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THE PRAISE AND PRAYER at the dedication of the temple
of Solomon is, like the building itself, a magnifical fabric of gold and
silver and incorruptible thoughts, more valuable and indestructible than
any other work in the worship of ancient times. This inaugural petition,
when compared with its fulfillment as recorded in later history and
prophecy, will help us much to perceive the place of prayer in God’s
dealings with His creatures. Wherever it calls for human cooperation, it
fails to be fulfilled. Nevertheless, after man’s impotence has been
manifested, then God steps in and brings about a grand and glorious
conclusion, as the final fulfillment.
The prayer
of Solomon ascends to Jehovah in the crisis of a divine demonstration. God
is staging the tragedy of Human Government in the land of Israel for all
the world to see. And He has had it recorded for all future generations to
read. It was not enacted to merely entertain, nor written for pious
edification. It is God’s means of teaching us a vital lesson that men
and messengers must learn in order to enter into the joy and satisfaction
of God’s grand ultimate.
The two
introductory scenes in the tragedy of Human Government, as revealed
through the nation of Israel, had already been staged. They epitomized all
that was to follow. Saul was a man’s man. David was a man of God. Saul
depicted the glory and energy of the flesh. He towered tall above the
heads of all the people. Physically he was the superior of everyone. He
should have fought and conquered Goliath. Instead, his physical inferior,
the little lad, David, is given the kingdom and promised it in perpetuity
to his descendants, because he did not rely on his own strength, but on
the help of God.
In Solomon
we reach a climax and a turning point. He brings the kingdom to its
highest glory, yet leads it to a cataclysm from which it has not yet
recovered. Nor will it ever be restored to the power and splendor of the
days of David and Solomon until the Messiah, David’s greater Son, brings
it back to God in the eons of the eons. There are two significant facts
which should not escape us if we desire to get a grasp of the great lesson
which the kingdom is intended to teach. The first is that Christ is not
presented as the Son of Solomon, but of David. The second is
that the kingdom was not restored by David’s fleshly descendants, but
will be by Him Who is also the Son of God and Who is anointed, not only
with oil, but by God’s holy spirit.
Another
point is important and in perfect harmony with this lesson. The idea of
building a temple, a magnificent house for the worship of Israel’s God,
did not originate with Solomon. It was David who desired to honor
God in this way. His spiritual instinct made him uncomfortable in his
house of cedar, while the God Whom he adored lived in a temporary
tabernacle. Spiritually speaking it was the temple of David rather
than Solomon. He planned it and prepared for it. So to say, he was both
the owner and the architect, while Solomon was only the builder. Even in
this he was much helped by David’s friend, the king of Tyre.
We cannot
repeat too often the striking fact that the greatness and glory of Solomon’s
reign was based upon the temple, not the throne, marvelous
and magnificent as that was. Prosperity and power in the political
sphere must rest on the spiritual basis of worship of the Deity, to be
real and lasting.
The ideal
is government by God Himself, as it will be in the consummation. But there
is a gradual approach to this during the eons. To begin with, God gave
Israel priests, but no king. He Himself intervened by means of “judges”
or rulers, when necessary. A king was not given until the people clamored
for one. So we see that kings, as well as priests, are only a temporary
expedient, a passing provision, until all these functions are
superseded by direct submission to God and immediate worship of the
Supreme. There are intermediate stages in which priesthood and rule are
strictly separate, yet other times when they are combined. This was
foreshadowed by Melchizedek, who was both priest and king, and will be
clearly exemplified by the Messiah, Who combines the two offices during
the thousand years of His reign over Israel and the earth. Then they also
will be a nation of priests.
In order to
appreciate the perfection of Solomon’s prayer, we must see its place in
God’s plan. There is something very remarkable in the fact that Solomon,
a king, should pray at the dedication of the temple.
It is highly suggestive that there seemed to be no special building to
house the seat of government in Jerusalem, such as the capitol in
Washington, or the Parliament or Whitehall in London. Indeed, King David
had built a palace for himself, corresponding to the White House, and
Buckingham Palace, and the Quirinal in Rome, and the Schloss in Berlin,
but these are not the seat of government, only the residence of the ruler.
In Israel the center around which the nation was gathered was God’s
house, not man’s.
Although
Solomon did not actually infringe on the legal functions of the
priesthood, in spirit he seems to have anticipated the union of the two to
some extent in this prayer to Jehovah. Indeed, the reigns of David and
Solomon over all Israel are a type of the glorious kingdom of our Lord, in
the future. Strictly speaking, his business was to rule the people, not to
pray to God. But he was wise enough to see that both must go together, for
no one can rule acceptably unless God be with him. Indeed, if we learn
nothing else from Solomon’s prayer and his reign, we must be impressed
by the close connection between the worship of God and the prosperity of
the people. Notwithstanding the terrific drain upon their resources which
it entailed, they enjoyed welfare as at no other time in their history.
In the
present secret celestial administration the separation of church and state
is much to be preferred, although it is contrary to the ideal. We are
nearing the climax of man’s rebellion against the Deity, and it is not
the time for the ideal, except in our private experience. We must be
subject to the political authorities, but we are not obliged to submit to
the ecclesiastical powers. Whenever these have usurped control, it has
been very trying for men of God. Priests may be much more merciless than
politicians. The very word “inquisition” reminds us of the misuse of
political power by religious potentates.
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SOLOMON’S PRAYER (2 Chron.6:14-42) |
| DETAIL |
|
SUMMARY |
| 14-20 The Promise (Past).......House
of David.......(Future) Remembrance 42 |
| 21-39 The
Worshipers...................Others..................................The
Priests 41 |
| 40 God to See, Hear.......The
House of God.................Jehovah to Rise 41 |
| 14-15 Plea—16-17 Petition......THE
PROMISE.........18 Plea—19-20 Supplication |
| Faithfulness
Condescension |
| 21-31 Israel, 32
Foreigner........WORSHIPERS.............Foreigner 33, Israel 34-39 |
| 21 Supplication
(General)..........ISRAEL................Judgment (Particular)
22-31 |
| 22-23 Sin—24-25
Defeat...........JUDGMENT..........26-27 Drought—28-31 Famine |
| 34 Fight—35
Hearken................ISRAEL..........Captivity 36-38—Hearken
39 |

THE SKELETON OF SOLOMON’S PRAYER
Most
of the Lord’s people are like the man who could not see the forest
because of the front trees which barred his view. In order to survey all
of it, he should have ascended a high hill or a mountain, where he could
gaze on the whole with a single glance. In Stepenitz, where I spent some
years working on the German version, there was a tremendous forest, which
supported the “Stift,” or retreat for titled ladies, in which we
lived. One day we walked in it until I was tired and had to turn back, so
I never learned its extent or shape. I might easily have become lost in
it. If I had been given a map of it, with some notation of its salient
features, I would not be so ignorant and vague in my thoughts about it. So
it is with the saints and the Bible. They need a map to orient themselves
in it.
These
skeletons are often of great practical value. Nearly a half century ago,
when Dr. Bullinger was first writing on “the mystery,” and did not
differentiate between the secret of the evangel and that concerning the
joint body, he was strongly inclined to think that the last few verses of
Romans belonged at the end of Ephesians, because he saw no “mystery”
in Romans. But a glance at the skeleton of Romans would have shown him
that the last verses, on the secret evangel, were
indispensable to balance the evangel of God in the first
verse. Moreover, they would have nothing to correspond with them, should
they close the epistle to the Ephesians.
Even
Solomon’s prayer, short as it is, compared with the whole Book, is a
blur in the minds of many. So we have prepared a “map,” or rather “skeleton,”
so that the whole can be comprehended at a glance, and its message may be
firmly impressed upon the mind and memory. As such a skeleton is, perhaps,
the most powerful evidence for the inspiration of the Scriptures, and may
be an enormous help in grasping the exact significance of its details as
well as its general scope, we hope to be able to prepare one for every
part as well as for the Scriptures as a whole. Much has been done in this
direction by others, but no one seems to have noticed the fact that the
written word is planned as though it is a living creation, in which there
is a balance of parts.
As the
skeleton of a living creature is composed of two complementary sides, such
is also the usual literary structure of God’s revelation. A very
effective form is to deal with a subject in lengthy detail and then
retrace the steps, in reverse order, in a short summary. This is the case
with Solomon’s prayer. He presents a prolonged petition concerning The
House of David, then the Others, and The House of God,
and then summarizes them. In a brief conclusion He reverts to The House
of Jehovah, the Priests, and The House of David. It is
not easy to grasp the relation of each of these to each other as presented
in this paragraph, so we arrange them so as to express their spiritual
position in the skeleton.
But the
corresponding parts are not exact duplicates. Because of the confirmation
of our bones, we cannot put the right shoe on the left foot, or the left
glove on the right hand. They are complementary. They correspond.
In Solomon’s prayer he elaborates on the past promises to The
House of David at the beginning, but refers briefly to God’s future
remembrance at the end. Within these extremes Solomon prays for all
the rest of mankind who may contact the temple. There may seem to be an
imbalance in the amount of space given to each. There are eighteen verses
about the worshipers and only half of a verse about the priests. But this
objection vanishes when we weigh the two. I would have no
hesitation in saying that, for us, Paul’s epistles have more weight than
all the rest of the Scriptures put together. So also, the priests
are far more important to the temple than all the worshipers.
The same
principle can be seen in the central part of the prayer. So far as the temple
is concerned, it is much more momentous than the rest. They deal with the human
aspect, this with the divine. It is not only a house of prayer for
all people, but, first of all, the habitation of Jehovah God. If He will
not see and hear, if He will not rise and rest there, it is all a vain and
vapid perversion. This, the heart of the whole prayer, is near the end,
and has no bulk at all, yet it is the core and kernel of his petition. I
have often thought that an exposition of such a passage should start as
God did in dealing with the tabernacle—from the center to the
circumference. For this once we will base our study on the skeleton, and
start at the central peak and consider each zone, on both sides, so to
speak, at the same time.
Solomon’s
prayer is itself only a segment of a larger section dealing with The
Dedication of the Temple. This in turn is only a part of the whole
book of Chronicles. So, also, there are smaller parts in some of the
portions. The Promise concerning The House of David consists of two
complementary parts in which a Plea (14-15) and a Petition
(16-17) concerning David’s House are balanced by another Plea
(18) and Supplication (19-20) concerning Solomon himself. The first
one is based on God’s faithfulness, the second on His condescension.
The Worshipers
(21-39) is a reversal dealing with Israel (21-31), the Foreigner
(32), balanced by the Foreigner (38), Israel (34-39). One
set emphasizes worship, the other fear.

THE GOD OF ISRAEL
Jehovah
is the God of Israel, and of no other nation. It is the eonian nation,
predestinated by God to be the head and ruler, and the channel of blessing
to all the rest. He is bound to them by His promises in the past and their
fulfillment in the future. No other nation has had such a God. By His
revelation of Himself in the past and His promises for the future He has
made of Israel a unique nation, altogether different from the rest. As has
been fully explained elsewhere, His Name covers and comprehends their
whole history, for they are welded into a special people by His dealings
with them in the past, His discipline of them in the present, and His
promises to them for the future.

THE HOUSE OF DAVID
As
the opening section of Solomon’s prayer (14-20) is summarized in the
closing words of the prayer, we will quote these in order to grasp its
general outline: “Jehovah, God, Thou must not turn back the face of
Thine anointed. Remember the kindness of David, Thy servant” (2
Chron.6:42). David, that marvelous type of the coming Messiah, was
promised a “house,” or dynasty, of which Messiah will be the flower.
Yet the fulfillment of the promise was not dependent on Jehovah alone, but
upon the faithfulness of David’s successors. Solomon was a wise man, and
he seemed to sense the insecurity which this implied. He was fearful of
himself, although he had been anointed, and had a large measure of God’s
spirit. So he throws himself upon Jehovah. He does not say “let me not
turn back my face,” as we would expect. He asked that God would not do
the turning, not on his account, but because of the kindnesses He had
shown to David.

PRAYING TO GOD IN HEAVEN
Christendom
prays to a distant God, Who is in heaven. Their God is further from them
than Jehovah was from Israel in the wilderness, or in the land. God dwelt
in the midst of His people, in the tabernacle and in the temple. His home
was on the earth, not in the heavens. All Israel came to Jerusalem
to worship Him, and even foreigners, from other lands, could make a
pilgrimage to the temple in Jerusalem to do homage to Him. After the glory
had departed, however, when the Ethiopian eunuch came, he did not find Him
there, but on the road from Jerusalem to Gaza (Acts 8:26). Saul of Tarsus
had doubtless been in the court of the temple many a time, but he did not
meet God, through Christ, in its precincts, but on the road to Damascus
(Acts 9). He it Was who told the Athenians that God does not dwell in
temples made with hands. Though far from the land, among the nations, he
assured them that God was not far from each one of us (Acts
17:24-29).
There are
many examples for praying to the Father in heaven, in the Scriptures. It
is in the popular formula, the so-called “Lord’s prayer,” which He
gave to the disciples at their request (Matt.6: 9-13). Indeed, our Lord
often spoke of their Father in the heavens (Matt.5:16,45; 6:1; 7:11;
18:14). Most of us are blind to the unbridgeable distance implied in this
seemingly harmless phrase. God should have been very near to our Lord’s
disciples. Not merely on the earth, but in the land, in the holy city that
they so often visited, in the temple. The Shekinah should have shone above
the cherubim in the holy of holies. Instead, Jehovah had become a distant
God, more unapproachable even than when He dwelt behind the courts and
curtains of the sanctuary. They could approach the inner courts of the
temple, and the priests could go into the holies of holies, but who could
ascend to the heavens? Such is the true background of our Lord’s
ministry, especially in the account given by Matthew.
Christendom
has been led astray by failing to recognize that heaven is a place of distance,
in contrast to the normal nearness of the Deity to His earthly
people Israel. Is it not remarkable that the heavens are mentioned four
times as often in Matthew than in all of Paul’s epistles put together?
And this notwithstanding the fact that Matthew presents a kingdom on the
earth and Paul alone deals with a heavenly destiny? Christians have sought
to mimic the temple on Mount Moriah, by erecting vast cathedrals and
building lesser “Churches” and try to envelop these with a false
sanctity which is abhorrent to the Deity, Who seeks no habitation made by
human hands, but only in that grand spiritual structure which consists of
those who are hallowed by His spirit.

THE COVENANT OF GOD
God
had a covenant with Israel. If they kept His law, He would bless them.
They thought they could keep it, but they failed miserably. Nevertheless,
whenever they did so in some measure by the help of His spirit, He was
faithful to His covenant, and they prospered, only to fall back into
failure again. When they have learned the lesson that they cannot keep the
law in their own strength, then He will write it on their hearts, and
fulfill it by the power of His spirit in the day of Jehovah.
God’s
covenant with David and his dynasty is almost a perfect parallel to this.
David himself, however, did not have the self-confidence of the people. He
took it as an undeserved favor. That is why he was able to please
Jehovah, and to sing His praises, and received such a special measure of
blessing during his lifetime. Yet even he was disciplined, and the penalty
for his sins was extended to his descendants (2 Sam.12:10). Like the law,
this covenant was conditioned on their conduct. As a result, the history
of the kingdom is a record of division and declension and apostasy, with a
few intervals of restoration, until the kingdom was taken from them and
Israel was deported and scattered among the nations, who were given their
place of rule at the head of earthly dominion.
But, at the
same time that God fulfills the law by placing it in their hearts, He will
also give them a King, a Son of David, the Messiah, Who was begotten by
God and anointed with His spirit, hence is fully able to meet the
conditions and bring to Israel all the blessings which they failed to win
in the past because of their disobedience.
Solomon
prayed, “Keep with thy servant David, my father, that which Thou didst
speak to him, saying, ‘No man of yours shall be cut off from before Me
while sitting on the throne of Israel, should your sons be keeping
their way to walk in My law, as you walk before Me.’” We can only
too well understand Solomon for saying this, for the history of his
descendants became one great demonstration of the faithlessness of David’s
line and its disastrous consequences, ending in the destruction of the
magnificent building itself and the loss of the throne, which lasts until
this day. Yet it is overwhelming to realize in what far more wonderful way
God will, in the end, answer this prayer and fulfill His promises to
David, notwithstanding the sins of his descendants and his people. He will
send His Darling [David], the Messiah, and overfill His covenant, in
spite of their failure.

GOD’S CONDESCENSION
Solomon’s
wisdom and humility was displayed in his next plea and petition. He had
just finished what was probably the most marvelous temple ever built. No
other God ever had such a magnificent place of worship. But Solomon was
well versed in nature. He had been awed by the grandeur of the heavens. He
reveled in the visible creation of God. In comparison with His handiwork,
what was this temple that he had built? How could the God of the celestial
realms come down to earth? How could He Who was high above the hosts of
heaven condescend to dwell among men? Here is a note of wonder and
adoration that may find an appropriate place in any prayer. Far more
marvelous, however, is it that He should home in our hearts, for our base
bodies cannot compare with the house that Solomon built in size or
splendor.

SOLOMON PRAYS FOR THE WORSHIPERS
Solomon
himself and the people of Israel were to pray “to” or toward the
temple with which God’s name was connected. It was to be the place, the
center, to which all should turn, in appealing to the Deity. His glories
were represented there in tangible form for the eye to see and the ear to
hear and the nose to smell; and all this was in accord with His own
instructions. It is the elementary method which must be used with soulish
creatures who must learn through their sensations. The walls which
surrounded it indicated His holiness, the path through the curtains, past
the altar and the laver revealed His salvation, the lampstand His
illumination, the showbread His provision, and the golden altar with its
incense the way of worship. Above all, in the holy of holies, the shekinah
glory proclaimed His presence, even to the material man. In full accord
with this was the instinctive desire to turn toward it when praying to the
God Whom it housed and hid.
But Solomon
was too wise to reason about God as if He were a man like himself. If one
of us, or even Solomon were to take up our residence in the temple he had
built, we would be forced to leave the place where we had been. We cannot
be in more than one place at the same time. Yet the wise king realized
that not even the heavens were vast enough to accommodate Him. How then
could He forsake them entirely and dwell in a single place upon the earth
(2 Chron.6:18)? Hence, throughout his prayer, he speaks of God as dwelling
in heaven as well as on the earth. But the house that Solomon had built is
distinguished as the place on earth where Jehovah has placed His “name.”
This is a most expressive figure of speech, in Hebrew, and denotes the
location where the greatness, of His glory and manifold magnificence is
revealed, where His essential virtues are disclosed to the senses, by
means of which mortals are able to realize and appreciate what He is to
them in spirit.

ITS FULFILLMENT
Solomon’s
prayer was prophetic, for he did not fully follow Jehovah, even under the
most favorable circumstances. His glory was great, yet he sinned, and,
when he was old, he went after the false gods of the nations, and his
heart was not perfect with Jehovah, his God, as the heart of David, his
father. We should learn from this that our prayers, be they ever so wise,
and even if we seek to throw all the responsibility on God, as every wise
man will certainly do, they will fail to be fulfilled if there is the
least of self involved. On the other hand, the appeal to the kindness of
David was heard, for Solomon himself did not live to see the results of
his defection. It was after his death that the greater part of the kingdom
was rent from the house of David. The dire effect of his sins continued
throughout the era of the kings. The house of David never again ruled over
all Israel, and will not, until they are united in the hands of Messiah,
in the future.

THE DAVIDIC DYNASTY
In
Solomon Jehovah fulfilled what He had promised David up to that time (15).
But thenceforth his further sons did not come up to the conditions, except
in checkered fashion. They seldom kept His way and walked in His law.
Consequently the line was cut off and the kingdom ended and given
over to the nations in the days of Nebuchadnezzar. As a whole the line
degenerated, but there were occasional returns to Jehovah, with consequent
periods of blessing. It was only after the hopelessness of human rule had
been fully demonstrated that the line was cut off temporarily, and the
Davidic dynasty came to an end.
Nevertheless,
even though David’s sons according to the flesh had failed, his greater
Son, Christ Jesus, will fulfill all that was promised to David, and far
more, in the coming kingdom. And the splendors of His glorious rule will
be greatly enhanced by the dark background of the past.

THE WORSHIPERS PARDONED
AND JUSTIFIED
The
pardon of that day was conditional, even as our Lord showed when He
told His hearers about the ten thousand talent debtor (Matt.18:24). The
sacrifices offered on the altar of the temple had no such efficacy as the
blood of Christ.
Justification
was only for the just. It consisted in a recognition of their
righteousness by Jehovah and a suitable reward. Many sought to justify
themselves and merit God’s blessings, like the Pharisee in our Lord’s
day (Luke 18:14). But few, indeed, were like the tribute collector, who
did the right thing in acknowledging the wrong, and his need of a
propitiatory shelter.

THE PARDON OF THE NATION
As
a nation, Israel was subject to God’s judgments. When they sinned,
Jehovah sent their enemies against them, who took away some or all of
their land. This happened again and again. But when they prayed and
supplicated Jehovah, they recovered what they had lost. Yet, eventually,
Israel was deported, and never came back. Then Judah was carried to
Babylon. But Daniel and others repented, and a remnant was restored. These
were in the land when the Jews committed their greatest sin, the
crucifixion of their Messiah. For this they were forgiven, at the request
of the Saviour, on the cross, but they did not bring forth fruit suitable
to repentance. Hence their pardon was withdrawn. To this day they are
scattered among the nations. Those who return to the land are due to
endure the great affliction, until their Messiah, the Son of David, will
come and give them the kingdom.
All this is
in fulfillment of this part of the prayer (36-39): “In case they are
sinning against Thee (for there is no man who does not sin), and Thou art
angry with them and dost smite them and give them up before the enemy, and
their captors capture them and bring them to the land of the enemy, far or
near, yet they reverse their heart in the land where they are captives,
and turn back and supplicate to Thee in the land of their captors, saying,
‘We have sinned and have been depraved and wicked,’ and return to
Thee, with all their heart and with all their soul, in the land of their
captors who captured them, and pray to Thee the way of their land which
Thou gavest their forefathers and the city which Thou hast chosen and the
house which I have built for Thy name, then hearken from the heavens, from
Thy established dwelling, to their prayer and their supplication, and
execute judgment for them, and pardon Thy people who have sinned against
Thee.

THE “ANSWERS” TO SOLOMON’S PRAYER
The
principal profit in judging such prayers as Solomon’s lies in
considering their fulfillment. From this we can see what to expect
in our own case. In general, if we crave blessing contingent on human
conduct, and not on God, we must prepare to be disappointed in our
expectations. If we base them entirely on God, we are safe. Nevertheless,
even our selfish wishes will be fulfilled fully and finally, not through
our efforts, but in His final favor. We should consider each petition in
order and see how it is answered in Israel’s history. It is very helpful
to have such a long period and so much detail, in which the prayer is
worked out in actual practice in the Davidic dynasty, in the worshipers of
Jehovah, in Israel as a nation. It will help us to understand the present
Jewish crisis, and the struggle for the land of Palestine. God alone is
the Source of every blessing, and it comes to His creatures through
Christ.
A. E. Knoch |