Sunday, August 24, 2014

Lecture Seven: Prophets and Kings of the South




Rehoboam King of Judah (1st Kgs. 14:21-31)

After the split, Solomon’s son Rehoboam continued to reign for 17 years over Judah from Jerusalem, and the people continued to be evil during his reign.

“By the sins they committed they stirred up his jealous anger more than those who were before them had done. They also set up for themselves high places, sacred stones and Asherah poles on every high hill and under every spreading tree. There were even male shrine prostitutes in the land; the people engaged in all the detestable practices of the nations the LORD had driven out before the Israelites.”
-- 1st Kings 14:22-24

In Rehoboam’s fifth year, Judah was attacked by Shishak king of Egypt.

The Egyptians took the treasures of the royal palace and the Temple.

Throughout Rehoboam’s reign, he was at war with Jeroboam in the north.

The Kings of Judah…according to puppets…



Abijah (15:1-8)

He reigned in Jerusalem for 3 years

He was bad.

He was Absalom’s grandson.

Warred against Jeroboam throughout his reign.

Asa (15:9-24)

He reigned in Jerusalem 41 years

He was good.

He got rid of the idols.

He even deposed the wicked Queen Mother.

Baasha of Israel started a war with him during his reign.

He had diseased feet in his old age.

Jehoshaphat (22:41-50)

He reigned over Judah for 25 years.

He was a good king…but kind of dummy, too.

He forbade worshiping idols, but failed to destroy them…

He built ships, but they never set sail…

Jehoram (2nd Kgs. 8:16-24)

He reigned in Jerusalem for 8 years.

He was evil.

He married one of Ahab’s daughters.

Edom rebelled during his reign.

Ahaziah (8:25-29)

He reigned for one year.

He was bad, too.

He teamed up with Israel and went to war against Hazael of Aram, but he died in battle.

Athaliah and Joash (11:1-21)

Joash was the only boy left alive from the house of David.

His aunt Jehosheba hid him in the Temple for six years from his crazy grandma Athaliah.

Priests proclaim Joash king on his seventh birthday.

Revealed to the worshipers

Crown placed on head, given copy of The Law

Athaliah came to the Temple and tried to make a scene, but the Temple guards arrested her and put her to death outside of the Temple.

High Priest Jehoiada made a covenant between the king and the people and between the king and God.

The people then destroyed Baal’s temple, and the land had peace.

Joash Repairs the Temple (12:1-21)

Joash reigned in Jerusalem for 40 years.

He did what was right in God’s sight.

Joash set up a fund for Temple repairs.

When he turned 30, he saw that the priests had not done a good job in repairing damages at the Temple, so he told the priests to use the money to hire workers who knew what they were doing, and in this way the Temple was finally repaired.

Hazael King of Aram attacked Jerusalem, and Joash emptied the Temple treasury and the royal treasury and gave it all to Hazael to make him go away.

One day, as Joash was walking down the road, some of his own officials attacked him and killed him.

Joash’s son Amaziah succeeded him as king, and the Davidic Dynasty continued.
More Kings

Amaziah King of Judah (14:1-22)

29 year reign. He was pretty good at first.

He defeated Edom in battle and got cocky.
Picked an unwanted fight with Israel.

King of Israel captured Amaziah and put him in jail.
King of Israel raided Jerusalem and the Temple.


Amaziah’s own people came and assassinated him.

Azariah King of Judah (15:1-7)

Became king at age 16.
52 year reign. He was good, but
his subjects worshiped idols.
Azariah was a leper and became co-regent with his son Jotham

Jotham King of Judah (15:32-38)

16 year official reign. He was good.
He rebuilt the Temple's Upper Gate.
Israel and the Assyrians
began to struggle against Judah.

Ahaz King of Judah (16:1-20)

16 year reign. He was bad.

He sacrificed his own son in the fire.
War with Israel and Aram.
Allied himself with the Assyrians.


Dismantled large sections of Temple
and gave all Temple gold to Assyrians.
Assyrians sacked Damascus and deported Arameans.

The prophet Isaiah spoke against a number of things that Ahaz did.
When Ahaz died, Hezekiah became king of Judah.

Structure of 2nd Kings 18–25

2 Kgs 18:1–23:30 – Judah’s disobedience and reform

2 Kgs 23:31–25:30 – Destruction and exile

Hezekiah King of Judah (18:1-16)

One of Judah’s greatest kings.

He reigned in Jerusalem 29 years.

“He did what was right in the eyes of the LORD.”

He destroyed the peoples’ idols.

Even destroyed bronze snake of Moses.

The prophet Isaiah

Warns Hezekiah not to ally himself with Egypt and Philistia when they rebel against Assyria.

Hezekiah listens at first, but later rebels.

Hezekiah’s struggles

He wipes out the Philistines

Assyrians destroy northern kingdom of Israel during his reign

Later, Assyrians capture all of Judah’s fortified cities

Hezekiah bribes the Assyrian king Sennacherib with gold and silver from the royal and Temple treasuries to keep him out of Jerusalem for awhile

Sennacherib Threatens Jerusalem (18:17-37)

Later, Sennacherib’s troops surrounded Jerusalem again.

The field commander called out to the people of Jerusalem.

On what are you basing this confidence of yours?
Pharaoh will not be able to save you from us.
We will give you a good new land to live in if you surrender to us.
Will Yahweh really protect you?
Haven’t you been unfaithful to Yahweh?
None of the gods of the other nations of the world were able to save their people from our might.
Yahweh himself told us to march against Jerusalem and destroy it!
Surely you will all “eat your own dung” and “drink your own piss”!

The people remained silent as Hezekiah had commanded them.

Hezekiah puts on sackcloth and goes to the Temple.

He sent for the prophet Isaiah, the son of Amoz.

Hezekiah hoped that God would “rebuke” the Assyrians for their blasphemy and save Jerusalem.

Jerusalem’s Deliverance Foretold (19:1-13)

Isaiah gave this message to King Hezekiah:

“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. Listen! When he hears a certain report, I will make him want to return to his own country, and there I will have him cut down with the sword.”

The Assyrians retreated because of threats of a Cushite invasion from the African continent.

As they left, they sent a letter to King Hezekiah threatening that they would eventually come back and conquer Jerusalem and no one would be able to stop them.

Hezekiah’s Prayer (19:14-19)

“It is true that the Assyrians have destroyed the gods of other nations…because they were not really gods at all…”

“Now, Lord our God, deliver us from his hand, so that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you alone, Lord, are God.”

Isaiah Prophesies Sennacherib’s Fall (19:20-37)

Isaiah’s message about Sennacherib, condensed:

“‘Virgin Daughter Zion
    despises you and mocks you.
Daughter Jerusalem
    tosses her head as you flee.
Who is it you have ridiculed and blasphemed?
    Against whom have you raised your voice
and lifted your eyes in pride?
    Against the Holy One of Israel!


“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.By the way that he came he will return;
    he will not enter this city,
declares the Lord.I will defend this city and save it,
    for my sake and for the sake of David my servant.’”


The angel of the LORD slaughters 185,000 Assyrian soldiers at night.

Sennacherib returns to his capital at Nineveh.

His two sons assassinate him.

Esarhaddon becomes king of Assyria.

Hezekiah’s Illness (20:1-11)

Hezekiah becomes deathly ill.

Isaiah’s message:

Get your house in order because you are going to die.

Hezekiah’s plea

Faces the wall and cries
Asks God to remember his faithfulness

Isaiah leaves, God stops him, sends him back.

Isaiah’s new message:

God has heard you
God will heal you
God will protect this city from the Assyrians

Hezekiah asks for a sign from God.

The sign was the shadow moving backwards up the steps instead of following its normal course down the steps during the day.

Envoys From Babylon (20:12-21)

The Babylonians

King Marduk-Baladan is pleased that Hezekiah has recovered

Sends envoys with gifts for him

Hezekiah’s poor decision

He shows off all of Jerusalem’s wealth to the envoys

Isaiah scolds him, predicts the King of Babylon will one day come to plunder Jerusalem’s wealth

Entrance to Hezekiah's Tunnel
Hezekiah doesn’t care, figures he’ll be long gone by then

Hezekiah’s tunnel

Hezekiah is famous for building an extensive tunnel and water system under the city in order to make sure the city would never run out of water in the event of a long siege.

More Kings

Manasseh King of Judah (21:1-18)

He was 12 when he became king.
55 year reign. He was bad.

He worshiped other gods.
He rebuilt the idols and shrines
his father Hezekiah had torn down.

He sacrificed his own son.
He built new altars inside the Temple
of the LORD for worshiping the stars.
He put an Asherah pole
inside the Temple of the LORD.

He practiced divination, sought omens,
and consulted mediums and spiritists.

“Moreover, Manasseh also shed so much innocent blood
that he filled Jerusalem from end to end…”
The people followed Manasseh in his evil ways.
The text says that the people of Jerusalem
had become worse than the pagans
who had lived in the land before them.

God spoke through many prophets
condemning Manasseh’s ways.
God said that Judah would eventually be
judged as the rest of Israel had been judged.

Amon King of Judah (21:19-26)

2 year reign. He was bad.

His own officials assassinated him.
His son Josiah became king after him.

The Book of the Law Found (22:1-20)

Josiah becomes king.

He is only 8 years old

He reigns for 31 years.

Josiah arranged to have the Temple of the LORD cleaned and repaired.

High Priest Hilkiah finds “The Book of the Law” while cleaning the Temple.

Josiah’s secretary reads him The Law.

Josiah tears his robes and weeps because he now knows how far from God Judah has strayed.

Orders priests to inquire of the LORD so they might somehow avoid the curses of The Covenant.

The prophetess Huldah’s message:

The land is indeed under the curse

God is pleased with Josiah

Jerusalem will be safe during his lifetime

Josiah reads the Law to the people.

The people pledge to be faithful to the Covenant with God.

Josiah’s Reforms (23:1-30)

Josiah’s reforms

Josiah destroys all of the idols of his ancestors, including the idols Solomon made for his wives, and the “Tophit” used for child sacrifice in the valley.

He piles up the skeletons of all the false priests and prophets of the golden calves of Jeroboam on top of the place where the golden calf at Bethel once stood, fulfilling Ahijah’s prophecy.

He gets rid of the mediums and spiritists.

He has the people celebrate Passover again.

“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.”

As a part of the Deuteronomistic History, Joshua and Josiah book end each other, with Joshua at the beginning and Josiah at the end. They are both king-like figures, both copy the Law, both read it to the assembly, and both celebrate the Passover. Not to mention the obvious similarities in both of their names.


Death of Josiah

The Egyptians make an alliance with the Assyrians, and Josiah fights against Pharaoh’s army, but is killed in battle.

Even More Kings

Jehoahaz King of Judah (23:31-35)

3 month reign. He was bad.

Pharaoh Necho captured him and dragged
him in chains to Egypt where he died.
Necho made Judah his vassal
and made them pay tribute to him.

He appointed Josiah’s son Eliakim
to replace Jehoahaz as king.
He changed Eliakim’s name to Jehoiakim.

Jehoiakim King of Judah (23:36–24:7)

11 year reign. He was bad.

During his reign, King Nebuchadnezzar
of Babylon invaded the land, and Judah
became Babylon’s vassal for three years.

Jehoiachin King of Judah (24:8-17)

3 month reign. He was bad.

During his reign, Nebuchadnezzar laid siege
to Jerusalem again and took away
all the gold from the Temple of the LORD
and the royal palace as Isaiah had predicted.

Nebuchadnezzar took 10,000 people
from Jerusalem and exiled them to Babylon,
including the entire army and the royal family.
He made Mattaniah, Jehoiachin’s uncle,
king in his place and changed his name to Zedekiah.

Zedekiah King of Judah (24:18-20)

Nebuchadnezzar’s puppet-king for 11 years.

The Fall of Jerusalem (24:20–25:26)

Zedekiah rebels

Against King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon.

Babylonian army besieges Jerusalem for two years.

Final destruction

Extreme famine in the city.

Babylonians finally break through walls

Jerusalem’s army flees towards the Arabah, but is captured.

Zedekiah captured, his sons executed in front of him, Zedekiah’s eyes poked out, dragged away in chains to Babylon

Almost all of Jerusalem’s people captured, exiled to Babylon

Destruction of the Temple of the LORD

Babylonians remove treasures and holy items, destroy what is left

Priests taken to Babylon, executed in front of Nebuchadnezzar.

Governor Gedaliah

Appointed over Judah by Nebuchadnezzar

Ruled over “the poorest of the poor”

Gedaliah assassinated, people flee to Egypt in fear

Jehoiachin Released (25:27-30)

Meanwhile, former king Jehoiachin had spent 37 years in prison, and was finally released when Awel-Marduk became king of Babylon.

The king of Babylon honored him and allowed him to eat at the king’s table.

Babylonian cuneiform records have even confirmed Jehoiachin’s regular food ration from the royal table.



Sunday, August 17, 2014

Lecture Six: Prophets and Kings of the North


Structure of 2nd Kings 1–17

2 Kgs 1:1–8:29 – Continuation of Israel and the prophets

2 Kgs 9:1–12:21 – Revolution and reform

2 Kgs 13:1–17:41 – Israel slides into disaster

2nd Kings according to puppets…



Elijah Taken Up to Heaven (2:1-18)

Elijah and Elisha journey together

From Gilgal to Bethel

Elisha refuses to leave Elijah’s side

Prophets foretell Elijah’s departure, Elisha says not to speak of it

Arrival at Jordan River

Elisha refuses to leave Elijah’s side

Elijah strikes river with his cloak, river parts

Both men cross over on “dry ground”


Elisha’s request:

“Let me inherit a double portion of your spirit.”

Elijah's response:

“You have asked a difficult thing, yet if you see me when I am taken from you, it will be yours—otherwise, it will not.”

Chariots of fire appear, Elijah taken up to heaven in whirlwind

Elisha cries out, “My father! My father! The chariots and horsemen of Israel!”

Elisha receives Elijah’s cloak, parts river, returns

Reaction of other prophets:

“Look! The spirit of Elijah has fallen upon Elisha!”

Unsuccessful search for Elijah, Elisha says “I told you so.”





Healing of the Water (2:19-22)

Elisha stayed at Jericho and the people told him the water was no good.

Elisha threw some salt in the water and the water was “healed.”

Elisha is Jeered (2:23-25)

Elisha went from Jericho up into the land towards Bethel.

On the way, he was jeered by the boys of the town.

They chanted, “Get out of here, baldy!”

Elisha cursed them in the name of the LORD.

Two bears came out of the woods and mauled 42 of the boys.

Elisha continued on his way.

Moab Revolts (3:1-27)

Joram was king of Israel for 12 years.

He was evil, but not as evil as Ahab.

Fought against Moab because they stopped paying tribute.

Judah and Edom joined with him in battle.

Wandered in desert for a week, ran out of water

Inquired of Elisha the Prophet


Elisha can’t stand Joram

Foretells victorious outcome

In the morning, Moabite army sees sun reflecting off pools of water in the valley, assumes it’s the blood of their enemies.

Moabites go out to loot, but are quickly surrounded by the three armies.

The battle

Fierce fight, Moabites fail to kill Edom’s king

King of Moab sacrifices his son on the wall

“The fury against Israel was great; they withdrew and returned to their own land.”

The Widow’s Olive Oil (4:1-7)


A fellow prophet dies

Widow cannot pay his debts

The collector is coming to take her two sons as payment

Widow inquires of Elisha

Instruction to gather jars from neighbors, pour remaining oil into jars

Oil miraculously never runs out, used to pay debt

The Shunammite Woman (4:8-37)

Elisha’s arrival at Shunem

Fed by woman and her family, invited to come back anytime

They build him a room with a cot on their roof

Elisha inquires of disciple Gehazi

Desires to repay the woman’s kindness, learns she is barren

Prophesies, “In one year you will have a son.”

She says, “Don’t get my hopes up like that.” Elisha’s word comes true.

The woman’s son

The boy gets older, works in fields with his father

Terrible headache one morning, dies at noon in mother’s lap

Son placed on Elisha’s bed, mother searches furiously for Elisha

Finds him on Mount Carmel, grabs his feet and weeps

Elisha unaware of events, Gehazi rebukes woman, Elisha defends her

Gehazi sent to place Elisha’s staff on the boy, no results

Elisha arrives, shuts door behind him and prays

Lays on top of boy – “mouth to mouth, eyes to eyes, hands to hands.”

“…boy’s body grew warm.”

Elisha paces, tries again, boy sneezes seven times and opens eyes

Elisha gives him back to his mother

Death in the Pot (4:38-41)


Elisha had his servant cook up a stew for the prophets.

Somebody added poisonous gourds.

As the prophets began to eat, they started crying out, “There’s death in the pot!”

Elisha added some flour and the stew was fine.

Feeding of a Hundred (4:42-44)

A man showed up with twenty loaves of bread.

Elisha told him to distribute it among the men.

There were 100 men present, and after they all ate and had their fill, there was still bread left over.

Naaman Healed of Leprosy (5:1-27)

Namaan was commander of the Aramean army.

He had leprosy.

His wife’s Israelite servant girl tells her mistress that Namaan should go be healed by the prophet Elisha.

King of Aram gives Namaan permission to go to Israel, sends letter of peace to King Joram.

Namaan takes gifts of silver, gold and clothing with him.

Joram receives the letter and rips his own clothes

“Am I God? …Why is he sending me people to be cured of leprosy?”

Elisha told Joram to stop freaking out and to send Namaan his way.

Elisha tells Namaan to bathe in the Jordan seven times.

Namaan leaves angry

“I thought he was going to wave his hand over me and cure me… Aren’t the rivers of Damascus better than the Jordan?”

His servants stop him, ask him to at least try this simple task.

Namaan consents, is completely healed.

“Now I know that there is no God in all the world except in Israel.”

Tries to give Elisha gifts, but Elisha refuses them.

Namaan requests a cartload of Israel’s dirt to bring back to Aram, pledges to never again offer sacrifices to any God but Israel’s God.

Gehazi later goes after Namaan, tells him Elisha changed his mind about the gifts, Namaan gives them to Gehazi.

Gehazi hides them in the house.

Later, Elisha confronts Gehazi about this and Gehazi lies to him.

Gehazi and his descendants cursed with Namaan’s leprosy forever

An Axhead Floats (6:1-7)

All the prophets gather at the river, cut down trees to build a meeting place.

One prophet borrows an ax, and while he’s chopping wood the iron axhead flies off and sinks in the river.

Elisha throws a stick in the water, the axhead floats to the surface.

Elisha Traps Blinded Arameans (6:8-23)

Arameans at war with Israel.

God tells Elisha Aramean battle plans, Elisha relays them to Joram.

King of Aram believes there’s a traitor in his midst, informed of Elisha

“Elisha, the prophet who is in Israel, tells the king of Israel the very words you speak in your bedroom.”

Aramean army sets out to attack the city where Elisha is staying.

Elisha’s servant wakes up in the morning to find the city surrounded.

Elisha says, “Don’t be afraid. Those who are with us are more than those who are with them.”

Elisha prays that his servant’s “eyes would be opened.”

The servant looks up again and sees that the hills are full of a second army – one of fiery horses and chariots to protect Elisha.



Arameans attack, Elisha prays, enemies struck with blindness.

Elisha tells them they’re at the wrong place, guides them to Samaria.

In Samaria, Elisha prays again, their sight is restored, they realize they’ve been trapped.

King Joram asks Elisha if he should kill them all, Elisha says no.

Elisha makes Joram feed his enemies and send them back home.

After this, many Arameans stop raiding Israel.

Famine in Besieged Samaria (6:24–7:20)

Ben-Hadad of Aram lays siege to Samaria, city runs out of food.

King Joram walks through besieged city, sees woman calling for help.

She says she and another woman agreed to eat their sons, but after they killed her own son and ate him the other woman changed her mind.

Joram puts on sackcloth, swears to cut off Elisha’s head that very day.

Elisha and the elders gather in a house and lock the door.

Joram and his officers arrive.

“This disaster is from the LORD. Why should I wait for the LORD any longer?”

Elisha tells Joram food will arrive tomorrow.

King’s chief officer scoffs, Elisha predicts the scoffer won’t get to eat.

Four lepers leave the city to surrender to the Arameans, but find the Aramean camp is deserted.

God had caused the army to hear the sound of chariots so they quickly fled and left everything behind, assuming the Egyptians and Hittites had come to rescue Israel.

Lepers eat food and gather gold left behind.

They feel guilty for hoarding and go back to share the good news with the rest of the city.

The king thinks it might be a trap so he sends his officers out to investigate.

All the people rush out of the city to get food.

The officer who had scoffed at Elisha is trampled in the stampede.

Hazael Murders Ben-Hadad (8:7-15)

Elisha journeys to Damascus, capital of Aram

Ben-Hadad is very ill, sends servant Hazael to inquire of Elisha

Elisha’s response:

“Your master will die, but tell him he’ll live.”

Stares intently at Hazael until he feels embarrassed.

Starts weeping, claims knowledge of Hazael’s future crimes against Israel

Tells Hazael he will replace Ben-Hadad as king of Aram

Hazael becomes king of Aram

He returns, tells Ben-Hadad he will recover

Next day, takes a wet cloth and suffocates Ben-Hadad

Jehu Anointed King of Israel (9:1-13)

Elisha sends servant to anoint Jehu king over Israel

Servant runs in, pours oil on his head, tells him he must destroy Ahab’s house, and runs off.

Jehu’s friends ask what that “maniac” wanted, Jehu’s like, “Oh, you know…”

His friends press him, he confesses he’s now king, and they honor him.

Jehu Kills Joram and Ahaziah (9:14-29)

Joram spies an army coming towards his palace

He sends a messenger, saying, “Do you come in peace?”

Messenger returns, saying:

“The man in charge must be Jehu – he’s driving like a maniac as usual!”

“The man in charge says, ‘What do you have to do with peace, Joram?’”

Joram flees, but is shot down by Jehu

Joram’s body tossed into what was once Naboth’s vineyard

Jehu also kills Ahaziah King of Judah who had been visiting Joram

Jezebel Killed (9:30-37)

Jezebel puts on makeup, sits in second story window, calls to Jehu.

“Have you come in peace, you Zimri, you murderer of your master?”

Jezebel’s eunuchs side with Jehu and throw her out the window.

Jezebel hits the ground and “her blood spattered on the wall.”

Jehu and his men go inside to eat lunch, and their horses trample her.

When they return to bury her, they only find her skull, hands, and feet.

Elijah’s prophecy affirmed – “dogs will devour Jezebel...”

Ahab’s Family Killed (10:1-17)

Servants side with Jehu, behead Ahab’s 70 sons, send heads in baskets to Jehu, Jehu piles them up at gate of Jezreel.

Jehu kills all of Ahab’s friends and priests.

On the side, he kills some relatives of Judah’s now former king.

Servants of Baal Killed (10:18-36)

Jehu tells priests of Baal he will serve Baal more faithfully than Ahab did, he invites them all to come to a great sacrifice.

After the sacrifice, Jehu slaughters the priests

God promised to reward Jehu for his faithfulness.

However, the text says that sometimes Jehu was unfaithful by worshiping the golden calves.

Jehu reigned over Israel for 28 years.

When he died, his son Jehoahaz succeeded him as king.

Jehoahaz King of Israel (13:1-9)

He reigned for 17 years, but he was evil.

Israel still refused to repent even after God allowed the Arameans to wipe out most of their army.


Jehoash King of Israel (13:10-19)

He reigned for 16 years, but was also evil.

Jehoash visits Elisha

Elisha had been sick for a long time and would soon die

Jehoash weeps in Elisha’s presence, saying, “My father! My father! The chariots and horsemen of Israel!”

Elisha’s last message:

“Take your bow and shoot towards Aram – you will defeat them!”

“Strike the ground with your arrows.”

Jehoash strikes the ground three times, but stops.

Elisha is angry, and tells him if he had struck it more times he would have had greater victory.

“You will only have three victories before Aram returns.”

Death of Elisha (13:20-25)

Elisha dies and is buried in a tomb.

Some time later, Moabite raiders show up during another funeral for a different family.

The family quickly throws the body into Elisha’s tomb and runs.

“When the body touched Elisha’s bones, the man came to life and stood up on his feet.”

The text says that later Jehoash was only able to defeat the Arameans three times, but God was still compassionate towards His sinful people for the sake of His covenant with Abraham.








Furthermore…it was Moses and Elijah who appeared when Jesus was transfigured on the mountain.

Jeroboam II King of Israel (14:23-29)

41 year reign. He was bad.

Zechariah King of Israel (15:8-12)

6 month reign. He was bad.

Assassinated by Shallum

Shallum King of Israel (15:13-16)

1 month reign. He was bad.

Assassinated by Menahem

Menahem King of Israel (15:17-22)

10 year reign. He was Bad.
Israel became a vassal to the Assyrians.

Pekahiah King of Israel (15:23-26)

2 year reign. He was bad.


Assassinated by Pekah.

Pekah King of Israel (15:27-31)

29 year reign. He was bad.

Tiglath-Pileser invaded Israel and took many cities,
including all of the territories of Gilead and Naphtali.
Tiglath-Pileser deported many Israelites to Assyria.

Assassinated by Hoshea

Hoshea Last King of Israel (17:1-5)

9 year reign. He was bad.
Israel was still a vassal to the Assyrians,
but Hoshea refused to pay tribute to them
and made an alliance with So King of Egypt.

Shalmaneser King of Assyria attacked Israel
and put Hoshea in prison.

The Assyrians invaded the entire land
and laid siege to it for three years.

Israel Exiled Because of Sin (17:6-23)

Shalmaneser deported all the Israelites to Assyria, Holah, Gozan, and Media.

“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.”

“The LORD warned Israel and Judah through all his prophets…”

“But they would not listen and were as stiff-necked as their ancestors, who did not trust in the LORD their God.”

“They made golden calves to worship…”

“They worshiped all the starry host…”

“They worshiped Baal…”

“They sacrificed their sons and daughters in the fire…”

“They practiced divination…”

“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.”

“So the people of Israel were taken from their homeland into exile in Assyria, and they are still there.”

Samaria Resettled (17:24-41)

“The king of Assyria brought people from Babylon, Kuthah, Avva, Hamath and Sepharvaim and settled them in the towns of Samaria to replace the Israelites.”

God sent lions to attack the people who had replaced Israel because of the evil things they did.

The king of Assyria sent back one of the captive Israelite priests to teach the new people in the land how to worship the God of that land.

The people, who came to be known as Samaritans, worshiped Yahweh, but also worshiped other gods, and they sacrificed their children in the fire.