Chapter 12:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2 Samuel 2 Kings
1 Kings 12
Complete Concise
The glory of the kingdom of Israel was in its height and
perfection in Solomon; it was long in coming to it, but it soon declined, and
began to sink and wither in the very next reign, as we find in this chapter,
where we have the kingdom divided, and thereby weakened and made little in
comparison with what it had been. Here is, I. Rehoboam's accession to the
throne and Jeroboam's return out of Egypt (v. 1, 2). II. The people's
petition to Rehoboam for the redress of grievances, and the rough answer he
gave, by the advice of his young counsellors, to that petition (v. 3-15). III.
The revolt of the ten tribes thereupon, and their setting up Jeroboam (v. 16-20).
IV. Rehoboam's attempt to reduce them and the prohibition God gave to that
attempt (v. 21-24). V. Jeroboam's establishment of his government upon
idolatry (v. 25-33). Thus did Judah become weak, being deserted by their
brethren, and Israel, by deserting the house of the Lord.
Verses 1-15
Solomon had 1000 wives and concubines, yet we read but of one
son he had to bear up his name, and he a fool. It is said (Hos. 4:10),
They
shall commit whoredom, and shall not increase. Sin is a bad way of building
up a family. Rehoboam was the son of the wisest of men, yet did not inherit his
father's wisdom, and then it stood him in little stead to inherit his father's
throne. Neither wisdom nor grace runs in the blood. Solomon came to the crown
very young, yet he was then a wise man. Rehoboam came to the crown at forty
years old, when men will be wise if ever they will, yet he was then foolish.
Wisdom does not go by age, nor is it the multitude of years nor the advantage of
education that reaches it. Solomon's court was a mart of wisdom and the
rendezvous of learned men, and Rehoboam was the darling of the court; and yet
all was not sufficient to make him a wise man.
The race is not to the swift,
nor the battle to the strong. No dispute is made of Rehoboam's succession;
upon the death of his father, he was immediately proclaimed. But,
I. The people desired a treaty with him at Shechem, and he
condescended to meet them there. 1. Their pretence was to make him king, but the
design was to unmake him. They would give him a public inauguration in another
place than the city of David, that he might not seem to be king of Judah only.
They had ten parts in him, and would have him among themselves for once, that
they might recognize his title. 2. The place was ominous: at
Shechem,
where Abimelech set up himself (Jdg. 9); yet it had been famous for the
convention of the states there, Jos. 24:1. Rehoboam, we may suppose, knew of the
threatening, that the kingdom should be rent from him, and hoped by going to
Shechem, and treating there with the ten tribes, to prevent it: yet it proved
the most impolitic thing he could do, and hastened the rupture.
II. The representatives of the tribes addressed him, praying to
be eased of the taxes they were burdened with. The meeting being appointed, they
sent for Jeroboam out of Egypt to come and be their speaker. This they needed
not to have done: he knew what God had designed him for, and would have come
though he had not been sent for, for now was his time to expect the possession
of the promised crown. In their address, 1. They complain of the last reign:
Thy
father made our yoke grievous, v. 4. They complain not of his father's
idolatry and revolt from God; that which was the greatest grievance of all was
none to them, so careless and indifferent were they in the matters of religion,
as if God or Moloch were all one, so they might but live at ease and pay no
taxes. Yet the complaint was groundless and unjust. Never did people live more
at ease than they did, nor in great plenty. Did they pay taxes? It was to
advance the strength and magnificence of their kingdom. If Solomon's buildings
cost them money, they cost them no blood, as war would do. Were many servile
hands employed about them? They were not the hands of the Israelites. Were the
taxes a burden? How could that be, when Solomon imported bullion in such plenty
that silver was, in a manner, as common as the stones? So that they did but
render to Solomon the things that were Solomon's. Nay, suppose there was some
hardship put upon them, were they not told before that this would be the manner
of the king and yet they would have one? The best government cannot secure
itself from reproach and censure, no, not Solomon's. Factious spirits will
never want something to complain of. I know nothing in Solomon's
administration that could make the people's yoke grievous, unless perhaps the
women whom in his latter days he doted on were connived at in oppressing them.
2. They demand relief from him, and on this condition will continue in their
allegiance to the house of David. They asked not to be wholly free from paying
taxes, but to have the burden made lighter; this was all their care, to save
their money, whether their religion was supported and the government protected
or no. All seek their own.
III. Rehoboam consulted with those about him concerning the
answer he should give to this address. It was prudent to take advice, especially
having so weak a head of his own; yet, upon this occasion, it was impolitic to
take time himself to consider, for thereby he gave time to the disaffected
people to ripen things for a revolt, and his deliberating in so plain a case
would be improved as an indication of the little concern he had for the people's
ease. They saw what they must expect, and prepared accordingly. Now, 1. The
grave experienced men of his council advised him by all means to give the
petitioners a kind answer, to give them good words, to promise them fair, and
this day, this critical day, to serve them, that is, to tell them that he was
their servant, and that he would redress all their grievances and make it his
business to please them and make them easy. "Deny thyself (say they) so far
as to do this for this once, and they will be
thy servants for ever. When
the present heat is allayed with a soft answer, and the assembly dismissed,
their cooler thoughts will reconcile and fix them to Solomon's family still."
Note, The way to rule is to serve, to do good, and stoop to do it, to become all
things to all men and so win their hearts. Those who are in power really sit
highest, and easiest, and safest, when they take this method. 2. The young men
of his council were hot and haughty, and they advised him to return a severe and
threatening answer to the people's demands. It was an instance of Rehoboam's
weakness, (1.) That he did not prefer aged counsellors, but had a better opinion
of the young men that had grown up with him and with whom he was familiar, v. 8.
Days should speak. It was a folly for him to think that, because they had been
his agreeable companions in the sports and pleasures of his youth, they were
therefore fit to have the management of the affairs of his kingdom. Great wits
have not always the most wisdom; nor are those to be relied on as our best
friends that know how to make us merry, for that will not make us happy. It is
of great consequence to young people, that are setting out in the world, whom
they associate with, accommodate themselves to, and depend upon for advice. If
they reckon those that feed their pride, gratify their vanity, and further them
in their pleasures, their best friends, they are already marked for ruin. (2.)
That he did not prefer moderate counsels, but was pleased with those that put
him upon harsh and rigorous methods, and advised him to double the taxes,
whether there was occasion for so doing or no, and to tell them in plain terms
that he would do so, v. 10, 11. These young counsellors thought the old men
expressed themselves but dully, v. 7. They affect to be witty in their advice,
and value themselves on that. The old men did not undertake to put words into
Rehoboam's mouth, only counselled him to speak good words; but the young men
will furnish him with very quaint and pretty phrases, with pointed and pert
similitudes:
My little finger shall be thicker than my father's loins,
etc. That is not always the best sense that is best worded.
IV. He answered the people according to the counsel of the young
men, v. 14, 15. He affected to be haughty and imperious, and fancied he could
carry all before him with a high hand, and therefore would rather run the risk
of losing them than deny himself so far as to give them good words. Note, Many
ruin themselves by consulting their humour more than their interest. See,
1. How Rehoboam was infatuated in his counsels. He could not
have acted more foolishly and impoliticly. (1.) He owned their reflections upon
his father's government to be true:
My father made your yoke heavy; and
therein he was unjust to his father's memory, which he might easily have
vindicated from the imputation. (2.) He fancied himself better able to manage
them, and impose upon them, than his father was, not considering that he was
vastly inferior to him in capacity. Could he think to support the blemishes of
his father's reign who could never pretend to come near the glories of it?
(3.) He threatened not only to squeeze them by taxes, but to chastise them by
cruel laws and severe executions of them, which should be not as whips only, but
as scorpions, whips with rowels in them, that will fetch blood at every lash. In
short, he would use them as brute beasts, load them and beat them at his
pleasure: not caring whether they loved him or no, he would make them fear him.
(4.) He gave this provocation to a people that by long ease and prosperity were
made wealthy, and strong, and proud, and would not be trampled upon (as a poor
cowed dispirited people may), to a people that were now disposed to revolt, and
had one ready to head them. Never, surely, was man so blinded by pride and
affectation of arbitrary power, than which nothing is more fatal.
2. How God's counsels were hereby fulfilled. It was
from
the Lord, v. 15. He left Rehoboam to his own folly, and
hid from his eyes
the
things which belonged to his peace, that the kingdom might be rent
from him. Note, God serves his own wise and righteous purposes by the
imprudences and iniquities of men, and snares sinners in the work of their own
hands. Those that lose the kingdom of heaven throw it away, as Rehoboam did his,
by their own wilfulness and folly.
Verses 16-24
We have here the rending of the kingdom of the ten tribes from
the house of David, to effect which,
I. The people were hold and resolute in their revolt. They
highly resented the provocation that Rehoboam had given them, were incensed at
his menaces, concluded that that government would in the progress of it be
intolerably grievous which in the beginning of it was so very haughty, and
therefore immediately came to this resolve, one and all:
What portion have we
in David? v. 16. They speak here very unbecomingly of David, that great
benefactor of their nation, calling him
the son of Jesse, no greater a
man than his neighbours. How soon are good men, and their good services to the
public, forgotten! The rashness of their resolution was also much to be blamed.
In time, and with prudent management, they might have settled the original
contract with Rehoboam to mutual satisfaction. Had they enquired who gave
Rehoboam this advice, and taken a course to remove those evil counsellors from
about him, the rupture might have been prevented: otherwise their jealousy for
their liberty and property well became that free people.
Israel is not a
servant, is not a homeborn slave; why should he be spoiled? Jer. 2:14. They
are willing to be ruled, but not to be ridden. Protection draws allegiance, but
destruction cannot. No marvel that
Israel falls away from the house of David
(v. 19) if the house of David fall away from the great ends of their
advancement, which was to be
ministers of God to them for good. But thus
to rebel against the seed of David, whom God had advanced to the kingdom
(entailing it on his seed), and to set up another king in opposition to that
family, was a great sin; see 2 Chr. 13:5-8. To this God refers, Hos. 8:4.
They
have set up kings, but not by me. And it is here mentioned to the praise of
the tribe of Judah that they
followed the house of David (v. 17, 20),
and, for aught that appears, they found Rehoboam better than his word, nor did
he rule with the rigour which at first he threatened.
II. Rehoboam was imprudent in the further management of this
affair, and more and more infatuated. Having foolishly thrown himself into a
quick-sand, he sunk the further in with plunging to get out. 1. He was very
unadvised in sending Adoram, who was
over the tribute, to treat with
them, v. 18. The tribute was the thing, and, for the sake of that, Adoram was
the person, they most complained of. The very sight of him, whose name was
odious among them, exasperated them, and made them outrageous. He was one to
whom they could not so much as give a patient hearing, but
stoned him to
death in a popular tumult. Rehoboam was now as unhappy in the choice of his
ambassador as before of his counsellors. 2. Some think he was also unadvised in
quitting his ground, and making so much haste to Jerusalem, for thereby he
deserted his friends and gave advantage to his enemies, who had gone to their
tents indeed (v. 16) in disgust, but did not offer to make Jeroboam king till
Rehoboam had gone, v. 20. See how soon this foolish prince went from one extreme
to the other. He hectored and talked big when he thought all was his own, but
sneaked and looked very mean when he saw himself in danger. It is common for
those that are most haughty in their prosperity to be most abject in adversity.
III. God forbade his attempt to recover by the sword what he had
lost. What was done was of God, who would not suffer that it should be undone
again (as it would be if Rehoboam got the better and reduced the ten tribes),
nor that more should be done to the prejudice of the house of David, as would be
if Jeroboam got the better and conquered the two tribes. The thing must rest as
it is, and therefore God forbids the battle. 1. It was brave in Rehoboam to
design the reducing of the revolters by force. His courage came to him when he
had come to Jerusalem, v. 21. There he thought himself among his firm friends,
who generously adhered to him and appeared for him. Judah and Benjamin (who
feared the Lord and the king, and meddled not with those that were given to
change) presently raised an army of 180,000 men, for the recovery of their king's
right to the ten tribes, and were resolved to stand by him (as we say) with
their lives and fortunes, having either not such cause, or rather not such a
disposition, to complain, as the rest had. 2. It as more brave in Rehoboam to
desist when God, by a prophet, ordered him to lay down his arms. He would not
lose a kingdom tamely, for then he would have been unworthy the title of a
prince; and yet he would not contend for it in opposition to God, for then he
would have been unworthy the title of an Israelite. To proceed in this war would
be not only to
fight against their brethren (v. 24), whom they ought to
love, but to fight against their God, to whom they ought to submit:
This
thing is from me. These two considerations should reconcile us to our losses
and troubles, that God is the author of them and our brethren are the
instruments of them; let us not therefore meditate revenge. Rehoboam and his
people
hearkened to the word of the Lord, disbanded the army, and
acquiesced. Though, in human probability, they had a fair prospect of success
(for their army was numerous and resolute, Jeroboam's party weak and
unsettled), though it would turn to their reproach among their neighbours to
lose so much of their strength and never have one push for it, to make a
flourish and do nothing, yet, (1.) They regarded the command of God though sent
by a poor prophet. When we know God's mind we must submit to it, how much
soever it crosses our own mind. (2.) They consulted their own interest,
concluding that though they had all the advantages, even that of right, on their
side, yet they could not prosper if they fought in disobedience to God; and it
was better to sit still than to rise up and fall. In the next reign God allowed
them to fight, and gave them victory (2 Chr. 13), but not now.
Verses 25-33
We have here the beginning of the reign of Jeroboam. He built
Shechem first and then Penuelbeautified and fortified them, and probably had
a palace in each of them for himself (v. 25), the former in Ephraim, the latter
in Gad, on the other side Jordan. This might be proper; but he formed another
project for the establishing of his kingdom which was fatal to the interests of
religion in it.
I. That which he designed was by some effectual means to secure
those to himself who had now chosen him for their king, and to prevent their
return to the house of David, v. 26, 27. It seems, 1. He was jealous of the
people, afraid that, some time or other, they would kill him and go again to
Rehoboam. Many that have been advanced in one tumult have been hurled down in
another. Jeroboam could not put any confidence in the affections of his people,
though now they seemed extremely fond of him; for what is got by wrong and
usurpation cannot be enjoyed nor kept with any security or satisfaction. 2. He
was distrustful of the promise of God, could not take his word that, if he would
keep close to his duty,
God would build him a sure house (ch. 11:38); but
he would contrive ways and means, and sinful ones too, for his own safety. A
practical disbelief of God's all-sufficiency is at the bottom of all our
treacherous departures from him.
II. The way he took to do this was by keeping the people from
going up to Jerusalem to worship. That was the place God had chosen, to put his
name there. Solomon's temple was there, which God had, in the sight of all
Israel, and in the memory of many now living, taken solemn possession of in a
cloud of glory. At the altar there the priest of the Lord attended, there all
Israel were to keep the feasts, and thither they were to bring their sacrifices.
Now,
1. Jeroboam apprehended that, if the people continued to do
this, they would in time return to the house of David, allured by the
magnificence both of the court and of the temple. If they cleave to their old
religion, they will go back to their old king. We may suppose, if he had treated
with Rehoboam for the safe conduct of himself and his people to and from
Jerusalem at the times appointed for their solemn feasts, it would not have been
denied him; therefore he fears not their being driven back by force, but their
going back voluntarily to Rehoboam.
2. He therefore dissuaded them from going up to Jerusalem,
pretending to consult their ease:
"It is too much for you to go so
far to worship God, v. 28. It is a heavy yoke, and it is time to shake it off;
you
have gone long enough to Jerusalem" (so some read it); "the
temple, now that you are used to it, does not appear so glorious and sacred as
it did at first" (sensible glories wither by degrees in men's
estimation); "you have greed yourselves from other burdens, free yourselves
from this: why should we now be tied to one place any more than in Samuel's
time?"
3. He provided for the assistance of their devotion at home.
Upon consultation with some of his politicians, he came to this resolve, to set
up two golden calves, as tokens or signs of the divine presence, and persuade
the people that they might as well stay at home and offer sacrifice to those as
go to Jerusalem to worship before the ark: and some are so charitable as to
think they were made to represent the mercy-seat and the cherubim over the ark;
but more probably he adopted the idolatry of the Egyptians, in whose land he had
sojourned for some time and who worshipped their god Apis under the similitude
of a bull or calf. (1.) He would not be at the charge of building a golden
temple, as Solomon had done; two golden calves are the most that he can afford.
(2.) He intended, no doubt, by these to represent, or rather make present, not
any false god, as Moloch or Chemosh, but the true God only, the God of Israel,
the God that brought them up out of the land of Egypt, as he declares, v. 28. So
that it was no violation of the first commandment, but the second. And he chose
thus to engage the people's devotion because he knew there were many among
them so in love with images that for the sake of the calves they would willingly
quit God's temple, where all images were forbidden. (3.) He set up two, by
degrees to break people off from the belief of the unity of the godhead, which
would pave the way to the polytheism of the Pagans. He set up these two at Dan
and Beth-el (one the utmost border of his country northward), the other
southward, as if they were the guardians and protectors of the kingdom. Beth-el
lay close to Judah. He set up one there, to tempt those of Rehoboam's subjects
over to him who were inclined to image-worship, in lieu of those of his subjects
that would continue to go to Jerusalem. He set up the other at Dan, for the
convenience of those that lay most remote, and because Micah's images had been
set up there, and great veneration paid to them for many ages, Jdg. 18:30, 31.
Beth-el
signifies
the house of God, which gave some colour to the superstition;
but the prophet called it
Beth-aven, the house of vanity, or iniquity.
4. The people complied with him herein, and were fond enough of
the novelty: They
went to worship before the one, even unto Dan (v. 30),
to that at Dan first because it was first set up, or
even to that at Dan,
though it lay such a great way off. Those that thought it much to go to
Jerusalem, to worship God according to his institution, made no difficulty of
going twice as far, to Dan, to worship him according to their own inventions. Or
they are said to go to one of the calves at Dan because Abijah, king of Judah,
within twenty years, recovered Beth-el (2 Chr. 13:19), and it is likely removed
the golden calf, or forbade the use of it, and then they had only that at Dan to
go to.
This became a sin; and a great sin it was, against the express
letter of the second commandment. God had sometimes dispensed with the law
concerning worshipping in one place, but never allowed the worship of him by
images. Hereby they justified their fathers in making the calf at Horeb, though
God had so fully shown his displeasure against them for it and threatened to
visit for it in the day of visitation (Ex. 32:34), so that it was as great a
contempt of God's wrath as it was of his law; and thus they added sin to sin.
Bishop Patrick quotes a saying of the Jews, That till Jeroboam's time the
Israelites sucked but one calf, but from that time they sucked two.
5. Having set up the gods, he fitted up accommodations for them;
and wherein he varied from the divine appointment we are here told, which
intimates that in other things he imitated what was done in Judah (v. 32) as
well as he could. See how one error multiplied into many. (1.) He made a house
of high-places, or of altars, one temple at Dan, we may suppose, and another at
Beth-el (v. 31), and in each many altars, probably complaining of it as an
inconvenience that in the temple at Jerusalem there was but one. The multiplying
of altars passed with some for a piece of devotion, but God, by the prophet,
puts another construction upon it, Hos. 8:11.
Ephraim has made many altars to
sin. (2.) He made priests of the lowest of the people; and the lowest of the
people were good enough to be priests to his calves, and too good. He made
priests
from the extremest parts of the people, that is, some out of
every corner of the country, whom he ordered to reside among their neighbours,
to instruct them in his appointments and reconcile them to them. Thus were they
dispersed as the Levites, but
were not of the sons of Levi. But the
priests of the high-laces, or altars, he ordered to reside in Beth-el, as the
priests at Jerusalem (v. 32), to attend the public service. (3.) The feast of
tabernacles, which God had appointed on the fifteenth day of the seventh month,
he adjourned to the fifteenth day of the eighth month (v. 32),
the month
which he devised of his own heart, to show his power in ecclesiastical
matters, v. 33. The passover and pentecost he observed in their proper season,
or did not observe them at all, or with little solemnity in comparison with
this. (4.) He himself assuming a power to make priests, no marvel if he
undertook to do the priests' work with his own hands:
He offered upon the
altar. This is twice mentioned (v. 32, 33), as also that he burnt incense.
This was connived at in him because it was of a piece with the rest of his
irregularities; but in king Uzziah it was immediately punished with the plague
of leprosy. He did it himself, to make himself look great among the people and
to get the reputation of a devout man, also to grace the solemnity of his new
festival, with which, it is likely, at this time he joined the feast of the
dedication of his altar. And thus, [1.] Jeroboam sinned himself, yet perhaps
excused himself to the world and his own conscience with this, that he did not
do so ill as Solomon did, who worshipped other gods. [2.] He
made Israel to
sin, drew them off from the worship of God and entailed idolatry upon their
seed. And hereby they were punished for deserting the thrones
of the house of
David. The learned Mr. Whiston, in his chronology, for the adjusting of the
annals of the two kingdoms of Judah and Israel, supposes that Jeroboam changed
the calculation of the year and made it to contain but eleven months, and that
by those years the reigns of the kings of Israel are measured till Jehu's
revolution and no longer, so that during this interval eleven years of the
annals of Judah answer to twelve in those of Israel.
Chapter 12:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2 Samuel 2 Kings
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
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Nahum
Habakkuk
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Haggai
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Acts
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1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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