The Bible Recap - Day 172 (1 Kings 10-11, 2 Chronicles 9) - Year 5
Episode Date: June 21, 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 - Watch with TLC! FROM TO...DAY’S PODCAST: - James 1:5 - Deuteronomy 17:16-17 - Deuteronomy 7:1-5 - Find out more about D-Group - Check out our D-Group Promo Video 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.
The last time we dropped in on Solomon's story, he had just finished building his empire,
so it's no surprise that word about him spreads quickly, and today a foreign queen travels
a long way to visit him.
The queen of Sheba shows up with a lot of people and camels and gifts, as well as a lot of questions,
and Solomon answers them all.
She's dumbfounded.
She's also taken aback by how wealthy he is.
She praises him for his prosperity and his wisdom, and she points out that even the people
who work for him really seem to like him.
That's unusual for a king, especially in this day.
They trade gifts since she heads home to Shiba, which is probably either modern-day Ethiopia
or Yemen, they're just across the Red Sea from each other.
But before she goes, this pagan queen even praises God for establishing him as king, and
points to God as the source of it all.
We see this idea reiterated in 1024, which says,
the whole earth sought the presence of Solomon
to hear his wisdom, which God had put into his mind.
There is no wisdom apart from God.
He owns it all, and anyone who has it, got it from him.
Solomon asked God for this wisdom, and we can too.
James 1.5 says, If any of you lacks wisdom,
let him ask God who gives generously to all without reproach,
and it will be given him.
This is a prayer God promises to answer with a yes
for any of his kids who ask.
Wisdom is not only from God,
but it points back to God.
He's the source, supply, and goal of it all. Despite his wisdom, Solomon isn't perfectly
obedient to God's commands for Israel's kings. We see him amassing more gold and more horses,
which is in direct defiance of Deuteronomy 17. That's the passage that says Israel's king shouldn't
collect horses, gold, or women. Then as we move into chapter 11, we see him adding women to his list. Uh-oh.
We all have a blind spot, and it seems like this was his. He married and associated with women who
turned his heart from God. He ended up with 700 wives and 300 concubines, but it all started with
just one. Just one woman whose heart wasn't aligned with God. I've mentioned this before,
but my dad says the way you turn a battleship to go in a completely different direction is one
degree at a time. Little by little, tiny yields to God's commands are how we lead our own hearts
astray, and that's how Solomon shows that he's ruled by lust, not by God, and it eventually leads
to the downfall of his kingdom.
It went exactly as God said it would go way back
in Deuteronomy 7 where he said,
you shall not intermary with them,
giving your daughters to their sons
or taking their daughters for your sons,
for they would turn away your sons from following me
to serve other gods.
God wasn't guessing, he knows.
Solomon even ends up building sites for idle worship.
At least one of whom, Molech,
is a God the pagans make child sacrifices too.
Are you kidding me right now, Solomon?
And remember, this is the guy who built the temple.
His heart had done a 180.
I find it interesting that 116 says,
Solomon did what was evil in the side of the Lord
and did not wholly follow the Lord
as David his father had done.
David?
And this is in the book of kings, not Chronicles.
This is the book that is more likely to tell us
the bad stuff and not eliminate it from the narrative,
but here it is, recounting David as a man who obeyed God.
Isn't that incredible?
Doesn't that show you God's heart for forgiveness?
God isn't remembering David as the murderer or the man who committed grave sexual sin.
He's marking him down as a man who followed him. There were consequences for David's disobedience,
and there are consequences for Solomon's too. God says his rebellion will cost in the kingdom. Despite Solomon's sin, God wants to keep his promise to his father David.
He says that after Solomon dies, the majority of Israel will be torn away from his son during
his reign.
God effectively punishes Solomon's blatant disobedience while maintaining his promises
to David and Israel.
Talk about efficiency.
In 1114, we see God raising up an enemy to oppose Solomon.
Specifically, God raised up a man named Jeroboam,
who is one of Solomon's servants.
Jeroboam had been suspicious of Solomon for a while
because one time after they'd completed a construction project,
Jeroboam was heading out of town
and he ran into the prophet Ahayja,
who was wearing a new outfit.
All of a sudden,
right in front of Jeroboam, Ahayja terraces own brand new clothes into 12 pieces and hands
10 of those pieces to Jeroboam. Then he explains himself. He prophesies that God will take
10 of the tribes away from Solomon's line of descendants and give them to Jeroboam.
What? That's crazy. That's like if you're an employee at Amazon, and one day someone
comes up to you and rips a giant cardboard box into 12 pieces, hands you 10 strips, and
says, someday God will take Amazon from Jeff Bezos and give it to you. From that moment
on, Jeroboam seems to be eagerly awaiting his own rise to power. Solomon knows Jeroboam
is after the kingdom, so he tries to kill him. But Jeroboam
packs his bags and goes to Egypt and stays there until Solomon dies. His son, Reha Bohem,
takes over the throne after him. I know the names Jeroboam and Reha Bohem are really close
to each other, and since we're going to be talking about them for a while, I want to give you
a little trick to remember it that will hopefully help. The letter R for Reeboam is right beside the letter S for Solomon in the alphabet.
So you can remember that they're close to each other in the alphabet and also in relation.
Jereboam is the outsider here.
I'll also try to call them Jerry and Ray for short just to prevent confusion.
So King Ray takes over after Solomon.
Where did you see God's character on display today?
My God shot was just a little phrase that caught my eye in 2 Chronicles 9-8, where the queen
of Shiba is blessing God in response to Solomon's prosperity and wisdom.
She says,
Blessed be the Lord your God, who has delighted in you and set you on His throne as king
for the Lord your God.
The part that caught my eye was where she said, God set you on his throne.
She didn't say God set Solomon on Solomon's throne,
but that God set Solomon on God's throne.
Now, there's zero chance she's talking about the heavenly throne
or even the earthly throne of the Ark of the Covenant.
What's indicated here in the text
is that God owns positions of power,
specifically the throne of Israel. He's in
charge of who's in charge, no matter who's in charge. These are his people, and he's
establishing their rulers as he sees fit to work in them what he wants.
That's a nice idea when the people in power are guys like Solomon or David for the most
part, but what about all those terrible judges? It's hard for us to see what God might be doing by positioning them in power.
Ugh!
That's where we have to be open-handed and trust that he's working out something we can't see.
For instance, he used those terrible judges to produce repentance in the hearts of his people.
He has purposes we can't understand sometimes,
but they're always righteous and good and loving.
And no matter who is on the throne, he's where the joy is.
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D-group core value number three is bring your wins and losses. In D-group, we set the expectations bar high,
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I recently put my Bible knowledge to the test
in a game called This or That, and I had a blast
doing it, kind of made a fool of myself as well.
You can guess along with me as I try to tell the difference between Bible names and Disney
characters.
Now I've never actually seen a Disney movie, but fortunately I had a lot of help from
past or chat of the prayer wall.
If you want to watch it, text the word Disney to 67101 or click the link in the show notes.