THE KINGS OF ISRAEL AND JUDAH. George Rawlinson
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Название: THE KINGS OF ISRAEL AND JUDAH

Автор: George Rawlinson

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Документальная литература

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isbn: 9788027244331

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СКАЧАТЬ rejection of the legitimate priesthood and the institution of an illegitimate priesthood in its place (vers. 9, 10); and contrasting with Jeroboam’s novelties the steadfast adherence of Judah to the rites and ordinances laid down in the Law3 (vers. 10, 11); he made an appeal to the Israelites to desert the standard of Jeroboam, and “not fight against the Lord God of their fathers;” if they did so, he assured them they “would not prosper” (vers. 12, 13). It does not appear, however, that any effect was produced by this harangue. Jeroboam, wholly untouched by it, made the best disposition of his troops that was possible; his troops neither deserted, nor relaxed in their efforts, on account of the invitation addressed to them. Such was the Israelite preponderance in numbers, that it was found possible to send a large detachment to the rear of the Jewish camp, and then to make simultaneously a double attack, from the front and from behind (vers. 13, 14). The men of Judah resisted bravely, but were in great distress, when the aid of God being implored with great earnestness amid the trumpet blasts of the priests, suddenly the tide of battle turned—Judah was successful, and Israel was put to flight (vers. 15, 16). A terrible carnage followed. According to the existing text, the slain on the part of the Israelites amounted to 500,000 men; but the numbers in our present Book of Chronicles are in many instances exaggerated, and it is generally agreed that the original reading in this place was probably not 500,000, but 50,000. Even this was an enormous loss; and we can well understand its having led on to the conquest of several Israelite towns, as Bethel, Jeshanah, and Ephraim, which passed for a time under the dominion of Judah (ver. 19). Abijah’s triumph was, however, followed very shortly by his death. The length of his reign is said in one place to have been “three years” (1 Kings xv. 2); but as he ascended the throne in Jeroboam’s eighteenth year (ibid, ver. 1), and was succeeded by Asa in the same king’s twentieth year (ibid. ver. 9), the real duration of his reign cannot have much exceeded two years. He “walked,” we are told, “in all the sins of his father, which he had done before him; and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God, as the heart of David his father” (ibid. ver. 3). Though the formal worship of Jehovah at Jerusalem was not interfered with, but continued with all its legal and customary rites (2 Chron. xiii. 11), yet side by side with it numerous other worships were tolerated (2 Chron. xiv. 3); and the general condition of the nation in respect of religion was probably very much the same under Abijam as under Rehoboam. Certainly the high-place worship continued without interruption until the reign of Asa; and with this were combined image worship (ibid. ver. 5), altars to strange gods, and ashérah worship, which was a form of the cult of Astarte. Abijah, in fact, would seem to have instituted no religious changes at all; but to have been content with the laxity which had prevailed during the reign of his father.

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