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2 Chronicles

2 Chronicles

Summary of the Book of Second Chronicles

By H. A. (Buster) Dobbs
  1. Introduction.
    1. Unnamed authors supplement information given in the books of Samuel and Kings
      1. The work may have been compiled by Ezra after the Babylonian exile
      2. It deals with the kingdom of Judah and ignores the kingdom of Israel
      3. It is more concerned with the religious than with the civil aspects of Jewish history
      4. Its emphasis is upon the priesthood and temple worship
    2. It gives a historical perspective of Judah
      1. It is a basis for the restoration of the kingdom of Judah
      2. Stress is placed on the religious nature of Judah’s history and future
  2. Reign of Solomon (1:1 to 9:31)
    1. Building of the temple (1:1 to 7:22)
      1. Solomon offers a thousand burnt offerings at Gibeon (1:1-6)
      2. Solomon’s wisdom, strength, and wealth (1:7-17)
      3. Solomon’s Temple (2:1 to 4:22)
        1. Request for material and workers (2:1-10)
        2. Huram of Tyre grants the request (2:11-16)
        3. Strangers in Israel assigned to construction work (2:17-18)
        4. Place, time, and dimensions of the temple (3:1-17)
        5. Altar, basin and lavers, candlesticks, tables, and tools (4:1-22)
      4. The ark of the covenant brought into the Temple and the glory of God filled the Temple (5:1-14)
      5. Solomon’s prayer of dedication (6:1-42)
      6. Jehovah accepts the sacrifices by fire (7:1-3)
      7. A great national feast with rejoicing and worship (7:4-11)
      8. Promises made to Solomon (7:12-22)
    2. Solomon’s prosperity and fame (8:1 to 9:31)
      1. Rebuilding and occupying 20 cities in Galilee (8:2, 1 Kings 9:11-13)
      2. Capturing and securing other cities (8:3-6)
      3. Canaanites left in the land reduced to slavery (8:7-8)
      4. Israelites promoted (8:9-10)
      5. Built a palace for Pharoah’s daughter, whom he had married (8:11)
      6. Solomon’s sacrifices on the altar of Jehovah (8:12-13)
      7. Solomon was true to David’s arrangement of worship (8:14-15)
      8. Solomon built two port cities and stimulated commerce (8:16-17)
      9. Visit from queen of Sheba (9:1-12)
      10. Solomon’s gold and silver (9:13-14)
      11. Solomon’s throne, vessels, and riches (9:15-28)
      12. Solomon’s death (9:29-31)
  3. Reigns of Selected Kings of Judah
    1. Reign of Rehoboam (10:1 to 12:16)
      1. All Israel came to Shechem to make Rehoboam king (10:1)
      2. Jeroboam recalled from Egypt to request relaxation (10:2-5)
      3. Rehoboam answer the request roughly (10:6-15)
      4. Ten tribes revolt and Rehoboam flees to Jerusalem (10:16-19)
      5. Rehoboam forbidden to fight against the rebelling tribes (11:1-4)
      6. Rehoboam strengthens his defenses (11:5-17)
      7. Rehoboam’s wives and children (11:18-23)
      8. Rehoboam forsakes Jehovah and Egypt invades Judah (12:1-5)
      9. Rehoboam repents at the rebuke of God’s prophet (12:6-12)
        1. King of Egypt takes away the shields of gold and other treasure from the temple (12:9)
        2. Rehoboam makes replacement shields of brass (12:10)
      10. Reign and death of Rehoboam (12:13-16)
    2. Reign of Abijah (13:1-22)
      1. Abijah begins to reign and makes war with Israel (13:1-3)
      2. Abijah declares his case against Israel – a holy war (13:4-12)
      3. Judah has a great victory over Israel (13:13-20)
      4. The wives, children, and death of Abijah (13:21-22)
    3. Reign of Asa (14:1 to 16:14)
      1. Asa destroys idols and promotes true worship (14:1-5)
      2. Asa builds forts and trains an army (14:6-8)
      3. Asa defeats the Ethiopians in a war at Maresha (14:9-15)
      4. Asa and the people make a covenant with God (15-1-15)
      5. Asa removes his mother from being queen (15:16-17)
      6. Asa refurbishes the temple and reigns in peace (15:17-18)
      7. Asa aligns with Syria to defeat Baasha, king of Israel (16:1-6)
      8. Asa rebuked by the prophet Hanani whom Asa puts in prison (16:7-10)
      9. Asa completes his reign and dies in Jerusalem (16:11-14)
    4. Reign of Jehosaphat (17:1 to 20:37)
      1. Jehosaphat was a good man who caused the people to be taught the law of God and to be reminded of their history (17:1-9)
      2. Jehosaphat trained a standing army (17:10-19)
      3. Jehosaphat joined affinity with Ahab of Israel (18:1-34)
        1. False prophets foretold a victory against Ramath-gilead (18:5-7)
        2. Micaiah was called at the request of Jehosaphat (18:8-27)
        3. Ahab killed in the battle (18:28-34)
      4. Jehosaphat returned to Jerusalem in peace (19:1-11)
        1. Jehosaphat rebuked by Jehu the prophet (19:2-3)
        2. Jehosaphat repaired his way before God (19:4-11)
      5. Jehosaphat gains a great victory over his enemies (20:1-34)
        1. Ammon, Moab came against Judah (20:1-2)
        2. Jehosaphat feared and proclaimed a fast (20:3-13)
        3. Victory prophesied (20:14-19)
        4. Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir destroy themselves (20:20-25)
        5. Judah enriched by the spoils (20:26-34)
      6. Jehosaphat compromises with the king of Israel (20:35-37)
    5. Reign of Jehoram (21:1-20)
      1. Jehoram killed his own brothers (20:1-4)
      2. Jehoram had Ahab’s daughter for his wife (20:5-6)
      3. Jehoram followed the ways of the kings of Israel (20:6-7)
      4. Edom and Libnah revolted against Judah (20:8-11)
      5. Elijah prophesied a miserable end for Jehoram (20:12-15)
      6. Wars with Phlistia, the Arabians, and the Ethiopians (20:16-17)
      7. Jehoram dies a miserable death (20:18-20)
    6. Reign of Ahaziah, an evil king (22:1-9)
    7. Reign of Athaliah, mother of Ahaziah (22:10 to 23:15)
      1. Athaliah killed the royal seed, except Joash (22:10-12)
      2. Athaliah put to death by order of the high priest (23:1-15)
    8. Reign of Joash (23:16 to 24:27)
      1. Images of Baal in Jerusalem destroyed, and worship of Jehovah restored (23:17-21)
      2. Joash made king at the age of seven (24:1-3)
      3. Joash repaired the temple (24:4-14)
      4. Joash apostatizes (24:15-22)
      5. Syrian invasion of Judah (24:23-24)
      6. Joash’s servants conspired against him and killed him (24:15-27)
    9. Reign of Amaziah (25:1-28)
      1. Amaziah served Jehovah, but not with a perfect heart (25:1-4)
      2. Amaziah defeats the Edomites (24:5-13)
      3. Amaziah worships idols (25:14-16)
      4. Amaziah provokes Joash of Israel to war (25:17-24)
      5. Amaziah killed by his own people (25:25-28)
    10. Reign of Uzziah (26:1-23)
      1. Uzziah had great success in commerce and war (26:1-15)
      2. Uzziah usurps priestly office and is punished with leprosy (26:16-21)
      3. Uzziah dies (26:22-23)
    11. Reign of Jotham (27:1-9)
      1. Jotham was a good king (27:1-4)
      2. Jotham defeated the Ammonites (27:5-6)
      3. Jotham dies and is buried (27:7-9)
    12. Reign of Ahaz (28:1-27)
      1. Ahaz was evil and was delivered to the Syrians (28:1-5)
      2. Ahaz becomes even more wicked (28:6-25)
      3. Ahaz dies and is succeeded by Hezekiah (28:26-27)
    13. Reign of Hezekiah (29:1 to 32:33)
      1. Hezekiah was a good king (29:1-2)
      2. Hezekiah lead a restoration of pure worship (29:3-11)
      3. Hezekiah restores the Levitical priesthood (29:12-19)
      4. Hezekiah’s sacrifices (29:20-36)
      5. Hezekiah lead in observance of passover (30:1-12)
      6. The feast of unleavened bread is kept (30:13-27)
      7. Idol images destroyed (31:1)
      8. Levitical worship and tithing restored (31:2-10)
      9. Officers appointed to receive the tithe (31:11-19)
      10. Hezekiah’s zeal and sincerity (31:20-21)
      11. Assyria (Sennacherib) invades Judah (32:1-8)
      12. Threats of Sennacherib’s messengers (32:9-20)
      13. An angel of God defeats the Assyrians (32:21-23)
      14. Sickness and recovery (32:24-26)
      15. Hezekiah’s wealth and accomplishments (32:27-31)
      16. Hezekiah’s death and burial (32:32-33
    14. Reign of Manasseth (33:1-20)
      1. Manasseth was a wicked king (33:1-2)
      2. Manasseth re-established idolatry in Jerusalem (33:3-10)
      3. Manasseth punished (33:11)
      4. Manasseth sought the Lord and was forgiven (33:12-17)
      5. Manasseth’s works and death (33:18-20)
    15. Reign of Amon (33:21-25)
      1. Amon a wicked king (33:26-23)
      2. Amon was assassinated by his servants (33:24-25)
    16. Reign of Josiah (34:1-35:27)
      1. Josiah a good king (34:1-2)
      2. Josiah purges idolatry from the land (34:3-7)
      3. Temple restored (34:8-13)
      4. Book of the law found in the temple and read to Josiah (34:14-22)
      5. Inquiry made of Huldah, the prophetess (34:23-28)
      6. Josiah and the people renew the covenant (34:29-33)
      7. Josiah leads the nation in keeping the passover (35:1-20)
      8. Josiah killed in a war with Necho of Egypt (35:21-24)
      9. Lamentation for and burial of Josiah (35:25-27)
    17. Reign of Jehoahaz (36:1-3)
      1. Jehoahaz reigned three months (36:1-2)
      2. Jehoahaz deposed by the king of Egypt (36:3)
    18. Reign of Jehoakim (36:4-8)
      1. King of Egypt made Eliakim, Jehoahaz’ brother, king and changed his name to Jehoakim (36:4)
      2. Jehoakim was an evil king (36:5)
      3. Defeated by Nebuchadnezzar and carried to Babylon (36:7-8)
    19. Reign of Jehoichin (36:9-10)
      1. Jehoichin, though young, was an evil king (36:9)
      2. Nebuchadnezzar carried him to Babylon (36:10)
    20. Reign of Zedekiah (36:11-14)
      1. Zedekiah was an evil king (36:11-12)
      2. Zedekiah rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar (36:13)
      3. Nebuchadnezzar returns to utterly destroy Jerusalem (36:14-21)
  4. Proclamation by Cyrus for Jews to return to Jerusalem (36:22-23)

2 Chronicles

Ezra - help. (1.) A priest among those that returned to Jerusalem under Zerubabel (Neh. 12:1).

(2.) The "scribe" who led the second body of exiles that returned from Babylon to Jerusalem B.C. 459, and author of the book of Scripture which bears his name. He was the son, or perhaps grandson, of Seraiah (2 Kings 25:18-21), and a lineal descendant of Phinehas, the son of Aaron (Ezra 7:1-5). All we know of his personal history is contained in the last four chapters of his book, and in Neh. 8 and 12:26.

In the seventh year of the reign of Artaxerxes Longimanus (see DARIUS ¯T0000975), he obtained leave to go up to Jerusalem and to take with him a company of Israelites (Ezra 8). Artaxerxes manifested great interest in Ezra's undertaking, granting him "all his request," and loading him with gifts for the house of God. Ezra assembled the band of exiles, probably about 5,000 in all, who were prepared to go up with him to Jerusalem, on the banks of the Ahava, where they rested for three days, and were put into order for their march across the desert, which was completed in four months. His proceedings at Jerusalem on his arrival there are recorded in his book.

He was "a ready scribe in the law of Moses," who "had prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord and to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments." "He is," says Professor Binnie, "the first well-defined example of an order of men who have never since ceased in the church; men of sacred erudition, who devote their lives to the study of the Holy Scriptures, in order that they may be in a condition to interpret them for the instruction and edification of the church. It is significant that the earliest mention of the pulpit occurs in the history of Ezra's ministry (Neh. 8:4). He was much more of a teacher than a priest. We learn from the account of his labours in the book of Nehemiah that he was careful to have the whole people instructed in the law of Moses; and there is no reason to reject the constant tradition of the Jews which connects his name with the collecting and editing of the Old Testament canon. The final completion of the canon may have been, and probably was, the work of a later generation; but Ezra seems to have put it much into the shape in which it is still found in the Hebrew Bible. When it is added that the complete organization of the synagogue dates from this period, it will be seen that the age was emphatically one of Biblical study" (The Psalms: their History, etc.).

For about fourteen years, i.e., till B.C. 445, we have no record of what went on in Jerusalem after Ezra had set in order the ecclesiastical and civil affairs of the nation. In that year another distinguished personage, Nehemiah, appears on the scene. After the ruined wall of the city had been built by Nehemiah, there was a great gathering of the people at Jerusalem preparatory to the dedication of the wall. On the appointed day the whole population assembled, and the law was read aloud to them by Ezra and his assistants (Neh. 8:3). The remarkable scene is described in detail. There was a great religious awakening. For successive days they held solemn assemblies, confessing their sins and offering up solemn sacrifices. They kept also the feast of Tabernacles with great solemnity and joyous enthusiasm, and then renewed their national covenant to be the Lord's. Abuses were rectified, and arrangements for the temple service completed, and now nothing remained but the dedication of the walls of the city (Neh. 12).

Chronicles, two books of the Old Testament that interpret the history of Israel and Judah from the creation of Adam to the mid-6th century BC. Placed among the historical books of the Bible by Christians, they are the last two books of the Hebrew canon. Originally 1 and 2 Chronicles and the books of Ezra and Nehemiah formed one book, which is believed to have been composed about 300 BC.

According to scholars, the books of Genesis and Numbers were the principal sources for the first nine chapters of 1 Chronicles. The rest of 1 Chronicles and most of 2 Chronicles were drawn from partly parallel accounts in 2 Samuel and 1 and 2 Kings. These deal mainly with the reigns of King David and King Solomon and the subsequent history of the kingdom of Judah until the time of the Babylonian Captivity in the 500s BC.