Prayer:
Focus on Forgiveness. 1 Kings
1 Kings
Solomon can go to God and claim promises because he knows that God is
going to fulfil that which He has said that He is going to do.
In 1 Kings 8:24 Solomon reminds God of what He has done and how He has
fulfilled His Word in the past. So what he is doing is expressing the precedent.
Now he reminds Him that He has made a promise and is going to pray that God
will fulfil that promise in the future. That is the structure of this prayer.
He is using one example of His faithfulness to God’s promise as a basis for his
intercessory request to God for
“You have spoken with Your mouth.” In Numbers
God talked about the way He spoke to Moses and said: “Unlike other prophets, I
speak to you mouth to mouth.” So this shows the uniqueness of God’s promise to
David, that he spoke with His mouth to David; “fulfilled it with Your hand,” is
a figure of speech speaking about the operation of God, what he does, His
power. He has done what He said. Solomon sees that what happened that day is a
fulfilment of a promise that God made to David. The word in the Hebrew
translated “promise” (there really isn’t a word for promise, the nuance is
gained from the context) is like “you have spoken.” The word can mean “word,
thing, incident,” it has a wide range of meaning so that we look at other
elements in the context to find out just exactly which nuance is being
emphasised.
1 Kings 8:25 “Now therefore, O LORD, the God of Israel, keep with Your servant
David my father that which You have promised him, saying, ‘You shall not lack a
man to sit on the throne of Israel, if only your sons take heed to their way to
walk before Me as you have walked.’
1 Kings
Verse 27 is parenthetical. Grammatically it doesn’t fit between verses
26 & 28. It is a total aside. As Solomon is focusing on God and on the fact
that God has allowed him to build this temple which is the dwelling place for
God his mind is already tracking with God’s omnipresence and that you can’t localise
God: How in the world can God dwell on the earth? 1 Kings 8:27 NASB
“But will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven and the highest heaven
cannot contain You, how much less this house which I have built!
1 Kings 8:28 NASB “Yet have regard to the prayer of Your
servant and to his supplication …” That just doesn’t catch what is said in the
Hebrew. The original starts off with a qal perfect.
What this shows is that the nuance of this verb—the first two words in the
Hebrew are “And turn”—is saying: “Turn and listen to me.” The “and” picks up
the nuance of the previous verb, and since v. 27 is parenthetical it is going
to pick up the nuance of the aman, v. 26—Let
your promise be confirmed. “… O LORD my God, to listen to the cry and to the prayer which
Your servant prays before You today.” Literally, this is “And turn to the prayer
of your servant and to the supplication, O LORD God, to listen.” The
idiomatic expression is: “Please pay attention to this request.”
At this point he uses four distinct words for prayer. He uses one word
that has to do with making a request, making a plea. He uses another word that
has the idea of requesting a favour—supplication. Another word that expresses
either a cry of joy or a moan of misery, and it expresses the emotion that lies
behind the request. A fourth word has to do with intercession but it is a word
that is laden with judicial overtones and is sometimes found in the Old
Testament in judicial contexts. By the time we get into the inter-Testamental period it is used frequently in a judicial
context, and so what it does is once again brings us back to the fact that our
relationships with God are defined within covenant structures and His
righteousness.