And Hezekiah Welcomed Them Gladly...

"And Hezekiah welcomed them gladly. And he showed them his treasure house, the silver, the gold, the spices, the precious oil, his whole armory, all that was found in his storehouses. There was nothing in his house or in all his realm that Hezekiah did not show them."

~Isaiah 39:2

No, he didn’t write a book of the Bible—as some occasionally tease—but Hezekiah was a king, and a pretty darn good one too. That’s really saying something when you scan the vast majority of Judahite rulers between David and Jesus, the permanent Occupant of David’s throne. What a bunch of scoundrels!

Hezekiah is a fascinating study with some important points of connection for us today. Here are a few bullets of context for the verse quoted above (see 2 Chronicles 29-32 for even more):

  • At 25, Hezekiah takes power in a time of great national rebellion, decay, and danger

  • He has the Levitical priests purge the Temple of its filthy idols and reinstate proper worship

  • He calls all Israel to remember and celebrate the Passover rightly

  • He organizes the priests for faithful & more effective service

  • In the face of Jerusalem being vastly outnumbered and besieged by Assyria, a hostile northern superpower, Hezekiah cries out to God who hears and delivers him and His people from destruction and domination.

We read in 2 Chron. 31:20-21: “Thus Hezekiah did throughout all Judah, and he did what was good and right and faithful before the LORD his God. And every work that he undertook in the service of the house of God and in accordance with the law and the commandments, seeking his God, he did with all his heart, and prospered.” Certainly an impressive guy in the midst of a string of mostly awful kings!

After Hezekiah’s faithfulness in the Assyrian crisis and God’s subsequent deliverance, a personal crisis strikes: Hezekiah becomes deathly sick. Isaiah the prophet tells him to get ready to die for his time is up. Again Hezekiah prays. Again God delivers and gives him 15 more years of life.

Here’s where Hezekiah’s deepest crisis hits.

Great leadership, great faithfulness, great effectiveness, and great humility had led to great prosperity for Hezekiah’s kingdom and great notoriety for himself. News of Judah’s national deliverance and Hezekiah’s personal deliverance ripple out from Jerusalem. These kinds of things don’t just happen! People far and wide are curious and want answers. When the Babylonians send an envoy to find out how such great things could happen to such a nobody king and worthless nation, what does Hezekiah do?

We’ll get to that, but first, what does Hezekiah’s God do? After all, the LORD is the One behind all this national and personal success, right? Second Chronicles 32:31 tells us: “…in the matter of the envoys of the princes of Babylon, who had been sent to him to inquire about the sign (i.e. all the good stuff) that had been done in the land, God left him to himself, in order to test him and to know all that was in his (Hezekiah’s) heart.”

Wow.

If you’re picturing angry Moses atop the rock while Israel writhes in rebellion; if you’re picturing lustful David atop his palace roof when his men are out fighting; if you’re picturing hiding, despairing Elijah complaining to God that he’s the only faithful one left in Israel; or if you’re picturing boastful Peter declaring his readiness to die with Jesus in front of the other disciples, you’re on the right track towards understanding Hezekiah’s plight: he’s been faithful to God, used of God; he’s said right things, done right things, and experienced visible signs of God’s favor and blessing; but he has a blind spot: his own heart. God isn’t blind to Hezekiah’s, Moses’, David’s, Peter’s, or our blind spots … but they were, and we can be too! The moment we feel the glow of success however big or small, especially having faced crises with faith, having followed God through hard stuff, having attained a moral and experiential footing from which to ascribe credit for the success, that is the most dangerous moment of all for a child of God.

How easy it is to look at visible successes and to overlook the invisible God who made them possible, even when we’ve acknowledged Him openly in the past, before or during a crisis. How easy it is to unlock the storehouse doors, to open the lids on the treasure chests of our lives and point curious outsiders to beautiful, tangible blessings when it is only God who has granted them.

Moses had encountered God face-to-face; he’d prayed for God to spare rebellious Israel in the past, and he felt he ought to get to strike the rock like before when this time God specifically said to speak to the rock in order to provide Israel with water. David stood for God’s honor when Goliath blasphemed, refused to kill Saul when his own men urged him to do so, and defended Israel valiantly time and time again. Surely these successes afforded him a one-nighter with another man’s wife? Elijah called down fire and slew 400 false prophets. Isn’t that worth a little self-congratulatory wound-licking? Peter nailed the answer to Jesus’ question: “Who do you say I am?” But even here Jesus reminds him and the other disciples that “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” came from the Father, not Peter.

“In those days Hezekiah became sick and was at the point of death, and he prayed to the LORD, and He answered him and gave him a sign. But Hezekiah did not make return according to the benefit done to him, for his heart was proud.” (2 Chron. 32:24-25)

God does nothing for us that He doesn’t expect us to fully credit or praise Him for doing. Hezekiah showcased God’s bountiful blessings for the Babylonian inquirers, but failed to showcase God. 2 Chron. 32:26a tells us that“Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of his heart, both he and the inhabitants of Jerusalem so that the wrath of the LORD did not come upon them in the days of Hezekiah.” That’s good, right? Sure, for Hezekiah and his generation, but it wasn’t good for the coming generation! Hezekiah dies and the next chapter opens: “Manasseh was twelve years old when he began to reign, and he reigned fifty five years in Jerusalem. And he did what was evil in the sight of the LORD…”

What if while visiting all the grain storehouses and treasuries with his father the boy Manasseh had heard his dad give God worship before the Babylonians rather than showing off all of his wealth? One generation’s prideful failure to fully credit God became the next generation’s utter abandonment of God.

I want you to experience success. I want you to face adversity and crises of all kinds with faith and to taste the blessings and favor of God in real and tangible ways on the other side. I want curious outsiders and onlookers to investigate the visible goodness of God in your life. I want your church to weather its present crisis under your faithful, prayerful leadership and to emerge into a new season of revival and growth such that other pastors and even non-believers notice. I want the strife in your marriage or other strained family relationships to be the occasion for personal, spiritual deepening and dependance on God such that true healing and reconciliation not only happens but gets the attention of others. I want you to know the healing touch of God on your physical body, your emotions: your depression, your anxiety, etc. I want these and other kinds of “successes” for myself too! But what I want most of all is to avoid the temptation to showcase the tangible marks of blessing to the neglect of the Blesser. What I want most is for us to not fail to “make return according to the benefit done to us” by our great and gracious God.

We won’t fail in this if our pride is in check. We do this by keeping close to God’s word and to God in prayer, not just when the heat of pressure and crisis is bearing down and threatening to crush us but also (perhaps especially) when the pressure and crisis subsides. Then, when the curious come wanting to know why, what, and how, like Hezekiah, we can still welcome them gladly, but without failing to identify the right Who that has brought us through and blessed us!