Day 162. Reading 1 Kings 5-6, 2 Chronicles 2-3
1 Kings 5 and 2 Chronicles 2.
PREPARATION & SUPPLIES
Time to build the Temple, for “the LORD my God has given me rest on every side. There is neither adversary nor misfortune.”
Solomon’s father, King David, had known and had good relations with King Hiram of Tyre. (“Hiram had always loved David.”) So when Solomon sent to him for cedar wood to build the Temple, Hiram was more than willing.
He had woodsmen cut the great logs, carry them to the sea, and raft them down to Joppa, where Solomon took them up to Jerusalem. Hiram also sent cypress and algum (sandalwood) timber.
Interestingly, Solomon also asked Hiram for “a man skilled to work in gold, silver, bronze, and iron, and in purple, crimson, and blue fabrics, trained in engraving, to work with Solomon’s skilled workers.” (This reminds me of Bezalel, whom God chose to do the same for the building of the original Tabernacle.) Hiram’s man was Huram-abi, whose mother was a Jew from Dan.
Hiram gladly complied with Solomon’s requests, asking only for food to be sent, which Solomon did yearly. Solomon then counted all the “resident aliens” (people they had conquered in the land but whom God did not command to kill) and found over 150K to use as laborers to carry materials, quarry stone, and oversee the workers.
1 Kings 6 and 2 Chronicles 3.
THE BUILDING BEGINS & FINISHES
In the 4th year of Solomon’s reign, after he had gathered the materials, the king began the construction of the Temple.
- This was 480 years after the people of Israel came out of Egypt. THAT’S A LONG TIME. If we were to think back from today (2025), it would be 1545, and King Henry VIII would be reigning in England!
- I wonder how the Tabernacle tent was enduring by that time. While King David had brought the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem, the Tabernacle itself, with the bronze altar for sacrifices and all the other holy items, was still in Gibeon, where the people went to worship God.
Solomon built the Temple on Mount Moriah, the very place where Abraham had been willing to sacrifice his son, Isaac, until the Angel of the LORD stopped him, saying, “I will provide a sacrifice,” and indicated a ram caught in the thorn bush. Mount Moriah is also the place where God provided “THE Sacrifice,” His only begotten Son, Jesus, who died there on the cross.
While Solomon was building the Temple, the LORD came to him and spoke this promise, “Concerning this house that you are building, if you will walk in my statutes and obey my rules and keep all my commandments and walk in them, then I will establish my word with you, which I spoke to David, your father. And I will dwell among the children of Israel and will not forsake my people Israel.”
The materials and measurements, the details of decorations, and the beauty and majesty of the Temple are almost beyond conceiving. The actual building process took seven years to complete. (the perfect number)
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(The following chapters describe the furnishings Solomon made for the Temple, similar to the Tabernacle but more majestic and large. Unlike the Tabernacle furnishings, they didn’t need to be portable.)
