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<h3> CHAPTER 3. How Manasseh Reigned After Hezekiah; And How When He Was In Captivity He Returned To God And Was Restored To His Kingdom And Left It To [His Son] Amon. </h3>
<p>1. When king Hezekiah had survived the interval of time already mentioned,
and had dwelt all that time in peace, he died, having completed fifty-four
years of his life, and reigned twenty-nine. But when his son Manasseh,
whose mother's name was Hephzibah, of Jerusalem, had taken the kingdom, he
departed from the conduct of his father, and fell into a course of life
quite contrary thereto, and showed himself in his manners most wicked in
all respects, and omitted no sort of impiety, but imitated those
transgressions of the Israelites, by the commission of which against God
they had been destroyed; for he was so hardy as to defile the temple of
God, and the city, and the whole country; for, by setting out from a
contempt of God, he barbarously slew all the righteous men that were among
the Hebrews; nor would he spare the prophets, for he every day slew some
of them, till Jerusalem was overflown with blood. So God was angry at
these proceedings, and sent prophets to the king, and to the multitude, by
whom he threatened the very same calamities to them which their brethren
the Israelites, upon the like affronts offered to God, were now under. But
these men would not believe their words, by which belief they might have
reaped the advantage of escaping all those miseries; yet did they in
earnest learn that what the prophets had told them was true.</p>
<p>2. And when they persevered in the same course of life, God raised up war
against them from the king of Babylon and Chaldea, who sent an army
against Judea, and laid waste the country; and caught king Manasseh by
treachery, and ordered him to be brought to him, and had him under his
power to inflict what punishment he pleased upon him. But then it was that
Manasseh perceived what a miserable condition he was in, and esteeming
himself the cause of all, he besought God to render his enemy humane and
merciful to him. Accordingly, God heard his prayer, and granted him what
he prayed for. So Manasseh was released by the king of Babylon, and
escaped the danger he was in; and when he was come to Jerusalem, he
endeavored, if it were possible, to cast out of his memory those his
former sins against God, of which he now repented, and to apply himself to
a very religious life. He sanctified the temple, and purged the city, and
for the remainder of his days he was intent on nothing but to return his
thanks to God for his deliverance, and to preserve him propitious to him
all his life long. He also instructed the multitude to do the same, as
having very nearly experienced what a calamity he was fallen into by a
contrary conduct. He also rebuilt the altar, and offered the legal
sacrifices, as Moses commanded. And when he had re-established what
concerned the Divine worship, as it ought to be, he took care of the
security of Jerusalem: he did not only repair the old walls with great
diligence, but added another wall to the former. He also built very lofty
towers, and the garrisoned places before the city he strengthened, not
only in other respects, but with provisions of all sorts that they wanted.
And indeed, when he had changed his former course, he so led his life for
the time to come, that from the time of his return to piety towards God he
was deemed a happy man, and a pattern for imitation. When therefore he had
lived sixty-seven years, he departed this life, having reigned fifty-five
years, and was buried in his own garden; and the kingdom came to his son
Amon, whose mother's name was Meshulemeth, of the city of Jotbath.</p>
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<h3> CHAPTER 4. How Amon Reigned Instead Of Manasseh; And After Amon Reigned Josiah; He Was Both Righteous And Religious. As Also Concerning Huldah The Prophetess. </h3>
<p>1. This Amon imitated those works of his father which he insolently did
when he was young: so he had a conspiracy made against him by his own
servants, and was slain in his own house, when he had lived twenty-four
years, and of them had reigned two. But the multitude punished those that
slew Amon, and buried him with his father, and gave the kingdom to his son
Josiah, who was eight years old. His mother was of the city of Boscath,
and her name was Jedidah. He was of a most excellent disposition, and
naturally virtuous, and followed the actions of king David, as a pattern
and a rule to him in the whole conduct of his life. And when he was twelve
years old, he gave demonstrations of his religious and righteous behavior;
for he brought the people to a sober way of living, and exhorted them to
leave off the opinion they had of their idols, because they were not gods,
but to worship their own God. And by repeating on the actions of his
progenitors, he prudently corrected what they did wrong, like a very
elderly man, and like one abundantly able to understand what was fit to be
done; and what he found they had well done, he observed all the country
over, and imitated the same. And thus he acted in following the wisdom and
sagacity of his own nature, and in compliance with the advice and
instruction of the elders; for by following the laws it was that he
succeeded so well in the order of his government, and in piety with regard
to the Divine worship. And this happened because the transgressions of the
former kings were seen no more, but quite vanished away; for the king went
about the city, and the whole country, and cut down the groves which were
devoted to strange gods, and overthrew their altars; and if there were any
gifts dedicated to them by his forefathers, he made them ignominious, and
plucked them down; and by this means he brought the people back from their
opinion about them to the worship of God. He also offered his accustomed
sacrifices and burnt- offerings upon the altar. Moreover, he ordained
certain judges and overseers, that they might order the matters to them
severally belonging, and have regard to justice above all things, and
distribute it with the same concern they would have about their own soul.
He also sent over all the country, and desired such as pleased to bring
gold and silver for the repairs of the temple, according to every one's
inclinations and abilities. And when the money was brought in, he made one
Maaseiah the governor of the city, and Shaphan the scribe, and Joab the
recorder, and Eliakim the high priest, curators of the temple, and of the
charges contributed thereto; who made no delay, nor put the work off at
all, but prepared architects, and whatsoever was proper for those repairs,
and set closely about the work. So the temple was repaired by this means,
and became a public demonstration of the king's piety.</p>
<p>2. But when he was now in the eighteenth year of his reign, he sent to
Eliakim the high priest, and gave order, that out of what money was
overplus, he should cast cups, and dishes, and vials, for ministration [in
the temple]; and besides, that they should bring all the gold or silver
which was among the treasures, and expend that also in making cups and the
like vessels. But as the high priest was bringing out the gold, he lighted
upon the holy books of Moses that were laid up in the temple; and when he
had brought them out, he gave them to Shaphan the scribe, who, when he had
read them, came to the king, and informed him that all was finished which
he had ordered to be done. He also read over the books to him, who, when
he had heard them read, rent his garment, and called for Eliakim the high
priest, and for [Shaphan] the scribe, and for certain [other] of his most
particular friends, and sent them to Huldah the prophetess, the wife of
Shallum, [which Shallum was a man of dignity, and of an eminent family,]
and bid them go to her, and say that [he desired] she would appease God,
and endeavor to render him propitious to them, for that there was cause to
fear, lest, upon the transgression of the laws of Moses by their
forefathers, they should be in peril of going into captivity, and of being
cast out of their own country; lest they should be in want of all things,
and so end their days miserably. When the prophetess had heard this from
the messengers that were sent to her by the king, she bid them go back to
the king, and say that "God had already given sentence against them, to
destroy the people, and cast them out of their country, and deprive them
of all the happiness they enjoyed;" which sentence none could set aside by
any prayers of theirs, since it was passed on account of their
transgressions of the laws, and of their not having repented in so long a
time, while the prophets had exhorted them to amend, and had foretold the
punishment that would ensue on their impious practices; which threatening
God would certainly execute upon them, that they might be persuaded that
he is God, and had not deceived them in any respect as to what he had
denounced by his prophets; that yet, because Josiah was a righteous man,
he would at present delay those calamities, but that after his death he
would send on the multitude what miseries he had determined for them.</p>
<p>3. So these messengers, upon this prophecy of the woman, came and told it
to the king; whereupon he sent to the people every where, and ordered that
the priests and the Levites should come together to Jerusalem; and
commanded that those of every age should be present also. And when they
had gathered together, he first read to them the holy books; after which
he stood upon a pulpit, in the midst of the multitude, and obliged them to
make a covenant, with an oath, that they would worship God, and keep the
laws of Moses. Accordingly, they gave their assent willingly, and
undertook to do what the king had recommended to them. So they immediately
offered sacrifices, and that after an acceptable manner, and besought God
to be gracious and merciful to them. He also enjoined the high priest,
that if there remained in the temple any vessel that was dedicated to
idols, or to foreign gods, they should cast it out. So when a great number
of such vessels were got together, he burnt them, and scattered their
ashes abroad, and slew the priests of the idols that were not of the
family of Aaron.</p>
<p>4. And when he had done thus in Jerusalem, he came into the country, and
utterly destroyed what buildings had been made therein by king Jeroboam,
in honor of strange gods; and he burnt the bones of the false prophets
upon that altar which Jeroboam first built; and, as the prophet [Jadon],
who came to Jeroboam when he was offering sacrifice, and when all the
people heard him, foretold what would come to pass, viz. that a certain
man of the house of David, Josiah by name, should do what is here
mentioned. And it happened that those predictions took effect after three
hundred and sixty-one years.</p>
<p>5. After these things, Josiah went also to such other Israelites as had
escaped captivity and slavery under the Assyrians, and persuaded them to
desist from their impious practices, and to leave off the honors they paid
to strange gods, but to worship rightly their own Almighty God, and adhere
to him. He also searched the houses, and the villages, and the cities, out
of a suspicion that somebody might have one idol or other in private; nay,
indeed, he took away the chariots [of the sun] that were set up in his
royal palace, <SPAN href="#link10note-7" name="link10noteref-7" id="link10noteref-7"><small>7</small></SPAN> which his predecessors had
framed, and what thing soever there was besides which they worshipped as a
god. And when he had thus purged all the country, he called the people to
Jerusalem, and there celebrated the feast of unleavened bread, and that
called the passover. He also gave the people for paschal sacrifices, young
kids of the goats, and lambs, thirty thousand, and three thousand oxen for
burnt-offerings. The principal of the priests also gave to the priests
against the passover two thousand and six hundred lambs; the principal of
the Levites also gave to the Levites five thousand lambs, and five hundred
oxen, by which means there was great plenty of sacrifices; and they
offered those sacrifices according to the laws of Moses, while every
priest explained the matter, and ministered to the multitude. And indeed
there had been no other festival thus celebrated by the Hebrews from the
times of Samuel the prophet; and the plenty of sacrifices now was the
occasion that all things were performed according to the laws, and
according to the custom of their forefathers. So when Josiah had after
this lived in peace, nay, in riches and reputation also, among all men, he
ended his life in the manner following.</p>
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