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The Broad Wall and a Refugee Crisis | Bible Trek – Jerusalem in the Old Testament Series – 04

The building of the Broad Wall was commissioned by King Hezekiah in the eighth century BC. As the Assyrian army marched towards Jerusalem, the King ordered the building of a wall seven metres wide to protect Jerusalem and provide safety and protection for refugees who were fleeing Assyria. The remnant of the Broad Wall takes us right back to this historic event found in 2 Chronicles 32.  


Quick read

2 Chronicles 32.2–5 

In a nutshell 

You inspected all the houses in Jerusalem and tore some of them down to get stones to repair the city walls. Isaiah 22.10


In 701 Assyrian troops marched against Jerusalem. King Hezekiah of Judah prepared the city for siege by ordering the construction of a broad wall that would protect not only Jerusalemites but Jewish refugees from the north who had fled from the approaching Assyrians. 

Remnants of the wall can be still admired today. They are 65 metres long and vary between six and seven metres in width.  

Hezekiah went down in history for successfully resisting the eventual Assyrian siege. There was a significant downside though. As Isaiah points out, some people lost their houses as the king looked for building material for his wall and didn’t hesitate to pull down whatever stood in its way. 

Hezekiah was castigated for this by the prophet Isaiah. This was not unusual in Old Testament times, as God called his prophets to speak truth to power whenever that power caused harm to the powerless. 

Promising Harvard law graduate Bryan Stevenson traded the prospect of a stellar legal career for a move to Montgomery, Alabama, to start up the Equal Justice Initiative. This was a costly move. At times opposition was overwhelming, but his faith-rooted activism eventually saw many black people exonerated who had been wrongly convicted.   

Justice is a deep-rooted theme in the Bible. God is a God of justice, and he has made us his image-bearers. But biblical justice is way more than following the rulebook. It’s restorative, it’s about advocating justice, it’s about going beyond simply obeying the law.  

Jerusalem’s Broad Wall reminds us of King Hezekiah commissioning the expansion of Jerusalem to accommodate refugees; in a way, he is reflecting the heart of God. But the collateral damage caused by the building project highlights the complexity of life and the brokenness of humanity.  

We are still called to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. He sought out the marginalised and the vulnerable. In his light let us live radically selfless lives.

Read on, to find out more about Old Testament regulations on how to treat those in need. 

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