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woman to not be able to bear children.  For any reason, a man could divorce his wife by cutting off the
               hem of her dress before city officials.  He was then free to remarry.  Sounds like Africa today!

               The economy of Assyria was based on a barter system.  They did not have coinage, so items of value
               were exchanged or traded, including gold or silver, copper, and bronze.  Animals and grain were
               exchanged for purchases.  Most Assyrians were either farmers or in the military. Often, they would trade
               with other countries, as desired the furniture and carved ivory of the Phoenicians.

               The Assyrians and Israel

               The Assyrians were a thorn in the side of Israel. Beginning in 733 BC under King Tilgath-pileser, Assyria
               took the Northern Kingdom’s land and carried the inhabitants into exile (2 Kings 15:29). Later, beginning
               in 721 BC, the Assyrian king Shalmaneser besieged Israel’s capital, Samaria, and it fell three years later (2
               Kings 18:9-12). This event fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecy that God would use Assyria as the “rod of His anger”
               (Isaiah 10:5-19); that is, the Assyrian Empire was implementing God’s judgment against the idolatrous
               Israelites. The sovereign God takes full credit as the source of Assyria’s authority (compare Isaiah
               7:18; 8:7; 9:11; and Daniel 4:17). Secular history records that in 703 BC Assyria under King
               Sennacherib suppressed a major Chaldean challenge.

               Given the Assyrian threat against Israel, it is understandable that the prophet Jonah did not want to
               travel to Nineveh (Jonah 1:1-3). When he eventually arrived in the Assyrian capital, Jonah preached
               God’s impending judgment. After hearing Jonah’s message, the king of Assyria and the entire city of
               Nineveh repented, and God turned His anger away for a time (Jonah 3:10). The grace of God was
               extended even to the Assyrians.

               The military rulers, as in many other nations, could be a brutal breed. They ruled their empire and
               subdued nations with absolute terror.  Here is a quote from an ancient writing from an Assyrian military
               officer:

                   “I destroyed, I demolished, I burned. I took their warriors prisoner and impaled them on stakes
                   before their cities. I flayed the nobles, as many as had rebelled, and spread their skins out on the
                   piles [of dead corpses].  Many of the captives I burned in a fire. Many I took alive; from some I cut
                   off their hands to the write, from other I cut off their noses, ears and fingers; I put out the eyes of
                   many of the soldiers."

                   I slew two hundred and sixty fighting men; I cut off their heads and made pyramids thereof. I slew
                   one of every two. I built a wall before the great gates of the city; I flayed the chief men of the rebels,
                   and I covered the wall with their skins. Some of them were enclosed alive in the bricks of the wall,
                   some of them were crucified on stakes along the wall; I caused a great multitude of them to be
                   flayed in my presence, and I covered the wall with their skins. I gathered together the heads in the
                   form of crowns, and their pierced bodies in the form of garlands."
                                                                              vi


               God used the pagan Assyrians to bring a horrendous judgment to Northern Israel.  Many of the Minor
               Prophets foretold of the impending doom to come to Israel because they refused to submit their lives to
               Yahweh and willfully defied His commandments.   They also predicted judgment which would come to
               Assyria because their wickedness.



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