THE TWO KINGDOMS.
I Kings i-xii; II Chronicles i-xii.
From the division of the kingdom till the
downfall of that of the ten tribes, called the
kingdom of Israel, or the northern kingdom,
while the other was the kingdom of Judah, or
the southern kingdom, the author of the book
of Kings treats their history alternately, while
the Chronicler confines himself to the latter,
except when the two come in contact.
We should study this part of the history
under the subdivisions into which it is naturally
divided, and we must take into view the
writings of the prophets as they come into
contact with the history; for the latter constitute
a very important part of the history of
the times, and without them the narrative in [46]
Kings and Chronicles could be but imperfectly
understood.
This portion of the history divides itself
into three distinct parts which we shall consider
separately. They are first, a period of
hostility between the two kingdoms; second,
a period of friendly alliance; and third, a second
period of hostility.
1. The First Period of Hostility. This
period began with the division of the kingdom,
and closed with an alliance between kings
Ahab and Jehoshaphat, and it lasted about 78
years. At the beginning of this period Jeroboam
established the worship of Jehovah under
the image of golden calves at Bethel and Dan;
ordained an annual festival at the former place,
and made it unlawful for his subjects to go to
Jerusalem to worship as the law of Moses required.
The author of the book of Kings is
careful to trace the continuance of this unlawful
worship in the reigns of subsequent kings
of Israel, and the evil consequences of it are
plainly seen in the course of events. Within
about fifty years four different dynasties came
to the throne, each exterminating the male
offspring of the predecessor, and each being
pronounced more wicked than those that had
gone before. Finally the religious degradation [47]
reached such a point that to the calf-worship
inaugurated by Jeroboam was added the almost
universal worship of Baal. In this crisis the
greatest of all the prophets who have left no
writings behind them, Elijah the Tishbite,
appeared like a sudden thunderstorm on the
scene, and gave a staggering blows to this pernicious
system.
In the meantime, the kingdom of Judah had
progressed more satisfactorily. Adhering to
the true God, and maintaining his worship according
to the law, only four kings had come
to the throne when the seventh began to reign
in Israel. During a temporary apostasy of the
people under Rehoboam, the country was overrun
by an Egyptian army, and a heavy tribute
was paid to get rid of it; but a return to the Lord
brought a return to prosperity, and Jehoshaphat
was reigning righteously over Judah
while Ahab was in the midst of the wickedest
reign that had been known in Israel.
2. The Period of Reconciliation. The two
kingdoms so long hostile now became reconciled
by the marriage of Ahab's daughter
Athaliah to Jehoram the son and heir of Jehoshaphat.
The alliance emboldened Ahab to a
military enterprise which he had not dared to
undertake alone, and which resulted in the [48]
defeat of his army and the loss of his life.
The whole story of his reign is full of instruction
and warning. Jehoshaphat was rebuked by a
messenger from God for helping those who
were the enemies of God; but the friendly relations
between his kingdom and that of Israel
continued until the former reaped much bitter
fruit therefrom. Athaliah proved a scourge to
Judah, and in the third generation of Jehoshaphat's
descendants she attempted the extermination
of the royal family. She came so
near succeeding that only one infant was left
to perpetuate the family of David, and to make
possible the divine promise that he should never
lack a son to sit upon his throne. This infant
was saved at the sacrifice of Athaliah's own
execrable life, and then came to an end the
alliance between Israel and Judah which had
proved a continuous disaster to the latter.
While such was the course of history in
Judah, Israel had fared no better. Ahab's son
and successor, Ahaziah, reigned only two
years. He made a feeble effort to revive Baal
worship, and he also committed the fatal sin of
his life by sending messengers to Baal-zebub,
the god of Ekron, to inquire of him the result
of an injury which he had received from a fall.
Dying without a son, he was succeeded by his [49]
brother Jehoram, in whose reign the career of
Elijah came to a glorious end, and the brilliant
career of Elisha kept alive to some extent the
fear of God among the people. More than once
he saved the kingdom from subjugation by
Benhadad the powerful king of Syria. Jehoram's
career ended in the extermination of the
whole offspring of Ahab by the hand of Jehu.
That the two great prophets, Elijah and
Elisha, were sent to the more wicked of the
two kingdoms, though a matter of surprise at
first thought, was the very thing to be expected;
for their mission was to rebuke sin,
and where sin most abounded was their proper
field of activity. By checking Baal-worship in
the larger kingdom, where it originated, they
brought it to a speedier end in the smaller
kingdom to which it had spread.
3. The Second Period of Hostility. After
the extermination of the house of Ahab in Israel,
and the death of Athaliah in Judah, there
was no more co-operation between the two
kingdoms; but instead there were frequent
wars as of old. The house of Jehu held the
throne in the north longer than any other, and
under Jeroboam II the kingdom reached its
greatest power and prosperity since the days of
Solomon. This king, by the prophetic [50]
guidance of the prophet Jonah, subdued the kingdom
of Syria which had long oppressed his nation,
and extended his dominions to the Euphrates,
which was the northern boundary of
the kingdom of David. The incidents recorded
in the book of Jonah belong to this reign.
It was in this reign, which was a long
one, that the prophets Hosea and Amos uttered
the prophecies which we find in their books.
It is necessary to study these, in order to fully
understand the condition of the people at the
time; for while the account in the historical
book of Kings touches upon political and
military affairs, and this very slightly, the two
prophets speak to the people of their sins; and
in doing so they bring to light a state of irreligion
and immorality in the midst of secular
prosperity, which fills the reader with horror,
and which is yet but the legitimate result of
the experiences through which the ten tribes
had passed since the division of the kingdom.
It is also worthy of special notice that they
predicted the downfall and ruin of the kingdom
at the very time when, according to all human
foresight, there was less prospect of such a disaster
than at any previous period in its history.
After the fall of the house of Jehu, which
occurred in six months after the death of [51]
Jeroboam II, the kingdom hastened rapidly to
the doom predicted for it by Hosea and Amos. A
succession of five kings came to the throne in
thirty-two years, all of whom but one were
assassinated by their successors. In their rivalries
they hired three successive kings of Assyria
to interfere in their affairs, thus fairly inviting
the rulers of that great Empire to come at last,
as they did, and take the whole kingdom into
captivity. Finally in the ninth year of the last
of these assassins, Hoshea, the end came as described
in the seventeenth chapter of II Kings.
While Israel was thus going the downward
road to destruction, Judah, having recovered
somewhat from the damaging effects of the alliance
with the house of Ahab, passed through
a happier career, though not without some
severe rebukes from the two prophets who were
specially sent to Israel. Of the six kings who
reigned during the time of the ten in Israel,
two were faithful to God and his law, while
three were unfaithful in many things, but far
less so than the kings of Israel.
The last of these good kings, Hezekiah,
was in the sixth year of his reign when Israel
was carried captive.
The whole period of the separate existence
of the two kingdoms, counted by adding [52]
together the reigns of the kings and making
a proper reduction for the peculiar Hebrew
method of counting, in 354 years, and the modern
date of captivity of Israel is B. C. 721.
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