The Bible Recap - Day 179 (1 Kings 20-21) - Year 3
Episode Date: June 28, 2021SHOW 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 FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... 1 Kings 18:4-13 - 1 Kings 19:1-3 - 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!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
We spent today in the Northern Kingdom of Israel.
We opened with a man named Ben Haydad, the King of Syria, invading the Northern Kingdom.
Syria is their immediate neighbor to the Northeast.
Ben Haydad gathers an alliance, including 32 other kings or chiefs, and sends his demands
to Ahab.
He wants all his wealth, and the best of his women in offspring.
King Ahab, ever the gentleman, says, you can have him.
Okay.
In the face of the military threat of Ben Haydad's massive coalition, King Ahab agrees to give
them everything they demand.
But the Syrian coalition takes things a step too far when they say they're going to come
to a raid on Ahab's palace.
The elders of Israel put their foot down.
Feet down, whatever.
But then bin Hadeh is like, you got to be kidding me.
You seriously have no idea how big my army is, do you?
You're about to find out.
And then Ahab responds, oh really, we'll see about that.
You might put your armor on tomorrow, but you won't be taking it off.
This is ancient Israeli trash talk that basically amounts to a death threat. This insight's
been Haydad, who has already three sheets to the wind. That's unadvisable when you're
trying to win a war. And while bin Haydad is seeing double, King Ahab is seeing a
prophet, who tells him
he'll win the war despite the size of the enemy army.
Following the prophet's instructions, Israel attacks the coalition and wins.
The prophet warns Ahab that the Syrians are going to come back to mount another attack
in the spring and suggest that Ahab get ready.
The Syrians prefer to fight in the plains because they have chariots, and they think the
reason Israel won the last battle is because they had the advantage
of fighting in the hills where chariots are useless.
So Syria goes to attack them on the plains.
Meanwhile the Prophet shows up again until Zahab don't sweat this.
God reigns everywhere and God wins everywhere in the hills and in the valleys.
Israel wins and the 27,000 Syrians who don't die in the battle flee to a local city,
where the city wall collapses and kills them.
Talk about going from the frying pan into the fire.
Ben Haydad was in hiding, and he and his servant survive.
They hatch a plan to beg Ahab for mercy, an exchange for giving him back some land they
took.
Ahab agrees, which all sounds well and good, except it defies what God commanded them to do
in this situation.
He was supposed to kill Ben Haydad, not negotiate.
God sends a prophet to call out A Heb Sin,
and this prophet has a weird strategy
for accomplishing that.
It reminds me of how Nathan the Prophet would always
put together a little bit of theater
anytime he needed to get David's attention.
These prophets would probably make great screenwriters.
This particular profit, who might be a guy named Makaya that will officially meet later, forces another profit to beat him up, and he bandages himself and sits by the road where he knows
A-hab will pass. He points out that by leaving Ben Hadeh at alive, A-hab has invited the death penalty
on himself and on his people. Ahab was not repinant.
He returned to home angry and grumpy.
In fact, these words also carry the connotation
of being stubborn, so he was actually resistant
to the prophecy.
When he gets home, he decides what would make him happy
again is more land.
His neighbor Naboth has a nice plot of land
that he really wants, so he makes him an offer. Actually, it's less of an offer and more of a demand.
When Naboth turns him down because it seems God would disapprove of it,
then Ahab is angry and grumpy again, two of the very worst dwarves.
Ahab's covetousness is intense.
Then we encounter his wife Jezebel, daughter of a pagan king.
She's a murderer and a deceiver who sles up to people of power and gives them everything
they want in order to make her self-fill important and ultimately get what she wants.
Yesterday we saw that she's a murderer.
She killed lots of prophets in 1 Kings 18, and she threatened the life of Elijah after
he defeated her own prophets in 1 Kings 19.
And today we see the deceptive side of her personality, plus more murder.
She forges a letter, signs it with Ahab's seal, and uses his name to put together a gathering
presumably to honor God.
She invites their neighbor, Naboth, who shows up to honor God alongside everyone else,
not knowing she had hired two men to sit beside him, and falsely accuse him of cursing God and Ahab, which is punishable by death.
So they stoned him right then and there. He never saw it coming.
Jezebel goes home and tells Ahab the quote-unquote good news that he can have the land he wants so badly, so he takes it.
But God doesn't let this go unpunished.
God holds Ahab responsible for the sin of his wife, just like God held
Adam responsible for the sins of his wife. This may not seem fair to us, but the position
of leadership carries weight to it. There's an added weight on anyone who is the head of
anything, and they have the emotional and spiritual responsibility of being mindful of the
lives and souls of the people in their care. Ask any pastor if they feel this way.
Actually, just pray for them because I can almost guarantee you they do.
God sends Elijah to condemn Ahab.
Not only will he die, but Jezebel and all their family will die too.
This devastates Ahab, and he actually demonstrates signs of true repentance.
God shows mercy and says he'll delay the complete
punishment until the next generation. And that's where my God shot came in today. We've talked about
this before, but it bears repeating. Anytime God makes a promise, he keeps it. The only time he
hedges on it is on the side of mercy and grace. We see that here with Ahab. Scripture repeatedly tells us he was God's
least favorite king in Israel. We saw that yesterday in our reading and we saw it again today
in 21, 25 through 26. It says, there was none who sold himself to do what was evil in the
side of the Lord like Ahab, whom Jezebel, his wife, incited. He acted very abominably.
And then in the very next paragraph,
God relaxes his punishment on A-hab.
God loves to show mercy to people.
Even the most wicked among us,
even those who act like the very worst dwarves.
His heart is so eager to forgive.
How can you not love a God like that?
He's where the joy is.
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