BibleProject - City of God or City of Cain? – The City E8
Episode Date: June 12, 2023When we first read about Jerusalem in the Bible, it appears to be a golden city—founded by David, a center of victory, prosperity, and unity. But it doesn’t take long for the cracks to begin to sh...ow, and Jerusalem becomes a home for idolatry and oppression. What happened to the city David founded to cause the prophet Micah to accuse it of being a city founded on human bloodshed? In this episode, Tim and Jon talk about how even the so-called city of God can resemble the city of Cain.View more resources on our website →Timestamps Part one (00:00-9:29)Part two (9:29-21:26)Part three (21:26-40:08)Part four (40:08-53:21)Part five (53:21-1:03:12)Referenced ResourcesInterested in more? Check out Tim’s library here.You can experience our entire library of resources in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Show Music “Defender (Instrumental)” by TENTS“Ah” by a contributor“Wonderful” by Beautiful Eulogy“New Babylon” by McKinley WilsonOriginal sound design by Dan GummelShow produced by Cooper Peltz with Associate Producer Lindsey Ponder, Lead Editor Dan Gummel, and Editors Tyler Bailey and Frank Garza. Mixed by Tyler Bailey. Podcast annotations for the BibleProject app by Hannah Woo.Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
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Hey, this is Cooper at Bible Project.
I produce the podcast in Classroom.
We've been exploring a theme called the City,
and it's a pretty big theme.
So we decided to do two separate Q and R episodes about it.
We're currently taking questions for the second Q and R
and we'd love to hear from you.
Just record your question by July 21st
and send it to us at infoatbiboproject.com.
Let us know your name and where you're from,
try to keep your question to about 20 seconds
and please transcribe your question when you email it in, try to keep your question to about 20 seconds,
and please transcribe your question when you email it in.
That's a huge help to our team.
We're excited to hear from you.
Here's the episode.
We are walking through the biblical theme of the city.
In our last episode, we talked about the golden age of Jerusalem.
The time under King David,
where Jerusalem was marked by unity and peace with its neighboring nations.
However, this Golden Age doesn't last long.
The unity of Israel lasts Solomon's lifetime as well, but the cracks in that unity start to show,
so that Solomon dies, his son is not able to hold the tribes together, and they split apart.
The tribe of Israel splits into two camps, the Northern Kingdom, later to become Samaria,
and the Southern Kingdom known as Judah, where the capital Jerusalem remains.
And as you read through the kings' scroll, Jerusalem and Samaria are like the twin monster.
It's like a dragon that sprouts two heads, but then the two heads
are constantly fighting and trying to annihilate the other one, but they're both manifestations
of one terrible monster.
Today, we'll look at how the Prophet Micah claims that Jerusalem was built on human blood,
a pretty bleak assessment. Yet, the story doesn't end for Jerusalem here.
At the center of the Micah's growth is the poem in what we call chapter 4.
It's about how, in the last days, the mountain of the house of Yahweh
will be set up as the head of all mountains, and all nations will stream to it.
And the nations will say, hey, let's all go up to the mountain of Yahweh.
But it's envisioning a day when this human city, Jerusalem,
will become the vehicle of God's instruction and justice.
Today, Tim McEnie,
look at how the city of Jerusalem
intended to be the city of God became like the city of Cain.
I'm John Collins, and you're listening
to Bobo Project Podcast.
Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
[♪ INTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Hey Tim.
Hey John.
Hi.
Hi.
All right, we're talking about the city.
Yes we are.
We're talking about the city of God.
Heavenly city.
Yes.
That God is building.
Heavenly city, the God.
Mmm.
Yeah, has founded from all eternity.
Well, okay, there's some new information.
Of which human cities can potentially become a reflection.
Yeah.
But that's not how we started the story of this conversation.
The big insight from last time we were talking about city as a theme was going back and bringing our attention back to the fact that when Cain built his city
Which is the first city in the story of the Bible first city in the story of the Bible
There's a hyperlink there of Cain building the eard which is Hebrew for city
Through that kind of like good pronunciation. Yeah, I heard it and
God building the Azer. God building the Azer happens in Genesis chapter 2. And that's God taking Adam,
pulling him apart into two and creating woman. Yeah, who Adam calls the who God says what he's going to do when he does that is provide the delivering ally.
Yes, an Azer.
Without whom humanity cannot accomplish the task that God has given it.
And so God building the woman, building the Azer, it's a weird phrase in Hebrew, and you're
supposed to just pay attention to it because then Cain builds the ear, and Azer and ear, and Hebrew, like look
almost identical. And so you're supposed to be paying attention to this hyperlink of
like, okay, God built something for man to like create life and to flourish, and it's
the mother of all of life of humanity. And then Cain builds what in the biblical imagination cities are the mother, a mother of sorts
of protection, a womb for civilization, the flourish. And in biblical poetry, in the prophets and
the Psalms, cities are often called or described metaphorically as women.
Ladies, Zion, lady, Jerusalem, the daughters of Jerusalem, lady, Babylon, and so on.
And so if the story of Genesis 2 and 3 is about Adam and Eve choosing how are they going
to flourish and multiply us to the earth, be the image of God in the garden, and the
temptation or the test is the tree,
the known good and bad,
that represents doing it on their own terms,
building that rain on their own terms.
They take that and things go south.
Yeah.
And so in the same way,
when you get the story of Cain,
and he's, God says,
I'm gonna protect you,
even though you've blown it, you've murdered your brother, I'm going to protect you, even though you've blown it, you've murdered
your brother.
I'm going to protect you.
I'm giving you the sign of protection.
And the king goes out and he then takes his wife, builds a city.
And you're supposed to put this on analogy of Adam and Eve taking of the tree. And so we
started talking about how the city is an extension of the tree of knowing good and bad.
Or the choice that the humans were faced with at the tree in the garden is
that on analogy to the choice that Cain is faced with as he builds a city.
And so it makes you maybe do some imaginative meditation of,
what would it look like for Cain to say, God,
can you build the city?
Yeah, that's right.
Can I have your wisdom and build your city with you?
Right.
I get it now.
I don't want the sin, the croucher to be ruling me anymore.
Let's build that city.
That's right.
What would have happened?
What would have happened?
We know from a later repetition of this city theme in the Torah is the provision of the
cities of refuge, which are for those who like Cain have murdered someone, but they haven't
had their trial yet.
They can go there and their life can be protected.
And that's what God wanted to provide for Cane.
So cities can become a place of preservation of life.
Cities can be, even though they're introduced in the Bible as a big problem, they can be
a preservation of life.
And so in this imaginative world of can we build the city of God with God?
The place you think of is Jerusalem. Is that what King David did?
Right, right. And that's what we looked at in our last conversation, was in the story of David
taking Jerusalem over, establishing it as the capital, bringing the ark of the covenant in there in the tabernacle.
That whole story has in the subtext of it, all of these flags of going, this is going to be a problem.
Look at this is a problem.
Yeah. The story of David bringing the ark to Jerusalem, the celebration, the sudden death of one of the priests, is all
packed with hyperlinks and analogies in the language of the failure of Adam and Eve in
the garden.
He builds it, he names it after himself, they don't follow the instructions of God and
how to transport the ark.
The whole thing is just kind of just riddled with problems. And then where does this all go in the scroll?
It's leading towards the city of Jerusalem becoming a place of idolatry and kings who rule with violence and
Yeah, and that's what we're gonna focus on in this conversation. Okay. Yeah, cool. We also talked about was how
that founding event of bringing the ark to Jerusalem depicted
it as problematic, yes, but as a potential garden of Eden on earth. I mean, heaven on earth,
type of place. And we saw how in the Psalms that were later sung in Jerusalem by the priestly choirs, they seem to imagine the earthly city of Jerusalem
as an analogy to a symbol of or a pointer to a heavenly city of God. That is the source of all
humanity, or a source of all the new humanity in Psalms 46 and 87. But those transcendent dreams eventually all came to nothing
in that earthly Jerusalem.
And that's what we're gonna look at right now.
Okay. I'm going to go to the next one. So I thought we could use the anchor for this step of the conversation, the poetry of
a prophet we've never read together, maybe one verse from the prophet Micah.
I think we talked about Micah 6.8 in the Justice video.
He has shown you what is good and what the Lord requires of you to do, Justice,
live mercy.
Well, come play it with your God.
So, that's Micah chapter 6.
So Micah, he is one of the Israelite prophets.
He lived in the southern kingdom after there was a near civil war and split.
So real quick overview.
So there's David.
Yeah.
He's the king of all the tribes.
Unites everyone.
Unites everybody.
And that unity of the tribes lasts for exactly his lifetime in rule.
So his son Solomon, he actually had many sons, we'll talk about that.
His son Solomon is appointed as king.
And actually, excuse me, the unity of Israel lasts Solomon's lifetime as well.
But the cracks in that unity start to show
so that when Solomon dies, his son is not able to hold the tribes together
and they split apart.
And so the tribes of Israel split into two main camps.
There's the tribes that go with the North,
called the Northern Tribes.
They're often called Joseph,
sometimes Ephraim, or sometimes just Israel. And most of the tribes are up there. And then
in the south, and we're talking the north of Jerusalem.
North of Jerusalem. Jerusalem is almost right at the boundary between the two. A little
bit north of Jerusalem, but close. And then Judah is in the south, but the tribe of Benjamin is enclosed within Judah's
territory in the south.
So you have Judah and Benjamin in the south.
So Micah, the prophet, lived about 200-ish years after the split of the two kingdoms.
And during those times Jerusalem became the prominent capital city of Judah in the South,
but the northern tribes also had a monarchy arise that wanted to build their own rival capital
city called Samaria.
And as you read through the kings scroll, Jerusalem and Samaria are like the twin
monster. But they're, oh, what's a good example? It's like a dragon that sprouts two heads,
but then the two heads are constantly fighting and trying to annihilate the other one to become
the lone head, something like that. But they're both manifestations of one terrible monster.
That's Judah and Samaria.
Or Jerusalem and so on.
It's your head of dragon.
So Micah's prophecy is open with this little heading here. The word of Yahweh that came to Micah of
Mordership during the reigns of, and it names a bunch of kings of the southern kingdom Chudah. The Iranians of Yotham, Ahaz and Khizkiah.
Jatham, Ahaz and Hezekiah.
She used English raising.
This is the vision he saw concerning two cities.
Samaria and Jerusalem.
So just right there, the opening, these are all focusing on two cities, Israelite cities,
the two dragon heads of the really screwed up family, the family of Israel, at least they're
screwed up in Micah's point of view.
So he begins, listen, you peoples, all of you, listen, O land, and all who live on it.
Sovereign Yahweh is going to bear witness against you. Yahweh from his holy temple.
Which is in Jerusalem? Yahweh is coming down from his dwelling place. He comes down and treads upon the high places of the land.
So this is the divine temple. This is the heavenly city.
Heaven, okay. I mean it doesn't say city here. Yeah. But if you always temple, so here it's where
this image of the heavenly temple of which Jerusalem was supposed
to be an earthly match like the Tabernacle was.
But as we're going to see here, Yahweh has some things to say about how his earthly temple
is disconnected from the heavenly temple now.
So what follows is a poem that basically is a reversal of Genesis 1.
The mountains melt, valleys split apart, like wax before fire, like water rushing down
a slope.
So the cosmos is going to collapse.
Why?
Because of Jacob's transgression, the sins of the people of Israel.
What is Jacob's transgression?
Isn't it Samaria?
What is Judah's high place?
That's a technical term in the prophets, the high places.
Referring to the places where idolatry happens.
Yeah, yeah.
So typically, it would be on some hill
that you'd set up a shrine pole and an altar and offer sacrifices
to some illegitimate god, at least illegitimate in the eyes of the prophets.
So what is Judas Highplace?
It's the Judas whole region.
It's Jerusalem.
Yeah.
I've had the point of this trash talk right now.
Trash in Jerusalem.
It's a place where idolteries happen to me.
That's right.
High places is normally where you refer
to these kind of low grade mini shrines
to Baal or Akshara, but Jerusalem is being described
as one of these high place shrines.
Therefore, I will make Samaria a heap of rubble, a place for planting vineyards, which
here is negative, because it means all the buildings would be removed and it'll just
become a...
Fields again.
Fields again, yeah.
But also surprisingly optimistic.
But yeah, you know, it can be...
Life can come back.
Reclaimed, yeah, totally.
Yeah. It can be... Life can come back. Reclamed. Yeah, totally. All poor her stones into the valley,
meaning if it's on a hill,
it's like all the stones that toppled and fall down.
All they bear her foundations and the idols
will be broken to pieces.
You get the idea.
Yeah.
Okay.
So why is this the case?
Well, chapter two.
Whoa to those who plan iniquity,
to those who plot evil on their beds.
At morning's light they carry it out
because it is in their power to do it.
They covet fields and seize them.
And houses, they take them.
They defraud people of their homes,
robbing them of their inheritance.
Who was in the prophet's mind here? Is this a king or a general or is this just like,
squirrely dude who's just like just running a muck out in his community?
Yeah, he says later who's on his mind? Okay. In chapter six, he picks it up. Chapter six, verse
nine, and listen, Yahweh is calling to the city and to fear your name is wisdom. When
Yahweh comes to your city with a message, it's a tension. This pit wisdom. Yeah. Should
I forget your selfishly gotten treasures, you wicked house.
Shall I declare you innocent of dishonest scales or bags of false weights using imagery
of the marketplace here?
Yeah, so they're being corrupt in their commerce dealings.
Yep, you're wealthy, people are violent.
Those who inhabit you are liars, tongue speaking, deceit, he goes
down for 16, you all have kept the statutes of omri and you have done the
practices of the house of Ahab. House of Ahab. Yeah, how is he new Ahab?
How do I know Ahab? Yeah, he's a king of one of the kings of the northern
tribes that features big time. In fact, he's a king of one of the kings of the northern tribes that features big time.
In fact, he's the king of the northern tribes that gets the most air time in the stories of
the Book of Kings.
Okay.
Famously, he was the rival or the opponent of the famous prophet Elijah.
Okay.
And Elijah.
Now, Ahab's been dead for over a century by Micah's time.
So in other words, what he sees is that Jerusalem and Samaria have become all the things he's describing
because they are living out the practices of Ahab.
They're carrying on the legacy of Ahab.
So, the point here in Micah is that clearly the cities of Jerusalem and Samaria have become
the opposite of the Garden of Eden.
So basically, all, I mean, you can't get this sense, all the people in the city are participating
in this.
It's not just a king or a general.
It's like this has become the nature of the culture of the city.
It's dishonesty,
and plotting violence. Yeah, in fact, here's a summary from chapter three. Here this, you leaders of
Jacob, you rulers of Israel who despise justice and distort what is right, you build Zion with bloodshed
and Jerusalem with wickedness. And he goes on, he talks about the leaders,
the priests, the prophets. It's just a den of scum and villainy.
He just giggled when he said scum and villainy.
That's in the first Star Wars movie, that's what Obi-Wan Kenobi calls most eyesly, which
is a city.
Okay, you did a Star Wars reference. City on Tatooine.
Yeah, a wretched hive of scum and villainy.
Nice work.
We must be cautious.
So yeah, that's a building, a city of blood.
He says Jerusalem is a city built on blood.
And it's an away hyperlink to able like, yeah mm-hmm, yeah, for sure, cane city.
It's cane city.
So what's he talking about?
So he's using these descriptions,
but like, what are these descriptions correspond to?
Yeah.
So what I want to do real quick is touch down
on a narrative about Solomon,
to get underneath, how was Zion built with bloodshed?
What does that mean? And what does
that mean that Samaria has followed the ways of Ahab? And what these little references are
is their hyperlinks back to moments in the story of kings that I want to go just kind of
survey two points and we'll watch how the city of
Jerusalem and the city of Samaria are both depicted as potential Eden cities on
earth that went awry and they fit into this larger portrait of the potential of
the city. So that's Micah. Let's go to the story of Solomon the beginning of the King's scroll,
which, man, we just have not really talked much about kings.
I have a lot of meditating I need to do on kings, but the story begins with King David
as old and about to die.
And what we're told is that he just can't keep warm.
And they put lots of layers of blankets on him and he can't keep warm.
I've been there.
I've been there. I've been there.
You've been there recently?
Yeah. Well, I was like, I felt like I was about to get a fever the other night.
Oh, yeah, that's right. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah.
You know, it's that feeling of just shivering and you just you pile on blankets.
Yeah.
It's just can't see them.
But then you end up getting too hot.
Yep.
Yeah, you can't keep warm.
There's so much going on here that we're not gonna have time to talk about.
But his courtiers get this idea of, let's find a young unmarried woman who can just lay
next to him and his bed to keep him warm.
Now, what's interesting, the word warm is spelled with the same letters as the name of one
of Noah's sons, Ham. And remember that weird story of what
Ham does with his father or his father's wife in the season.
Niggas of a father.
Yep. Totally. And it's Ham trying to make a power move to usurp his father. So this whole
story is going to be about which son of David is going to inherit the position of power from his father.
And the first sentence is, he could not ham.
So it's a Hebrew wordplay, hyperlinking back, which is a story of no and ham, and calling
up the design powder of the firstborn.
Anyway, it's a really clever technique. And illusions to the story of Cain and Abel and to Ham and his brothers are all over
these chapters.
So what's going to happen is that one of David's sons, who is the guy named Audonajja,
says, you know what?
I'm going to be King.
And he's the firstborn from among.
He was the first son born from among all the wives of
days. He's got a good reason to think that's right. That's right. So what's interesting is that
that son's going to set himself up and have a big coronation ceremony in Jerusalem. But Nathan,
who was a key prophetic counselor of David, and Bashiba, who was the infamous wife that David saw and took and had sex with and then
murdered her husband, the son he had with Bashiba is named Solomon. And so Nathan and Bashiba
come up with this plan, basically, to try and beat Audon Ija to the throne
So they come up with this plan where they go and they say to David
Do you remember that oath you took that Bathsheba?
You know that her son would be the king after you
So you should act on that oath now like today. This is a real thing so so fast name
There's no record of David ever making that promise. Okay. They just come in and say that he made that
promise. Yeah. And they convinced David that he made that promise. And so he says, like,
oh, yes, I did make that promise. I should fulfill it today. So the whole thing is like,
what? Is this court intrigue? All right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah? He's elder abuse. So anyway, the convince.
This is kind of like also Jacob deceiving his father.
This whole thing.
Totally.
That's exactly right.
And there are lots of hyperlinks to Jacob and Esa here too.
Yeah, because you have a mother.
A mother and a son.
And a son, she's trying to get.
Inspiring together to take over.
Exactly.
So basically the point is they succeed and Solomon gets installed as king. And Adonija,
and everybody aligned with him, is all of a sudden afraid for their lives. So this is how chapter
2 begins. Solomon gets made king. Chapter 2. When the time junior for David to die, he gave a charge to Solomon, his son.
I am about to go the way of all the earth.
He said, so be strong, be a man.
Keep what Yahweh, your God, requires.
Walk in obedience to him.
Keep his decrees and commands.
His Torah, his regulations, like it's written in the Torah
of Moses.
Do this and you will prosper in everything you do.
Everywhere you go, Yahweh will keep his promise to me.
So, if you're faithful, Yahweh will keep his promise to me, which is if you're seed,
your descendants are careful how they live if they're faithful with all their heart
and all their nefesh, all their soul. This is Moses' language. You will never fail to have
the successor on the throne of its realm. Okay? So first let's say this is good stuff.
It feels like, oh these are good. Is it the kind of advice you're hoping David would give?
That's right.
Yeah.
It's a Torah follow God's instruction.
Yeah, and if that's true,
it's all of the laws of the Torah and the wisdom they offer.
And a lot of it's counterintuitive, remember,
especially about the kings.
Yeah.
Like, don't accumulate lots of gold.
Yeah.
And silver, don't marry many wives,
don't import Egyptian stallions into
your chariot, forces, stuff like that.
All of a sudden, it's about to do.
Yeah, don't.
But on David's part, you're like, oh, he's kind of acting like a Moses here.
Like be faithful to the covenant.
Like don't trust all the people to do that. But if you do it, you can kind of hurt them in the right direction.
Oh yeah, one more thing. So you know what my uncle, Joab, son of Zerua, did to me.
Remember what he did to the commanders of two of Israel's armies, Avanera and Amasa.
Yeah, he killed them.
He murdered them.
He shed their blood in a time of peace,
as if it was a time of war.
And with that blood, he stained the belt around his waist
and the sandals on his feet.
Did you skip a part of the story
what didn't someone plant this in David's mind
to get revenge?
Or is this his idea?
This is his idea. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So he's got a grudge against his relative Joab. Yeah. And right we sell
like Joab conspired to carry out the murders of two not family members of David, but people that David cared about. Yeah. And he describes Joab in the language of Cain.
Yeah. In murder, he spilled their blood,
deal with him according to your wisdom.
As long as your wisdom says, don't let his gray hair go down to the grave in peace.
Yeah.
So do what you think is good as long as it involves assassinating him.
Hahaha.
Um, remember there's this guy, Shimei, the son of Gerr-a, the Benjaminite from Bacheloreme,
you know, the guy who called down curses on me that day that I had to leave Jerusalem
and flee for my life.
Mm-hmm. I remember that. curses on me that day that I had to leave Jerusalem and flee for my life.
Remember that?
Yeah, he came down and met me at the Jordan and I swore to him,
I am not going to kill you with my sword.
You know, but now you shouldn't treat him like an innocent man.
You're a man of wisdom.
You know what to do.
Bring his gray hair down to the grave and blood.
Yeah, David's got a hit list here.
Totally.
Yeah, then David rested with his ancestors and was buried in the city of David.
It's ruthless, man.
Yes, this is like David turning into a mob boss.
Yeah, totally.
Like, saying, yeah, that's right. Yeah.
I gotta hit less, take down some of my enemies.
I've been holding some grudges.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
Yeah, in this language, you have wisdom, do what's good to you, but.
Yeah.
You know what you need to do.
Yeah.
I have so fascinating, so fascinating.
It's a very mobile language where it's like,
if you had to testify or something,
but I just told him to do it was wise in his own eyes
So I have it only that was kill my enemies
So these two aren't the only people who die in the following chapters the next story is about that older brother who tried to make himself king
He comes back and he tries, you know, this is like Jacob and Levin
Schemers trying to deceive other schemers, you know, so his older brother comes back and he tries, you know, this is like Jacob and Laban. Schemers trying to deceive other schemers, you know.
So his older brother comes back and he makes a move asking if he can marry that woman they
got to keep their dad warm when he couldn't keep warm.
And Solomon interprets this as a sly move to try and regain the kingship, which is another set of hyperlinks to ham and Noah and so on.
But essentially what he does is have Adonajah does not pave with his life for this request.
Right.
So he puts a...
Which does seem a little extreme, but what you realize is like he's protecting his...
Yeah.
He thinks that his brother is trying to scheme his way back to the throne.
Yeah.
That's right.
So he has his older brother assassinated.
And where in the law of Moses was all the assassination commands?
Totally.
That's right.
So then he goes after his relative Joe Ab.
And so here's what's interesting.
King Solomon was told that Joe Ab fled to the tabernacle.
And he was sitting beside the altar.
This moment to me feels so cinematic.
Oh yeah, totally. He's like, you can't kill me here.
I'm here. I'm grasping onto the altar.
Yeah, it's like when kids are playing tag
and they establish a base.
And actually, the reason why that significant is
because that's a legit place to go
To do that. Oh, it is home base. It is home base. Yes. There's a lot on the Torah about like
Not killing someone in the courtyard. Okay. So he goes to home base and King Solomon
Order is one of his hitmen, Beniah, saying, go strike him down.
And so right there in the courtyard of the temple, Joab's murdered, right there, cold blood.
Now you could say, but Joab murdered in cold blood.
Well, exact, this is Lemek, after Cain.
Right? My ancestor can kill. Well, it's just the spiral, the point is the spiral. So then what the King does to
Shimey, the guy who cursed David, he's shows mercy. He says, you know, here's the thing, how about this?
Build yourself a house in Jerusalem and live there. But if you ever leave the city, I'm going to kill you. So who's Jimmy? So Jimmy is the second guy that is David said to assassinate.
I see.
And he doesn't.
And he doesn't.
He puts them on house arrest.
House arrest.
Yeah.
He says, if you ever leave the boundary of the city of Jerusalem, your blood will be on
your own head.
And so three years later, what he's told this guy, Shime had two slaves who ran away.
And Shime was told, your slaves are in this city.
And so he saddled his donkey and you went to go get them.
And when Solomon heard about this, then he had them assassinated.
Yeah.
And then look at this, after all the assassinations,
Second Kings, chapter two, verse 46,
now the kingdom was established in Solomon's hands.
Yeah, he consolidated power.
So you're saying, my guys are reflecting on these stories.
Yeah, and stories like them.
Bloody assassinations.
Yeah, yeah.
Because what's interesting is what stands out
is the story of Kaneain Cain murders able and
God says I'm gonna protect you
Mm-hmm, and so you get these stories of
David has been wrong by people just like able to be wrong and
the wisdom he
Insolven kind of scheme up isn't, how can we be generous towards our enemies
and create places of refuge?
How can we turn this upside down?
Instead, they're like, let's kill him.
Yeah, let's kill our enemies.
And I think the way the narrative play out,
his brother makes an attempt for a power move in his court. Yeah.
And his immediate responses, he'll pay with his life.
Yeah.
Just like done.
Joab runs to the dwelling place of Yahweh.
Yeah.
You know, which is a, he's appealing.
Yeah.
To the law.
Yes, and to for mercy.
And he's killed in the courtyard.
And this guy, Shimmy, is apparently dealt with
mercifully, but the moment he violates the house arrest, he's killed. And this is a part
of the complex portrait of Solomon. And so here, the first scholar who really opened my
eyes to this was a scholar, J. Daniel Hayes, in an article that's really wonderfully titled,
called, has the narrator come to praise Solomon or to bury him?
Narrative subtlety in First Kings, chapters 11-11.
Yeah, because what's so interesting is when Solomon, we get to the classic in chapters 3 where
God is like, hey, I'm going to give you anything you want. The story leading up to that,
I have mail to really figure it out
because it feels like Solomon's doing idolatry
right beforehand.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, totally.
That's right.
That's kind of a, well, what you're first told
is that he married the daughter of Pharaoh King of Egypt.
What are you not supposed to do?
In an alliance.
Yeah.
And then...
And then he sees that people are sacrificing on the high places.
And you just said, that's the, that's bad.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
And so he goes, okay, well, then I'll just go and I'll like make that more official,
right?
Yeah, essentially, he said, but Solomon loved Yahweh and walked according to the
instructions given him by his father, David.
Okay.
Exactly.
Exactly. He was still offering sacrifices on the high places.
Yeah.
That's a pretty big thing.
Yeah, I agree.
Because there's the tabernacle in the courtyard.
Yeah.
So Solomon, and in this and many other ways, he's going to build the temple, but then you
find out he builds it with forced labor slaves, which the king was not.
First order, then he goes to offer a sacrifice
on one of those important high places.
And he offers 1,000.
And then, then, then you know,
then you know, yeah, totally.
And so it's just like, wait,
he's offering 1,000 sacrifices.
On the wrong altar.
The wrong altar, a place where got,
like in the law of Moses is like,
go just take these down.
Just burn them to the ground.
Yeah, I know.
And Solomon's like, yeah,
I'm a man, I'm gonna turn it into this like,
you know, pseudo Yahweh place.
Yeah.
And that's where God meets them and says,
you know, I'm gonna give you anything you want.
Just so weird to me.
Mm-hmm. Yeah, it seems like the portrait of Yahweh
is that of extremely patient generous,
meeting people in their folly and error.
But that's not the story of Solomon.
I was told, the story of Solomon was like,
Solomon was doing everything right.
And so God came and said, because of that,
I'm going to give you whatever you want.
That's right.
So this is the essay article by J. Daniel Hayes,
published in the journal for the study of Old Testament many years ago.
But he works through from all three chapters one to 11,
and he just shows like what we just did.
He just closely carefully starts reading these details and every step of the way
there are aspects that can be viewed positively and aspects that can be viewed negatively.
His point is that it's through irony, hyperlinks, narrative illusions that Solomon is depicted as a mixed bag type of figure.
Yeah. Because by the time you get to first kings, you'll have to- The best of kings is the worst
of kings. He seems like he's gone from the best of the worst. And by chapter 11, he marries many
foreign women besides Pharaoh's daughters and, you know, worships other gods. And so on the surface, you go chapter 1 through 10, he's good.
Chapter 11, he goes bad.
And Jesus' argument is read more closely.
And he's good and bad, like all the way through.
That's the basic point.
So it seems to me that when Micah talks about Jerusalem
as being a city founded on bloodshed, that he has stories
like this on the brain. So that's Jerusalem. But remember by Micah's day, Israel is split in become
a double dragon. With one head in Jerusalem, the other head in Samaria. Samaria was founded by a
god named Omri. And basically what's happening up in the northern kingdom as you
read through the book of kings is it's just powered military coup after military
coup and these military commanders win a battle, get some favor, build a private
army and then proclaim themselves king, and they
just keep taking each other out. So, one family lasted for many generations, and that's the family of Omri.
And Omri built Samaria as the capital city, and Ahab was his, I forget if you son or
grandson, who becomes king for quite some time.
Ahab is married to the famous Jezebel, who was a princess from Tyre up in the North.
Remember Micah said that Samaria is a place where leaders covet, they desire,
gardens and fields, and then take them for themselves, and they follow the ways of
Omri and Ahab. So let's ponder another story. First Kings chapter 21.
Now, it happened after these things,
that's everything came before, obviously.
Sometime later, there was an incident involving a vineyard
belonging to a guy named Na'vote.
He was from Jezreel.
You see, this vineyard was in Jezreel,
but it was right close within
Isite of the palace of Ahab. Is Jezreel in Israelite city?
Mm-hmm, yeah. And it's near Samaria within Isite. So the king from Israel,
a palace can look and he sees this beautiful vineyard. Nice garden. Now Ahab said to Navath, give me your vineyard, to use as a garden for vegetables.
These are all words from Genesis 1 and 2. Vegetable is? Yeah, vegetable. In Genesis 1,
there's the different kinds of plants that God calls forth from the ground and the
the Yeric, the green vegetable. So he wants a little vegetable garden, a royal vegetable garden.
Makes sense. Yeah, it's close by.
Last year I had the chance with my family. I went to go teach at a school that was in France
for a week. And I got to take my family with me. It was a really amazing experience.
And we stayed on a little bit longer
to go travel and see some historical stuff like you do
when you're in France.
And we went to this one region that was just packed
with medieval castles.
They're all turned into museums.
And my kids favorite place to go
in all these castle museums was the kitchen.
And we went into a number of these museums where the kitchen was all like recreated.
It was really remarkable to go look at a 12th century royal kitchen.
I don't have anything in my mind.
I don't have any idea what that would look like.
I was just a big stone room with a huge fire hearth, but all of, you know, this meat and
game hanging from hooks on the ceiling, piles of vegetables grown in the royal vegetable
gardens, which they had recreated out around in the, and it was just cool to see like a
pantry.
What does a 12th century king's pantry look like? Yeah, and the way bigger than our little pantry covered.
Now so anyway, that's within my mind right now.
But it was such a small,
small minority of the population that got to eat the way that
many people consider just like normal diet today.
Yeah, but it was royal feasts back then.
So every time that we're having dinner now at the dinner table, I try to remind
them that we're having a royal feast for dinner tonight.
And I like to think about that.
I often reflect on that.
Especially when I go out to a nice meal and you just all the different ingredients
that have been put together in all his unique ways.
And just the sheer luxury of it.
Oh, and even just the excess ability of spices
to flavor our foods is like normal.
Mom has any grocery store here that I know of.
In America has a big know of. Right.
In America has a big spice section.
Yeah.
Which would have been just the height to be able to get access to any of that stuff would have been just.
Yeah.
The height of luxury.
Anyhow.
So the king wants a vegetable garden.
Yeah.
So boss, it's good to imagine.
Yeah.
Like what, you know, for a neighbor you're listening, go ahead and Google what a medieval kitchen looked like.
It's really a good education in food.
This is an evil time.
This is iron age.
Iron age.
Yeah.
So, actually, I'm going to switch translations here to the new American standard so we can
get the hyperlinks.
Sure.
New Hebrew will get a little more easy.
So give me your vineyard.
Give it to me so that I can have it for my vegetable garden because it is right next to my house.
And I will give you a vineyard that is more tove, more good.
Yeah?
Okay.
And it's like, you can give a trade.
Great.
You know, if you want, I'll give it to you in money.
I'll give you money.
Yeah.
So you saw it, he wants it, and he's gonna, he's got the money.
But notice right here, he doesn't say I'm gonna take it.
What he says is, give it to me, and I'll give you
something more good in this place.
This is like when the government comes in and says,
hey, we're building the highway here. We'll buy your house for you.
Yeah.
And you don't have a choice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is a minute domain.
Yeah, there we go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Navos said to A-hab, Yahweh for bid that I ever give you this inheritance for my
ancestors.
Yeah, actually, he's being very literal here, right? That's right. ever give you this inheritance from my ancestors.
Yeah, actually he's being very literal here, right?
That's right.
So he's appealing to the land boundaries
that were established in the days of Joshua.
And so Yahweh assigned each of the tribes.
And they were, if they did happen to sell property
to another tribe.
Which is a bummer.
Yeah, it's a bummer.
Yeah.
And this is in the year of Jubilee regulations.
The whole thing is the reason you would sell your ancestral land is if you don't have enough
money to cover it and you have to sell it.
But every seven times seven years, that land is restored to the family owners.
So this is like a story of the king just taking too much. He wants what Yahweh
has not given to him. Yep. That's right. He wants a garden. He wants a garden. It's because it's
real close. You can see it from this palace. Yeah. Totally. Yeah. So. Why can't his vegetables be there. Verse four. So Ahab went into his house, Solan and Vexed. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha vegetables. The king just he didn't get what he wants. He didn't get what he wants. That's the thing.
And with your king. And when you're a king, you get what you want.
Give what you want. Yep. How is it that just some dude just stood in his way? He is king. Yeah.
Yep. That is vexing. Yeah. So he went into his house and lay down on his bed. He turned away his face and he would eat no food.
He's a little tantrum.
Tohler. But to hear the eating echoes, he would not eat.
So the irony is that Adam and Eve were at the tree of good and bad, right? And for them, it was eating
by seeing, desiring, taking, and then giving and eating. And they violated the command to not eat. Here,
he wants to eat from this garden, but he cannot, and so he refuses to eat. So that's this kind of creative
inversion of the eating imagery here. But can you see the portrait building
where he's being depicted like Adam and Eve here? Okay. He wants this garden. Yeah. And
but there is an interesting thing where that he is there's some reluctance of him to actually
use his authority to take it. Correct. That's right. Yeah. And he appealed Nebo appealed to Yahweh.
Yahweh forbid me.
I can't. Yahweh said.
He's got to put in his place a little bit here.
Yeah. The king, yeah.
Novos is putting Ahab in his place
by appealing to the command of Yahweh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But Jezebel, his wife, came to him and said,
Why is it that your Rua, your life energy,
has become so depressed that you do not eat?
Well, he said there's a guy about a few. I
Spoke to Navout the Ezrealite and I said give me your vineyard for money or else if it's good to you
I'll give you a vineyard in its place, but he said I will not give you my vineyard
you, I'll give you a vineyard in its place, but he said, I will not give you my vineyard. Jessabelle, his wife said to him, hold on.
Are you the reigning king who's over Israel?
Who's the king here?
Get up, eat.
Let your heart be glad.
I will give you the vineyard of Navout, Israelite. So,
knows the Adam and Eve imagery here. It's the wife who will take and give so that the king
can eat. It's a clear Adam and Eve reference right there. And now she engages into deception.
So, she's both likened to Eve and now she's about to become snake.
She wrote letters in Ahab's name, sealing them with a seal, sending letters to the elders,
to the nobles living, with novos in the city, and she wrote letters saying, proclaim a fast.
And seat novos at the head of the table.
Seat two worthless men before him, who this is interesting.
The word worthless here is Billy Aal. Two sons of Billy Aal is what she says in Hebrew.
Ben, a binebili Aal. The word Billy Aal means in Hebrew, worth nothing. It could translate
it worthless. But Billy Aal became, in second-tumble literature,
one of the names for the Satan. Oh wow. With the devil. And Biliyat al, that final L,
when that Hebrew word got shifted into Aramaic, and then into Greek, came to be spelled Biliyar,
Creek came to be spelled Billy Yarr or Belyar.
Do you know about this? No. Belyar?
Yeah.
Still not connecting.
Okay. Yeah.
Belyar is a name for the Satan,
where the devil, where the prime spiritual evil won
in the New Testament.
Paul references Belyire. And...
You're in 2 Corinthians.
2 Corinthians chapter 6. Yeah. There's a paragraph where the evil one,
where the Satan is referred to in Greek as Balaire.
So in 2nd Temple periods, this becomes a stand in for the Satan.
a stand in for the Satan. And I have become compelled that that stands true even in the final stages of the formation of the Hebrew Bible. So she says put two sons of the one worth nothing.
Okay. Which on one level is just two worthless men or two men who are representing the evil one. Exactly. Yeah,
totally. Yep. So let them testify against Navov saying, we heard you curse God and the king.
They are being accusers. So yeah. Yeah, they're going to bear false witness and take him out and
stone him to death. And so that's what they do. Well, yeah. She hires these two guys.
It's another assassination plot.
They stone him.
They stone Navos.
Verse 15, when Jezebel heard
that Navos has been stoned and was dead,
she said to Ahab,
get up, take possession of the vineyard.
The vineyard that he refused to give you for money
for Navos is not alive anymore,
but dead. When Ahab heard that Navoth was dead, he arose to go down to the vineyard and he took
possession of it. And then who appears, who meets him down at the vineyard? The prophet Elijah.
And essentially what he says is you and your wife are gonna pay for this with your lives.
And it takes a while, just like that of me, it takes a while before they pay with their
lives, but that's a bunch like that has been founded on bloodshed
and people are just plotting schemes to take fields.
Yeah, yeah.
You're like, oh yeah, just like the story of Solomon
and just like the story of A-Hop.
And Micah actually mentions A-Hab later.
By name, yeah.
By name.
So let's pause here.
So we have two portraits of the human city.
So let's go back.
We've revisited the city of Cane.
We've talked about it length.
Yeah. Then we had the city of Cain. We've talked about it length. Then we had the city of Nimrod.
Then we had the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Then we had Pharaoh city.
The cities in Egypt, and there, they're the first cities that, in one generation, are a
source of life, giving food and time a famine.
But then in a later generation generation they become a source of death
with the enslavement of Israel. Then we looked at Jerusalem next. And Jerusalem is the capital
of a nation that splits into two. And now here we are. Yeah, two capital cities. And both of them,
Now here we are. Yeah.
Two capital cities, and both of them, by the time Micah is on the scene, they're both
pretty cropped, and Micah's pointing out, look, they were founded this way.
There's something inherently cropped.
Yeah, in a way, to say Zion was built with bloodshed, Samaria is a place for the seizing and desiring
and seizing and taking of what doesn't truly belong
to those who desire, sees and take.
By depicting these cities on analogy
to these earlier cities in the Bible,
so that, in one sense, it's pretty clear
the analogy that's being set up.
It's another replay of the human condition, but the portraits are different from each
other.
So one is of a king who comes to power through court intrigue and then it's a mix of
good and bad.
He's told to be a wise leader, but kill all your enemies. You know, even if they haven't done anything to you yet, kill them before
they do. So that's a whole other, that's a new portrait of the city that's different, you know?
That's, well, I guess maybe that's sort of like Pharaoh that the beginning of Exodus were Pharaoh fears what these immigrants could do.
And so instead of allying with them, he enslaves them.
So in the same way, Solomon's being told, instead of finding a creative way
to deal with people you can't trust, you just kill them.
That's the wisdom of Jerusalem
Well, I think my big takeaway from these conversations right now is that
It's tempting. It's always been tempting. I think in my tradition to take the stories of the Hebrew Bible and try to kind of
find the heroes in them and so in the in the same way, Jerusalem and Samaria,
oh, Jerusalem, not Samaria.
Jerusalem is the city, the city of God.
It's like, and Solomon, this wonderful king,
and King David, we kind of just gloss over all the problems
and we just kind of celebrate like, hey, it happened.
God was using it.
And what you've been pointing out is like embedded
in these stories is this very critical
and inditing perspective of, at the root of this,
it's corrupt.
Yeah.
And here that corruption is focused on individuals,
particularly the kings.
Yeah.
These adamant and Eve, the royal priestly figures.
So it's a way of taking what in a city
is always corporate and communal.
But it focuses it in to psychologist it
in the story of one person who's representative of the whole.
It's back to these similar themes of scarcity,
of fear of losing power and influence,
or what they have, it's just straight up not getting what you want.
Yeah, I desire that and I want it.
And this is the portrait of the human city.
And something about the city magnifies.
Yeah, that's a magnifier.
We've been talking about that a lot. and something about the city magnifies. Yeah, that's a magnifier.
We've been talking about that a lot.
The city is just this leverage point
of taking anything and just the volume gets turned up.
The potential for good and the potential for bad.
It's magnified.
Yep.
So, Micah at the center of the Micah scroll
is the poem in what we call chapter 4, that
is actually almost verbatim to a poem that's in Isaiah chapter 2.
But it's about how, in the last days, the mountain of the house of Yahweh will be set up
as the head of all mountains raised above the hills and all nations will
stream to it. And the nations will say, Hey, let's all go up to the mountain of
Yahweh to the house of the God of Jacob. So he may teach us the word Torah
instruct us his ways we can walk in his paths. Because from Zion, the Torah will go out, and the word of the Lord will go out from Jerusalem.
So it's envisioning a day when this human city, specifically Jerusalem, will become the vehicle
of God's instruction and justice, which David said he was passing on to Solomon, but you're like,
wow, that's a weird kind of wisdom. And the word of Yahweh, which Ahab rejected, when they both
reminded him of the word of Yahweh, that it's not just that it will be followed, but actually this
city will become the center point for all the nations to come into.
And so now we're back to our conversations from the last episode about somehow the relationship
of earthly Jerusalem to the heavenly city of God, the biblical poets can talk about one
as if it's the other in a way that I think can feel confusing to us.
Because it seems like he's actually talking about Jerusalem.
But you read these stories and you're like, how will that city ever become this kind of place?
Well, and by the end of last conversation, when we went to Paul, he starts spiritualizing.
He starts calling it a heavenly Jerusalem.
Yeah.
Or you could say, not necessarily spiritualizing it, but he takes the referent to refer not to the earthly
Jerusalem, but rather something other the kingdom of God
Yeah, yeah, the kingdom of God which is in the heavenlies
So that's the future that Micah can see some
merging some way
that the city of Jerusalem can become the city of God that brings peace and justice to all the nations.
So how will the earthly Jerusalem ever become a source of heavenly life to the nations?
The scroll in the Hebrew Bible that focuses on that question more than any other is the Isaiah
scroll, which is all about a tale of two cosmic cities, cosmic Jerusalem and cosmic Babylon.
And only one of them will be less standing.
So that's what we can explore next.
Cool.
Thanks for listening to this episode of Bible Project Podcast.
Next week we're exploring the theme of the city in the Skull of Isaiah, who prophesies
God's judgment on Jerusalem for oppression and
idolatry.
A fiery test is coming for Jerusalem.
But the purpose of the fire is to destroy what is impure so that what God has called it
to be will be brought out of the flames to become the faithful city of righteousness and justice.
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