3 entries
4 Kings 14:1-29 3 entries

THE REIGNS OF AMAZIAH IN JUDAH AND JEROBOAM IN ISRAEL

AMAZIAH TURNED TO IDOLATRY.

St. Ephrem the Syrian (c. 306–373)

In the second year of King Joash son of Ahaziah of Israel, King Amaziah son of Joash of Judah began to reign, who avenged the death of his father, but with moderation, so that he spared the life of the relatives of the conspirators according to the prescriptions of the Law and was careful that the punishment might not be too excessive for the authors of the crime. Therefore Amaziah was pious, as long as he had before his eyes his father’s unhappy end, whose cause he could not ignore: offense against the true religion [of God]. However, when his reign began to be very prosperous, [Amaziah] rejected his fear of God which he had conceived after witnessing his father’s punishment, and embraced foreign cults. In the second book of the Annals, the Scripture relating his victory against the Edomites confirms that this was the reason of his apostasy: But Amaziah took courage, and led out his people, and went to the Valley of Salt and smote ten thousand men of Seir. The men of Judah captured another ten thousand alive and took them to the top of a rock, and all were enchained.[1] And the text adds, After Amaziah came from the slaughter of the Edomites, he brought the gods of the men of Seir, and set them up as his gods and worshiped them, making offerings to them.[2] [3] MEANING OF JEHOASH’S WORDS TO AMAZIAH. ISHO‘DAD OF MERV: The thorn bush [mentioned here] is a tiny plant and herb and is not the blackberry bush, [whose fruits] we eat. Since, if ever, he says, the thorn bush were sent to a cedar, saying, ‘Give your daughter to my son for a wife,’ it would be an insult and an act of derision, since the thorn bush is much smaller than the cedar, so you, Amaziah, do not differ at all from the thorn bush, if compared with my power. By the cedar and the wild beast Jehoash signifies himself. [1]

Books of Sessions 2 Kings 12.4

GOD WORKS IN HUMAN HEARTS.

St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430)

The Almighty, who cannot possibly will anything unjust, is able to set in motion even the inclinations of their will in people’s hearts in order to accomplish through these people whatever he wishes to achieve through their agency. What meaning can these words have that the man of God addressed to King Amaziah: Do not allow the army of Israel to go out with you, for the Lord is not with Israel and all the children of Ephraim. And if you think to prevail over them, God will put you to flight before your enemies; for it belongs to God both to help and to put to flight?[1]

How does the power of God help some in war by giving them confidence and turns others to flight by instilling them with fear, except for this reason, that he who has made all things as he willed in heaven and on earth, also works in the human hearts? We also read of what Joash, king of Israel, said when he dispatched a messenger to King Amaziah, who had a mind to go to war with him. Having mentioned certain things, he went on to say, Sit at home. Why do you provoke evil that you should fall and Judah with you? The Scripture then went on to add, And Amaziah would not listen to him because it was the Lord’s will that he should be delivered into the hands of enemies because he sought after the gods of Edom.[2]

There you see how God, wishing to punish the sin of idolatry, influenced the heart of this man with whom he was justly angry, that he would not heed salutary advice but, in his contempt for it, would engage in battle, there to perish together with his army.

On Grace and Free Will 21.42

JEROBOAM HONORED THE PROPHET JONAH.

St. Ephrem the Syrian (c. 306–373)

In the fifteenth year of King Amaziah son of Joash of Judah, King Jeroboam son of Joash of Israel began to reign in Samaria; he reigned forty-one years. He restored the border of Israel from Lebo-hamath as far as the Sea of the Arabah, according to the word of the Lord, the God of Israel, which he spoke by his servant Jonah son of Amittai, the prophet. This is the same Jonah who preached the repentance of Nineveh. And the Sea of Arabah[1] is the same that the Scripture calls elsewhere the salt sea,[2] situated on the border with Canaan, of which the city of Hamath, beside the Mount Lebanon, is the other northern border. Jeroboam honored the prophet Jonah as his father had honored Elisha and recurred to his useful work, so that, being encouraged by his predictions and advice, was able to conquer back the cities occupied by the Syrians.[3]

On the Second Book of Kings 14.23