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2 Kings Chapter Quizzes

מלכים בּ (Malachim - Bet — “Kings - Two”)

2 Kings continues the history of the divided kingdom through the exile, showing how both nations fell due to covenant...

Written by Jeremiah (traditionally) (c. 560-540 BC). To complete the history of the monarchy and explain why God allowed His people to go into exile.

25
Chapters
719
Verses
1,500+
Questions
~2hrs
Total Read Time

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About 2 Kings

Second Kings chronicles the tragic descent of both Israel and Judah from relative stability to complete destruction and exile. The book opens with Elijah's dramatic translation to heaven and Elisha receiving a double portion of his spirit, beginning a ministry marked by numerous miracles demonstrating God's power and compassion. Yet despite prophetic ministry and occasional revivals, both kingdoms spiral downward into increasing apostasy and covenant violation. The northern kingdom of Israel falls to Assyria in 722 BC, its population deported and replaced by foreign peoples. Judah survives another 136 years but ultimately meets the same fate, with Jerusalem destroyed and its temple burned by Babylon in 586 BC.

The book demonstrates the inexorable working out of covenant curses warned in Deuteronomy—persistent disobedience brings exile from the land. Yet it also shows God's extraordinary patience. Revival under Hezekiah brings temporary deliverance from Assyria's siege, and Josiah's reforms temporarily stay judgment. God sends prophet after prophet calling for repentance, yet the accumulated weight of generations of sin finally brings inevitable catastrophe. The northern kingdom never had a godly king; every single monarch 'did evil in the sight of the LORD.' Judah had occasional faithful kings, yet even these could not undo centuries of apostasy.

Second Kings was compiled for exiles asking why disaster had befallen them. The answer is clear and repeated: covenant unfaithfulness despite persistent prophetic warning. Chapter 17 provides explicit theological commentary on Israel's fall—they 'feared other gods... walked in the statutes of the heathen... did secretly those things that were not right... set them up images and groves... served idols.' This pattern repeated in Judah led to similar judgment. Yet the book ends with a note of hope—Jehoiachin released from prison, treated kindly by Babylon's king, given a seat at the royal table. The Davidic line continues even in exile, pointing toward future restoration.

Key Themes

Prophetic Ministry in Declining Times

Elisha's ministry dominates the book's first half, demonstrating God's continuing presence and power even amid national apostasy. His miracles—multipl...

The Inexorable Progression Toward Judgment

Second Kings traces both kingdoms' tragic trajectories toward exile. The northern kingdom cycles through dynasties, each more unstable than the last, ...

Revivals and Their Limitations

Hezekiah's and Josiah's reforms demonstrate that genuine revival is possible and brings real blessing—Hezekiah sees miraculous deliverance from Assyri...

Divine Patience and Justice

The book reveals both God's patience and His justice. He sends prophet after prophet, grants temporary deliverances, responds to repentance with mercy...

The Failure of Human Kingship

Second Kings presents a devastating indictment of monarchy. The northern kingdom never had a faithful king—all walked in Jeroboam's sins. Judah's king...

Hope Beyond Judgment

Despite the book's tragic ending—Jerusalem destroyed, temple burned, population exiled—subtle notes of hope appear. The Davidic line survives; Jehoiac...

Christ in 2 Kings

Second Kings points to Christ through multiple channels:

**Elisha's Miracles as Type**: Elisha's miracles anticipate Christ's ministry—multiplying food (feeding 100 with 20 loaves; cf. Jesus feeding 5,000), raising the dead (the Shunammite's son; cf. Jesus raising multiple individuals), healing leprosy (Naaman; cf. Jesus cleansing lepers). The parallels demonstrate that the same divine power at work through Elisha operates in Christ, but Christ's ministry surpasses Elisha's in scope and authority.

Key Verses

And it came to pass, when they were gone over, that Elijah said unto Elisha, Ask what I shall do for thee, before I be taken away from thee. And Elisha said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me.

2 Kings 2:9

For so it was, that the children of Israel had sinned against the LORD their God, which had brought them up out of the land of Egypt, from under the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and had feared other gods.

2 Kings 17:7

Go ye, inquire of the LORD for me, and for the people, and for all Judah, concerning the words of this book that is found: for great is the wrath of the LORD that is kindled against us, because our fathers have not hearkened unto the words of this book, to do according unto all that which is written concerning us.

2 Kings 22:13

And the king of Babylon smote them, and slew them at Riblah in the land of Hamath. So Judah was carried away out of their land.

2 Kings 25:21

Historical Context

Second Kings covers approximately 280 years (850-570 BC), from the conclusion of Elijah's ministry through the Babylonian exile. This period witnessed dramatic shifts in Near Eastern power. The Neo-Assyrian Empire dominated the 8th century BC, conquering northern Israel in 722 BC and deporting its population—the famous 'lost ten tribes.' Assyria under Sennacherib besieged Jerusalem in 701 BC but was miraculously turned back, as recorded in chapter 19. The Assyrian Empire then fell rapidly to Babylon and Media in the late 7th century.

Babylon under Nebuchadnezzar became the new dominant power, ultimately destroying Jerusalem in 586 BC after years of Judean rebellion. The temple—standing for approximately 370 years—was burned, the walls were demolished, and the population was deported to Babylon in stages (597, 586, 582 BC). This fulfilled prophetic warnings from Isaiah, Jeremiah, and others that persistent covenant violation would result in exile.

The book was compiled during the exile (post-586 BC), possibly by Jeremiah or members of a prophetic school with access to royal archives and prophetic traditions. The compiler had a clear theological agenda: explaining why the catastrophe occurred and calling the exiled generation to understand their history through the lens of covenant theology. The repeated citations of source material ('the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel/Judah') demonstrate the work's historical basis while the theological commentary interprets events according to Deuteronomic principles.

Theological Significance

Second Kings develops several crucial theological themes:

Covenant Theology and Divine Judgment: The book relentlessly applies Deuteronomic principles—obedience brings blessing, disobedience brings curse. The exile is not divine failure but covenant fulfillment. God warned through the law and the prophets that persistent covenant violation would result in exile from the land (Deuteronomy 28-30). The destruction of both kingdoms vindicates God's righteousness and validates His word. This establishes that God takes covenant seriously—both promises and warnings.

The Necessity of Internal Heart Change: External reforms prove insufficient without internal transformation. Hezekiah removes high places, restores temple worship, and celebrates Passover, yet his son Manasseh reverses everything. Josiah's reforms are genuine but cannot change the people's hearts. The book demonstrates that ritual cleansing, proper worship, and even sincere royal leadership cannot substitute for individual and corporate heart devotion to God. This anticipates Jeremiah's new covenant prophecy of internal, heart-level transformation.

Divine Sovereignty and Human Responsibility: God raises up and brings down nations—Assyria and Babylon serve as instruments of divine judgment. Yet human responsibility remains—Israel and Judah are judged for their choices, not merely as helpless pawns in divine plans. Kings and people alike bear responsibility for covenant violation. This tension between divine sovereignty and human accountability runs throughout Scripture and is clearly expressed here.

The Prophetic Word and Its Authority: The book repeatedly demonstrates that prophetic words come to pass exactly as spoken. Elisha's prophecies, Isaiah's words to Hezekiah, Huldah's oracle to Josiah—all are fulfilled. Conversely, rejection of prophetic word brings disaster. This validates the prophetic office and establishes Scripture's authority. What God speaks through His prophets must be heeded, for it will certainly occur.

The Davidic Covenant's Endurance: Despite judgment, the Davidic line survives. Even in exile, Jehoiachin lives and receives honor. God's promise to David of an eternal dynasty remains operative even through catastrophe. This demonstrates that human unfaithfulness cannot void divine covenant promises. The preservation of David's line points toward the coming Davidic King who will reign forever.

Hope Beyond Judgment: The book's tragic ending is not final. The preservation of the exiled community, the maintenance of sacred literature, the survival of the Davidic line—all point toward future restoration. God's judgment is real but not ultimate. This provides theological foundation for the post-exilic community and ultimately points toward eschatological restoration in Christ.

Literary Style

Second Kings continues the regnal formula established in First Kings, evaluating each monarch according to covenant faithfulness rather than political success. The repetitive structure—'he did evil/right in the sight of the LORD'—provides theological assessment of political history. This formulaic approach is interrupted by extended narratives receiving fuller development: the Elisha cycles (chapters 2-8), Jehu's violent purge (chapters 9-10), Hezekiah's crisis and deliverance (chapters 18-20), and Josiah's reforms (chapters 22-23).

Chapter 17 stands as the book's theological centerpiece, providing explicit commentary on Israel's fall. Rather than merely recording events, the author interprets them: Israel fell because they 'walked in the statutes of the heathen,' 'served idols,' and rejected God's covenant despite persistent prophetic warning. This commentary serves as warning to Judah—and to the exilic readers—that similar covenant violation brings similar judgment.

The book employs Hebrew narrative techniques: dialogue revealing character, dramatic irony (Joram asking if Jehu comes in peace just before being killed), type-scenes, and theological interpretation embedded in narrative. The miracles in the Elisha cycle use vivid detail—the widow's oil that fills every vessel, Naaman washing seven times in Jordan, the ax head floating—making these stories memorable and emphasizing God's continuing presence despite national apostasy.

The ending is deliberately abrupt—Jerusalem destroyed, population exiled—yet includes a final note about Jehoiachin's release from prison. This mixed ending reflects the exilic community's situation: judgment is complete, yet hope remains. The Davidic line survives; God's purposes continue.

Relationship to the New Testament

The New Testament references Second Kings in several significant ways:

Naaman's Healing: Jesus cites Naaman's cleansing in His Nazareth sermon (Luke 4:27), using it to demonstrate that God's grace extends to Gentiles and that Israel's rejection of prophets has precedent. This infuriates His audience, foreshadowing His own rejection. The episode establishes that salvation has always been available to outsiders who respond in faith.

Elijah's Return: Malachi's prophecy that Elijah would return before the Messiah's coming (Malachi 4:5-6, drawing on the Elijah-Elisha narratives) is discussed extensively in the Gospels. Jesus identifies John the Baptist with Elijah's prophetic role (Matthew 11:14, 17:10-13). Elijah's appearance at the Transfiguration alongside Moses (Matthew 17:3) confirms his typological significance.

The Widow's Oil: Elisha's multiplication of the widow's oil parallels Jesus' provision miracles. Jesus' feeding of multitudes echoes Elisha feeding 100 with 20 loaves (2 Kings 4:42-44), demonstrating continuity in divine compassion but surpassing in scale.

Faith and Healing: The healings in Second Kings anticipate the Gospel healing narratives. Jesus' healing of lepers, in particular, fulfills the pattern established with Naaman but extends it to multiple individuals, demonstrating that the Messianic age brings multiplication of prophetic healing ministry.

The Sign of Jonah: Jonah's mission to Nineveh (2 Kings 14:25) receives extensive New Testament treatment, with Jesus using Jonah's three days in the fish as a type of His death and resurrection (Matthew 12:39-41). Nineveh's repentance at a prophet's preaching contrasts with Israel's rejection of the greater Prophet.

Warning Against Apostasy: Paul uses Israel's exile as warning that God's judgment on covenant unfaithfulness is real (Romans 11:21-22). The privilege of being God's people doesn't guarantee security if we don't continue in His goodness. Hebrews similarly uses Old Testament examples to warn against falling away.

The Remnant Theology: Paul's discussion in Romans 9-11 of the remnant preserved through judgment draws on the pattern established in Kings. Even when the nation corporately fails, God preserves a faithful remnant—ultimately identified with those who receive Christ.

Practical Application

Second Kings speaks powerfully to contemporary believers:

The Reality of Divine Judgment: The book's tragic trajectory warns that God's patience, though extensive, has limits. Persistent covenant violation eventually brings judgment. For churches and individuals, this warns against presuming on God's grace. Belonging to God's people doesn't guarantee immunity from discipline. The exile demonstrates that God takes holiness seriously and will not indefinitely tolerate persistent, unrepentant sin.

External Religion Without Heart Change Is Insufficient: Hezekiah's and Josiah's reforms—destroying idols, repairing the temple, celebrating festivals—brought temporary blessing but couldn't produce lasting transformation. This warns against trusting in external religious activity without internal heart devotion. Contemporary parallels include churches with correct theology but dead spirituality, or individuals with impeccable religious practice but unchanged hearts. God desires truth in the inward parts.

The Power and Necessity of God's Word: Josiah's response to hearing the Book of the Law—immediate recognition that they stood under judgment—models proper response to Scripture. When we encounter God's Word, we must respond with repentance and action, not merely intellectual assent. The book found in the temple produced national reformation; Scripture should produce personal transformation. Neglect of God's Word leads to spiritual decline; rediscovery of it brings revival.

Prophetic Ministry Remains Essential: Despite rejection, persecution, and apparent failure, prophets faithfully proclaimed God's word. Modern Christians are called to similar faithfulness—speaking biblical truth even when unpopular, calling people to repentance even when they prefer comfortable messages, maintaining hope even when circumstances suggest despair. The validation of the prophetic word encourages us that faithful proclamation of Scripture will accomplish God's purposes regardless of immediate reception.

Miracles Alone Don't Produce Faith: Elisha performed spectacular miracles throughout the northern kingdom, yet the nation continued in apostasy. This warns against expecting that signs and wonders will automatically produce genuine faith. While God can and does work miraculously, human hearts require more than spectacular displays—they need spiritual regeneration. Ministry must address heart issues, not merely seek to impress with dramatic demonstrations.

Individual Faithfulness Matters Even in Corporate Decline: Though both kingdoms fell, individuals like Elisha, Hezekiah, Josiah, and unnamed faithful people maintained covenant loyalty. This encourages believers living in declining cultures or compromised churches—we're responsible for our own faithfulness regardless of surrounding apostasy. God preserves a remnant in every generation. Our calling is to be part of that faithful minority.

Hope Endures Beyond Catastrophe: The book's ending—though tragic—includes subtle notes of hope. The Davidic line survives; the community maintains its identity; God's purposes continue. This assures believers facing overwhelming circumstances that God's plans extend beyond immediate catastrophe. The exile wasn't final; neither are our defeats. God works through judgment toward restoration, through death toward resurrection. The darkest moments can precede the greatest deliverances.

Leadership Profoundly Affects Communities: Kings' choices blessed or cursed entire nations for generations. This soberly reminds leaders—in churches, families, or society—that their influence extends far beyond their own lives. Faithful leadership like Hezekiah's or Josiah's brings blessing; unfaithful leadership like Manasseh's brings disaster. Those in positions of influence must recognize the weighty responsibility of their choices and lead with fear of God and love for those under their care.

Chapter-by-Chapter Breakdown

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ChTitleKey EventVersesAction
1Elijah and AhaziahElijah confronts King Ahaziah's messengers18Take Quiz
2Elijah Taken UpElijah ascends to heaven; Elisha succeeds him25Take Quiz
3Alliance Against MoabKings unite and defeat Moab with divine help27Take Quiz
4Elisha's MiraclesElisha performs miracles including raising a child44Take Quiz
5Naaman HealedNaaman is cleansed of leprosy by Elisha27Take Quiz
6Elisha's ProtectionElisha reveals and defeats Aramean plans33Take Quiz
7Siege LiftedElisha prophesies end of famine and deliverance20Take Quiz
8Elisha and HazaelHazael's rise foretold; Jehoram's reign in Judah29Take Quiz
9Jehu Anointed KingJehu anointed to destroy Ahab's house37Take Quiz
10Jehu's PurgeJehu executes judgment on Ahab's family36Take Quiz
11Joash Crowned KingJoash becomes king of Judah after Athaliah's death21Take Quiz
12Joash's ReformsJoash repairs the temple in Jerusalem21Take Quiz
13Elisha's DeathElisha dies; Israel's struggles continue25Take Quiz
14Kings of Israel and JudahJeroboam II restores Israel's borders; Amaziah reigns29Take Quiz
15Judah's KingsReigns of Azariah, Jotham, and Ahaz in Judah38Take Quiz
16Ahaz's ReignAhaz's idolatry and Assyrian alliance20Take Quiz
17Israel's ExileIsrael's sin leads to Assyrian captivity41Take Quiz
18Hezekiah's ReformsHezekiah trusts God; Assyrian threat repelled37Take Quiz
19Assyrian Siege DefeatedGod delivers Jerusalem from Sennacherib's army37Take Quiz
20Hezekiah's IllnessHezekiah healed; God extends his life21Take Quiz

Showing first 20 of 25 chapters. Click any chapter above to see its quiz.