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Bible Overview should be a wonderful help
to all of you whether you are starting or continuing
your Bible study. Bible Overview features an examination
of a different book of the Bible each month (in
order) by Bible scholar and lecturer, Mary
Jane Chaignot. This month covers I Kings.
If some of you are deciding to read the Bible
through this year, you might want to check our
archives where you can find articles and information
on the books of the Bible as well as the characters
we've already reviewed on this website. The Bible
Time-Line in Teaching the Bible is also a
quick reference to a particular individual. We
encourage readers to share their Bible Study success
stories on this site. Email us at overview@biblewise.com
to be included on next month's site.
1 Kings
The history of Israel that began with the event
of the Exodus continues in the two books of Kings.
By the end of these volumes, the kingdoms of Israel
(north) and Judah (south) will be gone, marked
by the destruction of the temple and the conquest
of Jerusalem by the Babylonians. Originally, of
course, these books were one long document. But,
like 1 & 2 Samuel, they were divided into
two books for ease of handling, probably by the
Middle Ages. Most scholars think the division
between the first and second book is quite random,
coming as it does in the middle of a story about
Ahaziah and Elijah. Nonetheless, there are three
natural divisions within these two books: the
segment describing the reign of Solomon, the divided
kingdom, and the southern kingdom of Judah following
the destruction of the northern kingdom by the
Assyrians.
1 Kings appears at first glance to be
nothing but history, a chronological record of
kings - both good and bad - and the battles they
won or lost. And by today's standards, it wouldn't
even be considered good history because there
is no critical evaluation of extrabiblical sources
to corroborate the many events and details that
are described. Despite these shortcomings, 1
Kings claims to be a record of real people
and real events interpreted in a particular manner,
which is to say, as always, the people's relationship
with Yahweh. This relationship is really at the
heart of all these "historical" works.
(Admittedly, the author(s) would have had little
interest in keeping secular records.) As in the
previous books, the main character and causative
agent is Yahweh. Those reading Kings would have
had knowledge of these prior stories, including
the saving event of the Exodus, the wilderness
experience, the conquest of Canaan, and the previous
monarchies. Because the book of Deuteronomy exerts
such a powerful influence over all these stories,
most scholars have included them as being part
of the Deuteronomistic History. Basically,
that means they are better read as theological
statements rather than historical accounts.
The history of the kings opens with the final
days of David's reign and the resultant struggle
between his sons over who should succeed to the
throne. Solomon prevails over Adonijah, and David
gives him words of advice on how to govern. As
always, he is to keep the Law of Moses so that
the Lord will keep his promises to the house of
David and provide an everlasting monarchy. The
fact that that kingdom no longer exists should
tip the reader off to the fact that something
went wrong along the way. Some scholars would
argue that it started right at the beginning with
Solomon, who initially governed wisely and obediently,
but allowed himself to be distracted from following
the ways of the Lord and eventually turned towards
other gods.
That raises some issues involving the composition
of these books. Scholars believe that they (along
with the previous books) were given their final
shape during the time of the exile. Basically,
then, the author(s) knew how things had turned
out. They had this in mind as they collected,
edited, and arranged the stories that had been
circulating for centuries. But now they were in
exile - God's people in exile! The unthinkable
had happened. As they worked through their history,
they tried to understand why it had occurred.
No doubt there was a general feeling of despair.
Many felt God had abandoned them, punished them
unfairly. Granted, the people had not listened
to the prophets who spoke for God. Then again,
there were many false prophets who had done nothing
but reassure them and told them not to worry.
Most didn't worry. The few who did, who felt they
deserved God's judgment, were weighted down with
their own guilt. Obedience and loyalty to God
were at an all-time low.
In a sense, then, 1 Kings is not only
history, but it's a "preaching history."
It was written not just to chronicle their story,
but also for the audience to learn from it. They
were at a point where they needed to reevaluate
themselves before God, to reassess their relationship.
It wasn't like they were starting over, but they
did need to regroup in light of the events that
had occurred. Alongside these cause and effect
issues stood the prophetic voice. Although the
prophets had played somewhat of a supporting role
in the conquest and the settlement period, they
became very prominent during the time of the divided
kingdom. They came from various walks of life
and exhibited a variety of characteristics. But
they all claimed to be devout and clear-cut followers
of Yahweh. When the socio-political scene was
most threatened and precarious, prophecy issued
its strongest clarion call. These were men of
God, who interpreted the events in terms of God's
will for his people. Oftentimes they were in opposition
to the kings, but more than likely the kings relied
on the men of God to give them advice.
The Israelites had tried to become God's people.
They had been chosen by God and been the recipients
of His promises. But since they never fully carried
out their side of the bargain, it was understandable
that they could never fully enjoy the promises.
There was so much backsliding and outright disobedience
that complete possession of the land would go
unfulfilled. Many had a sense of entitlement,
believing that they would inherit God's blessings
regardless of their behavior. This, of course,
is not the way it worked. In conjunction with
God's blessings came lessons to be learned. Their
sense of history was grounded in these lessons.
Despite their many failures, they would come to
learn that God was also a faithful, loving, compassionate
God. God was willing to and did give them multiple
chances. The fact that 1 Kings exists is
a testament to its effectiveness. The audience
learned from their history, canonized it, and
gave it to us. Disobedience leads to judgment;
repentance leads to restoration. But none of this
is mechanical. God is always sovereign and he
is not bound by human expectations.
There are two primary sections in 1 Kings: 1
Kings 1-11 - Solomon's reign; 1 Kings 12 - 22
- the divided kingdom
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| 1:1-11:43 - The reign of
Solomon |
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| 1:1-53 |
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David
is in decline, dramatic power struggle for
his throne |
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1:1-4 David
needs special care
1:5-10 David's
eldest son, Adonijah, contends for the throne
Invites
officials to celebratory meal (not Solomon
or Nathan)
1:11-27 Nathan and Bathsheba
go to David
They
tell him about Adonijah, ask if that's what
he wanted
They
tell him that Solomon has been excluded
1:28-31 David keeps his
oath to Bathsheba about Solomon
1:32-40 David tells
them he wants Solomon to follow him
David
tells Nathan to anoint Solomon
There
is much rejoicing in the land
1:41-48 Adonijah
hears the news
1:49-53 Adonijah's
guests flee in fear
Adonijah
takes refuge at the altar
Solomon
promises clemency for good behavior
Trouble
is averted
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| 2:1-9 |
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David's
charge to Solomon
David tells him to follow God's ways
Wrongs have to be righted
Solomon is to rid the country of two men who
might challenge him
Joab and Shimei are to be killed |
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| 2:10-11 |
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David
dies |
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| 2:12-46 |
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Solomon
sits on the throne |
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2:13-18 Adonijah
asks Bathsheba to ask Solomon for David's
nurse
as wife
2:19-25 Solomon
decrees the death of Adonijah
Benaiah
carries it out
2:26-27 Solomon
banishes Abiathar the priest, who supported
Adonijah
2:28-35 Joab
(David's general and supporter of Adonijah)
flees
to
altar
Solomon
tells Benaiah to kill him anyway
Benaiah
hesitates, asks twice, but then kills him
Solomon
puts Benaiah in charge of army
Azariah,
the son of Zadok, is new high priest
2:36-46 Shimei
is told to stay in Jerusalem
After
three years, he crosses the Kidron
When
Solomon hears, he has Shimei killed
Solomon
has now fulfilled all of David's deathbed
requests
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| 3:1:2 |
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Solomon
marries Pharaoh's daughter
People worship at high places - no house has
been built for God |
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| 3:3-12 |
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The
Lord appears to Solomon in a dream
Solomon has to decide what kind of king he
will be - worldly or Deuteronomic. Will he
follow trappings of glory or the Law?
Solomon asks for "an understanding heart",
"to discern between good and evil"
The Lord grants him a wise and discerning
mind |
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| 3:13-28 |
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Solomon
settles dispute between two harlots
Both claim to be mother of one living child
Solomon says child should be divided
Real mother is discovered
Solomon's wisdom is renowned throughout Israel |
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| 4:1-28 |
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Solomon's
administration
Solomon reorganizes government - cabinet members
and tax program
Good old days of Solomon |
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| 4:29-34 |
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Solomon
is wealthy and wise
People come from all over to hear the wisdom
of Solomon |
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| 5:1-18 |
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Solomon's
treaty with the King Hiram of Tyre
Solomon proposes that the king send timber
and craftsmen
Solomon wants to build temple
King is happy to oblige in return for food
for his household
Agreement is blessed by the Lord
Combined workforce of Israelites and Phoenicians
work on temple |
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| 6:1-7:51 |
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The
building of the Temple - meant to instill
awe with sheer grandeur
Program begins in Solomon's fourth year (would
work on it for 7½ years)
Temple is roughly 90 ft long, 30 ft wide,
45 ft high, plus side chambers
Outside courts are in addition to this
Solomon has them build a palace (takes 13
years!)
Adds several more buildings - hall of judgment,
house for wives
Temple is proper place for worship |
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| 8:1-9:28 |
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Dedication
of the temple - Temple and prayers are vital
to nation |
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8:1-13 Ark
is installed in Holy of Holies
Big
ceremony, much suspense culminates in cloud
descending
over temple
God
accepts new home
Solomon
formally offers temple to the Lord
8:14-51 Solomon's
prayers
Solomon
declares God's promises to David are fulfilled
Solomon
prays for continual rule over Israel
Solomon
consecrates temple as place of prayer
Describes
prayers that might be needed (7 in all)
Oaths,
battle, famine, drought, foreigners, victory,
exile
Realizes
such needs arise as consequence of sin
8:52- 61 Asks for
God's attentiveness
Blesses
the people, asks God for continued faithfulness
Prays
that God will remain with them and the people
will be
obedient
8:62-66 Festival
begins with sacrifices
9:1-28 Solomon's
second vision - Carrot and stick
God
says, "If you will walk before me
.I
will establish your
house forever"
If
not
.there will be dire consequences
Predicts
destruction of temple and exile
Solomon
has many other building projects
Solomon
sells 20 "worthless" cities to
Hiram for lots
of
gold
Building
projects are made possible by forced labor
Canaanite
people are subject to Solomon
Solomon
celebrates festivals at the temple
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| 10:1-13 |
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Queen
of Sheba visits Solomon
Queen of Sheba "tests" Solomon with
hard questions
Solomon meets her every expectation
Queen understands that Solomon governs with
righteousness
Queen and Solomon exchange gifts |
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| 10:14-29 |
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Solomon's
trade exploits
Solomon receives 666 talents of gold (Between
$10 - 30 million
per year)
Principal revenue is from trades, navy, taxation
Solomon has achieved prosperity, splendor,
and security |
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| 11:1-43 |
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Opposition
to Solomon from Edom and Syria |
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11:1-8 Solomon
has 700 wives (mostly foreign), 300 concubines
Israelites
have been forbidden to marry them
(Deut
7:1-5)
Solomon
"loves" them, probably marries
them for political
reasons
Marrying
foreign women opens Solomon's heart to
their
gods
Solomon
violates First Commandment
11:9-13 God
is angry with Solomon
God
tells Solomon he will tear the kingdom away
from
Solomon
Judgment
is mitigated because of David
His
son will have half; won't happen until Solomon
is
gone
Solomon
will lose the kingdom because he disobeyed
the
Law
In
his haste to cement relations with foreigners,
Solomon
forgets relationship with God - big consequences
Things
look good on outside; inside corrupt
11:14-22 Hadad,
an Edomite, is raised up against Solomon
11:23-25 Rezon,
king of Damascus, is raised up against Solomon
11:26-40 Jeroboam,
an Ephraimite, sees the prophet Ahijah
The
promise made to David is essentially given
to Jeroboam
He
can become like David, if only he will obey
God
Ahijah
tells him he will be the ruler of 10 tribes
God
has spoken
Solomon's
son will have one tribe so the "lamp"
of David will
remain
Solomon
seeks to kill Jeroboam, but he flees to
safety in
Egypt
11:41-43 Solomon reigns
for 40 years, dies
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| 12:1-22:52 -
The divided Kingdom |
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| 12:1-15 |
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The
revolt of the Northern Tribes
Rehoboam (Solomon's son) goes to Shechem to
be anointed king
Jeroboam returns from Egypt, asks whether
king will "lighten their load"
The northern tribes felt they were unjustly
bearing the greater burden of Solomon's building
projects
Rehoboam asks for time to think it over
Gets advice from elders: serve them and speak
good words
Gets advice from peers: lord it over them
Chooses advice from peers |
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| 12:16-20 |
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Jeroboam
leads revolt of 10 northern tribes, is made
king |
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| 12:21-24 |
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Rehoboam
gathers 180,000 warriors to fight them
God tells him not to fight his kinsmen; the
split is God's plan
Rehoboam returns home - war is averted, but
the kingdom is divided |
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| 12:25-33 |
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Jeroboam
builds altars at Bethel and Dan
Doesn't want people from north to have to
go to Jerusalem to worship
Jeroboam puts golden calves on altars, celebrates
feasts, sacrifices
Motives might have been good, but this is
the beginning of Israel's sin |
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| 13:1-10 |
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Man
of God comes from Judah
Predicts collapse of altar
Jeroboam stretches out his hand to condemn
him to death
Hand is frozen; asks prophet to restore it,
which he does
Jeroboam invites him to his house; man of
God refuses
Man of God begins journey back home |
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| 13:11-32 |
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On
the way, an old man from Bethel invites man
of God to his home
Man of God accepts because man from Bethel
says he is also
a prophet
During the meal, God tells man from Bethel
that man of God
will die
because he disobeyed God's command not to
eat with them
Man of God is killed by lion on way home
Man of Bethel knows, then, this truly is a
prophet and his words will be true
Gets the body, brings it back, buries it |
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| 13:33-34 |
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Jeroboam
continues to "do evil in the eyes of
the Lord"
The Lord disapproves of altar at Bethel
Jeroboam and northern tribes continue to worship
at high places |
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| 14:1-31 |
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Reigns
of Jeroboam and Rehoboam |
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14:1-20 End
of Jeroboam
Jeroboam's
son falls ill
Wife
goes to prophet, Ahijah, to find out child's
fate
Ahijah
prophesies that child will die
Because
Jeroboam was not faithful, he will also
die, lose
his kingdom
Jeroboam
reigns 22 years; oracles come to pass
14:21-31 End of Rehoboam
Rehoboam
"did evil in the eyes of the Lord"
He
also builds high places, has cult prostitutes
In
the fifth year of his reign, king of Egypt
wars
against
him
Steals
many treasures
Rehoboam
reigns 17 years, then "slept with his
fathers"
There
was war between Jeroboam and Rehoboam all
the
days
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| 15:1-16:34 |
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History
of nine kings
Rehoboam's successors are Abijam and Asa who
together rule for 50 years, thereby bringing
great stability to the southern kingdom
Neither are that great - Asa starts out well,
then declines
Things seem to be going better in Judah than
Israel (northern kingdom)
The two kingdoms are usually at war
Asa gains great victory against Israel during
his reign
Also makes treaty with Syria
Syria plays both kingdoms against each other
During this same time, Israel has 6 kings,
considerably less stability
Plagued by various civil wars
Omri, commander of the army, takes over, brings
stability to region
Builds palace, headquarters in Samaria
Forms alliance with Phoenicia
Great military leader, but "did evil
in the eyes of the Lord"
God insured political stability in Judah;
succession is orderly
Temple is in Jerusalem (including God's presence
in the Ark)
Instability of north lends itself to exploitation
by other nations
(Phoenicia and Syria)
Ahab, son of Omri, begins to reign in Israel
Takes Jezebel for wife, serves Baal, builds
house for Baal in Samaria
Building a house for Baal is considered the
worst sin of any king |
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| 17:1-19:18 |
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Elijah
is introduced - right after Ahab's abomination! |
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17:1-7 Elijah
tells Ahab there will be a drought for three
years
Ravens
feed Elijah
17:8-16 Lord
tells Elijah to go to a widow in Zerephath
Asks
the widow to make him a cake from her limited
amount
She
does; supply does not wane
She
feeds herself, her son, and Elijah for many
days
17:17-24 Widow's
son falls ill and dies
Elijah
prays, child is restored
Widow
now knows "that you are a man of God"
18:1-19 Elijah
and Ahab
Ahab
and his servant, Obadiah, are out looking
for grass for
cattle
Elijah
meets Obadiah, tells him to go tell Ahab
to
meet
Elijah
Obadiah
thinks Elijah will hide, then Ahab will
kill
Obadiah
Elijah
promises to meet with Ahab
They
do meet; Elijah makes a date to meet at
Mount Carmel
with all of Baal's and Asherah's prophets
(450 and
400 respectively)
18:20-46 Contest on Mount
Carmel
Elijah
speaks to the people; tells them they must
choose
- God or Baal
People
do not respond, which indicates their choice
(not
God)
Sacrifices
are prepared, but no fire is started
Prophets
are to pray to Baal
Baal's
prophets pray all day, even cut themselves
- still no
response
Elijah
ridicules Baal - thus indicating he is no
god; he's a
joke
Elijah
pours water over his whole setup
Prays
to the Lord; fire consumes the sacrifice
and the table
People
confess that the Lord is God alone
Baal's
prophets are killed
Drought
is over; credit can only be given to God
They
head back quickly to Jezreel with Elijah
running ahead
of Ahab
19:1-18 Elijah
at Mount Horeb
Ahab
tells Jezebel what happened
She
is furious at the loss of all the prophets
Threatens
Elijah, who runs for his life back to Judah
Elijah
is spiritually exhausted, is ready to die
Angels
give him food and drink (twice)
Elijah
goes to a cave at Mount Horeb
Elijah
is bitter; feels as though he's failed
God
appears to Elijah - not in the wind, earthquake,
or
fire
God
is in the "still, small voice",
utter stillness
His
presence is so real; Elijah gets new assignment
He
is to anoint Hazael to be king over Syria;
Jehu
over
Israel;
Elisha
as his successor (Elijah only does this
last one)
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| 19:19-21 |
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Elijah
anoints Elisha as his successor |
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| 20:1-43 |
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War
with Syria |
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20:1-12 Siege
of Samaria
Ben-hadad,
king of Syria, besieges Samaria
He
demands tribute from Ahab
Ahab
agrees, but king increases demands
Ahab
is advised to resist by the elders and the
people (not
God)
20:13-30 Man of God comes
to Ahab's aid, tells him to attack midday
Ben-hadad
and his men are drunk; Ahab routs them
In
the spring, Ben-hadad tries again
Man
of God comes to Ahab's aid again; Ben-hadad
loses
again
20:31-34 Ben-hadad surrenders;
Ahab shows mercy to him, lets him
live
20:35-43 Encounter between Prophet
and Ahab
Ahab
invites judgment against himself for allowing
Ben-hadad
to live
God
gives the victory; Ahab allows the enemy
to live - not good
Violates
principles of "holy war"
Shows
continued disloyalty to Yahweh
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| 21:1-29 |
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Naboth's
vineyard
Ahab wants Naboth's vineyard, but it's not
for sale
Complains to Jezebel
Jezebel arranges for two witnesses to bring
charges against Naboth
Naboth is found guilty and is stoned
Ahab takes vineyard
Elijah goes to Ahab, accuses Ahab of murder
and theft
Tells him his house is cursed
Ahab repents; curse is stayed until Ahab's
death |
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| 22:1-50 |
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War against the Syrians to recover the
city of Ramoth-Gilead
22:1-4 Israel
and Judah plan to join forces to go against
the Syrians
22:5-28 Consultation
with prophets
Jehoshaphat
(Judah's king) wants prophetic approval
Ahab
brings his prophets - all "yes"
men
Jehoshaphat
isn't convinced, asks for another
Micaiah
comes, but Ahab hates him (he always speaks
evil
of Ahab)
Jehoshaphat
insists he speak
Micaiah
agrees with Ahab's 400 prophets, says the
words,
but lying
Ahab
knows he's lying, insists he speak the truth
Micaiah
sees all Israel scattered; Ahab will die
if
he
attacks
22:29-40 The death of Ahab
Ahab
and Jehoshaphat decide to go to war anyway
Ahab
disguises himself, thinking the Syrians
won't be able
to find him
He's
hoping to cheat the prophecy
Jehoshaphat
is dressed as the king of Israel
Jehoshaphat
is spared, but a random arrow wounds Ahab
He
dies that day
22:41-50 Recap of the
reign of Jehoshaphat
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| 22:51-53 |
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Ahaziah
(son of Ahab) begins to rule over Israel
He "did evil in the eyes of the Lord" |
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This first book of Kings
ends in the middle of a story about Ahaziah. He
has just begun to rule, and the author ominously
mentions that he "did evil in the eyes of the
Lord." Like his father and many of Israel's
kings before him, he worshiped and served Baal.
We already know this can only lead to apostasy and
adulterated faith. The only question is when and
what will be the consequences. This first book,
then, is not a self-contained narrative; it ends
unfinished, almost like a cliffhanger. But that's
not the only unfinished issue. Throughout there
has been some very significant movement regarding
Yahweh's appearances. In the beginning, he talked
with Solomon directly. Now, towards the end, he
only talks through prophets. It indicates the growing
distance between Yahweh and the kings. Since the
second section of 1 Kings focuses on the
northern kingdom, we don't know if this same thing
is happening in Judah as well. That, too, will have
to wait for the next installment. What we do know
is that dark clouds are gathering on the horizon.
Plenty of warnings have been given, and they have
gone unheeded. What will Yahweh do now? |
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Bibliography
Alter, Robert and Frank Kermode. The Literary
Guide to the Bible. Cambridge, MA: Belknap
Press. 1987.
Auld, A.Graeme. "I & II Kings."
The Daily Study Bible Series. Philadelphia,
PA: Westminster
Press, 1986.
Brueggeman, Walter. "1 & 2 Kings."
Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary. Macon,
Georgia: Smyth &
Helwys. 2000.
Mills, Watson and Richard Wilson. Mercer Commentary
on the Bible. Macon, GA: Mercer
University Press, 1995
Nelson, Richard. "I & II Kings."
Interpretation. Atlanta: John Knox Press.
1987.
Provan, Iain. "1 and 2 Kings." New
International Biblical Commentary. Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson
Publishers, 1995.
Rice, Gene. "1 Kings, Nations Under God."
The International Theological Commentary.
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 1990.
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