Introduction: A Tale of Two Kingdoms
First Kings begins with the
death of David which occurred about 971 BC. Joseph died about 1800 BC, so we have almost 1000
years between Joseph and David. We need to bridge that gap a little so that we
can understand what has happened to the seed of Abraham from the death of
Joseph to the death of David.
1 Kings’
place in the canon. There are
three divisions in the Hebrew Old Testament. We need to see how the Jews saw
the organization because there is a spiritual lesson there for us, a doctrinal
lesson, especially when it comes to interpretation. The first division was the
Torah. Torah means law or instruction and the root concept has to do with
learning. The second section is the Neviim, the
section called the prophets. The third section is the Kethuvim,
the writings. Unlike the English Bible which starts off with the law and then
the historical books and then poetry, major prophets and minor prophets, that
section in the English organization which we call history is not viewed as just
history. We look as history often as just sort of abstract chronicle, just
random events that take place over a period of time, but when the Bible looks
at what we would call history it is much more than just “this is what happened,”
it is an editorialised or theologised history from the divine viewpoint where
all the mass of people and all the mass of data that took place over a period
of time God selects specific individuals and specific events because they teach
about His plan, program and purpose for mankind and what He is doing. So there
are spiritual lessons to be learned, not the least of which is how to look at
what happens in human history from the divine viewpoint so that we can come to
history and understand it from God’s perspective and not from man’s
perspective. But when we look at the English canon and talk about historical
books the Hebrew canon divides that a little differently.
The first section and the one
we are familiar with is the Torah, the first five books, also known as the Pentateuch,
the five books of Moses. But when the Hebrews came to the second section and
the organising of the Old Testament after the exile, they divided it into two
sections. The first section is what the English Bibles usually classify as
history but in the Jewish Bible it is the former prophets. These are written by
prophets. Then there are the latter prophets. These are the ones we normally
think of—Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel. Then for the Jews
they just pulled together the Minor Prophets into one grouping called The
Twelve. So that is considered one book in the Hebrew canon. That is why the
Hebrew canon only has 22 books whereas the English Old Testament canon has 39
books. One of the reasons for emphasising this is because of the role of a
prophet. The role of a prophet was simply to foretell the future. That is often
a misconception that people have. There were many things that a prophet did
when he confronted the king and foretelling the future was simply a secondary
element. What he was foretelling often had to do with future judgment for
current sin or future blessing in relationship to the Abrahamic
covenant, the Mosaic covenant and the other Old Testament covenants. The role of
a prophet was to be the mouthpiece of God. He was the voice of God, he
presented God’s Word to the people, and as such in many ways he functioned in
relationship to the Mosaic law like a prosecuting attorney.
When the nation disobeyed the Mosaic law it was this
prosecutor who came from the throne of God who challenged them and indicted
them for their disobedience to God, to read them the riot act and explain exactly
what the consequences were going to be. The prophet was always over the
government. The kings were anointed by a prophet; it was by the hand of God
that they were put into office and taken from the office. This is seen from
Samuel anointing the first king, Saul, Samuel anoints David, and this all leads
up tom the anointing of the eternal Davidic King, Jesus Christ, by John the
Baptist the last of the Old Testament prophets.
When we look at these books
we see clearly with Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and the Twelve that they are prosecuting
the nation for their disobedience to the law. But what we see in the earlier
prophets, in Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings is the same thing. They are giving
the history of the nation in light of their obedience to the law or their disobedience
to the law and the consequences. In Joshua they are conquering the Canaanites, they are following God’s mandates to annihilate
the them, until they begin to compromise. Generally speaking, Joshua is the
story of how God blessed them militarily to conquer the
There are a lot of parallels
between Judges and Kings. Judges starts off with
The last part is called the Kethuvim which is all the other books which is what we usually
call poetry but also includes some historical books like Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah,
Esther and Chronicles, and that is because these books are designed not just to
teach history but about how to live—how they were to live out of the land, as
in Daniel and how they were to live back in the land. Ezra Nehemiah and Esther
teaches how God is protecting those outside of the land, and Chronicles is a
rehearsal of the ways which God provided for them in the kingdom of Judah,
tracing the line of the seed to the Davidic line.
Following the death of Joseph
the Jews are going to spend about 400 years in
Then there is the period
known as the united monarchy. There are three kings: Saul, David, and Solomon. The
book of 1 Samuel covers the life of Samuel, the death of Eli, the anointing of
Saul and the discipline announced on Saul, the anointing of David, but David
does not become king until 2 Samuel chapter one. Second Samuel covers the reign
of David—everything except his death. His death is covered in the first two
chapters of 1 Kings.
Another way to look at this
is to start off with the theocracy at Sinai to Saul. Then there is the period
of the united monarchy under the three kings, Saul, David and Solomon. Then in
931 BC
there will be a tax revolt and the ten tribes in the north are going to align
themselves with Jeroboam who is one of the chief aristocrats and leaders in the
nation. He was a major figure in Solomon’s administration. But he had to go
into hiding at the end because of various problems. When Solomon died his son Rehoboam
became king. He refuses to listen to his older and wiser counsellors and listens
to the foolish young men, The people in the north
revolt because he is going to increase their taxes which were already heavy
from Solomon. So the nation divides into the northern kingdom
How do we understand Kings
and the covenants? The importance of the Abrahamic
covenant is that everything from Genesis 12 on in the Bible has to be
understood in some sense within the framework of that covenant. That is
especially true of everything that happens in the Old Testament after Abraham. All
of the other covenants are part of this. The next covenant that is revealed in
the Mosaic covenant, so everything else that comes after in terms of revelation
is in light of the promises, the mandates, the judgments and blessings of the
Mosaic covenant. Then Deuteronomy 30 gives us the land covenant and 2 Samuel 7
gives us the Davidic covenant. Much of 1 Kings is dealing with the outworking of the
Mosaic law blessings and cursings and the Davidic
covenant, although the focal point in Kings is on the northern kingdom. Chronicles
focuses exclusively on the line of David and what happens there.
Introduction:
The title is from the Hebrew
word melek
which is the word for king. Originally this was one book in the Hebrew canon
and the opening word in 1 Kings 1:1 is, “And the king.” Books in the Old Testament
got their name from the first word. The content of the book focuses on the
reigns of 40 kings of
Important dates: The kingdom
divides in 931 BC. The fall of the northern kingdom was in 722 BC.
One of the things to be noted
in the book is the phrase “until this day” (12 times), which indicates that the
writer talks about something that is still evident even when he is writing. He
puts himself very close to the action.
Purpose: The purpose is to
continue the narrative related to the Davidic kingship and the seed of Abraham
where Samuel left off, beginning from the death of David. 1 Samuel covers the
transition from the theocracy to the united monarchy and 2 Samuel focuses on
the consolidation of the kingdom. 1 Kings begins with the glory and the
expansion of the kingdom under Solomon and then its subsequent disintegration
and eventual destruction in 2 Kings. It has a historical purpose to trace the
line but the most important thing is the theological purpose, that there are lessons
to be learned here and the writer is showing how God is faithful to His
promise, both in terms of blessing
What we are going to see in
Kings again and again and again is that the success or failure of a nation is
not related to the accuracy of its political philosophy, to the accuracy of the
economic philosophy, or in justice in terms of a law code because we have a
perfect law code that comes from God, but it has to do with the spiritual
orientation of the people. As go the people so goes the nation. If the people
are not oriented to God and to eternal absolute values then that affects every
detail within the culture. If it is not oriented to God it leads to collapse and
destruction; if it is oriented to God then God blesses them and they have
success in whatever they do. As we get into this book we realise that it is a
historical, theological and prophetic narrative showing how God blesses the
nation or curses them in relationship to the covenant. The basic principle we
come out of this with is that doctrine really matters.