Sermon Outline, February 6Peter J. Leithart, February 02, 2005 INTRODUCTION THE TEXT STRUCTURE A. Worship and Destruction of Baals (1 Ki. 16-18). COUNTERFEIT DAVID Several themes dominate the account of the Omride dynasty. First, Omri and his son Ahab evidently pursue a program of “re-Canaanitization,Ereinstituting the worship and practices of the Canaanites whom Yahweh drove from the land (1 Kings 16:31-32). By intermarrying with the house of David, they also evidently want to reunite the kingdom under an Omride king. As we shall see, they almost succeed. Second, because the Omrides are like Canaanites, there needs to be a new exodus and a “re-conquestEof the land. The ministries of Elijah and Elisha develop these themes. Third, there is a “provocation to jealousyEtheme (16:33). In Deuteronomy 32, Moses warned the people that if they provoked Yahweh to jealousy by going after other gods, He will provoke them to jealousy by paying attention to other peoples. Elijah and Elisha spend a lot of their time ministering among Gentiles, which is supposed to provoke Israel to jealousy and repentance. COUNTERFEIT SOLOMON The names of the Sidonians are intriguing. The name “JezebelEplays on the word zebul, which is sometimes included in the name of Baal (2 Kings 1:3, 6). Jerome Walsh says that “The word zbl, ‘Prince,Ewas probably pronounced zabul or zebul, as in the name Baalzebul or Beelzebul, ‘Baal is PrinceE(which itself is usually deformed in the Bible to Baalzebub or Beelzebub, ‘Baal of FliesE. Pronounced zebel, the element resembles a word in other Semitic languages for ‘excrementEthat may well have existed also in Hebrew, though it is not attested in the Hebrew Bible.EJezebel is both a daughter of Baal, and dung. Her father’s name includes the name of Baal explicitly, and his name is the first reference in Kings to Baal. It is not the last; Baal worship is beginning to take over the Northern kingdom. It is the latest craze. (According to Josephus, Ethbaal (Ittobal) was the grandfather of Dido of Carthage, famous in the Aeneid [Against Apion, 1.18].) Verse 34 speaks of another building project, the rebuilding of Jericho. It is likely that Ahab authorized this building, since a project to rebuild a border city would not likely be done without the king’s permission. Of course, Jericho was the first city conquered during the conquest, and the rebuilding means that the conquest is being reversed. Instead of destroying Canaanites, Ahab is rebuilding their cities. It is not clear whether Hiel the Bethelite killed his sons or if they died from natural causes. In the ancient world, “foundation sacrifices,Ehuman sacrifices to consecrate the building of a city or temple, were not unknown (Cain/Abel; Romulus/Remus). Though Hiel and Ahab are sinning when they rebuild Jericho, they in fact participate in the fulfillment of the word of Yahweh, the word of curse spoken centuries before by Joshua (Joshua 6:26). |
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