Dictionary: Trust
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One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... complete contempt for his father. By sleeping with the concubines in a tent pitched on the roof, he also ensures that all Israel knows what he is doing. Given the skill and the reputation of Ahithophel, it comes as a shock to see his advice rejected in 17:1–14. Ahithophel recommends that Absalom pursue David immediately, before he has a chance to escape very far or to organize his forces. If he had killed David quickly, then David’s supporters would likely have paid allegiance to Absalom and the nation ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... loud enough to make the earth quake. The tremors can be felt as far away as Adonijah’s banquet, an event taking place simultaneously with Solomon’s anointing ceremony. Jonathan son of Abiathar (of the line of Eli and thus acquainted with rejection!) brings the crushing news (1:41–48) to Adonijah, exhaustively detailing the accession of Solomon. This breathless report disperses the guests and sends Adonijah to the horns of the altar, setting the stage for a confrontation between the two brothers (1:49 ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... force. But Solomon is not the only one to notice Jeroboam: for no specified reason, Jeroboam receives an oracle, delivered by Ahijah of Shiloh. Ahijah has no introduction and has not appeared previously in the narrative, but his hometown of Shiloh is certainly acquainted with rejected houses and divine judgment (see 1 Sam. 4:12–22; cf. Ps. 78:60; Jer. 7:12, 14). The crux of Ahijah’s oracle is transmitted by means of a wordplay, as he tears Jeroboam’s robe (Hebrew salmah) to underscore the tearing of ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... it difficult to happily dwell under fig and vine. The advice of the elders to Rehoboam indicates that the northerners’ claim is not unreasonable, and the elders’ advocacy of servant leadership—surely not something Solomon ever embodied—reveals their wisdom. That Rehoboam rejects their counsel and secures a second opinion from his cronies (described as “young men,” in contrast to the elders) does not speak well of his political acumen. The cronies are also crude, as it is more likely that the NIV ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... : God hides his prophet deep in the queen’s territory (cf. Luke 4:25–26). Such themes, however, are threatened when the widow’s son takes ill (17:17–24). Yet the son’s restoration is accomplished through prophetic mediation and thus encourages a rejection of the royal paradigm espoused by Ahab and Jezebel: what rulers (of any nation) are ultimately helpless to give, the prophetic word achieves. In this scene the reader hears the testimony of a non-Israelite about the God of Israel and his chosen ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... arranged hair, she includes in her greeting to Jehu the term “Zimri” (see 1 Kings 16:15–20). By alluding to Zimri and his one-week reign of terror, Jezebel invites Jehu to partner with her if he wants a longer kingship. Jehu categorically rejects her offer, and some eunuchs duly throw her out the window, and she is trampled by oncoming horses and chariotry. It almost seems an afterthought when Jehu finally gives orders to bury her, and only scant remains can be found, giving Jehu one more opportunity ...

1 Chronicles 28:1-21
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of the land. David then turns to Solomon in 28:9–10, calling him to acknowledge and serve God with all his being and identifying the two possibilities before Solomon (seek or forsake) and their attendant results (finding God and being rejected by God). These two possibilities echo the “two ways” placed before Israel as they were poised to enter the promised land (Deut. 30:15). Yahweh’s omniscience discourages any hypocrisy and ensures a just divine response. Fundamental to the service Solomon ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... reform (11:13–17) comes divine blessing in the form of military fortification (11:5–12) and abundant progeny (11:18–23). It is interesting that the religious reform is linked to the return of priests and Levites from the north who rejected Jeroboam’s illegitimate religious innovations (see further 1 Kings 12:25–33). This emphasis on the key role played by priestly and especially Levitical figures is typical of the Chronicler. Their return suggests that already in this second phase of Rehoboam’s ...

2 Chronicles 25:1-28
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... . This arouses divine anger, and so again Yahweh sends a prophet to confront the king. This time, however, Amaziah ignores the divine warning and ensures divine judgment. Ironically, this judgment will come through the hand of the northern kingdom, whose mercenaries are rejected by Yahweh in 25:5–12 and will be prompted by Amaziah’s vengeful challenge of the northern king Joash. The fateful battle takes place at Beth Shemesh, which guarded Jerusalem from its vantage point in the Sorek Valley along the ...

2 Chronicles 33:1-20
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of Jerusalem (33:4, 7) is a poignant reminder that ultimately it is not God who has failed Israel, but Israel who has failed God and so experiences exile (33:8). What follows in 33:10–17 is a classic depiction of repentance. After rejecting God’s gracious warning through his prophetic word (33:10), Manasseh is severely punished by Yahweh through the Assyrians, who take him off to Babylon, a region under their control (33:11). There, however, Manasseh has a change of heart, described by the Chronicler ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... 5 (520 BC) until the early part of Artaxerxes’ reign, before Nehemiah is sent to Jerusalem (445 BC). Why does the author skip ahead chronologically? He apparently thought it important to emphasize the continuing opposition, possibly to justify the decision to reject the neighbors’ help and to emphasize the significance of the achievements recorded in chapters 5 and 6. The opposition described here is opposition to the building of the wall. But apart from verse 6, details of the activity during the reign ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the Jews have given to Tattenai (5:15). The answer from King Darius (6:6–12) is very direct and very detailed. The phrase “stay away from there” (6:6) translates a legal term that indicates the accusations against the Jews have been rejected. Comparable documents from the Persian treasury to other subject peoples include similar details. However, the specific mention of the wheat, salt, wine, and oil to be used in the Jewish sacrifices (6:9) may suggest that a Jewish scribe helped with the details ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... must have been familiar with these Scriptures. The final paragraph of the prayer (9:13–15) represents Ezra’s plea for mercy, although not in the form of a direct petition to God. Rather, he recognizes before God how evil the people have been, how unreasonable their rejection of God’s commands. Ezra confesses that God has shown more mercy than the people deserve; what they really deserve is punishment for their present disobedience. Because of this, he throws himself and his people on God’s mercy.

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the Apocrypha, the Midrash, the gnostics, and the patristic writings (Gordis 1936, 86). Eliphaz’s point is clear: Job is arrogant. Age and communal consensus are the pillars of wisdom and understanding. How dare one lone mortal take these on, and do so by rejecting soft-spoken divine consolation with raging outbursts (15:11–13). Eliphaz again draws from his first speech (4:17–19) to reiterate that no human is perfect (15:14–16). Job has been declaring himself innocent (9:21; 13:23). Eliphaz has been ...

Job 8:1-22
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... were but for a season. Children are now uprooted, and Job himself will likely be uprooted if he does not return to God. 8:20–22 · Here Bildad clearly articulates what his rhetorical questions had in mind in Job 8:3: God does not reject the blameless or strengthen the evildoer. Echoing his earlier plea to call on God to correct the wrong (8:5–7), Bildad, in traditional psalmlike rhetoric and categories, addresses Job directly and again affirms the possibility of a bright, restored future with enemies ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
Eliphaz has just argued that Job is arrogant in his rejection of conventional wisdom, that it is the wicked who suffer torment, distress, and ruin and receive it in full (15:32). Job’s opening remarks (16:1–6) ridicule his friends: “Will your long-winded speeches never end?” (16:3). He too, if he were in their shoes, could say ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... position of Job’s friends. Job himself trembles at the implications. The wicked live on in prosperity (21:7–16). They live to old age, seeing generations of children. They are secure, never feeling God’s judgment. They enjoy life thoroughly and consciously reject God and God’s ways. God does nothing. What tradition affirms as a rule Job offers as exception (21:17–21). For tradition, even if in one generation a wicked person does not receive full retribution, the next generation will. But Job will ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... instance, insight to understand his crisis. The friends have maintained, particularly Eliphaz in Job 4:6, that pious reverence (yirah) confidently invites God’s favor. Not only has Job vigorously argued against the traditional understanding, but he himself has teasingly admitted his rejection of traditional reverence of God (6:14). Job is not buying the cliché. The cliché, further, echoes the opening line of Job (1:1). There Job “feared God and shunned evil.” In Job 28:28, the fear of the Lord is ...

Psalm 1:1-6
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... play out on earth and how it ultimately will turn out in eternity. It establishes a key theme traced throughout the Psalms: the righteous (those committed to God) contrasted to the wicked (those with little interest in God). To experience true happiness, believers reject the ways of those who do not serve God and embrace God’s truth, considering the implications of truth for all aspects of life (1:1–2). Doing so brings stability, refreshment, and fruitfulness to life (1:3). Following the world makes one ...

Psalm 2:1-12
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the relationship between God and his appointed king (Father and Son—2:6–7). This king will reign over the earth with absolute power (2:8–9). All people are urged to yield themselves joyfully to the Lord and to his Son (2:10–12). Verse 12 echoes Psalm 1—rejecting God’s Son brings ultimate destruction (1:6); embracing him brings blessing (1:1–2).

Psalm 10:1-18
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the enemies of his people to inflict terrifying suffering on them over long periods of time. The psalmist begins with a question: Where are you, God, when I need you most? The enemy is boastful and self-absorbed, rejoicing in greed and rejecting God (10:2–4). This foul-mouthed enemy sneers at God’s people, destroying the helpless—seemingly never experiencing tragedy, only success (10:5–10), and somehow escaping God’s judgment (10:11–13). Despite describing two divergent pathways of life, the ...

Psalm 43:1-5
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... —there are more commands and entreaties (significantly more considering the relative sizes of the two psalms). In the parallel verses (43:2 and 42:9, respectively), “stronghold” (i.e., “fortress”) evokes more forceful imagery than does “rock,” and “rejected” is more actively intentional than “forgotten.” Even the word “go,” in “Why must I go about mourning” (43:2), suggests a pacing back and forth, an agitation, rather than mere motion (42:9). In Psalm 43, the psalmist implores ...

Psalm 53:1-6
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
Appropriately placed between two psalms in which David scathingly denounces heinous plots and acts against God’s people, Psalm 53 deplores the character and dealings of those who reject God, and it applauds God’s righteous judgment of such people. Psalm 53 essentially replicates Psalm 14. Like other psalms in book 2, Psalm 53 favors the use of Elohim (God) over that of Yahweh (Lord); wherever the name Yahweh appears in Psalm 14, Psalm 53 either does not include ...

Psalm 78:1-72
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... establishing his dwelling place among his people and choosing his servant David to shepherd his people; 78:65–72). In between, Asaph records God’s miraculous works on Israel’s behalf (78:12–16, 23–29, 42–55, 65–66), Israel’s trivializing of those miracles and rejection of God’s word (78:8–11, 17–20, 22, 32, 36–37, 40–42, 56–58), God’s merciful but powerful judgment against his people (78:21, 30–31, 33, 38–39, 59–64), and Israel’s repentance, short-lived as it was (78:34 ...

Psalm 97:1-12
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... :8). The forces of evil are no match for him and are in fact subject to him (97:7). Thus, God’s people delight in him because he is greater than any other power this world knows or serves (97:8–9). The psalmist then commands God’s people to reject the world’s ways and to joyfully embrace God, who protects them against that world (97:10–12).