cancel by one bold stroke the alleged difference of
worship between the Levitical and non-Levitical kingdom,
are omitted as quite too impossible, although the
whole remaining context is preserved (2Chronicles
xii. 1-16). In the same way the unfavourable
judgment upon Rehoboam’s successor Abijah (1Kings
xv. 3-5) is dropped, because the first kings of Judah,
inasmuch as they maintain the true religion against
those of Israel who have fallen away from it, must
of necessity have been good. But though the
Chronicler is silent about what is bad, for the sake
of Judah’s honour, he cannot venture to pass
over the improvement which, according to 1Kings xv.
12 seq., was introduced in Asa’s day, although
one does not in the least know what need there was
for it, everything already having been in the best
possible state. Nay, he even exaggerates this
improvement, and makes of Asa another Josiah (2Chronicles
xv. 1-15), represents him also (xiv. 3) as abolishing
the high places, and yet after all (xv. 1 7) repeats
the statement of 1Kings xv. 14 that the high places
were not removed. So also of Jehoshaphat, we
are told in the first place that he walked in the
first ways of his father Asa and abolished the high
places in Judah (2Chronicles xvii. 3, 6, xix. 3),
a false generalisation from 1Kings (xxii. 43, 47);
and then afterwards we learn (xx. 32, 33) that the
high places still remained, word for word according
to 1Kings xxii. 43, 44. To thc author it seems
on the one hand an impossibility that the worship
of the high places, which in spite of xxxiii.17 is
to him fundamentally idolatry, should not have been
repressed even by pious,
i.e., law-observing
kings, and yet on the other hand he mechanically transcribes
his copy.
In the case of the notoriously wicked rulers his resort
is to make them simply heathen and persecutors of
the covenant religion, for to him they are inconceivable
within the limits of Jehovism, which always in his
view has had the Law for its norm, and is one and
the same with the exclusive Mosaism cf Judaism.
So first, in the case of Joram: he makes high
places on the hills of Judah and seduces the inhabitants
of Jerusalem to commit fornication, and Judah to apostatise
(xxi. 11), and moreover slays all his brethren with
the sword (ver. 4)—the one follows from
the other. His widow Athaliah breaks up the
house of Jehovah by the hand of her sons (who had
been murdered, but for this purpose are revived), and
makes images of Baal out of the dedicated things (xxiv.
7); none the less on that account does the public
worship of Jehovah go on uninterrupted under Jehoiada
the priest. Most unsparing is the treatment
that Ahaz receives. According to 2Kings xvi.
10 seq., be saw at Damascus an altar which took his
fancy, and he caused a similar one to be set up at
Jerusalem after its pattern, while Solomon’s
brazen altar was probably sent to the melting-pot;
it was Urijah the priest who carried out the orders
of the king. One observes no sign of autonomy,