Title: ISRAELS MONARCHY:
1ISRAELS MONARCHY
- I and II Samuel, I and II Kings
2Lead-in from Judges
-
- In those days there was no king in Israel.
Every man did what was right in his own eyes.
3Main Story Line, pt. I
- Through Samuel, God allows Gods spirit to rest
upon human kings. Under the kings, Israel
becomes a united national entity and a player in
the Ancient Near Eastern political landscape
culminating in the building of the Temple in
Jerusalem. But
4Main Story Line, pt. II
- the human kings prove as well to be Israels
downfall. By getting overly cozy with the other
nations (and their gods), and through their own
sad greed, Israels monarchs allow Israel to
become divided, then overcome by enemies, leading
to the Babylonian captivity.
5Themes
- Israel becomes more like other nations settled,
powerful, led by skilled politicians, trading
with other nations, etc. - On the other hand, Israel becomes more like other
nations having human kings, entering into
alliances with idol-worshippers, etc.
6Main Characters
- Samuel, the kingmaker the last judge who anoints
the first kings. - Saul, Israels first king and a tragically-flawed
man.
7(Main characters, continued)
- David, a local boy made good. A savvy
politician, he becomes king after God and Samuel
both reject Saul. - Solomon, who built the Temple, and whose
disregard for Israels God set the stage for the
kingdoms split.
8(Main characters, continued)
- Rehoboam, Solomons son who ascended the throne
after Solomon died and couldnt get the support
of the northern territories. - Jeroboam, under whose leadership the northern
territories seceded and declared their
independence.
9(Main characters, continued)
- The Deuteronomistic Historian, who during the
Babylonian captivity brought together many
stories and traditions into the single history we
read here.
10SAMUEL, the last judge
- Hannah prays for a son in the sanctuary at
Shiloh. The priest Eli believes her to be drunk.
(Deuteronomist criticizing the priesthood.) - Samuels miraculous birth, early signs of being a
prophet. (1 Sam 1-3) - In conflict with Philistines, Samuel proves
himself to be a judge.
11SAMUEL, the last judge
- Samuel, the last judge, got old, and the people
did not want his sons to take over. The nation
lobbied for a radical departure from the
covenantal structure "Appoint a king to rule us,
like the other nations" (I Sam 85). -
12SAUL, the first king of Israel
- Samuel is deeply shaken by the peoples request
for a king. Rejection of God? - After warning the people that a king will impose
heavy burdens (Deuteronomist editorializing?)
Samuel anoints Saul as king.
13SAUL, the first king of Israel
- Anointing There is some evidence that priests
and prophets were anointed, but the ceremony was
especially used to designate kings. - Anointed one mashiach in Hebrew, rendered
messiah in English and christos in Greek.
Christ moshiach/messiah anointed king.
14Saul Cycle
- Anointed king by Samuel and presented to Israel
(I Sam. 9, 10) - Wins victory against Ammonites and is acclaimed
king by Israel (11) - Disobeyed Samuel by offering an unlawful
sacrifice (13) and is rejected as king by Samuel
(15) - Tried to kill David (19) eventually his life is
spared by David (23-26). - Died in battle with the Philistines on Mount
Gilboa (31)
15Saul Cycle Source Critical Issues
- Three accounts of the anointing of Saul
- 1) While looking for his fathers donkeys one
day, Saul finds a seer in Ramah (later revealed
to be Samuel) who anoints him. (1 Sam 91-1016)
16Saul Cycle, Source-Critical Issues
- 2) The people appeal to Samuel directly for for a
centralized monarchy. By drawing lots, Samuel
narrows the choice of king down to Saul -- who is
found hiding in the luggage and subsequently
anointed. (1 Samuel 1017-24 and 121-5)
17Saul Cycle, Source-Critical Issues
- 3) Saul is anointed king by Samuel as a result
of his military victory against the Ammonites and
Jabesh-Gilead. (1 Samuel 111-11 and 1115)
18Saul Cycle source-critical hypothesis
- The donkey story and the military victory story
are pro-monarchic traditions that predate the
exile. The account from 1017-24 and 121-5, on
the other hand, comes from the so-called
republican source, a later source that was
critical of the monarchy.
19DAVID
- David found by Samuel in an unlikely place --
Bethlehem. - Also unlikely David is the youngest son of
Jesse. (Theme of youngest son receiving the
promise.) - House of David - Samuel promises that Israels
eternal kingship will come from Davids lineage.
20DAVID
- David is anointed, and immediately the spirit of
God rests upon him as it did upon Saul. - David returns to the southern territory of Judah,
his home tribe. - David unifies the tribal territories into one
kingdom. Shows extraordinary political savvy
doesnt alienate Sauls followers in the north,
and moves his capital to Jebus/Jerusalem in the
north, and calls it the city of David.
21DAVID
- Eternal promise given to Davids descendents
Your house and your kingdom will be established
firmly forever before me. Your throne will be
established forever. (716) - But all is not well with David signaled by the
David and Bathsheba episode. - Court history of David - infighting among his
sons.
22SOLOMON
- II Samuel ends with David offering a sacrifice to
end a plague. The place where he offers the
sacrifice becomes the site of the temple. - I Kings Solomon proves his fitness for kingship
through being wise. - Builds temple.
- Divides territory up into twelve districts that
dont match tribal boundaries.
23The Kingdom Splits
- To fund the building of the temple and get the
supplies, Solomon gave some of the northern
territory away to other nations and entered into
foreign alliances through marriage. - His son Rehoboam cant unite the kingdom in the
face of resentment from the north. Northern
secession led by Jeroboam. - Northern kingdom becomes Israel (ten tribes)
Southern Kingdom becomes Judah (tribe of Judah).
Levites have no territory.
24Northern Kingdom Falls
- Israels kingship line corrupt stage for
Elijahs prophetic activity. - Israel falls first to the Assyrians.
- Of the twelve tribes, only Judah remains.
- Deuteronomist records Judahs history after the
fall of the northern kingdom Josiahs reforms
to eliminate worship centers other than
Jerusalem focus on the book of the Torah
(Deuteronomy).
25Southern Kingdom Falls
- Josiah killed in battle at Megiddo
(Armageddon) - Southern kingdom falls into hands of Assyrians,
and then in short order the Babylonians conquer
the Assyrians. - Babylonian captivity
26Deuteronomistic Historian
- Deep ambivalence about kingship tragedy that
kings were even needed. - Hope in the promise of Davidic line Through the
house of David that Israel will be restored. - Reserves special condemnation for northern
kingdom. - Writing from Babylonian captivity.
- Chooses to incorporate both pro-monarchic and
anti-monarchic material.