Verse 1
2 Kings 23:1. The king sent and
gathered unto him all the elders
— Although he had received a
message from God, that there was
no preventing the ruin of
Jerusalem, and that he only
should deliver his own soul; yet
he does not therefore sit down
in despair, and resolve to do
nothing for his country, because
he could not do all he would.
But he will endeavour to do his
duty, and then leave the event
to God. He knew, if any thing
could prevent, delay, or
alleviate the threatened ruin,
it must be a public reformation.
He therefore makes preparations
for this, by summoning a general
assembly of the magistrates, or
representatives of the people,
with the priests and prophets,
the ordinary and extraordinary
ministers of God: that, these
all joining in it, what was done
might become a national act, and
so be the more likely to prevent
national judgments; and that so
many principal persons advising
and assisting in it, the whole
business might be transacted
with more solemnity, and such as
were against it might be
discouraged from making any
opposition.
Verse 2
2 Kings 23:2. The king went up
into the house of the Lord — For
as this great meeting was called
for a religious purpose, it was
to be conducted in a religious
manner; and whatever was done in
it was to be done as in the
presence of God. And all the men
of Judah — A very great number
of them; for it cannot be
supposed that the court of the
Lord’s house could contain all
the inhabitants of the land at
once. And the prophets — Either
Jeremiah, Zephaniah, Urijah,
Huldah, or the sons of the
prophets. The people, both small
and great — High and low, rich
and poor, young and old: for
persons of all ranks,
conditions, and ages, were
present. And he read in their
ears, &c. — Josiah himself, for
he did not think it beneath him
to be a reader, any more than
Solomon did to be a preacher,
and David even a door-keeper, in
the house of God. All people are
concerned to know the
Scriptures, and all in authority
to spread the knowledge of them.
Verse 3
2 Kings 23:3. The king stood by
a pillar — Of which see on chap.
2 Kings 11:14. And made a
covenant before the Lord — The
king himself was the first and
principal covenanter, who
publicly and solemnly declared
his consent to this covenant, to
set the elders, priests, and
people an example, and to assure
them not only of his protection,
but of all the furtherance his
power could give them in their
obedience. And all the people
stood to the covenant — They
declared their consent to it,
and their concurrence with the
king in that act, which possibly
they did by standing up, as the
king himself stood when ha took
it. It is of good use, with all
possible solemnity, to oblige
ourselves to our duty: and he
that bears an honest heart, does
not startle at assurances.
Verse 4
2 Kings 23:4. The king commanded
Hilkiah and the priests of the
second order — Either those two
who were next in degree to the
high-priest, and in case of
sickness were to manage his
work; or the heads of the
twenty-four courses which David
had appointed. To bring forth
out of the temple — Or to take
care they should be brought
forth. All the vessels made for
Baal — So that, even in the
house of the Lord, the sacred
temple built by Solomon, and
dedicated to the honour and
worship of the God of Israel,
were found vessels, and all
manner of utensils, for the
worship of Baal, for the grove,
and all the host of heaven — It
appears, therefore, that
although Josiah had suppressed
the worship of idols, yet the
provisions made for that worship
were carefully preserved by some
persons in power, even in the
temple itself, to be used again
whenever the present restraint
should be taken off: nay, even
the image of the grove, probably
Ashtaroth or Venus, was yet kept
standing in the temple. How
Josiah could suffer all this,
till the eighteenth year of his
reign, is difficult to say;
perhaps it was done without his
knowledge. He now, however,
gives orders that all these
instruments of idolatry should
be burned, in the fields
adjoining to the brook Kidron;
and that the ashes of them
should be carried out of his
kingdom to Beth-el: in token of
his abhorrence of every species
of idolatry, and to pollute and
disgrace that place which had
been the chief seat and throne
of it.
Verse 5
2 Kings 23:5. He put down the
idolatrous priests — כמרים,
chemarim. Their particular
business, as appears from this
place, was to burn incense.
Hence it is thought by some,
that the faithful Jews gave them
this name by way of contempt, as
being continually scorched by
their fumigating fires. But,
according to Bishop Patrick,
they were so called from being
clothed in black: for the
Egyptians, as well as many other
pagan nations; made use of black
garments when they sacrificed to
the infernal deities: in
opposition to which the Jewish
priests were clothed with white
at their sacrifices.
Verse 6
2 Kings 23:6. And cast the
powder thereof upon the graves —
By the law, a ceremonial
uncleanness was contracted by
the touch of a grave, so that by
casting these ashes here, he
declared them most impure, and
that none could touch them
without making themselves
unclean thereby. The Chaldee
renders it, He cast it into the
graves, to signify that he would
have all idolatry buried out of
his sight, as a loathsome thing.
Of the children of the people —
The common people, whose graves
were made together in some
common place, which was
generally accounted very impure
and contemptible, and therefore
a fit place for this filth to be
thrown into. But the Hebrew here
is more properly rendered, Of
that people; that is, those
idolatrous people, as it is
expressed 2 Chronicles 34:4.
Verse 7
2 Kings 23:7. He brake down the
houses of the sodomites — The
name sometimes given to the most
infamous of all prostitutes, who
exposed their bodies to be
abused contrary to nature, in
honour of those filthy deities
whom they worshipped. Their
houses were near the temple, and
the persons themselves were
dedicated to impurity, and, that
they might commit their
abominations with the greater
licentiousness, they had women
appointed to make them tents,
wherein they were wont to retire
upon these detestable occasions.
— Calmet. Thus corporal and
spiritual whoredoms went
together, and the vile
affections to which they were
given up were the punishment of
their vain imaginations. They
that dishonoured their God were
justly left thus to dishonour
themselves. Where the women wove
hangings for the grove — For the
idols worshipped in the grove,
or rather for Asherah, or
Ashtaroth, an idol so called, as
observed before, and probably
the same with the Grecian Venus.
These hangings might possibly be
curtains to draw before the
idol, to preserve it from
defilement, or to gain more
reverence to it: or garments for
it, or for the priests or
priestesses belonging to it. But
the Hebrew word בתים, bathim,
here used, properly means
houses; which, most likely, were
either little chapels or shrines
made of woven work, like those
mentioned Acts 19:24, which were
made of silver, within which
were representations of the
idol; or they were tents,
encompassing the image, where
the worshippers committed all
manner of lewdness, and that in
or near the house of the Lord,
in an impudent defiance of the
holiness of God and his temple.
Well might the apostle call
these kinds of worship
abominable idolatries! Can any
wonder that wrath, not to be
quenched, was kindled against
this city and people?
Verse 8
2 Kings 23:8. He brought all the
priests — Belonging to the high
places following, whether such
as worshipped idols, or such as
worshipped God in those
forbidden places. Out of the
cities of Judah — That they
might not continue to corrupt
the people. And defiled the high
places — Casting dead carcasses
there, and other such like
unclean things, and thus making
them receptacles of impurity,
and burning dead men’s bones
upon the altars that were there.
From Geba — The northern border
of the kingdom of Judah. To
Beer-sheba — The southern
border; that is, throughout the
whole country. And brake down
the high places of the gates —
Dedicated to their tutelary
gods, whom their idolatrous
kings, after the manner of the
heathen, owned for the
protectors of their city and
habitations. These places seem
to have been erected at the
gates, in order that all who
entered or went out of the city
might pay some kind of adoration
to them. In the gate of Joshua,
the governor of the city — This
circumstance is mentioned to
show Josiah’s great zeal and
impartiality in rooting out all
monuments of idolatry, without
any respect unto those great
persons who were concerned in
them.
Verse 9
2 Kings 23:9. Nevertheless, the
priests of the high places — Who
had worshipped the true God
there. Came not up to the altar
of the Lord in Jerusalem — Were
not suffered to come thither to
exercise their priestly office,
as a just punishment for their
joining in and contributing to
the corruption of God’s worship,
and the transgression of so
plain and positive a law of God
as that in Deuteronomy 12:11;
which conduct was much worse in
them than in the people, as they
had more knowledge to discern
the will of God, and were under
greater obligations to observe
it. But they did eat of the
unleavened bread — Of the
meat-offerings allotted to the
priests, wherein there was to be
no leaven, (Leviticus 2:4-11,)
and consequently of other
provisions belonging to the
priests, which are comprehended
under this one kind. Thus the
king mixed mercy with severity,
and they were put into the
condition of those priests who
had corporal blemishes,
(Leviticus 21:17-22,) who might
not offer the bread of their
God, but might eat the bread of
their God, both of the most holy
and the holy: they were shut out
from spiritual services, but
allowed necessary provisions.
Verse 10
2 Kings 23:10. He defiled
Topheth — By throwing different
kinds of filth and dead
carcasses into it, and making it
the burying-place of the city.
Topheth was a place very near
Jerusalem, where was the image
of Molech, to whom some
sacrificed their children,
burning them in the fire, as the
reader may see in the note on
Leviticus 18:21; and to whom
others, as many able
interpreters think, only
dedicated them, by making them
pass between two fires, or by
waving them, or making them jump
over a fire. It is supposed to
be called Topheth, from toph, a
drum; because they beat drums at
the burning of their children,
that their shricks might not be
heard. This place, near
Jerusalem, was also called the
valley of the sons of Hinnom, (2
Chronicles 28:3,) from the
yelling of the sacrificed
infants. Thus Milton calls
Molech: —
Horrid king, besmear’d with
blood
Of human sacrifice, and parents’
tears,
Though for the noise of drums,
and timbrels loud,
Their children’s cries unheard,
that pass’d through fire
To his grim idol. Par. Lost,
book 1. 50:392.
Verse 11
2 Kings 23:11. And he took away
— Hebrew, וישׁבת, va-jashbeth,
he put down, or made to cease;
the horses that the kings of
Judah had given to the sun —
That is, had consecrated to the
sun. It appears, by the
testimony of many authors, that
among several nations horses
were dedicated to the sun, as
hawks and some other creatures
were, because of the swiftness
of their motions. Thus the
ancient Persians consecrated
white horses and chariots to the
sun, as Xenophon testifies, and
with them were wont to adorn
their processions. See Hyde’s
Relig. Ver. Persar. “We can see
no reason, therefore,” says Dr.
Dodd, referring to the Universal
Hist. and Boch. Hieroz., “why so
many learned commentators should
scruple to suppose that the Jews
had adopted this, among other
far worse heathenish idolatries;
especially considering how soon
the Prophet Amos, and from him
St. Stephen, charged them with
having carried about the
tabernacle of Molech, or the
sun, and the star of their god
Remphan. What convinces us
further that these were real
chariots, drawn by horses, and
bearing some image of the sun,
is, that the text expressly
says, that Josiah did not burn
the chariots and horses, as he
would have done if they had been
only carved and painted, but
that he took away the horses,
and burned the chariots. Bochart
supposes that these horses and
chariots were designed to carry
the king and his great officers
out at the east gate of the city
every morning, to salute and
adore the sun, at his coming
above the horizon, according to
the custom of the Persian
idolaters.” At the entering in
of the house of the Lord — By
the gate of the outward court of
the temple. By the chamber of
the chamberlain — Or officer, to
whom the care of these horses
was committed. Which was in the
suburbs — Of the temple; in
certain outward buildings
belonging to the temple. Was it
to defy or affront the Lord,
that they thus brought the
objects and instruments of their
various idolatries as near as
possible to his house, and some
of them even into the courts of
it?
Verse 12
2 Kings 23:12. The altars on the
top of the upper chamber, &c. —
“Read,” says Mr. Locke, “the
altars on the house-top.”
According to Jeremiah, chap.
Jeremiah 32:29, they were so mad
upon their idols, that they were
not content with their numerous
public high places and altars,
but made others upon their
house-tops for the worship of
Baal and others of their false
gods. And the altars which
Manasseh had made in the two
courts, &c. — We learn from 2
Chronicles 33:13-15, that when
Manasseh repented he took away
all the altars he had built in
the mount of the house of the
Lord, and in Jerusalem; and it
is probable those in the court
of the priests, and in that of
the people, were then removed;
but, it seems, Amon set them up
again in the very place where
Manasseh had erected them, and
therefore they are here called
his altars. And cast the dust of
them into the brook Kidron — To
show his detestation of them,
and to abolish the very
remembrance of them.
Verse 13
2 Kings 23:13. The high places
on the right hand of the mount
of Corruption — That is, the
mount of Olives, (1 Kings 11:7,)
called the mount of Corruption,
for the gross idolatry there
practised. Which Solomon had
builded for Ashtoreth, &c. — Not
the same individual altars;
which, doubtless, either
Solomon, upon his repentance, or
some other of Josiah’s
predecessors, had taken away,
but other altars built by
Manasseh or Amen, which, because
erected by Solomon’s example,
and for the same use, and in the
same place, are called by his
name: this brand is left by the
Holy Ghost upon his name and
memory, as a just punishment of
that abominable practice, and a
means to deter others from the
like. The abomination of the
Zidonians — The idol, so called,
because it was abominable, and
made them abominable to God. Did
the king defile — By dead men’s
bones and other unclean things.
Verse 14
2 Kings 23:14. And filled their
places — The places of the
groves; with the bones of men —
Of the idolatrous priests, which
he caused to be taken out of
their graves, 2 Kings 23:18. As
he carried the ashes of the
images to the graves, to mingle
them with dead men’s bones, so
he carried dead men’s bones to
the places where the images had
been, that both ways idolatry
might be rendered loathsome.
Dead men and dead gods were
indeed much alike, and fittest
to go together.
Verse 15
2 Kings 23:15. The altar that
was at Beth-el he brake down —
Probably this city was now under
the kingdom of Judah, to which
it was added by Abijah long
before this time. And it is
probable, since the ten tribes
were carried away, many cities
had put themselves under the
protection of Judah. The golden
calf, it seems, was gone; but
Josiah would leave no remains of
that idolatry.
Verse 16
2 Kings 23:16. As Josiah turned
himself — His care and zeal were
so great that he would not trust
his officers with these things,
but would see them done with his
own eyes. He spied the
sepulchres that were in the
mount — It is not said whose
sepulchres they were, but it is
probable they were those of the
idolatrous priests, (for, 2
Chronicles 34:5, he is said to
have burned their bones,) and of
the false prophets and great men
who had been instruments to
promote Jeroboam’s idolatry, and
who were so attached to their
altar at Beth-el, that they were
desirous to have their bones
laid near it. And burned them,
&c., according to the word which
the man of God proclaimed — Who
foretold, three hundred and
sixty-two years before, that
these very things should be done
by a king called Josiah, 1 Kings
13:2. God always foresees, and
has sometimes foretold as
certain, that which yet to us
seems most contingent. Of this
we have here a remarkable
instance. No word of God shall
fall to the ground!
Verse 17
2 Kings 23:17. He said, What
title is that that I see? — It
was the custom then, as it is
now, to set up little pillars or
stones by or upon the graves of
the higher sort of men, upon
which the names of the deceased
persons, and some remarkable
passages relating to them, were
engraven. The king observing a
stone or pillar of this kind
more eminent than the rest, with
an inscription upon it not
legible, inquired whose title it
was. And the men of the city
told him — That is, some of the
old inhabitants who had escaped
the captivity; and not any of
those new-comers, whom the king
of Assyria had sent thither. For
these could have given no
account of the ancient history
of the Israelites; neither can
we suppose that the sepulchre
itself, after so many years
standing, could have been
distinguishable, had not some
pious person or other, with an
intent to perpetuate the fact,
taken care to preserve and
repair it. See the note on 1
Kings 13:1.
Verse 18
2 Kings 23:18. He said, Let no
man move his bones — It is
pertinently observed by Joh.
Wolfius, that if pious persons,
in those days, had had the same
opinion about relics which has
long been prevalent in the
Church of Rome, the king would
not have ordered his bones to
remain quiet and undisturbed,
but would have put them into
golden boxes, and carried them
to Jerusalem, to be there
regarded with religious, if not
idolatrous veneration by the
people.
Verse 20
2 Kings 23:20. He slew all the
priests of the high places — By
this relation it appears, that
after the departure of the king
of Assyria, divers of the
Israelites, who had retired to
other parts, and kept themselves
out of the conqueror’s hands,
returned together with their
priests to their own land, and
to their old trade, worshipping
idols; to whom, peradventure,
they ascribed this their
deliverance from that judgment
which Jehovah had brought upon
them. And burned men’s bones
upon them — According to that
famous prophecy, 1 Kings 13:1-2.
Verse 21
2 Kings 23:21. The king
commanded, saying, Keep the
passover, &c. — Having abolished
false worship, he now endeavours
to set up the true worship of
the true God. Thus he differed
greatly from Jehu, who, when he
had destroyed the worship of
Baal, took no heed to walk in
the commandments and ordinances
of God. Josiah considered that
we must not only cease to do
evil, but also learn to do well,
and that the way to keep out all
abominable customs is to keep up
all instituted ordinances. He
therefore commanded all the
people to keep the passover,
which was not only a memorial of
their deliverance out of Egypt,
but a token of their being
dedicated to him who brought
them out, and of their communion
with him. As it is written in
this book of the covenant — This
book which he had found, wherein
is contained the covenant made
between God and Israel, and the
terms of it.
Verse 22
2 Kings 23:22. Surely there was
not holden such a passover, &c.
— Celebrated with such solemn
care, and great preparation, and
numerous sacrifices, and
universal joy of all good men;
which was much the greater,
because of their remembrance of
the former wicked and miserable
times under Manasseh and Amon;
and the good hopes they now had
of the happy establishment of
their nation, and the true
religion; and of the prevention
of God’s judgments denounced
against them. From the days of
the judges — Or, of Samuel, the
last of the judges; as it is
expressed 2 Chronicles 35:18.
None of the kings had taken such
care to prepare themselves, the
priests, and people, and so
accurately to observe all the
rites, and diligently to purge
out all uncleanness, and to
renew their covenant with God.
And undoubtedly God was pleased
to recompense their zeal in
destroying idolatry, with
uncommon tokens of his presence
and favour. All this concurred
to make it such a passover as
had not been even in the days of
Hezekiah. For in his passover
many communicated who were not
cleansed according to the
purification of the sanctuary,
and the Levites were permitted
to do the work of the priests.
Verse 24
2 Kings 23:24. Workers with
familiar spirits, and wizards —
Of which see notes on
Deuteronomy 18:10-11; Leviticus
19:31; and Leviticus 20:27. And
the images — Hebrew, the
teraphim, images which were very
ancient among idolaters. And
idols — Other kinds of images.
And all the abominations that
were spied — All the instruments
and monuments of idolatry that
were discovered, were destroyed
as God had commanded; not only
such as were in the place of
worship, but such as their
priests or zealots had removed,
and endeavoured to hide.
Verse 25
2 Kings 23:25. Like unto him was
there no king before him — For
his diligent study in God’s law,
and his exact care, and
unwearied industry, and fervent
zeal, in rooting out idolaters,
and all kinds and appearances of
idolatry, not only in Judah, but
in Israel also; and in the
establishment of the true
religion in all his dominions,
and in the conforming of his own
life, and his people’s too, (as
far as he could,) to the holy
law of God: though Hezekiah
might excel him in some
particulars.
Verse 26
2 Kings 23:26. Notwithstanding,
the Lord turned not, &c. —
Because, though the king was
most hearty in his repentance,
and acceptable to God, and
therefore the judgment was
delayed for his time; yet the
people were in general corrupt,
and secretly averse from
Josiah’s pious reformation, as
appears from the complaints of
the prophets, especially
Jeremiah and Zephaniah, against
them; and by the following
history, wherein we see, that as
soon as ever Josiah was gone,
his children, and the princes,
and the people, suddenly and
greedily returned to their
former abominations. Because of
all the provocations, &c. — The
sins of Manasseh, and of the men
of his generation, who concurred
with him in his idolatrous and
cruel practices, are justly
punished in this generation:
because of God’s sovereign right
of punishing sinners when he
sees fit; because of that public
declaration of God, that he
would visit the iniquity of the
fathers upon the children; and
principally, because these men
had never sincerely repented of
their own nor of their fathers’
sins.
Verse 27
2 Kings 23:27. I will cast off
this city, and the house of
which I said, My name shall be
there — God promised upon
conditions, in sundry places
expressed, that his name should
be there. These conditions they
broke, and therefore God justly
made them to know his breach of
promise.
Verse 29
2 Kings 23:29. In his days
Pharaoh-nechoh, king of Egypt,
went up, &c. — According to
Herodotus, Nechoh was the proper
name of this monarch, Pharaoh
being the general name of all
their kings, as has been before
observed in these notes. He
tells us he was the son and
successor of Psammeticus, king
of Egypt, and a man of a bold
and enterprising spirit; that he
made an attempt to join the Nile
and the Red sea, by drawing a
canal from the one to the other;
that, though he failed in this
design, yet, by sending a fleet
from the Red sea, through the
straits of Babelmandel, he
discovered the coast of Africa,
and in this expedition to the
Euphrates, intended to destroy
the united force of the
Babylonians and Medes, and
thereby to obtain the whole
monarchy of Asia. See Prideaux’s
Connect., and Calmet’s Dict.
Went up against the king of
Assyria — The king of Babylon,
who, having formerly rebelled
against the Assyrian, had now
conquered him, as appears by the
course of the sacred, and the
concurrence of profane history;
and therefore is here and
elsewhere called the Assyrian,
and the king of Assyria, because
now he was the head of that
empire. To the river Euphrates —
Against Carchemish by Euphrates,
as it is expressed 2 Chronicles
35:20, which the Assyrian had
taken from Pharaoh’s
confederates, who therefore
sends forces against the
Assyrian, that he might both
help them and secure himself.
Josiah went against him — Either
to defend his own country from
Pharaoh’s incursions, or to
assist the king of Babylon, with
whom he seems to have been in
league. And he slew him at
Megiddo — Gave him his
death-wound there, though he
died not till he came to
Jerusalem. When he had seen him
— When he fought with him, or in
the first onset. Megiddo was a
city in the half-tribe of
Manasseh, not far from the
Mediterranean sea. It does not
appear that Josiah had any clear
call to engage in this war;
possibly he received his
death-wound as a punishment of
his rashness. Mr. Locke,
however, observes, that from the
time of the carrying away of
Manasseh, the kings of Judah
were under the protection of the
Babylonians; and that Josiah,
being most piously observant of
his faith, would not grant a
passage to this enemy of the
king of Babylon, and therefore
went against him.
Verse 30
2 Kings 23:30. His servants
carried him in a chariot dead
from Megiddo — That is, mortally
wounded, as in the former verse;
and, as we commonly say of a
sick man, past hopes of
recovery, that he is a dead man.
Instead of dead, Houbigant reads
dying. The people took Jehoahaz,
and made him king — Who was
younger than Jehoiakim, yet
preferred by the people before
the elder brother; either
because Jehoiakim refused the
kingdom for fear of Pharaoh,
whom he knew he should hereby
provoke; or, because Jehoahaz
was the more stout and warlike
prince: whence he is called a
lion, Ezekiel 19:3. And anointed
him — Which ceremony was used
because this was a troublesome
time, and he was not the right
heir to the crown, and therefore
needed this solemn rite of
confirmation, which Solomon had
in the same circumstances.
Verse 32
2 Kings 23:32. He did evil,
according to all that his
fathers had done — That is, his
grand-parents, Manasseh and
Amon. He restored that idolatry
which his father had destroyed.
Jerusalem saw not a good day
after Josiah was laid in his
grave; but one trouble came
after another, till, within two
and twenty years, it was
destroyed.
Verse 33
2 Kings 23:33. Pharaoh-nechoh
put him in bands — Either
because he presumed to take the
kingdom without his consent; or,
because he renewed the war
against Egypt. At Riblah — An
eminent city in Syria, where
Pharaoh now was, that he might
finish or make good his
conquests, and whither Jehoahaz
was carried to receive his
sentence. That he might not
reign — Or, because he had
reigned, that is, taken the
kingdom without right, and
without his leave. And put the
land to a tribute — Namely, an
annual tribute, whereby they
should acknowledge him to be
their superior, and for which he
would be their protector when
they needed his help.
Verse 34
2 Kings 23:34. Pharaoh-nechoh
made Eliakim king — Whom he
probably perceived to be of a
more mild and peaceable
disposition. And turned his name
to Jehoiakim — It was usual for
conquerors to change the names
of the persons they vanquished
in war, in testimony of their
absolute power over them. Thus
we find the king of Babylon
changing the name Mattaniah into
Zedekiah, when he constituted
him king of Judah, chap. 2 Kings
24:17. Archbishop Usher further
remarks, that the king of Egypt
gave Eliakim the name of
Jehoiakim, which signifies, God
hath made, or shall make it to
prosper; thereby to testify,
that he ascribed his victory
over the Babylonians to Jehovah,
the God of Israel, who had
excited him, as he pretended, (2
Chronicles 35:21,) to undertake
the expedition. And took
Jehoahaz away — That he might
give no disturbance to his
brother, and also probably as a
punishment for him. And he came
to Egypt, and died there —
According to the prophecy of
Jeremiah, whom God sent to call
this new king and the people to
repentance. See Jeremiah 22:1-3;
Jeremiah 22:10; Jeremiah 22:12.
Verse 37
2 Kings 23:37. He did that which
was evil, &c. — By idolatry, the
oppression of his people, and
the persecution of the prophets
and other good men. For he
killed the Prophet Urijah, and
was at the charge to fetch him
out of Egypt, whither he fled to
save his life, Jeremiah
26:20-21, &c. And if it had not
been for Ahikam, the son of
Shaphan, who had been a great
man in his father Josiah’s
courts, he would have served
Jeremiah in the same manner, 2
Kings 23:24. And from hence it
is evident, that the reformation
of the people, in general, was
not sincere in the time of
Josiah, but that they dissembled
in obedience to the king’s
command; otherwise it cannot be
supposed that this young king
would have immediately set at
naught, and gone directly
contrary to, all his father had
done: but, Josiah being dead, it
is likely the people threw off
their mask, and showed how
vehemently they were inclined to
idolatry, and this young king
was thereby soon induced to join
with them in it. |