God Blesses Individuals

2 Kings 5.1

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In 1 and 2 Kings we are considering lessons in faith: we move from the end of David’s life and the transition to Solomon and subsequent monarchs.

We could almost entitle these books: Will God Keep His Promise?  Because even from the first chapter of the first book the great threat is the possibility (that is what is put before us) of the promise of God not being fulfilled, not being kept. And Solomon not succeeding David, his father, as king.

It was through Solomon that the line for the Messiah runs. The son promised to David, through whom will eventually come the great Descendant, the coming Messiah. The one through whom all the nations of the world would be blessed, as God promised to Abraham. But now there is a plot to usurp Solomon, for him to be executed, and for the vain, boastful, spoilt Adonijah to become king.

So the tension from the beginning of 1 Kings is: can the promise be fulfilled? Even in this seemingly impossible situation, with the failing of a dying, almost insensible old man as king, courtiers panicking, the danger of an armed coup, and the real possibility of things going radically wrong?

But 1 and 2 Kings are all about lessons in faith. Earthly so-called wisdom – resorting in desperation to  the ungodly customs of the time – sees everyone trying to take matters into their own hands, to revive the king (who is seemingly not in his senses) using unwise methods. It is not the court of David at its best.

But God is sovereign. What He says will come to pass. And it does – in His time. Solomon does become king; the rebellion is overthrown and order is restored. There are so many lessons from the reign of Solomon and the following kings for us today.



Related Resources

Anger is a Tender Virtue

He who would be angry without sin must not be angry at anything except sin. Our Saviour was angry with Peter, and angry with the Pharisees for the hardness of their hearts. Moses was filled with holy anger at the people over the golden calf. Equanimity in such circumstances would be no better than complacency or listlessness.

A View of the Heart

Lessons in faith including Elisha with Hazael, showing the mechanism which begins all wars, and the deathbed act of Elisha exposing a king’s indolence, with spiritual applications. Related Resource: Rend Your Heart

The Eye of Faith

Part of a series of Bible Studies on 2 Kings entitled ‘Lessons in Faith from the Life of Elisha’. Related Resource: Answering Doubts About God And Faith