A Walk Through the Bible With Bro. Bill Parker

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Praise Chapel Puget Sound. A Walk Through the Bible With Bro. Bill Parker. Lesson 7 The Monarchy First and Second Kings . A Walk Through the Bible. Outline Of First Kings ● The first Book of Kings holds the secret of success in reigning over the kingdom of your own life. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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A Walk Through the Bible

With Bro. Bill Parker

Lesson 7 The MonarchyFirst and Second Kings

Praise Chapel Puget Sound

A Walk Through the Bible

• Outline Of First Kings● The first Book of Kings holds

the secret of success in reigning over the kingdom of your own life.

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● It is the secret of learning to be submissive to the authority and dominion of God in your own life.

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•David is still king when the book opens, but he is immediately confronted by the rebellion of another one

of his sons, Adonijah.

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1. Adonijah attempts to gain control before his father dies.

2. David learns of the plot and moves to anoint Solomon king.

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3. Solomon assumes the throne while David is still alive.

4. In chapters 2 and 3 we see Solomon coming to the throne.

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5. Solomon acceded to the throne between the ages of twelve and fifteen.

6. David on his deathbed instructed Solomon to clean house.

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7. There were a number of overdue punishments.8. For one, Joab murdered Abner and was never punished.

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9. David realized that unless those issues were resolved, they would come back to haunt

Solomon.

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B. In chapter three we also have the seeds of defeat.1. He does two little things that

ultimately overthrow his kingdom.

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2. Solomon made a marriage alliance with Pharaoh, King of Egypt.3. He brings the Pharaoh’s daughter

into the central life of Israel.

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4. Here an alliance is made with the flesh (world).

5. The pagan tribes have erected altars, which were the center of idolatrous worship.

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6. The people of Israel took over these altars and used them for sacrifices to Jehovah.7. Solomon did not present his offerings at the altar in the Tabernacle. He was using the pagan altars.

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8. Solomon lacked the commitment to God that his father David had.

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● God appears to Solomon in a dream and tells him to ask for whatever he wanted.

1. Solomon, in a marvelous passage, asks not for riches or for honor, but for wisdom.

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2. He wanted to discern between good and evil.3. The great problem we have in our lives is to identify evil when it comes smiling at you, and offers you everything you have been looking for.

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4. Christian maturity comes when we learn to exercise the spirit of wisdom to distinguish between good and evil.

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● This wisdom is what Solomon asked for and God granted his request.

1. God gave Solomon this wisdom but He gave it with the circumstances that put the wisdom to the test.

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2. God also gave Solomon riches and honor.3. The thing that Solomon really needed was the wisdom to rule the kingdom of his own life.

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4. The test was a dispute between two mothers who brought a baby to Solomon. They both had a baby, but one had died.

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5. Both women claimed the living baby. Solomon was asked to decide whose baby it was.6. Solomon asks for a sword and tells the women to cut the baby in half and divide it between them.

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7. The real mother said no, let her have the baby. The second mother thought that dividing the baby was fair.

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8. Solomon knew at once who the real mother was. Thus his wisdom was demonstrated.

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● Chapter four verse 29, begins a commentary on how much

wisdom Solomon was given.

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1. His wisdom was beyond measure, like the sand of the seashore.

2. Solomon uttered three thousand proverbs. His songs were a thousand and five.

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● In chapters five through eight we have the account of the glorious temple that Solomon built.1. To build the Temple, Solomon

pulled together a workforce of 183,000.

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2. 30,000 men who worked 10,000 at a time for a month and were off two months to go home.

3. 70,000 carriers; 80,000 hewers in the mountains, and about 3,300 supervisors.

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4. The basic design was patterned after the Tabernacle except it was twice as big, every dimension was doubled.

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5. Instead of a single Menorah, there were 10 lampstands. Instead of one Table of Showbread there were twelve.6. The inside of the Temple was entirely covered with gold.

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● There were some things added that were not in the Tabernacle.

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1. In front in a place we will call the Porch, there were 2 gigantic

bronze pillars. One was called Jachin (in his council) and the other Boaz (in his strength).

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2. There were storerooms for the personal effects of the priests.3. All these features turn out to be

spiritually relevant.

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4. We look at the Tabernacle as being body, soul and spirit.

5. The Temple further refines it.

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a. The Outer Court seems to be relative to the body.

b. The Inner Court is relative to the soul.

c. We have the heart in the in the Holy Place.

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d. The spirit is in the Holy of Holies. The Porch is the transition period.

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6. Everything outside the Porch is bronze. (the metal associated with fire)

7. Everything inside the Porch is gold.

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● We have the story of the visits of the Queen of Sheba and the King of Tyre to Solomon.1. The Queen of Sheba couldn’t

believe the stories she heard about Solomon.

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2. She is famous for saying, “The half of it was not told to me”

3. The splendor of the kingdom was staggering even by today’s standards.

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C. Then suddenly at the beginning of chapter 11 the story takes a turn in the other direction.

● We read of the results of the seeds of evil that were sown earlier in Solomon’s life.

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1. King Solomon loved many foreign women; the daughter of the Pharaoh, Moabite, Ammonite,

Edomite, Sidonian, and Hittite women. These are pagan tribes.

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2. He had seven hundred wives, princesses, and three hundred

concubines. His wives turned away his heart. (1 Kings 11:3)

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3. This is the same man who wrote in the book of Proverbs “He who finds a wife finds a good

thing” (Proverbs 19:22)

A Walk Through the Bible● Solomon did what was evil in the

sight of the Lord.1. Solomon built a high place for

Chemosh, a hideous image in which a fire was built at the height of the religious festival. Children were thrown into the fire.

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2. He also built a place for Molech, the abomination of the Ammonites (a

fertility god) on the mountain east of Jerusalem.3. The Lord was angry with Solomon because his heart had turned away….(1 Kings 11:7b-9a)

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● Three times in rapid succession in the rest of Chapter 11 the Lord raised up an adversary against

Solomon.

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1. First Hadad, the Edomite, the man of the flesh.

2. Then Rezon, the son of Eliada, who had fled from his master.

3. Then in verse 26, Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, an Ephramite of

Zeredah (who later split the kingdom).

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D. Chapter 12 begins the second movement in this book, the degradation and breakup of the kingdom.

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● Jeroboam split the kingdom, taking 10 tribes north to begin the Northern Kingdom.

1. Jeroboam reintroduced Israel to the awful worship of golden calves.

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● Chapter 14 gives us the story of the invasion and defeat of Israel by

Egypt.● The Egypt out of which God had led His people.

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1. Egypt is again a picture of the world and its ways. It’s wickedness, its

folly, its futility and its foolishness.

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● After this, the account tells of the various kings that come to the

throne of Israel.1. Nadab is followed by Baasha

and Zimri. Finally comes Ahab and his wicked wife Jezebel.

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E. The final part of the book, beginning in chapter 17, introduces the prophetic ministry beginning with Elijah.

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● There are other prophets that come before Elijah but they did

not do miracles.

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1. Elijah begins the ministry of miracles in the Bible.2. The prophets who ministered to

Judah, the Southern Kingdom did no miracles, because there, God’s testimony was still the central life of the nation.

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3. In the Northern Kingdom, God’s presence was rejected, and in His place the golden calves were worshiped.

4. The ministry of miracles is a testimony that God is still in their midst.

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5. God intends to shake them up, to make them aware they had drifted away from Him.

6. Elijah’s ministry is a revelation of God’s dealing with the wayward human heart.

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7. Among his many accomplishments, Elijah performed eight major miracles. Two of which are listed below.

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a. He shut the heavens so that it did not rain for 3 years.

b. Then he called down fire from heaven on those that were sent to arrest him.

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7. This gets the people’s attention. There was a degree of repentance. They understood

God was using a harsh hand.

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● Then there was a clash between the two philosophies on Mt. Carmel.1. God vindicates Elijah’s honor

by consuming his offering by fire, even the water that was poured on the altar.

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2. Elijah orders the priests of Baal to be seized and they are executed.

3. The drought on the land is ended.

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● Jezebel, the wicked wife of Ahab, hears about the incident on Mt

Carmel and swears to kill Elijah.1. Elijah flees to the wilderness

and hides under a juniper bush.

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2. God puts him to bed and gives him a good night’s rest.3. Then God gives him a good meal.

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4. Finally God teaches him the greatest secret that Elijah ever learned.

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5. That God does not always move through earthquake, fire, and thunder, but many times through the still, small voice of a changed conscience.

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● The book closes with the story of King Ahab and his failure.

● In chapter 22 we learn how God works through accidental

circumstances.

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1. The 2 kings of Israel and Judah go out to battle.

2. Ahab, king of Israel, tries to put the king of Judah out in the front of the battle.

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3. Ahab dresses the king of Judah in Ahab’s armor hoping he would be mistaken for the king of Israel and get shot at.

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4. Rejoicing in his tricking the king of Judah, an arrow is shot in the air by a warrior of the opposite

side, and pierces through a crack in his armor into his heart, killing Ahab the king of Israel.

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This concludes our review of the First Book

of Kings

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A Walk Thru The BibleOutline Of Second Kings

● In the Hebrew Bible the books of 1st and 2nd Kings are

combined into one book of Kings.

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1. The first 10 chapters are the annals of the rebellious Northern Kingdom.2. The next 7 chapters are the annals of both Kingdoms as they have strains between them.

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4. During the time of the writing, prophets show up: Jonah, Amos, and Hosea.5. Chapters 18-25 are the annals of

the Southern Kingdom.

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● Many of the major and minor prophets wrote in this period.

1. Obadiah. Joel, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah as the minor prophets.

• 2. Isaiah and Jeremiah as the major prophets.

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● The term “major” and “minor” simply refer to the size of their writings, not their significance as prophets.● There is a substantial, prophetic

focus on the Southern Kingdom.

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● From the beginning there were always two divisions in the monarchy.

1. When David became king, he was king only of Judah for 7 years.

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2. After 7 years he became king over both divisions of the nation.3. The division was between the 10

tribes of the north and the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin in the south.

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● Remember Jeroboam led a revolt against his father Solomon and split the kingdom.1. Rehoboam remained as king

in the south over Benjamin and Judah.

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● They represent the two divisions in the human life.1. First there is the body which

we are so aware. We take it around with us.

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2. We spend our time taking care of it, primping it, dressing it up, painting it, and doing all the

things necessary to keep it good looking.3. Unfortunately most of life seems

to be spent in taking care of the body.

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● There is also the soul, the invisible part that contains the personality, and is so obviously gone when we look at the emptiness of a corpse and the terrible tragedy of death.

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● Here in the two kingdoms this division of life is acted out.

1. The ten tribes of the north are representative of the body.

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2. While Judah and Benjamin, the two tribes of the south,

represent the soul.3. Without the Holy Spirit dwelling

in the human spirit, man is incomplete.

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● The northern kingdom is representative of a man’s body, when our spirit loses fellowship with the Holy Spirit, it is not very long before the body begins to disintegrate.

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1. Jeroboam the son of Rehoboam, introduced the great sin for which the northern kingdom was noted.

2. Jeroboam introduced two calves of gold and said “these be your gods.” The spirit of the flesh.

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● David and Jeroboam become the representatives of the two

spiritual principles traced through the kingdoms.

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● In Israel, the northern kingdom, there were no godly kings.1. There was a continual

succession of kings murdering their predecessors to gain the throne.

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2. God in His grace intervened by sending prophets in an attempt to arrest the fall of the northern

kingdom.

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3. In Judah, the southern kingdom, there were a few godly kings and these men stand out like

lights in the darkness—the primary ones were Jehoshaphat, Joash, Hezekiah and Josiah.

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• ● God never spoke to the nation through a king.

1. He used the king in government, to control and to administer justice.

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2. When God wanted to speak to the nation he sent a prophet.3. Hosea, Amos, Joel, Isaiah, and

Jeremiah were also prophets that spoke to the nation.

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● The only prophets that appear in first and second Kings are Elijah and Elisha.1. Elijah was a rugged

personality. He went around wearing a leather girdle and dressed in haircloth.

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2. Time after time he met the king face to face to deliver a message of judgment.

3. His life was at stake many times but God protected him.

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4. There was the confrontation with 450 priests of Baal on Mt. Carmel in first Kings.

5. He was primarily the prophet of the law.

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6. His was a ministry of love and of fire and of judgment.

7. In all Elijah worked 8 miracles.

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8. Elijah is one of the most fantastic prophets in scripture.

● When Elijah was caught up into heaven in a chariot of fire, his

mantle fell upon Elisha.

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1. Elisha not only wants to follow in Elijah’s footsteps, he wanted a double portion to be twice as

good.

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2. Elisha’s ministry of the Lord was to the individual.

3. His was a ministry of grace, of winsome sweetness, of compassionate tenderness and helpfulness.

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● There is another interesting comparison here, in that Elisha also seems to picture the ministry of the Holy Spirit in the church after the day of Pentecost.

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1. Elisha’s ministry also began with a man ascending into heaven.

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2. Elisha’s first miracle depicted the ministry of the Holy Spirit. a. The putting of salt into the

water and the sweetening of the water.

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3. The miracle concerning salt, the miracle of the oil that kept flowing continually which is

another symbol of the Holy Spirit.

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4. The miracle of the water suddenly appearing in the parched and barren famine stricken fields all picture the Holy Spirit.

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5. Then there was the miracle of resurrection of a little boy who died and was raised from the dead as Elisha lay his staff on him and breathed on his face.

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6. That was not mouth to mouth resuscitation, it was a genuine resurrection.

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7. Elisha also performed the miracles of healing leprosy, of feeding a thousand or more people and recovering the lost iron ax head by making it float on top of the water.

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8. Miracles continued even after he was dead and buried.

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9. A group of men trying to dispose of a body, threw the corpse into the tomb of Elisha and when it touched Elisha’s bones the body sprang back to life.

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● The southern kingdom had twenty kings who reigned for 370 years, a century longer than the northern kingdom.

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● The northern kingdom of Israel had nineteen kings who reigned for 250 years over seven different dynasties.

A Walk Through the Bible1. They never returned from the Assyrian captivity.2. The Assyrians had a policy of transplanting their captives to other parts of the empire to mix them so they would have no sense of identity and no sense of root.

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● Judah was spared temporarily from captivity by the glorious life of Hezekiah.

1. His first act as king was to cleanse the temple.

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2. It took the Levites (the priestly tribe) sixteen days to carry all the rubbish and junk out of the temple before they could purify it for the services again.

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3. Hezekiah also reintroduced the Passover.

4. He also destroyed the great brazen serpent the people had been worshipping. It had become an object of idolatry.

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5. Hezekiah’s life was extended when the shadow on the sundial turned back 10 degrees and he was allowed fifteen more years of life.

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6. During those 15 years, he had a son named Manasseh who became the worst king Judah

ever had.

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● The kingdom declined and was carried away by Nebuchadnezzar into Babylon the symbol of

corruption and defilement.

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1. For a few years the temple remained in Jerusalem, but in the end it was stripped and burned.2. The walls of the city were broken

down, and all the people carried away to captivity.

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3. The book closes with Zedekiah the last king of Israel.

4. After he was captured by the king of Babylon, his sons were slain before his eyes, and his

eyes were put out. Then he was bound and taken to Babylon.

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This concludes our review of the 1st and 2nd

Books of Kings

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