Ahab’s question: War or no war?
2 Chronicles 18:2-27 1Israel and Syria lived in peace for three years. 2But in that third year, King Jehoshaphat of Judah came up to visit King Ahab in Israel.
3Ahab told him, “Ramoth Gilead belongs to us. You know that, right? But we haven’t done anything to take it back from the Syrian king. 4Would you ride into battle with me at Ramoth Gilead?” Jehoshaphat said, “We are the sons of Israel. We are one people. My horses are your horses. 5But before we go to war, we should ask the LORD about it.” 400 prophets say “Go to war”
6King Arab assembled 400 prophets and he asked them one question: “Should I go into battle to reclaim Ramoth in Gilead or not?” [1] The prophets agreed, “Go. The LORD will give you the city.”
7Jehoshaphat said, “Are there any other prophets we can ask? Just to be sure.” 8Ahab said, “Yeah, there’s one more we could ask. But I hate him. His name is Micaiah son of Imiah. He never predicts anything good for me. All he predicts is disaster.” Jehoshaphat said, “No, no, no. Don’t talk that way about a prophet of the LORD.” 9Ahab told one of his officials, “Get Micaiah son of Imiah here right away.”
10Ahab and Jehoshaphat were both dressed in their royal robes. They sat outside on their thrones. This was on a threshing floor [2] near the gate into Samaria. That’s where all the other prophets assembled to prophesy for the kings. 11A prophet named Zedekiah son of Chenaanah, pieced together iron into the shape of horns. And he said, “The LORD says you will gore the Syrians to death.” 12All the crowd of prophets said, “Go to Ramoth in Gilead and take it back. The LORD will give it to you.” One prophet predicts Ahab’s disaster
13The king’s messenger who went to get Micaiah told the prophet, “All the prophets told the king to go ahead with his plan. They told him he would succeed. You should do the same.” 14Micaiah said, “As sure as the LORD is alive, I’ll deliver his message to the king.”
15When the prophet arrived, Ahab said, “Micaiah, should we fight to take back Ramoth Gilead or not?” The prophet said, “Go ahead. You’ll win the battle and God will give you back the land you lost.” 16The king pressed him, “How many times am I going to have to insist you tell me all the truth when you speak for the LORD?”
17Micaiah said, “I saw your soldiers in the message God gave me. They had scattered onto the hills like sheep without a shepherd. The LORD told me, ‘They have no leader anymore. They should go home peacefully.’”
18Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “It didn’t take a prophet to call that one. Didn’t I tell you this man never has a good word for me? All he does is doom me with one disaster after another.”
19Micaiah said, “Here’s more from the LORD. I saw the LORD sitting on his throne in heaven. Crowds stood with him, left and right of his throne. 20He was asking for a volunteer. He said, ‘Who’s willing to tempt Ahab to retake Ramoth in Gilead?’ Voices rang out with reactions. 21Then a single spirit volunteered, ‘I can turn him.’ 22The LORD asked, ‘And how do you plan to do that?’ The spirit said, ‘I’ll feed the prophets on lies.’ The LORD said, ‘Do it. Lure Ahab. You’ll succeed.’ [3] 23So, now you know. It was the LORD who seduced the prophets to lie. The LORD convinced the prophets into giving the king this disastrous recommendation.”
24Zedekiah slapped Micaiah up the side of his face and said, “Why on earth would the spirit of the LORD speak through you when I’m here?” 25Micaiah said, “Well, perhaps you’ll discover why when you have more time to reflect—while you’re hiding in the back room of someone’s house.”
26Ahab said, “Arrest Micaiah. Escort him to Samaria’s city governor, Amon. Leave him in the custody of Amon and my son Joash. 27Tell the men to put him in prison and keep him there and feed him reduced rations of bread and water until I safely return.”
28Micaiah said, “Safely return? If you safely return, the LORD didn’t speak through me. I’ll be the one who lied. Hey everyone, did you get that? Get it!” Ahab fatally wounded
2 Chronicles 18:28-34 29So they went to war. Israel’s king and Judah’s king led their armies to Ramoth in Gilead. 30Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “I’m going to disguise myself. But you go ahead and wear your royal robes.” And that’s what they did.
31Syria’s king brought a chariot corps led by 32 commanders. He gave them these orders, “Don’t engage anyone but the king of Israel. Find him and kill him.” 32Chariot commanders spotted only one man wearing royal robes, and it was Jehoshaphat. They said, “That’s got to be him.” So the entire corps raced to catch him. Jehoshaphat saw them coming and he screamed. 33Charioteers got close enough to see it wasn’t Ahab. So they turned away.
34A Syrian archer’s arrow pierced Ahab between the chest protector and the scale armor. The archer didn’t know his target was Ahab. The king told his chariot driver, “I’m wounded. Get me out of here.” Ahab bleeds out during the battle
35The battle raged all day, with Ahab propped up and dying while his chariot faced the enemy. He bled out and died that evening as his blood drained onto the chariot’s floorboard. 36At sundown a voice cried out to the Israelite army, “Go home to your families, wherever home is.”
37Soldiers carried Ahab’s body back to Samaria. 38They drove his chariot to the pool of Samaria and washed it there. His blood dispersed into the pool, where dogs drank it and prostitutes bathed in it. [4] That’s just what the LORD said would happen. [5]
39The rest of Ahab’s story survives in the History of Israel’s Kings. [6] It tells of the ivory house he built and all the cities he fortified with walls. 40Ahab joined his ancestors in death. His son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king. Jehoshaphat’s reign in Judah
2 Chronicles 20:31-21:1 41Jehoshaphat son of Asa became Judah’s king during Ahab’s fourth year as king of Israel. 42Jehoshaphat was 35 years old when he became king in Jerusalem. He reigned for 25 years.
His mother was Azubah, the daughter of Shilhi.
43Jehoshaphat was his father’s son, and it showed. He stayed true to the LORD. He wasn’t able, however, to get rid of the hilltop shrines where people sacrificed animals to idols and burned incense to honor the gods. 44Jehoshaphat was the king who made peace between Judah and Israel. 45The rest of his story about his power and his wars is preserved in the History of Judah’s Kings.
46Jehoshaphat did manage to get rid of the priest-prostitutes who worked at pagan shrines. His father Asa hadn’t been able to do that. 47The nation of Edom didn’t have a king. They had a deputy king as a placeholder.
48Jehoshaphat had a fleet built in the style of Tarshish [7] ships. He wanted to send them to Ophir [8] to bring back some gold. But the ships didn’t make it far. They wrecked in Ezion-geber. 49Ahab’s son King Ahaziah tried to talk Jehoshaphat into letting some of his men sail with the ships of Judah. Jehoshaphat turned him down.
50Jehoshaphat died and was buried with his ancestors in the City of David, in lower Jerusalem. His son Jehoram became the new king. Ahaziah, Ahab’s son, king of Israel
51Ahab’s son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king when Jehoshaphat was into his seventeenth year as king of Judah. 52He was a bad king, evil like his father and mother, and like Jeroboam. They normalized sin for the entire nation. 53He worshiped Baal, [9] which got the true God of Israel angry as all get out. He was like his father in that way.
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Your support helps us keep our Casual Bible free and accessible, especially for people new to the Bible, curious non-Christians, and Christians who’ve always found it hard to understand.
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1Israel and Syria lived in peace for three years. 2But in that third year, King Jehoshaphat of Judah came up to visit King Ahab in Israel.
3Ahab told him, “Ramoth Gilead belongs to us. You know that, right? But we haven’t done anything to take it back from the Syrian king. 4Would you ride into battle with me at Ramoth Gilead?” Jehoshaphat said, “We are the sons of Israel. We are one people. My horses are your horses. 5But before we go to war, we should ask the LORD about it.”
7Jehoshaphat said, “Are there any other prophets we can ask? Just to be sure.” 8Ahab said, “Yeah, there’s one more we could ask. But I hate him. His name is Micaiah son of Imiah. He never predicts anything good for me. All he predicts is disaster.” Jehoshaphat said, “No, no, no. Don’t talk that way about a prophet of the LORD.” 9Ahab told one of his officials, “Get Micaiah son of Imiah here right away.”
10Ahab and Jehoshaphat were both dressed in their royal robes. They sat outside on their thrones. This was on a threshing floor [2] near the gate into Samaria. That’s where all the other prophets assembled to prophesy for the kings. 11A prophet named Zedekiah son of Chenaanah, pieced together iron into the shape of horns. And he said, “The LORD says you will gore the Syrians to death.” 12All the crowd of prophets said, “Go to Ramoth in Gilead and take it back. The LORD will give it to you.”
15When the prophet arrived, Ahab said, “Micaiah, should we fight to take back Ramoth Gilead or not?” The prophet said, “Go ahead. You’ll win the battle and God will give you back the land you lost.” 16The king pressed him, “How many times am I going to have to insist you tell me all the truth when you speak for the LORD?”
17Micaiah said, “I saw your soldiers in the message God gave me. They had scattered onto the hills like sheep without a shepherd. The LORD told me, ‘They have no leader anymore. They should go home peacefully.’”
18Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “It didn’t take a prophet to call that one. Didn’t I tell you this man never has a good word for me? All he does is doom me with one disaster after another.”
19Micaiah said, “Here’s more from the LORD. I saw the LORD sitting on his throne in heaven. Crowds stood with him, left and right of his throne. 20He was asking for a volunteer. He said, ‘Who’s willing to tempt Ahab to retake Ramoth in Gilead?’ Voices rang out with reactions. 21Then a single spirit volunteered, ‘I can turn him.’ 22The LORD asked, ‘And how do you plan to do that?’ The spirit said, ‘I’ll feed the prophets on lies.’ The LORD said, ‘Do it. Lure Ahab. You’ll succeed.’ [3] 23So, now you know. It was the LORD who seduced the prophets to lie. The LORD convinced the prophets into giving the king this disastrous recommendation.”
24Zedekiah slapped Micaiah up the side of his face and said, “Why on earth would the spirit of the LORD speak through you when I’m here?” 25Micaiah said, “Well, perhaps you’ll discover why when you have more time to reflect—while you’re hiding in the back room of someone’s house.”
26Ahab said, “Arrest Micaiah. Escort him to Samaria’s city governor, Amon. Leave him in the custody of Amon and my son Joash. 27Tell the men to put him in prison and keep him there and feed him reduced rations of bread and water until I safely return.”
28Micaiah said, “Safely return? If you safely return, the LORD didn’t speak through me. I’ll be the one who lied. Hey everyone, did you get that? Get it!”Ahab fatally wounded
3Ahab told him, “Ramoth Gilead belongs to us. You know that, right? But we haven’t done anything to take it back from the Syrian king. 4Would you ride into battle with me at Ramoth Gilead?” Jehoshaphat said, “We are the sons of Israel. We are one people. My horses are your horses. 5But before we go to war, we should ask the LORD about it.”
400 prophets say “Go to war”
6King Arab assembled 400 prophets and he asked them one question: “Should I go into battle to reclaim Ramoth in Gilead or not?” [1] The prophets agreed, “Go. The LORD will give you the city.”7Jehoshaphat said, “Are there any other prophets we can ask? Just to be sure.” 8Ahab said, “Yeah, there’s one more we could ask. But I hate him. His name is Micaiah son of Imiah. He never predicts anything good for me. All he predicts is disaster.” Jehoshaphat said, “No, no, no. Don’t talk that way about a prophet of the LORD.” 9Ahab told one of his officials, “Get Micaiah son of Imiah here right away.”
10Ahab and Jehoshaphat were both dressed in their royal robes. They sat outside on their thrones. This was on a threshing floor [2] near the gate into Samaria. That’s where all the other prophets assembled to prophesy for the kings. 11A prophet named Zedekiah son of Chenaanah, pieced together iron into the shape of horns. And he said, “The LORD says you will gore the Syrians to death.” 12All the crowd of prophets said, “Go to Ramoth in Gilead and take it back. The LORD will give it to you.”
One prophet predicts Ahab’s disaster
13The king’s messenger who went to get Micaiah told the prophet, “All the prophets told the king to go ahead with his plan. They told him he would succeed. You should do the same.” 14Micaiah said, “As sure as the LORD is alive, I’ll deliver his message to the king.”15When the prophet arrived, Ahab said, “Micaiah, should we fight to take back Ramoth Gilead or not?” The prophet said, “Go ahead. You’ll win the battle and God will give you back the land you lost.” 16The king pressed him, “How many times am I going to have to insist you tell me all the truth when you speak for the LORD?”
17Micaiah said, “I saw your soldiers in the message God gave me. They had scattered onto the hills like sheep without a shepherd. The LORD told me, ‘They have no leader anymore. They should go home peacefully.’”
18Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “It didn’t take a prophet to call that one. Didn’t I tell you this man never has a good word for me? All he does is doom me with one disaster after another.”
19Micaiah said, “Here’s more from the LORD. I saw the LORD sitting on his throne in heaven. Crowds stood with him, left and right of his throne. 20He was asking for a volunteer. He said, ‘Who’s willing to tempt Ahab to retake Ramoth in Gilead?’ Voices rang out with reactions. 21Then a single spirit volunteered, ‘I can turn him.’ 22The LORD asked, ‘And how do you plan to do that?’ The spirit said, ‘I’ll feed the prophets on lies.’ The LORD said, ‘Do it. Lure Ahab. You’ll succeed.’ [3] 23So, now you know. It was the LORD who seduced the prophets to lie. The LORD convinced the prophets into giving the king this disastrous recommendation.”
24Zedekiah slapped Micaiah up the side of his face and said, “Why on earth would the spirit of the LORD speak through you when I’m here?” 25Micaiah said, “Well, perhaps you’ll discover why when you have more time to reflect—while you’re hiding in the back room of someone’s house.”
26Ahab said, “Arrest Micaiah. Escort him to Samaria’s city governor, Amon. Leave him in the custody of Amon and my son Joash. 27Tell the men to put him in prison and keep him there and feed him reduced rations of bread and water until I safely return.”
28Micaiah said, “Safely return? If you safely return, the LORD didn’t speak through me. I’ll be the one who lied. Hey everyone, did you get that? Get it!”
Ahab fatally wounded
2 Chronicles 18:28-34 29So they went to war. Israel’s king and Judah’s king led their armies to Ramoth in Gilead. 30Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “I’m going to disguise myself. But you go ahead and wear your royal robes.” And that’s what they did.
31Syria’s king brought a chariot corps led by 32 commanders. He gave them these orders, “Don’t engage anyone but the king of Israel. Find him and kill him.” 32Chariot commanders spotted only one man wearing royal robes, and it was Jehoshaphat. They said, “That’s got to be him.” So the entire corps raced to catch him. Jehoshaphat saw them coming and he screamed. 33Charioteers got close enough to see it wasn’t Ahab. So they turned away.
34A Syrian archer’s arrow pierced Ahab between the chest protector and the scale armor. The archer didn’t know his target was Ahab. The king told his chariot driver, “I’m wounded. Get me out of here.” Ahab bleeds out during the battle
35The battle raged all day, with Ahab propped up and dying while his chariot faced the enemy. He bled out and died that evening as his blood drained onto the chariot’s floorboard. 36At sundown a voice cried out to the Israelite army, “Go home to your families, wherever home is.”
37Soldiers carried Ahab’s body back to Samaria. 38They drove his chariot to the pool of Samaria and washed it there. His blood dispersed into the pool, where dogs drank it and prostitutes bathed in it. [4] That’s just what the LORD said would happen. [5]
39The rest of Ahab’s story survives in the History of Israel’s Kings. [6] It tells of the ivory house he built and all the cities he fortified with walls. 40Ahab joined his ancestors in death. His son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king. Jehoshaphat’s reign in Judah
2 Chronicles 20:31-21:1 41Jehoshaphat son of Asa became Judah’s king during Ahab’s fourth year as king of Israel. 42Jehoshaphat was 35 years old when he became king in Jerusalem. He reigned for 25 years.
His mother was Azubah, the daughter of Shilhi.
43Jehoshaphat was his father’s son, and it showed. He stayed true to the LORD. He wasn’t able, however, to get rid of the hilltop shrines where people sacrificed animals to idols and burned incense to honor the gods. 44Jehoshaphat was the king who made peace between Judah and Israel. 45The rest of his story about his power and his wars is preserved in the History of Judah’s Kings.
46Jehoshaphat did manage to get rid of the priest-prostitutes who worked at pagan shrines. His father Asa hadn’t been able to do that. 47The nation of Edom didn’t have a king. They had a deputy king as a placeholder.
48Jehoshaphat had a fleet built in the style of Tarshish [7] ships. He wanted to send them to Ophir [8] to bring back some gold. But the ships didn’t make it far. They wrecked in Ezion-geber. 49Ahab’s son King Ahaziah tried to talk Jehoshaphat into letting some of his men sail with the ships of Judah. Jehoshaphat turned him down.
50Jehoshaphat died and was buried with his ancestors in the City of David, in lower Jerusalem. His son Jehoram became the new king. Ahaziah, Ahab’s son, king of Israel
51Ahab’s son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king when Jehoshaphat was into his seventeenth year as king of Judah. 52He was a bad king, evil like his father and mother, and like Jeroboam. They normalized sin for the entire nation. 53He worshiped Baal, [9] which got the true God of Israel angry as all get out. He was like his father in that way.
29So they went to war. Israel’s king and Judah’s king led their armies to Ramoth in Gilead. 30Ahab told Jehoshaphat, “I’m going to disguise myself. But you go ahead and wear your royal robes.” And that’s what they did.
31Syria’s king brought a chariot corps led by 32 commanders. He gave them these orders, “Don’t engage anyone but the king of Israel. Find him and kill him.” 32Chariot commanders spotted only one man wearing royal robes, and it was Jehoshaphat. They said, “That’s got to be him.” So the entire corps raced to catch him. Jehoshaphat saw them coming and he screamed. 33Charioteers got close enough to see it wasn’t Ahab. So they turned away.
34A Syrian archer’s arrow pierced Ahab between the chest protector and the scale armor. The archer didn’t know his target was Ahab. The king told his chariot driver, “I’m wounded. Get me out of here.”
37Soldiers carried Ahab’s body back to Samaria. 38They drove his chariot to the pool of Samaria and washed it there. His blood dispersed into the pool, where dogs drank it and prostitutes bathed in it. [4] That’s just what the LORD said would happen. [5]
39The rest of Ahab’s story survives in the History of Israel’s Kings. [6] It tells of the ivory house he built and all the cities he fortified with walls. 40Ahab joined his ancestors in death. His son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king.Jehoshaphat’s reign in Judah
31Syria’s king brought a chariot corps led by 32 commanders. He gave them these orders, “Don’t engage anyone but the king of Israel. Find him and kill him.” 32Chariot commanders spotted only one man wearing royal robes, and it was Jehoshaphat. They said, “That’s got to be him.” So the entire corps raced to catch him. Jehoshaphat saw them coming and he screamed. 33Charioteers got close enough to see it wasn’t Ahab. So they turned away.
34A Syrian archer’s arrow pierced Ahab between the chest protector and the scale armor. The archer didn’t know his target was Ahab. The king told his chariot driver, “I’m wounded. Get me out of here.”
Ahab bleeds out during the battle
35The battle raged all day, with Ahab propped up and dying while his chariot faced the enemy. He bled out and died that evening as his blood drained onto the chariot’s floorboard. 36At sundown a voice cried out to the Israelite army, “Go home to your families, wherever home is.”37Soldiers carried Ahab’s body back to Samaria. 38They drove his chariot to the pool of Samaria and washed it there. His blood dispersed into the pool, where dogs drank it and prostitutes bathed in it. [4] That’s just what the LORD said would happen. [5]
39The rest of Ahab’s story survives in the History of Israel’s Kings. [6] It tells of the ivory house he built and all the cities he fortified with walls. 40Ahab joined his ancestors in death. His son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king.
Jehoshaphat’s reign in Judah
2 Chronicles 20:31-21:1 41Jehoshaphat son of Asa became Judah’s king during Ahab’s fourth year as king of Israel. 42Jehoshaphat was 35 years old when he became king in Jerusalem. He reigned for 25 years.
His mother was Azubah, the daughter of Shilhi.
43Jehoshaphat was his father’s son, and it showed. He stayed true to the LORD. He wasn’t able, however, to get rid of the hilltop shrines where people sacrificed animals to idols and burned incense to honor the gods. 44Jehoshaphat was the king who made peace between Judah and Israel. 45The rest of his story about his power and his wars is preserved in the History of Judah’s Kings.
46Jehoshaphat did manage to get rid of the priest-prostitutes who worked at pagan shrines. His father Asa hadn’t been able to do that. 47The nation of Edom didn’t have a king. They had a deputy king as a placeholder.
48Jehoshaphat had a fleet built in the style of Tarshish [7] ships. He wanted to send them to Ophir [8] to bring back some gold. But the ships didn’t make it far. They wrecked in Ezion-geber. 49Ahab’s son King Ahaziah tried to talk Jehoshaphat into letting some of his men sail with the ships of Judah. Jehoshaphat turned him down.
50Jehoshaphat died and was buried with his ancestors in the City of David, in lower Jerusalem. His son Jehoram became the new king. Ahaziah, Ahab’s son, king of Israel
51Ahab’s son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king when Jehoshaphat was into his seventeenth year as king of Judah. 52He was a bad king, evil like his father and mother, and like Jeroboam. They normalized sin for the entire nation. 53He worshiped Baal, [9] which got the true God of Israel angry as all get out. He was like his father in that way.
41Jehoshaphat son of Asa became Judah’s king during Ahab’s fourth year as king of Israel. 42Jehoshaphat was 35 years old when he became king in Jerusalem. He reigned for 25 years.
His mother was Azubah, the daughter of Shilhi.
43Jehoshaphat was his father’s son, and it showed. He stayed true to the LORD. He wasn’t able, however, to get rid of the hilltop shrines where people sacrificed animals to idols and burned incense to honor the gods. 44Jehoshaphat was the king who made peace between Judah and Israel. 45The rest of his story about his power and his wars is preserved in the History of Judah’s Kings.
46Jehoshaphat did manage to get rid of the priest-prostitutes who worked at pagan shrines. His father Asa hadn’t been able to do that. 47The nation of Edom didn’t have a king. They had a deputy king as a placeholder.
48Jehoshaphat had a fleet built in the style of Tarshish [7] ships. He wanted to send them to Ophir [8] to bring back some gold. But the ships didn’t make it far. They wrecked in Ezion-geber. 49Ahab’s son King Ahaziah tried to talk Jehoshaphat into letting some of his men sail with the ships of Judah. Jehoshaphat turned him down.
50Jehoshaphat died and was buried with his ancestors in the City of David, in lower Jerusalem. His son Jehoram became the new king.
43Jehoshaphat was his father’s son, and it showed. He stayed true to the LORD. He wasn’t able, however, to get rid of the hilltop shrines where people sacrificed animals to idols and burned incense to honor the gods. 44Jehoshaphat was the king who made peace between Judah and Israel. 45The rest of his story about his power and his wars is preserved in the History of Judah’s Kings.
46Jehoshaphat did manage to get rid of the priest-prostitutes who worked at pagan shrines. His father Asa hadn’t been able to do that. 47The nation of Edom didn’t have a king. They had a deputy king as a placeholder.
48Jehoshaphat had a fleet built in the style of Tarshish [7] ships. He wanted to send them to Ophir [8] to bring back some gold. But the ships didn’t make it far. They wrecked in Ezion-geber. 49Ahab’s son King Ahaziah tried to talk Jehoshaphat into letting some of his men sail with the ships of Judah. Jehoshaphat turned him down.
50Jehoshaphat died and was buried with his ancestors in the City of David, in lower Jerusalem. His son Jehoram became the new king.
Ahaziah, Ahab’s son, king of Israel
51Ahab’s son Ahaziah became Israel’s new king when Jehoshaphat was into his seventeenth year as king of Judah. 52He was a bad king, evil like his father and mother, and like Jeroboam. They normalized sin for the entire nation. 53He worshiped Baal, [9] which got the true God of Israel angry as all get out. He was like his father in that way.Help Keep the Casual English Bible®
Free for Everyone
Your support helps us keep our Casual Bible free and accessible, especially for people new to the Bible, curious non-Christians, and Christians who’ve always found it hard to understand.
This mission is 100% reader-supported. If you believe everyone deserves a Bible they can easily read and relate to, we’d love your help.




