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11 He removed the images of horses that the kings of Judah had put beside the entrance to the Lord's temple. He also burned the chariots that were there. The kings had put the horses and chariots there to give honour to the sun god. They were in the temple yard near the room of Nathan Melech, a palace officer.[a]

12 King Josiah knocked down the altars that were on the roof of the palace. The kings of Judah had built the altars there, above the high room of King Ahaz. He also knocked down the altars that King Manasseh had built in the two yards of the Lord's temple. Josiah broke the altars into small pieces. He threw the bits into the Kidron Valley.

13 King Josiah also destroyed the altars that were on the hills east of Jerusalem. Those altars were on the south side of Mount Trouble.[b] King Solomon had built them to worship these false gods:

Ashtoreth, a wicked female god that the people in Sidon worshipped.

Chemosh, a wicked god that the people in Moab worshipped.

Molech, the evil god that the people in Ammon worshipped.

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Footnotes

  1. 23:11 They used the horses and chariots when they worshipped the sun.
  2. 23:13 Mount Trouble may be a name for the Mount of Olives, on the east side of Jerusalem. The hill was called this because there were many altars for false gods there.