The Bible Recap - Day 163 (1 Kings 7, 2 Chronicles 4) - Year 5
Episode Date: June 12, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Check out Way Nation’s Pr...ayer Study! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Exodus 31:3 - Video: Model of Solomon's Temple - Video: A'in Dara Temple in Syria (before/after air strikes) - Philippians 1:6 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today we briefly interrupt temple details to zoom in on Solomon's personal house, dividing
the temple description in half.
This is probably an intentional move by the author to illustrate a sad point.
Solomon has a divided heart.
There was also a hint toward this in yesterday's reading when the Canaanite laborers worked
in ships where they spent one month working on the temple, followed by two months working
on his house.
And according to today's descriptions, his house is much larger.
Cranted, houses that hold physical people have to be larger than ones that house God's
spirit and a few small pieces of furniture. So it's reasonable that it might take longer and
be larger, but this interruption of the narrative is probably there to tell us about what's happening
in Solomon's heart. He uses a lot of the same resources for his house, and he doesn't just build a
house. He builds a whole palace complex, and it's
majestic.
He has his own palace, his wife's palace, a throne hall, and the hall of pillars.
While his father David had humble roots as a shepherd, Solomon was bougie, maybe a little
too bougie, like the bougieist, and it becomes a problem for him.
We'll read more about that in the future. Next, we jump back into the descriptions of the temple furniture.
You can see how they've come a long way from the tabernacle.
This temple is gorgeous.
Solomon hires the most skilled craftsman.
And for the bronze items, he uses an artist named Hiram,
not to be confused with King Hiram of Tyra,
where he got the cedar trees.
Hiram doesn't just have skill, he has wisdom and understanding too.
And you may recall from our lengthy Tabernacle descriptions that God empowered Bezalel
in Exodus 31 along those same lines. It says, I have filled him with the spirit of God,
with ability and intelligence, with knowledge and all craftsmanship.
When you have a task as important as this, it's vital to choose not only the person with talent,
but with wisdom and understanding. For a role related to the temple,
character and integrity seem to be even more important than skill.
First King 748 is kind of confusing because it says Solomon made all the vessels,
but it's more likely
that he just commissioned the making of them.
As far as we know, he wasn't a goldsmith.
He was probably more into things like binge watching Jeopardy and feeling smarter than
all the contestants.
Solomon also commissions all the work that has to be done around the temple as a part of
the temple complex.
That includes the bronze basin, which holds somewhere between 12,000 and 18,000 gallons.
That's about as much as the average swimming pool.
But this is like an above ground pool, suspended on the backs of 12 bronze oxen.
I know it sounds lovely, but I doubt you'd get that approved by your HOA.
Solomon also makes 10 lamp stands or menorahs, even though God only asked for one.
There are so many other
details and extravagant decorations. In fact, in the 1980s, someone discovered what was believed
to be one of the pomegranates mentioned in 2 Chronicles 413, and the Israel Museum, which is like
the Smithsonian, bought it for over half a million dollars. It was the size of a thumb.
In case you want to see what the temple might have looked like,
we've linked to a short video demonstration
in the show notes.
It's about five minutes long, and it's really helpful.
Granted, the images of the cherubim
leave a lot to be desired, and even the video's creator
himself admits to that.
But I didn't have time to make my own computerized rendering
of the first temple, so this will have to suffice. And if you want to see a real approximation of what this might have looked like,
we'll also link to a separate short video, just to give you a visual.
This video shows an entirely different temple from this time period,
but it's made of some of the same materials.
It was a pagan temple in Syria, 500 miles north of Jerusalem,
and it was just discovered in 1955.
It was the most well-preserved temple from that time period, Syria, 500 miles north of Jerusalem, and it was just discovered in 1955.
It was the most well-preserved temple from that time period, but then it was destroyed
by airstrikes during the Syrian Civil War in 2018.
Based on how closely it resembles the Bible's blueprint for Solomon's Temple, lots of historians
think either this temple's design influenced Solomon or Solomon's design influenced
this one.
What was your God shot today?
This was a tough day for finding God, wasn't it?
Here's where I saw him.
First King 721 describes the two exterior pillars of the temple,
which faces east.
It says, he set up the pillar on the south
and called its name Jakean.
And he set up the pillar on the north
and called its name Boaz.
The name Jakean means he will establish,
and the name Boaz means in strength.
He will establish in strength.
At the place where you would have entered God's house,
where you draw near to his presence,
as you pass through the columns holding it up,
you would have been reminded that God initiated all of this
and that he is sustaining
it. And what he initiates will not only be sustained, it will be fulfilled because he's doing it
in strength. I don't want to spoil this beautiful new temple for you, but I'm going to. It gets
destroyed. But do you know what doesn't get destroyed? God's presence with His people.
That temple was always meant to be a temporary house for Him.
He doesn't dwell in buildings anymore.
He dwells in His people.
And did you know that He marks us with the very same promise?
Philippians 1.6 says it this way,
He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion
at the day of Christ Jesus.
He will establish in strength.
Established in strength, established in him,
kept secure until the day of Christ Jesus.
He's where the joy is.
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