列王纪下 23
Chinese New Version (Simplified)
王宣读约书并与 神立约(A)
23 于是王派人召集犹大和耶路撒冷所有的长老到他那里。 2 王登上耶和华的殿,犹大众人、耶路撒冷所有的居民,还有祭司、先知和众民,不论大小,都一同前往。王就把在耶和华殿发现的约书所记的一切话都念给他们听。 3 王站在柱旁,在耶和华面前立约,要一心一意跟从耶和华,谨守他的诫命、典章和律例,实行这书上所写有关这约的话。众民都一同立约。
除去偶像与一切恶行(B)
4 王吩咐希勒家大祭司、副祭司和守殿门的,把所有为巴力、亚舍拉和天上的万象所制造的器皿,从耶和华殿里搬出去,在耶路撒冷城外汲沦谷的田野,把它们烧了。然后把它们的灰烬带到伯特利去。 5 他废除了从前犹大列王所立、在犹大各城的邱坛,和耶路撒冷的周围焚香拜偶像的祭司。又废除向巴力、日、月、星辰和天上万象焚香的人。 6 他把亚舍拉像从耶和华殿里搬走,拿到耶路撒冷外的汲沦溪去,在汲沦溪把它烧毁,磨碎成灰,把灰撒在平民的坟墓上。 7 他拆毁在耶和华殿内男性庙妓的房屋,就是妇女为亚舍拉编织袍子的地方。 8 他又从犹大各城把祭司们召来,污秽祭司们焚香的邱坛,从迦巴直到别是巴。他又拆毁设在城门的邱坛,就是在市长约书亚门的出入处,在城门的左边。 9 但是邱坛的祭司不会登上在耶路撒冷耶和华的祭坛,他们只是在他们的兄弟中间吃无酵饼。 10 他又污秽在欣嫩子谷的陀斐特,不许人在那里将儿女焚烧献给摩洛(“将儿女焚烧献给摩洛”直译是“将儿女经过进入火中给摩洛”)。 11 他又除去犹大列王献给日头的马匹;这些马匹是在耶和华殿的入口处,靠近太监拿单.米勒在院子里的住宅。他又把献给日头的战车用火烧掉。 12 他又把亚哈斯的楼房顶上,犹大列王所做的祭坛,和玛拿西在耶和华殿的两院中所做的祭坛拆毁,就地打碎,把它们的灰尘倒进汲沦溪去。 13 在耶路撒冷东面、橄榄山南面的邱坛,就是以色列王所罗门为西顿人可憎的神亚斯他录、摩押人可憎的神基抹,和亚扪人可憎的神米勒公所筑的邱坛,王都污秽了。 14 他又打碎神柱,砍下亚舍拉,把死人的骨头布满那个地方。
15 此外,甚至在伯特利的祭坛和那使以色列人陷于罪中的尼八的儿子耶罗波安所做的邱坛,他都拆毁焚烧,压碎成灰,又把亚舍拉烧了。 16 约西亚转过身来,看见在山上的坟墓,于是派人把骨头从坟墓中取出来,烧在祭坛上,污秽它,就像神人从前所宣告的耶和华的话。 17 约西亚说:“我看见的这墓碑是谁的呢?”那城的人对他说:“这是以前从犹大来预告你在伯特利祭坛上所作的事的神人的坟墓。” 18 所以王说:“由他吧!不要让人动他的骨头。”于是他们没有碰他的骨头和那从撒玛利亚来的先知的骨头。 19 以色列诸王在撒玛利亚各城市建造,以致激怒耶和华的一切邱坛上的庙堂,约西亚都除去;他照着在伯特利所行的一切对付它们。 20 他又把所有邱坛的祭司都在祭坛上宰了。他把人的骨头烧在它们上面,然后回到耶路撒冷去了。
王下令守逾越节(C)
21 王又命令众民说:“照着这约书上所写的,守逾越节,记念耶和华你们的 神。” 22 真的自从士师治理以色列的日子以来,以及以色列诸王和犹大列王所有的日子以来,没有守过像这次的逾越节的。 23 只有在约西亚王第十八年,在耶路撒冷守了这逾越节,记念耶和华。
其他改革
24 约西亚也除去在犹大地和耶路撒冷所有招魂的、行巫术的、家神、偶像和一切可憎之物,为要实践希勒家祭司在耶和华殿里所寻得的书上所写律法的话。 25 在他以前没有王好象他按着摩西一切律法,全心、全性、全力归向耶和华;在他以后也没有兴起一个王好象他的。
26 但耶和华并没有把他向犹大所发的烈怒消除,因玛拿西种种的恶行激怒了他。 27 耶和华说:“我也要把犹大从我面前赶走,好象我把以色列除去一样。我要丢弃我所拣选的城市耶路撒冷,以及圣殿,我曾说:‘我的名必立在那里。’”
约西亚阵亡(D)
28 约西亚其余的事迹和他所行的一切,不是都写在犹大列王的年代志上吗? 29 在约西亚的日子,埃及王法老尼哥上来幼发拉底河帮助(按照《马索拉文本》,“帮助”应作“上去”)亚述王,约西亚王竟去迎战他,法老看见他的时候,就把他杀死在米吉多。 30 他的臣仆把他的尸体从米吉多用马车运载,送到耶路撒冷,把他埋葬在他自己的坟墓里。国民选举约西亚的儿子约哈斯,膏了他,立他接续他父亲作王。
约哈斯作犹大王(E)
31 约哈斯登基时是二十三岁,他在耶路撒冷作王三个月。他母亲名叫哈慕他,是立拿人耶利米的女儿。 32 他行耶和华看为恶的事,好象他的祖先所行的。
约雅敬作犹大王(F)
33 法老尼哥把他囚禁在哈马地的利比拉,使他不能在耶路撒冷作王;又罚了犹大国三千公斤银子和三十公斤金子。 34 法老尼哥另立约西亚的儿子以利雅敬接续他的父亲约西亚作王,改了他的名字作约雅敬。他俘掳了约哈斯,把他带到埃及,他就死在那里。 35 约雅敬把银子、金子付给法老;为了应付法老的命令,他向全国征收税银,按着他的评估,向每位国民索取金银,好付给法老尼哥。
36 约雅敬登基的时候是二十五岁,他在耶路撒冷作王十一年。他母亲名叫西布大,是鲁玛人毘大雅的女儿。 37 他行耶和华看为恶的事,好象他的祖先一切所行的。
列王纪下 23
Chinese Contemporary Bible (Simplified)
约西亚的改革
23 于是,王召集犹大和耶路撒冷的所有长老, 2 与祭司、先知、犹大人、耶路撒冷的居民等全体民众,不论贵贱,一同上到耶和华的殿。王把在殿中发现的约书念给他们听。 3 王站在柱旁,在耶和华面前立约,要全心全意地跟随耶和华,遵从祂的一切诫命、法度和律例,履行约书上的规定。民众都答应守约。
4 王吩咐大祭司希勒迦及其副手和殿门守卫清除耶和华殿里用来祭拜巴力、亚舍拉及天上万象的一切器具,将其搬到耶路撒冷城外汲沦溪旁的田野烧掉,又把灰烬带到伯特利。 5 从前,犹大各王任命祭司在犹大各城和耶路撒冷周围的丘坛烧香。现在,约西亚除掉那些祭司,又除掉向巴力、日、月、星辰及天上万象烧香的祭司。 6 他将亚舍拉神像从耶和华的殿里搬到耶路撒冷城外汲沦溪旁烧掉,磨成灰撒在平民的坟墓上。 7 他又拆毁耶和华的殿内男庙妓的房屋,就是妇女为亚舍拉编织帐幔的地方。 8 他召集犹大各城中的祭司,污渎从迦巴到别示巴的各丘坛,那些祭司曾在那里烧香。他拆毁耶路撒冷城门左边、约书亚总督门前的丘坛。 9 但在丘坛烧香的祭司不能在耶路撒冷耶和华的祭坛那里事奉,只可以和其他祭司一起吃无酵饼。 10 他污渎欣嫩子谷中的陀斐特,使人们不能焚烧自己的儿女献给摩洛。 11 他从耶和华的殿门口除掉犹大各王献给太阳神的马匹,这些马匹在太监拿单·米勒房子旁边的院子里。他烧掉了那些献给太阳神的战车。 12 他推倒犹大各王在亚哈斯楼顶上建造的祭坛,摧毁玛拿西在耶和华殿的两个院子里所筑的祭坛,把它们打碎,把灰丢进汲沦溪。 13 他污渎耶路撒冷东面、败坏山南面的丘坛。这些丘坛都是以色列王所罗门为西顿人可憎的神明亚斯她录、摩押人可憎的神明基抹和亚扪人可憎的神明米勒公建造的。 14 他砸碎神柱,砍倒亚舍拉神像,用死人骨头填满那些地方。
15 他拆掉伯特利高岗上的祭坛,即尼八的儿子耶罗波安诱使以色列人犯罪时建造的祭坛,把祭坛烧毁,捣碎成灰,又焚烧亚舍拉神像。 16 约西亚转身看见山上的坟墓,就派人取出墓中的尸骨,放在那祭坛上焚烧,污渎了那祭坛,应验了耶和华借祂的仆人所说的预言。 17 约西亚问:“我看到的那墓碑是谁的?”那城里的人告诉他:“是上帝仆人的,他曾从犹大来预言你对伯特利祭坛所做的这些事。” 18 他说:“不要动他,不要动他的尸骨。”于是,他们没有动那位先知和撒玛利亚来的先知的尸骨。 19 他拆毁以色列各王从前建在撒玛利亚各城高岗上、惹耶和华发怒的丘坛,就像他在伯特利所做的一样。 20 他在祭坛上杀死那些丘坛的祭司,又在坛上焚烧死人骨头。之后,他返回耶路撒冷。
约西亚守逾越节
21 约西亚王吩咐民众:“你们应当依照约书的记载庆祝逾越节,以尊崇你们的上帝耶和华。” 22-23 约西亚执政第十八年,他们在耶路撒冷庆祝逾越节,以尊崇耶和华。自士师治理以色列起,至以色列和犹大列王统治期间,都没有这样庆祝过逾越节。
24 为了遵守祭司希勒迦在耶和华殿里找到的律法书上的话,约西亚彻底清除了耶路撒冷和犹大境内的灵媒、巫师、家庭神像及其他一切可憎之物。 25 约西亚全心、全意、全力归向耶和华,遵行摩西的一切律法,在犹大列王中空前绝后。
26 然而,玛拿西所行的一切惹怒耶和华,耶和华对犹大仍盛怒未息。 27 耶和华说:“我要像驱逐以色列人一样将犹大人从我面前赶走。我要撇弃我所拣选的耶路撒冷和我名常在的殿。”
28 约西亚其他的事及作为都记在犹大的列王史上。 29 约西亚执政期间,埃及王尼哥前往幼发拉底河援助亚述王,约西亚出兵迎战尼哥,在米吉多被杀。 30 他的臣仆用车把他的尸体从米吉多运回耶路撒冷,安葬在他的墓穴里。民众膏立他儿子约哈斯做王。
约哈斯做犹大王
31 约哈斯二十三岁登基,在耶路撒冷执政三个月。他母亲叫哈慕她,是立拿人耶利米的女儿。 32 约哈斯像他祖先一样做耶和华视为恶的事。 33 埃及王尼哥把约哈斯囚禁在哈马的利比拉,不准他在耶路撒冷做王,又罚犹大国三点四吨银子和三十四公斤金子。
约雅敬做犹大王
34 埃及王尼哥立约西亚的另一个儿子以利亚敬为王,给他改名为约雅敬。约哈斯被尼哥带到埃及,并死在那里。 35 为了缴纳法老索要的金银,约雅敬向全国征税,按照民众家产的多少征收金银。 36 约雅敬二十五岁登基,在耶路撒冷执政十一年。他母亲叫西布妲,是鲁玛人毗大雅的女儿。 37 他像他祖先一样做耶和华视为恶的事。
2 Kings 23
Contemporary English Version
Josiah Reads The Book of God's Law
(2 Chronicles 34.29-33)
23 King Josiah called together the older leaders of Judah and Jerusalem. 2 Then he went to the Lord's temple, together with the people of Judah and Jerusalem, the priests, and the prophets. Finally, when everybody was there, he read aloud The Book of God's Law[a] that had been found in the temple.
3 After Josiah had finished reading, he stood by one of the columns. He asked the people to promise in the Lord's name to faithfully obey the Lord and to follow his commands. The people agreed to do everything written in the book.
Josiah Follows the Teachings of God's Law
(2 Chronicles 34.3-7)
4 (A) Josiah told Hilkiah the priest, the assistant priests, and the guards at the temple door to go into the temple and bring out the things used to worship Baal, Asherah, and the stars. Josiah had these things burned in Kidron Valley just outside Jerusalem, and he had the ashes carried away to the town of Bethel.
5 Josiah also got rid of the pagan priests at the local shrines in Judah and around Jerusalem. These were the men that the kings of Judah had appointed to offer sacrifices to Baal and to the sun, moon, and stars. 6 Josiah had the sacred pole[b] for Asherah brought out of the temple and taken to Kidron Valley, where it was burned. He then had its ashes ground into dust and scattered over the public cemetery there. 7 He had the buildings torn down where the male prostitutes[c] lived next to the temple, and where the women wove sacred robes[d] for the idol of Asherah.
8 In almost every town in Judah, priests had been offering sacrifices to the Lord at local shrines.[e] Josiah brought these priests to Jerusalem and had their shrines made unfit for worship—every shrine from Geba just north of Jerusalem to Beersheba in the south. He even tore down the shrine at Beersheba that was just to the left of Joshua Gate, which was named after the highest official of the city. 9 Those local priests could not serve at the Lord's altar in Jerusalem, but they were allowed to eat sacred bread,[f] just like the priests from Jerusalem.
10 (B) Josiah sent some men to Hinnom Valley just outside Jerusalem with orders to make the altar there unfit for worship. That way, people could no longer use it for sacrificing their children to the god Molech. 11 He also got rid of the horses that the kings of Judah used in their ceremonies to worship the sun, and he destroyed the chariots along with them. The horses had been kept near the entrance to the Lord's temple, in a courtyard[g] close to where an official named Nathan-Melech lived.
12 (C) Some of the kings of Judah, especially Manasseh, had built altars in the two courts of the temple and in the room that Ahaz had built on the palace roof. Josiah had these altars torn down and smashed to pieces, and he had the pieces thrown into Kidron Valley, just outside Jerusalem. 13 (D) After that, he closed down the shrines that Solomon had built east of Jerusalem and south of Spoil Hill to honor Astarte the disgusting goddess of Sidon, Chemosh the disgusting god of Moab, and Milcom the disgusting god of Ammon.[h] 14 He tore down the stone images of foreign gods and cut down the sacred pole used in the worship of Asherah. Then he had the whole area covered with human bones.[i]
15 (E) But Josiah was not finished yet. At Bethel he destroyed the shrine and the altar that Jeroboam son of Nebat had built and that had caused the Israelites to sin. Josiah had the shrine and the Asherah pole burned and ground into dust. 16 (F) As he looked around, he saw graves on the hillside. He had the bones in them dug up and burned on the altar, so that it could no longer be used. This happened just as God's prophet had said when Jeroboam was standing at the altar, celebrating a festival.[j]
Then Josiah saw the grave of the prophet who had said this would happen 17 (G) and he asked,[k] “Whose grave is that?”
Some people who lived nearby answered, “It belongs to the prophet from Judah who told what would happen to this altar.”
18 Josiah replied, “Then leave it alone. Don't dig up his bones.” So they did not disturb his bones or the bones of the old prophet from Israel who had also been buried there.[l]
19 Some of the Israelite kings had made the Lord angry by building pagan shrines all over Israel. So Josiah sent troops to destroy these shrines just as he had done to the one in Bethel. 20 He killed the priests who served at them and burned their bones on the altars.
After all that, Josiah went back to Jerusalem.
Josiah and the People of Judah Celebrate Passover
(2 Chronicles 35.1-19)
21 Josiah told the people of Judah, “Celebrate Passover in honor of the Lord your God, just as it says in The Book of God's Law.”[m]
22 This festival had not been celebrated in this way since the time that tribal leaders ruled Israel or the kings ruled Israel and Judah. 23 But in Josiah's eighteenth year as king of Judah, everyone came to Jerusalem to celebrate Passover.
The Lord Is Still Angry with the People of Judah
24 Josiah got rid of every disgusting person and thing in Judah and Jerusalem—including magicians, fortunetellers, and idols. He did his best to obey every law written in the book that the priest Hilkiah found in the Lord's temple. 25 No other king before or after Josiah tried as hard as he did to obey the Law of Moses.
26 But the Lord was still furious with the people of Judah because Manasseh had done so many things to make him angry. 27 The Lord said, “I will desert the people of Judah, just as I deserted the people of Israel. I will reject Jerusalem, even though I chose it to be mine. And I will abandon this temple built to honor me.”
Josiah Dies in Battle
(2 Chronicles 35.20—36.1)
28 Everything else Josiah did while he was king is written in The History of the Kings of Judah. 29 During Josiah's rule, King Neco of Egypt led his army north to the Euphrates River to help the king of Assyria. Josiah led his troops north to fight Neco, but when they met in battle at Megiddo, Josiah was killed.[n] 30 A few of Josiah's servants put his body in a chariot and took it back to Jerusalem, where they buried it in his own tomb. Then the people of Judah found his son Jehoahaz and poured olive oil on his head to show that he was their new king.
King Jehoahaz of Judah
(2 Chronicles 36.2-4)
31 Jehoahaz was 23 years old when he became king of Judah, and he ruled from Jerusalem only 3 months. His mother Hamutal was the daughter of Jeremiah from Libnah. 32 Jehoahaz disobeyed the Lord, just as some of his ancestors had done.
33 King Neco of Egypt had Jehoahaz arrested and put in prison at Riblah[o] near Hamath. Then he forced the people of Judah to pay him 3.4 tons of silver and 34 kilograms of gold as taxes. 34 (H) Neco appointed Josiah's son Eliakim king of Judah, and changed his name to Jehoiakim. He took Jehoahaz as a prisoner to Egypt, where he died.
35 Jehoiakim forced the people of Judah to pay higher taxes, so he could give Neco the silver and gold he demanded.
King Jehoiakim of Judah
(2 Chronicles 36.5-8)
36 (I) Jehoiakim was 25 years old when he was appointed king, and he ruled 11 years from Jerusalem. His mother Zebidah was the daughter of Pedaiah from Rumah. 37 Jehoiakim disobeyed the Lord by following the example of his ancestors.
Footnotes
- 23.2 The Book of God's Law: The Hebrew text has “The Book of God's Agreement,” which is the same as “The Book of God's Law” in 22.8,11. In traditional translations this is called “The Book of the Covenant.”
- 23.6 sacred pole: See the note at 13.6,7.
- 23.7 male prostitutes: Young men or boys sometimes served as prostitutes in the worship of Canaanite gods, but the Lord had forbidden the people of Israel and Judah to worship in this way (see Deuteronomy 23.17,18).
- 23.7 sacred robes: Or “coverings.”
- 23.8 local shrines: See the note at 12.3.
- 23.9 sacred bread: The Hebrew text has “thin bread,” which may be either the pieces of thin bread made without yeast to be eaten during the Passover Festival (see verses 21-23) or the baked flour used in sacrifices to give thanks to the Lord (see Leviticus 2.4,5).
- 23.11 in a courtyard: One possible meaning for the difficult Hebrew text.
- 23.13 the shrines … Ammon: See 1 Kings 11.5-7.
- 23.14 Then he … human bones: This made the whole area unfit for the worship of any god.
- 23.16 just … festival: See 1 Kings 13.1,2.
- 23.16,17 said when Jeroboam … asked: One ancient translation; Hebrew “said. 17 Then Josiah asked.”
- 23.18 old prophet … there: See 1 Kings 13.11-32.
- 23.21 The Book of God's Law: See the note at 23.2.
- 23.29 killed: At this time, King Neco of Egypt (609–595 b.c.) was fighting on the side of the Assyrians. He marched north to fight the Babylonian army and help Assyria keep control of its land. Since Josiah considered Assyria an enemy, he set out to stop Neco and the Egyptian troops.
- 23.33 Riblah: An important town in Syria on the Orontes River.
Chinese New Version (CNV). Copyright © 1976, 1992, 1999, 2001, 2005 by Worldwide Bible Society.
Chinese Contemporary Bible Copyright © 1979, 2005, 2007, 2011 by Biblica® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
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