Immediately
after all of this, God appears to Solomon personally (so add Solomon to the
people who’ve seen God in person in spite of claims elsewhere in the Bible that
nobody ever has) to tell him how pleased he is that Solomon built him a temple.
Of course, the encounter is laden with the usual stuff about how as long as
Solomon keeps worshiping Yahweh and no other gods, then Israel will prosper and
Solomon’s line will rule forever. But if he ever starts worshipping other gods,
then God will fuck him up something fierce along with Israel.
It bears
repeating: God appeared to Solomon in person and told him that bad shit would
happen to him and to Israel if he ever starts chasing after other gods. Got it?
Because…
Later in
life, that’s exactly what Solomon does. Because of his foreign wives, of
course.
Before
the Bible gets to that, it spends some time raving about how incredibly wise
and rich and famous Solomon was, and how every king in all the world sought him
out for his wisdom and sent him lavish gifts. But by the time we get to the
last years of his life we find Solomon with 700 wives and 300 concubines, many
of whom are from people that Israelites are forbidden to marry. And of course,
Solomon starts serving the various gods of his various wives, and having
temples built for them.
So just
to summarize. The Bible claims that Solomon was the wisest man who ever lived
in all of history (which is questionable to begin with just on the basis of
having a thousand wives and concubines). Further, that he was given this wisdom
for the express purpose of governing Israel properly. It further claims that
God visited Solomon and personally warned
him not to muck around with foreign gods or it would result in the destruction
of his kingdom. So, in theory, Solomon has actual evidence of his god’s
existence, explicit instructions from that god about an action that will
destroy Israel, and the explicit mental faculties to avoid taking that action.
But he does it anyway. That’s not even remotely credible.
Unless…
All the
supernatural aspects here are bullshit, Solomon actually had no reason to
believe Yahweh is any more or less real than Ashtoreth, Milcom, Chemosh, or
Molech (the gods he’s accused of building temples to), and all of it was just
added to the story after the fact to explain why the nation fell apart (for
purely human political reasons that the Bible describes in detail and then
attributes to God anyway) in a way that let the writers reinforce a religious
dogma.
But
anyway, back to the Bible story. God has an interesting way of enforcing his
dictates.
“1 Kings 11:9 And Yahweh was angry with Solomon, because his heart
had turned away from Yahweh, the god of Israel, who had appeared to him twice 10 and had commanded him concerning
this thing, that he should not go after other gods. But he did not keep what
Yahweh commanded. 11 Therefore
Yahweh said to Solomon, ‘Since you have not kept my covenant and my statutes
that I have commanded you, I will surely tear the kingdom from you and give it
to your servant. 12 Yet for the sake
of David your father I will not do it in your days, but I will tear it out of
the hand of your son. 13 However, I
will not tear away all the kingdom, but I will give one tribe to your son, for
the sake of David my servant and for the sake of Jerusalem that I have
chosen.’”
There he
goes again, punishing the son because he’s pissed at the dad. Yay, justice!
Although
to be fair, the son who loses the kingdom is kind of a dick.
The
Bible goes on for awhile about the politics of who plots to break up the
kingdom and why (which are all initiated by human beings, though sometimes
human beings claiming to speak on behalf of God). Interestingly, among these
descriptions is not one instance of Solomon attempting to make up to Yahweh
and/or get rid of the temples to other gods. Almost as if God’s warning never
actually took place, or at least wasn’t regarded seriously. And after a reign
of forty years, Solomon eventually dies and leaves the kingdom to his son
Rehoboam.
Early in
Rehoboam’s reign, some of the elders of Israel (led by a guy named Jeroboam,
who’s been hiding out in Egypt ever since a priest named Ahijah had promised
him that God would give him most of the tribes of Israel to rule after
Solomon’s death) come to complain that Solomon had been too harsh and demanding
a ruler, and to ask that Rehoboam take a lighter hand. Rehoboam responded that
since he was a bigger man than his father (and depending on how well you trust
the internet when it comes to Biblical euphemisms, may have been making a joke
about penis sizes when he said it), he would be even more harsh than Solomon
had been. And…
“1 Kings 12:15 So the king did not listen to the people, for it was
a turn of affairs brought about by Yahweh that he might fulfill his word, which
Yahweh spoke by Ahijah the Shilonite to Jeroboam the son of Nebat.”
Once
again implying that God controls people’s actions when he feels like it.
So all
the tribes of Israel except Benjamin and Judah rebel against Rehoboam and make
Jeroboam their king. Rehoboam wants to make a fight of it (supposedly gathering
an army of 180,000 men), but God (speaking through a “man of god” named
Shemaiah) forbids the people from fighting and they go home instead.
Ironically
Jeroboam, whom God supposedly picked to rule Israel to make up for Solomon’s
respect to foreign gods, also can’t seem to follow God’s rules or refrain from
putting up idols. Yahweh, it appears, is pretty shite when it comes to picking
kings who’ll do his bidding.
Anyhow,
I think we’ll call this a stopping point for now. It’s going to take some
thought to cull the worthwhile stories from the mind-numbing political
meanderings of the next portion of First Kings. So until then, everybody be
well!
This is great. It's like a "Heretics Notes" version of the bible.
ReplyDeleteGlad you're enjoying it!
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