- Texts and versions
Kings: background and Solomon’s reign
- Related Topics:
- number of the beast
- Hebrew Bible
- mammon
- Bible
- biblical criticism
The fourth book of the Former Prophets (I and II Kings in the Septuagint) continues the history of the nation Israel from the death of David, the reign of Solomon, and the divided monarchy through the collapse of both Israel (the northern kingdom) and Judah (the southern kingdom). Whereas Samuel was composed primarily of the early and the later sources with some editing on the part of the Deuteronomic historians, the Deuteronomic editors of Kings, in addition to these two sources, used other sources—such as the book of the acts of Solomon, the Book of the Chronicles of the Kings of Israel, the Book of the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah, temple archives, and traditions centring on certain major kings and prophets. The Deuteronomic historians wrote from the vantage points of the reign of King Josiah of Judah, who died in 609 bce and was the ruler who accepted the Deuteronomic reform that began in 621 bce, and of the Babylonian Exile, which traditionally lasted 70 years, though it began in 597 bce, the temple was destroyed in 587/586, some exiles returned in 538, and the temple was restored in 516. The Deuteronomic view that national apostasy was the cause of the covenant people’s predicament pervades this work.
(The history of the 10th through the early 6th century bce is covered in the article Judaism, and therefore this article will concentrate only on the reigns of important monarchs and their relationships to the rising power of the prophetic movement in Israel.)
The Book of Kings may be divided into four sections: (1) the last years of David and Solomon’s succession to the throne (I Kings, chapter 1, to chapter 2, verse 11); (2) the reign of Solomon (I Kings, chapter 2, verse 12, to chapter 11, verse 43); (3) the beginning of the divided monarchy to the fall of Israel (I Kings, chapter 12, to II Kings, chapter 17); and (4) the last years of Judah (II Kings, chapters 18–25).
The succession of Solomon to the throne
I Kings (chapters 1 and 2) continues the story of David and the struggle for the succession of his throne. The sides were drawn between Adonijah, David’s eldest living son, and Solomon, the son of David and Bathsheba. Supporting Adonijah were the “old guard”—the general Joab and the priest Abiathar—and supporting Solomon were the priest Zadok, the prophet Nathan, and the captain of David’s bodyguard, Benaiah. With David close to death, Adonijah prepared to seize control of the kingdom; Nathan, however, requested Bathsheba to go to David and persuade David to proclaim Solomon the next monarch. Following the advice of Nathan, David then appointed Solomon the heir to his throne; and Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anointed the son of Bathsheba king in Gihon.
After David died, however, Adonijah attempted to regain some semblance of prestige by asking Solomon to give him Abishag, a young Shunammite woman who had been given to David in his old age, as his wife. To this request Solomon answered by ordering Adonijah’s execution, which Benaiah carried out. Solomon also ordered the execution of the old general Joab for having killed Abner and Amasa years earlier as a loyal supporter of David, an execution again carried out by Benaiah, who also executed Shimei, a man who had cursed David a long time earlier. Prior to these executions, which David—before he had died—had requested of Solomon, the new king banished the priest Abiathar of the house of Eli to Anathoth, an act that confirmed the position of Zadok as the principal priest of Jerusalem.
The reign of Solomon
David had reigned from about 1000 to 962 bce, a period in which he consolidated a federation of tribes that had been united under the charismatic leadership of Saul, who had reigned for about two decades before David began to construct his minor empire. Solomon, who inherited a strong monarchy, reigned for 40 years. His reputation as a monarch centred about his great wisdom (chapter 3), his reorganization of the administrative bureaucracy (chapter 4), and his building of the magnificent Temple (chapters 3–8). Though two sons of the prophet Nathan served Solomon, one as a court official and another as a priest, the prophetic movement apparently was little encouraged by the united monarchy’s third king. Solomon is perhaps one of the most overrated figures in the Old Testament, in spite of his achievements in wisdom, construction, and commerce; he is recorded as having 1,000 wives and concubines—some of them merely guarantees of commercial treaties, to be sure—and as building a fleet of ships for a nearly landlocked Israel. To accommodate his desire for a seaport, he built the port of Ezion-geber at the head of the Gulf of Aqaba of the Red Sea. A son of the harem, Solomon had had little contact with the people of his realm, and he used many of them in labour battalions in his vast building programs to the economic disadvantage of Israel. By fostering social discontent in such ventures, Solomon prepared the way for the disintegration of the united kingdom and the resurgence of the prophetic movement that reflected the indigenous covenant concept peculiar to Israel.
Whereas David secured Israel’s borders and property by military means, Solomon sought to extend Israel’s influence through commercial treaties. To secure diplomatic and commercial treaties, Solomon contracted marriage with various princesses—who brought with them their native deities. This defection from the Covenant obligations to Yahweh is viewed by the Deuteronomic historian as a continuance of Israel’s constant flirting with apostasy, which had occurred under the judges, and the beginning of a long process of internal religious and political disintegration under the monarchical system. Solomon’s oppressive taxation and commercial expansion also brought about retaliation and rebellion.