Verse 1
2 Chronicles 33:1. Manasseh was
twelve years old, &c. — This and
the following verses, to 2
Chronicles 33:11, are taken out
of 2 Kings 21:1, &c., where the
reader will find them explained.
Verse 11
2 Chronicles 33:11. The Lord
brought upon them the captains
of the host of the king of
Assyria — Some suppose that
Esar-haddon, the successor of
Sennacherib, king of Assyria, is
here meant, and that, in
consequence of the royal family
failing in Babylon, he found
means to bring that kingdom
under his yoke again; or that,
by force of arms, or some other
means, he recovered it from
Merodach-Baladan. They say that
he held it thirteen years, and
that it was during this time
that Manasseh was taken and
carried captive to Babylon.
Others think it more probable
that the king of Babylon is here
called the king of Assyria,
because he had added Assyria to
his empire, and that having been
informed by his ambassadors of
the great riches which were in
Hezekiah’s treasures at
Jerusalem, and being assured of
Manasseh’s degeneracy from the
piety of his father, and from
that God whose power alone made
Hezekiah formidable, he thought
this a fit season to invade
Manasseh’s kingdom, which the
Jews say he did, in the twenty-
second year of his reign. Which
took Manasseh among the thorns —
In some thicket where he thought
to have hid himself from the
Assyrians till he could make an
escape: or, as the Hebrew בחוחים,
bachochim, may be rendered, with
hooks, metaphorically speaking;
or, in his forts, that is, in
one of them.
Verse 12
2 Chronicles 33:12. When he was
in affliction he besought the
Lord his God — Being “deprived
of his authority and liberty,
and secluded from his evil
counsellors and companions, and
from all his pleasures, in
chains, and in a prison, without
any other prospect than of
ending his days in that wretched
situation, he had leisure to
reflect on what had passed. He
then, no doubt, recollected the
honour, prosperity, and
deliverances with which his
father had been favoured; his
own good education, with the
instruction and warnings of the
prophets; and his atrocious,
multiplied, and daring crimes:
and he remembered that his
miseries had been foretold by
his faithful monitors. Thus, by
the special grace of God, his
solitude and affliction brought
him to view his own conduct and
character in another light than
before, and he began to cry for
mercy and deliverance, humbling
himself greatly before the God
of his fathers.” — Scott. Bishop
Hall remarks, from this verse,
the truth of that saying of the
prophet, Affliction giveth
understanding. “If the cross
bear us not to heaven,” says he,
“nothing can. What use were
there of the grain, but for the
edge of the sickle, wherewith it
is cut down; the stroke of the
flail, wherewith it is beaten;
the weight and attrition of the
mill, wherewith it is crushed;
the fire of the oven, wherewith
it is baked? Say now, Manasseh,
with that grand-father of thine,
It is good for me that I have
been afflicted; thine iron was
more precious to thee than thy
gold; thy jail was a more happy
lodging to thee than thy palace;
Babylon was a better school to
thee than Jerusalem. How foolish
are we to frown upon our
afflictions! These, how severe
soever, are our best friends:
they are not indeed for our
pleasure, they are for our
profit; their issue makes them
worthy of a welcome. What do we
care how bitter that potion is
which brings us health?”
Verse 13
2 Chronicles 33:13. Then
Manasseh knew that the Lord he
was God — He was convinced, by
his own experience, of God’s
power, justice, and goodness;
that Jehovah alone was the true
God, and not those idols which
he had worshipped, by which he
had received great hurt and no
good. He might have known this
at a less expense, if he would
have given due attention and
credit to the word written and
preached: but it was better to
pay thus dear for the knowledge
of God, than perish in ignorance
and unbelief.
Verse 14
2 Chronicles 33:14. After this
he built a wall without the city
of David — He repaired and
strengthened that wall which
Hezekiah had built, (2
Chronicles 32:5,) and which,
possibly, the king of Assyria,
or of Babylon rather, when he
last took Jerusalem, had caused
to be thrown down, either wholly
or in part. On the west side of
Gihon — On the west side of the
city of David, to which Hezekiah
had brought the watercourse
down, mentioned 2 Chronicles
32:30, into the great pool which
he had made to receive it: and
possibly this wall was built to
secure the free use of it to the
citizens, when they should be
distressed or besieged by an
enemy.
Verse 15-16
2 Chronicles 33:15-16. He took
away the strange gods — The
images of them, and that idol,
whatever it was, which he had
set up with so much solemnity in
the house of the Lord. And all
the altars — The idolatrous
altars, as detestable things,
loathing them as much, it is to
be hoped, as ever he had loved
them. And he repaired the altar
of the Lord — Which had either
been abused or broken down by
some of the idolatrous priests,
or at least neglected, and was
therefore gone out of repair.
And sacrificed thereon
peace-offerings — To implore
God’s favour; and
thank-offerings — To praise him
for his deliverance. And
commanded Judah to serve the
Lord — Using his power to reform
his people, as he had before
abused it to corrupt them. Thus
he brought forth fruit meet for
repentance, and endeavoured, as
far as he could, to repair the
injuries which he had done to
the cause of God by his impious
commands, 2 Chronicles 33:9.
Observe, reader, those that
truly repent of their sins, will
not only return to God
themselves, but will do all they
can to bring those back to him
that have, by their example,
been seduced and drawn away from
him.
Verse 17
2 Chronicles 33:17.
Nevertheless, the people did
sacrifice still, &c. — “Rabbi
Kimchi observes very well here,
that though Manasseh’s
repentance might be sincere, yet
it was attended with a
melancholy circumstance, which
ought to sound in the ear of
every one invested with power,
His example and authority easily
seduced his people to idolatry;
but his royal mandate was unable
to reclaim them.” — Dodd. He
could not carry the reformation
so far as he had carried the
corruption. It is an easy thing
to debauch men’s manners; but
not so easy to reform them
again.
Verse 18
2 Chronicles 33:18. The words of
the seers that spake to him in
the name of the Lord — The
reproofs they gave him for his
sin, and their exhortations to
repentance. Let sinners
consider, that how little notice
soever they take of them, an
account is kept of the words of
the seers, that speak to them
from God, to admonish them of
their sins, and warn them of
their danger, and call them to
their duty, which words will be
produced against them in the
great day. They are written in
the books of the kings of Israel
— Of Judah, often called Israel.
He speaks not of the books of
Kings, for these things are not
mentioned there, but of their
public records, whence the most
important things were taken by
the prophets, and put into those
canonical books.
Verse 19
2 Chronicles 33:19. His prayer
also — Which is twice mentioned
as remarkable. We have a prayer
which, it is pretended, he made
in prison. The church does not
receive it as canonical; but it
has a place among the apocryphal
pieces, and, in our collection,
stands before the books of
Maccabees. The Greek church has
received it into its book of
prayers, and it is there
sometimes used as a devout form,
and which contains nothing in it
deserving censure. And how God
was entreated of him — Which was
written for the generations to
come, that the people that
should be created might praise
the Lord, for his readiness to
receive returning prodigals.
They are written among the
sayings of the seers — To those
seers that spake to him, (2
Chronicles 33:18,) to reprove
him for his sin, he sent his
confession, when he repented, to
be inserted in their memoirs, as
a token of his gratitude to them
for their kindness in reproving
him. Thus it becomes penitents
to take shame to themselves, and
to give thanks to their
reprovers, and warning to
others.
Verse 20
2 Chronicles 33:20. And they
buried him in his own house —
Not in the sepulchres of the
kings. He was buried privately,
and nothing of that honour was
done him, at his death, that was
done to his father. Penitents
may recover their comfort sooner
than their credit.
Verse 22
2 Chronicles 33:22. He did that
which was evil, as did Manasseh
his father — That is, as
Manasseh had done in the days of
his apostacy. They who think the
wickedness of Amon an evidence
that Manasseh did not truly
repent, forget how many good
kings had wicked sons. Manasseh,
however, seems to have been very
deficient in this after his
repentance, that when he cast
out the images, he did not
utterly deface and destroy them,
according to the law, which
required them to burn the images
with fire, Deuteronomy 7:5. How
necessary that law was, this
instance shows; for the carved
images being only thrown by, and
not burned, Amon, knowing where
to find them, soon set them up,
and sacrificed to them.
Verse 23
2 Chronicles 33:23. And humbled
not himself &c. — He fell, like
his father, but did not rise
again like him. It is not so
much sin, as impenitence in sin,
that ruins men; not so much that
they have offended, as that they
do not humble themselves for,
and forsake their offences; not
the disease, but the neglect of
the remedy. But Amon trespassed
more and more — Increased in
wickedness of every kind, and
especially in his attachment to
various and abominable
idolatries. They that were
joined to idols, generally grew
more and more mad upon them.
Verse 24
2 Chronicles 33:24. His servants
conspired against him — He
rebelled against God, and his
own servants rebelled against
him, and that when he had
reigned but two years. Thus,
though they were wicked, God was
righteous. Perhaps when he
sinned, as his father did, in
the beginning of his days, he
promised himself that he would
repent, as his father had done,
in the latter end of his days.
But if so, he was wretchedly
mistaken, being cut off when he
was young. And his case shows
what madness it is to presume
upon repenting and turning to
God when we are old. Reader,
behold, now is the accepted
time! let it be to thee the day
of salvation! remember, thou
knowest not what a day may bring
forth. To-day, then, hear his
voice, and harden not thy heart. |