Amaziah and Jeroboam II
Amaziah’s reign shows that partial obedience cannot offset pride and covenant compromise: he obeys the law in one matter but is ruined by presumption and refusal to heed warning. Jeroboam II’s reign shows the opposite paradox: God may grant national relief and expansion even to a sinful king, but th
Commentary
14:1 In the second year of the reign of Israel’s King Joash son of Joahaz, Joash’s son Amaziah became king over Judah.
14:2 He was twenty-five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned for twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother was Jehoaddan, who was from Jerusalem.
14:3 He did what the Lord approved, but not like David his father. He followed the example of his father Joash.
14:4 But the high places were not eliminated; the people continued to offer sacrifices and burn incense on the high places.
14:5 When he had secured control of the kingdom, he executed the servants who had assassinated his father.
14:6 But he did not execute the sons of the assassins. He obeyed the Lord’s commandment as recorded in the law scroll of Moses, “Fathers must not be put to death for what their sons do, and sons must not be put to death for what their fathers do. A man must be put to death only for his own sin.”
14:7 He defeated 10,000 Edomites in the Salt Valley; he captured Sela in battle and renamed it Joktheel, a name it has retained to this very day.
14:8 Then Amaziah sent messengers to Jehoash son of Jehoahaz son of Jehu, king of Israel. He said, “Come, let’s meet face to face.”
14:9 King Jehoash of Israel sent this message back to King Amaziah of Judah, “A thornbush in Lebanon sent this message to a cedar in Lebanon, ‘Give your daughter to my son as a wife.’ Then a wild animal of Lebanon came by and trampled down the thorn.
14:10 You thoroughly defeated Edom and it has gone to your head! Gloat over your success, but stay in your palace. Why bring calamity on yourself? Why bring down yourself and Judah along with you?”
14:11 But Amaziah would not heed the warning, so King Jehoash of Israel attacked. He and King Amaziah of Judah met face to face in Beth Shemesh of Judah.
14:12 Judah was defeated by Israel, and each man ran back home.
14:13 King Jehoash of Israel captured King Amaziah of Judah, son of Jehoash son of Ahaziah, in Beth Shemesh. He attacked Jerusalem and broke down the wall of Jerusalem from the Gate of Ephraim to the Corner Gate – a distance of about six hundred feet.
14:14 He took away all the gold and silver, all the items found in the Lord’s temple and in the treasuries of the royal palace, and some hostages. Then he went back to Samaria. (
14:15 The rest of the events of Jehoash’s reign, including all his accomplishments and his successful war with King Amaziah of Judah, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
14:16 Jehoash passed away and was buried in Samaria with the kings of Israel. His son Jeroboam replaced him as king.)
14:17 King Amaziah son of Joash of Judah lived for fifteen years after the death of King Jehoash son of Jehoahaz of Israel.
14:18 The rest of the events of Amaziah’s reign are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Judah.
14:19 Conspirators plotted against him in Jerusalem, so he fled to Lachish. But they sent assassins after him and they killed him there.
14:20 His body was carried back by horses and he was buried in Jerusalem with his ancestors in the city of David.
14:21 All the people of Judah took Azariah, who was sixteen years old, and made him king in his father Amaziah’s place.
14:22 Azariah built up Elat and restored it to Judah after the king had passed away. Jeroboam II’s Reign over Israel
14:23 In the fifteenth year of the reign of Judah’s King Amaziah, son of Joash, Jeroboam son of Joash became king over Israel. He reigned for forty- one years in Samaria.
14:24 He did evil in the sight of the Lord; he did not repudiate the sinful ways of Jeroboam son of Nebat who encouraged Israel to sin.
14:25 He restored the border of Israel from Lebo Hamath in the north to the sea of the Arabah in the south, in accordance with the word of the Lord God of Israel announced through his servant Jonah son of Amittai, the prophet from Gath Hepher.
14:26 The Lord saw Israel’s intense suffering; everyone was weak and incapacitated and Israel had no deliverer.
14:27 The Lord had not decreed that he would blot out Israel’s memory from under heaven, so he delivered them through Jeroboam son of Joash.
14:28 The rest of the events of Jeroboam’s reign, including all his accomplishments, his military success in restoring Israelite control over Damascus and Hamath, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
14:29 Jeroboam passed away and was buried in Samaria with the kings of Israel. His son Zechariah replaced him as king. Azariah’s Reign over Judah
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 passage belongs to the divided-monarchy period, when Judah and Israel existed as rival kingdoms with separate royal lines, military interests, and religious failures. Amaziah of Judah inherits a compromised Davidic throne and initially acts with partial fidelity, yet his pride after defeating Edom leads him into a disastrous challenge to Israel. The war at Beth Shemesh results in humiliation for Judah, including a breached wall, plundered temple treasures, and hostages—marks of covenantal defeat and political weakness. Jeroboam II’s long reign over Israel is characterized by outward territorial recovery and inward apostasy; the text presents his expansion as a merciful act of the LORD through a prophet’s word, not as a verdict of spiritual approval. The notice of Jonah son of Amittai places this prosperity within a prophetic framework, showing that God’s compassion can temporarily restrain total judgment even on a sinful nation.
Central idea
Amaziah’s reign shows that partial obedience cannot offset pride and covenant compromise: he obeys the law in one matter but is ruined by presumption and refusal to heed warning. Jeroboam II’s reign shows the opposite paradox: God may grant national relief and expansion even to a sinful king, but that mercy does not cancel the kingdom’s deep corruption. The chapter therefore highlights both the seriousness of pride and the patience of God.
Context and flow
This chapter sits in the royal-annals section of Kings, where the narrative alternates between Judah and Israel to show the moral and covenantal trajectory of both kingdoms. It follows earlier notices about Amaziah’s accession and the ongoing instability in Israel, and it leads into the brief notice of Azariah’s accession and the continuation of Jeroboam II’s era. Structurally, the unit moves from Amaziah’s accession and partial reform, to his pride and defeat, to Jeroboam II’s accession and expansion, with the final verses stressing divine mercy amid Israel’s continuing sin.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter is composed like an annalistic diptych: the first half follows Amaziah of Judah, and the second half follows Jeroboam II of Israel. Amaziah’s accession notice is followed by a sober evaluation: he does what is right in the LORD’s eyes, but not with David’s fullness. That qualification matters. His reign contains one notable act of obedience—he refuses to punish the sons of the assassins, explicitly submitting to Mosaic law in Deuteronomic fashion. The narrator is not cynical; he does acknowledge real obedience. Yet the same paragraph exposes the limit of that obedience: the high places remain, so worship is still compromised.
Amaziah’s military success over Edom is real, and the capture and renaming of Sela indicate a genuine victory. But the narrative quickly shows that victory became the occasion for pride. His challenge to Jehoash of Israel is presumptuous, and Jehoash’s reply is crafted as a proverb-like fable. The thornbush and cedar image is deliberately humiliating: a lowly, fragile plant is acting like a great tree. The point is not merely insult; it is warning. Amaziah is told that his success against Edom has inflated him beyond his station and that his aggression will bring disaster on both himself and Judah. He refuses to listen, and the result is defeat at Beth Shemesh.
The defeat is narrated in covenantal terms, even though the text does not explicitly quote a curse formula. Judah is routed, Amaziah is captured, Jerusalem’s wall is breached, temple and palace treasuries are stripped, and hostages are taken. The destruction of a section of the wall marks loss of security and honor; the seizure of temple wealth marks humiliation before God as well as before enemies. The narrator gives no hint that Israel’s success proves Israel’s righteousness. On the contrary, Israel is serving as an instrument of discipline in God’s providence while remaining itself under judgment.
Amaziah’s death is summarized tersely, and the burial in the city of David preserves dynastic continuity, while Azariah’s accession shows that the Davidic line is not extinguished. Then the focus shifts to Jeroboam II. The formula “he did evil” places him squarely within Israel’s sinful royal pattern, specifically the continuing sin of Jeroboam son of Nebat. Yet the next verses are crucial: Jeroboam’s territorial restoration is said to occur in accordance with the word of the LORD spoken through Jonah son of Amittai. The prophetic word is not developed here, but it anchors the military expansion in divine speech rather than mere political luck. Verse 26 explains the theological reason: the LORD saw Israel’s affliction and, though not erasing Israel from under heaven, granted deliverance through Jeroboam. This is mercy, not endorsement. Israel’s outward recovery thus coexists with inward corruption, which is precisely the kind of irony Kings wants the reader to feel.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands within the history of the divided monarchy, after the Davidic covenant has established Judah’s royal line and after the Mosaic covenant’s blessings and curses have been repeatedly triggered by royal and national unfaithfulness. Amaziah’s failure shows that mere possession of the Davidic line does not guarantee covenant fidelity, while Jeroboam II’s success shows that God can extend temporary mercy to a rebellious nation without nullifying his long-term judicial purposes. The chapter anticipates the continuing decline of both kingdoms and the eventual exile, while preserving the Davidic line and the prophetic word as necessary strands in the unfolding story that leads toward the promised righteous king.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God as sovereign over both judgment and mercy. He holds kings accountable, honors obedience to his law, and opposes proud self-exaltation. He also sees affliction and can grant national relief even to an unfaithful people. Human success is therefore morally ambiguous unless it is joined to covenant faithfulness. The chapter also underscores the seriousness of proper worship, the personal nature of guilt, the limits of political power, and the reality that God’s patience does not equal approval of sin.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
The only explicit prophetic note is the word of the LORD through Jonah son of Amittai concerning Israel’s border restoration. This is direct prophetic confirmation of a historical expansion, not a messianic oracle. The thornbush-and-cedar exchange is a parabolic rebuke, using common Near Eastern imagery of rank and vulnerability. No major typology or symbol requires special comment beyond restrained recognition of the metaphor and the prophetic word.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects honor-shame dynamics, especially in Amaziah’s challenge and Jehoash’s public humiliation of him. The fable of the thornbush and cedar is a conventional ancient-style rebuke in which disproportionate status exposes folly. The taking of hostages, removal of temple treasures, and breach of city walls are standard markers of military domination in the ancient Near East. The explicit legal citation in v. 6 also reflects covenantal and family logic: guilt is personal, not transferred across generations in criminal punishment.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its original setting, the chapter exposes the inadequacy of Judah’s and Israel’s kings: even a king who does some things right is still mixed, proud, and vulnerable, while a king who prospers territorially remains spiritually corrupt. That pattern intensifies the biblical need for a truly righteous Davidic ruler who combines obedience, humility, justice, and lasting victory. Jeroboam II’s temporary restoration is a mercy within history, not the final restoration. Canonically, the passage keeps alive the hope for a better king and a deeper deliverance than either Amaziah or Jeroboam can provide.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Partial obedience is not enough; external success cannot substitute for covenant faithfulness. Pride after victory is spiritually dangerous, especially when success is detached from submission to God’s word. Leaders should heed warning before conflict becomes self-inflicted ruin. God’s mercy to the suffering should never be confused with approval of the instruments he uses. The passage also encourages trust that the Lord sees affliction, restrains judgment at times, and governs history even through flawed rulers.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Do not flatten this chapter into a generic lesson about leadership success. Jeroboam II’s territorial gains are not a template for divine favor, and Amaziah’s defeat is not simply a lesson about military overconfidence. Keep the covenantal setting in view, preserve the distinction between Judah and Israel, and treat the parable-like taunt and the prophetic notice with appropriate restraint.
Key Hebrew terms
hayyāšār beʿênê YHWH
Gloss: upright, right
This standard royal evaluation formula is important here because Amaziah is said to do what is right, yet his obedience is immediately qualified as incomplete and unlike David’s wholehearted standard.
bāmôt
Gloss: elevated cult sites
The continued existence of the high places signals incomplete reform and ongoing disordered worship, even in a king otherwise described positively.
ḥāzaq
Gloss: be strong, take firm hold
The note that Amaziah acted after securing the kingdom marks the transition from consolidation to judicial action against the assassins.
ḥaṭṭāʾtô
Gloss: sin, offense
The citation of Mosaic law in v. 6 stresses personal accountability and shows Amaziah’s moment of genuine conformity to Torah in a specific legal matter.
gĕvûl
Gloss: boundary, border
Jeroboam II’s restoration of Israel’s border is central to the chapter’s irony: territorial expansion can occur under divine mercy even while the king remains morally corrupt.
yāšaʿ
Gloss: save, deliver
The text explicitly says the LORD delivered Israel through Jeroboam, underscoring that the restoration is an act of divine compassion rather than a commendation of Jeroboam’s character.
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