii, 31, 32, xix. 2-6, xxxii. 35; Psalm cvi. 37, 38.
[636] Ewald infers from Isa. lvii. 5-9; Jer. ii. 5-13, that he actually _sought_ for all foreign kinds of worship, in order to introduce them.
[637] 1 Sam. iii. 11; Jer. xix. 3.
[638] Comp. Isa. xxxiv. 11; Lam. ii. 8.
[639] 2 Kings xxi. 13. LXX., ἀλάβαστρος, _al._ πυξίον. The Vulgate also takes it to mean the obliteration of writing on a tablet: "Delebo Jerusalem sicut deleri solent tabulæ; et ducam crebrius stylum super faciem ejus."
[640] 2 Kings xxi. 16; Heb., "from mouth to mouth"; LXX., στόμα εἰς στόμα; Vulg., _donec impleret Jerusalem usque ad os_. Comp. 2 Kings x. 21.
[641] _Antt._, X. iii, 1: "He butchered alike all the just among the Hebrews." To this reign of terror some refer Psalm xii. 1; Isa. lvii. 1-4.
[642] This (as I have said) cannot be regarded as certain. Isaiah began to prophesy in the year that King Uzziah died, sixty years before Manasseh. It is a Jewish Haggadah. See Gesen on Isa. i., p. 9, and the Apocryphal "Ascension of Isaiah."
[643] Esarhaddon reigned only eight years, till 668, and then resigned in favour of his son Assurbanipal. In his reign Psammetichus recovered Egypt, and put an end to the Dodecarchy. In the reign of his successor, Assuredililani, Assyria began to decline (647-625).
[644] Comp. Isa. xxxix. 6; Jos., _Antt._, X. iii. 2. The phrase "among the thorns" means "_with rings_" (comp. Isa. xxx. 28, xxxvii. 29; Ezek. xxxviii. 4; Amos iv. 2). Assurbanipal says similarly that he seized Necho, "bound him with bonds and iron chains, hands and feet," but afterwards allowed him to return to Egypt (Schrader, ii. 59).
[645] Late and worthless Haggadoth, echoed by still later writers (Suidas and Syncellus), say he was kept in a brazen cage, fed on bran bread dipped in vinegar, etc. See _Apost. Constt._, ii. 22: "And the Lord hearkened to his voice, and there became about him a flame of fire, and all the irons about him melted." John Damasc., _Parall._,