Uzziah in Easton's Bible Dictionary
a contracted form of Azari'ah the Lord is my strength. (1.)
One
of Amaziah's sons, whom the people made king of
Judah in his
father's stead (2 Kings 14:21; 2 Chr. 26:1). His
long reign of
about fifty-two years was "the most prosperous
excepting that of
Jehosaphat since the time of Solomon." He was a
vigorous and
able ruler, and "his name spread abroad, even to the
entering in
of Egypt" (2 Chr. 26:8, 14). In the earlier part of
his reign,
under the influence of Zechariah, he was faithful to
Jehovah,
and "did that which was right in the sight of the
Lord" (2 Kings
15:3; 2 Chr. 26:4, 5); but toward the close of his
long life
"his heart was lifted up to his destruction," and he
wantonly
invaded the priest's office (2 Chr. 26:16), and
entering the
sanctuary proceeded to offer incense on the golden
altar.
Azariah the high priest saw the tendency of such a
daring act on
the part of the king, and with a band of eighty
priests he
withstood him (2 Chr. 26:17), saying, "It
appertaineth not unto
thee, Uzziah, to burn incense." Uzziah was suddenly
struck with
leprosy while in the act of offering incense (26:19-
21), and he
was driven from the temple and compelled to reside
in "a several
house" to the day of his death (2 Kings 15:5, 27; 2
Chr. 26:3).
He was buried in a separate grave "in the field of
the burial
which belonged to the kings" (2 Kings 15:7; 2 Chr.
26:23). "That
lonely grave in the royal necropolis would
eloquently testify to
coming generations that all earthly monarchy must
bow before the
inviolable order of the divine will, and that no
interference
could be tolerated with that unfolding of the
purposes of God,
which, in the fulness of time, would reveal the
Christ, the true
High Priest and King for evermore" (Dr. Green's
Kingdom of
Israel, etc.).
(2.) The father of Jehonathan, one of David's
overseers (1
Chr. 27:25).
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