Jeremiah
2 Kings 19:18BSB·traditional attribution

They have cast their gods into the fire and destroyed them, for they were not gods, but only wood and stone—the work of human hands.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

Rabshakeh, having delivered his message and received no answer (whether he took this silence for a consent or a slight does not appear), left his army before Jerusalem, under the command of the other generals, and went himself to attend the king his master for further orders. He found him besieging Libnah, a city that had revolted from Judah, Kg2 8:22.

Commenting on 2 Kings 19:8-19

Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Reformed @jfbcommentary

HEZEKIAH'S PRAYER. (2Ki. 19:14-34) Hezekiah received the letter . . . and went up into the house of the Lord--Hezekiah, after reading it, hastened into the temple, spread it in the childlike confidence of faith before the Lord, as containing taunts deeply affecting the divine honor, and implored deliverance from this proud defier of God and man.

Commenting on 2 Kings 19:14-34

Keil & Delitzsch Lutheran @keilanddelitzsch

2Ki 19:17-19 After the challenge, to observe the blasphemies of Sennacherib, Hezekiah mentions the fact that the Assyrians have really devastated all lands, and therefore that it is not without ground that they boast of their mighty power; but he finds the explanation of this in the impotence and nothingness of the gods of the heathen.

Commenting on 2 Kings 19:17-19