Judah's last gasps of independence end in catastrophic judgment. This chapter chronicles the rapid succession of Judah's final four kings—each worse than the last—culminating in Jerusalem's destruction and the Babylonian exile. Despite repeated warnings from God's messengers, the people's persistent rebellion seals their fate, yet the chapter closes with Cyrus's decree offering a glimmer of restoration.
The final two verses of Chronicles form a hinge between judgment and restoration, exile and return. Verse 22 opens with a temporal marker—"in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia"—that signals a new epoch. The phrase "in order to fulfill the word of Yahweh by the mouth of Jeremiah" is a purpose clause that interprets the entire Persian conquest as the outworking of prophetic promise. Jeremiah had foretold both the seventy-year exile (Jer 25:11-12; 29:10) and the eventual return, and now history bends to the arc of that word. The verb הֵעִיר ("stirred up") is the theological centerpiece: Yahweh is the hidden actor behind Cyrus's decree. The causative Hiphil stem underscores divine initiative, and the object—"the spirit of Cyrus"—locates God's work in the inner life of the king. The decree is then disseminated "throughout all his kingdom" both orally and in writing, ensuring maximum reach and permanence.
Verse 23 presents the content of the decree in direct speech, introduced by the messenger formula "Thus says Cyrus king of Persia." The structure is chiastic: Cyrus acknowledges Yahweh's universal sovereignty ("all the kingdoms of the earth"), then narrows to the specific commission ("He has appointed me to build Him a house in Jerusalem"), and finally opens outward again to a universal invitation ("Whoever there is among you from all His people"). The confession "Yahweh, the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth" is remarkable on the lips of a pagan monarch. Whether Cyrus was a genuine monotheist or simply employing diplomatic rhetoric, the Chronicler presents the decree as a theological statement: the God of Israel is sovereign over world empires. The verb פָּקַד ("appointed") casts the temple-building project as a divine mandate, not a political favor.
The final clause—"may Yahweh his God be with him, and let him go up!"—is both benediction and exhortation. The jussive mood (וְיָעַל) expresses permission and encouragement, and the verb עָלָה ("go up") is loaded with exodus and pilgrimage overtones. The book ends not with a period but with an exclamation point, not with closure but with an open door. The Chronicler leaves his readers suspended between promise and fulfillment, between decree and obedience. The temple will be rebuilt, but the story is unfinished. The final word is an invitation to ascend, to return, to participate in the restoration that Yahweh has set in motion. Chronicles thus concludes with a call to action that transcends its historical moment and addresses every generation of God's people.
The last word of Chronicles is not a conclusion but a commission: "let him go up!" History does not end with exile but with an open door, and the God who stirs the hearts of kings still summons His people to ascend toward His purposes.
The Chronicler explicitly invokes Jeremiah's prophecy of the seventy-year exile, framing Cyrus's decree as the fulfillment of that word. Jeremiah 25:11-12 foretold that after seventy years, Yahweh would punish Babylon and restore His people; Jeremiah 29:10 promised that when the seventy years were complete, Yahweh would visit His people and bring them back. The temporal precision underscores the reliability of prophetic word: history unfolds according to divine script. The decree of Cyrus is not a political accident but the punctual arrival of promised grace.
Isaiah 44:28 and 45:1-7 go further, naming Cyrus by name more than a century before his birth and calling him Yahweh's "shepherd" and "anointed" (māšîaḥ, "messiah"). Isaiah declares that Cyrus will say of Jerusalem, "She shall be built," and of the temple, "Your foundation shall be laid." The Chronicler's account is the historical realization of that prophetic vision. By ending with Cyrus's decree, Chronicles places itself within the trajectory of Isaiah's eschatological hope, suggesting that the return from exile is a down payment on the ultimate restoration when Yahweh's glory will fill the earth. The God who names kings before they are born is the God who keeps covenant across centuries.
"Yahweh" for יְהוָה—The LSB preserves the divine name rather than substituting "LORD," making explicit that it is Israel's covenant God, not a generic deity, who stirs Cyrus's spirit and receives acknowledgment from a pagan king. This choice highlights the scandal and wonder of the passage: the God bound to Israel by covenant is revealed as sovereign over all nations.
"stirred up" for הֵעִיר—The LSB captures the causative force of the Hiphil stem, emphasizing Yahweh's active agency in moving Cyrus's heart. Alternative translations like "moved" or "prompted" can sound too passive; "stirred up" conveys the dynamic, awakening quality of divine initiative that rouses a king to action he would not otherwise have taken.
"let him go up" for וְיָעַל—The LSB renders the jussive mood with "let him go up," preserving both the permissive and hortatory nuances. This is not merely "he may go up" (too weak) or "he shall go up" (too strong), but an invitation and exhortation. The translation leaves the ending open, as the Hebrew does, with a call that echoes beyond the page into the life of the reader.