Chapter 23:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 1 Kings 1 Chronicles
2 Kings 23
Complete Concise
We have here, I. The happy continuance of the goodness of Josiah's
reign, and the progress of the reformation he began, reading the law (v. 1, 2),
renewing the covenant (v. 3), cleansing the temple (v. 4), and rooting out idols
and idolatry, with all the relics thereof, in all places, as far as his power
reached (v. 5-20), keeping a solemn passover (v. 21-23), and clearing the
country of witches (v. 24); and in all this acting with extraordinary vigour (v.
25). II. The unhappy conclusion of it in his untimely death, as a token of the
continuance of God's wrath against Jerusalem (v. 26-30). III. The more
unhappy consequences of his death, in the bad reigns of his two sons Jehoahaz
and Jehoiakim, that came after him (v. 31-37).
Verses 1-3
Josiah had received a message from God that there was no
preventing the ruin of Jerusalem, but that he should deliver only his own soul;
yet he did not therefore sit down in despair, and resolve to do nothing for his
country because he could not do all he would. No, he would do his duty, and then
leave the event to God. A public reformation was the thing resolved on; if any
thing could prevent the threatened ruin it must be that; and here we have the
preparations for that reformation. 1. He summoned a general assembly of the
states, the elders, the magistrates or representatives of Judah and Jerusalem,
to meet him
in the house of the Lord, with the priests and prophets, the
ordinary and extraordinary ministers, that, they all joining in it, it might
become a national act and so be the more likely to prevent national judgments;
they were all called to attend (v. 1, 2), that the business might be done with
the more solemnity, that they might all advise and assist in it, and that those
who were against it might be discouraged from making any opposition. Parliaments
are no diminution at all to the honour and power of good princes, but a great
support to them. 2. Instead of making a speech to this convention, he ordered
the book of the law to be read to them; nay, it should seem, he read it himself
(v. 2), as one much affected with it and desirous that they should be so too.
Josiah thinks it not below him to be a reader, any more than Solomon did to be a
preacher, nay, and David himself to be a door-keeper in the house of God.
Besides the convention of the great men, he had a congregation of the
men of
Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem to hear the law read. It is really
the interest of princes to promote the knowledge of the scriptures in their
dominions. If the people be but as stedfastly resolved to obey by law as he is
to govern by law, the kingdom will be happy. All people are concerned to know
the scripture, and all in authority to spread the knowledge of it. 3. Instead of
proposing laws for the confirming of them in their duty, he proposed an
association by which they should all jointly engage themselves to God, v. 3. The
book of the law was the book of the covenant, that, if they would be to God a
people, he would be to them a God; they here engage themselves to do their part,
not doubting but that then God would do his. (1.) The covenant was that they
should walk after the Lord, in compliance with his will, in his ordinances and
his providences, should answer all his calls and attend all his motionsthat
they should make conscience of all his commandments, moral, ceremonial, and
judicial, and should carefully observe them
with all their heart and all
their soul, with all possible care and caution, sincerity, vigour, courage,
and resolution, and so fulfil the conditions of this covenant, in dependence
upon the promises of it. (2.) The covenanters were, in the first place, the king
himself, who stood by his pillar (ch. 11:14) and publicly declared his consent
to this covenant, to set them an example, and to assure them not only of his
protection but of his presidency and all the furtherance his power could give
them in their obedience. It is no abridgment of the liberty even of princes
themselves to be in bonds to God.
All the people likewise
stood to the
covenant, that is, they signified their consent to it and promised to abide
by it. It is of good use to oblige ourselves to our duty with all possible
solemnity, and this is especially seasonable after notorious backslidings to sin
and decays in that which is good. He that bears an honest mind does not shrink
from positive engagements: fast bind, fast find.
Verses 4-24
We have here an account of such a reformation as we have not met
with in all the history of the kings of Judah, such thorough riddance made of
all the abominable things and such foundations laid of a glorious good work; and
here I cannot but wonder at two things:-1. That so many wicked things should
have got in, and kept standing so long, as we find here removed. 2. That
notwithstanding the removal of these wicked things, and the hopeful prospects
here given of a happy settlement, yet within a few years Jerusalem was utterly
destroyed, and even this did not save it; for the generality of the people,
after all, hated to be reformed.
The founder melteth in vain, and
therefore
reprobate silver shall men call them, Jer. 6:29, 30. Let us
here observe,
I. What abundance of wickedness there was, and had been, in
Judah and Jerusalem. One would not have believed it possible that in Judah,
where God was knownin Israel, where his name was greatin Salem, in Sion,
where his dwelling place was, such abominations should be found as here we have
an account of. Josiah had now reigned eighteen years, and had himself set the
people a good example, and kept up religion according to law; and yet, when he
came to make inquisition for idolatry, the depth and extent of the dunghill he
had to carry away appeared almost incredible. 1. Even in the house of the Lord,
that sacred temple which Solomon built, and dedicated to the honour and for the
worship of the God of Israel, there were found vessels, all manner of utensils,
for the worship of Baal,
and of the grove (or
Ashtaroth), and
of
all the host of heaven, v. 4. Though Josiah had suppressed the worship of
idols, yet the utensils made for that worship were all carefully preserved, even
in the temple itself, to be used again whenever the present restraint should be
taken off; nay, even the grove itself, the image of it, was yet standing in the
temple (v. 6); some make it the image of Venus, the same with Ashtaroth. 2. Just
at the entering in of the house of the Lord was a stable for horses kept
(would you think it?) for a religious use; they were holy horses,
given to
the sun (v. 11), as if he needed them who
rejoiceth as a strong man to
run a race (Ps. 19:5), or rather they would thus represent to themselves the
swiftness of his motion, which they much admired, making their religion to
conform to the poetical fictions of the chariot of the sun, the follies of which
even a little philosophy, without any divinity, would have exposed and made them
ashamed of. Some say that those horses were to be led forth in pomp every
morning to meet the rising sun, others that the worshippers of the sun rode out
upon them to adore the rising sun; it should seem that they drew the chariots of
the sun, which the people worshipped. Strange that ever men who had the written
word of God among them should be thus
vain in their imaginations! 3. Hard
by the house of the Lord there were
houses of the Sodomites, where
all manner of lewdness and filthiness, even that which was most unnatural, was
practised, and under pretence of religion too, in honour of their impure
deities. Corporal and spiritual whoredom went together, and the vile affections
to which the people were given up were the punishment of their vain
imaginations. Those that dishonoured their God were justly left thus to
dishonour themselves, Rom. 1:24, etc. There were women that
wove hangings for
the grove (v. 7), tents which encompassed the image of Venus, where the
worshippers committed all manner of lewdness, and this
in the house of the
Lord. Those did ill that made our Father's house a house of merchandise;
those did worse that made it a den of thieves; but those did worst of all that
made it
(Horrendum dictu!
Horrible to relate!) a brothel, in an
impudent defiance of the holiness of God and of his temple. Well might the
apostle call them
abominable idolatries. 4. There were many idolatrous
altars found (v. 12), some in the palace,
on the top of the upper chamber of
Ahaz. The roofs of their houses being flat, they made them their high
places, and set up altars upon them (Jer. 19:13; Zep. 1:5), domestic altars. The
kings of Judah did so: and, though Josiah never used them, yet to this time they
remained there. Manasseh had built altars for his idols in the house of the
Lord. When he repented he removed them, and
cast them out of the city (2
Chr. 33:15), but, not destroying them, his son Amon, it seems, had brought them
again into the courts of the temple; there Josiah found them, and thence he
broke
them down, v. 12. 5. There was
Tophet, in the valley of the son of Hinnom,
very near Jerusalem, where the image of Moloch (that god of unnatural cruelty,
as others were of unnatural uncleanness) was kept, to which some sacrificed
their children, burning them in the fire, others dedicated them, making them to
pass through the fire (v. 10),
labouring in the very fire, Hab. 2:13. It
is supposed to have been called
Tophet from
toph, a drum, because
they beat drums at the burning of the children, that their shrieks might not be
heard. 6. There were
high places before Jerusalem, which
Solomon had
built, v. 13. The altars and images on those high places, we may suppose,
had been taken away by some of the preceding godly kings, or perhaps Solomon
himself had removed them when he became a penitent; but the buildings, or some
parts of them, remained, with other high places, till Josiah's time. Those
that introduce corruptions into religion know not how far they will reach nor
how long they will last. Antiquity is no certain proof of verity. There were
also high places all the kingdom over, from
Geba to Beer-sheba (v. 8),
and
high places of the gates, in the entering in of the gate of the governor.
In these high places (bishop Patrick thinks) they burnt incense to those tutelar
gods to whom their idolatrous kings had committed the protection of their city;
and probably the governor of the city had a private altar for his
penates
his
household-gods. 7. There were idolatrous priests, that officiated at all
those idolatrous altars (v. 5), chemarim, black men, or that wore black. See Zep.
1:4. Those that sacrificed to Osiris, or that wept for Tammuz (Eze. 8:14), or
that worshipped the infernal deities, put on black garments as mourners. These
idolatrous priests the kings of
Judah had ordained to burn incense in the
high places; they were, it should seem, priests of the house of Aaron, who
thus profaned their dignity, and there were others also who had no right at all
to the priesthood, who burnt incense to Baal. 8. There were conjurers and
wizards, and such as
dealt with familiar spirits, v. 24. When they
worshipped the devil as their god no marvel that they consulted him as their
oracle.
II. What a full destruction good Josiah made of all those relics
of idolatry. Such is his zeal for the Lord of hosts, and his holy indignation
against all that is displeasing to him, that nothing shall stand before him. The
law was that the monuments of the Canaanites' idolatry must be all destroyed (Deu.
7:5), much more those of the idolatry of the Israelites, in whom it was much
more impious, profane, and perfidious. 1. He ordered Hilkiah, and the other
priests, to clear the temple. This was their province, v. 4. Away with all the
vessels that were made for Baal. They must never be employed in the service of
God, no, nor reserved for any common use; they must all be burnt, and the ashes
of them carried to Bethel. That place had been the common source of idolatry,
for there was set up one of the calves, and, that lying next to Judah, the
infection had thence spread into that kingdom, and therefore Josiah made it the
lay-stall of idolatry, the dunghill to which he carried the filth and
offscouring of all things, that, if possible, it might be made loathsome to
those that had been fond of it. 2. The idolatrous priests were all put down.
Those of them that were not of the house of Aaron, or had sacrificed to Baal or
other false gods, he put to death, according to the law, v. 20. He
slew them
upon their own altars, the most acceptable sacrifice that ever had been
offered upon them, a sacrifice to the justice of God. Those that were
descendants from Aaron, and yet had burnt incense in the high places, but to the
true God only, he forbade ever to approach the altar of the Lord; they had
forfeited that honour (v. 9): He
brought them out of the cities of Judah
(v. 8), that they might not do mischief in the country by secretly keeping up
their old idolatrous usages; but he allowed them to
eat of the unleavened
bread (the bread of the meat-offering, Lev. 2:4, 5)
among their brethren,
with whom they were to reside, that being under their eye they might be kept
from doing hurt and taught to do well; that bread, that unleavened bread (heavy
and unpleasant as it was), was better than they deserved, and that would serve
to keep them alive. But whether they were permitted to eat of all the
sacrifices, as blemished priests were (Lev. 21:22), which is called, in general,
the bread of their God, may be justly questioned. 3. All the images were
broken to pieces and burnt. The image of the grove (v. 6), some goddess or
other, was reduced to ashes, and the
ashes cast upon the graves of the common
people (v. 6), the common burying-place of the city. By the law a ceremonial
uncleanness was contracted by the touch of a grave, so that in casting them here
he declared them most impure, and none could touch them without thereby making
themselves unclean.
He cast it into the graves (so the Chaldee),
intimating that he would have all idolatry buried out of his sight, as a
loathsome thing, and forgotten, as dead men are out of mind, v. 14. He
filled
the places of the groves with the bones of men; as he carried the ashes of
the images to the graves, to mingle them with dead men's bones, so he carried
dead men's bones to the places where the images had been, and put them in the
room of them, that, both ways, idolatry might be rendered loathsome, and the
people kept both from the dust of the images and from the ruins of the places
where they had been worshipped. Dead men and dead gods were much alike and
fittest to go together. 4. All the wicked houses were suppressed, those nests of
impiety that harboured idolaters, the houses of the Sodomites, v. 7. "Down
with them, down with them, rase them to the foundations." The high places
were in like manner broken down and levelled with the ground (v. 8), even that
which belonged to the governor of the city; for no man's greatness or power
may protect him in idolatry or profaneness. Let governors be obliged, in the
first place, to reform, and then the governed will be the sooner influenced. He
defiled the high places (v. 8 and again v. 13), did all he could to render them
abominable, and put the people out of conceit with them, as Jehu did when he
made the house of Baal a draught-house, 2 Ki. 10:27. Tophet, which, contrary to
other places of idolatry, was in a valley, whereas they were on hills or high
places, was likewise defiled (v. 10), was made the burying-place of the city.
Concerning this we have a whole sermon, Jer. 19:1, 2, etc., where it is said,
They
shall bury in Tophet, and the whole city is threatened to be made like
Tophet. 5. The horses that had been given to the sun were taken away and put to
common use, and so were delivered from the vanity to which they were made
subject; and the chariots of the sun (what a pity was it that those horses and
chariots should be kept as the chariots and horsemen of Israel!) he burnt with
fire; and, if the sun be a flame, they never resembled him so much as they did
when they were chariots of fire. 6. The workers with familiar spirits and the
wizards were put away, v. 24. Those of them that were convicted of witchcraft,
it is likely, he put to death, and so deterred others from those diabolical
practices. In all this he had a sincere regard to
the words of the law which
were written in the book lately found, v. 24. He made that law his rule and
kept that in his eye throughout this reformation.
III. How his zeal extended itself to the cities of Israel that
were within his reach. The ten tribes were carried captive and the Assyrian
colonies did not fully people the country, so that, it is likely, many cities
had put themselves under the protection of the kings of Judah, 2 Chr. 30:1;
34:6. These he here visits, to carry on his reformation. As far as our influence
goes our endeavours should go to do good and bring the wickedness of the wicked
to an end.
1. He defiled and demolished Jeroboam's altar at Bethel, with
the high place and the grove that belonged to it, v. 15, 16. The golden calf, it
should seem, was gone
(thy calf, O Samaria! has cast thee off), but the
altar was there, which those that were wedded to their old idolatries made use
of still. This was, (1.) Defiled, v. 16. Josiah, in his pious zeal, was
ransacking the old seats of idolatry, and spied the sepulchres in the mount, in
which probably the idolatrous priests were buried, not far from the altar at
which they had officiated, and which they were so fond of that they were
desirous to lay their bones by it; these he opened, took out the bones, and
burnt
them upon the altar, to show that thus he would have done by the priests
themselves if they had been alive, as he did by those whom he found alive, v.
20. Thus he polluted the altar, desecrated it, and made it odious. It is
threatened against idolaters (Jer. 8:1, 2) that
their bones shall be spread
before the sun; that which is there threatened and this which is here
executed (bespeaking their
iniquity to be upon their bones, Eze. 32:27)
are an intimation of a punishment after death, reserved for those that live and
die impenitent in that or any other sin; the burning of the bones, if that were
all, is a small matter, but, if it signify the torment of the soul in a worse
flame (Lu. 16:24), it is very dreadful. This, as it was Josiah's act, seems to
have been the result of a very sudden resolve; he would not have done it but
that he happened to turn himself, and spy the sepulchres; and yet it was
foretold above 350 years before, when this altar was first built by Jeroboam, 1
Ki. 13:2. God always foresees, and has sometimes foretold as certain, that which
yet to us seems most contingent.
The king's heart is in the hand of the
Lord; king Josiah's was so, and he turned it (or ever he himself was
aware, Cant. 6:12) to do this. No work of God shall fall to the ground. (2.) It
was demolished. He broke down the altar and all its appurtenances (v. 15), burnt
what was combustible, and, since an idol is nothing in the world, he went as far
towards the annihilating of it as he could; for he
stamped it small to powder
and made it
as dust before the wind.
2. He destroyed all the houses of the high places, all those
synagogues of Satan that were
in the cities of Samaria, v. 19. These the
kings of Israel built, and God raised up this king of Judah to pull them down,
for the honour of the ancient house of David, from which the ten tribes had
revolted; the priests he justly made sacrifices
upon their own altars, v.
20.
3. He carefully preserved the sepulchre of that man of God who
came from Judah to foretel this, which now a king who came from Judah executed.
This was that good prophet who
proclaimed these things against the altar of
Bethel, and yet was himself slain by a lion for disobeying the word of the
Lord; but to show that God's displeasure against him went no further than his
death, but ended there, God so ordered it that when all the graves about his
were disturbed his was safe (v. 17, 18) and no man moved his bones. He had
entered into peace, and therefore should rest in his bed, Isa. 57:2. The old
lying prophet, who desired to be buried as near him as might be, it should seem,
knew what he did; for his dust also, being mingled with that of the good
prophet, was preserved for his sake; see Num. 23:10.
IV. We are here told what a solemn passover Josiah and his
people kept after all this. When they had cleared the country of the old leaven
they then applied themselves to the keeping of the feast. When Jehu had
destroyed the worship of Baal, yet he took no heed to walk in the commandments
and ordinances of God; but Josiah considered that we must learn to do well, and
no
only cease to do evil, and that the way to keep out all abominable
customs is to keep up all instituted ordinances (see Lev. 18:30), and therefore
he commanded all the people to keep the passover, which was not only a memorial
of their deliverance out of Egypt, but a token of their dedication to him that
brought them out and their communion with him. This he found written in the
book
of the law, here called
the book of the covenant; for, though the
divine authority may deal with us in a way of absolute command, divine grace
condescends to federal transactions, and therefore he observed it. We have not
such a particular account of this passover as of that in Hezekiah's time, 2
Chr. 30. But, in general, we are told that
there was not holden such a
passover in any of the foregoing reigns, no, not
from the days of the
judges (v. 22), which, by the way, intimates that, though the account which
the book of Judges gives of the state of Israel under that dynasty looks but
melancholy, yet there were then some golden days. This passover, it seems, was
extraordinary for the number and devotion of the communicants, their sacrifices
and offerings, and their exact observance of the laws of the feast; and it was
not now as in Hezekiah's passover, when many communicated that were not
cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary, and the Levites were
permitted to do the priests' work. We have reason to think that during all the
remainder of Josiah's reign religion flourished and the feasts of the Lord
were very carefully observed; but in this passover the satisfaction they took in
the covenant lately renewed, the reformation in pursuance of it, and the revival
of an ordinance of which they had lately found the divine original in the book
of the law, and which had long been neglected or carelessly kept, put them into
great transports of holy joy; and God was pleased to recompense their zeal in
destroying idolatry with uncommon tokens of his presence and favour. All this
concurred to make it a distinguished passover.
Verses 25-30
Upon the reading of these verses we must say, Lord, though
thy
righteousness be
as the great mountainsevident, conspicuous, and
past dispute, yet
thy judgments are a great deep, unfathomable and past
finding out, Ps. 36:6. What shall we say to this?
I. It is here owned that Josiah was one of the best kings that
ever sat upon the throne of David, v. 25. As Hezekiah was a non-such for faith
and dependence upon God in straits (ch. 18:5), so Josiah was a non-such for
sincerity and zeal in carrying on a work of reformation. For this there was none
like him, 1. That he
turned to the Lord from whom his fathers had
revolted. It is true religion to turn to God as one we have chosen and love. He
did what he could to turn his kingdom also to the Lord. 2. That he did this
with
his heart and soul; his affections and aims were right in what he did. Those
make nothing of their religion that do not make heart-work of it. 3. That he did
it with
all his heart, and
all his soul, and
all his mightwith
vigour, and courage, and resolution: he could not otherwise have broken through
the difficulties he had to grapple with. What great things may we bring to pass
in the service of God if we be but lively and hearty in it! 4. That he did this
according
to all the law of Moses, in an exact observance of that law and with an
actual regard to it. His zeal did not transport him into any irregularities,
but, in all he did, he walked by rule.
II. Notwithstanding this he was cut off by a violent death in
the midst of his days, and his kingdom was ruined within a few years after.
Consequent upon such a reformation as this, one would have expected nothing but
the prosperity and glory both of king and kingdom; but, quite contrary, we find
both under a cloud. 1. Even the reformed kingdom continues marked for ruin. For
all this (v. 26)
the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath.
That is certainly true, which God spoke by the prophet (Jer. 18:7, 8), that if a
nation, doomed to destruction,
turn from the evil of sin, God will
repent
of the evil of punishment; and therefore we must conclude that Josiah's
people, though they submitted to Josiah's power, did not heartily imbibe
Josiah's principles. They were turned by force, and did not voluntarily
turn
from their evil way, but still continued their affection for their idols;
and therefore he that knows men's hearts would not recall the sentence, which
was, That Judah should be removed, as Israel had been, and Jerusalem itself cast
off, v. 27. Yet even this destruction was intended to be their effectual
reformation; so that we must say, not only that the criminals had filled their
measure and were ripe for ruin, but also that the disease had come to a crisis,
and was ready for a cure; and this shall be all the fruit, even the taking away
of sin. 2. As an evidence of this, even the reforming king is cut off in the
midst of his usefulnessin mercy to him, that he might not see the evil which
was coming upon his kingdom, but in wrath to his people, for his death was an
inlet to their desolations. The king of Egypt waged war, it seems, with the king
of Assyria: so the king of Babylon is now called. Josiah's kingdom lay between
them. He therefore thought himself concerned to oppose the king of Egypt, and
check the growing, threatening, greatness of his power; for though, at this
time, he protested that he had no design against Josiah, yet, if he should
prevail to unite the river of Egypt and the river Euphrates, the land of Judah
would soon be overflowed between them. Therefore
Josiah went against him,
and was killed in the first engagement, v. 29, 30. Here, (1.) We cannot justify
Josiah's conduct. He had no clear call to engage in this war, nor do we find
that he asked counsel of God by urim or prophets concerning it. What had he to
do to appear and act as a friend and ally to the king of Assyria?
Should he
help the ungodly and love those that hate the Lord? If the kings of Egypt
and Assyria quarrelled, he had reason to think God would bring good out of it to
him and his people, by making them instrumental to weaken one another. Some
understand the promise made to him that he should
come to his grave in peace
in a sense in which it was not performed because, by his miscarriage in this
matter, he forfeited the benefit of it. God has promised to keep us
in all
our ways; but, if we go out of our way, we throw ourselves out of his
protection. I understand the promise so as that I believe it was fulfilled, for
he
died in peace with God and his own conscience, and saw not, nor had
any immediate prospect of, the destruction of Judah and Jerusalem by the
Chaldeans; yet I understand the providence to be a rebuke to him for his
rashness. (2.) We must adore God's righteousness in taking away such a jewel
from an unthankful people that knew not how to value it. They greatly lamented
his death (2 Chr. 35:25), urged to it by Jeremiah, who told them the meaning of
it, and what a threatening omen it was; but they had not made a due improvement
of the mercies they enjoyed by his life, of which God taught them the worth by
the want.
Verses 31-37
Jerusalem saw not a good day after Josiah was laid in his grave,
but one trouble came after another, till within twenty-two years it was quite
destroyed. Of the reign of two of his sons here is a short account; the former
we find here a prisoner and the latter a tributary to the king of Egypt, and
both so in the very beginning of their reign. This king of Egypt having slain
Josiah, though he had not had any design upon Judah, yet, being provoked by the
opposition which Josiah gave him, now, it should seem, he bent all his force
against his family and kingdom. If Josiah's sons had trodden in his steps,
they would have fared the better for his piety; but, deviating from them, they
fared the worse for his rashness.
I. Jehoahaz, a younger son, was first made king by
the people
of the land, probably because he was observed to be of a more active warlike
genius than his elder brother, and likely to make head against the king of Egypt
and to avenge his father's death, which perhaps the people were more
solicitous about, in point of honour, than the keeping up and carrying on of his
father's reformation; and the issue was accordingly. 1. He did ill, v. 32.
Though he had a good education and a good example given him, and many a good
prayer, we may suppose, put up for him, yet he
did that which was evil in the
sight of the Lord, and, it is to be feared, began to do so in his father's
lifetime, for his reign was so short that he could not, in that, show much of
his character. He did
according to all that his wicked
fathers had
done. Though he had not time to do much, yet he had chosen his patterns, and
showed whom he intended to follow and whose steps he resolved to tread in; and,
having done this, he is here reckoned to have done according to all the evil
which those did whom he proposed to imitate. It is of great consequence to young
people whom they choose to take for their patterns and whom they emulate. An
error in this choice is fatal. Phil. 3:17, 18. 2. Doing ill, no wonder that he
fared ill. He was but three months a prince, and was then made a prisoner, and
lived and died so. The king of Egypt seized him, and put him in bands (v. 33),
fearing lest he should give him disturbance, and carried him to Egypt, where he
died soon after, v. 34. This Jehoahaz is that young lion whom Ezekiel speaks of
in his
lamentation for the princes of Israel, that learnt to
catch the
prey and devour men (that was the evil which he did in the sight of the
Lord); but
the nations heard of him, he was taken in their pit, and they
brought him with chains into the land of Egypt, Eze. 19:1-4. See Jer. 22:10-12.
II. Eliakim, another son of Josiah, was made king by the king of
Egypt, it is not said
in the room of Jehoahaz (his reign was so short
that it was scarcely worth taking notice of), but
in the room of Josiah.
The crown of Judah had hitherto always descended from a father to a son, and
never, till now, from one brother to another; once the succession had so
happened in the house of Ahab, but never, till now, in the house of David. The
king of Egypt, having used his power in making him king, further showed it in
changing his name; he called him
Jehoiakim, a name that has reference to
Jehovah, for he had no design to make him renounce or forget the religion of his
country. "All people will walk in the name of their God, and let him do so."
The king of Babylon did not do so by those whose names he changed, Dan. 1:7. Of
this Jehoiakim we are here told, 1. That the king of Egypt made him poor,
exacted from him a vast tribute of 100
talents of silver and a talent of gold
(v. 33), which, with much difficulty, he squeezed out of his subjects and gave
to Pharaoh, v. 35. Formerly the Israelites had spoiled the Egyptians; now the
Egyptians spoil Israel. See what woeful changes sin makes. 2. That which made
him poor, yet did not make him good. Notwithstanding the rebukes of Providence
he was under, by which he should have been convinced, humbled, and reformed, he
did
that which was evil in the sight of the Lord (v. 37), and so prepared
against himself greater judgments; for such God will send if less do not do the
work for which they are sent.
Chapter 23:
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