Manasseh
The only son and successor of Hezekiah on the throne of
Judah. He was twelve years old when he began to reign (2 Kings 21:1), and he
reigned fifty-five years (B.C. 698-643).
Though he reigned so long, yet comparatively little is known of this king. His
reign was a continuation of that of Ahaz, both in religion and national polity.
He early fell under the influence of the heathen court circle, and his reign was
characterized by a sad relapse into idolatry with all its vices, showing that
the reformation under his father had been to a large extent only superficial (Isa.
7:10; 2 Kings 21:10-15). A systematic and persistent attempt was made, and all
too successfully, to banish the worship of Jehovah out of the land.
Amid this wide-spread idolatry there were not wanting, however, faithful
prophets (Isaiah, Micah) who lifted up their voice in reproof and in warning.
But their fidelity only aroused bitter hatred, and a period of cruel persecution
against all the friends of the old religion began. "The days of Alva in Holland,
of Charles IX. in France, or of the Covenanters under Charles II. in Scotland,
were anticipated in the Jewish capital. The streets were red with blood."
There is an old Jewish tradition that Isaiah was put to death at this time (2
Kings 21:16;24: 3, 4; Jer. 2:30), having been sawn asunder in the trunk of a
tree. Psalms 49, 73, 77, 140, and 141 seem to express the feelings of the pious
amid the fiery trials of this great persecution.
Manasseh has been called the "Nero of Palestine." Esarhaddon, Sennacherib's
successor on the Assyrian throne, who had his residence in Babylon for thirteen
years (the only Assyrian monarch who ever reigned in Babylon), took Manasseh
prisoner (B.C. 681) to Babylon. Such captive kings were usually treated with
great cruelty. They were brought before the conqueror with a hook or ring passed
through their lips or their jaws, having a cord attached to it, by which they
were led. This is referred to in 2 Chr. 33:11, where the Authorized Version
reads that Esarhaddon "took Manasseh among the thorns;" while the Revised
Version renders the words, "took Manasseh in chains;" or literally, as in the
margin, "with hooks." (Comp. 2 Kings 19:28.)
The severity of Manasseh's imprisonment brought him to repentance. God heard his
cry, and he was restored to his kingdom (2 Chr. 33:11-13). He abandoned his
idolatrous ways, and enjoined the people to worship Jehovah; but there was no
thorough reformation. After a lengthened reign extending through fifty-five
years, the longest in the history of Judah he died, and was buried in the garden
of Uzza, the "garden of his own house" (2 Kings 21:17, 18; 2 Chr. 33:20), and
not in the city of David, among his ancestors. He was succeeded by his son Amon.
In Judg. 18:30 the correct reading is "Moses," and not "Manasseh." The name
"Manasseh" is supposed to have been introduced by some transcriber to avoid the
scandal of naming the grandson of Moses the great lawgiver as the founder of an
idolatrous religion.