Bible Commentary

Isaiah 37:16

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 37:16

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

O Lord … that dwellest between the cherubims; literally, that sittest upon the cherubim. The allusion is scarcely to the poetic imagery of God riding on the cherubim in the heavens (), as Mr.

Cheyne suggests; but rather to his dwelling between the two cherubic forms in the holy of holies, and there manifesting himself (camp. ; ; ; ; ; ).

Thou art the God, even thou alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth. It has been questioned whether Hezekiah was really as pronounced a monotheist as these expressions would imply, and suggested that his actual words received "a colouring" from a later writer.

Hezekiah's contemporaries, it is said, Isaiah and Micah, make no such strong statements of their belief in one only God as this (Kuenen, Cheyne). But it is difficult to see what can be a clearer revelation of monotheism than , or what truth more absolutely underlies the whole of Isaiah's teaching than the unity of the Supreme Being.

The same under-current is observable in Micah (, ; ; ; , ). Sennacherib's belief, that each country has its own god (), is not shared by the religious Jews of his time.

They are well aware that the heathen gods are "vanity" (; ; ; ), "wind" and "confusion" (, etc.). Thou hast made heaven and earth (comp. ; ; ; , etc.

).

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