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Bible Overview is a wonderful resource for anyone interested in Bible study. Each month we feature a book of the Bible (in order) with the help of Bible scholar and lecturer, Mary Jane Chapin Chaignot. This month's focus is 2 Kings, which is the final chapter of Israel's primary history. The story that began with Joshua and continued through Judges, Samuel, and Kings concludes with the destruction of both kingdoms. If some of you want to read this history in its entirety, you might want to check our archives where you can find the previous books as well as information on some of the main characters of this time period. The Bible Time-Line in Teaching the Bible is another quick reference tool for locating individuals or specific books. We encourage readers to share their Bible Study success stories on this site. Email us at forum@biblewise.com to be included on next month's site.

2 Kings

2 Kings is a continuation of the history of Israel, a history that is more than half told. This is the part of the story where all the pieces should come together, but instead, and quite literally, it's where everything falls apart. By the end of this book, both kingdoms will have been conquered and destroyed. A brief summary of I Kings will help in understanding the significance of the events in 2 Kings.

In 1 Kings, Solomon ascended the throne upon the demise of David. His main contribution was the building of a glorious Temple in Jerusalem. Upon his death, however, the kingdom was torn apart. His son, Rehoboam, followed him as king over Judah and Benjamin (the southern territory), but the northern ten tribes formed their own kingdom led by Jeroboam (who just happened to be the leader who led the revolt). This division highlighted differences that had always existed between the two communities. Once divided, these communities were staunch rivals, due in part to the dominance of the north. (They had better land and access to the international trade routes.) Eventually the kingdoms became allies when they were mutually threatened by a stronger power - namely, Assyria.

The author(s) of 2 Kings move between the two kingdoms, generally describing the Israelite (northern) king and then his (southern) counterpart in Judah. This brings a sense of disjointedness to the texts. The author(s) were also highly selective in their presentation of the various kings. A good king was one who furthered the people's relationship with Yahweh, not the neighboring states. A good king was one who spent money repairing the temple, not warring after more territory. By default, that made most of the northern kings suspect, or just plain sinners in the eyes of the author(s) because the northern tribes no longer worshipped at the temple in Jerusalem (located in the southern territory). One of the first things Jeroboam did was to establish a center of worship at Shechem, in part to compete with the pull of the temple in Jerusalem. And just as the temple in Jerusalem had the Ark of the Covenant as a symbol of God's presence, Jeroboam erected two bulls to provide a throne for the presence of God in the north. Unfortunately, this "political" alternative to Jerusalem was resoundingly condemned by the author(s) of Kings and was denounced as a "great sin." From that point forward, Jeroboam's sin became a reference point for all his successors.

It is no surprise, then, that the dynasties of the north were judged at the outset as "doing evil in the eyes of the Lord." When the north was destroyed in 722 BCE by the Assyrian emperor, they ceased to exist as a nation. Their territory was subsumed into the Assyrian Empire. The Judeans were righteously convinced that Yahweh had destroyed them precisely because they had built places of worship beyond the confines of the temple in Jerusalem. These ideas were furthered by subsequent events whereby Assyria began its decline at about the same time Josiah began to institute his reforms (and increase his territory). It conformed nicely to the Deuteronomic thought that obedience resulted in blessings, while disobedience resulted in judgment. The southern kingdom had been obedient and was flourishing. The northern kingdom had been disobedient and was destroyed.

Such thinking, however, was short-lived as the Babylonians arrived to take up where the Assyrians left off. Eventually the southern kingdom was conquered by Babylon in 587 BCE, resulting in exile for the priests, officials, artisans, and all but a few peasants. While the priests were sitting in exile, they tried to make sense out of their situation. By selecting certain kings and highlighting certain deeds, the author(s) of 1 & 2 Kings wrote, amazingly, not a story of defeat, but one of hope. They saw both the Assyrians and the Babylonians as the very instruments Yahweh used to enforce his will and teach his lessons. Through the telling of their history, they accepted responsibility for their failures and the ensuing consequences, thereby vindicating God. These documents, then, were written for all time - they were to be used as a teaching tool for future generations who would be able to learn from the mistakes made by God's people and who would choose to live in obedience to God's law. 1 & 2 Kings are essentially a call for repentance borne out of the belief that if the people would only turn to God, God would forgive them and restore them.

There are two primary sections in 2 Kings: 2 Kings 1-17 - the divided kingdom; 2 Kings 18-25 - the fall of Judah.

 
 
1:1-17:41 - the divided kingdom
   
22:52-1:18   Ahaziah (son of Ahab) begins to rule over Israel
He gets hurt, sends messengers to enquire of the god of Ekron
Messengers meet Elijah on the way
Elijah tells them Ahaziah will die because he doesn't believe there is a God in all of Israel (has to inquire of some other god)
Ahaziah dies
     
2:1-25   Elisha inherits Elijah's mantle
It's time for Elijah to leave Elisha
Elisha is not anxious for him to go, does not want to leave him
Elijah parts the water of the Jordan with his mantle
Elisha asks for a "double portion" of spirit
Proper inheritance for eldest son
Elijah tells him if he sees him being taken, it will be so
Chariots of fire come; Elijah is taken up in a whirlwind
Elisha mourns the loss of Elijah, takes his mantle
Elisha parts the waters of the Jordan with Elijah's mantle
Prophets of God search for Elijah
Elisha knows from the beginning it would be a pointless search
Elisha makes the water in the city fresh
Curses boys who tease him
     
3:1-27   Battle with Moab
Moab refuses to pay taxes to Northern Kingdom
Ahab's son, Jeroham, enlists aid of Southern Kingdom
Together, with the king of Edom, they call for a prophet
Elisha tells them they will prevail
They go against Moab in battle, are doing well
King of Moab offers his son in sacrifice
Tide of battle turns, Israel goes home
Edomites would say their god prevailed
Author(s) does not really offer an explanation of these events
     
4:1-5:19   Various Miracles involving Elisha
     
   

4:1-7      Widow's oil
               Widow's sons are to be taken in payment for debts
               She has oil in the house
               Elisha has her fill pots with oil, and she pays her debts

4:8-37   The Shunammite's son
               Elisha frequently stays with a family in Shunem
               Wife is barren, wants a child; Elisha says it will happen
               Wife has a son; one day son gets sick and dies
               Woman loses her son but not her faith, she finds Elisha
               Elisha tells servant (Gehazi) to lay his staff on child
               Nothing happens
               Elisha's prayer, presence bring the boy back to life

4:38-41 Death in the pot
               Sons of prophets begin to eat from stew that is poisoned
               Elisha neutralizes poison; they all eat

4:42-44 Elisha feeds the multitude
                A limited amount of food is multiplied for many - with                 leftovers!

5:1-19    Healing of Naaman, a Syrian Leper
                Naaman is commander of the army, and a leper
                Wife's maiden is from Israel, talks about the Prophet from                 Israel
                Naaman takes many gifts, goes to see king of Israel
                King of Israel mourns, cannot cure anyone of leprosy
                Elisha finds out king is upset, invites Naaman to visit him
                Tells Naaman to wash seven times in the Jordan
                Naaman is outraged, humiliated
                Servants tell him to obey, Naaman does, and leprosy is                 gone
                After his healing, Naaman is very grateful, tries to repay                 Elisha
                Elisha refuses all gifts; Naaman says he will worship the                 true God

     
5:20-27   Gehazi's greed
Gehazi runs after Naaman, asks for a "few gifts"
Elisha is very disappointed; Gehazi's family will have leprosy
     
6:1-7:20   Invasions from Syria
     
   

6:1-7          Floating axe head
                   Sons of prophets cut down trees; axe head is lost
                   Elisha throws in stick, axe head floats and is recovered

6:8-23        Spiritual lessons continue - Arameans (Syrians)
                    Elisha is able to foretell where Syrians will camp
                    Is very upsetting to Syrian king, wants to capture Elisha
                    Syrian king sends chariots to Dothan where Elisha is
                    The chariots circle the city causing fear in Elisha's                     servant
                    Elisha prays; army is struck blind
                    Elisha leads them to Samaria; king of Samaria is told to                     feed them
                    Army returns to Aram; war is over

6:24-7:20  The Siege of Samaria
                    Some time later, Syrian king comes back, besieges                     Samaria
                    People resort to eating human flesh
                    Jehoram mourns, wants to take it out on Elisha
                    Decides to kill Elisha
                    Elisha foretells visit from army, tells them siege will be                     over next day
                    That evening 4 lepers go to army camp, hoping to get                     food
                    Camp is deserted: they think 4 lepers are huge army
                    Lepers help themselves, then tell king
                    King sends out "suicide mission" to see if it's a trap
                    Report comes back that Syrians have really abandoned                     their camp
                    All Israel eats well that night
                    Elisha's words are fulfilled

     
8:1-6   Shunammite regains her land
Elisha warns Shunammite about coming famine
She and her family go to the land of the Philistines for 7 years
When they return, she goes to the king to ask for return of her land
Gehazi happens to be there, talking about Elisha
He sees the woman, tells the king all that Elisha has done for her
King restores woman's land
     
8:7-15   Elisha and Hazael
King of Syria is ill, asks Hazael (origin unknown) to inquire of man of God
Elisha's answer is that king will recover, but he will surely die
Elisha weeps because Hazael will become king
Hazael will do many atrocities against Israel
Hazael kills king, becomes king as Elisha prophesied
     
8:16-29   History of kings, most "did evil in the sight of the Lord"
     
9:1-37   The End of the House of Ahab
Elisha tells a son of the prophet to go anoint Jehu the son of Jehoshaphat
Jehu is conferring with commanders, is quite surprised
Accepts anointing (This was also part of Elijah's commission)
Jehu goes out to confront King of Israel (King of Judah is visiting)
Messengers are sent to inquire whether his visit is of peace
Messengers fall in behind Jehu
Jehu reaches Jezreel. Kings go out to ask re: peace
Jehu kills them both - Ahaziah of Judah; Joram of Israel.
Jezebel is also killed; prophesies re: their deaths are fulfilled
     
10:1-31   Jehu wipes out Ahab's remaining family
Jehu also kills relatives of king of Judah's family
Jehu calls for a huge celebration, says he wants to sacrifice to Baal
When all Baal worshippers are gathered, he has them all killed
In that way, Jehu's ruse gets rid of Baal throughout the land
But Jehu does not rid the land of the golden calves in Dan and Bethel
His father had established these
Still, the author(s) say that Jehu "did right in the eyes of the Lord"
     
10:32-36   King Hazael is beginning to attack parts of Israel
Some of the territory of Israel is falling to Syria (not a good sign)
     
11:1-21   Meanwhile back in the southern kingdom -- Athalia takes over Judah
With her son, Ahaziah, dead, Athalia kills the royal family and rules Judah
(One son, Joash, is hidden for 6 years)
Jehoiada, the high priest, installs Joash as king when he is seven
Athalia never did have any right to govern; she is killed
Joash "did right in the eyes of the Lord" -- as long as Jehoiada was there
Covenant is renewed between people and God
     
12:1-16   Joash as king
He institutes temple repairs
Turns process over to the priests; they drop the ball
Then he turns it over to the people
Repairs are done, but no one seems too interested in them
House of the Lord is 127 years old; needs upkeep
Lack of enthusiasm is considered disobedience against God
     
12:17-21   Joash as a military figure
Hazael sets his face to attack Jerusalem
Joash empties temple and palace treasuries, sends gifts
Hazael goes back home
     
13:1-14:29   Kings of Judah and Israel
Short histories of several kings, both Judah and Israel
There is considerable fighting with Syria, though Israel prevails
Elisha dies, predicts Israel will only defeat Syria three times
Eventually kings of Judah and Israel face off
Israel prevails
     
15:1-16:20   The end of Israel comes closer
Several more Kings in Israel "did what was evil in the sight of the Lord."
King of Assyria came against them; Israel pays tribute
War is averted
Kings of Syria and Israel combine to wage war against Judah
They are worried about the king of Assyria and want to force Judah to join forces with them in warding off Assyria
King of Judah asks for help from king of Assyria
Pays heavy tribute for his aid
It works; Assyria brings protection to the south
These chapters (13-16) are rife with war, civil strife, revolution, and incompetence. The author(s) claim God is resolutely in charge. God only wishes good for them; God is bound to them through his covenant. Yet their relentless sin requires justice.
     
17:1-41   The end of the Northern Kingdom (Israel)
Israel's last king is Hoshea - means deliverer (very ironic)
Assyria (Shalmaneser) comes against Israel
First Hoshea pays more tribute, but then he stops
Shalmaneser besieges Samaria for three years.
In the ninth year of Hoshea, the Assyrians capture Samaria (722BCE)
Israel falls due to the accumulation of divine displeasure - for centuries!
Ends with a whole litany of sins and lack of trust and disobedience
Not that Judah is perfect, but at least Judah keeps the customs
     
18:1-25:30 - The History of Judah and its fall
     
18:1-12   Introduction of Hezekiah
Hezekiah begins his reign in the third year of Hoshea
He "did what was right in the eyes of the Lord"
He institutes many reforms, watches Israel fall and be exiled
He is referred to as the "second David"
Despite the deliberate contrast of Hezekiah with the northern kings, he, too, is threatened by Assyria
     
18:14-16   Hezekiah offers to pay tribute to king of Assyria
Temple treasuries are stripped one more time
     
18:17-37   New king of Assyria (Sennacherib) decides tribute is not enough
Commander goes to Judah to convince them to avoid siege by surrendering, regales them with tales of horrors and sufferings
This could all be avoided - just surrender
If they surrender, they will live -- in exile
Commander brags that no god has been able to withstand Assyria
That will also be true for Judah's God
     
19:1-7   Commander's words overreach their claims
Hezekiah consults Isaiah; Commander has mocked God by claiming God is powerless and impotent to save Judah
Isaiah tells him "be not afraid"
Isaiah says, the Lord will confuse Sennacherib, send him home to die
     
19:8-13   Instead of going home, Sennacherib sends another threatening communication to Hezekiah
     
19:14-19   This time Hezekiah prays on his own
     
19:20-34   Isaiah returns with a second prophecy
This is God's response to Hezekiah's prayer - much more specific
Assyria is under God's control
Assyria will withdraw; recovery in Judah would be slow but steady
Sennacherib will withdraw without war
     
19:35-37   Sennacherib's army suffers enormous casualties by God's hand
Sennacherib returns home, is killed by one of his sons
Isaiah's prophecy is fulfilled
     
20:1-21   Deliverance and Exile
     
   

20:1-11      Hezekiah is ill, calls for Isaiah
                    Isaiah prophesies he will not recover
                    Hezekiah prays; God hears his prayer
                    God tells Isaiah new report; Isaiah returns to Hezekiah
                    God gives two signs to Hezekiah re: his recovery

20:12-21    Visitors from Babylon
                    Hezekiah shows visitors from Babylon all his wealth
                    Isaiah says the day will come when all that wealth will                     be in Babylon
                    This will not happen in Hezekiah's lifetime
                    Hints of the end are accumulating

     
21:1-18   Hezekiah's son, Manasseh, becomes king
Manasseh undoes all the good that his father accomplished
All the high places are reinstated, idol worship, leads them astray
Destruction of Jerusalem is foretold
     
21:19-26   Manasseh's son, Amon, becomes king
Did "evil in the sight of the Lord"
     
22:1-23:30   King Josiah, son of Amon, a righteous king
     
   

22:1-13      in the eighteenth year of his reign, he begins work on                     the temple
                    One of the workers finds "The Book of the Law" (Book of                     Deuteronomy)
                    Upon reading the book, he realizes how far off the mark                     Judah is
                    He mourns, sends envoys to consult with the                     prophetess, Huldah

22:14-20    Huldah's message
                    Disaster will come, but because Josiah humbled                     himself, he will not see it

23:1-3        Josiah calls the people together
                   Reads the words of the book to the assembly, renews                    the covenant

23:4-25     Lengthy report of Josiah's reforms
                   Does away with all the high places, Baals, Asherahs,                    even altar at Bethel
                   "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." (23:25)

23:26-30   Judah's fate has already been decided
                    Josiah's reforms are too little too late
                    Josiah dies in battle - tough ending for good king (sign                     of the times)

     
23:36-25:30   the End of Judah
     
   

23:31-37    Josiah's successors "did evil in the sight of the Lord"
                    Egypt interferes in Judaean politics installing their                     favorite
                    Egypt imposes a high tariff, takes former king to Egypt

24:1-7        Current king is Jehoiakim, Josiah's son
                    During his reign, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon,                     invades
                    For three years, Jehoiakim pays tribute, then he rebels

24:8-17      Price of rebellion is Nebuchadnezzar besieging                     Jerusalem
                    Eventually Jehoiakim surrenders, is carried off to                     Babylon
                    He also takes all the treasury, army, artisans - only the                     poor are left

24:18-20   Zedekiah (Jehoiakim's uncle) is installed as king (by                    Babylonians) and reigns in Jerusalem

25:1-7       Zedekiah also rebels against Babylon
                  In the ninth year of his reign Nebuchadnezzar besieges                   Jerusalem again
                  After three-year siege, life is desperate
                  Short war, Jerusalem is captured; Zedekiah is tortured,                   exiled

25:8-21    Weeks later, city of Jerusalem is torched; temple is                   destroyed

25:22-26  Gedaliah, grandson of Josiah's secretary, is appointed to                    govern
                   Babylonians watch him carefully
                   Gedaliah preaches compliance with the Babylonians,                    but is shortly killed
                   Out of fear, remaining people flee to Egypt
                   Book ends with epilogue:

25:27-30   After 37 years, king of Babylon releases Jehoiakim
                   Treated him well

   
  The authors could have left the ending barren, devoid of hope. But just the fact that Jehoiakim is alive and living well is a reminder of God's promise to David. At least there is the possibility of David's line continuing forever. The final words of Kings, then, are not hopeless; God's last words might not be rejection of his people, the temple, and the city. As it is, God's options are wide open. So are the children's of Israel. The next book, 1 & 2 Chronicles is an attempt to reinterpret their history, to tweak it, to give it a positive spin - to provide hope for the future. If the message of Kings was to show how disobedience and sin lead to defeat, the message of the Chronicler is that out of the ashes of defeat arise faith and victory.
   
 

Bibliography

Alter, Robert and Frank Kermode. The Literary Guide to the Bible. Cambridge, MA:      Belknap Press. 1987.

Brueggeman, Walter. "1 & 2 Kings." Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary. Macon,      Georgia: Smyth & Helwys. 2000.

Provan, Iain. "1 and 2 Kings." New International Biblical Commentary. Peabody,      MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1995.

Mills, Watson and Richard Wilson. Mercer Commentary on the Bible. Macon, GA:      Mercer University Press, 1995

Auld, A.Graeme. "I & II Kings." The Daily Study Bible Series. Philadelphia, PA:      Westminster Press, 1986.

Nelson, Richard. "I & II Kings." Interpretation. Atlanta: John Knox Press. 1987.

Rice, Gene. "1 Kings, Nations Under God." The International Theological      Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 1990.

   
 
   
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