AMAZIAH, (NINTH) KING OF JUDAH.
JEHOASH, (THIRTEENTH) KING OF ISRAEL
Accession of Amaziah —
Character of his Reign — Military Preparations — The Hiring
of Israelitish Mercenaries, Warning of the Prophet, and
Dismissal of the Auxiliaries — "The Valley of Salt" — Defeat
of the Edomites — March upon Petra — Description of Petra —
Slaughter of the Captives — Introduction of Edomite Idolatry
— The Challenge of Amaziah to Jehoash, and his Reply —
Defeat of Judah — Capture and Plunder of Jerusalem —
Conspiracy against Amaziah — Flight to Lachish — Murder of
the King.
(2 KINGS 14:1-20; 2
CHRONICLES 25.)
It has been well remarked that Jehoahaz of Israel had on
his death left to
his son and successor Jehoash, amidst the sore troubles of
his country, this
priceless inheritance the promised answer to his prayer. How
largely his
promise had already been fulfilled appears from a comparison
of the
condition to which Hazael had reduced the army of Israel in
the time of
Jehoahaz (2 Kings 13:7), with the three brilliant victories
which Jehoash
gained over Ben-hadad III. Nor were the military successes
of Israel
confined to foreign enemies. Jehoash proved as victorious
against Judah as
against Syria.
In the second year of the reign of Jehoash over Israel,
Joash, king of Judah,
was succeeded by his son Amaziah. The reign of that monarch,
who
ascended the throne at the age of twenty-five, extended over
twenty-nine
years. Its beginning was marked by a continuance of what on
the whole
might, as in the case of his father Joash, be characterized
as doing that
which was "right in the sight of Jehovah:"
1 To this the
Book of Kings
adds, however, the qualification, "Yet not as David his
father," which the
Book of Chronicles explains by the expression, "not with a
perfect heart."
In truth his religious bearing during that period was (as
both the historical
records note) like that of his father Joash, and included
the toleration of
worship and services in "the high places." But even this
qualified
adherence to the religion of his fathers did not continue
during the latter
part of his reign.
Ascending the throne after a palace-revolution to which his
father had
fallen victim (2 Kings 12:20, 21), it must have been some
time before "the
kingship [royal rule] was confirmed in his hand."
2 So soon
as this first
necessity was secured, he punished the authors of the late
revolt by
executing the murderers of his father. The sacred text
especially notes that
in so doing he spared their children, in conformity with the
Mosaic law
(Deuteronomy 24:16), which in this, as in so many other
respects, differed
from the common practice of ancient times.
3 But the promise
of this good
beginning failed only too soon. As one has aptly remarked,
"with a perfect
heart" Amaziah was only a soldier, and even this rather in
the sense of a
cruel and boastful Eastern monarch than of a wise or brave
general. It
seems not improbable that the successes of the king of
Israel against Syria
had awakened in Amaziah lust for military glory. For the
attainment of
this object he made preparations of the most extensive
character. His first
aim was again to reduce Edom to the vassalage which it had
cast off during
the reign of Jehoram (2 Kings 8:20-22).
4 In prospect of
this expedition, he
reorganized the forces of Judah, that had been shattered by
the Syrians in
the time of his father Joash (2 Chronicles 24:23, 24). From
the account in 2
Chronicles 25:5, 6, he seems to have made a levy en masse,
calling to arms
the whole population capable of military service.
5 The
national character
of this measure appears even from the circumstance that the
officers of the
new army were first appointed according to the old
arrangement of tribe,
clans, and families (2 Chronicles 25:5), and that these
chiefs then
conducted the levy of the people. The grand total so called
to arms
appears large; but it is considerably smaller than that in
the time of Abijah
(2 Chronicles 13:3), in that of Asa (2 Chronicles 14:8), or
in that of
Jehoshaphat 6 (2 Chronicles 17:14-8).
Besides raising a native Judaean army, Amaziah had recourse
to the novel
device of hiring 100,000 Israelitish mercenaries, at the
enormous cost of
100 talents — presumably silver talents,
7 amounting to
about. 37,500
pounds of our money. Such aid could only lead to defeat,
since Jehovah
was not with Israel. Of this even their hiring themselves
out for a foreign
warfare in which they were not in any wise concerned affords
fresh
evidence. Had Amaziah possessed spiritual insight, he would
not have
sought such help. As it was, "a prophet" was commissioned to
warn him
that if he went to battle relying on such aid he should
surely succumb. 8
God would show that He had power not only to help, but also
to cast
down. The answer of the king was characteristic. It
indicated that while he
rightly appraised the character of these mercenaries,
9 he
was chiefly
concerned about the money which had been spent upon them.
The
dignified reply of the man of God, pointing him upwards to
Him who
could give far more than this, at least silenced the king,
and he dismissed
his auxiliaries. But the matter ended not there.
Disappointed, no doubt, of
their hope of plunder and ravage, the Ephraimires returned
to their homes
"in burning anger" (2 Chronicles 25:10). Josephus, although
telling the
story with his usual embellishments, adds what seems a
historical notice to
the effect that these Israelites laid waste the land as far
as Beth-horon,
taking much cattle, and slaying 3,000 men (Ant. ix.
9, 1). If this account be
trustworthy, we can scarcely be mistaken in tracing to this
the later war
between Judah and Israel, with its disastrous consequences
to Amaziah.
If Amaziah had hitherto proved himself anything but what his
name
implied, "the strong one of Jehovah" [or perhaps, "Jehovah
strengthens"],
his true character was soon to appear, alike in his success
and in his defeat.
The dismissal of the Israelitish auxiliaries did not delay
the preparations
for the war. The south-eastern limit of "the land" may be
roughly marked
by the lower end of the Dead Sea., Here, east of the
mountain of rock-salt
(the Khashm Usdum), stretches southward that
continuation of the
Jordan-gorge (the Ghor) known as "the Valley of Salt"
(the Sabkah). The
valley, which extends about eight miles (about three hours),
trends
southwards to the white chalk cliffs,
10 which rise 50 to
150 feet. They are
formed from the debris washed down from the higher soil of
the Arabah —
here especially that part of "the plain" which stretches
from Jericho
downwards on both sides of the Jordan as far as the Elanitic
Gulf of the
Red Sea. 11 The "salt valley" itself formed the southern
boundary of Judaea
towards Edom. In its western and central parts it is wholly
desolate, the
clay soil being often flooded by the Dead Sea, and even the
watercourses
which traverse it being impregnated with the salt which
encrusts the
district. It is otherwise as regards the southern part of
the valley, and
especially the eastern, which is covered with vegetation,
and where we still
trace the sites of ancient towns. 12 Here indeed we have an
oasis that
formed the ancient boundary between Edom and Moab.
In this "salt valley" had Joab, or rather Abishai, his
brother, defeated
Edom in the time of David (2 Samuel 8:13; 1 Chronicles
18:12, etc.), and
here again did the Edomite army encounter the host of
Amaziah. Although
we know not the precise spot where the battle was fought, we
may well
suppose that it was in the southern part of the valley. The
Edomites were
within their own territory; their retreat would not be
difficult, and, owing
to the surrounding heights, comparatively safe. On the other
hand, if the
Judaean army had been beaten, it is not easy to imagine how
any
considerable remnant could have escaped, either by crossing
the
treacherous "valley," or by skirting it. Nevertheless the
Edomite army was
defeated, with a slaughter of 10,000 men, and the capture of
other ten
thousand. 13 The account in the Book of Kings (2 Kings 14:7)
adds that the
victorious Jewish army marched on to Sela, or Petra, where,
according to 2
Chronicles 25:12, the wretched prisoners were "cast down
from the height
of Sela." Needless objection has been taken to the transport
of prisoners
over what is sometimes described as so long and difficult a
journey.
Chiefly for this reason, 14 the localization of the "Valley
of Salt" has also
been called in question. But if we suppose the battlefield
to have been the
southern part of the valley, these objections are removed.
15 And obviously
it would be the policy of the victorious army to penetrate
into the heart of
the conquered country, take its capital,
16 and by an act of
terrible
vengeance to strike terror into the people.
It must have been a marvelous sight which met the Jewish
host as they
descended from the east into that surpassingly grand defile
which opens
into the so-called Wady Musa — the "Valley of Moses "
17 —
the site of
the ancient, Sela, "rock " — better known by its
later name of Petra. The
"cleft," or Sik, which formed the only access to it,
passes between
perpendicular rocks of red sandstone, rising to a height of
from 100 to 300
feet. It follows the winding course of a torrent which rises
in the
mountains half an hour thence, at a spot said to be that
where the rod of
Moses had brought the water from the smitten rock. For an
hour and a half
we pass through this gorge, between rocky walls that
"overlap and
crumble and crack," their intervening heights "throughout
almost as narrow
as the narrowest part of the defile of Pfeffers." At the
entrance we pass
under an arch that spans the chasm. Our progress is along
what had once
been a paved way, where the torrent had been "diverted,"
"along troughs
in the rocks, into a water-conduit for the city." Festoons
of the caper-plant
and wild ivy and oleanders fringe the road, which winds like
a river,
affording at every turn the surprise of new views. The
cliffs are red — in
the sunshine, scarlet; in the shadow, black. Then through a
narrow
opening, where the rocks here overarch, we find ourselves
suddenly at a
turn of the road in face of a temple, with its pale pink
pillars, all hewn into
the rock. For all here is rock — rock graves, streets of
rock, rock dwellings,
rock temples, rock monuments; gorgeous rocks, dull crimson
streaked with
purple, over which seem to flow ribbons of yellow and blue.
Again the
road narrows through the streets of tombs, till it passes
into the bottom of
the rock-enclosed hollow or valley, with its branching
valleys of rocks.
This is the site of Petra now a desolation, but once a city
of splendor and
wealth, the central station for the commerce from India.
For further description this is not the place.
18 It was
into the midst of all
this wondrous glory of nature and wealth of man that the
Jewish army
marched with its ten thousand captives. There cannot be
doubt that the
victorious host plundered and laid waste Sela. This explains
how Amos
does not mention it, but only Bozrah
19 (Amos 1:12), which
seems to have
become the capital of Edom. Similarly, it is not named by
the later
prophets, except in Isaiah 16:1 and 42:11; and it only again
emerges into
importance in the fourth century before our era. But the
most terrible
scene yet remained to be enacted in the conquered city. We
can scarcely be
mistaken in supposing that the victors marched or drove
their captives
through its streets across to the western bank of the
rivulet. There up the
western cliffs mounts "a staircase" of broad steps "hewn out
of the
rocks." "High up in these cliffs, between two gigantic walls
of cliff, stands
a temple." It must be here, or on the cliffs above and
around — or perhaps
on the Acropolis somewhat to the south of it that we have to
look for "the
height of Sela" (2 Chronicles 25:12
20 — lit., "the top,"
or "head"), whence
the ten thousand Edomite captives were hurled, their
shattered limbs
dashing from cliff and rock, and their mangled remains
strewing the heights
and covering the ground beneath. But as they that long
afterwards laid
waste Jerusalem changed its name to Aelia Capitolina,
so did King
Amaziah change that of Sela into Joktheel, "the
subdued of God" (2 Kings
14:7). Yet neither the one nor the other name, given by man
in his pride,
did long continue. 21
It is a horrible, heart- sickening scene of history, so
utterly un- Jewish in
character that we can only account for its enactment by the
state of moral
degradation which the contemporary prophets Hosea and Amos
describe
in such vivid language. Yet another terrible inheritance,
besides the guilt of
this deed, did Judah bring back from the campaign against
Edom. We can
readily imagine how deeply the rock-city had impressed the
mind of the
king. But one of its chief features, which still first
attracts the traveler, is
the startling appearance and weird location of its temples.
An Eastern
mind, not religious, but superstitious, would readily come
under the spell
of these divinities whose temples were so weird and grand,
so thoroughly
in accord with nature around. 22 Be this as it may, on his
return from Edom
King Amaziah brought with him its idols, and did worship to
them,
although the notice of it in 2 Chronicles (25:14) seems to
imply personal
rather than national or public idolatry. None the less was
Divine anger
kindled against such a Jewish and Davidic king. In vain was
Divine warning
sent to him by "a prophet." The king replied by coarse
sneers and threats,
which, needless to say, so far from silencing the Divine
messenger, only
led to the announcement of near judgment.
23 And the sacred
narrative
expressly marks the connection between this and the later
conspiracy
which cost the king his life (2 Chronicles 25:27).
Two characteristics which have so often impressed us in the
course of this
Divine history appear in this narrative also. For, first,
the Divine decree, in
this instance of judgment, was not immediately carried out,
and to some it
might seem to tarry. And, further, the execution of this
decreed destruction
came not in sudden or miraculous manner, but in what might
be regarded as
the natural course of events, through popular
dissatisfaction at
gratuitously provoked national disaster. Thus, however real
the connection
between the Divine agency and Amaziah' s destruction, it
would, on both
the grounds above mentioned, require the eye of faith to
perceive it. And
this also is of permanent meaning: that the teaching of God
is only to those
who are capable of learning it.
It might almost seem as if the victory over Edom had
infatuated the king
and his council, filling them with unbounded self-confidence
and
overweening self-esteem. For, since they discarded God, was
it not the
prowess and might of Judah which had wrought the victory
over Edom?
Very significantly, the account of Judah' s defeat by Israel
in the Book of
Chronicles is introduced by the notice, "And the king took
counsel." He
had taunted the prophet as not being a counselor to the
king, and the
prophet had announced to him the counsel of God to his
destruction. 24 It
would now appear how the king's own chosen counselors would
themselves bring about this "counsel" of God.
As we have suggested, it is not unlikely that the war
between Judah and
Israel really grew out of the dismissal of the Israelitish
auxiliaries from the
host of Judah. This would be the more probable if the
account of Josephus
is trustworthy, that Amaziah had hired these soldiers
directly from the
king of Israel, and that on their return to their homes they
had laid waste
Judaean territory. And this would also better account for
the challenge to
fight 25 which Amaziah, with advice of his council,
addressed to Jehoash,
king of Israel, than to view it as a demand for submission
and return to
obedience to the Davidic rule, which, according to Josephus,
formed the
burden of this message. If the challenge of Amaziah was
peculiarly
Oriental and boastful in its tone, the reply of Jehoash
equaled and even
surpassed it in these respects. The allegory
26 which he
used about the
"thorn" in Lebanon that had sought a family alliance with
the cedar, meant
that it was absolute folly on the part of Amaziah to regard
himself as the
equal of Jehoash. Yet this was implied in his purpose of
measuring himself
with him. A contest between them! Why, a beast of the field
in Lebanon
passing over the thorn would crush it down.
27 Then followed
the mocking
application of the simile:
"Thou hast indeed smitten Edom make thyself glorious [enjoy
thy
glory], and abide at home' why shouldest thou meddle
28 with evil,
that thou fall, thou and Judah with thee?" (2 Kings 14:10.)
The advice was sound, though extremely provocative to one in
the mood
of Amaziah. But Jehoash did not await his attack. Marching
southwards,
he met the Judaean army at Beth Shemesh, the south-eastern
point in the
ancient possession of Dan, close to the border of Philistia,
29 situated in a
beautiful valley only eight or nine hours west of Jerusalem.
The battle was
most disastrous for Judah. The army fled; Amaziah was taken
prisoner;
and the Israelitish host advanced unopposed to Jerusalem.
Here they made
a breach in the wall 400 cubits (or about 600 feet
30 )
wide, from the
northern gate of Ephraim (or Benjamin, the present Damascus gate) to that
in the north-west corner of the wall, where it runs
southward. Thus the
city would be laid open towards the north, or the land of
Israel. Josephus
(Ant. ix. 9, 3) has it that Jehoash through this breach made
triumphal entry
into Jerusalem, carrying his royal prisoner with him.
31 The
victor
plundered the Temple of what treasures it still contained in
charge of one Obed-Edom. 32 tie also stripped the royal palace of its
valuables, and taking
with him "hostages" — probably from the chief nobles —
returned to
Samaria. 33
The war between Judah and Israel probably occurred quite
near the close
of the reign of Jehoash, king of Israel. As Amaziah of Judah
reigned
altogether twenty-nine years (2 Kings 14:2), and survived
Jehoash for
fifteen years (verse 17), we conclude that the
Judaeo-Israelitish war had
occurred in the fourteenth, and the Edomite war probably in
the thirteenth,
year of the reign of Amaziah. The fifteen years which
followed after the
death of Jehoash were full of trouble to the king of Judah.
At last the
general dissatisfaction, caused by the disasters of the war
and the
attempted introduction of foreign rites, culminated in a
revolution at
Jerusalem. Amaziah escaped to Lachish, in the low country of
Judah
(Joshua 15:33, 39), on the road from Hebron to Gaza.
Lachish has sometimes been erroneously identified with the
present Tel-el-
Hasi. Its more correct location 34 seems to be, passing from Eleutheropolis
[the Biblical Libnah] westwards to Ajlan, the ancient Eglon,
whence at a
distance of about forty-five minutes the ruins of Umm Lakis
— the ancient
Lachish are — reached. As usually, the ancient city lay on
the top of a hill.
Among its ruins many cisterns are found. The country around
is
undulating, and two great wadys open on either side. Lachish
was, as we
know, strongly fortified (2 Chronicles 11:9); it was
besieged by
Sennacherib (2 Kings 18:14, 17; Isaiah 36:2); and could
offer a stout
resistance to Nebuchadnezzar (Jeremiah 34:7). In short, it
was one of the
strong fortresses towards Egypt, although, from the friable
nature of the
building materials, its ruins, as those of other
similarly-constructed places,
are not considerable. In the time of Solomon, Lachish had
been one of the
"chariot-cities," for which alike its situation near the
Egyptian emporium
of horses (1 Kings 9:19; 10:26-29), and the plentiful
pasturage around,
would specially fit it. From the prophecies of Micah (1:13),
it appears to
have been the first Judaean city to adopt the idolatrous
worship of the
northern kingdom, which thence passed into Jerusalem.
But the strong walls of Lachish could not afford security to
Amaziah. The
conspirators from Jerusalem followed the king, and his dead
body was
brought back to Jerusalem — perhaps in the very chariot in
which he had
made his escape. 35 Yet even this circumstance, as well as
his honorable
burial with his royal ancestors, and the elevation to the
throne of his son,
"by all the people of Judah," indicate that although the
discontent was not
confined to the capital, yet the people generally were
wholly averse to any
change of dynasty, such as had characterized every
revolution in Israel. 36 |