God Secures Solomon's Throne
The writer of Kings is really
tracing out the Davidic covenant. So what we have in the narrative in the first
eleven chapters is the transition from the Davidic kingship from David to
Solomon in fulfilment of the Davidic covenant. The first part of that is a
transfer of the kingdom from David to Solomon—1:1-2:12. That can be further
subdivided into two sections. Chapter one covers the coronation of Solomon
despite the fact that Adonijah his half-brother makes
a power grab and tries to seize the throne away from Solomon. Then the second
part of that has to do with David’s final exhortation, his last words to
Solomon, regarding covenant faithfulness and dealing with David’s foes and
friends in 2:1-12.
There are three major
doctrines that we need to keep in mind as we go through this. The first has to
do with the promises of God. God promised David that Solomon would sit on his
throne. We know that from a couple of different passages, first in 1 Chronicles
22:6ff where we see that David told Solomon sometime prior to this event that
God had told him that Solomon would be the one to build a house for the Lord
and that Solomon would be his heir. Furthermore, according to this passage in 1
Kings David told Bathsheba this, and this happens
before God formalised the Davidic covenant with David. So it was clear within
the household of David, which would include Adonijah
and the other sons, that Solomon was the heir. So that makes Adonijah’s coup even more insidious because we see that he
must be completely away from the Lord in his own spiritual life.
We have noted looking at
the background that we have to look at all these books in terms of the
covenants, and the first and most important covenant is the Mosaic covenant
because that is the one that is most directly applicable to Israel at this
time. In the Mosaic covenant there are promises of blessing for obedience and
curses or judgments for disobedience. Deuteronomy 28-30 are key chapters which
we ought to take time to read through to see what God promised in terms of
blessing and judgment, and in chapter pay attention to the promise to bring
them back from all the earth to the land. But in Deuteronomy 28:1 Moses reminds
the people NASB “Now it shall be, if you diligently obey the LORD your God,
being careful to do all His commandments which I command you today, the LORD your God
will set you high above all the nations of the earth.” The
word there for obedience means to listen, to hear, to regard, thus to listen
with obedience. The idea of hearing in Scripture isn’t just a sort of
academic detached listening and understanding but it is always for the purpose
of application and obedience. That is what we see in the New testament
in James: “Don’t be hearers only but doers/appliers of the Word.” In
Deuteronomy 28:10 we see that the purpose for this is to be a witness for all
the earth. NASB “So all the peoples of the earth will see that you
are called by the name of the LORD, and they will be afraid of you.” And God’s purpose
is to make
But then the covenant with
Abraham is expanded further with David, and there is a hint of this in 1
Chronicles 15:1 NASB “Now {David} built houses for himself in the
city of
In the Davidic covenant
the key verses are 2 Samuel 7:12-16; Psalm 89 which is a meditation on the
Davidic covenant; 1 Chronicles 17:11-14. 2 Samuel 7 focuses more on the earthly
aspect of the descendants, the seed of David down through Solomon, whereas
Chronicles focuses more on its eternal results which are fulfilled in the Lord
Jesus Christ. There are three elements that are promised through the Davidic
covenant. The first is that God promises an eternal house, i.e. dynasty, 2
Samuel 7:11, 13a, 16 and 1 Chronicles 17:10. Then God promised an eternal
kingdom in 2 Samuel 7:12c and 1 Chronicles
It is obvious from this
that this covenant can’t be fulfilled in Solomon because Solomon is not
eternal, he is just a human being and no other human son is capable of
fulfilling this. So it begins to be clear that the fulfilment of this has to be
in a person who is also God. So this idea that Jesus or the Messiah would be
God does not just pop up when Jesus comes at the first advent. It was very
clear from numerous passages in the Old Testament.
This covenant forms the
backdrop for a number of passages later on in Scripture. In Isaiah there is the
promise related to the Messiah. Isaiah 9:6 NASB “For a child will be
born to us, a son will be given to us; And the government will rest on His
shoulders; And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.” This terms “son” is particularly
pregnant with the meaning “son of David.” The fact that “a child will be born
to us” indicates His humanity; the fact that “a son will be given to us”
relates to this Davidic sonship that has divine overtones, because by this time
we have Psalm 110:1 NASB “The LORD says to my Lord: ‘Sit at My right hand Until I make
Your enemies a footstool for Your feet’,” and other passages that indicate His
deity. The word “eternal Father” in Isaiah 9:6 does not mean that the son is
the Father. This is a poor translation. The Hebrew phrase should be translated
“the Father of eternity,” indicating His eternal nature. And that reminds us of
the fact that God promised David an eternal house, an eternal throne, an
eternal kingdom.
Isaiah 9:7 NASB
“There will be no end to the increase of {His} government or of peace, On the throne of David and over his kingdom, To establish it
and to uphold it with justice and righteousness From then on and forevermore.
The zeal of the LORD of hosts will accomplish this.” This directly ties
this son to the Davidic kingdom and the Davidic throne.
Isaiah 11:1 NASB
“Then a shoot will spring from the stem of Jesse, And
a branch from his roots will bear fruit.” What is interesting about this is the
prophetic element. The picture is of a stump that dies. It appears that the
stump related to the lineage from Jesse dies out. Where is it today? Yet a new
shoot will come out of the stump from Jesse, and that is a reference to the
future restoration of the kingdom under the Messiah, and “a branch from his
roots will bear fruit” is a messianic implication related to the Millennial kingdom, that this is yet future.
Jeremiah also makes these
same allusions. Jeremiah 23:5 NASB “‘Behold, {the} days are coming,’
declares the LORD, ‘When I will raise up for David a righteous Branch;
And He will reign as king and act wisely And do justice and righteousness in
the land’.” That reference to the Branch goes back to that same illustration of
the branch or stem coming up from the root of the stump or trunk of Jesse. Another
thing that we notice in both the Isaiah 9:6 passage and here is that which
characterises the one who fulfils the Davidic covenant is that His reign is
characterised by righteousness and justice. Was that true of Solomon’s reign?
No. As we go through Kings and the various kings in the south and in the north
it becomes apparent that no human king can fulfil this requirement to provide a
king who acts wisely and does justice and righteousness in the land. No human
king can do that. One application of this is that human politics and political
leaders aren’t the answer. “It is a fool who puts his trust in the arm of
flesh.” Down through even the
Jeremiah 30:8, 9 NASB
“‘It shall come about on that day,’ declares the LORD of hosts,
‘that I will break his yoke from off their neck and will tear off their bonds;
and strangers will no longer make them their slaves.
Amos
That brings us to I Kings
1:1 NASB “Now King David was old, advanced in age; and they covered
him with clothes, but he could not keep warm.” The picture that we have of
David in this first chapter is of an old king where it is not possible for his
body to generate warmth, and he is no longer the vibrant, take-charge leader
that he has been. In fact, in the first part of this chapter all of the verbs related
to David are passive. It reinforces this picture that he is not active. He is
not in charge of his life or what is going on around him. He has to be taken
care of.
As we look at this first
chapter we have six scenes. The first scene, vv.1-4, is the old king’s bedroom and
the problem of his warmth. His body just can’t generate body heat anymore. The second
scene, vv. 5-10, introduces us to Adonijah’s
attempted coup. The third scene which is really broken up into sub sections
goes from
All of this has to happen
very quickly because Adonijah is at that very moment
being anointed and crowned king. So they have to find Solomon, they have to
bring him out and the other supporters, they have to get Zadok
the high priest and Benaiah the son of Jehoiada who is the head of the military now that Joab has gone over to Adonijah.
They have to pull this ad hoc anointing together very quickly so that they can
regain the initiative. We see a lot of wisdom here in the way they react and
plan. They go down to the pool of Gihon which is
about half a mile closer than where Adonijah is,
which means they can get Solomon down there and anoint him and they can blow
the trumpet to announce the anointing of the king and then bring him back to
the palace because he is not as far away as Adonijah.
So they can come in and undercut what Adonjiah is
doing.
In the fifth scene,
beginning in v. 41, Adonijah learns that he has been
trumped. Solomon has already been anointed king by Nathan the prophet, and Zadok the high priest is behind him, and he is in trouble.
He knows that his life is in danger. So in the closing scene he appeals to
Solomon in grace and he is treated in grace “by the seed of the covenant.”
Solomon is demonstrating grace orientation and acting at this point as a type
of Christ. He is extending grace to the usurper to give him time to show that
he will not be an enemy of the throne.
In the first four verses
the focus is on David and Abishag. Why is this here?
It is not simply to tell us that David has a problem with something similar to
hyperthermia and needs to be warmed by another human being. Because Abishag is brought into the kings
harem tells us why Adonijah wants her for his wife later
on. It is a set-up, this isn’t just here to tell us
that the king had a lovely young woman sleeping with him every night. There is
nothing untoward about this, it was a common practice. He was not able to generate
his own body warmth anymore so his servants came up with a solution, v. 2 NASB
“So his servants said to him, ‘Let them seek a young virgin for my lord the
king, and let her attend the king and become his nurse; and let her lie in your
bosom, that my lord the king may keep warm’.” The word for “virgin” here is bethulah. The two
main words in the Hebrew are bethulah and almah,
as in Isaiah 7:14 which is a picture of a sign, a sign for Ahaz.
Bethulah
can refer to a virgin of any age, but it may also refer to a young widow, as it
does in Joel 1:8. Usually when bethulah is used it has an explanatory statement, which we
have here. Almah is a term that
refers to a young virgin of marriageable age. It is never used of a married
woman. When the rabbis translated Isaiah
The reason they were
looking for a virgin is that it had to be a single woman, not a married woman. No
husband would want their wife sleeping with the king or any other man to keep
him warm, so she had to be unmarried. And in that culture a young unmarried
woman would be a virgin. They did not have problems with infidelity or sexual
promiscuity in that culture like we have today. That young woman would still be
living in the home with her parents.
1 Kings 1:3 NASB
“So they searched for a beautiful girl throughout all the
Then the scene shifts. We
see this passive, out-of-touch king who is entering into some early stages of
senility and he is just not in control of his family or the administration of
the kingdom anymore, and so one of the sons attempts
to seize control. Adonijah was the fourth son of
David. Amnon was the eldest and he is dead, Absolom is dead. There was another son mentioned in 2
Samuel but he apparently died young and is not in the picture. Adonijah makes a decision that he wants to reign and he
doesn’t look to God or seek God’s direction, he is going to make his own
decision. 1 Kings 1:5 NASB “Now Adonijah
the son of Haggith exalted himself, saying, ‘I will
be king.’ So he prepared for himself chariots and horsemen with fifty men to
run before him.” He is operating on arrogance and self-absorption. He is the
product of a spoiled upbringing. There was no parental discipline. 1 Kings 1:6 NASB
“His father had never crossed him at any time by asking, ‘Why have you done so?’
And he was also a very handsome man, and he was born after Absalom.”