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			 SOLOMON 
			THE chronicler’s history of Solomon is constructed on the same 
			principles as that of David, and for similar reasons. The builder of 
			the first Temple commanded the grateful reverence of a community 
			whose national and religious life centered in the second Temple. 
			While the Davidic king became the symbol of the hope of Israel, the 
			Jews could not forget that this symbol derived much of its 
			significance from the widespread dominion and royal magnificence of 
			Solomon. The chronicler, indeed, attributes great splendor to the 
			court of David, and ascribes to him a lion’s share in the Temple 
			itself. He provided his successor with treasure and materials and 
			even the complete plans, so that on the principle, "Qui facit per 
			alium, facit per se," David might have been credited with the actual 
			building. Solomon was almost in the position of a modern engineer 
			who puts together a steamer that has been built in sections. But, 
			with all these limitations, the clear and obvious fact remained that 
			Solomon actually built and dedicated the Temple. Moreover, the 
			memory of his wealth and grandeur kept a firm hold on the popular 
			imagination; and these conspicuous blessings were received as 
			certain tokens of the favor of Jehovah. 
			 
			Solomon’s fame, however, was threefold: he was not only the Divinely 
			appointed builder of the Temple and, by the same Divine grace, the 
			richest and most powerful king of Israel: he had also received from 
			Jehovah the gift of "wisdom and knowledge." In his royal splendor 
			and his sacred buildings he only differed in degree from other 
			kings; but in his wisdom he stood alone, not only without equal, but 
			almost without competitor. Herein he was under no obligation to his 
			father, and the glory of Solomon could not be diminished by 
			representing that he bad been anticipated by David. Hence the name 
			of Solomon came to symbolize Hebrew learning and philosophy. 
			 
			In religious significance, however, Solomon cannot rank with David. 
			The dynasty of Judah could have only one representative, and the 
			founder and eponym of the royal house was the most important figure 
			for the subsequent theology. The interest that later generations 
			felt in Solomon lay apart from the main line of Jewish orthodoxy, 
			and he is never mentioned by the prophets. 
			 
			Moreover, the darker aspects of Solomon’s reign made more impression 
			upon succeeding generations than even David’s sins and misfortunes. 
			Occasional lapses into vices and cruelty might be forgiven or even 
			forgotten; but the systematic oppression of Solomon rankled for long 
			generations in the hearts of the people, and the prophets always 
			remembered his wanton idolatry. His memory was further discredited 
			by the disasters which marked the close of his own reign and the 
			beginning of Rehoboam’s. Centuries later these feelings still 
			prevailed. The prophets who adopted the Mosaic law for the closing 
			period of the monarchy exhort the king to take warning by Solomon, 
			and to multiply neither horses, nor wives, nor gold and silver. {Deu 
			17:16-17; Cf. 2Ch 1:14-17 and 1Ki 11:3-8} 
			 
			But as time went on Judah fell into growing poverty and distress, 
			which came to a head in the Captivity and were renewed with the 
			Restoration. The Jews were willing to forget Solomon’s faults in 
			order that they might indulge in fond recollections of the material 
			prosperity of his reign. Their experience of the culture of Babylon 
			led them to feel greater interest and pride in his wisdom, and the 
			figure of Solomon began to assume a mysterious grandeur, which has 
			since become the nucleus for Jewish and Mohammedan legends. The 
			chief monument of his fame in Jewish literature is the book of 
			Proverbs, but his growing reputation is shown by the numerous 
			Biblical and apocryphal works ascribed to him. His name was no doubt 
			attached to Canticles because of a feature in his character which 
			the chronicler ignores. His supposed authorship of Ecclesiastes and 
			of the Wisdom of Solomon testifies to the fame of his wisdom, while 
			the titles of the "Psalms of’ Solomon" and even of some canonical 
			psalms credit him with spiritual feeling and poetic power. 
			 
			When the Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach proposes to "praise 
			famous men," it dwells upon Solomon’s temple and his wealth, and 
			especially upon his wisdom; but it does not forget his failings. {Ecclesiasticus 
			47:12-21} Josephus celebrates his glory at great length. The New 
			Testament has comparatively few notices of Solomon; but these 
			include references to his wisdom, {Mat 12:42} his splendor, {Mat 
			6:29} and his temple. {Act 7:47} The Koran, however, far surpasses 
			the New Testament in its interest in Solomon; and his name and his 
			seal play a leading part in Jewish and Arabian magic. The bulk of 
			this literature is later than the chronicler, but the renewed 
			interest in the glory of Solomon must have begun before his time. 
			Perhaps, by connecting the building of the Temple as far as possible 
			with David, the chronicler marks his sense of  
			Solomon’s unworthiness. On the other hand, there were many reasons 
			why he should welcome the aid of popular sentiment to enable him to 
			include Solomon among the ideal Hebrew kings. After all, Solomon had 
			built and dedicated the Temple; he was the "pious founder," and the 
			beneficiaries of the foundation would wish to make the most of his 
			piety. "Jehovah" had "magnified Solomon exceedingly in the sight of 
			all Israel, and bestowed upon him such royal majesty as had not been 
			on any king before him in Israel." {1Ch 29:25} "King Solomon 
			exceeded all the kings of the earth in riches and wisdom; and all 
			the kings of the earth sought the presence of Solomon, to hear his 
			wisdom, which God had put in his heart." {2Ch 9:22-23} The 
			chronicler would naturally wish to set forth the better side of 
			Solomon’s character as an ideal of royal wisdom and splendor, 
			devoted to the service of the sanctuary. Let us briefly compare 
			Chronicles and Kings to see how he accomplished his purpose. 
			 
			The structure of the narrative in Kings rendered the task 
			comparatively easy: it could be accomplished by removing the opening 
			and closing sections and making a few minor changes in the 
			intermediate portion. The opening section is the sequel to the 
			conclusion of David’s reign; the chronicler omitted this conclusion, 
			and therefore also its sequel. But the contents of this section were 
			objectionable in themselves. Solomon’s admirers willingly forgot 
			that his reign was inaugurated by the execution of Shimei, of his 
			brother Adonijah, and of his father’s faithful minister Joab, and by 
			the deposition of the high-priest Abiathar. The chronicler narrates 
			with evident approval the strong measures of Ezra and Nehemiah 
			against foreign marriages, and he is therefore not anxious to remind 
			his readers that Solomon married Pharaoh’s daughter. He does not, 
			however, carry out his plan consistently. Elsewhere he wishes to 
			emphasize the sanctity of the Ark and tells us that "Solomon brought 
			up the daughter of Pharaoh out of the city of David unto the house 
			that he had built for her, for he said, My wife shall not dwell in 
			the house of David, king of Israel, because the places are holy 
			whereunto the ark of the Lord hath come." {2Ch 8:11} 
			 
			In Kings the history of Solomon closes with a long account of his 
			numerous wives and concubines, his idolatry and consequent 
			misfortunes. All this is omitted by the chronicler; but later on, 
			with his usual inconsistency, he allows Nehemiah to point the moral 
			of a tale he has left untold: "Did not Solomon, king of Israel, sin 
			by these things? Even him did strange women cause to sin." {Neh 
			13:26} In the intervening section he omits the famous judgment of 
			Solomon, probably on account of the character of the women 
			concerned, he introduces sundry changes which naturally follow from 
			his belief that the Levitical law was then in force. His feeling for 
			the dignity of the chosen people and their king comes out rather 
			curiously in two minor alterations. Both authorities agree in 
			telling us that Solomon had recourse to forced labor for his 
			building operations; in fact, after the usual Eastern fashion from 
			the Pyramids down to the Suez Canal, Solomon’s temple and palaces 
			were built by the corvee. According to the oldest narrative, he 
			"raised a levy out of all Israel." This suggests that forced labor 
			was exacted from the Israelites themselves, and it would help to 
			account for Jeroboam’s successful rebellion. The chronicler omits 
			this statement as open to an interpretation derogatory to the 
			dignity of the chosen people, and not only inserts a later 
			explanation which he found in the book of Kings, but also another 
			express statement that Solomon raised his levy of the "strangers 
			that were in the land of Israel." {2Ch 2:2; 2Ch 2:17-18; 2Ch 8:7-10} 
			These statements may have been partly suggested by the existence of 
			a class of Temple slaves called Solomon’s servants. 
			 
			The other instance relates to Solomon’s alliance with Hiram, king of 
			Tyre. In the book of Kings we are told that "Solomon gave Hiram 
			twenty cities in the land of Galilee." {1Ki 9:11-12} There were 
			indeed redeeming features connected with the transaction; the cities 
			were not a very valuable possession for Hiram: "they pleased him 
			not"; yet he "sent to the king six score talents of gold." However, 
			it seemed incredible to the chronicler that the most powerful and 
			wealthy of the kings of Israel should either cede or sell any 
			portion of Jehovah’s inheritance. He emends the text of his 
			authority so as to convert it into a causal reference to certain 
			cities which Hiram had given to Solomon. {2Ch 8:1-2. R.V} 
			 
			We will now reproduce the story of Solomon as given by the 
			chronicler. Solomon was the youngest of four sons born to David at 
			Jerusalem by Bathshua, the daughter of Ammiel. Besides these three 
			brothers, he had at least six other eider brothers. As in the cases 
			of Isaac, Jacob, Judah, and David himself, the birthright fell to a 
			younger son. In the prophetic utterance which foretold his birth, he 
			was designated to succeed to his father’s throne and to build the 
			Temple. At the great assembly which closed his father’s reign he 
			received instructions as to the plans and services of the Temple, 
			{1Ch 28:9} and was exhorted to discharge his duties faithfully. He 
			was declared king according to the Divine choice, freely accepted by 
			David and ratified by popular acclamation. At David’s death no one 
			disputed his succession to the throne: "All Israel obeyed him; and 
			all the princes and the mighty men and all the sons likewise of King 
			David submitted themselves unto Solomon the king." {1Ch 29:23-24} 
			 
			His first act after his accession was to sacrifice before the brazen 
			altar of the ancient Tabernacle at Gideon. That night God appeared 
			unto him "and said unto him, Ask what I shall give thee." Solomon 
			chose wisdom and knowledge to qualify-him for the arduous task of 
			government. Having thus "sought first the kingdom of God and His 
			righteousness," all other things -" riches, wealth, and honor"-were 
			added unto him. {2Ch 1:7-13} 
			 
			He returned to Jerusalem, gathered a great array of chariots and 
			horses by means of traffic with Egypt, and accumulated great wealth, 
			so that silver, and gold, and cedars became abundant at Jerusalem. 
			{2Ch 1:14-17} 
			 
			He next proceeded with the building of the Temple, collected 
			workmen, obtained timber from Lebanon and an artificer from Tyre. 
			The Temple was duly erected and dedicated, the king taking the chief 
			and most conspicuous part in all the proceedings. Special reference, 
			however, is made to the presence of the priests and Levites at the 
			dedication. On this occasion the ministry of the sanctuary was not 
			confined to the course whose turn it was to officiate, but "all the 
			priests that were present had sanctified themselves and did not keep 
			their courses; also the Levites, which were the singers, all of 
			them, even Asaph, Heman, Jeduthun, and their sons and their 
			brethren, arrayed in fine linen, with cymbals, and psalteries, and 
			harps, stood at the east end of the altar, and with them a hundred 
			and twenty priests sounding with trumpets." 
			 
			Solomon’s dedication prayer concludes with special petitions for the 
			priests, the saints, and the king: "Now therefore arise, O Jehovah 
			Elohim, into Thy resting-place, Thou and the ark of Thy strength; 
			let Thy priests, O Jehovah Elohim, be clothed with salvation, and 
			let Thy saints rejoice in goodness. O Jehovah Elohim, turn not away 
			the face of Thine anointed; remember the mercies of David Thy 
			servant." 
			 
			When David sacrificed at the threshing-floor of Ornan the Jebusite, 
			the place had been indicated as the site of the future Temple by the 
			descent of fire from heaven; and now, in token that the mercy shown 
			to David should be continued to Solomon, the fire again fell from 
			heaven, and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices; and the 
			glory of Jehovah "filled the house of Jehovah," as it had done 
			earlier in the day, when the Ark was brought into the Temple. 
			Solomon concluded the opening ceremonies by a great festival: for 
			eight days the Feast of Tabernacles was observed according to the 
			Levitical law, and seven days more were specially devoted to a 
			dedication feast. 
			 
			Afterwards Jehovah appeared again to Solomon, as He had before at 
			Gibeon, and told him that this prayer was accepted. Taking up the 
			several petitions that the king had offered, He promised, "If I shut 
			up heaven that there be no rain, or if I send pestilence among My 
			people; if My people, which are called by My name, shall humble 
			themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked 
			ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and 
			will heal their land. Now Mine eyes shall be open, and Mine ears 
			attent, unto the prayer that is made in this place." Thus Jehovah, 
			in His gracious condescension, adopts Solomon’s own words to express 
			His answer to the prayer. He allows Solomon to dictate the terms of 
			the agreement, and merely appends His signature and seal. 
			 
			Besides the Temple, Solomon built palaces for himself and his wife, 
			and fortified many cities, among the rest Hamath-zobah, formerly 
			allied to David. He also organized the people for civil and military 
			purposes. 
			 
			As far as the account of his reign is concerned, the Solomon of 
			Chronicles appears as "the husband of one wife"; and that wife is 
			the daughter of Pharaoh. A second, however, is mentioned later on as 
			the mother of Rehoboam; she too was a "strange woman," an Ammonitess, 
			Naamah by name. 
			 
			Meanwhile Solomon was careful to maintain all the sacrifices and 
			festivals ordained in the Levitical law, and all the musical and 
			other arrangements for the sanctuary commanded by David, the man of 
			God. 
			 
			We read next of his commerce by sea and land, his great wealth and 
			wisdom, and the romantic visit of the queen of Sheba. 
			 
			And so the story of Solomon closes with this picture of royal state, 
			- 
			 
			"The wealth of Ormus and of Ind, Or where the gorgeous East with 
			richest hand Showers on her kings barbaric pearl and gold." 
			 
			Wealth was combined with imperial power and Divine wisdom. Here, as 
			in the case of Plato’s own pupils Dionysius and Dion of Syracuse, 
			Plato’s dream came true; the prince was a philosopher, and the 
			philosopher a prince. 
			 
			At first sight it seems as if this marriage of authority and wisdom 
			had happier issue at Jerusalem than at Syracuse. Solomon’s history 
			closes as brilliantly as David’s, and Solomon was subject to no 
			Satanic possession and brought no pestilence upon Israel. But 
			testimonials are chiefly significant in what they omit; and when we 
			compare the conclusions of the histories of David and Solomon, we 
			note suggestive differences. 
			 
			Solomon’s life does not close with any scene in which his people and 
			his heir assemble to do him honor and to receive his last 
			injunctions. There are no "last words" of the wise king; and it is 
			not said of him that "he died in a good old age, full of days, 
			riches, and honor." "Solomon slept with his fathers, and he was 
			buried in the city of David his father; and Rehoboam his son reigned 
			in his stead" that is all. When the chronicler, the professed 
			panegyrist of the house of David, brings his narrative of this great 
			reign to so lame and impotent a conclusion, he really implies as 
			severe a condemnation upon Solomon as the book of Kings does by its 
			narrative of his sins. 
			 
			Thus the Solomon of Chronicles shows the same piety and devotion to 
			the Temple and its ritual which were shown by his father. His prayer 
			at the dedication of the Temple is parallel to similar utterances of 
			David. Instead of being a general and a soldier, he is a scholar and 
			a philosopher. He succeeded to the administrative abilities of his 
			father; and his prayer displays a deep interest in the welfare of 
			his subjects. His record-in Chronicles-is even more faultless than 
			that of David. And yet the careful student with nothing but 
			Chronicles, even without Ezra and Nehemiah, might somehow get the 
			impression that the story of Solomon, like that of Cambuscan, had 
			been "left half told." In addition to the points suggested by a 
			comparison with the history of David, there is a certain abruptness 
			about its conclusion. The last fact noted of Solomon, before the 
			formal statistics about "the rest of his acts" and the years of his 
			reign, is that horses were brought for him "out of Egypt and out of 
			all lands." Elsewhere the chronicler’s use of his materials shows a 
			feeling for dramatic effect. We should not have expected him to 
			close the history of a great reign by a reference to the king’s 
			trade in horses. {1Ch 9:28} 
			 
			Perhaps we are apt to read into Chronicles what we know from the 
			book of Kings; yet surely this abrupt conclusion would have raised a 
			suspicion that there were omissions, that facts had been suppressed 
			because they could not bear the light. Upon the splendid figure of 
			the great king, with his wealth and wisdom, his piety and devotion, 
			rests the vague shadow of unnamed sins and unrecorded misfortunes. A 
			suggestion of unhallowed mystery attaches itself to the name of the 
			builder of the Temple, and Solomon is already on the way to become 
			the Master of the Genii and the chief of magicians. 
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