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			 MANASSEH: REPENTANCE AND 
			FORGIVENESS 
			2 Chronicles 33 
			In telling the melancholy story of the wickedness of Manasseh in 
			the first period of his reign, the chronicler reproduces the book of 
			Kings, with one or two omissions and other slight alterations. He 
			omits the name of Manasseh’s mother; she was called Hephzi-bah-"My 
			pleasure is in her." In any case, when the son of a godly father 
			turns out badly, and nothing is known about the mother, uncharitable 
			people might credit her with his wickedness. But the chronicler’s 
			readers were familiar with the great influence of the queen-mother 
			in Oriental states. When they read that the son of Hezekiah came to 
			the throne at the age of twelve and afterwards gave himself up to 
			every form of idolatry, they would naturally ascribe his departure 
			from his father’s ways to the suggestions of his mother. The 
			chronicler is not willing that the pious Hezekiah should lie under 
			the imputation of having taken delight in an ungodly woman, and so 
			her name is omitted. 
			 
			The contents of 2Ki 21:10-16 are also omitted; they consist of a 
			prophetic utterance and further particulars as to the sins of 
			Manasseh; they are virtually replaced by the additional information 
			in Chronicles. 
			 
			From the point of view of the chronicler, the history of Manasseh in 
			the book of Kings was far from satisfactory. The earlier writer had 
			not only failed to provide materials from which a suitable moral 
			could be deduced, but he had also told the story so that undesirable 
			conclusions might be drawn. Manasseh sinned more wickedly than any 
			other king of Judah: Ahaz merely polluted and closed the Temple, but 
			Manasseh "built altars for all the hosts of heaven in the two courts 
			of the Temple," and set up in it an idol. And yet in the earlier 
			narrative this most wicked king escaped without any personal 
			punishment at all. Moreover, length of days was one of the rewards 
			which Jehovah was wont to bestow upon the righteous; but while Ahaz 
			was cut off at thirty-six, in the prime of manhood, Manasseh 
			survived to the mature age of sixty-seven, and reigned fifty-five 
			years. 
			 
			However, the history reached the chronicler in a more satisfactory 
			form. Manasseh was duly punished, and his long reign fully accounted 
			for. When, in spite of Divine warning, Manasseh and his people 
			persisted in their sin, Jehovah sent against them "the captains of 
			the host of the king of Assyria, which took Manasseh in chains, and 
			bound him with fetters, and carried him to Babylon." 
			 
			The Assyrian invasion referred to here is partially confirmed by the 
			fact that the name of Manasseh occurs amongst the tributaries of 
			Esarhaddon and his successor, Assurbanipal. The mention of Babylon 
			as his place of captivity rather than Nineveh may be accounted for 
			by supposing that Manasseh was taken prisoner in the reign of 
			Esarhaddon. This king of Assyria rebuilt Babylon, and spent much of 
			his time there. He is said to have been of a kindly disposition, and 
			to have exercised towards other royal captives the same clemency 
			which he extended to Manasseh. For the Jewish king’s misfortunes led 
			him to repentance: "When he was in trouble, he besought Jehovah his 
			God, and humbled himself greatly before the God of his fathers, and 
			prayed unto him." Amongst the Greek Apocrypha is found a "Prayer of 
			Manasses," doubtless intended by its author to represent the prayer 
			referred to in Chronicles. In it Manasseh celebrates the Divine 
			glory, confesses his great wickedness, and asks that his penitence 
			may be accepted and that he may obtain deliverance. 
			 
			If these were the terms of Manasseh’s prayers, they were heard and 
			answered; and the captive king returned to Jerusalem a devout 
			worshipper and faithful servant of Jehovah. He at once set to work 
			to undo the evil he had wrought in the former period of his reign. 
			He took away the idol and the heathen altars from the Temple, 
			restored the altar of Jehovah, and reestablished the Temple 
			services. In earlier days he had led the people into idolatry; now 
			he commanded them to serve Jehovah, and the people obediently 
			followed the king’s example. Apparently he found it impracticable to 
			interfere with the high places; but they were so far purified from 
			corruption that, though the people still sacrificed at these illegal 
			sanctuaries, they worshipped exclusively Jehovah, the God of Israel. 
			 
			Like most of the pious kings, his prosperity was partly shown by his 
			extensive building operations. Following in the footsteps of Jotham, 
			he strengthened or repaired the fortifications of Jerusalem, 
			especially about Ophel. He further provided for the safety of his 
			dominions by placing captains, and doubtless also garrisons, in the 
			fenced cities of Judah. The interest taken by the Jews of the second 
			Temple in the history of Manasseh is shown by the fact that the 
			chronicler is able to mention, not only the "Acts of the Kings of 
			Israel," but a second authority: "The History of the Seers." The 
			imagination of the Targumists and other later writers embellished 
			the history of Manasseh’s captivity and release with many striking 
			and romantic circumstances. 
			 
			The life of Manasseh practically completes the chronicler’s series 
			of object-lessons in the doctrine of retribution; the history of the 
			later kings only provides illustrations similar to those already 
			given. These object-lessons are closely connected with the teaching 
			of Ezekiel. In dealing with the question of heredity in guilt, the 
			prophet is led to set forth the character and fortunes of four 
			different classes of men. First {Eze 18:20} we have two simple 
			cases: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the 
			wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him. These have been 
			respectively illustrated by the prosperity of Solomon and Jotham and 
			the misfortunes of Jehoram, Ahaziah, Athaliah, and Ahaz. Again, 
			departing somewhat from the order of Ezekiel-"When the righteous 
			turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and 
			doeth according to all the abominations of the wicked man, shall he 
			live? None of his righteous deeds that he hath done shall be 
			remembered; in his trespass that he hath trespassed and in his sin 
			that he hath sinned he shall die"-here we have the principle that in 
			Chronicles governs the Divine dealings with the kings who began to 
			reign well and then fell away into sin: Asa, Joash, Amaziah, and 
			Uzziah. 
			 
			We reached this point in our discussion of the doctrine of 
			retribution in connection with Asa. So far the lessons taught were 
			salutary: they might deter from sin; but they were gloomy and 
			depressing: they gave little encouragement to hope for success in 
			the struggle after righteousness, and suggested that few would 
			escape terrible penalties of failure. David and Solomon formed a 
			class by themselves; an ordinary man could not aspire to their 
			almost supernatural virtue. In his later history the chronicler is 
			chiefly bent on illustrating the frailty of man and the wrath of 
			God. The New Testament teaches a similar lesson when it asks, "If 
			the righteous is scarcely saved, where shall the ungodly and sinner 
			appear?" {1Pe 4:18} But in Chronicles not even the righteous is 
			saved. Again and again we are told at a king’s accession that he 
			"did that which was good and right in the eyes of Jehovah"; and yet 
			before the reign closes he forfeits the Divine favor, and at last 
			dies ruined and disgraced. 
			 
			But this somber picture is relieved by occasional gleams of light. 
			Ezekiel furnishes a fourth type of religious experience: "If the 
			wicked turn from all his sins that he hath committed, and keep all 
			My statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall live; 
			he shall not die. None of his transgressions that he hath committed 
			shall be remembered against him; in his righteousness that he hath 
			done he shall live. Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, 
			saith the Lord Jehovah, and not rather that he should return from 
			his way and live?" {Eze 18:21-23} The one striking and complete 
			example of this principle is the history of Manasseh. It is true 
			that Rehoboam also repented, but the chronicler does not make it 
			clear that his repentance was permanent. Manasseh is unique alike in 
			extreme wickedness, sincere penitence, and thorough reformation. The 
			reformation of Julius Caesar or of our Henry V, or, to take a 
			different class of instance, the conversion of St. Paul, was nothing 
			compared to the conversion of Manasseh. It was as though Herod the 
			Great or Caesar Borgia had been checked midway in a career of 
			cruelty and vice, and had thenceforward lived pure and holy lives, 
			glorifying God by ministering to their fellow-men. Such a repentance 
			gives us hope for the most abandoned. In the forgiveness of Manasseh 
			the penitent sinner receives assurance that God will forgive even 
			the most guilty. The account of his closing years shows that even a 
			career of desperate wickedness in the past need not hinder the 
			penitent from rendering acceptable service to God and ending his 
			life in the enjoyment of Divine favor and blessing. Manasseh becomes 
			in the Old Testament what the Prodigal Son is in the New: the one 
			great symbol of the possibilities of human nature and the infinite 
			mercy of God. 
			 
			The chronicler’s theology is as simple and straightforward as that 
			of Ezekiel. Manasseh repents, submits himself, and is forgiven. His 
			captivity apparently had expiated his guilt, as far as expiation was 
			necessary. Neither prophet nor chronicler was conscious of the moral 
			difficulties that have been found in so simple a plan of salvation. 
			The problems of an objective atonement had not yet risen above their 
			horizon. 
			 
			These incidents afford another illustration of the necessary 
			limitations of ritual. In the great crisis of Manasseh’s spiritual 
			life, the Levitical ordinances played no part; they moved on a lower 
			level, and ministered to less urgent needs. Probably the worship of 
			Jehovah was still suspended during Manasseh’s captivity; none the 
			less Manasseh was able to make his peace with God. Even if they were 
			punctually observed, of what use were services at the Temple in 
			Jerusalem to a penitent sinner at Babylon? When Manasseh returned to 
			Jerusalem, he restored the Temple worship, and offered sacrifices of 
			peace-offerings and of thanksgiving; nothing is said about 
			sin-offerings. His sacrifices were not the condition of his pardon, 
			but the seal and token of a reconciliation already effected. The 
			experience of Manasseh anticipated that of the Jews of the 
			Captivity: he discovered the possibility of fellowship with Jehovah, 
			far away from the Holy Land, without temple, priest, or sacrifice. 
			The chronicler, perhaps unconsciously, already foreshadows the 
			coming of the hour when men should worship the Father neither in the 
			holy mountain of Samaria nor yet in Jerusalem. 
			 
			Before relating the outward acts which testified the sincerity of 
			Manasseh’s repentance, the chronicler devotes a single sentence to 
			the happy influence of forgiveness and deliverance upon Manasseh 
			himself. When his prayer had been heard, and his exile was at an 
			end, then Manasseh knew and acknowledged that Jehovah was God. Men 
			first begin to know God when they have been forgiven. The alienated 
			and disobedient, if they think of Him at all, merely have glimpses 
			of His vengeance and try to persuade themselves that He is a stern 
			Tyrant. By the penitent not yet assured of the possibility of 
			reconciliation God is chiefly thought of as a righteous Judge. What 
			did the Prodigal Son know about his father when he asked for the 
			portion of goods that fell to him or while he was wasting his 
			substance in riotous living? Even when he came to himself, he 
			thought of the father’s house as a place where there was bread 
			enough and to spare; and he supposed that his father might endure to 
			see him living at home in permanent disgrace, on the footing of a 
			hired servant. When he reached home, after he had been met a great 
			way off with compassion and been welcomed with an embrace, he began 
			for the first time to understand his father’s character. So the 
			knowledge of God’s love dawns upon the soul in the blessed 
			experience of forgiveness; and because love and forgiveness are more 
			strange and unearthly than rebuke and chastisement, the sinner is 
			humbled by pardon far more than by punishment; and his trembling 
			submission to the righteous Judge deepens into profounder reverence 
			and awe for the God who can forgive, who is superior to all 
			vindictiveness, whose infinite resources enable Him to blot out the 
			guilt, to cancel the penalty, and annul the consequences of sin. 
			 
			"There is forgiveness with Thee, That Thou mayest be feared." 
			 
			The words that stand in the forefront of the Lord’s Prayer, 
			"Hallowed be Thy name," are virtually a petition that sinners may 
			repent, and be converted, and obtain forgiveness. 
			 
			In seeking for a Christian parallel to the doctrine expounded by 
			Ezekiel and illustrated by Chronicles, we have to remember that the 
			permanent elements in primitive doctrine are often to be found by 
			removing the limitations which imperfect faith has imposed on the 
			possibilities of human nature and Divine mercy. We have already 
			suggested that the chronicler’s somewhat rigid doctrine of temporal 
			rewards and punishments symbolizes the inevitable influence of 
			conduct on the development of character. The doctrine of God’s 
			attitude towards backsliding and repentance seems somewhat arbitrary 
			as set forth by Ezekiel and Chronicles. A man apparently is not to 
			be judged by his whole life, but only by the moral period that is 
			closed by his death. If his last years be pious, his former 
			transgressions are forgotten; if his last years be evil, his 
			righteous deeds are equally forgotten. While we gratefully accept 
			the forgiveness of sinners, such teaching as to backsliders seems a 
			little cynical; and though, by God’s grace and discipline, a man may 
			be led through and out of sin into righteousness, we are naturally 
			suspicious of a life of "righteous deeds" which towards its close 
			lapses into gross and open sin. "Nemo repente turpissimus fit." We 
			are inclined to believe that the final lapse reveals the true bias 
			of the whole character. But the chronicler suggests more than this: 
			by his history of the almost uniform failure of the pious kings to 
			persevere to the end, he seems to teach that the piety of early and 
			mature life is either unreal or else is unable to survive as body 
			and mind wear out. This doctrine has sometimes, inconsiderately no 
			doubt, been taught from Christian pulpits; and yet the truth of 
			which the doctrine is a misrepresentation supplies a correction of 
			the former principle that a life is to be judged by its close. 
			Putting aside any question of positive sin, a man’s closing years 
			sometimes seem cold, narrow, and selfish when once he was full of 
			tender and considerate sympathy; and yet the man is no Asa or 
			Amaziah who has deserted the living God for idols of wood and stone. 
			The man has not changed, only our impression of him. Unconsciously 
			we are influenced by the contrast between his present state and the 
			splendid energy and devotion or self-sacrifice that marked his 
			prime; we forget that inaction is his misfortune, and not his fault; 
			we overrate his ardor in the days when vigorous action was a delight 
			for its own sake; and we overlook the quiet heroism with which 
			remnants of strength are still utilized in the Lord’s service, and 
			do not consider that moments of fretfulness are due to decay and 
			disease that at once increase the need of patience and diminish the 
			powers of endurance. Muscles and nerves slowly become less and less 
			efficient; they fail to carry to the soul full and clear reports of 
			the outside world; they are no longer satisfactory instruments by 
			which the soul can express its feelings or execute its will. We are 
			less able than ever to estimate the inner life of such by that which 
			we see and hear. While we are thankful for the sweet serenity and 
			loving sympathy which often make the hoary head a crown of glory, we 
			are also entitled to judge some of God’s more militant children by 
			their years of arduous service, and not by their impatience of 
			enforced inactivity. 
			 
			If our author’s statement of these truths seem unsatisfactory, we 
			must remember that his lack of a doctrine of the future life placed 
			him at a serious disadvantage. He wished to exhibit a complete 
			picture of God’s dealings with the characters of his history, so 
			that their lives should furnish exact illustrations of the working 
			of sin and righteousness. He was controlled and hampered by the idea 
			that underlies many discussions in the Old Testament: that God’s 
			righteous judgment upon a man’s actions is completely manifested 
			during his earthly life. It may be possible to assert an eternal 
			providence; but conscience and heart have long since revolted 
			against the doctrine that God’s justice, to say nothing of His love, 
			is declared by the misery of lives that might have been innocent, if 
			they had ever had the opportunity of knowing what innocence meant. 
			The chronicler worked on too small a scale for his subject. The 
			entire Divine economy of Him with whom a thousand years are as one 
			day cannot be even outlined for a single soul in the history of its 
			earthly existence. These narratives of Jewish kings are only 
			imperfect symbols of the infinite possibilities of the eternal 
			providence. The moral of Chronicles is very much that of the Greek 
			sage, "Call no man happy till he is dead"; but since Christ has 
			brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel, we no 
			longer pass final judgment upon either the man or his happiness by 
			what we know of his life here. The decisive revelation of character, 
			the final judgment upon conduct, the due adjustment of the gifts and 
			discipline of God, are deferred to a future life. When these are 
			completed, and the soul has attained to good or evil beyond all 
			reversal, then we shall feel, with Ezekiel and the chronicler, that 
			there is no further need to remember either the righteous deeds or 
			the transgressions of earlier stages of its history. 
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