JEHORAM AND AHAZIAH, (FIFTH AND
SIXTH) KINGS OF JUDAH. JORAM, (TENTH) KING OF ISRAEL
Accession of Jehoram —
Murder of the Royal Princes — Introduction of the service of
Baal in Judah — Revolt of Edom — and of Libnah — The Writing
from Elijah — Incursion of the Philistines and of Arab
tribes — Sickness, Death, and Burial of Jehoram — State of
public feeling. (2 Kings 8:16-24; 2 Chronicles 21.)
The tangled skein of Judaean and Israelitish history is now
once more
taken up. 1 It is a period of fast-hastening judgment,
luridly lit up by the
horrors attending Diehard' s accession to the throne of
Israel, though
retarded in Judah by the mercy of God towards the house of
David, and
the temporary repentance and return to Jehovah in the land.
The account
in 2 Kings 8:16 introduces almost abruptly the accession of Jehoram to the
throne of Judah, after the death of his father Jehoshaphat.
It was probably
for this reason, and because of the long gap between this
and the previous
historical notice about Judah (1 Kings 22:51), that the
somewhat difficult
explanatory clause (supposing it to be genuine) may have
been inserted in
2 Kings 8: 16: "And Jehoshaphat had been king of
Judah." 2 In 2 Kings 8
(vers. 16-24) the history of Judah and of the reign of
Jehoram is given only
in briefest outline. For details we must, as in other cases,
turn to the Book
of Chronicles (2 Chronicles 21.), whose narrative we now
follow.
The historical notices with which the reign of Jehoram is
introduced are
almost identical in 2 Kings and 2 Chronicles. Both state
that Jehoram was
thirty-two years old at his accession, and that his reign
lasted eight years.
The Book of Chronicles connects, as usually, this accession
with the death
and burial at Jerusalem of the former king, while the Book
of Kings marks
that Jehoram ascended the throne of Judah "in the fifth year
of Joram, the
son of Ahab, king of Israel." And since the reign of the
latter extended over
twelve years 3 (comp. 2 Kings 8:25), their rule must for
seven years have
been contemporaneous — that is, to within one year of the
death of Joram
of Israel. Even more important is the notice given in the
same words in the
two narratives — quite prominently in the Book of Kings — to
the effect
that Jehoram "walked in the way of the kings of Israel, as
did the house of
Ahab: for the daughter of Ahab [Athaliah] was his wife: and
he did the evil
in the sight of Jehovah" (comp. 2 Chronicles 21:6). That
notice explains
alike the history of the reign of Jehoram and the hastening
ruin of Judah.
Nor can it have been without evil influence even upon Joram
and Israel.
The fatal combination of political devices with earnest
religion, which
constituted the weakness of Jehoshaphat's reign, and led to
his alliance
with the house of Ahab, appeared also in his disposition
regarding his
children. Besides Jehoram, who as the eldest succeeded to
the throne, he
had left six sons. 4 For these he had — apparently during
his lifetime —
made not only ample provision in treasure, but assigned to
them certain
"fenced cities in Judah." This was to imitate the policy of Rehoboam
(11:23), and, no doubt, with the same purpose of securing,
in troublous
times, the allegiance of the country districts and of their
aristocracy, by
assigning these "fenced cities" as residences to the royal
princes. But in the
present instance the device proved fatal to them. Jehoram
had nothing to
fear from his brother-in-law Joram — as Rehoboam had from
Jeroboam.
But the semi-royal position of his brothers, supported — as
it would
almost seem — by intrigues of the chiefs of the local
aristocracy, roused
his fears. With the same unscrupulousness that characterized
the house of
Ahab and Jezebel, he rid himself of any possible rivals by
the murder of all
his brothers, and of their adherents among "the princes."
And throughout,
Diehard' s reign was in accordance with its beginning.
Following closely in
the steps of the house of Ahab, he not only abolished all
the pious
ordinances and arrangements of his father, but actually
rebuilt "the high
places," which his grandfather Asa (17:3), and his father
Jehoshaphat
(17:6), had destroyed, and introduced the worship of Baal
with all its
abominations.
We cannot be mistaken in attributing a large share in these
evil doings to
Athaliah, although her name is not expressly mentioned. For,
besides the
repeated reference to the house of Ahab, we have the
statement that his
"brethren" of his "father's house were better" than Jehoram,
which seems
to imply that his special circumstances had made him
different from the
other members of Jehoshaphat's family, and also this — in
our view, very
significantly — that there came to him a writing from Elijah
the prophet.
For, as there is not any other reference to Elijah
throughout the Books of
Chronicles, we infer that his activity had been confined to
the northern
kingdom, and that this solitary prophecy in regard to the
kingdom of Judah
must have been due to the connection of Jehoram with the
house of Ahab,
— or, to be more particular, to his marriage with Athaliah
and her influence
upon him. And we would date the composition of this
"writing," or it may
be its commission, shortly after that ill-fated union.
5 For
it seems of quite
secondary importance whether Elijah himself wrote this
letter, with
direction to have it delivered at the proper time to the
husband of Athaliah,
or else commissioned one of his disciples to write it in his
name, when the
circumstances of the case indicated it. And as regards this
latter view, we
remember that the direction to Elijah to anoint Hazael king
of Syria, was
executed six or seven years after the death of Ahab, that to
anoint Jehu
fourteen years after Ahab: in both cases, therefore, many
years after the
commission had been given (1 Kings 19:15, 16); in both cases
also, not by
Elijah himself, nor yet with precisely literal fulfillment
of the commission
given.
The "writing from Elijah" announced, for the public and
personal sins of
Jehoram, public and personal judgments. But even before that
warning
came from the dead prophet, with all the solemnity of a
message straight
from heaven, the judgment upon Judah had begun. Indeed, as
the sacred
writer remarks, 6 it would have extended to the destruction
of the whole
family of Jehoram — and with it of the commonwealth of
Israel — but for
the gracious promise to David of the continuance of his
house till his rule
should merge in that of "David's greater Son"
7 (2 Samuel
7:12, 13; 1 Kings
1 1:36). Still most serious calamities befell the country,
both in the east and
in the west. In the south-east, Edom had for one hundred and
fifty years
been subject to Judah. It now rebelled. Josephus reports
that the governor,
whom Jehoshaphat had appointed, was murdered; while, from
the
prophecies of Joel (3:19), we infer that the rebellion was
attended by a
massacre of the Judaean settlers in Edom. From the account
of the
expedition against Edom — given with only slight variations
in the Books
of Kings and Chronicles — we learn that Jehoram started from
Jerusalem
with the host, and notably war-chariots;
8 that he was
surrounded by the Edomites, but that he and the captains of his chariots —
representing the
standing army — fought their way through the Edomites, while
the people
— that is, the probably undisciplined multitude that had
followed
Jehoram, fled to their homes. Thus ended the brief campaign,
with the
permanent loss of Edom, which, except temporarily and for a
short period
(comp. 2 Kings 14:7, 22), did not again become subject to
Judaea, till its
subdual under the Maccabean prince Hyrcan, about a century
before
Christ. It afterwards returned to Palestine the terrible
gift of a Herod.
Nor was Edom the only loss which the southern kingdom
sustained. In the
west, not far from the borders of Philistia, Libnah,
9 the
ancient Canaanitish
royal, and afterwards a priest city, revolted (comp. Joshua
15:42; 12:15;
21:13). Its site has not been localized with certainty,
though it has, with
some probability, been suggested that it is represented by
the modern Tell-
es-Safieh, somewhat to the south-east of Ascalon, and on the
edge of the
great Philistine plain. The hill on which the site stands
was known in
crusading times as "bright hill" (collis clarus), and
the fort built upon it as
"white garde" (Blanche Garde, alba specula or alba
custodia). The name
not only corresponds to the ancient Libnah,
"whiteness," "sheen," but to
the description of the place, 10 as in its white sheen
visible in all directions.
If Libnah was at the time inhabited by priests, it may have
been that
Diehard' s apostasy from the faith led to its revolt from
his rule. This may
have been prompted by the success of the rising in Edom, and
the
movement itself have been encouraged by the Philistines.
This view is supported by the account in the Book of
Chronicles, that the
Philistines, aided by certain Arab tribes from the
neighborhood of Ethiopia
— probably hired for the purpose — made an incursion into
Judaea, and
literally "clave it." We know sufficient of the fierceness
of these Arabs
"by the side of the Cushites," when their spirit is roused,
to understand
that Judah, divided and enfeebled, and under the rule of a
Jehoram, could
not withstand their onset. The invading host seems to have
taken, if not
Jerusalem 11 itself, yet the place where the king and his
household were;
and they carried away with them what of the royal property
they found,
as well as the wives and sons of Jehoram, and indeed killed
all the latter
except the youngest, Jehoahaz, who, from some reason
unknown, escaped
death.
This was the beginning of that "great stroke" with which, as
foretold in the
writing from Elijah, Jehovah would smite Jehoram in his
people, his
children, his wives, and all his substance. For even this
more public
calamity had a personal character, since, as we read,
"Jehovah stirred up
against Jehoram the spirit" of these enemies; and very
markedly their
plunder was confined to the royal property. And when the
second part of
the threatened judgment befell the king, and that incurable
internal disease 12
attacked him of which he ultimately died, it seems difficult
to understand
how those who witnessed all this, and still more, they who
succeeded him,
could have maintained the same attitude as he towards
Jehovah. We can
only account for it by the rooted belief that Jehovah was
only a national
deity, who was angry with those who forsook His service; but
that the
new deity, Baal, who had proved so mighty a god to the
surrounding
nations, would by and by take them under his protection. And
as between
the stern demands and the purity of the service of Jehovah,
Who claimed
of royalty absolute submission and simple stewardship and
Who elevated
all His people into a royal priesthood, and the voluptuous
luxuriousness of
the worship of Baal, who placed king and people in so very
different a
relationship to each other and to himself, rulers of the
character of Jehoram
or Ahaziah would not hesitate in their choice.
13
We have evidence that the ungodly rule of Jehoram was not
popular in
Judah. "He departed without being desired" by his people,
nor did they
make any burning of precious spices at his funeral, such as
was customary
at the obsequies of kings (comp. 2 Chronicles 16:14;
Jeremiah 34:5). And
although "they buried him in the city of David," yet "not in
the sepulchers
of the kings." 14 If these notices seem to indicate a
hostile popular feeling,
the same inference comes to us from the unusual statement
that
"the inhabitants of Jerusalem made Ahaziah, his youngest
son, king
in his stead" (2 Chronicles 22:1).
It would probably be too much to conclude that there was
opposition to
the accession of one who must have been known to be
like-minded with
his father on the part of the Levite and Priest party,
although the revolt of
the priest city Libnah and the later activity of the high
priest Jehoiada and
of the Levites on behalf of Joash (22: 1 1 ; 23) seem to
point in that
direction. But we cannot be mistaken in concluding that
Ahaziah was
placed on the throne by a faction in Jerusalem favorable to
the new order
of things. And it needs no elaborate argument to convince us
that, alike
religiously and politically, a regime must have been
profoundly unpopular
which had reversed the whole former order of things, was
associated with
the permanent loss of Edom, the defection of so important a
center as
Libnab, and the victorious incursions of Philistines and
Arab bands. To
these outward calamities must be added the paramount sway of
a woman,
such as the daughter of Ahab, and the remodeling of Judah
after the pattern
of Israel, which even mere patriots must have felt to be a
most humiliating
abdication of supremacy in favor of the northern kingdom.
And in the
history of the brief reign of Ahaziah, as well as in the
later rising which
resulted in the death of Athaliah, the existence of two
parties in Judah
must be kept in view; the one representing the corrupt court
faction, the
other the growing popular feeling in favor of return to the
old order of
things.
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