2 Chronicles 35
Cambridge2 Chronicles 35:1
Ch. 2 Chronicles 35:1-19 (= 1Es 1:1-22; cp. 2 Kings 23:21-23). Josiah’s Passover
- Moreover Josiah] R.V. And Josiah. the first month] The legal month; cp. 2 Chronicles 30:2 (with note).
2 Chronicles 35:2
- in their charges] i.e. at their duties. encouraged them] As Hezekiah had done; cp. 2 Chronicles 29:5-11; 2 Chronicles 30:22.
2 Chronicles 35:3
- that taught all Israel] Cp. Nehemiah 8:7; Nehemiah 8:9; also (perhaps) 2 Chronicles 30:22, A.V.
2 Chronicles 35:4
- by the houses of your fathers, after your courses] R.V. after your fathers’ houses by your courses. the writing of David] Cp. 1 Chronicles 23:27; 1 Chronicles 28:19-21.
2 Chronicles 35:5
- of the families of the fathers] R.V. of the fathers’ houses. the people] R.V. the children of the people, i.e. the laity. The same phrase is translated in 2 Kings 23:6 “the common people” (without any invidious meaning). and after the division of the families of the Levites] R.V. and let there be for each a portion of a fathers’ house of the Levites. Each great division of the laity is to be served by a small division of the Levites.
2 Chronicles 35:6
- prepare your brethren that they may do] R.V. prepare for your brethren, to do. Cp. 2 Chronicles 35:12-13.
2 Chronicles 35:7
- gave] R.V. mg., gave for offerings; cp. 2 Chronicles 30:24, (R.V.) where it is said that Hezekiah did the same at his great Passover. to the people] R.V. to the children of the people (as in 2 Chronicles 35:5, see note). for all] R.V. unto all.
2 Chronicles 35:8
- willingly] The A.V. is better here than the R.V. (“for a free will offering”). rulers of the house of God] Cp. 1 Chronicles 9:11, note.
2 Chronicles 35:9
- Conaniah … and Shemaiah] Perhaps the “Conaniah and Shimei his brother” of 2 Chronicles 31:12, and so Jozabad may be the “Jozabad” of 2 Chronicles 31:13. If this be so, the names represent families rather than individuals, for nearly sixty years separate the reigns of Hezekiah and Josiah. chief] R.V. the chiefs.
2 Chronicles 35:10
- in their courses] R.V. by their courses.
2 Chronicles 35:11
- sprinkled] Cp. 2 Chronicles 29:22, note. from their hands] R.V. which they received of their hand; cp. 2 Chronicles 30:16. the Levites flayed] Cp. 2 Chronicles 29:34.
2 Chronicles 35:12
- that they might give according to the divisions of the families of the people] R.V. that they might give them according to the divisions of the fathers’ houses of the children of the people.
2 Chronicles 35:13
- the ordinance] Exodus 12:9. but the other holy offerings] R.V. and the holy offerings. The bullocks mentioned in 2 Chronicles 35:7-9. They would not be slain on the Passover day itself, but on the days which immediately followed. divided them speedily among all the people] R.V. carried them quickly to all the children of the people.
2 Chronicles 35:14
- of burnt offerings] R.V. the burnt offerings. the fat] Cp. 2 Chronicles 7:7, note; 2 Chronicles 29:35.
2 Chronicles 35:15
- the singers] Cp. 1 Chronicles 25:1 ff. waited at every gate; they might not depart] R.V. were at every gate: they needed not to depart.
2 Chronicles 35:16
- the same day] Lit. “on that day,” i.e. the fourteenth of Nisan.
2 Chronicles 35:18
- there was no passover] Cp. what is said of Hezekiah’s Passover, 2 Chronicles 30:26. from the days of Samuel] Perhaps in allusion to 1 Samuel 9:12-13, though there is no word there to identify the feast mentioned with the Passover. In 2 Kings 23:22 “from the days of the judges.”
2 Chronicles 35:19
- in the eighteenth year] Cp. 2 Chronicles 34:8; 2 Kings 23:23.
2 Chronicles 35:20-24
20–24 (= 1Es 1:25-31; cp. 2 Kings 23:29-30). The Death of Josiah The account of Josiah’s death is very much fuller in Chron. than in Kings. The features which are peculiar to the Chronicler are, (1) Neco’s message to dissuade Josiah from war, (2) Josiah’s disguising himself and coming to fight in the valley of Megiddo, (3) the wounding of Josiah by archers, (4) the transfer of the wounded king from a war chariot to another chariot. In other words all the details which represent the meeting at Megiddo as a battle are peculiar to Chron. The account given in Kings is simply:—“King Josiah went to meet him (Necho), and he put him to death at Megiddo when he saw him. And his servants carried him in a chariot dead from Megiddo, and brought him to Jerusalem.” The Hebrew expression for “went to meet” in this passage is the same as in 1 Kings 18:16; 2 Kings 16:10; it does not suggest a hostile meeting, though it can be used in a suitable context to describe one. The phrase “when he saw him” suggests an interview rather than a battle. Thus we have two traditions of Josiah’s death: according to Chron. he was mortally wounded in battle, according to Kings he sought an interview with Neco and was assassinated by him at the town of Megiddo.
2 Chronicles 35:21
- against the house wherewith I have war] In 1Es 1:27 there is a different reading “My war is upon Euphrates.” commanded] R.V. hath commanded.
2 Chronicles 35:22
- disguised himself] Josiah, like Ahab (2 Chronicles 18:29), took the warning so far seriously as to think that his life was in danger and that he would be safer fighting in disguise. The ἐκραταιώθη (“was strengthened”) of the LXX. represents an inferior reading. the valley of Megiddo] Cp. Judges 5:19; Zechariah 12:11. In 1Es 1:29, “the plain of Megiddo.” The whole (or perhaps only the western part) of the plain of Esdrelon is meant; cp. 1 Chronicles 10:7, note.
2 Chronicles 35:23
- the archers shot] Cp. the death of Ahab, 2 Chronicles 18:33. 1Es 1:29 has an inferior reading, viz. “the princes came down against king Josias.”
2 Chronicles 35:24
- His servants therefore took him out of that chariot] R.V. So his servants took him out of the chariot. the second chariot] War chariots were small, with (apparently) only standing room for their occupants; see the illustrations of Egyptian and Assyrian chariots given in Smith’s Bib. Dict. s.v. This “second chariot” was probably of a larger kind, suitable for travelling. in one of the sepulchres] R.V. in the sepulchres.
2 Chronicles 35:25
25 (= 1Es 1:32; not in 2 Kin.). The Lamentations for Josiah 25. lamented] i.e. “composed (or uttered) an elegy.” The Heb. word (ḳ ?ônçn) suggests formal composition, and the actual words of lamentation are often given; 2 Samuel 1:17 ff; 2 Samuel 3:33-34; Ezekiel 27:32; Ezekiel 32:2; Ezekiel 32:16. and they made them an ordinance] Cp. 2 Samuel 1:18, R.V. in the lamentations] In some lost work, not in our canonical book of the Lamentations, for there we “look in vain for a single word distinctive of a funeral dirge over a devout and zealous reformer like Josiah” (E. H. Plumptre in Smith’s Bib. Dict. s.v.).
2 Chronicles 35:26
26, 27 (= 1Es 1:33; 2 Kings 23:25; 2 Kings 23:28). The Epilogue of Josiah’s Reign 26. his goodness] R.V. his good deeds; cp. 2 Chronicles 32:32. according to that which was (is) written] Cp. the strong terms used in 2 Kings 23:25, “like unto him was no king before him, that turned to the Lord with all his heart … according to all the law of Moses … neither after him arose there any like him.”
