Today's Scripture Reading (June 15, 2026): 2 Kings 21
"It was
the best of times; it was the worst of times." With these words, Charles
Dickens launches his story about the French Revolution, "A Tale of Two
Cities." The words highlight the paradoxical nature of the human
experience. And sometimes it seems that the best of times and the worst of
times are separated by the thinnest of margins. Consider the men who historians
often argue are the best and the worst American Presidents. On the best side,
Abraham Lincoln consistently ranks as the best of American Presidents. Lincoln
is praised for his leadership throughout the American Civil War and his
abolition of slavery. Abraham Lincoln is a man who was made, as maybe we all
are, by the circumstances of his life. Would Abraham have presided over the abolition
of slavery had he been President twenty years earlier? I don't think so. And
while one of the great tragedies of American history was Lincoln's assassination,
the assassination stopped the Lincoln story before Reconstruction. And no one
knows how Reconstruction might have changed his legacy.
So maybe it's
no surprise that the two worst Presidents are the two men who served before and
after Abraham Lincoln. The worst President of the United States is consistently
James Buchanan. I think there might be a few other candidates for this
position, but Buchanan keeps rising to the top because of the way he handled American
Society in the years leading up to the Civil War. Buchanan believed that
history would vindicate him, but that vindication has never really
materialized. He has been consistently criticized for his unwillingness or
inability to react to the Southern States, which were threatening to secede
from the Union, setting the stage for the Civil War. It is as if someone else were
President; maybe the Civil War wouldn't have happened. And I am not sure that
is true either.
But Buchanan's
competition for the title of worst American President is often Andrew Johnson, who
succeeded Abraham Lincoln. In all fairness, Johnson had been Lincoln's
Vice-President for less than two months before Lincoln's assassination. Still,
Johnson had the privilege of serving as President for most of Abraham Lincoln's
second term (April 15, 1865 - March 4, 1869), and his legacy remains that he
failed Reconstruction by blocking civil rights for the newly freed slaves.
Together, Buchanan, Lincoln, and Johnson served as Presidents of the United
States from March 4, 1857, to March 4, 1869, some of the most volatile years in
the history of the Union. They were the best and the worst of times and of
Presidents.
I sometimes wonder
why the author of Kings chose not to compare the reign of King Manasseh with
that of his father, Hezekiah, and his grandfather, Ahaz. Here, we once again
seem to have a story of the worst and the best of the Kings of Judah in two
consecutive generations. But instead, the author of Kings, possibly Jeremiah,
chooses to compare Manasseh to the best of the Judean Kings, Hezekiah, with the
worst of the Israelite or Samaritan Kings, Ahab. And while 2 Kings omits part
of the story, it seems that Manasseh competed with both of these kings. For
part of his reign, he was as bad as Ahaz and his wife, Jezebel, of Israel. And
while he was never as good as his father, Hezekiah, he did try to follow his
father's example later in his reign.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: 2 Chronicles 33