Read
King Manasseh of Judah
(2 Chronicles 33.1-20)
1Manasseh was 12 years old when he became king of Judah, and he ruled 55 years from Jerusalem. His mother was Hephzibah. 2 Manasseh disobeyed the Lord by following the disgusting customs of the nations that the Lord had forced out of Israel. 3He rebuilt the local shrines that his father Hezekiah had torn down. He built altars for the god Baal and set up a sacred pole for worshiping the goddess Asherah, just as King Ahab of Israel had done. And he faithfully worshiped the stars in heaven.
4 In the temple, where only the Lord was supposed to be worshiped, Manasseh built altars for the worship of pagan gods 5and the stars. He placed these altars in both courts of the temple, 6-7 and even set up the pole for Asherah there. Manasseh practiced magic and witchcraft; he asked fortunetellers for advice and sacrificed his own son. He did many sinful things and made the Lord very angry.
Years ago the Lord had told David and his son Solomon:
Jerusalem is the place I prefer above all others in Israel. It belongs to me, and there I will be worshiped forever. 8If my people will faithfully obey all the commands in the Law of my servant Moses, I will never make them leave the land I gave to their ancestors.
9But the people of Judah disobeyed the Lord. They listened to Manasseh and did even more sinful things than the nations the Lord had wiped out.
10One day the Lord said to some of his prophets:
11King Manasseh has done more disgusting things than the Amorites, and he has led my people to sin by forcing them to worship his idols. 12Now I, the Lord God of Israel, will destroy both Jerusalem and Judah! People will hear about it but won't believe it. 13Jerusalem is as sinful as Ahab and the people of Samaria were. So I will wipe out Jerusalem and be done with it, just as someone wipes water off a plate and turns it over to dry.
14I will even get rid of my people who survive. They will be defeated and robbed by their enemies. 15My people have done what I hate and have not stopped making me angry since their ancestors left Egypt.
16Manasseh was guilty of causing the people of Judah to sin and disobey the Lord. He also refused to protect innocent people—he even let so many of them be killed that their blood filled the streets of Jerusalem.
17Everything else Manasseh did while he was king, including his terrible sins, is written in The History of the Kings of Judah. 18He died and was buried in Uzza Garden near his palace, and his son Amon became king.
King Amon of Judah
(2 Chronicles 33.21-25)
19Amon was 22 years old when he became king of Judah, and he ruled from Jerusalem for 2 years. His mother Meshullemeth was the daughter of Haruz from Jotbah. 20Amon disobeyed the Lord, just as his father Manasseh had done. 21Amon worshiped the idols Manasseh had made and 22refused to be faithful to the Lord, the God his ancestors had worshiped.
23Some of Amon's officials plotted against him and killed him in his palace. 24-26He was buried in Uzza Garden. Soon after that, the people of Judah killed the murderers of Amon, then they made his son Josiah king.
Everything else Amon did while he was king is written in The History of the Kings of Judah.
Reflect
Welcome to one of the darkest periods of not only Judah’s, but all of history. The irony is that Judah’s most evil king ruled the longest – from age 12 for 55 years! Even King David, the “measuring standard” of good kingship, ruled only 40 years.
Every conceivable evil, from idolatry (vv 3-5) through witchcraft and child sacrifice (vv 6-7) to mass murder of innocent people (v 16), was introduced and superintended by Manasseh. In fact, some rabbinical accounts have it that it was he who executed the prophet Isaiah. He was “faithfully unfaithful” to God and everything good.
In sin measurement, he had become the new “gold standard” for evil. The scripture testifies that he had not only reached the sin level of Israel’s King Ahab whom God threw into exile (v 13), but Manasseh was even “more disgusting” than the previous land owners whom God had also thrown out to bring Judah in (v 11). To summarize, “He did many sinful things and made the Lord very angry.” God had plans to wipe him out.
Perhaps it makes sense how a wicked king like Manasseh would produce an equally evil son like Amon (vv 19-25) but how does a good king like Hezekiah produce a terrible son successor like Manasseh? And why does God allow such evil to continue for nearly six decades?
The answers to these questions are not simple yet they bring out the fundamental nature of humans and God. Human history has been a checkered one of good-evil, evil-good while God’s has been one constant stream of love, mercy, grace and faithfulness. It is incredible how, “If we are not faithful, he will still be faithful. Christ cannot deny who he is.” (2 Timothy 2:13) I am shaking my head; are you?
Respond
Everlasting God, you whose faithfulness is a constant stream, forgive my inconsistency and many sinful ways and make me more and more like you, so the world may be attracted to you as they see in me evidence of your good, good nature which demands a response. In Jesus’ name, Amen!

Yaw Perbi
Dr. Yaw Perbi is a physician, pastor and president of International Student Ministries Canada (ISMC). He is the founder and Global CEO of The HuD Group and has ministered in 45 countries on five continents. Yaw is a Fellow of the Africa Leadership Initiative and a Lausanne Movement Catalyst. Dr. Perbi currently resides in Montreal, Canada with his dear wife Anyele and six delightful children. He owes all this to Christ Jesus.