Jeroboam
Jeroboam ירבעם | |
---|---|
King of Israel (Northern Kingdom) | |
Reign | 931/22 – 910/901 BC (tentative) |
Predecessor | Position established |
Successor | Nadab |
Born | unknown United Kingdom of Israel |
Died | 910/901 BC (tentative) Tirzah, Northern Kingdom of Israel |
Spouse | Ano (named only in the Septuagint) |
Issue | Abijah Nadab |
House | New House, Tribe of Ephraim |
Father | Nebat |
Mother | Zeruah |
Jeroboam I (/ˌdʒɛrəˈboʊ.əm/; Hebrew: יָרָבְעָם Yārŏḇʿām; Greek: Ἱεροβοάμ, romanized: Hieroboám), frequently cited Jeroboam son of Nebat, was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the first king of the northern Kingdom of Israel following a revolt of the ten tribes against Rehoboam that put an end to the United Monarchy. According to the book of 1 Kings, he reigned for 22 years and "there was war continually between Rehoboam and Jeroboam". Jeroboam also fought Abijam son of Rehoboam king of Judah. Jeroboam is often described as doing "evil in the sight of the Lord", and all the rest of the northern kings were also described in the same way.
William F. Albright has dated his reign from 922 to 901 BC, while Edwin R. Thiele offers the dates 931 to 910 BC.[1]
Etymology
[edit]The name Yārŏḇ‘ām יָרָבְעָם is commonly held to have been derived from rīḇ רִיב and ʿam עַם, signifying "the people contend" or "he pleads the people's cause". It is alternatively translated to mean "his people are many" or "he increases the people" (from רבב rbb, meaning "to increase"), or even "he that opposes the people". In the Septuagint he is called Hieroboam (Ἱεροβοάμ).[2]
Biblical background
[edit]Jeroboam was the son of Nebat, an Ephraimite of Zereda. His mother,[a] named Zeruah (צרוע "leprous") was a widow.[3] He had at least two sons, Abijah[4] and Nadab; Nadab succeeded Jeroboam on the throne.
King Solomon made the young Jeroboam a superintendent over his tribesmen in the building of the fortress Millo in Jerusalem and of other public works, and he naturally became conversant with the widespread discontent caused by the extravagances which marked the reign of Solomon.[5]
Influenced by the words of the prophet Ahijah,[6] he began to form conspiracies with the view of becoming king of the ten northern tribes; but these were discovered, and he fled to Egypt, where he remained under the protection of Pharaoh Shishak until the death of Solomon. After this event, he returned and participated in a delegation sent to ask the new king Rehoboam to reduce taxes.[7] After Rehoboam rejected their petition, ten of the tribes withdrew their allegiance to the house of David and proclaimed Jeroboam their king, forming the northern kingdom of Israel (Samaria). Only the tribes of Judah and Benjamin remained to form the rump kingdom of Judah, loyal to Rehoboam.[7]
Temples
[edit]Jeroboam rebuilt and fortified Shechem as the capital of the northern kingdom, and fearing that pilgrimages to the temple in Jerusalem prescribed by the Law might provide an occasion for his people to go back to their old allegiance, he built two state temples[8] with golden calves, one in Bethel and the other in Dan.[5] This act is condemned by an unnamed prophet in 1 Kings 14, where the LORD declares that Jeroboam has cast YHWH behind his back.[9][10] Jeroboam further deviated from normative Torah law by moving the holiday of Sukkot to eighth month instead of the seventh month (perhaps by adding a leap month in Elul).[11]
According to Rabbinic literature, Gehazi possessed a magnet by which he lifted up the idol made by Jeroboam, so that it was seen between heaven and earth; he had "Yhwh" engraved on it, and in consequence the idol (a calf) pronounced the first two words of the Decalogue (ib.).[12]
According to 1 Kings,[13] while Jeroboam was engaged in offering incense at Bethel, a "man of God" warned him that "a son named Josiah will be born to the house of David", who would destroy the altar (referring to King Josiah of Judah who would rule approximately three hundred years later). When Jeroboam attempted to have the prophet arrested for his bold words of defiance, the king's hand was "dried up", and the altar before which he stood was rent asunder. At the entreaty of the man of God, his hand was restored to him again, but the miracle made no abiding impression on him.[14] Jeroboam offered hospitality to the man of God but this was declined, not out of contempt but in obedience to the command of God.[15] The prophecy is fulfilled in 2 Kings.[16]
Identity of related figures
[edit]Josephus and Jerome identify the "man of God" who warned Jeroboam as the seer named Iddo.[17]
The wife of Jeroboam is a character in the Hebrew Bible. Though unnamed in the Masoretic text, she appears in the Septuagint as an Egyptian princess called Ano:
- And Sousakim gave to Jeroboam Ano the eldest sister of Thekemina his wife, to him as wife; she was great among the king's daughters... [18]
In 1 Kings,[19] Jeroboam's son Abijah falls ill, and Jeroboam sends his wife to the prophet Ahijah. Ahijah's message, however, is that Abijah will die, which he does. According to The Jewish Encyclopedia, the good that Abijah did for which he would be laid in the grave ("Rabbinical Literature: The passage, I Kings, xiv. 13, in which there is a reference to "some good thing [found in him] toward the Lord God of Israel") is interpreted (M. Ḳ. 28b) as an allusion to Abijah's courageous and pious act in removing the sentinels placed by his father on the frontier between Israel and Judah to prevent pilgrimages to Jerusalem. Some assert that Abijah himself undertook a pilgrimage."[20]
War with Judah
[edit]According to the Hebrew Bible, Jeroboam was in "constant war with the house of Judah".[21] While the southern kingdom made no serious effort militarily to regain power over the north, there was a long-lasting boundary dispute, fighting over which lasted during the reigns of several kings on both sides before being finally settled.
In the eighteenth year of Jeroboam's reign, Abijah (also known as Abijam), Rehoboam's son, became king of Judah.[22] During his short reign of three years, Abijah went to considerable lengths to bring the Kingdom of Israel back under his control. He waged a major battle against Jeroboam in the mountains of Ephraim. According to the Book of Chronicles Abijah had a force of 400,000 and Jeroboam 800,000.[23] The Biblical sources mention that Abijah addressed the armies of Israel, urging them to submit and to let the Kingdom of Israel be whole again,[24] but his plea fell on deaf ears. Abijah then rallied his own troops with a phrase which has since become famous: "God is with us as our leader". The biblical account states that his elite warriors fended off a pincer movement and rout Jeroboam's troops, killing 500,000 of them.[25]
Jeroboam was crippled by this severe defeat to Abijah and posed little threat to the Kingdom of Judah for the rest of his reign.[26] He also lost the towns of Bethel, Jeshanah, and Ephron, with their surrounding villages.[27] Bethel was an important centre for Jeroboam's Golden Calf cult (which used non-Levites as priests),[28] located on Israel's southern border, which had been allocated to the Tribe of Benjamin by Joshua, as was Ephron, which is believed to be the Ophrah that was allocated to the Tribe of Benjamin by Joshua.[29]
Jeroboam died soon after Abijam.
Rabbinic literature
[edit]In spite of the great mischief caused by Micah, he had one good quality, and God permitted it to plead for him when the angels stood up against him as his accusers. He was extremely hospitable. His house always stood wide open to the wanderer, and to his hospitality he owed it that he was granted a share in the future world.1*7 In hell Micah is the first in the sixth division, which is under the guid¬ ance of the angel Hadriel, and he is the only one in the di¬ vision who is spared hell tortures.1" Micah's son was Jero¬ boam, whose golden calves were sinful far beyond anything his father had done.1"[30] That Ahijah, though one of the pillars of righteousness, should have been sent to Jeroboam with a divine message inducing him to establish his idolatrous kingdom is explained by the rabbis in the following manner: They say that he was entrapped by a ruse of Jeroboam's idolatrous friends, who circulated a document requesting Jeroboam to become king and stipulating that, if he were elected, he set up a golden calf at Dan and Beth-El. Ahijah signed this document, believing firmly that Jeroboam would not belie his trust. Herein he was mistaken in his pupil. Jeroboam had shown great wisdom and learning, and appeared to Ahijah "as pure as the new garment" he wore when Ahijah saw him coming out of Jerusalem (I Kings, xi. 29). Moreover, as he excelled all the rest of the pupils, he had been initiated by Ahijah into the innermost secrets of the Law (Sanh. 101b et seq.). Just as the words said of Isaac, "his eyes were dim, so that he could not see" (Gen. xxvii. 1), are taken to refer to spiritual blindness, because he favored his wicked son Esau, so the words, "Ahijah could not see, for his eyes were set by reason of his age" (I Kings, xiv. 4), imply spiritual blindness on the part of Ahijah, who favored a wicked pupil and set him up as ruler (Gen. R. lxv.). For this reason Ahijah was stricken with the plague (Gen. R. lxv., Yer. Yeb. xvi. 15c and parallels). Jeroboam became for the rabbinical writers a typical evil-doer. This appears in the Septuagint (2d recension), where even his mother is represented as a disreputable woman. The name is explained as (= "one that caused strife among the people," or "one that caused strife between the people and their Heavenly Father"; Sanh. 108b). The name (Nebat) of his father is construed as implying some defect in his progenitor. Jeroboam is excluded from the world to come (Yalḳ., Kings, 196). Although he reached the throne because he reproved Solomon, he was nevertheless punished for doing so publicly (ib.). In the meeting between Jeroboam and the Shilonite the Rabbis detect indications of Jeroboam's presumption, his zeal for impious innovations (ib.). His arrogance brought about his doom (Sanh. 101b). His political reasons for introducing idolatry are condemned (Sanh.90). As one that led many into sin, the sins of many cling to him (Abot v. 18). He is said to have invented one hundred and three interpretations of the law in reference to the priests to justify his course. At first God was pleased with him and his sacrifice because he was pious, and in order to prevent his going astray proposed to His council of angels to remove him from earth, but He was prevailed upon to let him live; and then Jeroboam, while still a lad, turned to wickedness. God had offered to raise him into Gan 'Eden; but when Jeroboam heard that Jesse's son would enjoy the highest honors there, he refused. Jeroboam had even learned the "mysteries of the chariot" (Midr. Teh.; see "Sefer Midrash Abot," Warsaw, 1896).[31]"...If the person suffers indignities after his death, this too, can atone for his sins, and gain him a share in the World to Come. For example, the Talmud says that King Jeroboam, a brazen idolater who incited the population to follow his G‑dless ways, and certainly deserved to be excluded from the World to Come, will nevertheless arise when the time of resurrection arrives. Why? Because many years after he died his remains were ignominiously burned in fire." [32]
Commentary on sources
[edit]The account of Jeroboam's life, like that of all his successors, ends with the formula "And the rest of the acts of Jeroboam, how he warred, and how he reigned, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel".[33]
"The Chronicles of the Kings of Israel", likely compiled by or derived from these kings' own scribes, is likely the source for the basic facts of Jeroboam's life and reign, though the compiler(s) of the extant Book of Kings clearly made selective use of it and added hostile commentaries. His family was eventually wiped out.
The prophecies of doom concerning the fall of both the House of Jeroboam and the northern kingdom as a whole ("For the Lord shall smite Israel..., and he shall root up Israel out of this good land, which he gave to their fathers, and shall scatter them beyond the river",[34] might have been composed retroactively, after the events described had already come to pass. Alternatively, the prophecy could have been a logical deduction. Judah had just been conquered and turned into a vassal of Egypt, while Israel stood between the Egyptian and Mesopotamian empires.
It is likely that the story of the golden calf in the wilderness[35] was composed as a polemic against Jeroboam's cultic restoration by claiming that its origins were inconsistent with worship of YHWH.[7]
Thomas Römer has argued that Jeroboam I may not have existed and that Deuteronomistic redactors transferred data from the reign of Jeroboam II to Jeroboam I,[36] although Lester L. Grabbe finds this theory unlikely.[37]
In popular culture
[edit]Jeroboam is portrayed by Nickolas Grace in Solomon & Sheba (1995) and by Richard Dillane in Solomon (1997). Both of these are television films.
Within the range of standard liquor bottle sizes, a Jeroboam (also called a Double Magnum) contains 3 liters (101.4 fluid ounces). A Rehoboam contains 4.5 liters (152.2 fluid ounces).[38]
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ An alternative interpretation of the English text claims Zeruah was the grandmother of Jeroboam, being the mother of Nebat. But this is not supported by the Hebrew source. Additionally throughout the Books of Kings, it is standard practice to also list the names of kings' mothers, on the occasion of the beginning of their reign.
Citations
[edit]- ^ Thiele 1983.
- ^ "Study dictionary: Jeroboam". NeXtBible Learning Environment. Archived from the original on 2007-03-15. Source of transliterations and explanation of significance.
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 11:26
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 14:1
- ^ a b Driscoll 1910.
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 11:29–39
- ^ a b c Oded & Sperling 2006, p. 142.
- ^ Collins, John J., A short introduction to the Hebrew Bible, Fortress Press (2007), p. 47
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 14:9
- ^ Klein, Ralph W. (2018). The "Sin" of Jeroboam. pp. 26–35.
- ^ Klein, Reuven Chaim (2018). "The Leap-Month Fabricated by Jeroboam" (PDF). Jewish Bible Quarterly. 46 (1): 13–18. doi:10.17613/M6P843V9D.
- ^ Gehazi at Jewish Encyclopedia
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 13:1–6
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 13:33
- ^ Gill, J., Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible on 1 Kings 13, accessed 19 October 2017
- ^ Bible 2 Kings 23:15–16
- ^ "IDDO - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com.
- ^ 1 Kings 12:24e, New English Translation of the Septuagint
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 14
- ^ Jewish Encyclopedia - "The passage, I Kings, xiv. 13, in which there is a reference to 'some good thing [found in him] toward the Lord God of Israel,' is interpreted (M. Ḳ. 28b) as an allusion to Abijah's courageous and pious act in removing the sentinels placed by his father on the frontier between Israel and Judah to prevent pilgrimages to Jerusalem. Some assert that he himself undertook a pilgrimage."
- ^ Smith's Bible Dictionary: Jeroboam, accessed 2 August 2017
- ^ Bible 2 Chronicles 13:1
- ^ Bible2 Chronicles 13:3
- ^ Bible 2 Chronicles 13:4–12
- ^ Bible 2 Chronicles 13:17
- ^ Bible 2 Chronicles 13:20
- ^ Bible 2 Chronicles 13:19
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 12:25–33
- ^ Bible Joshua 18:20–28, esp. 23
- ^ The Legends of the Jews Louis Ginzberg Vol IV pp.49-53
- ^ Jerobaum "Jewish Encyclopedia"
- ^ By Naftali Silberberg "Who Will Be Resurrected?
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 14, 19
- ^ Bible 1 Kings 14:15
- ^ (cf. 1 Kings 12:28 with Exodus 32:4
- ^ Römer, Thomas. “How Jeroboam II became Jeroboam I”, HeBAI 6/3, 2017, 372-382. “The Deuteronomistic redactors of the book of Kings are almost silent about the reign of Jeroboam II. This can be explained by the fact that they transferred the foundation of the sanctuaries of Dan and Bethel to the time of Jeroboam I.”
- ^ Grabbe, Lester L. (2017). "Jeroboam I? Jeroboam II? Or Jeroboam 0? Jeroboam in History and Tradition". In Lipschits, O.; Gadot, Y.; Adams, M. J. (eds.). Rethinking Israel: Studies in the History and Archaeology of Ancient Israel in Honor of Israel Finkelstein. Eisenbrauns. pp. 115–123. ISBN 978-1-57506-787-2.
- ^ "Liquor Bottle Sizes: A Complete Guide | TricorBraun". www.tricorbraun.com. Retrieved 2024-08-18.
Sources
[edit]- Driscoll, James F. (1910). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- Oded, Bustanay; Sperling, S. David (2006). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 11 (2nd ed.).
- Thiele, Edwin (1983) [1951]. The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings (3rd ed.). Grand Rapids: Zondervan/Kregel. ISBN 0-8254-3825-X., ISBN 978-0-82543825-7