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2
Kings 1 |
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After Ahab's
death, Moab rebelled against Israel. {2} Now Ahaziah had fallen through
the lattice of his upper room in Samaria and injured himself. So he sent
messengers, saying to them, "Go and consult Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron,
to see if I will recover from this injury." {3} But the angel of the
LORD said to Elijah the Tishbite, "Go up and meet the messengers of the
king of Samaria and ask them, 'Is it because there is no God in Israel
that you are going off to consult Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron?' {4}
Therefore this is what the LORD says: 'You will not leave the bed you
are lying on. You will certainly die!'" So Elijah went. {5} When the
messengers returned to the king, he asked them, "Why have you come
back?" {6} "A man came to meet us," they replied. "And he said to us,
'Go back to the king who sent you and tell him, "This is what the LORD
says: Is it because there is no God in Israel that you are sending men
to consult Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron? Therefore you will not leave
the bed you are lying on. You will certainly die!"'" {7} The king asked
them, "What kind of man was it who came to meet you and told you this?"
{8} They replied, "He was a man with a garment of hair and with a
leather belt around his waist." The king said, "That was Elijah the
Tishbite." {9} Then he sent to Elijah a captain with his company of
fifty men. The captain went up to Elijah, who was sitting on the top of
a hill, and said to him, "Man of God, the king says, 'Come down!'" {10}
Elijah answered the captain, "If I am a man of God, may fire come down
from heaven and consume you and your fifty men!" Then fire fell from
heaven and consumed the captain and his men. {11} At this the king sent
to Elijah another captain with his fifty men. The captain said to him,
"Man of God, this is what the king says, 'Come down at once!'" {12} "If
I am a man of God," Elijah replied, "may fire come down from heaven and
consume you and your fifty men!" Then the fire of God fell from heaven
and consumed him and his fifty men. {13} So the king sent a third
captain with his fifty men. This third captain went up and fell on his
knees before Elijah. "Man of God," he begged, "please have respect for
my life and the lives of these fifty men, your servants! {14} See, fire
has fallen from heaven and consumed the first two captains and all their
men. But now have respect for my life!" {15} The angel of the LORD said
to Elijah, "Go down with him; do not be afraid of him." So Elijah got up
and went down with him to the king. {16} He told the king, "This is what
the LORD says: Is it because there is no God in Israel for you to
consult that you have sent messengers to consult Baal-Zebub, the god of
Ekron? Because you have done this, you will never leave the bed you are
lying on. You will certainly die!" {17} So he died, according to the
word of the LORD that Elijah had spoken. Because Ahaziah had no son,
Joram succeeded him as king in the second year of Jehoram son of
Jehoshaphat king of Judah. {18} As for all the other events of Ahaziah's
reign, and what he did, are they not written in the book of the annals
of the kings of Israel? |
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2 Kings 2 |
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When the LORD was
about to take Elijah up to heaven in a whirlwind, Elijah and Elisha were
on their way from Gilgal. {2} Elijah said to Elisha, "Stay here; the
LORD has sent me to Bethel." But Elisha said, "As surely as the LORD
lives and as you live, I will not leave you." So they went down to
Bethel. {3} The company of the prophets at Bethel came out to Elisha and
asked, "Do you know that the LORD is going to take your master from you
today?" "Yes, I know," Elisha replied, "but do not speak of it." {4}
Then Elijah said to him, "Stay here, Elisha; the LORD has sent me to
Jericho." And he replied, "As surely as the LORD lives and as you live,
I will not leave you." So they went to Jericho. {5} The company of the
prophets at Jericho went up to Elisha and asked him, "Do you know that
the LORD is going to take your master from you today?" "Yes, I know," he
replied, "but do not speak of it." {6} Then Elijah said to him, "Stay
here; the LORD has sent me to the Jordan." And he replied, "As surely as
the LORD lives and as you live, I will not leave you." So the two of
them walked on. {7} Fifty men of the company of the prophets went and
stood at a distance, facing the place where Elijah and Elisha had
stopped at the Jordan. {8} Elijah took his cloak, rolled it up and
struck the water with it. The water divided to the right and to the
left, and the two of them crossed over on dry ground. {9} When they had
crossed, Elijah said to Elisha, "Tell me, what can I do for you before I
am taken from you?" "Let me inherit a double portion of your spirit,"
Elisha replied. {10} "You have asked a difficult thing," Elijah said,
"yet if you see me when I am taken from you, it will be yours--otherwise
not." {11} As they were walking along and talking together, suddenly a
chariot of fire and horses of fire appeared and separated the two of
them, and Elijah went up to heaven in a whirlwind. {12} Elisha saw this
and cried out, "My father! My father! The chariots and horsemen of
Israel!" And Elisha saw him no more. Then he took hold of his own
clothes and tore them apart. {13} He picked up the cloak that had fallen
from Elijah and went back and stood on the bank of the Jordan. {14} Then
he took the cloak that had fallen from him and struck the water with it.
"Where now is the LORD, the God of Elijah?" he asked. When he struck the
water, it divided to the right and to the left, and he crossed over.
{15} The company of the prophets from Jericho, who were watching, said,
"The spirit of Elijah is resting on Elisha." And they went to meet him
and bowed to the ground before him. {16} "Look," they said, "we your
servants have fifty able men. Let them go and look for your master.
Perhaps the Spirit of the LORD has picked him up and set him down on
some mountain or in some valley." "No," Elisha replied, "do not send
them." {17} But they persisted until he was too ashamed to refuse. So he
said, "Send them." And they sent fifty men, who searched for three days
but did not find him. {18} When they returned to Elisha, who was staying
in Jericho, he said to them, "Didn't I tell you not to go?" {19} The men
of the city said to Elisha, "Look, our lord, this town is well situated,
as you can see, but the water is bad and the land is unproductive." {20}
"Bring me a new bowl," he said, "and put salt in it." So they brought it
to him. {21} Then he went out to the spring and threw the salt into it,
saying, "This is what the LORD says: 'I have healed this water. Never
again will it cause death or make the land unproductive.'" {22} And the
water has remained wholesome to this day, according to the word Elisha
had spoken. {23} From there Elisha went up to Bethel. As he was walking
along the road, some youths came out of the town and jeered at him. "Go
on up, you baldhead!" they said. "Go on up, you baldhead!" {24} He
turned around, looked at them and called down a curse on them in the
name of the LORD. Then two bears came out of the woods and mauled
forty-two of the youths. {25} And he went on to Mount Carmel and from
there returned to Samaria. |
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2 Kings 3 |
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Joram son of Ahab
became king of Israel in Samaria in the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat
king of Judah, and he reigned twelve years. {2} He did evil in the eyes
of the LORD, but not as his father and mother had done. He got rid of
the sacred stone of Baal that his father had made. {3} Nevertheless he
clung to the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel
to commit; he did not turn away from them. {4} Now Mesha king of Moab
raised sheep, and he had to supply the king of Israel with a hundred
thousand lambs and with the wool of a hundred thousand rams. {5} But
after Ahab died, the king of Moab rebelled against the king of Israel.
{6} So at that time King Joram set out from Samaria and mobilised all
Israel. {7} He also sent this message to Jehoshaphat king of Judah: "The
king of Moab has rebelled against me. Will you go with me to fight
against Moab?" "I will go with you," he replied. "I am as you are, my
people as your people, my horses as your horses." {8} "By what route
shall we attack?" he asked. "Through the Desert of Edom," he answered.
{9} So the king of Israel set out with the king of Judah and the king of
Edom. After a roundabout march of seven days, the army had no more water
for themselves or for the animals with them. {10} "What!" exclaimed the
king of Israel. "Has the LORD called us three kings together only to
hand us over to Moab?" {11} But Jehoshaphat asked, "Is there no prophet
of the LORD here, that we may inquire of the LORD through him?" An
officer of the king of Israel answered, "Elisha son of Shaphat is here.
He used to pour water on the hands of Elijah." {12} Jehoshaphat said,
"The word of the LORD is with him." So the king of Israel and
Jehoshaphat and the king of Edom went down to him. {13} Elisha said to
the king of Israel, "What do we have to do with each other? Go to the
prophets of your father and the prophets of your mother." "No," the king
of Israel answered, "because it was the LORD who called us three kings
together to hand us over to Moab." {14} Elisha said, "As surely as the
LORD Almighty lives, whom I serve, if I did not have respect for the
presence of Jehoshaphat king of Judah, I would not look at you or even
notice you. {15} But now bring me a harpist." While the harpist was
playing, the hand of the LORD came upon Elisha {16} and he said, "This
is what the LORD says: Make this valley full of ditches. {17} For this
is what the LORD says: You will see neither wind nor rain, yet this
valley will be filled with water, and you, your cattle and your other
animals will drink. {18} This is an easy thing in the eyes of the LORD;
he will also hand Moab over to you. {19} You will overthrow every
fortified city and every major town. You will cut down every good tree,
stop up all the springs, and ruin every good field with stones." {20}
The next morning, about the time for offering the sacrifice, there it
was--water flowing from the direction of Edom! And the land was filled
with water. {21} Now all the Moabites had heard that the kings had come
to fight against them; so every man, young and old, who could bear arms
was called up and stationed on the border. {22} When they got up early
in the morning, the sun was shining on the water. To the Moabites across
the way, the water looked red--like blood. {23} "That's blood!" they
said. "Those kings must have fought and slaughtered each other. Now to
the plunder, Moab!" {24} But when the Moabites came to the camp of
Israel, the Israelites rose up and fought them until they fled. And the
Israelites invaded the land and slaughtered the Moabites. {25} They
destroyed the towns, and each man threw a stone on every good field
until it was covered. They stopped up all the springs and cut down every
good tree. Only Kir Hareseth was left with its stones in place, but men
armed with slings surrounded it and attacked it as well. {26} When the
king of Moab saw that the battle had gone against him, he took with him
seven hundred swordsmen to break through to the king of Edom, but they
failed. {27} Then he took his firstborn son, who was to succeed him as
king, and offered him as a sacrifice on the city wall. The fury against
Israel was great; they withdrew and returned to their own land. |
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2 Kings
4 |
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The wife of a man
from the company of the prophets cried out to Elisha, "Your servant my
husband is dead, and you know that he revered the LORD. But now his
creditor is coming to take my two boys as his slaves." {2} Elisha
replied to her, "How can I help you? Tell me, what do you have in your
house?" "Your servant has nothing there at all," she said, "except a
little oil." {3} Elisha said, "Go around and ask all your neighbors for
empty jars. Don't ask for just a few. {4} Then go inside and shut the
door behind you and your sons. Pour oil into all the jars, and as each
is filled, put it to one side." {5} She left him and afterward shut the
door behind her and her sons. They brought the jars to her and she kept
pouring. {6} When all the jars were full, she said to her son, "Bring me
another one." But he replied, "There is not a jar left." Then the oil
stopped flowing. {7} She went and told the man of God, and he said, "Go,
sell the oil and pay your debts. You and your sons can live on what is
left." {8} One day Elisha went to Shunem. And a well-to-do woman was
there, who urged him to stay for a meal. So whenever he came by, he
stopped there to eat. {9} She said to her husband, "I know that this man
who often comes our way is a holy man of God. {10} Let's make a small
room on the roof and put in it a bed and a table, a chair and a lamp for
him. Then he can stay there whenever he comes to us." {11} One day when
Elisha came, he went up to his room and lay down there. {12} He said to
his servant Gehazi, "Call the Shunammite." So he called her, and she
stood before him. {13} Elisha said to him, "Tell her, 'You have gone to
all this trouble for us. Now what can be done for you? Can we speak on
your behalf to the king or the commander of the army?'" She replied, "I
have a home among my own people." {14} "What can be done for her?"
Elisha asked. Gehazi said, "Well, she has no son and her husband is
old." {15} Then Elisha said, "Call her." So he called her, and she stood
in the doorway. {16} "About this time next year," Elisha said, "you will
hold a son in your arms." "No, my lord," she objected. "Don't mislead
your servant, O man of God!" {17} But the woman became pregnant, and the
next year about that same time she gave birth to a son, just as Elisha
had told her. {18} The child grew, and one day he went out to his
father, who was with the reapers. {19} "My head! My head!" he said to
his father. His father told a servant, "Carry him to his mother." {20}
After the servant had lifted him up and carried him to his mother, the
boy sat on her lap until noon, and then he died. {21} She went up and
laid him on the bed of the man of God, then shut the door and went out.
{22} She called her husband and said, "Please send me one of the
servants and a donkey so I can go to the man of God quickly and return."
{23} "Why go to him today?" he asked. "It's not the New Moon or the
Sabbath." "It's all right," she said. {24} She saddled the donkey and
said to her servant, "Lead on; don't slow down for me unless I tell
you." {25} So she set out and came to the man of God at Mount Carmel.
When he saw her in the distance, the man of God said to his servant
Gehazi, "Look! There's the Shunammite! {26} Run to meet her and ask her,
'Are you all right? Is your husband all right? Is your child all
right?'" "Everything is all right," she said. {27} When she reached the
man of God at the mountain, she took hold of his feet. Gehazi came over
to push her away, but the man of God said, "Leave her alone! She is in
bitter distress, but the LORD has hidden it from me and has not told me
why." {28} "Did I ask you for a son, my lord?" she said. "Didn't I tell
you, 'Don't raise my hopes'?" {29} Elisha said to Gehazi, "Tuck your
cloak into your belt, take my staff in your hand and run. If you meet
anyone, do not greet him, and if anyone greets you, do not answer. Lay
my staff on the boy's face." {30} But the child's mother said, "As
surely as the LORD lives and as you live, I will not leave you." So he
got up and followed her. {31} Gehazi went on ahead and laid the staff on
the boy's face, but there was no sound or response. So Gehazi went back
to meet Elisha and told him, "The boy has not awakened." {32} When
Elisha reached the house, there was the boy lying dead on his couch.
{33} He went in, shut the door on the two of them and prayed to the
LORD. {34} Then he got on the bed and lay upon the boy, mouth to mouth,
eyes to eyes, hands to hands. As he stretched himself out upon him, the
boy's body grew warm. {35} Elisha turned away and walked back and forth
in the room and then got on the bed and stretched out upon him once
more. The boy sneezed seven times and opened his eyes. {36} Elisha
summoned Gehazi and said, "Call the Shunammite." And he did. When she
came, he said, "Take your son." {37} She came in, fell at his feet and
bowed to the ground. Then she took her son and went out. {38} Elisha
returned to Gilgal and there was a famine in that region. While the
company of the prophets was meeting with him, he said to his servant,
"Put on the large pot and cook some stew for these men." {39} One of
them went out into the fields to gather herbs and found a wild vine. He
gathered some of its gourds and filled the fold of his cloak. When he
returned, he cut them up into the pot of stew, though no one knew what
they were. {40} The stew was poured out for the men, but as they began
to eat it, they cried out, "O man of God, there is death in the pot!"
And they could not eat it. {41} Elisha said, "Get some flour." He put it
into the pot and said, "Serve it to the people to eat." And there was
nothing harmful in the pot. {42} A man came from Baal Shalishah,
bringing the man of God twenty loaves of barley bread baked from the
first ripe grain, along with some heads of new grain. "Give it to the
people to eat," Elisha said. {43} "How can I set this before a hundred
men?" his servant asked. But Elisha answered, "Give it to the people to
eat. For this is what the LORD says: 'They will eat and have some left
over.'" {44} Then he set it before them, and they ate and had some left
over, according to the word of the LORD. |
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2 Kings 5 |
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Now Naaman was
commander of the army of the king of Aram. He was a great man in the
sight of his master and highly regarded, because through him the LORD
had given victory to Aram. He was a valiant soldier, but he had leprosy.
{2} Now bands from Aram had gone out and had taken captive a young girl
from Israel, and she served Naaman's wife. {3} She said to her mistress,
"If only my master would see the prophet who is in Samaria! He would
cure him of his leprosy." {4} Naaman went to his master and told him
what the girl from Israel had said. {5} "By all means, go," the king of
Aram replied. "I will send a letter to the king of Israel." So Naaman
left, taking with him ten talents of silver, six thousand shekels of
gold and ten sets of clothing. {6} The letter that he took to the king
of Israel read: "With this letter I am sending my servant Naaman to you
so that you may cure him of his leprosy." {7} As soon as the king of
Israel read the letter, he tore his robes and said, "Am I God? Can I
kill and bring back to life? Why does this fellow send someone to me to
be cured of his leprosy? See how he is trying to pick a quarrel with
me!" {8} When Elisha the man of God heard that the king of Israel had
torn his robes, he sent him this message: "Why have you torn your robes?
Have the man come to me and he will know that there is a prophet in
Israel." {9} So Naaman went with his horses and chariots and stopped at
the door of Elisha's house. {10} Elisha sent a messenger to say to him,
"Go, wash yourself seven times in the Jordan, and your flesh will be
restored and you will be cleansed." {11} But Naaman went away angry and
said, "I thought that he would surely come out to me and stand and call
on the name of the LORD his God, wave his hand over the spot and cure me
of my leprosy. {12} Are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus,
better than any of the waters of Israel? Couldn't I wash in them and be
cleansed?" So he turned and went off in a rage. {13} Naaman's servants
went to him and said, "My father, if the prophet had told you to do some
great thing, would you not have done it? How much more, then, when he
tells you, 'Wash and be cleansed'!" {14} So he went down and dipped
himself in the Jordan seven times, as the man of God had told him, and
his flesh was restored and became clean like that of a young boy. {15}
Then Naaman and all his attendants went back to the man of God. He stood
before him and said, "Now I know that there is no God in all the world
except in Israel. Please accept now a gift from your servant." {16} The
prophet answered, "As surely as the LORD lives, whom I serve, I will not
accept a thing." And even though Naaman urged him, he refused. {17} "If
you will not," said Naaman, "please let me, your servant, be given as
much earth as a pair of mules can carry, for your servant will never
again make burnt offerings and sacrifices to any other god but the LORD.
{18} But may the LORD forgive your servant for this one thing: When my
master enters the temple of Rimmon to bow down and he is leaning on my
arm and I bow there also--when I bow down in the temple of Rimmon, may
the LORD forgive your servant for this." {19} "Go in peace," Elisha
said. After Naaman had traveled some distance, {20} Gehazi, the servant
of Elisha the man of God, said to himself, "My master was too easy on
Naaman, this Aramean, by not accepting from him what he brought. As
surely as the LORD lives, I will run after him and get something from
him." {21} So Gehazi hurried after Naaman. When Naaman saw him running
toward him, he got down from the chariot to meet him. "Is everything all
right?" he asked. {22} "Everything is all right," Gehazi answered. "My
master sent me to say, 'Two young men from the company of the prophets
have just come to me from the hill country of Ephraim. Please give them
a talent of silver and two sets of clothing.'" {23} "By all means, take
two talents," said Naaman. He urged Gehazi to accept them, and then tied
up the two talents of silver in two bags, with two sets of clothing. He
gave them to two of his servants, and they carried them ahead of Gehazi.
{24} When Gehazi came to the hill, he took the things from the servants
and put them away in the house. He sent the men away and they left. {25}
Then he went in and stood before his master Elisha. "Where have you
been, Gehazi?" Elisha asked. "Your servant didn't go anywhere," Gehazi
answered. {26} But Elisha said to him, "Was not my spirit with you when
the man got down from his chariot to meet you? Is this the time to take
money, or to accept clothes, olive groves, vineyards, flocks, herds, or
menservants and maidservants? {27} Naaman's leprosy will cling to you
and to your descendants forever." Then Gehazi went from Elisha's
presence and he was leprous, as white as snow. |
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2 Kings 6 |
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The company of the
prophets said to Elisha, "Look, the place where we meet with you is too
small for us. {2} Let us go to the Jordan, where each of us can get a
pole; and let us build a place there for us to live." And he said, "Go."
{3} Then one of them said, "Won't you please come with your servants?"
"I will," Elisha replied. {4} And he went with them. They went to the
Jordan and began to cut down trees. {5} As one of them was cutting down
a tree, the iron axhead fell into the water. "Oh, my lord," he cried
out, "it was borrowed!" {6} The man of God asked, "Where did it fall?"
When he showed him the place, Elisha cut a stick and threw it there, and
made the iron float. {7} "Lift it out," he said. Then the man reached
out his hand and took it. {8} Now the king of Aram was at war with
Israel. After conferring with his officers, he said, "I will set up my
camp in such and such a place." {9} The man of God sent word to the king
of Israel: "Beware of passing that place, because the Arameans are going
down there." {10} So the king of Israel checked on the place indicated
by the man of God. Time and again Elisha warned the king, so that he was
on his guard in such places. {11} This enraged the king of Aram. He
summoned his officers and demanded of them, "Will you not tell me which
of us is on the side of the king of Israel?" {12} "None of us, my lord
the king," said one of his officers, "but Elisha, the prophet who is in
Israel, tells the king of Israel the very words you speak in your
bedroom." {13} "Go, find out where he is," the king ordered, "so I can
send men and capture him." The report came back: "He is in Dothan." {14}
Then he sent horses and chariots and a strong force there. They went by
night and surrounded the city. {15} When the servant of the man of God
got up and went out early the next morning, an army with horses and
chariots had surrounded the city. "Oh, my lord, what shall we do?" the
servant asked. {16} "Don't be afraid," the prophet answered. "Those who
are with us are more than those who are with them." {17} And Elisha
prayed, "O LORD, open his eyes so he may see." Then the LORD opened the
servant's eyes, and he looked and saw the hills full of horses and
chariots of fire all around Elisha. {18} As the enemy came down toward
him, Elisha prayed to the LORD, "Strike these people with blindness." So
he struck them with blindness, as Elisha had asked. {19} Elisha told
them, "This is not the road and this is not the city. Follow me, and I
will lead you to the man you are looking for." And he led them to
Samaria. {20} After they entered the city, Elisha said, "LORD, open the
eyes of these men so they can see." Then the LORD opened their eyes and
they looked, and there they were, inside Samaria. {21} When the king of
Israel saw them, he asked Elisha, "Shall I kill them, my father? Shall I
kill them?" {22} "Do not kill them," he answered. "Would you kill men
you have captured with your own sword or bow? Set food and water before
them so that they may eat and drink and then go back to their master."
{23} So he prepared a great feast for them, and after they had finished
eating and drinking, he sent them away, and they returned to their
master. So the bands from Aram stopped raiding Israel's territory. {24}
Some time later, Ben-Hadad king of Aram mobilised his entire army and
marched up and laid siege to Samaria. {25} There was a great famine in
the city; the siege lasted so long that a donkey's head sold for eighty
shekels of silver, and a quarter of a cab of seed pods for five shekels.
{26} As the king of Israel was passing by on the wall, a woman cried to
him, "Help me, my lord the king!" {27} The king replied, "If the LORD
does not help you, where can I get help for you? From the threshing
floor? From the winepress?" {28} Then he asked her, "What's the matter?"
She answered, "This woman said to me, 'Give up your son so we may eat
him today, and tomorrow we'll eat my son.' {29} So we cooked my son and
ate him. The next day I said to her, 'Give up your son so we may eat
him,' but she had hidden him." {30} When the king heard the woman's
words, he tore his robes. As he went along the wall, the people looked,
and there, underneath, he had sackcloth on his body. {31} He said, "May
God deal with me, be it ever so severely, if the head of Elisha son of
Shaphat remains on his shoulders today!" {32} Now Elisha was sitting in
his house, and the elders were sitting with him. The king sent a
messenger ahead, but before he arrived, Elisha said to the elders,
"Don't you see how this murderer is sending someone to cut off my head?
Look, when the messenger comes, shut the door and hold it shut against
him. Is not the sound of his master's footsteps behind him?" {33} While
he was still talking to them, the messenger came down to him. And the
king said, "This disaster is from the LORD. Why should I wait for the
LORD any longer?" |
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2 Kings
7 |
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Elisha said, "Hear
the word of the LORD. This is what the LORD says: About this time
tomorrow, a seah of flour will sell for a shekel and two seahs of barley
for a shekel at the gate of Samaria." {2} The officer on whose arm the
king was leaning said to the man of God, "Look, even if the LORD should
open the floodgates of the heavens, could this happen?" "You will see it
with your own eyes," answered Elisha, "but you will not eat any of it!"
{3} Now there were four men with leprosy at the entrance of the city
gate. They said to each other, "Why stay here until we die? {4} If we
say, 'We'll go into the city'--the famine is there, and we will die. And
if we stay here, we will die. So let's go over to the camp of the
Arameans and surrender. If they spare us, we live; if they kill us, then
we die." {5} At dusk they got up and went to the camp of the Arameans.
When they reached the edge of the camp, not a man was there, {6} for the
Lord had caused the Arameans to hear the sound of chariots and horses
and a great army, so that they said to one another, "Look, the king of
Israel has hired the Hittite and Egyptian kings to attack us!" {7} So
they got up and fled in the dusk and abandoned their tents and their
horses and donkeys. They left the camp as it was and ran for their
lives. {8} The men who had leprosy reached the edge of the camp and
entered one of the tents. They ate and drank, and carried away silver,
gold and clothes, and went off and hid them. They returned and entered
another tent and took some things from it and hid them also. {9} Then
they said to each other, "We're not doing right. This is a day of good
news and we are keeping it to ourselves. If we wait until daylight,
punishment will overtake us. Let's go at once and report this to the
royal palace." {10} So they went and called out to the city gatekeepers
and told them, "We went into the Aramean camp and not a man was
there--not a sound of anyone--only tethered horses and donkeys, and the
tents left just as they were." {11} The gatekeepers shouted the news,
and it was reported within the palace. {12} The king got up in the night
and said to his officers, "I will tell you what the Arameans have done
to us. They know we are starving; so they have left the camp to hide in
the countryside, thinking, 'They will surely come out, and then we will
take them alive and get into the city.'" {13} One of his officers
answered, "Have some men take five of the horses that are left in the
city. Their plight will be like that of all the Israelites left
here--yes, they will only be like all these Israelites who are doomed.
So let us send them to find out what happened." {14} So they selected
two chariots with their horses, and the king sent them after the Aramean
army. He commanded the drivers, "Go and find out what has happened."
{15} They followed them as far as the Jordan, and they found the whole
road strewn with the clothing and equipment the Arameans had thrown away
in their headlong flight. So the messengers returned and reported to the
king. {16} Then the people went out and plundered the camp of the
Arameans. So a seah of flour sold for a shekel, and two seahs of barley
sold for a shekel, as the LORD had said. {17} Now the king had put the
officer on whose arm he leaned in charge of the gate, and the people
trampled him in the gateway, and he died, just as the man of God had
foretold when the king came down to his house. {18} It happened as the
man of God had said to the king: "About this time tomorrow, a seah of
flour will sell for a shekel and two seahs of barley for a shekel at the
gate of Samaria." {19} The officer had said to the man of God, "Look,
even if the LORD should open the floodgates of the heavens, could this
happen?" The man of God had replied, "You will see it with your own
eyes, but you will not eat any of it!" {20} And that is exactly what
happened to him, for the people trampled him in the gateway, and he
died. |
|
2 Kings 8 |
|
Now Elisha had
said to the woman whose son he had restored to life, "Go away with your
family and stay for a while wherever you can, because the LORD has
decreed a famine in the land that will last seven years." {2} The woman
proceeded to do as the man of God said. She and her family went away and
stayed in the land of the Philistines seven years. {3} At the end of the
seven years she came back from the land of the Philistines and went to
the king to beg for her house and land. {4} The king was talking to
Gehazi, the servant of the man of God, and had said, "Tell me about all
the great things Elisha has done." {5} Just as Gehazi was telling the
king how Elisha had restored the dead to life, the woman whose son
Elisha had brought back to life came to beg the king for her house and
land. Gehazi said, "This is the woman, my lord the king, and this is her
son whom Elisha restored to life." {6} The king asked the woman about
it, and she told him. Then he assigned an official to her case and said
to him, "Give back everything that belonged to her, including all the
income from her land from the day she left the country until now." {7}
Elisha went to Damascus, and Ben-Hadad king of Aram was ill. When the
king was told, "The man of God has come all the way up here," {8} he
said to Hazael, "Take a gift with you and go to meet the man of God.
Consult the LORD through him; ask him, 'Will I recover from this
illness?'" {9} Hazael went to meet Elisha, taking with him as a gift
forty camel-loads of all the finest wares of Damascus. He went in and
stood before him, and said, "Your son Ben-Hadad king of Aram has sent me
to ask, 'Will I recover from this illness?'" {10} Elisha answered, "Go
and say to him, 'You will certainly recover'; but the LORD has revealed
to me that he will in fact die." {11} He stared at him with a fixed gaze
until Hazael felt ashamed. Then the man of God began to weep. {12} "Why
is my lord weeping?" asked Hazael. "Because I know the harm you will do
to the Israelites," he answered. "You will set fire to their fortified
places, kill their young men with the sword, dash their little children
to the ground, and rip open their pregnant women." {13} Hazael said,
"How could your servant, a mere dog, accomplish such a feat?" "The LORD
has shown me that you will become king of Aram," answered Elisha. {14}
Then Hazael left Elisha and returned to his master. When Ben-Hadad
asked, "What did Elisha say to you?" Hazael replied, "He told me that
you would certainly recover." {15} But the next day he took a thick
cloth, soaked it in water and spread it over the king's face, so that he
died. Then Hazael succeeded him as king. {16} In the fifth year of Joram
son of Ahab king of Israel, when Jehoshaphat was king of Judah, Jehoram
son of Jehoshaphat began his reign as king of Judah. {17} He was
thirty-two years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem
eight years. {18} He walked in the ways of the kings of Israel, as the
house of Ahab had done, for he married a daughter of Ahab. He did evil
in the eyes of the LORD. {19} Nevertheless, for the sake of his servant
David, the LORD was not willing to destroy Judah. He had promised to
maintain a lamp for David and his descendants forever. {20} In the time
of Jehoram, Edom rebelled against Judah and set up its own king. {21} So
Jehoram went to Zair with all his chariots. The Edomites surrounded him
and his chariot commanders, but he rose up and broke through by night;
his army, however, fled back home. {22} To this day Edom has been in
rebellion against Judah. Libnah revolted at the same time. {23} As for
the other events of Jehoram's reign, and all he did, are they not
written in the book of the annals of the kings of Judah? {24} Jehoram
rested with his fathers and was buried with them in the City of David.
And Ahaziah his son succeeded him as king. {25} In the twelfth year of
Joram son of Ahab king of Israel, Ahaziah son of Jehoram king of Judah
began to reign. {26} Ahaziah was twenty-two years old when he became
king, and he reigned in Jerusalem one year. His mother's name was
Athaliah, a granddaughter of Omri king of Israel. {27} He walked in the
ways of the house of Ahab and did evil in the eyes of the LORD, as the
house of Ahab had done, for he was related by marriage to Ahab's family.
{28} Ahaziah went with Joram son of Ahab to war against Hazael king of
Aram at Ramoth Gilead. The Arameans wounded Joram; {29} so King Joram
returned to Jezreel to recover from the wounds the Arameans had
inflicted on him at Ramoth in his battle with Hazael king of Aram. Then
Ahaziah son of Jehoram king of Judah went down to Jezreel to see Joram
son of Ahab, because he had been wounded. |
|
2 Kings 9 |
|
The prophet Elisha
summoned a man from the company of the prophets and said to him, "Tuck
your cloak into your belt, take this flask of oil with you and go to
Ramoth Gilead. {2} When you get there, look for Jehu son of Jehoshaphat,
the son of Nimshi. Go to him, get him away from his companions and take
him into an inner room. {3} Then take the flask and pour the oil on his
head and declare, 'This is what the LORD says: I anoint you king over
Israel.' Then open the door and run; don't delay!" {4} So the young man,
the prophet, went to Ramoth Gilead. {5} When he arrived, he found the
army officers sitting together. "I have a message for you, commander,"
he said. "For which of us?" asked Jehu. "For you, commander," he
replied. {6} Jehu got up and went into the house. Then the prophet
poured the oil on Jehu's head and declared, "This is what the LORD, the
God of Israel, says: 'I anoint you king over the Lord's people Israel.
{7} You are to destroy the house of Ahab your master, and I will avenge
the blood of my servants the prophets and the blood of all the Lord's
servants shed by Jezebel. {8} The whole house of Ahab will perish. I
will cut off from Ahab every last male in Israel--slave or free. {9} I
will make the house of Ahab like the house of Jeroboam son of Nebat and
like the house of Baasha son of Ahijah. {10} As for Jezebel, dogs will
devour her on the plot of ground at Jezreel, and no one will bury her.'"
Then he opened the door and ran. {11} When Jehu went out to his fellow
officers, one of them asked him, "Is everything all right? Why did this
madman come to you?" "You know the man and the sort of things he says,"
Jehu replied. {12} "That's not true!" they said. "Tell us." Jehu said,
"Here is what he told me: 'This is what the LORD says: I anoint you king
over Israel.'" {13} They hurried and took their cloaks and spread them
under him on the bare steps. Then they blew the trumpet and shouted, "Jehu
is king!" {14} So Jehu son of Jehoshaphat, the son of Nimshi, conspired
against Joram. (Now Joram and all Israel had been defending Ramoth
Gilead against Hazael king of Aram, {15} but King Joram had returned to
Jezreel to recover from the wounds the Arameans had inflicted on him in
the battle with Hazael king of Aram.) Jehu said, "If this is the way you
feel, don't let anyone slip out of the city to go and tell the news in
Jezreel." {16} Then he got into his chariot and rode to Jezreel, because
Joram was resting there and Ahaziah king of Judah had gone down to see
him. {17} When the lookout standing on the tower in Jezreel saw Jehu's
troops approaching, he called out, "I see some troops coming." "Get a
horseman," Joram ordered. "Send him to meet them and ask, 'Do you come
in peace?'" {18} The horseman rode off to meet Jehu and said, "This is
what the king says: 'Do you come in peace?'" "What do you have to do
with peace?" Jehu replied. "Fall in behind me." The lookout reported,
"The messenger has reached them, but he isn't coming back." {19} So the
king sent out a second horseman. When he came to them he said, "This is
what the king says: 'Do you come in peace?'" Jehu replied, "What do you
have to do with peace? Fall in behind me." {20} The lookout reported,
"He has reached them, but he isn't coming back either. The driving is
like that of Jehu son of Nimshi--he drives like a madman." {21} "Hitch
up my chariot," Joram ordered. And when it was hitched up, Joram king of
Israel and Ahaziah king of Judah rode out, each in his own chariot, to
meet Jehu. They met him at the plot of ground that had belonged to
Naboth the Jezreelite. {22} When Joram saw Jehu he asked, "Have you come
in peace, Jehu?" "How can there be peace," Jehu replied, "as long as all
the idolatry and witchcraft of your mother Jezebel abound?" {23} Joram
turned about and fled, calling out to Ahaziah, "Treachery, Ahaziah!"
{24} Then Jehu drew his bow and shot Joram between the shoulders. The
arrow pierced his heart and he slumped down in his chariot. {25} Jehu
said to Bidkar, his chariot officer, "Pick him up and throw him on the
field that belonged to Naboth the Jezreelite. Remember how you and I
were riding together in chariots behind Ahab his father when the LORD
made this prophecy about him: {26} 'Yesterday I saw the blood of Naboth
and the blood of his sons, declares the LORD, and I will surely make you
pay for it on this plot of ground, declares the LORD.' Now then, pick
him up and throw him on that plot, in accordance with the word of the
LORD." {27} When Ahaziah king of Judah saw what had happened, he fled up
the road to Beth Haggan. Jehu chased him, shouting, "Kill him too!" They
wounded him in his chariot on the way up to Gur near Ibleam, but he
escaped to Megiddo and died there. {28} His servants took him by chariot
to Jerusalem and buried him with his fathers in his tomb in the City of
David. {29} (In the eleventh year of Joram son of Ahab, Ahaziah had
become king of Judah.) {30} Then Jehu went to Jezreel. When Jezebel
heard about it, she painted her eyes, arranged her hair and looked out
of a window. {31} As Jehu entered the gate, she asked, "Have you come in
peace, Zimri, you murderer of your master?" {32} He looked up at the
window and called out, "Who is on my side? Who?" Two or three eunuchs
looked down at him. {33} "Throw her down!" Jehu said. So they threw her
down, and some of her blood spattered the wall and the horses as they
trampled her underfoot. {34} Jehu went in and ate and drank. "Take care
of that cursed woman," he said, "and bury her, for she was a king's
daughter." {35} But when they went out to bury her, they found nothing
except her skull, her feet and her hands. {36} They went back and told
Jehu, who said, "This is the word of the LORD that he spoke through his
servant Elijah the Tishbite: On the plot of ground at Jezreel dogs will
devour Jezebel's flesh. {37} Jezebel's body will be like refuse on the
ground in the plot at Jezreel, so that no one will be able to say, 'This
is Jezebel.'" |
|
2 Kings 10 |
|
Now there were in
Samaria seventy sons of the house of Ahab. So Jehu wrote letters and
sent them to Samaria: to the officials of Jezreel, to the elders and to
the guardians of Ahab's children. He said, {2} "As soon as this letter
reaches you, since your master's sons are with you and you have chariots
and horses, a fortified city and weapons, {3} choose the best and most
worthy of your master's sons and set him on his father's throne. Then
fight for your master's house." {4} But they were terrified and said,
"If two kings could not resist him, how can we?" {5} So the palace
administrator, the city governor, the elders and the guardians sent this
message to Jehu: "We are your servants and we will do anything you say.
We will not appoint anyone as king; you do whatever you think best." {6}
Then Jehu wrote them a second letter, saying, "If you are on my side and
will obey me, take the heads of your master's sons and come to me in
Jezreel by this time tomorrow." Now the royal princes, seventy of them,
were with the leading men of the city, who were rearing them. {7} When
the letter arrived, these men took the princes and slaughtered all
seventy of them. They put their heads in baskets and sent them to Jehu
in Jezreel. {8} When the messenger arrived, he told Jehu, "They have
brought the heads of the princes." Then Jehu ordered, "Put them in two
piles at the entrance of the city gate until morning." {9} The next
morning Jehu went out. He stood before all the people and said, "You are
innocent. It was I who conspired against my master and killed him, but
who killed all these? {10} Know then, that not a word the LORD has
spoken against the house of Ahab will fail. The LORD has done what he
promised through his servant Elijah." {11} So Jehu killed everyone in
Jezreel who remained of the house of Ahab, as well as all his chief men,
his close friends and his priests, leaving him no survivor. {12} Jehu
then set out and went toward Samaria. At Beth Eked of the Shepherds,
{13} he met some relatives of Ahaziah king of Judah and asked, "Who are
you?" They said, "We are relatives of Ahaziah, and we have come down to
greet the families of the king and of the queen mother." {14} "Take them
alive!" he ordered. So they took them alive and slaughtered them by the
well of Beth Eked--forty-two men. He left no survivor. {15} After he
left there, he came upon Jehonadab son of Recab, who was on his way to
meet him. Jehu greeted him and said, "Are you in accord with me, as I am
with you?" "I am," Jehonadab answered. "If so," said Jehu, "give me your
hand." So he did, and Jehu helped him up into the chariot. {16} Jehu
said, "Come with me and see my zeal for the LORD." Then he had him ride
along in his chariot. {17} When Jehu came to Samaria, he killed all who
were left there of Ahab's family; he destroyed them, according to the
word of the LORD spoken to Elijah. {18} Then Jehu brought all the people
together and said to them, "Ahab served Baal a little; Jehu will serve
him much. {19} Now summon all the prophets of Baal, all his ministers
and all his priests. See that no one is missing, because I am going to
hold a great sacrifice for Baal. Anyone who fails to come will no longer
live." But Jehu was acting deceptively in order to destroy the ministers
of Baal. {20} Jehu said, "Call an assembly in honor of Baal." So they
proclaimed it. {21} Then he sent word throughout Israel, and all the
ministers of Baal came; not one stayed away. They crowded into the
temple of Baal until it was full from one end to the other. {22} And
Jehu said to the keeper of the wardrobe, "Bring robes for all the
ministers of Baal." So he brought out robes for them. {23} Then Jehu and
Jehonadab son of Recab went into the temple of Baal. Jehu said to the
ministers of Baal, "Look around and see that no servants of the LORD are
here with you--only ministers of Baal." {24} So they went in to make
sacrifices and burnt offerings. Now Jehu had posted eighty men outside
with this warning: "If one of you lets any of the men I am placing in
your hands escape, it will be your life for his life." {25} As soon as
Jehu had finished making the burnt offering, he ordered the guards and
officers: "Go in and kill them; let no one escape." So they cut them
down with the sword. The guards and officers threw the bodies out and
then entered the inner shrine of the temple of Baal. {26} They brought
the sacred stone out of the temple of Baal and burned it. {27} They
demolished the sacred stone of Baal and tore down the temple of Baal,
and people have used it for a latrine to this day. {28} So Jehu
destroyed Baal worship in Israel. {29} However, he did not turn away
from the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel to
commit--the worship of the golden calves at Bethel and Dan. {30} The
LORD said to Jehu, "Because you have done well in accomplishing what is
right in my eyes and have done to the house of Ahab all I had in mind to
do, your descendants will sit on the throne of Israel to the fourth
generation." {31} Yet Jehu was not careful to keep the law of the LORD,
the God of Israel, with all his heart. He did not turn away from the
sins of Jeroboam, which he had caused Israel to commit. {32} In those
days the LORD began to reduce the size of Israel. Hazael overpowered the
Israelites throughout their territory {33} east of the Jordan in all the
land of Gilead (the region of Gad, Reuben and Manasseh), from Aroer by
the Arnon Gorge through Gilead to Bashan. {34} As for the other events
of Jehu's reign, all he did, and all his achievements, are they not
written in the book of the annals of the kings of Israel? {35} Jehu
rested with his fathers and was buried in Samaria. And Jehoahaz his son
succeeded him as king. {36} The time that Jehu reigned over Israel in
Samaria was twenty-eight years. |
|
2 Kings 11 |
|
When Athaliah the
mother of Ahaziah saw that her son was dead, she proceeded to destroy
the whole royal family. {2} But Jehosheba, the daughter of King Jehoram
and sister of Ahaziah, took Joash son of Ahaziah and stole him away from
among the royal princes, who were about to be murdered. She put him and
his nurse in a bedroom to hide him from Athaliah; so he was not killed.
{3} He remained hidden with his nurse at the temple of the LORD for six
years while Athaliah ruled the land. {4} In the seventh year Jehoiada
sent for the commanders of units of a hundred, the Carites and the
guards and had them brought to him at the temple of the LORD. He made a
covenant with them and put them under oath at the temple of the LORD.
Then he showed them the king's son. {5} He commanded them, saying, "This
is what you are to do: You who are in the three companies that are going
on duty on the Sabbath--a third of you guarding the royal palace, {6} a
third at the Sur Gate, and a third at the gate behind the guard, who
take turns guarding the temple-- {7} and you who are in the other two
companies that normally go off Sabbath duty are all to guard the temple
for the king. {8} Station yourselves around the king, each man with his
weapon in his hand. Anyone who approaches your ranks must be put to
death. Stay close to the king wherever he goes." {9} The commanders of
units of a hundred did just as Jehoiada the priest ordered. Each one
took his men--those who were going on duty on the Sabbath and those who
were going off duty--and came to Jehoiada the priest. {10} Then he gave
the commanders the spears and shields that had belonged to King David
and that were in the temple of the LORD. {11} The guards, each with his
weapon in his hand, stationed themselves around the king--near the altar
and the temple, from the south side to the north side of the temple.
{12} Jehoiada brought out the king's son and put the crown on him; he
presented him with a copy of the covenant and proclaimed him king. They
anointed him, and the people clapped their hands and shouted, "Long live
the king!" {13} When Athaliah heard the noise made by the guards and the
people, she went to the people at the temple of the LORD. {14} She
looked and there was the king, standing by the pillar, as the custom
was. The officers and the trumpeters were beside the king, and all the
people of the land were rejoicing and blowing trumpets. Then Athaliah
tore her robes and called out, "Treason! Treason!" {15} Jehoiada the
priest ordered the commanders of units of a hundred, who were in charge
of the troops: "Bring her out between the ranks and put to the sword
anyone who follows her." For the priest had said, "She must not be put
to death in the temple of the LORD." {16} So they seized her as she
reached the place where the horses enter the palace grounds, and there
she was put to death. {17} Jehoiada then made a covenant between the
LORD and the king and people that they would be the Lord's people. He
also made a covenant between the king and the people. {18} All the
people of the land went to the temple of Baal and tore it down. They
smashed the altars and idols to pieces and killed Mattan the priest of
Baal in front of the altars. Then Jehoiada the priest posted guards at
the temple of the LORD. {19} He took with him the commanders of
hundreds, the Carites, the guards and all the people of the land, and
together they brought the king down from the temple of the LORD and went
into the palace, entering by way of the gate of the guards. The king
then took his place on the royal throne, {20} and all the people of the
land rejoiced. And the city was quiet, because Athaliah had been slain
with the sword at the palace. {21} Joash was seven years old when he
began to reign. |
|
2 Kings 12 |
|
In the seventh
year of Jehu, Joash became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem forty
years. His mother's name was Zibiah; she was from Beersheba. {2} Joash
did what was right in the eyes of the LORD all the years Jehoiada the
priest instructed him. {3} The high places, however, were not removed;
the people continued to offer sacrifices and burn incense there. {4}
Joash said to the priests, "Collect all the money that is brought as
sacred offerings to the temple of the LORD--the money collected in the
census, the money received from personal vows and the money brought
voluntarily to the temple. {5} Let every priest receive the money from
one of the treasurers, and let it be used to repair whatever damage is
found in the temple." {6} But by the twenty-third year of King Joash the
priests still had not repaired the temple. {7} Therefore King Joash
summoned Jehoiada the priest and the other priests and asked them, "Why
aren't you repairing the damage done to the temple? Take no more money
from your treasurers, but hand it over for repairing the temple." {8}
The priests agreed that they would not collect any more money from the
people and that they would not repair the temple themselves. {9}
Jehoiada the priest took a chest and bored a hole in its lid. He placed
it beside the altar, on the right side as one enters the temple of the
LORD. The priests who guarded the entrance put into the chest all the
money that was brought to the temple of the LORD. {10} Whenever they saw
that there was a large amount of money in the chest, the royal secretary
and the high priest came, counted the money that had been brought into
the temple of the LORD and put it into bags. {11} When the amount had
been determined, they gave the money to the men appointed to supervise
the work on the temple. With it they paid those who worked on the temple
of the LORD--the carpenters and builders, {12} the masons and
stonecutters. They purchased timber and dressed stone for the repair of
the temple of the LORD, and met all the other expenses of restoring the
temple. {13} The money brought into the temple was not spent for making
silver basins, wick trimmers, sprinkling bowls, trumpets or any other
articles of gold or silver for the temple of the LORD; {14} it was paid
to the workmen, who used it to repair the temple. {15} They did not
require an accounting from those to whom they gave the money to pay the
workers, because they acted with complete honesty. {16} The money from
the guilt offerings and sin offerings was not brought into the temple of
the LORD; it belonged to the priests. {17} About this time Hazael king
of Aram went up and attacked Gath and captured it. Then he turned to
attack Jerusalem. {18} But Joash king of Judah took all the sacred
objects dedicated by his fathers--Jehoshaphat, Jehoram and Ahaziah, the
kings of Judah--and the gifts he himself had dedicated and all the gold
found in the treasuries of the temple of the LORD and of the royal
palace, and he sent them to Hazael king of Aram, who then withdrew from
Jerusalem. {19} As for the other events of the reign of Joash, and all
he did, are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of
Judah? {20} His officials conspired against him and assassinated him at
Beth Millo, on the road down to Silla. {21} The officials who murdered
him were Jozabad son of Shimeath and Jehozabad son of Shomer. He died
and was buried with his fathers in the City of David. And Amaziah his
son succeeded him as king |
|
2 Kings
13 |
|
In the
twenty-third year of Joash son of Ahaziah king of Judah, Jehoahaz son of
Jehu became king of Israel in Samaria, and he reigned seventeen years.
{2} He did evil in the eyes of the LORD by following the sins of
Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel to commit, and he did
not turn away from them. {3} So the Lord's anger burned against Israel,
and for a long time he kept them under the power of Hazael king of Aram
and Ben-Hadad his son. {4} Then Jehoahaz sought the Lord's favor, and
the LORD listened to him, for he saw how severely the king of Aram was
oppressing Israel. {5} The LORD provided a deliverer for Israel, and
they escaped from the power of Aram. So the Israelites lived in their
own homes as they had before. {6} But they did not turn away from the
sins of the house of Jeroboam, which he had caused Israel to commit;
they continued in them. Also, the Asherah pole remained standing in
Samaria. {7} Nothing had been left of the army of Jehoahaz except fifty
horsemen, ten chariots and ten thousand foot soldiers, for the king of
Aram had destroyed the rest and made them like the dust at threshing
time. {8} As for the other events of the reign of Jehoahaz, all he did
and his achievements, are they not written in the book of the annals of
the kings of Israel? {9} Jehoahaz rested with his fathers and was buried
in Samaria. And Jehoash his son succeeded him as king. {10} In the
thirty-seventh year of Joash king of Judah, Jehoash son of Jehoahaz
became king of Israel in Samaria, and he reigned sixteen years. {11} He
did evil in the eyes of the LORD and did not turn away from any of the
sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel to commit; he
continued in them. {12} As for the other events of the reign of Jehoash,
all he did and his achievements, including his war against Amaziah king
of Judah, are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of
Israel? {13} Jehoash rested with his fathers, and Jeroboam succeeded him
on the throne. Jehoash was buried in Samaria with the kings of Israel.
{14} Now Elisha was suffering from the illness from which he died.
Jehoash king of Israel went down to see him and wept over him. "My
father! My father!" he cried. "The chariots and horsemen of Israel!"
{15} Elisha said, "Get a bow and some arrows," and he did so. {16} "Take
the bow in your hands," he said to the king of Israel. When he had taken
it, Elisha put his hands on the king's hands. {17} "Open the east
window," he said, and he opened it. "Shoot!" Elisha said, and he shot.
"The Lord's arrow of victory, the arrow of victory over Aram!" Elisha
declared. "You will completely destroy the Arameans at Aphek." {18} Then
he said, "Take the arrows," and the king took them. Elisha told him,
"Strike the ground." He struck it three times and stopped. {19} The man
of God was angry with him and said, "You should have struck the ground
five or six times; then you would have defeated Aram and completely
destroyed it. But now you will defeat it only three times." {20} Elisha
died and was buried. Now Moabite raiders used to enter the country every
spring. {21} Once while some Israelites were burying a man, suddenly
they saw a band of raiders; so they threw the man's body into Elisha's
tomb. When the body touched Elisha's bones, the man came to life and
stood up on his feet. {22} Hazael king of Aram oppressed Israel
throughout the reign of Jehoahaz. {23} But the LORD was gracious to them
and had compassion and showed concern for them because of his covenant
with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. To this day he has been unwilling to
destroy them or banish them from his presence. {24} Hazael king of Aram
died, and Ben-Hadad his son succeeded him as king. {25} Then Jehoash son
of Jehoahaz recaptured from Ben-Hadad son of Hazael the towns he had
taken in battle from his father Jehoahaz. Three times Jehoash defeated
him, and so he recovered the Israelite towns. |
|
2 Kings 14 |
|
In the second year
of Jehoash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel, Amaziah son of Joash king of
Judah began to reign. {2} He was twenty-five years old when he became
king, and he reigned in Jerusalem twenty-nine years. His mother's name
was Jehoaddin; she was from Jerusalem. {3} He did what was right in the
eyes of the LORD, but not as his father David had done. In everything he
followed the example of his father Joash. {4} The high places, however,
were not removed; the people continued to offer sacrifices and burn
incense there. {5} After the kingdom was firmly in his grasp, he
executed the officials who had murdered his father the king. {6} Yet he
did not put the sons of the assassins to death, in accordance with what
is written in the Book of the Law of Moses where the LORD commanded:
"Fathers shall not be put to death for their children, nor children put
to death for their fathers; each is to die for his own sins." {7} He was
the one who defeated ten thousand Edomites in the Valley of Salt and
captured Sela in battle, calling it Joktheel, the name it has to this
day. {8} Then Amaziah sent messengers to Jehoash son of Jehoahaz, the
son of Jehu, king of Israel, with the challenge: "Come, meet me face to
face." {9} But Jehoash king of Israel replied to Amaziah king of Judah:
"A thistle in Lebanon sent a message to a cedar in Lebanon, 'Give your
daughter to my son in marriage.' Then a wild beast in Lebanon came along
and trampled the thistle underfoot. {10} You have indeed defeated Edom
and now you are arrogant. Glory in your victory, but stay at home! Why
ask for trouble and cause your own downfall and that of Judah also?"
{11} Amaziah, however, would not listen, so Jehoash king of Israel
attacked. He and Amaziah king of Judah faced each other at Beth Shemesh
in Judah. {12} Judah was routed by Israel, and every man fled to his
home. {13} Jehoash king of Israel captured Amaziah king of Judah, the
son of Joash, the son of Ahaziah, at Beth Shemesh. Then Jehoash went to
Jerusalem and broke down the wall of Jerusalem from the Ephraim Gate to
the Corner Gate--a section about six hundred feet long. {14} He took all
the gold and silver and all the articles found in the temple of the LORD
and in the treasuries of the royal palace. He also took hostages and
returned to Samaria. {15} As for the other events of the reign of
Jehoash, what he did and his achievements, including his war against
Amaziah king of Judah, are they not written in the book of the annals of
the kings of Israel? {16} Jehoash rested with his fathers and was buried
in Samaria with the kings of Israel. And Jeroboam his son succeeded him
as king. {17} Amaziah son of Joash king of Judah lived for fifteen years
after the death of Jehoash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel. {18} As for
the other events of Amaziah's reign, are they not written in the book of
the annals of the kings of Judah? {19} They conspired against him in
Jerusalem, and he fled to Lachish, but they sent men after him to
Lachish and killed him there. {20} He was brought back by horse and was
buried in Jerusalem with his fathers, in the City of David. {21} Then
all the people of Judah took Azariah, who was sixteen years old, and
made him king in place of his father Amaziah. {22} He was the one who
rebuilt Elath and restored it to Judah after Amaziah rested with his
fathers. {23} In the fifteenth year of Amaziah son of Joash king of
Judah, Jeroboam son of Jehoash king of Israel became king in Samaria,
and he reigned forty-one years. {24} He did evil in the eyes of the LORD
and did not turn away from any of the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat,
which he had caused Israel to commit. {25} He was the one who restored
the boundaries of Israel from Lebo Hamath to the Sea of the Arabah, in
accordance with the word of the LORD, the God of Israel, spoken through
his servant Jonah son of Amittai, the prophet from Gath Hepher. {26} The
LORD had seen how bitterly everyone in Israel, whether slave or free,
was suffering; there was no one to help them. {27} And since the LORD
had not said he would blot out the name of Israel from under heaven, he
saved them by the hand of Jeroboam son of Jehoash. {28} As for the other
events of Jeroboam's reign, all he did, and his military achievements,
including how he recovered for Israel both Damascus and Hamath, which
had belonged to Yaudi, are they not written in the book of the annals of
the kings of Israel? {29} Jeroboam rested with his fathers, the kings of
Israel. And Zechariah his son succeeded him as king. |
|
2 Kings 15 |
|
In the
twenty-seventh year of Jeroboam king of Israel, Azariah son of Amaziah
king of Judah began to reign. {2} He was sixteen years old when he
became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem fifty-two years. His mother's
name was Jecoliah; she was from Jerusalem. {3} He did what was right in
the eyes of the LORD, just as his father Amaziah had done. {4} The high
places, however, were not removed; the people continued to offer
sacrifices and burn incense there. {5} The LORD afflicted the king with
leprosy until the day he died, and he lived in a separate house. Jotham
the king's son had charge of the palace and governed the people of the
land. {6} As for the other events of Azariah's reign, and all he did,
are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of Judah?
{7} Azariah rested with his fathers and was buried near them in the City
of David. And Jotham his son succeeded him as king. {8} In the
thirty-eighth year of Azariah king of Judah, Zechariah son of Jeroboam
became king of Israel in Samaria, and he reigned six months. {9} He did
evil in the eyes of the LORD, as his fathers had done. He did not turn
away from the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel
to commit. {10} Shallum son of Jabesh conspired against Zechariah. He
attacked him in front of the people, assassinated him and succeeded him
as king. {11} The other events of Zechariah's reign are written in the
book of the annals of the kings of Israel. {12} So the word of the LORD
spoken to Jehu was fulfilled: "Your descendants will sit on the throne
of Israel to the fourth generation." {13} Shallum son of Jabesh became
king in the thirty-ninth year of Uzziah king of Judah, and he reigned in
Samaria one month. {14} Then Menahem son of Gadi went from Tirzah up to
Samaria. He attacked Shallum son of Jabesh in Samaria, assassinated him
and succeeded him as king. {15} The other events of Shallum's reign, and
the conspiracy he led, are written in the book of the annals of the
kings of Israel. {16} At that time Menahem, starting out from Tirzah,
attacked Tiphsah and everyone in the city and its vicinity, because they
refused to open their gates. He sacked Tiphsah and ripped open all the
pregnant women. {17} In the thirty-ninth year of Azariah king of Judah,
Menahem son of Gadi became king of Israel, and he reigned in Samaria ten
years. {18} He did evil in the eyes of the LORD. During his entire reign
he did not turn away from the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he
had caused Israel to commit. {19} Then Pul king of Assyria invaded the
land, and Menahem gave him a thousand talents of silver to gain his
support and strengthen his own hold on the kingdom. {20} Menahem exacted
this money from Israel. Every wealthy man had to contribute fifty
shekels of silver to be given to the king of Assyria. So the king of
Assyria withdrew and stayed in the land no longer. {21} As for the other
events of Menahem's reign, and all he did, are they not written in the
book of the annals of the kings of Israel? {22} Menahem rested with his
fathers. And Pekahiah his son succeeded him as king. {23} In the
fiftieth year of Azariah king of Judah, Pekahiah son of Menahem became
king of Israel in Samaria, and he reigned two years. {24} Pekahiah did
evil in the eyes of the LORD. He did not turn away from the sins of
Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had caused Israel to commit. {25} One of
his chief officers, Pekah son of Remaliah, conspired against him. Taking
fifty men of Gilead with him, he assassinated Pekahiah, along with Argob
and Arieh, in the citadel of the royal palace at Samaria. So Pekah
killed Pekahiah and succeeded him as king. {26} The other events of
Pekahiah's reign, and all he did, are written in the book of the annals
of the kings of Israel. {27} In the fifty-second year of Azariah king of
Judah, Pekah son of Remaliah became king of Israel in Samaria, and he
reigned twenty years. {28} He did evil in the eyes of the LORD. He did
not turn away from the sins of Jeroboam son of Nebat, which he had
caused Israel to commit. {29} In the time of Pekah king of Israel,
Tiglath-Pileser king of Assyria came and took Ijon, Abel Beth Maacah,
Janoah, Kedesh and Hazor. He took Gilead and Galilee, including all the
land of Naphtali, and deported the people to Assyria. {30} Then Hoshea
son of Elah conspired against Pekah son of Remaliah. He attacked and
assassinated him, and then succeeded him as king in the twentieth year
of Jotham son of Uzziah. {31} As for the other events of Pekah's reign,
and all he did, are they not written in the book of the annals of the
kings of Israel? {32} In the second year of Pekah son of Remaliah king
of Israel, Jotham son of Uzziah king of Judah began to reign. {33} He
was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he reigned in
Jerusalem sixteen years. His mother's name was Jerusha daughter of Zadok.
{34} He did what was right in the eyes of the LORD, just as his father
Uzziah had done. {35} The high places, however, were not removed; the
people continued to offer sacrifices and burn incense there. Jotham
rebuilt the Upper Gate of the temple of the LORD. {36} As for the other
events of Jotham's reign, and what he did, are they not written in the
book of the annals of the kings of Judah? {37} (In those days the LORD
began to send Rezin king of Aram and Pekah son of Remaliah against
Judah.) {38} Jotham rested with his fathers and was buried with them in
the City of David, the city of his father. And Ahaz his son succeeded
him as king. |
|
2 Kings 16 |
|
In the seventeenth
year of Pekah son of Remaliah, Ahaz son of Jotham king of Judah began to
reign. {2} Ahaz was twenty years old when he became king, and he reigned
in Jerusalem sixteen years. Unlike David his father, he did not do what
was right in the eyes of the LORD his God. {3} He walked in the ways of
the kings of Israel and even sacrificed his son in the fire, following
the detestable ways of the nations the LORD had driven out before the
Israelites. {4} He offered sacrifices and burned incense at the high
places, on the hilltops and under every spreading tree. {5} Then Rezin
king of Aram and Pekah son of Remaliah king of Israel marched up to
fight against Jerusalem and besieged Ahaz, but they could not overpower
him. {6} At that time, Rezin king of Aram recovered Elath for Aram by
driving out the men of Judah. Edomites then moved into Elath and have
lived there to this day. {7} Ahaz sent messengers to say to
Tiglath-Pileser king of Assyria, "I am your servant and vassal. Come up
and save me out of the hand of the king of Aram and of the king of
Israel, who are attacking me." {8} And Ahaz took the silver and gold
found in the temple of the LORD and in the treasuries of the royal
palace and sent it as a gift to the king of Assyria. {9} The king of
Assyria complied by attacking Damascus and capturing it. He deported its
inhabitants to Kir and put Rezin to death. {10} Then King Ahaz went to
Damascus to meet Tiglath-Pileser king of Assyria. He saw an altar in
Damascus and sent to Uriah the priest a sketch of the altar, with
detailed plans for its construction. {11} So Uriah the priest built an
altar in accordance with all the plans that King Ahaz had sent from
Damascus and finished it before King Ahaz returned. {12} When the king
came back from Damascus and saw the altar, he approached it and
presented offerings on it. {13} He offered up his burnt offering and
grain offering, poured out his drink offering, and sprinkled the blood
of his fellowship offerings on the altar. {14} The bronze altar that
stood before the LORD he brought from the front of the temple--from
between the new altar and the temple of the LORD--and put it on the
north side of the new altar. {15} King Ahaz then gave these orders to
Uriah the priest: "On the large new altar, offer the morning burnt
offering and the evening grain offering, the king's burnt offering and
his grain offering, and the burnt offering of all the people of the
land, and their grain offering and their drink offering. Sprinkle on the
altar all the blood of the burnt offerings and sacrifices. But I will
use the bronze altar for seeking guidance." {16} And Uriah the priest
did just as King Ahaz had ordered. {17} King Ahaz took away the side
panels and removed the basins from the movable stands. He removed the
Sea from the bronze bulls that supported it and set it on a stone base.
{18} He took away the Sabbath canopy that had been built at the temple
and removed the royal entryway outside the temple of the LORD, in
deference to the king of Assyria. {19} As for the other events of the
reign of Ahaz, and what he did, are they not written in the book of the
annals of the kings of Judah? {20} Ahaz rested with his fathers and was
buried with them in the City of David. And Hezekiah his son succeeded
him as king. |
|
2 Kings 17 |
|
In the twelfth
year of Ahaz king of Judah, Hoshea son of Elah became king of Israel in
Samaria, and he reigned nine years. {2} He did evil in the eyes of the
LORD, but not like the kings of Israel who preceded him. {3} Shalmaneser
king of Assyria came up to attack Hoshea, who had been Shalmaneser's
vassal and had paid him tribute. {4} But the king of Assyria discovered
that Hoshea was a traitor, for he had sent envoys to So king of Egypt,
and he no longer paid tribute to the king of Assyria, as he had done
year by year. Therefore Shalmaneser seized him and put him in prison.
{5} The king of Assyria invaded the entire land, marched against Samaria
and laid siege to it for three years. {6} In the ninth year of Hoshea,
the king of Assyria captured Samaria and deported the Israelites to
Assyria. He settled them in Halah, in Gozan on the Habor River and in
the towns of the Medes. {7} All this took place because the Israelites
had sinned against the LORD their God, who had brought them up out of
Egypt from under the power of Pharaoh king of Egypt. They worshiped
other gods {8} and followed the practices of the nations the LORD had
driven out before them, as well as the practices that the kings of
Israel had introduced. {9} The Israelites secretly did things against
the LORD their God that were not right. From watchtower to fortified
city they built themselves high places in all their towns. {10} They set
up sacred stones and Asherah poles on every high hill and under every
spreading tree. {11} At every high place they burned incense, as the
nations whom the LORD had driven out before them had done. They did
wicked things that provoked the LORD to anger. {12} They worshiped
idols, though the LORD had said, "You shall not do this." {13} The LORD
warned Israel and Judah through all his prophets and seers: "Turn from
your evil ways. Observe my commands and decrees, in accordance with the
entire Law that I commanded your fathers to obey and that I delivered to
you through my servants the prophets." {14} But they would not listen
and were as stiff-necked as their fathers, who did not trust in the LORD
their God. {15} They rejected his decrees and the covenant he had made
with their fathers and the warnings he had given them. They followed
worthless idols and themselves became worthless. They imitated the
nations around them although the LORD had ordered them, "Do not do as
they do," and they did the things the LORD had forbidden them to do.
{16} They forsook all the commands of the LORD their God and made for
themselves two idols cast in the shape of calves, and an Asherah pole.
They bowed down to all the starry hosts, and they worshiped Baal. {17}
They sacrificed their sons and daughters in the fire. They practiced
divination and sorcery and sold themselves to do evil in the eyes of the
LORD, provoking him to anger. {18} So the LORD was very angry with
Israel and removed them from his presence. Only the tribe of Judah was
left, {19} and even Judah did not keep the commands of the LORD their
God. They followed the practices Israel had introduced. {20} Therefore
the LORD rejected all the people of Israel; he afflicted them and gave
them into the hands of plunderers, until he thrust them from his
presence. {21} When he tore Israel away from the house of David, they
made Jeroboam son of Nebat their king. Jeroboam enticed Israel away from
following the LORD and caused them to commit a great sin. {22} The
Israelites persisted in all the sins of Jeroboam and did not turn away
from them {23} until the LORD removed them from his presence, as he had
warned through all his servants the prophets. So the people of Israel
were taken from their homeland into exile in Assyria, and they are still
there. {24} The king of Assyria brought people from Babylon, Cuthah,
Avva, Hamath and Sepharvaim and settled them in the towns of Samaria to
replace the Israelites. They took over Samaria and lived in its towns.
{25} When they first lived there, they did not worship the LORD; so he
sent lions among them and they killed some of the people. {26} It was
reported to the king of Assyria: "The people you deported and resettled
in the towns of Samaria do not know what the god of that country
requires. He has sent lions among them, which are killing them off,
because the people do not know what he requires." {27} Then the king of
Assyria gave this order: "Have one of the priests you took captive from
Samaria go back to live there and teach the people what the god of the
land requires." {28} So one of the priests who had been exiled from
Samaria came to live in Bethel and taught them how to worship the LORD.
{29} Nevertheless, each national group made its own gods in the several
towns where they settled, and set them up in the shrines the people of
Samaria had made at the high places. {30} The men from Babylon made
Succoth Benoth, the men from Cuthah made Nergal, and the men from Hamath
made Ashima; {31} the Avvites made Nibhaz and Tartak, and the
Sepharvites burned their children in the fire as sacrifices to
Adrammelech and Anammelech, the gods of Sepharvaim. {32} They worshiped
the LORD, but they also appointed all sorts of their own people to
officiate for them as priests in the shrines at the high places. {33}
They worshiped the LORD, but they also served their own gods in
accordance with the customs of the nations from which they had been
brought. {34} To this day they persist in their former practices. They
neither worship the LORD nor adhere to the decrees and ordinances, the
laws and commands that the LORD gave the descendants of Jacob, whom he
named Israel. {35} When the LORD made a covenant with the Israelites, he
commanded them: "Do not worship any other gods or bow down to them,
serve them or sacrifice to them. {36} But the LORD, who brought you up
out of Egypt with mighty power and outstretched arm, is the one you must
worship. To him you shall bow down and to him offer sacrifices. {37} You
must always be careful to keep the decrees and ordinances, the laws and
commands he wrote for you. Do not worship other gods. {38} Do not forget
the covenant I have made with you, and do not worship other gods. {39}
Rather, worship the LORD your God; it is he who will deliver you from
the hand of all your enemies." {40} They would not listen, however, but
persisted in their former practices. {41} Even while these people were
worshiping the LORD, they were serving their idols. To this day their
children and grandchildren continue to do as their fathers did. |
|
2 Kings 18 |
|
In the third year
of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Hezekiah son of Ahaz king of Judah
began to reign. {2} He was twenty-five years old when he became king,
and he reigned in Jerusalem twenty-nine years. His mother's name was
Abijah daughter of Zechariah. {3} He did what was right in the eyes of
the LORD, just as his father David had done. {4} He removed the high
places, smashed the sacred stones and cut down the Asherah poles. He
broke into pieces the bronze snake Moses had made, for up to that time
the Israelites had been burning incense to it. (It was called Nehushtan.)
{5} Hezekiah trusted in the LORD, the God of Israel. There was no one
like him among all the kings of Judah, either before him or after him.
{6} He held fast to the LORD and did not cease to follow him; he kept
the commands the LORD had given Moses. {7} And the LORD was with him; he
was successful in whatever he undertook. He rebelled against the king of
Assyria and did not serve him. {8} From watchtower to fortified city, he
defeated the Philistines, as far as Gaza and its territory. {9} In King
Hezekiah's fourth year, which was the seventh year of Hoshea son of Elah
king of Israel, Shalmaneser king of Assyria marched against Samaria and
laid siege to it. {10} At the end of three years the Assyrians took it.
So Samaria was captured in Hezekiah's sixth year, which was the ninth
year of Hoshea king of Israel. {11} The king of Assyria deported Israel
to Assyria and settled them in Halah, in Gozan on the Habor River and in
towns of the Medes. {12} This happened because they had not obeyed the
LORD their God, but had violated his covenant--all that Moses the
servant of the LORD commanded. They neither listened to the commands nor
carried them out. {13} In the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah's reign,
Sennacherib king of Assyria attacked all the fortified cities of Judah
and captured them. {14} So Hezekiah king of Judah sent this message to
the king of Assyria at Lachish: "I have done wrong. Withdraw from me,
and I will pay whatever you demand of me." The king of Assyria exacted
from Hezekiah king of Judah three hundred talents of silver and thirty
talents of gold. {15} So Hezekiah gave him all the silver that was found
in the temple of the LORD and in the treasuries of the royal palace.
{16} At this time Hezekiah king of Judah stripped off the gold with
which he had covered the doors and doorposts of the temple of the LORD,
and gave it to the king of Assyria. {17} The king of Assyria sent his
supreme commander, his chief officer and his field commander with a
large army, from Lachish to King Hezekiah at Jerusalem. They came up to
Jerusalem and stopped at the aqueduct of the Upper Pool, on the road to
the Washerman's Field. {18} They called for the king; and Eliakim son of
Hilkiah the palace administrator, Shebna the secretary, and Joah son of
Asaph the recorder went out to them. {19} The field commander said to
them, "Tell Hezekiah: "'This is what the great king, the king of
Assyria, says: On what are you basing this confidence of yours? {20} You
say you have strategy and military strength--but you speak only empty
words. On whom are you depending, that you rebel against me? {21} Look
now, you are depending on Egypt, that splintered reed of a staff, which
pierces a man's hand and wounds him if he leans on it! Such is Pharaoh
king of Egypt to all who depend on him. {22} And if you say to me, "We
are depending on the LORD our God"--isn't he the one whose high places
and altars Hezekiah removed, saying to Judah and Jerusalem, "You must
worship before this altar in Jerusalem"? {23} "'Come now, make a bargain
with my master, the king of Assyria: I will give you two thousand
horses--if you can put riders on them! {24} How can you repulse one
officer of the least of my master's officials, even though you are
depending on Egypt for chariots and horsemen ? {25} Furthermore, have I
come to attack and destroy this place without word from the LORD? The
LORD himself told me to march against this country and destroy it.'"
{26} Then Eliakim son of Hilkiah, and Shebna and Joah said to the field
commander, "Please speak to your servants in Aramaic, since we
understand it. Don't speak to us in Hebrew in the hearing of the people
on the wall." {27} But the commander replied, "Was it only to your
master and you that my master sent me to say these things, and not to
the men sitting on the wall--who, like you, will have to eat their own
filth and drink their own urine?" {28} Then the commander stood and
called out in Hebrew: "Hear the word of the great king, the king of
Assyria! {29} This is what the king says: Do not let Hezekiah deceive
you. He cannot deliver you from my hand. {30} Do not let Hezekiah
persuade you to trust in the LORD when he says, 'The LORD will surely
deliver us; this city will not be given into the hand of the king of
Assyria.' {31} "Do not listen to Hezekiah. This is what the king of
Assyria says: Make peace with me and come out to me. Then every one of
you will eat from his own vine and fig tree and drink water from his own
cistern, {32} until I come and take you to a land like your own, a land
of grain and new wine, a land of bread and vineyards, a land of olive
trees and honey. Choose life and not death! "Do not listen to Hezekiah,
for he is misleading you when he says, 'The LORD will deliver us.' {33}
Has the god of any nation ever delivered his land from the hand of the
king of Assyria? {34} Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad? Where are
the gods of Sepharvaim, Hena and Ivvah? Have they rescued Samaria from
my hand? {35} Who of all the gods of these countries has been able to
save his land from me? How then can the LORD deliver Jerusalem from my
hand?" {36} But the people remained silent and said nothing in reply,
because the king had commanded, "Do not answer him." {37} Then Eliakim
son of Hilkiah the palace administrator, Shebna the secretary and Joah
son of Asaph the recorder went to Hezekiah, with their clothes torn, and
told him what the field commander had said. |
|
2 Kings 19 |
|
When King Hezekiah
heard this, he tore his clothes and put on sackcloth and went into the
temple of the LORD. {2} He sent Eliakim the palace administrator, Shebna
the secretary and the leading priests, all wearing sackcloth, to the
prophet Isaiah son of Amoz. {3} They told him, "This is what Hezekiah
says: This day is a day of distress and rebuke and disgrace, as when
children come to the point of birth and there is no strength to deliver
them. {4} It may be that the LORD your God will hear all the words of
the field commander, whom his master, the king of Assyria, has sent to
ridicule the living God, and that he will rebuke him for the words the
LORD your God has heard. Therefore pray for the remnant that still
survives." {5} When King Hezekiah's officials came to Isaiah, {6} Isaiah
said to them, "Tell your master, 'This is what the LORD says: Do not be
afraid of what you have heard--those words with which the underlings of
the king of Assyria have blasphemed me. {7} Listen! I am going to put
such a spirit in him that when he hears a certain report, he will return
to his own country, and there I will have him cut down with the sword.'"
{8} When the field commander heard that the king of Assyria had left
Lachish, he withdrew and found the king fighting against Libnah. {9} Now
Sennacherib received a report that Tirhakah, the Cushite king of Egypt,
was marching out to fight against him. So he again sent messengers to
Hezekiah with this word: {10} "Say to Hezekiah king of Judah: Do not let
the god you depend on deceive you when he says, 'Jerusalem will not be
handed over to the king of Assyria.' {11} Surely you have heard what the
kings of Assyria have done to all the countries, destroying them
completely. And will you be delivered? {12} Did the gods of the nations
that were destroyed by my forefathers deliver them: the gods of Gozan,
Haran, Rezeph and the people of Eden who were in Tel Assar? {13} Where
is the king of Hamath, the king of Arpad, the king of the city of
Sepharvaim, or of Hena or Ivvah?" {14} Hezekiah received the letter from
the messengers and read it. Then he went up to the temple of the LORD
and spread it out before the LORD. {15} And Hezekiah prayed to the LORD:
"O LORD, God of Israel, enthroned between the cherubim, you alone are
God over all the kingdoms of the earth. You have made heaven and earth.
{16} Give ear, O LORD, and hear; open your eyes, O LORD, and see; listen
to the words Sennacherib has sent to insult the living God. {17} "It is
true, O LORD, that the Assyrian kings have laid waste these nations and
their lands. {18} They have thrown their gods into the fire and
destroyed them, for they were not gods but only wood and stone,
fashioned by men's hands. {19} Now, O LORD our God, deliver us from his
hand, so that all kingdoms on earth may know that you alone, O LORD, are
God." {20} Then Isaiah son of Amoz sent a message to Hezekiah: "This is
what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: I have heard your prayer
concerning Sennacherib king of Assyria. {21} This is the word that the
LORD has spoken against him: "'The Virgin Daughter of Zion despises you
and mocks you. The Daughter of Jerusalem tosses her head as you flee.
{22} Who is it you have insulted and blasphemed? Against whom have you
raised your voice and lifted your eyes in pride? Against the Holy One of
Israel! {23} By your messengers you have heaped insults on the Lord. And
you have said, "With my many chariots I have ascended the heights of the
mountains, the utmost heights of Lebanon. I have cut down its tallest
cedars, the choicest of its pines. I have reached its remotest parts,
the finest of its forests. {24} I have dug wells in foreign lands and
drunk the water there. With the soles of my feet I have dried up all the
streams of Egypt." {25} "'Have you not heard? Long ago I ordained it. In
days of old I planned it; now I have brought it to pass, that you have
turned fortified cities into piles of stone. {26} Their people, drained
of power, are dismayed and put to shame. They are like plants in the
field, like tender green shoots, like grass sprouting on the roof,
scorched before it grows up. {27} "'But I know where you stay and when
you come and go and how you rage against me. {28} Because you rage
against me and your insolence has reached my ears, I will put my hook in
your nose and my bit in your mouth, and I will make you return by the
way you came.' {29} "This will be the sign for you, O Hezekiah: "This
year you will eat what grows by itself, and the second year what springs
from that. But in the third year sow and reap, plant vineyards and eat
their fruit. {30} Once more a remnant of the house of Judah will take
root below and bear fruit above. {31} For out of Jerusalem will come a
remnant, and out of Mount Zion a band of survivors. The zeal of the LORD
Almighty will accomplish this. {32} "Therefore this is what the LORD
says concerning the king of Assyria: "He will not enter this city or
shoot an arrow here. He will not come before it with shield or build a
siege ramp against it. {33} By the way that he came he will return; he
will not enter this city, declares the LORD. {34} I will defend this
city and save it, for my sake and for the sake of David my servant."
{35} That night the angel of the LORD went out and put to death a
hundred and eighty-five thousand men in the Assyrian camp. When the
people got up the next morning--there were all the dead bodies! {36} So
Sennacherib king of Assyria broke camp and withdrew. He returned to
Nineveh and stayed there. {37} One day, while he was worshiping in the
temple of his god Nisroch, his sons Adrammelech and Sharezer cut him
down with the sword, and they escaped to the land of Ararat. And
Esarhaddon his son succeeded him as king. |
|
2 Kings 20 |
|
In those days
Hezekiah became ill and was at the point of death. The prophet Isaiah
son of Amoz went to him and said, "This is what the LORD says: Put your
house in order, because you are going to die; you will not recover." {2}
Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed to the LORD, {3}
"Remember, O LORD, how I have walked before you faithfully and with
wholehearted devotion and have done what is good in your eyes." And
Hezekiah wept bitterly. {4} Before Isaiah had left the middle court, the
word of the LORD came to him: {5} "Go back and tell Hezekiah, the leader
of my people, 'This is what the LORD, the God of your father David,
says: I have heard your prayer and seen your tears; I will heal you. On
the third day from now you will go up to the temple of the LORD. {6} I
will add fifteen years to your life. And I will deliver you and this
city from the hand of the king of Assyria. I will defend this city for
my sake and for the sake of my servant David.'" {7} Then Isaiah said,
"Prepare a poultice of figs." They did so and applied it to the boil,
and he recovered. {8} Hezekiah had asked Isaiah, "What will be the sign
that the LORD will heal me and that I will go up to the temple of the
LORD on the third day from now?" {9} Isaiah answered, "This is the
Lord's sign to you that the LORD will do what he has promised: Shall the
shadow go forward ten steps, or shall it go back ten steps?" {10} "It is
a simple matter for the shadow to go forward ten steps," said Hezekiah.
"Rather, have it go back ten steps." {11} Then the prophet Isaiah called
upon the LORD, and the LORD made the shadow go back the ten steps it had
gone down on the stairway of Ahaz. {12} At that time Merodach-Baladan
son of Baladan king of Babylon sent Hezekiah letters and a gift, because
he had heard of Hezekiah's illness. {13} Hezekiah received the
messengers and showed them all that was in his storehouses--the silver,
the gold, the spices and the fine oil--his armory and everything found
among his treasures. There was nothing in his palace or in all his
kingdom that Hezekiah did not show them. {14} Then Isaiah the prophet
went to King Hezekiah and asked, "What did those men say, and where did
they come from?" "From a distant land," Hezekiah replied. "They came
from Babylon." {15} The prophet asked, "What did they see in your
palace?" "They saw everything in my palace," Hezekiah said. "There is
nothing among my treasures that I did not show them." {16} Then Isaiah
said to Hezekiah, "Hear the word of the LORD: {17} The time will surely
come when everything in your palace, and all that your fathers have
stored up until this day, will be carried off to Babylon. Nothing will
be left, says the LORD. {18} And some of your descendants, your own
flesh and blood, that will be born to you, will be taken away, and they
will become eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon." {19} "The
word of the LORD you have spoken is good," Hezekiah replied. For he
thought, "Will there not be peace and security in my lifetime?" {20} As
for the other events of Hezekiah's reign, all his achievements and how
he made the pool and the tunnel by which he brought water into the city,
are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of Judah?
{21} Hezekiah rested with his fathers. And Manasseh his son succeeded
him as king..'" |
|
2 Kings 21 |
|
Manasseh was
twelve years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem
fifty-five years. His mother's name was Hephzibah. {2} He did evil in
the eyes of the LORD, following the detestable practices of the nations
the LORD had driven out before the Israelites. {3} He rebuilt the high
places his father Hezekiah had destroyed; he also erected altars to Baal
and made an Asherah pole, as Ahab king of Israel had done. He bowed down
to all the starry hosts and worshiped them. {4} He built altars in the
temple of the LORD, of which the LORD had said, "In Jerusalem I will put
my Name." {5} In both courts of the temple of the LORD, he built altars
to all the starry hosts. {6} He sacrificed his own son in the fire,
practiced sorcery and divination, and consulted mediums and spiritists.
He did much evil in the eyes of the LORD, provoking him to anger. {7} He
took the carved Asherah pole he had made and put it in the temple, of
which the LORD had said to David and to his son Solomon, "In this temple
and in Jerusalem, which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, I
will put my Name forever. {8} I will not again make the feet of the
Israelites wander from the land I gave their forefathers, if only they
will be careful to do everything I commanded them and will keep the
whole Law that my servant Moses gave them." {9} But the people did not
listen. Manasseh led them astray, so that they did more evil than the
nations the LORD had destroyed before the Israelites. {10} The LORD said
through his servants the prophets: {11} "Manasseh king of Judah has
committed these detestable sins. He has done more evil than the Amorites
who preceded him and has led Judah into sin with his idols. {12}
Therefore this is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: I am going to
bring such disaster on Jerusalem and Judah that the ears of everyone who
hears of it will tingle. {13} I will stretch out over Jerusalem the
measuring line used against Samaria and the plumb line used against the
house of Ahab. I will wipe out Jerusalem as one wipes a dish, wiping it
and turning it upside down. {14} I will forsake the remnant of my
inheritance and hand them over to their enemies. They will be looted and
plundered by all their foes, {15} because they have done evil in my eyes
and have provoked me to anger from the day their forefathers came out of
Egypt until this day." {16} Moreover, Manasseh also shed so much
innocent blood that he filled Jerusalem from end to end--besides the sin
that he had caused Judah to commit, so that they did evil in the eyes of
the LORD. {17} As for the other events of Manasseh's reign, and all he
did, including the sin he committed, are they not written in the book of
the annals of the kings of Judah? {18} Manasseh rested with his fathers
and was buried in his palace garden, the garden of Uzza. And Amon his
son succeeded him as king. {19} Amon was twenty-two years old when he
became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem two years. His mother's name
was Meshullemeth daughter of Haruz; she was from Jotbah. {20} He did
evil in the eyes of the LORD, as his father Manasseh had done. {21} He
walked in all the ways of his father; he worshiped the idols his father
had worshiped, and bowed down to them. {22} He forsook the LORD, the God
of his fathers, and did not walk in the way of the LORD. {23} Amon's
officials conspired against him and assassinated the king in his palace.
{24} Then the people of the land killed all who had plotted against King
Amon, and they made Josiah his son king in his place. {25} As for the
other events of Amon's reign, and what he did, are they not written in
the book of the annals of the kings of Judah? {26} He was buried in his
grave in the garden of Uzza. And Josiah his son succeeded him as king. |
|
2 Kings 22 |
|
Josiah was eight
years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem thirty-one
years. His mother's name was Jedidah daughter of Adaiah; she was from
Bozkath. {2} He did what was right in the eyes of the LORD and walked in
all the ways of his father David, not turning aside to the right or to
the left. {3} In the eighteenth year of his reign, King Josiah sent the
secretary, Shaphan son of Azaliah, the son of Meshullam, to the temple
of the LORD. He said: {4} "Go up to Hilkiah the high priest and have him
get ready the money that has been brought into the temple of the LORD,
which the doorkeepers have collected from the people. {5} Have them
entrust it to the men appointed to supervise the work on the temple. And
have these men pay the workers who repair the temple of the LORD-- {6}
the carpenters, the builders and the masons. Also have them purchase
timber and dressed stone to repair the temple. {7} But they need not
account for the money entrusted to them, because they are acting
faithfully." {8} Hilkiah the high priest said to Shaphan the secretary,
"I have found the Book of the Law in the temple of the LORD." He gave it
to Shaphan, who read it. {9} Then Shaphan the secretary went to the king
and reported to him: "Your officials have paid out the money that was in
the temple of the LORD and have entrusted it to the workers and
supervisors at the temple." {10} Then Shaphan the secretary informed the
king, "Hilkiah the priest has given me a book." And Shaphan read from it
in the presence of the king. {11} When the king heard the words of the
Book of the Law, he tore his robes. {12} He gave these orders to Hilkiah
the priest, Ahikam son of Shaphan, Acbor son of Micaiah, Shaphan the
secretary and Asaiah the king's attendant: {13} "Go and inquire of the
LORD for me and for the people and for all Judah about what is written
in this book that has been found. Great is the Lord's anger that burns
against us because our fathers have not obeyed the words of this book;
they have not acted in accordance with all that is written there
concerning us." {14} Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam, Acbor, Shaphan and
Asaiah went to speak to the prophetess Huldah, who was the wife of
Shallum son of Tikvah, the son of Harhas, keeper of the wardrobe. She
lived in Jerusalem, in the Second District. {15} She said to them, "This
is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: Tell the man who sent you to
me, {16} 'This is what the LORD says: I am going to bring disaster on
this place and its people, according to everything written in the book
the king of Judah has read. {17} Because they have forsaken me and
burned incense to other gods and provoked me to anger by all the idols
their hands have made, my anger will burn against this place and will
not be quenched.' {18} Tell the king of Judah, who sent you to inquire
of the LORD, 'This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says concerning
the words you heard: {19} Because your heart was responsive and you
humbled yourself before the LORD when you heard what I have spoken
against this place and its people, that they would become accursed and
laid waste, and because you tore your robes and wept in my presence, I
have heard you, declares the LORD. {20} Therefore I will gather you to
your fathers, and you will be buried in peace. Your eyes will not see
all the disaster I am going to bring on this place.'" So they took her
answer back to the king. |
|
2 Kings 23 |
|
Then the king
called together all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem. {2} He went up to
the temple of the LORD with the men of Judah, the people of Jerusalem,
the priests and the prophets--all the people from the least to the
greatest. He read in their hearing all the words of the Book of the
Covenant, which had been found in the temple of the LORD. {3} The king
stood by the pillar and renewed the covenant in the presence of the
LORD--to follow the LORD and keep his commands, regulations and decrees
with all his heart and all his soul, thus confirming the words of the
covenant written in this book. Then all the people pledged themselves to
the covenant. {4} The king ordered Hilkiah the high priest, the priests
next in rank and the doorkeepers to remove from the temple of the LORD
all the articles made for Baal and Asherah and all the starry hosts. He
burned them outside Jerusalem in the fields of the Kidron Valley and
took the ashes to Bethel. {5} He did away with the pagan priests
appointed by the kings of Judah to burn incense on the high places of
the towns of Judah and on those around Jerusalem--those who burned
incense to Baal, to the sun and moon, to the constellations and to all
the starry hosts. {6} He took the Asherah pole from the temple of the
LORD to the Kidron Valley outside Jerusalem and burned it there. He
ground it to powder and scattered the dust over the graves of the common
people. {7} He also tore down the quarters of the male shrine
prostitutes, which were in the temple of the LORD and where women did
weaving for Asherah. {8} Josiah brought all the priests from the towns
of Judah and desecrated the high places, from Geba to Beersheba, where
the priests had burned incense. He broke down the shrines at the
gates--at the entrance to the Gate of Joshua, the city governor, which
is on the left of the city gate. {9} Although the priests of the high
places did not serve at the altar of the LORD in Jerusalem, they ate
unleavened bread with their fellow priests. {10} He desecrated Topheth,
which was in the Valley of Ben Hinnom, so no one could use it to
sacrifice his son or daughter in the fire to Molech. {11} He removed
from the entrance to the temple of the LORD the horses that the kings of
Judah had dedicated to the sun. They were in the court near the room of
an official named Nathan-Melech. Josiah then burned the chariots
dedicated to the sun. {12} He pulled down the altars the kings of Judah
had erected on the roof near the upper room of Ahaz, and the altars
Manasseh had built in the two courts of the temple of the LORD. He
removed them from there, smashed them to pieces and threw the rubble
into the Kidron Valley. {13} The king also desecrated the high places
that were east of Jerusalem on the south of the Hill of Corruption--the
ones Solomon king of Israel had built for Ashtoreth the vile goddess of
the Sidonians, for Chemosh the vile god of Moab, and for Molech the
detestable god of the people of Ammon. {14} Josiah smashed the sacred
stones and cut down the Asherah poles and covered the sites with human
bones. {15} Even the altar at Bethel, the high place made by Jeroboam
son of Nebat, who had caused Israel to sin--even that altar and high
place he demolished. He burned the high place and ground it to powder,
and burned the Asherah pole also. {16} Then Josiah looked around, and
when he saw the tombs that were there on the hillside, he had the bones
removed from them and burned on the altar to defile it, in accordance
with the word of the LORD proclaimed by the man of God who foretold
these things. {17} The king asked, "What is that tombstone I see?" The
men of the city said, "It marks the tomb of the man of God who came from
Judah and pronounced against the altar of Bethel the very things you
have done to it." {18} "Leave it alone," he said. "Don't let anyone
disturb his bones." So they spared his bones and those of the prophet
who had come from Samaria. {19} Just as he had done at Bethel, Josiah
removed and defiled all the shrines at the high places that the kings of
Israel had built in the towns of Samaria that had provoked the LORD to
anger. {20} Josiah slaughtered all the priests of those high places on
the altars and burned human bones on them. Then he went back to
Jerusalem. {21} The king gave this order to all the people: "Celebrate
the Passover to the LORD your God, as it is written in this Book of the
Covenant." {22} Not since the days of the judges who led Israel, nor
throughout the days of the kings of Israel and the kings of Judah, had
any such Passover been observed. {23} But in the eighteenth year of King
Josiah, this Passover was celebrated to the LORD in Jerusalem. {24}
Furthermore, Josiah got rid of the mediums and spiritists, the household
gods, the idols and all the other detestable things seen in Judah and
Jerusalem. This he did to fulfill the requirements of the law written in
the book that Hilkiah the priest had discovered in the temple of the
LORD. {25} Neither before nor after Josiah was there a king like him who
turned to the LORD as he did--with all his heart and with all his soul
and with all his strength, in accordance with all the Law of Moses. {26}
Nevertheless, the LORD did not turn away from the heat of his fierce
anger, which burned against Judah because of all that Manasseh had done
to provoke him to anger. {27} So the LORD said, "I will remove Judah
also from my presence as I removed Israel, and I will reject Jerusalem,
the city I chose, and this temple, about which I said, 'There shall my
Name be.'" {28} As for the other events of Josiah's reign, and all he
did, are they not written in the book of the annals of the kings of
Judah? {29} While Josiah was king, Pharaoh Neco king of Egypt went up to
the Euphrates River to help the king of Assyria. King Josiah marched out
to meet him in battle, but Neco faced him and killed him at Megiddo.
{30} Josiah's servants brought his body in a chariot from Megiddo to
Jerusalem and buried him in his own tomb. And the people of the land
took Jehoahaz son of Josiah and anointed him and made him king in place
of his father. {31} Jehoahaz was twenty-three years old when he became
king, and he reigned in Jerusalem three months. His mother's name was
Hamutal daughter of Jeremiah; she was from Libnah. {32} He did evil in
the eyes of the LORD, just as his fathers had done. {33} Pharaoh Neco
put him in chains at Riblah in the land of Hamath so that he might not
reign in Jerusalem, and he imposed on Judah a levy of a hundred talents
of silver and a talent of gold. {34} Pharaoh Neco made Eliakim son of
Josiah king in place of his father Josiah and changed Eliakim's name to
Jehoiakim. But he took Jehoahaz and carried him off to Egypt, and there
he died. {35} Jehoiakim paid Pharaoh Neco the silver and gold he
demanded. In order to do so, he taxed the land and exacted the silver
and gold from the people of the land according to their assessments.
{36} Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he
reigned in Jerusalem eleven years. His mother's name was Zebidah
daughter of Pedaiah; she was from Rumah. {37} And he did evil in the
eyes of the LORD, just as his fathers had done. |
|
2 Kings 24 |
|
During Jehoiakim's
reign, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon invaded the land, and Jehoiakim
became his vassal for three years. But then he changed his mind and
rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar. {2} The LORD sent Babylonian, Aramean,
Moabite and Ammonite raiders against him. He sent them to destroy Judah,
in accordance with the word of the LORD proclaimed by his servants the
prophets. {3} Surely these things happened to Judah according to the
Lord's command, in order to remove them from his presence because of the
sins of Manasseh and all he had done, {4} including the shedding of
innocent blood. For he had filled Jerusalem with innocent blood, and the
LORD was not willing to forgive. {5} As for the other events of
Jehoiakim's reign, and all he did, are they not written in the book of
the annals of the kings of Judah? {6} Jehoiakim rested with his fathers.
And Jehoiachin his son succeeded him as king. {7} The king of Egypt did
not march out from his own country again, because the king of Babylon
had taken all his territory, from the Wadi of Egypt to the Euphrates
River. {8} Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he became king, and he
reigned in Jerusalem three months. His mother's name was Nehushta
daughter of Elnathan; she was from Jerusalem. {9} He did evil in the
eyes of the LORD, just as his father had done. {10} At that time the
officers of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon advanced on Jerusalem and
laid siege to it, {11} and Nebuchadnezzar himself came up to the city
while his officers were besieging it. {12} Jehoiachin king of Judah, his
mother, his attendants, his nobles and his officials all surrendered to
him. In the eighth year of the reign of the king of Babylon, he took
Jehoiachin prisoner. {13} As the LORD had declared, Nebuchadnezzar
removed all the treasures from the temple of the LORD and from the royal
palace, and took away all the gold articles that Solomon king of Israel
had made for the temple of the LORD. {14} He carried into exile all
Jerusalem: all the officers and fighting men, and all the craftsmen and
artisans--a total of ten thousand. Only the poorest people of the land
were left. {15} Nebuchadnezzar took Jehoiachin captive to Babylon. He
also took from Jerusalem to Babylon the king's mother, his wives, his
officials and the leading men of the land. {16} The king of Babylon also
deported to Babylon the entire force of seven thousand fighting men,
strong and fit for war, and a thousand craftsmen and artisans. {17} He
made Mattaniah, Jehoiachin's uncle, king in his place and changed his
name to Zedekiah. {18} Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he became
king, and he reigned in Jerusalem eleven years. His mother's name was
Hamutal daughter of Jeremiah; she was from Libnah. {19} He did evil in
the eyes of the LORD, just as Jehoiakim had done. {20} It was because of
the Lord's anger that all this happened to Jerusalem and Judah, and in
the end he thrust them from his presence. Now Zedekiah rebelled against
the king of Babylon. |
|
2 Kings 25 |
|
So in
the ninth year of Zedekiah's reign, on the tenth day of the tenth month,
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon marched against Jerusalem with his whole
army. He encamped outside the city and built siege works all around it.
{2} The city was kept under siege until the eleventh year of King
Zedekiah. {3} By the ninth day of the fourth month the
famine in the city had become so severe that there was no food for the
people to eat. {4} Then the city wall was broken through, and the
whole army fled at night through the gate between the two walls near the
king's garden, though the Babylonians were surrounding the city. They
fled toward the Arabah, {5} but the Babylonian army pursued the
king and overtook him in the plains of Jericho. All his soldiers were
separated from him and scattered, {6} and he was captured. He was
taken to the king of Babylon at Riblah, where sentence was pronounced on
him. {7} They killed the sons of Zedekiah before his eyes. Then
they put out his eyes, bound him with bronze shackles and took him to
Babylon. {8} On the seventh day of the fifth month, in the
nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, Nebuzaradan commander
of the imperial guard, an official of the king of Babylon, came to
Jerusalem. {9} He set fire to the temple of the LORD, the royal
palace and all the houses of Jerusalem. Every important building he
burned down. {10} The whole Babylonian army, under the commander
of the imperial guard, broke down the walls around Jerusalem. {11}
Nebuzaradan the commander of the guard carried into exile the people
who remained in the city, along with the rest of the populace and those
who had gone over to the king of Babylon. {12} But the commander
left behind some of the poorest people of the land to work the vineyards
and fields. {13} The Babylonians broke up the bronze pillars, the
movable stands and the bronze Sea that were at the temple of the LORD
and they carried the bronze to Babylon. {14} They also took away
the pots, shovels, wick trimmers, dishes and all the bronze articles
used in the temple service. {15} The commander of the imperial
guard took away the censers and sprinkling bowls--all that were made of
pure gold or silver. {16} The bronze from the two pillars, the
Sea and the movable stands, which Solomon had made for the temple of the
LORD, was more than could be weighed. {17} Each pillar was
twenty-seven feet high. The bronze capital on top of one pillar was four
and a half feet high and was decorated with a network and pomegranates
of bronze all around. The other pillar, with its network, was similar.
{18} The commander of the guard took as prisoners Seraiah the chief
priest, Zephaniah the priest next in rank and the three doorkeepers.
{19} Of those still in the city, he took the officer in charge of
the fighting men and five royal advisers. He also took the secretary who
was chief officer in charge of conscripting the people of the land and
sixty of his men who were found in the city. {20} Nebuzaradan the
commander took them all and brought them to the king of Babylon at
Riblah. {21} There at Riblah, in the land of Hamath, the king had
them executed. So Judah went into captivity, away from her land. {22}
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon appointed Gedaliah son of Ahikam, the
son of Shaphan, to be over the people he had left behind in Judah.
{23} When all the army officers and their men heard that the king of
Babylon had appointed Gedaliah as governor, they came to Gedaliah at
Mizpah--Ishmael son of Nethaniah, Johanan son of Kareah, Seraiah son of
Tanhumeth the Netophathite, Jaazaniah the son of the Maacathite, and
their men. {24} Gedaliah took an oath to reassure them and their
men. "Do not be afraid of the Babylonian officials," he said. "Settle
down in the land and serve the king of Babylon, and it will go well with
you." {25} In the seventh month, however, Ishmael son of
Nethaniah, the son of Elishama, who was of royal blood, came with ten
men and assassinated Gedaliah and also the men of Judah and the
Babylonians who were with him at Mizpah. {26} At this, all the
people from the least to the greatest, together with the army officers,
fled to Egypt for fear of the Babylonians. {27} In the
thirty-seventh year of the exile of Jehoiachin king of Judah, in the
year Evil-Merodach became king of Babylon, he released Jehoiachin from
prison on the twenty-seventh day of the twelfth month. {28} He
spoke kindly to him and gave him a seat of honor higher than those of
the other kings who were with him in Babylon. {29} So Jehoiachin
put aside his prison clothes and for the rest of his life ate regularly
at the king's table. {30} Day by day the king gave Jehoiachin a
regular allowance as long as he lived. |
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