Passover Is Celebrated (2CH 30:13-22)

[30:13] A great number of people gathered in Jerusalem in the second month to celebrate the Festival of Unleavened Bread.

[30:14] They took all the altars that had been used in Jerusalem for offering sacrifices and burning incense and threw them into Kidron Valley.

[30:15] And on the fourteenth day of the month they killed the lambs for the Passover sacrifice. The priests and Levites who were not ritually clean became so ashamed that they dedicated themselves to the Lord, and now they could sacrifice burnt offerings in the Temple.

[30:16] They took their places in the Temple according to the instructions in the Law of Moses, the man of God. The Levites gave the blood of the sacrifices to the priests, who sprinkled it on the altar.

[30:17] Because many of the people were not ritually clean, they could not kill the Passover lambs, so the Levites did it for them and dedicated the lambs to the Lord.

[30:18] In addition, many of those who had come from the tribes of Ephraim, Manasseh, Issachar, and Zebulun had not performed the ritual of purification, and so they were observing Passover improperly. King Hezekiah offered this prayer for them:

[30:19] “O Lord, the God of our ancestors, in your goodness forgive those who are worshiping you with all their heart, even though they are not ritually clean.”

[30:20] The Lord answered Hezekiah's prayer; he forgave the people and did not harm them.

[30:21] For seven days the people who had gathered in Jerusalem celebrated the Festival of Unleavened Bread with great joy, and day after day the Levites and the priests praised the Lord with all their strength.

[30:22] Hezekiah praised the Levites for their skill in conducting the worship of the Lord.

A Second Celebration (2CH 30:22-27)

[30:22] After the seven days during which they offered sacrifices in praise of the Lord, the God of their ancestors,

[30:23] they all decided to celebrate for another seven days. So they celebrated with joy.

[30:24] King Hezekiah contributed 1,000 bulls and 7,000 sheep for the people to kill and eat, and the officials gave them another 1,000 bulls and 10,000 sheep. A large number of priests went through the ritual of purification.

[30:25] So everyone was happy—the people of Judah, the priests, the Levites, the people who had come from the north, and the foreigners who had settled permanently in Israel and Judah.

[30:26] The city of Jerusalem was filled with joy, because nothing like this had happened since the days of King Solomon, the son of David.

[30:27] The priests and the Levites asked the Lord's blessing on the people. In his home in heaven God heard their prayers and accepted them.

Hezekiah Reforms Religious Life (2CH 31:1-21)

[31:1] After the festival ended, all the people of Israel went to every city in Judah and broke the stone pillars, cut down the symbols of the goddess Asherah, and destroyed the altars and the pagan places of worship. They did the same thing throughout the rest of Judah, and the territories of Benjamin, Ephraim, and Manasseh; then they all returned home.

[31:2] King Hezekiah reestablished the organization of the priests and Levites, under which they each had specific duties. These included offering the burnt offerings and the fellowship offerings, taking part in the Temple worship, and giving praise and thanks in the various parts of the Temple.

[31:3] From his own flocks and herds he provided animals for the burnt offerings each morning and evening, and for those offered on the Sabbath, at the New Moon Festival, and at the other festivals which are required by the Law of the Lord.

[31:4] In addition, the king told the people of Jerusalem to bring the offerings to which the priests and the Levites were entitled, so that they could give all their time to the requirements of the Law of the Lord.

[31:5] As soon as the order was given, the people of Israel brought gifts of their finest grain, wine, olive oil, honey, and other farm produce, and they also brought the tithes of everything they had.

[31:6] All the people who lived in the cities of Judah brought tithes of their cattle and sheep, and they also brought large quantities of gifts which they dedicated to the Lord their God.

[31:7] The gifts started arriving in the third month and continued to pile up for the next four months.

[31:8] When King Hezekiah and his officials saw how much had been given, they praised the Lord and praised his people Israel.

[31:9] The king spoke to the priests and the Levites about these gifts,

[31:10] and Azariah the High Priest, a descendant of Zadok, said to him, “Since the people started bringing their gifts to the Temple, there has been enough to eat and a large surplus besides. We have all this because the Lord has blessed his people.”

[31:11] On the king's orders they prepared storerooms in the Temple area

[31:12] and put all the gifts and tithes in them for safekeeping. They placed a Levite named Conaniah in charge and made his brother Shimei his assistant.

[31:13] Ten Levites were assigned to work under them: Jehiel, Azaziah, Nahath, Asahel, Jerimoth, Jozabad, Eliel, Ismachiah, Mahath, and Benaiah. All this was done under the authority of King Hezekiah and Azariah the High Priest.

[31:14] Kore son of Imnah, a Levite who was chief guard at the East Gate of the Temple, was in charge of receiving the gifts offered to the Lord and of distributing them.

[31:15] In the other cities where priests lived, he was faithfully assisted in this by other Levites: Eden, Miniamin, Jeshua, Shemaiah, Amariah, and Shecaniah. They distributed the food equally to their fellow Levites according to what their duties were,

[31:16] and not by clans. They gave a share to all males thirty years of age or older who had daily responsibilities in the Temple in accordance with their positions.

[31:17] The priests were assigned their duties by clans, and the Levites twenty years of age or older were assigned theirs by work groups.

[31:18] They were all registered together with their wives, children, and other dependents, because they were required to be ready to perform their sacred duties at any time.

[31:19] Among the priests who lived in the cities assigned to Aaron's descendants or in the pasture lands belonging to these cities, there were responsible men who distributed the food to all the males in the priestly families and to everyone who was on the rolls of the Levite clans.

[31:20] Throughout all Judah, King Hezekiah did what was right and what was pleasing to the Lord his God.

[31:21] He was successful, because everything he did for the Temple or in observance of the Law, he did in a spirit of complete loyalty and devotion to his God.

The Assyrians Threaten Jerusalem (2CH 32:1-23)

[32:1] After these events, in which King Hezekiah served the Lord faithfully, Sennacherib, the emperor of Assyria, invaded Judah. He besieged the fortified cities and gave orders for his army to break their way through the walls.

[32:2] When Hezekiah saw that Sennacherib intended to attack Jerusalem also,

[32:5] The king strengthened the city's defenses by repairing the wall, building towers on it, and building an outer wall. In addition, he repaired the defenses built on the land that was filled in on the east side of the old part of Jerusalem. He also had a large number of spears and shields made.

[32:6] He placed all the men in the city under the command of army officers and had them assemble in the open square at the city gate. He said to them,

[32:7] “Be determined and confident, and don't be afraid of the Assyrian emperor or of the army he is leading. We have more power on our side than he has on his.

[32:8] He has human power, but we have the Lord our God to help us and to fight our battles.” The people were encouraged by these words of their king.

[32:9] Some time later, while Sennacherib and his army were still at Lachish, he sent the following message to Hezekiah and the people of Judah who were with him in Jerusalem:

[32:10] “I, Sennacherib, Emperor of Assyria, ask what gives you people the confidence to remain in Jerusalem under siege.

[32:11] Hezekiah tells you that the Lord your God will save you from our power, but Hezekiah is deceiving you and will let you die of hunger and thirst.

[32:12] He is the one who destroyed the Lord's shrines and altars and then told the people of Judah and Jerusalem to worship and burn incense at one altar only.

[32:13] Don't you know what my ancestors and I have done to the people of other nations? Did the gods of any other nation save their people from the emperor of Assyria?

[32:14] When did any of the gods of all those countries ever save their country from us? Then what makes you think that your god can save you?

[32:15] Now don't let Hezekiah deceive you or mislead you like that. Don't believe him! No god of any nation has ever been able to save his people from any Assyrian emperor. So certainly this god of yours can't save you!”

[32:16] The Assyrian officials said even worse things about the Lord God and Hezekiah, the Lord's servant.

[32:17] The letter that the emperor wrote defied the Lord, the God of Israel. It said, “The gods of the nations have not saved their people from my power, and neither will Hezekiah's god save his people from me.”

[32:18] The officials shouted this in Hebrew in order to frighten and discourage the people of Jerusalem who were on the city wall, so that it would be easier to capture the city.

[32:19] They talked about the God of Jerusalem in the same way that they talked about the gods of the other peoples, idols made by human hands.

[32:20] Then King Hezekiah and the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz prayed to God and cried out to him for help.

[32:21] The Lord sent an angel that killed the soldiers and officers of the Assyrian army. So the emperor went back to Assyria disgraced. One day when he was in the temple of his god, some of his sons killed him with their swords.

[32:22] In this way the Lord rescued King Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem from the power of Sennacherib, the emperor of Assyria, and also from their other enemies. He let the people live in peace with all the neighboring countries.

[32:23] Many people came to Jerusalem, bringing offerings to the Lord and gifts to Hezekiah, so that from then on all the nations held Hezekiah in honor.

Hezekiah's Illness and Pride (2CH 32:24-26)

[32:24] About this time King Hezekiah became sick and almost died. He prayed, and the Lord gave him a sign that he would recover.

[32:25] But Hezekiah was too proud to show gratitude for what the Lord had done for him, and Judah and Jerusalem suffered for it.

[32:26] Finally, however, Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem humbled themselves, and so the Lord did not punish the people until after Hezekiah's death.

Hezekiah's Wealth and Splendor (2CH 32:27-31)

[32:27] King Hezekiah became very wealthy, and everyone held him in honor. He had storerooms built for his gold, silver, precious stones, spices, shields, and other valuable objects.

[32:28] In addition, he had storehouses built for his grain, wine, and olive oil; barns for his cattle; and pens for his sheep.

[32:29] Besides all this, God gave him sheep and cattle and so much other wealth that he built many cities.

[32:30] It was King Hezekiah who blocked the outlet for Gihon Spring and channeled the water to flow through a tunnel to a point inside the walls of Jerusalem. Hezekiah succeeded in everything he did,

[32:31] and even when the Babylonian ambassadors came to inquire about the unusual event that had happened in the land, God let Hezekiah go his own way only in order to test his character.

The End of Hezekiah's Reign (2CH 32:32-33)

[32:32] Everything else that King Hezekiah did and his devotion to the Lord are recorded in The Vision of the Prophet Isaiah Son of Amoz and in The History of the Kings of Judah and Israel.

[32:33] Hezekiah died and was buried in the upper section of the royal tombs. All the people of Judah and Jerusalem paid him great honor at his death. His son Manasseh succeeded him as king.

King Manasseh of Judah (2CH 33:1-9)

[33:1] Manasseh was twelve years old when he became king of Judah, and he ruled in Jerusalem for fifty-five years.

[33:2] Following the disgusting practices of the nations whom the Lord had driven out of the land as his people advanced, Manasseh sinned against the Lord.

[33:3] He rebuilt the pagan places of worship that his father Hezekiah had destroyed. He built altars for the worship of Baal, made images of the goddess Asherah, and worshiped the stars.

[33:4] He built pagan altars in the Temple, the place that the Lord had said was where he should be worshiped forever.

[33:5] In the two courtyards of the Temple he built altars for the worship of the stars.

[33:6] He sacrificed his sons in Hinnom Valley as burnt offerings. He practiced divination and magic and consulted fortunetellers and mediums. He sinned greatly against the Lord and stirred up his anger.

[33:7] He placed an image in the Temple, the place about which God had said to David and his son Solomon: “Here in Jerusalem, in this Temple, is the place that I have chosen out of all the territory of the twelve tribes of Israel as the place where I am to be worshiped.

[33:8] And if the people of Israel will obey all my commands and keep the whole Law that my servant Moses gave them, then I will not allow them to be driven out of the land that I gave to their ancestors.”

[33:9] Manasseh led the people of Judah to commit even greater sins than those committed by the nations whom the Lord had driven out of the land as his people advanced.

Manasseh Repents (2CH 33:10-17)

[33:10] Although the Lord warned Manasseh and his people, they refused to listen.

[33:11] So the Lord let the commanders of the Assyrian army invade Judah. They captured Manasseh, stuck hooks in him, put him in chains, and took him to Babylon.

[33:12] In his suffering he became humble, turned to the Lord his God, and begged him for help.

[33:13] God accepted Manasseh's prayer and answered it by letting him go back to Jerusalem and rule again. This convinced Manasseh that the Lord was God.

[33:14] After this, Manasseh increased the height of the outer wall on the east side of David's City, from a point in the valley near Gihon Spring north to the Fish Gate and the area of the city called Ophel. He also stationed an army officer in command of a unit of troops in each of the fortified cities of Judah.

[33:15] He removed from the Temple the foreign gods and the image that he had placed there, and the pagan altars that were on the hill where the Temple stood and in other places in Jerusalem; he took all these things outside the city and threw them away.

[33:16] He also repaired the altar where the Lord was worshiped, and he sacrificed fellowship offerings and thanksgiving offerings on it. He commanded all the people of Judah to worship the Lord, the God of Israel.

[33:17] Although the people continued to offer sacrifices at other places of worship, they offered them only to the Lord.

The End of Manasseh's Reign (2CH 33:18-20)

[33:18] Everything else that Manasseh did, the prayer he made to his God, and the messages of the prophets who spoke to him in the name of the Lord, the God of Israel, are all recorded in The History of the Kings of Israel.

[33:19] The king's prayer and God's answer to it, and an account of the sins he committed before he repented—the evil he did, the pagan places of worship and the symbols of the goddess Asherah that he made and the idols that he worshiped—are all recorded in The History of the Prophets.

[33:20] Manasseh died and was buried at the palace, and his son Amon succeeded him as king.