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Isaiah 39

Hezekiah, Babylon’s Embassy, and the Shadow of Exile

After receiving great mercy, Hezekiah fails a subtler test of pride and display, and the Lord reveals that the treasures and sons of Judah will one day be carried to Babylon, preparing the way for Isaiah’s message of exile and comfort.

Chapter Summary

After receiving great mercy, Hezekiah fails a subtler test of pride and display, and the Lord reveals that the treasures and sons of Judah will one day be carried to Babylon, preparing the way for Isaiah’s message of exile and comfort.

Overview

The chapter argues that the heart can fail under blessing as well as under threat, and that Judah’s deepest problem has not been solved by Assyria’s defeat or Hezekiah’s healing. Babylonian exile is coming, and the people will need a greater comfort, redemption, and king.

Context
Author

Isaiah son of Amoz

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, especially those needing to understand that deliverance from Assyria did not remove the deeper covenant problem that would lead to exile.

Setting

After Hezekiah’s illness and recovery, Merodach-Baladan son of Baladan, king of Babylon, sends letters and a gift because He heard Hezekiah had been sick and recovered. Babylon at this stage is politically significant but not yet the dominant imperial power it will become later.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

Isaiah 39 moves from Babylon’s embassy arriving after Hezekiah’s recovery, to Hezekiah’s glad reception and display of His treasures, to Isaiah’s interrogation, to the prophecy that everything shown to Babylon will one day be carried away, including Hezekiah’s descendants, and finally to Hezekiah’s troubling response that the word of the Lord is good because peace and security will remain in His own days.

Covenant Significance

Isaiah 39 reveals that Judah’s covenant crisis remains unresolved. The Lord has saved Jerusalem from Assyria, but royal pride and covenant unfaithfulness still point toward Babylonian exile. The Davidic house itself will be humbled, preparing the need for deeper covenant mercy.

Gospel Clarity

The gospel clarity in Isaiah 39 comes through exposure. Deliverance from Assyria and healing from sickness do not cure the deeper problem of the human heart. Hezekiah can pray in crisis and still stumble after mercy. Judah can be spared from Assyria and still face Babylon. The gospel announces the need for a greater salvation than temporary rescue, a greater king than Hezekiah, and a deeper redemption from pride, sin, exile, and judgment.

In Christ, God provides the faithful King who bears exile-like judgment and brings His people home.

Focus Points

  • Testing After Mercy
  • Pride and Display
  • Flattery as Temptation
  • Prophetic Accountability
  • Babylonian Exile
  • Limits of Hezekiah
  • Generational Responsibility
  • Need for Comfort and Redemption
  • The chapter exposes pride that arises through display, glad reception of flattery, and self-focused security.
  • Hezekiah is tested after mercy and deliverance, showing that spiritual testing can follow blessing.
  • Royal treasure and influence are entrusted by God and must not be used for self-glory.
  • Isaiah holds the king accountable under the word of the Lord.
  • The treasures and sons of Judah will be carried to Babylon as judgment.
  • Babylonian exile is introduced as the next major horizon of Judah’s future.
  • Hezekiah’s failure and the captivity of royal descendants show that the Davidic house needs a greater fulfillment.
  • Hezekiah’s response warns against being satisfied with present peace while future generations suffer consequences.
  • The Lord declares future exile before Babylon becomes the dominant imperial threat, showing His sovereign knowledge and rule.
  • The announcement of exile prepares the need for the comfort and redemptive promises that follow in Isaiah 40-55.

Passages

Chapter opening: Isaiah 39:1-8

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