The Bible Recap - Day 174 (1 Kings 12-14) - Year 5
Episode Date: June 23, 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 - Find out what streaming Way... Nation offers HERE! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Map: The Divided Kingdom - The Bible Recap Printable Reading Plan: #2 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.
Two days ago in our reading, Solomon died in his son Rehiboham, or Reh, as we're calling
him, took over the throne.
Today we launch into the reign of the new King Reh.
We've got a lot of important stuff to cover today,
and it's a big day in Israel's history.
So if you're listening at a speed faster than 1x,
you may want to slow me down,
and you may even want to listen twice
to make sure you catch it all.
As soon as Solomon died and his son, King Ray,
took the throne.
Jeroboam or Jerry, as we're calling him,
came back from hiding in Egypt.
He fled there because Solomon was trying to kill him, because he had received a prophecy
that he would be king over 10 of the tribes.
So Jerry has come back to Israel to see the fulfillment of this prophecy.
Then Jerry gathers a bunch of people to approach King Ray about a problem that had been developing
over the last few years, which was, Solomon had been so involved in his construction projects that he'd started to treat his workers like slaves.
The people know it isn't right, and they ask King Ray to lighten their load a bit.
King Ray confers with some of his counselors, and they say the people are right, but he doesn't like their advice,
so he asks his buddies for a second opinion.
But these guys grew up in the palace with him, and they have no idea what it's like to be a regular person
who has to do manual labor.
They aren't compassionate,
and they have no experiential wisdom and leadership.
They suggest that he increase the people's workload.
King Ray does what his buddies suggest,
and the text tells us that it was because God had ordained
that he would reject the people's request
as a part of God's plan to fulfill his prophecy to Jerry.
And this is the moment when the kingdom is divided.
This part can get kind of confusing, and since we're going to be dealing with this for a while,
I want to explain a bit about how the divided kingdom works
and give you some tips for remembering the important parts.
10 of the tribes become the northern kingdom, also known as Israel, and two of the tribes,
Judah and Benjamin, become the southern kingdom.
And they're often collectively referred to as Judah.
Here's how I remember which is which.
Israel starts with an eye, and they're the northern tribes.
Judah starts with a J, and they're the southern tribes.
If you're reading from top to
bottom, they're laid out in alphabetical order. I comes before J. Maybe that will help you,
but if not, we've also included a map in the show notes. One important thing to remember is that
during this time of division, when we read the word Israel, it's now referring to only those 10
tribes in the northern kingdom, not all 12 tribes. King Ray remains King, but only over the Southern Kingdom of Judah, and then the Northern Kingdom
of Israel makes Jerry their King.
And again, if it helps, Jay comes before R, so if you're looking from top to bottom,
the Kings are laid out in alphabetical order too.
Ray is not happy about the ten tribes breaking away from him, so he gathers an army to go
fight them.
But God positions a prophet to speak to him and warns him not to fight, because he would be fighting against God's plan, so they shut it down. In the meantime, Jerry moves up north,
but he feels threatened because he realizes his people are probably still going to travel down
to the southern kingdom to make their sacrifices to God.
And then they might get all nostalgic and decide to reunite with King Ray and the southern
kingdom, and then Ray will come kill him.
Jerry decides that the best way to keep people from making that pilgrimage south is to set
up his own place of worship in the northern kingdom.
Brilliant idea, right?
Also wicked.
He sets up two altars, one at Bethel, which used to be the religious capital before Jerusalem,
and one at Dan.
Cherry decides to make, ta-da-da, two golden calves, and sets one up in each city.
I feel like I know where this is going, don't you?
He sets up his own temples, appoints his own non-leviate priests, establishes his own
days for feast and sacrifices, and just generally does whatever he wants without any regard
for God, simply because he's afraid of losing power.
Fear will drive you to unholy ends.
Chapter 13 gets kinda crazy.
A man of God shows up to rebuke Jerry, but Jerry is not having it.
He points at the man and orders him to be killed, but then his hand immediately withers.
Then the altar is torn down just like the man said would happen.
The man prays for Jerry and his hand is restored.
Jerry tries to win the favor of this obviously powerful man, but the man remains resolute.
Word of all this reaches an old prophet who lives nearby,
and he goes to track down the man of God.
He lies to him and says,
God told me you're supposed to come to my house for dinner.
First of all, he sounds like a serial killer.
Second, the prophet really is a prophet, not a serial killer,
and he tells the man of God he made a terrible mistake
by listening to him instead of God, and that the punishment is death.
Wow.
As it turns out, the prophet is right, and the man of God is killed by a lion on his way
home that day.
The moral of this story is to obey the voice of God, not the voice of man.
Despite all that has happened, King Jerry keeps worshipping at the high places and keeps
ordaining any old Brando as priest.
He isn't repentant.
That major obvious sign God gave him of a withered hand and a healed hand.
Those weren't enough to change his heart.
Then Jerry's son gets sick, and now Jerry knows they need real help, not metal livestock.
He sends his wife indescribced to see Ahayja, the same prophet who tore his clothes and
gave 10 pieces to Jerry when he prophesied that Jerry would be king.
Ahayja is old now and can't see very well.
But before Jerry's wife even arrives in her disguise, God gives him the heads up that
she's on her way.
When she arrives, he calls her out.
And then he has terrible news for her. Their
son will die. Like his promise to David, God's promise to Jerry was contingent upon obedience.
Since Jerry doesn't follow Yahweh, Yahweh takes the kingdom from him, and he severs the
consequences of his sin just like David did. Jerry sinh hurts so many other people.
We never sin in a vacuum.
Our sin always impacts others.
Jerry dies and he succeeded by a son to dab.
Meanwhile, back in the southern kingdom of Judah,
Ray is still reigning,
but things aren't going well there either.
They're sinning too,
setting at pie places and pillars and male cult prostitutes.
The division between the two kingdoms persists, and after Ray dies, his son Abaijim takes his place.
A lot happened in today's reading. Where did you see your God shot?
Despite all of man's idolatry and wickedness, there was a comforting little phrase that reminded me of God's compassionate heart in 1413.
When Jerry's son dies, the verse says,
All Israel shall mourn for him and bury him, because in him there is found something pleasing
to the Lord, the God of Israel.
When we think of God taking someone in death, it's easy to think of it as a cruel and angry
act.
But here we see another side of God that's easy to miss.
He took the one who pleased him. I think there's something incredibly sweet about that.
But just to clarify, God didn't need another angel, like well-meaning people sometimes say,
because first of all, people don't become angels when they die. Angels are a whole different
kind of being, and they're actually a lower order
of created being than humans, because they're not mating God's image like we are. So that
would be a downgrade for us if we had to become angels when we die. And second of all, God
doesn't need anything. He is entirely self-sufficient. He took the boy because he
delighted in him. That's all. Just delight. He brought him home to himself.
So the boy escaped the wicked world, his early father ruled and went to the peaceful home of his
heavenly father. That's a fantastic trade-off, truly, because he's where the joy is.
Are you a list maker and a box checker? Do crossed-off items make you smile? because he's where the joy is.
Are you a list maker and a box checker? Do crossed-off items make you smile?
Maybe you're thankful for all the tech resources available to us,
but you prefer a good old-fashioned sheet of paper.
If that's you, check out our free, printable reading plan on our website.
Who knows, maybe it will be just the game changer you need
to keep you going strong in your reading through the summer.
And yes, you heard me right. It's free. Maybe it will be just the game changer you need to keep you going strong in your reading through the summer.
And yes, you heard me right.
It's free.
Just go to thebibelrycap.com-forward-slash-start and look for the printable plan in step two,
or check for the link in the show notes.
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Way Nation has lots of free streams you can pick from, no matter which genre you prefer.
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To listen to any of those, text the word stream to 67101 or click the link in the show notes.
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