(D11) The Untold Story of the Last Days of the Kingdom of Israel
14/03/2024
00:40:58
The Untold Story of the
Kingdom of Judah
Oded Lipschits
Part D: Part Four: The Untold Story of the History
of the Kingdom of Israel
The
account of the history of the Kingdom of Israel in the last generation of its
existence, starting from the short reign of Zechariah, the son of Jeroboam II (746
BCE) until the destruction of the Kingdom (722 BCE), is a short, dry and
focused account, which tells mainly of the murders of the kings and the
frequent changes of power in the kingdom. This is a biased literary
description, the purpose of which is to present the rapid deterioration of the
Kingdom of Israel towards the destruction as a chain of murders and dynasty
changes right up to the destruction. The historiographer consciously chooses
not to use the motif of the prophecy and its fulfillment in the description of
this period, and it can be assumed that the rapid changes of dynasties and the
destruction of the kingdom overshadowed all of this. It seems that during the
last generation in the history of the Kingdom of Israel, the Deuteronomistic
historiographers had only a few sources, which included only the lists of kings
with the chronological information contained within them, without additional
sources, such as prophetic stories, and with very little information that could
be linked to the history of the Kingdom of Israel from the parallel histories
of the kings of Judah. Even about the great Assyrian campaigns conducted
against the kings of Israel, about which modern historians have information
from the Assyrian inscriptions, the ancient historiographers had only little
information, likely only what was recorded in the lists of kings.
Therefore,
the description of the kings of Israel during this period was so reduced and
remained technical and focused on the acts of murder and the changing of
dynasties, until the description of the destruction and exile, which received a
broad theological explanation. According to this explanation, the destruction
came due to the sins of Jeroboam and the continuous sin of all the kings of
Israel, until God’s final decision to destroy the kingdom. In this way, a
historical circle is closed that begins with the division of the monarchy in
the days of Jeroboam, closes with the detailed description of the days of
Jeroboam II and ends with the rapid deterioration into destruction, exile and
the final disappearance of the Kingdom of Israel from the stage of history.