THE THIRD BOOK OF KINGS

         This and the following Book are called by the holy fathers
         the third and fourth book of Kings; but by the Hebrews, the
         first and second. They contain the history of the kingdoms
         of Israel and Juda, from the beginning of the reign of
         Solomon, to the captivity. As to the writer of these books,
         it seems most probable they were not written by one man;
         nor at one time; but as there was all along a succession of
         prophets in Israel, who recorded, by divine inspiration,
         the most remarkable things that happened in their days,
         these books seem to have been written by these prophets.
         See 2 Paralip. alias 2 Chron. 9.29; 12.15; 13.22; 20.34;
         26.22; 32.32.

         3 Kings Chapter 1

         King David growing old, Abisag a Sunamitess is brought to
         him. Adonias pretending to reign, Nathan and Bethsabee
         obtain that Solomon should be declared and anointed king.

         1:1. Now king David was old, and advanced in years: and
         when he was covered with clothes he was not warm.

         1:2. His servants therefore, said to him: Let us seek for
         our Lord the king, a young virgin, and let her stand before
         the king, and cherish him, and sleep in his bosom and warm
         our lord the king.

         1:3. So they sought a beautiful young woman, in all the
         coasts of Israel and they found Abisag, a Sunamitess, and
         brought her to the king.

         1:4. And the damsel was exceedingly beautiful, and she
         slept with the king, and served him, but the king did not
         know her.

         1:5. And Adonias, the son of Haggith, exalted himself,
         saying: I will be king.  And he made himself chariots and
         horsemen, and fifty men to run before him.

         1:6. Neither did his father rebuke him at any time, saying:
         Why hast thou done this?  And he also was very beautiful,
         the next in birth after Absalom.

         1:7. And he conferred with Joab, the son of Sarvia, and
         with Abiathar, the priest, who furthered Adonias's side.

         1:8. But Sadoc, the priest, and Banaias, the son of Joiada,
         and Nathan, the prophet, and Semei, and Rei, and the
         strength of David's army, was not with Adonias.

         1:9. And Adonias having slain rams and calves, and all fat
         cattle, by the stone of Zoheleth, which was near the
         fountain Rogel, invited all his brethren, the king's sons,
         and all the men of Juda, the king's servants:

         1:10. But Nathan, the prophet, and Banaias, and all the
         valiant men, and Solomon, his brother, he invited not.

         1:11. And Nathan said to Bethsabee, the mother of Solomon:
         Hast thou not heard that Adonias, the son of Haggith,
         reigneth, and our lord David knoweth it not?

         1:12. Now then, come, take my counsel, and save thy life,
         and the life of thy son Solomon.

         1:13. Go, and get thee in to king David, and say to him:
         Didst not thou, my lord, O king, swear to me, thy handmaid,
         saying: Solomon, thy son, shall reign after me, and he
         shall sit on my throne? why then doth Adonias reign?

         1:14. And while thou art yet speaking there with the king,
         I will come in after thee, and will fill up thy words.

         1:15. So Bethsabee went in to the king into the chamber.
         Now the king was very old, and Abisag, the Sunamitess,
         ministered to him.

         1:16. Bethsabee bowed herself, and worshipped the king.
         And the king said to her: What is thy will?

         1:17. She answered, and said: My lord, thou didst swear to
         thy handmaid, by the Lord thy God, saying: Solomon, thy
         son, shall reign after me, and he shall sit on my throne.

         1:18. And behold, now Adonias reigneth, and thou, my lord
         the king, knowest nothing of it.

         1:19. He hath killed oxen, and all fat cattle, and many
         rams, and invited all the king's sons, and Abiathar, the
         priest, and Joab, the general of the army: but Solomon, thy
         servant, he invited not.

         1:20. And now, my lord, O king, the eyes of all Israel are
         upon thee, that thou shouldst tell them, who shall sit on
         thy throne, my lord the king, after thee.

         1:21. Otherwise it shall come to pass, when my lord the
         king sleepeth with his fathers, that I, and my son,
         Solomon, shall be accounted offenders.

         1:22. As she was yet speaking with the king, Nathan, the
         prophet, came.

         1:23. And they told the king, saying: Nathan, the prophet,
         is here. And when he was come in before the king, and had
         worshipped, bowing down to the ground,

         1:24. Nathan said: My lord, O king, hast thou said: Let
         Adonias reign after me, and let him sit upon my throne?

         1:25. Because he is gone down to day, and hath killed oxen,
         and fatlings, and many rams, and invited all the king's
         sons, and the captains of the army, and Abiathar the
         priest: and they are eating and drinking before him, and
         saying: God save king Adonias:

         1:26. But me, thy servant, and Sadoc, the priest, and
         Banaias, the son of Joiada, and Solomon, thy servant, he
         hath not invited.

         1:27. Is this word come out from my lord the king, and hast
         thou not told me, thy servant, who should sit on the throne
         of my lord the king after him?

         1:28. And king David answered, and said: Call to me
         Bethsabee. And when she was come in to the king, and stood
         before him,

         1:29. The king swore, and said: As the Lord liveth, who
         hath delivered my soul out of all distress,

         1:30. Even as I swore to thee, by the Lord, the God of
         Israel, saying: Solomon thy son, shall reign after me, and
         he shall sit upon my throne in my stead, so will I do this
         day.

         1:31. And Bethsabee, bowing with her face to the earth,
         worshipped the king, saying: May my lord David live for
         ever.

         1:32. King David also said: Call me Sadoc, the priest, and
         Nathan, the prophet, and Banaias, the son of Joiada.  And
         when they were come in before the king,

         1:33. He said to them: Take with you the servants of your
         lord, and set my son Solomon upon my mule: and bring him to
         Gihon:

         1:34. And let Sadoc, the priest, and Nathan, the prophet,
         anoint him there king over Israel: and you shall sound the
         trumpet, and shall say: God save king Solomon.

         1:35. And you shall come up after him, and he shall come,
         and shall sit upon my throne, and he shall reign in my
         stead: and I will appoint him to be ruler over Israel, and
         over Juda.

         1:36. And Banaias, the son of Joiada, answered the king,
         saying: Amen: so say the Lord, the God of my lord the king.

         1:37. As the Lord hath been with my lord the king, so be he
         with Solomon, and make his throne higher than the throne of
         my lord king David.

         1:38. So Sadoc, the priest, and Nathan, the prophet, went
         down, and Banaias, the son of Joiada, and the Cerethi, and
         Phelethi: and they set Solomon upon the mule of king David,
         and brought him to Gihon.

         1:39. And Sadoc, the priest, took a horn of oil out of the
         tabernacle, and anointed Solomon: and they sounded the
         trumpet, and all the people said: God save king Solomon.

         1:40. And all the multitude went up after him, and the
         people played with pipes, and rejoiced with a great joy,
         and the earth rang with the noise of their cry.

         1:41. And Adonias, and all that were invited by him, heard
         it, and now the feast was at an end. Joab also, hearing the
         sound of the trumpet, said: What meaneth this noise of the
         city in an uproar?

         1:42. While he yet spoke, Jonathan, the son of Abiathar,
         the priest, came: and Adonias said to him: Come in, because
         thou art a valiant man, and bringest good news.

         1:43. And Jonathan answered Adonias: Not so: for our lord,
         king David, hath appointed Solomon king;

         1:44. And hath sent with him Sadoc, the priest, and Nathan,
         the prophet, and Banaias, the son of Joiada, and the
         Cerethi, and the Phelethi, and they have set him upon the
         king's mule:

         1:45. And Sadoc, the priest, and Nathan, the prophet, have
         anointed him king, in Gihon: and they are gone up from
         thence rejoicing, so that the city rang again: this is the
         noise that you have heard.

         1:46. Moreover, Solomon sitteth upon the throne of the
         kingdom.

         1:47. And the king's servants going in, have blessed ouur
         lord king David, saying: May God make the name of Solomon
         greater than thy name, and make his throne greater than thy
         throne. And the king adored in his bed:

         1:48. And he said: Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel,
         who hath given this day one to sit on my throne, my eyes
         seeing it.

         1:49. Then all the guests of Adonias were afraid, and they
         all arose, and every man went his way.

         1:50. And Adonias fearing Solomon, arose and went, and took
         hold of the horn of the altar.

         1:51. And they told Solomon, saying: Behold Adonias fearing
         king Solomon, hath taken hold of the horn of the altar,
         saying: Let king Solomon swear to me this day, that he will
         not kill his servant with the sword.

         1:52. And Solomon said: If he be a good man, there shall
         not so much as one hair of his head fall to the ground: but
         if evil be found in him, he shall die.

         1:53. Then king Solomon sent, and brought him out from the
         altar: and going in, he worshipped king Solomon: and
         Solomon said to him: Go to thy house.

         3 Kings Chapter 2

         David, after giving his last charge to Solomon, dieth.
         Adonias is put to death: Abiathar is banished: Joab and Semei
         are slain.

         1:1. And the days of David drew nigh that he should die,
         and he charged his son Solomon, saying:

         2:2. I am going the way of all flesh: take thou courage and
         shew thyself a man.

         2:3. And keep the charge of the Lord thy God, to walk in
         his ways, and observe his ceremonies, and his precepts, and
         judgments, and testimonies, as it is written in the law of
         Moses: that thou mayst understand all thou dost, and
         whithersoever thou shalt turn thyself:

         2:4. That the Lord may confirm his words, which he hath
         spoken of me, saying: If thy children shall take heed to
         their ways, and shall walk before me in truth, with all
         their heart, and with all their soul, there shall not be
         taken away from thee a man on the throne of Israel.

         2:5. Thou knowest also what Joab, the son of Sarvia, hath
         done to me, what he did to the two captains of the army of
         Israel, to Abner, the son of Ner, and to Amasa, the son of
         Jether: whom he slew, and shed the blood of war in peace,
         and put the blood of war on his girdle that was about his
         loins, and in his shoes that were on his feet.

         Joab... These instructions given by David to his son, with
         relation to Joab and Semei, proceeded not from any rancour
         of heart, or private pique; but from a zeal for justice,
         that crimes so public and heinous might not pass
         unpunished.

         2:6. Do, therefore, according to thy wisdom, and let not
         his hoary head go down to hell in peace.

         To hell... This word hell doth not here signify the place
         or state of damnation; but the place and state of the dead.

         2:7. But shew kindness to the sons of Berzellai, the
         Galaadite, and let them eat at thy table: for they met me
         when I fled from the face of Absalom, thy brother.

         2:8. Thou hast also with thee Semei, the son of Gera, the
         son of Jemini, of Bahurim, who cursed me with a grievous
         curse, when I went to the camp: but because he came down to
         meet me when I passed over the Jordan, and I swore to him
         by the Lord, saying: I will not kill thee with the sword:

         2:9. Do not thou hold him guiltless. But thou art a wise
         man, and knowest what to do with him, and thou shalt bring
         down his grey hairs with blood to the grave.

         2:10. So David slept with his fathers, and was buried in
         the city of David.

         2:11. And the days that David reigned in Israel, were forty
         years: in Hebron he reigned seven years, in Jerusalem
         thirty-three.

         2:12. And Solomon sat upon the throne of his father David,
         and his kingdom was strengthened exceedingly.

         2:13. And Adonias, the son of Haggith, came to Bethsabee
         the mother of Solomon. And she said to him: Is thy coming
         peaceable? He answered: It is peaceable.

         2:14. And he added: I have a word to speak with thee. She
         said to him: Speak. And he said:

         2:15. Thou knowest that the kingdom was mine, and all
         Israel had preferred me to be their king: but the kingdom
         is transferred, and is become my brother's: for it was
         appointed him by the Lord.

         2:16. Now therefore, I ask one petition of thee; turn not
         away my face. And she said to him: Say on.

         2:17. And he said I pray thee speak to king Solomon (for he
         cannot deny thee any thing) to give me Abisag, the
         Sunamitess, to wife.

         2:18. And Bethsabee said: Well, I will speak for thee to
         the king.

         2:19. Then Bethsabee came to king Solomon, to speak to him
         for Adonias: and the king arose to meet her, and bowed to
         her, and sat down upon his throne: and a throne was set for
         the king's mother, and she sat on his right hand.

         2:20. And she said to him: I desire one small petition of
         thee; do not put me to confusion. And the king said to her:
         My mother ask, for I must not turn away thy face.

         2:21. And she said: Let Abisag, the Sunamitess, be given to
         Adonias, thy brother, to wife.

         2:22. And king Solomon answered, and said to his mother:
         Why dost thou ask Abisag, the Sunamitess, for Adonias? ask
         for him also the kingdom; for he is my elder brother, and
         hath Abiathar, the priest, and Joab, the son of Sarvia.

         2:23. Then king Solomon swore by the Lord, saying: So and
         so may God do to me, and add more, if Adonias hath not
         spoken this word against his own life.

         2:24. And now, as the Lord liveth, who hath established me,
         and placed me upon the throne of David, my father, and who
         hath made me a house, as he promised, Adonias shall be put
         to death this day.

         2:25. And king Solomon sent by the hand of Banaias, the son
         of Joiada, who slew him, and he died.

         2:26. And the king said also to Abiathar, the priest: Go to
         Anathoth, to thy lands, for indeed thou art worthy of
         death: but I will not at this time put thee to death,
         because thou didst carry the ark of the Lord God before
         David, my father, and hast endured trouble in all the
         troubles my father endured.

         2:27. So Solomon cast out Abiathar from being the priest of
         the Lord, that the word of the Lord might be fulfilled,
         which he spoke concerning the house of Heli in Silo.

         2:28. And the news came to Joab, because Joab had turned
         after Adonias, and had not turned after Solomon: and Joab
         fled into the tabernacle of the Lord, and took hold on the
         horn of the altar.

         2:29. And it was told king Solomon, that Joab was fled into
         the tabernacle of the Lord, and was by the altar: and
         Solomon sent Banaias, the son of Joiada, saying. Go, kill
         him.

         2:30. And Banaias came to the tabernacle of the Lord, and
         said to him: Thus saith the king: Come forth. And he said:
         I will not come forth, but here I will die. Banaias
         brought word back to the king, saying: Thus saith Joab, and
         thus he answered me.

         2:31. And the king said to him: Do as he hath said; and
         kill him, and bury him, and thou shalt remove the innocent
         blood which hath been shed by Joab, from me, and from the
         house of my father:

         2:32. And the Lord shall return his blood upon his own
         head; because he murdered two men, just and better than
         himself: and slew them with the sword, my father, David,
         not knowing it; Abner, the son of Ner, general of the army
         of Israel, and Amasa, the son of Jether general of the army
         of Juda;

         2:33. And their blood shall return upon the head of Joab,
         and upon the head of his seed for ever. But to David and
         his seed, and his house, and to his throne, be peace for
         ever from the Lord.

         2:34. So Banaias, the son of Joiada, went up, and setting
         upon him slew him, and he was buried in his house in the
         desert.

         2:35. And the king appointed Banaias, the son of Joiada in
         his room over the army; and Sadoc, the priest, he put in
         the place of Abiathar.

         2:36. The king also sent, and called for Semei, and said to
         him: Build thee a house in Jerusalem, and dwell there: and
         go not out from thence any where.

         2:37. For on what day soever thou shalt go out, and shalt
         pass over the brook Cedron, know that thou shalt be put to
         death: thy blood shall be upon thy own head.

         2:38. And Semei said to the king: The saying is good: as my
         lord the king hath said, so will thy servant do.  And Semei
         dwelt in Jerusalem many days.

         2:39. And it came to pass after three years, that the
         servants of Semei ran away to Achis, the son of Maacha, the
         king of Geth: and it was told Semei that his servants were
         gone to Geth.

         2:40. And Semei arose, and saddled his ass, and went to
         Achis, to Geth, to seek his servants, and he brought them
         out of Geth.

         2:41. And it was told Solomon, that Semei had gone from
         Jerusalem to Geth, and was come back.

         2:42. And sending he called for him, and said to him: Did I
         not protest to thee by the Lord, and tell thee before: On
         what day soever thou shalt go out and walk abroad any
         where, know that thou shalt die?  And thou answeredst me:
         The word that I have heard is good.

         2:43. Why then hast thou not kept the oath of the Lord, and
         the commandment that I laid upon thee?

         2:44. And the king said to Semei: Thou knowest all the
         evil, of which thy heart is conscious, which thou didst to
         David, my father: the Lord hath returned thy wickedness
         upon thy own head.

         2:45. And king Solomon shall be blessed, and the throne of
         David shall be established before the Lord for ever.

         2:46. So the king commanded Banaias, the son of Joiada: and
         he went out and struck him; and he died.

         3 Kings Chapter 3

         Solomon marrieth Pharao's daughter. He sacrificeth in
         Gabaon: in the choice which God gave him he preferreth
         wisdom. His wise judgment between the two harlots.

         3:1. And the kingdom was established in the hand of
         Solomon, and he made affinity with Pharao, the king of
         Egypt: for he took his daughter, and brought her into the
         city of David: until he had made an end of building his
         own house, and the house of the Lord, and the wall of
         Jerusalem round about.

         3:2. But yet the people sacrificed in the high places: for
         there was no temple built to the name of the Lord until
         that day.

         High places... That is, altars where they worshipped the
         Lord, but not according to the ordinance of the law; which
         allowed of no other places for sacrifice but the temple of
         God. Among these high places that of Gabaon was the
         chiefest, because there was the tabernacle of the
         testimony, which had been removed from Silo to Nobe and
         from Nobe to Gabaon.

         3:3. And Solomon loved the Lord, walking in the precepts of
         David, his father; only he sacrificed in the high places,
         and burnt incense.

         3:4. He went therefore to Gabaon, to sacrifice there: for
         that was the great high place: a thousand victims for
         holocausts, did Solomon offer upon that altar, in Gabaon.

         3:5. And the Lord appeared to Solomon in a dream by night,
         saying: Ask what thou wilt that I should give thee.

         3:6. And Solomon said: Thou hast shewed great mercy to thy
         servant David, my father, even as he walked before thee in
         truth, and justice, and an upright heart with thee: and
         thou hast kept thy great mercy for him, and hast given him
         a son to sit on his throne, as it is this day.

         3:7. And now, O Lord God, thou hast made thy servant king
         instead of David, my father: and I am but a child, and know
         not how to go out and come in;

         3:8. And thy servant is in the midst of the people which
         thou hast chosen, an immense people, which cannot be
         numbered nor counted for multitude.

         3:9. Give therefore to thy servant an understanding heart,
         to judge thy people, and discern between good and evil. For
         who shall be able to judge this people, thy people, which
         is so numerous?

         3:10. And the word was pleasing to the Lord, that Solomon
         had asked such a thing.

         3:11. And the Lord said to Solomon: Because thou hast asked
         this thing, and hast not asked for thyself long life nor
         riches, nor the lives of thy enemies, but hast asked for
         thyself wisdom to discern jndgment;

         3:12. Behold I have done for thee according to thy words,
         and have given thee a wise and understanding heart, in so
         much that there hath been no one like thee before
         thee, nor shall arise after thee.

         3:13. Yea, and the things also which thou didst not ask, I
         have given thee; to wit, riches and glory: so that no one
         hath been like thee among the kings in all days
         heretofore.

         3:14. And if thou wilt walk in my ways, and keep my
         precepts and my commandments, as thy father walked, I will
         lengthen thy days.

         3:15. And Solomon awaked, and perceived that it was a
         dream: and when he was come to Jerusalem, he stood before
         the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and offered
         holocausts, and sacrificed victims of peace offerings, and
         made a great feast for all his servants.

         3:16. Then there came two women that were harlots, to the
         king, and stood before him.

         3:17. And one of them said: I beseech thee, my lord, I and
         this woman dwelt in one house, and I was delivered of a
         child with her in the chamber.

         3:18. And the third day after I was delivered, she also was
         delivered; and we were together, and no other person with
         us in the house; only we two.

         3:19. And this woman's child died in the night: for in her
         sleep she overlaid him.

         3:20. And rising in the dead time of the night, she took my
         child from my side, while I, thy handmaid, was asleep, and
         laid it in her bosom: and laid her dead child in my bosom.

         3:21. And when I arose in the morning, to give my child
         suck, behold it was dead: but considering him more
         diligently, when it was clear day, I found that it was not
         mine which I bore.

         3:22. And the other woman answered: It is not so as thou
         sayst, but thy child is dead, and mine is alive. On the
         contrary, she said; Thou liest: for my child liveth, and
         thy child is dead. And in this manner they strove before
         the king.

         3:23. Then said the king: The one saith, My child is alive,
         and thy child is dead. And the other answereth: Nay; but
         thy child is dead, and mine liveth.

         3:24. The king therefore said: Bring me a sword. And when
         they had brought a sword before the king,

         3:25. Divide, said he, the living child in two, and give
         half to the one and half to the other.

         3:26. But the woman, whose child was alive, said to the
         king; (for her bowels were moved upon her child) I beseech
         thee, my lord, give her the child alive, and do not kill
         it. But the other said: Let it be neither mine nor thine;
         but divide it.

         3:27. The king answered, and said: Give the living child to
         this woman, and let it not be killed; for she is the mother
         thereof.

         3:28. And all Israel heard the judgment which the king had
         judged, and they feared the king, seeing that the wisdom of
         God was in him to do judgment.

         3 Kings Chapter 4

         Solomon's chief officers. His riches and wisdom.

         4:1. And king Solomon reigned over all Israel:

         4:2. And these were the princes which he had: Azarias, the
         son of Sadoc, the priest:

         4:3. Elihoreph, and Ahia, the sons of Sisa, scribes:
         Josaphat, the son of Ahilud, recorder:

         4:4. Banaias, the son of Joiada, over the army: and Sadoc,
         and Abiathar, priests.

         Abiathar... By this it appears that Abiathar was not
         altogether deposed from the high priesthood; but only
         banished to his country house, and by that means excluded
         from the exercise of his functions.

         4:5. Azarias, the son of Nathan, over them that were about
         the king: Zabud, the son of Nathan, the priest, the king's
         friend:

         4:6. And Ahisar, governor of the house: and Adoniram, the
         son of Abda, over the tribute.

         4:7. And Solomon had twelve governors over all Israel, who
         provided victuals for the king and for his house hold: for
         every one provided necessaries, each man his month in the
         year.

         4:8. And these are their names: Benhur, in mount Ephraim.

         4:9. Bendecar, in Macces, and in Salebim, and in Bethsames,
         and in Elon, and in Bethanan.

         4:10. Benhesed, in Aruboth: his was Socho, and all the land
         of Epher.

         4:11. Benabinadab, to whom belonged all Nephath-Dor: he
         had Tapheth, the daughter of Solomon, to wife.

         4:12. Bana, the son of Ahilud, who governed Thanac, and
         Mageddo, and all Bethsan, which is by Sarthana, beneath
         Jezrael, from Bethsan unto Abelmehula, over against
         Jecmaan.

         4:13. Bengaber, in Ramoth Galaad: he had the town of Jair,
         the son of Manasses, in Galaad: he was chief in all the
         country of Argob, which is in Basan, threescore great
         cities with walls, and brazen bolts.

         4:14. Ahinadab, the son of Addo, was chief in Manaim.

         4:15. Achimaas, in Nephthali: he also had Basemath, the
         daughter of Solomon, to wife.

         4:16. Baana, the son of Husi, in Aser, and in Baloth.

         4:17. Josaphat, the son of Pharue, in Issachar.

         4:18. Semei, the son of Ela, in Benjamin.

         4:19. Gaber, the son of Uri, in the land of Galaad, in the
         land of Sehon, the king of the Amorrhites, and of Og, the
         king of Basan, over all that were in that land.

         4:20. Juda and Israel were innumerable, as the sand of the
         sea in multitude; eating and drinking, and rejoicing.

         4:21. And Solomon had under him all the kingdoms, from the
         river to the land of the Philistines, even to the border of
         Egypt: and they brought him presents, and served him all
         the days of his life.

         The river... Euphrates.

         4:22. And the provision of Solomon, for each day, was
         thirty measures of fine flour, and threescore measures of
         meal;

         4:23. Ten fat oxen, and twenty out of the pastures, and a
         hundred rams; besides venison of harts, roes, and
         buffles, and fatted fowls.

         4:24. For he had all the country which was beyond the
         river, from Thaphsa to Gazan, and all the kings of those
         countries: and he had peace on every side round about.

         4:25. And Juda, and Israel, dwelt without any fear, every
         one under his vine, and under his fig tree, from Dan to
         Bersabee, all the days of Solomon.

         4:26. And Solomon had forty thousand stalls of chariot
         horses, and twelve thousand for the saddle.

         4:27. And the foresaid governors of the king fed them; and
         they furnished the necessaries also for king Solomon's
         table, with great care, in their time.

         4:28. They brought barley also, and straw for the horses
         and beasts, to the place where the king was, according as
         it was appointed them.

         4:29. And God gave to Solomon wisdom, and understanding
         exceeding much, and largeness of heart, as the sand that is
         on the sea shore.

         4:30. And the wisdom of Solomon surpassed the wisdom of all
         the Orientals, and of the Egyptians;

         4:31. And he was wiser than all men: wiser than Ethan, the
         Ezrahite, and Heman, and Chalcol, and Dorda, the sons of
         Mahol, and he was renowned in all nations round about.

         4:32. Solomon also spoke three thousand parables: and his
         poems were a thousand and five.

         Three thousand parables, etc... These works are all lost,
         excepting some part of the parables extant in the book of
         Proverbs; and his chief poem called the Canticle of
         Canticles.

         4:33. And he treated about trees, from the cedar that is in
         Libanus, unto the hyssop that cometh out of the wall: and
         he discoursed of beasts, and of fowls, and of creeping
         things, and of fishes.

         4:34. And they came from all nations to hear the wisdom of
         Solomon, and from all the kings of the earth, who heard of
         his wisdom.

         3 Kings Chapter 5

         Hiram king of Tyre agreeth to furnish timber and workmen for
         building the temple: the number of workmen and overseers.

         5:1. And Hiram, king of Tyre, sent his servants to Solomon:
         for he heard that they had anointed him king in the room of
         his father: for Hiram had always been David's friend.

         5:2. Solomon sent to Hiram, saying:

         5:3. Thou knowest the will of David, my father, and that he
         could not build a house to the name of the Lord his God,
         because of the wars that were round about him, until the
         Lord put them under the soles of his feet.

         5:4. But now the Lord my God hath given me rest round
         about; and there is no adversary nor evil occurrence.

         5:5. Wherefore I purpose to build a temple to the name of
         the Lord my God, as the Lord spoke to David my father,
         saying: Thy son, whom I will set upon the throne, in thy
         place, he shall build a house to my name.

         5:6. Give orders, therefore, that thy servants cut me down
         cedar trees, out of Libanus, and let my servants be with
         thy servants: and I will give thee the hire of thy servants
         whatsoever thou wilt ask: for thou knowest how there is not
         among my people a man that has skill to hew wood like to
         the Sidonians.

         5:7. Now when Hiram had heard the words of Solomon, he
         rejoiced exceedingly, and said: Blessed be the Lord God
         this day, who hath given to David a very wise son over this
         numerous people.

         5:8. And Hiram sent to Solomon, saying: I have heard all
         thou hast desired of me; and I will do all thy desire
         concerning cedar trees, and fir trees.

         5:9. My servants shall bring them down from Libanus to the
         sea: and I will put them together in floats, on the sea,
         and convey them to the place, which thou shalt signify to
         me, and will land them there, and thou shalt receive them:
         and thou shalt allow me necessaries to furnish food for my
         household.

         5:10. So Hiram gave Solomon cedar trees, and fir trees,
         according to all his desire.

         5:11. And Solomon allowed Hiram twenty thousand measures of
         wheat, for provision for his house, and twenty measures of
         the purest oil: thus gave Solomon to Hiram every year.

         5:12. And the Lord gave wisdom to Solomon, as he promised
         him: and there was peace between Hiram and Solomon, and
         they two made a league together.

         5:13. And king Solomon chose workmen out of all Israel, and
         the levy was of thirty thousand men.

         5:14. And he sent them to Libanus, ten thousand every
         month, by turns, so that two months they were at home: and
         Adoniram was over this levy.

         5:15. And Solomon had seventy thousand to carry burdens,
         and eighty thousand to hew stones in the mountain:

         5:16. Besides the overseers who were over every work, in
         number three thousand and three hundred, that ruled over
         the people, and them that did the work.

         5:17. And the king commanded that they should bring great
         stones, costly stones, for the foundation of the temple,
         and should square them:

         5:18. And the masons of Solomon, and the masons of Hiram,
         hewed them: and the Giblians prepared timber and stones to
         build the house.

         3 Kings Chapter 6

         The building of Solomon's temple.

         6:1. And it came to pass in the four hundred and eightieth
         year after the children of Israel came out of the land of
         Egypt, in the fourth year of the reign of Solomon over
         Israel, in the month Zio, (the same is the second month) he
         began to build a house to the Lord.

         6:2. And the house, which king Solomon built to the Lord,
         was threescore cubits in length, and twenty cubits in
         breadth, and thirty cubits in height.

         6:3. And there was a porch before the temple, of twenty
         cubits in length, according to the measure of the breadth
         of the temple: and it was ten cubits in breadth, before the
         face of the temple.

         6:4. And he made in the temple oblique windows.

         6:5. And upon the wall of the temple, he built floors round
         about, in the walls of the house, round about the temple
         and the oracle, and he made chambers in the sides round
         about.

         Upon the wall, i. e., joining to the wall.-Ibid. He built
         floors round about... Chambers or cells adjoining to the
         temple, for the use of the temple and of the priests, so
         contrived as to be between the inward and outward wall of
         the temple, in three stories, one above another.-Ibid. The
         oracle... The inner temple or holy of holies, where God
         gave his oracles.

         6:6. The floor that was underneath was five cubits in
         breadth, and the middle floor was six cubits in breadth,
         and the third floor was seven cubits in breadth. And he put
         beams in the house round about on the outside, that they
         might not be fastened in the walls of the temple.

         6:7. And the house, when it was in building, was built of
         stones, hewed and made ready: so that there was neither
         hammer nor axe, nor any tool of iron heard in the house
         when it was in building.

         Made ready, etc... So the stones for the building of God's
         eternal temple in the heavenly Jerusalem, (who are the
         faithful,) must first be hewn and polished here by many
         trials and sufferings, before they can be admitted to have
         a place in that celestial structure.

         6:8. The door, for the middle side, was on the right hand
         of the house: and by winding stairs they went up to the
         middle room, and from the middle to the third.

         6:9. So he built the house, and finished it: and he covered
         the house with roofs of cedar.

         6:10. And he built a floor over all the house, five cubits
         in height, and he covered the house with timber of cedar.

         6:11. And the word of the Lord came to Solomon,

         6:12. As for this house, which thou art building, if thou
         wilt walk in my statutes, and execute my judgments, and
         keep all my commandments, walking in them, I will fulfil my
         word to thee, which I spoke to David thy father.

         6:13. And I will dwell in the midst of the children of
         Israel, and I will not forsake my people Israel.

         6:14. So Solomon built the house, and finished it.

         6:15. And he built the walls of the house on the inside,
         with boards of cedar, from the floor of the house to the
         top of the walls, and to the roofs, he covered it with
         boards of cedar on the inside: and he covered the floor of
         the house with planks of fir.

         6:16. And he built up twenty cubits with boards of cedar at
         the hinder part of the temple, from the floor to the top:
         and made the inner house of the oracle to be the holy of
         holies.

         6:17. And the temple itself, before the doors of the
         oracle, was forty cubits long.

         6:18. And all the house was covered within with cedar,
         having the turnings, and the joints thereof artfully
         wrought, and carvings projecting out: all was covered with
         boards of cedar: and no stone could be seen in the wall at
         all.

         6:19. And he made the oracle in the midst of the house, in
         the inner part, to set there the ark of the covenant of the
         Lord.

         6:20. Now the oracle was twenty cubits in length, and
         twenty cubits in breadth, and twenty cubits in height. And
         he covered it, and overlaid it with most pure gold. And
         the altar also he covered with cedar.

         6:21. And the house before the oracle he overlaid with most
         pure gold, and fastened on the plates with nails of gold.

         6:22. And there was nothing in the temple that was not
         covered with gold: the whole altar of the oracle he covered
         also with gold.

         6:23. And he made in the oracle two cherubims of olive
         tree, of ten cubits in height.

         6:24. One wing of the cherub was five cubits, and the other
         wing of the cherub was five cubits: that is, in all ten
         cubits, from the extremity of one wing to the extremity of
         the other wing.

         6:25. The second cherub also was ten cubits: and the
         measure, and the work was the same in both the cherubims:

         6:26. That is to say, one cherub was ten cubits high, and
         in like manner the other cherub.

         6:27. And he set the cherubims in the midst of the inner
         temple: and the cherubims stretched forth their wings, and
         the wing of the one touched one wall, and the wing of the
         other cherub touched the other wall: and the other wings in
         the midst of the temple touched one another.

         6:28. And he overlaid the cherubims with gold.

         6:29. And all the walls of the temple round about he carved
         with divers figures and carvings: and he made in them
         cherubims and palm trees, and divers representations, as it
         were standing out, and coming forth from the wall.

         6:30. And the floor of the house he also overlaid with gold
         within and without.

         6:31. And in the entrance of the oracle, he made little
         doors of olive tree, snd posts of five corners,

         6:32. And two doors of olive tree: and he carved upon them
         figures of cherubims, and figures of palm trees, and
         carvings very much projecting; and he overlaid them with
         gold: and he covered both the cherubims and the palm trees,
         and the other things, with gold.

         6:33. And he made in the entrance of the temple posts of
         olive tree foursquare:

         6:34. And two doors of fir tree, one of each side: and each
         door was double, and so opened with folding leaves.

         6:35. And he carved cherubims, and palm trees, and carved
         work standing very much out: and he overlaid all with
         golden plates in square work by rule.

         6:36. And he built the inner court with three rows of
         polished stones, and one row of beams of cedar.

         6:37. In the fourth year was the house of the Lord founded,
         in the month Zio:

         6:38. And in the eleventh year, in the month Bul.  (which
         is the eighth month) the house was finished in all the
         works thereof, and in all the appurtenances thereof: and he
         was seven years in building it.

         3 Kings Chapter 7

         Solomons palace, his house in the forest, and the queen's
         house: the work of the two pillars: the sea (or laver) and
         other vessels.

         7:1. And Solomon built his own house in thirteen years, and
         brought it to perfection.

         7:2. He built also the house of the forest of Libanus; the
         length of it was a hundred cubits, and the breadth fifty
         cubits, and the height thirty cubits: and four galleries
         between pillars of cedar: for he had cut cedar trees into
         pillars.

         7:3. And he covered the whole vault with boards of cedar,
         and it was held up with five and forty pillars.  And one
         row had fifteen pillars,

         7:4. Set one against another,

         7:5. And looking one upon another, with equal space between
         the pillars, and over the pillars were square beams in all
         things equal.

         7:6. And he made a porch of pillars of fifty cubits in
         length, and thirty cubits in breadth: and another porch
         before the greater porch, and pillars, and chapiters upon
         the pillars.

         7:7. He made also the porch of the throne wherein is the
         seat of judgment; and covered it with cedar wood from the
         floor to the top.

         7:8. And in the midst of the porch, was a small house,
         where he sat in judgment of the like work. He made also a
         house for the daughter of Pharao (whom Solomon had taken to
         wife) of the same work, as this porch;

         7:9. All of costly stones, which were sawed by a certain
         rule and measure, both within and without: from the
         foundation to the top of the walls, and without, unto the
         great court.

         7:10. And the foundations were of costly stones, great
         stones of ten cubits or eight cubits.

         7:11. And above there were costly stones of equal measure
         hewed, and in like manner planks of cedar.

         7:12. And the great court was made round with three rows of
         hewed stones, and one row of planks of cedar, which also
         was observed in the inner court of the house of the Lord,
         and in the porch of the house.

         7:13. And king Solomon sent, and brought Hiram from Tyre,

         7:14. The son of a widow woman, of the tribe of Nephthali,
         whose father was a Tyrian, an artificer in brass, and full
         of wisdom, and understanding, and skill to work all work in
         brass. And when he was come to king Solomon, he wrought all
         his work.

         7:15. And he cast two pillars in brass, each pillar was
         eighteen cubits high: and a line of twelve cubits compassed
         both the pillars.

         7:16. He made also two chapiters of molten brass, to be set
         upon the tops of the pillars: the height of one chapiter
         was five cubits, and the height of the other chapiter was
         five cubits:

         7:17. And a kind of network, and chain work wreathed
         together with wonderful art. Both the chapiters of the
         pillars were cast: seven rows of nets were on one chapiter,
         and seven nets on the other chapiter.

         7:18. And he made the pillars, and two rows round about
         each network to cover the chapiters, that were upon the
         top, with pomegranates: and in like manner did he to the
         other chapiter.

         7:19. And the chapiters that were upon the top of the
         pillars, were of lily work, in the porch of four cubits.

         7:20. And again there were other chapiters on the top of
         the pillars above, according to the measure of the pillar
         over against the network: and of pomegranates there were
         two hundred, in rows round about the other chapiter.

         7:21. And he set up the two pillars in the porch of the
         temple: and when he had set up the pillar on the right
         hand, he called the name thereof Jachin: in like manner he
         set up the second pillar, and called the name thereof Booz.

         Jachin... That is, firmly established.-Ibid. Booz... That
         is, in its strength. By recording these names in holy writ,
         the spirit of God would have us understand the invincible
         firmness and strength of the pillars on which the true
         temple of God, which is the church, is established.

         7:22. And upon the tops of the pillars he made lily work:
         so the work of the pillars was finished.

         7:23. He made also a molten sea, of ten cubits, from brim
         to brim, round all about; the height of it was five cubits,
         and a line of thirty cubits compassed it round about.

         7:24. And a graven work, under the brim of it, compassed it
         for ten cubits going about the sea: there were two rows
         cast of chamfered sculptures.

         7:25. And it stood upon twelve oxen, of which three looked
         towards the north, and three towards the west, and three
         towards the south, and three towards the east: and the sea
         was above upon them, and their hinder parts were all hid
         within.

         7:26. And the laver was a hand breadth thick: and the brim
         thereof was like the brim of a cup, or the leaf of a
         crisped lily: it contained two thousand bates.

         Two thousand bates... That is, about ten thousand gallons.
         This was the quantity of water which was usually put into
         it: but it was capable, if brimful, of holding three
         thousand. See 2 Par. 4.5.

         7:27. And he made ten bases of brass, every base was four
         cubits in length, and four cubits in breadth, and three
         cubits high.

         7:28. And the work itself of the bases, was intergraven:
         and there were gravings between the joinings.

         7:29. And between the little crowns and the ledges, were
         lions, and oxen, and cherubims; and in the joinings
         likewise above: and under the lions and oxen, as it were
         bands of brass hanging down.

         7:30. And every base had four wheels, and axletrees of
         brass: and at the four sides were undersetters, under the
         laver molten, looking one against another.

         7:31. The mouth also of the laver within, was in the top of
         the chapiter: and that which appeared without, was of one
         cubit all round, and together it was one cubit and a half:
         and in the corners of the pillars were divers engravings:
         and the spaces between the pillars were square, not round.

         7:32. And the four whee]s, which were at the four corners
         of the base, were joined one to another under the base: the
         height of a wheel was a cubit and a half.

         7:33. And they were such wheels as are used to be made in a
         chariot: and their axletrees, and spokes, and strakes, and
         naves, were all cast.

         7:34. And the four undersetters, that were at every corner
         of each base, were of the base itself, cast and joined
         together.

         7:35. And on the top of the base, there was a round compass
         of half a cubit, so wrought that the laver might be set
         thereon, having its gravings, and divers sculptures of
         itself.

         7:36. He engraved also in those plates, which were of
         brass, and in the corners, cherubims, and lions, and palm
         trees, in likeness of a man standing, so that they seemed
         not to be engraven, but added round about.

         7:37. After this manner, he made ten bases, of one casting
         and measure, and the like graving.

         7:38. He made also ten lavers of brass: one laver contained
         four bates, and was of four cubits: and upon every base, in
         all ten, he put as many lavers.

         7:39. And he set the ten bases, five on the right side of
         the temple, and five on the left: and the sea he put on the
         right side of the temple, over against the east southward.

         7:40. And Hiram made cauldrons, and shovels, and basins,
         and finished all the work of king Solomon in the temple of
         the Lord.

         7:41. The two pillars and the two cords of the chapiters,
         upon the chapiters of the pillars: and the two networks, to
         cover the two cords, that were upon the top of the pillars.

         7:42. And four hundred pomegranates for the two networks:
         two rows of pomegranates for each network, to cover the
         cords of the chapiters, which were upon the tops of the
         pillars.

         7:43. And the ten bases, and the ten lavers on the bases.

         7:44. And one sea, and twelve oxen under the sea.

         7:45. And the cauldrons, and the shovels, and the basins.
         All the vessels that Hiram made for king Solomon, for the
         house of the Lord, were of fine brass.

         7:46. In the plains of the Jordan, did the king cast them
         in a clay ground, between Socoth and Sartham.

         7:47. And Solomon placed all the vessels: but for its
         exceeding great multitude the brass could not be weighed.

         7:48. And Solomon made all the vessels for the house of the
         Lord: the altar of gold, and the table of gold, upon which
         the loaves of proposition should be set:

         7:49. And the golden candlesticks, five on the right hand,
         and five on the left, over against the oracle, of pure
         gold: and the flowers like lilies, and the lamps over them
         of gold: and golden snuffers,

         7:50. And pots, and fleshhooks, and bowls, and mortars, and
         censers, of most pure gold: and the hinges for the doors of
         the inner house of the holy of holies, and for the doors of
         the house of the temple, were of gold.

         7:51. And Solomon finished all the work that he made in the
         house of the Lord, and brought in the things that David,
         his father, had dedicated, the silver and the gold, and the
         vessels, and laid them up in the treasures of the house of
         the Lord.

         3 Kings Chapter 8

         The dedication of thc temple: Solomon's prayer and
         sacrifices.

         8:1. Then all the ancients of Israel, with the princes of
         the tribes, and the heads of the families of the children
         of Israel, were assembled to king Solomon, in Jerusalem:
         that they might carry the ark of the covenant of the Lord,
         out of the city of David, that is, out of Sion.

         8:2. And all Israel assembled themselves to king Solomon,
         on the festival day, in the month of Ethanim, the same is
         the seventh month.

         8:3. And a]l the ancients of Israel came, and the priests
         took up the ark,

         8:4. And carried the ark of the Lord, and the tabernacle of
         the covenant, and all the vessels of the sanctuary, that
         were in the tabernacle: and the priests and the Levites
         carried them.

         8:5. And king Solomon, and all the multitude of Israel,
         that were assembled unto him, went with him before the ark,
         and they sacrificed sheep and oxen, that could not be
         counted or numbered.

         8:6. And tbe priests brought in the ark of the covenant of
         the Lord into its place, into the oracle of the temple,
         into the holy of holies, under the wings of the cherubims.

         8:7. For the cherubims spread forth their wings over the
         place of the ark, and covered the ark, and the staves
         thereof above.

         8:8. And whereas the staves stood out, the ends of them
         were seen without, in the sanctuary before the oracle, but
         were not seen farther out, and there they have been unto
         this day.

         8:9. Now in the ark there was nothing else but the two
         tables of stone, which Moses put there at Horeb, when the
         Lord made a covenant with the children of Israel, when they
         came out of the land of Egypt.

         Nothing else, etc... There was nothing else but the tables
         of the law within the ark: but on the outside of the ark,
         or near the ark were also the rod of Aaron, and a golden
         urn with manna, Heb. 9.4.

         8:10. And it came to pass, when the priests were come out
         of the sanctuary, that a cloud filled the house of the
         Lord,

         8:11. And the priests could not stand to minister because
         of the cloud: for the glory of the Lord had filled the
         house of the Lord.

         8:12. Then Solomon said: The Lord said that he would
         dwell in a cloud.

         8:13. Building, I have built a house for thy dwelling, to
         be thy most firm throne for ever.

         8:14. And the king turned his face, and blessed all the
         assembly of Israel: for all the assembly of Israel stood.

         8:15. And Solomon said: Blessed be the Lord the God of
         Israel, who spoke with his mouth to David, my father, and
         with his own hands hath accomplished it, saying:

         8:16. Since the day that I brought my people Israel, out of
         Egypt, I chose no city out of all the tribes of Israel, for
         a house to be built, that my name might be there: but I
         chose David to be over my people Israel.

         8:17. And David, my father, would have built a house to the
         name of the Lord, the God of Israel:

         8:18. And the Lord said to David, my father: Whereas, thou
         hast thought in thy heart to build a house to my name, thou
         hast done well in having this same thing in thy mind.

         8:19. Nevertheless, thou shalt not build me a house, but
         thy son, that shall come forth out of thy loins, he shall
         build a house to my name.

         8:20. The Lord hath performed his word which he spoke. And
         I stand in the room of David, my father, and sit upon the
         throne of Israel, as the Lord promised: and have built a
         house to the name of the Lord, the God of Israel.

         8:21. And I have set there a place for the ark, wherein is
         the covenant of the Lord, which he made with our fathers,
         when they came out of the land of Egypt.

         8:22. And Solomon stood before the altar of the Lord, in
         the sight of the assembly of Israel, and spread forth his
         hands towards heaven,

         8:23. And said: Lord God of Israel, there is no God like
         thee, in heaven above, or on the earth beneath: who keepest
         covenant and mercy with thy servants, that have walked
         before thee with all their heart:

         8:24. Who hast kept with thy servant David, my father, what
         thou hast promised him: with thy mouth thou didst speak,
         and with thy hands thou hast performed, as this day
         proveth.

         8:25. Now, therefore, O Lord God of Israel, keep with thy
         servant David, my father, what thou hast spoken to him,
         saying: There shall not be taken away of thee a man in my
         sight, to sit on the throne of Israel: yet so that thy
         children take heed to their way, that they walk before me
         as thou hast walked in my sight.

         8:26. And now, Lord God of Israel, let thy words be
         established, which thou hast spoken to thy servant David,
         my father.

         8:27. Is it then to be thought that God should indeed dwell
         upon earth? for if heaven, and the heavens of heavens,
         cannot contain thee, how much less this house which I have
         built?

         8:28. But have regard to the prayer of thy servant, and to
         his supplications, O Lord, my God: hear the hymn and the
         prayer, which thy servant prayeth before thee this day:

         8:29. That thy eyes may be open upon this house, night and
         day: upon the house of which thou hast said:  My name shall
         be there: that thou mayst hearken to the prayer which thy
         servant prayeth, in this place to thee:

         8:30. That thou mayst hearken to the supplication of thy
         servant, and of thy people Israel, whatsoever they shall
         pray for in this place, and hear them in the place of thy
         dwelling in heaven; and when thou hearest, shew them mercy.

         8:31. If any man trespass against his neighbour, and have
         an oath upon him, wherewith he is bound, and come, because
         of the oath, before thy altar, to thy house,

         8:32. Then hear thou in heaven: and do and judge thy
         servants, condemning the wicked, and bringing his way upon
         his own head, and justifying the just, and rewarding him
         according to his justice.

         8:33. If thy people Israel shall fly before their enemies
         (because they will sin against thee) and doing penance, and
         confessing to thy name, shall come and pray, and make
         supplications to thee in this house:

         8:34. Then hear thou in heaven, and forgive the sin of thy
         people Israel, and bring them back to the land which thou
         gavest to their fathers.

         8:35. If heaven shall be shut up, and there shall be no
         rain, because of their sins, and they, praying in this
         place, shall do penance to thy name, and shall be converted
         from their sins, by occasion of their afflictions:

         8:36. Then hear thou them in heaven, and forgive the sins
         of thy servants, and of thy people Israel: and shew them
         the good way wherein they should walk, and give rain upon
         thy land, which thou hast given to thy people in
         possession.

         8:37. If a famine arise in the land, or a pestilence, or
         corrupt air, or blasting, or locust, or mildew; if their
         enemy afflict them, besieging the gates, whatsoever plague,
         whatsoever infirmity,

         8:38. Whatsoever curse or imprecation shall happen to any
         man of thy people Israel: when a man shall know the wound
         of his own heart, and shall spread forth his hands in this
         house;

         8:39. Then hear thou in heaven, in the place of thy
         dwelling, and forgive, and do so as to give to every one
         according to his ways, as thou shalt see his heart (for
         thou only knowest the heart of all the children of men)

         8:40. That they may fear thee all the days that they live
         upon the face of the land, which thou hast given to our
         fathers.

         8:41. Moreover also the stranger, who is not of thy people
         Israel, when he shall come out of a far conntry for thy
         name's sake, (for they shall hear every where of thy great
         name, and thy mighty hand,

         8:42. And thy stretched out arm) so when he shall come, and
         shall pray in this place,

         8:43. Then hear thou in heaven, in the firmament of thy
         dwelling place, and do all those things, for which that
         stranger shall call upon thee: that all the people of the
         earth may learn to fear thy name, as do thy people Israel,
         and may prove that thy name is called upon on this house,
         which I have built.

         8:44. If thy people go out to war against their enemies, by
         what way soever thou shalt send them, they shall pray to
         thee towards the way of the city, which thou hast chosen,
         and towards the house, which I have built to thy name:

         8:45. And then hear thou in heaven their prayers, and their
         supplications, and do judgment for them.

         8:46. But if they sin against thee, (for there is no man
         who sinneth not) and thou being angry, deliver them up to
         their enemies, so that they be led away captives into the
         land of their enemies, far or near;

         8:47. Then if they do penance in their heart, in the place
         of captivity, and being converted, make supplication to
         thee in their captivity, saying: We have sinned, we have
         done unjustly, we have committed wickedness:

         8:48. And return to thee with all their heart, and all
         their soul, in the land of their enemies, to which they
         have been led captives: and pray to thee towards the way of
         their land, which thou gavest to their fathers, and of the
         city which thou hast chosen, and of the temple which I have
         built to thy name:

         8:49. Then hear thou in heaven, in the firmament of thy
         throne, their prayers, and their supplications, and do
         judgment for them:

         8:50. And forgive thy people, that have sinned against
         thee, and all their iniquities, by which they have
         transgressed against thee: and give them mercy before them
         that have made them captives, that they may have compassion
         on them.

         8:51. For they are thy people, and thy inheritance, whom
         thou hast brought out of the land of Egypt, from the midst
         of the furnace of iron.

         8:52. That thy eyes may be open to the supplication of thy
         servant, and of thy people Israel, to hear them in all
         things for which they shall call upon thee.

         8:53. For thou hast separated them to thyself for an
         inheritance, from amongst all the people of the earth, as
         thou hast spoken by Moses, thy servant, when thou
         broughtest our fathers out of Egypt, O Lord God.

         8:54. And it came to pass, when Solomon had made an end of
         praying all this prayer and supplication to the Lord, that
         he rose from before the altar of the Lord: for he had fixed
         both knees on the ground, and had spread his hands towards
         heaven.

         8:55. And he stood, and blessed all the assembly of Israel
         with a loud voice, saying:

         8:56. Blessed be the Lord, who hath given rest to his
         people Israel, according to all that he promised: there
         hath not failed so much as one word of all the good things
         that he promised by his servant Moses.

         8:57. The Lord our God be with us, as he was with our
         fathers, and not leave us, nor cast us off:

         8:58. But may he incline our hearts to himself, that we may
         walk in all his ways, and keep his commandments, and his
         ceremonies, and all his judgments, which he commanded our
         fathers.

         8:59. And let these my words, wherewith I have prayed
         before the Lord, be nigh unto the Lord our God day and
         night, that he may do judgment for his servant, and for his
         people Israel, day by day:

         8:60. That all the people of the earth may know, that the
         Lord he is God, and there is no other besides him.

         8:61. Let our hearts also be perfect with the Lord our God,
         that we may walk in his statutes, and keep his
         commandments, as at this day.

         8:62. And the king, and all Israel with him, offered
         victims before the Lord.

         8:63. And Solomon slew victims of peace offerings, which he
         sacrificed to the Lord, two and twenty thousand oxen, and a
         hundred and twenty thousand sheep so the king, and all the
         children of Israel, dedicated the temple of the Lord.

         8:64. In that day the king sanctified the middle of the
         court, that was before the house of the Lord for there he
         offered the holocaust, and sacrifice, and the fat of the
         peace offerings: because the brazen altar that was before
         the Lord, was too little to receive the holocaust, and
         sacrifice, and the fat of the peace offerings.

         8:65. And Solomon made at the same time a solemn feast, and
         all Israel with him, a great multitude, from the entrance
         of Emath to the river of Egypt, before the Lord our God,
         seven days and seven days, that is, fourteen days.

         8:66. And on the eighth day, he sent away the people: and
         they blessed the king, and went to their dwellings,
         rejoicing, and glad in heart, for all the good things that
         the Lord had done for David, his servant, and for Israel,
         his people.

         3 Kings Chapter 9

         The Lord appeareth again to Solomon: he buildeth cities: he
         sendeth a fleet to Ophir.

         9:1. And it came to pass when Solomon had finished the
         building of the house of the Lord, and the king's house,
         and all that he desired and was pleased to do,

         9:2. That the Lord appeared to him the second time, as he
         had appeared to him in Gabaon.

         9:3. And the Lord said to him: I have heard thy prayer and
         thy supplication, which thou hast made before me: I have
         sanctified this house, which thou hast built, to put my
         name there for ever; and my eyes, and my heart, shall be
         there always.

         9:4. And if thou wilt walk before me, as thy father walked,
         in simplicity of heart, and in uprightness: and wilt do all
         that I have commanded thee, and wilt keep my ordinances,
         and my judgments,

         As thy father walked, in simplicity of heart... That is, in
         the sincerity and integrity of a single heart, as opposite
         to all double dealing and deceit.

         9:5. I will establish the throne of thy kingdom over
         Israel for ever, as I promised David, thy father, saying:
         There shall not fail a man of thy race upon the throne of
         Israel.

         9:6. But if you and your children, revolting, shall turn
         away from following me, and will not keep my commandments,
         and my ceremonies, which I have set before you, but will go
         and worship strange gods, and adore them:

         9:7. I will take away Israel from the face of the land
         which I have given them; and the temple which I have
         sanctified to my name, I will cast out of my sight; and
         Israel shall be a proverb, and a byword among all people.

         9:8. And this house shall be made an example of: every one
         that shall pass by it, shall be astonished, and shall hiss,
         and say: Why hath the Lord done thus to this land, and to
         this house?

         9:9. And they shall answer: Because they forsook the Lord
         their God, who brought their fathers out of the land of
         Egypt, and followed strange gods, and adored them, and
         worshipped them: therefore hath the Lord brought upon them
         all this evil.

         9:10. And when twenty years were ended, after Solomon had
         built the two houses; that is, the house of the Lord, and
         the house of the king,

         9:11. (Hiram, the king of Tyre, furnishing Solomon with
         cedar trees, and fir trees, and gold, according to all he
         had need of) then Solomon gave Hiram twenty cities in the
         land of Galilee.

         9:12. And Hiram came out of Tyre, to see the towns which
         Solomon had given him, and they pleased him not;

         9:13. And he said: Are these the cities which thou hast
         given me, brother? And he called them the land of Chabul,
         unto this day.

         Chabul... That is, dirty or displeasing.

         9:14. And Hiram sent to king Solomon a hundred and twenty
         talents of gold.

         9:15. This is the sum of the expenses, which king Solomon
         offered to build the house of the Lord, and his own house,
         and Mello, and the wall of Jerusalem, and Heser, and
         Mageddo, and Gazer.

         9:16. Pharao, the king of Egypt, came up and took Gazer,
         and burnt it with fire: and slew the Chanaanite that dwelt
         in the city, and gave it for a dowry to his daughter,
         Solomon's wife.

         9:17. So Solomon built Gazer, and Bethhoron the nether,

         9:18. And Baalath, and Palmira, in the land of the
         wilderness.

         9:19. And all the towns that belonged to himself, and were
         not walled, he fortified; the cities also of the chariots,
         and the cities of the horsemen, and whatsoever he had a
         mind to build in Jerusalem, and in Libanus, and in all the
         land of his dominion.

         9:20. All the people that were left of the Amorrhites, and
         Hethites, and Pherezites, and Hevites, and Jebusites, that
         are not of the children of Israel:

         9:21. Their children, that were left in the land; to wit,
         such as the children of Israel had not been able to
         destroy, Solomon made tributary unto this day.

         9:22. But of the children of Israel, Solomon made not any
         to be bondmen, but they were warriors, and his servants,
         and his princes, and captains, and overseers of the
         chariots and horses.

         9:23. And there were five hundred and fifty chief officers
         set over all the works of Solomon, and they had people
         under them, and had charge over the appointed works.

         9:24. And the daughter of Pharao came up out of the city of
         David to her house, which Solomon had built for her: then
         did he build Mello.

         9:25. Solomon also offered three times every year
         holocausts, and victims of peace offerings, upon the altar
         which he had built to the Lord, and he burnt incense before
         the Lord: and the temple was finished.

         9:26. And king Solomon made a fleet in Asiongaber, which is
         by Ailath, on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of
         Edom.

         9:27. And Hiram sent his servants in the fleet, sailors
         that had knowledge of the sea, with the servants of
         Solomon.

         9:28. And they came to Ophir; and they brought from thence
         to king Solomon four hundred and twenty talents of gold.

         3 Kings Chapter 10

         The queen of Saba cometh to king Solomon: his riches and
         glory.

         10:1. And the queen of Saba having heard of the fame of
         Solomon in the name of the Lord, came to try him with hard
         questions.


         10:2. And entering into Jerusalem with a great train, and
         riches, and camels that carried spices, and an immense
         quantity of gold, and precious stones, she came to king
         Solomon, and spoke to him all that she had in her heart.

         10:3. And Solomon informed her of all the things she
         proposed to him: there was not any word the king was
         ignorant of, and which he could not answer her.

         10:4. And when the queen of Saba saw all the wisdom of
         Solomon, and the house which he had built,

         10:5. And the meat of his table, and the apartments of his
         servants, and the order of his ministers, and their
         apparel, and the cupbearers, and the holocausts, which he
         offered in the house of the Lord, she had no longer any
         spirit in her;

         10:6. And she said to the king: The report is true, which I
         heard in my own country,

         10:7. Concerning thy words, and concerning thy wisdom.  And
         I did not believe them that told me, till I came myself,
         and saw with my own eyes, and have found that the half hath
         not been told me: thy wisdom and thy works exceed the fame
         which I heard.

         10:8. Blessed are thy men, and blessed are thy servants,
         who stand before thee always, and hear thy wisdom.

         10:9. Blessed be the Lord thy God, whom thou hast pleased,
         and who hath set thee upon the throne of Israel, because
         the Lord hath loved Israel for ever, and hath appointed
         thee king, to do judgment and justice.

         10:10. And she gave the king a hundred and twenty talents
         of gold, and of spices a very great store, and precious
         stones: there was brought no more such abundance of spices
         as these which the queen of Saba gave to king Solomon.

         10:11. (The navy also of Hiram, which brought gold from
         Ophir, brought from Ophir great plenty of thyine trees, and
         precious stones.

         10:12. And the king made of the thyine trees the rails of
         the house of the Lord, and of the king's house: and
         citterns and harps for singers: there were no such thyine
         trees as these brought nor seen unto this day.)

         10:13. And king Solomon gave the queen of Saba all that she
         desired, and asked of him: besides what he offered her of
         himself of his royal bounty. And she returned, and went to
         her own country, with her servants.

         10:14. And the weight of the gold that was brought to
         Solomon every year, was six hundred and sixty-six talents
         of gold:

         10:15. Besides that which the men brought him that were
         over the tributes, and the merchants, and they that sold by
         retail, and all the kings of Arabia, and the governors of
         the country.

         10:16. And Solomon made two hundred shields of the purest
         gold: he allowed six hundred sicles of gold for the plates
         of one shield.

         10:17. And three hundred targets of fine gold: three
         hundred pounds of gold covered one target: and the king put
         them in the house of the forest of Libanus.

         10:18. King Solomon also made a great throne of ivory: and
         overlaid it with the finest gold.

         10:19. It had six steps: and the top of the throne was
         round behind: and there were two hands on either side
         holding the seat: and two lions stood, one at each hand,

         10:20. And twelve little lions stood upon the six steps, on
         the one side and on the other: there was no such work made
         in any kingdom.

         10:21. Moreover, all the vessels out of which king Solomon
         drank, were of gold: and all the furniture of the house of
         the forest of Libanus was of most pure gold: there was no
         silver, nor was any account made of it in the days of
         Solomon:

         10:22. For the king's navy, once in three years, went with
         the navy of Hiram by sea to Tharsis, and brought from
         thence gold, and silver, and elephants' teeth, and apes,
         and peacocks.

         10:23. And king Solomon exceeded all the kings of the earth
         in riches and wisdom.

         10:24. And all the earth desired to see Solomon's face, to
         hear his wisdom, which God had given in his heart.

         10:25. And every one brought him presents, vessels of
         silver and of gold, garments, and armour, and spices, and
         horses, and mules, every year.

         10:26. And Solomon gathered together chariots and horsemen,
         and he had a thousand four hundred chariots, and twelve
         thousand horsemen: and he bestowed them in fenced cities,
         and with the king in Jerusalem.

         10:27. And he made silver to be as plentiful in Jerusalem
         as stones: and cedars to be as common as sycamores which
         grow in the plains.

         10:28. And horses were brought for Solomon out of Egypt,
         and Coa: for the king's merchants bought them out of Coa,
         and brought them at a set price.

         10:29. And a chariot of four horses came out of Egypt, for
         six hundred sicles of silver, and a horse for a hundred and
         fifty. And after this manner did all the kings of the
         Hethites, and of Syria, sell horses.

         3 Kings Chapter 11

         Solomon by means of his wives falleth into idolatry: God
         raiseth him adversaries, Adad, Razon, and Jeroboam:
         Solomon dieth.

         11:1. And king Solomon loved many strange women, besides
         the daughter of Pharao, and women of Moab, and of Ammon,
         and of Edom, and of Sidon, and of the Hethites:

         11:2. Of the nations concerning which the Lord said to the
         children of Israel:  You shall not go in unto them, neither
         shall any of them come into yours: for they will most
         certainly turn away your hearts to follow their gods. And
         to these was Solomon joined with a most ardent love.

         11:3. And he had seven hundred wives as queens, and three
         hundred concubines: and the women turned away his heart.

         11:4. And when he was now old, his heart was turned away by
         women to follow strange gods: and his heart was not perfect
         with the Lord his God, as was the heart of David, his
         father.

         11:5. But Solomon worshipped Astarthe, the goddess of the
         Sidonians, and Moloch, the idol of the Ammonites.

         11:6. And Solomon did that which was not pleasing before
         the Lord, and did not fully follow the Lord, as David, his
         father.

         11:7. Then Solomon built a temple for Chamos, the idol of
         Moab, on the hill that is over against Jerusalem, and for
         Moloch, the idol of the children of Ammon.

         11:8. And he did in this manner for all his wives that were
         strangers, who burnt incense, and offered sacrifice to
         their gods.

         11:9. And the Lord was angry with Solomon, because his mind
         was turned away from the Lord, the God of Israel, who had
         appeared to him twice;

         11:10. And had commanded him concerning this thing, that he
         should not follow strange gods: but he kept not the things
         which the Lord commanded him.

         11:11. The Lord therefore said to Solomon: Because thou
         hast done this, and hast not kept my covenant, and my
         precepts, which I have commanded thee, I will divide and
         rend thy kingdom, and will give it to thy servant.

         11:12. Nevertheless, in thy days I will not do it, for
         David thy father's sake: but I will rend it out of the hand
         of thy son.

         11:13. Neither will I take away the whole kingdom; but I
         will give one tribe to thy son, for the sake of David, my
         servant, and Jerusalem, which I have chosen.

         One tribe... Besides that of Juda, his own native tribe.

         11:14. And the Lord raised up an adversary to Solomon,
         Adad, the Edomite, of the king's seed, in Edom.

         11:15. For when David was in Edom, and Joab, the general of
         the army, was gone up to bury them that were slain, and had
         killed every male in Edom,

         11:16. (For Joab remained there six months with all Israel,
         till he had slain every male in Edom,)

         11:17. Then Adad fled, he and certain Edomites of his
         father's servants, with him, to go into Egypt: and Adad was
         then a Iittle boy.

         11:18. And they arose out of Madian, and came into Pharan,
         and they took men with them from Pharan, and went into
         Egypt, to Pharao, the king of Egypt: who gave him a house,
         and appointed him victuals, and assigned him land.

         11:19. And Adad found great favour before Pharao, insomuch
         that he gave him to wife the own sister of his wife,
         Taphnes, the queen.

         11:20. And the sister of Taphnes bore him his son,
         Genubath; and Taphnes brought him up in the house of
         Pharao: and Genubath dwelt with Pharao among his children.

         11:21. And when Adad heard in Egypt that David slept with
         his fathers, and that Joab, the general of the army, was
         dead, he said to Pharao: Let me depart, that I may go to my
         own country.

         11:22. And Pharao said to him: Why, what is wanting to thee
         with me, that thou seekest to go to thy own country?  But
         he answered: Nothing; yet I beseech thee to let me go.

         11:23. God also raised up against him an adversary, Razon,
         the son of Eliada, who had fled from his master, Adarezer,
         the king of Soba.

         11:24. And he gathered men against him, and he became a
         captain of robbers, when David slew them of Soba: and they
         went to Damascus, and dwelt there, and they made him king
         in Damascus.

         11:25. And he was an adversary to Israel all the days of
         Solomon: and this is the evil of Adad, and his hatred
         against Israel; and he reigned in Syria.

         11:26. Jeroboam also, the son of Nabat, an Ephrathite, of
         Sareda, a servant of Solomon, whose mother was named Sarua,
         a widow woman, lifted up his hand against the king.

         11:27. And this is the cause of his rebellion against him;
         for Solomon built Mello, and filled up the breach of the
         city of David, his father.

         11:28. And Jeroboam was a valiant and mighty man: and
         Solomon seeing him a young man ingenious and industrious,
         made him chief over the tributes of all the house of
         Joseph.

         11:29. So it came to pass at that time, that Jeroboam went
         out of Jerusalem, and the prophet Ahias, the Silonite, clad
         with a new garment, found him in the way: and they two were
         alone in the field.

         11:30. And Ahias taking his new garment, wherewith he was
         clad, divided it into twelve parts:

         11:31. And he said to Jeroboam: Take to thee ten pieces:
         for thus saith the Lord, the God of Israel: Behold, I will
         rend the kingdom out of the hand of Solomon, and will give
         thee ten tribes.

         11:32. But one tribe shall remain to him for the sake of my
         servant, David, and Jerusalem, the city which I have chosen
         out of all the tribes of Israel:

         11:33. Because he hath forsaken me, and hath adored
         Astarthe, the goddess of the Sidonians, and Chamos, the god
         of Moab, and Moloch, the god of the children of Ammon: and
         hath not walked in my ways, to do justice before me, and to
         keep my precepts, and judgments, as did David, his father.

         11:34. Yet I will not take away all the kingdom out of his
         hand, but I will make him prince all the days of his life,
         for David my servant's sake, whom I chose, who kept my
         commandments, and my precepts.

         11:35. But I will take away the kingdom out of his son's
         hand, and will give thee ten tribes:

         11:36. And to his son I will give one tribe, that there may
         remain a lamp for my servant, David, before me always in
         Jerusalem, the city which I have chosen, that my name might
         be there.

         11:37. And I will take thee, and thou shalt reign over all
         that thy soul desireth, and thou shalt be king over Israel.

         11:38. If then thou wilt hearken to all that I shall
         command thee, and wilt walk in my ways, and do what is
         right before me, keeping my commandments and my precepts,
         as David, my servant, did: I will be with thee, and will
         build thee up a faithful house, as I built a house for
         David, and I will deliver Israel to thee:

         11:39. And I will for this afflict the seed of David, but
         yet not for ever.

         11:40. Solomon, therefore, sought to kill Jeroboam: but he
         arose, and fled into Egypt, to Sesac, the king of Egypt,
         and was in Egypt till the death of Solomon.

         11:41. And the rest of the words of Solomon, and all that
         he did and his wisdom: behold they are all written in the
         book of the words of the days of Solomon.

         The book of the words, etc... This book is lost, with
         divers others mentioned in holy writ.

         11:42. And the days that Solomon reigned in Jerusalem, over
         all Israel, were forty years.

         11:43. And Solomon slept with his fathers, and was buried
         in the city of David, his father; and Roboam, his son,
         reigned in his stead.

         Solomon slept, etc... That is, died. He was then about
         fifty-eight years of age, having reigned forty years.

         3 Kings Chapter 12

         Roboam, following the counsel of young men alienateth from
         him the minds of the people. They make Jeroboam king over
         ten tribes: he setteth up idolatry.

         12:1. And Roboam went to Sichem: for thither were all
         Israel come together to make him king.

         12:2. But Jeroboam, the son of Nabat, who was yet in Egypt,
         a fugitive from the face of king Solomon, hearing of his
         death, returned out of Egypt.

         12:3. And they sent and called him: and Jeroboam came, and
         all the multitude of Israel, and they spoke to Roboam,
         saying:

         12:4. Thy father laid a grievous yoke upon us: now,
         therefore, do thou take off a little of the grievous
         service of thy father, and of his most heavy yoke, which he
         put upon us, and we will serve thee.

         12:5. And he said to them: Go till the third day, and come
         to me again. And when the people was gone,

         12:6. King Roboam took counsel with the old men, that stood
         before Solomon, his father, while he yet lived, and he
         said:  What counsel do you give me, that I may answer this
         people?

         12:7. They said to him: If thou wilt yield to this people
         to day, and condescend to them, and grant their petition,
         and wilt speak gentle words to them, they will be thy
         servants always.

         12:8. But he left the counsel of the old men, which they
         had given him, and consulted with the young men that had
         been brought up with him, and stood before him.

         12:9. And he said to them: What counsel do you give me,
         that I may answer this people, who have said to me: Make
         the yoke, which thy father put upon us, lighter?

         12:10. And the young men that had been brought up with him,
         said: Thus shalt thou speak to this people, who have spoken
         to thee, saying: Thy father made our yoke heavy, do thou
         ease us.  Thou shalt say to them: My little finger is
         thicker than the back of my father.

         12:11. And now my father put a heavy yoke upon you, but I
         will add to your yoke: my father beat you with whips, but I
         will beat you with scorpions.

         12:12. So Jeroboam, and all the people, came to Roboam the
         third day, as the king had appointed, saying: Come to me
         again the third day.

         12:13. And the king answered the people roughly, leaving
         the counsel of the old men, which they had given him,

         12:14. And he spoke to them according to the counsel of the
         young men, saying: My father made your yoke heavy, but I
         will add to your yoke: My father beat you with whips, but I
         will beat you with scorpions.

         12:15. And the king condescended not to the people: for the
         Lord was turned away from him, to make good his word, which
         he had spoken in the hand of Ahias, the Silonite, to
         Jeroboam, the son of Nabat.

         12:16. Then the people, seeing that the king would not
         hearken to them, answered him, saying: What portion have we
         in David? or what inheritance in the son of Isai? Go home
         to thy dwellings, O Israel: now, David, look to thy own
         house. So Israel departed to their dwellings.

         12:17. But as for all the children of Israel that dwelt in
         the cities of Juda, Roboam reigned over them.

         12:18. Then king Roboam sent Aduram, who was over the
         tribute: and all Israel stoned him, and he died.  Wherefore
         king Roboam made haste to get him up into his chariot, and
         he fled to Jerusalem:

         12:19. And Israel revolted from the house of David, unto
         this day.

         12:20. And it came to pass when all Israel heard that
         Jeroboam was come again, that they gathered an assembly,
         and sent and called him, and made him king over all Israel,
         and there was none that followed the house of David but the
         tribe of Juda only.

         Juda only... Benjamin was a small tribe, and so intermixed
         with the tribe of Juda, (the very city of Jerusalem being
         partly in Juda, partly in Benjamin,) that they are here
         counted but as one tribe.

         12:21. And Roboam came to Jerusalem, and gathered together
         all the house of Juda, and the tribe of Benjamin, a hundred
         fourscore thousand chosen men for war, to fight against the
         house of Israel, and to bring the kingdom again under
         Roboam, the son of Solomon.

         12:22. But the word of the Lord came to Semeias, the man of
         God, saying:

         12:23. Speak to Roboam, the son of Solomon, the king of
         Juda, and to all the house of Juda, and Benjamin, and the
         rest of the people, saying:

         12:24. Thus saith the Lord: You shall not go up, nor fight
         against your brethren, the children of Israel: let every
         man return to his house, for this thing is from me. They
         hearkened to the word of the Lord, and returned from their
         journey, as the Lord had commanded them.

         12:25. And Jeroboam built Sichem in mount Ephraim, and
         dwelt there, and going out from thence, he built Phanuel.

         12:26. And Jeroboam said in his heart: Now shall the
         kingdom return to the house of David,

         12:27. If this people go up to offer sacrifices in the
         house of the Lord at Jerusalem: and the heart of this
         people will turn to their lord Roboam, the king of Juda,
         and they will kill me, and return to him.

         12:28.  And finding out a device, he made two golden
         calves, and said to them: Go ye up no more to Jerusalem:
         Behold thy gods, O Israel, who brought thee out of the land
         of Egypt.

         Golden calves... It is likely, by making his gods in this
         form, he mimicked the Egyptians, among whom he had
         sojourned, who worshipped their Apis and their Osiris under
         the form of a bullock.

         12:29. And he set the one in Bethel, and the other in Dan:

         Bethel and Dan... Bethel was a city of the tribe of Ephraim
         in the southern part of the dominions of Jeroboam, about
         six leagues from Jerusalem; Dan was in the extremity of his
         dominions to the north in the confines of Syria.

         12:30. And this thing became an occasion of sin: for the
         people went to adore the calf as far as Dan.

         12:31. And he made temples in the high places, and priests
         of the lowest of the people, who were not of the sons of
         Levi.

         12:32. And he appointed a feast in the eighth month, on the
         fifteenth day of the month, after the manner of the feast
         that was celebrated in Juda. And going up to the altar, he
         did in like manner in Bethel, to sacrifice to the calves,
         which he had made: and he placed in Bethel priests of the
         high places, which he had made.

         12:33. And he went up to the altar, which he had built in
         Bethel, on the fifteenth day of the eighth month, which he
         had devised of his own heart: and he ordained a feast to
         the children of Israel, and went up on the altar to burn
         incense.

         3 Kings Chapter 13

         A prophet sent from Juda to Bethel foretelleth the birth
         of Josias, and the destruction of Jeroboam's altar.
         Jeroboam's hand offering violence to the prophet
         withereth, but is restored by the prophet's prayer: the
         same prophet is deceived by another prophet, and slain by a
         lion.

         13:1. And behold there came a man of God out of Juda, by
         the word of the Lord, to Bethel, when Jeroboam was standing
         upon the altar, and burning incense.

         13:2. And he cried out against the altar in the word of the
         Lord, and said: O altar, altar, thus saith the Lord: Behold
         a child shall be born to the house of David, Josias by
         name, and he shall immolate upon thee the priests of the
         high places, who now burn incense upon thee, and he shall
         burn men's bones upon thee.

         13:3. And he gave a sign the same day, saying: This shall
         be the sign, that the Lord hath spoken: Behold the altar
         shall be rent, and the ashes that are upon it, shall be
         poured out.

         13:4. And when the king had heard the word of the man of
         God, which he had cried out against the altar in Bethel, he
         stretched forth his hand from the altar, saying: Lay hold
         on him. And his hand which he stretched forth against him,
         withered: and he was not able to draw it back again to him.

         13:5. The altar also was rent, and the ashes were poured
         out from the altar, according to the sign which the man of
         God had given before in the word of the Lord.

         13:6. And the king said to the man of God: Entreat the face
         of the Lord thy God, and pray for me, that my hand may be
         restored to me. And the man of God besought the face of
         the Lord, and the king's hand was restored to him, and it
         became as it was before.

         13:7. And the king said to the man of God: Come home with
         me to dine, and I will make thee presents.

         13:8. And the man of God answered the king: If thou wouldst
         give me half thy house, I will not go with thee, nor eat
         bread, nor drink water in this place:

         13:9. For so it was enjoined me by the word of the Lord
         commanding me: Thou shalt not eat bread, nor drink water,
         nor return by the same way that thou camest.

         13:10. So he departed by another way, and returned not by
         the way that he came into Bethel.

         13:11. Now a certain old prophet dwelt in Bethel, and his
         sons came to him, and told him all the works that the man
         of God had done that day in Bethel: and they told their
         father the words which he had spoken to the king.

         13:12. And their father said to them: What way went he?
         His sons shewed him the way by which the man of God went,
         who came out of Juda.

         13:13. And he said to his sons: Saddle me the ass. And when
         they had saddled it, he got up,

         13:14. And went after the man of God, and found him sitting
         under a turpentine tree: and he said to him: Art thou the
         man of God who camest from Juda? He answered: I am.

         13:15. And he said to him: Come home with me to eat bread.

         13:16. But he said: I must not return, nor go with thee,
         neither will I eat bread, or drink water in this place:

         13:17. Because the Lord spoke to me, in the word of the
         Lord, saying: Thou shalt not eat bread, and thou shalt not
         drink water there, nor return by the way thou wentest.

         13:18. He said to him: I also am a prophet like unto thee:
         and an angel spoke to me, in the word of the Lord, saying:
         Bring him back with thee into thy house, that he may eat
         bread, and drink water. He deceived him,

         An angel spoke to me, etc... This old man of Bethel was
         indeed a prophet, but he sinned in thus deceiving the man
         of God; the more because he pretended a revelation for what
         he did.

         13:19. And brought him back with him: so he ate bread, and
         drank water in his house.

         13:20. And as they sat at table, the word of the Lord came
         to the prophet that brought him back:

         13:21. And he cried out to the man of God who came out of
         Juda, saying: Thus saith the Lord: Because thou hast not
         been obedient to the Lord, and hast not kept the
         commandment which the Lord thy God commanded thee,

         13:22. And hast returned, and eaten bread, and drunk water
         in the place wherein he commanded thee that thou shouldst not
         eat bread, nor drink water, thy dead body shall not be
         brought into the sepulchre of thy fathers.

         13:23. And when he had eaten and drunk, he saddled his ass
         for the prophet, whom he had brought back.

         13:24. And when he was gone, a lion found him in the way,
         and killed him, and his body was cast in the way: and the
         ass stood by him, and the lion stood by the dead body.

         Killed him... Thus the Lord often punishes his servants
         here, that he may spare them hereafter. For the generality
         of divines are of opinion, that the sin of this prophet,
         considered with all its circumstances, was not mortal.

         13:25. And behold, men passing by, saw the dead body cast
         in the way, and the lion standing by the body. And they
         came and told it in the city, wherein that old prophet
         dwelt.

         13:26. And when that prophet, who had brought him back out
         of the way, heard of it, he said: It is the man of God,
         that was disobedient to the mouth of the Lord, and the Lord
         hath delivered him to the lion, and he hath torn him, and
         killed him, according to the word of the Lord, which he
         spoke to him.

         13:27. And he said to his sons: Saddle me an ass. And when
         they had saddled it,

         13:28. And he was gone, he found the dead body cast in the
         way, and the ass and the lion standing by the carcass: the
         lion had not eaten of the dead body, nor hurt the ass.

         13:29. And the prophet took up the body of the man of God,
         and laid it upon the ass, and going back brought it into
         the city of the old prophet, to mourn for him.

         13:30. And he laid his dead body in his own sepulchre: and
         they mourned over him, saying:  Alas! alas, my brother.

         13:31. And when they had mourned over him, he said to his
         sons: When I am dead, bury me in the sepulchre wherein the
         man of God is buried: lay my bones beside his bones.

         13:32. For assuredly the word shall come to pass which he
         hath foretold in the word of the Lord, against the altar
         that is in Bethel: and against all the temples of the high
         places, that are in the cities of Samaria.

         13:33. After these words, Jeroboam came not back from his
         wicked way: but on the contrary, he made of the meanest of
         the people priests of the high places: whosoever would, he
         filled his hand, and he was made a priest of the high
         places.

         13:34. And for this cause did the house of Jeroboam sin,
         and was cut off, and destroyed from the face of the earth.

         3 Kings Chapter 14

         Ahias prophesieth the destruction of the family of
         Jeroboam.  He dieth, and is succeeded by his son Nadab. The
         king of Egypt taketh and pillageth Jerusalem. Roboam dieth
         and his son Abiam succeedeth.

         14:1. At that time Abia, the son of Jeroboam, fell sick.

         14:2. And Jeroboam said to his wife: Arise, and change thy
         dress, that thou be not known to be the wife of Jeroboam,
         and go to Silo, where Ahias, the prophet is, who told me
         that I should reign over this people.

         14:3. Take also with thee ten loaves, and cracknels, and a
         pot of honey, and go to him: for he will tell thee what
         will become of this child.

         14:4. Jeroboam's wife did as he told her: and rising up,
         went to Silo, and came to the house of Ahias; but he could
         not see, for his eyes were dim by reason of his age.

         14:5. And the Lord said to Ahias: Behold the wife of
         Jeroboam cometh in, to consult thee concerning her son,
         that is sick: thus and thus shalt thou speak to her. So
         when she was coming in, and made as if she were another
         woman,

         14:6. Ahias heard the sound of her feet, coming in at the
         door, and said: Come in, thou wife of Jeroboam: why dost
         thou feign thyself to be another? But I am sent to thee
         with heavy tidings.

         14:7. Go, and tell Jeroboam: Thus saith the Lord, the God
         of Israel: For as much as I exalted thee from among the
         people, and made thee prince over my people Israel;

         14:8. And rent the kingdom away from thc house of David,
         and gave it to thee, and thou hast not been as my servant,
         David, who kept my commandments, and followed me with all
         his heart, doing that which was well pleasing in my sight:

         14:9. But hast done evil above all that were before thee,
         and hast made thee strange gods, and molten gods, to
         provoke me to anger, and hast cast me behind thy back:

         14:10. Therefore, behold I will bring evils upon the house
         of Jeroboam, and will cut off from Jeroboam him that
         pisseth against the wall, and him that is shut up, and the
         last in Israel: and I will sweep away the remnant of the
         house of Jeroboam, as dung is swept away till all be clean.

         14:11. Them that shall die of Jeroboam in the city, the
         dogs shall eat: and them that shall die in the field, the
         birds of the air shall devour: for the Lord hath spoken it.

         14:12. Arise thou, therefore, and go to thy house: and when
         thy feet shall be entering into the city, the child shall
         die,

         14:13. And all Israel shall mourn for him, and shall bury
         him: for he only of Jeroboam shall be laid in a sepulchre,
         because in his regard there is found a good word from the
         Lord, the God of Israel, in the house of Jeroboam.

         14:14. And the Lord hath appointed himself a king over
         Israel, who shall cut off the house of Jeroboam in this
         day, and in this time:

         14:15. And the Lord God shall strike Israel as a reed is
         shaken in the water: and he shall root up Israel out of
         this good land, which he gave to their fathers, and shall
         scatter them beyond the river: because they have made to
         themselves groves, to provoke the Lord.

         14:16. And the Lord shall give up Israel for the sins of
         Jeroboam, who hath sinned, and made Israel to sin.

         14:17. And the wife of Jeroboam arose, and departed, and
         came to Thersa: and when she was coming in to the threshold
         of the house, the child died,

         14:18. And they buried him. And all Israel mourned for
         him, according to the word of the Lord, which he spoke by
         the hand of his servant Ahias, the prophet.

         14:19. And the rest of the acts of Jeroboam, how he fought,
         and how he reigned, behold they are written in the book of
         the words of the days of the kings of Israel.

         The book of the words of the days of the kings of Israel...
         This book, which is often mentioned in the Book of Kings,
         is long since lost. For as to the books of Paralipomenon,
         or Chronicles, (which the Hebrews call the words of the
         days,) they were certainly written after the Book of Kings,
         since they frequently refer to them.

         14:20. And the days that Jeroboam reigned, were two and
         twenty years: and he slept with his fathers: and Nadab, his
         son, reigned in his stead.

         14:21. And Roboam, the son of Solomon, reigned in Juda:
         Roboam was one and forty years old when he began to reign:
         and he reigned seventeen years in Jerusalem, the city which
         the Lord chose out of all the tribes of Israel to put his
         name there. And his mother's name was Naama, an Ammonitess.

         14:22. And Juda did evil in the sight of the Lord, and
         provoked him above all that their fathers had done, in
         their sins which they committed.

         14:23. For they also built them altars, and statues, and
         groves, upon every high hill, and under every green tree:

         14:24. There were also the effeminate in the land, and they
         did according to all the abominations of the people, whom
         the Lord had destroyed before the face of the children of
         Israel.

         The effeminate... Catamites, or men addicted to unnatural
         lust.

         14:25. And in the fifth year of the reign of Roboam, Sesac,
         king of Egypt, came up against Jerusalem.

         14:26. And he took away the treasures of the house of the
         Lord, and the king's treasures, and carried all off: as
         also the shields of gold which Solomon had made:

         14:27. And Roboam made shields of brass instead of them,
         and delivered them into the hand of the captains of the
         shieldbearers, and of them that kept watch before the gate
         of the king's house.

         14:28. And when the king went into the house of the Lord,
         they whose office it was to go before him, carried them:
         and afterwards they brought them back to the armoury of the
         shieldbearers.

         14:29. Now the rest of the acts of Roboam, and all that he
         did, behold they are written in the book of the words of
         the days of the kings of Juda.

         14:30. And there was war between Roboam and Jeroboam
         always.

         14:31. And Roboam slept with his fathers, and was buried
         with them, in the city of David:  and his mother's name was
         Naama, an Ammonitess: and Abiam, his son, reigned in his
         stead.

         3 Kings Chapter 15

         The acts of Abiam and of Asa kings of Juda. And of
         Nadab and Baasa kings of Israel.

         15:1. Now in the eighteenth year of the reign of Jeroboam,
         the son of Nabat, Abiam reigned over Juda.

         15:2. He reigned three years in Jerusalem: the name of his
         mother was Maacha, the daughter of Abessalom.

         Maacha, etc... She is called elsewhere Michaia, daughter of
         Uriel; but it was common in those days for the same person
         to have two names.

         15:3. And he walked in all the sins of his father, which he
         had done before him: and his heart was not perfect with the
         Lord his God, as was the heart of David, his father.

         15:4. But for David's sake the Lord his God gave him a lamp
         in Jerusalem, to set up his son after him, and to establish
         Jerusalem:

         15:5. Because David had done that which was right in the
         eyes of the Lord, and had not turned aside from any thing
         that he commanded him, all the days of his life, except the
         matter of Urias, the Hethite.

         15:6. But there was war between Roboam and Jeroboam all the
         time of his life.

         15:7. And the rest of the words of Abiam, and all that he
         did, are they not written in the book of the words of the
         days of the kings of Juda? And there was war between Abiam
         and Jeroboam.

         15:8. And Abiam slept with his fathers, and they buried him
         in the city of David: and Asa, his son, reigned in his
         stead.

         15:9. So in the twentieth year of Jeroboam, king of Israel,
         reigned Asa, king of Juda,

         15:10. And he reigned one and forty years in Jerusalem.
         His mother's name was Maacha, the daughter of Abessalom.

         His mother, etc... That is, his grandmother; unless we
         suppose, which is not improbable, that the Maacha here
         named is different from the Maacha mentioned, ver. 2.

         15:11. And Asa did that which was right in the sight of the
         Lord, as did David, his father:

         15:12. And he took away the effeminate out of the land, and
         removed all the filth of the idols, which his fathers had
         made.

         15:13. Moreover, he also removed his mother, Maacha, from
         being the princess in the sacrifices of Priapus, and in the
         grove which she had consecrated to him: and he destroyed
         her den, and broke in pieces the filthy idol, and burnt it
         by the torrent Cedron:

         15:14. But the high places he did not take away.
         Nevertheless, the heart of Asa was perfect with the Lord
         all his days:

         The high places... There were excelsa or high places of two
         different kinds. Some were set up, and dedicated to the
         worship of idols, or strange gods; and these Asa removed, 2
         Par. 14.2; others were only altars of the true God, but
         were erected contrary to the law, which allowed of no
         sacrifices but in the temple; and these were not removed by
         Asa.-Ibid. Perfect with the Lord... Asa had his faults; but
         never forsook the worship of the Lord.

         15:15. And he brought in the things which his father had
         dedicated, and he had vowed, into the house of the Lord,
         silver and gold, and vessels.

         15:16. And there was war between Asa, and Baasa, king of
         Israel, all their days.

         15:17. And Baasa, king of Israel, went up against Juda, and
         built Rama, that no man might go out or come in of the side
         of Asa, king of Juda.

         15:18. Then Asa took all the silver and gold that remained
         in the treasures of the house of the Lord, and in the
         treasures of the king's house, and delivered it into the
         hands of his servants: and sent them to Benadad, son of
         Tabremon, the son of Hezion, king of Syria, who dwelt in
         Damascus, saying:

         15:19. There is a league between me and thee, and between
         my father and thy father: therefore I have sent thee
         presents of silver and gold: and I desire thee to come, and
         break thy league with Baasa, king of Israel, that he may
         depart from me.

         15:20. Benadad, hearkening to king Asa, sent the captains
         of his army against the cities of Israel, and they smote
         Ahion, and Dan, and Abeldomum Maacha, and all Cenneroth;
         that is all the land of Nephthali.

         15:21. And when Baasa had heard this, he left off building
         Rama, and returned into Thersa.

         15:22. But king Asa sent word into all Juda, saying: Let no
         man be excused: and they took away the stones from Rama,
         and the timber thereof, wherewith Baasa had been building,
         and with them king Asa built Gabaa of Benjamin, and Maspha.

         15:23. But the rest of all the acts of Asa, and all his
         strength, and all that he did, and the cities that he
         built, are they not written in the book of the words of the
         days of the kings of Juda? But in the time of his old age
         he was diseased in his feet.

         15:24. And he slept with his fathers, and was buried with
         them in the city of David, his father. And Josaphat, his
         son, reigned in his place.

         15:25. But Nadab, the son of Jeroboam, reigned over Israel
         the second year of Asa, king of Juda: and he reigned over
         Israel two years.

         15:26. And he did evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked
         in the ways of his father, and in his sins, wherewith he
         made Israel to sin.

         15:27. And Baasa, the son of Ahias, of the house of
         Issachar, conspired against him, and slew him in Gebbethon,
         which is a city of the Philistines: for Nadab and all
         Israel besieged Gebbethon.

         15:28. So Baasa slew him in the third year of Asa, king of
         Juda, and reigned in his place.

         15:29. And when he was king, he cut off all the house of
         Jeroboam: he left not so much as one soul of his seed, till
         he had utterly destroyed him, according to the word of the
         Lord, which he had spoken in the hand of Ahias, the
         Silonite:

         15:30. Because of the sin of Jeroboam, which he had sinned,
         and wherewith he had made Israel to sin, and for the
         offence wherewith he provoked the Lord, the God of Israel.

         15:31. But the rest of the acts of Nadab, and all that he
         did, are they not written in the book of the words of the
         days of the kings of Israel?

         15:32. And there was war between Asa and Baasa, the king of
         Israel, all their days.

         15:33. In the third year of Asa, king of Juda, Baasa, the
         son of Ahias, reigned over all Israel, in Thersa, four and
         twenty years.

         15:34. And he did evil before the Lord, and walked in the
         ways of Jeroboam, and in his sins, wherewith he made Israel
         to sin.

         3 Kings Chapter 16

         Jehu prophesieth against Baasa: his son Ela is slain and
         all his family destroyed by Zambri. Of the reign of Amri
         father of Achab.

         16:1. Then the word of the Lord came to Jehu, the son of
         Hanani, against Baasa, saying:

         16:2. For as much as I have exalted thee out of the dust
         and made thee prince over my people Israel, and thou hast
         walked in the way of Jeroboam, and hast made my people
         Israel to sin, to provoke me to anger with their sins:

         16:3. Behold I will cut down the posterity of Baasa, and
         the posterity of his house, and I will make thy house as
         the house of Jeroboam, the son of Nabat.

         16:4. Him that dieth of Baasa, in the city, the dogs shall
         eat: and him that dieth of his in the country, the fowls of
         the air shall devour.

         16:5.  But the rest of the acts of Baasa, and all that he
         did, and his battles, are they not written in the book of
         the words of the days of the kings of Israel?

         16:6. So Baasa slept with his fathers, and was buried in
         Thersa: and Ela, his son, reigned in his stead.

         16:7. And when the word of the Lord came in the hand of
         Jehu, the son of Hanani, the prophet, against Baasa, and
         against his house, and against all the evil that he had
         done before the Lord, to provoke him to anger by the works
         of his hands, to become as the house of Jeroboam: for this
         cause he slew him; that is to say, Jehu, the son of Hanani,
         the prophet.

         16:8. In the six and twentieth year of Asa, king of Juda,
         Ela, the son of Baasa, reigned over Israel, in Thersa, two
         years.

         16:9. And his servant Zambri, who was captain of half the
         horsemen, rebelled against him: now Ela was drinking in
         Thersa, and drunk in the house of Arsa, the governor of
         Thersa.

         16:10. And Zambri rushing in, struck him, and slew him, in
         the seven and twentieth year of Asa, king of Juda and he
         reigned in his stead.

         16:11. And when he was king, and sat upon his throne, he
         slew all the house of Baasa, and he left not one thereof to
         piss against a wall and all his kinsfolks and friends.

         16:12. And Zambri destroyed all the house of Baasa,
         according to the word of the Lord, that he had spoken to
         Baasa, in the hand of Jehu, the prophet,

         16:13. For all the sins of Baasa, and the sins of Ela, his
         son, who sinned, and made Israel to sin, provoking the
         Lord, the God of Israel, with their vanities.

         16:14. But the rest of the acts of Ela, and all that he did,
         are they not written in the book of the words of the days
         of the kings of Israel?

         16:15. In the seven and twentieth year of Asa, king of
         Juda, Zambri reigned seven days in Thersa: now the army was
         besieging Gebbethon, a city of the Philistines.

         16:16. And when they heard that Zambri had rebelled, and
         slain the king, all Israel made Amri their king, who was
         general over Israel in the camp that day.

         16:17. And Amri went up, and all Israel with him, from
         Gebbethon, and they besieged Thersa.

         16:18. And Zambri, seeing that the city was about to be
         taken, went into the palace, and burnt himself with the
         king's house: and he died

         16:19. In his sins, which he had sinned, doing evil before
         the Lord, and walking in the way of Jeroboam, and in his
         sin, wherewith he made Israel to sin.

         16:20. But the rest of the acts of Zambri, and of his
         conspiracy and tyranny, are they not written in the book of
         the words of the days of the kings of Israel?

         16:21. Then were the people of Israel divided into two
         parts: one half of the people followed Thebni, the son of
         Gineth, to make him king: and one half followed Amri.

         16:22. But the people that were with Amri, prevailed over
         the people that followed Thebni, the son of Gineth: and
         Thebni died, and Amri reigned.

         16:23. In the one and thirtieth year of Asa, king of Juda,
         Amri reigned over Israel twelve years: in Thersa he reigned
         six years.

         In the one and thirtieth year, etc... Amri began to reign
         in the seven and twentieth year of Asa; but had not quiet
         possession of the kingdom till the death of his competitor
         Thebni, which was in the one and thirtieth year of Asa's
         reign.

         16:24. And he bought the hill of Samaria of Semer, for two
         talents of silver: and he built upon it, and he called the
         city which he built Samaria, after the name of Semer, the
         owner of the hill.

         16:25. And Amri did evil in the sight of the Lord, and
         acted wickedly above all that were before him.

         16:26. And he walked in all the way of Jeroboam, the son of
         Nabat, and in his sins, wherewith he made Israel to sin: to
         provoke the Lord, the God of Israel, to anger with their
         vanities.

         With their vanities... That is, their idols their golden
         calves, vain, false, deceitful things.

         16:27. Now the rest of the acts of Amri, and the battles he
         fought, are they not written in the book of the words of
         the days of the kings of Israel?

         16:28. And Amri slept with his fathers, and was buried in
         Samaria, and Achab, his son, reigned in his stead.

         16:29. Now Achab, the son of Amri, reigned over Israel in
         the eight and thirtieth year of Asa, king of Juda. And
         Achab, the son of Amri, reigned over Israel in Samaria two
         and twenty years.

         16:30. And Achab, the son of Amri, did evil in the sight of
         the Lord above all that were before him.

         16:31. Nor was it enough for him to walk in the sins of
         Jeroboam, the son of Nabat: but he also took to wife
         Jezabel, daughter of Ethbaal, king of the Sidonians. And
         he went, and served Baal, and adored him.

         16:32. And he set up an altar for Baal, in the temple of
         Baal, which he had built in Samaria;

         16:33. And he planted a grove: and Achab did more to
         provoke the Lord, the God of Israel, than all the kings of
         Israel that were before him.

         16:34. In his days Hiel, of Bethel, built Jericho: in
         Abiram, his firstborn, he laid its foundations: and in his
         youngest son, Segub, he set up the gates thereof: according
         to the word of the Lord, which he spoke in the hand of
         Josue, the son of Nun.

         3 Kings Chapter 17

         Elias shutteth up the heaven from raining. He is fed by
         ravens, and afterwards by a widow of Sarephta. He raiseth
         the window's son to life.

         17:1. And Elias the Thesbite, of the inhabitants of Galaad,
         said to Achab:  As the Lord liveth, the God of Israel, in
         whose sight I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these
         years, but according to the words of my mouth.

         17:2. And the word of the Lord came to him, saying:

         17:3. Get thee hence, and go towards the east, and hide
         thyself by the torrent of Carith, which is over against the
         Jordan;

         17:4. And there thou shalt drink of the torrent: and I have
         commanded the ravens to feed thee there.

         17:5. So he went, and did according to the word of the
         Lord: and going, he dwelt by the torrent Carith, which is
         over against the Jordan.

         17:6. And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the
         morning, and bread and flesh in the evening; and he drank
         of the torrent.

         17:7. But after some time the torrent was dried up: for it
         had not rained upon the earth.

         17:8. Then the word of the Lord came to him, saying:

         17:9. Arise, and go to Sarephta of the Sidonians, and
         dwell there: for I have commanded a widow woman there to
         feed thee.

         Sarephta of the Sidonians... That is, a city of the
         Sidonians.

         17:10. He arose, and went to Sarephta. And when he was come
         to the gate of the city, he saw the widow woman gathering
         sticks, and he called her, and said to her: Give me a
         little water in a vessel, that I may drink.

         17:11. And when she was going to fetch it, he called after
         her, saying:  Bring me also, I beseech thee, a morsel of
         bread in thy hand.

         17:12. And she answered: As the Lord thy God liveth, I have
         no bread, but only a handful of meal in a pot, and a little
         oil in a cruise: behold I am gathering two sticks, that I
         may go in and dress it, for me and my son, that we may eat
         it and die.

         17:13. And Elias said to her: Fear not; but go, and do as
         thou hast said but first make for me of the same meal a
         little hearth cake, and bring it to me, and after make for
         thyself and thy son.

         17:14. For thus saith the Lord, the God of Israel: The pot
         of meal shall not waste, nor the cruise of oil be
         diminished, until the day wherein the Lord will give rain
         upon the face of the earth.

         17:15. She went, and did according to the word of Elias:
         and he ate, and she, and her house: and from that day

         17:16. The pot of meal wasted not, and the cruise of oil
         was not diminished according to the word of the Lord, which
         he spoke in the hand of Elias.

         17:17. And it came to pass after this, that the son of the
         woman, the mistress of the house, fell sick, and the
         sickness was very grievous, so that there was no breath
         left in him.

         17:18. And she said to Elias: What have I to do with thee,
         thou man of God? art thou come to me, that my iniquities
         should be remembered, and that thou shouldst kill my son?

         17:11. And Elias said to her: Give me thy son. And he took
         him out of her bosom, and carried him into the upper
         chamber where he abode, and laid him upon his own bed.

         17:20. And he cried to the Lord, and said: O Lord, my God,
         hast thou afflicted also the widow, with whom I am after a
         sort maintained, so as to kill her son?

         17:21. And he stretched, and measured himself upon the
         child three times, and cried to the Lord, and said: O Lord,
         my God, let the soul of this child, I beseech thee, return
         into his body.

         17:22. And the Lord heard the voice of Elias: and the soul
         of the child returned into him, and he revived.

         17:23. And Elias took the child, and brought him down from
         the upper chamber to the house below, and delivered him to
         his mother, and said to her: Behold thy son liveth.

         17:24. And the woman said to Elias: Now by this I know that
         thou art a man of God, and the word of the Lord in thy
         mouth is true.

         3 Kings Chapter 18

         Elias cometh before Achab. He convinceth the false prophets
         by bringing fire from heaven: he obtaineth rain by his
         prayer.

         18:1. After many days, the word of the Lord came to Elias,
         in the third year, saying: Go, and shew thyself to Achab,
         that I may give rain upon the face of the earth.

         18:2. And Elias went to shew himself to Achab, and there
         was a grievous famine in Samaria.

         18:3. And Achab called Abdias the governor of his house:
         now Abdias feared the Lord very much.

         18:4. For when Jezabel killed the prophets of the Lord, he
         took a hundred prophets, and hid them by fifty and fifty in
         caves, and fed them with bread and water.

         18:5. And Achab said to Abdias: Go into the land unto all
         fountains of waters, and into all valleys, to see if we can
         find grass, and save the horses and mules, that the beasts
         may not utterly perish.

         18:6. And they divided the countries between them, that
         they might go round about them: Achab went one way, and
         Abdias another way by himself.

         18:7. And as Abdias was in the way, Elias met him:  and he
         knew him, and fell on his face, and said: Art thou my lord
         Elias?

         18:8. And he answered: I am.  Go, and tell thy master:
         Elias is here.

         18:9. And he said: What have I sinned, that thou wouldst
         deliver me, thy servant, into the hand of Achab, that he
         should kill me?

         18:10. As the Lord thy God liveth, there is no nation or
         kingdom, whither my lord hath not sent to seek thee: and
         when all answered: He is not here: he took an oath of every
         kingdom and nation, because thou wast not found.

         18:11. And now thou sayest to me:  Go and tell thy master:
         Elias is here.

         18:12. And when I am gone from thee, the Spirit of the Lord
         will carry thee into a place that I know not: and I shall
         go in and tell Achab; and he, not finding thee, will kill
         me: but thy servant feareth the Lord from his infancy.

         18:13. Hath it not been told thee, my lord, what I did when
         Jezabel killed the prophets of the Lord; how I hid a
         hundred men of the prophets of the Lord, by fifty and fifty
         in caves, and fed them with bread and water?

         18:14. And now thou sayest: Go and tell thy master: Elias
         is here: that he may kill me.

         18:15. And Elias said: As the Lord of hosts liveth, before
         whose face I stand, this day I will shew myself unto him.

         18:16. Abdias therefore went to meet Achab, and told him:
         and Achab came to meet Elias.

         18:17. And when he had seen him, he said: Art thou he that
         troublest Israel?

         18:18. And he said: I have not troubled Israel, but thou
         and thy father's house, who have forsaken the commandments
         of the Lord, and have followed Baalim.

         18:19. Nevertheless send now, and gather unto me all
         Israel, unto Mount Carmel, and the prophets of Baal four
         hundred and fifty, and the prophets of the groves four
         hundred, who eat at Jezabel's table.

         18:20. Achab sent to all the children of Israel, and
         gathered together the prophets unto mount Carmel.

         18:21. And Elias coming to all the people, said: How long
         do you halt between two sides?  If the Lord be God, follow
         him: but if Baal, then follow him.  And the people did not
         answer him a word.

         18:22. And Elias said again to the people: I only remain a
         prophet of the Lord: but the prophets of Baal are four
         hundred and fifty men.

         18:23. Let two bullocks be given us, and let them choose
         one bullock for themselves, and cut it in pieces, and lay
         it upon wood, but put no fire under: and I will dress the
         other bullock, and lay it on wood, and put no fire under
         it.

         18:24. Call ye on the names of your gods, and I will call
         on the name of my Lord: and the God that shall answer by
         fire, let him be God.  And all the people answering, said:
         A very good proposal.

         18:25. Then Elias said to the prophets of Baal: Choose you
         one bullock and dress it first, because you are many: and
         call on the names of your gods; but put no fire under.

         18:26. And they took the bullock, which he gave them, and
         dressed it: and they called on the name of Baal from
         morning even until noon, saying: O Baal, hear us.  But
         there was no voice, nor any that answered: and they leaped
         over the altar that they had made.

         18:27. And when it was now noon, Elias jested at them,
         saying: Cry with a louder voice:  for he is a god; and
         perhaps he is talking, or is in an inn, or on a journey; or
         perhaps he is asleep, and must be awaked.

         18:28. So they cried with a loud voice, and cut themselves
         after their manner with knives and lancets, till they were
         all covered with blood.

         18:29. And after midday was past, and while they were
         prophesying, the time was come of offering sacrifice, and
         there was no voice heard, nor did any one answer, nor
         regard them as they prayed.

         18:30. Elias said to all the people: Come ye unto me.  And
         the people coming near unto him, he repaired the altar of
         the Lord, that was broken down:

         18:31. And he took twelve stones, according to the number
         of the tribes of the sons of Jacob to whom the word of the
         Lord came, saying:  Israel shall be thy name.

         18:32. And he built with the stones an altar to the name of
         the Lord: and he made a trench for water, of the breadth of
         two furrows, round about the altar.

         18:33. And he laid the wood in order, and cut the bullock
         in pieces, and laid it upon the wood.

         18:34. And he said: Fill four buckets with water, and pour
         it upon the burnt offering, and upon the wood.  And again
         he said: Do the same the second time. And when they had
         done it the second time, he said: Do the same also the
         third time.  And they did so the third time.

         18:35. And the water run round about the altar, and the
         trench was filled with water.

         18:36. And when it was now time to offer the holocaust,
         Elias, the prophet, came near and said: O Lord God of
         Abraham, and Isaac, and Israel, shew this day that thou art
         the God of Israel, and I thy servant, and that according to
         thy commandment I have done all these things.

         18:37. Dear me, O Lord, hear me: that this people may learn
         that thou art the Lord God, and that thou hast turned their
         heart again.

         18:38. Then the fire of the Lord fell, and consumed the
         holocaust, and the wood, and the stones, and the dust, and
         licked up the water that was in the trench.

         18:39. And when all the people saw this, they fell on their
         faces, and they said: The Lord, he is God; the Lord, he is
         God.

         18:40. And Elias said to them: Take the prophets of Baal,
         and let not one of them escape. And when they had taken
         them, Elias brought them down to the torrent Cison, and
         killed them there.

         18:41. And Elias said to Achab: Go up, eat and drink: for
         there is a sound of abundance of rain.

         18:42. Achab went up to eat and drink: and Elias went up to
         the top of Carmel, and casting himself down upon the earth,
         put his face between his knees,

         18:43. And he said to his servant: Go up, and look towards
         the sea. And he went up, and looked, and said: There is
         nothing. And again he said to him: Return seven times.

         18:44. And at the seventh time: Behold a little cloud arose
         out of the sea like a man's foot. And he said: Go up, and
         say to Achab: Prepare thy chariot, and go down, lest the
         rain prevent thee.

         18:45. And while he turned himself this way and that way,
         behold the heavens grew dark, with clouds and wind, and
         there fell a great rain. And Achab getting up, went away to
         Jezrahel:

         18:46. And the hand of the Lord was upon Elias, and he
         girded up his loins, and ran before Achab, till he came to
         Jezrahel.

         3 Kings Chapter 19

         Elias, fleeing from Jezabel, is fed by an angel in the
         desert; and by the strength of that food walketh forty
         days, till he cometh to Horeb, where he hath a vision of
         God.

         19:1. And Achab told Jezabel all that Elias had done, and
         how he had slain all the prophets with the sword.

         19:2. And Jezabel sent a messenger to Elias, saying: Such
         and such things may the gods do to me, and add still more,
         if by this hour to morrow I make not thy life as the life
         of one of them.

         19:3. Then EIias was afraid, and rising up, he went
         whithersoever he had a mind: and he came to Bersabee of
         Juda, and left his servant there,

         19:4. And he went forward, one day's journey into the
         desert. And when he was there, and sat under a juniper
         tree, he requested for his soul that he might die, and
         said: It is enough for me, Lord; take away my soul: for I
         am no better than my fathers.

         That he might die... Elias requested to die, not out of
         impatience or pusillanimity, but out of zeal against sin;
         and that he might no longer be witness of the miseries of
         his people; and the war they were waging against God and
         his servants. See ver. 10.

         19:5. And he cast himself down, and slept in the shadow of
         the juniper tree: and behold an angel of the Lord touched
         him, and said to him: Arise and eat.

         19:6. He looked, and behold there was at his head a hearth
         cake, and a vessel of water: and he ate and drank, and he
         fell asleep again.

         19:7. And the angel of the Lord came again the second time,
         and touched him, and said to him: Arise, eat: for thou hast
         yet a great way to go.

         19:8. And he arose, and ate and drank, and walked in the
         strength of that food forty days and forty nights, unto the
         mount of God, Horeb.

         In the strength of that food, etc... This bread, with which
         Elias was fed in the wilderness, was a figure of the bread
         of life which we receive in the blessed sacrament; by the
         strength of which we are to be supported in our journey
         through the wilderness of this world till we come to the
         true mountain of God, and his vision in a happy eternity.

         19:9. And when he was come thither, he abode in a cave. and
         behold the word of the Lord came unto him, and he said to
         him: What dost thou here, Elias?

         19:10. And he answered: With zeal have I been zealous for
         the Lord God of hosts: for the children of Israel have
         forsaken thy covenant: they have thrown down thy altars,
         they have slain thy prophets with the sword, and I alone am
         left, and they seek my life to take it away.

         I alone am left... Viz., of the prophets in the kingdom of
         Israel, or of the ten tribes; for in the kingdom of Juda
         religion was at that time in a very flourishing condition
         under the kings Asa and Josaphat. And even in Israel there
         remained several prophets, though not then known to Elias.
         See chap. 20.13, 28, 35.

         19:11. And he said to him: Go forth, and stand upon the
         mount before the Lord: and behold the Lord passeth, and a
         great and strong wind before the Lord, overthrowing the
         mountains, and breaking the rocks in pieces: but the Lord
         is not in the wind. And after the wind, an earthquake: but
         the Lord is not in the earthquake.

         19:12. And after the earthquake, a fire: but the Lord is
         not in the fire. And after the fire, a whistling of a
         gentle air.

         19:13. And when Elias heard it, he covered his face with
         his mantle, and coming forth, stood in the entering in of
         the cave, and behold a voice unto him, saying: What dost
         thou here, Elias? And he answered:

         19:14. With zeal have I been zealous for the Lord God of
         hosts: because the children of Israel have forsaken thy
         covenant: they have destroyed thy altars, they have slain
         thy prophets with the sword; and I alone am left, and they
         seek my life to take it away.

         19:15. And the Lord said to him: Go, and return on thy way,
         through the desert, to Damascus: and when thou art come
         thither, thou shalt anoint Hazael to be king over Syria;

         19:16. And thou shalt anoint Jehu, the son of Namsi, to be
         king over Israel: and Eliseus, the son of Saphat, of
         Abelmeula, thou shalt anoint to be prophet in thy room.

         19:17. And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall
         escape the sword of Hazael, shall be slain by Jehu: and
         whosoever shall escape the sword of Jehu, shall be slain by
         Eliseus.

         Shall be slain by Eliseus... Eliseus did not kill any of
         the idolaters with the material sword: but he is here
         joined with Hazael and Jehu, the great instruments of God
         in punishing the idolatry of Israel, because he foretold to
         the former his exaltation to the kingdom of Syria, and the
         vengeance he would execute against Israel, and anointed the
         latter by one of his disciples to be king of Israel, with
         commission to extirpate the house of Achab.

         19:18. And I will leave me seven thousand men in Israel,
         whose knees have not been bowed before Baal, and every
         mouth that hath not worshipped him, kissing the hands.

         19:19. And Elias departing from thence, found Eliseus, the
         son of Saphat, ploughing with twelve yoke of oxen: and he
         was one of them that were ploughing with, twelve yoke of
         oxen: and when Elias came up to him, he cast his mantle
         upon him.

         19:20. And he forthwith left the oxen, and run after Elias,
         and said: Let me, I pray thee, kiss my father and my
         mother, and then I will follow thee. And he said to him:
         Go, and return back: for that which was my part, I have
         done to thee.

         19:21. And returning back from him, he took a yoke of oxen,
         and killed them, and boiled the flesh with the plough of
         the oxen, and gave to the people, and they ate: and rising
         up, he went away, and followed Elias, and ministered to
         him.

         3 Kings Chapter 20

         The Syrians besiege Samaria: they are twice defeated by
         Achab: who is reprehended by a prophet for letting Benadad
         go.

         20:1. And Benadad, king of Syria, gathered together all his
         host, and there were two and thirty kings with him, and
         horses, and chariots: and going up, he fought against
         Samaria, and besieged it.

         20:2. And sending messengers to Achab, king of Israel, into
         the city,

         20:3. He said: Thus saith Benadad: Thy silver and thy gold
         is mine: and thy wives and thy goodliest children are mine.

         20:4. And the king of Israel answered: According to thy
         word, my lord, O king, I am thine, and all that I have.

         20:5. And the messengers came again, and said: Thus saith
         Benadad, who sent us unto thee: Thy silver and thy gold,
         and thy wives and thy children, thou shalt deliver up to
         me.

         20:6. To morrow, therefore, at this same hour, I will send
         my servants to thee, and they shall search thy house, and
         the houses of thy servants: and all that pleaseth them,
         they shall put in their hands, and take away.

         20:7. And the king of Israel called all the ancients of the
         land, and said: Mark, and see that he layeth snares for us.
         For he sent to me for my wives, and for my children, and
         for my silver and gold: and I said not nay.

         20:8. And all the ancients, and all the people said to him:
         Hearken not to him, nor consent to him.

         20:9. Wherefore he answered the messengers of Benadad: Tell
         my lord, the king: All that thou didst send for to me, thy
         servant at first, I will do: but this thing I cannot do.

         20:10. And the messengers returning brought him word.  And
         he sent again, and said: Such and such things may the gods
         do to me, and more may they add, if the dust of Samaria
         shall suffice for handfuls for all the people that follow
         me.

         20:11. And the king of Israel answering, said: Tell him:
         Let not the girded boast himself as the ungirded.

         Let not the girded, etc... Let him not boast before the
         victory: it will then be time to glory when he putteth off
         his armour, having overcome his adversary.

         20:12. And it came to pass, when Benadad heard this word,
         that he and the kings were drinking in pavilions, and he
         said to his servants: Beset the city. And they beset it.

         20:13. And behold a prophet coming to Achab, king of
         Israel, said to him:  Thus saith the Lord: Hast thou seen
         all this exceeding great multitude? behold I will deliver
         them into thy hand this day: that thou mayst know that I am
         the Lord.

         20:14. And Achab said: By whom? And he said to him: Thus
         saith the Lord: By the servants of the princes of the
         provinces. And he said: Who shall begin to fight? And he
         said: Thou.

         20:15. So he mustered the servants of the princes of the
         provinces, and he found the number of two hundred and
         thirty-two:  and he mustered after them the people, all the
         children of Israel, seven thousand:

         20:16. And they went out at noon. But Benadad was drinking
         himself drunk in his pavilion, and the two and thirty kings
         with him, who were come to help him.

         20:17. And the servants of the princes of the provinces
         went out first. And Benadad sent.  And they told him,
         saying: There are men come out of Samaria.

         20:18. And he said: Whether they come for peace, take them
         alive: or whether they come to fight, take them alive.

         20:19. So the servants of the princes of the provinces went
         out, and the rest of the army followed:

         20:20. And every one slew the man that came against him:
         and the Syrians fled, and Israel pursued after them.  And
         Benadad, king of Syria, fled away on horseback with his
         horsemen.

         20:21. But the king of Israel going out overthrew the
         horses and chariots, and slew the Syrians with a great
         slaughter.

         20:22. (And a prophet coming to the king of Israel, said to
         him: Go, and strengthen thyself, and know, and see what
         thou dost: for the next year the king of Syria will come up
         against thee.)

         20:23. But the servants of the king of Syria said to him:
         Their gods are gods of the hills, therefore they have
         overcome us: but it is better that we should fight against
         them in the plains, and we shall overcome them.

         20:24. Do thou, therefore, this thing: Remove all the kings
         from thy army, and put captains in their stead:

         20:25. And make up the number of soldiers that have been
         slain of thine, and horses, according to the former horses,
         and chariots, according to the chariots which thou hadst
         before: and we will fight against them in the plains, and
         thou shalt see that we shall overcome them. He believed
         their counsel, and did so.

         20:26. Wherefore, at the return of the year, Benadad
         mustered the Syrians, and went up to Aphec, to fight
         against Israel.

         20:27. And the children of Israel were mustered, and taking
         victuals, went out on the other side, and encamped over
         against them, like two little flocks of goats: but the
         Syrians filled the land.

         20:28. (And a man of God coming, said to the king of
         Israel: Thus saith the Lord:  Because the Syrians have
         said: The Lord is God of the hills, but is not God of the
         valleys: I will deliver all this great multitude into thy
         hand, and you shall know that I am the Lord.)

         20:29. And both sides set their armies in array one against
         the other seven days, and on the seventh day the battle was
         fought: and the children of Israel slew, of the Syrians, a
         hundred thousand footmen in one day.

         20:30. And they that remained fled to Aphec, into the city:
         and the wall fell upon seven and twenty thousand men, that
         were left.  And Benadad fleeing, went into the city, into a
         chamber that was within a chamber.

         20:31. And his servants said to him: Behold, we have heard
         that the kings of the house of Israel are merciful; so let
         us put sackcloths on our loins, and ropes on our heads, and
         go out to the king of Israel: perhaps he will save our
         lives.

         20:32. So they girded sackcloths on their loins, and put
         ropes on their heads, and came to the king of Israel, and
         said to him: Thy servant, Benadad, saith: I beseech thee
         let me have my life. And he said: If he be yet alive, he is
         my brother.

         20:33. The men took this for good luck: and in haste caught
         the word out of his mouth, and said: Thy brother Benadad.
         And he said to them: Go, and bring him to me. Then Benadad
         came out to him, and he lifted him up into his chariot.

         20:34. And he said to him: The cities which my father took
         from thy father, I will restore: and do thou make thee
         streets in Damascus, as my father made in Samaria and
         having made a league, I will depart from thee. So he made a
         league with him, and let him go.

         20:35. Then a certain man of the sons of the prophets, said
         to his companion, in the word of the Lord: Strike me. But
         he would not strike.

         20:36. Then he said to him: Because thou wouldst not
         hearken to the word of the Lord, behold thou shalt depart
         from me, and a lion shall slay thee.  And when he was gone
         a little from him, a lion found him, and slew him.

         20:37. Then he found another man, and said to him: Strike
         me. And he struck him and wounded him.

         20:38. So the prophet went, and met the king in the way,
         and disguised himself by sprinkling dust on his face and
         his eyes.

         20:39. And as the king passed by, he cried to the king, and
         said: Thy servant went out to fight hand to hand: and when
         a certain man was run away, one brought him to me, and
         said: Keep this man: and if he shall slip away, thy life
         shall be for his life, or thou shalt pay a talent of
         silver.

         20:40. And whilst I, in the hurry, turned this way and
         that, on a sudden he was not to be seen. And the king of
         Israel said to him: This is thy judgment, which thyself
         hast decreed.

         20:41. But he forthwith wiped off the dust from his face,
         and the king of Israel knew him, that he was one of the
         prophets.

         20:42. And he said to him: Thus saith the Lord. Because
         thou hast let go out of thy hand a man worthy of death, thy
         life shall be for his life, and thy people for his people.

         20:43. And the king of Israel returned to his house,
         slighting to hear, and raging came into Samaria.

         3 Kings Chapter 21

         Naboth, for denying his vineyard to king Achab, is by
         Jezabel's commandment, falsely accused and stoned to death.
         For which crime Elias denounceth to Achab the judgments of
         God: upon his humbling himself the sentence is mitigated.

         21:1. And after these things, Naboth the Jezrahelite, who
         was in Jezrahel, had at that time a vineyard, near the
         palace of Achab, king of Samaria.

         21:2. And Achab spoke to Naboth, saying: Give me thy
         vineyard, that I may make me a garden of herbs, because it
         is nigh, and adjoining to my house; and I will give thee
         for it a better vineyard: or if thou think it more
         convenient for thee, I will give thee the worth of it in
         money.

         21:3. Naboth answered him: The Lord be merciful to me, and
         not let me give thee the inheritance of my fathers.

         21:4. And Achab came into his house angry and fretting,
         because of the word that Naboth, the Jezrahelite, had
         spoken to him, saying: I will not give thee the inheritance
         of my fathers. And casting himself upon his bed, he turned
         away his face to the wall, and would eat no bread.

         21:5. And Jezabel, his wife, went in to him, and said to
         him: What is the matter that thy soul is so grieved?  and
         why eatest thou no bread?

         21:6. And he answered her: I spoke to Naboth, the
         Jezrahelite, and said to him:  Give me thy vineyard, and
         take money for it: or if it please thee, I will give thee a
         better vineyard for it. And he said: I will not give thee
         my vineyard.

         21:7. Then Jezabel, his wife, said to him. Thou art of
         great authority indeed, and governest well the kingdom of
         Israel.  Arise, and eat bread, and be of good cheer; I will
         give thee the vineyard of Naboth, the Jezrahelite.

         21:8. So she wrote letters in Achab's name, and sealed them
         with his ring, and sent them to the ancients, and the chief
         men that were in his city, and that dwelt with Naboth.

         21:9. And this was the tenor of the letters: Proclaim a
         fast, and make Naboth sit among the chief of the people;

         21:10. And suborn two men, sons of Belial, against him.
         and let them bear false witness; that he hath blasphemed
         God and the king: and then carry him out, and stone him,
         and so let him die.

         21:11. And the men of his city, the ancients and nobles,
         that dwelt with him in the city, did as Jezabel had
         commanded them, and as it was written in the letters which
         she had sent to them;

         21:12. They proclaimed a fast, and made Naboth sit among
         the chief of the people.

         21:13. And bringing two men, sons of the devil, they made
         them sit against him: and they, like men of the devil, bore
         witness against him before the people: saying: Naboth hath
         blasphemed God and the king.  Wherefore they brought him
         forth without the city, and stoned him to death.

         21:14. And they sent to Jezabel, saying: Naboth is stoned,
         and is dead.

         21:15. And it came to pass, when Jezabel heard that Naboth
         was stoned, and dead, that she said to Achab: Arise, and
         take possession of the vineyard of Naboth, the Jezrahelite,
         who would not agree with thee, and give it thee for money:
         for Naboth is not alive, but dead.

         21:16. And when Achab heard this, to wit, that Naboth was
         dead, he arose, and went down into the vineyard of Naboth,
         the Jezrahelite, to take possession of it.

         21:17. And the word of the Lord came to Elias, the Thesbite,
         saying:

         21:18. Arise, and go down to meet Achab, king of Israel,
         who is in Samaria: behold he is going down to the vineyard
         of Naboth, to take possession of it:

         21:19. And thou shalt speak to him, saying: Thus saith the
         Lord: Thou hast slain: moreover also thou hast taken
         possession.  And after these words thou shalt add: Thus
         saith the Lord: In this place, wherein the dogs have licked
         the blood of Naboth, they shall lick thy blood also.

         21:20. And Achab said to Elias: Hast thou found me thy
         enemy?  He said: I have found thee because thou art sold,
         to do evil in the sight of the Lord.

         Sold, to do evil in the sight, etc... That is, so addicted
         to evil, as if thou hadst sold thyself to the devil, to be
         his slave to work all kinds of evil.

         21:21. Behold I will bring evil upon thee, and I will cut
         down thy posterity, and I will kill of Achab him that
         pisseth against the wall, and him that is shut up, and the
         last in Israel.

         21:22. And I will make thy house like the house of Jeroboam
         the son of Nabat, and like the house of Baasa the son of
         Ahias: for what thou hast done to provoke me to anger, and
         for making Israel to sin.

         21:23.  And of Jezabel also, the Lord spoke, saying: The
         dogs shall eat Jezabel in the field of Jezrahel.

         21:24. If Achab die in the city, the dogs shall eat him:
         but if he die in the field, the birds of the air shall eat
         him.

         21:25. Now, there was not such another as Achab, who was
         sold to do evil in the sight of the Lord: for his wife,
         Jezabel, set him on,

         21:26. And he became abominable, insomuch that he followed
         the idols which the Amorrhites had made, whom the Lord
         destroyed before the face of the children of Israel.

         21:27. And when Achab had heard these words, he rent his
         garments, and put haircloth upon his flesh, and fasted, and
         slept in sackcloth, and walked with his head cast down.

         21:28. And the word of the Lord came to Elias, the
         Thesbite, saying:

         21:29. Hast thou not seen Achab humbled before me?
         therefore, because he hath humbled himself, for my sake, I
         will not bring the evil in his days, but in his son's days
         will I bring the evil upon his house.

         3 Kings Chapter 22

         Achab believing his false prophets, rather than Micheas, is
         slain in Ramoth Galaad.  Ochozias succeedeth him.  Good
         king Josaphat dieth, and his son Joram succeedeth him.

         22:1. And there passed three years without war between
         Syria and Israel.

         22:2. And in the third year, Josaphat, king of Juda, came
         down to the king of Israel.

         22:3. (And the king of Israel said to his servants: Know ye
         not that Ramoth Galaad is ours, and we neglect to take it
         out of the hand of the king of Syria?)

         22:4. And he said to Josaphat: Wilt thou come with me to
         battle to Ramoth Galaad?

         22:5. And Josaphat said to the king of Israel: As I am, so
         art thou: my people and thy people are one: and my horsemen
         are thy horsemen. And Josaphat said to the king of Israel:
         Inquire, I beseech thee, this day the word of the Lord.

         22:6. Then the king of Israel assembled the prophets, about
         four hundred men, and he said to them: Shall I go to
         Ramoth Galaad to fight, or shall I forbear?  They answered:
         Go up, and the Lord will deliver it into the hand of the
         king.

         22:7. And Josaphat said: Is there not here some prophet of
         the Lord, that we may inquire by him?

         22:8. And the king of Israel said to Josaphat. There is one
         man left, by whom we may inquire of the Lord; Micheas, the
         son of Jemla: but I hate him, for he doth not prophecy good
         to me, but evil. And Josaphat said: Speak not so, O king.

         22:9. Then the king of Israel called an eunuch, and said to
         him: Make haste, and bring hither Micheas, the son of
         Jemla.

         22:10. And the king of Israel, and Josaphat, king of Juda,
         sat each on his throne, clothed with royal robes, in a
         court, by the entrance of the gate of Samaria, and all the
         prophets prophesied before them.

         22:11. And Sedecias, thc son of Chanaana, made himself
         horns of iron, and said: Thus saith the Lord: With these
         shalt thou push Syria, till thou destroy it.

         22:12. And all the prophets prophesied in like manner,
         saying: Go up to Ramoth Galaad, and prosper, for the Lord
         will deliver it into the king's hands.

         22:13. And the messenger that went to call Micheas, spoke
         to him, saying: Behold the words of the prophets with one
         mouth declare good things to the king: let thy word,
         therefore, be like to theirs, and speak that which is good.

         22:14. But Micheas said to him: As the Lord liveth,
         whatsoever the Lord shall say to me, that will I speak.

         22:15. So he came to the king, and the king said to him:
         Micheas, shall we go to Ramoth Galaad to battle, or shall
         we forbear?  He answered him: Go up, and prosper, and the
         Lord shall deliver it into the king's hands.

         Go up, etc... This was spoken ironically, and by way of
         jesting at the flattering speeches of the false prophets:
         and so the king understood it, as appears by his adjuring
         Micheas, in the following verse, to tell him the truth in
         the name of the Lord.

         22:16. But the king said to him: I adjure thee again and
         again, that thou tell me nothing but that which is true, in
         the name of the Lord.

         22:17. And he said: I saw all Israel scattered upon the
         hills, like sheep that have no shepherd; and the Lord said:
         These have no master: let every man of them return to his
         house in peace.

         22:18. (Then the king of Israel said to Josaphat: Did I not
         tell thee, that he prophesieth no good to me, but always
         evil?)

         22:19. And he added and said: Hear thou, therefore, the
         word of the Lord: I saw the Lord sitting on his throne, and
         all the army of heaven standing by him on the right hand
         and on the left:

         22:20. And the Lord said: Who shall deceive Achab, king of
         Israel, that he may go up, and fall at Ramoth Galaad? And
         one spoke words of this manner, and another otherwise.

         The Lord said, etc... God standeth not in need of any
         counsellor; nor are we to suppose that things pass in
         heaven in the manner here described: but this
         representation was made to the prophet, to be delivered by
         him in a manner adapted to the common ways and notions of
         men.

         22:21. And there came forth a spirit, and stood before the
         Lord, and said: I will deceive him. And the Lord said to
         him: By what means?

         22:22. And he said: I will go forth, and be a lying spirit,
         in the mouth of all his prophets. And the Lord said: Thou
         shalt deceive him, and shalt prevail: go forth, and do so.

         Go forth, and do so... This was not a command, but a
         permission: for God never ordaineth lies; though he often
         permitteth the lying spirit to deceive those who love not
         the truth. 2 Thess. 2.10. And in this sense it is said in
         the following verse, The Lord hath given a lying spirit in
         the mouth of all thy prophets.

         22:23. Now, therefore, behold the Lord hath given a lying
         spirit in the mouth of all thy prophets that are here, and
         the Lord hath spoken evil against thee.

         22:24. And Sedecias, the son of Chanaana, came, and struck
         Micheas on the cheek, and said: Hath then the spirit of the
         Lord left me, and spoken to thee?

         22:25. And Micheas said: Thou shalt see in the day when
         thou shalt go into a chamber within a chamber to hide
         thyself.

         Go into a chamber, etc... This happened when he heard the
         king was slain, and justly apprehended that he should be
         punished for his false prophecy.

         22:26. And the king of Israel said: Take Micheas and let
         him abide with Amon, the governor of the city, and with
         Joas, the son of Amalech;

         22:27. And tell them: Thus saith the king: Put this man in
         prison, and feed him with bread of affliction, and water of
         distress till I return in peace.

         22:28. And Micheas said: If thou return in peace, the Lord
         hath not spoken by me. And he said: Hear, all ye people.

         22:29. So the king of Israel, and Josaphat, king of Juda,
         went up to Ramoth-Galaad.

         22:30. And the king of Israel said to Josaphat: Take thy
         armour, and go into the battle, and put on thy own
         garments.  But the king of Israel changed his dress, and
         went into the battle.

         22:31. And the king of Syria had commanded the two and
         thirty captains of the chariots, saying: You shall not
         fight against any, small or great, but against the king of
         Israel only.

         22:32. So when the captains of the chariots saw Josaphat,
         they suspected that he was the king of Israel, and making a
         violent assault, they fought against him: and Josaphat
         cried out.

         22:33. And the captains of the chariots perceived that he
         was not the king of Israel, and they turned away from him.

         22:34. And a certain man bent his bow, shooting at a
         venture, and chanced to strike the king of Israel, between
         the lungs and the stomach. But he said to the driver of his
         chariot: Turn thy hand, and carry me out of the army, for I
         am grievously wounded.

         22:35. And the battle was fought that day, and the king of
         Israel stood in his chariot against the Syrians, and he
         died in the evening: and the blood ran out of the wound
         into the midst of the chariot.

         22:36. And the herald proclaimed through all the army,
         before the sun set, saying: Let every man return to his own
         city, and to his own country.

         22:37. And the king died, and was carried into Samaria: and
         they buried the king in Samaria.

         22:38. And they washed his chariot in the pool of Samaria
         and the dogs licked up his blood, and they washed the reins
         according to the word of the Lord which he had spoken.

         22:39. But the rest of the acts of Achab, and all that he
         did, and the house of ivory that he made, and all the
         cities that he built, are they not written in the book of
         the words of the days of the kings of Israel?

         22:40. So Achab slept with his fathers; and Ochozias, his
         son, reigned in his stead.

         22:41. But Josaphat, the son of Asa, began to reign over
         Juda, in the fourth year of Acbab, king of Israel.

         22:42. He was five and thirty years old when he began to
         reign, and he reigned five and twenty years in Jerusalem:
         the name of his mother was Azuba, the daughter of Salai.

         22:43. And he walked in all the way of Asa, his father, and
         he declined not from it: and he did that which was right in
         the sight of the Lord.

         22:44. Nevertheless, he took not away the high places for
         as yet the people offered sacrifice, and burnt incense in
         the high places.

         He took not away, etc... He left some of the high places,
         viz., those in which they worshipped the true God: but took
         away all others, 2 Par. 17.6, and note ver. 14 of chap. 15.
         3 Kings.

         22:45. And Josaphat had peace with the king of Israel.

         22:46. But the rest of the acts of Josaphat, and his works
         which he did, and his battles, are they not written in the
         book of the words of the days of the kings of Juda?

         22:47. And the remnant also of the effeminate, who remained
         in the days of Asa, his father, he took out of the land.

         22:48. And there was then no king appointed in Edom.

         22:49. But king Josaphat made navies on the sea, to sail
         into Ophir for gold: but they could not go, for the ships
         were broken in Asiongaber.

         22:50. Then Ochozias, the son of Achab, said to Josaphat:
         Let my servants go with thy servants in the ships.  And
         Josaphat would not.

         Would not... He had been reprehended before for admitting
         such a partner: and therefore would have no more to do with
         him.

         22:51. And Josaphat slept with his fathers, and was buried
         with them in the city of David, his father: and Joram, his
         son, reigned in his stead.

         22:52. And Ochozias, the son of Achab, began to reign over
         Israel, in Samaria, in the seventeenth year of Josaphat,
         king of Juda, and he reigned over Israel two years.

         22:53. And he did evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked
         in the way of his father and his mother, and in the way of
         Jeroboam, the son of Nabat, who made Israel to sin.

         22:54. He served also Baal, and worshipped him, and
         provoked the Lord, the God of Israel, according to all that
         his father had done.

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