Have you ever known someone who seemingly had everything going for them, but then they threw it all away because of a very bad and foolish decision? Many of us know of someone like that, or perhaps that person is yourself. In our Scripture for today we will take a look at someone who had been abundantly blessed by God, but then willfully threw it all away through the wrong decisions he made. Let’s take a look at who this is, and what his wrong decisions and choices were.
The person that I am referring to is King Solomon. He was the son of King David, and succeeded him to the throne after he died. Solomon was a young man when he came to the throne. Twice in his life he had very specific encounters with Yahweh, the God of Israel. The first time was shortly after coming to the throne (I Kings 3:5-14), and the second was after he had dedicated the Temple which he had built (I Kings 9:1-9). During this first encounter with God, the Lord asked him what he would like, as He would give him anything he requested. Rather than asking for riches, a long life, or victory over all of his enemies, Solomon asked for wisdom to effectively rule over the people. God was so pleased with Solomon’s request, that not only did He give him more wisdom than anyone else, but He also gave him everything that he hadn’t asked for.
So where did Solomon go wrong? That can be answered in one word - compromise. God had given the people the Law through His servant Moses, and one of the laws was that the people were not to take any foreign, pagan spouses to marry (Deuteronomy 7:1-4). However, Solomon thought that he could compromise. As we read in our Scripture, he married many foreign women (vs. 1). Perhaps he thought that since these were royal women, these marriages could be considered okay for the political alliances they would bring. These were not merely political alliances, as he had affection and attachment to these pagan women, which would soon lead to his spiritual downfall. Solomon had misplaced affection. Affection is never morally neutral. Loving what God forbids leads inevitably to spiritual decline.
Solomon, with this compromise, was in direct disobedience to God’s Word (vs. 2). God had clearly spoken. The king’s sin was not ignorance, but was willful disregard to the Lord’s Word. God had warned that these pagan women would turn their heart away from Him. Solomon believed that he could handle this compromise, but he couldn’t. No believer is strong enough to resist the consequences of disobeying God’s clear commands.
This wasn’t just a little compromise, or a one-time occurrence. Solomon married not just one, two, or even three pagan wives. He married 700 of them, along with 300 concubines (vs. 3). This was not merely excessive, it was rebellious. This was also in direct violation of Deuteronomy 17:17, where God said the king was not to have multiple wives. This was not an innocent action that didn’t really matter. Sin always grows. What begins as a small compromise becomes a dominating force.
These women turned Solomon’s heart away from Yahweh. The heart is the battleground. Solomon did not lose his wisdom, he lost his devotion to Yahweh (vs. 4). A divided heart is the beginning of apostasy. Compromise begins when we ignore God’s instructions and follow the world’s practices. He might have thought that every other king had foreign wives, why not him? Then we start loving people, activities, or other things more than we love God, and soon we find ourselves pursuing what He has forbidden. If we don’t heed God’s discipline, we’re in danger of losing what He intended for our lives, just as what happened with Solomon.
The worst thing that came through Solomon’s compromise with marrying these pagan women was that he allowed them to set up altars to their heathen, pagan gods, and not too long after that Solomon began joining these wives in their worship of these gods and goddesses. He didn’t merely tolerate idolatry, he participated in it (vs. 5-7). Ashtoreth was a goddess of fertility and sexual immorality. Milcom (also known as Molech) was associated with child sacrifice. Solomon built altars to these pagan gods on the hill east of Jerusalem, likely the Mount of Olives. This began the country’s downward slide into public, nationwide idolatry, which would eventually lead to their captivity in Babylon. His sin affected the nation.
God’s anger was righteous and personal (vs. 9-10). Twice He had appeared to Solomon, which was an extraordinary privilege. Yet Solomon turned from the very God who had blessed him. God’s warning had been clear. Solomon’s wisdom did not protect him. His heart was turned because he allowed influences that God had forbidden. He had heard God’s voice and received His promises, yet he fell. No amount of blessing replaces obedience. Partial obedience is disobedience. Solomon obeyed God in building the Temple, but disobeyed Him in personal holiness. He didn’t fall in a day. He drifted slowly, one small compromise at a time, and his sin affected the entire nation.
No amount of wisdom, blessing, or spiritual experience can substitute for obedience. Solomon’s heart was turned because he loved what God forbade, ignored God’s Word, and allowed ungodly influences to shape his life. As believers we are called to wholehearted devotion, separation from sin, and faithful obedience to God who has spoken clearly in His Word, the Bible.