The
Impact of Apostasy on the North. 1 Kings 15:16-32
Spiritual regression is what we will see that characterises the life of
Asa, the third king in the southern kingdom after the break-up. He is the grandson
of Rehoboam. He has a reign that gets high marks from God because early on he
is focused on the truth, he knows that the only way the southern kingdom is
going to have any kind of blessing is for them to be devoted completely and
exclusively to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the God who gave them the
Mosaic covenant. So he cleanses the land. He is involved in what we would call
a true biblical revival. As a result of that there was tremendous blessing on
the southern kingdom of Judah during the reign
of Asa. But by the time we get to the end of Asa’s life he makes the mistake
that so many believers make and he starts to coast on past achievements, past
successes in his spiritual life, and what eventually happens if we slip into
neutral in the spiritual life then it is not difficult to become negative. What
happens when we get into a state of being neutral and not being actively
positive—unless a person is oriented to an active study of the Word where a
relationship with God is a vital part of their life, they are negative. It
might be a mild negativity but they are taking God for granted and they are
slipping into a form of just coasting in their spiritual life and the next
thing they know is they coast right into negative volition. Once we slip our
gear out of drive then what characterises being neutral is arrogance. We are
either oriented to God in humility, obedient to him and grace oriented, or we
are going to be slipping into some pattern of arrogance. That is very easy to
do.
Timeline: Approximately 930 BC is when there was the split between the
northern and southern kingdoms. Rehoboam dies first and he is succeeded by his
son Abijam who only reigns for about two years, and he was followed by Asa. In
the north Jeroboam lived until about 910 which is approximately the time that
Asa comes top the throne. Then his son Nadab will come to the throne for about
one year and then the prophecy that God gave through Ahijah comes to pass and
Jeroboam’s line is wiped out by Baasha. He will reign for about 24-25 years
until his death, his son Elah comes to the throne for about one year and then
Baasha’s line gets wiped out. Then Zimri has a short reign of seven days. Tibni
and Omri have a civil war for five years and Omri is the father of Ahab. That sets
the stage for understanding the backdrop for Elijah.
All of this has been leading up to Elijah. Why does Elijah come on the
scene at the beginning of 1 Kings 17? One day we have never heard of him; the
next day he just storms into the throne room of Ahab and announces that it
won’t rain until he says so, and then he just as quickly disappears. To
understand why that happens the way it happens we have to understand this
context—that from 930 when the kingdom split to 874, which is 55 years, the
northern kingdom has been getting deeper and deeper into apostasy and idolatry,
and eventually the most degraded form of pagan worship, the fertility cult and
the introduction of Baal worship through Jezebel. That is what precipitates
Elijah’s coming on the scene.
What we have done so far is to look at the 1 Kings account of Abijah and
Asa. Abijah was not a good king but Asa turns things around and has a very long
reign (approx, 41 years), and this is a time of tremendous blessing in the nation.
But then things are going to change again and things will be affected
negatively after Asa. In the north it is all negative.
2 Chronicles 14 & 15 give us the primary data on Asa. The narrative
on Asa in 1 Kings is comparatively brief because the focus of the writer of 1
Kings is to explain how Israel has gone through
the ups and downs of blessing and cursing in relationship to the Mosaic Law and
the behaviour of the kings. This has a great application to us. What we should
never forget is that what we see in 1 Kings is a divine viewpoint editorial on
what makes history go the way it goes. What makes history go the way it goes
isn’t technology, military skill, education programs, welfare programs or the
lack of them, or any of the things that are emphasised in any of the political
campaigns that we have witnessed. The real causative factor in history always
boils down to this view of reality which means the view of God in the spiritual
life. That is the determinative causative factor in history. What ultimately
moves things is always going to be related to that spiritual life factor. It
has to do with the attitude of the majority of people in the nation.
In the north it is apostate; in the south it is going to go back and
forth. Because of the apostasy in the north there is tremendous instability.
Stability in a monarchy has to do with the same person being in charge for a
lengthy period of time. Asa is the king for the longest period of time—41
years, Rehoboam just under 20 years, and during that time there are eight
different rulers in the north. So who has instability? Who has the most war
going on? Who is going to have the most social upheaval and instability?
Because things like social factors, political factors and economic factors all
flow out of the core spiritual orientation of the people and of believers.
Asa comes on, and he comes on strong. He starts off doing that which was
good and right in the eyes of the Lord. Even though he messes up a little at
the end his ultimate evaluation is that he did what was good and right in the
eyes of the Lord. He removed the altars and the high places and does all of
these things to clean out the bad. Then he mandates that the people obey the
Lord and implements the Law, and then moves from dealing with the spiritual
issues first to dealing with the physical issue of their military security
second. He makes sure the nation is going to be protected and that their
national identity is going to be preserved. Within three years he is tested by
the invasion by the Pharaoh of Egypt.
2 Chronicles 16:1 NASB “In the thirty-sixth year of Asa’s
reign Baasha king of Israel came up against Judah and fortified Ramah in order
to prevent {anyone} from going out or coming in to Asa king of Judah.”
1 Kings 16:8 NASB “In the twenty-sixth year of Asa king
of Judah, Elah the son of
Baasha became king over Israel at Tirzah, {and
reigned} two years.” According to this verse Baasha is going to die in the 26th
year of Asa’s reign, but in 2 Chronicles it says Baasha is going to attack from
the south. He has been dead for ten years! The explanation isn’t simple. The
problem with the explanation that it is a copyist’s error is that there is no
manuscript documentation for that, even though that could have happened. There
is no MS that has an
alternate reading; it is not in the LXX or any of the ancient Greek translations of
the Old Testament. So perhaps there is a different and a better understanding.
There is and it is complicated.
There were two ways in which the people of the ancient world would count
the years of the king. The first way is called a non-accession way and the
other is the accession year reign. The accession year reign means that the year
in which the king comes to the throne would not be counted at all as an official
year. His official reign would not be counted until the first day of the new
year. So as they add up the years they would say that only the next year, the
first official year beginning with the new year would be his official year.
This was the way in which the northern kingdom counted the years. The
non-accession year system means that the year the king began to rule is his
first year.
Jeroboam comes to the throne in 930. That is his first year. The battle
with the Egyptians is dated as being in the 15th year of Asa’s
reign. So if he comes to the throne in 910 then 895 is the year they have that
huge celebration where they cleanse the temple. From 930-895 is 35 years, plus
that other year that is part of the year that is counted in the north. That
would give them 36 years. So the way the writer of Chronicles is counting is in
the 36th year from the time of the split. The reason for getting
that is because if we look at 2
Chronicles 15:19 is says there was
no war until the 35th year of the reign of Asa. The Hebrew
translation is awkward there and the phrase “of Asa” is added. It should read:
“there was no war until the 35th year.” That would be the 35th
year since the split between the north and the south. So that in the 36th
year since the split is when Baasha the king of Israel came up against Judah. Why is he coming
up against Judah? Because Asa has
just demonstrated his military might and has defeated this one-million
foot-soldier army plus about 300 chariots.
There is also another factor. After Jeroboam established the northern
kingdom and the two altar sites what happened to all the believers in the
north? The Levites who were believers all headed south into the southern
kingdom. As time went by there were also other believers in the north who headed
south. 2 Chronicles 15:9 NASB “He gathered all Judah and Benjamin
and those from Ephraim, Manasseh and Simeon who resided with them, for many
defected to him from Israel when they saw that
the LORD his God was with
him.” What kind of instability would that have produced in the northern
kingdom? And what is the king in the north going to be thinking when he starts
seeing his people start heading south? He wants to secure his border. Baasha
moves south to Ramah in order to blockade the southern kingdom so that he can
protect the north from any possible invasion from this super-victorious army
that Asa has had in the south, and also to keep his people from fleeing down to
the south because it is obvious God is blessing Asa and not Baasha. The city of
Ramah sat astride the major trade
route, so once Baasha moved into that territory he is going to effectively cut
off the flow of goods from the north to the south and from the south to the
north, and he is going to control all commerce. So there are a lot of economic
things going on in this particular action that is taken. In the south Asa is
trying to figure out how to handle this. Rather than challenge Baasha with an
army he goes into the house of the Lord and takes all the silver and gold out
of the treasury and uses that as a bribe or an enticement, a tribute to the
king of Syria to break his treaty with Baasha and to invade the northern part
of the land in order to pull Baasha out of Ramah so that he will have all his
attention up in the north. This would free things up in the south so that goods
can flow back and forth.
But there is a problem with him doing it this way. He is trusting in his
own manipulation of the events by bribing the king of Syria rather than
trusting in God. So it shows that his faith in God which was so strongly
manifest in victory over the Egyptians has now become an attempt to handle his
problems on his own without going to the Lord. This is going to bring about a
judgment from God on him. He is successful in his manoeuvre, and what we learn
from that is that human viewpoint systems of problem-solving are often
successful. But that doesn’t mean they are right and it doesn’t mean that
believers can use them. Just because systems of psychology and counselling work
doesn’t mean that is the way believers are to be facing and handling their
problems. Asa is typical of many believers who, rather than trusting in the
sufficiency of grace and the sufficiency of God’s Word, try to solve the
problem on their own.
2 Chronicles 16:4 NASB “So Ben-hadad listened to King Asa and
sent the commanders of his armies against the cities of Israel, and they
conquered Ijon, Dan, Abel-maim and all the store cities of Naphtali.” All of
these locations are in the north. [5] “When Baasha heard {of it,} he ceased fortifying
Ramah and stopped his work. [6] Then King Asa brought all Judah, and they carried
away the stones of Ramah and its timber with which Baasha had been building,
and with them he fortified Geba and Mizpah.” They just completely dismantled
everything that Baasha had built at Ramah and with those resources built two
other cities. But at that time Asa is going to be challenged by God with the
fact that he has failed to fully trust God. [7] “At that time Hanani the
seer came to Asa king of Judah and said to him, “Because you have relied on the
king of Aram and have not relied on the LORD your God, therefore the army
of the king of Aram has escaped out of your hand.” So Asa could have had a
conquest of Syria technically. [8]
“Were not the Ethiopians and the Lubim an immense army with very many chariots
and horsemen? Yet because you relied on the LORD, He delivered them into your
hand.” Didn’t you learn anything? [9] “For the eyes of the LORD move to and fro
throughout the earth that He may strongly support those whose heart is
completely His. You have acted foolishly in this. Indeed, from now on you will
surely have wars.” God is looking for those who are really committed to
trusting Him and to rely upon the sufficiency of His Word and His grace. The
problem is that even those who are supposed to be mature spiritually often fail
to take God at His Word and to trust in His sufficiency. That is the problem
with Asa.
The conclusion: “You have acted foolishly in this. Indeed, from now on
you will surely have wars.” There are consequences to spiritual failure. The
interesting thing is this word which is sued for “foolish.” The whole concept
of foolish in the Old Testament is contrasted to wise. The wise person is the
person who fears the Lord—“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.”
The fool is the one who says in his heart, “There is no God.” This isn’t the
position of the atheist out there, the fool that psalm is talking about is the
person who in terms of their mentality, the way they live, is operating as if
God doesn’t exist. That’s foolish. Asa is operating foolishly because he is
operating and planning as if God isn’t there to provide for him and to protect
him. He is acting like a functional atheist; he is not trusting in God.
The reaction of arrogance: 2 Chronicles 16:10 NASB “Then Asa
was angry with the seer and put him in prison, for he was enraged at him for
this…” When arrogance, self-absorption and self-justification get challenged
the reaction is anger, bitterness and hostility because the person doesn’t get
their way. “…And Asa oppressed some of the people at the same time.” The word
“some” isn’t there in the original—he oppressed his people at the same time. So
he not only takes it out on the prophet but he take sit out on his people. He becomes
an oppressive dictator as the king, punishing the people for his own spiritual
failure.
A spiritual evaluation from God on Asa’s reign. 2 Chronicles 16:11 NASB “Now, the acts of Asa from first
to last, behold, they are written in the Book of the Kings of Judah and Israel.” That is, the
account in 1 Kings 15. [12] “In the thirty-ninth year of his reign Asa became
diseased in his feet. His disease was severe, yet even in his disease he did
not seek the LORD, but the physicians.” His malady is severe so that he can’t walk. This
isn’t saying that if we get sick don’t go to a doctor. It is a different
economy, different dispensation, different promises in the Mosaic Law in
relation to the reign of these kings of Israel. Rather than seek
the Lord Asa seeks the physicians and he has continued under divine discipline.
It is during this two-year period of time that he enters into a co-regency with
his son Jehoshaphat. So that last period of a year and a half or so is a
co-regency. Asa is basically in hiding because of his illness and his misery
and then finally he dies. 2 Chronicles 16:13 “So Asa slept with
his fathers, having died in the forty-first year of his reign. [14] “They
buried him in his own tomb which he had cut out for himself in the city of
David, and they laid him in the resting place which he had filled with spices
of various kinds blended by the perfumers’ art; and they made a very great fire
for him.” The burning has to do with a celebration of his life because he was a
much-beloved king in Israel and there was much
experienced blessing under his reign because of his earlier positive volition
to the Lord.
1 Kings 15:23 NASB “Now the rest of all the acts of
Asa and all his might and all that he did and the cities which he built, are
they not written in the Book of the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah? But in
the time of his old age he was diseased in his feet.” That
reference to the chronicles of the kings of Judah is not a reference
to 1 & 2 Chronicles. It was probably a resource that was used by the writer
of 1 & 2 Chronicles. There is no spiritual analysis in this verse; it just
says he was diseased in his feet.
1 Kings 15:24 NASB “And Asa slept with his fathers and was
buried with his fathers in the city of David his father; and Jehoshaphat his
son reigned in his place.” That takes us to about 60 years from
the split of the northern and southern kingdoms. The rest of this chapter, from
v. 25 to 16:28 is going to deal
with what happens in the north.
1 Kings 15:25 NASB “Now Nadab the son of Jeroboam became
king over Israel in the second year
of Asa king of Judah, and he reigned
over Israel two years.”
The second year of Asa, using the non-accession year reckoning in the north,
means that this is his first official year, no matter what part of that year it
is. His length of reign is going to be two official years, but in non-accession
year reckoning this can be only one actual year. [26] “He did evil in the sight
of the LORD, and walked in the
way of his father [Jeroboam I] and in his sin which he made Israel sin”—idolatry
related to the golden calf. [27] The fulfilment of the prophecy that Ahijah had
given his father, that all of his sons would be killed in a horrible way and
their bodies would be just left out in the open to rot. “Then Baasha the son of
Ahijah [not the prophet] of the house of Issachar conspired against him, and
Baasha struck him down at Gibbethon, which belonged to the Philistines, while
Nadab and all Israel were laying siege
to Gibbethon.” This is the kind of environment generated by
paganism. [28] “So Baasha
killed him in the third year of Asa king of Judah and reigned in his
place.” He took the throne in the second year of Asa and reigned
for two years. [29] “It came about as soon as he was king, he struck down all
the household of Jeroboam. He did not leave to Jeroboam any persons alive,
until he had destroyed them, according to the word of the LORD, which He spoke by
His servant Ahijah the Shilonite, [30] {and} because of the sins
of Jeroboam which he sinned, and which he made Israel sin, because of his
provocation with which he provoked the LORD God of Israel to anger.”
There is political disruption because of sin. Sin doesn’t just affect the
spiritual life, it affects every area that we are engaged in.
1 Kings 15:31 NASB “Now the rest of the acts of
Nadab and all that he did, are they not written in the Book of the Chronicles
of the Kings of Israel? [32] There was war between Asa and Baasha
king of Israel all their days.”
Illustrations