There’s a moment in Josiah’s life that we need to slow down and really see. In the middle of repairing the temple, something is discovered that had been missing for a long time:
2 Chronicles 34:14
And Hilkiah the priest found a book of the law of the LORD given by Moses.
“Found a book of the law of the Lord…”
This wasn’t a new book. It was a neglected one. Josiah grew up in a nation that still had a temple, still had priests, and still had religious activity. But somewhere along the way, the Word of God stopped being read. That decline really started years earlier under Manasseh:
2 Kings 21:2
And he did that which was evil in the sight of the LORD…
For decades, idolatry filled the land and false worship became normal. And when that happens, the Word of God gets pushed aside. You can have religion without the Word—and still be far from God.
By Josiah’s time, Judah still looked like a nation with spiritual structure, but it had drifted far from truth. That’s what happens when Scripture is ignored: idols take over, conviction fades, compromise feels normal, and people keep going through the motions. If the Word doesn’t rule, something else will. The greatest tragedy wasn’t that the Law was lost—it was that nobody missed it.
Then in our text, everything changes. In the middle of repairs, someone opens something that hadn’t been opened in a long time:
2 Chronicles 34:14
And Hilkiah… found a book of the law of the LORD.
At that moment, everything shifts. Because when the Word of God comes back into the light, it doesn’t just sit there—it speaks.
Psalm 119:130
The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.
And when the Word comes back, idols go out. Josiah doesn’t just read it and move on—he responds. He starts tearing things down: high places, idols, everything that had taken God’s place. Why? Because the Word always demands a response.
Exodus 20:3
Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
And real faith always shows up in real change “Faith… if it hath not works, is dead…” (James 2:17)
The same problem still shows up today. We may not be bowing to carved statues, but idols are still everywhere. Anything that takes first place in our lives can become one—success, entertainment, social media, relationships, comfort, even good things that become ultimate things. And Scripture warns us plainly:
1 John 5:21
Little children, keep yourselves from idols.
Because idols don’t just sit there—they compete for your heart.
Jesus said: “Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin.” (John 8:34)
Sin always looks like freedom, but it never delivers it. It promises life—but produces bondage. It promises joy—but leaves emptiness. It promises more—but always takes more than it gives.
Sin promises freedom… but delivers chains.
Josiah’s story is really a “lost and found” story. The Word wasn’t gone—it was just buried under years of neglect. And when it was found again, it changed everything. The same is still true today.
“When the Word of God is found again, it never leaves things the same.”
Because the real question isn’t whether God is still speaking… it’s whether we’re still listening.
So, where is your Bible and how did it speak to you today?
This post expands on a key point from a recent sermon and is intended to further encourage your study and reflection on God's Word. While this post explores one aspect of the message, the full sermon provides the broader context, and practical application.
We invite you to watch the complete sermon below.

Remember Now Thy Creator
In this special Graduation Sunday message, we explore Solomon’s challenge in Ecclesiastes 12:1: “Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth.” Looking at the life of King Josiah, we see how God can use young people in extraordinary ways when they choose to seek Him early. From Josiah’s position as a young king, to his pursuit of God, purging of idols, and ultimately experiencing revival through God’s Word, this sermon reminds us that the greatest life is not the life that waits to serve God later—it is the life that remembers God now. Whether you are young or old, this message will challenge you to pursue God wholeheartedly, remove anything that competes for His place in your heart, and allow His Word to bring true revival to your life.














