Comentário sobre II Reis 16:25
Rashi on II Kings
He exiled [it's people] to Kir. The people therein he exiled to a province named Kir.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
Before [king Achaz] came. [He built the altar] before the king came from Damesek.1Achaz decided to worship the idols of Arom because he believed they were responsible for his defeat. See II Divrei Hayomim 28:23.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
And the Copper Altar … he brought, etc. It is impossible to say that this was the Copper Altar that Moshe made, because it was hidden. It is also impossible to say that his was the stone altar that Shlomo made, and he called it the “Copper Altar,”2II Divrei Hayomim 7:7. because it was impossible to move it from one corner to another without taking it apart,3Alternatively, “he placed the new altar near the Copper Altar, i.e., near Shlomo's altar which is referred to as the Copper Altar. He placed it closer to the Sanctuary than Shlomo's altar without moving that altar to show that it was important to him.—Radak but we learned that the fire that descended in Shlomo's time, did not leave the altar until Menashe came and removed it,4Maseches Zevachim 61b. for he demolished the altar, as we find in the Aggadah of [the chapter entitled] “Cheilek.”5See Maseches Sanhedrin 103b. I have no way to explain this “[copper] altar” except as [referring to] the basin and the bases of copper, which were accessories of the altar and were near the holy altar. Now, when Achaz made the altar for the idols, he removed the basin and moved it to another side, [farther] away from the Temple, so as not to intervene between the altar he made and the Temple of Adonoy, and he placed it next to the holy altar on the north. We find that our Rabbis6Maseches Shabbos 55a. explained a passage in a similar manner, ”And they came and stood next to the Copper Altar.”7Yechezkeil 9:2. Did the Copper Altar exist? He said to them, ”Begin from the place where they recite songs before Me.” Thus we see here that copper musical instruments are referred to as a “[copper] altar.”8It follows then, that the copper basin which is an accessory to the altar is referred to as “the Copper Altar.”
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
To visit. At intervals, when it enters my mind to visit it.9The Copper Altar will be for occasional use, thereby, establishing the new altar as the primary one.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
The frames of the bases. The rows upon which the bases were made,10He removed the bases from the ten basins, and out of contempt, he set the basins on a stone floor.—Radak as it is stated, ”The bases were made in the following manner: They had frames … ”11I Melochim 7:28. 12See I Melochim 7:23-27.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
The canopy for Shabbos. The roof of a tent made for shade,13Alternatively, a building in which the mishmar, i.e., the family of kohanim that had served during the week, would stay until after Shabbos. That too he removed.—Radak to sit under it in the [Temple] courtyard on Shabbos.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Rashi on II Kings
And the king's … entrance. [The entrance] through which he would come, from his house to the Beis [Hamikdosh] of Adonoy through the outside,14He sealed up that entrance so that access to the palace could be gained only through the Beis Hamikdosh. This would make an attack on the palace more difficult because now the only access to the palace would be through the Beis Hamikdosh.—Ralbag he changed to a concealed place because of the king of Ashur, so that he would not covet those vessels, and he also changed the entrance, in case he would have to hide and secretly escape.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy