As for you, get up and go home. When your feet enter the city, the child will die. Sermons
I. HEAVY TIDINGS RESPECTING ABIJAH. 1. As to the issue of his illness. (1) "The child shall die." This is a direct answer to the question with which the royal messenger was charged (ver. 3). Here was the withering of a limb of Jeroboam's family answering to the sign of the withering of his arm (see 1 Kings 13:4). (2) The king does not now ask for the restoration of the child as he had done for the restoration of his arm (1 Kings 13:6). He did not even ask, in time, that the judgment might be averted. How could he, without repenting of his sin? Note: The descents of depravity, like those of natural gravitation, are in accelerating degrees. (3) This judgment is the signal that the season of retributions has now fairly set in. What a horror to wake up to such a conviction! "Be sure your sin will find you out." 2. As to the near approach of his death. (1) "When thy feet enter into the city." Every step of the queen's advance over that twelve miles from Shiloh to Tirzah measured a stride of death towards his victim. Do we sufficiently realize the fact that this is the case with us in passing through the journey of life? (2) What must have been the conflict in the heart of the queen? Maternal affection would urge her steps with speed that she might see her son alive. Yet was it a race with death; and death was first at the palace. That monster overtakes the swiftest. If he passes one it is to strike another, and so that the recoil of his sting may wound the trembling heart. 3. As to the circumstances attending. "All Israel shall mourn for him and bury him;" but for him only of the royal family, "because in him there is found some good thing towards the Lord God of Israel." Hence learns (1) God's punishments are discriminative. He does not overlook the good in the evil. (2) Yet the good suffer with the evil. Abijah dies for the sin of his father. Christ dies for the sin of the world. But in His death is life to the believer. (3) Still the good suffer for their good. They are taken away from evil to come. Had Abijah lived he might have been drawn into his father's sin. God often takes them soonest whom He loves best. (4) The evil suffer in the good, Jeroboam had reason to mourn the loss of the best of his family. So had Israel, since the succession would now open to a wicked prince. Note: We should pray for the preservation of virtuous and useful lives. Especially so when such are found in seats of power and influence. II. HEAVY TIDINGS RESPECTING HIS SURVIVORS. 1. They are devoted to extermination. (1) This as a general fact was already known. (2) It is now published with additional circumstance. The agent that shall effect it is one who shall himself mount the throne of Israel. (3) This was fulfilled to the letter (see 1 Kings 15:27-30). 2. Judgment will come speedily. (1) Some think this exclamation of the prophet, "But what? Even now" arose from his having seen that this would be the case. (2) So it proved. Within two years Jeroboam died. He was succeeded by Nadab, who two years later was slain by Baasha. In that time also, and by the same hand, the predicted extermination was completed. (3) "The wicked do not live out half their days." This is true of dynasties as of individuals. The dynasty of Jeroboam lasted only four and twenty years. - J.A.M.
At that time Abijah the son of Jeroboam fell sick. One beautiful flower in a desert; one lovely rose amongst thorns; one fruitful branch on a corrupt tree. We are going to speak of a boy who was like that flower, rose, or branch.I. This boy's father was very wicked. God had been kind to this man. Instead of remembering God's kindness and obeying Him, he tried to put away all thoughts of God from his mind, and disobeyed Him. He caused two calves of gold to be made. One he placed in Dan and the other in Bethel These he worshipped himself. Sin is like descending a hill, a river in its course, a tree in its progress. This was seen in his life. Some of the kings who preceded him were wicked, but he was the worst. II. THIS BOY'S MOTHER WAS A DECEIVER. III. ALTHOUGH THIS BOY HAD A WICKED FATHER AND A DECEIVING MOTHER, HE WAS GOOD. We are told that in him there was found some good thing toward the Lord God of Israel. 1. This good thing was religion. It is called good for four reasons: (1) (2) (3) (4) 2. Religion was in this boy: (1) (2) (3) (1) (2) (3) 3. How could he be so unlike his father and mother? (1) (2) (3) IV. THIS BOY DIED. (A. McAuslane, D. D.) People Abijah, Abijam, Ahijah, David, Israelites, Jeroboam, Naamah, Nadab, Rehoboam, Shishak, Sodomites, Solomon, TirzahPlaces Bethel, Egypt, Euphrates River, Jerusalem, Shiloh, TirzahTopics Arise, Boy, Child, Death, Depart, Die, Died, Enter, Foot, Hour, Lad, Rise, TownOutline 1. Abijah being sick, 2. Jeroboam sends his wife, disguised, with presents to the prophet Ahijah 5. Ahijah forewarned by God, denounces God's judgment 17. Abijah dies, and is buried 19. Nadab succeeds Jeroboam 21. Rehoboam's wicked reign, 25. Shishak raids Jerusalem 29. Abijam succeeds Rehoboam Dictionary of Bible Themes 1 Kings 14:6-16Library Synopsis. --The Gradual Narrowing of the Miraculous Element in the Bible by Recent Discovery and Discussion. --The Alarm Thereby Excited in the Church. --The Fallacy WhichIt is barely forty years since that beloved and fearless Christian scholar, Dean Stanley, spoke thus of the miracles recorded of the prophet Elisha: "His works stand alone in the Bible in their likeness to the acts of mediaeval saints. There alone in the Sacred History the gulf between Biblical and Ecclesiastical miracles almost disappears."[5] It required some courage to say as much as this then, while the storm of persecution was raging against Bishop Colenso for his critical work on the Pentateuch. … James Morris Whiton—Miracles and Supernatural Religion Jeroboam Whether Contention is a Mortal Sin? Whether Divination by Drawing Lots is Unlawful? The Whole Heart Sovereignty and Human Responsibility The Prophet Joel. Kings Links 1 Kings 14:12 NIV1 Kings 14:12 NLT 1 Kings 14:12 ESV 1 Kings 14:12 NASB 1 Kings 14:12 KJV 1 Kings 14:12 Bible Apps 1 Kings 14:12 Parallel 1 Kings 14:12 Biblia Paralela 1 Kings 14:12 Chinese Bible 1 Kings 14:12 French Bible 1 Kings 14:12 German Bible 1 Kings 14:12 Commentaries Bible Hub |