Reading: The Kings, Decline and Promise: Dr. Ted Hildebrandt, OT History, Lit., and Theology, Lecture 26
Reading: The Kings, Decline and Promise: Dr. Ted Hildebrandt, OT History, Lit., and Theology, Lecture 26
Reading: The Kings, Decline and Promise: Dr. Ted Hildebrandt, OT History, Lit., and Theology, Lecture 26
This is Dr. Ted Hildebrandt teaching Old Testament History, Literature, and Theology
course, the final lecture number 26, from Solomon to Rehoboam, Jeroboam, down to Ahab and
then some of the Messianic prophecies.
Review of Solomon’s apostasy
I want to buzz through some things rather quickly here and so we’re just going to kind
of hit and run as we go through this material. So let’s get this started up. Last time we were
talking about Solomon and we were basically saying Solomon is the wisest man that ever
lived. Then we said that at the end of his life he kind of botches up his life, he ends up with all
these women, he ends up worshiping other gods, and he has these problems. So it’s kind of
interesting that it’s the smartest man that ever lived turns out to be a very foolish man. The very
thing that he warned his kids about is the thing that he botched up himself. So what ends up
happening it seems to me and I wonder if you noticed this, have you ever noticed people that
are really smart end up to being really stupid at the same time? So you get this connection on
the backside of wisdom, that the wisdom and folly actually crossover sometimes. With
Solomon you get this flipping over. The very things that he warned the young man against the
adulteress and going after other gods is the very thing that he participates in himself. So
Solomon turns his back on God. He’s got some big problems there. That brings up Hebrews 6
and a host of things about whether you’re saved, you’re always saved; but we’ll save that for
New Testament. But anyways, we’ve looked at wisdom and folly, and the connections between
the two in the narrative.
Dividing of the monarchy
What happen is, because Solomon goes after other gods, God comes in chapter 11
and let me just read this, chapter 11, verse 11: “The Lord said to Solomon: “‘since this is your
attitude and you have not kept my covenant and my decrees,” notice “you have not kept my
covenant,” the covenant was a big thing for God. “You have not kept my covenant, my decrees
which I commanded you. I will most certainly tare the kingdom away from you and give it to
one of your subordinates. Nevertheless, for the sake of David your father I will not do it during
your lifetime.” So actually Solomon gets spared why? Because David was his father. He
actually says because David was your father I won’t do it to you, because you’re David’s kid.
God spares Solomon on David’s behalf, which is really an interesting concept there.
Now what happens is the kingdom is going to split north and south. I call these two
guys the Boam-brothers ok, the Boam-brothers. This is when the kingdom splits. The south is
going to be Rehoboam and Rehoboam is Solomon’s son. Rehoboam is going to be in the
Davidic line. Rehoboam is going to be the king of Judah. Judah is going to be in the south. So
there’s one tribe in the south that stays in the Davidic line--Judah in the south. The ten tribes in
the north, they get carried away by this guy Jeroboam. So Jeroboam who actually is an
antagonist to Rehoboam and Jeroboam sets up in the north. The north will be called “Israel;”
the south will be called “Judah.” So the kingdom is going to split at this point and this is a big
thing for Israel. Under Saul, David, and Solomon, the kingdom had been united. Now ten tribes
headed by Ephraim are going to get carried to the north. The ten tribes in the north are going to
go to Jeroboam, who’s not Davidic. Then the south, one tribe, Judah, is going to go to
Rehoboam.
So we’ll look back at that, so what we have here is the kingdom’s divided into what they
call a “divided monarchy” as oppose to the “united monarchy.” The united monarchy is Saul,
David, and Solomon. The divided monarchy is a bunch of kings in the north, Israel, and a
bunch of kings in the south, Judah.
Some dates to know: 1000 B.C., 722 B.C., and 586 B.C.
Now, there’s going to be three or four dates that I want you to know. First date that I
want you to know is what? David’s what? David is a 1000 B.C. A second date and I want to
introduce today is when the kingdom split in 931 B.C. I don’t want you to know the date 931.
David’s a 1000 B.C., you figure Solomon is right after that so you get kind of close to this.
This date 722 B.C. is an important date. This is when the northern kingdom of Israel,
the ten tribes in the north, get carried off to Assyria, to Nineveh. Nineveh is the capital of
Assyria. The Assyrians where an exceedingly cruel people. Soon as I say Assyria, who’s the
prophet that comes to mind? Jonah. So Jonah goes to Assyria. Basically the ten tribes get
carried off to Assyria. He rips off all the people of wealth, and of means. He leaves the poor
people in the land and he scatters the Jews. The ten tribes are scattered throughout Assyria
and the region. Have those ten tribes ever been re-gathered? Are the ten tribes really
scattered around the world? From 722 B.C., are they scattered among the world to this day?
You say no Hildebrandt, they are really scattered they’re in New York City, most of them. But
the Jews are scattered all over the world--Poland, Germany, etc. And now they’ve gone back
to Israel but you know like we said, there are more Jews in New York City then there are in
Israel. This is when the northern ten tribes were scattered by Assyria and may have been
scattered ever since—722 B.C.
About a 130 years later Judah, Judah lasts about another 130 years. Judah gets
scattered in 586 B.C. and this is a really big date. 586 is when the temple of Solomon is
destroyed. So this is a really important date, this is when Babylon comes in and destroys the
temple of Solomon. So the temple is destroyed and the Jews are hauled off to Babylon by
Nebuchadnezzar. And by the way, who were some Jews that were hauled off to Babylon that
you know? Does anybody remember Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, those guys and
Ezekiel? Does anybody remember the prophet who spoke just before the Babylonians came in
and destroyed the temple? Does anybody know what prophet, was a crying prophet, he cried a
lot? Jeremiah, that’s right. Jeremiah prophesied just before they go to Babylon Jeremiah tells
them, “you guys are going off to Babylon. You’re going to go off to Babylon, repent, repent” and
they don’t repent. Instead, they beat up on Jeremiah. They get hauled off to Babylon. By the
way, does God preserve Jeremiah alive? Jeremiah doesn’t go to Babylon, he’s preserved
because he spoke God’s word, although he was beat up quite a bit. So that’s 586 B.C., it’s a
big date--the temple is destroyed and Jews are exiled to Babylon.
By the way, how many years did they go to Babylon for? Does anybody remember
that? Seventy years. They go for seventy years. Why did God say seventy years? He said,
“you owe me because you have not kept the Sabbath year.” Remember every seventh year
they are supposed to let the land rest? The Sabbatical year and the Jews had not done that for
490 years and so God kept track of that. He says you’re out of my land, my land is going to get
its rest. You’re in Babylon for seventy years. Now had they gotten away with it for 490 years?
Yes. God says, “Okay, now it’s due, you’re out of here, you’re going to Babylon for seventy
years” and they go in 586 B.C. which is the date when that actually happens in a big way.
The splitting of the kingdom with Rehoboam (Solomon’s son)
Now, the kingdom is split and we just want to talk about the split and how this
happens. Rehoboam is Solomon’s son. He’s going to make some bad mistakes here. One of
the mistakes he’s going to make is he’s going to listen to the young versus the old. A young
person, when you ask for advice, should the young person listen to an old person or should
they listen to their peers? A young person should listen to old people to get wisdom. I’m an old
man now. Question, should I listen cross-generationally to my son who’s 23? Yes, I should
because that gives you this cross-generational kind of context here. So Rehoboam is, “Okay,
so my father is dead now, I’m the king.” And so what he says is this, he goes to the old men
and he says: “hey, elders what do you recommend?” He consulted with the elders and they
said: “if today, you will be a servant to these people and serve them and give them a favorable
answer, they will always be your servants.” In other words, if you as the king serve your
people, your people will do what to you? They will serve you. So if the king serves the people,
then the people will serve the king. Is this talking about leadership? If a new king serves his
people, the people will then in turn serve him. That works ok. It’s what Jesus did.
He rejects that and he goes instead to the young men that he had grown up with and
here’s what they say: “Hey, Rehoboam, you’re king, you’re the big man now. You tell them, my
little finger is thicker than my father’s waist. My father laid on you a heavy yoke; I will make it
even heavier. My father scourged you with whips; I will scourge you with scorpions.” In other
words, my father made it rough for you, you ain’t seen nothing yet. I’m on the throne now and
my little finger’s tougher than my father’s whole power and being. And that’s what the young
men say. Show them who’s boss. Have you ever seen the young leader come in and he’s got
to take over and show everybody that he’s the man? Ok, is that a loser? That’s a loser. When
you have to prove something like that, that’s a loser. The person that comes in and serves
people, is that leader a winner?
I just had a talk with my son about that in terms of his experience in the Marines. You
have some Marines come in and “I’m going to show them how tough I am.” My son was a
group team leader and you know what he did? His guys marched sixteen miles. Rather than
giving them a lecture telling them they were nothing, do you know what he did? He went out
and bought pizza for his guys. Question: would those guys have died for him? I’m not talking
figuratively, I’m talking literally. The answer is, yes. The problem is they knew that he would go
first. If they were going through a bad door, they knew he would go first because he wouldn’t
let them go first because that’s the kind of leader he is. He would go first and that’s why I was
glad that he was relieved of his duty because I knew he would do that. But that’s what a leader
does, a leader serves.
This guy, Rehoboam, accepts the advice of the young guys. He comes out: I’m going to
whip you. My father whipped you with whips; I’m going to whip you with scorpions. All the
people said what? We are taxed enough already. Did you ever see that “Taxed Enough
Already”? Has anybody ever seen that? T-e-a, yes, we have had it in our country. “Taxed
enough already.”
People said we’re taxed too much Rehoboam. We are not going to pay you taxes like
they paid them. So they said: ten tribes, we’re going north. We’re not going to come back down
here. So, they split the kingdom over this. Now Rehoboam, just to show how dumb this guy
was, this guy used Adoniram who was a minor character. Adoniram was Solomon’s tax
collector. What does Rehoboam do? He sends Adoniram out to collect taxes. What did the
people do to this guy? When he gets out there to collect the taxes, the people stone Adoniram
to death. They actually kill him; he’s trying to collect taxes for Rehoboam. They said, “sorry it
doesn’t work here” and they actually stoned this guy to death. Was that a really dumb move on
his part? Had this guy already had bad blood because he was a tax collector for Solomon?
That’s what they were complaining about too much taxes. So Adoniram was stoned to death. It
just shows Rehoboam and his stupidity.
Now, the northern kingdom splits off. The northern kingdom will be called Israel. The
names get funny here. So the northern kingdom is called Israel and Judah will be in the south.
All the kings of the north are bad. Every one of them are bad starting with Jeroboam, on down.
They’re all bad. So it’s pretty easy for the northern kingdom, they’re all bad guys. In the south,
the southern kingdom is called Judah and it’s through the southern kingdom of Judah that
David’s descendants will rule. The problem is they have only got one tribe. They actually
had immigrated in there, but I don’t want to get in to that. But anyway, Judah is where David’s
son will rule. Most of the kings of the south were bad, some of them were good. Hezekiah was
a very good king. Josiah was another real good king. So you’ve got Hezekiah, Josiah, Asa
some of these kings in the south who were good. Not all of them were bad but about four or so
were good.
Northern Kingdom kings: a quick overview
Now, the kings of the north, here we go. I don’t want you to know this or write this
down. I’m just going to float through the northern kingdom. When I took this course many many
years ago, my professor had us memorize all the kings of the north and their dates and the
kings of the south and their dates. Now I swore if I ever taught this class I would never do that
to anyone.
Jeroboam is going to be our first king of the north, he’s king when kingdom splits in
931. He’s the guy that takes over in the north. He has a son Nadab, but what happens to his
line? His line gets cut off. Baasha kills Nadab’s son Elah, Elah gets killed. Zimri has no kids,
he rules for about three weeks or three months or so. He gets killed immediately. So these
guys are getting killed off. Do you see that each of their lines ends?
Now, by the way, in the south are we going to have David’s line, father son father son
father son. David’s line is going continue forever. But here you see these guys are cut off, cut
off, and cut off. None of their descendants lasts.
Now here’s a big one, this guy’s got four in a row Omri. You know Omri because you
know his son Ahab. Ahab was famous. He was married to Jezebel. So this is Jezebel’s
husband. This father Omri is also very important outside the Bible more than inside the
Bible. But this is Ahab who was the worst of the worst kings. Ahab is the worst of the north and
then he has a couple of sons and then his line gets cut off as well.
Then you have Jehu, Jehu is important for one thing. I’m sorry for simplifying it this
much but Jehu takes out Ahab’s line. Jehu is the one that finishes off all of Ahab’s kids. So
Jehu basically ends this bad line in the north. Then Jeroboam II, this guy Jeroboam ends
Jehu’s dynasty. He’s not related to Jeroboam I. But Jeroboam II was the most wealthy of the
northern kings. He was the most powerful. This guy was very powerful and wealthy in his day.
These other guys are a bunch of nobodies. I’m sorry but to be honest with you, they’re
a bunch of nobodies and what happens to them: killed, killed, killed, killed. They each get
wiped out after a short period of time.
Finally, because of their idolatry in the north, God sends in Assyria from Nineveh and in
722 B.C., the ten tribes in the north get carried off to Assyria and they take all the wealthy
people. They take all the people of intelligence and basically normal people and up. They take
them to Nineveh and then they bring in intelligentsia people from other areas and they swap
whole populations. Why would they want to swap populations? Because when you’re in a
foreign country, you’re not going to create a revolt because you don’t know the people, you’re
in a foreign country. So they did this thing where they would swap populations so there would
be no revolt against them.
The Assyrians were really cruel. In one picture they’ve got a pyramid of people’s heads,
just their heads. The point is, if you disobey them what happens? Your head would be added to
the pile. Now is that a pretty convincing argument? Would that work in a philosophy class?
Yes, it would. Is that pretty convincing? Pile of head, your heads will be there? That’s one of
the best arguments ever. “Yes sir,” you say. So Assyria is cruel.
Jeroboam I and the beginning of the northern kingdom
Now Jeroboam I, I just want to talk about this guy, he’s the king of the north Israel.
What he does is Jeroboam’s got a problem. He’s got the ten tribes in the north, Judah’s to the
south. But Judah has the capital city of what? Jerusalem. Where are the people supposed to
go three times a year and bring all their tithes and offerings? They’re supposed to go down to
Jerusalem. This means then that all this money from the north is going to go where? It’s going
to go south and so Jeroboam says: “These people are going to take their sacrifices down
there, all this wealth is going down there. They’re going to go down there three times a year.
These people are going to revolt against me because they’ve got to keep going to Jerusalem.”
So he says, “you know we shouldn’t do this.”
Now let me just do the narration here. This is 1 Kings 12:27: “If these people go up to
offer sacrifices at the temple of the Lord in Jerusalem, they will again give their allegiance to
their lord, Rehoboam king of Judah. Then they will kill me and return to the King Rehoboam.”
So what he does is he’s going to make these golden calves and set them up at Dan and Bethel
in the north so that the people will take pilgrimages and bring their sacrifices to the north, this
way he won’t lose any revenue, and he won’t lose any allegiance from those people.
Have we seen the golden calf thing before? Aaron at Mount Sinai remember? “These
are the gods that brought you out of Egypt.” He’s reviving this and again he sets up a golden
calf in Bethel. He sets up another one at Dan. He says, “these are the gods that brought you
out of Egypt.” So they’re identifying Jehovah with these golden calves. So there will be golden
calves at Dan and Bethel. His epithet is that “Jeroboam is the one that taught Israel to sin.”
This epithet comes up, all the kings of Israel in the north will commit this sin that Jeroboam son
of Nebat, “they taught Israel to sin.” So Jeroboam is the first one and because he set up the
golden calves they all do the golden calf thing.
I should say this while I’m thinking about this too. Dan, the one up in Dan in the north,
they put up a golden calf up at Dan. Do you know that they have excavated Dan and guess
what they found? No, no, somebody said they found the golden calf. Why would you never find
the golden calf? Because if somebody as an invader comes in and sees a golden calf, what
are they going to do? They’re going to rip off the golden calf, they’re going to melt it down,
they’re going to bring it back to their temples. So you’re never going to see anything like a
golden calf. But would you see a platform where they had their worship? They have found the
high place at Dan. In other words, where he had this thing set up. In other words, they would
level the ground there, they found that. So they have actually found this high place of
Jeroboam. That’s really pretty cool archaeologically up in Dan at the foot of Mount Hermon.
Man of God out of Judah confronts Jeroboam
Now what happens? Jeroboam sets up the two golden calves, the people in the north
are worshiping golden calves. The king makes it. Who’s going to hold the king in check? The
prophet. So in chapter 13 of 1 Kings, there’s a man of God comes up out of Judah. Do you
remember this guy? The Man of God comes up out of Judah and what does he do? He
prophesies against the altars that Jeroboam had set up. “So by the word of the Lord, a man of
God came from Judah to Bethel as Jeroboam was standing by the altar making an offering and
he cried out against the altar by the word of the Lord. O altar, altar, this is what the Lord says.”
By the way, that phrase: “this is what the Lord says.” Is that what a prophet says? A prophet
speaks for God: “Thus saith the Lord.” “This is what the Lord says,” and the prophet gives you
what God says. “A son named Josiah will be born to the house of David and on you he will
sacrifice the priests of the high places who now make offerings here. Human bones, O altar,
will be burned on you.”
Human bones and the guy’s name that he will be called “Josiah.” When did Josiah live?
300 years later. There’s a prophecy here of Josiah 300 years before the guy lived telling
exactly what he would do, that he would burn human bones on this altar that Jeroboam had set
up. By the way, 300 years later guess what he does? Josiah is born and Josiah does exactly
this. So it’s really kind of an interesting fulfilled prophecy.
Now what you’re saying is in 1 Kings 13, 300 years before the guy lives, it predicts his
name and tells what he would do. Is that a miracle to tell the future and that much, 300 years,
in the future? Yes. Question: do critics except miracles in the Bible? No, you can’t so you got to
get rid of it and here’s how the critics get rid of most of the prophetic miracles foretelling the
future. Here’s how they get rid of them: they use this thing called prophecy post-eventu. What
this means is “prophecy after the event.” What this means then is that the prophecy, when it
says that Josiah will do this 300 years later that that prophecy was actually made up after the
time of Josiah and written back into the text. Do you see what I’m saying? So the prophecy
actually comes after the time of Josiah. When Josiah does this, then they put it back in the text-
-prophecy after the event. That’s how basically critics get rid of a lot of the prophecies in
Scripture. They make the prophecy after the event. Now by the way, does the Bible say this? Is
there any manuscript evidence for this? The answer is: no. So it’s just their way to get rid of
those miraculous predictions.