Thursday 29 May 2014

1 Kings 22 A lucky shot

1 Kings 22

Following the defeat by Ahab of Ben Hadad there is peace between Israel and Aram for 3 years.

In the third year it appears that Judah's king Jehoshaphat, paid a visit to Ahab the king of Israel.

Ahab wants to recover the town of Ramoth Gilead from the king of Aram who has apparently held it for some years and they have not done anything to re take the town, and Ahab requested the aid of King Jehoshaphat in the attempt.

In principle Jehoshaphat agreed, but asked to enquire of God before committing, so Ahab bought in his tame prophets - about 400 of them and asked them "Should I attack Ramoth in Gilead" 
The unanimous answer was "Yes, go."
Jehoshaphat asked if there was a prophet of God there, and Ahab reluctantly admits that there is Micaiah, but he never prophesies anything nice and has rather fallen out of favour as a result.

Some of the prophets had gone to rather extreme lengths, one of them had made a pair of horns out of iron and said that Ahab would gore the enemy with them until they are destroyed.

The messenger told Micaiah that all the other prophets are prophesying good things and encouraging the kings to attack, and why can he not do the same thing?

Micaiah tells the 2 kings of Israel and Judah dressed in their royal robes to go ahead and attack.
Ahab does not believe this and orders Micaiah to tell the truth.

Micaiah saw all Israel scattered on the hills like sheep without a shepherd and let all the leaderless men go home in peace.

It seems that Ahab is a tad smug when he told Jehoshaphat that Miciah never says anything good!

Micaiah also told a story of how God would entice Ahab into destruction - eventually one suggested that he could do it by placing a lying spirit in his prophets, a plan God approved of.

Ahab ordered Micaiah to be locked up until he returned from Ramoth Gilead. To which Micaiah replied "If you return then you can be sure that God did not speak through me".

Ahab persuaded Jehoshaphat to go into battle wearing his royal regalia while Ahab went in as an ordinary soldier in a chariot.

The King of Aram had given orders to his chariot units that they were to attack the king of Israel and nobody else, and when they saw a man in royal robes they attacked him.
Only when Jehoshaphat cried out did they realise their mistake and stopped pursuing him.
Ironically an archer at random fired an arrow and hit Ahab at a gap in his armour.
The battle raged all day and Ahab died in the evening causing despair in his troops who left the battlefield.

After bleeding in his chariot for several hours Ahab had made a mess, and they washed out the chariot of his blood at the pool reserved for prostitutes to bathe and dogs licked up the blood in the same place that Naboth had been murdered.

Ahab is recorded as a very evil king who was anti God.
He was succeeded by his son Ahaziah became king.

Jehoshaphat was the son of King Asa of Judah - he was recorded as a good king he followed God but he did not remove alternative worship sites from the land. He built a fleet of ships to trade. Ahab had asked to help man the ships and share the profits but Jehoshaphat refused. the ships were actually wrecked before the even set sail!
Jehoshaphat was king for 25 years before he died and was buried in Jerusalem.

Ahaziah in Israel lasted a whole 2 years as king and followed the example of his father and king Jeroboam 

I do like the irony in this chapter and the death of Ahab - he went disguised into battle while Jehoshaphat went to battle in royal regalia (which would surely make him a target) 
Ahab is killed anyway by an anonymous archer who may have been shooting generally into the lines, his shot was really a fluke.


Monday 26 May 2014

1 Kings 21 Naboth's Vinyard

1 Kings 21 

It seems to me that Ahab, king of Israel and his wife, Jezebel are really quite unpleasant characters.

In this chapter Ahab decided that he wanted to buy the vinyard close to his palace that belonged to a guy called Naboth. Ahab wanted to plant vegetables there. 

Naboth refused to sell the land as it was part of his ancestral inheritance and it was not permitted for him to permanently sell the land under the law of Moses.


Ahab went home again in a strop (the New International Version of the Bible describes him as sullen and angry, refusing to eat because he was busy sulking) because Naboth would not sell him the land.

Jezebel asked Ahab why he is in a strop and he explained that Naboth would not sell him his land for a vegetable garden.
Jezebel told Ahab to pull himself together and this is no way for the king to act - she arranged for a high feast to be held with Naboth as a guest of honour, but she also paid some scoundrels to sit opposite him at the feast and accused Naboth of issuing a curse against God and the king and they took him out on the word of scoundrels and stoned him to death.

They then sent a message to Jezebel and she and Ahab took possession of the land.
God sent Elijah to meet Ahab and Jezebel at Naboths vinyard and proclaim judgement "Have you not murdered a man and seized his property ?" Because of this dogs will lick up Ahab's blood in the same place as Naboth's blood had been spilled.

God will also wipe out the whole of Ahab's family, those who die in the city will be eaten by dogs, those in the country will be eaten by birds, nobody will have a decent burial. Jezebel herself would be eaten by dogs by the wall of Jezreel where she lived.

Ahab heard this and repented in sackcloth and ashes. God relented on his plan and he let Ahab die in peace the trouble came down on his son. 

Sunday 25 May 2014

1 Kings 20 Attack

1 Kings 20

At the last post God told Elijah to go and annoint Hazael as king of Aram - perhaps this is good as the current king, Ben Haldad attacked the capital of Israel - Samaria.

It would appear that Israel was under the protection of other, more powerful surrounding kings at this stage, and somehow Ahab managed to get on the wrong side of Ben Hadad.

Ben Hadad demanded the gold and silver in Ahab's city as well as the pick of his wives and daughters.
The king of Israel accepted these terms, so Ben Hadad upped the demand to everything that Ahab valued.

Ahab summoned the leaders of Israel to discuss the new terms and they advise to reject everything as he has gone too far - they were prepared to pay off Aram, but not at any cost it seems.

Ahab's messengers told Ben Hadad, that they would accept his first demand but not his second.

Ben-Hadad promised to reduce Samaria to a pile of rubble and give all his soldiers a handful as a souvenir.

Ahab responds by saying that boasts are far more appropriate after the battle than before.


Ahab actually wins the battle, and with the help of God's advice - at noon the junior officers attacked Ben Hadad, who was in his tent getting drunk with his mates.

Ahab was advised by improve his defences as Ben Hadad escaped and would come back and attack again next year.

The following year, Ben Hadad reasoned that they lost last time because the god of Israel was a hill and mountain god, and fighting them on the plains, they will win.

God told Israel that for this reason only, Israel will win because Ben-Hadad thinks that God is no use on the flat. For 6 days the two armies look at each other and on the 7th day Israel routed Aram.
Ben-Hadad flees the battle and eventually is persuaded to surrender and throw himself on the mercy of Ahab who made a peace treaty in return for the right to hold a market in Damascus and the return of all Israelite towns captured in the time of Ben-Hadad's father.

A messenger of God heard this deal and demanded of the closest soldier to hit him. The soldier refused and got attacked by a lion!
The next guy did hit him and the prophet then was able to give Ahab a message in the form of a parable.
The story goes that he was charged to guard a prisoner, if he escaped it would be his life for the life of the prisoner or a talent of silver (about 34 kg), but the prisoner escaped.
The king refused to have any sympathy.
The Prophet then removed the bandage from his face and the king recognised him, "Since you did not spare one who God has declared should die it is your life for his, and your people for his people"

This rather upset Ahab and he returned to Samaria in a huff!


Saturday 24 May 2014

1 Kings 19 "What are you doing here?"

1 Kings 19

At the end of my last post on the previous chapter we left king Ahab racing the prophet Elijah from mount Carmel to the city trying to stay ahead of the rain. (The first for several years as it happens, but that is another story) 

Ahab told his wife, the infamous Jezebel, that Elijah had killed the priests of Baal and in a dramatic demonstration shown that God is the real god.
Jezebel in outraged and issues a death sentence against Elijah with the oath "May the gods deal severely with me if I don't make Elijah like my priests" so Elijah does the sensible thing and runs for his life!

He left his servant in Beersheba in southern Judah and he himself went further south into the wilderness.
In despair and sheltering under a broom tree Elijah prayed to God that he has had enough and wants to die "Take my life, I am no better than my ancestors". He then fell asleep under the tree.

He is awakened by an angel with some bread and water and told to eat. This happened twice the second time "Get up and eat, for the journey is too much for you"

Having rested and regained his strength Elijah journeyed to Mount Horeb, which is another name for Sinai and is in the south of the Sinai peninsula.
Finding a cave, Elijah stays there overnight.

The next bit I'm afraid I cannot read without thinking of a line from the old radio show - The Goons, written by Spike Milligan - I'll explain the link which may not be entirely obvious.

In the Bible God (or the word of the Lord) came to Elijah while he was in the cave and asked "What are you doing here, Elijah?"
Elijah responds that he has been zealous for God, the Israelites tear down the alters to God and rejected the covenant and murdered all the prophets that God has sent and he is the last one standing and they are trying to kill him too.

In the Goon show there is a character called "Eccles" a bit of a simple chap played by Spike Milligan. When Neddie Seagoon (Played by Harry Secombe) finds him in an unexpected place demands "What are you doing here, Eccles?" 
To which the reply is "Everybody's got to be somewhere" 

Elijah is told to stand in the mouth of the cave as God is about to pass by in person.
First there was a tremendous and powerful wind 
Second there was an earthquake 
Third there was a fire 
God was not in any of these things that insurance companies like to term "Acts of God" 
Finally, in the aftermath of the destruction there is a very quiet whisper, and that is God.
Again God asked "What are you doing here, Elijah?"
Having heard Elijah's complaint, God gives Elijah some very specific instructions and told Elijah that he has actually got 7000 fellow countrymen and women that have not worshipped other gods and he really is not alone.

Elijah obeyed and he annointed Hazael as king over Aram and also Jehu as king over Israel to overthrow Ahab and destroy the wicked family line.
Elijah also called Elisha to be prophet 

There are some quite interesting points in this chapter - 
Elijah obviously needed some time out of the public eye and safe from the threat of Jezebel, rest, food and drink were what he needed to start with. Elijah went without further food and water for 40 days by the way - one of only 3 people in the Bible recorded as fasting for 40 days. 

Many critics of faith and religion will point to  natural disasters, such as earthquakes, hurricanes, and bush fires out of control and say "Where is your God in this situation?" 
Guess what - the bible tells us that God is not in the earthquake, winds, volcanic eruptions and other devastating natural disasters. I believe that God IS present in the aftermath where the aid agencies go in to make things better as quickly as possible. 
Unfortunately it seems that to live on a planet that supports such wonderful life, disaster and death simply cannot be avoided for without them the planet would surely be uninhabitable 

Thursday 15 May 2014

1 Kings 18 Showdown

1 Kings 18

Some time later, about 3 years into the drought, Elijah is told to return to Israel and confront king Ahab again, after this rain would come back.

The famine by this stage was severe in the land and Ahab had split from his palace administrator Obadiah, to try and find some pasture for the royal horses otherwise they would have to be slaughtered

Obadiah was a good man who had hidden 100 prophets of God while the queen, Jezebel, was trying to eradicate all worship of God.

Elijah met Obadiah on the road and told him to go and fetch Ahab. 
Obadiah went a bit nuts, "Are you trying to kill me? You will disappear while I'm gone and then Ahab will have my guts for garters." (that was a paraphrase by the way) 

Ahab greeted Elijah with a typically warm greeting "So you are here, you troubler of Israel?"
Elijah's riposte is equally warm "It is you and your family that cause more trouble than me!"

Elijah arranged for a show down on Mount Carmel witnessed by the ordinary people - a kind of, I don't think scientific is the right word, demonstration.
The test was that the true God should step forward and prove to the people Baal and Asherah were on one side with 400 priests and prophets and God was on the other side with a lone Elijah.

The challenge was build your alter, put wood on it and slaughter a sacrifice for burning but not set fire to it.
In a spirit of generosity, Elijah suggests that the priests of Baal get on with it as there were so many of them.
The priests of Baal started to chant, dance and call on Baal to set fire to the burned offering.
They did this for about 3 hours, from morning to noon. Around noon, Elijah started to get a bit bored and started winding them up.
"Surely Baal is a god, he must be able to hear you, shout louder, perhaps he is on holiday, or business trip?"
"Perhaps he is on the loo and deep in thought or asleep?"
The priests of Baal went a bit mental and started to cut themselves and shout louder, but no fire, not even a lightening bolt or any response from Baal.

They carried on with this all day and as the sun set Elijah called the people- he built an alter using 12 uncut stones, he laid the wood on it and arranged the sacrifice, and dug a trench around it.
He then asked for 4 large jars of water to be bought and poured over the whole offering. he then ordered the action repeated 2 more times.
Given that they are at the top of a mountain, and into 3 years without rain - I suspect that this act would have been quite difficult. Having said that, God would now have a bit more effort with the fire.

Elijah prayed a simple prayer to God, that he would show his power in Israel.
Fire from God came down and burned the sacrifice, wood, stones and evaporated all the water.
At this Israel believed in God and at Elijah's command killed all 400 priests of Baal 

To Ahab, Elijah urged him to eat and drink something as he could hear the sound of rain in the distance.
Elijah continued in prayer and asked his servant to see what he saw in the sky, 6 times he said nothing, the 7th time he saw a cloud as big as a man's fist.
Eliah told Ahab to get into his chariot and ride for his city otherwise he would be bogged down, God gave Elijah power and he outran Ahab and his chariot back to town

This chapter has some really great drama and special effects worthy of an Indiana Jones ending!

Wednesday 14 May 2014

1 Kings 17 Elijah

1 Kings 17

We saw at the end of the last chapter that Ahab was a particularly nasty king who did not just ignore the ways of God but positively is hostile to God.

Against Ahab and the moral degeneration God raised up a new breed of messenger, the prophets, starting with Elijah.
Elijah started his mission be announcing a prolonged drought on the land of Israel. He is then told to make himself scarce in the Kerith ravine where there is water to drink. God arranges that Elijah is fed morning and evening by ravens bringing him food.

Eventually since no rain or dew has fallen the brook ran dry and Elijah is told to head to Zarephath in Sidon where he meets a widow who is gathering sticks to make a fire.
Elijah asked her for some food and she explained patiently that she lived with her son and all they had to eat was a small amount of flour and olive oil and no chance of any more food to come, so this was going to be her and her son's last meal and they would starve to death very soon.
Elijah told her that if she shares her last meal with him she and her son would not starve.
Elijah winds up lodging with the widow an her son and the small amount of flour and oil never ran out and they lived.

Some time later the widow's son became seriously ill and stopped breathing. The widow asked him "what do you have against me man of God?, did you come to remind me of my sin and kill my son?"


Elijah asked for the sons body and prayed to God "Lord my God have you brought tragedy even on this widow I am staying with by causing her son to die?" He laid the body on the bed and stretched himself over the boy and prayed 3 times "Lord my God, let this boys life return to him".

The boy's life was returned and he came around. Elijah re-united him with his mother.


Tuesday 13 May 2014

1 Kings 16 Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab - kings for a bit

1 Kings 16

Baasha was king of Israel in Tirzah for 24 years, but he followed the example of Jeroboam, and God sent a message that his family would be wiped out. Having gone to the trouble of raising up a king, the king basically ignoring God was not appreciated!

Elah, son of Baasha became the next king and he managed to rule for 2 years, until he was assassinated by 

Zimri - one of Elah's palace officials assassinated the king as he was getting drunk at the house of a friend of his Arza the palace administrator. Once on the throne he wiped out Baasha and Elah's entire family and all their friends.
Zimri was king for all of a week, yes only a week, though they are still recorded in the annals of the kings of Israel apparently.
Zimri died when the army led by Omri laid siege to Tirzah and he burned the palace down around him.
I'm impressed, the shortest monarch reign in England was 9 days and that was Lady Jane Grey in 1554!

Omri managed to come out on top of the power struggle following Zimri's death and he became the next king and reigned for 12 years.
The Bible is quite scathing about his character - he followed completely the example of Jeroboam and made God angry by doing the same wrong things that Jeroboam had done.

Omri's son, Ahab followed him as king and set new standards in not obeying the law of God. during his 22 year rule he considered it trivial that he committed the sins that Jeroboam had committed, he married Jezebel (a name that is still not popular to this day) daughter of the king of Sidon.
He built temples to Baal and Asherah poles , generally doing more to outrage God than anybody before him.

During Ahab's reign a guy called Hiel of Bethel rebuilt Jericho. His firstborn son Abiram died as he was clearing the foundations and his youngest son Segub died as he was setting the final touches and hanging the gates to the city.
This had been foretold by Joshua when the city was destroyed.

Things seem to have got very bad spiritually in Israel, in the next chapter we meet another great character in the Bible - the prophet Elijah.

Sunday 11 May 2014

1 Kings 15 Abijah, Asa and Nadab

1 Kings 15

Abijah becomes king of Judah in the 18th year of the reign of Jeroboam, he rules in Judah for 3 years only.
the Bible is quite scathing on him, he did not follow the law of God as his great grandfather, David had, yet God did not bring down judgement on him because of David who had wholeheartedly followed the law, apart from the incident with Uriah.

Abijah and Jeroboam were at war as well.

Asa, the son of Abijah becomes king on the death of Abijah and reigned for 41 years.
Asa did follow the law of God, as David had, he rid Judah of the shrine prostitutes and the Asherah poles and idols. He deposed his grandmother from her position as queen mother for making an idol.

Asa dedicated a lot of gold and silver to God and kept his promise until he was attacked by Israel at which point he bribed the king of Damascus to change his allegiance.

Meanwhile in Israel, Nadab son of Jeroboam became king for 2 years and he carried on as his father had, and after 2 years a guy called Baasha rebelled, killed all the members of Jeroboam's family, which is seen as the judgement of God on the sins of Jeraboam.

There was effectively civil war continually during the reigns of Jeroboam, Nadab and Baasha of Israel and Rehoboam, Abijah and Asa of Judah 

It starts to look like David and Solomon were very much the golden age of Israel

Saturday 10 May 2014

1 Kings 14 Political subterfuge

1 Kings 14

The son of King Jeroboam of Israel became ill and Jeroboam asked his wife to go in disguise to Shiloh in Judah where a prophet called Ahijah was living.

Ahijah was very old and blind but could tell right away that his visitor was the wife of Jeroboam, mainly because the word of God had spoken to him saying that she was coming!

God's message to Jeroboam was that he had torn the kingdom away from David's descendants and given it to Jerobaom with a promise that if Jeroboam walked according to the law his dynasty would be kings for a long time, but because Jeroboam had been more evil in the eyes of God than anybody before him (persuading all Israel to worship idols he made and appointing anybody priests who wanted to become a priest).

God will destroy the whole family of Jeroboam and raise up another king in Israel.
Jeroboam's son died at the moment his mother entered the palace.
The acts of Jeroboam are recorded in a book "The annals of the kings of Israel".
Having ruled for 22 years, Jeroboam died and he was succeeded by his son Nadab.

Meanwhile King Rehoboam, son of Solomon became king at the age of 41 and reigned for 17 years in Jerusalem.
In spite of having the Temple of God in his city and that Jeroboam in the north had advised his people not to go to the temple, Judah abandon worship of God and set up shrines in high places with shrine prostitutes and the people practised the detestable practises of the the people in the land before Israel.
The king of Egypt, Shishak attacked Rehoboam and Jerusalem and carried off all the treasures that Solomon had made, including all the golden shields. Rehoboam had them remade in bronze.

The events of Rehoboam' reign were recorded in the annals of the kings of Judah.
Rehoboam and Jeroboam were enemies all their lives and there was a continual state of war between them.

Abijah became king of Judah after the death of Rehoboam.


Saturday 3 May 2014

1 Kings 13 The troubles of a prophet

1 Kings 13

In the last chapter, Jeroboam king of Israel built idols and alters to stop his people from obeying the requirements of the law of Moses, which would involve them visiting the region of Israel that was not under his command or control.

God sent a man with a message to the alter where Jeroboam was making sacrifices, one day a descendant of David called Josiah will burn the priests who sacrificed animals on this alter - he also predicted that the alter would split and ashes would pour out.

Jeroboam was not impressed and commanded that the man be arrested, but the hand he used to point him out shrivelled and he could not pull it back, at the same time the alter split.
Jeroboam asked the man of God to pray for him and restore his hand. With his hand restored, Jeroboam asked to spend time and a meal with the man of God, but he declined saying he had instruction from God to eat and drink nothing in Israel and not to go back by the road he arrived on.

Word of this reached the ears of an old prophet who lived locally and he sent his sons out to find the man of God, he then met with him and lying told him that God had sent word that he should go for dinner with this local prophet. This seems particularly underhanded and rather unfair.

While they were sitting at the table, the word of God came to the old prophet saying that God had commanded his man to not eat and drink anything and since he had defied God he would not be buried in his home town.

After the meal, they parted company with the man of God departing on his donkey and was attacked and killed on the road by a lion - which did not eat the man or attack the donkey.
A passer by reported to the prophet what he had seen and he went out and recovered the body and buried him locally with instruction that when he die, the old prophet be buried with the man of God

Even after this Jeroboam continued to appoint anybody at priests and to ignore the law of Moses.
The Bible records that his line came to an end due to the sins of Jeroboam.



Friday 2 May 2014

1 Kings 12 Honest politics

1 Kings 12

Here in the UK we will shortly be taking part in an election to the European Parliament and the various political parties and nut-jobs (Sorry if that phrase is offensive) are trying to persuade me that their policies and world views are not only healthy but in my best interest.
Political spin doctors also appear in this chapter of the Bible.

Solomon has died and his son Rehoboam has become king and the leaders of the people come to him with a request - your father laid a heavy yoke on us, forced labour, taxation and oppression. Make our lives better and easier and we will happily follow you. Sound familiar?

Rehoboam asked for 3 days thinking time and when they return in 3 days he will have made his decision.
He asked his father's advisors, men who have been in the administration and know what the king can get away with and what he cannot, and they advise king Rehoboam to relax his iron grip and lower his expectations, at least for now and he would be a good king of the whole land.

He also asked the friends and advisors he grew up with, young idealists with fiery ambition and hot heads and they told him to say basically "you think my Dad was hard on you, you ain't seen nothing yet!" 
My little finger is heavier than Dad's waist, if he beat you with whips, I'll tie scorpions to them, now stop whining and get on with it.
We saw with Moses in Exodus just how well that turned out last time!

The Israelites left Rehoboam saying we have no share in this, you are on your own pal, and when Rehoboam sent out people to enforce the forced labour they stoned him to death.

Meanwhile Jeroboam (not of champagne fame) has returned to Israel following Solomon's death and he is proclaimed king of the 10 tribes of Israel while Judah and Benjamin were loyal to Rehoboam and David's line.

Rehoboam and Jeraboam are all set to go to war for the kingdom, but God sent a message telling them not to go to war with thier brothers and to go home, which they did.

Jeroboam in the North was now faced with a dilemma, the temple of God, built for all Israel in Jerusalem was now in a hostile country and he did not want the good people of Israel leaving the land to worship God in Jerusalem, where they may be tempted to stay to properly worship the God of Israel.

Jeroboam had been told to carefully obey all the law of Moses, but what he does is build 2 idols, one in the North and the other in the south where the Israelites could worship (again I think i have seen similar before), and built alters on many high places and appointed priests who were no relative of Aaron and Levi 
He took the official Jewish celebration of Sukkot, the festival of tabernacles and instituted his own ceremony in competition - the Israelites could have their celebration locally without having to travel to Jerusalem.

With the split of Israel and Judah I am put in mind that Scotland will also be voting on whether to separate from the union and become a fully independent state - it is slightly remarkable that 
A) the rest of the union don't get a say in this as probably a lot of English would say something like "bog off back north of Hadrian's wall then, you ingrate" and
B) the same politicians urging Scotland to stay IN the UK are promising a referendum on whether the UK should leave the European Union and would urge us to get out of the EU

And now a partly political message from me to all politicians - 
Please stop telling me that you will fix all our problems - you won't.
Don't promise a utopia that you cannot or will not deliver
remember that you have to answer to a number of higher powers - we the electorate are one of those powers, and also to God, even if you do not believe in him.
You have a responsibility for all those you represent and speak for so please make sure that your words are honest, true, and above all build communities not walls.
My experience is that life goes on DESPITE politics and government and not BECAUSE of politics and government - I'd love to be proved wrong.







Thursday 1 May 2014

1 Kings 11 How many wives??

1 Kings 11

Solomon, despite, or possibly because, of his great wealth was courted by many women and he married loads of wives, I mean 700 wives of royal descent and 300 concubines.

I simply do not understand the logic of somebody being content to be one of 1000 women that were at the beck and call of Solomon - flipping heck just imagine the grief he would have if he upset one of the mothers-in-law or forgot a birthday or anniversary!

Anyway his wives coming from different countries all bought their religion with them and Solomon was accommodating enough to try and share their faiths and this led him away from serving the God of Israel, who Jews, Christians, and Muslims believe is the one true God.

Solomon started out asking the true God for wisdom but ended up making a mess of his faith being led astray by his wives.

Solomon built alters to these other gods on the hills around Jerusalem burning incense and making sacrifices.
This really upset God and God promised to take the kingdom away from Solomon as he had not followed the ways of God as David his father had, but for the sake of David, he would tear the kingdom from Solomon's son, not Solomon himself.

Solomon also found he had enemies - Hadad the Edomite had escaped when king David and Joab the army commander had defeated Edom and killed all the men. Hadad was young and escaped to Egypt.
He married the sister in law of the Pharaoh and when he heard that David and Joab were dead moved against Solomon, as did a ruler of Aram called Rezon.

From within Israel, one of Solomon's officials also rebelled - Jeroboam (Not sure if this is the inspiration behind the name given to and extra large bottle with the capacity of 4 bottles of champagne) was in charge of forced labour in Judah and was met by a prophet who tore his cloak into 12 and gave 10 parts to Jeroboam declaring that he would be king of 10 parts of Israel as God had decreed, all he had to do was walk in the way of God and keep the law and his dynasty would last .
Solomon tried to get Jeroboam but he escaped to Egypt.

Solomon dies at the end of the chapter and the Golden age of Israel is over - the Bible refers to a lost book, the annals of Solomon, and Solomon dies and is succeeded by his son Rehoboam 

We shall see how he gets on in the next post, he has a tough act to follow - Solomon had 1000 women in his harem and still found time to write books and run a country.
Sometimes I find it tough being single, writing a blog, and working as an engineer during the day.