Monday, August 27, 2018

Route 66:18 The Wild, Wild East

Well, it's back to the home stretch of the journey through Old Testament History. After this journey, I will be visiting the homes of some of that history's most famous men: the prophets! But first, we backtrack to the days of Solomon, the richest, wisest and, unfortunately most decadent of the kings of Judah.

As we saw, he went from a young lover, to a wise leader, to a disillusioned old man. With every year of his long reign he sought to compromise his beliefs to maintain his political power. When he wanted to build a relationship with a tribe or nation, he would marry a beautiful woman close to its leadership. And then, he would take "concubines" to run his expanded household.

After years of high taxes to the people of the land, the power shifted to his only mentioned son and successor, Rehoboam. Members of Solomon's cabinet counseled the young king to ease up on the royal tyranny, but he instead chose to listen to his spoiled friends. Things got worse for the people in and around Jerusalem, and millions "voted" with their feet in a civil war that split the people for the rest of their history as free nations.

The northern kingdom of Israel went from bad to worse, while the southern kingdom of Judah (with Benjamin and Levites joining them), went from good to bad, with two or three revivals as prophets proclaimed coming doom. The end almost came for them all under the Assyrians until the good king of the south prayed and submitted himself to God. Only Jerusalem and some suburbs stood when the Assyrians were wiped out by angels from heaven!

With a new lease on life, Judah continued for about two hundred years, one in four of those years under the reign of the next king, the evil Manasseh. But then, we learn something new! The old king came to his senses by a miracle of God's grace. He couldn't undo his evil, but his grandson oversaw one last revival before the end came when Judah's last king rebelled against Babylon. Just as the prophets had said, judgment fell against both the kingdom and the temple.

The Chronicler ends his tale with a preview of the return from Babylonian captivity. It was time to rebuild under the watchful eye of a series Gentile Kings.

No comments: