Prophets and Kings
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 4: Results of Transgression
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Hearing of his wisdom and of the magnificent temple he had built, the Queen of Sheba determined to prove him with hard questions and to see for herself his famous works.
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Prominent among the primary causes that led Solomon into
extravagance and oppression was his failure to maintain and foster the spirit
of self-sacrifice. {PK
61.1}
When, at the foot of Sinai, Moses told the people of the
divine command, "Let them make Me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among
them," the response of the Israelites was accompanied by the appropriate
gifts. "They came, everyone whose heart stirred him up, and everyone whom
his spirit made willing," and brought offerings. Exodus 25:8; 35:21. For
the building of the sanctuary, great and extensive preparations were necessary;
a large amount of the most precious and costly material was required, but the
Lord accepted only freewill offerings. "Of every man that giveth it
willingly with his heart ye shall take My offering," was the command
repeated by Moses to the congregation. Exodus 25:2. Devotion to God and a
spirit of sacrifice were the [62] first requisites in preparing a
dwelling place for the Most High. {PK 61.2}
A similar call to self-sacrifice was made when David turned
over to Solomon the responsibility of building the temple. Of the assembled
multitude David asked, "Who then is willing to consecrate his service this
day unto the Lord?" 1 Chronicles 29:5. This call to consecration and
willing service should ever have been kept in mind by those who had to do with
the erection of the temple. {PK
62.1}
For the construction of the wilderness tabernacle, chosen
men were endowed by God with special skill and wisdom. "Moses said unto
the children of Israel, See, the Lord hath called by name Bezaleel,
. . . of the tribe of Judah; and He hath filled him with the Spirit
of God, in wisdom, in understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of
workmanship. . . . And He hath put in his heart that he may teach,
both he, and Aholiab, . . . of the tribe of Dan. Them hath He filled
with wisdom of heart, to work all manner of work, of the engraver, and of the
cunning workman, and of the embroiderer, . . . and of the weaver,
even of them that do any work. . . . Then wrought Bezaleel and
Aholiab, and every wisehearted man, in whom the Lord put wisdom and
understanding." Exodus 35:30-35; 36:1. Heavenly intelligences co-operated
with the workmen whom God Himself had chosen. {PK 62.2}
The descendants of these workmen inherited to a large degree
the talents conferred on their forefathers. For a time these men of Judah and
Dan remained humble and unselfish; but gradually, almost imperceptibly, they
lost their hold upon God and their desire to serve Him unselfishly. They [63]
asked higher wages for their services, because of their superior skill as
workmen in the finer arts. In some instances their request was granted, but
more often they found employment in the surrounding nations. In place of the
noble spirit of self-sacrifice that had filled the hearts of their illustrious
ancestors, they indulged a spirit of covetousness, of grasping for more and
more. That their selfish desires might be gratified, they used their God-given
skill in the service of heathen kings, and lent their talent to the perfecting of
works which were a dishonor to their Maker. {PK 62.3}
It was among these men that Solomon looked for a master
workman to superintend the construction of the temple on Mount Moriah. Minute
specifications, in writing, regarding every portion of the sacred structure,
had been entrusted to the king; and he could have looked to God in faith for
consecrated helpers, to whom would have been granted special skill for doing
with exactness the work required. But Solomon lost sight of this opportunity to
exercise faith in God. He sent to the king of Tyre for a man, "cunning to
work in gold, and in silver, and in brass, and in iron, and in purple, and
crimson, and blue, and that can skill to grave with the cunning men
. . . in Judah and in Jerusalem." 2 Chronicles 2:7. {PK 63.1}
The Phoenician king responded by sending Huram, "the
son of a woman of the daughters of Dan, and his father was a man of Tyre."
Verse 14. Huram was a descendant, on his mother's side, of Aholiab, to whom,
hundreds of years before, God had given special wisdom for the construction of
the tabernacle. {PK 63.2}
Thus at the head of Solomon's company of workmen [64]
there was placed a man whose efforts were not prompted by an unselfish desire
to render service to God. He served the god of this world, mammon. The very
fibers of his being were inwrought with the principles of selfishness. {PK 63.3}
Because of his unusual skill, Huram demanded large wages.
Gradually the wrong principles that he cherished came to be accepted by his
associates. As they labored with him day after day, they yielded to the
inclination to compare his wages with their own, and they began to lose sight
of the holy character of their work. The spirit of self-denial left them, and
in its place came the spirit of covetousness. The result was a demand for
higher wages, which was granted. {PK 64.1}
The baleful influences thus set in operation permeated all
branches of the Lord's service, and extended throughout the kingdom. The high
wages demanded and received gave to many an opportunity to indulge in luxury
and extravagance. The poor were oppressed by the rich; the spirit of
self-sacrifice was well-nigh lost. In the far-reaching effects of these
influences may be traced one of the principal causes of the terrible apostasy
of him who once was numbered among the wisest of mortals. {PK 64.2}
The sharp contrast between the spirit and motives of the
people building the wilderness tabernacle, and of those engaged in erecting
Solomon's temple, has a lesson of deep significance. The self-seeking that
characterized the workers on the temple finds its counterpart today in the
selfishness that rules in the world. The spirit of covetousness, of seeking for
the highest position and the highest wage, is rife. [65] The
willing service and joyous self-denial of the tabernacle workers is seldom met
with. But this is the only spirit that should actuate the followers of Jesus.
Our divine Master has given an example of how His disciples are to work. To
those whom He bade, "Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men"
(Matthew 4:19), He offered no stated sum as a reward for their services. They
were to share with Him in self-denial and sacrifice. {PK 64.3}
Not for the wages we receive are we to labor. The motive
that prompts us to work for God should have in it nothing akin to self-serving.
Unselfish devotion and a spirit of sacrifice have always been and always will
be the first requisite of acceptable service. Our Lord and Master designs that
not one thread of selfishness shall be woven into His work. Into our efforts we
are to bring the tact and skill, the exactitude and wisdom, that the God of
perfection required of the builders of the earthly tabernacle; yet in all our
labors we are to remember that the greatest talents or the most splendid
services are acceptable only when self is laid upon the altar, a living,
consuming sacrifice. {PK
65.1}
Another of the deviations from right principles that finally
led to the downfall of Israel's king was his yielding to the temptation to take
to himself the glory that belongs to God alone. {PK 65.2}
From the day that Solomon was entrusted with the work of
building the temple, to the time of its completion, his avowed purpose was
"to build an house for the name of the Lord God of Israel." 2
Chronicles 6:7. This purpose was fully recognized before the assembled hosts of
Israel [66]
at the time of the dedication of the temple. In his prayer the king
acknowledged that Jehovah had said, "My name shall be there." 1 Kings
8:29. {PK 65.3}
One of the most touching portions of Solomon's dedicatory
prayer was his plea to God for the strangers that should come from countries
afar to learn more of Him whose fame had been spread abroad among the nations.
"They shall hear," the king pleaded, "of Thy great name, and of
Thy strong hand, and of Thy stretched-out arm." In behalf of every one of
these stranger worshipers Solomon had petitioned: "Hear Thou,
. . . and do according to all that the stranger calleth to Thee for:
that all people of the earth may know Thy name, to fear Thee, as do Thy people
Israel; and that they may know that this house, which I have builded, is called
by Thy name." Verses 42, 43. {PK 66.1}
At the close of the service, Solomon had exhorted Israel to
be faithful and true to God, in order that "all the people of the earth
may know," he said, "that the Lord is God, and that there is none
else." Verse 60. {PK
66.2}
A Greater than Solomon was the designer of the temple; the
wisdom and glory of God stood there revealed. Those who were unacquainted with
this fact naturally admired and praised Solomon as the architect and builder;
but the king disclaimed any honor for its conception or erection. {PK 66.3}
Thus it was when the Queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon.
Hearing of his wisdom and of the magnificent temple he had built, she
determined "to prove him with hard questions" and to see for herself
his famous works. Attended by a retinue of servants, and with camels bearing [67]
"spices, and gold in abundance, and precious stones," she made the
long journey to Jerusalem. "And when she was come to Solomon, she communed
with him of all that was in her heart." She talked with him of the
mysteries of nature; and Solomon taught her of the God of nature, the great
Creator, who dwells in the highest heaven and rules over all. "Solomon
told her all her questions: there was not anything hid from the king, which he
told her not." 1 Kings 10:1-3; 2 Chronicles 9:1, 2. {PK 66.4}
"When the Queen of Sheba had seen all Solomon's wisdom,
and the house that he had built, . . . there was no more spirit in
her." "It was a true report," she acknowledged, "which I
heard in mine own land of thine acts, and of thy wisdom: howbeit I believed not
their words, until I came, and mine eyes had seen it:" "and, behold,
the half was not told me: thy wisdom and prosperity exceedeth the fame which I
heard. Happy are thy men, happy are these thy servants, which stand continually
before thee, and that hear thy wisdom." 1 Kings 10:4-8; 2 Chronicles
9:3-7. {PK 67.1}
By the time of the close of her visit the queen had been so
fully taught by Solomon as to the source of his wisdom and prosperity that she
was constrained, not to extol the human agent, but to exclaim, "Blessed be
the Lord thy God, which delighted in thee, to set thee on the throne of Israel:
because the Lord loved Israel forever, therefore made He thee king, to do
judgment and justice." 1 Kings 10:9. This is the impression that God
designed should be made upon all peoples. And when "all the kings of the
earth sought the presence of Solomon, to hear his wisdom, that God had [68]
put in his heart" (2 Chronicles 9:23), Solomon for a time honored God by
reverently pointing them to the Creator of the heavens and the earth, the Ruler
of the universe, the All-wise. {PK 67.2}
Had Solomon continued in humility of mind to turn the
attention of men from himself to the One who had given him wisdom and riches
and honor, what a history might have been his! But while the pen of inspiration
records his virtues, it also bears faithful witness to his downfall. Raised to
a pinnacle of greatness and surrounded with the gifts of fortune, Solomon
became dizzy, lost his balance, and fell. Constantly extolled by men of the
world, he was at length unable to withstand the flattery offered him. The
wisdom entrusted to him that he might glorify the Giver, filled him with pride.
He finally permitted men to speak of him as the one most worthy of praise for
the matchless splendor of the building planned and erected for the honor of
"the name of the Lord God of Israel." {PK 68.1}
Thus it was that the temple of Jehovah came to be known
throughout the nations as "Solomon's temple." The human agent had
taken to himself the glory that belonged to the One "higher than the
highest." Ecclesiastes 5:8. Even to this day the temple of which Solomon
declared, "This house which I have built is called by Thy name" (2
Chronicles 6:33), is oftenest spoken of, not as the temple of Jehovah, but as
"Solomon's temple." {PK 68.2}
Man cannot show greater weakness than by allowing men to
ascribe to him the honor for gifts that are Heaven-bestowed. The true Christian
will make God first and [69] last and best in everything. No
ambitious motives will chill his love for God; steadily, perseveringly, will he
cause honor to redound to his heavenly Father. It is when we are faithful in
exalting the name of God that our impulses are under divine supervision, and we
are enabled to develop spiritual and intellectual power. {PK 68.3}
Jesus, the divine Master, ever exalted the name of His
heavenly Father. He taught His disciples to pray, "Our Father who art in
heaven, hallowed be Thy name." Matthew 6:9, A.R.V. And they were not to
forget to acknowledge, "Thine is . . . the glory." Verse
13. So careful was the great Healer to direct attention from Himself to the Source
of His power, that the wondering multitude, "when they saw the dumb to
speak, the maimed to be whole, the lame to walk, and the blind to see,"
did not glorify Him, but "glorified the God of Israel." Matthew
15:31. In the wonderful prayer that Christ offered just before His crucifixion,
He declared, "I have glorified Thee on the earth." "Glorify Thy
Son," He pleaded, "that Thy Son also may glorify Thee." "O
righteous Father, the world hath not known Thee: but I have known Thee, and
these have known that Thou hast sent Me. And I have declared unto them Thy
name, and will declare it: that the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in
them, and I in them." John 17:4, 1, 25, 26. {PK 69.1}
"Thus saith the Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his
wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man
glory in his riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he
understandeth and knoweth Me, [70] that I am the Lord which exercise
loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the earth: for in these things
I delight, saith the Lord." Jeremiah 9:23, 24.
"I will praise the name of God, . . .
And will magnify Him with thanksgiving."
"Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor
and power."
"I will praise Thee, O Lord my God, with all my heart:
And I will glorify Thy name forevermore."
"O magnify the Lord with me,
And let us exalt His name together."
Psalm 69:30; Revelation 4:11; Psalm 86:12; 34:3. {PK 69.2}
The introduction of principles leading away from a spirit of
sacrifice and tending toward self-glorification, was accompanied by yet another
gross perversion of the divine plan for Israel. God had designed that His people
should be the light of the world. From them was to shine forth the glory of His
law as revealed in the life practice. For the carrying out of this design, He
had caused the chosen nation to occupy a strategic position among the nations
of earth. {PK 70.1}
In the days of Solomon the kingdom of Israel extended from
Hamath on the north to Egypt on the south, and from the Mediterranean Sea to
the river Euphrates. Through this territory ran many natural highways of the
world's commerce, and caravans from distant lands were constantly passing to
and fro. Thus there was given to Solomon and his people opportunity to reveal
to men of all nations the character of the King of kings, and to teach them to
reverence and obey Him. To all the world this knowledge was [71] to be given. Through the
teaching of the sacrificial offerings, Christ was to be uplifted before the
nations, that all who would might live. {PK 70.2}
Placed at the head of a nation that had been set as a beacon
light to the surrounding nations, Solomon should have used his God-given wisdom
and power of influence in organizing and directing a great movement for the
enlightenment of those who were ignorant of God and His truth. Thus multitudes
would have been won to allegiance to the divine precepts, Israel would have
been shielded from the evils practiced by the heathen, and the Lord of glory
would have been greatly honored. But Solomon lost sight of this high purpose.
He failed of improving his splendid opportunities for enlightening those who
were continually passing through his territory or tarrying at the principal
cities. {PK 71.1}
The missionary spirit that God had implanted in the heart of
Solomon and in the hearts of all true Israelites was supplanted by a spirit of
commercialism. The opportunities afforded by contact with many nations were
used for personal aggrandizement. Solomon sought to strengthen his position
politically by building fortified cities at the gateways of commerce. He
rebuilt Gezer, near Joppa, lying along the road between Egypt and Syria;
Beth-horon, to the westward of Jerusalem, commanding the passes of the highway
leading from the heart of Judea to Gezer and the seacoast; Megiddo, situated on
the caravan road from Damascus to Egypt, and from Jerusalem to the northward;
and "Tadmor in the wilderness" (2 Chronicles 8:4), along the route of
caravans from the east. All these cities were strongly [72]
fortified. The commercial advantages of an outlet at the head of the Red Sea
were developed by the construction of "a navy of ships in Ezion-geber,
. . . on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of Edom." Trained
sailors from Tyre, "with the servants of Solomon," manned these
vessels on voyages "to Ophir, and fetched from thence gold," and
"great plenty of almug trees, and precious stones." Verse 18; 1 Kings
9:26, 28; 10:11. {PK 71.2}
The revenue of the king and of many of his subjects was
greatly increased, but at what a cost! Through the cupidity and
shortsightedness of those to whom had been entrusted the oracles of God, the
countless multitudes who thronged [73] the highways of travel were
allowed to remain in ignorance of Jehovah. {PK 72.1}
In striking contrast to the course pursued by Solomon was
the course followed by Christ when He was on this earth. The Saviour, though
possessing "all power," never used this power for
self-aggrandizement. No dream of earthly conquest, of worldly greatness, marred
the perfection of His service for mankind. "Foxes have holes, and the
birds of the air have nests," He said, "but the Son of man hath not
where to lay His head." Matthew 8:20. Those who, in response to the call
of the hour, have entered the service of the Master Worker, may well study His
methods. He took advantage of the opportunities to be found along the great
thoroughfares of travel. {PK
73.1}
In the intervals of His journeys to and fro, Jesus dwelt at
Capernaum, which came to be known as "His own city." Matthew 9:1.
Situated on the highway from Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt and to the
Mediterranean Sea, it was well adapted to be the center of the Saviour's work.
People from many lands passed through the city or tarried for rest. There Jesus
met with those of all nations and all ranks, and thus His lessons were carried
to other countries and into many households. By this means interest was aroused
in the prophecies pointing forward to the Messiah, attention was directed to
the Saviour, and His mission was brought before the world. {PK 73.2}
In this our day the opportunities for coming into contact
with men and women of all classes and many nationalities are much greater than
in the days of Israel. The thoroughfares of travel have multiplied a
thousandfold. [74] {PK 73.3}
Like Christ, the messengers of the Most High today should
take their position in these great thoroughfares, where they can meet the
passing multitudes from all parts of the world. Like Him, hiding self in God,
they are to sow the gospel seed, presenting before others the precious truths
of Holy Scripture that will take deep root in mind and heart, and spring up
unto life eternal. {PK
74.1}
Solemn are the lessons of Israel's failure during the years
when ruler and people turned from the high purpose they had been called to
fulfill. Wherein they were weak, even to the point of failure, the Israel of
God today, the representatives of heaven that make up the true church of
Christ, must be strong; for upon them devolves the task of finishing the work
that has been committed to man, and of ushering in the day of final awards. Yet
the same influences that prevailed against Israel in the time when Solomon
reigned are to be met with still. The forces of the enemy of all righteousness
are strongly entrenched; only by the power of God can the victory be gained.
The conflict before us calls for the exercise of a spirit of self-denial, for
distrust of self and for dependence on God alone, for the wise use of every
opportunity for the saving of souls. The Lord's blessing will attend His church
as they advance unitedly, revealing to a world lying in the darkness of error
the beauty of holiness as manifested in a Christlike spirit of self-sacrifice,
in an exaltation of the divine rather than the human, and in loving and
untiring service for those so much in need of the blessings of the gospel. {PK 74.2}
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"Solomon's Repentance"
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