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parallelVerse INT GEN EXO LEV NUM DEU JOB JOS JDG RUTH 1SA 2SA PSA AMOS HOS 1KI 2KI 1CH 2CH PRO ECC SNG JOEL MIC ISA ZEP HAB JER LAM YNA NAH OBA DAN EZE EZRA EST NEH HAG ZEC MAL YHN MARK MAT LUKE ACTs YAC GAL 1TH 2TH 1COR 2COR ROM COL PHM EPH PHP 1TIM TIT 1PET 2PET 2TIM HEB YUD 1YHN 2YHN 3YHN REV
Isa Intro C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 C31 C32 C33 C34 C35 C36 C37 C38 C39 C40 C41 C42 C43 C44 C45 C46 C47 C48 C49 C50 C51 C52 C53 C54 C55 C56 C57 C58 C59 C60 C61 C62 C63 C64 C65 C66
Isa 37 V1 V2 V3 V4 V6 V7 V8 V9 V10 V11 V12 V13 V14 V15 V16 V17 V18 V19 V20 V21 V22 V23 V24 V25 V26 V27 V28 V29 V30 V31 V32 V33 V34 V35 V36 V37 V38
Note: This view shows ‘verses’ which are not natural language units and hence sometimes only part of a sentence will be visible. Normally the OET discourages the reading of individual ‘verses’, but this view is only designed for doing comparisons of different translations. Click on any Bible version abbreviation down the left-hand side to see the verse in more of its context. The OET segments on this page are still very early looks into the unfinished texts of the Open English Translation of the Bible. Please double-check these texts in advance before using in public.
Text critical issues=none Clarity of original=clear Importance=normal (All still tentative.)
OET-LV And_they_came the_servants the_king Ḩizqiyyāh to Yəshaˊyāh.
UHB וַיָּבֹ֗אוּ עַבְדֵ֛י הַמֶּ֥לֶךְ חִזְקִיָּ֖הוּ אֶל־יְשַׁעְיָֽהוּ׃ ‡
(vayyāⱱoʼū ˊaⱱdēy hammelek ḩizqiyyāhū ʼel-yəshaˊyāhū.)
Key: khaki:verbs.
Note: Automatic aligning of the OET-RV to the LV is done by some temporary software, hence the OET-RV alignments are incomplete (and may occasionally be wrong).
BrLXX Καὶ ἦλθον οἱ παῖδες τοῦ βασιλέως Ἐζεκίου πρὸς Ἡσαΐαν.
(Kai aʸlthon hoi paides tou basileōs Ezekiou pros Haʸsaian. )
BrTr So the servants of king Ezekias came to Esaias.
ULT And the servants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah,
UST After those men gave Isaiah that message,
BSB § So the servants of King Hezekiah went to Isaiah,
OEB your prayer for those that remain.’ And this was the answer that Isaiah returned to the deputation of King Hezekiah’s ministers: ‘Tell your master,’ he said, ‘that the Lord’s message to him is this: he is not to be afraid of the blasphemous words he has heard from the minions of the King of Assyria.
WEBBE So the servants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
WMBB (Same as above)
NET When King Hezekiah’s servants came to Isaiah,
LSV And the servants of King Hezekiah come to Isaiah,
FBV After Hezekiah's officials delivered his message to Isaiah,
T4T After those men gave me that message,
LEB When[fn] the servants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah,
37:5 Or “And”
BBE So the servants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
Moff No Moff ISA book available
JPS So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
ASV So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
DRA And the servants of Ezechias came to Isaias.
YLT And the servants of king Hezekiah come in unto Isaiah,
Drby And the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
RV So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
Wbstr So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
KJB-1769 So the servants of king Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
KJB-1611 So the seruants of King Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
(Modernised spelling is same as from KJB-1769 above, apart from capitalisation)
Bshps So the seruauntes of the kyng Hezekia came to Esai,
(So the servants of the king Hezekia came to Esai,)
Gnva So the seruants of the King Hezekiah came to Isaiah.
(So the servants of the King Hezekiah came to Isaiah. )
Cvdl So the seruauntes of kinge Ezechias came to Esay.
(So the servants of king Ezechias came to Esay.)
Wycl And the seruauntis of kyng Esechie camen to Isaie;
(And the servants of king Esechie came to Isaie;)
Luth Und die Knechte des Königs Hiskia kamen zu Jesaja.
(And the servant(s) the kings Hiskia came to Yesaja.)
ClVg Et venerunt servi regis Ezechiæ ad Isaiam.
(And venerunt servi king Ezechiæ to Isaiam. )
37:5-7 God answered that he would deal with the Assyrians and rescue the remnant of his people from their distress (see 63:9).
Isaiah 36-37; 2 Kings 18-19; 2 Chronicles 32
The harrowing experience of the attack on Judah by King Sennacherib of Assyria during Hezekiah’s reign is recorded by three different writers of Scripture and even by Sennacherib himself. Many scholars also suspect that this event formed the basis for Herodotus’s story regarding an army of mice eating the bow strings of the Assyrian army during their campaign against the Egyptians (Histories, 2.141). The origins of this event stretch back into the reign of Hezekiah’s father Ahaz, who enticed the Assyrians to attack Israel and Aram in exchange for making Judah a vassal of Assyria (2 Kings 16-17; 2 Chronicles 28; Isaiah 7-8; also see “The Final Days of the Northern Kingdom of Israel” map). Judah continued to be a vassal of Assyria through the early part of Hezekiah’s reign, but Hezekiah also quietly made extensive preparations to throw off the yoke of Assyria one day (2 Kings 18:1-12; 1 Chronicles 4:39-43; 2 Chronicles 29-31; also see “Hezekiah Strengthens Judah” map). Hezekiah also appears to have been hoping for support from Babylon and Egypt regarding his efforts to revolt against Assyria’s rule, but the prophet Isaiah warned Judah against placing their hopes in these foreign powers (Isaiah 30:1-5; 31:1-3; 39:1-8; 40:10-15; 2 Kings 20:12-19). After a few years spent quashing rebellion among the Babylonians, the Kassites, and the Medes in the east, Sennacherib turned his sights westward and began a campaign to subdue the various vassal nations that were refusing to submit to Assyria’s rule any longer. He first reconquered the Phoenician cities of Sidon and Tyre and then moved south to Philistia. He subdued Joppa, Beth-dagon, Bene-berak, and Azor and then moved to capture the cities of the Shephelah, which guarded the entrances to the valleys leading into the central hill country of Judah. While Sennacherib was attacking Lachish he sent his officers to demand Hezekiah’s surrender. This may be the Assyrian advance upon Jerusalem from the north described in Isaiah 10:28-32, but this is not certain (see “Assyria Advances on Jerusalem” map). Hezekiah sent officers back to Sennacherib with gold and silver taken from Temple and the royal treasury, but he would not surrender. The officers then traveled to Libnah to meet with Sennacherib, for he gone to fight there by that time. In the meantime King Tirhakah of Cush, who was ruling over Egypt at this time, came to attack Sennacherib, so Sennacherib sent his officials back to Hezekiah with a message that Jerusalem would be taken if he resisted. Hezekiah laid the letter from the officials before the Lord and prayed, and the Lord sent word through the prophet Isaiah that Jerusalem would not be taken. Then that very night the angel of the Lord killed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers (probably those with Sennacherib fighting the Egyptians), and Sennacherib went back to Assyria. There while he was worshiping in the temple of Nisroch, Sennacherib’s sons killed him and fled to Ararat (see “Ararat” map).