Holy Bible: Easy-To-Read Version

2 Chronicles 29:20-30 Holy Bible: Easy-To-Read Version (ETR)

20. King Hezekiah gathered the city officials and went up to the Temple of the Lord early the next morning.

21. They brought seven bulls, seven rams, seven lambs, and seven young male goats. These animals were for a sin offering for the kingdom of Judah, for the Holy Place to make it clean, and for the people of Judah. King Hezekiah commanded the priests who were descendants of Aaron to offer these animals on the Lord’S altar.

22. So the priests killed the bulls and kept the blood. Then they sprinkled the bulls’ blood on the altar. Then they killed the rams and sprinkled the rams’ blood on the altar. Then they killed the lambs and sprinkled the lambs’ blood on the altar.

23-24. Then the priests brought the male goats in front of the king, and the people gathered together. The goats were the sin offering. The priests put their hands on the goats and killed the goats. They made a sin offering with the goats’ blood on the altar. They did this so that God would forgive the sins of the Israelites. The king said that the burnt offering and the sin offering should be made for all the Israelites.

25. King Hezekiah put the Levites in the Lord’S Temple with cymbals, harps, and lyres as David, Gad, the king’s seer, and the prophet Nathan had commanded. This command came from the Lord through his prophets.

26. So the Levites stood ready with David’s instruments of music, and the priests stood ready with their trumpets.

27. Then Hezekiah gave the order to sacrifice the burnt offering on the altar. When the burnt offering began, singing to the Lord also began. The trumpets were blown, and the instruments of David king of Israel were played.

28. All the assembly bowed down, the musicians sang, and the trumpet players blew their trumpets until the burnt offering was finished.

29. After the sacrifices were finished, King Hezekiah and all the people with him bowed down and worshiped.

30. King Hezekiah and his officials ordered the Levites to give praise to the Lord. They sang songs that David and Asaph the seer had written. They praised God and became happy. They all bowed and worshiped God.