Daily Bread for Apr 30, 1 Chr 1-2
1 & 2 Chronicles were
originally one volume. 1 Chr focuses on the history of Judah, the Southern
Kingdom, and the reign of David & Solomon (roughly from 1000 BC to
about 930 BC). It stresses David's heart of worship and gives us the plans for
the temple which will be built by Solomon.
While most of the events and people
depicted in the two volumes of Chronicles are also covered in the Samuel/Kings
four-volume series, the Chronicler puts a heavy emphasis on interpreting the
history of Israel from a theological perspective. The Chronicler has the
benefit of time. As he looks back
on historical events, he can be more analytical as to how they impacted
Israel’s relationship with God. As such, much time is spent on the temple as a
place of covenant worship, the covenant itself, the results of breaking
it, prayers, and speeches. In other words, the Chronicler is able to look back
and interpret the meaning of the event of history rather than merely record
them.
The genealogies documented in the
first three chapters of 1 Chr show us Israel's place in history and the
continuity of God's plan of redemption, starting in the Garden, weaving its way
through the first settlers, then Noah, then Abram.
God's blessing would come through
Abram, then eventually through David. We see not only how God ordered the birth
of those He would use but how He designated where they would live. Notice that
many of the names mentioned are also names of cities and countries. Many towns
and kingdoms take their names from the first notable person who settled there.
Here's a map of David and Solomon's
kingdoms as of the 10th century B.C.
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