Manasseh and Amon
Manasseh’s reign shows the depth of Judah’s covenant corruption: he led the nation into egregious idolatry and brought God’s judgment upon himself. Yet when he humbled himself, the Lord mercifully heard his prayer and restored him, proving that divine judgment is real but repentance is not beyond ho
Commentary
33:1 Manasseh was twelve years old when he became king, and he reigned for fifty-five years in Jerusalem.
33:2 He did evil in the sight of the Lord and committed the same horrible sins practiced by the nations whom the Lord drove out ahead of the Israelites.
33:3 He rebuilt the high places that his father Hezekiah had destroyed; he set up altars for the Baals and made Asherah poles. He bowed down to all the stars in the sky and worshiped them.
33:4 He built altars in the Lord’s temple, about which the Lord had said, “Jerusalem will be my permanent home.”
33:5 In the two courtyards of the Lord’s temple he built altars for all the stars in the sky.
33:6 He passed his sons through the fire in the Valley of Ben-Hinnom and practiced divination, omen reading, and sorcery. He set up a ritual pit to conjure up underworld spirits and appointed magicians to supervise it. He did a great amount of evil in the sight of the Lord and angered him.
33:7 He put an idolatrous image he had made in God’s temple, about which God had said to David and to his son Solomon, “This temple in Jerusalem, which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, will be my permanent home.
33:8 I will not make Israel again leave the land I gave to their ancestors, provided that they carefully obey all I commanded them, the whole law, the rules and regulations given to Moses.”
33:9 But Manasseh misled the people of Judah and the residents of Jerusalem so that they sinned more than the nations whom the Lord had destroyed ahead of the Israelites.
33:10 The Lord confronted Manasseh and his people, but they paid no attention.
33:11 So the Lord brought against them the commanders of the army of the king of Assyria. They seized Manasseh, put hooks in his nose, bound him with bronze chains, and carried him away to Babylon.
33:12 In his pain Manasseh asked the Lord his God for mercy and truly humbled himself before the God of his ancestors.
33:13 When he prayed to the Lord, the Lord responded to him and answered favorably his cry for mercy. The Lord brought him back to Jerusalem to his kingdom. Then Manasseh realized that the Lord is the true God.
33:14 After this Manasseh built up the outer wall of the City of David on the west side of the Gihon in the valley to the entrance of the Fish Gate and all around the terrace; he made it much higher. He placed army officers in all the fortified cities in Judah.
33:15 He removed the foreign gods and images from the Lord’s temple and all the altars he had built on the hill of the Lord’s temple and in Jerusalem; he threw them outside the city.
33:16 He erected the altar of the Lord and offered on it peace offerings and thank offerings. He told the people of Judah to serve the Lord God of Israel.
33:17 The people continued to offer sacrifices at the high places, but only to the Lord their God.
33:18 The rest of the events of Manasseh’s reign, including his prayer to his God and the words the prophets spoke to him in the name of the Lord God of Israel, are recorded in the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
33:19 The Annals of the Prophets include his prayer, give an account of how the Lord responded to it, record all his sins and unfaithful acts, and identify the sites where he built high places and erected Asherah poles and idols before he humbled himself.
33:20 Manasseh passed away and was buried in his palace. His son Amon replaced him as king. Amon’s Reign
33:21 Amon was twenty-two years old when he became king, and he reigned for two years in Jerusalem.
33:22 He did evil in the sight of the Lord, just like his father Manasseh had done. He offered sacrifices to all the idols his father Manasseh had made, and worshiped them.
33:23 He did not humble himself before the Lord as his father Manasseh had done. Amon was guilty of great sin.
33:24 His servants conspired against him and killed him in his palace.
33:25 The people of the land executed all who had conspired against King Amon, and they made his son Josiah king in his place.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The setting is late monarchic Judah under strong Assyrian imperial pressure. Manasseh’s long reign likely reflects political stability under vassalage, but the text presents that stability as spiritually disastrous: he imports and institutionalizes pagan worship, desecrates the temple, and turns Judah toward practices associated with the nations Israel was commanded to displace. Child sacrifice, divination, and astral worship belong to the condemned cultic world of the nations, not to covenant faith. The humiliation of Manasseh at the hands of Assyrian commanders underscores imperial domination, while the brief reign of Amon shows how quickly covenant apostasy can continue when repentance is absent. The mention of Babylon may reflect an Assyrian sphere of detention or transport and should be read cautiously as historical detail subordinate to the theological point.
Central idea
Manasseh’s reign shows the depth of Judah’s covenant corruption: he led the nation into egregious idolatry and brought God’s judgment upon himself. Yet when he humbled himself, the Lord mercifully heard his prayer and restored him, proving that divine judgment is real but repentance is not beyond hope. Amon’s unrepentant continuation of the same evil then reopens the contrast and sets the stage for Josiah.
Context and flow
In Chronicles, this unit stands after Hezekiah’s reform and before Josiah’s reform. The chapter is shaped as a two-king contrast: Manasseh’s apostasy, judgment, repentance, and partial restoration; then Amon’s short, hard-hearted reign and violent end. The repentance narrative functions as a theological hinge, showing both the seriousness of sin and the mercy available to the humbled king.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter opens with the familiar Deuteronomistic assessment: Manasseh “did evil in the sight of the Lord.” Chronicles then expands the catalogue of his sins with careful escalation. He restores the high places, promotes Baal and Asherah worship, bows to the heavenly host, and brings foreign altars into the temple courts. This is not mere private idolatry but public, institutionalized covenant treason. Verse 6 adds especially grave offenses: child sacrifice in the Valley of Ben-Hinnom, divination, omen reading, sorcery, and necromantic practice. The cumulative language signals a king who has embraced the full religious corruption of the surrounding nations.
Verses 7-9 sharpen the offense by contrasting Manasseh’s actions with the Lord’s own covenant words about the temple and the land. The temple was chosen for the Lord’s name; the land was given under covenant obligation. Manasseh’s sin is therefore not only moral but covenantal: he violates the sanctity of the temple and leads Judah into disobedience that threatens continued enjoyment of the land. The narrator then adds a key interpretive judgment: Manasseh misled Judah and Jerusalem into deeper sin than the nations already judged by God. This is a severe covenant indictment.
Verses 10-11 present divine confrontation and judgment. The Lord speaks, but the king and people ignore him. Assyrian commanders then seize Manasseh, humiliate him publicly, and take him to Babylon. The narrator is not interested in imperial politics for its own sake; the foreign domination is God’s instrument of discipline. The hooks, chains, and deportation imagery communicate humiliation and loss of royal dignity.
Verses 12-13 mark the narrative reversal. In pain, Manasseh seeks mercy, humbles himself, and prays. The text explicitly says the Lord responds favorably. This is not presented as automatic pardon but as mercy granted in response to genuine humiliation before the God of the fathers. His return to Jerusalem and the kingdom is a concrete act of restoration, and the conclusion, “the Lord is the true God,” states the theological lesson of the episode.
Verses 14-17 show the fruits of repentance. Manasseh strengthens Jerusalem’s defenses, removes idols from the temple and city, restores the Lord’s altar, and calls Judah to serve the Lord. The note that the people still sacrificed at high places, though only to the Lord, is descriptive and somewhat qualified; it suggests incomplete reform and lingering irregularity rather than a full return to ideal worship.
Verses 18-19 refer to additional sources and stress both prayer and prophetic warning. Chronicles wants the reader to remember both the depth of Manasseh’s sins and the reality of his repentance. Verse 20 closes his account and introduces Amon. The final section is intentionally brief and negative: Amon repeats his father’s earlier evil but not his later humility. His refusal to humble himself is the decisive moral contrast. His servants kill him, and the people of the land execute the conspirators and enthrone Josiah. The chapter therefore ends by preserving Davidic succession and preparing for the reforming king who follows.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant administration in the land, where obedience is tied to blessing, temple holiness, and continued enjoyment of the inheritance. Manasseh’s idolatry embodies covenant unfaithfulness at its worst, while his humiliation and restoration display that the Lord remains free to show mercy to the repentant. The chapter also preserves the Davidic line through Amon’s death and Josiah’s accession, keeping the kingdom promise moving forward even through severe judgment. In the larger storyline, this is an exilic-warning text that intensifies the need for true covenant renewal and a faithful Davidic king.
Theological significance
The passage reveals that God is patient but not indifferent: prolonged sin eventually draws judgment, and even a king cannot desecrate the Lord’s holiness with impunity. It also shows that repentance matters deeply; true humility before God is met with mercy. The chapter exposes the corrupting power of leadership, the reality of corporate guilt, the seriousness of idolatry, and the Lord’s sovereign freedom to restore whom he will. At the same time, it warns that receiving mercy does not automatically erase all the consequences or guarantee that the next generation will be faithful.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The temple, high places, child sacrifice, and astral worship function as covenant markers of fidelity or rebellion rather than as primary predictive symbols. Manasseh’s repentance is a theological pattern, but it should not be forced into a direct messianic type.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
Honor and shame dynamics are important here: the king who exalted himself is publicly humiliated, then truly humbled before being restored. The “hooks in his nose” and bronze chains are concrete images of imperial subjugation and disgrace. The passage also assumes a corporate view of kingship: the ruler’s actions significantly shape the people’s spiritual condition. The phrase “the people of the land” reflects a stabilizing local constituency that can act to preserve the Davidic succession.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this chapter deepens the contrast between failed Davidic kings and the hope for a truly faithful ruler. Manasseh shows how far a son of David can fall, while his repentance confirms that the Lord hears the humbled. Later biblical revelation continues this line of thought by exposing the need for a king who not only repents but perfectly obeys and leads God’s people in covenant faithfulness. The passage therefore contributes to messianic expectation by highlighting both the failure of Judah’s kings and the mercy of God that keeps the Davidic line alive until the coming of the promised Son of David.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Leadership shapes worship and morality, so public office carries grave spiritual responsibility. Idolatry is not a minor flaw; it is covenant treason that corrupts a people. Yet no sinner is beyond the reach of God’s mercy if he truly humbles himself and seeks the Lord. Repentance must include turning from idols, not merely regretting consequences. Believers should also beware of assuming that past reform guarantees future faithfulness, since Amon shows how quickly a heart can repeat inherited sin.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive question is how to assess the historicity and extent of Manasseh’s repentance and restoration, especially in relation to 2 Kings 21, which does not narrate it. Chronicles clearly presents the repentance as genuine and theologically significant, even if the precise historical sequence is not fully recoverable from the biblical text alone.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this chapter into a generic promise that any severe sinner will be restored on demand. The passage teaches God’s mercy toward the truly humbled, but it does so within the covenant history of Judah and the Davidic line. It should also not be used to erase Israel’s historical setting or to treat temple-centered events as direct church templates.
Key Hebrew terms
bamot
Gloss: elevated cult sites
The repeated rebuilding of the high places marks active reversal of Hezekiah’s reform and signals unauthorized, syncretistic worship.
kanaʿ
Gloss: be humbled, submit
This is the turning point in the narrative: Manasseh’s repentance is described not merely as regret but as real self-abasement before God.
pesel
Gloss: carved image
The image in the temple represents deliberate covenant rebellion and the desecration of the place where the Lord put his name.
raʿaʿ
Gloss: act wickedly
The repeated description of both kings as doing evil frames their reigns by covenant evaluation, not by political success.
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