MANASSEH (FOURTEENTH), AMON
(FIFTEENTH), KINGS OF JUDAH.
Popular Mourning for
Hezekiah — Accession of Manasseh — Temptations and Character
of the King — Idolatry and Cruelty of his Reign — Moral
State of the People — Prophetic Announcement of Judgment —
Supplementary Narrative in the Book of Chronicles — Its
Reliableness Confirmed by the Assyrian Inscriptions — The
Captivity of Manasseh in Babylon — His Repentance and Prayer
— His Restoration to Jerusalem — Superficial Character of
his Reformation — His Death — Reign of Amon.
(2 KINGS 21; 2 CHRONICLES
33)
With the death of Hezekiah, another and a strange chapter
in Jewish
history opens. When they buried him "in the ascent of the
sepulchers of
the sons of David," 1 not only the inhabitants of Jerusalem
— for the
defense, adornment, and convenience of which he had done so
much — but
all Judah united to do him honor. His reign, despite
temporary reverses
and calamities, had been prosperous for his country, and he
left it in
political circumstances far different from those when he had
ascended the
throne. Above all, his history might have been full of most
important
theocratic teaching to the people. If it was otherwise, we
see in this only
fresh evidence of that spiritual decay of which the
prophets, in their
description of the moral condition of the people, give so
realistic a picture.
Manasseh was only twelve years old 2 when he succeeded his
father.
According to our Western notions, he would have to be
regarded as merely
a child. But in the East he would at that age have reached
the most
dangerous period of wakening manhood, before thought could
have
tempered willfulness, or experience set bounds to impulse.
In such
circumstances, to have resisted the constant temptation and
incitement to
gratify every will and desire, would have required one of
strong moral
fibber. But Manasseh was selfish and reckless, weak and
cruel in his
wickedness, and scarcely respectable even in his repentance.
When the
infant Jehoash acceded to the throne, he had the benefit of
the advice of
Jehoiada (2 Kings 12:2), and we know how his later and
independent reign
disappointed its early promise. But Manasseh had not any
such guidance.
The moral and religious corruption in his grandfather's
reign, must, as we
infer from the prophetic writings, be regarded as not only
the outcome, but
also partly the explanation of the measures of Ahaz. This
condition of
things could not have been effectually checked during
Hezekiah's reign of
twenty-nine years, especially amidst the troubles and the
disorganization
connected with the Assyrian invasion. In fact, we know that
even among
the intimate counselors of Hezekiah, there were those whom
the prophetic
word emphatically condemned (comp. Isaiah 22:15-19;
29:14-16; 30:1, 9-
14).
In these circumstances the sudden re-action and the
"counter-reformation"
of Manasseh' s reign, in which he, apparently, carried the
people with him,
cannot appear altogether strange or surprising. Briefly, it
was a kind of
heathen ideal of religion in which various forms of national
idolatry were
combined. The corrupt mode of Jehovah-worship on "the
heights" was
restored. To this were added the Phoenician rites of Baal
and Asherah,
which Ahab had introduced in Israel, and the Assyro-Chaldean
worship of
the stars. All this was carried to its utmost sequences. In
the Temple, on
which Jehovah had put His thrice Holy Name, and which, as a
firm and
lasting abode in contrast to the Tabernacle, symbolized the
permanence of
His dwelling in the midst of Israel, and their permanence in
the land,
Manasseh built altars to the host of heaven, placing them in
the outer and
inner courts. Nay, in the sacred "house" itself, he set up
the vilest of idols:
"the graven image of the Asherah," whose worship implied all
that was
lascivious. Conjoined with this was the institution of a new
priesthood, 3
composed of them that had familiar spirits, and "wizards,"
while the king
himself practiced divination and enchantment
4 And as usual,
together with
all this, (Compare Deuteronomy 18:10, 11.) the service of
Moloch, with
its terrible rite of passing children through the fire, was
not only
encouraged by the example of the king (2 Kings 21:6; 2
Chronicles 33:6),
but apparently came into general practice (2 Kings 23:10).
Alike the extent
and the shameless immorality of the idolatry now prevalent,
may be
inferred from the account of the later reformation by Josiah
(2 Kings 23:4-
8). For, whatever practices may have been introduced by
previous kings,
the location, probably in the outer court of the Temple, of
a class of
priests, who, in their unnaturalness of vice, combined a
species of madness
with deepest moral degradation, 5 and by their side, and in
fellowship with
them, that of priestesses of Astarte, must have been the
work of
Manasseh.
We know that some such abominations formed part of the
religious rites,
not only of the inhabitants of Canaan, but of the
Babylonians. 6 On the
other hand, we can scarcely avoid the inference that these
forms of idolatry
were chiefly encouraged for the sake of the vices connected
with them.
Thus it involved not only religious, but primarily moral
degeneracy. Yet,
as might be expected, there was also spiritual protest and a
moral reaction
against all this. Prophetic voices were heard announcing the
near doom of a
king and people more wicked than the Canaanites
7 of old.
But it is
significant that the names of these Divine messengers are
not mentioned
here. 8 In truth, it was a time of martyrdom, rather than of
testimony.
There may be exaggeration in the account of Josephus, that
Manasseh
killed all the righteous among the Hebrews, and spared not
even the
prophets, but every day slew some among them (Ant. x.
3, 1); and only a
basis of historical truth may underlie the Jewish tradition,
9 which was
adopted by the Fathers, 10 that by command of Manasseh
Isaiah was sawn
asunder in a cedar-tree, in which he had found refuge. But
Holy Scripture
itself relates that Manasseh had filled Jerusalem "from end
to end" with
innocent blood.
As we have already marked, these sins were national, and
this in a more
special sense than merely the identification of a nation
with its rulers and
their public acts. As this condition of the people was not
exceptional, but
the outcome of a long course, so the Divine judgments were
to be
cumulative, extending back from the first beginning to the
present stage of
guilt (2 Kings 21:15). And commensurate not only with the
sin of Israel,
but with their utter unfaithfulness to the meaning and
purpose of their
calling, would be the coming evil. 11 In the figurative
language of Scripture,
the desolation of Jerusalem would be as complete as that of
Samaria and of
the house of Ahab — as it were, a razing to the ground, so
that the builder
might stretch over it the measuring line and apply the
plummet, as if not
anything had stood there (comp. Isaiah 34:11; Lamentations
2:8; Amos
7:7-9). Nay, Jerusalem would be thoroughly emptied and
cleansed, as a
dish that was wiped, and then turned upside down.
12 For
Judah — the
remnant of what had been the inheritance of God — would be
cast off, and
surrendered to their enemies for "a prey and a spoil" (2
Kings 21:12-14).
Here the history of Manasseh abruptly breaks off in the Book
of Kings, to
be resumed and supplemented in that of Chronicles (2
Chronicles 33:11-
20). This in itself is noticeable, first, as casting fresh
light on the
"prophetic" character of the history as presented in the
Books of the
Kings, and, secondly, as attesting the historical value of
those of
Chronicles. In the Books of the Kings, the writer, or
compiler, gives not
the annals of a reign, nor the biographies of kings and
heroes; but groups
together such events as bear on the Divine issues of this
history, in relation
to the calling of Israel. This explains not only the brief
summary of the
longest reign in Judah or Israel — that of Manasseh, which
lasted fifty-five
years — but specifically the omission of what he had done
for the defense
of Jerusalem and Judah (2 Chronicles 33:14), as well as of
his captivity,
his repentance, return to his capital, and reformation. For
these defenses of
Judah were useless; the captivity of Manasseh was temporary;
and his
reformation was, as we shall see, only superficial. But
rarely has the
skepticism of a certain school of critics received more
severe rebuke than in
regard to the doubts which on internal grounds have been
cast — and that
not long ago 13 — on the credibility of the narrative in 2
Chronicles 33:11-
20. It was called in question for this reason, that, in view
of the silence of
the Book of Kings, there was not ground for believing that
the Assyrians
exercised supremacy in Judah — far less that there had been
a hostile
expedition against Manasseh; and because, since the
residence of the
Assyrian kings was in Nineveh, the reported transportation
of Manasseh
to Babylon (ver. 11) must be unhistorical. To these were
added, as
secondary objections, that the unlikely account of a king
transported in
iron bonds and fetters was proved to be untrustworthy by the
still more
incredible notice that such a captive had been again
restored to his
kingdom. Eminently specious as these objections may seem,
they have
been entirely set aside by the evidence from the Assyrian
inscriptions, the
preservation of whose testimony is here specially
providential.
Unfortunately, the lessons which might have been learned in
regard to
skepticism on "internal grounds" have had little influence.
Of the supremacy of Assyria over Judah in the time of
Manasseh, there
cannot be any doubt, notwithstanding the silence of the Book
of Kings. In
a list of twenty-two subject kings of "the land Chatti," in
the reign of
Esarhaddon, whom that monarch summoned, appears expressly
the name
of Minasi sar mat (ir) Jaudi, Manasseh, king of
Judah. 14 But the capture
of Manasseh by the Assyrian captains, and his deportation to
Babylon,
recorded in 2 Chronicles 33:11, seems to have taken place
not in the reign
of Esarhaddon, but in that of his successor, Asurbanipal
(the Sardanapalus
of classical writers), when his brother Samas-sum-ukln, the
viceroy of
Babylon, involved among other countries also Phoenicia and
Palestine in
his rebellion. And although the ordinary residence of
Asurbanipal was in
Nineveh, we have not only reason to believe that after his
assumption of
the dignity of king of Babylon, he temporarily resided in
that city, but
monumental evidence of it in his reception there of
ambassadors with
tributary presents. Lastly, we find the exact counterpart
alike of this, that
Manasseh was carried to Babylon with "hooks,"
15 and "bound
in fetters,"
and then afterwards restored to his kingdom, in the Assyrian
record of.
precisely the same mode of deportation and of the same
restoration by Asurbanipal of Necho of Egypt.
16
Holy Scripture tracing this restoration — not, as in the
Assyrian
inscription, to its secondary cause "the mercy of the king"
— but to its
real source, connects it with the repentance and prayer of
Manasseh in his
distress (2 Chronicles 33:12, 13). That in such
circumstances the son of
Hezekiah, with the remembrance of the Divine deliverance of
his father in
his mind, should have recognized the folly and guilt of his
conduct,
humbled himself, and prayed unto the Lord
17 — seems so
natural as
scarcely to require confirmation. Yet there is such, at
least of his return to
Jerusalem, in the historical notice of his additions to the
fortifications of
Jerusalem (2 Chronicles 33:14). And if his abolition of the
former idolatry,
and restoration of the service of Jehovah, seem not
consistent with the
measures that had afterwards to be adopted by his grandson
Josiah, we
have to remember that between them intervened the wicked
reign of Amon;
that Manasseh seems rather to have put aside than destroyed
idolatry; and
that the sacred text itself indicates the superficiality and
incompleteness of
his reformation (2 Chronicles 33:17).
The events just recorded must have taken place near the
close of this reign,
which extended over the exceptional period of fifty-five
years. As Holy
Scripture refers to his sins as extreme and permanent
instance of guilt (2
Kings 23:26; 24:3; Jeremiah 15:4), so, on the other hand,
Jewish tradition
dwells upon the repentance of Manasseh and the acceptance of
his prayer,
as the fullest manifestation of God's mercy, and the
greatest
encouragement to repentant sinners. 18 And, in truth, the
threatened
judgment upon Jerusalem was deferred for more than half a
century. So it
was in peace that Manasseh laid himself to sleep.
19 He was
buried in a
garden attached to his palace, which popularly bore the name
of "the
garden of Uzza." 20
That the reformation made by Manasseh could only have been
superficial,
appears also from the record of the brief reign of his son
and successor
Amon. Indeed, some writers have seen a picture of that
period in certain of
the utterances of Zephaniah, 21 although he prophesied
during the reign of
Josiah. Amon was twenty-four years old at his accession, and
his rule only
lasted two years. It was marked by the resumption of the
idolatry of
Manasseh — apparently in an even aggravated form (2
Chronicles 33:23).
A palace-conspiracy put an end to his life. As on a former
occasion (2
Kings 14:20, 21), "the people of the land" secured the
Davidic succession
by proclaiming Josiah, the youthful son of Amen, heir to his
throne.
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