JEHU, (ELEVENTH) KING OF ISRAEL.
ATHALIAH, (SEVENTH) QUEEN OF JUDAH.
Murder of the "sons" of Ahab and of Joram —
Destruction of the adherents of Ahab in Jezreel — March on
Samaria — Slaughter of the "brethren" of Ahaziah — Jehonadab
the son of Rechab — Meaning of the Rechabite movement — The
Feast of Baal at Samaria — Destruction of the Worshippers —
Character of the Reign of Jehu — Decline of the Northern
Kingdom — Commencing Decline of the Southern Kingdom.
(2 Kings 10:2; 2 Chronicles 21:10; 24:17-26.)
We have learned enough of this history to understand the
seeming
inconsistencies in the conduct of Jehu. Absolutely speaking,
he was the
instrument selected for executing the Divine punishment on
the house of
Ahab; and also in whose reign the national judgment upon
Israel was to
begin. Jehu himself clearly understood his mission as
regarded the house of
Ahab and the worship of Baal. But he accepted it as a
national and, if the
term may be used, a Jehovistic movement, without implying
the necessity
of true fear of the Lord, or of return to Him; and he
carried it out as a
Jehu. Alike as regarded his feelings and his methods, he was
the
instrument, not the servant of the Lord .
To such an one as Jehu even common prudence would have
dictated to do
what work he had, quickly, sharply, and completely. A
dynasty that had
extended over four reigns must have numbered many adherents,
while on
the other hand the demoralizing influence of the worship of
Baal must have
widely spread in the land. There was more than merely a
mocking taunt in
the reminder of Jezebel about the fate of Zimri. The mission
as well as the
rule of Jehu depended upon a rapid succession of measures
which would
alike anticipate the possibility of a counter-revolution,
and render a return
to the former state of things impossible. This explains the
measures taken
by the new king. Samaria was not only the capital, but a
fortified city,
where the main body of the standing army
1 lay. Here, as we
know, had
been placed the "seventy sons of Ahab" — understanding the
term 2 in its
wider sense, common in Hebrew, which included, besides the
sons of
Ahab, his grandsons, the children of Joram (comp. 2 Kings
10:3). These
royal princes of the house of Ahab were entrusted, some (in
the Eastern
fashion) for supervision, the younger for education to the
"princes," 3 —
that is, the governor of the palace and the governor of the
city (10:1, comp.
10:5) — to the "elders," and to certain prominent persons
who had charge
of them. These officials in Samaria would embody the
possibility of a
counter-revolution, and to them Jehu addressed on the morrow
of his entry
into Jezreel what really amounted to a challenge, to declare
themselves for
the house of Ahab, or else to make submission to his rule.
The motives
which decided their choice (ver. 4) show that their
inclination was in favor
of the old regime, while their fears dictated
submission to the usurper. So
Jehu had judged wisely in forcing an immediate decision,
without exposing
himself by marching with his small troop against Samaria.
But this was not all. Neither their allegiance nor his rule
was safe so long as
any of the royal princes lived; and, indeed, their
destruction was part of
his work and mission. To have killed them himself would have
been a
doubtful expedient, which, even if successful, might have
given rise to
popular reaction, and at all events brought him ill-will,
while it would have
left free the hands of the adherents of Ahab. It was
therefore, from his
point of view, the wisest policy on receiving the submission
of the leaders
of Samaria to order them to kill all the royal princes and
bring their heads
to Jezreel. 4 This would not only accomplish the primary
object of Jehu,
but, by making them participate in the crimes of his
revolution, render any
future movement against his rule impossible. At the same
time the ghastly
sight of those heads, sent to Jezreel by the chief
representatives of the old
regime, would offer an excellent opportunity for an
appeal to the people.
When, therefore, next day the heads of the seventy princes
were brought in
baskets to Jezreel, he ordered them to be laid "at the
entering in of the
gate," 5 where the blood of Jezebel had so lately
bespattered the wall, and
the chariot of the conqueror passed over her body. And in
the morning
Jehu, pointing to the gory heaps, could tell the people
6
that not only
himself, but all the chief personages under the late
government, had part in
the destruction of the house of Ahab; that those to whom
they had been
entrusted had chosen rather to slay these princes in cold
blood than to take
up their cause — that all had perished, and so the word
spoken by the
Lord through the great prophet Elijah had been fulfilled.
Thus his rule and
the slaughter of the house of Ahab had — as he put it — the
support of all
men and the sanction of God Himself.
It was now possible for Jehu to take possession of his
capital without
danger of opposition, and there to carry out his final
measures against the
old order of things. But before doing so he took care, so to
speak, to secure
his rear by killing all that had been connected with the
house of Ahab in
Jezreel, "all his great men," his friends,
7 and his chief officials.
8
On his way to Samaria another tragedy was to be enacted. It
was at a
solitary place, in a locality which has not been
ascertained, but which bore
the name of "house of binding of the shepherds" — or, as the
Chaldee
Paraphrast calls it: "The house of assembly of the
shepherds." Here,
where evidently the roads from Jezreel and Jerusalem joined,
Jehu and his
followers met the forty-two princes, "the brethren of
Ahaziah, king of
Judah," 9 who were going on a friendly visit to "the
children of the king
[Joram] and the children of the mistress," [lady -ruler,
Gebhirah —
evidently Jezebel]. 10 So rapid had been the movements of
Jehu, and so
great was the fear of him, that tidings of what had passed
in Israel had not
traveled so far as to arrest the journey of the princes of
Judah. Jehu's order
was to "take them alive." Whether they offered resistance,
or this was part
of the original order of Jehu, certain it is that they were
all killed "at the
cistern of Beth-Eqed," 11 into which their bodies were
probably thrown.
As Jehu passed from the scene of slaughter he met a figure
that seems
strange and mysterious. "Jehonadab, the son of Rechab," who
had come
from Samaria to meet the new king, belonged to the Kenites
(1 Chronicles
2:55). This tribe, which was probably of Arab nationality,
appears so
early as the days of Abraham (Genesis 15:19). Jethro, the
father-in-law of
Moses, belonged to it (Judges 1:16). Part at least of the
tribe accompanied
Israel into the Land of Promise (Numbers 10:29-32), and
settled in the
south of Judah (Judges 1:16), where we find them by-and-by
mixed up
with the Amalekites (1 Samuel 15:6). Another part of the
tribe, however,
seems to have wandered far north, where Jael, the wife of
Heber the
Kenite, slew Sisera on his flight from Barak (Judges 4:17,
etc.; 5:24, etc.).
Thus they appear to have occupied the extreme south and
north of the
country, and would even on that ground possess political
importance. But
what interests us more is their religious relationship to
Israel. From the
deed of Jael we infer that they were intensely attached to
the national
cause. Again, from the circumstance that Jehonadab, the son
of Rechab —
evidently the chief of the tribe — came from Samaria to meet
Jehu, and
from the anxiety which the latter displayed as to Jehonadab'
s views and
intentions, as well as from the manner in which he treated
him, we gather
that the chieftain was a person of considerable political
importance, while
the invitation of Jehu: "Come with me, and see my zeal for
Jehovah,"
shows that he and his tribe were identified with the service
of Jehovah in
the land. All this throws fresh light on the special
injunction which from
that time onward Jehonadab laid upon his tribe (Jeremiah
35:1-16). They
were neither to build houses, nor to sow seed, nor to plant
or have
vineyards; but to dwell in tents, and so both to be and to
declare
themselves strangers in the land.
This rule, which the descendants of Rechab observed for
centuries, must,
from its peculiarity, have had a religious, not a political,
12 bearing. It has
with great probability been connected with Elijah,
13 but
the important
question has not yet been mooted whether it originated
before or after the
occupation of Samaria by Jehu. We believe the latter to have
been the case,
and it seems evidenced even by the circumstance that Jehonadab came
from Samaria to meet Jehu. We suppose that the ministry of
Elijah had
made the deepest impression on Jehonadab and his tribe. The
very
appearance and bearing of the prophet would appeal to them,
and his
words seem as those of a second Moses. Earnestly they waited
for the
results of his mission and of that of Elisha. And when the
word of Jehovah
to and by Elijah was being fulfilled — Hazael made king of
Syria, Jehu king
of Israel, and the house of Ahab destroyed, root and
branches — they
would naturally turn to Jehu, in the hope that a national
return to Jehovah
would follow. It was a kind of Old Testament John the
Baptist's hope of a
kingdom of God. Feelings such as these prompted Jehonadab to
go and
meet Jehu, while the latter, knowing the deep impression
which the
Rechabite movement in favor of the reformation of Elijah had
produced in
the land, would be anxious to secure his public support,
perhaps even —
so strange and mixed are our motives — to gain his
approbation. But what
Jehonadab saw of Jehu must soon have convinced him that he
was not one
to carry out an Elijah-movement in its positive and
spiritual aspect,
however fitted an instrument he might be to execute Divine
punishment.
And so Jehonadab left Jehu to perpetuate in his own tribe
the testimony
of Elijah, by making them Nazarites for ever, thus
symbolizing their
dedication to God, and by ordering them to be conspicuously
strangers in
the land, thus setting forth their expectation of the
judgments which Elijah
had predicted upon apostate Israel.
We are now prepared to accompany Jehonadab, as after
responding to
Jehu's anxious challenge about his feelings toward him, he
mounted Jehu's
chariot to go with him and see his zeal for Jehovah. The
first measure of
the conqueror was to repeat in Samaria what he had done in
Jezreel, and to
kill all related to or connected with the family of Ahab.
His next was, by a
truly Eastern device, to seize and destroy the adherents of
the religious
rites introduced under the late regime. Although this was in
fulfillment of
his mission, it will be observed that it also afforded the
best means of
establishing his own rule, since the national worship of
Baal was identified
with the house of Ahab. Accordingly we imagine that when
Jehu publicly
announced that he meant to serve Baal even much more than
Ahab, and
proclaimed a solemn assembly for Baal, the gathering would
be thoroughly
representative. First, as we understand it, Jehu summoned
all the prophets
and priests of Baal, and "all his servants" — either the
leading laity
generally, or else those in Samaria itself — ostensibly to
make preparation
for his great sacrifice. Next, similar proclamation was made
throughout the
country. In both cases the object was to secure the
attendance of all
professed worshippers of Baal. On the day appointed, the
courts of the
Temple of Baal were thronged "from one opening to the other
[the
opposite]." To make the leaders of the new religion the more
prominent,
Jehu now directed that each of them should be arrayed in
festive
vestments, 14 and then, to prevent any possible mistake,
since some of the
servants of Jehovah might have followed Jehu and Jehonadab
to the house
of Baal, he ordered, on his arrival, to search for and
remove any
worshippers of the Lord .
Neither of these measures would excite surprise, but would
only be
regarded as indications of Jehu's zeal, and his desire that
the rites of Baal
should not be profaned by the presence of strangers. The
attendance of
Jehonadab might seem strange; but he was in the train of the
king whom he
was known to have served, in whose company he had returned
to Samaria,
and with whom he had continued while he issued his mandates,
and
prepared for the feast of Baal. He might therefore be simply
an adherent of
Jehu, and now prepared to follow his lead.
The rest may be briefly told. As the sacrifices were offered
Jehu
surrounded the building with eighty of his trusted guards,
who, on the
given word of command, entered the building, threw down all
they
encountered, and penetrated into "the sanctuary
15 of the
house of Baal,"
where all who had been marked out to them were slaughtered.
Then they
brought out the wooden images and burnt them, while the
large stone
statue of Baal, as well as the Temple itself, were
destroyed. And
completely to desecrate the site, and mark the contempt
attaching to it,
Jehu converted it into a place for public convenience.
"Thus," as Scripture marks, "Jehu destroyed Baal out of
Israel." Yet, as
the cessation of idolatry after the return from the exile
did not issue in true
repentance towards God, nor in faith in the Messiah, so did
not this
destruction of Baal- worship lead up to the service of
Jehovah. Rather did
king and people stray farther from the Lord their God. Of
the succeeding
events in Jehu's reign, which lasted no less than
twenty-eight years, no
account is given in Scripture, except this notice, that "in
those days
Jehovah began to cut Israel short: and Hazael smote them in
all the coasts
of Israel; from Jordan eastward, all the land of Gilead, of
the Gadites, and
the Reubenites, and the Manassites, from Aroer, which is by
the river
Arnon, even Gilead and Bashan." And the Assyrian monuments
throw
farther light upon this brief record. They inform us about
the wars of
Hazael against Assyria, and they represent Jehu as bringing
tribute to the
king of Assyria. The inference which we derive is that Jehu
had entered
into a tributary alliance with the more powerful empire of
Assyria against
Hazael, and that when the latter had made his peace with
Assyria, he
turned against Jehu, and inflicted on Israel the losses thus
briefly noticed in
Scripture. Be this as it may, this at least is certain, that
with the loss of the
whole trans-Jordanic territory, the decline of the northern
kingdom had
commenced.
Nor was the state of matters more hopeful in the southern
kingdom of
Judah. The brief and bloody reign of Athaliah was, indeed,
followed by the
counter-revolution of Jehoiada, and the elevation of Joash
to the throne.
But the reformation then inaugurated was of short duration.
After the
death of Jehoiada, the worship of Jehovah was once more
forsaken for that
of
"groves and idols, and wrath came upon Judah and Jerusalem
for this their trespass" (2 Chronicles 24:18).
And although the Lord sent them prophets to bring them again
unto the
Lord, they not only would not give ear, but actually at the
commandment
of the king, and in the very house of Jehovah, shed the
blood of Zechariah,
which, according to Jewish legend, could not be wiped out,
but continued
to bubble on the stones, till the Assyrians entered and laid
low the
sanctuary thus profaned. And even before that, the army of
Hazael,
though greatly inferior in numbers, defeated that of Judah,
desolated and
despoiled the land, and laid siege to Jerusalem. The Syrian
army was,
indeed, bought off, but the hand of God lay heavy on the
king. Stricken
down by disease he was murdered in his bed by his own
servants, and
they the sons of strangers. Thus had inward and outward
decline come to
Judah also. And darker and yet darker gathered the clouds of
judgment
over a land and people which had "forsaken Jehovah, the God
of their
fathers."
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