JORAM AND JEHU, (TENTH AND
ELEVENTH) KINGS OF ISRAEL. AHAZIAH, (SIXTH) KING OF JUDAH.
Accession of Ahaziah — Character of his Reign
— Expedition of Joram and Ahaziah against Hazael and taking
of Ramoth-Gilead — Joram returns Wounded to Jezreel — Visit
of Ahaziah — Jehu anointed King — Rapid March on Jezreel —
Joram killed — Pursuit and Death of Ahaziah — Jezebel killed
— Fulfillment of the Divine sentence by Elijah.
(2 Kings 8:25-9:37; 2 Chronicles 22:1-9.)
The brief reign of Ahaziah, or Jehoahaz (2 Chronicles 21:17)
— for the
names are precisely the same, the two words of which they
are
compounded being only reversed 1 ) — may be regarded as
marking the
crisis in the history alike of the northern and the southern
kingdom. The
young prince was twenty-two years old 2 when he ascended the
throne (2
Kings 8:26) 3 . To say that he followed the evil example set
by his father,
would not express the whole truth. Holy Scripture designates
his course as
a walking "in the ways of the house of Ahab," explaining
that his mother Athaliah a was his counselor, and that he was also
influenced by the other
members of that family. It was by their advice that he
united with his
uncle Joram in that expedition which ended in the death of
the two kings,
although there is no evidence that a Judaean army was
actually joined to
the forces of Israel. 4
We remember that fourteen years before, Jehoshaphat, the
grandfather of
Ahaziah, had joined Ahab in a similar undertaking, which had
proved
unsuccessful, and in which Ahab lost his life. We might
wonder at the
renewal of an attempt upon Ramoth-Gilead, when a man like
Hazael
occupied the throne of Syria; but the Assyrian monuments
explain alike
the expedition and its opening success. From these we learn
that there was
repeated war between Assyria and Hazael, in which, to judge
from the
number of Syrian war chariots captured (1121), the whole
force of the
country must have been engaged and exhausted. On another
occasion we
read of a war in which after a great victory
5 an Assyrian
monarch pursued
his enemy from city to city, and even into the mountains,
burning and
destroying everything before him. 6 We may therefore
conjecture that if Joram was not actually in league with Assyria — as Jehu
afterwards was
— the Israelitish king availed himself of the opportunity
for an attack
upon Ramoth-Gilead. In this he seems to have been successful
(2 Kings
9:14), although he was wounded by the Syrians — as Josephus
has it, by
an arrow during the siege (Ant. 9:6, 1). Leaving
Ramoth-Gilead, which he
had taken, in the keeping of Jehu, his chief captain, Joram
went back to the
summer palace of Jezreel, to be healed of his wounds, both
as nearer to the
field of action, and because the court was there at the
time.
It was to Jezreel that Ahaziah went to see his uncle, and
during this fatal
visit the "destruction" overtook him, which, as the writer
of the Book of
Chronicles notes, "was of God." It came together with that
of Joram and
the whole house of Ahab. The judgment which more than
fourteen years
before had been pronounced upon Ahab (1 Kings 21:21-24) had
only been
deferred till the measure of the guilt of his house was
filled. And now the
hour had come. In that awful vision on Mount Horeb, Elijah
had received
the commission to "anoint Jehu the son of Nimshi... to be
king over Israel"
(1 Kings 19:16), with special view to the work of punishment
which he
was to execute. The commission, which Elijah himself could
not discharge,
had devolved on Elisha; and, the proper time for its
execution having
arrived, the prophet now sent one of the "sons of the
prophets" — a
young man (9:4), possibly his personal attendant. As no
doubt he literally
obeyed the injunctions of his master, we shall best learn
what these were
by following the detailed account of what he actually said
and did.
As directed by Elisha, he went to Ramoth-Gilead, carrying
with him a vial,
probably of holy oil, which the prophet had given him. Even
this is
significant. On his arrival he found, as so often in this
history, all
apparently arranged so as to carry out the special purpose
of God. He had
been told to "look out" Jehu, and here were all the captains
of the host
sitting together, probably in deliberation. Remembering that
the chief
command devolved on Jehu, it would not be difficult to
single out the
object of the young man's mission. He had only to say, "I
have a word to
thee, O captain," and Jehu as president would naturally
answer. It was so;
and on Jehu's inquiry to which of them the message was, the
young
prophet replied: "To thee, O captain."
The captains had been sitting in the great court, and Jehu
now took his
strange visitor "into the house," no doubt, as Elisha had
directed, into "an
inner chamber," one that opened out of another, where what
passed
between them could not be observed from the court. Here,
without further
explanation — for abruptness of delivery was part of the
object in view,
and indeed characteristic of the direct Divine message — the
young man
poured the oil on the head of Jehu, and stated the terms of
his commission.
It was in the name of "Jehovah, God of Israel," and on
behalf of Israel,
viewed as "the people of Jehovah" (2 Kings 9:6). This
emphatic
introduction of Jehovah marked the character of the work to
which Jehu
was called. He was now Divinely anointed king, to execute
judgment on
the house of Ahab, and to avenge at the hand of Jezebel the
blood of the
prophets, and of all the servants of Jehovah. And the whole
house of Ahab
was to perish like that of Jeroboam (1 Kings 14: 10), and
that of Baasha (1
Kings 16:3). But upon Jezebel would special personal
judgment descend,
commensurate to the terrible crime against Naboth, which she
had planned
and executed (1 Kings 21.). Thus would all men see that
Jehovah was the
living and true God; thus also would the loudest but also
the last call to
national repentance come to Israel, ere the storm of
judgment burst over
the land.
It is in this light that what seem from our point of view
the horrible events
of the beginning of Jehu's reign must be regarded. But then
our point of
view was not that of Israel at that time, and if the
commencing judgment
on national apostasy, and the final call to repentance which
it implied,
were to be effective, they must be suited to their, not to
our, standpoint.
Let it be remembered that the long ministry of Elijah and
Elisha, with all
the exceptionally direct and striking Divine interpositions
connected with
them, had passed without producing any appreciable effect on
the people.
The years of sudden famine, and its equally sudden
cessation; the scene at
the sacrifice on Carmel, as well as the prolonged public and
private activity
of Elisha, had apparently only wrought this result: that the
great prophets
came to be regarded as possessing some absolute power to
influence the
God of Israel (comp. 2 Kings 6:31; 8:4). A very different
kind of
ambassador was now to do God's behest and to execute His
judgments,
although perhaps just because he would do that for which he
was called in
his own wild Eastern manner, and in accordance with the
spirit of the time.
It is in this sense that we can understand the Divine
approbation conveyed
to Jehu (2 Kings 10:30), even while feeling that the man
himself and his
modes of acting were contrary to God. And, indeed, this fact
is distinctly
brought out in the verse which follows the expression of the
Divine
approbation (ver. 31).
We have said that Jehu did his work as a Jehu, not as an
Elisha, and in
accordance with the spirit of his times. We may add that, as
the experience
of the past showed, no other mode would have been understood
by Israel.
It was a very dark night, and only the flashes of lightning
and the flames of
burning palaces which they had kindled could show what
tempest of
judgment had gathered in the sky. Yet even so might men have
learned the
possibility of brightness and calm with the sunrise of the
morrow. 7
Returning to our history, we follow Elisha' s messenger as,
obedient to his
directions, after having executed his commission, he opens
the door and
literally flees through the court where the assembled
captains are in waiting
for Jehu. He must not give explanations to any man; he must
not be
arrested nor questioned by any. His business was with Jehu —
that done,
alike in character with the Divine message, and even for the
sake of its
success, he must withdraw. And, although so widely differing
in character,
there is in this also a practical lesson for those who have
some work to do
for God. Let us avoid all mere talking, and, if we can, all
explanation.
God's work will best explain itself, we cannot explain it.
We must
withdraw our personality as soon and as completely as may
be; do the
commission which we feel to be of God, and eschew in it
saluting any man
by the way (Luke 10:4). And so the young prophet would be
outside the
walls of Ramoth-Gilead, and on his way back to Samaria, when
Jehu
rejoined the "servants of his lord."
8
They must all have recognized the garb and appearance of one
of "the sons
of the prophets," and inferred that something of supreme
importance was
about to take place. For the proper understanding of this
history it is
necessary to bear in mind that it was possible to be opposed
to the
worship of Baal, and in favor of that of the God of Israel,
without any
personal or true religion. In point of fact, Jehu
exterminated for the time
alike the service and the servants of Baal, although he
"took no heed to walk in the way of Jehovah, God of Israel,
with all his heart; he departed not from the sins of Jeroboam, which
made Israel to sin" (2 Kings 10:31).
It was the service of Baal which Ahab had initiated, while
Jeroboam's
worship of God under the symbol of the golden calf might be
represented
as the ancient Israelitish (in opposition to the Judaean and
Levitic) service
of the God of Israel. We can readily believe that there
might be a large and
influential national party in the northern kingdom,
intensely opposed to
the anti-Israelitish and foreign policy and ways in State
and Church of the
house of Ahab. And both from his antecedents (comp. 2 Kings
9:25, 26),
and his subsequent conduct, we infer that Jehu was a leader
— perhaps the
leader — of this national party, which naturally would have
many
adherents throughout the country.
Quite consistent with this view is the deep interest taken
by the captains
in the mission of the young prophet to Jehu, and their
readiness to take up
his cause, even while at the same time the messenger was
slightingly
spoken of — just as men of the world might characterize such
an one as a
"mad" enthusiast. It is difficult to decide the reason of
what seems the
evasive answer first made by Jehu. But when perceiving by
their interest
the likelihood of their joining the national cause, he told
them at least that
part of the message which appointed him king over Israel.
9
If Jehu
possessed the ferocity, he evidently had also the cunning of
an Eastern.
Perhaps he could scarcely have been prepared for the
rapidity with which
the military revolution was accomplished. The assembled
captains took off
their upper garments, and spread them, in token of homage,
as a carpet "on
the platform of the steps," 10 that is, the steps which led
up to a platform
or balcony, and then, amidst the blast of trumpets, the
usual signal at a
coronation (1 Kings 1:39; 2 Kings 11:14), Jehu was
proclaimed king.
The formal conspiracy against Joram, now hastily made, was
immediately
carried out. At the proposal of Jehu, the city gates were
watched, lest any
fugitive might bring tidings to Jezreel. Jehu himself, with
Bidkar as his
chief captain, in his chariot (ver. 25), and attended by a
"multitude" (ver.
17) — no doubt, of horsemen — rapidly made his way to
Jezreel. From
incidental notices in the account (vers. 17, 30, 31) we
gather that the royal
palace formed part of the fortifications of the town, —
perhaps, as in
other places, that the palace was the only fortified part of
Jezreel, 11 the
town straggling beyond, and lying, as it were, in the
shelter of the palace
fort, which would occupy the height. Thus the "watchman on
the tower of Jezreel" would really hold that place of observation in the
palace, and
when "Jehu came to Jezreel," Jezebel could address him from
a window
above, as he "entered in at the gate."
From the knoll — about 500 feet high, forming a low spur of
Mount
Gilboa — on which Jezreel stands, two roads diverge, keeping
close to
Mount Gilboa. The one turns east and south, and then sharply
round the
corner at Beth-Shean; the other crosses the plain of
Esdraelon, almost
straight south to En-gannim ("the fount of the gardens," the
modern Jenin),
where the direct road leads to Samaria, but whence also we
might turn off
eastwards to Beth-Shean and the Jordan. It is almost
needless to say that it
was along the former of these roads that the watchman on the
tower of
Jezreel saw Jehu and his company advancing at "mad" haste.
For miles
they must have been visible on the road that led up to Beth-Shean.
When
the watchman announced their approach to the king, Joram, in
his false
security, directed that a single horseman should be sent to
inquire what
tidings they brought. As he reached Jehu, the rebel general
imperiously
bade him join his troop. This movement also the watchman
observed and
reported to Joram. If the dispatch of the first horseman may
be
understood, that of a second one seems in the circumstances
little short of
fatuity.
By the time the second messenger from Jezreel had obeyed the
orders of
Jehu and joined his companion, the troop was sufficiently
near for the
experienced eye of the watchman to recognize, not indeed the
face of Jehu,
but that the driving of the foremost chariot was like none
other's than that
of the bold, reckless chief captain of Israel's host. When
the watchman
reported it to the king, this would probably coincide with
what had been
his own idea from the first. A troop advancing from that
direction could
only have come from the army in Ramoth-Gilead — probably to
bring
tidings of some victory, or of the final retreat of the
Syrians, or of
proposals of peace. The announcement that it was Jehu
himself would
tend to confirm such anticipations. Accordingly Joram had
his war chariot
and that of Ahaziah hastily made ready, and the two kings
went to meet
Jehu.
As we descend from Jezreel on the road to Beth-Shean there
are on the
east and south-east of the city "rock-cut wine-presses on
the rugged hills,"
marking no doubt where "the portion of Naboth" and his
vineyard had
been. It was here that the royal party encountered Jehu and
his troop. To
the light-hearted question of Joram, "Is it peace, Jehu?"
12
such answer
came as must at once and rudely have dispelled any
illusions. "What! 'is it
peace?' (until) so long as the whoredoms of Jezebel thy
mother, and her
witchcrafts, the many?" the former expression referring, as
frequently, to
idolatry (comp. Jeremiah 3:2, 3; Ezekiel 23:27); the latter
to the
enchantments and heathen rites practiced in connection with
it. 13 From
which words we also learn that in popular opinion Jezebel
exercised
paramount influence over her son, and that the un-Israelitish
rites
prevalent were attributed to her.
With the short cry, "Deceit, Ahaziah!" Joram turned his
horses' heads to
flee into Jezreel, when Jehu, drawing his bow, sent the
arrow with such
strength between the shoulders of Joram that it passed out
at his heart, and
the king fell dead in his chariot. Then reminding his
"adjutant" Bidkar of
the burden or punitive sentence which Jehovah had in their
presence laid
upon Ahab, on the day they two had ridden behind the king as
his
attendants, when he had gone to take possession of the
property of
murdered Naboth, he commanded the body of Joram to be cast
into that
very plat of ground, "according to the word of Jehovah."
Meanwhile Ahaziah, perceiving the turn of matters, sought
safety in flight.
Leaving Jezreel aside, he turned sharp round the shoulder of
Gilboa, and
struck the direct road southwards: "fled the way of the
Beth-Gan," which
we regard as another name for En-gannim, the modern Jenin,
at the
southern end of the plain of Jezreel.
14 Unwilling to allow
his escape, Jehu,
while himself preparing to enter Jezreel, gave rapid
directions to pursue
Ahaziah. "Him also smite — in the going up to Gur! which is
by
Ibleam." 15 We can at least thus far identify "the going up
to Gur," that the
neighboring town of Ibleam has been localized in the modern
Bir el
Belemeh, south of En-gannim. It is here then that we must
place the
"ascent to Gur," where Jehu had expected, although
mistakenly, that the
pursuers might overtake the chariot of Ahaziah.
As we infer, the object of Ahaziah was to reach Megiddo in
safety. That
place has generally been located, but, as recently shown,
erroneously, at
the western edge of the plain of Jezreel, under Mount
Carmel. In truth
Megiddo lay in the opposite direction — south and east from
Jezreel —
being "the large ruin between Jezreel and Beth-shean, which
still bears the
name Mujedd'a." 16 This location of Megiddo greatly helps
the
understanding of our narrative. As already stated, Ahaziah'
s hope was that
in reaching Megiddo he would have not only out-distanced,
but out-
wearied his pursuers. And his purpose may have been to make
his way to
the Jordan, 17 and along its eastern banks till he could
cross into Judaea. But
in this hope, as we imagine, he was disappointed. Pursued to
Megiddo, he
fled to Samaria (2 Chronicles 22:9). The knowledge that the
sons of Ahab
were brought up in the houses of the principal men of the
city (2 Kings
10: 1) led him to expect that he might be able to hide for a
time among the
adherents of his grandfather. We know how little the loyalty
of the nobles
of Samaria was to be depended upon (2 Kings 10:1-7), and we
do not
wonder to read that Ahaziah was "caught" in Samaria, brought
back to
Megiddo, and there slain by order of Jehu. Nor does it seem
strange that
his body was given up to his servants to be taken to
Jerusalem and buried
there, as being a descendant of that Jehoshaphat "who sought
Jehovah
with all his heart." For the whole movement of Jehu was
ostensibly for the
purpose of abolishing the worship of Baal, and restoring
that of Jehovah,
the God of Israel.
We return to sketch, as briefly as we may, the closing hours
of that day in
Jezreel. Tidings of all that was passing had rapidly reached
Jezebel. Her
course was soon chosen. She knew she must die; and she would
die as a
princess of her race, and a queen. After the Oriental
fashion, she put paint
on her eyes, 18 "and tired her head." Thus arrayed as a
queen, 19 she took her
place at the window, awaiting the arrival of Jehu. As he
appeared, she
called to him from above — taking up and adapting the word
with which
the messengers of Joram, and then the unfortunate king
himself, had
unsuspectingly greeted Jehu: "Is it peace? Zimri, murderer
of his master!"
The words were intended to remind Jehu of the fate of Zimri,
whose reign
lasted only seven days (1 Kings 16:9-19), perhaps to stir up
feelings
which would lead to a similar counter-revolution. Even if no
other motive
had been actuating him, self-preservation dictated quick and
decisive action
on the part of Jehu. Looking up, he exclaimed in his
impatient way: "Who
is on my side? Who?" and when some of the eunuchs
immediately
responded, Jezebel was, at his command, thrown from the
window. Her
blood bespattered the wall and the horses, and the chariot
of Jehu, as he
passed through the gate, crushed her mangled body.
And now King Jehu is at his royal banquet within the palace
of the
murdered princes. Was it statecraft, dictating regard for
the Tyrian
princess; or some pity for the fallen greatness of one who
had died a proud
queen; or a rising feeling that, for his own sake, a
descendant of royalty
should not be exposed to the extreme of popular contempt,
which
prompted him to give orders for the burial of Jezebel? But
whatever his
motives, the command came too late. Only the skull, the
hands, and the
feet of Jezebel were found; the rest had been food for those
wild dogs
which prowled about Jezreel. And if Jehu did not in his
heart recognize the
meaning and lessons of the terrible judgment which had
fallen with such
literality on the wretched queen, he at least declared and
owned: "This is
the word of Jehovah, which He spake by His servant Elijah
the Tishbite."
And so there was testimony in Israel for Jehovah and His
Word in the
judgments upon Ahab and his house — even as many centuries
afterwards
there was testimony of judgment for the Christ in the flames
which
consumed Jerusalem and its Temple. 20
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