| JEHU, (ELEVENTH) KING OF ISRAEL. 
					ATHALIAH, (SEVENTH) QUEEN OF JUDAH. 
					
					
					
					Murder of the "sons" of Ahab and of Joram — 
					Destruction of the adherents of Ahab in Jezreel — March on 
					Samaria — Slaughter of the "brethren" of Ahaziah — Jehonadab 
					the son of Rechab — Meaning of the Rechabite movement — The 
					Feast of Baal at Samaria — Destruction of the Worshippers — 
					Character of the Reign of Jehu — Decline of the Northern 
					Kingdom — Commencing Decline of the Southern Kingdom. 
					
					 
					
					(2 Kings 10:2; 2 Chronicles 21:10; 24:17-26.) 
					     
					
					We have learned enough of this history to understand the 
					seeming 
					inconsistencies in the conduct of Jehu. Absolutely speaking, 
					he was the 
					instrument selected for executing the Divine punishment on 
					the house of 
					Ahab; and also in whose reign the national judgment upon 
					Israel was to 
					begin. Jehu himself clearly understood his mission as 
					regarded the house of 
					Ahab and the worship of Baal. But he accepted it as a 
					national and, if the 
					term may be used, a Jehovistic movement, without implying 
					the necessity 
					of true fear of the Lord, or of return to Him; and he 
					carried it out as a 
					Jehu. Alike as regarded his feelings and his methods, he was 
					the 
					instrument, not the servant of the Lord . 
      
					To such an one as Jehu even common prudence would have 
					dictated to do 
					what work he had, quickly, sharply, and completely. A 
					dynasty that had 
					extended over four reigns must have numbered many adherents, 
					while on 
					the other hand the demoralizing influence of the worship of 
					Baal must have 
					widely spread in the land. There was more than merely a 
					mocking taunt in 
					the reminder of Jezebel about the fate of Zimri. The mission 
					as well as the 
					rule of Jehu depended upon a rapid succession of measures 
					which would 
					alike anticipate the possibility of a counter-revolution, 
					and render a return 
					to the former state of things impossible. This explains the 
					measures taken 
					by the new king. Samaria was not only the capital, but a 
					fortified city, 
					where the main body of the standing army 
					1 lay. Here, as we 
					know, had 
					been placed the "seventy sons of Ahab" — understanding the 
					term 2 in its 
					
					
					
					
					
					wider sense, common in Hebrew, which included, besides the 
					sons of 
					Ahab, his grandsons, the children of Joram (comp. 2 Kings 
					10:3). These 
					royal princes of the house of Ahab were entrusted, some (in 
					the Eastern 
					fashion) for supervision, the younger for education to the 
					"princes," 3 — 
					that is, the governor of the palace and the governor of the 
					city (10:1, comp. 
					10:5) — to the "elders," and to certain prominent persons 
					who had charge 
					of them. These officials in Samaria would embody the 
					possibility of a 
					counter-revolution, and to them Jehu addressed on the morrow 
					of his entry 
					into Jezreel what really amounted to a challenge, to declare 
					themselves for 
					the house of Ahab, or else to make submission to his rule. 
					The motives 
					which decided their choice (ver. 4) show that their 
					inclination was in favor 
					of the old regime, while their fears dictated 
					submission to the usurper. So 
					Jehu had judged wisely in forcing an immediate decision, 
					without exposing 
					himself by marching with his small troop against Samaria.
					
      
					But this was not all. Neither their allegiance nor his rule 
					was safe so long as 
					any of the royal princes lived; and, indeed, their 
					destruction was part of 
					his work and mission. To have killed them himself would have 
					been a 
					doubtful expedient, which, even if successful, might have 
					given rise to 
					popular reaction, and at all events brought him ill-will, 
					while it would have 
					left free the hands of the adherents of Ahab. It was 
					therefore, from his 
					point of view, the wisest policy on receiving the submission 
					of the leaders 
					of Samaria to order them to kill all the royal princes and 
					bring their heads 
					to Jezreel. 4 This would not only accomplish the primary 
					object of Jehu, 
					but, by making them participate in the crimes of his 
					revolution, render any 
					future movement against his rule impossible. At the same 
					time the ghastly 
					sight of those heads, sent to Jezreel by the chief 
					representatives of the old 
					regime, would offer an excellent opportunity for an 
					appeal to the people. 
					When, therefore, next day the heads of the seventy princes 
					were brought in 
					baskets to Jezreel, he ordered them to be laid "at the 
					entering in of the 
					gate," 5 where the blood of Jezebel had so lately 
					bespattered the wall, and 
					the chariot of the conqueror passed over her body. And in 
					the morning 
					Jehu, pointing to the gory heaps, could tell the people
					6 
					that not only 
					himself, but all the chief personages under the late 
					government, had part in 
					the destruction of the house of Ahab; that those to whom 
					they had been 
					entrusted had chosen rather to slay these princes in cold 
					blood than to take 
					up their cause — that all had perished, and so the word 
					spoken by the 
					
					
					
					
					
					Lord through the great prophet Elijah had been fulfilled. 
					Thus his rule and 
					the slaughter of the house of Ahab had — as he put it — the 
					support of all 
					men and the sanction of God Himself. 
      
					It was now possible for Jehu to take possession of his 
					capital without 
					danger of opposition, and there to carry out his final 
					measures against the 
					old order of things. But before doing so he took care, so to 
					speak, to secure 
					his rear by killing all that had been connected with the 
					house of Ahab in 
					Jezreel, "all his great men," his friends,
					7 and his chief officials.
					8     
					On his way to Samaria another tragedy was to be enacted. It 
					was at a 
					solitary place, in a locality which has not been 
					ascertained, but which bore 
					the name of "house of binding of the shepherds" — or, as the 
					Chaldee 
					Paraphrast calls it: "The house of assembly of the 
					shepherds." Here, 
					where evidently the roads from Jezreel and Jerusalem joined, 
					Jehu and his 
					followers met the forty-two princes, "the brethren of 
					Ahaziah, king of 
					Judah," 9 who were going on a friendly visit to "the 
					children of the king 
					[Joram] and the children of the mistress," [lady -ruler, 
					Gebhirah — 
					evidently Jezebel]. 10 So rapid had been the movements of 
					Jehu, and so 
					great was the fear of him, that tidings of what had passed 
					in Israel had not 
					traveled so far as to arrest the journey of the princes of 
					Judah. Jehu's order 
					was to "take them alive." Whether they offered resistance, 
					or this was part 
					of the original order of Jehu, certain it is that they were 
					all killed "at the 
					cistern of Beth-Eqed," 11 into which their bodies were 
					probably thrown. 
      
					As Jehu passed from the scene of slaughter he met a figure 
					that seems 
					strange and mysterious. "Jehonadab, the son of Rechab," who 
					had come 
					from Samaria to meet the new king, belonged to the Kenites 
					(1 Chronicles 
					2:55). This tribe, which was probably of Arab nationality, 
					appears so 
					early as the days of Abraham (Genesis 15:19). Jethro, the 
					father-in-law of 
					Moses, belonged to it (Judges 1:16). Part at least of the 
					tribe accompanied 
					Israel into the Land of Promise (Numbers 10:29-32), and 
					settled in the 
					south of Judah (Judges 1:16), where we find them by-and-by 
					mixed up 
					with the Amalekites (1 Samuel 15:6). Another part of the 
					tribe, however, 
					seems to have wandered far north, where Jael, the wife of 
					Heber the 
					Kenite, slew Sisera on his flight from Barak (Judges 4:17, 
					etc.; 5:24, etc.). 
					Thus they appear to have occupied the extreme south and 
					north of the 
					country, and would even on that ground possess political 
					importance. But 
					
					
					
					
					
					what interests us more is their religious relationship to 
					Israel. From the 
					deed of Jael we infer that they were intensely attached to 
					the national 
					cause. Again, from the circumstance that Jehonadab, the son 
					of Rechab — 
					evidently the chief of the tribe — came from Samaria to meet 
					Jehu, and 
					from the anxiety which the latter displayed as to Jehonadab' 
					s views and 
					intentions, as well as from the manner in which he treated 
					him, we gather 
					that the chieftain was a person of considerable political 
					importance, while 
					the invitation of Jehu: "Come with me, and see my zeal for 
					Jehovah," 
					shows that he and his tribe were identified with the service 
					of Jehovah in 
					the land. All this throws fresh light on the special 
					injunction which from 
					that time onward Jehonadab laid upon his tribe (Jeremiah 
					35:1-16). They 
					were neither to build houses, nor to sow seed, nor to plant 
					or have 
					vineyards; but to dwell in tents, and so both to be and to 
					declare 
					themselves strangers in the land. 
      
					This rule, which the descendants of Rechab observed for 
					centuries, must, 
					from its peculiarity, have had a religious, not a political, 
					12 bearing. It has 
					with great probability been connected with Elijah, 
					13 but 
					the important 
					question has not yet been mooted whether it originated 
					before or after the 
					occupation of Samaria by Jehu. We believe the latter to have 
					been the case, 
					and it seems evidenced even by the circumstance that Jehonadab came 
					from Samaria to meet Jehu. We suppose that the ministry of 
					Elijah had 
					made the deepest impression on Jehonadab and his tribe. The 
					very 
					appearance and bearing of the prophet would appeal to them, 
					and his 
					words seem as those of a second Moses. Earnestly they waited 
					for the 
					results of his mission and of that of Elisha. And when the 
					word of Jehovah 
					to and by Elijah was being fulfilled — Hazael made king of 
					Syria, Jehu king 
					of Israel, and the house of Ahab destroyed, root and 
					branches — they 
					would naturally turn to Jehu, in the hope that a national 
					return to Jehovah 
					would follow. It was a kind of Old Testament John the 
					Baptist's hope of a 
					kingdom of God. Feelings such as these prompted Jehonadab to 
					go and 
					meet Jehu, while the latter, knowing the deep impression 
					which the 
					Rechabite movement in favor of the reformation of Elijah had 
					produced in 
					the land, would be anxious to secure his public support, 
					perhaps even — 
					so strange and mixed are our motives — to gain his 
					approbation. But what 
					Jehonadab saw of Jehu must soon have convinced him that he 
					was not one 
					to carry out an Elijah-movement in its positive and 
					spiritual aspect, 
					
					
					
					
					
					however fitted an instrument he might be to execute Divine 
					punishment. 
					And so Jehonadab left Jehu to perpetuate in his own tribe 
					the testimony 
					of Elijah, by making them Nazarites for ever, thus 
					symbolizing their 
					dedication to God, and by ordering them to be conspicuously 
					strangers in 
					the land, thus setting forth their expectation of the 
					judgments which Elijah 
					had predicted upon apostate Israel. 
      
					We are now prepared to accompany Jehonadab, as after 
					responding to 
					Jehu's anxious challenge about his feelings toward him, he 
					mounted Jehu's 
					chariot to go with him and see his zeal for Jehovah. The 
					first measure of 
					the conqueror was to repeat in Samaria what he had done in 
					Jezreel, and to 
					kill all related to or connected with the family of Ahab. 
					His next was, by a 
					truly Eastern device, to seize and destroy the adherents of 
					the religious 
					rites introduced under the late regime. Although this was in 
					fulfillment of 
					his mission, it will be observed that it also afforded the 
					best means of 
					establishing his own rule, since the national worship of 
					Baal was identified 
					with the house of Ahab. Accordingly we imagine that when 
					Jehu publicly 
					announced that he meant to serve Baal even much more than 
					Ahab, and 
					proclaimed a solemn assembly for Baal, the gathering would 
					be thoroughly 
					representative. First, as we understand it, Jehu summoned 
					all the prophets 
					and priests of Baal, and "all his servants" — either the 
					leading laity 
					generally, or else those in Samaria itself — ostensibly to 
					make preparation 
					for his great sacrifice. Next, similar proclamation was made 
					throughout the 
					country. In both cases the object was to secure the 
					attendance of all 
					professed worshippers of Baal. On the day appointed, the 
					courts of the 
					Temple of Baal were thronged "from one opening to the other 
					[the 
					opposite]." To make the leaders of the new religion the more 
					prominent, 
					Jehu now directed that each of them should be arrayed in 
					festive 
					vestments, 14 and then, to prevent any possible mistake, 
					since some of the 
					servants of Jehovah might have followed Jehu and Jehonadab 
					to the house 
					of Baal, he ordered, on his arrival, to search for and 
					remove any 
					worshippers of the Lord . 
      
					Neither of these measures would excite surprise, but would 
					only be 
					regarded as indications of Jehu's zeal, and his desire that 
					the rites of Baal 
					should not be profaned by the presence of strangers. The 
					attendance of 
					Jehonadab might seem strange; but he was in the train of the 
					king whom he 
					was known to have served, in whose company he had returned 
					to Samaria, 
					
					
					
					
					
					and with whom he had continued while he issued his mandates, 
					and 
					prepared for the feast of Baal. He might therefore be simply 
					an adherent of 
					Jehu, and now prepared to follow his lead. 
      
					The rest may be briefly told. As the sacrifices were offered 
					Jehu 
					surrounded the building with eighty of his trusted guards, 
					who, on the 
					given word of command, entered the building, threw down all 
					they 
					encountered, and penetrated into "the sanctuary 
					15 of the 
					house of Baal," 
					where all who had been marked out to them were slaughtered. 
					Then they 
					brought out the wooden images and burnt them, while the 
					large stone 
					statue of Baal, as well as the Temple itself, were 
					destroyed. And 
					completely to desecrate the site, and mark the contempt 
					attaching to it, 
					Jehu converted it into a place for public convenience. 
      
					"Thus," as Scripture marks, "Jehu destroyed Baal out of 
					Israel." Yet, as 
					the cessation of idolatry after the return from the exile 
					did not issue in true 
					repentance towards God, nor in faith in the Messiah, so did 
					not this 
					destruction of Baal- worship lead up to the service of 
					Jehovah. Rather did 
					king and people stray farther from the Lord their God. Of 
					the succeeding 
					events in Jehu's reign, which lasted no less than 
					twenty-eight years, no 
					account is given in Scripture, except this notice, that "in 
					those days 
					Jehovah began to cut Israel short: and Hazael smote them in 
					all the coasts 
					of Israel; from Jordan eastward, all the land of Gilead, of 
					the Gadites, and 
					the Reubenites, and the Manassites, from Aroer, which is by 
					the river 
					Arnon, even Gilead and Bashan." And the Assyrian monuments 
					throw 
					farther light upon this brief record. They inform us about 
					the wars of 
					Hazael against Assyria, and they represent Jehu as bringing 
					tribute to the 
					king of Assyria. The inference which we derive is that Jehu 
					had entered 
					into a tributary alliance with the more powerful empire of 
					Assyria against 
					Hazael, and that when the latter had made his peace with 
					Assyria, he 
					turned against Jehu, and inflicted on Israel the losses thus 
					briefly noticed in 
					Scripture. Be this as it may, this at least is certain, that 
					with the loss of the 
					whole trans-Jordanic territory, the decline of the northern 
					kingdom had 
					commenced. 
      
					Nor was the state of matters more hopeful in the southern 
					kingdom of 
					Judah. The brief and bloody reign of Athaliah was, indeed, 
					followed by the 
					counter-revolution of Jehoiada, and the elevation of Joash 
					to the throne. 
					
					
					
					
					
					But the reformation then inaugurated was of short duration. 
					After the 
					death of Jehoiada, the worship of Jehovah was once more 
					forsaken for that 
					of 
      
					"groves and idols, and wrath came upon Judah and Jerusalem
					
      for this their trespass" (2 Chronicles 24:18). 
      
					And although the Lord sent them prophets to bring them again 
					unto the 
					Lord, they not only would not give ear, but actually at the 
					commandment 
					of the king, and in the very house of Jehovah, shed the 
					blood of Zechariah, 
					which, according to Jewish legend, could not be wiped out, 
					but continued 
					to bubble on the stones, till the Assyrians entered and laid 
					low the 
					sanctuary thus profaned. And even before that, the army of 
					Hazael, 
					though greatly inferior in numbers, defeated that of Judah, 
					desolated and 
					despoiled the land, and laid siege to Jerusalem. The Syrian 
					army was, 
					indeed, bought off, but the hand of God lay heavy on the 
					king. Stricken 
					down by disease he was murdered in his bed by his own 
					servants, and 
					they the sons of strangers. Thus had inward and outward 
					decline come to 
					Judah also. And darker and yet darker gathered the clouds of 
					judgment 
					over a land and people which had "forsaken Jehovah, the God 
					of their 
					fathers." 
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