2 Chronicles 24
King Joash orders Temple repaired
King taxes people for Temple repair
2 Kings 12:1-16 1Joash was king at age seven. He reigned for an entire generation, 40 years. [1] His mother was Zibiah, [2] from Beersheba. 2Joash kept on the good side of the LORD for as long as the priest Jehoiada lived. 3The priest found two wives for the king, who became the father of sons and daughters.
4Later, Joash decided to repair the Temple. [3] Priests ignore king’s order to fix Temple
5Joash told the priests, “I want you to collect silver from the people and use the money, year after year, to repair anything that needs fixing at the Temple. Get to work on this right away.” The Levites in charge quickly did nothing.
6So he called in Jehoiada and some other priests to give them a royal nudge. He said, “Why haven’t you ordered the Levites to collect the tax Moses set up for the tent worship center expenses?” [4]
7There was a lot to fix in the Temple because Queen Athaliah, an evil woman, let people take holy objects from the Temple and use them to worship the native god Baal. [5] 8Joash ordered a donation box, built from wood. He put this chest outside, near the entrance gate into the Temple courtyard.
9He sent messages throughout Jerusalem and beyond, to the rest of Judah. He told the people to bring their tax money to Jerusalem and deposit it into the collection box. Temple’s rich building fund
10The people celebrated the king’s announcement and filled the chest with silver. 11When the chest filled up, day after day, the high priest and the king’s secretary took the silver and put it where it belonged. They collected a lot of silver.
12King Joash and the priest Jehoiada distributed the silver to the foremen of the Temple workers, as salary. The foremen gave the money to their carpenters, masons, and their experts in working with iron and bronze. They were all hired to help repair the Temple. 13Everyone worked on the building project until the job was done, and the Temple looked new again.
14Workers didn’t spend all the money that was collected for the job. They brought the leftover silver to the king and Jehoiada, who decided to use the rest to buy new utensils and furnishings for the Temple. These included utensils that priests needed to sacrifice animals, along with bowls and ladles of silver and gold. The people celebrated the finished repair work by sacrificing burnt offerings [6] to atone for their sins.
15The priest Jehoiada died at the age of 130. 16The people buried him in the City of David, [7] among the tombs of the kings, because he was good with God and good for the people of Israel.
17After Jehoiada died, some of Judah’s leaders assumed his role as welcome advisor to the king. They talked. He listened. 18In time they backed away from the Temple, eventually abandoning God. They worshiped idols instead and used sacred poles [8] in their religious rituals. God grew angry at the idol-worshiping people of Jerusalem and throughout Judah. Jerusalem stones prophet to death
19Yet God didn’t stop reaching out to them. He sent prophets to restore the relationship. No one cared. No one listened.
20God’s Spirit moved Zechariah, the son of the late prophet Jehoiada. He stood above the crowd and said, “This is God’s message to you.”
“Why do you break the laws the LORD gave you?
That’s not going to do you any good. You’ve turned your back on me. So I’ve turned my back on you.”
21Some angry people met with the king and developed a plan to silence Zechariah. They stoned him to death in the Temple courtyard.
22King Joash disregarded how kind Zechariah’s father, the priest, had been to him. The king ordered the priest’s son executed. As the prophet lay dying, he cursed the people by saying, “May the LORD see what you’ve done and punish you for it.” Syrians invade Jewish homeland
23When spring came, [9] so did the Syrian army. They attacked the forces of King Joash in Jerusalem and throughout Judah. They killed all Judah’s government officials and sent all the valuables they looted back to Damascus. 24They had just a small army. But God helped them defeat a large army. God did this because his people quit him. So, God used the Syrians to punish them.
25The battle left King Joash wounded and lying in his bed. His servants hated him for ordering the execution of Zachariah, son of the late high priest Jehoiada. So they killed the wounded king in his bed. 26Servants who planned the assassination were Zabad son of Shimeath from Ammon, along with Jehozabad son of Shimrith from Moab.
27A commentary on the Book of Kings reports more about King Joash’s sons, prophecies against him, and about his repair of the Temple. His son Amaziah became the next king.
4Later, Joash decided to repair the Temple. [3]
Priests ignore king’s order to fix Temple
5Joash told the priests, “I want you to collect silver from the people and use the money, year after year, to repair anything that needs fixing at the Temple. Get to work on this right away.” The Levites in charge quickly did nothing.6So he called in Jehoiada and some other priests to give them a royal nudge. He said, “Why haven’t you ordered the Levites to collect the tax Moses set up for the tent worship center expenses?” [4]
7There was a lot to fix in the Temple because Queen Athaliah, an evil woman, let people take holy objects from the Temple and use them to worship the native god Baal. [5] 8Joash ordered a donation box, built from wood. He put this chest outside, near the entrance gate into the Temple courtyard.
9He sent messages throughout Jerusalem and beyond, to the rest of Judah. He told the people to bring their tax money to Jerusalem and deposit it into the collection box.
Temple’s rich building fund
10The people celebrated the king’s announcement and filled the chest with silver. 11When the chest filled up, day after day, the high priest and the king’s secretary took the silver and put it where it belonged. They collected a lot of silver.12King Joash and the priest Jehoiada distributed the silver to the foremen of the Temple workers, as salary. The foremen gave the money to their carpenters, masons, and their experts in working with iron and bronze. They were all hired to help repair the Temple. 13Everyone worked on the building project until the job was done, and the Temple looked new again.
14Workers didn’t spend all the money that was collected for the job. They brought the leftover silver to the king and Jehoiada, who decided to use the rest to buy new utensils and furnishings for the Temple. These included utensils that priests needed to sacrifice animals, along with bowls and ladles of silver and gold. The people celebrated the finished repair work by sacrificing burnt offerings [6] to atone for their sins.
15The priest Jehoiada died at the age of 130. 16The people buried him in the City of David, [7] among the tombs of the kings, because he was good with God and good for the people of Israel.
17After Jehoiada died, some of Judah’s leaders assumed his role as welcome advisor to the king. They talked. He listened. 18In time they backed away from the Temple, eventually abandoning God. They worshiped idols instead and used sacred poles [8] in their religious rituals. God grew angry at the idol-worshiping people of Jerusalem and throughout Judah.
Jerusalem stones prophet to death
19Yet God didn’t stop reaching out to them. He sent prophets to restore the relationship. No one cared. No one listened.20God’s Spirit moved Zechariah, the son of the late prophet Jehoiada. He stood above the crowd and said, “This is God’s message to you.”
“Why do you break the laws the LORD gave you?
That’s not going to do you any good. You’ve turned your back on me. So I’ve turned my back on you.”
22King Joash disregarded how kind Zechariah’s father, the priest, had been to him. The king ordered the priest’s son executed. As the prophet lay dying, he cursed the people by saying, “May the LORD see what you’ve done and punish you for it.”
Syrians invade Jewish homeland
23When spring came, [9] so did the Syrian army. They attacked the forces of King Joash in Jerusalem and throughout Judah. They killed all Judah’s government officials and sent all the valuables they looted back to Damascus. 24They had just a small army. But God helped them defeat a large army. God did this because his people quit him. So, God used the Syrians to punish them.25The battle left King Joash wounded and lying in his bed. His servants hated him for ordering the execution of Zachariah, son of the late high priest Jehoiada. So they killed the wounded king in his bed. 26Servants who planned the assassination were Zabad son of Shimeath from Ammon, along with Jehozabad son of Shimrith from Moab.
27A commentary on the Book of Kings reports more about King Joash’s sons, prophecies against him, and about his repair of the Temple. His son Amaziah became the next king.
Footnotes
Well, maybe not 40 years exactly. “Forty years” was a common way of saying “many years,” or “a long time.” The symbolic number shows up about 150 times in the Bible. It was probably intended to be taken no more literally than our modern saying “at the eleventh hour.” “Eleventh hour” means at the last moment, not 11 o’clock.
Zibiah likely died when Athaliah killed the royal family, but overlooked Joash who went in hiding when the assassinations began (2 Kings 11:1-3).
The Temple would have been roughly 150 years old by then. Solomon’s crew of workers, which included citizens drafted for duty against their will, finished the Jerusalem Temple in about 957 BC. Joash reigned from about 835-796 BC.
Moses ordered everyone, rich and poor, to pay half a shekel every year for maintenance of the tent worship center often called the Tabernacle. Shekels came in different kinds of metal and different weights. It’s unclear what kind of shekel the writer was describing, or how much it weighed. There was a heavy shekel that weighed about 11.5 grams or .4 ounces. That’s a little more than a 7-gram American quarter or an 8-gram Euro coin. This was sometimes called the King’s Shekel or the Royal Shekel. Some scholars say this was also the weight used in the Israelite worship center and later in the Jerusalem Temple. The lighter shekel weighed about 9.5 grams or .33 ounces. Some scholars say this was probably the shekel accepted at the worship center. The version of this story in 2 Kings 11 reports that Joash ordered money collected from other sources, including the Temple treasury.
Baal was a god of fertility in family, fields, and flocks. Canaanites, who were native to what is now Israel and Palestinian land, worshiped Baal. Joshua led the Jews in killing many Canaanites while the Jewish people reclaimed the land that the Bible says God promised to the descendants of Abraham. But Jews continued to worship Baal and other Middle Eastern gods off and on throughout Old Testament times.
Burnt offerings were the most common animal sacrifice. Worshipers burned the entire animal to atone for their sins. Jews taught that in God’s eyes, sin was a capital offense. Jewish law, however, says God allowed them to substitute the death of an animal for the death they deserved. “Blood is what brings a body to life. I’ve given you blood to use exclusively on the altar. It atones for your sin—it gets rid of your guilt so you can stay on good terms with the LORD. Blood is the price of your sin” (Leviticus 17:11). The writer of Hebrews says the blood of Jesus was the last sacrifice needed; it paid the price for the sins of all people for all time (Hebrews 10:10). Grain and wine offerings were an expression of gratitude for a harvest and for the way God takes care of the Israelites. People offered the grain in several ways: ground to fine flour, presented as baked, fried, cooked, or roasted with olive oil.
The City of David was the original part of town before Solomon expanded up the hill to add the Temple and palace complexes.
These poles may have been trees or poles meant to represent trees, as symbols of a Canaanite fertility goddess known as Asherah, goddess of motherhood. She was the love interest of Baal. He was chief god of the people who lived in Canaan, now known as Israel and Palestinian Territories. Sometime later, Israel’s Queen Jezebel tried to murder all God’s prophets and replace them with prophets and priests devoted to Baal and Asherah (1 Kings 18:4, 18-19). People worshiped this goddess with sacred poles described as repulsive and obscene. But we’re left to guess how the people used those poles in worship.
Literally, “at the turn of the year.” The new year on the Jewish calendar started in the month of Nisan, which fell between late March and early April. That’s when armies often launched a campaign, often planning to fight until early winter, if necessary (1 Chronicles 20:1; 2 Samuel 11:1).
Discussion Questions
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