Friday, 12 July 2013

1 Kings

Well, I've been a little busy recently doing blog repairs, but the Eccles Bible Project must go on. In particular, I am being telephoned at all hours of the day and night by a retired zoologist in Oxford, who is studying this course with great interest.

Jeeves

Mr Eccles cannot speak to you right now, Professor Dawkins.

"I'm bored, Eccles," says this zoologist, a modest chap who wishes to remain nameless. "Give me more spiritual nourishment, or I'll have to go back to spending all day on Twitter as follows:

Monday: Insult Catholics.
Tuesday: Insult Muslims.
Wednesday: Re-tweet sycophantic remarks saying how great I am.
Thursday:  Insult pro-lifers, opponents of SSM, anyone 
with any moral views.
Friday: Day of abstinence. Off Twitter. Working on new book 
More garbage. I'll think of a better title later.
Saturday: Regret insulting all Catholics; insult the Pope instead.
Sunday: Attend Church of [my name] and accept praise from grateful
worshippers.
So, let's get on with 1 Kings.

3 kings

Or should it be "3 Kings"?

It's been pointed out to me that some Bibles used by Catholics - although not all - would call this "3 Kings" and the books of Samuel would be 1 Kings and 2 Kings. Well, whatever we call it, it does contain lots of historical stuff about Kings of Israel.

Solomon, son of David, is well-known: ♫ Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anoin-ted Sol-o-mo-on KING! ♫ - as Handel put it.

God offers Solomon a wish: Ask what thou wilt that I should give thee. Solomon turns down the obvious things - money, women, Jerusalem to win the cup ... and asks: Give therefore to thy servant an understanding heart, to judge thy people, and discern between good and evil.

THIS PLEASES GOD. So much so that Solomon ends up with lots of money and women as well.

mothers-in-law

Some of Solomon's 700 mothers-in-law.

Well, that's our bit of moral teaching out of the way. Solomon also builds a temple, which will survive 400 years until Nebuchadnezzar knocks it down to make way for a housing estate. More on that later.

We fast-forward to the death of Solomon the Wise, and the arrival on the scene of his son Rehoboam (or Roboam) the Unwise. His offer to the people is, frankly, not a great vote-winner: My father beat you with whips, but I will beat you with scorpions.

Miss Whiplash

Actually, some of my customers do ask for the "scorpion" service.

For what it's worth, the old men had given better advice than this, but it was the young men who came up with this vote-loser.

So the kingdom is divided - Rehoboam is left with just two of the twelve tribes (in the south), while Jeroboam, a known trouble-maker, gets the other ten (in the north).

bottles

A short guide to Biblical characters.

The brand-name Israel goes with Jeroboam's kingdom, although in fact we should be just as interested in the "other one", which is Judah.

One of the most important people not yet mentioned is Elijah (Elias) the prophet, who takes on the rival prophets of Baal and wins. You may say that's not very difficult, really, as Baal is a made-up God, but it does help if you've got a good line to the real God when necessary. Nowadays there are very few people who worship Baal, even in Oxford.

Look, I can see you're fidgeting, Richard. I know it was you who was rustling those papers. And stop pulling Polly Toynbee's hair. Honestly, these Bible classes become harder and harder to control. Go and look up Jezebel, and write me an essay on what happened to her. Something to do with dogs, you'll find...

Jezebel

Jezebel, wife of Ahab, and another villain.

O.K. Class dismissed!

9 comments:

  1. Thank you for your spiritaully nuorishing fare as usual. Do you think the Duchess of Cambridge has spotted this while googling for baby names?

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    1. I like the idea of a Prince(ss) Split - quite appropriate for the littlest of the family. ("Split" and "Half" were, of course, the names suggested for the child involved in the Judgement of Solomon, had things turned out differently.)

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  2. If you keep this up Eccles, you’ll have all kinds of post Vat II people reading the Bibble. All those wives, concubines and Jezebels will draw a crowd.

    Of course all the mothers in law is a bit of a drawback. But as the man said: “you pays for your pleasures…”

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  3. Don't forget that truly saved pussons call Chronicles 'Paralipomenon'.

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  4. Take care with your remarks about spending all day on Twitter, lest a certain self-obsessed deaconhead takes it to be a reference to himself and deluges all our email with spam again.

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  5. Elijah won because the "prophets" sent down a "no baal" and he won the Nobaal Peace Prize.

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  6. A grammatical point is that the Book should be called 1 King because it is a singular Book.

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  7. darling eccles - will de queens be jealous becuz dey has no book? :) xx Jess

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  8. I really like this one, Eccles. Very spiritually nourishing.

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