2 Kings 7:13
7:13 One of his advisers replied, “Pick some men and have them take five of the horses that are left in the city. (Even if they are killed, their fate will be no different than that of all the Israelite people – we’re all going to die!)
Let’s send them out so we can know for sure what’s going on.”
2 Kings 7:17
7:17 Now the king had placed the officer who was his right-hand man at the city gate. When the people rushed out, they trampled him to death in the gate. This fulfilled the prophet’s word which he had spoken when the king tried to arrest him.
2 Kings 10:5
10:5 So the palace supervisor,
the city commissioner,
the leaders,
and the guardians sent this message to Jehu, “We are your subjects!
Whatever you say, we will do. We will not make anyone king. Do what you consider proper.”
2 Kings 10:29
A Summary of Jehu’s Reign
10:29 However, Jehu did not repudiate the sins which Jeroboam son of Nebat had encouraged Israel to commit; the golden calves remained in Bethel and Dan.
2 Kings 14:28
14:28 The rest of the events of Jeroboam’s reign, including all his accomplishments, his military success in restoring Israelite control over Damascus and Hamath, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
2 Kings 21:7-8
21:7 He put an idol of Asherah he had made in the temple, about which the
Lord had said to David and to his son Solomon, “This temple in Jerusalem, which I have chosen out of all the tribes of Israel, will be my permanent home.
21:8 I will not make Israel again leave the land I gave to their ancestors,
provided that they carefully obey all I commanded them, the whole law my servant Moses ordered them to obey.”
2 Kings 21:11
21:11 “King Manasseh of Judah has committed horrible sins.
He has sinned more than the Amorites before him and has encouraged Judah to sin by worshiping his disgusting idols.
2 Kings 23:12-13
23:12 The king tore down the altars the kings of Judah had set up on the roof of Ahaz’s upper room, as well as the altars Manasseh had set up in the two courtyards of the
Lord’s temple. He crushed them up
and threw the dust in the Kidron Valley.
23:13 The king ruined the high places east of Jerusalem, south of the Mount of Destruction,
that King Solomon of Israel had built for the detestable Sidonian goddess Astarte, the detestable Moabite god Chemosh, and the horrible Ammonite god Milcom.
2 Kings 23:15-17
23:15 He also tore down the altar in Bethel at the high place made by Jeroboam son of Nebat, who encouraged Israel to sin. He burned all the combustible items at that high place and crushed them to dust; including the Asherah pole.
23:16 When Josiah turned around, he saw the tombs there on the hill. So he ordered the bones from the tombs to be brought; he burned them on the altar and defiled it. This fulfilled the Lord’s announcement made by the prophet while Jeroboam stood by the altar during a festival. King Josiah turned and saw the grave of the prophet who had foretold this.
23:17 He asked, “What is this grave marker I see?” The men from the city replied, “It’s the grave of the prophet who came from Judah and foretold these very things you have done to the altar of Bethel.”
2 Kings 23:19
23:19 Josiah also removed all the shrines on the high places in the cities of Samaria. The kings of Israel had made them and angered the Lord. He did to them what he had done to the high place in Bethel.
2 Kings 23:27
23:27 The
Lord announced, “I will also spurn Judah,
just as I spurned Israel. I will reject this city that I chose – both Jerusalem and the temple, about which I said, “I will live there.”