Topics

Siege

A siege is a military strategy where an enemy army surrounds and isolates a city or fortress to force surrender through starvation and psychological pressure. Scripture reveals both the devastating human costs of siege warfare and God's sovereignty over such events.

Overview

Biblical sieges involved surrounding a city, cutting off supplies, and waiting for inhabitants to surrender or starve. The accounts in Scripture show the extreme suffering—including famine—that resulted from prolonged sieges. God sometimes used siege as judgment against His people for disobedience, while other times He delivered cities from their enemies.

Key Scriptures

"There was a great famine in Samaria, as they besieged it, until a donkey's head was sold for eighty shekels of silver" (2 Kings 6:25, ESV). "And the king of Assyria will not come into this city or shoot an arrow there" (Isaiah 37:33, ESV). "Deuteronomy 20:19-20 instructed Israel to preserve fruit trees even during siege warfare, showing God's concern for future provision even in conflict."

Application

Reflect on how sieges illustrate the destructive consequences of sin and conflict, while also remembering that God remains sovereign and can deliver His people even in desperate circumstances.

Scripture References 19
Full Topical Reference List 19 total — Nave's Topical Bible

Conducted by erecting embankments parallel to the walls of the besieged city

Offer of peace must be made to the city before beginning