2 Chronicles 9
Solomon entertains Queen of Sheba
Visting royals
1 Kings 10:1-13 1The queen of Sheba [1] heard King Solomon had become famous. And she wanted to see for herself if he was as smart as people were saying. So, she went to test him with hard problems. She brought with her a huge entourage in a caravan of camels loaded with spices, gold, and jewels. She asked Solomon every question she had for him. 2Solomon gave her a solid answer every time. He didn’t say “pass” on any of them.
3The queen studied the king and the way he ran his kingdom. Firsthand, the queen saw how he handled tough questions. She toured the palace he built. 4She ate the food he served. She saw the officials who ate with him. She even noticed his well-dressed servants. She went with him to the Temple of the LORD, which he built, and she watched him sacrifice animals as burnt offerings. [2] She took it all in and it took her breath away. Sheba gives Solomon passing grade
5She told the king, “I’ve got to tell you, everything I heard about your wisdom and your accomplishments is true. 6I didn’t believe it. So, I came to see for myself. And I can tell you now that you’re twice the king I heard about. Your insights and prosperity are more than I could have imagined. 7Your people are happy. Even your servants are happy to work for you and to learn from your wisdom.
8What a wonderful God your LORD is to you. Clearly, he put you on this throne and he’s glad he did. The LORD has a deep love for Israel. That’s why he put you on this throne. He wants you to show these people what goodness and justice look like.” Solomon and Sheba trade products
9The queen gave Solomon two and a half tons [3] of gold and jewels. And she gave him more spices than Solomon or any other king of Israel ever got or would ever get again in one huge shipment.
10During the queen’s visit, Hiram’s fleet of ships came home from the land of Ophir, [4] loaded with gold, gemstones, and a lot of almug [5] wood. 11Solomon used some of the wood to make steps for the Temple and his palace. And he used some to make harps and lyres for the Temple musicians.
12King Solomon gave the queen of Sheba everything she said she wanted, [6] with royal gifts on top of it. Then he sent her on her way back home. King Solomon’s portfolio
2 Chronicles 9:13-28 13In a single year, Solomon took in about 25 tons [7] of gold. 14Solomon added to his portfolio gold from trading and business ventures, along with gifts from Arabian kings and Israel’s district governors. Solomon’s taste in décor
15King Solomon ordered 200 large shields, each hammered from 15 pounds [8] of gold. 16He ordered 300 smaller shields, each hammered from four pounds [9] of gold. The king put the shields on display in the Home of the Lebanon Forest, the largest room in the palace complex.
17The king also ordered a huge ivory throne overlaid with the finest gold. 18There were six steps to the top, armrests on both sides, and two lions standing beside each armrest. 19A lion stood on each side of every step, for a dozen lions. There was no throne on earth like this one.
20All of Solomon’s drinking cups and dishes were made from gold. No silver at all. Same for the large room called Home of the Lebanon Forest. In those days, Solomon’s gold dishes were no big deal. 21Solomon had an ongoing trade expedition with Tarshish. [10] He sent a fleet of ships there with Hiram’s fleet. And every three years the fleet came back loaded with gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks. King Solomon as a popular attraction
22King Solomon was wiser and richer than any king on earth. 23People from all over the world wanted to hear his insights from God. 24So, they came to see him. They brought gifts: silver, gold, clothing, weapons, spices, horses, and mules. This went on year after year. Solomon’s chariot corps
25Solomon established Israel’s cavalry and chariot corps. He had 12,000 horses and 4,000 stalls for resting horses and parked chariots. He stationed them in Jerusalem and in towns scattered around the nation.
26Solomon controlled the territory from the Euphrates River in the far north, to the Philistine homeland in the east along the Mediterranean coast, to Egypt’s desert in the south. 27When Solomon was king, everyone in Jerusalem had silver. People saw it everywhere. It was like seeing rocks on the ground, cedar in Lebanon, or sycamore trees in the forests of the local Judean foothills. [11] 28Solomon bought imported horses from Egypt and from countries all everywhere. Solomon dies
1 Kings 11:41-43 29The rest of Solomon’s story—from beginning to end—is written in several accounts:
- history of the prophet Nathan
- prophecy of Ahijah from the town of Shiloh
- visions of Iddo, which are mostly about King Jeroboam son of Nebat.
30Solomon reigned over Israel 40 years. [12] 31Solomon died and the people buried him in the City of David, the town named after his father. Solomon’s son Rehoboam became Israel’s next king. Footnotes
19:1No one seems to know where the land of Sheba was. A popular guess is Yemen, in southern Arabia, parked at the corner of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Another common guess is across the Red Sea, somewhere on the Horn of Africa, in Somalia, Ethiopia, or another neighboring nation.
29:4These were offerings for sin, the most common offering in Israel. Worshipers burned the entire animal, which could have been a bull or a sheep—or in Solomon’s case, many of them.
39:10That’s 9,000 pounds or 4,000 kilograms. In Hebrew measurement, 120 talents.
49:10Like Sheba, no one seem sure of where Ophir was. And, like Sheba, popular guesses are southern Arabia and the eastern coast of Africa. The phrase “gold of Ophir” shows up on a broken piece of pottery found in the ruins of Tell Qasile, in what is now Tel Aviv: “gold of Ophir for Beth-Horan…30 shekels.” Tell Qasile was an ancient town destroyed by Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak in 924 BC, a few years after Solomon’s reign. Solomon ruled Israel from about 970-931.
59:11There’s no such wood today. The most common guess is that almug wood is today’s sandalwood, which is about the most expensive wood on the market. It’s fine-grained and good for building and carving. But it’s also fragrant, with an oil that produces a long-lasting scent. Some people describe the smell as calming, sensual, or woodsy. Africa has several kinds of sandalwood, but not from the same family as the hardwood trees.
69:13This could read like it’s a gift exchange, but it may have been a financial transaction with gifts on top of it. The queen may have come with a shopping list and a supply of goods to use in trade.
79:13That’s 23 metric tons and 666 talents, in ancient Hebrew measurement. There’s no indication of how he got it. Perhaps in mining expeditions or in taxes collected by the non-Israelite nations he dominated.
89:15Seven kilograms, or 600 shekels in ancient Hebrew weight.
99:16Two kilograms, or three minas in Hebrew weight.
109:21Location of Tarshish is unknown. But wherever it was, it was west of the Jewish homeland of Israel. Scholars often guess that it was a city in Spain or somewhere else at the opposite end of the Mediterranean Sea from the Jewish homeland. Some say it was a Phoenician colony called Tartessus, in Spain. Phoenicians were native to what is now Lebanon, but their merchant ships sailed through the Mediterranean Sea.
119:27Literally, “Shephelah,” the name for the western foothills on the coastal side of the range of mountains and hills alongside the Jordan River Valley. The hills lie in what are now parts of Israel and Palestinian Territory in the West Bank.
129:30“Forty years” was a common way of saying “many years,” or “a long time.” The symbolic number shows up about 150 times in the Bible. It was probably intended to be taken no more literally than our modern saying “at the eleventh hour.” “Eleventh hour” means at the last moment, not 11 o-clock.
Discussion Questions
- Sorry, there are currently no questions for this chapter.
Videos
3The queen studied the king and the way he ran his kingdom. Firsthand, the queen saw how he handled tough questions. She toured the palace he built. 4She ate the food he served. She saw the officials who ate with him. She even noticed his well-dressed servants. She went with him to the Temple of the LORD, which he built, and she watched him sacrifice animals as burnt offerings. [2] She took it all in and it took her breath away.
Sheba gives Solomon passing grade
5She told the king, “I’ve got to tell you, everything I heard about your wisdom and your accomplishments is true. 6I didn’t believe it. So, I came to see for myself. And I can tell you now that you’re twice the king I heard about. Your insights and prosperity are more than I could have imagined. 7Your people are happy. Even your servants are happy to work for you and to learn from your wisdom.8What a wonderful God your LORD is to you. Clearly, he put you on this throne and he’s glad he did. The LORD has a deep love for Israel. That’s why he put you on this throne. He wants you to show these people what goodness and justice look like.”
Solomon and Sheba trade products
9The queen gave Solomon two and a half tons [3] of gold and jewels. And she gave him more spices than Solomon or any other king of Israel ever got or would ever get again in one huge shipment.10During the queen’s visit, Hiram’s fleet of ships came home from the land of Ophir, [4] loaded with gold, gemstones, and a lot of almug [5] wood. 11Solomon used some of the wood to make steps for the Temple and his palace. And he used some to make harps and lyres for the Temple musicians.
12King Solomon gave the queen of Sheba everything she said she wanted, [6] with royal gifts on top of it. Then he sent her on her way back home.
King Solomon’s portfolio
2 Chronicles 9:13-28 13In a single year, Solomon took in about 25 tons [7] of gold. 14Solomon added to his portfolio gold from trading and business ventures, along with gifts from Arabian kings and Israel’s district governors. Solomon’s taste in décor
15King Solomon ordered 200 large shields, each hammered from 15 pounds [8] of gold. 16He ordered 300 smaller shields, each hammered from four pounds [9] of gold. The king put the shields on display in the Home of the Lebanon Forest, the largest room in the palace complex.
17The king also ordered a huge ivory throne overlaid with the finest gold. 18There were six steps to the top, armrests on both sides, and two lions standing beside each armrest. 19A lion stood on each side of every step, for a dozen lions. There was no throne on earth like this one.
20All of Solomon’s drinking cups and dishes were made from gold. No silver at all. Same for the large room called Home of the Lebanon Forest. In those days, Solomon’s gold dishes were no big deal. 21Solomon had an ongoing trade expedition with Tarshish. [10] He sent a fleet of ships there with Hiram’s fleet. And every three years the fleet came back loaded with gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks. King Solomon as a popular attraction
22King Solomon was wiser and richer than any king on earth. 23People from all over the world wanted to hear his insights from God. 24So, they came to see him. They brought gifts: silver, gold, clothing, weapons, spices, horses, and mules. This went on year after year. Solomon’s chariot corps
25Solomon established Israel’s cavalry and chariot corps. He had 12,000 horses and 4,000 stalls for resting horses and parked chariots. He stationed them in Jerusalem and in towns scattered around the nation.
26Solomon controlled the territory from the Euphrates River in the far north, to the Philistine homeland in the east along the Mediterranean coast, to Egypt’s desert in the south. 27When Solomon was king, everyone in Jerusalem had silver. People saw it everywhere. It was like seeing rocks on the ground, cedar in Lebanon, or sycamore trees in the forests of the local Judean foothills. [11] 28Solomon bought imported horses from Egypt and from countries all everywhere. Solomon dies
1 Kings 11:41-43 29The rest of Solomon’s story—from beginning to end—is written in several accounts:
- history of the prophet Nathan
- prophecy of Ahijah from the town of Shiloh
- visions of Iddo, which are mostly about King Jeroboam son of Nebat.
30Solomon reigned over Israel 40 years. [12] 31Solomon died and the people buried him in the City of David, the town named after his father. Solomon’s son Rehoboam became Israel’s next king. Footnotes
19:1No one seems to know where the land of Sheba was. A popular guess is Yemen, in southern Arabia, parked at the corner of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Another common guess is across the Red Sea, somewhere on the Horn of Africa, in Somalia, Ethiopia, or another neighboring nation.
29:4These were offerings for sin, the most common offering in Israel. Worshipers burned the entire animal, which could have been a bull or a sheep—or in Solomon’s case, many of them.
39:10That’s 9,000 pounds or 4,000 kilograms. In Hebrew measurement, 120 talents.
49:10Like Sheba, no one seem sure of where Ophir was. And, like Sheba, popular guesses are southern Arabia and the eastern coast of Africa. The phrase “gold of Ophir” shows up on a broken piece of pottery found in the ruins of Tell Qasile, in what is now Tel Aviv: “gold of Ophir for Beth-Horan…30 shekels.” Tell Qasile was an ancient town destroyed by Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak in 924 BC, a few years after Solomon’s reign. Solomon ruled Israel from about 970-931.
59:11There’s no such wood today. The most common guess is that almug wood is today’s sandalwood, which is about the most expensive wood on the market. It’s fine-grained and good for building and carving. But it’s also fragrant, with an oil that produces a long-lasting scent. Some people describe the smell as calming, sensual, or woodsy. Africa has several kinds of sandalwood, but not from the same family as the hardwood trees.
69:13This could read like it’s a gift exchange, but it may have been a financial transaction with gifts on top of it. The queen may have come with a shopping list and a supply of goods to use in trade.
79:13That’s 23 metric tons and 666 talents, in ancient Hebrew measurement. There’s no indication of how he got it. Perhaps in mining expeditions or in taxes collected by the non-Israelite nations he dominated.
89:15Seven kilograms, or 600 shekels in ancient Hebrew weight.
99:16Two kilograms, or three minas in Hebrew weight.
109:21Location of Tarshish is unknown. But wherever it was, it was west of the Jewish homeland of Israel. Scholars often guess that it was a city in Spain or somewhere else at the opposite end of the Mediterranean Sea from the Jewish homeland. Some say it was a Phoenician colony called Tartessus, in Spain. Phoenicians were native to what is now Lebanon, but their merchant ships sailed through the Mediterranean Sea.
119:27Literally, “Shephelah,” the name for the western foothills on the coastal side of the range of mountains and hills alongside the Jordan River Valley. The hills lie in what are now parts of Israel and Palestinian Territory in the West Bank.
129:30“Forty years” was a common way of saying “many years,” or “a long time.” The symbolic number shows up about 150 times in the Bible. It was probably intended to be taken no more literally than our modern saying “at the eleventh hour.” “Eleventh hour” means at the last moment, not 11 o-clock.
Discussion Questions
- Sorry, there are currently no questions for this chapter.
Videos
Solomon’s taste in décor
15King Solomon ordered 200 large shields, each hammered from 15 pounds [8] of gold. 16He ordered 300 smaller shields, each hammered from four pounds [9] of gold. The king put the shields on display in the Home of the Lebanon Forest, the largest room in the palace complex.17The king also ordered a huge ivory throne overlaid with the finest gold. 18There were six steps to the top, armrests on both sides, and two lions standing beside each armrest. 19A lion stood on each side of every step, for a dozen lions. There was no throne on earth like this one.
20All of Solomon’s drinking cups and dishes were made from gold. No silver at all. Same for the large room called Home of the Lebanon Forest. In those days, Solomon’s gold dishes were no big deal. 21Solomon had an ongoing trade expedition with Tarshish. [10] He sent a fleet of ships there with Hiram’s fleet. And every three years the fleet came back loaded with gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks.
King Solomon as a popular attraction
22King Solomon was wiser and richer than any king on earth. 23People from all over the world wanted to hear his insights from God. 24So, they came to see him. They brought gifts: silver, gold, clothing, weapons, spices, horses, and mules. This went on year after year.Solomon’s chariot corps
25Solomon established Israel’s cavalry and chariot corps. He had 12,000 horses and 4,000 stalls for resting horses and parked chariots. He stationed them in Jerusalem and in towns scattered around the nation.26Solomon controlled the territory from the Euphrates River in the far north, to the Philistine homeland in the east along the Mediterranean coast, to Egypt’s desert in the south. 27When Solomon was king, everyone in Jerusalem had silver. People saw it everywhere. It was like seeing rocks on the ground, cedar in Lebanon, or sycamore trees in the forests of the local Judean foothills. [11] 28Solomon bought imported horses from Egypt and from countries all everywhere.
Solomon dies
1 Kings 11:41-43 29The rest of Solomon’s story—from beginning to end—is written in several accounts:
- history of the prophet Nathan
- prophecy of Ahijah from the town of Shiloh
- visions of Iddo, which are mostly about King Jeroboam son of Nebat.
30Solomon reigned over Israel 40 years. [12] 31Solomon died and the people buried him in the City of David, the town named after his father. Solomon’s son Rehoboam became Israel’s next king. Footnotes
19:1No one seems to know where the land of Sheba was. A popular guess is Yemen, in southern Arabia, parked at the corner of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Another common guess is across the Red Sea, somewhere on the Horn of Africa, in Somalia, Ethiopia, or another neighboring nation.
29:4These were offerings for sin, the most common offering in Israel. Worshipers burned the entire animal, which could have been a bull or a sheep—or in Solomon’s case, many of them.
39:10That’s 9,000 pounds or 4,000 kilograms. In Hebrew measurement, 120 talents.
49:10Like Sheba, no one seem sure of where Ophir was. And, like Sheba, popular guesses are southern Arabia and the eastern coast of Africa. The phrase “gold of Ophir” shows up on a broken piece of pottery found in the ruins of Tell Qasile, in what is now Tel Aviv: “gold of Ophir for Beth-Horan…30 shekels.” Tell Qasile was an ancient town destroyed by Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak in 924 BC, a few years after Solomon’s reign. Solomon ruled Israel from about 970-931.
59:11There’s no such wood today. The most common guess is that almug wood is today’s sandalwood, which is about the most expensive wood on the market. It’s fine-grained and good for building and carving. But it’s also fragrant, with an oil that produces a long-lasting scent. Some people describe the smell as calming, sensual, or woodsy. Africa has several kinds of sandalwood, but not from the same family as the hardwood trees.
69:13This could read like it’s a gift exchange, but it may have been a financial transaction with gifts on top of it. The queen may have come with a shopping list and a supply of goods to use in trade.
79:13That’s 23 metric tons and 666 talents, in ancient Hebrew measurement. There’s no indication of how he got it. Perhaps in mining expeditions or in taxes collected by the non-Israelite nations he dominated.
89:15Seven kilograms, or 600 shekels in ancient Hebrew weight.
99:16Two kilograms, or three minas in Hebrew weight.
109:21Location of Tarshish is unknown. But wherever it was, it was west of the Jewish homeland of Israel. Scholars often guess that it was a city in Spain or somewhere else at the opposite end of the Mediterranean Sea from the Jewish homeland. Some say it was a Phoenician colony called Tartessus, in Spain. Phoenicians were native to what is now Lebanon, but their merchant ships sailed through the Mediterranean Sea.
119:27Literally, “Shephelah,” the name for the western foothills on the coastal side of the range of mountains and hills alongside the Jordan River Valley. The hills lie in what are now parts of Israel and Palestinian Territory in the West Bank.
129:30“Forty years” was a common way of saying “many years,” or “a long time.” The symbolic number shows up about 150 times in the Bible. It was probably intended to be taken no more literally than our modern saying “at the eleventh hour.” “Eleventh hour” means at the last moment, not 11 o-clock.
Discussion Questions
- Sorry, there are currently no questions for this chapter.
Videos
- history of the prophet Nathan
- prophecy of Ahijah from the town of Shiloh
- visions of Iddo, which are mostly about King Jeroboam son of Nebat.
Footnotes
No one seems to know where the land of Sheba was. A popular guess is Yemen, in southern Arabia, parked at the corner of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Another common guess is across the Red Sea, somewhere on the Horn of Africa, in Somalia, Ethiopia, or another neighboring nation.
These were offerings for sin, the most common offering in Israel. Worshipers burned the entire animal, which could have been a bull or a sheep—or in Solomon’s case, many of them.
That’s 9,000 pounds or 4,000 kilograms. In Hebrew measurement, 120 talents.
Like Sheba, no one seem sure of where Ophir was. And, like Sheba, popular guesses are southern Arabia and the eastern coast of Africa. The phrase “gold of Ophir” shows up on a broken piece of pottery found in the ruins of Tell Qasile, in what is now Tel Aviv: “gold of Ophir for Beth-Horan…30 shekels.” Tell Qasile was an ancient town destroyed by Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak in 924 BC, a few years after Solomon’s reign. Solomon ruled Israel from about 970-931.
There’s no such wood today. The most common guess is that almug wood is today’s sandalwood, which is about the most expensive wood on the market. It’s fine-grained and good for building and carving. But it’s also fragrant, with an oil that produces a long-lasting scent. Some people describe the smell as calming, sensual, or woodsy. Africa has several kinds of sandalwood, but not from the same family as the hardwood trees.
This could read like it’s a gift exchange, but it may have been a financial transaction with gifts on top of it. The queen may have come with a shopping list and a supply of goods to use in trade.
That’s 23 metric tons and 666 talents, in ancient Hebrew measurement. There’s no indication of how he got it. Perhaps in mining expeditions or in taxes collected by the non-Israelite nations he dominated.
Seven kilograms, or 600 shekels in ancient Hebrew weight.
Two kilograms, or three minas in Hebrew weight.
Location of Tarshish is unknown. But wherever it was, it was west of the Jewish homeland of Israel. Scholars often guess that it was a city in Spain or somewhere else at the opposite end of the Mediterranean Sea from the Jewish homeland. Some say it was a Phoenician colony called Tartessus, in Spain. Phoenicians were native to what is now Lebanon, but their merchant ships sailed through the Mediterranean Sea.
Literally, “Shephelah,” the name for the western foothills on the coastal side of the range of mountains and hills alongside the Jordan River Valley. The hills lie in what are now parts of Israel and Palestinian Territory in the West Bank.
“Forty years” was a common way of saying “many years,” or “a long time.” The symbolic number shows up about 150 times in the Bible. It was probably intended to be taken no more literally than our modern saying “at the eleventh hour.” “Eleventh hour” means at the last moment, not 11 o-clock.
Discussion Questions
- Sorry, there are currently no questions for this chapter.