The road to exile — kings, prophets, and the fall of both kingdoms
And he did that which was right in the sight of the LORD, according to all that David his father did.
2 Kings 18:32 Kings covers the final 300 years of the divided monarchy — from the end of Elijah's ministry to the fall of both Israel (722 BC) and Judah (586 BC). The book is structured around the parallel histories of the two kingdoms, with prophetic interventions throughout. The northern kingdom of Israel has 19 kings — every single one of them evil. The southern kingdom of Judah has 19 kings and one queen — eight of whom 'did what was right in the sight of the LORD.' But even the good ones could not reverse the trajectory.
The first half of the book is dominated by Elisha (chapters 2-13), who inherits Elijah's mantle — literally. Elisha's ministry includes some of the most striking miracles in the OT: parting the Jordan, healing Naaman's leprosy, making an axe head float, raising a dead child, feeding a hundred men, and even causing the resurrection of a dead man whose body touched his bones. Where Elijah was Sinai-like and confrontational, Elisha is more pastoral and present among the common people.
The second half is the slow collapse. Assyria invades the north and destroys Samaria in 722 BC, scattering the ten tribes (the 'lost tribes of Israel'). Judah survives another 136 years, propped up by good kings like Hezekiah (who trusts the LORD and sees Sennacherib's army destroyed in a single night) and Josiah (who rediscovers the Book of the Law in the temple). But finally, Babylon comes. Jerusalem falls in 586 BC. The temple is destroyed. The people are deported. The book ends with King Jehoiachin still alive in Babylonian captivity — a flickering ember of hope for the Davidic line.
2 chapters per day · with the prophets of the same era
Naaman is the Syrian general — wealthy, decorated, and afflicted with leprosy. A captured Israelite slave girl tells his wife about Elisha. Naaman travels to Israel expecting a grand ritual; Elisha doesn't even come out of his house. He sends word: 'Go and wash in Jordan seven times.' Naaman is furious — but his servants persuade him to obey, and he's healed. The story is a masterpiece of grace: a foreigner is healed by a simple act of obedience. Jesus refers to it explicitly in Luke 4:27, pointing out that no Israelite leper was cleansed in Elisha's day — only a foreigner. The grace of God reaches outsiders who simply obey.
In 701 BC, the Assyrian Empire stood at the height of its terrifying power. Sennacherib had crushed every kingdom in his path. He laid siege to Jerusalem and sent his commander to taunt Hezekiah in Hebrew at the city wall, mocking the God of Israel and demanding surrender. Hezekiah took the threatening letter into the temple and spread it out before the LORD. Through Isaiah, God answered: Sennacherib would not enter the city. That night, the angel of the LORD went out and struck 185,000 Assyrian soldiers dead. Sennacherib returned to Nineveh and was assassinated by his own sons in his god's temple. The deliverance is documented in Assyrian records (Sennacherib's own prism boasts of shutting Hezekiah up 'like a bird in a cage' — but conspicuously fails to claim the city).
Josiah became king at age eight. At sixteen he began seeking God. At twenty he started purging idols from Judah. At twenty-six, while the temple was being repaired, the High Priest Hilkiah found 'the book of the law' (likely Deuteronomy) — which had apparently been lost for generations. When Josiah heard it read, he tore his clothes in grief: 'great is the wrath of the LORD that is kindled against us, because our fathers have not hearkened.' He launched the most thorough reformation in Israel's history — destroying idol shrines, executing false priests, even reaching north into former Israelite territory. He reinstated the Passover with greater observance than any king since Samuel. Josiah's reform delayed but could not prevent the coming judgment; Judah's sins had become too deep. But Scripture says of him: 'like unto him there was no king before him... neither after him arose there any like him' (23:25).
Two of 2 Kings' most striking scenes both involve fiery chariots. In chapter 2, Elijah is taken up to heaven in a whirlwind, with a chariot of fire and horses of fire separating him from Elisha. Elisha cries out, 'My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof!' Then in chapter 6, the king of Aram surrounds Elisha's city with an army. Elisha's servant panics. Elisha prays: 'LORD, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he may see.' Suddenly the servant sees: 'the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha.' The unseen army of the LORD is always more numerous than the visible enemies. Faith is not pretending the threat isn't real; faith is seeing the larger reality.