2 Kings 1:1-18 · The Lord’s Judgement of Ahaziah
Vendetta
2 Kings 1:1-18
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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You probably all know the play by Shakespeare called “Romeo and Juliet.” Even if you aren’t a Shakespeare fan, or even if you detest trying to read an older version of English, modernized versions of the play in the form of movies and references have made the story timeless.

For those of you who may not know the whole story, it centers around two families, the Capulets and the Montagues. Another family, the Verona family is in different ways tied to both. But the famous feud takes place between the Capulets and Montagues. Within that context, Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet fall in love, and the story ends tragically with the death of both young people.

Feuds between families were all too common in Shakespeare’s day. Arguments over property, land, women, and family honor often escalated into terrible tantrums and violence. It often came down to what you might call “unreasonable envy.” Because the families were “sworn enemies,” challenges would be issued for any infraction, even if misconstrued.

This kind of “bad blood” between people is what we call a “vendetta.” It’s based on the Latin word vendigo meaning vengeance. It is a breach of relationships, in which each swears the other an enemy and spends prolonged time each one-upping the other in a twisting spiral of blood, and ultimate doom.

But really, it’s an obsession. Each becomes so obsessed with vengeance upon the other that it drives them to all kinds of outrageous acts. It’s a kind of “craziness” you might say that makes people sink to the lowest possible state of humanness. Think of the Hatfield and McCoy feud which became a war.

In 1954 William Golding wrote a book about a similar state of human fallenness called “Lord of the Flies.” In the story, several boys are stranded on a desert island for a period of time, and in that time, as they face hunger, envy, vie for power, and disagree over strategies, they descend quickly into savagery, attacking one another and mistaking each other for a “beast.”

Both stories show the all-too-common tendency of human beings to succumb to their “beastly” cravings –anger, envy, power, and revenge. The title of Golding’s book comes from 2 Kings 1, the story of Ahaziah and his bid for restoration to Baalzebub, the god of Ekron (of the Philistines) called “the lord of flies” or the “god of dung.”

Ahaziah of Israel has fallen and injured himself and is lying on a mat in need of healing. But instead of calling upon YHWH, he asks his men to petition Baalzebub instead. We don’t know from the story whether he feels that his misfortune was somehow due to this Baalzebub’s influence. Perhaps he attributes his terrible fall to some kind of “evil” or underhanded power of an alien god. Often in those days, civilizations would “demonize” each other’s gods and see them as adversaries. But for whatever reason, Ahaziah does this, and as a result, he receives a message from Elijah that because he has not appealed to YHWH for healing, he in fact, will not be healed but will be relegated to his mat forever until his death.

In a sense, Ahaziah allows himself to appeal to his fallen nature. Instead of putting his trust in YHWH, the God of Israel, he seeks instead to appeal to a baser spirit. And in this, he dishonors himself.

Ahaziah may have been looking at the Philistine god Baalzebub as an “adversary.” Adversary is the way the Hebrew people described the forces of one’s baser emotions that would drive their inclinations toward bad deeds.^ It also described a real “adversary.” But as Jesus would later point out in his discussion with some Pharisees, “it is craziness to be an adversary against yourself!” Yet in a sense, at one time or another, we all do it. We don’t always act in our own best interests. Sometimes, we do rely on our lesser inclinations, and they always result in the worst outcomes. We are our own worst enemy.

A similar situation happened with Saul. In our scriptures for today, we see Saul growing more and more unhinged over David’s victories in the battlefield. Saul is jealous. He thinks David is garnering more attention and praise than he is. He is idolizing himself and targeting David as his “adversary.” As a result, Saul creates a harsh vendetta against David and tries to kill him at nearly every turn.

Saul is described as having a temper, and he displays a kind of off-the-wall craziness in his obsession with David. He is haunted by David’s achievements. He imagines all kinds of scenarios in which David has opposed him, even though not true. This causes Saul to act out in ways that ultimately lead to his loss of the crown –and his covenant place with God.

Jealousy, envy, vendettas serve only to turn against the one who acts upon them. While a “vendetta” may serve to mean a revenge against “dishonor” between families, in reality, a vendetta simply serves as a means of dishonoring one’s self. And dishonoring God.

Soren Kirkegaard, the 19th century Danish theologian, said that “sin is building your identity on anything but God.”* For the Jewish people, sin meant, “missing” (or miscomprehending/misapplying) the will of God.

Envy, like the kind that goes all the way back in the scriptures to Cain, is like that “wolf crouching at your door.” It creates in us a “crazy spirit” –an adversarial kind of spirit that makes us oppose others, break relationships, defy ourselves, and mistrust God. In carrying out a vendetta, you become an adversary to yourself, to your own kin, and to God.

It isn’t the god Baalzebub who effects evil upon a life, but one’s own spirit that double crosses one’s own self by allowing envious and jealous inclinations to guide one’s actions. I call this a “baalzebul spirit.” The irony is, the more you form a vendetta against someone else, the more you undermine yourself.

Jesus runs across the irony of this kind of baalzebub or baalzubul spirit in his dealings with Pharisees when he speaks in the synagogue in Nazareth. They accuse him of healing others by way of using powers that come from an evil source or from a foreign god.

Jesus firmly defends himself from this accusation, noting that no one can do good by means of evil. If he were wielding the power of Baalzubul, he would not be doing the healing he was doing. Likewise, he hurls the accusation back at them, noting that a “divided house cannot stand.” And that it is silly for an adversary to fight against oneself.

The more the Pharisees become obsessed with a vendetta against Jesus, the more they spiral into a pit of their own making, swimming in their own “baalzebul spirit.”

Jesus warns them: the ultimate sin is blasphemy against the presence and works of the Holy Spirit. This sin ensures that one is not trusting in God and not recognizing the presence of God. This sin removes one from relationship with God, and it defies God’s power and glory. As Peter was told in his own vision, “What God has blessed, let no one say is unclean!”

The scriptures themselves reveal his message:

Saul curses himself in trying to kill the one whom God has chosen. The Pharisees curse themselves in denying the Holy Spirit and trying to deny the one whom God has chosen. Ahaziah does the same. He curses himself when he calls upon Baalzebub instead of YHWH to heal him.

Sin is denying our relationship with God. Building an identity on our own desires, cravings, wants and envy instead of trusting God to provide for us, to care for us, and to choose to bless others, as God will. And in doing so, we condemn ourselves.

Many of Jesus’ parables tell the same message: we can get consumed by our envy of others, obsessed with our own ideas of fairness, and goodness, and how things “should” be. We can become so crazed with power or fame or money that we do things we could never imagine ourselves doing.

That’s crazy. But that’s what a vendetta is…..a crazy, blinding vengeance. Perhaps that’s why Jesus spent most of his ministry calling people to open their eyes and “see.”

See God. See self. See others, not with the colored glasses of vengeance and envy, but with the loving shades of God’s merciful and healing and forgiving love.

Who is your satan? What feelings inside of you become your own adversaries to leading a happy and fulfilled life? Do you undermine your own happiness with feelings of anger at someone else? Does envy eat at your spirit, so that you cannot enjoy the things you have? Is a sense of “unfairness” gnawing away at your relationship with your siblings?

What is your baalzebub?

Today, I invite you to the altar to pray, to ask Jesus to remove that spirit from your heart, and to instill in you, to restore in you, a spirit of love, hope, mercy, and joy. May you put your trust in Him, and only in Him. For He and only He can bring you rest –especially from yourself.


^See hebrewwordlessons.com

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Story of Ahaziah’s Bid to Baalzebub in Samaria (2 Kings 1)

Minor Text

The Egyptians Do Not Heed Moses’ and Aaron’s Miracles (Exodus 7-11)

The Story of David, Goliath and Saul’s Vendetta (1 Samuel 16-19)

Psalm 1: Do Not Follow the Wicked

Psalm 37: Do Not Fret About the Wicked

Psalm 151 (Septuagint): David’s Deed

Psalm 9: God’s Justice

Psalm 115: Glory to God

Psalms 11, 96, and 97: The Lord’s Righteousness

The Root of Jesse and the Coming Restoration (Isaiah 42)

The Lord’s Servant in Whom God’s Spirit Dwells (Isaiah 42)

Jesus is Accused of being Beelzebul (Matthew 9:27-9:38 and 12:15-12:50; Mark 3:20-3:35; Luke 11:14-11:36 and 8:19-21)

Jesus is Lord (John 5:18-5:47)

Stephen’s Speech About Loyalty to Jesus and His Subsequent Stoning (Acts 7)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner