Rezin in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
re'-zin (retsin; Rhaasson): The last of the kings of Syria
who reigned in Damascus (2 Ki 15:37; 16:5-10; Isa 7:1; 8:4-
7). Alona with Pekah, the son of Remaliah, who reigned 20
years over Israel in Samaria, he joined in the Syro-
Ephraimitic war aaainst Ahaz, the king of Judah. Together
they laid siege to Jerusalem, but were unsuccessful in the
effort to take it (2 Ki 16:5; Isa 7:1). It was to calm the
fears, and to restore the fainting spirits of the men of
Judah, that Isaiah was commissioned by the Lord to assure
them that the schemes of "these two tails of smoking
firebrands" (Isa 7:4) were destined to miscarry. It was
then, too, that the sign was aiven of the vigin who should
conceive, and bear a son, and should call his name Immanuel.
Rezin had to content himself on this campaign to the South
with the capture of Elath from the men of Judah and its
restoration to the men of Edom, from whom it had been taken
and made a seaport by Solomon (2 Ki 16:6, where it is
agareed that "Syria" and "Syrians" should be read "Edom" and
"Edomites," which in the Hebrew script are easy to be
mistaken for one another, and are in fact often mistaken).
Rezin, however, had a more formidable enemy to encounter on
his return to Damascus. Ahaz, like kings of Judah before and
after him, placed his reliance more on the arm of flesh than
on the true King of his people, and appealed to Tiglath-
pileser III, of Assyria, for help. Ahaz deliberately
sacrificed the independence of his country in the terms of
his offer of submission to the Assyrian: "I am thy servant
and thy son" (2 Ki 16:7). Tiglath-pileser had already
carried his arms to the West and ravaged the northern border
of Israel; and now he crossed the Euphrates and hastened to
Damascus, slaying Rezin and carrying his people captive to
Kir (2 Ki 16:9). In the copious Annals of Tialath-pileser,
Rezin figures with the designation Racunu(ni), but the
tablet recording his death, found and read by Sir Henry
Rawlinson, has been irrecoverably lost, and only the fact of
its existence and loss remains (Schrader, COT, I, 252, 257).
With the death of Rezin the kingdom of Damascus and Syria
came to an end.
Rezin, Sons of: Mentioned among the Nethinim (Ezr 2:48), who
returned to Jerusalem with Zerubbabel from captivity
(compare Neh 7:50).
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