CHRONOLOGICAL NOTE TO CHAPTER 15
To aid such readers as are interested in the somewhat
difficult study of the
chronology of that period, we shall put together the
principal points in the
elaborate note of Dr. Bahr in his Commentary on 2
Kings 8:16.
Let it be kept in mind that the accession of Jehu forms the
beginning of a
new period, alike as regards the kings of Israel and those
of Judah, since
both Joram and Ahaziah were killed in the revolution of
Jehu. Again, let it
be remembered that chronologists fix, with singular
unanimity, on the year
884 B.C. as that of the accession of Jehu, and the death of
the two kings.
Starting from this point, we can reckon backwards the years
of the various
kings in the past, and forward those of the reigns that
followed Joram and
Ahaziah. In all such computations we must, however, bear in
mind that the
Jews always reckoned the years of a king from the month
Nisan to the
month Nisan, so that not only a month, but even a day before
or after that
month, was reckoned as if it had been a year. It will be
seen that the
computation of a fragment of a year as if it had been a
whole year must
frequently introduce elements of confusion in our attempts
to piece
together the statements of the various reigns. And this must
therefore be
taken into account when studying the chronology. Keeping
this in view,
and counting backwards from the year 884, we have: —
I. KINGS OF JUDAH.
1. Ahaziah: died, 884; reigned one, not full, year (2
Kings 8:26);
acceded in 884 or 885 B.C.
2. Jehoram: died, 885; reigned eight years (2 Kings
8:17); acceded in
891 or 892 B.C.
3. Jehoshaphat: reigned twenty-five years (1 Kings
22:42); acceded in
916 or 917 B.C.
II. KINGS OF ISRAEL.
1. Ahab: reigned twenty-two years (1 Kings 16:29).
Since the first
year of the reign of Jehoshaphat coincided with the fourth
of that of
Ahab, Ahab acceded in 919 or 920 B.C.
2. Ahaziah: reigned two, not full, years (1 Kings
22:51; cp. 2 Kings
3:1); acceded between 897 and 898 B.C.
3. Joram: died in 884; reigned twelve years (2 Kings
3:1); acceded
between 895 and 896 B.C.
Ill CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN THE YEARS OF REIGNS OF THE
KINGS OF JUDAH AND ISRAEL.
1. Ahaziah of Judah acceded in the twelfth year of
Joram of Israel (2
Kings 8:26); and as the two were killed in 884, the one year
of
Ahaziah' s reign cannot have been a full one.
2. Jehoram of Judah acceded in the fifth year of
Joram of Israel (2
Kings 8:16). Since Joram acceded in 895 or 896 B.C., the
fifth year of
his reign must have coincided with that of the accession of
Jehoram in
891 or 892, as indicated under I.
3. Ahaziah of Israel, and his successor Joram,
acceded respectively in
the seventeenth (1 Kings 22:51) and the eighteenth (2 Kings
3:1) years
of Jehoshaphat, whence it follows that (as indicated under
II.) the two
years of Ahaziah of Israel were not full years. As
Jehoshaphat acceded
in 916, the seventeenth year of his reign would have been
899 B.C., and
the eighteenth year 898; while according to the computation
under II.,
Ahaziah acceded between 897 and 898, and Joram between 895
and
896. But these slight discrepancies are, no doubt, due to
the Jewish
mode of calculating the years of a reign, to which reference
has been
made above.
4. If we add the sum of the three reigns in Judah
(Jehoshaphat twenty-
five, Jehoram eight, and Ahaziah one), we obtain the number
thirty-
four, or, making allowance for the Jewish mode of
computation, thirty-
two years. Again, the sum of the three reigns in Israel
(Ahab twenty-
two, Ahaziah two, and Joram twelve), gives thirty-six, not
full, years.
The whole period from the reign of Ahab to that of Jehu
comprised
between thirty-five and thirty-six years, and as Jehoshaphat
acceded in
the fourth year of Ahab, the figures will be seen to agree.
The only exception to this general agreement in the numbers
is 2 Kings
1:17, where we read that Joram acceded to the throne of
Israel in the
second year of Jehoram, king of Judah. But in that case
Jehoshaphat could
only have reigned seventeen, not twenty-five years; nor
could Joram have
become king of Israel in the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat,
as we read in 2
Kings 3:1; while Jehoram of Judah would have reigned not
eight years (2
Kings 8: 17), but fourteen; nor would he have acceded in the
fifth year of
Joram (2 Kings 8: 16), but a year earlier than he.
Accordingly, most writers
have supposed a co-regency of Jehoram with his father
Jehoshaphat. But
as the text gives no hint of any such co-regency,
1 and
there are many and
strong reasons against this supposition,
2 Bahr has argued
that the clause in
2 Kings 1:17, "in the second year of Jehoram, the son of
Jehoshaphat, king
of Judah," is spurious. The usual chronological notice
which, as always,
appears in the account of a reign, follows in 2 Kings 3:1,
and there
correctly.
As regards the comparison between the Biblical chronology
and that based
on the Assyrian monuments, we may note.
1. That there are differences between the two from the reign
of Ahab to
that of Manasseh, but that these differences strangely vary,
for,
whereas the differences amount in one reign perhaps to
forty-three
years and more, they amount in another reign to nine years,
and even
less. This varying divergence leads us to suppose that the
differences
may depend on something as yet to us unknown, and which, if
known,
might establish a harmony between the two chronologies.
2. As regards the capture of Samaria in 722, the two
chronologies
absolutely agree; and substantially also as regards the
reign of
Manasseh.
3. It is admitted that, taken as a whole, the record in the
Bible of
persons and events which were contemporaneous accords with
the
record on the Assyrian monuments, so that (despite any minor
discrepancies) "the Bible receives, as regards chronology
also, a happy
vindication and confirmation" from the Assyrian monuments.
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