
Text -- 1 Kings 11:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Ki 11:4 - -- As having now reigned nigh thirty years. When it might have been expected that experience would have made him wiser: then God permitted him to fall so...
As having now reigned nigh thirty years. When it might have been expected that experience would have made him wiser: then God permitted him to fall so shamefully, that he might be to all succeeding generations an example of the folly, and weakness of the wisest and the best men, when left to themselves.

Wesley: 1Ki 11:4 - -- Not that they changed his mind about the true God, and idols, which is not credible; but they obtained from him a publick indulgence for their worship...
Not that they changed his mind about the true God, and idols, which is not credible; but they obtained from him a publick indulgence for their worship, and possibly persuaded him to join with them in the outward act of idol - worship; or, at least, in their feasts upon their sacrifices, which was a participation of their idolatry.
He could not have been more than fifty.

JFB: 1Ki 11:4 - -- Some, considering the lapse of Solomon into idolatry as a thing incredible, regard him as merely humoring his wives in the practice of their superstit...
Some, considering the lapse of Solomon into idolatry as a thing incredible, regard him as merely humoring his wives in the practice of their superstition; and, in countenancing their respective rites by his presence, as giving only an outward homage--a sensible worship, in which neither his understanding nor his heart was engaged. The apology only makes matters worse, as it implies an adding of hypocrisy and contempt of God to an open breach of His law. There seems no possibility of explaining the language of the sacred historian, but as intimating that Solomon became an actual and open idolater, worshipping images of wood or stone in sight of the very temple which, in early life, he had erected to the true God. Hence that part of Olivet was called the high place of Tophet (Jer 7:30-34), and the hill is still known as the Mount of Offense, of the Mount of Corruption (2Ki 23:13).
TSK -> 1Ki 11:4
TSK: 1Ki 11:4 - -- when Solomon : 1Ki 11:42, 1Ki 6:1, 1Ki 9:10, 1Ki 14:21
his wives : 1Ki 11:2; Deu 7:4, Deu 17:17; Neh 13:26, Neh 13:27
his heart : 1Ki 11:6, 1Ki 11:38,...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Ki 11:4
Barnes: 1Ki 11:4 - -- Old - About fifty or fifty-five. From his age at his accession (1Ki 2:2 note) he could not have been more than about sixty at his death. The tr...
Old - About fifty or fifty-five. From his age at his accession (1Ki 2:2 note) he could not have been more than about sixty at his death.
The true nature of Solomon’ s idolatry was neither complete apostasy - an apostasy from which there could be no recovery; nor a mere toleration, rather praise-worthy than blameable. Solomon did not ever openly or wholly apostatize. He continued his attendance on the worship of Yahweh, and punctually made his offerings three times a year in the temple 1Ki 9:25; but his heart was not "perfect"with God. The religious earnestness of his younger days was weakened by wealth, luxury, sensualism, an increasing worldliness leading him to worldly policy and latitudinarianism arising from contact with all the manifold forms of human opinion. His lapse into deadly sin was no doubt gradual. Partly from ostentation, partly from that sensualism which is the most common failing of Oriental monarchs, he established a harem on a grand and extraordinary scale. To gratify "strange women,"i. e., foreigners, admitted either from worldly policy, or for variety’ s sake, he built magnificent temples to their false gods, right over against Jerusalem, as manifest rivals to "the temple."He thus became the author of a syncretism, which sought to blend together the worship of Yahweh and the worship of idols - a syncretism which possessed fatal attractions for the Jewish nation. Finally, he appears himself to have frequented the idol temples 1Ki 11:5, 1Ki 11:10, and to have taken part in those fearful impurities which constituted the worst horror of the idolatrous systems, thus practically apostatising, though theoretically he never ceased to hold that Yahweh was the true God.
Poole -> 1Ki 11:4
Poole: 1Ki 11:4 - -- When Solomon was old as having now reigned nigh thirty years, when it might have been expected that age should have cooled his lust, and experience h...
When Solomon was old as having now reigned nigh thirty years, when it might have been expected that age should have cooled his lust, and experience have made him wiser and better, and when probably he was secure as to any such miscarriages; then God permitted him to fall so shamefully, that he might be to all succeeding generations an example of God’ s severity, and of the folly, and weakness, and wickedness of the wisest and best men, when left to themselves.
Turned away his heart after other gods not that they changed his mind or opinion about the true God and idols, which is not credible; but that they cooled his zeal against them, obtained from him a public indulgence for their worship, and money for the making of idols, and the support of the charges of their priests and sacrifices, and possibly persuaded him sometimes in complaisance to join with them in the outward act of idol worship, or, at least, in their feasts upon their sacrifices, which was a participation of their idolatry. See Psa 106:28 1Co 10:20 .
Haydock -> 1Ki 11:4
Haydock: 1Ki 11:4 - -- Old; about fifty. (Salien) (Calmet) ---
This is an aggravation of his guilt. (Haydock) ---
Solomon spent the first thirty years of his reign in ...
Old; about fifty. (Salien) (Calmet) ---
This is an aggravation of his guilt. (Haydock) ---
Solomon spent the first thirty years of his reign in virtue: but towards the termination of it, he gave into idolatry, and into such excesses, that he deserves to be ranked with Henry VIII, who began well, but ended with dishonour. (Haydock) ---
Heart, and mind also, ver. 9. He sacrificed to idols, not only externally, but gave them internal worship; (Salien) so much was his understanding darkened, unless (Haydock) he acted against his better knowledge, Ecclesiastes ii. 9. (Tirinus) ---
Father who did not continue long in sin. (Du Hamel) ---
"The wisdom, which had been given to him, entirely abandoned his heart, which the discipline even of the smallest tribulation had not guarded." (St. Gregory, Pastoral. p. 3.) ---
"He had commenced his reign with an ardent desire of wisdom, and when he had obtained it by spiritual love, he lost it by carnal affections." (St. Augustine, Doct. iii. 21.) ---
"Prosperity, which is a severe trial for the wise, was more disadvantageous to him than wisdom herself had been profitable." (St. Augustine, City of God xvii. 20.) ---
The Fathers do not attempt to palliate the guilt of Solomon; and those aggravate his crime, who endeavour to excuse him by saying, that his mind was still convinced that there could be but one God, and that his adoration of idols was merely external, and out of complaisance to his wives. See Santius,&c. (Calmet)
Gill -> 1Ki 11:4
Gill: 1Ki 11:4 - -- And it came to pass, when Solomon was old,.... Toward the latter end of his reign, when he might be near sixty years of age; for Rehoboam his son and ...
And it came to pass, when Solomon was old,.... Toward the latter end of his reign, when he might be near sixty years of age; for Rehoboam his son and successor was forty one when he began to reign, 1Ki 14:21 which is observed either as an aggravation of the sin of Solomon, that in his old age, when by long experience he might have been thought to be still wiser, and less lustful: and yet
that his wives turned away his heart after other gods; or as pointing at the advantage his wives took of his age:
and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God, as was the heart of David his father; who, though guilty of many sins, never inclined to idolatry; his heart was always right in that point, and sincere in his worship, see Psa 18:20.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Ki 11:4 Heb “his heart was not complete with the Lord his God, like the heart of David his father.”
Geneva Bible -> 1Ki 11:4
Geneva Bible: 1Ki 11:4 For it came to pass, when Solomon was old, [that] his wives turned away his heart after other gods: and his heart was not ( c ) perfect with the LORD ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ki 11:1-43
TSK Synopsis: 1Ki 11:1-43 - --1 Solomon's wives and concubines.4 In his old age they draw him to idolatry.9 God threatens him.14 Solomon's adversaries were Hadad, who was entertain...
MHCC -> 1Ki 11:1-8
MHCC: 1Ki 11:1-8 - --There is not a more melancholy and astonishing instance of human depravity in the sacred Scriptures, than that here recorded. Solomon became a public ...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ki 11:1-8
Matthew Henry: 1Ki 11:1-8 - -- This is a sad story, and very surprising, of Solomon's defection and degeneracy. I. Let us enquire into the occasions and particulars of it. Shall S...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ki 11:1-13
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ki 11:1-13 - --
The idolatry into which Solomon fell in his old age appears so strange in a king so wise and God-fearing as Solomon showed himself to be at the dedi...
Constable: 1Ki 1:1--11:43 - --I. THE REIGN OF SOLOMON chs. 1--11
The Holy Spirit led the writer of Kings to give an interpretation of history,...

Constable: 1Ki 11:1-43 - --4. Solomon's apostasy ch. 11
The writer brought Solomon's weaknesses and sins, to which he only ...
