Название: THE KINGS OF ISRAEL AND JUDAH
Автор: George Rawlinson
Издательство: Bookwire
Жанр: Документальная литература
isbn: 9788027244331
isbn:
2 Ewald, "History of Israel," vol. iv. p. 49, Eng. tr.
3 See Döllinger's "Jew and Gentile," vol i. pp. 425-431.
4 "History of Israel," vol. iv. p. 49, Eng. tr.
5 Compare 2 Chron. xv. 16 with 2 Kings xxiii. 12
6 See 2 Chron, XV 1-7; xvi. 7.
7 Sheshonk was succeeded by his son Osarkon I., and then by his grandson, Takelut I., who was the father of Osarkon II. The direct line can be traced for six generations.
8 The Hebrew form is
, Zěrakh, which the LXX. soften into Zaré. The guttural may represent the Egyptian k.9 Some have seen in Zerah an independent Ethiopian prince sufficiently powerful to march his troops through Egypt and wage war in Asia on his own account; but the records of the twenty-second dynasty contain no trace of such a condition of things.
10 Till the expedition of Neco, B.C. 609.
11 2 Kings xvii. 4, xviii. 24; Isa. xx. 5, 6, xxx. 2-7.
12 In the Hebrew Oded and Iddo are almost identical.
13 Baasha had ascended the throne of Israel in the third year of Asa (I Kings XV. 33).
14 This is not stated; but it seems to be a necessary preliminary to the occupation of Ramah.
15 Ewald, "History of Israel," vol iv. p. 35, Eng. tr.
16 Compare 1 Sam. xv. 14-29; 3 Sam. xii. 1-14, xxiv. 11-17; I Kings xi. 29-39, xii. 21-24.
17 Saul's vengeance on Ahimelech, and his companions fell upon the priestly, not the prophetical, order (see 1 Sam. xxii. 11-19).
18 See 2 Kings xxi. 16, xxiv. 4; 2 Chron. xxxvi. 16; Jer. II. 30, xxvi. 15, 23; &c.
Nadab
OF Nadab, the son and successor of Jeroboam, nothing is recorded except that he ascended the throne of Israel in the second year of Asa king of Judah (1 Kings xv. 25), and was murdered in the year following (ibid. ver. 20) by Baasha the son of Ahijah, of the tribe of Issachar, at Gibbethon, a Philistine town which the Israelites were besieging. No particulars are given of his age or actions. It is merely said, in the most general way, that “he did evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked in the way of his father, and in his sin wherewith he made Israel to sin” (ibid. ver. 26). Thus there are no materials for a biographical sketch of this monarch, whose reign probably did not cover the space of more than a few months.
Baasha
BAASHA, the third Israelite monarch, had a reign of twenty-four years (1 Kings xv. 33). He was the son of a certain Ahijah, of whom nothing more is known, and belonged to the very undistinguished and unimportant tribe of Issachar—the “ass crouching down between two burdens” of Jacob’s prophecy (Gen. xlix. 14). It would seem that he was originally of very humble rank (1 Kings xvi. 2); and, at the siege of Gibbethon, where he conceived the design of murdering his master, Nadab, and seating himself upon his throne, he was perhaps no more than a common soldier. But he was “a man of distinguished bravery,” ambitious to excess, and of extraordinary audacity. Without, so far as appears, any prophetic encouragement, without claim of any kind to the kingly office, he ventured to organize a conspiracy, against the reigning sovereign, the son of a valiant sire, who must have had the support of many powerful interests. What circumstances favoured his attempt we do not know. It is a mere conjecture of Ewald’s that Nadab’s war with the Philistines was proving unsuccessful, and that therefore dissatisfaction had arisen among the soldiers engaged in besieging Gibbethon, who were thus ripe for revolt, and ready to accept for sovereign any one whom they regarded as a more competent leader. No doubt the conjecture is plausible, but it is only one out of a thousand possibilities; and it may be questioned whether it is the historian’s business to indulge in conjectures where he possesses no data. All that we know is, that Baasha succeeded in his enterprise, that he slew Nadab at Gibbethon, and was accepted as king in his stead (1 Kings xv. 28), obtaining the throne, as it would seem, without any civil war or long struggle. The nation, which the house of Jeroboam had in no way attached to itself, acquiesced in his rule, probably preferring the firm hand that had seized the reins of government to the feeble one from which they had slipped.
In firmly establishing himself upon the throne, and consolidating his power, Baasha showed the same vigour and unscrupulousness that he had exhibited in making himself king. Unmoved by any stir of compassion or pity, he relentlessly exterminated the entire house of Jeroboam. In thus acting he could claim, to a certain extent, prophetic sanction; since Ahijah the Shilonite, who had originally designated Jeroboam for his kingly office (1 Kings xi. 29-39), had also at a later date declared that God would bring evil on the house of Jeroboam, and take away all that should remain of it, with the special curse attached, that
“Whoso of Jeroboam died in the city should the dogs eat;
And whoso died in the city should the fowls of the air eat.”
Baasha is distinctly said to have accomplished this prophecy (1 Kings XV. 29), so that we must regard him as not only putting the entire seed of Jeroboam to death, but as doing so with all those circumstances of ignominy which especially impress Orientals, and which are usually reserved for the worst grade of malefactors.
It might perhaps have been expected that the new king, having shown himself inimical in the highest degree to the royal house which had preceded him upon the throne, would have headed a reaction against the religious innovations which Jeroboam had introduced; innovations which must have been extremely distasteful to the Prophetical order, as well as to a considerable section of the nation. But in this direction he appears to have made not the slightest change or improvement. Baasha, we are told, “did evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin wherewith he made Israel to sin” (1 Kings xv. 34). He “provoked God to anger with the work of his hands in being like the house of Jeroboam” (ibid, xvi. 7). Religious feeling СКАЧАТЬ