AZARIAH, OR UZZIAH, (TENTH) KING OF
JUDAH
State of Judah at the
Accession of Uzziah — Account of his Reign in the Book of
Kings — Re-occupation of Elath — Religious Condition of
Judah — Expedition against the Philistines and neighboring
Tribes — Occupation of Trans-Jordanic Territory —
Restoration and Extension of the Fortifications of Jerusalem
— Re-organization — Prosperity of the Country — Growing
Pride and Corruption — The Sacrilege of Uzziah — His Leprosy
and Death — Jewish Legends.
(2 KINGS 15:1-7; 2
CHRONICLES 26)
Whatever motives had determined the selection of Uzziah
by all the
people of Judah as successor to his murdered father (2 Kings
14:21), the
choice proved singularly happy. To adapt the language of the
prophet
Amos (9:11), which, as mostly all prophetic announcements of
the
Messianic future, takes for its starting and connecting
point reference to
the present, easily understood, and hence full of meaning to
contemporaries — Uzziah found, on his accession, "the
tabernacle of
David," if not "fallen" and in "ruins," yet with threatening
"breaches" in it.
Never had the power of Judah sunk lower than when, after the
disastrous
war with Israel, the heir of David was tributary to Jehoash,
and the broken
walls of Jerusalem laid the city open and defenseless at the
feet of the
conqueror. This state of things was absolutely reversed
during the reign of
Uzziah; and at its close Judah not only held the same place
as Israel under
the former reign, but surpassed it in might and glory.
There can be little doubt that Jeroboam II. retained the
hold over Judah
which his father Jehoash had gained; and this, not only
during the fifteen
years after his accession, in which Amaziah of Judah still
occupied the
throne, but even in the beginning of the reign of Uzziah.
For "breaches"
such as those that had been made are not speedily repaired,
and Uzziah
was, at his accession, a youth of only sixteen years (2
Kings 15:2). We
therefore incline to the view that the otherwise
unintelligible notice (2
Kings 15:1), that Uzziah acceded "in the twenty- seventh
year of
Jeroboam" bears reference to the time when he had shaken off
the
suzerainty of Jeroboam, and "began to reign" in the real
sense of the term.
This would make the period of Judah's liberation the twenty-
seventh after
Jeroboam's accession, and the twelfth after the elevation of
Uzziah to the
throne, when that monarch was twenty-eight years of age.
1
Important
though the reign of Uzziah was — chiefly from a political,
but also from a
religious point of view — the writer of the Book of Kings
gives only a few
and these the briefest notices of it. In fact, he may be
said only to single
out the leading characteristics of that period. As regards
political events, he
marks the beginning of the recovery of Judah's power in the
occupation of
the important harbor of Elath, and the rebuilding of that
town (2 Kings
14:22). This, as we shall show reason for believing,
probably in the early
years of the accession of Uzziah. 2 As always, he records
the age of the
new king and the duration of his reign, as well as the name
of his mother (2
Kings 15:2). If the suggestion previously made is correct,
he also notices
the exact time of the recovery of Judaean independence from
Israel (2
Kings 15:1). Again, the religious character of this reign is
described; while,
lastly, the unhappy fate and end of the king are recorded,
although without
mention of what led to it. Manifestly the point of view in
the Book of
Kings is simply "prophetic" — not, as in Chronicles,
priestly — and the
writer hurries over events alike of a political and a
personal character, to
indicate what seems to him of main importance' the
theocratic relation of
the people to Jehovah. 3
The brief outline in the Book of Kings is amply filled up in
that of
Chronicles (2 Chronicles 26.). Here, also, the first event
recorded is the
taking of Elath. This important harbor, from which, as from
the
neighboring Ezion-Geber, Solomon had sent his fleet of
traders to Ophir (1
Kings 9:26-28; 2 Chronicles 8:17, 18), lay on the
north-eastern end of the
Gulf of Akabah, and at present bears the same name. Of its
ancient
greatness only a tower remains for protection of the
pilgrims to Mecca. 4
Around it are ruins and wretched hovels; but abundance of
date-palms still
betokens the former fertility. For half-an-hour beyond the
town stretch,
along the blue gulf, sands covered with beautiful shells;
the view being
finally shut off by granite and sandstone mountains. Such is
the present
aspect of "Eloth" (or Elath) "the strong trees." There can
be little doubt
that when in the days of Joram of Judah "Edom revolted" (2
Kings 8:20-
22), Elath recovered its independence. The conquest of Edom
by Amaziah
had apparently only extended as far as Petra, about half,
way between the
Dead Sea and Elath. In occupying it again and rebuilding it,
Uzziah
therefore completed the subjection of the country by his
father. Such an
expedition could not, in the state of Edom, have offered any
real difficulty,
however much its success must, after the late disasters,
have raised the
courage of Judah and inspired the people with confidence.
These
circumstances, as well as the place which the narrative
occupies in the
sacred text, lead us to infer that this was the first
military undertaking of
Uzziah, And, in view of his ultimate purpose as regarded
Israel, the king
would naturally begin with what was not only certain of
success, but
would also secure his rear in any future expedition. Nor was
this all. A
wide-reaching plan of national restoration would embrace the
revival of
commerce. And what prominence the new Tarshish mercantile
marine held
in public thought, and how it affected life in Judah in the
days of Jotham,
the successor of Uzziah, appears from the allusion in Isaiah
2:16.
As regards the religious condition of the country it is
significant that, as
the reign of former kings, so the present was characterized
by a
combination of doing "the right in the sight of Jehovah,"
with a
continuance of "the high places," and their sacrifices and
worship. It seems
to indicate that this strange mixture in religion marked the
highest point
attained by the people. But even this qualified adherence to
the worship of
the Lord was only temporary, as the text explains: "in the
days of
Zechariah, who instructed him in the fear of God"
5 (2
Chronicles 26:5).
This prepares us alike for the later history of the king,
and for what we
shall learn of the condition of the people.
But the first or religious period of the reign of Uzziah was
one of
continuous and progressive prosperity. Although it is not
possible to
determine the precise chronological succession of events, it
seems likely
that the expedition against the Philistines soon followed
that to the Red
Sea. The object of it was finally to break up the great
anti-Judaean
confederacy which, in the days of King Jehoram, had wrought
such havoc
in Judah, after the successful revolt of Edom (2 Chronicles
21:8-10). 6 The
defeat of Edom must have rendered this expedition also one
of comparative
ease. One by one the great Philistine cities fell; Gath,
which, in the reign of Joash, had been wrested by Hazael of Syria, and made the
starting-point of
his incursion into Judah (2 Kings 12:17); Jabneh (Joshua
15:11),
afterwards Jamnia, and about nine miles to the northeast of
it, and three
miles from the sea, Ashdod. It was probably owing to the
importance of
this strong town, which commanded the road from Egypt, that
the sacred
text specially mentions this district as one in which the
king "built cities"
(2 Chronicles 26:6). The general policy seems wisely to have
been not to
destroy nor depopulate the Philistine cities, but to render
them harmless
by breaking down their fortifications, and founding by their
side
throughout the Philistine territory, cities, inhabited no
doubt by Juda~an
colonists. And from Philistia the expedition naturally
extended to, and
reduced to submission, the Arab tribe to the south "in
Gur-baal" and "the
Meunim" (or Meunites). 7
We have now probably reached the period when either luxury
and
corruption had so demoralized Israel as to render it
incapable of resisting
the extending power of Judah, or else the government of
Jeroboam II. had
become paralyzed. For although the subdual of the
Philistines and the
other tribes to the south and south-east explains the
statement that "the
name" — here, presumably, the authority — of Uzziah "went to
the going
down into Egypt," more is implied in the notice that "the
Ammonites gave
gifts." This tribute imposed on Ammon evidently presupposes
the
occupation by Uzziah of the intervening trans-Jordanic
territory belonging
to Israel. 8 And its possession seems implied in the further
notice (2
Chronicles 26:10), that the herds of Uzziah pastured "in the
low country,"
that is, on the rich Philistine downs by the Mediterranean
(1 Chronicles
27:28), and "in the plain," that is, on the wide grazing
lands east of Jordan,
in the ancient possession of Reuben (Deuteronomy 3:10; 4:43;
and Joshua
13.).
But by far the most important undertaking of the reign of
Uzziah was the
restoration and the fortification of the northern wall of
Jerusalem, which
had been broken down in the time of Amaziah (2 Chronicles
25:23).
Drawing an almost straight line along the north of the
ancient city, Uzziah
built three towers: "at the lower gate," in the
north-western comer of the
city, whence the wall slopes slightly southwards, and
towards the west; at
"the valley-gate," the present Jaffa gate; and lastly, at
the opposite
extremity of the northern wall (and again slightly south),
to protect the so-
called "horse gate" (Nehemiah 3:28; Jeremiah 31:40), where
the northern
wall forms to the east "a turning" or angle, whence it runs
southwards
(comp. Nehemiah 3:19, 20, 24, 25). Thus, as the "upper city"
had, besides
that just mentioned, not any other gate towards the west,
nor yet any to
the south, the entrance into the city was defended on the
north, west,
south, and at its north-eastern angle. Moreover, these forts
were armed
with new and powerful engines for projecting arrows and
great stones
upon any besieging host (2 Chronicles 26:15). Lastly, in
accordance with
all this, we read of a re-organization of the army,
"according to the number
of their enrollment (mustering) by the hand of Jeiel, the
scribe, and
Maaseiah, the officer (superintendent?), under the hand
(direction) of
Hananiah one of the king's captains" (2 Chronicles
26:11). The levy was
again made in accordance with earliest national custom —
although in even
more systematic manner than before. Under two thousand six
hundred
"heads" or "chiefs of houses," "mighty men of valor," an
army of not less
than 307,500 men was gathered, and completely equipped by
the king —
the heavy infantry being furnished with shields, cuirasses,
and helmets, the
light infantry with bows and "stones for slings."
9 This
specially indicates
the completeness of the armament, which, this time, was not
only
furnished by the central authority, but with such care that
even the slings
and the stones generally picked up by the men were served
out to the
troops. 10
In these circumstances we do not wonder that the warlike
fame of the king
"went forth unto far," although we specially note how
carefully the sacred
text throughout emphasizes the Divine help extended to
Uzziah in each
part of his undertakings. Nor was the internal prosperity of
the realm less
marked. We have already seen how the reoccupation of Elath
led to a
revival of shipping and commerce which must have brought
wealth to the
country. Similarly, the king took a deep interest in
agriculture. In the
mountains of Judah the ancient terraces were repaired for
the culture of the
vine; in the more flat portions, as in the district of
Carmel (1 Samuel 15:12;
25:2, 5), agriculture was carried on; whilst, alike in "the
wilderness" of
Judah, in "the low country" of the Philistine downs, and in
the rich "plain"
across the Jordan, numerous flocks and herds browsed —
provision and
security for the operations of "husbandry" being afforded by
hewing out
many cisterns and building watch-towers (2 Chronicles
26:10).
It has previously been stated that this was the flourishing
period of
prophetism in Israel. This perhaps the more, because now the
last warning
voices were raised among a people sunk in idolatry and
corruption, and
nigh to judgment. From the prophetic allusions the state of
matters in
Judah seems, at least during the first period of this reign,
to have been
somewhat better. But here also, alike owing to increasing
prosperity and to
success, "pride" and its resultant vices, soon became
apparent (Amos 2:4;
Hosea 5:5, 14; comp. also Isaiah 2:5, etc.; 3:12, 15;
7:10-13; 28:7-10). 11 This
chiefly on the part of the king himself. In the expressive
language of Holy
Scripture, "when he was strong his heart was lifted up unto
destruction"
— that is, until he did that which was wrongful and
destructive. Intolerant
of any power in the land but his own, he sought to combine
the chief
functions of the priesthood with those of royalty.
12 The
holiest service of
the Temple was when the incense was offered on the golden
altar within
the Holy Place. It symbolized the offering of Israel's
worship by the great
High Priest. Regardless of the express Divine ordinance
(Exodus 30:7, 27;
Numbers 18:1-7), Uzziah penetrated into the Holy Place to
arrogate to
himself this holy function. In vain Azariah, "the chief
priest" (2 Chronicles
26: 17, 18), and with him eighty other brave men, no doubt
priests of "the
course" then on service, sought to arrest the king. Their
remonstrance,
really their warning, that the issue would be other than his
pride had
anticipated, only served to incite the wrath of the king.
Such utter
misunderstanding and perversion alike of the priestly
functions in their
deepest meaning, and of the royal office in its higher
object — and that
from motives of pride — must bring instant and signal
judgment. While yet
the censer with its burning coals was in his hand, and looks
and words of
wrath on his face and on his lips, in sight of the
priesthood, he was smitten
with what was regarded as pre-eminently and directly the
stroke of God's
own Hand (comp. Numbers 12:9, 10; 2 Kings 5:27). There,
"beside the
altar of incense," the plague-spot of leprosy appeared on
his forehead.
Hastily the assembled priests thrust him, whom God had so
visibly
smitten, from the Holy Place, lest the presence of the leper
should defile
the sanctuary. Nay himself, terror-stricken, hastened
thence. So the king,
whose heart had been lifted up to the utter forgetfulness of
the help
hitherto given him by Jehovah until he dared the uttermost
sacrilege,
descended living into the grave in the very moment of his
greatest pride.
Till death released him he was a leper, dwelling outside the
city, separated
— "in a house of sickness " — or, as others have rendered
the expression,
with perhaps greater probability, in "a house of separation"
(comp.
Leviticus 13:46; Numbers 5:2; 2 Kings 7:3) Cut off from
access to the
house of the Lord, where he had impiously sought to command,
and
debarred from all intercourse with men, the kingdom was
administered by
Jotham, his son — for how long a period before the death of
Uzziah it is
impossible to determine. His punishment followed him even
into the grave.
For, although he was "buried with his fathers," it was "in
the field of the
burial which belonged to the kings," probably the burying
ground of the
members of the royal family; he was not laid in the
sepulcher where the
kings of Judah rested; "for they said, He is a leper."
13
Of the record of his deeds by Isaiah, to which the sacred
text refers (2
Chronicles 26:2), no portion has been preserved. Although
the activity of
the prophet began during the reign of Uzziah (Isaiah 1:1;
6:1), yet,
considering that it extended into that of Hezekiah, Isaiah
must have been
still young, 14 when the leprous king died. Jewish legend
has fabled much
about the stroke that descended on the sacrilegious king. In
his clumsy
manner of attempting to account for the directly Divine by
natural causes,
Josephus 15 connects the sudden leprosy of the king with
that earthquake
(Amos 1: 1) of which the terrible memory so lingered in the
popular
memory as almost to form an era in their history (Zechariah
14:4, 5). In
that earthquake, which Josephus describes, he tells us: "a
rent was made in
the Temple, and the bright rays of the sun shone through it,
and fell upon
the king's face, insomuch that the leprosy seized upon him
immediately."
Other Jewish writers strangely identify the death of Uzziah
referred to in
Isaiah 6:1, with the living death of his leprosy, and the
earthquake with the
solemn scene there pictured. Yet this application of theirs
is certainly true
when they rank Uzziah with those "who attained not what they
sought,
and from whom was taken that which they had" (Ber. R. 20).
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