Day 162 — I Kings 5 – 6; II Chronicles 2 -3

The Temple was completed in about 960 B.C., about 450 years after the Israelites entered the Promised Land. II Chronicles tells us that it was built on Mount Moriah, which was the place where Abraham had intended to sacrifice Isaac. It was also the place where David built an altar and sacrificed burnt offerings and fellowship offerings in I Chronicles 21:18-22:1, to appease God when He sent a plague against Israel in punishment for David’s sin in taking a census. Recall that this was to be the place where the people would congregate three times a year for holy days as required in the Law. This made Jerusalem the city in which God would place His name, almost 500 years after first mentioning that that place would be designated by Him. In the meantime, the Tabernacle made by Moses had housed the articles of worship. This would be quite a change to the look and feel of worship. Consider all of these tidbits about the Temple; do they reveal to you anything about the worship that took place in the Temple, and thus, about your own worship?

Do you wonder, as I do, why God preserved the correspondence between Solomon and Hiram – not in one place, but two? Recall that Hiram was king of Tyre and Sidon, which would have made him the ruler of the most powerful kingdom in the known world in his day. It was powerful because it was the only source of those famous, precious cedar trees, and because they shipped goods all over the known world. Thus, Hiram was the wealthiest and most powerful ruler in the world in his day. Association with Hiram such as Solomon had, would have given Solomon and the nation of Israel prestige. The correspondence would have told the original readers of these books that Solomon was impressive and important. Again, isn’t it interesting that Hiram is such an unknown today that I feel the need to explain who he is and why his letter to Solomon was important, while Solomon needs no introduction today? The people of that day would not have believed it. Consider that, and marvel at God’s amazing works.

Day 149 — I Kings 3 – 4; II Chronicles 1; Psalm 72

Solomon didn’t waste any time in getting into sin as king. Recall the brief passage in Deuteronomy 17:14-20 in which God gave His instructions for the future king. The consequences of Solomon’s actions led to another consequence, and then another, and ultimately had a big impact on the nation. Why wouldn’t God have reminded Solomon? It’s possible that He did, as He confronted David with his sin, and Saul, his. What does this teach you about God and how He deals with men? How do you relate that with His dealings with you?

Solomon didn’t get it all wrong, though. Psalm 72 reveals that he understood God’s heart for the leadership of His people, and apparently intended to lead them that way. According to the descriptions of his subjects’ lives under his rule in the early years of his reign, he started out leading that way, and the people benefited. However, that changed. His life reveals the inadequacy of good intentions when one is disobedient in other matters. A divided heart is not on God’s side.

It’s interesting also that the very things used to describe Solomon’s greatness as a national leader are the very things that God had said the king must not do. Could God have given Israel victory over any enemy without the numerous horses and chariots? Could He have established Solomon as a great ruler, and Israel as a world-class nation, without the many wives, key alliances, and wealth? He had demonstrated His ability to do those very things, and yet Solomon chose to put his trust in these other security measures and allow the power to corrupt him. If the one whom God loved in such a special way, to whom He gave great wisdom and many other blessings, could fail thus, what hope do any of us have to enjoy relationship with God? None at all, which I believe is part of the point of the long history of the Old Testament, the story of the world’s long wait for the promised Messiah. There can be no doubt that we have no hope for a relationship with God apart from His intervention on our behalf.

Day 146 — I Kings 1 – 2; Psalms 37, 71 & 94

David was plagued with the promised consequences of his sin even into his old age. Let us remember that God knows how to impose painful consequences for our sin. No one was still living who would have remembered God’s pronouncement to Eli of the consequences of his sin in preferring not to offend his sons at the cost of offending God; but God remembered. Do you recall God’s telling Eli that his descendants would not be holding the office of High Priest as a result of his sin? The sad stories here remind us that we cannot presume upon God’s mercy by choosing to sin.

It’s difficult to understand why David charged Solomon with seeing justice accomplished when he failed to accomplish it himself, because justice in that day and place differed from our ideas of justice today. Don’t you wish Scripture would comment on some of these situations so we could understand them better? My only comment is that I find it interesting that the man after God’s own heart, faced with determinations of justice that were beyond his ability to decide, erred on the side of mercy. He is contrasted with God, who is perfect; but where he was imperfect, he was strong on mercy and weak on justice. Solomon was more wise and less conformed to God’s heart compared to his father, and was able to carry out justice better than David was. Again, these imperfect men point to God’s perfect balance of all character qualities.

David showed in Psalm 37 that he treasured God’s justice. Imagine if we took his advice and let go of our life’s dramas to wait on God to work them out in His time: at the very least, our relationships with God would be so much more intimate. Waiting in favor of attempting to work matters out ourselves builds trust and the hope in Him that He wants us to have. David’s life shows that God can be trusted to do as He promises, both for good and for bad. Is there anything for which you need to wait on God today?