David’s
charge to Solomon; Justice: Forestalling Rebellion; 1 Kings 2:1-12.
1 Kings 2:1 NASB “As David’s time to die drew near, he
charged Solomon his son, saying,” Here we have the report of his final meeting,
his final instructions, his challenge to Solomon. This is when he is going to
give Solomon spiritual advice first and foremost to keep his focus on the Lord
during the reign, that that is the most important priority, not only of any
individual but of the ruler of God’s people because this is still a theocratic
kingdom because the human king served under the reign of God. This was
signified by the fact that the human king was anointed by his prophet. The Word
of God is the ultimate authority, not the king. So we see the circumstances
here, that David recognises that he is going to die, something we should all
recognise, and he is taking the proper steps to take care of things before he
dies.
The advice he gives is described in verses 2-9. This is a two-part
advice. The first part deals with Solomon’s relationship with God, vv. 2-4, and
the second part, vv. 5-9, deals with the practical matter of dealing with
treasonous rebels in the kingdom in order to solidify Solomon’s reign.
Note that in the first part, the
spiritual part, these three verses are heavily dependent on the Mosaic
covenant. The keys words all through here are words that we see again and again
in Moses’ final admonition to the Israelites just before he died. 1 Kings 2:2-4
NASB “I am going the way of all the earth. Be strong, therefore, and
show yourself a man. Keep
the charge of the LORD your God, to walk in His ways, to keep His statutes, His commandments,
His ordinances, and His testimonies, according to what is written in the Law of
Moses, that you may succeed in all that you do and wherever you turn, so that the LORD may carry out His
promise which He spoke concerning me, saying, ‘If your sons are careful of
their way, to walk before Me in truth with all their heart and with all their
soul, you shall not lack a man on the throne of Israel.’” Verse 4
is specifically dependent on the promise of God made to David, and verse 3 is
focusing on the thrust of the Mosaic covenant.
“I am going the way of all the earth.” David recognises that he is about
to die and then he addresses himself to Solomon: “Be strong, therefore, and
show yourself a man.” This word “be strong” is his central
admonition here. It is from the Hebrew word which means to be strong, to
strengthen, and in contexts like this it has the idea of courage. In many
passages it is linked with courage. It emphasises the aspect of not just
physical strength, physical courage, but spiritual courage, the willingness to
take a stand on God’s Word as Martin Luther did when he said, “On this book I
take my stand, I can do no other.” It is the idea that the Word of God is the
ultimate final truth and we are not going to violate it in any way. That is
what David is challenging Solomon to do. Being a biblical man is not related to
success as it is in American culture, it is related to spiritual orientation to
God. That is the number one priority to be a man and fulfil our obligations as
a man in God’s eyes, not in the eyes of the culture. Cultures always set up
extraneous priorities for both men and women. So He challenges Solomon to be a
true man in the concept of biblical manhood which puts the Bible first. As a
leader the emphasis is on moral courage which comes only from the knowledge of
the law. Remember in the Mosaic Law in Deuteronomy the responsibility of the
king under the guidance of his priests was to sit down daily and hand write his
own copy of the law. He was to do that on a daily basis and it forced him to
think about the Mosaic Law said and to constantly be reminded of what the law
said. If that was true for kings of Israel then it should be
true for any believer-priest in the church age. We should take the time on a
daily basis to read the Word, to be reminded of what God expects of us, what
God has done in history to, to be reminded of promises that God has made to us
and take that time just to orient our soul each day to the eternal truths of
God’s Word.
Deuteronomy 11:8 uses the same kind of terminology. NASB “You
shall therefore keep every commandment which I am commanding you today, so that
you may be strong…” Strength comes from obedience to the Word. What matters is
our orientation to God’s Word. We keep God’s Word, we focus on His Word and
apply it in our life; that is what builds spiritual strength in the soul.
Deuteronomy 31:23 NASB “Then He commissioned Joshua the son
of Nun, and said, ‘Be strong and courageous, for you shall bring the sons of Israel into the land
which I swore to them, and I will be with you’.” Our strength is in the Lord.
Ephesians 6:10ff talks about the spiritual warfare we are in which is the
church age counterpart to the physical warfare, the holy warfare of Israel to take the land,
and we are to be “strong in the Lord.” It is the same concept, and that
strength only comes from the Word of God.
Joshua 1:9 NASB “Have I not commanded you? Be strong and
courageous! Do not tremble or be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever
you go.” So this terminology comes directly out of the Mosaic Law.
David goes on in 1 Kings 2:3 NASB “Keep the charge of the LORD your God.” What is
involved in that? First of all, “to walk in His ways, to keep His statutes, His
commandments, His ordinances, and His testimonies, according to what is written
in the Law of Moses, that you may succeed in all that you do and wherever you
turn.” He is basically saying the same thing in about four different ways.
Walking is a metaphor for living your life, it is not talking about physically
walking. Four different words there—statutes, commandments, ordinances, testimonies—summarise
all of the 613 mandates in the Mosaic Law. The first key word there is shamar, and it means to watch, to keep,
to preserve, to guard, to be careful, to watch over something, to watch
carefully over something, to be on one’s guard. Shamar is a word that has a broad general sense in terms of
guarding or watching or even observing, to a more narrow sense having to do
with someone who is being very diligent in keeping track of something involving
a lot of work, an intentional, conscious effort to make sure that something is
a priority and that it is carried out. A cognate to the verb shamar is the noun and it has the idea
of a mandate or a charge, a duty that is assigned, a responsibility that
someone has, a commission that is given.
So David is saying that a divine commission is being given to Solomon
and he is to be obedient, careful to keep the commandments of the Lord. This is
summarised in the following words, “walk in His ways.” This has the idea of his
general lifestyle. We see the same verbiage in passages like Deuteronomy 5:33 NASB
“You shall walk in all the way which the LORD your God has commanded you,
that you may live and that it may be well with you, and that you may prolong
{your} days in the land which you will possess.” At the end of 1 Kings 2:3
David tells Solomon that if he does this he “may succeed in all that you do and
wherever you turn.” This is the same idea that we see again and again in
Deuteronomy.
Deuteronomy 8:6 NASB “Therefore, you shall keep [shamar] the commandments of the LORD your God, to walk
in His ways and to fear Him.”
Deuteronomy 11:22 NASB
“For if you are careful to keep all this commandment which I am commanding you
to do, to love the LORD your God, to walk in all His ways and hold fast to Him.” All of these
commands we find again and again throughout the Mosaic Law. So when David says
this to Solomon he is crafting what he is saying in a specific way to connect
the role of the king as being established by the Mosaic Law as the covenant
between God and man, and that the duties and the responsibilities of the king
are defined and described by God. Solomon can’t just do whatever he wants to
do. If he does there is the threat of divine discipline and the threat of
punishment on the nation. But if he is obedient then there will be blessing for
the nation.
In verse 4 the result is given. NASB “so that the LORD may carry out His
promise which He spoke concerning me, saying, ‘If your sons are careful of
their way, to walk before Me in truth with all their heart and with all their
soul, you shall not lack a man on the throne of Israel.’” This was what
was promised to David in the Davidic covenant. So in his admonition to Solomon,
his exhortation to Solomon, he is connecting what he is doing on the throne to
the Mosaic Law which is the covenant, the constitution of the land of Israel
given by God, and to the gracious covenant, the royal grant covenant that God
gave to David that his descendants would have an eternal presence on the
throne. But, of course, what happened was they were disobedient and there won’t
be one on the throne of Israel for the time
being, but eventually that will be fulfilled.
Deuteronomy 5:33 NASB “You shall walk in all the way which
the LORD your God has
commanded you, that you may live and that it may be well with you, and that you
may prolong {your} days in the land which you will possess.” When we as
believers are conducting our life according to the protocols of God, when we
are carrying out all of the various mandates that God has for the Christian
life—staying in fellowship, studying the Word of God, applying the Word of God,
utilising all of the different mechanics of the Christian life—and we continue
to live in light of those, the result is that God blesses us. In the Old
Testament law and in the Old Testament when God is physically present he is
also dealing with Israel in very concrete
terms, and so the blessings are very physical, concrete and material. But that
is how they were defined in the Mosaic Law. For obedience there would be
prosperity; for disobedience there would not be those things, He would take
them away. That is not true for today because we are not living under the
Mosaic Law. The law was related to them living in he land, the blessings and
cursings were all land-oriented. We are living in the church age. The blessings
that God has for us are often spiritual, we may not have material prosperity,
for various reasons, but we have prosperity of the soul and that is really what
we talk about in the New Testament.
Deuteronomy talks about prosperity here. It uses a word that doesn’t
necessarily mean material prosperity. The verb in the hiphil stem has the idea
of acting with insight, to be prudent, to give insight, to teach, to prosper,
to consider something, to ponder, to understand prudently and to act with
devotion. It is translated as “discretion” is 1 Chronicles 22:12. So we have
the idea that if we walk in all the ways of the Lord it will be well or
prosperous, and it is really this idea of prudent and wisdom that is the
application of doctrine in the life.
1 Chronicles 22 is where David is also giving some wisdom and counsel to
Solomon. It doesn’t appear as if it is the same time, it is an earlier time
than probably 1 Kings 1. David is preparing Solomon for what will come to pass.
1 Chronicles 22:11 NASB
“Now, my son, the LORD be with you that you may be successful, and build the house of the LORD your God just as
He has spoken concerning you. [12] Only the LORD give you discretion and
understanding, and give you charge over Israel, so that you may
keep the law of the LORD your God.” So his prayer is that God would give Solomon wisdom and
understanding. The word for wisdom chokmah,
and it has the idea of skill. It is not wisdom in the sense of abstract
intellectual philosophising that we get from the Greeks, it is a more concrete
idea that comes out of the Jewish background. When Aholiab and Bezaleel were
designing and building the furniture, the clothing, the detailed work for the
high priest, in the tabernacle, the Scripture says that God gave them chokmah, He gave them skill. Chokmah is the ability to take the raw
information—the facts, the data, the Bible doctrine, the truths of Scripture
that the Holy Spirit stores in our soul—and then to apply them to the issues of
life in such a way that our lives become a work of art and skill. That is what
wisdom is, it is not just application of doctrine. It is what develops over
time and allows God the Holy Spirit to create an eternal work of art and skill
in our lives that glorifies Him. It goes far beyond the Greek concept of epignosis [e)pignwsij] which is just
knowledge in the soul that is available for application. Wisdom is that skilful
application of epignosis.
The other word that is used there is the word binah for “understanding,” discernment and the ability to make
decisions. It has the idea of understanding, comprehension, discernment and
righteous action. So “the LORD give you wisdom,” i.e. the skill to apply what you
know, because he has been well trained by David, “and understanding,” which has
to do with making decisions. It is the ability to discern, and it comes with
practice, with application of doctrine over time. David’s prayer is going to be
answered.
1 Chronicles 22:13 NASB
“Then you will prosper, if you are careful to observe the statutes and the
ordinances which the LORD commanded Moses concerning Israel. Be strong and
courageous, do not fear nor be dismayed.” So we see how again and again the
mandate, the exhortation that David gives to Solomon, is related to the Mosaic
Law.
Now we can’t look at the second part and divorce it from the first part.
We can’t take our twentieth-century sentiments that have unfortunately been too
affected by the bleeding-heart liberal values of our culture and apply that to
the next five verses. The next five verses are built on the same spiritual
absolutes as the first three verses. He doesn’t say to make the Word of God the
highest priority, remind Solomon of the importance of walking consistently with
the Mosaic Law, and then turn around and say to go and kill all your enemies,
start a blood bath and just go murder everybody. That is what happens when the
text is approached from a human viewpoint perspective that has been influenced
by the false values of modern culture. We get taught all of this garbage, it
comes across the media, various television shows and everything else which talk
about how terrible violence is, and talking the life of anybody, even in a
judicial context. David is operating just as much in obedience to the Mosaic
Law and the command of God and his relationship to God in vv. 5-9 as he is in
vv. 2-4. What we see in vv. 5-9 is wisdom. It is the skilful application of the
law to the reality of the conspiracies, the rebellions, the arrogance that
surrounds the throe of Israel in order to secure
the throne. Notice David doesn’t say: “Solomon, you just have to trust God. He
will take care of it.” He recognises an important principle here, and that is
that God has already told them how to take care of these kinds of things in the
Mosaic Law. So David is instructing Solomon that in the framework of the Mosaic
Law he needs to kill the rebels and to remove them, because the most dangerous
thing you can have in any culture or society are the people who are not oriented
to authority; either God’s authority or the authority of the leader in whatever
the field is. Here Solomon represents God’s established and ordained king and
yet there are various people who have demonstrated historically their inability
to submit to the authority of the king. This is coming from David, remember,
the man who was anointed by Samuel to be the king of Israel while Saul was
still king. David knew that no matter how disobedient, no matter how
rebellious, no matter how vindictive Saul was toward him, it never authorised
him to lift a finger against Saul. No matter how wrong Saul was, it never
excused David to also rebel against Saul. It is never right to overthrow a
divinely established authority no matter how evil they are.
Paul writes in Romans chapter thirteen that the government is the
minister of God for righteousness. He is writing this at the time when one of
the most heinous, tyrannical governments in all of history is in operation
under Nero in Rome. To rebel against
authority means that you are claiming omniscience. You know all the facts and
all the data. You know what is going to happen and you know that absolutely the
right thing to do is to take out this authority, and that you have the right to
be the judge over this authority which is a legally constituted authority over
you. That is exactly the mentality that Satan had in the fall. Satan said: “I
don’t think that God can do it right, I have a better idea.” This is exactly
what happens any time you are rebellious against any authority over you,
whether it is children to parents, workers to employers, wives to husbands,
husbands to God. Whenever you are acting in rebellion, as Samuel told Saul,
“rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft.”
David understood authority orientation. When we understand authority
orientation we can have genuine humility, and we can never have grace
orientation if we are in rebellion against divinely established authority over
you. It will never happen. This is why God has such harsh penalties in the
Mosaic Law for those who are rebellious against authority. The ultimate
authority is law in the governing of the land and the individuals that are
dealt with here because of their rebellion against the king are in violation of
law and they have demonstrated their inability to orient to authority. In every
case what they are oriented to is their own selfish, arrogant desires and
fulfilling the desires of their own sin nature.
1 Kings 2:5 NASB “Now you also know what Joab the son of
Zeruiah did to me, what he did to the two commanders of the armies of Israel,
to Abner the son of Ner, and to Amasa the son of Jether, whom he killed; he
also shed the blood of war in peace. And he put the blood of war on his belt
about his waist, and on his sandals on his feet.” Solomon is the
one who learned a lesson here. In Ecclesiastes he says that there is a time for
war and a time for peace, and in a time of war it is legitimate to take the
life of your enemy. But five minutes after peace is declared if you take the
life of the same person it is murder. You have to learn to think within that
reality. If not, then you are going to be defeated.
As we look at verse 5 we realise that Joab needs to be executed. This is
exactly what David is saying. He defines his guilt in verse 5 that in a time of
peace he has committed vengeance rather than letting it be handled through the
legitimate process. 1 Kings 2:6 NASB “So act according to your
wisdom [chokmah], and do not let his
gray hair go down to Sheol in peace”—application of doctrine, the Mosaic Law.
What exactly did Joab do? The name Joab means Yahweh is his father. So he comes out of a family that at least had
a nominal sense of values or relationship with God. This is true because he is
the son of Zeruiah, David’s sister. So Joab is David’s nephew, according to 2
Samuel 2:13; 10:7. The first time we see Joab is in 2 Samuel chapter two. 2
Samuel begins after the death of Saul. David is now recognised as king by only
his own tribe, the tribe of Judah, and there is now
a state of civil war among the tribes of Israel. This is going to
be intensified because Abner, Saul’s uncle, and was his commander of the army,
is going to manipulate Ish-bosheth, the son of Saul, to become the king. He
makes him king over Gilead, over the Asherites, over
Jezreel, over Ephraim, over Benjamin, and over all of Israel. Saul was of the
tribe of Benjamin so the northern area, being closely allied to Benjamin, are
willing to follow Ish-bosheth. So there were several of the tribes in the north
arrayed against David in the south, and we learn that David is going to rule
from Hebron for seven years
before he finally solidifies the country and has victory in this civil war.
2 Samuel 2:12-13 NASB “Now Abner the son of Ner, went out
from Mahanaim to Gibeon with the servants of
Ish-bosheth the son of Saul. And Joab the son of Zeruiah and the
servants of David went out and met them by the pool of Gibeon; and they sat
down, one on the one side of the pool and the other on the other side of the
pool.” They had David’s men lined up on one side, Saul’s on the other. [14]
“Then Abner said to Joab, ‘Now let the young men arise and hold a contest
before us.’ And Joab said, ‘Let them arise’…. [16] Each one of them seized his
opponent by the head and {thrust} his sword in his opponent’s side; so they
fell down together. Therefore that place was called Helkath-hazzurim, which is
in Gibeon.” It is a draw. So everyone else gets up and they
have this huge melee and fight each other. It looks as though Abner’s side is
going to lose, so Abner decides that discretion is the better part of valour
and he runs away and lives to fight another day. He is pursued by one of the
three sons of Zeruiah.
2 Samuel 2:18 NASB
“Now the three sons of Zeruiah were there, Joab and Abishai and Asahel; and
Asahel {was} {as} swift-footed as one of the gazelles which is in the field.”
Several times Abner tries to dissuade Asehel and get him to turn back, he
doesn’t want to kill him. He refuses to do that and Abner pulls up his spear,
thrusting it backward as Ashel is coming up on him and he kills Asahel. Joab
and Abishai comes up and discover that their brother has been killed and now
they are very angry with Abner. Abner gets away. Abner is really running a
power play here because he is playing king-maker, Ish-bosheth was young, he
wasn’t at the battle of Mount Gilboa. Abner has him
really wrapped around his finger.
The next thing to look at is in 2 Samuel 3:6 NASB “It
came about while there was war between the house of Saul and the house of David
that Abner was making himself strong in the house of Saul.” Abner has the
power. But then he is going to be confronted by Ish-bosheth [7] “Now Saul had a
concubine whose name was Rizpah, the daughter of Aiah; and Ish-bosheth said to
Abner, ‘Why have you gone in to my father’s concubine?’” There is a
certain ambiguity here. Did Abner rape
Rizpah? It doesn’t really say, it just says he is accused of it. Ish-bosheth
may just be his daddy’s son going around falsely accusing everybody of whatever
his paranoia has led him to believe they’ve been doing, which is typically what
Saul did. There is nothing in the text to indicate whether or not this is
actually true or not of Abner. However, Abner becomes extremely angry, so angry
that Ish-bosheth has accused him of this, and it seems to be a justifiable
anger because now he says: “I’ve had it with you, I’m going to go with David.”
That kind of a shift seems to be more the attitude of someone who has been
unjustly accused than someone who truly has a guilty conscience. If he had been
guilty of sexual relations with Rizpah it would have been part of the same
scenario we will see later on in 1 Kings 2. By taking the wife of a king you
are basically exerting monarchical privilege, making a claim to the throne.
2 Samuel 3:12 NASB
“Then Abner sent messengers to David in his place, saying, ‘Whose is the land?
Make your covenant with me, and behold, my hand shall be with you to bring all Israel over to you’.” So
he is now going to bring the northern tribes to David to unite the kingdom,
whuch is exactly what he does, and he comes down and makes peace with David.
When he does this, they come together and in vv. 20, 21 we see that they have a
huge feast, and we read: “So David sent Abner away, and he went in peace.” Joab
wasn’t there. When he shows up he finds that David has made peace with Abner
and he is livid, becsue he is riding a vendetta to kill Abner for the murder of
Asahel. This is exactly what he does. 2 Samuel 3:27-30 NASB “So when
Abner returned to Hebron, Joab took him aside into the middle of the gate to
speak with him privately, and there he struck him in the belly so that he died
on account of the blood of Asahel his brother. Afterward when
David heard it, he said, “I and my kingdom are innocent before the LORD forever
of the blood of Abner the son of Ner. ‘May it fall on the head of
Joab and on all his father’s house; and may there not fail from the house of
Joab one who has a discharge, or who is a leper, or who takes hold of a distaff,
or who falls by the sword, or who lacks bread.’ So Joab and Abishai his brother
killed Abner because he had put their brother Asahel to death in the battle at Gibeon.”
But David doesn’t do anything about it. He has committed murder but
David doesn’t have whatever it is to stop Joab and to execute him. So he is
going to leave it to Solomon. Joab is guilty of murder here and he is guilty of
murder one other time.
1 Kings 2:7 NASB “But show kindness to the sons of Barzillai
the Gileadite, and let them be among those who eat at your table; for they
assisted me when I fled from Absalom your brother. [8] Behold, there is with you
Shimei the son of Gera the Benjamite, of
Bahurim; now it was he who cursed me with a violent curse on the day I went to
Mahanaim. But when he came down to me at the Jordan, I swore to him by
the LORD, saying, ‘I will
not put you to death with the sword.’ [9] Now therefore, do not
let him go unpunished, for you are a wise man; and you will know what you ought
to do to him, and you will bring his gray hair down to Sheol with blood.”
Illustrations