Divine Discipline on
We have an illustration in
this chapter of the way government expands. There are many ways in which we can
have government expansion but the underlying principles are the same. As we go
through 1 & 2 Kings we will see this illustrated again and again and again.
As we have seen in 1 Kings 1-11 we have the end of the
We see the same thing in
chapter fourteen and fifteen which tells the story of two Abijahs.
The first Abijah is the son of Jeroboam 1st
who is the king in the northern kingdom and the second is going to be brought
in in chapter fifteen, and he is called Abijam here but in other passages Abijah,
and he is the son of Rehoboam. As we look at this passage and as we go forward
in 1 Kings we are going to see a lot of interesting things. All of the history
of
In chapter fourteen we see
this working itself out in the life of Jeroboam. As we look at the passage
there are three things we ought to think about in terms of analysing these events.
The first is that the framework for understanding the prophets—in the Jewish
canon, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings were considered the former prophets—is
that the role of the prophet is that he is the one challenging the nation on
the basis of its obedience or disobedience to the Mosaic Law. He is the one who
brings a message from God in terms of the promise of blessing if they obey and
cursing or discipline of they disobey. So the framework for understanding all
of this has to come out of our understanding of the Mosaic Law/Covenant, and
foundational to this is the Ten Commandments given in Exodus 20.
The second thing that is
important for understanding any kind of history, especially when we are dealing
with social and political history, is the divine institutions. As soon as we make
the statement, going back to Genesis 1:26, 27, it immediately puts us in counter
point with much of the thinking in the culture today, because in our culture we
live in a world where people don’t think that man should rule and subdue. Ruling
and subduing always should be done responsibly and when man is ruling over the planet
he should use the resources responsibly. But there is a different framework from
the Christian viewpoint of the environment and the pagan view of the
environment. The first three divine institutions really focus on individual
responsibility and outworking within the marriage and the family, and the marriage
and the family both are viewed as being integral to fulfilling God’s original purpose
to rule the planet and to represent God over his creation. Then the last two
divine institutions, human government and nations, have to do with institutions
that are established by God in order to restrain the evil that is in man’s
heart. Genesis chapter six—“the thoughts of man’s heart were evil continually.”
And so because that unrestrained evil that dominated the antediluvian culture
God is going to change the terms of the contract again in the Noahic covenant—Genesis chapter nine—and establish
government. Then after the
So part of the role of government
in nations is to restrain the evil and another part is to promote the first
three divine institutions which are designed to promote man’s productivity, and
when we think through the divine institutions and apply that framework to the events
in Israel’s history we see that they fall apart on the fundamentals.
Third, we use the framework
of the ten stress busters. Any good story turns on conflict and the hero (always
God) resolves the conflict. In other words, the conflict is the problem. So we
determine the conflict in the story and the problem is always going to be
resolved God’s way through the use of one of the ten problem-solving devices or
it is going to be handled through arrogance.
The first twenty verses of
this chapter describe the end of Jeroboam’s reign. The first three verses begin
with identifying the immediate problem that Jeroboam faces. There is a broader spiritual
problem which as to do with the success of his dynasty and rule over the
northern kingdom of
1 Kings 14:4, 5 “Jeroboam’s
wife did so, and arose and went to
Verses
6-14 is the main body of this section.
It is obvious that the focus here is on what happens in the conversation
between Ahijah and Jeroboam’s wife. As she comes in
to meet with him the Lord communicates to Ahijah and
identifies her. 1 Kings 14:6 NASB “When Ahijah heard the sound of her feet coming in the doorway,
he said, ‘Come in, wife of Jeroboam, why do you pretend to be another woman? For I am sent to you {with} a harsh {message.}’” Then in
verse 7 he gives her the message that she is supposed to take back to Jeroboam
from the Lord. Notice he says: “Thus says the LORD God of
The key
issue in this whole analysis of Ahijah’s boils down
to Jeroboam’s idolatry. The
judgment is said to be idolatry. Verse 7 is the reminder that God is the one
who raised up Jeroboam. God is the one (v. 8) who tore
the kingdom away from Solomon and gave it to Jeroboam. God is the one who
promised that if Jeroboam was obedient then God is the one who would exalt him.
Remember Psalm 127:1 NASB “Unless the LORD builds the house, They labor in vain who build it…” We
always have to relax and let Him be the one to be in control. The challenge is,
v. 9: “you also have done more evil than all who were before you, and have gone
and made for yourself other gods and molten images to provoke Me to anger, and
have cast Me behind your back—” Notice how evil is defined here. We think of
evil too often as some sort of political position or in certain kinds of
criminality or sexual perversion, but the Bible defines
evil at its starting point which is the rejection of God. We can go back and
read the first two commandments and the Ten Commandments focus on that
foundation: “that you will have no other gods before me and you won’t make any
idols and worship them.” Because once that is gone, everything else that is
built upon that collapses. Once a culture loses that eternal, infinite,
absolute reference point then everything becomes relative. Jeroboam has
violated all of that.
1 Kings 14:10 NASB
“therefore behold, I am bringing calamity on the house of Jeroboam, and will
cut off from Jeroboam every male person, both bond and free in Israel, and I
will make a clean sweep of the house of Jeroboam, as one sweeps away dung until
it is all gone. [11] Anyone belonging to Jeroboam who dies in the city the dogs
will eat. And he who dies in the field the birds of the heavens will eat; for
the LORD has spoken {it.}” It is not just that they are going to die, it is going to be a horrible death and a death that
shows that they are not valued or respected at all. So He announces judgment on
the house of Jeroboam because that was what Jeroboam was really concerned with—his
dynasty.
The God answers the
specific question: 1 Kings 14:12 NASB “Now you,
arise, go to your house. When your feet enter the city the child will die.” What
a judgment! But it is very interesting what God said in the next verse. [13]
“All Israel shall mourn for him and bury him, for he alone of Jeroboam’s
{family} will come to the grave, because in him something good was found toward
the LORD God of Israel in the house of Jeroboam.” He is the only one who will
be buried respectfully. The reason this child is going to die is because all
potential heirs had to die because Jeroboam’s line is ending under divine
discipline. But there is something about this one son, that something good was
seen in him. It is believed that of all of his house
this child was probably the only one positive. Another reason that this child
is going to die is because if he had lived his impact spiritually on the nation
would have been positive and God was judging the nation so He was not going to
allow that to happen. We don’t think like that. We wonder why God doesn’t raise
up a good leader to challenge the direction of the country. It is because God
doesn’t want that direction challenged because we are already under judgment as
a culture, so God is not going to raise up that kind
of leader or allow that kind of person to come on the scene. 1 Kings 14:14 NASB
“Moreover, the LORD will raise up for Himself a king over Israel who will
cut off the house of Jeroboam this day and from now on.” Eventually because of the sin of Jeroboam God
will eventually judge the northern kingdom, take them out of the land and
scatter them beyond the
The conclusion of Jeroboam’s
life: 1 Kings
Secondly, as the anointed
leader over God’s people he leads them in rebellion against God. If we go back
to Exodus 20 which begins with the Ten commandments, the preamble to the Mosaic
Law: v. 1 NASB “Then God spoke all these words, saying, [2] ‘I am
the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house
of slavery.” That is how He identifies Himself. What happens with Jeroboam is
that he is going to establish his alternate religion and makes two golden
calves. And what did he says about them? 1 Kings
So when we evaluate this
in terms of the divine institutions he failed spiritually in his own walk with
the Lord, he failed as a spiritual leader, and as a political leader who is to
uphold the law. It is the Law that ruled
Then we look at the other
aspect in terms of the arrogance skills. They begin with self-absorption: we
are focused on me. It is narcism, it is I’m going to do what I want to do to fulfil
my power lust, my approbation lust, etc. It is self-absorption which leads into
self-indulgence, and then self-indulgence leads to self-justification which
leads to self-deception and then self-deification. It happens on the individual
scale all the time. This is what happens with most unbelievers and many
believers, especially in a narcissist culture.