The narrative traces how Manasseh’s lengthy reign reintroduces and multiplies unlawful worship and violence, prompting a prophetic announcement of sweeping disaster for Jerusalem, and then shows Amon continuing the pattern until his assassination.
The narrative traces how Manasseh’s lengthy reign reintroduces and multiplies unlawful worship and violence, prompting a prophetic announcement of sweeping disaster for Jerusalem, and then shows Amon continuing the pattern until his assassination.
Context Snapshot
Date
Divided kingdom to Jerusalem's fall, c. 850-586 BC
Genre
Theological history
Setting
Exilic Israel/Judah tradition
Audience
Israel and Judah
World Stage
c. 850-586 BC
Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian pressure over Israel and Judah
Kings of Israel and Judah under imperial pressure c. 850-586 BC
2 Kings follows the divided kingdoms through prophetic warning, Assyrian conquest of Samaria, and Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem. The setting explains exile as covenant collapse, not random political loss.