JOSIAH (SIXTEENTH), JEHOAHAZ
(SEVENTEENTH), JEHOIAKIM (EIGHTEENTH), KINGS OF JUDAH.
Retrospect — Political
History — Possible Reunion of Judah and Israel — The Fall of
the Assyrian Empire — Incursion of the Scythians — Revolt
and Independence of Babylonia — The Expedition of Pharaoh
Necho — Resistance of Josiah to his Progress — Battle of
Megiddo — Death and Burial of Josiah — Appointment,
Deposition, and Captivity of Jehoahaz — Accession of
Jehoiakim — Tribute to Egypt.
(2 KINGS 23:29-36; 2
CHRONICLES 35:20; 36:5.)
The observant student of this history must have been
impressed with the
seemingly strange fact that, at the final crisis in the
history of Judah, when
that kingdom was hastening to its fall, monarchs of such
opposite religious
tendencies as Ahaz and Hezekiah, Amon and Josiah, should
have
succeeded one another. And it reflects most unfavorably on
the moral and
religious condition of the people that each reformation
should, within so
short a period, have been followed by a counter-reformation.
On the other
hand, it must be felt how gracious had been the divine
dealing when, in
succession to monarchs who, as we cannot but think, too
truly represented
the real state of the nation, pious kings were raised up, as
if to give space
for tardy repentance and recovery. Even the history of Manas
seh would,
in that sense, almost seem to have borne a symbolic meaning.
But
especially does the mind dwell on the administration of
Josiah, with its
very significant re-discovery and re-publication of the Law
of Moses. As
neither before nor after him was there any king whose heart
was so
"tender," and who so humbled himself before Jehovah (2 Kings
22:19), nor
yet any who so
"turned to Jehovah with all his heart, and with all his
soul, and with
all his might, according to all the law of Moses" (2 Kings 23:25)
— so we must surely regard his upraising at that crisis, his
bearing, and his
rule as of direct Divine grace and interposition.
It is when taking into wider consideration these two facts —
regarding the
people and the king — that we fully understand the Divine
sentence of
judgment upon Jerusalem and Judah (2 Kings 23:26, 27), and
the personal
mercy extended to Josiah (2 Kings 22:20). We have been
hitherto occupied
with the most important measures of his reign — that public
religious
reformation which had as its necessary sequence the
abolition of private
idolatrous practices (2 Kings 23:24). But the political
history of the time is
also of deepest interest.
Reference has already been made to the approximation between
Judah and
the remnant of Israel left in the northern kingdom. All
indications point to
the inference that hopes were entertained, if not plans
actually formed, of a
possible re-union of the two kingdoms under the sway of
Josiah. Thus,
just as the independent existence of Judah was about to
cease, the national
prospects might seem to human view more promising than for
centuries
past. The disappointment of these hopes must have shown
that, even as
Israel had at the first held the land, not by the power of
man, but by the
Divine appointment, so would no combination, however
hopeful, succeed
in restoring what only the God of Israel could bestow. And
this has its
lessons for the future, as well as in the past.
It has already been stated that Assyria was no longer able
to suppress any
attempts at independent action in Palestine. Under the
brilliant but cruel
reign of Asurbanipal (the son of Ezar-haddon) Assyria had
reached the
highest point of its might; but with it also commenced the
decay of the
cumbrous empire. Its beginning may be dated from the
rebellion of
Sammughes (Saosduchin, i.e., Samul-sum-iskun), the
brother of
Asurbanipal and viceroy of Babylon. That rebellion was
indeed crushed,
and its author perished in the flames, the victor himself
assuming the
crown of Babylon. But already other forces were in the
field. Elam-Persia,
the latest conquest of Assyria, rose in rebellion. These
armies were indeed
vanquished in two or rather three wars; but from the east
the Medes
invaded Assyria. The attack was unsuccessful, and cost the
Median king,
Phraortes, his life. But over Western Asia and far down to
Egypt the
power of Assyria was lost. And from the north of the Black
Sea, from the
steppes of Russia, the Scythians swept down and overran the
country to
the shores of the Mediterranean, and down to the borders of
Egypt. There
Psammetichus succeeded in buying them off, and the majority
of the
barbarians returned northwards. Some writers have supposed
that they
came into conflict with Josiah, and that Jeremiah 4:5-6:30,
as well as some
of the utterances of Zephaniah, refer to this, and that the
presence of the
invaders was perpetuated in the later name of Scythopolis
for Beth-
Shean. 1 But this is, to say the least, doubtful.
2 When,
after many years, 3
the Medes succeeded in finally repelling the Scythians,
Assyria was
utterly exhausted, and the fall of Nineveh at hand.
But before that an event had taken place of special
importance in the
history of Judah. The decline of Assyria had naturally
rekindled the hopes
of Egypt, its rival for the empire of the ancient world.
Hitherto it had
always been worsted in the contests with Assyria. But now,
Pharaoh-
Necho (really Necho II.), the son of Psammetichus (the
founder of the
twenty-sixth, Saite dynasty), resolved to attack the
Assyrian power. To
us a special interest attaches to Necho, since he was the
first to attempt
joining the Red Sea with the Mediterranean, although he had
finally to
desist from the enterprise. 4 Circumstances seemed indeed
favorable to the
expedition of Necho against Assyria. Asurbanipal had on his
death
(probably in 626 B.C.) bequeathed to his successor or
successors 5 a very
troubled heritage. In Babylonia 6 Nabo-palassar appears (in
626 or 625) as
nominally a viceroy, but virtually independent of Assyria.
The expedition
of Necho, to which reference is made in 2 Kings 23:29, and
at greater
length in 2 Chronicles 35:20-25, was made in the year 609
B.C., or sixteen
years after Nabopalassar had becotne ruler of Babylonia. In
2 Kings 23:29
the expedition is expressly described as against "the king
of Assyria." But
here a difficulty arises. According to some authorities
7 the
fall of Nineveh 8
preceded or coincided with the accession of Nabo-palassar to
the
Babylonian throne in 626 B.C. In that case the expedition of
Necho would
have been against the Babylonian monarch, who would have
been
designated "King of Assyria" as successor to that power.
According to
other authorities the fall of Nineveh would have to be
placed between the
years 609 and 606 B.C. As Asurbanipal seems to have still
occupied the
throne in 626 B.C., and as we read of two sieges of Nineveh,
it appears
most likely that this (the first) expedition of Necho was
still literally
against "the king of Assyria."
Avoiding a march through the land of Judah, the Egyptian
army advanced
along the ordinary route followed towards the East. At the
slope of the
hills which separate the low coast tract south of Carmel
from the great
plain of Esdraelon, its progress was barred by a Judaean
army under
Josiah, holding the strong position of Megiddo, the modern
el-Lejjun,
which commanded the valley of the Kishon (called in 1 (3)
Esd. i. 27 that
of Mageddo), and also access to the mountains of Samaria. It
is not easy to
form a definite opinion as to the motives which induced
Josiah to attempt
arresting the march of Necho. But probably he may have been
influenced
by those plans for the re-union of Israel and Judah to which
reference has
already been made. He may have thought that the danger to
the
independence of the new kingdom would be much greater if
Necho
succeeded in the object of his expedition than if matters
continued as they
were. Of the two powers which threatened Palestine — Egypt
and
Assyria — the former was, at that time, certainly more to be
dreaded.
Besides, had Josiah succeeded, he would have secured not
only the
gratitude of Assyria, but the virtual, if not the nominal
independence of his
kingdom.
It was in vain that Necho remonstrated with Josiah. In the
remarkable
message 9 which his ambassadors were instructed to deliver
(2 Chronicles
35:21), he probably did not refer to any special prophecies
against
Assyria, but rather to what he regarded as the general
lesson which Josiah
should derive from the history of Hezekiah, viewed in
connection with
subsequent events, as indicating the will of the God of
Israel in regard to
the destruction of Assyria. But Josiah gave not heed to the
warning. A
decisive battle was fought on "the plain of Megiddo" (2
Chronicles 35:22).
If the reading is correct that Josiah "disguised himself,"
10 we would almost
be reminded of the similar device of Ahab (2 Chronicles
18:29). But the
precaution, if adopted, was useless. Mortally wounded by the
archers,
Josiah was lifted from his chariot, and probably expired on
the way to
Jerusalem (2 Kings 23:30), whither they carried him. He was
buried in "his
own sepulcher" — apparently in the new place of sepulcher
prepared by
Manasseh (2 Chronicles 35:24; comp. 2 Kings 21:18, 26).
General and
deep was the mourning in Jerusalem and Judah for good King
Josiah. The
prophet Jeremiah composed a "lament" for him, which,
although now lost,
seems to have been inserted in a special book of "Laments"
mentioned by
the Chronicler (35:25). Nay, his memory and the "lament" for
him
continued in Israel — and the memorial, if not some of the
words, of it are
preserved in Jeremiah 22:10, 18, and so late as in Zechariah
12:11.
In truth, the defeat of the Judean army and the death of
Josiah, not only
put an end to his great reformatory movement, and to the
hopes of the
possible re-union and recovery of Israel and Judah, but it
sounded the knell
of Jewish independence. Henceforth Judah was alternately
vassal to Egypt
or Babylonia. According to 1 Chronicles 3:15, Josiah had
four sons, 11 of
whom the eldest, Johanan, seems to have died, either before
his father or
perhaps in the battle of Megiddo. The other three, arranging
them in the
order of age, were Eliakim, afterwards called Jehoiakim;
Shallum,
afterwards called Jehoahaz; and Zedekiah. On the death of
Josiah "the
people of the land" made and anointed,
12 as his successor,
not the eldest
royal prince, but his younger brother Shallum, who, on his
accession,
assumed the name Jehoahaz, "Jehovah holds up" (comp. 2 Kings
23:30,
with Jeremiah 22:11, and 1 Chronicles 3:15). From the fate
which so
speedily overtook him, we may infer that the popular choice
of Jehoahaz
was largely influenced by his opposition to Egypt. Of his
brief reign of
three months and, according to Josephus,
13 ten days, we
only know that
"he did the evil in the sight of Jehovah." If Josephus also
characterizes him
as "impure in his course of life," this may refer to the
restoration of the
lascivious rites of his grandfather's reign.
Meantime, Necho had, after the battle of Megiddo, continued
his march
towards Syria. Thither, at Riblah (the modern Ribleh, on the
Orontes) "in
the land of Hamath," the victor summoned the new Jewish
king. 14 On his
arrival, Jehoahaz, who had been crowned without the leave of Necho, was
put in bonds. Necho does not seem, on this occasion, to have
pursued his
expedition against Assyria. The great battle at Carchemish,
to which the
chronicler refers by anticipation (2 Chronicles 35:20), was
fought on a
second expedition, three years later, when the Egyptian army
under Necho
was defeated with great slaughter by Nebuchadnezzar, the son
of
Nabopalassar. This was after the fall of Nineveh, and when
the Babylonian
or Chaldean empire had taken the place of the Assyrian. But
on the
present occasion Necho seems to have returned, before
encountering the
Assyrians, into Egypt, whither "he brought"
15 with him
Jehoahaz, who
died in captivity.
The Pharaoh appointed, in room of Jehoahaz, his brother
Eliakim, who
ascended the throne at the age of twenty-five, being two
years older than
Jehoahaz (2 Kings 23:31). After a not uncommon practice
(Comp. Genesis
41:45; Ezra 5:14; Daniel 1:7), and to show how entirely the
new king was
his subject, Necho changed his name, Eliakim, into Jehoiakim
— "Jehovah
setteth up" — the selection of the name being probably
determined by a
regard for its effect upon the people. A tribute of 100
talents of silver and
one talent of gold was imposed upon the land. This sum, so
small as
compared with the tribute formerly imposed by
Tiglath-pileser on
Menahem of Samaria (2 Kings 15:19), and that given to
Sennacherib by
Hezekiah (2 Kings 18:14), and amounting to only about 37,500
pounds in
silver and 6,750 pounds in gold, affords evidence of the
impoverishment of
the country. After the example of Menahem of Samaria (2
Kings 15:20),
Jehoiakim raised the tribute by a general tax upon the land.
It was an
ominous precedent to follow. But, to use the language of a
great writer, 16
the twenty-three years which elapsed between the decease of
Josiah and
the final deportation to Babylon, were only "the dying time"
of the
kingdom of Judah.
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