JOASH, (EIGHTH) KING OF JUDAH.
JEHOASH, (TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH) KINGS OF ISRAEL
Accession of Jehoahaz —
Chronology of the Period — Character of his Reign — Wars
with Syria — The Assyrian Monuments — The Prayer of Jehoahaz
and its Answer — Re-arrangement of the Text — Spiritual
Lessons of this History — Accession of Jehoash — The Dynasty
of Jehu and Reversal of the Policy of Ahab — The new
Relation to the Prophets — Explanation of it — The Three
Fundamental Principles in the bearing of the Prophets — Last
Interview between Jehoash and Elisha — its Lessons — The
Miracle after Elisha 's Death — Victories over Syria.
(2 KINGS 13.)
The reign of Joash, king of Judah, extended over the
unusually long period
of forty years. 1 Acceding to the throne in the seventh year
of Jehu, king of
Israel, he survived not only that monarch and his son and
successor, Jehoahaz, but also witnessed the accession of Jehoash.
According to the
Biblical text, Jehu was followed on the throne of Israel by
Jehoahaz, his
son, in the twenty-third, or more strictly speaking, in the
twenty-first year
of Joash, king of Judah. 2 His reign, which lasted seventeen
years, was a
period of incessant warfare with Syria, and of constant and
increasing
humiliation to Israel. The history is very briefly indicated
in the Book of
Kings, which is chiefly concerned in marking the deeper
spiritual reasons
for the disasters of Israel in the increasing apostasy of
king and people.
But welcome light is thrown on the brief details of
political history
furnished in the Biblical account by what we read on the
Assyrian
monuments. It will be remembered that the Syrian conquest of Israelitish
territory had begun during the reign of Jehu.
3 The Biblical
notice of these
successive conquests by Hazael (2 Kings 10:32, 33) is
probably somewhat
general, and not confined only to the time of Jehu. But the
records on the
Assyrian monuments show that Hazael was at war with the
powerful
empire of Assyria, defeated, and obliged to entreat peace
under humiliating
conditions. They also record that Jehu had paid tribute to
the powerful
king of Assyria — more strictly, that he had entered into a
tributary
alliance with that empire. 4 When peace was concluded
between Assyria
and Hazael, the latter seems to have turned his whole force
against the
kingdom of Israel as allied to Assyria. By a series of
victories, Hazael
gradually possessed himself of the whole country east of the
Jordan.
Thence, during the reign of Jehoahaz, he extended his
conquests over the
Israelitish territory west of the Jordan, till, in the
judgment of God, 5 the
army of the king of Israel, gathered together in Samaria as
the last
stronghold, came to be reduced to,, fifty horsemen, ten
chariots, and ten
thousand footmen." 6 The rest — in the expressive language
of Scripture —
"the king of Syria had destroyed," "and made them as dust to
trample
upon" (lit. "to tread down") (2 Kings 13:7).
7 And we again
mark, as
indicated in the previous Chapter, that it was two years
after the accession
of Jehoahaz, viz., in "the three and twentieth year of King
Jehoash" (2
Kings 12:6), during the full progress of the Syrian conquest
of Israel, when
the restoration of the Temple was begun. We can scarcely be
mistaken in
connecting this with a national reaction against what had
taken place in the
north, and with fear of judgments such as had overtaken
Israel. Lastly, we
should notice, in final explanation of the expedition of
Hazael against Gath
(2 Kings 12:17), which ultimately eventuated in a march upon
Jerusalem,
that the Assyrian monuments everywhere indicate a tributary
dependence
upon Assyria of the Philistine cities along the seacoast.
From this glimpse into the political history we turn to what
throughout is
the main object of the sacred writer, the indication of the
religious causes
which led up to these events. The Biblical text seems here
somewhat
involved, in part from the mixture of remarks by the writer
with the
historical notices extracted from existing documents. The
following
appears its real order. The usual notice (2 Kings 13:1) of
the accession of
Jehoahaz, and of the duration of his reign is followed by a
general
description of the character of that monarch (in ver. 2): as
doing that which
was evil in the sight of Jehovah, and continuing the
wrongful religious
institutions of Jeroboam. Then we have in ver. 3 a notice of
the Divine
punishment of these sins in the surrender of Israel to
Hazael, king of Syria,
and to Ben-Hadad, his son and successor. The following verse
(ver. 4)
marks the repentance and prayer of Jehoahaz, occasioned by
these
calamities, and God's gracious answer, although not in the
immediate
present (see vers. 22-25). Verses 5 and 6 form a
parenthesis. Possibly it
may begin with ver. 4. The reference to the wars of Ben-Hadad
in ver. 3,
which can only apply to the time of Jehoahaz,
8 may be
rather of a general
character (see vers. 22 and 25). In any case the continuous
historical
notices, or extracts, recommence with ver. 7, which
describes the
depressed condition of the kingdom under Jehoahaz, while
vets. 8 and 9
record, in the usual form, the death of Jehoahaz and the
accession of his
son, Jehoash (or Joash). Thus, as already stated, vets. 5
and 6, if not also
yet. 4, form an intercalated notice, telling on the one hand
how God had
heard the prayer of Jehoahaz by raising up "a savior" to
Israel (ver. 5),
and, on the other hand, how this gracious interposition did
not really affect
the spiritual state of Israel (ver. 6). They not only
continued in the sins of
Jeroboam, but "there stood the Asherah
9 also in Samaria."
This parenthetic
notice must be considered as of a general character: "the
savior" raised up
being in the first place Jehoash (ver. 25), and finally and
fully Jeroboam II.
(2 Kings 14:25-27). 10 Similarly the account of Israel's
degenerate religious
condition in 2 Kings 13:6 must be regarded as a general
description, and
not confined to either the reign of Jehoahaz, that of
Jehoash, or that of
Jeroboam II. 11 Lastly, the graphic expression, "the
children of Israel dwelt
in tents as beforetimes" (lit. "as yesterday and the third
day ") (the day
before), is intended to recall the primitive happy days, the
idea being that
so thorough was the deliverance from the Syrians that Israel
once more
dwelt in perfect security as in olden times.
But the parenthesis in verses 5 and 6 is not the only one in
this chapter.
The brief notice in vers. 10-13 of the accession of Jehoash,
the character of
his reign, his death, and his succession by Jeroboam II.,
seems derived
from the same historical record from which the equally brief
previous
account of Jehoahaz had been taken. It is followed in vers.
14-21 by a
parenthetic account of what occurred in connection with the
death of
Elisha the prophet, derived, we would venture to suggest,
from another
source; perhaps a narrative of the lives and activity of
Elijah and Elisha. 12
With this the writer connects (in verses 22-25) what really
resumes and
fully carries out the more summary remarks in vets. 4-6.
Lastly, in chapter
14, the history of Jehoash — which had only been outlined in
13:9-13 —
is taken up in detail and continued, and this in connection
with the history
of Judah, being perhaps derived from the annals of Judah, as
the previous
brief record may have been extracted from those of Israel.
Viewing this history from another and higher standpoint, we
mark the
readiness of the Lord in His mercy to listen to the entreaty
of Jehoahaz,
welcoming, as it were, every sign of repentance, and by His
deliverance in
response to it, encouraging a full return to Him, showing
also that
prosperity or disaster depended on the relation of the
people towards
Him. And assuredly no better evidence could be afforded us
that even in
our farthest decline we may still turn to God, nor yet that
prayer — even
by Jehoahaz, and in that state of Israel — shall not remain
unanswered.
Yet, though the prayer was immediately heard, as in the
judgment
pronounced upon Ahab (1 Kings 21:27-29), its immediate
manifestation
was delayed. These are precious practical lessons to all
time, and the more
valuable that they are in such entire accordance with God's
dealings as
declared in other parts of Revelation, exhibiting the
harmony and inward
unity of Holy Scripture. And even as regards the outward
structure of this
narrative, its very want of artistic connection only
inspires us with greater
confidence in its trustworthiness, as not concocted but
apparently strung
together from extracts of existing historical documents.
Jehoahaz was succeeded on the throne of Israel by his son
Jehoash (or
Joash), whose reign extended over sixteen years (2 Kings
13:10, 11).
Religiously it was, like that of his father, marked by
continuance in "the
sins of Jeroboam, the son of Nebat." Indeed, as previously
stated, this
return to the religious policy of the founder of the
northern kingdom,
supplies the explanation of the administration of Jehu, and
of the popular
reaction against the house of Ahab which he represented and
headed. Of
this uniform policy we find an indication even in the name
Jeroboam,
which the son and successor of Jehoash bore. There was this
other
continuity also, that the monarchy founded by Jehu,
originating in a
military revolution, continued a military rule under his
successors. This
appears from the alliances with Assyria, from the continuous
and finally
successful wars with Syria during the whole of this dynasty,
and lastly
from the war with Amaziah, king of Judah (2 Kings 13: 12).
In this, as in
the abolition of Ahab's religious institutions, we observe a
reversal of the
policy of the dethroned house. Nor can we be mistaken in
ascribing to the
latter cause the new friendly relations with the servants of
Jehovah, and
especially His prophets, which the new dynasty sought to
inaugurate.
Almost the first act of Jehu had been to invite Jehonadab,
the son of
Rechab, to make public entry with him into Samaria, and to
witness his
zeal for Jehovah (2 Kings 10:16). Almost his first public
measure had been
the destruction of the temple of Baal, with its priests and
worshippers (2
Kings 10:18-28). Even the slaughter of the descendants of
Ahab and of the
princes of Judah (2 Kings 13:4) might be imputed to the same
motives —
at least by a people in the religious condition of Israel.
The same feelings
may be traced in the repentant prayer of Jehoahaz (2 Kings
13:4), and
lastly in the visit of Jehoash to the deathbed of Elisha (2
Kings 13:14).
It is another and a more serious question how the relation
of these servants
of Jehovah and especially of Elisha towards a dynasty
stained by so many
crime, and so unfaithful to the true service of the Lord, is
to be explained.
It certainly cannot be understood without taking several
considerations
into account. The situation was not simple, but complicated,
and
accordingly the motives influencing the conduct of the
prophets were
varied, and, if one-sidedly viewed, may for that very reason
appear
conflicting. These three considerations may, however, help
us to
understand their general bearing. First, the prophets were
always only the
executors of God's behests; they stood not in any
independent personal
relation to events or individuals. Secondly, the behests of
God, and
consequently the prophetic commission, whether as regarded
judgment or
deliverance, applied to acts and individual events, not to
persons or lives.
Thirdly, the final object of all was, on the one hand, the
vindication of
Jehovah's dealings, and, on the other, the arresting of
Israel's spiritual, and
with it of their national decline. It was needful that
signal judgments should
sweep away Ahab and all connected with his ways, and Jehu
was, in the
circumstances of the time and in the state of the people,
the most suitable
instrument for it. Thus far, and thus far only, had his
counter-revolution
the countenance of the prophets. Again, it was in accordance
with the
Divine purpose of mercy that the first indication of any
spiritual
comprehension of God's judgments should be welcomed and
encouraged.
Hence the prayer of Jehoahaz was heard; hence, also, and in
further
pursuance of the promise of deliverance, the interview
between the king
and the dying prophet, as well as the prediction of Jonah,
the son of
Amittai (2 Kings 14:25). Nor must we overlook in all this
the human
aspect of the question. The prophets were indeed first and
foremost God's
messengers; but they were also true patriots, and intensely
national, and
this not despite, but rather because of their office. Any
national reaction,
any possible prospect of national return to God, must have
had their
warmest sympathy and received their most hearty
encouragement. In
short, whenever they could, they would most readily range
themselves on
the side of their people and its rulers. They would
co-operate whenever
and in whatsoever they might; and only protest, warn, and
denounce when
they must. And a consideration alike of the bearing of
Jehonadab (comp.
Vol. VI., p. 210), and again of Elisha, must convince that
as their co-
operation was never withheld when it might be given, so it
was never
extended to that which was either wrong in itself or
inconsistent with their
spiritual mission.
13
If evidence were required of what has just been stated, it
would be found in
the last interview between Jehoash, the king of Israel, and
Elisha. Forty-
five years had elapsed since the anointing of Jehu, and as
Elisha was grown
up even during the reign of Ahab (1 Kings 19: 19), he must
have attained a
very advanced age. Strange as it may seem, we have not any
record of his
public activity during the forty-five years that had passed
since Jehu's
accession. It is impossible to determine whether or not some
of his
recorded mighty deeds had been done during this lengthened
period,
although inserted in this history without regard to
chronological order,
having been extracted from a separate biographical rather
than historical
work. Or his activity may not have been of so public a
character; or it may
not have required record in the general history of Israel;
or through him
may have come the message to Jehu (2 Kings 10:30), and
afterwards the
impulse which led to the prayer of Jehoahaz.
Residing in Samaria, Elisha could not, even as regards his
prophetic office,
have fallen out of public view, since, on tidings of his
last fatal illness,
Jehoash at once hastened to his side.
14 Nor, on the other
hand, could we
imagine this history to have omitted all reference to the
death of Elisha; nor
yet that the prophet should have departed without some
public
admonition for good or pledge of Jehovah's near deliverance
of Israel.
Indeed, had it been otherwise, the victory over Syria,
coming so long after
the prayer of Jehoahaz, might have been imputed to the
prowess of
Jehoash, and not to the answer of God.
It would be difficult to imagine a more striking contrast
than between the
bearing of the youthful king of Israel and that of the aged
dying prophet.
Elisha is full of confidence and courage, while Jehoash is
overwhelmed
rather with concern than with grief at the impending death
of the prophet,
weeps "over his face," and addresses him: "My father, my
father! the
chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof!" The language
is the same as
that of Elisha himself on the removal of Elijah (2 Kings 2:
12), but uttered
in a spirit very different from his.
15 The king's was
language of respectful
affection, indeed, but also of unbelief, as if with the
removal of Elisha' s
presence from amongst them the defense and might of Israel
had ceased.
Very different also from the bearing of Elisha when his
master had been
taken from him was that of Jehoash. Then the first act of
Elisha had been
one of faith that dared the utmost, when with the mantle
fallen from his
master's shoulders he smote the waters of Jordan, and they
parted hither
and thither. On the other hand, almost the first act of
Jehoash in view of
the departure of his master was one of unbelief, that in
cowardice shrunk
back, even within sound of the prophet's express directions
and of the
accompanying assurance of promised Divine help. So the same
words have
a very different meaning in the mouths of different persons,
nor is there
safety in any mere formula, however sacred or sanctioned. In
this also the
letter killeth, but the Spirit maketh alive.
Alike intrinsically, and in view of the condition of the
king, as also for a
lasting record to Israel, it was needful that the prophet
should before his
departure once more give emphatic testimony to Jehovah,
emphatic
confirmation also of His promise, and encouragement to
Israel. So would
his dying words become a permanent message to the people,
and not only
sum up and seal, but, so to speak, perpetuate his whole
mission. It was in
accordance with almost uniform prophetic custom (comp. 1
Kings 11:29-
32; Isaiah 20:2; Jeremiah 13:1; Ezekiel 4:1, and others),
and also best
suited to the condition of the king and the circumstances of
the case, that
this message should be joined to a symbolic act as its sign.
It would be
impossible to misunderstand it, when Elisha bade Jehoash
take bow and
arrows and put his hand upon the bow, while the prophet
himself laid his
hands upon that of the king. And when this had been done,
the window
towards the east was opened, or rather, its lattice removed,
and the king at
Elisha' s command shot the arrow. Towards the east was
Syria; in shooting
the arrow thither, the king of Israel was acting at the
direction, and with
the symbolically assured helping Presence of the Lord . And
so it meant:
"An arrow of salvation [deliverance] of Jehovah [the
deliverance being His]
and an arrow of salvation from [against, over] Syria;" to
which the
prophetic promise was immediately added' "For thou shalt
smite Syria in
Aphek to destruction [complete annihilation]." The latter
statement, it
need scarcely be said, referred only to the Syrian host at
Aphek, since this
first was followed by other victories. But Aphek was a
significant name,
marking the locality where by Divine prediction and Divine
help Israel had
once before defeated the overwhelming might of Syria (1
Kings 20:26-30).
But the interposition of God, although direct, is not of the
nature of magic.
If any success granted by Him is to be complete, it implies
moral
conditions on our part. To put it otherwise: the full
reception of God's
benefits has for its condition full receptivity on the part
of man. This was
the meaning of Elisha's further behest to the king; this
also the explanation
of Jehoash's failure. The prophet bade him seize "the
arrows" which he
had already taken from the quiver, 16 and "strike (that is,
shoot, hit)
towards the earth." Instead of obeying fully and literally,
or at least
shooting five or six times, the king struck only thrice. It
was a symbol he
could not fully understand, and which therefore had not any
real meaning
for him. Of simple, unquestioning, and persevering obedience
of faith he
had not any conception. So far as his capacity reached he
did obey. He
may have dimly perceived that it meant the shooting at the
enemy
prostrate on the ground. But then "three times" indicated in
ordinary
Jewish parlance that a thing was completely and fully done
(as in Exodus
23:17; Numbers 22:28, 32, 33; 24:10; 2 Kings 1:9-14), and
three times he
had "smitten." This also was symbolic of the king's moral
incapacity for
full deliverance. That at such a moment he should have
failed in the test of
faith and obedience, perhaps grown weary of what seemed
meaningless in
its continuation, and that this failure should have involved
the delay of
Israel's full deliverance, filled the prophet and patriot
with holy
indignation. 17 It should be to him as he had done — only
thrice, according
to his obedience, but not to complete and final victory
would Jehoash
smite the Syrians.
We cannot help connecting the brief notice of the miracle
after Elisha's
death and burial with this interview between the king and
the prophet. It
was not as the king in his faint-heartedness had cried, or
as Israel might
have feared, that with the disappearance of the living
prophet from among
them "the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof were
gone. It was the
God of the prophet, and not the prophet's god, that was
Israel's defense
and might. It needed not a living prophet — the same power
which stood
behind him in life could work deliverance through him after
he was dead.
The main point was not the man, but his mission, and to it —
that he was
a prophets this miracle after his death gave the most
emphatic attestation;
such also as would both in itself and from its surrounding
circumstances
specially appeal to that time and generation. This, without
overlooking its
other possible symbolic application,
18 seems to us its
chief meaning. It
appears that "at the coming in of the year" — probably in
the spring —
after Elisha's burial, they were carrying a man to his
burying, as was the
wont, on an open bier. But lo, as the procession reached the
last place of
rest, one of those predatory Moabite bands, which, like the Bedawin of
modern times, desolated the land, was seen swooping round to
where the
mourners were gathered. Only a hasty flight could save them
from death or
bondage. There was not time for hesitation. Rolling away the
stone which
barred the entrance, and opening the door of his sepulcher,
they laid the
dead man upon the bones of the prophet, and then hastily
fled. But lo, life
came again to the dead man by touch of the dead prophet —
and "he stood
on his feet," the only bring man in the silent home of the
dead; safe in the
sepulcher of Elisha from either flight or the Moabites. But
whatever its
immediate meaning, who can in this prophetic history refrain
from thinking
here of the life that comes from touch of the crucified
Christ; of the raising
of the young man carried at Nain on his bier to the burying;
or even of the
dim dawning of thoughts of a resurrection, the full blaze of
whose light
comes to us from the empty tomb on the Easter morning?
At its close the narrative again returns to what is its
keynote (in vers. 4, 5).
Again comes the record of the Lord's compassion, of His
faithful
remembrance of the covenant with the Fathers, and of His
merciful delay
of that final punishment of Israel's sin which would sweep
them far from
their land. It was as God had promised. Hazael was dead.
Once and again,
nay three times, did Jehoash defeat Ben-hadad (III.), the
son and successor
of Hazael, and take from him those cities which had been
captured in the
reign of Jehoahaz.
But as from the rock-hewn sepulcher of Elisha came
attestation of his
Divine mission, so comes there to us from the monuments of
Assyria
confirmation of this defeat of Ben-hadad in fulfillment of
Divine promise.
For whereas his father is repeatedly referred to as a bold
warrior even
against the overwhelming might of Assyria, Ben-hadad (III.)
is not even
mentioned. 19 This is most significant; evidently, his reign
was smitten with
weakness, and his power had been wholly broken.
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