2 kings 21-23:30

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2 Kings 21-23:30 Repentance and Reformation Kings Manaeh and Josiah of Judah

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Page 1: 2 Kings 21-23:30

2 Kings 21-23:30���Repentance and Reformation

Kings Manasseh and Josiah of Judah

Page 2: 2 Kings 21-23:30

~726 BC

Assyrian/Babylonian Captivity of Israel

(11) Southern Kingdom: Judah

(11) (29)

Manasseh   Josiah  Hezekiah   Jehoiakim   Zedekiah  

Amon

 

Jeho

ahaz  

(55) (31)

~609 BC586 BC

~592-570 BC

~626-586 BCJeremiah

Ezekiel

Fall of Judah to Babylon

612 BC

Fall of Assyria to Babylon

Part  2  

Jeho

iach

in  

Isaiah

~605-535 BCDaniel

-685 BC

ProphetsKings  

(approx. reign in years)

Legend:

Kings  and  Prophets  Timeline  

Page 3: 2 Kings 21-23:30

King Manasseh of Judah���

Page 4: 2 Kings 21-23:30

King Manasseh’s Deeds���  Followed the detestable practices of the nations driven out

before Israel���

  Rebuilt the high places, erected altars to Baal and Asherah poles���

  Built altars in the temple and worshiped the starry host���

  In the valley of Ben Hinnom, sacrificed his son in the fire to Molech���

  Practiced sorcery, divination, consulted mediums and spiritists���

  Shed much innocent blood, filling Jerusalem end to end���

  Led the people astray, causing them to do evil���

2 Ki. 21, 2 Chr. 33���

Page 5: 2 Kings 21-23:30

King Amon of Judah���

Page 6: 2 Kings 21-23:30

King Josiah of Judah���

Page 7: 2 Kings 21-23:30

King Josiah’s Deeds���  8th year of his reign: he began to seek God���

  12th year of his reign: began to purge Jerusalem and Judah of idols���

  18th year of his reign: repaired the temple���

  Read the Book of the Covenant to the people and renewed the covenant, leading all the people to pledge themselves to the covenant���

  Cleansed the land���

  Removed and burned articles and altars to other gods from the temple���

  Removed pagan priests, tore down the shrines and desecrated the shrines and high places and altar to Molech, Smashed sacred stones and cut down Asherah poles, all detestable things���

  Slaughtered all the priests of the high places, burned human bones on the altars���

  Celebrated the Passover like never before or since in the days of the kings���

2 Ki. 22-23, 2 Chr. 34-35���

Page 8: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Archeological Evidence���  Existence of these rulers?���

  Main sources: Assyrian and Babylonian records���

  Manasseh – ���

  1 seal (not found in situ), ���

  2 records (Esarhaddon – materials, Ashurbanipal – help repress Egyptian revolt)���

  Josiah – non in situ ostracon (names king)���

Page 9: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Assyrian Zenith & Fall���  681 B.C. King Sennacherib is assassinated by his sons���

  680-669 B.C. Esarhaddon reigns���

  671 Defeats Taharka, king of Egypt; makes Egypt a province of Assyria���

  669 Dies on a campaign against Egypt���

  669-627 B.C. Ashurbanipal succeeds his father���

  Established huge royal library���

  662 Defeats nephew of Tahakra of Egypt; Established Necho, an Egyptian prince, as a vassal pharaoh���

  652 B.C. Babylonian king (his brother) revolts, takes 4 years to subdue���

  650 B.C. Coalition of Egypt, Phoenicia and others revolt, subdued in 648 B.C.���

  627 B.C. Ashurbanipal dies and Assyria fights Scythian invasion from north���Facts compiled from Old Testament Times by R. K. Harrison���

Page 10: 2 Kings 21-23:30

The Assyrian Empire���

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Map_of_Assyria.png���

Page 11: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Babylonian Rebellion & Rise���

  652 B.C. Babylonian king (brother of Ashurbanipal) revolts, subdued after 4 years���

  626 B.C. Babylon successfully asserts her independence from Assyria���

  616 B.C. King Nabopolassar allies with the Medes to attack Assyria���

  614 Ashur (capital city) fell���

  612 Ninevah fell���

  610 the last remnant of Assyrian forces were wiped out at Haran���

  612-539 B.C. Babylonian Empire begins with the marriage of the daughter of the Medan king to Nebuchadnezzar II, son of Nabopolassar���

Facts compiled from Old Testament Times by R. K. Harrison���

Page 12: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Political Events���686 Hezekiah dies, ���

Manasseh reigns��� 681 Sennacherib dies, ���680 Esarhaddon reigns���

640 Amon dies, ��� Josiah reigns���

609 Josiah dies, ��� Jehoahaz II reigns,���

Jehoiakim reigns���

664 Taharka dies, ��� nephew reigns/dies,���

662 Neco installed���

669 Esarhaddon dies, ��� Ashurbanipal reigns���

627 Ashurbanipal dies���

633 Psamtik I reigns���Until 609 B.C.���

652 Babylonian king revolts��� (4 yrs to subdue)���

650 Egypt, Phoenicia revolts��� (2 yrs to subdue)���

626 Babylonian rebels���

Judah��� Assyria���Egypt���

616 Nabopolassar + Medes���Begins attacks on Assyria���

626 Assyria fights Scythians���

610 Neco II reigns���Until 595 B.C.���

Babylon���

642 Manasseh dies, ��� Amon reigns���

Facts compiled from Old Testament Times by R. K. Harrison���

605 Battle of Carchemish���Judah becomes Babylonian vassal���

Page 13: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Egyptian Role���  Psamtik I reigns in Egypt 633-610���

  610-595 B.C. Neco II reigns���

  609 B.C. Neco II moves to aid Assyria’s forces���

  King Josiah opposes his movement and is killed at Megiddo���

  609-605 B.C. Neco II of Egypt controls Judah���

  Removes Josiah’s son Jehoahaz after reigning 3 months, replaces him with son Jehoiakim���

  Imposes a big tribute on Judah (2 Chr. 36:1-3)���

  Neco II battles Nebuchadnezzar II (prince of Babylon) at Carchemish���

  Egypt routed and Judah becomes a Babylonian vassal���

Facts compiled from Old Testament Times by R. K. Harrison���

Page 14: 2 Kings 21-23:30

The Assyrian Empire���

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Map_of_Assyria.png���

Page 15: 2 Kings 21-23:30

The Minor Prophets���

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineveh���

  Nahum – vision concerning judgment on Nineveh/Assyria�

  Habakkuk – beautiful discourse between complaints of the prophet and God’s responses���

  Complaint of injustice���

  Response of Babylonians���

  Prayer for mercy ���

  Profession of trust in God���

  “Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior. ���

  The Sovereign Lord is my strength; he makes my feet like the feet of a deer, he enables me to go onto the heights.” Habakkuk 3:17-19���

Page 16: 2 Kings 21-23:30

the Prophetess Huldah���

http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/biblical-topics/bible-versions-and-translations/a-sefer-torah-in-the-bologna-library-may-be-the-oldest-known-torah-scroll/���

  2 Kings 22:8-20, 2 Chr. 34:19-28���

  Discovery – “Book of the Law” or “Book of the Covenant”���

  Huldah – woman, married, highly respected prophetess of the Lord, living in Jerusalem���

  God’s Response: ���

“I am going to bring disaster..”���

But also, “because your heart was responsive and you have humbled yourself…you will not see all the disaster”���

Page 17: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Scripture Passages���Manasseh���

  Read 2 Kings 21:10-16���

2 Chr. 33:10-17���

Josiah���

  Read 2 Kings 22:8-20���

2 Kings 23:24-27���

Lev. 4:13 ���

Page 18: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Table Discussion���  Manasseh���

  (2 Ki.s 21:10-16, and 2 Chr. 33:10-17)���

  What did God do to get Manasseh’s attention?���

  When and how was God merciful to Manasseh?���

  What changed in Manasseh’s thinking?���

  What elements of true repentance do we see in Manasseh’s behavior?���

  What spiritual responsibility does a leader have towards his people?���

  BONUS: What hope do you get from this passage?���

  Josiah���  (2 Ki.s 22:8-20, 23:24-27, with Lev. 4:13)���

  Under what circumstances was the Book of the Law found?���

  What did Josiah assume upon reading the law? (see Lev. 4:13) What did he do?���

  Who did God speak through and what does that teach us? ���

  How does God deal with those who repent?���

  How did Josiah’s actions demonstrate his heartfelt repentance?���

  How did Josiah help others to repent?���

Page 19: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Lessons from Manasseh���  Sometimes God is speaking, but we don’t listen.���

  God listens to humble prayer.���

  Answered prayer teaches us who God is.���

  True repentance means removing idols from our lives.���

  There’s hope even for the most wicked.���

Page 20: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Lessons from Josiah���  Ignorance of sin does not mean innocent of sin.���

  God chooses whomever He will to deliver His message.���

  God is gracious to the humble heart.���

  Our sins, though repented of, have consequences.���

Page 21: 2 Kings 21-23:30

2 Kings 21-23���The Responsibility of

Leadership���  2 Kings 21:9���

  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.���

  2 Chr. 34:33 ���  Josiah removed all the detestable idols from all the territory belonging to the

Israelites, and he had all who were present in Israel serve the LORD their God. As long as he lived, they did not fail to follow the LORD, the God of their ancestors.���

A sinful leader can cause people to sin, but a godly leader can help people faithful repent.���

Page 22: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Apply It:���

  Is God speaking and you aren’t listening?���

  Where is your leadership taking others?���

  For whom do you need to maintain hope? ���

  How are you currently seeking God?���

  What sin has the Lord made you aware of? How will you repent?���

  How can you help others repent of sin?���

Page 23: 2 Kings 21-23:30

Next Week���King Johiakim and Jehoiachin

Prophet Ezekiel

(2 Kings 24, Jeremiah 36-37)