Verses 1–9
Manasseh King of Judah
The God-fearing Hezekiah is followed after his death by his godless son Manasseh. Manasseh is only twelve years old when he starts reigning (2 Kings 21:1). His reign lasts no less than fifty-five years, a period that exceeds that of all the other reigns. It is one of the enigmas of God’s government that He allows such a wicked man as Manasseh to rule over His people for so long.
The name of his mother is also given. Hephzibah means ‘My lust is in her’. In that name we hear what Jerusalem means to the LORD. What kind of woman she is, is not told. Whether she is a good or a bad mother, we do not know. Judging by the development of Manasseh, she certainly could not prevent him from developing into such an ungodly king. We cannot point to a cause for all time when children go against what their God-fearing parents have told them.
Manasseh does not take as an example his father Hezekiah, but the kings of Israel, of whom we have read over and over again that they did, whatever is said here of Manasseh, “evil in the sight of the LORD” (2 Kings 21:2). He does “according to the abominations of the nations”.
He quickly undoes his father’s reforms and “he rebuilt the high places which Hezekiah his father had destroyed” (2 Kings 21:3). He is also inspired by Ahab, the most godless king of Israel. It is quite possible that his worship and serving of sun, moon and stars (“all the host of heaven”) comes through Assyrian influence. So we see that Manasseh takes over the worst of everything and everyone and puts it into practice. The judgment that God has given both to the nation and to Ahab doesn’t matter him at all.
That the wicked Manasseh seems to be able to do unhindered whatever it takes also says something about the people. The revival under Hezekiah has apparently not deeply rooted in the population. The people are easily carried away on the bad road on which Manasseh is leading them.
He openly provokes the LORD by building idol altars in the house of the LORD (2 Kings 21:4-Deuteronomy :). The greatness of this evil is clearly expressed by saying that Manasseh does this in the house “of which the LORD had said, “In Jerusalem I will put My name.””. Manasseh doesn't care about that. He ignores the rights of the LORD to His house and just makes it a dwelling place for demons. Manasseh does not act out of ignorance concerning the will of the LORD, but he does not care at all about that will.
His whole performance shows his surrender to demonic powers to whom he has voluntarily surrenders (2 Kings 21:6). This means that he sacrifices his children to the devil, engages in occultism – he practices witchcraft and uses divination – and stimulates all sorts of forms of sorcery – he appoints mediums and spiritists. The conclusion is that he does not ‘only’ ignore the LORD. It is much worse. Not only does he pass by the LORD with contempt, but he intentionally acts in this way to defy the LORD: “He did much evil in the sight of the LORD provoking [Him to anger].”
2 Kings 21:7 gives another example of his gross violation of the rights of the LORD and his defiance of Him. Even more emphatically than in 2 Kings 21:4 we hear the indignation of God about Manasseh’s shameless courage to set the carved image of Asherah in the temple. We hear God’s indignation in what He says of His house and of His city. God’s feelings about what He has chosen to put His Name there forever are deeply offended by Manasseh’s contemptuous actions.
In 2 Kings 21:8 the LORD continues, in connection with 2 Kings 21:7, to speak about what He would have liked to do. He had wanted to put His Name forever among a people whom He would never drive out of this land, if they at least listened to His law. And there it went wrong: “But they did not listen” (2 Kings 21:9). They follow Manasseh and it makes them wander in a way that makes them sin worse than the heathen peoples who first lived in the land. We have here the side of the godless mass of the people, after we have seen in Hezekiah the history of the faithful remnant.
Even now there is no nation that has corrupted it more than Christianity, just as Israel here is sinning worse than the nations. That is why God’s judgment will all the severer come over Christianity.