Kings and Chronicles, Part 1: The Demise of Kingship
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Lesson OneRise and Reign of Solomon (1 Kings 1-8)20 Activities|1 Assessment
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Kings 1-8
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In | Workbook: 1 Kings 1-2
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In | Introduction to Kings and Chronicles
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In | Reign and Succession of Solomon
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In | Workbook: David’s Final Charge to Solomon
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In | The Wisdom of Solomon?
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In | Solomon’s Rule over the Promised Land
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In | The Temple and the Palace
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Behind | iMap: Solomon’s Temple
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Behind | Onsite: Cedars and Royal Pretense: Ronit Maoz, Biblical Botanist
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Behind | Onsite: God’s Address on Earth - Edfu Temple, Upper Egypt
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Behind | Onsite: The Holy of Holies - The Edfu Temple: Egyptologist Essam Zeid
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Behind | Kingship
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Behind | Solomon’s Building Projects
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Behind | Phoenicia
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In Front | The "Wisdom" of Solomon
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In Front | Workbook: When Good Things Go Bad
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In Front | Solomon’s Mimicry
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson TwoSolomon’s Fall (1 Kings 9-11)13 Activities|2 Assessments
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Kings 9-11
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In | Workbook: Deuteronomy’s Law of the King and Solomon
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In | Preparing for the Downfall
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In | Workbook: Explaining Solomon’s Sin
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In | Workbook: Solomon’s Reign vs. the King’s Law, Part 2
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In | Workbook: Qualifications of David’s Covenant
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In | David's Covenant
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Behind | Egypt
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Behind | Onsite: Solomon's Fleet of Ships
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Behind | 360 View: Failed Fleet of Ships at Ezion-Geber
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In Front | Workbook: Legacies and Finishing Well
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson ThreeOverview of 1 and 2 Kings (1 Kings 12–16, 2 Kings 9–17)33 Activities|1 Assessment
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Kings 12–16, 2 Kings 9–17
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In | Workbook: The Loss of the Promised Land
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In | The Tragedy of Kings
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In | The Sins of Jeroboam
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In | Workbook: The Rationale for the Fall of the North
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In | The Kings of Israel and Judah
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In | Prophets and Kings: 800-400 BC
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In | Workbook: Good and Evil Kings
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In | Good and Evil Kings
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In | Literary Patterns/Royal Summaries, Part 1
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In | Literary Patterns/Royal Summaries, Part 2
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In | The Covenant and Prophetic History
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In | Workbook: Anticipating the Falls
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In | Deuteronomy and Deuteronomic History: Dr. Daniel Block
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Behind | Shechem, Bethel and Dan
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Behind | Onsite: Reflections on Jeroboam’s Religious Revolution
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Behind | Onsite: The Beginning of the End - Shishak Attacks Rehoboam: Steve Wunderink
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Behind | Workbook: Civil War and the End of the North
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Behind | Civil War
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Behind | Moving Toward the End of the North
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Behind | Annals of Shalmaneser III
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Behind | Assyrian Terror
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Behind | The Fall of the North
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Behind | Onsite: The Siloam Pool and Hezekiah’s Tunnel
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Behind | Annals of Sargon II
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Behind | Assyrian Invasion
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Behind | iMap: Assyrian Invasion
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In Front | Typology
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In Front | Types
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In Front | Workbook: Reflections - Pursuit of Perfection, Part 1
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In Front | Workbook: Reflections - Pursuit of Perfection, Part 2
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FourThe Prophet Elijah (1 Kings 17 – 2 Kings 1)26 Activities|2 Assessments
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 1 Kings 17 – 2 Kings 1
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In | Workbook: Elijah and Ahab, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Elijah and Ahab, Part 2
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In | Workbook: Elijah on Sinai, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Elijah on Sinai, Part 2
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In | Workbook: Elijah on Sinai, Part 3
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In | Elijah on Sinai
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In | Prophets: Predictors, Encouragement, Warning and Miracles
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In | Workbook: On the Prophetic Institution
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In | Ahab, Jezebel and Elijah
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In | Elijah at Horeb
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In | Elijah and Elisha Parallels
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Behind | Samaria
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Behind | 360 View: Samaria, City of Temporary Affluence
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Behind | Samaria: The Capital of the North
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Behind | Onsite: Samaria, Capital of the North - Case Study in Syncretism
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Behind | Onsite: Elijah Confronts the Prophets of Baal - Background for the Contest on Mt. Carmel
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Behind | Onsite: Terror and Intimacy on Mt. Sinai - Elijah at the "Cleft of the Rock"
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Behind | Onsite: Vegetable Gardens and Royalty - Ahab and Jezebel's Mistake
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Behind | Naboth’s Vineyard
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Behind | Onsite: Tel Jezreel and Valley
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In Front | Onsite: Conditioning the Heart of a Prophet - Elijah in Sidon before Mt. Carmel
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In Front | Affluenza
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In Front | Workbook: When Appearances Are Deceiving
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Lesson FiveThe Prophet Elisha (2 Kings 2–9)17 Activities
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Getting Started
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Lesson Text: 2 Kings 2–9
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In | Workbook: Elisha Story Arc, Part 1
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In | Workbook: Elisha Story Arc, Part 2
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In | Succession at the Jordan
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In | A Ministry of Compassion and Judgment
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In | Workbook: The Ministries of Elisha
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In | Workbook: Elisha’s Spring
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Behind | Onsite: Sweet Water in Jericho - A Visit to Elisha's Spring
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Behind | Onsite: Prophet of Compassion - Elisha's Banquet for the Arameans in Dothan
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In Front | Messianic Prototypes
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In Front | Onsite: Elisha the Healer
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In Front | Workbook: Caring for the Outsider
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In Front | Workbook: Elisha and the Dead Child
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In Front | Elisha and the Dead Child
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In Front | Workbook: “Go up, Baldhead!”
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Wrap-Up
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Getting Started
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
Behind | Solomon’s Building Projects
And this is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon drafted to build the house of the LORD and his own house and the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem and Hazor and Megiddo and Gezer.
1 Kings 9:15 (ESV)
We learn in 1 Kings that Solomon was engaged in a number of major building projects besides the temple and his palace. This carousel takes you through a brief tour of some of those locations. Of special note are the similar gate constructions in Gezer, Megiddo and Hazor, all from Solomon’s era.

Solomon built and fortified three cities on the major trade route. Megiddo and Gezer were extensions of control into areas Israel had struggled to control.

Megiddo was a focal point of Solomon’s construction. Megiddo was very sophisticated: its gate and defenses show some of the “Solomonic Footprint.”

Since the days of Joshua and the settlement of the promised land, Hazor was an important site for ancient Israel. This trend continued In Solomon’s day.

Like Gezer and Megiddo, Hazor has been described as exhibiting the “Solomon Footprint,” with a chambered gate and a casemate wall encompassing the city.

At Megiddo, archaeologists found what most consider Solomon’s stables (1 Kings 10:26). The city was a focal point of his building campaigns.

The Bible tells us that Solomon received Gezer as a wedding gift from Pharaoh when he married his daughter. This site shares the “Solomonic footprint.”

Soldiers would hide in chambers behind the outer gates to prepare to repel invaders. To come in, you had to go through three sets of chambers and gates.

A close-up of the so-called “Solomonic Gate” at Gezer. This gate functioned with a casemate wall that encompassed the city.