What is the meaning of 2 Chronicles 32:10? This is what Sennacherib king of Assyria says Sennacherib’s opening line is calculated to intimidate. • He presents himself as the ultimate authority, brushing aside Hezekiah’s earlier words of faith (cf. 2 Chronicles 32:7-8). • Similar taunts appear in 2 Kings 18:19 and Isaiah 36:4, showing a consistent campaign of psychological warfare. • Psalm 2:1-4 reminds us that earthly rulers who set themselves against the LORD are ultimately the ones in derision. God’s Word records these boasts so we can see His later vindication in real history. What is the basis of your confidence The heart of the taunt exposes the real battle: faith versus fear. • Sennacherib questions Judah’s trust, echoing 2 Kings 18:30: “Do not let Hezekiah persuade you to trust in the LORD.” • Hezekiah had already urged, “With us is the LORD our God to help us and to fight our battles” (2 Chronicles 32:8). The king of Assyria targets that very claim. • Scripture consistently locates true confidence in God alone—see Psalm 20:7; Proverbs 3:5-6; Isaiah 26:3-4. • The question forces every listener—ancient or modern—to clarify: Is my security rooted in human strength or in the living God? that you remain in Jerusalem under siege Sennacherib tries to make faith look foolish amid dire circumstances. • A siege meant cut-off supplies, growing thirst, and mounting panic (cf. Isaiah 36:12). • Yet God had promised deliverance: “He will not enter this city or shoot an arrow here” (2 Kings 19:32-34; Isaiah 37:33-35). • 2 Chronicles 32:21 records the literal fulfillment—185,000 Assyrian soldiers struck down overnight. • Repeated biblical patterns show God rescuing His people when escape seems impossible: Exodus 14:13-14; Psalm 91:1-3; Daniel 3:16-17. • Remaining in the city was not stubbornness but obedience, trusting the LORD to act exactly as He had said. summary Sennacherib’s challenge in 2 Chronicles 32:10 is more than ancient trash talk; it is a direct assault on faith in God’s revealed promises. By questioning Judah’s confidence and mocking their persistence under siege, he exposes his own reliance on human power. Scripture records his words so we can watch the LORD answer. The verse calls us today to ground our security not in circumstances but in the God who keeps every promise—no matter how loud the enemy’s voice or how tight the siege. |