历代志下 28
Chinese Union Version Modern Punctuation (Simplified)
亚哈斯做犹大王
28 亚哈斯登基的时候年二十岁,在耶路撒冷做王十六年。不像他祖大卫行耶和华眼中看为正的事, 2 却行以色列诸王的道,又铸造巴力的像, 3 并且在欣嫩子谷烧香,用火焚烧他的儿女,行耶和华在以色列人面前所驱逐的外邦人那可憎的事, 4 并在丘坛上、山冈上、各青翠树下献祭烧香。
为亚兰王所败
5 所以耶和华他的神将他交在亚兰王手里,亚兰王打败他,掳了他许多的民,带到大马士革去。神又将他交在以色列王手里,以色列王向他大行杀戮。 6 利玛利的儿子比加一日杀了犹大人十二万,都是勇士,因为他们离弃了耶和华他们列祖的神。 7 有一个以法莲中的勇士,名叫细基利,杀了王的儿子玛西雅和管理王宫的押斯利甘并宰相以利加拿。
以色列人返犹大俘虏
8 以色列人掳了他们的弟兄,连妇人带儿女共有二十万,又掠了许多的财物,带到撒马利亚去了。 9 但那里有耶和华的一个先知,名叫俄德,出来迎接往撒马利亚去的军兵,对他们说:“因为耶和华你们列祖的神恼怒犹大人,所以将他们交在你们手里,你们竟怒气冲天,大行杀戮。 10 如今你们又有意强逼犹大人和耶路撒冷人做你们的奴婢,你们岂不也有得罪耶和华你们神的事吗? 11 现在你们当听我说,要将掳来的弟兄释放回去,因为耶和华向你们已经大发烈怒。” 12 于是以法莲人的几个族长,就是约哈难的儿子亚撒利雅、米实利末的儿子比利家、沙龙的儿子耶希西家、哈得莱的儿子亚玛撒,起来拦挡出兵回来的人, 13 对他们说:“你们不可带进这被掳的人来。你们想要使我们得罪耶和华,加增我们的罪恶过犯!因为我们的罪过甚大,已经有烈怒临到以色列人了。” 14 于是,带兵器的人将掳来的人口和掠来的财物都留在众首领和会众的面前。 15 以上提名的那些人就站起,使被掳的人前来,其中有赤身的,就从所掠的财物中拿出衣服和鞋来给他们穿,又给他们吃喝,用膏抹他们,其中有软弱的,就使他们骑驴,送到棕树城耶利哥他们弟兄那里。随后,就回撒马利亚去了。
亚哈斯求助于亚述王
16 那时,亚哈斯王差遣人去见亚述诸王,求他们帮助, 17 因为以东人又来攻击犹大,掳掠子民。 18 非利士人也来侵占高原和犹大南方的城邑,取了伯示麦,亚雅仑,基低罗,梭哥和属梭哥的乡村,亭纳和属亭纳的乡村,瑾锁和属瑾锁的乡村,就住在那里。 19 因为以色列王亚哈斯在犹大放肆,大大干犯耶和华,所以耶和华使犹大卑微。 20 亚述王提革拉毗尼色上来,却没有帮助他,反倒欺凌他。 21 亚哈斯从耶和华殿里和王宫中并首领家内所取的财宝给了亚述王,这也无济于事。
祭大马士革之神
22 这亚哈斯王在急难的时候,越发得罪耶和华。 23 他祭祀攻击他的大马士革之神,说:“因为亚兰王的神帮助他们,我也献祭于他,他好帮助我。”但那些神使他和以色列众人败亡了。 24 亚哈斯将神殿里的器皿都聚了来,毁坏了,且封锁耶和华殿的门,在耶路撒冷各处的拐角建筑祭坛。 25 又在犹大各城建立丘坛,与别神烧香,惹动耶和华他列祖神的怒气。
亚哈斯卒
26 亚哈斯其余的事和他的行为,自始至终,都写在《犹大和以色列诸王记》上。 27 亚哈斯与他列祖同睡,葬在耶路撒冷城里,没有送入以色列诸王的坟墓中。他儿子希西家接续他做王。
2 Chronicles 28
Contemporary English Version
King Ahaz of Judah
(2 Kings 16.1-4)
28 Ahaz was 20 years old when he became king of Judah, and he ruled from Jerusalem for 16 years.
Ahaz was nothing like his ancestor David. Ahaz disobeyed the Lord 2 and was as sinful as the kings of Israel. He made idols of the god Baal, 3 and he offered sacrifices in Hinnom Valley. Worst of all, Ahaz sacrificed his own sons, which was a disgusting custom of the nations that the Lord had forced out of Israel. 4 Ahaz offered sacrifices at the local shrines,[a] as well as on every hill and in the shade of large trees.
Syria and Israel Attack Judah
(2 Kings 16.5,6)
5-6 (A) Ahaz and the people of Judah sinned and turned away from the Lord, the God their ancestors had worshiped. So the Lord punished them by letting their enemies defeat them.
The king of Syria attacked Judah and took many of its people to Damascus as prisoners. King Pekah[b] of Israel later defeated Judah and killed 120,000 of its bravest soldiers in one day. 7 During that battle, an Israelite soldier named Zichri killed three men from Judah: Maaseiah the king's son; Azrikam, the official in charge of the palace; and Elkanah, the king's second in command. 8 The Israelite troops captured 200,000 women and children and took them back to their capital city of Samaria, along with a large amount of their possessions. They did these things even though the people of Judah were their own relatives.
Oded the Prophet Condemns Israel
9 Oded lived in Samaria and was one of the Lord's prophets. He met Israel's army on their way back from Judah and said to them:
The Lord God of your ancestors let you defeat Judah's army only because he was angry with them. But you should not have been so cruel! 10 If you make slaves of the people of Judah and Jerusalem, you will be as guilty as they are of sinning against the Lord.
11 Send these prisoners back home—they are your own relatives. If you don't, the Lord will punish you in his anger.
12 About the same time, four of Israel's leaders arrived. They were Azariah son of Johanan, Berechiah son of Meshillemoth, Jehizkiah son of Shallum, and Amasa son of Hadlai. They agreed with Oded that the Israelite troops were wrong, 13 and they said:
If you bring these prisoners into Samaria, that will be one more thing we've done to sin against the Lord. And he is already angry enough with us.
14 So in front of the leaders and the crowd, the troops handed over their prisoners and the property they had taken from Judah. 15 The four leaders took some of the stolen clothes and gave them to the prisoners who needed something to wear. They later gave them all a new change of clothes and shoes, then fixed them something to eat and drink, and cleaned their wounds with olive oil. They gave donkeys to those who were too weak to walk, and led all of them back to Jericho, the city known for its palm trees. The leaders then returned to Samaria.
Ahaz Asks the King of Assyria for Help
(2 Kings 16.7-9)
16-18 Some time later, the Edomites attacked the eastern part of Judah again and carried away prisoners. And at the same time, the Philistines raided towns in the western foothills and in the Southern Desert. They conquered the towns of Beth-Shemesh, Aijalon, Gederoth, Soco, Timnah, and Gimzo, including the villages around them. Then some of the Philistines went to live in these places.
Ahaz sent a message to King Tiglath Pileser of Assyria and begged for help. 19 But God was punishing Judah with these disasters, because Ahaz had disobeyed him and refused to stop Judah from sinning. 20 So Tiglath Pileser came to Judah, but instead of helping, he made things worse. 21 Ahaz gave him gifts from the Lord's temple and the king's palace, as well as from the homes of Israel's other leaders. The Assyrian king still refused to help Ahaz.
The Final Sin of Ahaz and His Death
22 Even after all these terrible things happened to Ahaz, he sinned against the Lord even worse than before. 23 He said to himself, “The Syrian gods must have helped their kings defeat me. Maybe if I offer sacrifices to those gods, they will help me.” That was the sin that finally led to the downfall of Ahaz, as well as to the destruction of Judah.
24 Ahaz collected all the furnishings of the temple and smashed them to pieces. Then he locked the doors to the temple and set up altars to foreign gods on every street corner in Jerusalem. 25 In every city and town in Judah he built local shrines[c] to worship foreign gods. All of this made the Lord God of his ancestors very angry.
26 Everything else Ahaz did while he was king is written in The History of the Kings of Judah and Israel. 27 (B) Ahaz died and was buried in Jerusalem, but not in the royal tombs. His son Hezekiah then became king.
Copyright © 2011 by Global Bible Initiative
Copyright © 1995 by American Bible Society For more information about CEV, visit www.bibles.com and www.cev.bible.
Copyright © 2011 by Global Bible Initiative