Antiquities of the Jews
Preface I
II III
IV V
VI VII
VIII IX
X XI
XII XIII
XIV XV
XVI XVII
XVIII XIX
XX
Book VIII
FROM THE DEATH OF DAVID TO THE DEATH OF AHAB.
CHAPTER 1.
HOW SOLOMON, WHEN HE HAD RECEIVED THE KINGDOM TOOK OFF HIS ENEMIES.
1. WE have already treated of David, and his virtue, and of the
benefits he was the author of to his countrymen; of his wars also
and battles, which he managed with success, and then died an old
man, in the foregoing book. And when Solomon his son, who was but
a youth in age, had taken the kingdom, and whom David had declared,
while he was alive, the lord of that people, according to God's
will; when he sat upon the throne, the whole body of the people
made joyful acclamations to him, as is usual at the beginning of
a reign; and wished that all his affairs might come to a blessed
conclusion; and that he might arrive at a great age, and at the
most happy state of affairs possible.
2. But Adonijah, who, while his father was living, attempted to
gain possession of the government, came to the king's mother Bathsheba,
and saluted her with great civility; and when she asked him, whether
he came to her as desiring her assistance in any thing or not, and
bade him tell her if that were the case, for that she would cheerfully
afford it him; he began to say, that she knew herself that the kingdom
was his, both on account of his elder age, and of the disposition
of the multitude, and that yet it was transferred to Solomon her
son, according to the will of God. He also said that he was contented
to be a servant under him, and was pleased with the present settlement;
but he desired her to be a means of obtaining a favor from his brother
to him, and to persuade him to bestow on him in marriage Abishag,
who had indeed slept by his father, but, because his father was
too old, he did not lie with her, and she was still a virgin. So
Bathsheba promised him to afford him her assistance very earnestly,
and to bring this marriage about, because the king would be willing
to gratify him in such a thing, and because she would press it to
him very earnestly. Accordingly he went away in hopes of succeeding
in this match. So Solomon's mother went presently to her son, to
speak to him about what she had promised, upon Adonijah's supplication
to her. And when her son came forward to meet her, and embraced
her, and when he had brought her into the house where his royal
throne was set, he sat thereon, and bid them set another throne
on the right hand for his mother. When Bathsheba was set down, she
said, "O my son, grant me one request that I desire of thee,
and do not any thing to me that is disagreeable or ungrateful, which
thou wilt do if thou deniest me." And when Solomon bid her
to lay her commands upon him, because it was agreeable to his duty
to grant her every thing she should ask, and complained that she
did not at first begin her discourse with a firm expectation of
obtaining what she desired, but had some suspicion of a denial,
she entreated him to grant that his brother Adonijah might marry
Abishag.
3. But the king was greatly offended at these words, and sent away
his mother, and said that Adonijah aimed at great things; and that
he wondered that she did not desire him to yield up the kingdom
to him, as to his elder brother, since she desired that he might
marry Abishag; and that he had potent friends, Joab the captain
of the host, and Abiathar the priest. So he called for Benaiah,
the captain of the guards, and ordered him to slay his brother Adonijah.
He also called for Abiathar the priest, and said to him, "I
will not put thee to death because of those other hardships which
thou hast endured with my father, and because of the ark which thou
hast borne along with him; but I inflict this following punishment
upon thee, because thou wast among Adonijah's followers, and wast
of his party. Do not thou continue here, nor come any more into
my sight, but go to thine own town, and live on thy own fields,
and there abide all thy life; for thou hast offended so greatly,
that it is not just that thou shouldst retain thy dignity any longer."
For the forementioned cause, therefore, it was that the house of
Ithamar was deprived of the sacerdotal dignity, as God had foretold
to Eli, the grandfather of Abiathar. So it was transferred to the
family of Phineas, to Zadok. Now those that were of the family of
Phineas, but lived privately during the time that the high priesthood
was transferred to the house of Ithamar, (of which family Eli was
the first that received it,)were these that follow: Bukki, the son
of Abishua the high priest; his son was Joatham; Joatham's son was
Meraioth; Meraioth's son was Arophseus; Aropheus's son was Ahitub;
and Ahitub's son was Zadok, who was first made high priest in the
reign of David.
4. Now when Joab the captain of the host heard of the slaughter
of Adonijah, he was greatly afraid, for he was a greater friend
to him than to Solomon; and suspecting, not without reason, that
he was in danger, on account of his favor to Adonijah, he fled to
the altar, and supposed he might procure safety thereby to himself,
because of the king's piety towards God. But when some told the
king what Joab's supposal was, he sent Benaiah, and commanded him
to raise him up from the altar, and bring him to the judgment-seat,
in order to make his defense. However, Joab said he would not leave
the altar, but would die there rather than in another place. And
when Benaiah had reported his answer to the king, Solomon commanded
him to cut off his head there (1) and let him take that as a punishment
for those two captains of the host whom he had wickedly slain, and
to bury his body, that his sins might never leave his family, but
that himself and his father, by Joab's death, might be guiltless.
And when Benaiah had done what he was commanded to do, he was himself
appointed to be captain of the whole army. The king also made Zadok
to be alone the high priest, in the room of Abiathar, whom he had
removed.
5. But as to Shimei, Solomon commanded that he should build him
a house, and stay at Jerusalem, and attend upon him, and should
not have authority to go over the brook Cedron; and that if he disobeyed
that command, death should be his punishment. He also threatened
him so terribly, that he compelled him to take all oath that he
would obey. Accordingly Shimei said that he had reason to thank
Solomon for giving him such an injunction; and added an oath, that
he would do as he bade him; and leaving his own country, he made
his abode in Jerusalem. But three years afterwards, when he heard
that two of his servants were run away from him, and were in Gath,
he went for his servants in haste; and when he was come back with
them, the king perceived it, and was much displeased that he had
contemned his commands, and, what was more, had no regard to the
oaths he had sworn to God; so he called him, and said to him, "Didst
not thou swear never to leave me, nor to go out of this city to
another? Thou shalt not therefore escape punishment for thy perjury,
but I will punish thee, thou wicked wretch, both for this crime,
and for those wherewith thou didst abuse my father when he was in
his flight, that thou mayst know that wicked men gain nothing at
last, although they be not punished immediately upon their unjust
practices; but that in all the time wherein they think themselves
secure, because they have yet suffered nothing, their punishment
increases, and is heavier upon them, and that to a greater degree
than if they had been punished immediately upon the commission of
their crimes." So Benaiah, on the king's command, slew Shimei.
CHAPTER 2.
CONCERNING THE WIFE OF SOLOMON; CONCERNING HIS WISDOM AND RICHES;
AND CONCERNING WHAT HE OBTAINED OF HIRAM FOR THE BUILDING OF THE
TEMPLE.
1. SOLOMON having already settled himself firmly in his kingdom,
and having brought his enemies to punishment, he married the daughter
of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and built the walls of Jerusalem much
larger and stronger than those that had been before, (2) and thenceforward
he managed public affairs very peaceably. Nor was his youth any
hinderance in the exercise of justice, or in the observation of
the laws, or in the remembrance of what charges his father had given
him at his death; but he discharged every duty with great accuracy,
that might have been expected from such as are aged, and of the
greatest prudence. He now resolved to go to Hebron, and sacrifice
to God upon the brazen altar that was built by Moses. Accordingly
he offered there burnt-offerings, in number a thousand; and when
he had done this, he thought he had paid great honor to God; for
as he was asleep that very night God appeared to him, and commanded
him to ask of him some gifts which he was ready to give him as a
reward for his piety. So Solomon asked of God what was most excellent,
and of the greatest worth in itself, what God would bestow with
the greatest. joy, and what it was most profitable for man to receive;
for he did not desire to have bestowed upon him either gold or silver,
or any other riches, as a man and a youth might naturally have done,
for these are the things that generally are esteemed by most men,
as alone of the greatest worth, and the best gifts of God; but,
said he, "Give me, O Lord, a sound mind, and a good understanding,
whereby I may speak and judge the people according to truth and
righteousness." With these petitions God was well pleased;
and promised to give him all those things that he had not mentioned
in his option, riches, glory, victory over his enemies; and, in
the first place, understanding and wisdom, and this in such a degree
as no other mortal man, neither kings nor ordinary persons, ever
had. He also promised to preserve the kingdom to his posterity for
a very long time, if he continued righteous and obedient to him,
and imitated his father in those things wherein he excelled. When
Solomon heard this from God, he presently leaped out of his bed;
and when he had worshipped him, he returned to Jerusalem; and after
he had offered great sacrifices before the tabernacle, he feasted
all his own family.
2. In these days a hard cause came before him in judgment, which
it was very difficult to find any end of; and I think it necessary
to explain the fact about which the contest was, that such as light
upon my writings may know what a difficult cause Solomon was to
determine, and those that are concerned in such matters may take
this sagacity of the king for a pattern, that they may the more
easily give sentence about such questions. There were two women,
who were harlots in the course of their lives, that came to him;
of whom she that seemed to be injured began to speak first, and
said, "O king, I and this other woman dwell together in one
room. Now it came to pass that we both bore a son at the same hour
of the same day; and on the third day this woman overlaid her son,
and killed it, and then took my son out of my bosom, and removed
him to herself, and as I was asleep she laid her dead son in my
arms. Now, when in the morning I was desirous to give the breast
to the child, I did not find my own, but saw the woman's dead child
lying by me; for I considered it exactly, and found it so to be.
Hence it was that I demanded my son, and when I could not obtain
him, I have recourse, my lord, to thy assistance; for since we were
alone, and there was nobody there that could convict her, she cares
for nothing, but perseveres in the stout denial of the fact."
When this woman had told this her story, the king asked the other
woman what she had to say in contradiction to that story. But when
she denied that she had done what was charged upon her, and said
that it was her child that was living, and that it was her antagonist's
child that was dead, and when no one could devise what judgment
could be given, and the whole court were blind in their understanding,
and could not tell how to find out this riddle, the king alone invented
the following way how to discover it. He bade them bring in both
the dead child and the living child; and sent one of his guards,
and commanded him to fetch a sword, and draw it, and to cut both
the children into two pieces, that each of the women might have
half the living and half the dead child. Hereupon all the people
privately laughed at the king, as no more than a youth. But, in
the mean time, she that was the real mother of the living child
cried out that he should not do so, but deliver that child to the
other woman as her own, for she would be satisfied with the life
of the child, and with the sight of it, although it were esteemed
the other's child; but the other woman was ready to see the child
divided, and was desirous, moreover, that the first woman should
be tormented. When the king understood that both their words proceeded
from the truth of their passions, he adjudged the child to her that
cried out to save it, for that she was the real mother of it; and
he condemned the other as a wicked woman, who had not only killed
her own child, but was endeavoring to see her friend's child destroyed
also. Now the multitude looked on this determination as a great
sign and demonstration of the king's sagacity and wisdom, and after
that day attended to him as to one that had a divine mind.
3. Now the captains of his armies, and officers appointed over
the whole country, were these: over the lot of Ephraim was Ures;
over the toparchy of Bethlehem was Dioclerus; Abinadab, who married
Solomon's daughter, had the region of Dora and the sea-coast under
him; the Great Plain was under Benaiah, the son of Achilus; he also
governed all the country as far as Jordan; Gabaris ruled over Gilead
and Gaulanitis, and had under him the sixty great and fenced cities
[of Og]; Achinadab managed the affairs of all Galilee as far as
Sidon, and had himself also married a daughter of Solomon's, whose
name was Basima; Banacates had the seacoast about Arce; as had Shaphat
Mount Tabor, and Carmel, and [the Lower] Galilee, as far as the
river Jordan; one man was appointed over all this country; Shimei
was intrusted with the lot of Benjamin; and Gabares had the country
beyond Jordan, over whom there was again one governor appointed.
Now the people of the Hebrews, and particularly the tribe of Judah,
received a wonderful increase when they betook themselves to husbandry,
and the cultivation of their grounds; for as they enjoyed peace,
and were not distracted with wars and troubles, and having, besides,
an abundant fruition of the most desirable liberty, every one was
busy in augmenting the product of their own lands, and making them
worth more than they had formerly been.
4. The king had also other rulers, who were over the land of Syria
and of the Philistines, which reached from the river Euphrates to
Egypt, and these collected his tributes of the nations. Now these
contributed to the king's table, and to his supper every day (3)
thirty cori of fine flour, and sixty of meal; as also ten fat oxen,
and twenty oxen out of the pastures, and a hundred fat lambs; all
these were besides what were taken by hunting harts and buffaloes,
and birds and fishes, which were brought to the king by foreigners
day by day. Solomon had also so great a number of chariots, that
the stalls of his horses for those chariots were forty thousand;
and besides these he had twelve thousand horsemen, the one half
of which waited upon the king in Jerusalem, and the rest were dispersed
abroad, and dwelt in the royal villages; but the same officer who
provided for the king's expenses supplied also the fodder for the
horses, and still carried it to the place where the king abode at
that time.
5. Now the sagacity and wisdom which God had bestowed on Solomon
was so great, that he exceeded the ancients; insomuch that he was
no way inferior to the Egyptians, who are said to have been beyond
all men in understanding; nay, indeed, it is evident that their
sagacity was very much inferior to that of the king's. He also excelled
and distinguished himself in wisdom above those who were most eminent
among the Hebrews at that time for shrewdness; those I mean were
Ethan, and Heman, and Chalcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol. He
also composed books of odes and songs a thousand and five, of parables
and similitudes three thousand; for he spake a parable upon every
sort of tree, from the hyssop to the cedar; and in like manner also
about beasts, about all sorts of living creatures, whether upon
the earth, or in the seas, or in the air; for he was not unacquainted
with any of their natures, nor omitted inquiries about them, but
described them all like a philosopher, and demonstrated his exquisite
knowledge of their several properties. God also enabled him to learn
that skill which expels demons, (4) which is a science useful and
sanative to men. He composed such incantations also by which distempers
are alleviated. And he left behind him the manner of using exorcisms,
by which they drive away demons, so that they never return; and
this method of cure is of great force unto this day; for I have
seen a certain man of my own country, whose name was Eleazar, releasing
people that were demoniacal in the presence of Vespasian, and his
sons, and his captains, and the whole multitude of his soldiers.
The manner of the cure was this: He put a ring that had a Foot of
one of those sorts mentioned by Solomon to the nostrils of the demoniac,
after which he drew out the demon through his nostrils; and when
the man fell down immediately, he abjured him to return into him
no more, making still mention of Solomon, and reciting the incantations
which he composed. And when Eleazar would persuade and demonstrate
to the spectators that he had such a power, he set a little way
off a cup or basin full of water, and commanded the demon, as he
went out of the man, to overturn it, and thereby to let the spectators
know that he had left the man; and when this was done, the skill
and wisdom of Solomon was shown very manifestly: for which reason
it is, that all men may know the vastness of Solomon's abilities,
and how he was beloved of God, and that the extraordinary virtues
of every kind with which this king was endowed may not be unknown
to any people under the sun for this reason, I say, it is that we
have proceeded to speak so largely of these matters.
6. Moreover Hiram, king of Tyre, when he had heard that Solonion
succeeded to his father's kingdom, was very glad of it, for he was
a friend of David's. So he sent ambassadors to him, and saluted
him, and congratulated him on the present happy state of his affairs.
Upon which Solomon sent him an epistle, the contents of which here
follow:
SOLOMON TO KING HIRAM.
"(5)Know thou that my father would have built a temple to
God, but was hindered by wars, and continual expeditions; for he
did not leave off to overthrow his enemies till he made them all
subject to tribute. But I give thanks to God for the peace I at
present enjoy, and on that account I am at leisure, and design to
build a house to God, for God foretold to my father that such a
house should he built by me; wherefore I desire thee to send some
of thy subjects with mine to Mount Lebanon to cut down timber, for
the Sidonians are more skillful than our people in cutting of wood.
As for wages to the hewers of wood, I will pay whatsoever price
thou shalt determine."
7. When Hiram had read this epistle, he was pleased with it; and
wrote back this answer to Solomon.
HIRAM TO KING SOLOMON.
"It is fit to bless God that he hath committed thy father's
government to thee, who art a wise man, and endowed with all virtues.
As for myself, I rejoice at the condition thou art in, and will
be subservient to thee in all that thou sendest to me about; for
when by my subjects I have cut down many and large trees of cedar
and cypress wood, I will send them to sea, and will order my subjects
to make floats of them, and to sail to what place soever of thy
country thou shalt desire, and leave them there, after which thy
subjects may carry them to Jerusalem. But do thou take care to procure
us corn for this timber, which we stand in need of, because we inhabit
in an island." (6)
8. The copies of these epistles remain at this day, and are preserved
not only in our books, but among the Tyrians also; insomuch that
if any one would know the certainty about them, he may desire of
the keepers of the public records of Tyre to show him them, and
he will find what is there set down to agree with what we have said.
I have said so much out of a desire that my readers may know that
we speak nothing but the truth, and do not compose a history out
of some plausible relations, which deceive men and please them at
the same time, nor attempt to avoid examination, nor desire men
to believe us immediately; nor are we at liberty to depart from
speaking truth, which is the proper commendation of an historian,
and yet be blameless: but we insist upon no admission of what we
say, unless we be able to manifest its truth by demonstration, and
the strongest vouchers.
9. Now king Solomon, as soon as this epistle of the king of Tyre
was brought him, commended the readiness and good-will he declared
therein, and repaid him in what he desired, and sent him yearly
twenty thousand cori of wheat, and as many baths of oil: now the
bath is able to contain seventy-two sextaries. He also sent him
the same measure of wine. So the friendship between Hiram and Solomon
hereby increased more and more; and they swore to continue it for
ever. And the king appointed a tribute to be laid on all the people,
of thirty thousand laborers, whose work he rendered easy to them
by prudently dividing it among them; for he made ten thousand cut
timber in Mount Lebanon for one month; and then to come home, and
rest two months, until the time when the other twenty thousand had
finished their task at the appointed time; and so afterward it came
to pass that the first ten thousand returned to their work every
fourth month: and it was Adoram who was over this tribute. There
were also of the strangers who were left by David, who were to carry
the stones and other materials, seventy thousand; and of those that
cut the stones, eighty thousand. Of these three thousand and three
hundred were rulers over the rest. He also enjoined them to cut
out large stones for the foundations of the temple, and that they
should fit them and unite them together in the mountain, and so
bring them to the city. This was done not only by our own country
workmen, but by those workmen whom Hiram sent also.
CHAPTER 3.
OF THE BUILDING OF THIS TEMPLE
1. SOLOMON began to build the temple in the fourth year of his
reign, on the second month, which the Macedonians call Artemisius,
and the Hebrews Jur, five hundred and ninety-two years after the
Exodus out of Egypt; but one thousand and twenty years from Abraham's
coming out of Mesopotamia into Canaan, and after the deluge one
thousand four hundred and forty years; and from Adam, the first
man who was created, until Solomon built the temple, there had passed
in all three thousand one hundred and two years. Now that year on
which the temple began to be built was already the eleventh year
of the reign of Hiram; but from the building of Tyre to the building
of the temple, there had passed two hundred and forty years.
2. Now, therefore, the king laid the foundations of the temple
very deep in the ground, and the materials were strong stones, and
such as would resist the force of time; these were to unite themselves
with the earth, and become a basis and a sure foundation for that
superstructure which was to be erected over it; they were to be
so strong, in order to sustain with ease those vast superstructures
and precious ornaments, whose own weight was to be not less than
the weight of those other high and heavy buildings which the king
designed to be very ornamental and magnificent. They erected its
entire body, quite up to the roof, of white stone; its height was
sixty cubits, and its length was the same, and its breadth twenty.
There was another building erected over it, equal to it in its measures;
so that the entire altitude of the temple was a hundred and twenty
cubits. Its front was to the east. As to the porch, they built it
before the temple; its length was twenty cubits, and it was so ordered
that it might agree with the breadth of the house; and it had twelve
cubits in latitude, and its height was raised as high as a hundred
and twenty cubits. He also built round about the temple thirty small
rooms, which might include the whole temple, by their closeness
one to another, and by their number and outward position round it.
He also made passages through them, that they might come into on
through another. Every one of these rooms had five cubits in breadth,
(7) and the same in length, but in height twenty. Above these there
were other rooms, and others above them, equal, both in their measures
and number; so that these reached to a height equal to the lower
part of the house; for the upper part had no buildings about it.
The roof that was over the house was of cedar; and truly every one
of these rooms had a roof of their own, that was not connected with
the other rooms; but for the other parts, there was a covered roof
common to them all, and built with very long beams, that passed
through the rest, and rough the whole building, that so the middle
walls, being strengthened by the same beams of timber, might be
thereby made firmer: but as for that part of the roof that was under
the beams, it was made of the same materials, and was all made smooth,
and had ornaments proper for roofs, and plates of gold nailed upon
them. And as he enclosed the walls with boards of cedar, so he fixed
on them plates of gold, which had sculptures upon them; so that
the whole temple shined, and dazzled the eyes of such as entered,
by the splendor of the gold that was on every side of them, Now
the whole structure of the temple was made with great skill of polished
stones, and those laid together so very harmoniously and smoothly,
that there appeared to the spectators no sign of any hammer, or
other instrument of architecture; but as if, without any use of
them, the entire materials had naturally united themselves together,
that the agreement of one part with another seemed rather to have
been natural, than to have arisen from the force of tools upon them.
The king also had a fine contrivance for an ascent to the upper
room over the temple, and that was by steps in the thickness of
its wall; for it had no large door on the east end, as the lower
house had, but the entrances were by the sides, through very small
doors. He also overlaid the temple, both within and without, with
boards of cedar, that were kept close together by thick chains,
so that this contrivance was in the nature of a support and a strength
to the building.
3. Now when the king had divided the temple into two parts, he
made the inner house of twenty cubits [every way], to be the most
secret chamber, but he appointed that of forty cubits to be the
sanctuary; and when he had cut a door-place out of the wall, he
put therein doors of Cedar, and overlaid them with a great deal
of gold, that had sculptures upon it. He also had veils of blue,
and purple, and scarlet, and the brightest and softest linen, with
the most curious flowers wrought upon them, which were to be drawn
before those doors. He also dedicated for the most secret place,
whose breadth was twenty cubits, and length the same, two cherubims
of solid gold; the height of each of them was five cubits (8) they
had each of them two wings stretched out as far as five cubits;
wherefore Solomon set them up not far from each other, that with
one wing they might touch the southern wall of the secret place,
and with another the northern: their other wings, which joined to
each other, were a covering to the ark, which was set between them;
but nobody can tell, or even conjecture, what was the shape of these
cherubims. He also laid the floor of the temple with plates of gold;
and he added doors to the gate of the temple, agreeable to the measure
of the height of the wall, but in breadth twenty cubits, and on
them he glued gold plates. And, to say all in one word, he left
no part of the temple, neither internal nor external, but what was
covered with gold. He also had curtains drawn over these doors in
like manner as they were drawn over the inner doors of the most
holy place; but the porch of the temple had nothing of that sort.
4. Now Solomon sent for an artificer out of Tyre, whose name was
Hiram; he was by birth of the tribe of Naphtali, on the mother's
side, (for she was of that tribe,) but his father was Ur, of the
stock of the Israelites. This man was skillful in all sorts of work;
but his chief skill lay in working in gold, and silver, and brass;
by whom were made all the mechanical works about the temple, according
to the will of Solomon. Moreover, this Hiram made two [hollow] pillars,
whose outsides were of brass, and the thickness of the brass was
four fingers' breadth, and the height of the pillars was eighteen
cubits and their circumference twelve cubits; but there was cast
with each of their chapiters lily-work that stood upon the pillar,
and it was elevated five cubits, round about which there was net-work
interwoven with small palms, made of brass, and covered the lily-work.
To this also were hung two hundred pomegranates, in two rows. The
one of these pillars he set at the entrance of the porch on the
right hand, and called it Jachin (9) and the other at the left hand,
and called it Booz.
5. Solomon also cast a brazen sea, whose figure was that of a hemisphere.
This brazen vessel was called a sea for its largeness, for the laver
was ten feet in diameter, and cast of the thickness of a palm. Its
middle part rested on a short pillar that had ten spirals round
it, and that pillar was ten cubits in diameter. There stood round
about it twelve oxen, that looked to the four winds of heaven, three
to each wind, having their hinder parts depressed, that so the hemispherical
vessel might rest upon them, which itself was also depressed round
about inwardly. Now this sea contained three thousand baths.
6. He also made ten brazen bases for so many quadrangular lavers;
the length of every one of these bases was five cubits, and the
breadth four cubits, and the height six cubits. This vessel was
partly turned, and was thus contrived: There were four small quadrangular
pillars that stood one at each corner; these had the sides of the
base fitted to them on each quarter; they were parted into three
parts; every interval had a border fitted to support [the laver];
upon which was engraven, in one place a lion, and in another place
a bull, and an eagle. The small pillars had the same animals engraven
that were engraven on the sides. The whole work was elevated, and
stood upon four wheels, which were also cast, which had also naves
and felloes, and were a foot and a half in diameter. Any one who
saw the spokes of the wheels, how exactly they were turned, and
united to the sides of the bases, and with what harmony they agreed
to the felloes, would wonder at them. However, their structure was
this: Certain shoulders of hands stretched out held the corners
above, upon which rested a short spiral pillar, that lay under the
hollow part of the laver, resting upon the fore part of the eagle
and the lion, which were adapted to them, insomuch that those who
viewed them would think they were of one piece: between these were
engravings of palm trees. This was the construction of the ten bases.
He also made ten large round brass vessels, which were the lavers
themselves, each of which contained forty baths; (10) for it had
its height four cubits, and its edges were as much distant from
each other. He also placed these lavers upon the ten bases that
were called Mechonoth; and he set five of the lavers on the left
side of the temple (11) which was that side towards the north wind,
and as many on the right side, towards the south, but looking towards
the east; the same [eastern] way he also set the sea Now he appointed
the sea to be for washing the hands and the feet of the priests,
when they entered into the temple and were to ascend the altar,
but the lavers to cleanse the entrails of the beasts that were to
be burnt-offerings, with their feet also.
7. He also made a brazen altar, whose length was twenty cubits,
and its breadth the same, and its height ten, for the burnt-offerings.
He also made all its vessels of brass, the pots, and the shovels,
and the basons; and besides these, the snuffers and the tongs, and
all its other vessels, he made of brass, and such brass as was in
splendor and beauty like gold. The king also dedicated a great number
of tables, but one that was large and made of gold, upon which they
set the loaves of God; and he made ten thousand more that resembled
them, but were done after another manner, upon which lay the vials
and the cups; those of gold were twenty thousand, those of silver
were forty thousand. He also made ten thousand candlesticks, according
to the command of Moses, one of which he dedicated for the temple,
that it might burn in the day time, according to the law; and one
table with loaves upon it, on the north side of the temple, over
against the candlestick; for this he set on the south side, but
the golden altar stood between them. All these vessels were contained
in that part of the holy house, which was forty cubits long, and
were before the veil of that most secret place wherein the ark was
to be set.
8. The king also made pouring vessels, in number eighty thousand,
and a hundred thousand golden vials, and twice as many silver vials:
of golden dishes, in order therein to offer kneaded fine flour at
the altar, there were eighty thousand, and twice as many of silver.
Of large basons also, wherein they mixed fine flour with oil, sixty
thousand of gold, and twice as many of silver. Of the measures like
those which Moses called the Hin and the Assaron, (a tenth deal,)
there were twenty thousand of gold, and twice as many of silver.
The golden censers, in which they carried the incense to the altar,
were twenty thousand; the other censers, in which they carried fire
from the great altar to the little altar, within the temple, were
fifty thousand. The sacerdotal garments which belonged to the high
priest, with the long robes, and the oracle, and the precious stones,
were a thousand. But the crown upon which Moses wrote [the name
of God], (12) was only one, and hath remained to this very day.
He also made ten thousand sacerdotal garments of fine linen, with
purple girdles for every priest; and two hundred thousand trumpets,
according to the command of Moses; also two hundred thousand garments
of fine linen for the singers, that were Levites. And he made musical
instruments, and such as were invented for singing of hymns, called
,Nablee and Cindree, [psalteries and harps,] which were made of
electrum, [the finest brass,] forty thousand.
9. Solomon made all these things for the honor of God, with great
variety and magnificence, sparing no cost, but using all possible
liberality in adorning the temple; and these things he dedicated
to the treasures of God. He also placed a partition round about
the temple, which in our tongue we call Gison, but it is called
Thrigcos by the Greeks, and he raised it up to the height of three
cubits; and it was for the exclusion of the multitude from coming
into the temple, and showing that it was a place that was free and
open only for the priests. He also built beyond this court a temple,
whose figure was that of a quadrangle, and erected for it great
and broad cloisters; this was entered into by very high gates, each
of which had its front exposed to one of the [four] winds, and were
shut by golden doors. Into this temple all the people entered that
were distinguished from the rest by being pure and observant of
the laws. But he made that temple which was beyond this a wonderful
one indeed, and such as exceeds all description in words; nay, if
I may so say, is hardly believed upon sight; for when he had filled
up great valleys with earth, which, on account of their immense
depth, could not be looked on, when you bended down to see them,
without pain, and had elevated the ground four hundred cubits, he
made it to be on a level with the top of the mountain, on which
the temple was built, and by this means the outmost temple, which
was exposed to the air, was even with the temple itself. (13) He
encompassed this also with a building of a double row of cloisters,
which stood on high upon pillars of native stone, while the roofs
were of cedar, and were polished in a manner proper for such high
roofs; but he made all the doors of this temple of silver.
CHAPTER 4.
HOW SOLOMON REMOVED THE ARK INTO THE TEMPLE HOW HE MADE SUPPLICATION
TO GOD, AND OFFERED PUBLIC SACRIFICES TO HIM.
1. WHEN king Solomon had finished these works, these large and
beautiful buildings, and had laid up his donations in the temple,
and all this in the interval of seven years, and had given a demonstration
of his riches and alacrity therein, insomuch that any one who saw
it would have thought it must have been an immense time ere it could
have been finished; and would be surprised that so much should be
finished in so short a time; short, I mean, if compared with the
greatness of the work: he also wrote to the rulers and elders of
the Hebrews, and ordered all the people to gather themselves together
to Jerusalem, both to see the temple which he had built, and to
remove the ark of God into it; and when this invitation of the whole
body of the people to come to Jerusalem was every where carried
abroad, it was the seventh month before they came together; which
month is by our countrymen called Thisri, but by the Macedonians
Hyperberetoets. The feast of tabernacles happened to fall at the
same time, which was celebrated by the Hebrews as a most holy and
most eminent feast. So they carried the ark and the tabernacle which
Moses had pitched, and all the vessels that were for ministration,
to the sacrifices of God, and removed them to the temple. (14) The
king himself, and all the people and the Levites, went before, rendering
the ground moist with sacrifices, and drink-offerings, and the blood
of a great number of oblations, and burning an immense quantity
of incense, and this till the very air itself every where round
about was so full of these odors, that it met, in a most agreeable
manner, persons at a great distance, and was an indication of God's
presence; and, as men's opinion was, of his habitation with them
in this newly built and consecrated place, for they did not grow
weary, either of singing hymns or of dancing, until they came to
the temple; and in this manner did they carry the ark. But when
they should transfer it into the most secret place, the rest of
the multitude went away, and only those priests that carried it
set it between the two cherubims, which embracing it with their
wings, (for so were they framed by the artificer,) they covered
it, as under a tent, or a cupola. Now the ark contained nothing
else but those two tables of stone that preserved the ten commandments,
which God spake to Moses in Mount Sinai, and which were engraved
upon them; but they set the candlestick, and the table, and the
golden altar in the temple, before the most secret place, in the
very same places wherein they stood till that time in the tabernacle.
So they offered up the daily sacrifices; but for the brazen altar,
Solomon set it before the temple, over against the door, that when
the door was opened, it might be exposed to sight, and the sacred
solemnities, and the richness of the sacrifices, might be thence
seen; and all the rest of the vessels they gathered together, and
put them within the temple.
2. Now as soon as the priests had put all things in order about
the ark, and were gone out, there cane down a thick cloud, and stood
there, and spread itself, after a gentle manner, into the temple;
such a cloud it was as was diffused and temperate, not such a rough
one as we see full of rain in the winter season. This cloud so darkened
the place, that one priest could not discern another, but it afforded
to the minds of all a visible image and glorious appearance of God's
having descended into this temple, and of his having gladly pitched
his tabernacle therein. So these men were intent upon this thought.
But Solomon rose up, (for he was sitting before,) and used such
words to God as he thought agreeable to the Divine nature to receive,
and fit for him to give; for he said, "Thou hast an eternal
house, O Lord, and such a one as thou hast created for thyself out
of thine own works; we know it to be the heaven, and the air, and
the earth, and the sea, which thou pervadest, nor art thou contained
within their limits. I have indeed built this temple to thee, and
thy name, that from thence, when we sacrifice, and perform sacred
operations, we may send our prayers up into the air, and may constantly
believe that thou art present, and art not remote from what is thine
own; for neither when thou seest all things, and hearest all things,
nor now, when it pleases thee to dwell here, dost thou leave the
care of all men, but rather thou art very near to them all, but
especially thou art present to those that address themselves to
thee, whether by night or by day." When he had thus solemnly
addressed himself to God, he converted his discourse to the multitude,
and strongly represented the power and providence of God to them;
- how he had shown all things that were come to pass to David his
father, as many of those things had already come to pass, and the
rest would certainly come to pass hereafter; and how he had given
him his name, and told to David what he should be called before
he was born; and foretold, that when he should be king after his
father's death, he should build him a temple, which since they saw
accomplished, according to his prediction, he required them to bless
God, and by believing him, from the sight of what they had seen
accomplished, never to despair of any thing that he had promised
for the future, in order to their happiness, or suspect that it
would not come to pass.
3. When the king had thus discoursed to the multitude, he looked
again towards the temple, and lifting up his right hand to the multitude,
he said," It is not possible by what men can do to return sufficient
thanks to God for his benefits bestowed upon them, for the Deity
stands in need of nothing, and is above any such requital; but so
far as we have been made superior, O Lord, to other animals by thee,
it becomes us to bless thy Majesty, and it is necessary for us to
return thee thanks for what thou hast bestowed upon our house, and
on the Hebrew people; for with what other instrument can we better
appease thee when thou art angry at us, or more properly preserve
thy favor, than with our voice? which, as we have it from the air,
so do we know that by that air it ascends upwards [towards thee].
I therefore ought myself to return thee thanks thereby, in the first
place, concerning my father, whom thou hast raised from obscurity
unto so great joy; and, in the next place, concerning myself, since
thou hast performed all that thou hast promised unto this very day.
And I beseech thee for the time to come to afford us whatsoever
thou, O God, hast power to bestow on such as thou dost esteem; and
to augment our house for all ages, as thou hast promised to David
my father to do, both in his lifetime and at his death, that our
kingdom shall continue, and that his posterity should successively
receive it to ten thousand generations. Do not thou therefore fail
to give us these blessings, and to bestow on my children that virtue
in which thou delightest. And besides all this, I humbly beseech
thee that thou wilt let some portion of thy Spirit come down and
inhabit in this temple, that thou mayst appear to be with us upon
earth. As to thyself, the entire heavens, and the immensity of the
things that are therein, are but a small habitation for thee, much
more is this poor temple so; but I entreat thee to keep it as thine
own house, from being destroyed by our enemies for ever, and to
take care of it as thine own possession: but if this people be found
to have sinned, and be thereupon afflicted by thee with any plague,
because of their sin, as with dearth or pestilence, or any other
affliction which thou usest to inflict on those that transgress
any of thy holy laws, and if they fly all of them to this temple,
beseeching thee, and begging of time to deliver them, then do thou
hear their prayers, as being within thine house, and have mercy
upon them, and deliver them from their afflictions. Nay, moreover,
this help is what I implore of thee, not for the Hebrews only, when
they are in distress, but when any shall come hither from any ends
of the world whatsoever, and shall return from their sins and implore
thy pardon, do thou then pardon them, and hear their prayer. For
hereby all shall learn that thou thyself wast pleased with the building
of this house for thee; and that we are not ourselves of an unsociable
nature, nor behave ourselves like enemies to such as are not of
our own people; but are willing that thy assistance should be communicated
by thee to all men in common, and that they may have the enjoyment
of thy benefits bestowed upon them."
4. When Solomon had said this, and had cast himself upon the ground,
and worshipped a long time, he rose up, and brought sacrifices to
the altar; and when he had filled it with unblemished victims, he
most evidently discovered that God had with pleasure accepted of
all that he had sacrificed to him, for there came a fire running
out of the air, and rushed with violence upon the altar, in the
sight of all, and caught hold of and consumed the sacrifices. Now
when this Divine appearance was seen, the people supposed it to
be a demonstration of God's abode in the temple, and were pleased
with it, and fell down upon the ground and worshipped. Upon which
the king began to bless God, and exhorted the multitude to do the
same, as now having sufficient indications of God's favorable disposition
to them; and to pray that they might always have the like indications
from him, and that he would preserve in them a mind pure from all
wickedness, in righteousness and religious worship, and that they
might continue in the observation of those precepts which God had
given them by Moses, because by that means the Hebrew nation would
be happy, and indeed the most blessed of all nations among all mankind.
He exhorted them also to be mindful, that by what methods they had
attained their present good things, by the same they must preserve
them sure to themselves, and make them greater and more than they
were at present; for that it was not sufficient for them to suppose
they had received them on account of their piety and righteousness,
but that they had no other way of preserving them for the time to
come; for that it is not so great a thing for men to acquire somewhat
which they want, as to preserve what they have acquired, and to
be guilty of no sin whereby it may be hurt.
5. So when the king had spoken thus to the multitude, he dissolved
the congregation, but not till he had completed his oblations, both
for himself and for the Hebrews, insomuch that he sacrificed twenty
and two thousand oxen, and a hundred and twenty thousand sheep;
for then it was that the temple did first of all taste of the victims,
and all the Hebrews, with their wives and children, feasted therein:
nay, besides this, the king then observed splendidly and magnificently
the feast which is called the Feast of Tabernacles, before the temple,
for twice seven days; and he then feasted together with all the
people.
6. When all these solemnities were abundantly satisfied, and nothing
was omitted that concerned the Divine worship, the king dismissed
them; and they every one went to their own homes, giving thanks
to the king for the care he had taken of them, and the works he
had done for them; and praying to God to preserve Solomon to be
their king for a long time. They also took their journey home with
rejoicing, and making merry, and singing hymns to God. And indeed
the pleasure they enjoyed took away the sense of the pains they
all underwent in their journey home. So when they had brought the
ark into the temple, and had seen its greatness, and how fine it
was, and had been partakers of the many sacrifices that had been
offered, and of the festivals that had been solemnized, they every
one returned to their own cities. But a dream that appeared to the
king in his sleep informed him that God had heard his prayers; and
that he would not only preserve the temple, but would always abide
in it; that is, in case his posterity and the whole multitude would
be righteous. And for himself, it said, that if he continued according
to the admonitions of his father, he would advance him to an immense
degree of dignity and happiness, and that then his posterity should
be kings of that country, of the tribe of Judah, for ever; but that
still, if he should be found a betrayer of the ordinances of the
law, and forget them, and turn away to the worship of strange gods,
he would cut him off by the roots, and would neither suffer any
remainder of his family to continue, nor would overlook the people
of Israel, or preserve them any longer from afflictions, but would
utterly destroy them with ten thousand wars and misfortunes; would
cast them out of the land which he had given their fathers, and
make them sojourners in strange lands; and deliver that temple which
was now built to be burnt and spoiled by their enemies, and that
city to be utterly overthrown by the hands of their enemies; and
make their miseries deserve to be a proverb, and such as should
very hardly be credited for their stupendous magnitude, till their
neighbors, when they should hear of them, should wonder at their
calamities, and very earnestly inquire for the occasion, why the
Hebrews, who had been so far advanced by God to such glory and wealth,
should be then so hated by him? and that the answer that should
be made by the remainder of the people should be, by confessing
their sins, and their transgression of the laws of their country.
Accordingly we have it transmitted to us in writing, that thus did
God speak to Solomon in his sleep.
CHAPTER 5.
HOW SOLOMON BUILT HIMSELF A ROYAL PALACE, VERY COSTLY AND SPLENDID;
AND HOW HE SOLVED THE RIDDLES WHICH WERE SENT HIM BY HIRAM.
1. AFTER the building of the temple, which, as we have before said,
was finished in seven years, the king laid the foundation of his
palace, which be did not finish under thirteen years, for he was
not equally zealous in the building of this palace as he had been
about the temple; for as to that, though it was a great work, and
required wonderful and surprising application, yet God, for whom
it was made, so far co-operated therewith, that it was finished
in the forementioned number of years: but the palace, which was
a building much inferior in dignity to the temple, both on account
that its materials had not been so long beforehand gotten ready,
nor had been so zealously prepared, and on account that this was
only a habitation for kings, and not for God, it was longer in finishing.
However, this building was raised so magnificently, as suited the
happy state of the Hebrews, and of the king thereof. But it is necessary
that I describe the entire structure and disposition of the parts,
that so those that light upon this book may thereby make a conjecture,
and, as it were, have a prospect of its magnitude.
2. This house was a large and curious building, and was supported
by many pillars, which Solomon built to contain a multitnde for
hearing causes, and taking cognizance of suits. It was sufficiently
capacious to contain a great body of men, who would come together
to have their causes determined. It was a hundred cubits long, and
fifty broad, and thirty high, supported by quadrangular pillars,
which were all of cedar; but its roof was according to the Corinthian
order, (15) with folding doors, and their adjoining pillars of equal
magnitude, each fluted with three cavities; which building as at
once firm, and very ornamental. There was also another house so
ordered, that its entire breadth was placed in the middle; it was
quadrangular, and its breadth was thirty cubits, having a temple
over against it, raised upon massy pillars; in which temple there
was a large and very glorious room, wherein the king sat in judgment.
To this was joined another house that was built for his queen. There
were other smaller edifices for diet, and for sleep, after public
matters were over; and these were all floored with boards of cedar.
Some of these Solomon built with stones of ten cubits, and wainscoted
the walls with other stones that were sawed, and were of great value,
such as are dug out of the earth for the ornaments of temples, and
to make fine prospects in royal palaces, and which make the mines
whence they are dug famous. Now the contexture of the curious workmanship
of these stones was in three rows, but the fourth row would make
one admire its sculptures, whereby were represented trees, and all
sorts of plants; with the shades that arose from their branches,
and leaves that hung down from them. Those trees anti plants covered
the stone that was beneath them, and their leaves were wrought so
prodigious thin and subtile, that you would think they were in motion;
but the other part up to the roof, was plastered over, and, as it
were, embroidered with colors and pictures. He, moreover, built
other edifices for pleasure; as also very long cloisters, and those
situate in an agreeable place of the palace; and among them a most
glorious dining room, for feastings and compotations, and full of
gold, and such other furniture as so fine a room ought to have for
the conveniency of the guests, and where all the vessels were made
of gold. Now it is very hard to reckon up the magnitude and the
variety of the royal apartments; how many rooms there were of the
largest sort, how many of a bigness inferior to those, and how many
that were subterraneous and invisible; the curiosity of those that
enjoyed the fresh air; and the groves for the most delightful prospect,
for the avoiding the heat, and covering of their bodies. And, to
say all in brief, Solomon made the whole building entirely of white
stone, and cedar wood, and gold, and silver. He also adorned the
roofs and walls with stones set in gold, and beautified them thereby
in the same manner as he had beautified the temple of God with the
like stones. He also made himself a throne of prodigious bigness,
of ivory, constructed as a seat of justice, and having six steps
to it; on every one of which stood, on each end of the step two
lions, two other lions standing above also; but at the sitting place
of the throne hands came out and received the king; and when he
sat backward, he rested on half a bullock, that looked towards his
back; but still all was fastened together with gold.
3. When Solomon had completed all this in twenty years' time, because
Hiram king of Tyre had contributed a great deal of gold, and more
silver to these buildings, as also cedar wood and pine wood, he
also rewarded Hiram with rich presents; corn he sent him also year
by year, and wine and oil, which were the principal things that
he stood in need of, because he inhabited an island, as we have
already said. And besides these, he granted him certain cities of
Galilee, twenty in number, that lay not far from Tyre; which, when
Hiram went to, and viewed, and did not like the gift, he sent word
to Solomon that he did not want such cities as they were; and after
that time these cities were called the land of Cabul; which name,
if it be interpreted according to the language of the Phoenicians,
denotes what does not please. Moreover, the king of Tyre sent sophisms
and enigmatical sayings to Solomon, and desired he would solve them,
and free them from the ambiguity that was in them. Now so sagacious
and understanding was Solomon, that none of these problems were
too hard for him; but he conquered them all by his reasonings, and
discovered their hidden meaning, and brought it to light. Menander
also, one who translated the Tyrian archives out of the dialect
of the Phoenicians into the Greek language, makes mention of these
two kings, where he says thus: "When Abibalus was dead,. his
son Hiram received the kingdom from him, who, when he had lived
fifty-three years, reigned thirty-four. He raised a bank in the
large place, and dedicated the golden pillar which is in Jupiter's
temple. He also went and cut down materials of timber out of the
mountain called Libanus, for the roof of temples; and when he had
pulled down the ancient temples, he both built the temple of Hercules
and that of Astarte; and he first set up the temple of Hercules
in the month Peritius; he also made an expedition against the Euchii,
or Titii, who did not pay their tribute, and when he had subdued
them to himself he returned. Under this king there was Abdemon,
a very youth in age, who always conquered the difficult problems
which Solomon, king of Jerusalem, commanded him to explain. Dius
also makes mention of him, where he says thus: "When Abibalus
was dead, his son Hiram reigned. He raised the eastern parts of
the city higher, and made the city itself larger. He also joined
the temple of Jupiter, which before stood by itself, to the city,
by raising a bank in the middle between them; and he adorned it
with donations of gold. Moreover, he went up to Mount Libanus, and
cut down materials of wood for the building of the temples."
He says also, that Solomon, who was then king of Jerusalem, sent
riddles to Hiram, and desired to receive the like from him, but
that he who could not solve them should pay money to them that did
solve them, and that Hiram accepted the conditions; and when he
was not able to solve the riddles proposed by Solomon, he paid a
great deal of money for his fine; but that he afterward did solve
the proposed riddles by means of Abdemon, a man of Tyre; and that
Hiram proposed other riddles, which, when Solomon could not solve,
he paid back a great deal of money to Hiram." This it is which
Dius wrote.
CHAPTER 6.
HOW SOLOMON FORTIFIED THE CITY OF JERUSALEM, AND BUILT GREAT CITIES;
AND HOW HE BROUGHT SOME OF THE CANAANITES INTO SUBJECTION, AND ENTERTAINED
THE QUEEN OF EGYPT AND OF ETHIOPIA.
1. Now when the king saw that the walls of Jerusalem stood in need
of being better secured, and made stronger, (for he thought the
wails that encompassed Jerusalem ought to correspond to the dignity
of the city,) he both repaired them, and made them higher, with
great towers upon them; he also built cities which might be counted
among the strongest, Hazor and Megiddo, and the third Gezer, which
had indeed belonged to the Philistines; but Pharaoh, the king of
Egypt, had made an expedition against it, and besieged it, and taken
it by force; and when he had slain all its inhabitants, he utterly
overthrew it, and gave it as a present to his daughter, who had
been married to Solomon; for which reason the king rebuilt it, as
a city that was naturally strong, and might be useful in wars, and
the mutations of affairs that sometimes happen. Moreover, he built
two other cities not far from it, Beth-horon was the name of one
of them, and Baalath of the other. He also built other cities that
lay conveniently for these, in order to the enjoyment of pleasures
and delicacies in them, such as were naturally of a good temperature
of the air, and agreeable for fruits ripe in their proper seasons,
and well watered with springs. Nay, Solomon went as far as the desert
above Syria, and possessed himself of it, and built there a very
great city, which was distant two days' journey from Upper Syria,
and one day's journey from Euphrates, and six long days' journey
from Babylon the Great. Now the reason why this city lay so remote
from the parts of Syria that are inhabited is this, that below there
is no water to be had, and that it is in that place only that there
are springs and pits of water. When he had therefore built this
city, and encompassed it with very strong walls, he gave it the
name of Tadmor, and that is the name it is still called by at this
day among the Syrians, but the Greeks name it Palmyra.
2. Now Solomon the king was at this time engaged in building these
cities. But if any inquire why all the kings of Egypt from Menes,
who built Memphis, and was many years earlier than our forefather
Abraham, until Solomon, where the interval was more than one thousand
three hundred years, were called Pharaohs, and took it from one
Pharaoh that lived after the kings of that interval, I think it
necessary to inform them of it, and this in order to cure their
ignorance, and to make the occasion of that name manifest. Pharaoh,
in the Egyptian tongue, signifies a king (16) but I suppose they
made use of other names from their childhood; but when they were
made kings, they changed them into the name which in their own tongue
denoted their authority; for thus it was also that the kings of
Alexandria, who were called formerly by other names, when they took
the kingdom, were named Ptolemies, from their first king. The Roman
emperors also were from their nativity called by other names, but
are styled Caesars, their empire and their dignity imposing that
name upon them, and not suffering them to continue in those names
which their fathers gave them. I suppose also that Herodotus of
Halicarnassus, when he said there were three hundred and thirty
kings of Egypt after Menes, who built Memphis, did therefore not
tell us their names, because they were in common called Pharaohs;
for when after their death there was a queen reigned, he calls her
by her name Nicaule, as thereby declaring, that while the kings
were of the male line, and so admitted of the same nature, while
a woman did not admit the same, he did therefore set down that her
name, which she could not naturally have. As for myself, I have
discovered from our own books, that after Pharaoh, the father-in-law
of Solomon, no other king of Egypt did any longer use that name;
and that it was after that time when the forenamed queen of Egypt
and Ethiopia came to Solomon, concerning whom we shall inform the
reader presently; but I have now made mention of these things, that
I may prove that our books and those of the Egyptians agree together
in many things.
3. But king Solomon subdued to himself the remnant of the Canaanites
that had not before submitted to him; those I mean that dwelt in
Mount Lebanon, and as far as the city Hamath; and ordered them to
pay tribute. He also chose out of them every year such as were to
serve him in the meanest offices, and to do his domestic works,
and to follow husbandry; for none of the Hebrews were servants [in
such low employments]: nor was it reasonable, that when God had
brought so many nations under their power, they should depress their
own people to such mean offices of life, rather than those nations;
while all the Israelites were concerned in warlike affairs, and
were in armor; and were set over the chariots and the horses, rather
than leading the life of slaves. He appointed also five hundred
and fifty rulers over those Canaanites who were reduced to such
domestic slavery, who received the entire care of them from the
king, and instructed them in those labors and operations wherein
he wanted their assistance.
4. Moreover, the king built many ships in the Egyptian Bay of the
Red Sea, in a certain place called Ezion-geber: it is now called
Berenice, and is not far from the city Eloth. This country belonged
formerly to the Jews, and became useful for shipping from the donations
of Hiram king of Tyre; for he sent a sufficient number of men thither
for pilots, and such as were skillful in navigation, to whom Solomon
gave this command: That they should go along with his own stewards
to the land that was of old called Ophir, but now the Aurea Chersonesus,
which belongs to India, to fetch him gold. And when they had gathered
four hundred talents together, they returned to the king again.
5. There was then a woman queen of Egypt and Ethiopia; (17) she
was inquisitive into philosophy, and one that on other accounts
also was to be admired. When this queen heard of the virtue and
prudence of Solomon, she had a great mind to see him; and the reports
that went every day abroad induced her to come to him, she being
desirous to be satisfied by her own experience, and not by a bare
hearing; (for reports thus heard are likely enough to comply with
a false opinion, while they wholly depend on the credit of the relators;)
so she resolved to come to him, and that especially in order to
have a trial of his wisdom, while she proposed questions of very
great difficulty, and entreated that he would solve their hidden
meaning. Accordingly she came to Jerusalem with great splendor and
rich furniture; for she brought with her camels laden with gold,
with several sorts of sweet spices, and with precious stones. Now,
upon the king's kind reception of her, he both showed a great desire
to please her, and easily comprehending in his mind the meaning
of the curious questions she propounded to him, he resolved them
sooner than any body could have expected. So she was amazed at the
wisdom of Solomon, and discovered that it was more excellent upon
trial than what she had heard by report beforehand; and especially
she was surprised at the fineness and largeness of his royal palace,
and not less so at the good order of the apartments, for she observed
that the king had therein shown great wisdom; but she was beyond
measure astonished at the house which was called the Forest of Lebanon,
as also at the magnificence of his daily table, and the circumstances
of its preparation and ministration, with the apparel of his servants
that waited, and the skillful and decent management of their attendance:
nor was she less affected with those daily sacrifices which were
offered to God, and the careful management which the priests and
Levites used about them. When she saw this done every day, she was
in the greatest admiration imaginable, insomuch that she was not
able to contain the surprise she was in, but openly confessed how
wonderfully she was affected; for she proceeded to discourse with
the king, and thereby owned that she was overcome with admiration
at the things before related; and said, "All things indeed,
O king, that came to our knowledge by report, came with uncertainty
as to our belief of them; but as to those good things that to thee
appertain, both such as thou thyself possessest, I mean wisdom and
prudence, and the happiness thou hast from thy kingdom, certainly
the same that came to us was no falsity; it was not only a true
report, but it related thy happiness after a much lower manner than
I now see it to be before my eyes. For as for the report, it only
attempted to persuade our hearing, but did not so make known the
dignity of the things themselves as does the sight of them, and
being present among them. I indeed, who did not believe what was
reported, by reason of the multitude and grandeur of the things
I inquired about, do see them to be much more numerous than they
were reported to be. Accordingly I esteem the Hebrew people, as
well as thy servants and friends, to be happy, who enjoy thy presence
and hear thy wisdom every day continually. One would therefore bless
God, who hath so loved this country, and those that inhabit therein,
as to make thee king over them."
6. Now when the queen had thus demonstrated in words how deeply
the king had affected her, her disposition was known by certain
presents, for she gave him twenty talents of gold, and an immense
quantity of spices and precious stones. (They say also that we possess
the root of that balsam which our country still bears by this woman's
gift.) (18) Solomon also repaid her with many good things, and principally
by bestowing upon her what she chose of her own inclination, for
there was nothing that she desired which he denied her; and as he
was very generous and liberal in his own temper, so did he show
the greatness of his soul in bestowing on her what she herself desired
of him. So when this queen of Ethiopia had obtained what we have
already given an account of, and had again communicated to the king
what she brought with her, she returned to her own kingdom.
CHAPTER 7.
HOW SOLOMON GREW RICH, AND FELL DESPERATELY IN LOVE WITH WOMEN
AND HOW GOD, BEING INCENSED AT IT, RAISED UP ADER AND JEROBOAM AGAINST
HIM. CONCERNING THE DEATH OF SOLOMON.
1. ABOUT the same time there were brought to the king from the
Aurea Chersonesus, a country so called, precious stones, and pine
trees, and these trees he made use of for supporting the temple
and the palace, as also for the materials of musical instruments,
the harps and the psalteries, that the Levites might make use of
them in their hymns to God. The wood which was brought to him at
this time was larger and finer than any that had ever been brought
before; but let no one imagine that these pine trees were like those
which are now so named, and which take that their denomination from
the merchants, who so call them, that they may procure them to be
admired by those that purchase them; for those we speak of were
to the sight like the wood of the fig tree, but were whiter, and
more shining. Now we have said thus much, that nobody may be ignorant
of the difference between these sorts of wood, nor unacquainted
with the nature of the genuine pine tree; and we thought it both
a seasonable and humane thing, when we mentioned it, and the uses
the king made of it, to explain this difference so far as we have
done.
2. Now the weight of gold that was brought him was six hundred
and sixty-six talents, not including in that sum what was brought
by the merchants, nor what the toparchs and kings of Arabia gave
him in presents. He also cast two hundred targets of gold, each
of them weighing six hundred shekels. He also made three hundred
shields, every one weighing three pounds of gold, and he had them
carried and put into that house which was called The Forest of Lebanon.
He also made cups of gold, and of [precious] stones, for the entertainment
of his guests, and had them adorned in the most artificial manner;
and he contrived that all his other furniture of vessels should
be of gold, for there was nothing then to be sold or bought for
silver; for the king had many ships which lay upon the sea of Tarsus,
these he commanded to carry out all sorts of merchandise unto the
remotest nations, by the sale of which silver and gold were brought
to the king, and a great quantity of ivory, and Ethiopians, and
apes; and they finished their voyage, going and returning, in three
years' time.
3. Accordingly there went a great fame all around the neighboring
countries, which proclaimed the virtue and wisdom of Solomon, insomuch
that all the kings every where were desirous to see him, as not
giving credit to what was reported, on account of its being almost
incredible: they also demonstrated the regard they had for him by
the presents they made him; for they sent him vessels of gold, and
silver, and purple garments, and many sorts of spices, and horses,
and chariots, and as many mules for his carriages as they could
find proper to please the king's eyes, by their strength and beauty.
This addition that he made to those chariots and horses which he
had before from those that were sent him, augmented the number of
his chariots by above four hundred, for he had a thousand before,
and augmented the number of his horses by two thousand, for he had
twenty thousand before. These horses also were so much exercised,
in order to their making a fine appearance, and running swiftly,
that no others could, upon the comparison, appear either finer or
swifter; but they were at once the most beautiful of all others,
and their swiftness was incomparable also. Their riders also were
a further ornament to them, being, in the first place, young men
in the most delightful flower of their age, and being eminent for
their largeness, and far taller than other men. They had also very
long heads of hair hanging down, and were clothed in garments of
Tyrian purple. They had also dust of gold every day sprinkled on
their hair, so that their heads sparkled with the reflection of
the sun-beams from the gold. The king himself rode upon a chariot
in the midst of these men, who were still in armor, and had their
bows fitted to them. He had on a white garment, and used to take
his progress out of the city in the morning. There was a certain
place about fifty furlongs distant from Jerusalem, which is called
Etham, very pleasant it is in fine gardens, and abounding in rivulets
of water; (19) thither did he use to go out in the morning, sitting
on high [in his chariot.]
4. Now Solomon had a divine sagacity in all things, and was very
diligent and studious to have things done after an elegant manner;
so he did not neglect the care of the ways, but he laid a causeway
of black stone along the roads that led to Jerusalem, which was
the royal city, both to render them easy for travelers, and to manifest
the grandeur of his riches and government. He also parted his chariots,
and set them in a regular order, that a certain number of them should
be in every city, still keeping a few about him; and those cities
he called the cities of his chariots. And the king made silver as
plentiful in Jerusalem as stones in the street; and so multiplied
cedar trees in the plains of Judea, which did not grow there before,
that they were like the multitude of common sycamore trees. He also
ordained the Egyptian merchants that brought him their merchandise
to sell him a chariot, with a pair of horses, for six hundred drachmae
of silver, and he sent them to the kings of Syria, and to those
kings that were beyond Euphrates.
5. But although Solomon was become the most glorious of kings,
and the best beloved by God, and had exceeded in wisdom and riches
those that had been rulers of the Hebrews before him, yet did not
he persevere in this happy state till he died. Nay, he forsook the
observation of the laws of his fathers, and came to an end no way
suitable to our foregoing history of him. He grew mad in his love
of women, and laid no restraint on himself in his lusts; nor was
he satisfied with the women of his country alone, but he married
many wives out of foreign nations; Sidontans, and Tyrians, and Ammonites,
and Edomites; and he transgressed the laws of Moses, which forbade
Jews to marry any but those that were of their own people. He also
began to worship their gods, which he did in order to the gratification
of his wives, and out of his affection for them. This very thing
our legislator suspected, and so admonished us beforehand, that
we should not marry women of other countries, lest we should be
entangled with foreign customs, and apostatize from our own; lest
we should leave off to honor our own God, and should worship their
gods. But Solomon was Gllen headlong into unreasonable pleasures,
and regarded not those admonitions; for when he had married seven
hundred wives, (20) the daughters of princes and of eminent persons,
and three hundred concubines, and those besides the king of Egypt's
daughter, he soon was governed by them, till he came to imitate
their practices. He was forced to give them this demonstration of
his kindness and affection to them, to live according to the laws
of their countries. And as he grew into years, and his reason became
weaker by length of time, it was not sufficient to recall to his
mind the institutions of his own country; so he still more and more
contemned his own God, and continued to regard the gods that his
marriages had introduced nay, before this happened, he sinned, and
fell into an error about the observation of the laws, when he made
the images of brazen oxen that supported the brazen sea, (21) and
the images of lions about his own throne; for these he made, although
it was not agreeable to piety so to do; and this he did, notwithstanding
that he had his father as a most excellent and domestic pattern
of virtue, and knew what a glorious character he had left behind
him, because of his piety towards God. Nor did he imitate David,
although God had twice appeared to him in his sleep, and exhorted
him to imitate his father. So he died ingloriously. There came therefore
a prophet to him, who was sent by God, and told him that his wicked
actions were not concealed from God; and threatened him that he
should not long rejoice in what he had done; that, indeed, the kingdom
should not be taken from him while he was alive, because God had
promised to his father David that he would make him his successor,
but that he would take care that this should befall his son when
he :was dead; not that he would withdraw all the people from him,
but that he would give ten tribes to a servant of his, and leave
only two tribes to David's grandson for his sake, because he loved
God, and for the sake of the city of Jerusalem, wherein he should
have a temple.
6. When Solomon heard this he was grieved, and greatly confounded,
upon this change of almost all that happiness which had made him
to be admired, into so bad a state; nor had there much time passed
after the prophet had foretold what was coming before God raised
up an enemy against him, whose name was Ader, who took the following
occasion of his enmity to him. He was a child of the stock of the
Edomites, and of the blood royal; and when Joab, the captain of
David's host, laid waste the land of Edom, and destroyed all that
were men grown, and able to bear arms, for six months' time, this
Hadad fled away, and came to Pharaoh the king of Egypt, who received
him kindly, and assigned him a house to dwell in, and a country
to supply him with food; and when he was grown up he loved him exceedingly,
insomuch that he gave him his wife's sister, whose name was Tahpenes,
to wife, by whom he had a son; who was brought up with the king's
children. When Hadad heard in Egypt that both David and Joab were
dead, he came to Pharaoh, and desired that he would permit him to
go to his own country; upon which the king asked what it was that
he wanted, and what hardship he had met with, that he was so desirous
to leave him. And when he was often troublesome to him, and entreated
him to dismiss him, he did not then do it; but at the time when
Solomon's affairs began to grow worse, on account of his forementioned
transgressions (22) and God's anger against him for the same, Hadad,
by Pharaoh's permission, came to Edom; and when he was not able
to make the people forsake Solomon, for it was kept under by many
garrisons, and an innovation was not to be made with safety, he
removed thence, and came into Syria; there he lighted upon one Rezon,
who had run away from Hadadezer, king of Zobah, his master, and
was become a robber in that country, and joined friendship with
him, who had already a band of robbers about him. So he went up,
and seized upon that part of Syria, and was made king thereof. He
also made incursions into the land of Israel, and did it no small
mischief, and spoiled it, and that in the lifetime of Solomon. And
this was the calamity which the Hebrews suffered by Hadad.
7. There was also one of Solomon's own nation that made an attempt
against him, Jeroboam the son of Nebat, who had an expectation of
rising, from a prophecy that had been made to him long before. He
was left a child by his father, and brought up by his mother; and
when Solomon saw that he was of an active and bold disposition,
he made him the curator of the walls which he built round about
Jerusalem; and he took such care of those works, that the king approved
of his behavior, and gave him, as a reward for the same, the charge
of the tribe of Joseph. And when about that time Jeroboam was once
going out of Jerusalem, a prophet of the city Shilo, whose name
was Ahijah, met him and saluted him; and when he had taken him a
little aside to a place out of the way, where there was not one
other person present, he rent the garment he had on into twelve
pieces, and bid Jeroboam take ten of them; and told him beforehand,
that "this is the will of God; he will part the dominion of
Solomon, and give one tribe, with that which is next it, to his
son, because of the promise made to David for his succession, and
will have ten tribes to thee, because Solomon hath sinned against
him, and delivered up himself to women, and to their gods. Seeing
therefore thou knowest the cause for which God hath changed his
mind, and is alienated from Solomon, be thou
8. So Jeroboam was elevated by these words of the prophet; and
being a young man, (23) of a warm temper, and ambitious of greatness,
he could not be quiet; and when he had so great a charge in the
government, and called to mind what had been revealed to him by
Ahijah, he endeavored to persuade the people to forsake Solomon,
to make a disturbance, and to bring the government over to himself.
But when Solomon understood his intention and treachery, he sought
to catch him and kill him; but Jeroboam was informed of it beforehand,
and fled to Shishak, the king of Egypt, and there abode till the
death of Solomon; by which means he gained these two advantages
to suffer no harm from Solomon, and to be preserved for the kingdom.
So Solomon died when he was already an old man, having reigned eighty
years, and lived ninety-four. He was buried in Jerusalem, having
been superior to all other kings in happiness, and riches, and wisdom,
excepting that when he was growing into years he was deluded by
women, and transgressed the law; concerning which transgressions,
and the miseries which befell the Hebrews thereby, I think proper
to discourse at another opportunity.
CHAPTER 8.
HOW, UPON THE DEATH OF SOLOMON THE PEOPLE FORSOOK HIS SON REHOBOAM,
AND ORDAINED JEROBOAM KING OVER THE TEN TRIBES.
1. NOW when Solomon was dead, and his son Rehoboam (who was born
of an Amntonite wife; whose name was Naamah) had succeeded him in
the kingdom, the rulers of the multitude sent immediately into Egypt,
and called back Jeroboam; and when he was come to them, to the city
Shethem, Rehoboam came to it also, for he had resolved to declare
himself king to the Israelites while they were there gathered together.
So the rulers of the people, as well as Jeroboam, came to him, and
besought him, and said that he ought to relax, and to be gentler
than his father, in the servitude he had imposed on them, because
they had borne a heavy yoke, and that then they should be better
affected to him, and be well contented to serve him under his moderate
government, and should do it more out of love than fear. But Rehoboam
told them they should come to him again in three days' time, when
he would give an answer to their request. This delay gave occasion
to a present suspicion, since he had not given them a favorable
answer to their mind immediately; for they thought that he should
have given them a humane answer off-hand, especially since he was
but young. However, they thought that this consultation about it,
and that he did not presently give them a denial, afforded them
some good hope of success.
2. Rehoboam now called his father's friends, and advised with them
what sort of answer he ought to give to the multitude; upon which
they gave him the advice which became friends, and those that knew
the temper of such a multitude. They advised him to speak in a way
more popular than suited the grandeur of a king, because he would
thereby oblige them to submit to him with goodwill, it being most
agreeable to subjects that their kings should be almost upon the
level with them. But Rehoboam rejected this so good, and in general
so profitable, advice, (it was such, at least, at that time when
he was to be made king,) God himself, I suppose, causing what was
most advantageous to be condemned by him. So he called for the young
men who were brought up with him, and told them what advice the
elders had given him, and bade them speak what they thought he ought
to do. They advised him to give the following answer to the people
(for neither their youth nor God himself suffered them to discern
what was best): That his little finger should be thicker than his
father's loins; and if they had met with hard usage from his father,
they should experience much rougher treatment from him; and if his
father had chastised them with whips, they must expect that he would
do it with scorpions. (24) The king was pleased with this advice,
and thought it agreeable to the dignity of his government to give
them such an answer. Accordingly, when the multitude was come together
to hear his answer on the third day, all the people were in great
expectation, and very intent to hear what the king would say to
them, and supposed they should hear somewhat of a kind nature; but
he passed by his friends, and answered as the young men had given
him counsel. Now this was done according to the will of God, that
what Ahijah had foretold might come to pass.
3. By these words the people were struck as it were by all iron
hammer, and were so grieved at the words, as if they had already
felt the effects of them; and they had great indignation at the
king; and all cried out aloud, and said, "We will have no longer
any relation to David or his posterity after this day." And
they said further, "We only leave to Rehoboam the temple which
his father built;" and they threatened to forsake him. Nay,
they were so bitter, and retained their wrath so long, that when
he sent Adoram, which was over the tribute, that he might pacify
them, and render them milder, and persuade them to forgive him,
if he had said any thing that was rash or grievous to them in his
youth, they would not hear it, but threw stones at him, and killed
him. When Rehoboam saw this, he thought himself aimed at by those
stones with which they had killed his servant, and feared lest he
should undergo the last of punishments in earnest; so he got immediately
into his chariot, and fled to Jerusalem, where the tribe of Judah
and that of Benjamin ordained him king; but the rest of the multitude
forsook the sons of David from that day, and appointed Jeroboam
to be the ruler of their public affairs. Upon this Rehoboam, Solomon's
son, assembled a great congregation of those two tribes that submitted
to him, and was ready to take a hundred and eighty thousand chosen
men out of the army, to make an expedition against Jeroboam and
his people, that he might force them by war to be his servants;
but he was forbidden of God by the prophet [Shemaiah] to go to war,
for that it was not just that brethren of the same contry should
fight one against another. He also said that this defection of the
multitude was according to the purpose of God. So he did not proceed
in this expedition. And now I will relate first the actions of Jeroboam
the king of Israel, after which we will relate what are therewith
connected, the actions of Rehoboam, the king of the two tribes;
by this means we shall preserve the good order of the history entire.
4. When therefore Jeroboam had built him a palace in the city Shechem,
he dwelt there. He also built him another at Penuel, a city so called.
And now the feast of tabernacles was approaching in a little time,
Jeroboam considered, that if he should permit the multitude to go
to worship God at Jerusalem, and there to celebrate the festival,
they would probably repent of what they had done, and be enticed
by the temple, and by the worship of God there performed, and would
leave him, and return to their first kings; and if so, he should
run the risk of losing his own life; so he invented this contrivance;
He made two golden heifers, and built two little temples for them,
the one in the city Bethel, and the other in Dan, which last was
at the fountains of the Lesser Jordan (25) and he put the heifers
into both the little temples, in the forementioned cities. And when
he had called those ten tribes together over whom he ruled, he made
a speech to the people in these words: "I suppose, my countrymen,
that you know this, that every place hath God in it; nor is there
any one determinate place in which he is, but he every where hears
and sees those that worship him; on which account I do not think
it right for you to go so long a journey to Jerusalem, which is
an enemy's city, to worship him. It was a man that built the temple:
I have also made two golden heifers, dedicated to the same God;
and the one of them I have consecrated in the city Bethel, and the
other in Dan, to the end that those of you that dwell nearest those
cities may go to them, and worship God there; and I will ordain
for you certain priests and Levites from among yourselves, that
you may have no want of the tribe of Levi, or of the sons of Aaron;
but let him that is desirous among you of being a priest, bring
to God a bullock and a ram, which they say Aaron the first priest
brought also." When Jeroboam had said this, he deluded the
people, and made them to revolt from the worship of their forefathers,
and to transgress their laws. This was the beginning of miseries
to the Hebrews, and the cause why they were overcome in war by foreigners,
and so fell into captivity. But we shall relate those things in
their proper places hereafter.
5. When the feast [of tabernacles] was just approaching, Jeroboam
was desirous to celebrate it himself in Bethel, as did the two tribes
celebrate it in Jerusalem. Accordingly he built an altar before
the heifer, and undertook to be high priest himself. So he went
up to the altar, with his own priests about him; but when he was
going to offer the sacrifices and the burnt-offerings, in the sight
of all the people, a prophet, whose name was Jadon, was sent by
God, and came to him from Jerusalem, who stood in the midst of the
multitude, and in the 'hearing of' the king, and directing his discourse
to the altar, said thus: God foretells that there shall be a certain
man of the family of David, Josiah by name, who shall slay upon
thee those false priests that shall live at that time, and upon
thee shall burn the bones of those deceivers of the people, those
impostors' and wicked wretches. However, that this people may believe
that these things shall so come to pass, I foretell a sign to them
that shall also come to pass. This altar shall be broken to pieces
immediately, and all the fat of the sacrifices that is upon it shall
be poured upon the ground." When the prophet had said this,
Jeroboam fell into a passion, and stretched out his hand, and bid
them lay hold of him; but that hand which he stretched out was enfeebled,
and he was not able to pull it in again to him, for it was become
withered, and hung down, as if it were a dead hand. The altar also
was broken to pieces, and all that was upon it was poured out, as
the prophet had foretold should come to pass. So the king understood
that he was a man of veracity, and had a Divine foreknowledge; and
entreated him to pray to God that he would restore his right hand.
Accordingly the prophet did pray to God to grant him that request.
So the king, having his hand recovered to its natural state, rejoiced
at it, and invited the prophet to sup with him; but Jadon said that
he could not endure to come into his house, nor to taste of bread
or water in this city, for that was a thing God had forbidden him
to do; as also to go back by the same way which he came, but he
said he was to return by another way. So the king wondered at the
abstinence of the man, but was himself in fear, as suspecting a
change of his affairs for the worse, from what had been said to
him.
CHAPTER 9.
HOW JADON THE PROPHET WAS PERSUADED BY ANOTHER LYING PROPHET AND
RETURNED [TO BETHEL,] AND WAS AFTERWARDS SLAIN BY A LION. AS ALSO
WHAT WORDS THE WICKED PROPHET MADE USE OF TO PERSUADE THE KING,
AND THEREBY ALIENATED HIS MIND FROM GOD.
1. NOW there was a certain wicked man in that city, who was a false
prophet, whom Jeroboam had in great esteem, but was deceived by
him and his flattering words. This man was bedrid, by reason or
the infirmities of old age: however, he was informed by his sons
concerning the prophet that was come from Jerusalem, and concerning
the signs done by him; and how, when Jeroboam's right hand had been
enfeebled, at the prophet's prayer he had it revived again. Whereupon
he was afraid that this stranger and prophet should be in better
esteem with the king than himself, and obtain greater honor from
him: and he gave orders to his sons to saddle his ass presently,
and make all ready that he might go out. Accordingly they made haste
to do what they were commanded, and he got upon the ass and followed
after the prophet.; and when he had overtaken him, as he was resting
himself under a very large oak tree that was thick and shady, he
at first saluted him, but presently he complained of him, because
he had not come into his house, and partaken of his hospitality.
And when the other said that God had forbidden him to taste of any
one's provision in that city, he replied, that "for certain
God had not forbidden that I should set food before thee, for I
am a prophet as thou art, and worship God in the same manner that
thou dost; and I am now come as sent by him, in order to bring thee
into my house, and make thee my guest." Now Jadon gave credit
to this lying prophet, and returned back with him. But when they
were at dinner, and merry together, God appeared to Jadon, and said
that he should suffer punishment for transgressing his commands,
- and he told him what that punishment should be for he said that
he should meet with a lion as he was going on his way, by which
lion he should be torn in pieces, and be deprived of burial in the
sepulchers of his fathers; which things came to pass, as I suppose,
according to the will of God, that so Jeroboam might not give heed
to the words of Jadon as of one that had been convicted of lying.
However, as Jadon was again going to Jerusalem, a lion assaulted
him, and pulled him off the beast he rode on, and slew him; yet
did he not at all hurt the ass, but sat by him, and kept him, as
also the prophet's body. This continued till some travelers that
saw it came and told it in the city to the false prophet, who sent
his sons, and brought the body unto the city, and made a funeral
for him at great expense. He also charged his sons to bury himself
with him and said that all which he had foretold against that city,
and the altar, and priests, and false prophets, would prove true;
and that if he were buried with him, he should receive no injurious
treatment after his death, the bones not being then to be distinguished
asunder. But now, when he had performed those funeral rites to the
prophet, and had given that charge to his sons, as he was a wicked
and an impious man, he goes to Jeroboam, and says to him, "And
wherefore is it now that thou art disturbed at the words of this
silly fellow?" And when the king had related to him what had
happened about the altar, and about his own hand, and gave him the
names of divine man, and an excellent prophet, he endeavored by
a wicked trick to weaken that his opinion; and by using plausible
words concerning what had happened, he aimed to injure the truth
that was in them; for he attempted to persuade him that his hand
was enfeebled by the labor it had undergone in supporting the sacrifices,
and that upon its resting awhile it returned to its former nature
again; and that as to the altar, it was but new, and had borne abundance
of sacrifices, and those large ones too, and was accordingly broken
to pieces, and fallen down by the weight of what had been laid upon
it. He also informed him of the death of him that had foretold those
things, and how he perished; [whence he concluded that] he had not
any thing in him of a prophet, nor spake any thing like one. When
he had thus spoken, he persuaded the king, and entirely alienated
his mind from God, and from doing works that were righteous and
holy, and encouraged him to go on in his impious practices (26)
and accordingly he was to that degree injurious to God, and so great
a transgressor, that he sought for nothing else every day but how
he might be guilty of some new instances of wickedness, and such
as should be more detestable than what he had been so insolent as
to do before. And so much shall at present suffice to have said
concerning Jeroboam.
CHAPTER 10.
CONCERNING REHOBOAM, AND HOW GOD INFLICTED PUNISHMENT UPON HIM
FOR HIS IMPIETY BY SHISHAK [KING OF EGYPT].
1. Now Rehoboam, the son of Solomon, who, as we said before, was
king of the two tribes, built strong and large cities, Bethlehem,
and Etare, and Tekoa, and Bethzur, and Shoco, and Adullam, and Ipan,
and Maresha, and Ziph, and Adorlam, and Lachlsh, and Azekah, and
Zorah, and Aijalon, and Hebron; these he built first of all in the
tribe of Judah. He also built other large cities in the tribe of
Benjamin, and walled them about, and put garrisons in them all,
and captains, and a great deal of corn, and wine, and oil, and he
furnished every one of them plentifully with other provisions that
were necessary for sustenance; moreover, he put therein shields
and spears for many ten thousand men. The priests also that were
in all Israel, and the Levites, and if there were any of the multitude
that were good and righteous men, they gathered themselves together
to him, having left their own cities, that they might worship God
in Jerusalem; for they were not willing to be forced to worship
the heifers which Jeroboam had made; and they augmented the kingdom
of Rehoboam for three years. And after he had married a woman of
his own kindred, and had by her three children born to him, he married
also another of his own kindred, who was daughter of Absalom by
Tamar, whose name was Maachah, and by her he had a son, whom he
named Abijah. He had moreover many other children by other wives,
but he loved Maachah above them all. Now he had eighteen legitimate
wives, and thirty concubines; and he had born to him twenty-eight
sons and threescore daughters; but he appointed Abijah, whom he
had by Maachah, to be his successor in the kingdom, and intrusted
him already with the treasures and the strongest cities.
2. Now I cannot but think that the greatness of a kingdom, and
its change into prosperity, often become the occasion of mischief
and of transgression to men; for when Rehoboam saw that his kingdom
was so much increased, he went out of the right way unto unrighteous
and irreligious practices, and he despised the worship of God, till
the people themselves imitated his wicked actions: for so it usually
happens, that the manners of subjects are corrupted at the same
time with those of their governors, which subjects then lay aside
their own sober way of living, as a reproof of their governors'
intemperate courses, and follow their wickedness as if it were virtue;
for it is not possible to show that men approve of the actions of
their kings, unless they do the same actions with them. Agreeable
whereto it now happened to the subjects of Rehoboam; for when he
was grown impious, and a transgressor himself, they endeavored not
to offend him by resolving still to be righteous. But God sent Shishak,
king of Egypt, to punish them for their unjust behavior towards
him, concerning whom Herodotus was mistaken, and applied his actions
to Sesostris; for this Shishak, (27) in the fifth year of the reign
of Rehoboam, made an expedition [into Judea] with many ten thousand
men; for he had one thousand two hundred chariots in number that
followed him, and threescore thousand horsemen, and four hundred
thousand footmen. These he brought with him, and they were the greatest
part of them Libyans and Ethiopians. Now therefore when he fell
upon the country of the Hebrews, he took the strongest cities of
Rehoboam's kingdom without fighting; and when he had put garrisons
in them, he came last of all to Jerusalem.
3. Now when Rehoboam, and the multitude with him, were shut up
in Jerusalem by the means of the army of Shishak, and when they
besought God to give them victory and deliverance, they could not
persuade God to be on their side. But Shemaiah the prophet told
them, that God threatened to forsake them, as they had themselves
forsaken his worship. When they heard this, they were immediately
in a consternation of mind; and seeing no way of deliverance, they
all earnestly set themselves to confess that God might justly overlook
them, since they had been guilty of impiety towards him, and had
let his laws lie in confusion. So when God saw them in that disposition,
and that they acknowledge their sins, he told the prophet that he
would not destroy them, but that he would, however, make them servants
to the Egyptians, that they may learn whether they will suffer less
by serving men or God. So when Shishak had taken the city without
fighting, because Rehoboam was afraid, and received him into it,
yet did not Shishak stand to the covenants he had made, but he spoiled
the temple, and emptied the treasures of God, and those of the king,
and carried off innumerable ten thousands of gold and silver, and
left nothing at all behind him. He also took away the bucklers of
gold, and the shields, which Solomon the king had made; nay, he
did not leave the golden quivers which David had taken from the
king of Zobah, and had dedicated to God; and when he had thus done,
he returned to his own kingdom. Now Herodotus of Halicarnassus mentions
this expedition, having only mistaken the king's name; and [in saying
that] he made war upon many other nations also, and brought Syria
of Palestine into subjection, and took the men that were therein
prisoners without fighting. Now it is manifest that he intended
to declare that our nation was subdued by him; for he saith that
he left behind him pillars in the land of those that delivered themselves
up to him without fighting, and engraved upon them the secret parts
of women. Now our king Rehoboam delivered up our city without fighting.
He says withal (28) that the Ethiopians learned to circumcise their
privy parts from the Egyptians, with this addition, that the Phoenicians
and Syrians that live in Palestine confess that they learned it
of the Egyptians. Yet it is evident that no other of the Syrians
that live in Palestine, besides us alone, are circumcised. But as
to such matters, let every one speak what is agreeable to his own
opinion.
4. When Shishak was gone away, king Rehoboam made bucklers and
shields of brass, instead of those of gold, and delivered the same
number of them to the keepers of the king's palace. So, instead
of warlike expeditions, and that glory which results from those
public actions, he reigned in great quietness, though not without
fear, as being always an enemy to Jeroboam, and he died when he
had lived fifty-seven years, and reigned seventeen. He was in his
disposition a proud and a foolish man, and lost [part of his] dominions
by not hearkening to his father's friends. He was buried in Jerusalem,
in the sepulchers of the kings; and his son Abijah succeeded him
in the kingdom, and this in the eighteenth year of Jeroboam's reign
over the ten tribes; and this was the conclusion of these affairs.
It must be now our business to relate the affairs of Jeroboam, and
how he ended his life; for he ceased not nor rested to be injurious
to God, but every day raised up altars upon high mountains, and
went on making priests out of the multitude.
CHAPTER 11.
CONCERNING THE DEATH OF A SON OF JEROBOAM. HOW JEROBOAM WAS BEATEN
BY ABIJAH WHO DIED A LITTLE AFTERWARD AND WAS SUCCEEDED IN HIS KINGDOM
BY ASA. AND ALSO HOW, AFTER THE DEATH OF JEROBOAM BAASHA DESTROYED
HIS SON NADAB AND ALL THE HOUSE OF JEROBOAM.
1. HOWEVER, God was in no long time ready to return Jeroboam's
wicked actions, and the punishment they deserved, upon his own head,
and upon the heads of all his house. And whereas a soil of his lay
sick at that time, who was called Abijah, he enjoined his wife to
lay aside her robes, and to take the garments belonging to a private
person, and to go to Ahijah the prophet, for that he was a wonderful
man in foretelling futurities, it having been he who told me that
I should be king. He also enjoined her, when she came to him, to
inquire concerning the child, as if she were a stranger, whether
he should escape this distemper. So she did as her husband bade
her, and changed her habit, and came to the city Shiloh, for there
did Ahijah live. And as she was going into his house, his eyes being
then dim with age, God appeared to him, and informed him of two
things; that the wife of Jeroboam was come to him, and what answer
he should make to her inquiry. Accordingly, as the woman was coming
into the house like a private person and a stranger, he cried out,
"Come in, O thou wife of Jeroboam! Why concealest thou thyself?
Thou art not concealed from God, who hath appeared to me, and informed
me that thou wast coming, and hath given me in command what I shall
say to thee." So he said that she should go away to her husband,
and speak to him thus: "Since I made thee a great man when
thou wast little, or rather wast nothing, and rent the kingdom from
the house of David, and gave it to thee, and thou hast been unmindful
of these benefits, hast left off my worship, hast made thee molten
gods and honored them, I will in like manner cast thee down again,
and will destroy all thy house, and make them food for the dogs
and the fowls; for a certain king is rising up, by appointment,
over all this people, who shall leave none of the family of Jeroboam
remaining. The multitude also shall themselves partake of the same
punishment, and shall be cast out of this good land, and shall be
scattered into the places beyond Euphrates, because they have followed
the wicked practices of their king, and have worshipped the gods
that he made, and forsaken my sacrifices. But do thou, O woman,
make haste back to thy husband, and tell him this message; but thou
shalt then find thy son dead, for as thou enterest the city he shall
depart this life; yet shall he be buried with the lamentation of
all the multitude, and honored with a general mourning, for he was
the only person of goodness of Jeroboam's family." When the
prophet had foretold these events, the woman went hastily away with
a disordered mind, and greatly grieved at the death of the forenamed
child. So she was in lamentation as she went along the road, and
mourned for the death of her son, that was just at hand. She was
indeed in a miserable condition at the unavoidable misery of his
death, and went apace, but in circumstances very unfortunate, because
of her son: for the greater haste she made, she would the sooner
see her son dead, yet was she forced to make such haste on account
of her husband. Accordingly, when she was come back, she found that
the child had given up the ghost, as the prophet had said; and she
related all the circumstances to the king.
2. Yet did not Jeroboam lay any of these things to heart, but he
brought together a very numerous army, and made a warlike expedition
against Abijah, the son of Rehoboam, who had succeeded his father
in the kingdom of the two tribes; for he despised him because of
his age. But when he heard of the expedition of Jeroboam, he was
not affrighted at it, but proved of a courageous temper of mind,
superior both to his youth and to the hopes of his enemy; so he
chose him an army out of the two tribes, and met Jeroboam at a place
called Mount Zemaraim, and pitched his camp near the other, and
prepared everything necessary for the fight. His army consisted
of four hundred thousand, but the army of Jeroboam was double to
it. Now as the armies stood in array, ready for action and dangers,
and were just going to fight, Abijah stood upon an elevated place,
and beckoning with his hand, he desired the multitude and Jeroboam
himself to hear first with silence what he had to say. And when
silence was made, he began to speak, and told them, - "God
had consented that David and his posterity should be their rulers
for all time to come, and this you yourselves are not unacquainted
with; but I cannot but wonder how you should forsake my father,
and join yourselves to his servant Jeroboam, and are now here with
him to fight against those who, by God's own determination, are
to reign, and to deprive them of that dominion which they have still
retained; for as to the greater part of it, Jeroboam is unjustly
in possession of it. However, I do not suppose he will enjoy it
any longer; but when he hath suffered that punishment which God
thinks due to him for what is past, he will leave off the transgressions
he hath been guilty of, and the injuries he hath offered to him,
and which he hath still continued to offer and hath persuaded you
to do the same: yet when you were not any further unjustly treated
by my father, than that he did not speak to you so as to please
you, and this only in compliance with the advice of wicked men,
you in anger forsook him, as you pretended, but, in reality, you
withdrew yourselves from God, and from his laws, although it had
been right for you to have forgiven a man that was young in age,
and not used to govern people, not only some disagreeable words,
but if his youth and unskilfulness in affairs had led him into some
unfortunate actions, and that for the sake of his father Solomon,
and the benefits you received from him; for men ought to excuse
the sins of posterity on account of the benefactions of parent;
but you considered nothing of all this then, neither do you consider
it now, but come with so great an army against us. And what is it
you depend upon for victory? Is it upon these golden heifers, and
the altars that you have on high places, which are demonstrations
of your impiety, and not of religious worship? Or is it the exceeding
multitude of your army which gives you such good hopes? Yet certainly
there is no strength at all in an army of many ten thousands, when
the war is unjust; for we ought to place our surest hopes of success
against our enemies in righteousness alone, and in piety towards
God; which hope we justly have, since we have kept the laws from
the beginning, and have worshipped our own God, who was not made
by hands out of corruptible matter; nor was he formed by a wicked
king, in order to deceive the multitude; but who is his own workmanship,
(29) and the beginning and end of all things. I therefore give you
counsel even now to repent, and to take better advice, and to leave
off the prosecution of the war; to call to mind the laws of your
country, and to reflect what it hath been that hath advanced you
to so happy a state as you are now in."
3. This was the speech which Abijah made to the multitude. But
while he was still speaking Jeroboam sent some of his soldiers privately
to encompass Abijab round about, on certain parts of the camp that
were not taken notice of; and when he was thus within the compass
of the enemy, his army was affrighted, and their courage failed
them; but Abijah encouraged them, and exhorted them to place their
hopes on God, for that he was not encompassed by the enemy. So they
all at once implored the Divine assistance, while the priests sounded
with the trumpet, and they made a shout, and fell upon their enemies,
and God brake the courage and cast down the force of their enemies,
and made Ahijah's army superior to them; for God vouchsafed to grant
them a wonderful and very famous victory; and such a slaughter was
now made of Jeroboam's army (30) as is never recorded to have happened
in any other war, whether it were of the Greeks or of the Barbarians,
for they overthrew [and slew] five hundred thousand of their enemies,
and they took their strongest cities by force, and spoiled them;
and besides those, they did the same to Bethel and her towns, and
Jeshanah and her towns. And after this defeat Jeroboam never recovered
himself during the life of Abijah, who yet did not long survive,
for he reigned but three years, and was buried in Jerusalem in the
sepulchers of his forefathers. He left behind him twenty-two sons,
and sixteen daughters; and he had also those children by fourteen
wives; and Asa his son succeeded in the kingdom; and the young man's
mother was Michaiah. Under his reign the country of the Israelites
enjoyed peace for ten years.
4. And so far concerning Abijah, the son of Rehoboam, the son of
Solomon, as his history hath come down to us. But Jeroboam, the
king of the ten tribes, died when he had governed them two and twenty
years; whose son Nadab succeeded him, in the second year of the
reign of Asa. Now Jeroboam's son governed two years, and resembled
his father in impiety and wickedness. In these two years he made
an expedition against Gibbethon, a city of the Philistines, and
continued the siege in order to take it; but he was conspired against
while he was there by a friend of his, whose name was Baasha, the
son of Ahijah, and was slain; which Baasha took the kingdom after
the other's death, and destroyed the whole house of Jeroboam. It
also came to pass, according as God had foretold, that some of Jeroboam's
kindred that died in the city were torn to pieces and devoured by
dogs, and that others of them that died in the fields were torn
and devoured by the fowls. So the house of Jeroboam suffered the
just punishment of his impiety, and of his wicked actions.
CHAPTER 12.
HOW ZERAH, KING OF THE ETHIOPIANS, WAS BEATEN BY ASA; AND HOW ASA,
UPON BAASHA'S MAKING WAR AGAINST HIM, INVITED THE KING OF THE DAMASCENS
TO ASSIST HIM; AND HOW, ON THE DESTRUCTION OF THE HOUSE OF BAASHA
ZIMRI GOT THE KINGDOM AS DID HIS SON AHAB AFTER HIM.
1. Now Asa, the king of Jerusalem, was of an excellent character,
and had a regard to God, and neither did nor designed any thing
but what had relation to the observation of the laws. He made a
reformation of his kingdom, and cut off whatsoever was wicked therein,
and purified it from every impurity. Now he had an army of chosen
men that were armed with targets and spears; out of the tribe of
Judah three hundred thousand; and out of the tribe of Benjamin,
that bore shields and drew bows, two hundred and fifty thousand.
But when he had already reigned ten years, Zerah, king of Ethiopia,
(31) made an expedition against him, with a great army, of nine
hundred thousand footmen, and one hundred thousand horsemen, and
three hundred chariots, and came as far as Mareshah, a city that
belonged to the tribe of Judah. Now when Zerah had passed so far
with his own army, Asa met him, and put his army in array over against
him, in a valley called Zephathah, not far from the city; and when
he saw the multitude of the Ethiopians, he cried out, and besought
God to give him the victory, and that he might kill many ten thousands
of the enemy: "For," said he, (32) "I depend on nothing
else but that assistance which I expect from thee, which is able
to make the fewer superior to the more numerous, and the weaker
to the stronger; and thence it is alone that I venture to meet Zerah,
and fight him."
2. While Asa was saying this, God gave him a signal of victory,
and joining battle cheerfully on account of what God had foretold
about it, he slew a great many of the Ethiopians; and when he had
put them to flight, he pursued them to the country of Gerar; and
when they left off killing their enemies, they betook themselves
to spoiling them, (for the city Gerar was already taken,) and to
spoiling their camp, so that they carried off much gold, and much
silver, and a great deal of [other] prey, and camels, and great
cattle, and flocks of sheep. Accordingly, when Asa and his army
had obtained such a victory, and such wealth from God, they returned
to Jerusalem. Now as they were coming, a prophet, whose name was
Azariah, met them on the road, and bade them stop their journey
a little; and began to say to them thus: That the reason why they
had obtained this victory from God was this, that they had showed
themselves righteous and religious men, and had done every thing
according to the will of God; that therefore, he said, if they persevered
therein, God would grant that they should always overcome their
enemies, and live happily; but that if they left off his worship,
all things shall fall out on the contrary; and a time should come,
wherein no true prophet shall be left in your whole multitude, nor
a priest who shall deliver you a true ,answer from the oracle; but
your cities shall be overthrown, and your nation scattered over
the whole earth, and live the life of strangers and wanderers. So
he advised them, while they had time, to be good, and not to deprive
themselves of the favor of God. When the king and the people heard
this, they rejoiced; and all in common, and every one in particular,
took great care to behave themselves righteously. The king also
sent some to take care that those in the country should observe
the laws also.
3. And this was the state of Asa, king of the two tribes. I now
return to Baasha, the king of the multitude of the Israelites, who
slew Nadab, the son of Jeroboam, and retained the government. He
dwelt in the city Tirzah, having made that his habitation, and reigned
twenty-four years. He became more wicked and impious than Jeroboam
or his son. He did a great deal of mischief to the multitude, and
was injurious to God, who sent the prophet Jehu, and told him beforehand
that his whole family should be destroyed, and that he would bring
the same miseries on his house which had brought that of Jeroboam
to ruin; because when he had been made king by him, he had not requited
his kindness, by governing the multitude righteously and religiously;
which things, in the first place, tended to their own happiness,
and, in the next place, were pleasing to God: that he had imitated
this very wicked king Jeroboam; and although that man's soul had
perished, yet did he express to the life his wickedness; and he
said that he should therefore justly experience the like calamity
with him, since he had been guilty of the like wickedness. But Baasha,
though he heard beforehand what miseries would befall him and his
whole family for their insolent behavior, yet did not he leave off
his wicked practices for the time to come, nor did he care to appear
other than worse and worse till he died; nor did he then repent
of his past actions, nor endeavor to obtain pardon of God for them,
but did as those do who have rewards proposed to them, when they
have once in earnest set about their work, they do not leave off
their labors; for thus did Baasha, when the prophet foretold to
him what would come to pass, grow worse, as if what were threatened,
the perdition of his family, and the destruction of his house, (which
are really among the greatest of evils,) were good things; and,
as if he were a combatant for wickedness, he every day took more
and more pains for it: and at last he took his army and assaulted
a certain considerable city called Ramah, which was forty furlongs
distant from Jerusalem; and when he had taken it, he fortified it,
having determined beforehand to leave a garrison in it, that they
might thence make excursions, and do mischief to the kingdom of
Asa.
4. Whereupon Asa was afraid of the attempts the enemy might make
upon him; and considering with himself how many mischiefs this army
that was left in Ramah might do to the country over which he reigned,
he sent ambassadors to the king of the Damascenes, with gold and
silver, desiring his assistance, and putting him in mind that we
have had a friendship together from the times of our forefathers.
So he gladly received that sum of money, and made a league with
him, and broke the friendship he had with Baasha, and sent the commanders
of his own forces unto the cities that were under Baasha's dominion,
and ordered them to do them mischief. So they went and burnt some
of them, and spoiled others; Ijon, and Dan, and Abelmain (33) and
many others. Now when the king of Israel heard this, he left off
building and fortifying Ramah, and returned presently to assist
his own people under the distresses they were in; but Asa made use
of the materials that were prepared for building that city, for
building in the same place two strong cities, the one of which was
called Geba, and the other Mizpah; so that after this Baasha had
no leisure to make expeditions against Asa, for he was prevented
by death, and was buried in the city Tirzah; and Elah his son took
the kingdom, who, when he had reigned two years, died, being treacherously
slain by Zimri, the captain of half his army; for when he was at
Arza, his steward's house, he persuaded some of the horsemen that
were under him to assault Elah, and by that means he slew him when
he was without his armed men and his captains, for they were all
busied in the siege of Gibbethon, a city of the Philistines.
5. When Zimri, the captain of the army, had killed Elah, he took
the kingdom himself, and, according to Jehu's prophecy, slew all
the house of Baasha; for it came to pass that Baasha's house utterly
perished, on account of his impiety, in the same manner as we have
already described the destruction of the house of Jeroboam. But
the army that was besieging. Gibbethon, when they heard what had
befallen the king, and that when Zimri had killed him, he had gained
the kingdom, they made Omri their general king, who drew off his
army from Gibbethon, and came to Tirzah, where the royal palace
was, and assaulted the city, and took it by force. But when Zimri
saw that the city had none to defend it, he fled into the inmost
part of the palace, and set it on fire, and burnt himself with it,
when he had reigned only seven days. Upon which the people of Israel
were presently divided, and part of them would have Tibni to be
king, and part Omri; but when those that were for Omri's ruling
had beaten Tibni, Omri reigned over all the multitude. Now it was
in the thirtieth year of the reign of Asa that Omri reigned for
twelve years; six of these years he reigned in the city Tirzah,
and the rest in the city called Semareon, but named by the Greeks
Samaria; but he himself called it Semareon, from Semer, who sold
him the mountain whereon he built it. Now Omri was no way different
from those kings that reigned before him, but that he grew worse
than they, for they all sought how they might turn the people away
from God by their daily wicked practices; and oil that account it
was that God made one of them to be slain by another, and that no
one person of their families should remain. This Omri also died
in Samaria and Ahab his son succeeded him.
6. Now by these events we may learn what concern God hath for the
affairs of mankind, and how he loves good men, and hates the wicked,
and destroys them root and branch; for many of these kings of Israel,
they and their families, were miserably destroyed, and taken away
one by another, in a short time, for their transgression and wickedness;
but Asa, who was king of Jerusalem, and of the two tribes, attained,
by God's blessing, a long and a blessed old age, for his piety and
righteousness, and died happily, when he had reigned forty and one
years; and when he was dead, his son Jehoshaphat succeeded him in
the government. He was born of Asa's wife Azubah. And all men allowed
that he followed the works of David his forefather, and this both
in courage and piety; but we are not obliged now to speak any more
of the affairs of this king.
CHAPTER 13.
HOW AHAB WHEN HE HAD TAKEN JEZEBEL TO WIFE BECAME MORE WICKED THAN
ALL THE KINGS THAT HAD BEEN BEFORE HIM; OF THE ACTIONS OF THE PROPHET
ELIJAH, AND WHAT BEFELL NABOTH.
1. NOW Ahab the king of Israel dwelt in Samaria, and held the government
for twenty-two years; and made no alteration in the conduct of the
kings that were his predecessors, but only in such things as were
of his own invention for the worse, and in his most gross wickedness.
He imitated them in their wicked courses, and in their injurious
behavior towards God, and more especially he imitated the transgression
of Jeroboam; for he worshipped the heifers that he had made; and
he contrived other absurd objects of worship besides those heifers:
he also took to wife the daughter of Ethbaal, king of the Tyrians
and Sidonians, whose name was Jezebel, of whom he learned to worship
her own gods. This woman was active and bold, and fell into so great
a degree of impurity and madness, that she built a temple to the
god of the Tyrians, Which they call Belus, and planted a grove of
all sorts of trees; she also appointed priests and false prophets
to this god. The king also himself had many such about him, and
so exceeded in madness and wickedness all [the kings] that went
before him.
2. There was now a prophet of God Almighty, of Thesbon, a country
in Gilead, that came to Ahab, and said to him, that God foretold
he would not send rain nor dew in those years upon the country but
when he should appear. And when he had confirmed this by an oath,
he departed into the southern parts, and made his abode by a brook,
out of which he had water to drink; for as for his food, ravens
brought it to him every day: but when that river was dried up for
want of rain, he came to Zarephath, a city not far from Sidon and
Tyre, for it lay between them, and this at the command of God, for
[God told him] that he should there find a woman who was a widow
that should give him sustenance. So when he was not far off the
city, he saw a woman that labored with her own hands, gathering
of sticks: so God informed him that this was the woman who was to
give him sustenance. So he came and saluted her, and desired her
to bring him some water to drink; but as she was going so to do,
he called to her, and would have her to bring him a loaf of bread
also; whereupon she affirmed upon oath that she had at home nothing
more than one handful of meal, and a little oil, and that she was
going to gather some sticks, that she might knead it, and make bread
for herself and her son; after which, she said, they must perish,
and be consumed by the famine, for they had nothing for themselves
any longer. Hereupon he said, "Go on with good courage, and
hope for better things; and first of all make me a little cake,
and bring it to me, for I foretell to thee that this vessel of meal
and this cruse of oil shall not fail until God send rain."
When the prophet had said this, she came to him, and made him the
before-named cake; of which she had part for herself, and gave the
rest to her son, and to the prophet also; nor did any thing of this
fall until the drought ceased. Now Menander mentions this drought
in his account of the acts of Ethbaal, king of the Tyrians; where
he says thus: "Under him there was a want of rain from the
month Hyperberetmus till the month Hyperberetmus of the year following;
but when he made supplications, there came great thunders. This
Ethbaal built the city Botrys in Phoenicia, and the city Auza in
Libya." By these words he designed the want of rain that was
in the days of Ahab, for at that time it was that Ethbaal also reigned
over the Tyrians, as Menander informs us.
3. Now this woman, of whom we spake before, that sustained the
prophet, when her son was fallen into a distemper till he gave up
the ghost, and appeared to be dead, came to the prophet weeping,
and beating her breasts with her hands, and sending out such expressions
as her passions dictated to her, and complained to him that he had
come to her to reproach her for her sins, and that on this account
it was that her son was dead. But he bid her be of good cheer, and
deliver her son to him, for that he would deliver him again to her
alive. So when she had delivered her son up to him, he carried him
into an upper room, where he himself lodged, and laid him down upon
the bed, and cried unto God, and said, that God had not done well,
in rewarding the woman who had entertained him and sustained him,
by taking away her son; and he prayed that he would send again the
soul of the child into him, and bring him to life again. Accordingly
God took pity on the mother, and was willing to gratify the prophet,
that he might not seem to have come to her to do her a mischief,
and the child, beyond all expectation, came to life again. So the
mother returned the prophet thanks, and said she was then clearly
satisfied that God did converse with him.
4. After a little while Elijah came to king Ahab, according to
God's will, to inform him that rain was coming. Now the famine had
seized upon the whole country, and there was a great want of what
was necessary for sustenance, insomuch that it was after the recovery
of the widow's son of Sarepta, God sent not only men that wanted
it, but the earth itself also, which did not produce enough for
the horse and the other beasts of what was useful for them to feed
on, by reason of the drought. So the king called for Obadiah, who
was steward over his cattle, and said to him, that he would have
him go to the fountains of water, and to the brooks, that if any
herbs could be found for them, they might mow it down, and reserve
it for the beasts. And when he had sent persons all over the habitable
earth (34) to discover the prophet Elijah, and they could not find
him, he bade Obadiah accompany him. So it was resolved they should
make a progress, and divide the ways between them; and Obadiah took
one road, and the king another. Now it happened that the same time
when queen Jezebel slew the prophets, that this Obadiah had hidden
a hundred prophets, and had fed them with nothing but bread and
water. But when Obadiah was alone, and absent from the king, the
prophet Elijah met him; and Obadiah asked him who he was; and when
he had learned it from him, he worshipped him. Elijah then bid him
go to the king, and tell him that I am here ready to wait on him.
But Obadiah replied, "What evil have I done to thee, that thou
sendest me to one who seeketh to kill thee, and hath sought over
all the earth for thee? Or was he so ignorant as not to know that
the king had left no place untouched unto which he had not sent
persons to bring him back, in order, if they could take him, to
have him put to death?" For he told him he was afraid lest
God should appear to him again, and he should go away into another
place; and that when the king should send him for Elijah, and he
should miss of him, and not be able to find him any where upon earth,
he should be put to death. He desired him therefore to take care
of his preservation; and told him how diligently he had provided
for those of his own profession, and had saved a hundred prophets,
when Jezebel slew the rest of them, and had kept them concealed,
and that they had been sustained by him. But Elijah bade him fear
nothing, but go to the king; and he assured him upon oath that he
would certainly show himself to Ahab that very day.
5. So when Obadiah had informed the king that Elijah was there,
Ahab met him, and asked him, in anger, if he were the man that afflicted
the people of the Hebrews, and was the occasion of the drought they
lay under? But Elijah, without any flattery, said that he was himself
the man, he and his house, which brought such sad afflictions upon
them, and that by introducing strange gods into their country, and
worshipping them, and by leaving their own, who was the only true
God, and having no manner of regard to him. However, he bade him
go his way, and gather together all the people to him to Mount Carmel,
with his own prophets, and those of his wife, telling him how many
there were of them, as also the prophets of the groves, about four
hundred in number. And as all the men whom Ahab sent for ran away
to the forenamed mountain, the prophet Elijah stood in the midst
of them, and said, "How long will you live thus in uncertainty
of mind and opinion?" He also exhorted them, that in case they
esteemed their own country God to be the true and the only God,
they would follow him and his commandments; but in case they esteemed
him to be nothing, but had an opinion of the strange gods, and that
they ought to worship them, his counsel was, that they should follow
them. And when the multitude made no answer to what he said, Elijah
desired that, for a trial of the power of the strange gods, and
of their own God, he, who was his only prophet, while they had four
hundred, might take a heifer and kill it as a sacrifice, and lay
it upon pieces of wood, and not kindle any fire, and that they should
do the same things, and call upon their own gods to set the wood
on fire; for if that were done, they would thence learn the nature
of the true God. This proposal pleased the people. So Elijah bade
the prophets to choose out a heifer first, and kill it, and to call
on their gods. But when there appeared no effect of the prayer or
invocation of the prophets upon their sacrifice, Elijah derided
them, and bade them call upon their gods with a loud voice, for
they might either be on a journey, or asleep; and when these prophets
had done so from morning till noon, and cut themselves with swords
and lances, (35) according to the customs of their country, and
he was about to offer his sacrifice, he bade [the prophets] go away,
but bade [the people] come near and observe what he did, lest he
should privately hide fire among the pieces of wood. So, upon the
approach of the multitude, he took twelve stones, one for each tribe
of the people of the Hebrews, and built an altar with them, and
dug a very deep trench; and when he had laid the pieces of wood
upon the altar, and upon them had laid the pieces of the sacrifices,
he ordered them to fill four barrels with the water of the fountain,
and to pour it upon the altar, till it ran over it, and till the
trench was filled with the water poured into it. When he had done
this, he began to pray to God, and to invocate him to make manifest
his power to a people that had already been in an error a long time;
upon which words a fire came on a sudden from heaven in the sight
of the multitude, and fell upon the altar, and consumed the sacrifice,
till the very water was set on fire, and the place was become dry.
6. Now when the Israelites saw this, they fell down upon the ground,
and worshipped one God, and called him The great and the only true
God; but they called the others mere names, framed by the evil and
vile opinions of men. So they caught their prophets, and, at the
command of Elijah, slew them. Elijah also said to the king, that
he should go to dinner without any further concern, for that in
a little time he would see God send them rain. Accordingly Ahab
went his way. But Elijah went up to the highest top of Mount Carmel,
and sat down upon the ground, and leaned his head upon his knees,
and bade his servant go up to a certain elevated place, and look
towards the sea, and when he should see a cloud rising any where,
he should give him notice of it, for till that time the air had
been clear. When the Servant had gone up, and had said many times
that he saw nothing, at the seventh time of his going up, he said
that he saw a small black thing in the sky, not larger than a man's
foot. When Elijah heard that, he sent to Ahab, and desired him to
go away to the city before the rain came down. So he came to the
city Jezreel; and in a little time the air was all obscured, and
covered with clouds, and a vehement storm of wind came upon the
earth, and with it a great deal of rain; and the prophet was under
a Divine fury, and ran along with the king's chariot unto Jezreel
a city of Izar (36) [Issaachar].
7. When Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, understood what signs Elijah
had wrought, and how he had slain her prophets, she was angry, and
sent messengers to him, and by them threatened to kill him, as he
had destroyed her prophets. At this Elijah was affrighted, and fled
to the city called Beersheba, which is situate at the utmost limits
of the country belonging to the tribe of Judah, towards the land
of Edom; and there he left his servant, and went away into the desert.
He prayed also that he might die, for that he was not better than
his fathers, nor need he be very desirous to live, when they were
dead; and he lay and slept under a certain tree; and when somebody
awakened him, and he was risen up, he found food set by him and
water: so when he had eaten, and recovered his strength by that
his food, he came to that mountain which is called Sinai, where
it is related that Moses received his laws from God; and finding
there a certain hollow cave, he entered into it, and continued to
make his abode in it. But when a certain voice came to him, but
from whence he knew not, and asked him, why he was come thither,
and had left the city? he said, that because he had slain the prophets
of the foreign gods, and had persuaded the people that he alone
whom they had worshipped from the beginning was God, he was sought
for by the king's wife to be punished for so doing. And when he
had heard another voice, telling him that he should come out the
next day into the open air, and should thereby know what he was
to do, he came out of the cave the next day accordingly, When he
both heard an earthquake, and saw the bright splendor of a fire;
and after a silence made, a Divine voice exhorted him not to be
disturbed with the circumstances he was in, for that none of his
enemies should have power over him. The voice also commanded him
to return home, and to ordain Jehu, the son of Nimshi, to be king
over their own multitude; and Hazael, of Damascus, to be over the
Syrians; and Elisha, of the city Abel, to be a prophet in his stead;
and that of the impious multitude, some should be slain by Hazael,
and others by Jehu. So Elijah, upon hearing this charge, returned
into the land of the Hebrews. And when he found Elisha, the son
of Shaphat, ploughing, and certain others with him, driving twelve
yoke of oxen, he came to him, and cast his own garment upon him;
upon which Elisha began to prophesy presently, and leaving his oxen,
he followed Elijah. And when he desired leave to salute his parents,
Elijah gave him leave so to do; and when he had taken his leave
of them, he followed him, and became the disciple and the servant
of Elijah all the days of his life. And thus have I despatched the
affairs in which this prophet was concerned.
8. Now there was one Naboth, of the city Izar, [Jezreel,] who had
a field adjoining to that of the king: the king would have persuaded
him to sell him that his field, which lay so near to his own lands,
at what price he pleased, that he might join them together, and
make them one farm; and if he would not accept of money for it,
he gave him leave to choose any of his other fields in its stead.
But Naboth said he would not do so, but would keep the possession
of that land of his own, which he had by inheritance from his father.
Upon this the king was grieved, as if he had received an injury,
when he could not get another man's possession, and he would neither
wash himself, nor take any food: and when Jezebel asked him what
it was that troubled him, and why he would neither wash himself,
nor eat either dinner or supper, he related to her the perverseness
of Naboth, and how, when he had made use of gentle words to him,
and such as were beneath the royal authority, he had been affronted,
and had not obtained what he desired. However, she persuaded him
not to be cast down at this accident, but to leave off his grief,
and return to the usual care of his body, for that she would take
care to have Naboth punished; and she immediately sent letters to
the rulers of the Israelites [Jezreelites] in Ahab's name, and commanded
them to fast and to assemble a congregation, and to set Naboth at
the head of them, because he was of an illustrious family, and to
have three bold men ready to bear witness that he had blasphemed
God and the king, and then to stone him, and slay him in that manner.
Accordingly, when Naboth had been thus testified against, as the
queen had written to them, that he had blasphemed against God and
Ahab the king, she desired him to take possession of Naboth's vineyard
on free cost. So Ahab was glad at what had been done, and rose up
immediately from the bed whereon he lay to go to see Naboth's vineyard;
but God had great indignation at it, and sent Elijah the prophet
to the field of Naboth, to speak to Ahab, and to say to him, that
he had slain the true owner of that field unjustly. And as soon
as he came to him, and the king had said that he might do with him
what he pleased, (for he thought it a reproach to him to be thus
caught in his sin,) Elijah said, that in that very place in which
the dead body of Naboth was eaten by dogs both his own blood and
that of his wife's should be shed, and that all his family should
perish, because he had been so insolently wicked, and had slain
a citizen unjustly, and contrary to the laws of his country. Hereupon
Ahab began to be sorry for the things he had done, and to repent
of them; and he put on sackcloth, and went barefoot (37) and would
not touch any food; he also confessed his sins, and endeavored thus
to appease God. But God said to the prophet, that while Ahab was
living he would put off the punishment of his family, because he
repented of those insolent crimes he had been guilty of, but that
still he would fulfill his threatening under Ahab's son; which message
the prophet delivered to the king.
CHAPTER 14.
HOW HADAD KING OF DAMASCUS AND OF SYRIA, MADE TWO EXPEDITIONS AGAINST
AHAB AND WAS BEATEN.
1. WHEN the affairs of Ahab were thus, at that very time the son
of Hadad, [Benhadad,] who was king of the Syrians and of Damascus,
got together an army out of all his country, and procured thirty-two
kings beyond Euphrates to be his auxiliaries: so he made an expedition
against Ahab; but because Ahab's army was not like that of Benhadad,
he did not set it in array to fight him, but having shut up every
thing that was in the country in the strongest cities he had, he
abode in Samaria himself, for the walls about it were very strong,
and it appeared to be not easily to be taken in other respects also.
So the king of Syria took his army with him, and came to Samaria,
and placed his army round about the city, and besieged it. He also
sent a herald to Ahab, and desired he would admit the ambassadors
he would send him, by whom he would let him know his pleasure. So,
upon the king of Israel's permission for him to send, those ambassador's
came, and by their king's command spake thus: That Ahab's riches,
and his children, and his wives were Benhadad's, and if he would
make an agreement, and give him leave to take as much of what he
had as he pleased, he would withdraw his army, and leave off the
siege. Upon this Ahab bade the ambassadors to go back, and tell
their king, that both he himself and all that he hath are his possessions.
And when these ambassadors had told this to Berthadad, he sent to
him again, and desired, since he confessed that all he had was his,
that he would admit those servants of his which he should send the
next day; and he commanded him to deliver to those whom he should
send whatsoever, upon their searching his palace, and the houses
of his friends and kindred, they should find to be excellent in
its kind, but that what did not please them they should leave to
him. At this second embassage of the king of Syria, Ahab was surprised,
and gathered together the multitude to a congregation, and told
them that, for himself, he was ready, for their safety and peace,
to give up his own wives and children to the enemy, and to yield
to him all his own possessions, for that was what the Syrian king
required at his first embassage; but that now he desires to send
his servants to search all their houses, and in them to leave nothing
that is excellent in its kind, seeking an occasion of fighting against
him, "as knowing that I would not spare what is mine own for
your sakes, but taking a handle from the disagreeable terms he offers
concerning you to bring a war upon us; however, I will do what you
shall resolve is fit to be done." But the multitude advised
him to hearken to none of his proposals, but to despise him, and
be in readiness to fight him. Accordingly, when he had given the
ambassadors this answer to be reported, that he still continued
in the mind to comply with what terms he at first desired, for the
safety of the citizens; but as for his second desires, he cannot
submit to them, - he dismissed them.
2. Now when Benhadad heard this, he had indignation, and sent ambassadors
to Ahab the third time, and threatened that his army would raise
a bank higher than those walls, in confidence of whose strength
he despised him, and that by only each man of his army taking a
handful of earth; hereby making a show of the great number of his
army, and aiming to affright him. Ahab answered, that he ought not
to vaunt himself when he had only put on his armor, but when he
should have conquered his enemies in the battle. So the ambassadors
came back, and found the king at supper with his thirty-two kings,
and informed him of Ahab's answer; who then immediately gave order
for proceeding thus: To make lines round the city, and raise a bulwark,
and to prosecute the siege all manner of ways. Now, as this was
doing, Ahab was in a great agony, and all his people with him; but
he took courage, and was freed from his fears, upon a certain prophet
coming to him, and saying to him, that God had promised to subdue
so many ten thousands of his enemies under him. And when he inquired
by whose means the victory was to be obtained, be said," By
the sons of the princes; but under thy conduct as their leader,
by reason of their unskilfulness [in war]." Upon which he called
for the sons of the princes, and found them to be two hundred and
thirty-two persons. So when he was informed that the king of Syria
had betaken himself to feasting and repose, he opened the gates,
and sent out the princes' sons. Now when the sentinels told Benhadad
of it, he sent some to meet them, and commanded them, that if these
men were come out for fighting, they should bind them, and bring
them to him; and that if they came out peaceably, they should do
the same. Now Ahab had another army ready within the walls, but
the sons of the princes fell upon the out-guard, and slew many of
them, and pursued the rest of them to the camp; and when the king
of Israel saw that these had the upper hand, he sent out all the
rest of his army, which, falling suddenly upon the Syrians, beat
them, for they did not think they would have come out; on which
account it was that they assaulted them when they were naked (38)
and drunk, insomuch that they left all their armor behind them when
they fled out of the camp, and the king himself escaped with difficulty,
by fleeing away on horseback. But Ahab went a great way in pursuit
of the Syrians; and when he had spoiled their camp, which contained
a great deal of wealth, and moreover a large quantity of gold and
silver, he took Benhadad's chariots and horses, and returned to
the city; but as the prophet told him he ought to have his army
ready, because the Syrian king would make another expedition against
him the next year, Ahab was busy in making provision for it accordingly.
3. Now Benhadad, when he had saved himself, and as much of his
army as he could, out of the battle, he consulted with his friends
how he might make another expedition against the Israelites. Now
those friends advised him not to fight with them on the hills, because
their God was potent in such places, and thence it had come to pass
that they had very lately been beaten; but they said, that if they
joined battle with them in the plain, they should beat them. They
also gave him this further advice, to send home those kings whom
he had brought as his auxiliaries, but to retain their army, and
to set captains over it instead of the kings, and to raise an army
out of their country, and let them be in the place of the former
who perished in the battle, together with horses and chariots. So
he judged their counsel to be good, and acted according to it in
the management of the army.
4. At the beginning of the spring, Benhadad took his army with
him, and led it against the Hebrews; and when he was come to a certain
city which was called Aphek, he pitched his camp in the great plain.
Ahab also went to meet him with his army, and pitched his camp over
against him, although his army was a very small one, if it were
compared with the enemy's; but the prophet came again to him, and
told him, that God would give him the victory, that he might demonstrate
his own power to be, not only on the mountains, but on the plains
also; which it seems was contrary to the opinion of the Syrians.
So they lay quiet in their camp seven days; but on the last of those
days, when the enemies came out of their camp, and put themselves
in array in order to fight, Ahab also brought out his own army;
and when the battle was joined, and they fought valiantly, he put
the enemy to flight, and pursued them, and pressed upon them, and
slew them; nay, they were destroyed by their own chariots, and by
one another; nor could any more than a few of them escape to their
own city Aphek, who were also killed by the walls falling upon them,
being in number twenty-seven thousand. (39) Now there were slain
in this battle a hundred thousand more; but Benhadad, the king of
the Syrians, fled away, with certain others of his most faithful
servants, and hid himself in a cellar under ground; and when these
told him that the kings of Israel were humane and merciful men,
and that they might make use of the usual manner of supplication,
and obtain deliverance from Ahab, in case he would give them leave
to go to him, he gave them leave accordingly. So they came to Ahab,
clothed in sackcloth, with ropes about their heads, (for this was
the ancient manner of supplication among the Syrians,) (40) and
said, that Benhadad desired he would save him, and that he would
ever be a servant to him for that favor. Ahab replied he was glad
that he was alive, and not hurt in the battle; and he further promised
him the same honor and kindness that a man would show to his brother.
So they received assurances upon oath from him, that when he came
to him he should receive no harm from him, and then went and brought
him out of the cellar wherein he was hid, and brought him to Ahab
as he sat in his chariot. So Benhadad worshipped him; and Ahab gave
him his hand, and made him come up to him into his chariot, and
kissed him, and bid him be of good cheer, and not to expect that
any mischief should be done to him. So Berthadad returned him thanks,
and professed that he would remember his kindness to him all the
days of his life; and promised he would restore those cities of
the Israelites which the former kings had taken from them, and grant
that he should have leave to come to Damascus, as his forefathers
had to come to Samaria. So they confirmed their covenant by oaths,
and Ahab made him many presents, and sent him back to his own kingdom.
And this was the conclusion of the war that Benhadad made against
Ahab and the Israelites.
5. But a certain prophet, whose name was Micaiah, (41) came to
one of the Israelites, and bid him smite him on the head, for by
so doing he would please God; but when he would not do so, he foretold
to him, that since he disobeyed the commands of God, he should meet
with a lion, and be destroyed by him. When that sad accident had
befallen the man, the prophet came again to another, and gave him
the same injunction; so he smote him, and wounded his skull; upon
which he bound up his head, and came to the king, and told him that
he had been a soldier of his, and had the custody of one of the
prisoners committed to him by an officer, and that the prisoner
being run away, he was in danger of losing his own life by the means
of that officer, who had threatened him, that if the prisoner escaped
he would kill him. And when Ahab had said that he would justly die,
he took off the binding about his head, and was known by the king
to be Micaiah the prophet, who made use of this artifice as a prelude
to his following words; for he said that God would punish him who
had suffered Benhadad, a blasphemer against him, to escape punishment;
and that he would so bring it about, that he should die by the other's
means (42) and his people by the other's army. Upon which Ahab was
very angry at the prophet, and gave commandment that he should be
put in prison, and there kept; but for himself, he was in confusion
at the words of Micaiah, and returned to his own house.
CHAPTER 15.
CONCERNING JEHOSHAPHAT THE KING OF JERUSALEM AND HOW AHAB MADE
AN EXPEDITION AGAINST THE SYRIANS AND WAS ASSISTED THEREIN BY JEHOSHAPHAT,
BUT WAS HIMSELF OVERCOME IN BATTLE AND PERISHED THEREIN.
1. AND these were the circumstances in which Ahab was. But I now
return to Jehoshaphat, the king of Jerusalem, who, when he had augmented
his kingdom, had set garrisons in the cities of the countries belonging
to his subjects, and had put such garrisons no less into those cities
which were taken out of the tribe of Ephraim by his grandfather
Abijah, when Jeroboam reigned over the ten tribes [than he did into
the other]. But then he had God favorable and assisting to him,
as being both righteous and religious, and seeking to do somewhat
every day that should be agreeable and acceptable to God. The kings
also that were round about him honored him with the presents they
made him, till the riches that he had acquired were immensely great,
and the glory he had gained was of a most exalted nature.
2. Now, in the third year of this reign, he called together the
rulers of the country, and the priests, and commanded them to go
round the land, and teach all the people that were under him, city
by city, the laws of Moses, and to keep them, and to be diligent
in the worship of God. With this the whole multitude was so pleased,
that they were not so eagerly set upon or affected with any thing
so much as the observation of the laws. The neighboring nations
also continued to love Jehoshaphat, and to be at peace with him.
The Philistines paid their appointed tribute, and the Arabians supplied
him every year with three hundred and sixty lambs, and as many kids
of the goats. He also fortified the great cities, which were many
in number, and of great consequence. He prepared also a mighty army
of soldiers and weapons against their enemies. Now the army of men
that wore their armor, was three hundred thousand of the tribe of
Judah, of whom Adnah was the chief; but John was chief of two hundred
thousand. The same man was chief of the tribe of Benjamin, and had
two hundred thousand archers under him. There was another chief,
whose name was Jehozabad, who had a hundred and fourscore thousand
armed men. This multitude was distributed to he ready for the king's
service, besides those whom he sent to the best fortified cities.
3. Jehoshaphat took for his son Jehoram to wife the daughter of
Ahab, the king of the ten tribes, whose name was Athaliah. And when,
after some time, he went to Samaria, Ahab received him courteously,
and treated the army that followed him in a splendid manner, with
great plenty of corn and wine, and of slain beasts; and desired
that he would join with him in his war against the king of Syria,
that he might recover from him the city Ramoth, in Gilead; for though
it had belonged to his father, yet had the king of Syria's father
taken it away from him; and upon Jehoshaphat's promise to afford
him his assistance, (for indeed his army was not inferior to the
other,) and his sending for his army from Jerusalem to Samaria,
the two kings went out of the city, and each of them sat on his
own throne, and each gave their orders to their several armies.
Now Jehoshaphat bid them call some of the prophets, if there were
any there, and inquire of them concerning this expedition against
the king of Syria, whether they would give them counsel to make
that expedition at this time, for there was peace at that time between
Ahab and the king of Syria, which had lasted three years, from the
time he had taken him captive till that day.
4. So Ahab called his own prophets, being in number about four
hundred, and bid them inquire of God whether he would grant him
the victory, if he made an expedition against Benhadad, and enable
him to overthrow that city, for whose sake it was that he was going
to war. Now these prophets gave their counsel for making this expedition,
and said that he would beat the king of Syria, and, as formerly,
would reduce him under his power. But Jehoshaphat, understanding
by their words that they were false prophets, asked Ahab whether
there were not some other prophet, and he belonging to the true
God, that we may have surer information concerning futurities. Hereupon
Ahab said there was indeed such a one, but that he hated him, as
having prophesied evil to him, and having foretold that he should
be overcome and slain by the king of Syria, and that for this cause
he had him now in prison, and that his name was Micaiah, the son
of Imlah. But upon Jehoshaphat's desire that he might be produced,
Ahab sent a eunuch, who brought Micaiah to him. Now the eunuch had
informed him by the way, that all the other prophets had foretold
that the king should gain the victory; but he said, that it was
not lawful for him to lie against God, but that he must speak what
he should say to him about the king, whatsoever it were. When he
came to Ahab, and he had adjured him upon oath to speak the truth
to him, he said that God had shown to him the Israelites running
away, and pursued by the Syrians, and dispersed upon the mountains
by them, as flocks of sheep are dispersed when their shepherd is
slain. He said further, that God signified to him, that those Israelites
should return :in peace to their own home, and that he only should
fall in the battle. When Micalab had thus spoken, Ahab said to Jehoshaphat,
"I told thee a little while ago the disposition of the man
with regard to me, and that he uses to prophesy evil to me."
Upon which Micaiah replied, that he ought to hear all, whatsoever
it be, that God foretells; and that in particular, they were false
prophets that encouraged him to make this war in hope of victory,
whereas he must fight and be killed. Whereupon the king was in suspense
with himself: but Zedekiah, one of those false prophets, came near,
and exhorted him not to hearken to Micaiah, for he did not at all
speak truth; as a demonstration of which he instanced in what Elijah
had said, who was a better prophet in foretelling futurities than
Micaiah (43) for he foretold that the dogs should lick his blood
in the city of Jezreel, in the field of Naboth, as they licked the
blood of Naboth, who by his means was there stoned to death by the
multitude; that therefore it was plain that this Micalab was a liar,
as contradicting a greater prophet than himself, and saying that
he should be slain at three days' journey distance: "and [said
he] you shall soon know whether he be a true prophet, and hath the
power of the Divine Spirit; for I will smite him, and let him then
hurt my hand, as Jadon caused the hand of Jeroboam the king to wither
when he would have caught him; for I suppose thou hast certainly
heard of that accident." So when, upon his smiting Micaiah,
no harm happened to him, Ahab took courage, and readily led his
army against the king of Syria; for, as I suppose, fate was too
hard for him, and made him believe that the false prophets spake
truer than the true one, that it might take an occasion of bringing
him to his end. However, Zedekiah made horns of iron, and said to
Ahab, that God made those horns signals, that by them he should
overthrow all Syria. But Micaiah replied, that Zedekiah, in a few
days, should go from one secret chamber to another to hide himself,
that he might escape the punishment of his lying. Then did the king
give orders that they should take Micaiah away, and guard him to
Amon, the governor of the city, and to give him nothing but bread
and water.
5. Then did Ahab, and Jehoshaphat the king of Jerusalem, take their
forces, and marched to Ramoth a city of Gilead; and when the king
of Syria heard of this expedition, he brought out his army to oppose
them, and pitched his camp not far from Ramoth. Now Ahalx and Jehoshaphat
had agreed that Ahab should lay aside his royal robes, but that
the king of Jerusalem should put on his [Ahab's] proper habit, and
stand before the army, in order to disprove, by this artifice, what
Micaiah had foretold. (44)But Ahab's fate found him out without
his robes; for Benhadad, the king of Assyria, had charged his army,
by the means of their commanders, to kill nobody else but only the
king of Israel. So when the Syrians, upon their joining battle with
the Israelites, saw Jehoshaphat stand before the army, and conjectured
that he was Ahab, they fell violently upon him, and encompassed
him round; but when they were near, and knew that it was not he,
they all returned back; and while the fight lasted from the morning
till late in the evening, and the Syrians were conquerors, they
killed nobody, as their king had commanded them. And when they sought
to kill Ahab alone, but could not find him, there was a young nobleman
belonging to king Benhadad, whose name was Naaman; he drew his bow
against the enemy, and wounded the king through his breastplate,
in his lungs. Upon this Ahab resolved not to make his mischance
known to his army, lest they should run away; but he bid the driver
of his chariot to turn it back, and carry him out of the battle,
because he was sorely and mortally wounded. However, he sat in his
chariot and endured the pain till sunset, and then he fainted away
and died.
6. And now the Syrian army, upon the coming on of the night, retired
to their camp; and when the herald belonging to the camp gave notice
that Ahab was dead, they returned home; and they took the dead body
of Ahab to Samaria, and buried it there; but when they had washed
his chariot in the fountain of Jezreel, which was bloody with the
dead body of the king, they acknowledged that the prophecy of Elijah
was true, for the dogs licked his blood, and the harlots continued
afterwards to wash themselves in that fountain; but still he died
at Ramoth, as Micaiah had foretold. And as what things were foretold
should happen to Ahab by the two prophets came to pass, we ought
thence to have high notions of God, and every where to honor and
worship him, and never to suppose that what is pleasant and agreeable
is worthy of belief before what is true, and to esteem nothing more
advantageous than the gift of prophecy (44) and that foreknowledge
of future events which is derived from it, since God shows men thereby
what we ought to avoid. We may also guess, from what happened to
this king, and have reason to consider the power of fate; that there
is no way of avoiding it, even when we know it. It creeps upon human
souls, and flatters them with pleasing hopes, till it leads them
about to the place where it will be too hard for them. Accordingly
Ahab appears to have been deceived thereby, till he disbelieved
those that foretold his defeat; but, by giving credit to such as
foretold what was grateful to him, was slain; and his son Ahaziah
succeeded him.
ENDNOTE
(1) This execution upon Joab, as a murderer, by slaying him, even
when he had taken sanctuary at God's altar, is perfectly agreeable
to the law of Moses, which enjoins, that "if a man come presumptuously
upon his neighbor to slay him with guile, thou shalt take him from
mine altar that he die," Exodus 21:14.
(2) This building of the walls of Jerusalem, soon after David's
death, illustrates the conclusion of the 51st Psalm, where David
prays, "Build thou the walls of Jerusalem;" they being,
it seems, unfinished or imperfect at that time. See ch. 6. sect.
1; and ch. 1. sect. 7; also 1 Kings 9:15.
(3) It may not be amiss to compare the daily furniture of king
Solomon's table, here set down, and 1 Kings 4;22, 23, with the like
daily furniture of Nehemiah the governor's table, after the Jews
were come back from Babylon; and to remember withal, that Nehemiah
was now building the walls of Jerusalem, and maintained, more than
usual, above a hundred and fifty considerable men every day, and
that, because the nation was then very poor, at his own charges
also, without laying any burden upon the people at all. "Now
that which was prepared for me daily was one ox and six choice sheep;
also fowls were prepared for me, and once in ten days store of all
sorts of wine; and yet for all this required not the bread of the
governor, because the bondage was heavy upon this people,"
Nehemiah 5:18: see the whole context, ver. 14-19. Nor did the governor's
usual allowance of forty shekels of silver a-day, ver. 15, amount
to 45 a day, nor to 1800 a-year. Nor does it indeed appear that,
under the judges, or under Samuel the prophet, there was any such
public allowance to those governors at all. Those great charges
upon the public for maintaining courts came in with kings, as God
foretold they would, 1 Samuel 8:11-18.
(4) Some pretended fragments of these books of conjuration of Solomon
are still extant in Fabricius's Cod. Pseudepigr. Vet. Test. page
1054, though I entirely differ from Josephus in this his supposal,
that such books and arts of Solomon were parts of that wisdom which
was imparted to him by God in his younger days; they must rather
have belonged to such profane but curious arts as we find mentioned
Acts 19:13-20, and had been derived from the idolatry and superstition
of his heathen wives and concubines in his old age, when he had
forsaken God, and God had forsaken him, and given him up to demoniacal
delusions. Nor does Josephus's strange account of the root Baara
(Of the War, B. VIII. ch. 6. sect. 3) seem to be other than that
of its magical use in such conjurations. As for the following history,
it confirms what Christ says, Matthew 12;27 "If I by Beelzebub
cast out demons, by whom do your Sons cast them out?"
(5) These epistles of Solomon and Hiram are those in 1 Kings 5:3-9,
and, as enlarged, in 2 Chronicles 2:3-16, but here given us by Josephus
in his own words.
(6) What Josephus here puts into his copy of Hiram's epistle to
Solomon, and repeats afterwards, ch. 5. sect. 3, that Tyre was now
an island, is not in any of the three other copies, viz. that of
the Kings, Chronicles, or Eusebius; nor is it any other, I suppose,
than his own conjectural paraphrase; for when I, many years ago,
inquired into this matter, I found the state of this famous city,
and of the island whereupon it stood, to have been very different
at different times. The result of my inquiries in this matter, with
the addition of some later improvements, stands thus: That the best
testimonies hereto relating, imply, that Paketyrus, or Oldest Tyre,
was no other than that most ancient smaller fort or city Tyre, situated
on the continent, and mentioned in Joshua 19:29, out of which the
Canaanite or Phoenician inhabitants were driven into a large island,
that lay not far off in the sea, by Joshua: that this island was
then joined to the continent at the present remains of Paketyrus,
by a neck of land over against Solomon's cisterns, still so called;
and the city's fresh water, probably, was carried along in pipes
by that neck of land; and that this island was therefore, in strictness,
no other than a peninsula, having villages in its fields, Ezekiel
26:6, and a wall about it, Amos 1:10, and the city was not of so
great reputation as Sitlon for some ages: that it was attacked both
by sea and land by Salmanasser, as Josephus informs us, Antiq. B.
IX. ch. 14. sect. 2, and afterwards came to be the metropolis of
Phoenicia; and was afterwards taken and destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar,
according to the numerous Scripture prophecies thereto relating,
Isaiah 23.; Jeremiah 25:22; 27:3; 47:4; Ezekiel 26., 27., 28.: that
seventy years after that destruction by Nebuchadnezzar, this city
was in some measure revived and rebuilt, Isaiah 23:17, 18, but that,
as the prophet Ezekiel had foretold, chap. 26:3-5, 14; 27: 34, the
sea arose higher than before, till at last it over flowed, not only
the neck of land, but the main island or peninsula itself, and destroyed
that old and famous city for ever: that, however, there still remained
an adjoining smaller island, once connected to Old Tyre itself by
Hiram, which was afterwards inhabited; to which Alexander the Great,
with incredible pains, raised a new bank or causeway: and that it
plainly appears from Ifaundreh, a most authentic eye-witness, that
the old large and famous city, on the original large island, is
now laid so generally under water, that scarce more than forty acres
of it, or rather of that adjoining small island remain at this day;
so that, perhaps, not above a hundredth part of the first island
and city is now above water. This was foretold in the same prophecies
of Ezekiel; and according to them, as Mr. Maundrell distinctly observes,
these poor remains of Old Tyre are now "become like the top
of a rock, a place for the spreading of nets in the midst of the
sea."
(7) Of the temple of Solomon here described by Josephus, in this
and the following sections of this chapter, see my description of
the temples belonging to this work, ch. 13, These small rooms, or
side chambers, seem to have been, by Josephus's description, no
less than twenty cubits high a piece, otherwise there must have
been a large interval between one and the other that was over it;
and this with double floors, the one of six cubits distance from
the floor beneath it, as 1 Kings 6:5
(8) Josephus says here that the cherubims were of solid gold, and
only five cubits high, while our Hebrew copies (1 Kings 6;23, 28)
say they were of the olive tree, and the LXXX. of the cypress tree,
and only overlaid with gold; and both agree they were ten cubits
high. I suppose the number here is falsely transcribed, and that
Josephus wrote ten cubits also.
(9) As for these two famous pillars, Jachin and Booz, their height
could be no more than eighteen cubits, as here, and 1 Kings 7:15;
2 Kings 25:17; Jeremiah 3:21; those thirty-five cubits in 2 Chronicles
3:15, being contrary to all the rules of architecture in the world.
(10) The round or cylindrical lavers of four cubits in diameter,
and four in height, both in our copies, 1 Kings 7:38, 39, and here
in Josephus, must have contained a great deal more than these forty
baths, which are always assigned them. Where the error lies is hard
to say: perhaps Josephus honestly followed his copies here, though
they had been corrupted, and he was not able to restore the true
reading. In the mean time, the forty baths are probably the true
quantity contained in each laver, since they went upon wheels, and
were to be drawn by the Levites about the courts of the priests
for the washings they were designed for; and had they held much
more, they would have been too heavy to have been so drawn.
(11) Here Josephus gives us a key to his own language, of right
and left hand in the tabernacle and temple; that by the right hand
he means what is against our left, when we suppose ourselves going
up from the east gate of the courts towards the tabernacle or temple
themselves, and so vice versa; whence it follows, that the pillar
Jachin, on the right hand of the temple was on the south, against
our left hand; and Booz on the north, against our right hand. Of
the golden plate on the high priest's forehead that was in being
in the days of Josephus, and a century or two at least later, seethe
note on Antiq. B. III. ch. 7. sect. 6.
(12) Of the golden plate on the High priests forehead that was
in being in the days of Josephus, and a century or two at least
later, see the note on Antiq. B. III. ch.vii. sect. 6.
(13) When Josephus here says that the floor of the outmost temple
or court of the Gentiles was with vast labor raised to be even,
or of equal height, with the floor of the inner, or court of the
priests, he must mean this in a gross estimation only; for he and
all others agree, that the inner temple, or court of the priests,
was a few cubits more elevated than the middle court, the court
of Israel, and that much more was the court of the priests elevated
several cubits above that outmost court, since the court of Israel
was lower than the one and higher than the other. The Septuagint
say that "they prepared timber and stones to build the temple
for three years," 1 Kings 5:18; and although neither our present
Hebrew copy, nor Josephus, directly name that number of years, yet
do they both say the building itself did not begin till Solomon's
fourth year; and both speak of the preparation of materials beforehand,
1 Kings v. 18; Antiq. B. VIII. ch. 5. sect. 1. There is no reason,
therefore, to alter the Septuagint's number; but we are to suppose
three years to have been the just time of the preparation, as I
have done in my computation of the expense in building that temple.
(14) This solemn removal of the ark from Mount Sion to Mount Moriah,
at the distance of almost three quarters of a mile, confutes that
notion of the modern Jews, and followed by many Christians also,
as if those two were after a sort one and the same mountain, for
which there is, I think, very little foundation.
(15) This mention of the Corinthian ornaments of architecture in
Solomon's palace by Josephus seems to be here set down by way of
prophecy although it appears to me that the Grecian and Roman most
ancient orders of architecture were taken from Solomon's temple,
as from their original patterns, yet it is not so clear that the
last and most ornamental order of the Corinthian was so ancient,
although what the same Josephus says, (Of the War, B. V. ch. 5.
sect. 3,) that one of the gates of Herod's temple was built according
to the rules of this Corinthian order, is no way improbable, that
order being, without dispute, much older than the reign of Herod.
However, upon some trial, I confess I have not hitherto been able
fully to understand the structure of this palace of Solomon, either
as described in our Bibles, or even with the additional help of
this description here by Josephus; only the reader may easily observe
with me, that the measures of this first building in Josephus, a
hundred cubits long, and fifty cubits broad, are the very same with
the area of the cart of the tabernacle of Moses. and just hall'
an Egyptian orout, or acre.
(16) This signification of the name Pharaoh appears to be true.
But what Josephus adds presently, that no king of Egypt was called
Pharaoh after Solomon's father-in-law, does hardly agree to our
copies, which have long afterwards the names of Pharaoh Neehob,
and Pharaoh Hophrah, 2 Kings 23:29; Jeremiah 44:30, besides the
frequent mention of that name Pharaoh in the prophets. However,
Josephus himself, in his own speech to the Jews, Of the War, B.
V. ch. 9. sect. 4, speaks of Neehao, who was also called Pharaoh,
as the name of that king of Egypt with whom Abraham was concerned;
of which name Neehao yet we have elsewhere no mention till the days
of Josiah, but only of Pharaoh. And, indeed, it must be conceded,
that here, and sect. 5, we have more mistakes made by Josephus,
and those relating to the kings of Egypt, and to that queen of Egypt
and Ethiopia, whom he supposes to have come to see Solomon, than
almost any where else in all his Antiquities.
(17) That this queen of Sheba was a queen of Sabea in South Arabia,
and not of Egypt and Ethiopia, as Josephus here asserts, is, I suppose,
now generally agreed. And since Sabea is well known to be a country
near the sea in the south of Arabia Felix, which lay south from
Judea also; and since our Savior calls this queen, "the queen
of the south," and says, "she came from the utmost parts
of the earth," Matthew 12:42; Luke 11:31, which descriptions
agree better to this Arabia than to Egypt and Ethiopia; there is
little occasion for doubting in this matter.
(18) Some blame Josephus for supposing that the balsam tree might
be first brought out of Arabia, or Egypt, or Ethiopia, into Judea,
by this queen of Sheba, since several have said that of old no country
bore this precious balsam but Judea; yet it is not only false that
this balsam was peculiar to Judea but both Egypt and Arabia, and
particularly Sabea; had it; which last was that very country whence
Josephus, if understood not of Ethiopia, but of Arabia, intimates
this queen might bring it first into Judea. Nor are we to suppose
that the queen of Sabaea could well omit such a present as this
balsam tree would be esteemed by Solomon, in case it were then almost
peculiar to her own country. Nor is the mention of balm or balsam,
as carried by merchants, and sent as a present out of Judea by Jacob,
to the governor of Egypt, Genesis 37:25; 43:11, to be alleged to
the contrary, since what we there render balm or balsam, denotes
rather that turpentine which we now call turpentine of Chio, or
Cyprus, the juice of the turpentine tree, than this precious balm.
This last is also the same word that we elsewhere render by the
same mistake balm of Gilead; it should be rendered, the turpentine
of Gilead, Jeremiah 8:22.
(19) Whether these fine gardens and rivulets of Etham, about six
miles from Jerusalem, whither Solomon rode so often in state, be
not those alluded to, Ecclesiastes 2:5, 6, where he says, "He
made him gardens and orchards, and planted trees in them of all
kinds of fruits: he made him pools of water, to water the wood that
bringeth forth trees;" and to the finest part whereof he seems
to allude, when, in the Canticles, he compares his spouse to a garden
"enclosed," to a "spring shut up," to a "fountain
sealed," ch. 4. 12 (part of which from rains are still extant,
as Mr. Matmdrell informs us, page 87, 88); cannot now be certainly
determined, but may very probably be conjectured. But whether this
Etham has any relation to those rivers of Etham, which Providence
once dried up in a miraculous manner, Psalm 74:15, in the Septuagint,
I cannot say.
(20) These seven hundred wives, or the daughters of great men,
and the three hundred concubines, the daughters of the ignoble,
make one thousand in all; and are, I suppose, those very one thousand
women intimated elsewhere by Solomon himself, when he speaks of
his not having found one [good] woman among that very number, Ecclesiastes
7:28.
(21) Josephus is here certainly too severe upon Solomon, who, in
making the cherubims, and these twelve brazen oxen, seems to have
done no more than imitate the patterns left him by David, which
were all given David by Divine inspiration. See my description of
the temples, ch. 10. And although God gave no direction for the
lions that adorned his throne, yet does not Solomon seem therein
to have broken any law of Moses; for although the Pharisees and
latter Rabbins have extended the second commandment, to forbid the
very making of any image, though without any intention to have it
worshipped, yet do not I suppose that Solomon so understood it,
nor that it ought to be so understood. The making any other altar
for worship but that at the tabernacle was equally forbidden by
Moses, Antiq. B. IV. ch. 8. sect. 5; yet did not the two tribes
and a half offend when they made an altar for a memorial only, Joshua
22; Antiq. B. V. ch. 1. sect. 26, 27.
(22) Since the beginning of Solomon's evil life and adversity was
the time when Hadad or Ader, who was born at least twenty or thirty
years before Solomon came to the crown, in the days of David, began
to give him disturbance, this implies that Solomon's evil life began
early, and continued very long, which the multitude of his wives
and concubines does imply also; I suppose when he was not fifty
years of age.
(23) This youth of Jeroboam, when Solomon built the walls of righteous
and keep the laws, because he hath proposed to thee the greatest
of all rewards for thy piety, and the honor thou shalt pay to God,
namely, to be as greatly exalted as thou knowest David to have been."
Jerusalem, not very long after he had finished his twenty years
building of the temple and his own palace, or not very long after
the twenty-fourth of his reign, 1 Kings 9:24; 2 Chronicles 8:11,
and his youth here still mentioned, when Solomon's wickedness was
become intolerable, fully confirm my former observation, that such
his wickedness began early, and continued very long. See Ecclus.
47:14.
(24) That by scorpions is not here meant that small animal so called,
which was never used in corrections, but either a shrub, furze bush,
or else some terrible sort of whip of the like nature see Hudson's
and Spanheim's notes here.
(25) Whether these "fountains of the Lesser Jordan" were
near a place called Dan, and the fountains of the Greater near a
place called Jor, before their conjunction; or whether there was
only one fountain, arising at the lake Phiala, at first sinking
under ground, and then arising near the mountain Paneum, and thence
running through the lake Scmochonitis to the Sea of Galilee, and
so far called the Lesser Jordan; is hardly certain, even in Josephus
himself, though the latter account be the most probable. However,
the northern idolatrous calf, set up by Jeroboam, was where Little
Jordan fell into Great Jordan, near a place called Daphnae, as Josephus
elsewhere informs us, Of the War, B. IV. ch. 1. sect. 1: see the
note there.
(26) How much a larger and better copy Josephus had in this remarkable
history of the true prophet of Judea, and his concern with Jeroboam,
and with the false prophet of Bethel, than our other copies have,
is evident at first sight. The prophet's very name, Jadon, or, as
the Constitutions call him, Adonias, is wanting in our other copies;
and it is there, with no little absurdity, said that God revealed
Jadon the true prophet's death, not to himself as here, hut to the
false prophet. Whether the particular account of the arguments made
use of, after all, by the false prophet against his own belief and
his own conscience, in order to persuade Jeroboam to persevere in
his idolatry and wickedness, than which more plausible could not
be invented, was intimated in Josephus's copy, or in some other
ancient book, cannot now be determined; our other copies say not
one word of it.
(27) That this Shishak was not the same person with the famous
Sesostris, as some have very lately, in contradiction to all antiquity,
supposed, and that our Josephus did not take him to be the same,
as they pretend, but that Sesostris was many centuries earlier than
Shishak, see Authent. Records, part II. page 1024.
(28) Herodotus, as here quoted by Josephus, and as this passage
still stands in his present copies, B. II. ch. 14., affirms, that
"the Phoenicians and Syrians in Palestine [which last are generally
supposed to denote the Jews] owned their receiving circumcision
from the Egyptians;" whereas it is abnudantly evident that
the Jews received their circumcision from the patriarch Abraham,
Genesis 17:9-14; John 7:22, 23, as I conclude the Egyptian priests
themselves did also. It is not therefore very unlikely that Herodotus,
because the Jews had lived long in Egypt, and came out of it circumcised,
did thereupon think they had learned that circumcision in Egypt,
and had it not broke. Manetho, the famous Egyptian chronologer and
historian, who knew the history of his own country much better than
Herodotus, complains frequently of his mistakes about their affairs,
as does Josephus more than once in this chapter. Nor indeed does
Herodotus seem at all acquainted with the affairs of the Jews; for
as he never names them, so little or nothing of what he says about
them, their country, or maritime cities, two of which he alone mentions,
Cadytus and Jenysus, proves true; nor indeed do there appear to
have ever been any such cities on their coast.
(29) This is a strange expression in Josephus, that God is his
own workmanship, or that he made himself, contrary to common sense
and to catholic Christianity; perhaps he only means that he was
not made by one, but was unoriginated.
(30) By this terrible and perfectly unparalleled slaughter of five
hundred thousand men of the newly idolatrous and rebellious ten
tribes, God's high displeasure and indignation against that idolatry
and rebellion fully appeared; the remainder were thereby seriously
cautioned not to persist in them, and a kind of balance or equilibrium
was made between the ten and the two tribes for the time to come;
while otherwise the perpetually idolatrous and rebellious ten tribes
would naturally have been too powerful for the two tribes, which
were pretty frequently free both from such idolatry and rebellion;
nor is there any reason to doubt of the truth of the prodigious
number upmost: signal an occasion.
(31) The reader is to remember that Cush is not Ethiopia, but Arabia.
See Bochart, B. IV. ch. 2.
(32) Here is a very great error in our Hebrew copy in this place,
2 Chronicles 15:3-6, as applying what follows to times past, and
not to times future; whence that text is quite misapplied by Sir
Isaac Newton.
(33) This Abelmain, or, in Josephus's copy, Abellane, that belonged
to the land of Israel, and bordered on the country of Damascus,
is supposed, both by Hudson and Spanheim, to be the same with Abel,
or Ahila, whence came Abilene. This may he that city so denominated
from Abel the righteous, there buried, concerning the shedding of
whose blood within the compass of the land of Israel, I understand
our Savior's words about the fatal war and overthrow of Judea by
Titus and his Roman army; "That upon you may come all the righteous
blood shed upon the land, from the blood of righteous Abel to the
blood of Zacharias son of Barnchins, whom ye slew between the temple
and the altar. Verily, I say unto you, all these things shall come
upon this generation," Matthew 23;35, 36; Luke 11:51.
(34) Josephus, in his present copies, says, that a little while
rain upon the earth; whereas, in our other copies, it is after many
days, 1 Kings 18:1. Several years are also intimated there, and
in Josephus, sect. 2, as belonging to this drought and famine; nay,
we have the express mention of the third year, which I suppose was
reckoned from the recovery of the widow's son, and the ceasing of
this drought in Phmuiela (which, as Menander informs us here, lasted
one whole year); and both our Savior and St. James affirm, that
this drought lasted in all three years and six months. as their
copies of the Old Testament then informed them, Luke 4:25; James
5:17. Josephus here seems to mean, that this drought affected all
the habitable earth, and presently all the earth, as our Savior
says it was upon all the earth, Luke 4:25. They who restrain these
expressions to the land of Judea alone, go without sufficient authority
or examples.
(35) Mr. Spanheim takes notice here, that in the worship of Mithra
(the god of the Persians) the priests cut themselves in the same
manner as did these priests in their invocation of Baal (the god
of the Phoenicians).
(36) For Izar we may here read (with Hudson and Cocceius) Isachar,
i.e of the tribe of Isachar, for to that tribe did Jezreel belong;
and presently at the beginning of sect. 8, as also ch. 15. sect.
4, we may read for Iar, with one MS. nearly, and the Scripture,
Jezreel, for that was the city meant in the history of Naboth.
(37) "The Jews weep to this day," (says Jerome, here
cited by Reland,) "and roll themselves upon sackcloth, in ashes,
barefoot, upon such occasions." To which Spanheim adds, "that
after the same manner Bernice, when his life was in danger, stood
at the tribunal of Florus barefoot." Of the War, B. II. ch.
15. sect. 1. See the like of David, 2 Samuel 15:30; Antiq. B. VII.
ch. 9. sect. 2.
(38) Mr. Reland notes here very truly, that the word naked does
not always signify entirely naked, but sometimes without men's usual
armor, without heir usual robes or upper garments; as when Virgil
bids the husbandman plough naked, and sow naked; when Josephus says
(Antiq. B. IV. ch. 3. sect. 2) that God had given the Jews the security
of armor when they were naked; and when he here says that Ahab fell
on the Syrians when they were naked and drunk; when (Antiq. B. XI.
ch. 5. sect. 8) he says that Nehemiah commanded those Jews that
were building the walls of Jerusalem to take care to have their
armor on upon occasion, that the enemy might not fall upon them
naked. I may add, that the case seems to be the same in the Scripture,
when it says that Saul lay down naked among the prophets, 1 Samuel
19:24; when it says that Isaiah walked naked and barefoot, Isaiah
20:2, 3; and when it says that Peter, before he girt his fisher's
coat to him, was naked, John 21:7. What is said of David also gives
light to this, who was reproached by Michal for "dancing before
the ark, and uncovering himself in the eyes of his handmaids, as
one of the vain fellows shamelessly uncovereth himself," 2
Samuel 6:14, 20; yet it is there expressly said (ver. 14) that "David
was girded with a linen ephod," i.e. he had laid aside his
robes of state, and put on the sacerdotal, Levitical, or sacred
garments, proper for such a solemnity.
(39) Josephus's number, two myriads and seven thousand, agrees
here with that in our other copies, as those that were slain by
the falling down of the walls of Aphek; but I suspected at first
that this number in Josephus's present copies could not be his original
number, because he calls them "oligoi," a few, which could
hardly be said of so many as twenty-seven thousand, and because
of the improbability of the fall of a particular wall killing so
many; yet when I consider Josephus's next words, how the rest which
were slain in the battle were "ten other myriads," that
twenty-seven thousand are but a few in comparison of a hundred thousand,
and that it was not "a wall," as in our English version,
but "the walls" or "the entire walls" of the
city that fell down, as in all the originals, I lay aside that suspicion,
and firmly believe that Josephus himself hath, with the rest, given
us the just number, twenty-seven thousand.
(40) This manner of supplication for men's lives among the Syrians,
with ropes or halters about their heads or necks, is, I suppose,
no strange thing in later ages, even in our own country.
(41) It is here remarkable, that in Josephus's copy this prophet,
whose severe denunciation of a disobedient person's slaughter by
a lion had lately come to pass, was no other than Micaiah, the son
of Imlah, who, as he now denounced God's judgment on disobedient
Ahab, seems directly to have been that very prophet whom the same
Ahab, in 1 Kings 22:8, 18, complains of, "as one whom he hated,
because he did not prophesy good concerning him, but evil,"
and who in that chapter openly repeats his denunciations against
him; all which came to pass accordingly; nor is there any reason
to doubt but this and the former were the very same prophet.
(42) What is most remarkable in this history, and in many histories
on other occasions in the Old Testament, is this, that during the
Jewish theocracy God acted entirely as the supreme King of Israel,
and the supreme General of their armies, and always expected that
the Israelites should be in such absolute subjection to him, their
supreme and heavenly King, and General of their armies, as subjects
and soldiers are to their earthly kings and generals, and that usually
without knowing the particular reasons of their injunctions.
(43) These reasonings of Zedekiah the false prophet, in order to
persuade Ahab not to believe Micaiah the true prophet, are plausible;
but being omitted in our other copies, we cannot now tell whence
Josephus had them, whether from his own temple copy, from some other
original author, or from certain ancient notes. That some such plausible
objection was now raised against Micaiah is very likely, otherwise
Jehoshaphat, who used to disbelieve all such false prophets, could
never have been induced to accompany Ahab in these desperate circumstances.
(44) This reading of Josephus, that Jehoshaphat put on not his
own, but Ahab's robes, in order to appear to be Ahab, while Ahab
was without any robes at all, and hoped thereby to escape his own
evil fate, and disprove Micaiah's prophecy against him, is exceeding
probable. It gives great light also to this whole history; and shows,
that although Ahab hoped Jehoshaphat would he mistaken for him,
and run the only risk of being slain in the battle, yet he was entirely
disappointed, while still the escape of the good man Jehoshaphat,
and the slaughter of the bad man Ahab, demonstrated the great distinction
that Divine providence made betwixt them.
(45)We have here a very wise reflection of Josephus about Divine
Providence, and what is derived from it, prophecy, and the inevitable
certainty of its accomplishment; and that when wicked men think
they take proper methods to elude what is denounced against them,
and to escape the Divine judgments thereby threatened them, without
repentance, they are ever by Providence infatuated to bring about
their own destruction, and thereby withal to demonstrate the perfect
veracity of that God whose predictions they in vain endeavored to
elude.
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