Josiah and the found book of the law
Josiah responds to the recovered law scroll with covenantal fear and humility, and the Lord confirms through Huldah that Judah’s long-idolatrous rebellion has brought irreversible judgment. Yet because Josiah is tender-hearted before the word of God, the coming disaster will not fall in his lifetime
Commentary
22:1 Josiah was eight years old when he became king, and he reigned for thirty-one years in Jerusalem. His mother was Jedidah, daughter of Adaiah, from Bozkath.
22:2 He did what the Lord approved and followed in his ancestor David’s footsteps; he did not deviate to the right or the left.
22:3 In the eighteenth year of King Josiah’s reign, the king sent the scribe Shaphan son of Azaliah, son of Meshullam, to the Lord’s temple with these orders:
22:4 “Go up to Hilkiah the high priest and have him melt down the silver that has been brought by the people to the Lord’s temple and has been collected by the guards at the door.
22:5 Have them hand it over to the construction foremen assigned to the Lord’s temple. They in turn should pay the temple workers to repair it,
22:6 including craftsmen, builders, and masons, and should buy wood and chiseled stone for the repair work.
22:7 Do not audit the foremen who disburse the silver, for they are honest.”
22:8 Hilkiah the high priest informed Shaphan the scribe, “I found the law scroll in the Lord’s temple.” Hilkiah gave the scroll to Shaphan and he read it.
22:9 Shaphan the scribe went to the king and reported, “Your servants melted down the silver in the temple and handed it over to the construction foremen assigned to the Lord’s temple.”
22:10 Then Shaphan the scribe told the king, “Hilkiah the priest has given me a scroll.” Shaphan read it out loud before the king.
22:11 When the king heard the words of the law scroll, he tore his clothes.
22:12 The king ordered Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam son of Shaphan, Acbor son of Micaiah, Shaphan the scribe, and Asaiah the king’s servant,
22:13 “Go, seek an oracle from the Lord for me and the people – for all Judah. Find out about the words of this scroll that has been discovered. For the Lord’s fury has been ignited against us, because our ancestors have not obeyed the words of this scroll by doing all that it instructs us to do.”
22:14 So Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam, Acbor, Shaphan, and Asaiah went to Huldah the prophetess, the wife of Shullam son of Tikvah, the son of Harhas, the supervisor of the wardrobe. (She lived in Jerusalem in the Mishneh district.) They stated their business,
22:15 and she said to them: “This is what the Lord God of Israel says: ‘Say this to the man who sent you to me:
22:16 “This is what the Lord says: ‘I am about to bring disaster on this place and its residents, the details of which are recorded in the scroll which the king of Judah has read.
22:17 This will happen because they have abandoned me and offered sacrifices to other gods, angering me with all the idols they have made. My anger will ignite against this place and will not be extinguished!’”
22:18 Say this to the king of Judah, who sent you to seek an oracle from the Lord: “This is what the Lord God of Israel says concerning the words you have heard:
22:19 ‘You displayed a sensitive spirit and humbled yourself before the Lord when you heard how I intended to make this place and its residents into an appalling example of an accursed people. You tore your clothes and wept before me, and I have heard you,’ says the Lord.
22:20 ‘Therefore I will allow you to die and be buried in peace. You will not have to witness all the disaster I will bring on this place.’”’” Then they reported back to the king.
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
This scene belongs to Josiah’s reform in late seventh-century Judah, probably around 622 B.C. The temple is in need of repair, which reflects both neglect of the sanctuary and the broader covenantal decay inherited from Manasseh’s reign. The temple funds are administered through priests, scribes, and construction foremen, showing an established but apparently neglected system of sacred maintenance. The king’s delegation to inquire of the Lord shows that royal reform must be tested by divine revelation, not merely by political resolve.
Central idea
Josiah responds to the recovered law scroll with covenantal fear and humility, and the Lord confirms through Huldah that Judah’s long-idolatrous rebellion has brought irreversible judgment. Yet because Josiah is tender-hearted before the word of God, the coming disaster will not fall in his lifetime. The passage highlights the authority of God’s written word and the seriousness of covenant unfaithfulness.
Context and flow
This unit opens the section on Josiah’s reforms in 2 Kings 22–23. It follows the notice of Josiah’s righteous reign and the temple restoration project, and it leads directly into the public covenant-renewal measures and purge of idolatry in chapter 23. Literarily, the found scroll becomes the interpretive key for Josiah’s reforms and for the announcement that Judah’s judgment is already determined.
Exegetical analysis
The narrative begins with a standard royal introduction that places Josiah within the line of David and explicitly evaluates him positively: he did what the Lord approved and did not turn aside. That judgment is not mere ceremonial praise; it prepares the reader to see his reform as the exception rather than the rule in Judah’s late-monarchic decline. The temple repair project in verses 3–7 shows a practical act of restoration, but it also quietly reveals disorder: the house of the Lord has fallen into such condition that money is being gathered and directed toward basic structural repair. The note that the foremen need not be audited because they are trustworthy highlights administrative integrity, not hidden corruption.
The turning point comes in verse 8 when Hilkiah reports, “I found the law scroll in the Lord’s temple.” The text does not explain exactly where it was found or why it had been neglected, and it does not require us to imagine a sensational discovery story. The point is that the covenant document had effectively dropped out of active governing life. Shaphan’s public reading of the scroll before the king makes the book itself the decisive voice in the episode. Josiah’s tearing of clothes is the conventional gesture of grief, alarm, and repentance in the face of divine judgment; it is not theatrical but covenantally appropriate.
Josiah then orders a prophetic inquiry on behalf of himself and all Judah. This is important: the king recognizes that the issue is not only personal piety but the condition of the nation under the covenant. His explanation is theologically sharp: the Lord’s fury is kindled because the ancestors did not obey the words of this scroll. The narrative therefore places present disaster within a long history of covenant breach, not within a single isolated moment.
Huldah’s oracle has two parts. First, she announces unavoidable disaster on Jerusalem and its inhabitants because they have abandoned the Lord for idols. The language is sweeping and final: the anger will not be quenched. Second, she gives Josiah a personal word of mercy. Because he humbled himself, tore his clothes, and wept when he heard the warning, he will die in peace and will not live to see the catastrophe. The juxtaposition is crucial: repentance may not always reverse temporal judgment on a nation, but it is genuinely honored by God. The passage therefore holds together divine justice, covenant accountability, and personal mercy without contradiction.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant administration of Israel’s life in the land. The found scroll exposes Judah’s violation of the covenant stipulations and triggers the covenant curses associated with idolatry and persistent disobedience. Josiah’s response is the response of a Davidic king who recognizes that the kingdom exists under the authority of the law of the Lord. The oracle also looks ahead to exile as the covenant sanction for unrepentant national sin, while preserving the hope that God still notices and honors humble submission to his word.
Theological significance
The passage reveals the enduring authority of God’s written word, the seriousness of idolatry, and the reality of covenant judgment. It also shows that humility before God is not weakness but the only fitting response when his word exposes sin. God is not indifferent to generations of rebellion, yet he is attentive to the contrite. The scene likewise underscores that reform must be measured by revelation, not by zeal alone.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
This is a direct prophetic oracle, not a typological passage in the strict sense. Huldah’s word interprets the discovered scroll as a covenant lawsuit and announces imminent judgment, while Josiah’s delayed disaster is a mercy, not a messianic sign. The found scroll functions symbolically as the recovered authority of God’s word, but the symbolism remains firmly grounded in the historical narrative.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects covenant-law and honor-shame patterns common to the ancient world. Tearing garments is a public sign of grief, humiliation, and alarm. The king acts representatively for Judah, so his humility has national significance. The delegation to a prophet for an oracle reflects the assumption that true interpretation of national crisis comes from God’s authorized word, not from royal instinct. Huldah’s role also shows that prophetic authority is not limited by gender when God appoints the spokesperson.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In the OT setting, the passage is about Judah’s return to the covenant word and the certainty of judgment on a persistently idolatrous nation. Canonically, it contributes to the larger pattern of kings being evaluated by their submission to God’s revelation and to the increasing expectation that Israel needs a deeper, lasting covenant renewal than any reforming monarch can provide. The episode anticipates the post-exilic concern for the law and, more broadly, points forward to the need for a faithful king who perfectly obeys God’s word and brings real covenant renewal. It does not directly predict Christ, but it fits the trajectory that culminates in him as the obedient Son of David.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s word is not optional counsel but binding covenant truth that judges both leaders and people. Genuine reform begins when the word is read, believed, and obeyed. Humble repentance is never wasted, even when outward consequences remain. Leaders bear special responsibility to seek the Lord’s judgment rather than merely manage appearances. The passage also warns against assuming that religious institutions can remain healthy while the revealed word is neglected.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main minor question is the precise identity and extent of the “law scroll,” which is often linked to Deuteronomy or a broader Mosaic collection. The passage itself, however, does not require a definitive answer; its theological force rests on the fact that Judah has violated the authoritative covenant document. Huldah’s oracle is also sometimes discussed in terms of why she, rather than another prophet, is consulted, but the narrative simply presents her as the Lord’s authorized mouthpiece.
Application boundary note
This passage should not be flattened into a generic template for every modern revival effort. It belongs to Judah under the Mosaic covenant, with temple, king, and prophetic oracle functioning in a specific redemptive-historical setting. Readers should not erase Israel’s historical role or assume direct one-to-one transfer of temple and kingdom dynamics to the church. The enduring principle is the authority of God’s word and the necessity of repentance, not a promise that every sincere reform will prevent temporal judgment.
Key Hebrew terms
sefer hattorah
Gloss: book/scroll of the law
This is the authoritative written covenant document. The passage turns on the rediscovery of God’s revealed instruction and Judah’s failure to obey it.
matsa
Gloss: found, discovered
The scroll is not merely observed but recovered from neglect, underscoring how far Judah had drifted from the covenant word.
darash
Gloss: seek, inquire
Josiah does not treat the scroll as self-interpreting policy; he seeks a prophetic word from the Lord, which is the proper response to covenant warning.
rakh
Gloss: soft, tender, responsive
Josiah’s heart is morally pliable before God. His humility is genuine covenant repentance, not mere political caution.
khemah
Gloss: heat, anger, fury
The passage emphasizes settled divine wrath against idolatry. The coming disaster is not random history but covenant judgment.
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