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Books of Kings

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Books of Kings
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The BibleOld Testament/TanakhGenesis | Exodus | Joshua | Judges | Ruth | Samuel | Kings | Ezra | Nehemiah | Esther | Job | Psalms | Proverbs | Ecclesiastes | Songs | Isaiah | Jeremiah | Ezekiel | Daniel | Hosea | Joel | Amos | Obadiah | Jonah | Micah | Nahum | Habakkuk | Zephania | Haggai | Zechariah | MalachiApocrypha/DeuterocanonicalTobit | Judith | MaccabeesNew TestamentGospels | Acts | Romans | Corinthians | Galatians | Ephesians | Philippians | Colossians | Thessalonians | Timothy | Titus | Philemon | Hebrews | James | Peter | John | Jude | RevelationThe 11th and 12th books of The Bible.1 Kings tells of Israel's Golden Age under Solomon, but he also sows the seeds of rebellion which leads the nation to divide into Northern Israel and Southern Judah.2 Kings continues the history of the divided nations. Both go into a downward spiral until they are destroyed by foreign nations and their peoples sent into exile.In Christian Bibles it is followed by 1 and 2 Chronicles, which provides a more Politically Correct History counterpoint to Kings, focusing exclusively on the southern Kingdom of Judah to inspire the Jews exiled to Babylon and emphasizing the more positive qualities and achievements of the Davidic dynasty. Most of the Prophets preached during this period, so they will be discussed here also. In the Jewish Tanakh, it is followed by the Book of Isaiah. (Chronicles is relegated to the Ketuvimnote Recall that "Tanakh" is an acronym for Torah (the Torah), Neviim (the Prophets), and Ketuvim ("writings"). Kings is considered a prophetic book as several prophets figure prominently.). In some older Catholic and Orthodox bibles, the books are called 3 Kings and 4 Kings (due to the Books of Samuel changing names).
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 Books of Kings / int_117b3429
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A Taste of the Lash
 Books of Kings / int_117b3429
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A Taste of the Lash: King Rehoboam, by the bad advice given to him by the men who grew up with him, tells the other tribes of Israel that "my father chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions," referring to a more painful form of physical punishment (most likely chains) that made whips seem lighter by comparison.
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IAmAHumanitarian
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I Am a Humanitarian: There was a famine during the time of Elijah & Elisha, so there are instances of cannibalism, and people Driven to Madness by hunger enough to see their own children as potential food.
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 Books of Kings / int_1439161f
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Heroic BSoD
 Books of Kings / int_1439161f
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Heroic BSoD: Elijah has one after he is forced to go into hiding when Jezebel order him killed after his victory at Mount Carmel. King Josiah has one when he hears the Book of the Law being read before him and realizes that the people of God are in trouble, thus tearing his robes.
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 Books of Kings / int_147996f2
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Love Ruins the Realm
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Love Ruins the Realm: Solomon allows his wives to worship their own gods, rather than forcing them to convert. They eventually persuaded him that their gods were better, leading him to idol worship (as well as many of his subjects.) This leads to religiously-motivated civil war.
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 Books of Kings / int_191babbc
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Trampled Underfoot
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Trampled Underfoot: In 2nd Kings chapter 7, an official of the king of Israel who questioned Elisha's prophecy that "Tomorrow about this time a seah of fine flour shall be sold for a shekel, and two seahs of barley for a shekel, at the gate of Samaria" was also prophesied that "You shall see it with your eyes, but you shall not eat of it." And that came to pass when the people raided the deserted Syrian army's camp, and the people trampled the official in the gate, and he died.
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Sins of Our Fathers
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Sins of Our Fathers: Three seperate kings—Jeroboam I, Baasha and Ahab were punished that all their descendants would be killed off and left unburied. The removal of Abiathar from the priesthood by Solomon, while Solomon did this due to Abiathar's own actions, is also stated to be part of the punishment to priest Eli's sons, one of them being his great grandfather Phinehas. The division of Solomon's kingdom between Israel and Judah, which took place after Solomon's death, is stated as being the balance between rewarding Solomon's father for being righteous and punishment for Solomon for not.
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End of an Age
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End of an Age: The Books of Kings and Chronicles describe the rise and fall of the kingdom of Israel.
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 Books of Kings / int_1c263b9f
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The Purge
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The Purge: The families of Jeroboam son of Nebat, Baasha, and Ahab and Jezebel were wiped out by those who would succeed them as kings of Israel. In 2nd Chronicles chapter 21, King Jehoram purposely had his brothers killed when he became king so that there would be no rivals to the throne. Queen Athaliah nearly wiped out all the royal bloodline of the Davidic kingdom of Judah so she could reign as queen. Joash was spared that fate and raised in secret until he was old enough to assume the throne.
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The Siege
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The Siege: Samaria endured a siege by the Arameans during the time of King Joram of Israel that caused a famine among its people. The siege ended when God caused the Aramean army to flee for their lives, leaving behind great amounts of plunder that the people of Israel made use of. Jerusalem endured a siege at the time of King Zedekiah, with the Babylonians as the invaders. Eventually the city got sacked, the king was captured, and most of the people except for the poorest of the land were deported.
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 Books of Kings / int_1daa7fce
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In the Back
 Books of Kings / int_1daa7fce
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In the Back: Jehu spears Joram in the back as he is trying to escape and warn King Ahaziah of Jehu's coup.
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 Books of Kings / int_21bf4878
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Decapitation Presentation
 Books of Kings / int_21bf4878
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Decapitation Presentation: Jehu had Ahab's seventy sons killed by their servants and their heads put into baskets and displayed at the entrance of the gate of the town of Jezreel.
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 Books of Kings / int_21d70919
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Crapsack World
 Books of Kings / int_21d70919
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Crapsack World: Foreign invasions from without and political upheaval from within.
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 Books of Kings / int_21f60711
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Good Is Not Soft
 Books of Kings / int_21f60711
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Good Is Not Soft: King Josiah is said to have been the most utterly incorruptibly pure king in the Old Testament, and was a good and just ruler who cleaned up in Judah after Manasseh's reign and created happiness and justice for his people. However, he could still be quite brutal on the wicked. For example, as part of his religious reform campaign, he had the idolatrous priests sacrificed on their own altars. (Which might sound harsh to modern people, but makes sense in the context of the time—especially if they were priests of Moloch.)
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 Books of Kings / int_25a19aa5
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Turn the Other Cheek
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Turn the Other Cheek: When the Syrian army surrounds Elisha’s home in order to kill him, God blinds the army, and Elisha leads them to Samaria, where they are then surrounded by the Israelite army. But when the king asks (twice!) whether they should kill the Syrians, Elisha objects and instead orders that they be fed and allowed to return to Syria. Later, when the Syrian army puts Samaria under siege, leading to a countrywide famine, the Israelite king calls for Elisha to be beheaded!
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 Books of Kings / int_25dc6ef5
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Apathetic Citizens
 Books of Kings / int_25dc6ef5
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Apathetic Citizens: Elijah accuses the people of Israel of being this, but they continue their apathy until Elijah defeats the priests of Baal at Mount Carmel.
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 Books of Kings / int_266a9dd6
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Heel–Faith Turn
 Books of Kings / int_266a9dd6
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Heel–Faith Turn: A favorite verse used by modern-day Evangelicals is 2nd Chronicles 7:14, which was originally spoken to King Solomon by God in regard to the people of Israel: "If My people, who are called by My name, will humble themselves and pray, and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and will heal their land."
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 Books of Kings / int_27ab0123
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Offing the Offspring
 Books of Kings / int_27ab0123
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Offing the Offspring: The king of Moab did this to his eldest son that would reign after him in 2nd Kings chapter 3 when he realized that he could not defeat the amassed forces of the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom. Queen Athaliah did this with King Ahaziah's sons after he died at the hands of Jehu son of Nimshi in 2nd Kings chapter 11, although his sister Jehosheba took Joash and hid him away for several years until her husband Jehoiada the priest installed him as the rightful heir of the Davidic kingdom.
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 Books of Kings / int_2b9e3fb0
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Give Me a Sign
 Books of Kings / int_2b9e3fb0
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Give Me a Sign: When King Hezekiah asks of Isaiah whether the Lord will give him a sign that he will recover of his seemingly incurable illness, Isaiah offers Hezekiah a choice of whether the shadow of the sundial of Ahaz should go back ten degrees or go forward ten degrees. Hezekiah, knowing that it would be too easy for the shadow to go forward ten degrees, asks for the shadow to go back ten degrees, and thus it was done.
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SomebodyElsesProblem
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Somebody Else's Problem: In 2nd Kings chapter 20, after Merodach-Baladan of Babylon visits King Hezekiah of Judah and the king shows his visitor all his treasures, Isaiah the prophet tells Hezekiah that all his treasures will someday be taken to Babylon and that his descendants will serve the king of Babylon as eunuchs. All Hezekiah could say to that is, "The word of the Lord that you have spoken is good," for the narrative says he was thinking, "At least I will have peace and safety in my days."
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 Books of Kings / int_2fa6b075
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God Save Us from the Queen!
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God Save Us from the Queen!: Jezebel has been saddled with a reputation as this for millennia. She is accused of trying to kill every one of the Lord's prophets in the country, and having an innocent man killed because he didn't sell his vineyard to her husband. Athaliah (Jezebel's daughter) is said to have had all her grandsons killed. Only one of her grandsons survived, so she almost destroyed David's royal line.
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Ruling Couple
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Ruling Couple: Ahab and Jezebel. Considered an evil ruling couple by God's standards, with Ahab just letting his wife have her way in the kingdom, even going so far as to engineer the death of an innocent civilian just because he legally wouldn't sell his vineyard to the king.
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 Books of Kings / int_32976084
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Destination Defenestration
 Books of Kings / int_32976084
comment
Destination Defenestration: At Jehu's order, the evil Queen Dowager Jezebel is betrayed by her own retinue and thrown out of the palace window. It's also a stunningly powerful aversion of the hero/villain dichotomy with regard to how horrifically it's described. She hits the ground, falls apart like Judas and gets eaten by dogs. (The latter had previously been prophesied by Elijah, incidentally.)
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 Books of Kings / int_334b7f3a
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Cryptic Background Reference
 Books of Kings / int_334b7f3a
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Cryptic Background Reference: References are made about another book (presumably lost) detailing the rest of the deeds of Israel's kings
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 Books of Kings / int_33d76f78
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Heroic Ambidexterity
 Books of Kings / int_33d76f78
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Heroic Ambidexterity: In a list of famous warriors who served King David, 1st Chronicles 12:1-7 names 23 Benjaminites who "were armed with bows and were able to shoot arrows or to sling stones right-handed or left-handed".
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Lured into a Trap
 Books of Kings / int_34c3144b
comment
Lured into a Trap: In 2nd Kings 9:23 in the Common English Bible, King Joram of Israel yells to King Ahaziah of Judah, "It's a trap!" when the two kings find themselves face to face with Jehu son of Nimshi, who was anointed and sent by God to destroy the whole house of King Ahab and Queen Jezebel.
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La Résistance
 Books of Kings / int_34dd5f3
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La Résistance: God assures Elijah that there are seven thousand in Israel who have not “bowed to Baal.�
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Plunder
 Books of Kings / int_3511c4d7
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Plunder: In 2nd Kings chapter 7, the people of Samaria plunder the camp of the Syrian army after God caused the army to flee at the sound of chariots, horses, and a large army, making the army think that the king of Israel had hired the kings of the Hittites and the Egyptians to attack them. Thus was fulfilled what Elisha had prophesied, that a measure of fine flour would be sold for a shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel. In 2nd Chronicles chapter 20, King Jehoshaphat and his army came down to the Wilderness of Tekoa and sang praises to God, and because of this, the Ammonites and the Moabites ended up defeating each other, causing so great a slaughter that it took three days for Jehoshaphat and his men to take all the plunder.
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Lethal Chef
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Lethal Chef: Somebody in 2nd Kings 4:38-41 finds a strange batch of gourds that he nearly poisons others with by making them into a stew. Fortunately Elisha the prophet with the help of God makes the stew harmless to eat.
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Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism
 Books of Kings / int_372bc105
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Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: The Kings books are more cynical (they won't hide that otherwise good people like Solomon made mistakes, and they end when Jerusalem is destroyed and most Jews become captives), while the Chronicles are more idealistic (they just ignore those less flattering stories about David and Solomon, and they end when the Jews are allowed to return to their homeland, though they do expose the flaws of some of the "good" kings of Judah and reveal that King Manasseh in all his evilness had a Heel–Face Turn).
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Agony of the Feet
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Agony of the Feet: King Asa had a foot disease (possibly gout) near the end of his life when he turned against God, with 2nd Chronicles saying that he didn't turn to God to deal with the disease, but to the physicians.
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Short-Lived Leadership
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Happened a lot in the northern kingdom of Israel. Of the eighteen kings listed as having followed the kingdom's founder, Jeroboam, eight took the throne by overthrowing (and usually killing) the previous ruler — three of whom (Zimri, Shallum and Pekah) were usurpers themselves. Zimri is notable for having reigned for only one week.
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Teens Are Monsters
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Teens Are Monsters: The prophet Elisha encounters a gang of malicious youths who insult his baldness and tell him to drop dead. God returns the favor by allowing two she-bears to maul forty-two of them. Bullying a Dragon, indeed. One translation calls these bullies "little children", yet it is far more likely that they were adolescents at youngest. Some of the bad kings rose to power when they were teenagers. One that stands out is Jehoiachin. A copyist's mistake claims that he rose to power at the tender age of eight, but the correct translations verify that he was in fact eighteen when he became king.
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Face Death with Dignity
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Face Death with Dignity: When the soldiers came to kill Jezebel, she faced them while wearing her full royal attire. The affect was sort of diminished after centuries of this being interpreted as her being a prostitute.
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Fainting
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Fainting: Believed to have happened to the priests in the Temple during its inauguration in the days of King Solomon, as recorded in 1st Kings and 2nd Chronicles, when the glory of the Lord filled the Temple and the priests couldn't stand to minister because of the presence of the glory.
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Mystical Pregnancy
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comment
Mystical Pregnancy: The Shunnamite woman whom Elisha stays with in 2nd Kings is given one when Gehazi his servant tells that not only does the woman have no child, but also that her husband is old, suggesting that a bit of the supernatural also worked on him as well in order to produce the child.
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Shoot the Messenger
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Shoot the Messenger: Ahab has Micaiah imprisoned after Micaiah prophesies that Ahab will die in battle.
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Taking Up the Mantle
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Taking Up the Mantle: Elisha, both figuratively and literally, when he succeeds Elijah as the prophet of the northern kingdom of Israel when Elisha sees Elijah being taken up to heaven in a whirlwind. The mantle which Elijah used to part the waters of the Jordan when he and Elisha crossed over did the same thing when Elisha used it to cross back over the Jordan.
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King Incognito
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King Incognito Invoked by King Ahab of Israel, who enters a battle disguised as an ordinary soldier so the enemy won't recognize him, in the hope of debunking a prophecy that foretold his death in battle. Unfortunately for him, a "random" arrow shot fatally wounds him anyway. King Josiah does the same in 2nd Chronicles chapter 35 when he confronts Pharaoh Necho in battle and gets killed.
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 Books of Kings / int_470bff94
type
Eats Babies
 Books of Kings / int_470bff94
comment
Eats Babies: In 2nd Kings chapter 6, during the famine that strikes the northern kingdom of Israel, King Joram deals with two women who made a pledge with each other to eat each other's babies, that while one of the women's babies was eaten, the other woman took hers and hidden the child away.
 Books of Kings / int_470bff94
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_470bff94
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1.0
 Books of Kings
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Books of Kings / int_470bff94
 Books of Kings / int_47804320
type
Holy Ground
 Books of Kings / int_47804320
comment
Holy Ground: King David's palace is treated as that by King Solomon in 2nd Chronicles since the Ark of God had been there, so he had his wife, the Pharaoh's daughter, moved into a separate palace built for her.
 Books of Kings / int_47804320
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_47804320
featureConfidence
1.0
 Books of Kings
hasFeature
Books of Kings / int_47804320
 Books of Kings / int_4a02a75e
type
The Theocracy
 Books of Kings / int_4a02a75e
comment
The Theocracy: The kingdom of Israel, and its successor state, the southern kingdom of Judah, were this until the time of its dissolution when the Babylonians conquered it centuries later, with the reigning king (in ideal, if not always in practice) and his people subject to God's laws. How often they were faithful in keeping those laws depended on the king reigning at the time, although the high places were not removed until the time of King Hezekiah, and the shrines Solomon built were not removed until the time of King Josiah. The ten tribes that broke away and formed the northern kingdom of Israel fell into woshiping the calves erected at Bethel and Dan, and during the dynasty of King Ahab and Queen Jezebel, Baal worship until it was stopped by Jehu son of Nimshi.
 Books of Kings / int_4a02a75e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4a02a75e
featureConfidence
1.0
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Books of Kings / int_4a02a75e
 Books of Kings / int_4ad4b2b
type
Guardian Angel
 Books of Kings / int_4ad4b2b
comment
Guardian Angel: God provides an invisible army of horses and chariots of fire to protect Elisha from the Syrian army.
 Books of Kings / int_4ad4b2b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4ad4b2b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Books of Kings
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Books of Kings / int_4ad4b2b
 Books of Kings / int_4c123f8a
type
Do Not Touch the Funnel Cloud
 Books of Kings / int_4c123f8a
comment
Do Not Touch the Funnel Cloud: Elijah in 2nd Kings chapter 2 is carried off into heaven by a whirlwind. The sons of the prophets who saw Elijah and Elisha cross over the Jordan River to the other side and then later see Elisha return alone across the same river presume that Elijah had been carried off into some mountain and valley and begged Elisha that they would be sent to find him. Elisha eventually does let the sons of the prophets go to try finding Elijah, but after a few days, they came back and reportedly found nothing.
 Books of Kings / int_4c123f8a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4c123f8a
featureConfidence
1.0
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Books of Kings / int_4c123f8a
 Books of Kings / int_4c66466a
type
Honest Axe
 Books of Kings / int_4c66466a
comment
Honest Axe: When Solomon became King of Israel, God appeared and offered to grant him a blessing: immense wealth or destruction of his enemies. Solomon instead asked to be blessed with wisdom, as he didn't feel he was good enough to be King. God granted him wisdom, and wealth, and destruction of his enemies.
 Books of Kings / int_4c66466a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4c66466a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Books of Kings
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Books of Kings / int_4c66466a
 Books of Kings / int_4d846bbb
type
Bearer of Bad News
 Books of Kings / int_4d846bbb
comment
Bearer of Bad News: Johnathan, the son of Abiathar the priest, was the one who gave Adonijah the bad news that his father had just had his half-brother Solomon crowned as king over Israel.
 Books of Kings / int_4d846bbb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4d846bbb
featureConfidence
1.0
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Books of Kings / int_4d846bbb
 Books of Kings / int_4de061b6
type
Extra-ore-dinary
 Books of Kings / int_4de061b6
comment
Extra-ore-dinary: Elisha's faith in God caused an iron ax head to float in water when somebody tried to cut wood with an ax and its head slipped off the handle and fell into the water.
 Books of Kings / int_4de061b6
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4de061b6
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Books of Kings / int_4de061b6
 Books of Kings / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 Books of Kings / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: The books of Kings ends with the fall of Jerusalem and the Southern Kingdom and the exile of its people to Babylon. The books of Chronicles, however, ends with King Cyrus of Persia calling for the return of the Jews to their own homeland, setting up for the events in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah.
 Books of Kings / int_4e3d253b
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4e3d253b
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Books of Kings / int_4e3d253b
 Books of Kings / int_4e6e9b64
type
A Child Shall Lead Them
 Books of Kings / int_4e6e9b64
comment
A Child Shall Lead Them: Kings Joash and Josiah of Judah were both children when they were crowned king. Jehoiada the priest acted as a co-regent to help Joash grow into the role of a godly king, at least as long as the priest lived. After Jehoiada died, King Joash did a Faith–Heel Turn and was eventually killed.
 Books of Kings / int_4e6e9b64
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4e6e9b64
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Books of Kings / int_4e6e9b64
 Books of Kings / int_4ff6f484
type
Trash the Set
 Books of Kings / int_4ff6f484
comment
Trash the Set: The Babylonians destroy the Temple and leave it in ruins until the time of the Persian-Medo empire when the Jewish exiles returned home.
 Books of Kings / int_4ff6f484
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_4ff6f484
featureConfidence
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Books of Kings / int_4ff6f484
 Books of Kings / int_505f6a99
type
Showdown at High Noon
 Books of Kings / int_505f6a99
comment
Showdown at High Noon: The showdown at Mt. Carmel is a religious Ur-Example. Elijah and priests of Baal show up at a designated time with all the townspeople surrounding them. The contest is based on the premise that this country ain’t big enough for Yahweh and Baal. And it ends with Yahweh “firing� first, and all the priests of Baal being killed.
 Books of Kings / int_505f6a99
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_505f6a99
featureConfidence
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Books of Kings / int_505f6a99
 Books of Kings / int_50b05d30
type
Disproportionate Retribution
 Books of Kings / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: Poor Naboth is falsely accused of blasphemy and killed by stoning just because he wouldn't give his family's vineyard to King Ahab. In 2 Kings 7 a royal official expresses skepticism that God will end the famine in besieged Samaria by the same time tomorrow. Elisha proclaims that he will see the proverbial feast but not eat it - and sure enough when the man is put in charge of food distribution at the city gate the hungry crowd trample him to death.
 Books of Kings / int_50b05d30
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_50b05d30
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Books of Kings / int_50b05d30
 Books of Kings / int_5214816a
type
Miracle Food
 Books of Kings / int_5214816a
comment
Miracle Food: God performed a miracle with the Zeraphath widow woman's meager food supply so that she could feed herself, her son, and Elijah the prophet for many days out of the little flour and oil she had that would be enough only to make one small cake of bread. Also God multiplied loaves for the sons of the prophets during the days of Elisha's ministry as a prophet, giving them more than enough food to feast upon.
 Books of Kings / int_5214816a
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5214816a
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_5214816a
 Books of Kings / int_534793ae
type
Methuselah Syndrome
 Books of Kings / int_534793ae
comment
Methuselah Syndrome: Not as long as the actual Methuselah, but still pretty long; Jehoiada the priest lives to be 130 years old, acting as co-regent with King Joash of Judah.
 Books of Kings / int_534793ae
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_534793ae
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Books of Kings / int_534793ae
 Books of Kings / int_54cbd0cb
type
This Is Unforgivable!
 Books of Kings / int_54cbd0cb
comment
This Is Unforgivable!: King Manasseh shed so much innocent blood in Jerusalem that the writer of 2nd Kings says God couldn't forgive such an action, which became the reason that Judah was overrun by the Babylonians and its people taken into exile.
 Books of Kings / int_54cbd0cb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_54cbd0cb
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Books of Kings / int_54cbd0cb
 Books of Kings / int_54fbf23f
type
Seeking Sanctuary
 Books of Kings / int_54fbf23f
comment
Seeking Sanctuary: Joab in 1st Kings chapter 2 sought this by grabbing the horns of the altar in God's holy tent from King Solomon seeking after him to put him to death for his seditious act of siding with Solomon's half-brother Adonijah. This didn't work, as Joab was slain right at the altar when he refused to come out.
 Books of Kings / int_54fbf23f
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_54fbf23f
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_54fbf23f
 Books of Kings / int_553d8a44
type
King on His Deathbed
 Books of Kings / int_553d8a44
comment
King on His Deathbed: While David is bedridden and dying, his son Adonijah starts acting like he's already the king. After Bathsheba reminds David of his promise to make Solomon his heir, Nathan's report of Adonijah's presumptuous behavior is the final nail in the coffin. David then has Solomon anointed and enthroned to ensure his succession over Adonijah. His final recorded words are encouragements to Solomon.
 Books of Kings / int_553d8a44
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 Books of Kings / int_553d8a44
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Books of Kings / int_553d8a44
 Books of Kings / int_556a4e20
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The Empire
 Books of Kings / int_556a4e20
comment
The Empire: Assyria and Babylon are a constant looming threat to the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, and eventually Assyria conquers Israel but is then miraculously defeated in its assault on Judah. Over a century later, Babylon conquers Judea.
 Books of Kings / int_556a4e20
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 Books of Kings / int_556a4e20
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Books of Kings / int_556a4e20
 Books of Kings / int_55ab1be5
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Royal Brat
 Books of Kings / int_55ab1be5
comment
Royal Brat: It's mentioned that David never reprimanded Adonijah for anything.
 Books of Kings / int_55ab1be5
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_55ab1be5
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Books of Kings / int_55ab1be5
 Books of Kings / int_5674af1a
type
The Famine
 Books of Kings / int_5674af1a
comment
The Famine: Prophet Elijah told the impious king Ahab that no rain would fall for three and half years. It ended right after Elijah held a contest between himself and the prophets of Baal to determine whose god is truly God, with Elijah coming out the winner and the prophets of Baal the slaughtered losers. The town of Samaria, besieged by the Syrians, suffers a penury of food leading some to resort to cannibalism. It ends when Elisha prophesies about a great amount of food that will be sold at dirt-cheap prices, which is fulfilled when God causes the Syrian army to flee from their camp with all their stuff and food supplies behind.
 Books of Kings / int_5674af1a
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5674af1a
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Books of Kings / int_5674af1a
 Books of Kings / int_5768d31
type
Super-Speed
 Books of Kings / int_5768d31
comment
Super-Speed: In 1st Kings chapter 18, when God ends the drought over the northern kingdom of Israel by sending rain, He gives the prophet Elijah this kind of power when he outraces King Ahab on foot all the way to the entrance of Jezreel.
 Books of Kings / int_5768d31
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5768d31
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Books of Kings / int_5768d31
 Books of Kings / int_5989e3b6
type
Enemy Mine
 Books of Kings / int_5989e3b6
comment
The war between Israel and Judah begins when Jeroboam leads ten tribes to split away from the kingdom of Israel from Rehoboam. It lasts until Kings Ahab and Jehoshaphat unite to fight Syria. There was also a later union of Kings Jehoshaphat and Joram against Moab.
 Books of Kings / int_5989e3b6
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_5989e3b6
 Books of Kings / int_599f943f
type
Karma Houdini Warranty
 Books of Kings / int_599f943f
comment
Karma Houdini Warranty: David tells Solomon to finally seek justice against Joab, who killed Abner decades earlier despite David pardoning him. Joab is killed while seeking protection at the altar, in the same way he killed Abner despite him having royal protection.
 Books of Kings / int_599f943f
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 Books of Kings / int_599f943f
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Books of Kings / int_599f943f
 Books of Kings / int_59eebb51
type
Baby Be Mine
 Books of Kings / int_59eebb51
comment
Baby Be Mine: In the case that was brought before King Solomon of two prostitutes that became mothers, one of the women accidentally killed her own son while sleeping with him, so she swapped the dead child with the other woman's living child. Now the both of them were complaining that the living child was their own and the dead child was the other woman's. Solomon settled this by threatening to slice the living baby in two and giving each woman half a child, with the woman that pleaded for the child to be spared and given to the other woman revealed to be the actual mother of the living child.
 Books of Kings / int_59eebb51
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_59eebb51
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Books of Kings / int_59eebb51
 Books of Kings / int_5bd1083d
type
Holy Is Not Safe
 Books of Kings / int_5bd1083d
comment
Holy Is Not Safe: In 1st Kings, Adonijah, and later, Joab, fled to the tabernacle when they were in danger of being killed. Adonijah is (briefly) spared, but Joab is executed by the altar. In 2nd Chronicles, despite warnings from the priests, King Uzziah attempted to burn incense in the temple as a sacrifice to God. God got extremely angry at him for performing a task exclusively reserved for priests and so the king was struck with leprosy.
 Books of Kings / int_5bd1083d
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Books of Kings / int_5bd1083d
 Books of Kings / int_5d1cdda9
type
God Test
 Books of Kings / int_5d1cdda9
comment
God Test: Elijah challenges the worshipers of Baal to a contest where the god who answers by lighting a sacrifice on fire is determined to be God. The contest didn't end well for the Baal worshipers, even after Elijah makes it "nearly impossible" for God to light his sacrifice on fire. Elijah applies this to himself when Ahaziah keeps sending a captain and fifty men to bring Elijah to him to prophesy a healing. Each time a captain approaches him, they refer to Elijah as a “man of God,� to which Elijah responds, “If I am a man of God, let fire come down and consume you.� And then fire comes down and consumes them. This is done to demonstrate a greater God Test: that only God can save the king, not Baal-zebub, the god of Ekron.
 Books of Kings / int_5d1cdda9
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_5d1cdda9
 Books of Kings / int_5d3e7c6
type
Kangaroo Court
 Books of Kings / int_5d3e7c6
comment
Kangaroo Court: Naboth the Jezreelite was given a sham trial by order of Queen Jezebel when she had false witnesses accusing Naboth of cursing both God and the king and having him executed soon afterward so her husband King Ahab could legally own Naboth's vineyard.
 Books of Kings / int_5d3e7c6
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5d3e7c6
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Books of Kings / int_5d3e7c6
 Books of Kings / int_5f410c2c
type
Blood Is Squicker in Water
 Books of Kings / int_5f410c2c
comment
Blood Is Squicker in Water: In 2nd Kings chapter 3, after God gives the kings and armies of Israel, Judah, and Edom the miracle of water to drink, the king and army of Moab goes out early in the morning and sees that those same ditches filled with water now appear to be filled with blood, making the king of Moab assume that the three opposing armies have killed each other. Surprisingly, this turns out to be a trap for the army of Moab, as the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom bring forth their armies to attack the army of Moab.
 Books of Kings / int_5f410c2c
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 Books of Kings / int_5f410c2c
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Books of Kings / int_5f410c2c
 Books of Kings / int_5f930b19
type
Named After Somebody Famous
 Books of Kings / int_5f930b19
comment
Named After Somebody Famous: In-universe, Jeroboam II is a descendant of Jehu, not Jeroboam I.
 Books of Kings / int_5f930b19
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5f930b19
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Books of Kings / int_5f930b19
 Books of Kings / int_5ff56a1f
type
Long List
 Books of Kings / int_5ff56a1f
comment
Long List: 1st Chronicles chapters 1 through 9 is a list of people starting from Adam down to the descendants of the Israelites at the time they were called to return to their homeland and rebuild Jerusalem. The early chapters focus merely on the lineage of Adam through Seth that produced the Israelites and then the Davidic lineage of kings.
 Books of Kings / int_5ff56a1f
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_5ff56a1f
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 Books of Kings
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Books of Kings / int_5ff56a1f
 Books of Kings / int_600571df
type
Royal Harem
 Books of Kings / int_600571df
comment
Royal Harem: Solomon has quite a large one! In The Song of Solomon, though, none of them quite compare to the figurative Shulamite that Solomon seems to have an attraction to.
 Books of Kings / int_600571df
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_600571df
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Books of Kings / int_600571df
 Books of Kings / int_617f0563
type
Heel–Face Turn
 Books of Kings / int_617f0563
comment
Heel–Face Turn: Chronicles describes King Manasseh who "filled the land with innocent blood from one end to the other" returning to God late in life after his enemies took him captive. They returned him to his kingdom (though his son Amon was on the throne by then) to live out the remainder his life. Most likely the basis for the apocryphal Prayer Of Manasseh. Considering that he was Josiah's grandfather (and Josiah's reign started when he was just eight years old), it seems likely that Manasseh passed some of the lessons he'd learned on to his grandson, warning him not to go ticking off God the way he (and his son Amon) had with all the evil they'd done.
 Books of Kings / int_617f0563
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 Books of Kings / int_617f0563
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Books of Kings / int_617f0563
 Books of Kings / int_647ce68
type
Family-Unfriendly Violence
 Books of Kings / int_647ce68
comment
Family-Unfriendly Violence: "And [Elisha the prophet] went up from thence unto Bethel: and as he was going up by the way, there came forth young men out of the city, and mocked him, and said unto him, Go up, thou bald head; go up, thou bald head. And he turned back, and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord. And there came forth two she bears out of the wood, and tare forty and two young men of them." Turns out God doesn't take kindly to youngsters making death threats ("Go on up" meaning "Go join your predecessor Elijah in Heaven" in this context) against His prophets.
 Books of Kings / int_647ce68
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 Books of Kings / int_647ce68
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Books of Kings / int_647ce68
 Books of Kings / int_64cad83b
type
Pooping Food
 Books of Kings / int_64cad83b
comment
Pooping Food: The Rabshakeh that King Sennacherib of Assyria sends to threaten Jerusalem tells the people in 2nd Kings that the siege they plan against the city will be so bad that people will end up eating their own dung and drinking their own urine.
 Books of Kings / int_64cad83b
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 Books of Kings / int_64cad83b
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Books of Kings / int_64cad83b
 Books of Kings / int_661d7909
type
Maligned Mixed Marriage
 Books of Kings / int_661d7909
comment
Maligned Mixed Marriage: Solomon’s fall from grace is blamed on his many marriages to foreign women. King Ahab of Israel's marriage to Jezebel the daughter of Ethbaal the Sidonian is mentioned as being worse than all the other sins the king had committed, because it was through her that Baal worship was introduced to the northern kingdom of Israel.
 Books of Kings / int_661d7909
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 Books of Kings / int_661d7909
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Books of Kings / int_661d7909
 Books of Kings / int_6774150c
type
If I Can't Have You…
 Books of Kings / int_6774150c
comment
If I Can't Have You…: In the Judgment of Solomon when the king decided to deal with two women arguing over whose baby it is by cutting the child in two, one of the women pleaded for Solomon to spare his life and give him to the other woman, while the other woman said, "It shall be neither yours nor mine; cut it in two!�
 Books of Kings / int_6774150c
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Books of Kings / int_6774150c
 Books of Kings / int_678b0fa9
type
Fair-Weather Friend
 Books of Kings / int_678b0fa9
comment
Fair-Weather Friend: After hearing that David held a massive inauguration for Solomon, "then all the guests of Adonijah trembled and rose and each went his own way" (1 Kings 1:49).
 Books of Kings / int_678b0fa9
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 Books of Kings / int_678b0fa9
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Books of Kings / int_678b0fa9
 Books of Kings / int_68a91d1c
type
Honest Advisor
 Books of Kings / int_68a91d1c
comment
Honest Advisor: Micaiah son of Imlah, a prophet of God that King Ahab and King Jehoshaphat consult for advice concerning the battle of Ramoth Gilead. King Ahab hates Micaiah because "he never prophesies anything good, but bad." When Micaiah is asked for his prophetic advice concerning whether the kings should engage in the battle or not, Micaiah sarcastically agrees with the words of King Ahab's other prophets that the kings should engage in the battle — until King Ahab reminds Micaiah to only tell the truth in the name of the Lord, and then Micaiah prophesies to the effect that they should refrain because King Ahab will fall in the battle. That only confirms in King Ahab's mind about what he thought of the prophet, but Micaiah also tells the king that God had purposely sent a lying spirit to the mouths of his other prophets so that he would engage in the battle and fall. King Ahab orders that Micaiah would be put into prison and be fed bread and water until he returns in peace, but Micaiah warns that if King Ahab ever returns in peace, then the Lord has not spoken through him.
 Books of Kings / int_68a91d1c
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Books of Kings / int_68a91d1c
 Books of Kings / int_6af8ebb5
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Death by Falling Over
 Books of Kings / int_6af8ebb5
comment
Death by Falling Over: King Ahaziah of Israel. It wasn't the fall through the lattice that ultimately caused his death, but his choosing to seek out out a false god instead of the Lord about whether he would survive or not that sealed his fate.
 Books of Kings / int_6af8ebb5
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Books of Kings / int_6af8ebb5
 Books of Kings / int_6bd689ca
type
Meaningful Echo
 Books of Kings / int_6bd689ca
comment
Meaningful Echo: In 2nd Kings chapter 2, Elisha cries out “My father, my father, the chariot of Israel and its horsemen!� when he sees his master and mentor Elijah the prophet go up into heaven in a whirlwind. Years later, in Chapter 13, Joash king of Israel would say the same to Elisha upon his death bed, meaning that Elisha has earned his place alongside Elijah as a true prophet of God.
 Books of Kings / int_6bd689ca
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Books of Kings / int_6bd689ca
 Books of Kings / int_6bda9a30
type
Meaningful Name
 Books of Kings / int_6bda9a30
comment
Meaningful Name: Jabez (whose name is "sorrowful" or "pain", the very same Jabez who made the prayer that became the basis for the spiritual self-help book The Prayer Of Jabez) in 1st Chronicles 4:9-10, because his mother said, "Because I bore him with sorrow."
 Books of Kings / int_6bda9a30
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_6bda9a30
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_6bda9a30
 Books of Kings / int_6cf80934
type
Big Word Shout
 Books of Kings / int_6cf80934
comment
Big Word Shout: "TREASON! TREASON!" from Queen Athaliah when she realized Jehoiada the priest and the people plotted to put Joash, the rightful heir of the Davidic kingdom, on the throne behind her back.
 Books of Kings / int_6cf80934
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_6cf80934
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Books of Kings / int_6cf80934
 Books of Kings / int_6d332aea
type
Driven to Suicide
 Books of Kings / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: King Zimri of Israel lasted only a week as king when he found himself surrounded by Omri's forces that he decided to burn his house down with himself still inside it.
 Books of Kings / int_6d332aea
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_6d332aea
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Books of Kings / int_6d332aea
 Books of Kings / int_710f9249
type
Unusual Dysphemism
 Books of Kings / int_710f9249
comment
Unusual Dysphemism: God uses the term "one who urinates against a wall" in reference to males that are considered worthy of slaughter, particularly of the royal families of evil kings of the northern kingdom of Israel, equating those men to dogs.
 Books of Kings / int_710f9249
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_710f9249
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Books of Kings / int_710f9249
 Books of Kings / int_716cdf08
type
Vorpal Pillow
 Books of Kings / int_716cdf08
comment
Vorpal Pillow: In 2nd Kings chapter 8, Hazael the servant of King Ben-hadad of Aram smothered his liege to death with a wet cloth on his face so that he would become king in his place.
 Books of Kings / int_716cdf08
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_716cdf08
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Books of Kings / int_716cdf08
 Books of Kings / int_7241785e
type
You Can't Fight Fate
 Books of Kings / int_7241785e
comment
You Can't Fight Fate: King Ahab is warned by Micaiah the prophet that he will die in the battle of Ramoth Gilead. Ahab tries to avert the disaster by dressing up in different clothes before going into battle while King Jehoshaphat wears his royal clothes, hoping that the Syrian army will go after Jehoshaphat instead of him. However, an arrow shot at random pierces King Ahab.
 Books of Kings / int_7241785e
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_7241785e
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Books of Kings / int_7241785e
 Books of Kings / int_72852a93
type
Henpecked Husband
 Books of Kings / int_72852a93
comment
Henpecked Husband: King Ahab allows his domineering wife Jezebel to control the country in his name. Then he lets her frame a man for crimes he didn't commit and have him executed, because he wouldn't sell his vineyard to him. Ahab should have told Jezebel that this was against the law of Moses, according to which not even a king had a right force anybody to give up their property. But he could never pick up the courage to do that, thus making him an Accomplice by Inaction to Naboth's murder.
 Books of Kings / int_72852a93
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 Books of Kings / int_72852a93
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Books of Kings / int_72852a93
 Books of Kings / int_7294b403
type
Altar Diplomacy
 Books of Kings / int_7294b403
comment
Altar Diplomacy: Solomon marries Pharaoh’s daughter and many other foreign princesses, which ultimately leads him to worship their gods.
 Books of Kings / int_7294b403
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_7294b403
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Books of Kings / int_7294b403
 Books of Kings / int_77b03c0a
type
Remember the New Guy?
 Books of Kings / int_77b03c0a
comment
Remember the New Guy?: Elijah, one of greatest prophets in the Bible, is first mentioned when pronouncing a curse of no rain over Israel. He is given minimal introduction, and there is no explanation of his background except that he is from Tishbe, but he suddenly becomes The Protagonist for the rest of the book.
 Books of Kings / int_77b03c0a
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Books of Kings / int_77b03c0a
 Books of Kings / int_790b1e6
type
Nasty Party
 Books of Kings / int_790b1e6
comment
Nasty Party: Jehu son of Jehoshaphat ordered a group of Baal's priests to assemble together in the central temple of Baal for a huge sacrifice, pretending that he was planning to worship Baal far more than his predecessor ever had, but his real purpose was to have his men exterminate them all, thus ridding the northern kingdom of Israel of Jezebel's institution of Baal worship for good.
 Books of Kings / int_790b1e6
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 Books of Kings / int_790b1e6
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Books of Kings / int_790b1e6
 Books of Kings / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Books of Kings / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: King Abijah of Judah gave one about Jeroboam in 2nd Chronicles 13:4-12. (Granted, this is coming from a king that 1st Kings already testifies as "walking in the sins of his father", but still...)
 Books of Kings / int_7d89315b
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 Books of Kings / int_7d89315b
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Books of Kings / int_7d89315b
 Books of Kings / int_813afa05
type
Defiled Forever
 Books of Kings / int_813afa05
comment
Defiled Forever: Israel is compared to a spoiled, pampered, virginal princess, who is then raped and taken into captivity. In the Book of Ezekiel, Israel and Judah are compared to young girls who prostituted themselves in Egypt and were graciously taken as wives by God (despite their history... or maybe because of it), and given everything they could possibly want and more... only to lust after Assyrian soldiers (that is, desire political alliances with neighboring superpowers instead of relying on God to protect and provide for them) and go back to their old whoring ways. Both end up being killed "and their names became bywords among women."
 Books of Kings / int_813afa05
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_813afa05
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Books of Kings / int_813afa05
 Books of Kings / int_81ae2774
type
Evil Matriarch
 Books of Kings / int_81ae2774
comment
Evil Matriarch: Queen Jezebel is portrayed as being a bad influence on her sons even after they became kings. Queen Athaliah took it to another level, when she tried to have all of her own grandchildren killed. Supposedly, she did that to keep all the power to herself. Only one of her grandsons survived.
 Books of Kings / int_81ae2774
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 Books of Kings / int_81ae2774
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Books of Kings / int_81ae2774
 Books of Kings / int_8288929a
type
Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves
 Books of Kings / int_8288929a
comment
Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves: During Jehu's Ruling Family Massacre of the house of Ahab, he writes to the palace officials telling them to send the greatest of Ahab's sons out to fight him. They refuse and tell him they are his servants, so he writes them again telling them to bring him the heads of Ahab's sons. They comply, at which point he has them put to death for the murders of the princes.
 Books of Kings / int_8288929a
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Books of Kings / int_8288929a
 Books of Kings / int_83856158
type
Worthless Yellow Rocks
 Books of Kings / int_83856158
comment
Worthless Yellow Rocks: Or in this case, Worthless White Rocks, as 1st Kings chapter 10 said that King Solomon had so much gold that silver was accounted as nothing during the time of his reign, that it was as common as stones.
 Books of Kings / int_83856158
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Books of Kings / int_83856158
 Books of Kings / int_88699eee
type
Bargain with Heaven
 Books of Kings / int_88699eee
comment
Bargain with Heaven: God promises Solomon that “if you walk in My ways, keeping my statutes and commandments as your father David walked, then I will lengthen your days� (1 Kings 3:14, ESV). For much of Solomon’s life, he stayed true to his word, and Israel reached the height of its power. Once Solomon broke his word, Israel’s slow decline began.
 Books of Kings / int_88699eee
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Books of Kings / int_88699eee
 Books of Kings / int_89434320
type
Protagonist-Centered Morality
 Books of Kings / int_89434320
comment
Protagonist-Centered Morality: There's a theme running through these books: if you belong to the "right" religion, you're a hero; if you belong to the "wrong" religion, you're the villain. But it never becomes more obvious than with antagonist Jezebel and protagonists Elijah and Jehu. As soon as she begins a persecution of Jahve's prophets, this is treated as proof of how evil Jezebel is. Which would have been fair... Except for that when Elijah and Jehu start killing off Baal's prophets, this is portrayed as awesome acts of badassery!note Although this becomes slightly more understandable when one learns the historical context; while it's not mentioned in the text itself, Baal worship is believed to have involved Human Sacrifice and other immoral practices
 Books of Kings / int_89434320
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Books of Kings / int_89434320
 Books of Kings / int_8967e17f
type
Back from the Dead
 Books of Kings / int_8967e17f
comment
Done twice by the prophets Elijah and Elisha with their resurrection miracles as mentioned in Back from the Dead requiring lying down on top of the children they were praying for.
 Books of Kings / int_8967e17f
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 Books of Kings / int_8967e17f
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Books of Kings / int_8967e17f
 Books of Kings / int_8976acda
type
Civil War
 Books of Kings / int_8976acda
comment
Civil War: The war between Israel and Judah begins when Jeroboam leads ten tribes to split away from the kingdom of Israel from Rehoboam. It lasts until Kings Ahab and Jehoshaphat unite to fight Syria. There was also a later union of Kings Jehoshaphat and Joram against Moab. In Israel, between Omri and Tibni son of Ginath after King Zimri's death, which led to Omri being king of Israel.
 Books of Kings / int_8976acda
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 Books of Kings / int_8976acda
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Books of Kings / int_8976acda
 Books of Kings / int_8d718b9e
type
Bears Are Bad News
 Books of Kings / int_8d718b9e
comment
Bears Are Bad News: Elisha summons two bears to maul forty-two youths for mocking his bald head (and possibly implying that they would send him to heaven, i.e., kill him, although the phrase could also mean "why didn't you go up to heaven [like Elijah did]"?).
 Books of Kings / int_8d718b9e
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Books of Kings / int_8d718b9e
 Books of Kings / int_8e3f54c
type
Spare to the Throne
 Books of Kings / int_8e3f54c
comment
Spare to the Throne: King Joash of Judah, the only surviving heir of the Davidic kingdom, was spared from Queen Athaliah's wrath and raised in secrecy until he was old enough to assume the throne with Jehoiada the priest as co-regent.
 Books of Kings / int_8e3f54c
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Books of Kings / int_8e3f54c
 Books of Kings / int_8eb654e4
type
Firing Day
 Books of Kings / int_8eb654e4
comment
Ironically, one of the common interpretations is that Elijah's career ended for the same reason. Escaping from Ahab and Jezebel's persecution, Elijah complains to God that all of his deeds done to glorify God's name were for nothing, since the Israelites are too wicked to listen to him. God then does a whole light show involving storms and earthquakes, with God explicitly said not to be in any of them but implied to be in the following "sheer silence" (that is, trying to tell Elijah that his devoutness is not measured in rage, flashy miracles or displays of power). Elijah responds by repeating his complaint verbatim, showing that he had learned nothing. God then gives him his next orders, ending with "anoint Elisha as prophet in your place."
 Books of Kings / int_8eb654e4
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Books of Kings / int_8eb654e4
 Books of Kings / int_8ed5c6e4
type
Asshole Victim
 Books of Kings / int_8ed5c6e4
comment
Asshole Victim: King Jehoram of Judah, for his terrible reign of his kingdom, including slaughtering his brothers in order to keep the throne. Also Queen Jezebel, for her persecution and slaughter of the prophets of God among other things.
 Books of Kings / int_8ed5c6e4
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Books of Kings / int_8ed5c6e4
 Books of Kings / int_8f746311
type
Cargo Cult
 Books of Kings / int_8f746311
comment
Cargo Cult: The bronze serpent Moses made in the book of Numbers to miraculously cure victims of poison snake bites was being worshiped as a god by the Jews by the time King Hezekiah became king. Hezekiah destroyed the serpent and called it Nehushtan ("a thing of bronze") to mock the Jews for their idiocy in worshiping a lifeless object.
 Books of Kings / int_8f746311
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Books of Kings / int_8f746311
 Books of Kings / int_8ffcbb25
type
Matter Replicator
 Books of Kings / int_8ffcbb25
comment
Matter Replicator: Elisha the prophet (or rather, God working through Elisha) causes a single jar of a widow's oil to be replicated into multiple jars in 2nd Kings, allowing her to pay off her creditors and to live off the rest.
 Books of Kings / int_8ffcbb25
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_8ffcbb25
 Books of Kings / int_911db50a
type
Bequeathed Power
 Books of Kings / int_911db50a
comment
Bequeathed Power: In 2nd Kings chapter 2, before Elijah is taken up into heaven in a whirlwind, his assistant and future successor Elisha asks to have a double portion of his spirit to perform miracles with. Elijah replies, "That is a difficult thing to ask; however, if you see me going up, it will be so, but if you don't see me go up, it will not be so." True to Elijah's word, Elisha saw Elijah being taken up with his mantle falling to the ground, and Elisha picks up the fallen mantle and uses it to divide the Jordan River to cross over it safely, causing the sons of the prophets to recognize that the power of Elijah now rests on Elisha.
 Books of Kings / int_911db50a
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Books of Kings / int_911db50a
 Books of Kings / int_916ecb1
type
But I Can't Be Pregnant!
 Books of Kings / int_916ecb1
comment
But I Can't Be Pregnant!: When Elisha tells the Shunnamite woman he was staying with who couldn't bear any children that she was going to have a child in a year, she reacts in disbelief, saying, "O man of God, do not lie to your maidservant!" But true to his word, God gives the woman a child to conceive and bear.
 Books of Kings / int_916ecb1
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_916ecb1
 Books of Kings / int_9245d989
type
Sinister Minister
 Books of Kings / int_9245d989
comment
Sinister Minister: A false prophet from 1st Kings chapter 13 deceives a true prophet of God to return to his home and eat bread, although God has commanded that prophet not to do so. Although that prophet dies for disobeying the word of the Lord, the false prophet tells his family to bury him alongside the true prophet because he realizes that what the true prophet of God has prophesied concerning the altars that Jeroboam had built will come true.
 Books of Kings / int_9245d989
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Books of Kings / int_9245d989
 Books of Kings / int_95c2a9dd
type
Outliving One's Offspring
 Books of Kings / int_95c2a9dd
comment
Outliving One's Offspring: At the beginning of Solomon's reign, two women come before him after the child of one of them has died. Jeroboam I's son Ahiya was outlived by both parents. Elijah and Elisha both bring back to life children whose mothers were still alive (and the father, too, in the latter case( Jehu kills King Joram of Israel and King Ahaziah of Judah while the mothers of both are still alive.
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Books of Kings / int_95c2a9dd
 Books of Kings / int_976b0368
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Invulnerable Horses
 Books of Kings / int_976b0368
comment
Invulnerable Horses: Averted in the battle between Israel and Syria, in which “the king of Israel went out and struck the horses and chariots, and struck the Syrians with a great blow� (1 Kings 20:21).
 Books of Kings / int_976b0368
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Books of Kings / int_976b0368
 Books of Kings / int_9819d15b
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PriestKing
 Books of Kings / int_9819d15b
comment
Priest King: King Uzziah tried to serve as this when he offered up incense in the Lord's Temple in 2nd Chronicles chapter 26. This was forbidden, as God's Law stated that only the priests from the family line of Aaron could do that job. For that act of disobedience, God struck Uzziah with leprosy and he died separated from the house of God while his son Jotham took over as king.
 Books of Kings / int_9819d15b
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Books of Kings / int_9819d15b
 Books of Kings / int_99f2522e
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Hit Me, Dammit!
 Books of Kings / int_99f2522e
comment
Hit Me, Dammit!: In 1st Kings 20:35-37, a prophet of God needs to be beaten and bruised in order to deliver the message God had for King Ahab regarding the king of Syria that he granted mercy unto after handing him two defeats with the help of God. The first person he asks to injure him refuses, and is killed by a lion for refusing to obey God's command.
 Books of Kings / int_99f2522e
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Books of Kings / int_99f2522e
 Books of Kings / int_9a061e64
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Dishonored Dead
 Books of Kings / int_9a061e64
comment
Dishonored Dead: Queen Jezebel isn't given the honor of a burial, for her body had been eaten by dogs. Her son King Joram had his body thrown into the plot of land formerly owned by Naboth the Jezreelite after Jehu son of Jehoshaphat had killed him. Of the kings of Judah, Jehoram is not buried with the other kings due to being rather nasty, and Azariah/Uzziah is buried in a field due to being a leper.
 Books of Kings / int_9a061e64
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Books of Kings / int_9a061e64
 Books of Kings / int_9a480050
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Do Not Taunt Cthulhu
 Books of Kings / int_9a480050
comment
King Sennacherib of Assyria does this to King Hezekiah when he threatens to destroy Judah, saying "where are the gods" of the nations that he had conquered and suggesting that Hezekiah's God will not save him. It doesn't work well for the Assyrian king when, after King Hezekiah prays to God, Sennacherib finds that all 185,000 of his troops are dead.
 Books of Kings / int_9a480050
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Books of Kings / int_9a480050
 Books of Kings / int_9d12bbc1
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Foreshadowing
 Books of Kings / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: Elisha feeds 100 prophets with only 20 loaves of bread. For Christians, this foreshadows Christ feeding the 5,000 men plus women and children, with far fewer resources at hand.
 Books of Kings / int_9d12bbc1
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Books of Kings / int_9d12bbc1
 Books of Kings / int_9e9e8623
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It Is Beyond Saving
 Books of Kings / int_9e9e8623
comment
It Is Beyond Saving: Jerusalem, according to the narrative in 2nd Chronicles chapter 36, when God's warnings through His prophets have been mocked at and ignored by the people for so long, the only thing left for God to do is send judgment on them.
 Books of Kings / int_9e9e8623
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Books of Kings / int_9e9e8623
 Books of Kings / int_9f037665
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Quit Your Whining
 Books of Kings / int_9f037665
comment
Quit Your Whining: Queen Jezebel had this attitude toward her husband King Ahab when she found him sulking, because he was unable to obtain the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite. Then, she promises him that she will get him the vineyard he wanted. Unfortunately, she decides to do this by framing Naboth for crimes he didn't commit, which leads to him being executed.
 Books of Kings / int_9f037665
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Books of Kings / int_9f037665
 Books of Kings / int_9f62723d
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Get Out!
 Books of Kings / int_9f62723d
comment
Get Out!: In some translations, Elisha was jeered at by some boys who were saying, "Get out of here, baldy! Get out of here, baldy!" He called down a curse upon them, and a female bear mauled forty-two of the boys.
 Books of Kings / int_9f62723d
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Books of Kings / int_9f62723d
 Books of Kings / int_a00c13e0
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Awesome Moment of Crowning
 Books of Kings / int_a00c13e0
comment
Awesome Moment of Crowning: Solomon’s inauguration was so loud that Joab could hear the trumpets from miles away in En-Rogel! Subverted at Rehoboam’s inauguration, when Jeroboam interrupts it to demand Rehoboam make reforms.
 Books of Kings / int_a00c13e0
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Books of Kings / int_a00c13e0
 Books of Kings / int_a0a005d1
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Protagonist Journey to Villain
 Books of Kings / int_a0a005d1
comment
Protagonist Journey to Villain: Solomon is presented this way. At first he is a wise and just ruler—but his desire to make Israel great gradually leads him down the path of questionable decisions (e.g., forcing conscription on the people, marrying foreign princesses as part of his aggressive diplomacy). By the end of the story, he has become a tyrant who behaves a lot like the Pharaoh the Hebrews fled from in Moses' time, and the country is on the verge of open rebellion when he dies.
 Books of Kings / int_a0a005d1
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Books of Kings / int_a0a005d1
 Books of Kings / int_a108f2d2
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Death by Mocking
 Books of Kings / int_a108f2d2
comment
Death by Mocking: Possibly in 2nd Kings Chapter 2. Forty-two young males (either boys or young men) are attacked by two she-bears when they make fun of Elisha the prophet, mocking his authority as a God-anointed prophet. Though the text doesn't state whether they were killed or mauled, or whether they were merely insulting or actually threatening him.
 Books of Kings / int_a108f2d2
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Books of Kings / int_a108f2d2
 Books of Kings / int_a122bf2f
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Blind Seer
 Books of Kings / int_a122bf2f
comment
Blind Seer: Ahijah the Shilonite becomes this in 1st Kings chapter 14 around the time King Jeroboam's son Abijah becomes sick. Although Jeroboam's wife is told to disguise herself when approaching the prophet so that he would not recognize her, God tells Ahijah ahead of time who's coming to see him, and so instantly addresses her and her situation the instant she steps in.
 Books of Kings / int_a122bf2f
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Books of Kings / int_a122bf2f
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Smash the Symbol
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Smash the Symbol After slaying the worshipers of Baal in the northern kingdom of Israel, Jehu proceeds to destroy its temple and turn it into an outhouse. After the reign of King Zedekiah, the Babylonians proceed to destroy the Temple in Jerusalem.
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 Books of Kings / int_a20460b8
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Hot Consort
 Books of Kings / int_a20460b8
comment
Hot Consort: Abishag, who was brought to King David to keep him warm in his final years, except that there was nothing sexual going on between them; she was there to warm his bed.
 Books of Kings / int_a20460b8
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Books of Kings / int_a20460b8
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Eye Scream
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comment
Eye Scream: King Zedekiah had his eyes put out by King Nebuchadnezzar in Riblah after being captured and seeing his sons being killed.
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Books of Kings / int_a2b38d3b
 Books of Kings / int_a52f8fdf
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Bolt of Divine Retribution
 Books of Kings / int_a52f8fdf
comment
Elijah applies this to himself when Ahaziah keeps sending a captain and fifty men to bring Elijah to him to prophesy a healing. Each time a captain approaches him, they refer to Elijah as a “man of God,� to which Elijah responds, “If I am a man of God, let fire come down and consume you.� And then fire comes down and consumes them. This is done to demonstrate a greater God Test: that only God can save the king, not Baal-zebub, the god of Ekron.
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Books of Kings / int_a52f8fdf
 Books of Kings / int_a5de0ab9
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Polyamory
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comment
Polyamory: The case for the kings of both Judah and Israel. Solomon had 700 wives and 300 concubines. This eventually came to an end with the last king of Judah, when King Nebuchadnezzar brought King Zedekiah and his royal family to Babylon.
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Books of Kings / int_a5de0ab9
 Books of Kings / int_a6123b72
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Enfant Terrible
 Books of Kings / int_a6123b72
comment
Some of the bad kings rose to power when they were teenagers. One that stands out is Jehoiachin. A copyist's mistake claims that he rose to power at the tender age of eight, but the correct translations verify that he was in fact eighteen when he became king.
 Books of Kings / int_a6123b72
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 Books of Kings / int_a679184b
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Due to the Dead
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Due to the Dead: King Asa, who was a good king of Judah that turned bad in the latter part of his life, was given an honorable burial, as recorded in 2nd Chronicles 16:14. Jehoiada the priest, who acted as a co-regent to the young King Joash of Judah, was given the honor of being buried in the tombs of the kings, the same of which was not given to Joash himself after his Faith–Heel Turn.
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Books of Kings / int_a679184b
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General Ripper
 Books of Kings / int_a67b86a7
comment
General Ripper: General Jehu can come across as a very early example: an undisputed Four-Star Badass, he is also a fanatical fundamentalist who launches a Military Coup to root out the kingdom's ungodly leadership when a prophet tells him to, and then a violent purge of all supporters of the old regime, as well as everyone who followed the religion of Baal and Astarte. He is a heroic example, however, since (according to the narrator, at least) God really did approve of everything he did. Although, when all was said and done, Jehu only got rid of the Baal worship and not also the idol worship that was instituted by the first King Jeroboam, and thus his dynasty only lasted until the fourth generation, the longest-lasting dynasty in the kingdom. (According to the prophet Hosea, God thought that Jehu had gone overboard in his zeal for purging out both the royal family of Ahab and Baal worship with the massacre at Jezreel, so he would end his dynasty.)
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Books of Kings / int_a67b86a7
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Rule of Seven
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comment
Rule of Seven: Naaman is told by Elisha to go dip himself in the Jordan River seven times to be cured of his leprosy. At first Naaman refused, but when his servants persuaded him to do so, even if the man of God would tell him to do something difficult, Naaman went ahead with the method and thus was cured.
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Books of Kings / int_a6be3ad5
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Rule of Three
 Books of Kings / int_a6cda066
comment
In 1 Kings 17:8-24, After Elijah was directed to a house in Zarephath and he supplied food to a widow and her son, the boy felt ill and became breathless. Elijah prays to God three times, hoping that God would let the boy's life return to life. God heard Elijah's cry and returned the boy's life to him, resurrecting the child.
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Books of Kings / int_a6cda066
 Books of Kings / int_a9890a71
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Good Running Evil
 Books of Kings / int_a9890a71
comment
Good Running Evil: When King Sennacherib of Assyria planned on destroying Jerusalem and King Hezekiah of Judah prayed to God, God through the prophet Isaiah has a message sent to the Assyrian king to tell him that he is just a vessel in God's hand for the purpose of destroying kingdoms whose gods aren't really gods, and that because of his rage against God Himself, God will have him destroyed.
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Traumatic C-Section
 Books of Kings / int_ab88f865
comment
Traumatic C-Section: In 2nd Kings 8:12-13, Elisha told Hazael, the servant of King Ben-Hadad of Syria (Aram), that he would become king and then he would attack the people of Israel and rip open pregnant women in the attacks. In 2nd Kings 15:16, Menahem, the Klingon Promotion successor to King Shallum of Israel, attacked Tiphsah and all the territory of Tirzah, because they did not open to him, ripping open pregnant women as he struck down the people.
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Books of Kings / int_ab88f865
 Books of Kings / int_aba8065b
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Fatal Flaw
 Books of Kings / int_aba8065b
comment
Fatal Flaw Solomon's dissatisfaction with his life. Elah's drunkenness. Ahab's inability to stand up to his wife. Joab's violence. Josiah rushing off to battle when the Pharaoh Neco warned him not to.
 Books of Kings / int_aba8065b
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Books of Kings / int_aba8065b
 Books of Kings / int_ad9ce8a5
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Judgment of Solomon
 Books of Kings / int_ad9ce8a5
comment
Judgment of Solomon: Trope Namer. The story recounts that two mothers living in the same house, each the mother of an infant son, came to King Solomon. One of the babies had died, and each claimed the remaining boy as her own. Calling for a sword, Solomon declared his judgment: the baby would be cut in two, each woman to receive half. One mother thought the ruling fair, but the other begged Solomon, "Give the baby to her, just don't kill him!" The king declared the second woman the true mother, as a mother would even give up her baby if that was necessary to save its life. This judgment became known throughout all of Israel and was considered an example of profound wisdom.
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I Warned You
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I Warned You: The LORD and his prophets had long warned that Israel/Judah’s continual apostasy would lead to exile. After over 400 years, it finally happens.
 Books of Kings / int_ae372576
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Books of Kings / int_ae372576
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Face–Heel Turn
 Books of Kings / int_af3ea0e3
comment
Face–Heel Turn/Faith–Heel Turn: King Asa was a faithful follower of God for most of his life, but in 2nd Chronicles chapter 16, when Hanani the prophet called him out and condemned him for relying on help from the king of Aram instead of the Lord, Asa threw the prophet into prison and started oppressing the people. It got to the point where Asa ended up having diseased feet, of which he sought help from the physicians instead of from the Lord. King Joash of Judah after Jehoiada the priest died. He was a faithful follower of the Lord from childhood and helped to restore the Temple with the money the people brought in, but after the priest's death he turned against the Lord and eventually suffered because of his rebellion. Some Bible students blame this on Jehoiada failing to pass on his faith in the Lord to the king he served as a co-regent.
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The Usurper
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The Usurper: Queen Athaliah of Judah, who, when her son was dead, decided to kill all his heirs so that she could have the throne to herself. She would be removed from the throne several years later when the heir who was rescued from her, Joash, was rightfully made king. Happened a lot in the northern kingdom of Israel. Of the eighteen kings listed as having followed the kingdom's founder, Jeroboam, eight took the throne by overthrowing (and usually killing) the previous ruler — three of whom (Zimri, Shallum and Pekah) were usurpers themselves. Zimri is notable for having reigned for only one week. Hazael, servant to King Ben-Hadad of Syria, learned from the prophet Elisha that he was destined to be king himself (and would commit horrendous crimes against the Israelites — i.e. business as usual). On returning home, he murdered his master by smothering him with a wet cloth, and took the throne himself.
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Books of Kings / int_b0cac376
 Books of Kings / int_b1dde8fd
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Loophole Abuse
 Books of Kings / int_b1dde8fd
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Loophole Abuse: Jeroboam doesn't want his people to go to the Temple of Solomon in the Kingdom of Judah, since he thinks it will lead to them eventually defecting. He also knows that he (and the rest of the people) will be cursed if they worship other gods. His solution: build two golden cows in the north and south of his country and state that they are depictions of The Lord. This is a subverted example, since God made it very clear through an unnamed prophet that Jeroboam had broken the second commandment. This is the 'Sin of Jeroboam' that none of the Kings of Israel got rid of, even if they didn't worship any of the Caananite gods.
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Klingon Promotion
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In 2nd Kings 15:16, Menahem, the Klingon Promotion successor to King Shallum of Israel, attacked Tiphsah and all the territory of Tirzah, because they did not open to him, ripping open pregnant women as he struck down the people.
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Heir Club for Men
 Books of Kings / int_b2f4114e
comment
Heir Club for Men: Usually kingship in Israel and Judah would pass on to one of the king's sons, though near the final years of Judah's existence as a kingdom, when King Jehoahaz was deposed and brought as a prisoner to Egypt, his brother Eliakim took his place and was renamed King Jehoiakim. Then after Jehoiakim's son King Jehoiachin was deposed and taken to Babylon, Jehoahaz' other brother Mattaniah took his place and was renamed King Zedekiah. It was hardly ever given to one of the king's daughters, which was part of why after King Ahaziah died, his mother Athaliah killed all but one of the king's sons (who escaped slaughter by being secreted away by the king's sister) so she could become queen herself, though it lasted only until the king's son (Joash) was old enough to assume his rightful place on the throne.
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Your Days Are Numbered
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Your Days Are Numbered: Isaiah the prophet tells King Hezekiah to get his house in order because he was going to die soon of a seemingly incurable illness. Hezekiah prays desperately to God, and God has Isaiah tell the king that He will give him fifteen more years to live.
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Make an Example of Them
 Books of Kings / int_b4de919d
comment
Make an Example of Them: Implied to be at least part of the reason Elisha calls for the she-bears to tear apart 42 boys for mocking his baldness. This came right after Elisha assumed the mantle of head prophet, and some were doubting his succession. This act made clear Elisha was no longer just the Sidekick.
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Smarter Than You Look
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Smarter Than You Look: Jezebel is the "sexy, but actually pretty smart" kind. She can both read and write, even though she's only a woman, and knows enough about lawyerly things to construct a convincing legal frame-up to trap Naboth. This may be because she is a Phoenician princess originally (and possibly a priestess, as royal women there often were), and so was given a formal education (which Israelite women normally weren't).
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Too Dumb to Live
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Too Dumb to Live: The King of Israel sends some soldiers to bring Elijah to him. Their leader isn't very respectful, so Elijah makes a snarky comment and burns them with divine fire. The King sends a second group of soldiers, and their leader, apparently not noticing the charred corpses and burned rocks and whatnot, makes the exact same disrespectful demand as the first. The results are predictable. Thankfully, the third batch learned from their mistakes and humbles himself before the prophet, who allows him to take him to the King so he can deliver the Lord's message in person.
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Throne Made of X
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Throne Made of X: Solomon's throne demonstrated just how wealthy and powerful he was.
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Implicit Prison
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Implicit Prison: Shimei is told to build a house in Jerusalem and live there, and is warned that if he ever leaves Jerusalem, he will be killed. Three years later, two of his servants fled, and he left Jerusalem to get them back. Once Solomon heard of this, he had Shimei executed.
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The Paralyzer
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The Paralyzer: The prophet from Judah that was called to prophesy against King Jeroboam of Israel and the altars he had set up for the idols he created for the ten-tribe kingdom to worship in 1st Kings chapter 13, who by the power of God caused King Jeroboam's hand to wither so that he could not bring it back to himself, paralyzing him until the king entreated the prophet to be healed.
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Posthumous Sibling
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Posthumous Sibling: Beriah was born to Ephraim in 1st Chronicles 7:20-23 after the death of his siblings.
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Ignored Expert
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Ignored Expert: Micaiah son of Imlah, who prophesied that King Ahab was going to fall in battle at Ramoth Gilead. King Ahab persisted in engaging the battle, though dressed as a regular soldier in the hope that he would avert this fate, but an arrow shot at random strikes and kills him anyway.
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Healing Spring
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Healing Spring: The Jordan River, which in itself provided no supernatural healing, but Naaman the Syrian was told to dip himself in it seven times to be cleansed of his leprosy. Naaman refused to do this at first, claiming that the rivers in his own country are far better rivers to be dipped in, but Naaman eventually gives in and thus is cleansed of his leprosy.
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Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence
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Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence: Elijah in 2nd Kings chapter 2, presumably, when he was taken up into Heaven in a whirlwind. This is contested in 2nd Chronicles chapter 21, when years later from this event King Jehoram was given a letter written by Elijah telling him that he was going to die of an incurable sickness due to his terrible reign of Judah. It is also likely that the letter was written by his successor Elisha and that it was Wrongfully Attributed to Elijah by the author of the Chronicles.
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Desecrating the Dead
 Books of Kings / int_bd39588d
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Desecrating the Dead: In 2nd Kings chapter 23, in fulfillment of a prophecy made years before in 1st Kings chapter 13, King Josiah desecrates the bones of the dead priests that served the altars of the idols King Jeroboam I of Israel had set up by burning their bones on the altar to desecrate the altar itself, preventing anyone else from using it. He stops when he comes to the tomb of the prophet who declared that he would desecrate the altar and leaves his tomb alone, along with that of the false prophet who tested him after.
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Yes-Man
 Books of Kings / int_be192f18
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Yes-Man: King Ahab is surrounded by a bunch of prophets who act like this when he asks them whether he and King Jehoshaphat should attack Ramoth Gilead or refrain, with all of them saying, "Go ahead and attack, for the Lord will deliver them into your hand." Zedekiah son of Chenanaah takes it one step further and wielding a pair of iron horns proclaims that Ahab will smash the Syrians like a bull. Micaiah son of Imlah, the only true prophet of the Lord present, tells the king that the Lord has put a lying spirit into the mouths of those other prophets in order to get him to fall in the battle.
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Faith–Heel Turn
 Books of Kings / int_bf9c6b5e
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Jehoiada the priest, who acted as a co-regent to the young King Joash of Judah, was given the honor of being buried in the tombs of the kings, the same of which was not given to Joash himself after his Faith–Heel Turn.
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Straight for the Commander
 Books of Kings / int_c02ce551
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Straight for the Commander: In what would be King Ahab's final battle, the king of the Syrians ordered his charioteers to only attack the king of Israel (Ahab). Seeing King Jehoshaphat of Judah on the battlefield in his royal robes, they assumed that he was the king of Israel and went after him, but left him alone after he revealed (or God revealed, according to the 2nd Chronicles account of the same event) that he was not the king of Israel.
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Invisible to Normals
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Invisible to Normals: God's cavalry of horses and chariots of fire surrounding the place where Elisha and his servant were living in 2nd Kings chapter 6, protecting them from the Syrian raiders. At least they remained invisible until Elisha prayed to God for his servant's eyes to be opened, and thus it was revealed.
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Curse
 Books of Kings / int_c2e295cd
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Curse: Joshua cursed whoever rebuilds Jericho, saying whoever lays its foundations will lose his firstborn and whoever sets up its gates will lose his youngest child. This came true in the reign of Ahab when Hiel the Bethelite rebuilt Jericho, costing him his eldest son Abiram and his youngest son Segub, as recorded in 1st Kings 16:34. Gehazi, Elisha's servant, is cursed with leprosy along with his family line when he secretly went to Naaman the Syrian to receive a reward that Elisha refused for curing his leprosy. Elijah calls a curse on the family of Ahab and Jezebel when Jezebel has Naboth the Jezreelite killed by royal decree so her husband can possess Naboth's field. Because Ahab humbled himself before God when he realized that there was a curse on him, the curse wasn't fully carried out until Jehu son of Nimshi was anointed king of Israel, and Ahab's son King Joram was the one whose dead body would be cast into the field of Naboth.
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Hope Spot
 Books of Kings / int_c3c18143
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Hope Spot: Chronicles ends with the proclamation of Cyrus the Great allowing the Jews to return to their homeland. Also, for all of his Knight Templar qualities and the shrinkage of northern Israel's borders in his time, Jehu's reign actually proved to be a significant moral improvement over his predecessors'. Which really isn't saying much when Jehu only gets rid of the Baal worship and not also the idol worship that King Jeroboam I had instituted years ago.
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Books of Kings / int_c3c18143
 Books of Kings / int_c435ec5d
type
Aesop Amnesia
 Books of Kings / int_c435ec5d
comment
Aesop Amnesia: Prior to overthrowing a wicked king of Israel, God sends a prophet to explain why the king will be overthrown (and his family killed). Still, the next king will institute the same blasphemous practices of his predecessor and suffer the same fate. More specifically, Ahab witnesses God’s miraculous victory over Baal at Mount Carmel and the subsequent slaughter of Baal’s priests. Yet when he flees back to Jezreel and reports what happened to Jezebel, he consents to her plan to have Elijah killed. Ironically, one of the common interpretations is that Elijah's career ended for the same reason. Escaping from Ahab and Jezebel's persecution, Elijah complains to God that all of his deeds done to glorify God's name were for nothing, since the Israelites are too wicked to listen to him. God then does a whole light show involving storms and earthquakes, with God explicitly said not to be in any of them but implied to be in the following "sheer silence" (that is, trying to tell Elijah that his devoutness is not measured in rage, flashy miracles or displays of power). Elijah responds by repeating his complaint verbatim, showing that he had learned nothing. God then gives him his next orders, ending with "anoint Elisha as prophet in your place."
 Books of Kings / int_c435ec5d
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_c435ec5d
 Books of Kings / int_c5385ad9
type
Horrible Judge of Character
 Books of Kings / int_c5385ad9
comment
Horrible Judge of Character: Jehosaphat's alliance with Israel had terrible consequences. Pagan practices spread to Judah, he was almost killed in battle because of Ahab, his venture into maritime commerce ended in disaster and his daughter-in-law Athaliah almost destroyed David's royal line.
 Books of Kings / int_c5385ad9
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_c5385ad9
 Books of Kings / int_c66cb5a9
type
Human Sacrifice
 Books of Kings / int_c66cb5a9
comment
Human Sacrifice: Besides the religious sacrifice of children that pops up in the kingdom of Judah whenever an evil king rules the throne, King Mesha of Moab in 2nd Kings chapter 3 sacrifices his firstborn son and heir on the wall of his last remaining city when he sees that he cannot prevail against the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom and their armies. Oddly, this seems to work, as something then causes the armies to leave.
 Books of Kings / int_c66cb5a9
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_c66cb5a9
 Books of Kings / int_c87660d5
type
Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!
 Books of Kings / int_c87660d5
comment
Get A Hold Of Yourself Man: God often sends His angels to give words of encouragement, but on the top of the list of epic "Get A Hold Of Yourself"s from God Himself is when Elijah has a Heroic BSoD:
 Books of Kings / int_c87660d5
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 Books of Kings / int_c87660d5
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Books of Kings / int_c87660d5
 Books of Kings / int_c885a824
type
Sucksessor
 Books of Kings / int_c885a824
comment
Sucksessor: Terrible kings often followed good ones, but every once in a while good kings followed terrible ones. (At least in Judah, anyway. The book of Kings grades all of Israel's rulers as evil.)
 Books of Kings / int_c885a824
featureApplicability
1.0
 Books of Kings / int_c885a824
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Books of Kings / int_c885a824
 Books of Kings / int_c928d01d
type
Magic Music
 Books of Kings / int_c928d01d
comment
Magic Music: In 2nd Kings chapter 3, Elisha gets a message from God to give to the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom through a minstrel playing music. In 2nd Chronicles chapter 20, King Jehoshaphat leading his army to the Wilderness of Tekoa to sing praises unto God has caused three enemy armies to end up fighting each other to the death.
 Books of Kings / int_c928d01d
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1.0
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featureConfidence
1.0
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Books of Kings / int_c928d01d
 Books of Kings / int_c9790040
type
Decadent Court
 Books of Kings / int_c9790040
comment
Decadent Court: Elah, king of Israel, was “drinking himself drunk in the house of Arza� when Zimri leads The Coup against him.
 Books of Kings / int_c9790040
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_c9790040
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Books of Kings / int_c9790040
 Books of Kings / int_ca5eda76
type
Heteronormative Crusader
 Books of Kings / int_ca5eda76
comment
Heteronormative Crusader: By implication, all the "good" kings would have been this (since homosexual practices were outlawed in the Law of Moses). However, it's most explicit with Josiah, who is said to have destroyed the homes of the qedeshim in Jerusalem (and then presumably either killed them or deported them out of the kingdom, the text isn't quite clear on that). Qedeshim is translated as "sodomites" in the King James Version—other Bible translations can render it a little differently, but most agree that it has something to do with homosexuality.
 Books of Kings / int_ca5eda76
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Books of Kings / int_ca5eda76
 Books of Kings / int_ccbd82d3
type
Gotta Kill Them All
 Books of Kings / int_ccbd82d3
comment
Gotta Kill Them All: Jehu kills every descendant of Ahab and priest of Baal that he can get his hands on.
 Books of Kings / int_ccbd82d3
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_ccbd82d3
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Books of Kings / int_ccbd82d3
 Books of Kings / int_ce104b8e
type
Serial Escalation
 Books of Kings / int_ce104b8e
comment
Serial Escalation: In 1 Kings 14, Jeroboam did more evil when whomever preceded him. Later, in 1 Kings 16, Zimri was described as evil, and the two following kings (Omri and Ahab) did more evil than any before.
 Books of Kings / int_ce104b8e
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_ce104b8e
 Books of Kings / int_ce3f50f0
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Clever Crows
 Books of Kings / int_ce3f50f0
comment
Clever Crows: In 1st Kings chapter 17, God sends ravens to feed Elijah with bread and meat during the drought until the river had dried up.
 Books of Kings / int_ce3f50f0
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_ce3f50f0
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Books of Kings / int_ce3f50f0
 Books of Kings / int_cf92fea8
type
Cassandra Truth
 Books of Kings / int_cf92fea8
comment
God sends a lying spirit to all the false prophets in Ahab’s court, so they will entice him into battle against Syria, where Ahab will be killed. When the prophet Micaiah reveals this to Ahab, the king refuses to believe him and has Micaiah imprisoned. Ahab is then killed in battle against the Syrians, which is lampshaded by Micaiah himself as he's taken away ("If you ever return safely, the Lord has not spoken through me. Mark my words, all you people!").
 Books of Kings / int_cf92fea8
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Books of Kings / int_cf92fea8
 Books of Kings / int_d001c42c
type
Anti-Villain
 Books of Kings / int_d001c42c
comment
Anti-Villain: King Ahab is said to be the most evil of all the kings of Israel, but can fairly easily come across as one of the most sympathetic instead when judged by how he acts in his "onscreen" appearances. Some of this is due to Values Dissonance (the narrator's main complaint against him is that he was tolerant of other religions, which many modern secular people will not think was that evil. Many of those religions practiced human sacrifice and other crimes against humanity), but he also has many traits that would seem positive even at the time. For example, he is a capable soldier and statesman, brave in battle and yet magnanimous in victory (sparing the defeated Aramaeans and making an alliance and trade agreement with them instead of slaughtering them), and dies heroically fighting for his country. (Outside of The Bible, other old records also show that he was one of the leaders of The Alliance against the Assyrians, The Empire of the day.) In fact, other than his liberal religious policy, the only unambiguously evil things his regime is ever really shown to do aren't even initiated by Ahab, but are either done at Jezebel's instigation, or even done by her behind his back—and after her major atrocity (the judicial murder of the innocent farmer Naboth), Ahab is terribly regretful and ashamed about this. As the king he is still ultimately responsible for everything (and never punishes Jezebel for any of the evil things she does), but his characterization is very far from the cackling villain he is sometimes flanderized as in adaptations. Even God himself seems to agree, modifying Ahab's punishment to grant him a Mercy Kill so he won't have to personally witness the total destruction of his family line.
 Books of Kings / int_d001c42c
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_d001c42c
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Books of Kings / int_d001c42c
 Books of Kings / int_d19dc823
type
The Gods Must Be Lazy
 Books of Kings / int_d19dc823
comment
The Gods Must Be Lazy: In the challenge between Elijah the prophet and the prophets of Baal, when the latter prophets were calling on Baal to light their sacrifice and started to leap around the altar, Elijah taunts them to call louder, saying that Baal is probably asleep and must be awakened.
 Books of Kings / int_d19dc823
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Books of Kings / int_d19dc823
 Books of Kings / int_d1fc4a16
type
Please Spare Him, My Liege!
 Books of Kings / int_d1fc4a16
comment
Please Spare Him, My Liege!: In 1st Kings chapter 3, when King Solomon threatens the life of the child by having him be cut in two when two women argue over whose child he is, one of the women pleads with Solomon to spare him his life and to be given to the other woman, while the other woman is fine with just having the child be cut in two. Solomon determines that the woman that pleaded for the child's life is the actual mother and rewards custody to her.
 Books of Kings / int_d1fc4a16
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Books of Kings / int_d1fc4a16
 Books of Kings / int_d41832cc
type
Written by the Winners
 Books of Kings / int_d41832cc
comment
Written by the Winners: A theory is that this is why Jezebel and her family got such a negative portrayal. As all of them were killed off, there was nobody around to tell their side of the story. Their opponents (who had won in the battle of faiths) were thus able to slander them as much as they wanted to. And as for their kingdom in general: Around 720 BC, Israel was overrun by the Assyrians, while Judah was saved by a timely civil war, that shortly thereafter broke out in the Assyrian Empire and continued to exist for a good 200 additional years. So all somewhat contemporary surviving records of that time come from the priesthood in Jerusalem, which explains why the inhabitants and kings especially of the northern kingdom are described in such a negative light. The kingdom of Judah is often portrayed in a negative light as well. This should be a factor in assessing the other examples.
 Books of Kings / int_d41832cc
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Books of Kings / int_d41832cc
 Books of Kings / int_d44ea142
type
You Are Not Alone
 Books of Kings / int_d44ea142
comment
You Are Not Alone: In 1st Kings chapter 19, Elijah runs away from the threat of death by Queen Jezebel, running all the way to Mount Horeb where he meets God in a cave. God asks what he's doing there, and Elijah answers, “I have been very zealous for the Lord God of hosts; because the children of Israel have forsaken Your covenant, torn down Your altars, and killed Your prophets with the sword. I alone am left; and they seek to take my life.� God assures Elijah that he isn't alone, that "I have reserved seven thousand in Israel, all whose knees have not bowed to Baal, and every mouth that has not kissed him."
 Books of Kings / int_d44ea142
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Books of Kings / int_d44ea142
 Books of Kings / int_d45c0b86
type
Refuge in Audacity
 Books of Kings / int_d45c0b86
comment
Refuge in Audacity: Despite Jezebel having put a hit out on Elijah, Elijah confronts Ahab at Naboth’s vineyard after Jezebel has killed Naboth killed and pronounces a curse on the Ruling Couple.
 Books of Kings / int_d45c0b86
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Books of Kings / int_d45c0b86
 Books of Kings / int_d4fc9734
type
Salt the Earth
 Books of Kings / int_d4fc9734
comment
Salt the Earth: What the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom are commanded to do the people of Moab by Elisha the prophet in 2nd Kings 3:19.
 Books of Kings / int_d4fc9734
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_d4fc9734
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Books of Kings / int_d4fc9734
 Books of Kings / int_d786481
type
Top Wife
 Books of Kings / int_d786481
comment
Top Wife: In 2nd Chronicles 11:21, it says that King Rehoboam of Judah loved his cousin Maacah above all the wives and concubines he married (for he had married eighteen wives and had taken sixty concubines), and thus her son Abijah was chosen to be the crown prince that would succeed him as king.
 Books of Kings / int_d786481
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Books of Kings / int_d786481
 Books of Kings / int_d7b34c31
type
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"
 Books of Kings / int_d7b34c31
comment
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": The Pharaoh's Daughter who married Solomon.
 Books of Kings / int_d7b34c31
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_d7b34c31
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Books of Kings / int_d7b34c31
 Books of Kings / int_d965507b
type
Tragic Mistake
 Books of Kings / int_d965507b
comment
Tragic Mistake Hezekiah showed off Judah's treasures to Babylonian envoys and ended up putting his country on Babylon's hit list. Josiah goes off to fight against Egypt and gets killed.
 Books of Kings / int_d965507b
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_d965507b
 Books of Kings / int_da2f3716
type
Intimate Healing
 Books of Kings / int_da2f3716
comment
Intimate Healing: In the first chapter of 1st Kings, David's wise men look for a beautiful young woman that can lie on the king's bosom to keep him warm, and the woman they found was Abishag, who tended to this duty without anything sexual going on between them. Done twice by the prophets Elijah and Elisha with their resurrection miracles as mentioned in Back from the Dead requiring lying down on top of the children they were praying for.
 Books of Kings / int_da2f3716
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Books of Kings / int_da2f3716
 Books of Kings / int_db912a80
type
The Good King
 Books of Kings / int_db912a80
comment
The Good King: King Jotham of Judah, of whom both the books of Kings and Chronicles have little bad to say about him, except that "the high places were not removed". His distant successor Amon, by contrast, is just evil throughout and has nothing good said about him, though fortunately he had a short reign before he was killed.
 Books of Kings / int_db912a80
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Books of Kings / int_db912a80
 Books of Kings / int_e03533c8
type
Blood Bath
 Books of Kings / int_e03533c8
comment
Blood Bath: In some translations, 1st Kings 22:38 states that the prostitutes washed themselves in the blood that came from King Ahab when he died in his chariot returning home from his failed attempt to reclaim Ramoth Gilead.
 Books of Kings / int_e03533c8
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Books of Kings / int_e03533c8
 Books of Kings / int_e07342ac
type
Makeup Is Evil
 Books of Kings / int_e07342ac
comment
Makeup Is Evil: Queen Jezebel notoriously put on makeup before confronting God's anointed future king Jehu son of Nimshi. Unfortunately, it didn't stop her from becoming dog food.
 Books of Kings / int_e07342ac
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_e07342ac
 Books of Kings / int_e19e68
type
Cruel Mercy
 Books of Kings / int_e19e68
comment
Cruel Mercy: In 1 Kings chapter 2, after David dies, Solomon becomes king over Israel. Abiathar the priest is relieved of duty and forced to resign from the priesthood for participating in Adonijah's attempt to seize the throne. Instead of immediately executing Abiathar, Solomon allows him to retire to his fields in Anathoth in recognition of his service to King David. Shimei is restricted to a house in Jerusalem, and is not allowed to cross the Brook Kidron under penalty of death. After three years, two of Shimei's servants run away to Gath, and Shimei goes to Gath to retrieve them. Afterward, Solomon has Shimei executed.
 Books of Kings / int_e19e68
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Books of Kings / int_e19e68
 Books of Kings / int_e1f59bf0
type
Musical Episode
 Books of Kings / int_e1f59bf0
comment
Musical Episode: 1st Chronicles chapters 13, 15, and 16 recap David's attempt to bring the Ark of God into Jerusalem from 2nd Samuel chapter 6, with chapter 16 featuring David singing a psalm to the Lord when he is successful.
 Books of Kings / int_e1f59bf0
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Books of Kings / int_e1f59bf0
 Books of Kings / int_e21faf11
type
Friend to All Living Things
 Books of Kings / int_e21faf11
comment
Friend to All Living Things: When Elijah was a wanted criminal for his prophecies and had fled into the wilderness to escape the Israelite police, the ravens there brought him food so he wouldn't starve.
 Books of Kings / int_e21faf11
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Books of Kings / int_e21faf11
 Books of Kings / int_e22fdf2f
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In Its Hour of Need
 Books of Kings / int_e22fdf2f
comment
In Its Hour of Need: Hezekiah stays in Jerusalem during the Assyrian siege.
 Books of Kings / int_e22fdf2f
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_e22fdf2f
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_e22fdf2f
 Books of Kings / int_e26f04b4
type
Last of His Kind
 Books of Kings / int_e26f04b4
comment
Last Of Their Kind: Elijah and Elisha were the last miracle workers in the Old Testament.
 Books of Kings / int_e26f04b4
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1.0
 Books of Kings / int_e26f04b4
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Books of Kings / int_e26f04b4
 Books of Kings / int_e27693
type
The Coup
 Books of Kings / int_e27693
comment
The Coup: Jehu son of Nimshi was anointed by God to destroy the royal family of Ahab and Jezebel as well as getting rid of Baal worship in the northern kingdom of Israel. When King Joram of Israel and King Ahaziah of Judah came together to confront the coming kingslayer, they both realize that treachery is afoot, and they were both killed in the same battle together.
 Books of Kings / int_e27693
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 Books of Kings / int_e27693
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Books of Kings / int_e27693
 Books of Kings / int_e31b965b
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Improbable Food Budget
 Books of Kings / int_e31b965b
comment
Improbable Food Budget: With God's help, a widow woman of Zeraphath was able to feed herself, her son, and the prophet Elijah for many days on just what little flour and oil she had left in the house, which upon Elijah's arrival would have been enough for just one cake of bread that would barely feed herself and her son.
 Books of Kings / int_e31b965b
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Books of Kings / int_e31b965b
 Books of Kings / int_e4c89b67
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Attending Your Own Funeral
 Books of Kings / int_e4c89b67
comment
Attending Your Own Funeral: In 2nd Kings 13:21, some Israelites who were in the middle of burying a dead man suddenly saw a Moabite raiding party, so they dropped the body into Elisha's tomb and ran off. When the body touched Elisha's bones, the man came to life and stood on his feet.
 Books of Kings / int_e4c89b67
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Books of Kings / int_e4c89b67
 Books of Kings / int_e8760868
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Space Whale Aesop
 Books of Kings / int_e8760868
comment
Space Whale Aesop: Don't insult and threaten God's prophets, or God might just summon bears to maul you. (God apparently preferred something a little more original than a classic Bolt of Divine Retribution this time around.)
 Books of Kings / int_e8760868
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Books of Kings / int_e8760868
 Books of Kings / int_e9e35e8f
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Exact Words
 Books of Kings / int_e9e35e8f
comment
Exact Words: David swore not to have Shimei put to death. That doesn't stop him from dropping some extremely strong hints to Solomon about what he ought to do about him.
 Books of Kings / int_e9e35e8f
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_e9e35e8f
 Books of Kings / int_eb0bb6a6
type
Solid Gold Poop
 Books of Kings / int_eb0bb6a6
comment
Solid Gold Poop: In 2nd Kings chapter 6, the Aramean siege against Samaria would be so great and painful to endure that the people would sell the fourth part of a kab (about 1 cup) of dove's dung for five shekels of silver.
 Books of Kings / int_eb0bb6a6
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Books of Kings / int_eb0bb6a6
 Books of Kings / int_eb3c0a1
type
The Kingslayer
 Books of Kings / int_eb3c0a1
comment
The Kingslayer: Zimri earns this reputation for killing his master King Elah, so much that he brought wrath upon himself with Omri leading the charge against him. Jehu also earns the same reputation, to the point where Queen Jezebel calls him Zimri before her servants throw her down to be trampled underfoot to death. In fact, Jehu kills both Jezebel's son King Joram as well as King Ahaziah of Judah on the same day.
 Books of Kings / int_eb3c0a1
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Books of Kings / int_eb3c0a1
 Books of Kings / int_eb8ec7c8
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Jerkass
 Books of Kings / int_eb8ec7c8
comment
Jerkass: Rehoboam, Solomon's son. He was given the advice of taking it easy with the workload and taxes on the people of Israel, but instead he chose to make things harder on them, thus causing ten of the twelve tribes of Israel to revolt and form a new kingdom.
 Books of Kings / int_eb8ec7c8
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Books of Kings / int_eb8ec7c8
 Books of Kings / int_eb8f64a6
type
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
 Books of Kings / int_eb8f64a6
comment
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: After God blinds the Syrian army to prevent them from killing Elisha, Elisha prevents the Israelite army from killing the Syrians and feeds the Syrians and allows them to return to Syria. Soon after, however, the Syrian army puts all of Samaria under siege, causing a countrywide famine.
 Books of Kings / int_eb8f64a6
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Books of Kings / int_eb8f64a6
 Books of Kings / int_eba4a0e7
type
Chronic Villainy
 Books of Kings / int_eba4a0e7
comment
Chronic Villainy: Judah often backslides after a "good" king dies. Its final backslide leads to their people being taken into captivity by the Babylonians.
 Books of Kings / int_eba4a0e7
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1.0
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Books of Kings / int_eba4a0e7
 Books of Kings / int_eca6c7f9
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Gratuitous Princess
 Books of Kings / int_eca6c7f9
comment
Gratuitous Princess: King Solomon's marriages was with 700 of them, just to show how powerful and lust-driven the character was.
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Anti-Magical Faction: Judea under King Josiah. As part of his reformation after Manasseh's excesses, his government purges the country of sorcerers and necromancers as well as the cults of the false gods.
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Self-Made Man
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comment
Self-Made Man: General Omri is not given the usual "son of..." patronymic most other major characters sport, which would indicate that he was a commoner whose parents weren't considered worth mentioning. Still, he became supreme commander of the Army—and later king, when the Army refused to recognize Zimri's coup against King Elah and appointed Omri regent instead.
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0% Approval Rating
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0% Approval Rating: King Jehoram of Judah was recorded as having died "without being desired" in 2nd Chronicles 21:20, meaning that he was so unlikable as king that nobody was sad to see him go.
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LawOfConservationOfDetail
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Law of Conservation of Detail: The writers of the Books of Kings only discuss the parts of the kings’ reigns that they considered relevant regarding Israel/Judah’s covenant with God. All other details are left out. Lampshaded throughout the books, with the description of each reign ending with the words, “Now the rest of the acts of X, are they not written in …� Also applies to the Books of Chronicles, though in David's case, it's to leave out any mention of his adulterous affair with Bathsheba and its subsequent consequences with his family; in Solomon's case, it's to leave out any mention of his Polyamory leading to his idolatry as well as his Protagonist Journey To Villainy.
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Too Good for This Sinful Earth
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Too Good for This Sinful Earth: Jeroboam had a young son, Ahijah, who died of illness. He was the only one in the family to be buried and mourned because he was the only one in whom God found any good.
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The Starscream
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The Starscream: Many of Israel's kings became king after betraying and assassinating the former king, then proceeded to kill off the rest of their family, leaving no surviving heirs.
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Where Is Your X Now?
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Where Is Your X Now? When Elijah competes with the priests of Baal over whose god can light their sacrifice, he makes fun of the other priests using lines similar to this trope. King Sennacherib of Assyria does this to King Hezekiah when he threatens to destroy Judah, saying "where are the gods" of the nations that he had conquered and suggesting that Hezekiah's God will not save him. It doesn't work well for the Assyrian king when, after King Hezekiah prays to God, Sennacherib finds that all 185,000 of his troops are dead.
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Confirmation Bias
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Confirmation Bias: In-Universe. When Jehosophat suggests to Ahab that they consult prophets before going into battle against Syria, Ahab summons the 400 prophets on his payroll, who enthusiastically proclaim victory for their side. When Jehosophat asks if there are any prophets of the LORD, Ahab admits there is but doesn’t want to consult him, because “he never prophesies good concerning me, only evil.� And when (at Jehosophat's insistence) they do bring in the prophet Micaiah, he not only foretells defeat but declares that the LORD sent a lying spirit to put lies in the other prophets’ mouths. Ahab ignores Micaiah, instead locking him up, and is then killed in battle.
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You Will Be Spared
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You Will Be Spared When King Ahab hears God's threat to wipe out his entire family, he humbles himself enough that God decides that, while he's still going to have Ahab's entire family wiped out, he'll wait until after Ahab is dead to do it. When King Josiah had his men consult Huldah the prophetess when he heard from the Book of the Law and realized that God's wrath was great against Israel, Huldah tells the king that, though God's wrath will be poured out on Israel and "will not be quenched", the king at least will be spared from having to see it happen during his lifetime.
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Punished for Sympathy
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Punished for Sympathy: In 1st Kings chapter 20, after the armies of King Ben-Hadad of Syria have been defeated twice by the armies of Israel with the help of the Lord, the Syrian king decides to surrender in humility to the king of Israel and make a treaty of peace with him. Because the king of Israel accepted a peace treaty with a man that the Lord had appointed to utter destruction, He sent a prophet to warn the king that his life will be taken for the life of the king of Syria, and the lives of Israel for those of Syria.
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Nice Job Breaking It, Herod
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Nice Job Breaking It, Herod: Solomon creates a rival in Hadad the Edomite by wiping out much of his tribe. But after describing Hadad's back story, he is never mentioned again.
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Dying Curse
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Dying Curse: In 2nd Chronicles chapter 24, after King Joash's Face–Heel Turn, Zechariah the son of Jehoidada tells the king, "Thus says God: 'Why do you transgress the commandments of the LORD, so that you cannot prosper? Because you have forsaken the LORD, He also has forsaken you.' " When the king commanded Zechariah to be stoned, his last words were, "The LORD look on it, and repay!" Sometime after, the LORD brought judgment upon Joash by bringing the armies of Syria against Judah and Jerusalem, and later when Joash was wounded, he was assassinated.
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Darkest Hour
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Darkest Hour: The reign of Manasseh in Judah is the bleakest part of the book, and perhaps of The Bible in general. The northern kingdom of Israel was completely razed by Assyria. Meanwhile in Judah the king Manasseh is not only an Assyrian client but the most cruel and bloodthirsty king as of yet. Judah was under the rule of a Religion of Evil that led the people to become "more evil than the nations had done whom the Lord destroyed before the people of Israel". The king "shed very much innocent blood, till he had filled Jerusalem from one end to another", and according to extra-biblical tradition prophets like Isaiah were executed in extremely brutal ways.
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Prophecies Are Always Right
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Prophecies Are Always Right: Played with twice: God sends a lying spirit to all the false prophets in Ahab’s court, so they will entice him into battle against Syria, where Ahab will be killed. When the prophet Micaiah reveals this to Ahab, the king refuses to believe him and has Micaiah imprisoned. Ahab is then killed in battle against the Syrians, which is lampshaded by Micaiah himself as he's taken away ("If you ever return safely, the Lord has not spoken through me. Mark my words, all you people!"). Elisha tells Hazael, servant of King Ben-hadad of Syria, to tell Ben-hadad that the king will recover from his sickness, even though Ben-hadad will actually die. But then Elisha breaks down and cries and reveals to Hazael that he will become king of Syria and will cause great destruction to Israel.
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Drives Like Crazy
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Drives Like Crazy: Jehu, the charioteer. So much so that lookouts who see his chariot approaching can tell him apart from anyone else before he's even close enough to identify by sight.
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You Killed My Father
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You Killed My Father: Amaziah executed the people who killed his father.
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Sidekick Graduations Stick
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Sidekick Graduations Stick: Elisha, who long served as Elijah’s Sidekick, becomes the leading prophet of Israel after Elijah is taken up to heaven. Some of the “sons of the prophets,� while recognizing that the “spirit of Elijah� now rested on Elisha, did not accept that Elijah was gone looked for him in the mountains. Only when they failed to find Elijah and Elisha performed several miracles did the sons of the prophets accept Elisha as the new pre-eminent prophet.
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Don't Make Me Destroy You
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Don't Make Me Destroy You: Pharaoh Neco of Egypt says this to King Josiah of Judah when the king tried to engage him in battle in 2nd Chronicles 35:21:
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Ruling Family Massacre
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Ruling Family Massacre: This happened a few times with the kings of Israel (namely, the dynasties of Jeroboam I, Baasha, and Ahab) and Queen Athaliah almost decimated the Davidic dynasty in the kingdom of Judah except for one child that was spared to take the throne when he was of age.
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Princeling Rivalry
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Princeling Rivalry: Solomon vs. Adonijah. Although Adonijah's attempted ascent to the throne was overthrown by King David having Solomon officially anointed as king, Adonijah attempted yet again in a more underhanded way by requesting his father's consort Abishag to be given to him as a wife. This resulted in his death along with Joab's death and the removal of Abiathar as high priest.
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Books of Kings

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