1
ST
KINGS
Week 17, chapters 9 and 10

We moved into 1
st
Kings Chapter 9 last week, and the chapter begins sometime after the
halfway point of Solomon’s 40 year reign. The Temple is built and in operation, Solomon’s
extravagant Palace is completed. King Shlomo’s many building projects throughout his
kingdom have elevated his personal fame and Israel’s national status, and monarchs ruling far
flung kingdoms are curious and envious of this amazingly wise king and the astounding wealth
this relatively small country has amassed almost overnight.

Unexpectedly the Lord God appears to Solomon in a dream-vision, just as He had 2 decades
earlier at the beginning of Shlomo’s reign. God brings a dual-edged oracle to Solomon; first it
is to confirm that He has heard Solomon’s prayers and petitions at the Temple dedication
ceremony (now some 13 or more years in the past), and that He has been looking favorably
upon them. Second is to issue a reminder that is actually a not-so-veiled threat. Yehoveh
reminds Solomon that despite all the adulation and notoriety that is being heaped upon him for
his stupendous accomplishments, the future of Solomon’s dynasty and the well-being of the
nation of Israel shall always be subject to the Lord’s discretion.

The idea is that Solomon should NOT take it that because Israel and its king have become the
envy of the world that somehow this is indicative that all is right between Israel and God; the
accumulation of wealth and fame is not an earthly indication of righteousness or even harmony
with the Lord. Rather it is that if Solomon expects for one his sons to rule Israel after him, and if
Israel is to continue under God’s blessing, then there are 4 conditions that must be met. And
obviously Solomon meeting those conditions is currently in doubt or the Lord wouldn’t have
offered this warning.

What is so interesting is that we find confirmation yet again of the Biblical principle that a
nation’s fate from God’s perspective is all wrapped up in its leadership. The ideal king is a
Shepherd-King. It is a leader who leads for the benefit of the people and not himself. It is a
leader who sees himself as Joseph was in relation to Pharaoh, a kind of under-king, doing the
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will of the almighty king.

In God’s economy Israel’s leader (as the ideal example for all leaders) was first and foremost
to lead his people down Godly paths, using God’s Torah as the map. Like a Shepherd it was
not a matter of asking the sheep where they wanted to go and taking them there. Nor was it a
matter of forcefully or deceptively taking the sheep someplace that they ought not to go
because it was dangerous or wicked, but it did benefit the leader. Thus the leader is
responsible for the people as a congregation, and he or she also represents the spiritual
condition of the people on a national basis before the Lord. This is an immutable God-principle,
and it not something that any nation can hold themselves up as being exempt.

Thus Israel’s fate is squarely on Solomon’s royal shoulders because the Lord has put it there.
England’s fate is on their Prime Minister’s shoulders and the United States’ fate is on the
President’s shoulders and each represents the spiritual condition of the nation they govern
before God, and so on throughout the world in all times and eras. And thus the Lord lays out 4
conditions that Solomon must follow otherwise the consequences will be what we find in
chapter 9 verses 6 – 9.

RE-READ 1
ST
KINGS 9:6-9

Notice that there are 2 main consequences for not meeting these 4 conditions: God will
abandon the Temple, and God will eject Israel from the land. Several of the ancient Sages
have interpreted verse 6 where it says, “But if you turn away from me, you or your children…..”
as meaning King Solomon or the people of Israel. That is “your children” are meaning the
citizens of Israel. So the idea is that even if the King is righteous, if the people behaved
wickedly, then these curses of God will come upon the nation. That interpretation is terribly
flawed and without merit, and it only serves the rabbinical agenda to prove that Solomon (as
was his father, David) a 100% righteous man despite what we might read about him in the
Scriptures. And thus when Israel is divinely punished it has nothing to do with the actions of
any of David’s descendants but rather it is the rebellion of the people. The words immediately
preceding these are “You will never lack a man on the throne of Israel”, and they are part of a
reminder that Solomon is to obey God or else that promise of a dynasty will be removed.
Further, this same requirement of obedience goes for each succeeding generation of
Solomon’s dynasty.

So the continuation of God’s presence as demonstrated by God’s willingness to “dwell” in the
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Temple is conditional based on the worthiness of Israel’s leadership. And if God abandons the
Temple then it becomes an empty shell that loses all value. Thus verse 8 explains that what
was once a magnificent monument to Yehoveh that epitomized His glory being worked out
through Israel will overnight turn into something that will shock those from other lands who
knew it from prior times when God dwelled there and was blessing it. Some people will look at
the Temple building in horror and anguish; others will view it, smirk, and enjoy its demise. But
all will ask, “how did this happen?” And God says that BECAUSE the current King of Israel
disobeyed and because he elected to follow other gods and did not follow the 4 conditions, and
then the Lord views these actions as amounting to abandonment of Him by the congregation
as a whole.

Does it bother you that as followers that you are judged according to the actions and spiritual
condition of the leader? Consider then that it cuts both ways, and this Biblical principle is as
foundational for a nation being cursed as it is for an individual being blessed. Because it is the
righteousness of our leader Yeshua HaMashiach that makes us, His followers eligible for
God’s blessing. As members of God’s Kingdom, with our king being God Himself, then we will
be judged follower-by-follower according to His deeds and His perfection.

Let’s re-read some more of chapter 9.


RE-READ 1
ST
KINGS 9:10 – 14

Solomon has made a bad turn. He is succumbing to his great wealth, position, power, and
intellect. King Hiram of Tyre was a true partner in building the Temple and Solomon’s Palace
and now in return King Shlomo seems to be giving away cities in Israel to Hiram in gratitude for
his help. What a shameful thing to do, but apparently expedient. What we see here is
something that we need to always keep in mind: be careful who you become indebted to
because someday you will have to repay.

Especially in the next chapter of 1
st
Kings, in the Queen of Sheba episode, we are going to get
a glimpse of the other-worldly wealth that had become King Shlomo’s and Israel’s. But in
case it hasn’t yet occurred to you, none of it is coming from the land of Israel, but rather from
foreign places. Israel has never had any valuable natural resources to harvest; no gold, no
silver, no forests, no strange animals desired by other nations. Gold, silver, timber, precious
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gems, and exotic creatures all had to be imported from abroad. They had to be provided by
pagan gentiles. King Solomon completely depended on non-God worshippers for expertise and
materials even to build the Temple to Yehoveh; the chief source being Hiram. Now it was time
to pay the piper. And of course, what would Solomon use to pay him except all that Israel had
to offer: a piece of the Promised Land.

It is interesting however to try to properly characterize the nature of what went on once
Solomon offered these 20 Israelite cities and their surrounding territories up in the beautiful
and fertile areas of the northlands called the Galil (Galilee). The way most translations have it
is that Solomon offered these territories, and then Hiram came to view his new land, but was
not pleased with what he saw so he rejected it and gave it back as an insult. And thus he gave
the rejected 20-city region the negative epithet of Kabul, and it has been declared in Bible
commentaries that Kabul means “worthless”.

However there is another and more likely interpretation. Most Jewish scholars have a problem
with translating Kabul as worthless. Rather it more means binding or collateral. In other words
it is a term that has to do with debt and securing debt. “Binding” is meant in the sense of
offering collateral as proof of a debt, and as binding surety for a debt. This makes far more
sense for the context of this passage. Thus what we have here is that Solomon didn’t give
these cities away to King Hiram per se, but he did offer them as a debt guarantee for the
enormous national debt he had piled upon Israel for the immense sums of gold, valuable and
rare lumber, and skilled labor that he obtained from Hiram. Hiram was a friend and ally of
Israel, but he wasn’t naïve or simple; he of course held his own national interests above
Israel’s and so he would loan the modern equivalent of scores of millions of dollars to
King Shlomo, but not without some concrete assurances that his nation would be repaid. Thus
these 20 cities of northern Israel were essentially the collateral for the loan that would become
Hiram’s by default if Israel failed to repay the debt. And by the way: notice that King Solomon
who is a member of the southern Israel tribe of Judah didn’t blink at offering Hiram some
northern tribal territories as collateral for his projects, but of course nothing in Judah was put in
jeopardy.

Hiram went to see these 20 cities, found them as insufficient collateral, and rejected them as
such. When we think of the enormous amount of gold (here it is said to be 4 tons) that Hiram
loaned to Solomon, plus the vast quantities of material and labor, then Hiram must have had
high expectations for the value of this region up in the Galil. Obviously the region failed to meet
those expectations. Thus the region became known as what it was: Kabul, collateral. That
certainly would have been a degrading name as far as its residents were concerned. Hiram
had already given Solomon the bulk of the labor and materials so it was too late to break the
deal (which he probably wouldn’t have done anyway). But in the end, Solomon really can’t be
regarded as any less guilty for putting at risk part of God’s Kingdom as surety for a loan from a
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pagan, than for simply exchanging the land for payment of the loan because if Solomon had
defaulted the result would have been the same.

And yet there is a caveat for all this that might help to explain Solomon’s attitude about these
cities and not being very concerned about what became of them.

CJB
2 Chronicles 8:1 At the end of twenty years, during which time Shlomo had built the
house of ADONAI and his own palace,

2
Shlomo built up the cities which Huram had given to Shlomo and had the people of
Isra'el live there.

In this passage Hiram is called Huram (just a typical issue in ancient Hebrew of trying to
determine the vowel sounds). Apparently the idea is that these 20 cities were indeed in
Israelite territory, but they were occupied by non-Israelites, probably Canaanites, (on a
peaceful basis, and these residents gave their allegiance to Shlomo). And we read that on a
number of occasions Solomon used the resources of non-Hebrews living in Israel for his own
profit because the Hebrew majority wouldn’t have protested that approach. So Solomon
offered the collateral of 20 cities that were populated with non-Israelites and this displeased
Hiram because of course, as a king, he fully understood that what Solomon offered as a loan
guarantee wasn’t all that valuable to Solomon (as it would have been had tribal Israelites
possessed these cities).

However later on Shlomo put government funds into building up these cities and when he did,
naturally he moved Israelites into the formerly Canaanite populated cities. A very popular move
no doubt, and probably one designed to placate the northern Israelite tribes who would have
felt rather insulted for Solomon offering parts of their territory to Hiram. Politicians have always
known how to spend other people’s money for their own benefit.

Let’s re-read a little more.

RE-READ 1
ST
KINGS 9:15 – 23

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Our modern politicians have nothing on Solomon; here we see that he was the tax-and-spend
King of Israel. But thankfully in our time the tax is always money. What we see in these
passages is that the levy that Shlomo put upon his people was primarily forced labor. We get
a list of the major projects that this conscripted labor force was used for and besides the
Temple and Solomon’s personal palace are listed the Millo, the wall of Jerusalem and the
cities of Hatzor, Megiddo and Gezer. We will begin to run across these places and names
regularly from here forward and some play a significant role in end-times matters so let’s take
a few minutes to familiarize ourselves with them.

Millo literally means “earthen rampart”. It is a fortified wall structure used as defensive
position on the Kidron Valley side of the City of David. Its design is as a retaining wall back-
filled with soil and rubble. The Millo that we read about here has been rediscovered and
confirmed and you can visit it when you go to Israel. It was originally built by the Jebusites,
later fortified by David, and now rebuilt and strengthened by King Solomon.

The wall of Yerushalayim is referring to defensive walls that went beyond those of the City of
David. Solomon had been extending the city on up the hill towards the Temple Mount. There
was an undeveloped space between the City of David and the Temple Mount called the Ophel
and this was where Jerusalem was first expanded. This wall of Yerushalayim mentioned here
is bound to be a wall designed to join the City of David to the Temple Mount and thus enclose
the Ophel area.

Hatzor and Megiddo were in the Galilee region and both were strategic military outposts along
the invaluable Via Maris trade route. Hatzor served as a fortress designed to guard the
northern flank of Israel from the area of Syria. Likely this was one of Solomon’s most important
fortifications. Megiddo is better known today in Christian circles as Har Megiddo or
Armageddon. Har means hill or mountain, thus the name “the hill of Megiddo”. This is the
place of the end-times prophetic war to end all wars. In ancient times it guarded the pass into
the Jezreel Valley that over the centuries was the major north-south and east-west trade
crossroads, and it was also a battlefield and amazingly fertile agricultural region since time
immemorial This may have been Solomon’s most famous and extensive chariot city outside
of Jerusalem and one can see the excavated remains of the stables and fortifications to this
day.

Gezer and Beth-Horon were in the center of Israel, more or less at the southern border of
Ephraim’s tribal territory. We get an interesting aside in verse 16 explaining how King Shlomo
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had acquired Gezer. Let me pause for just a moment to note that by these passages
explaining how Gezer became Israelite, and a few verses earlier how the 20 cities used as
collateral for a debt owed to King Hiram in time became Hebrew cities, we see that still into
Solomon’s day Israel had many pockets of cities and towns within the Promised Land that
were Canaanite or occupied by some foreigners. It would be as though in the modern USA
there would be substantial towns and cities that were thoroughly Native American and not
assimilated into the European-based American culture. So it’s not a matter of an enemy
occupying some cities within an otherwise sovereign nation, but rather they were cities
primarily occupied by other ethnic groups and generally on peaceful terms with Israel.

Gezer was a Canaanite city that was captured some years earlier by Solomon’s father in law
Pharaoh Siamun of Egypt. He had destroyed the city by fire. But then he gave the remains of
the city to his daughter as a wedding present for her marriage to Solomon. The bottom line
here is that the marriage of Pharaoh’s daughter to Solomon, plus the giving of the defeated
but destroyed Canaanite city of Gezer to Solomon, created a strong and friendly political
alliance between Israel and Egypt. Gezer was in a strategically valuable location and as soon
as he could, Solomon moved Hebrews into the city and used government funds to rebuild it. It
was strategic because it controlled that particular section of the Via Maris trade route, and was
700 feet above sea level making it a marvelous lookout where one could see miles in every
direction.

Interestingly, again to demonstrate the geopolitical reality of the Israelites’ time in the
Promised Land, we see in Joshua 10 that centuries earlier Joshua actually captured Gezer,
killing the king, but then the Philistines gained control. It was even assigned the important
status as a Levitical city in Joshua 21. Apparently the Philistines eventually lost control to some
Canaanites, then the Canaanites lost control to Egypt, and now Egypt gave control to Solomon
as a political gift of friendship. So this acquisition of land and territory was uneven and often
the same piece of land changed hands regularly for any number of reasons. Egypt’s interest
in Gezer was economic and had to do with the Via Maris trade route. Gezer became another
of Solomon’s chariot cities. And each of these chariot cities was also where Israel’s tax
collectors had offices to extract a levy from the many trade caravans that passed through.

We also find a fleeting mention of Solomon building buildings in Lebanon, so we can see how
far north his influence extended. But starting in verse 20 we get a listing of the various ethnic
groups that still lived in the Israelite tribal territories, in peace with Israel and under Solomon’s
rule. And it was from these various groups that Solomon conscripted the labor for his many
projects.

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Verse 22 makes it clear that Solomon did NOT use Hebrews as forced laborers (a political
consideration). Instead, in a kind of role reversal for how it was for Israel in Egypt, the Israelites
were the foremen and task masters over the foreign labor pool. And national Israelites also
formed the loyal government administrators, military commanders, and other officials working
for Shlomo. Let me also be clear that while this was forced labor, the laborers were not slaves.
It was no different than the taxes we all pay to our government, which is also “forced” so-to-
speak. That is, we don’t pay by choice but by dictate of our government; we are not at all
slaves but the law compels us to give or to be prosecuted. It was that way in Israel under
Solomon except that the taxes amounted to labor and not money.


RE-READ 1
ST
KINGS CHAPTER 9:24 – end

Hebrew tradition better explains why this verse about Solomon’s Egyptian wife and her move
from the City of David to the Palace was included. It was that when Solomon married her he
gave her a place to live in the City of David. As soon as he could he built a palace outside the
City of David and then moved her into it. David has used the area of the Millo as a place for
the many pilgrims who came to Jerusalem to meet and congregate; it was intentionally
arranged as an area for an open public courtyard. But Solomon confiscated that area and built
private quarters upon it for his wife’s servants, thus eliminating its use for the common
pilgrims. Thus we get the words that only after Pharaoh’s daughter was moved into her new
quarters did the Millo refurbishment occur that entirely changed its character from a public
meeting place to private quarters for the king’s servants.

Verse 25 seems straightforward enough until we consider what is being implied. First, the
mention of Solomon officiating over sacrifices 3 times per year is referring to the 3 Torah
ordained chag or pilgrimage Biblical Feasts of Matza, Shavuot and Sukkot. What makes this
troubling is that we have Solomon offering the sacrifices at the altar and that were, by Torah
Law, tasks only for the priests to perform. This is just one of many indulgences that Solomon
took upon himself and it was seriously wrong and sinful and shows Solomon’s rapid descent
into self-importance and a sense that he was authorized to manipulate or change God’s Laws
at his whim.

To end the chapter we get a most interesting few words about Solomon building a fleet of
ships. This took place on the finger of the Red Sea called the Gulf of Aqaba. The building of
ships and their home port was near the city of Eilat. Ancient Eilat is on the eastern side of the
Gulf of Aqaba in what is modern day Jordan. Modern Eilat on the western side of the Gulf, but
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it too is a port city. As Israel was not a nation of seafarers, Solomon was able to get Hiram to
send some experienced sailors and ship builders to supervise and teach. This fleet sailed the
Red Sea, stopping at Arabian and African ports of call, and probably ventured as far as the
Indian Ocean.

The mention of Ofir as a place where gold was obtained in substantial quantities has always
intrigued Bible scholars and there is no agreement as to its location. However, any idea that it
was in the Mediterranean as is often surmised is illogical and unrealistic and certainly
Solomon’s fleet didn’t sail down the eastern coast of Africa, around the Horn of Africa, down
and around South Africa, back up Africa’s west coast and then enter the Mediterranean
through the Straits of Gibraltar.


Let’s move on to chapter 10.


READ 1
ST
KINGS CHAPTER 10 all


This chapter begins with the story of the famous Queen of Sheba and is put here to show that
God fulfilled His promise to Solomon to gift him with great wisdom and unprecedented wealth.

We won’t get much farther today than the 1
st
verse or so because there’s more here than
meets the eye. First let’s talk about who the Queen of Sheba might have been. It is nearly
certain that due to a copyist error the spelling of Sheva ought to have been with a seen ‘? and
not a sheen ? ‘. That is should give the first letter of her name the sound of an “s” instead of
an “sh”. Thus she was the Queen of Saba, not the Queen of Sheba.

The City of Saba was the capital of the ancient Arabian culture of the Sabeans. They were
traders in gold, incense and precious stones. These descendants of Ishmael were located
along the Arabian coast of the Red Sea and were known to traditionally have Queens instead
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of Kings. They were Moon God worshippers and as one might well expect there is a close tie
between Islam and the Sabeans. In fact, the account of the Queen of the Sabeans (the Queen
of Saba) and her visit with Solomon is told in the Muslim Koran in Sura 27.

Our English translations hide a really interesting word play in the 1
st
verse. Where the English
says that the Queen of Sheba heard what was being said about Shlomo because of the name
of Yehoveh, the Hebrew says this:

The Queen of Sheva shema what was being shama of Shlomo because of the shem of
Yehoveh. Not only do we have a memorable litany of the Hebrew letter sheen (sh) but also a
word play on the Hebrew word shema. What is being said is the Queen of Sheba
shema (heard and acted) on the shama (the report or description) about Solomon because of
the shem (the reputation, the characteristics) of his god Yehoveh. And the idea is that
Yehoveh was getting credit, as Solomon’s god, for all the amazing wealth and wisdom of
Solomon and his nation of Israel.

We are also told that she came to test him with hard questions. In Hebrew she came to nacah
Shlomo with chedoth. Nacah (nasah) means to test or to prove; chedoth means riddles. So
quite literally the Queen of Sheba came all the way to meet Solomon and test to see if his
wisdom was as stupefying as she had heard, by giving him riddles to solve.

That’s all for this week.


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