1 Kings 12:25-33

1 Kings 12:25-33

[25] Then Jeroboam  built  Shechem  in mount  Ephraim,  and dwelt  therein; and went out  from thence, and built  Penuel.  [26] And Jeroboam  said  in his heart,  Now shall the kingdom  return  to the house  of David:  [27] If this people  go up  to do  sacrifice  in the house  of the LORD  at Jerusalem,  then shall the heart  of this people  turn again  unto their lord,  even unto Rehoboam  king  of Judah,  and they shall kill  me, and go again  to Rehoboam  king  of Judah.  [28] Whereupon the king  took counsel,  and made  two  calves  of gold,  and said  unto them, It is too much  for you to go up  to Jerusalem:  behold thy gods,  O Israel,  which brought thee up  out of the land  of Egypt.  [29] And he set  the one  in Bethel,  and the other  put  he in Dan.  [30] And this thing  became a sin:  for the people  to worship before  the one,  even unto Dan.  [31] And he made  an house  of high places,  and made  priests  of the lowest  of the people,  which were not of the sons  of Levi.  [32] And Jeroboam  ordained  a feast  in the eighth  month,  on the fifteenth  day  of the month,  like unto the feast  that is in Judah,  and he offered  upon the altar.  So did  he in Bethel,  sacrificing  unto the calves  that he had made:  and he placed  in Bethel  the priests  of the high places  which he had made.  [33] So he offered  upon the altar  which he had made  in Bethel  the fifteenth  day  of the eighth  month,  which he had devised  and ordained  a feast  unto the children  of Israel:  and he offered  upon the altar,  and burnt incense. 

What does 1 Kings 12:25-33 Mean?

Contextual Meaning

During its history the Northern Kingdom had three capitals: first Shechem ( 1 Kings 12:25), later Tirzah ( 1 Kings 14:17; 1 Kings 15:33), and finally Samaria ( 1 Kings 16:23-24). Perhaps the king strengthened Penuel in west-central Gilead as a transjordanian provincial center. Like Shechem, Penuel (Peniel) was an important site in patriarchal times ( Genesis 32:30). By strengthening these sites, Jeroboam appears to have been trying to get the residents of his kingdom to view their nation as the continuation of what God had begun in patriarchal days. One writer suggested that Jeroboam may have abandoned Shechem and moved to Penuel because Shechem was a divided city. Levitical priests who would have opposed his religious reforms lived there. [1] Jeroboam"s fears that his subjects would kill him and return to Rehoboam ( 1 Kings 12:27) were due to disbelief in God"s promises that the prophet Ahijah had announced to him ( 1 Kings 11:31; 1 Kings 11:37-38).
Jeroboam seems to have designed his substitute religious system ( 1 Kings 12:28-33) to offer the Israelites convenient "improvements" in the Mosaic system that tied in with certain events in their history. The golden calves, for instance, recall the golden calf in the wilderness. The apis bull was a common religious symbol in Egypt. The golden calf in the wilderness and these calves may have been similar symbols. There is some question among scholars whether the people regarded calves of this type as idols or as pedestals on which the gods stood. [2] One writer made a good case for their being idols (cf. 1 Kings 14:9). [3] They certainly became idols to the Israelites in the North. However it seems more likely that Jeroboam conceived of them as the symbols and supporters of Yahweh. [4] Archaeologists have discovered the remains of a high place at Dan that they date from the time of Jeroboam I. [5]
"With the division of the kingdom, the chief symbol of God"s presence, the ark and the cherubim, was left to Judah. Needing a comparable symbol for his new state, Jeroboam chose the bull, universally admired for its strength and procreative power ( Deuteronomy 33:17; Isaiah 10:13 [6]; Isaiah 34:7; Psalm 68:30; 1 Kings 7:25). It is probable that Jeroboam meant the bull to serve the same function as the ark and cherubim, that Isaiah , as the throne or footstool of the invisibly present God.
"The adoption of the bull as a cult object may have been an effort to adapt the ark and cherubim to the culture of the northern tribes, especially since the bull was an indigenous symbol to the Canaanite element of the population. Archaeological finds in Palestine-Syria of statues depicting a god astride a bull point to a function for the bull similar to that of the ark and cherubim (ANEP [7], nos470-501 , 522-538)." [8]
After making the calves, Jeroboam said exactly the same thing Aaron had said ( 1 Kings 12:28; cf. Exodus 32:4). Jeroboam also followed up the making of the calves with a feast similar to the one at Sinai ( 1 Kings 12:32-33; cf. Exodus 32:5). Furthermore, Jeroboam followed Aaron"s example of setting himself up as covenant mediator, in Moses" absence, and as head of the cult (formal worship). In this he was quite clearly identifying his cult with the Exodus. [9] Jeroboam also assumed the role of the Davidic monarch who was the Lord"s anointed and, as such, both the political and the religious leader of Israel. [10]
How could Jeroboam have hoped to win the support of the Israelites since he revived the practice of worshipping a calf?
"I suggest that the motivation behind Jeroboam"s action may have been an intense animosity toward the Levites. It was the Levites who had taken sword in hand to slay the worshippers of Aaron"s golden calves. Jeroboam now bypassed the Levites by appointing his own priests and, in a supreme irony, manufactured his own golden calves as a symbol of his disdain for the Levitical priesthood. Had not Moses" own grandson, Jonathan, anticipated Jeroboam by serving as the first priest of the competing shrine at Dan 17-18]? Besides according a measure of legitimacy to Daniel , this story revealed that even within Moses" family there was room for diversity in religious practice. How could Jeroboam be faulted for his golden calves when Moses" own grandson had officiated over a cult at Dan which worshipped idols having no connection at all with the exodus?" [11]
This may also explain Jeroboam"s choice of Dan as one of his cultic centers. But why did he select Bethel? Jacob had met God at Bethel twice ( Genesis 28:10-22; Genesis 35:1-7). Perhaps Jeroboam promoted it as the birthplace of Israel"s faith. Geographically, Bethel stood on the main highway that led into Judah just north of the border. It was a convenient gathering place for Israelites who lived in the southern and central parts of the Northern Kingdom. Since they would have had to pass through Bethel if they wanted to go south to worship in Jerusalem, Jeroboam"s priests could have discouraged them from doing so there.
The feast Jeroboam set up ( 1 Kings 12:32) took place one month later than the Day of Atonement when the Levitical priests offered sacrifice to atone for the sins of the nation for the past year ( Leviticus 16). Thus it seems that Jeroboam had no regard for the will of God as expressed in the commands of the Mosaic Covenant. He viewed himself as a king like all the other kings of the ancient Near East. To establish himself and the Northern Kingdom as independent from Judah, he combined commonly accepted religious concepts that the surrounding pagan nations held with elements from Israel"s history. [12]
". . . Jeroboam"s sins are so far-reaching and repulsive that the author uses him as the example of how to define a morally deficient king (cf. 1 Kings 16:7; 1 Kings 16:9 [8], 26)." [14]