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Asa of Judah

Asa (Hebrew: אָסָא, Modern: ʾAsaʾ, Tiberian: ʾĀsāʾ; Greek: Ασά; Latin: Asa) was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the third king of the Kingdom of Judah and the fifth king of the House of David. The Hebrew Bible gives the period of his reign between 40–41 years. His reign is dated between 913–910 BC to 873–869 BC. He was succeeded by Jehoshaphat, his son (by Azubah). According to Thiele's chronology,[1] when Asa became very ill, he made Jehoshaphat coregent. Asa died two years into the coregency.

Asa
King of Judah
Reignc. 911 – 870 BCE
PredecessorAbijah
SuccessorJehoshaphat
Bornc. 932-927 BCE
Diedc. 870 BCE
Jerusalem
SpouseAzubah
HouseHouse of David
FatherAbijam

Asa was zealous in maintaining the traditional worship of God, and in rooting out idolatry, with its accompanying immoralities. After concluding a battle with Zerah of Ethiopia in the 10th year of his reign, there was peace in Judah (2 Chronicles 14:1,9) until the 36th year of Asa's reign (2 Chronicles 16:1). In his 36th year he was confronted by Baasha, king of Israel. He formed an alliance with Ben-Hadad I, king of Aram Damascus, and using a monetary bribe, convinced him to break his peace treaty with Baasha and invade the Northern Kingdom (2 Chronicles 16:2–6). He died greatly honoured by his people, and was considered for the most part a righteous king. He threw the prophet Hanani in jail and "oppressed some of the people at the same time" (2 Chronicles 16:10). It is also recorded of Asa that in his old age, when afflicted with a foot disease, he “sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians”.[2]

Family

Asa is typically understood as the son of Abijam.[3][4][5][6][7] Some scholars believe the biblical accounts of Asa's family to be contradictory;[8] however, a study of Hebrew linguistics removes any seeming contradictions. One of the alleged contradictions is that Maacah (Abijah's mother) is sometimes described as the daughter of Absalom, and elsewhere the daughter of Uriel. Absalom is described as only having one daughter, Tamar.[9] In Hebrew, "daughter" and "granddaughter" are the same word, removing any contradiction there.[10][11] Similarly, Maacah is initially described as Abijah's mother, but subsequently described as the mother of his son Asa. However, in Hebrew, "mother" and "grandmother" are the same word, once again removing any contradiction.[12]

Purging of idolatry

 
Asa destroying the idols, from the Bible Historiale, 1372.

Azariah son of Oded, a wiseman and prophet, exhorted Asa[13] to reinforce strict national observance of The Law given to Moses, and Asa paid heed. He purged the land of foreign religions and false idols; all the sites of Baʿal and Asherah worship were destroyed and the nation and YHWH entered into a renewed covenant.[14] At this time, the current gəḇīrā, Maʿacah, was deposed for her worship of Asherah and for making an ʾăšērā. This worship was in-line with local beliefs and practices, which were observed by the native peoples, and may or may not have been part of the official state religion. Finally, when the religious transition was completed in Asa's fifteenth year, a great feast was held in Jerusalem at Solomon's Temple (2 Chronicles 15:10–11). At that time, many northerners, particularly from the tribes Ephraim and Manasseh, migrated to the Kingdom of Judah because of the fruitful golden age in Judah, and the internal conflict in Israel after the fall of the dynasty of Jeroboam I.

Wars and defense projects

Taking advantage of 35 years of peace, Asa revamped and reinforced the fortress cities originally built by his grandfather Rehoboam. 2 Chronicles reports that Asa also repelled a raid by the Egyptian-backed chieftain Zerah the Ethiopian,[15] whose million men and 300 chariots were defeated by Asa's 580,000 men in the Valley of Zephath, near Mareshah (2 Chronicles 14:8–15). According to Steven Shawn Tuell, the biblical numbers given in this passage are "completely unrealistic".[16] The Bible does not state whether Zerah was a pharaoh or a general of the army. The Ethiopians were pursued all the way to Gerar, in the coastal plain, where they stopped out of sheer exhaustion. The resulting peace kept Judah free from Egyptian incursions until the time of Josiah, some centuries later.

In Asa's 36th year, King Baasha of Israel attacked the Kingdom of Judah (2 Chronicles 16:1; the Seder Olam and some later commentators take this as the 36th year since the division of the kingdom, not the 36th year of Asa's reign.[17]) Alteratively it could be interpreted as 26th year of Asa's reign and the last year of Baasha's life.[18] Baasha built the fortress of Ramah on the border, less than ten miles from Jerusalem. The result was that the capital was under pressure and the military situation was precarious. Asa took gold and silver from the Temple and sent them to Ben-Hadad I, king of Aram Damascus, in exchange for the Damascene king canceling his peace treaty with Baasha. Ben-Hadad I attacked Ijon, Dan, and many important cities of the tribe of Naphtali, and Baasha was forced to withdraw from Ramah. Asa tore down the unfinished fortress and used its raw materials to fortify Geba and Mizpah, on his side of the border.[15]

Later years

Hanani the Seer, a prophet, admonished Asa for relying on the King of Syria as opposed to Divine help in defeating Baasha (2 Chronicles 16:7–10). Asa became very angry and threw Hanani in jail. Asa was also not as just as he had been and oppressed some of the people. In the thirty-ninth year of his reign, Asa developed a severe disease in his feet, for which he sought the help of physicians, not the Lord (2 Chronicles 16:12). In Thiele's chronology, Asa made his son Jehoshaphat coregent in the year that saw the onset of his disease. Asa died two years later and was buried with his ancestors in Jerusalem, in the grave that he had dug for himself, and a pyre was lit in his honor (2 Chronicles 16:13–14).

Rabbinic literature

The question that puzzled Heinrich Ewald ("Gesch. des Volkes Israel," iii. 669, note 5) and others, "Where was the brazen serpent till the time of Hezekiah?" occupied the Talmudists also. They answered it in a very simple way: Asa and Joshaphat, when clearing away the idols, purposely left the brazen serpent behind, in order that Hezekiah might also be able to do a praiseworthy deed in breaking it (Ḥul. 6b).[19]

According to the Rabbis, Asa was one of the five men who were distinguished by certain physical perfections possessed by Adam, but were, on account of their having abused them, afflicted in these very parts of their body. Samson was distinguished by his strength, and behold, "his strength went from him" (Judges xvi. 19); Saul by towering with his neck above the rest, and behold, "he took a sword and fell upon it" (I Sam. xxxi. 4); Absalom by his long hair, and behold, "his head caught of the oak" (II Sam. xviii. 9); Zedekiah by his eyes, and behold, "they put out the eyes of Zedekiah" (II Kings xxv. 7); Asa by his feet (compare as to Adam B. B. 58a; Tan., AḦare Mot, ed. Buber, 3) and behold, "in the time of his old age he was diseased in his feet" (I Kings xv. 23); that is, he was afflicted with gout. And the reason for this affliction of Asa was that, when enlisting the whole of Judah in war he "exempted none" (I Kings xv. 22), but forced also the students of the Law—nay, even newly married husbands, whom the Law (Deut. xx. 7) exempts—to march along (Soṭah 10a). [Pirḳe Rabbenu ha-Ḳadosh, v. 14, ed. Gruenhut, p. 72, has Asahel the light-footed (II Sam. ii. 18-23) instead of Asa. Compare Pirḳe R. Eliezer liii., where, instead of five, six are mentioned, Josiah being added as the sixth, as boasting of and afflicted in his nostrils (II Chron. xxxv. 22, 23; Ta'an. 22b) whereas Tan., Wa'etḦanan, ed. Buber, 1, has seven instead of five.]

The chronological discrepancy between II Chron. xvi. 1 and I Kings xvi. 8 is readjusted by the interpretation that the thirty-sixth year of Chronicles refers to the thirty-six years of the secession of the northern kingdom, which was a punishment for the thirty-six years of Solomon's marriage to the daughter of Pharaoh, and ended in reality in the fifteenth year of Asa's reign, when Zerah the Ethiopian was vanquished by him; the alliance between the kingdoms of Israel and Syria (I Kings xi. 23) also lasted thirty-six years In obtaining an alliance with the king of Syria against Baasha by giving away the gold and silver treasures of the house of the Lord (I Kings xv. 18), Asa sinned grievously, for which Hanani, the seer, sternly rebuked him (II Chron. xvi. 7) (Tosef., Soṭah, xii. 1, 2; Seder 'Olam R. xvi.).

Asa, having contracted a matrimonial alliance with the wicked house of-Omri, brought about the decree of Heaven that after forty-two years both the houses of David and of Omri should go down together, which nearly happened in the time of Ahaziah, wherefore the latter is said to have been forty-two years old when he ascended the throne (II Chron. xxii. 2) in contradiction with xxi. 20, and II Kings viii. 26 (Tosef., Soṭah, xii. and Seder 'Olam R. xvii.).

Among the treasures which Asa took from Zerah the Ethiopian, and which Zerah had taken from Shishak (II Chron. xii. 9, compare xvi. 2), there was also the marvelous throne of Solomon upon which all the kings of Judah subsequently sat (Esther R. i. 2); while the other great treasures were given by Asa to the king of Syria to obtain his alliance; then they were taken again by the Ammonites, to be recaptured by Jehoshaphat; then they fell into the hands of Sennacherib, from whom Hezekiah recovered them, and at the capture of Jerusalem they came into the hands of the Babylonians; then into those of the Persians, and afterward of the Macedonians, and finally of the Romans, who kept them at Rome (Pes. 119a; compare III Sibyl. 179 and 351; IV Sibyl. 145).[15]

Chronological notes

William F. Albright has dated his reign to 913–873 BCE, while E. R. Thiele offers the dates 911/910–870/869 BCE.[20] Thiele's chronology for the first kings of Judah contained an internal inconsistency that later scholars corrected by dating these kings one year earlier, so that Asa's dates are taken as 912/911 to 871/870 BC in the present article. 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles describe his reign in a favorable manner. They both give his reign as lasting 41 years.

According to Thiele, the calendars for reckoning the years of kings in Judah and Israel were offset by six months, that of Judah starting in Tishri (in the fall) and that of Israel in Nisan (in the spring). Cross-synchronizations between the two kingdoms therefore often allow narrowing of the beginning and/or ending dates of a king to within a six-month range. For Asa, the Bible allows the narrowing of his accession to some time between Tishri 1 of 912 BC and the day before Nisan 1 of the 911 BCE. For calculation purposes, this should be taken as the Judean year beginning in Tishri of 912/911 BCE. His death occurred at some time between Tishri 1 of 871 BCE and Nisan 1 of 870 BCE. These dates are one year earlier than those given in the third edition of Thiele's Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, thereby correcting an internal inconsistency that Thiele never resolved.

Asa of Judah
Cadet branch of the Tribe of Judah
Contemporary Kings of Israel: Jeroboam I, Nadab, Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, Ahab
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Judah
912–871 BCE
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ Thiele 1965.
  2. ^ 2 Chronicles 16:12; cf. Jeremiah 17:5
  3. ^ Gomes 2006, p. 108.
  4. ^ Smith 2003, p. 263.
  5. ^ Jeon 2013, p. 137.
  6. ^ Kaiser 1998, p. 310.
  7. ^ Wiersbe 2007, p. 651.
  8. ^ Sweeney, Marvin Alan (2007-01-01). I & II Kings: A Commentary. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22084-6.
  9. ^ 2 Samuel 14:27, KJV.
  10. ^ "Daughter - Smith's Bible Dictionary".
  11. ^ "Daughter - International Standard Bible Encyclopedia". Bible Study Tools. Retrieved 2019-12-27.
  12. ^ Strong, James (2010). The New Strong's Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4185-4237-5.
  13. ^ 2 Chronicles 15:1–7
  14. ^ 2 Chronicles 15:12–15
  15. ^ a b c "ASA - JewishEncyclopedia.com". jewishencyclopedia.com.
  16. ^ Steven Shawn Tuell (2012). First and Second Chronicles. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-664-23743-1.
  17. ^ Thiele, Mysterious Numbers 84
  18. ^ 1 Kings 16:10
  19. ^ "HEZEKIAH - JewishEncyclopedia.com". jewishencyclopedia.com.
  20. ^ Edwin Thiele, The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, (1st ed.; New York: Macmillan, 1951; 2d ed.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1965; 3rd ed.; Grand Rapids: Zondervan/Kregel, 1983). ISBN 0-8254-3825-X, 9780825438257, p. 217.

Further reading

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "ASA (abbreviation of Asayah)". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

  • Arbeli, Shoshana (1985). "Maacah, the Queen-Mother (Gebirah) in the Reign time of Abiah and Asa, and her removal". Shnaton — an Annual for Biblical and Near Eastern Studies (in Hebrew). 9: 165–178.
  • Falk, A. (1996). A Psychoanalytic History of the Jews. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-3660-2.
  • Gomes, J.F. (2006). The Sanctuary of Bethel and the Configuration of Israelite Identity. Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft. De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-092518-0.
  • Japhet, S. (1993). I and II Chronicles: A Commentary. The Old Testament Library. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. ISBN 978-1-61164-589-7.
  • Jeon, Y.H. (2013). Impeccable Solomon?: A Study of Solomon's Faults in Chronicles. Pickwick Publications. ISBN 978-1-4982-7661-0.
  • Josephus (1737) [94]. The Antiquities of the Jews . Translated by Whiston, William.
  • Kaiser, W.C. (1998). History of Israel: From the bronze age through the Jewish wars. Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman. ISBN 978-0-8054-3122-3.
  • Myers, J.M. (1965). II Chronicles. The Anchor Bible. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-05778-3.
  • Smith, D.L. (2003). With Willful Intent: A Theology of Sin. Wipf & Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-59244-416-8.
  • Sweeney, M.A. (2007). I & II Kings: A Commentary. Old Testament library. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22084-6.
  • Tenney, M.C.; Silva, M. (2010). "Maacah (person)". The Zondervan Encyclopedia of the Bible. Vol. 4 (Revised Full-Color ed.). Zondervan. ISBN 978-0-310-87699-1.
  • Thiele, Edwin (1965). The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings (3rd ed.). Eerdmans. ISBN 0-8254-3825-X, 9780825438257
  • Wiersbe, W.W. (2007) [2005]. The Wiersbe Bible Commentary: Old Testament (2nd ed.). Colorado Springs, CO: David C Cook. ISBN 978-1-4347-6587-1.

judah, hebrew, modern, ʾasaʾ, tiberian, ʾĀsāʾ, greek, Ασά, latin, according, hebrew, bible, third, king, kingdom, judah, fifth, king, house, david, hebrew, bible, gives, period, reign, between, years, reign, dated, between, succeeded, jehoshaphat, azubah, acco. Asa Hebrew א ס א Modern ʾAsaʾ Tiberian ʾAsaʾ Greek Asa Latin Asa was according to the Hebrew Bible the third king of the Kingdom of Judah and the fifth king of the House of David The Hebrew Bible gives the period of his reign between 40 41 years His reign is dated between 913 910 BC to 873 869 BC He was succeeded by Jehoshaphat his son by Azubah According to Thiele s chronology 1 when Asa became very ill he made Jehoshaphat coregent Asa died two years into the coregency AsaAsa from Guillaume Rouille s Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum 1553King of JudahReignc 911 870 BCEPredecessorAbijahSuccessorJehoshaphatBornc 932 927 BCEDiedc 870 BCE JerusalemSpouseAzubahHouseHouse of DavidFatherAbijamAsa was zealous in maintaining the traditional worship of God and in rooting out idolatry with its accompanying immoralities After concluding a battle with Zerah of Ethiopia in the 10th year of his reign there was peace in Judah 2 Chronicles 14 1 9 until the 36th year of Asa s reign 2 Chronicles 16 1 In his 36th year he was confronted by Baasha king of Israel He formed an alliance with Ben Hadad I king of Aram Damascus and using a monetary bribe convinced him to break his peace treaty with Baasha and invade the Northern Kingdom 2 Chronicles 16 2 6 He died greatly honoured by his people and was considered for the most part a righteous king He threw the prophet Hanani in jail and oppressed some of the people at the same time 2 Chronicles 16 10 It is also recorded of Asa that in his old age when afflicted with a foot disease he sought not to the Lord but to the physicians 2 Contents 1 Family 2 Purging of idolatry 3 Wars and defense projects 4 Later years 5 Rabbinic literature 6 Chronological notes 7 References 8 Further readingFamily EditAsa is typically understood as the son of Abijam 3 4 5 6 7 Some scholars believe the biblical accounts of Asa s family to be contradictory 8 however a study of Hebrew linguistics removes any seeming contradictions One of the alleged contradictions is that Maacah Abijah s mother is sometimes described as the daughter of Absalom and elsewhere the daughter of Uriel Absalom is described as only having one daughter Tamar 9 In Hebrew daughter and granddaughter are the same word removing any contradiction there 10 11 Similarly Maacah is initially described as Abijah s mother but subsequently described as the mother of his son Asa However in Hebrew mother and grandmother are the same word once again removing any contradiction 12 Purging of idolatry Edit Asa destroying the idols from the Bible Historiale 1372 Azariah son of Oded a wiseman and prophet exhorted Asa 13 to reinforce strict national observance of The Law given to Moses and Asa paid heed He purged the land of foreign religions and false idols all the sites of Baʿal and Asherah worship were destroyed and the nation and YHWH entered into a renewed covenant 14 At this time the current geḇira Maʿacah was deposed for her worship of Asherah and for making an ʾăsera This worship was in line with local beliefs and practices which were observed by the native peoples and may or may not have been part of the official state religion Finally when the religious transition was completed in Asa s fifteenth year a great feast was held in Jerusalem at Solomon s Temple 2 Chronicles 15 10 11 At that time many northerners particularly from the tribes Ephraim and Manasseh migrated to the Kingdom of Judah because of the fruitful golden age in Judah and the internal conflict in Israel after the fall of the dynasty of Jeroboam I Wars and defense projects EditTaking advantage of 35 years of peace Asa revamped and reinforced the fortress cities originally built by his grandfather Rehoboam 2 Chronicles reports that Asa also repelled a raid by the Egyptian backed chieftain Zerah the Ethiopian 15 whose million men and 300 chariots were defeated by Asa s 580 000 men in the Valley of Zephath near Mareshah 2 Chronicles 14 8 15 According to Steven Shawn Tuell the biblical numbers given in this passage are completely unrealistic 16 The Bible does not state whether Zerah was a pharaoh or a general of the army The Ethiopians were pursued all the way to Gerar in the coastal plain where they stopped out of sheer exhaustion The resulting peace kept Judah free from Egyptian incursions until the time of Josiah some centuries later In Asa s 36th year King Baasha of Israel attacked the Kingdom of Judah 2 Chronicles 16 1 the Seder Olam and some later commentators take this as the 36th year since the division of the kingdom not the 36th year of Asa s reign 17 Alteratively it could be interpreted as 26th year of Asa s reign and the last year of Baasha s life 18 Baasha built the fortress of Ramah on the border less than ten miles from Jerusalem The result was that the capital was under pressure and the military situation was precarious Asa took gold and silver from the Temple and sent them to Ben Hadad I king of Aram Damascus in exchange for the Damascene king canceling his peace treaty with Baasha Ben Hadad I attacked Ijon Dan and many important cities of the tribe of Naphtali and Baasha was forced to withdraw from Ramah Asa tore down the unfinished fortress and used its raw materials to fortify Geba and Mizpah on his side of the border 15 Later years EditHanani the Seer a prophet admonished Asa for relying on the King of Syria as opposed to Divine help in defeating Baasha 2 Chronicles 16 7 10 Asa became very angry and threw Hanani in jail Asa was also not as just as he had been and oppressed some of the people In the thirty ninth year of his reign Asa developed a severe disease in his feet for which he sought the help of physicians not the Lord 2 Chronicles 16 12 In Thiele s chronology Asa made his son Jehoshaphat coregent in the year that saw the onset of his disease Asa died two years later and was buried with his ancestors in Jerusalem in the grave that he had dug for himself and a pyre was lit in his honor 2 Chronicles 16 13 14 Rabbinic literature EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The question that puzzled Heinrich Ewald Gesch des Volkes Israel iii 669 note 5 and others Where was the brazen serpent till the time of Hezekiah occupied the Talmudists also They answered it in a very simple way Asa and Joshaphat when clearing away the idols purposely left the brazen serpent behind in order that Hezekiah might also be able to do a praiseworthy deed in breaking it Ḥul 6b 19 According to the Rabbis Asa was one of the five men who were distinguished by certain physical perfections possessed by Adam but were on account of their having abused them afflicted in these very parts of their body Samson was distinguished by his strength and behold his strength went from him Judges xvi 19 Saul by towering with his neck above the rest and behold he took a sword and fell upon it I Sam xxxi 4 Absalom by his long hair and behold his head caught of the oak II Sam xviii 9 Zedekiah by his eyes and behold they put out the eyes of Zedekiah II Kings xxv 7 Asa by his feet compare as to Adam B B 58a Tan AḦare Mot ed Buber 3 and behold in the time of his old age he was diseased in his feet I Kings xv 23 that is he was afflicted with gout And the reason for this affliction of Asa was that when enlisting the whole of Judah in war he exempted none I Kings xv 22 but forced also the students of the Law nay even newly married husbands whom the Law Deut xx 7 exempts to march along Soṭah 10a Pirḳe Rabbenu ha Ḳadosh v 14 ed Gruenhut p 72 has Asahel the light footed II Sam ii 18 23 instead of Asa Compare Pirḳe R Eliezer liii where instead of five six are mentioned Josiah being added as the sixth as boasting of and afflicted in his nostrils II Chron xxxv 22 23 Ta an 22b whereas Tan Wa etḦanan ed Buber 1 has seven instead of five The chronological discrepancy between II Chron xvi 1 and I Kings xvi 8 is readjusted by the interpretation that the thirty sixth year of Chronicles refers to the thirty six years of the secession of the northern kingdom which was a punishment for the thirty six years of Solomon s marriage to the daughter of Pharaoh and ended in reality in the fifteenth year of Asa s reign when Zerah the Ethiopian was vanquished by him the alliance between the kingdoms of Israel and Syria I Kings xi 23 also lasted thirty six years In obtaining an alliance with the king of Syria against Baasha by giving away the gold and silver treasures of the house of the Lord I Kings xv 18 Asa sinned grievously for which Hanani the seer sternly rebuked him II Chron xvi 7 Tosef Soṭah xii 1 2 Seder Olam R xvi Asa having contracted a matrimonial alliance with the wicked house of Omri brought about the decree of Heaven that after forty two years both the houses of David and of Omri should go down together which nearly happened in the time of Ahaziah wherefore the latter is said to have been forty two years old when he ascended the throne II Chron xxii 2 in contradiction with xxi 20 and II Kings viii 26 Tosef Soṭah xii and Seder Olam R xvii Among the treasures which Asa took from Zerah the Ethiopian and which Zerah had taken from Shishak II Chron xii 9 compare xvi 2 there was also the marvelous throne of Solomon upon which all the kings of Judah subsequently sat Esther R i 2 while the other great treasures were given by Asa to the king of Syria to obtain his alliance then they were taken again by the Ammonites to be recaptured by Jehoshaphat then they fell into the hands of Sennacherib from whom Hezekiah recovered them and at the capture of Jerusalem they came into the hands of the Babylonians then into those of the Persians and afterward of the Macedonians and finally of the Romans who kept them at Rome Pes 119a compare III Sibyl 179 and 351 IV Sibyl 145 15 Chronological notes EditWilliam F Albright has dated his reign to 913 873 BCE while E R Thiele offers the dates 911 910 870 869 BCE 20 Thiele s chronology for the first kings of Judah contained an internal inconsistency that later scholars corrected by dating these kings one year earlier so that Asa s dates are taken as 912 911 to 871 870 BC in the present article 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles describe his reign in a favorable manner They both give his reign as lasting 41 years According to Thiele the calendars for reckoning the years of kings in Judah and Israel were offset by six months that of Judah starting in Tishri in the fall and that of Israel in Nisan in the spring Cross synchronizations between the two kingdoms therefore often allow narrowing of the beginning and or ending dates of a king to within a six month range For Asa the Bible allows the narrowing of his accession to some time between Tishri 1 of 912 BC and the day before Nisan 1 of the 911 BCE For calculation purposes this should be taken as the Judean year beginning in Tishri of 912 911 BCE His death occurred at some time between Tishri 1 of 871 BCE and Nisan 1 of 870 BCE These dates are one year earlier than those given in the third edition of Thiele s Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings thereby correcting an internal inconsistency that Thiele never resolved Asa of JudahHouse of DavidCadet branch of the Tribe of JudahContemporary Kings of Israel Jeroboam I Nadab Baasha Elah Zimri Omri AhabRegnal titlesPreceded byAbijam King of Judah912 871 BCE Succeeded byJehoshaphatReferences Edit Thiele 1965 2 Chronicles 16 12 cf Jeremiah 17 5 Gomes 2006 p 108 Smith 2003 p 263 Jeon 2013 p 137 Kaiser 1998 p 310 Wiersbe 2007 p 651 Sweeney Marvin Alan 2007 01 01 I amp II Kings A Commentary Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22084 6 2 Samuel 14 27 KJV Daughter Smith s Bible Dictionary Daughter International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Bible Study Tools Retrieved 2019 12 27 Strong James 2010 The New Strong s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible Nashville TN Thomas Nelson Publishers ISBN 978 1 4185 4237 5 2 Chronicles 15 1 7 2 Chronicles 15 12 15 a b c ASA JewishEncyclopedia com jewishencyclopedia com Steven Shawn Tuell 2012 First and Second Chronicles Westminster John Knox Press p 168 ISBN 978 0 664 23743 1 Thiele Mysterious Numbers 84 1 Kings 16 10 HEZEKIAH JewishEncyclopedia com jewishencyclopedia com Edwin Thiele The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings 1st ed New York Macmillan 1951 2d ed Grand Rapids Eerdmans 1965 3rd ed Grand Rapids Zondervan Kregel 1983 ISBN 0 8254 3825 X 9780825438257 p 217 Further reading Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 ASA abbreviation of Asayah The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Arbeli Shoshana 1985 Maacah the Queen Mother Gebirah in the Reign time of Abiah and Asa and her removal Shnaton an Annual for Biblical and Near Eastern Studies in Hebrew 9 165 178 Falk A 1996 A Psychoanalytic History of the Jews Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3660 2 Gomes J F 2006 The Sanctuary of Bethel and the Configuration of Israelite Identity Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fA r die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 092518 0 Japhet S 1993 I and II Chronicles A Commentary The Old Testament Library Presbyterian Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 1 61164 589 7 Jeon Y H 2013 Impeccable Solomon A Study of Solomon s Faults in Chronicles Pickwick Publications ISBN 978 1 4982 7661 0 Josephus 1737 94 The Antiquities of the Jews Translated by Whiston William Kaiser W C 1998 History of Israel From the bronze age through the Jewish wars Nashville TN Broadman amp Holman ISBN 978 0 8054 3122 3 Myers J M 1965 II Chronicles The Anchor Bible Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 05778 3 Smith D L 2003 With Willful Intent A Theology of Sin Wipf amp Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 59244 416 8 Sweeney M A 2007 I amp II Kings A Commentary Old Testament library Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22084 6 Tenney M C Silva M 2010 Maacah person The Zondervan Encyclopedia of the Bible Vol 4 Revised Full Color ed Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 87699 1 Thiele Edwin 1965 The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings 3rd ed Eerdmans ISBN 0 8254 3825 X 9780825438257 Wiersbe W W 2007 2005 The Wiersbe Bible Commentary Old Testament 2nd ed Colorado Springs CO David C Cook ISBN 978 1 4347 6587 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asa of Judah amp oldid 1128006846, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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