Solomon’s Harem (I Kings 11-12)

Solomon had been given great gifts and great wisdom. He had had visions from God. Yet he would end up failing badly in his intended faithfulness to Yahweh, by building altars to other gods, in response to the requests of his harem (11:6-8).

That harem was, famously, a thousand women, 700 wives and 300 concubines (11:3). The text tells us that Solomon was very much in love with these women (11:2), though it’s hard to imagine he would even be able to keep track of their names, let alone have some sense of who all these individual women might be. Perhaps we are to understand that he was mostly in love with the idea of having a harem of a thousand women, as a sign of his power or virility, rather than supposing that he felt personal affection for each of these individuals.

Yet his affection was strong enough for some of them – girls from foreign lands that had presumably been given in marriage to him to establish alliances – that he fulfilled their request for altars to their various gods. This will become part of the refrain of a later generation: we lose our faithfulness to the Lord when men marry foreign wives who lead them astray (11:2).

As it would turn out, Solomon not only built altars for his wives to worship their ancestral gods (11:8), but he himself became a worshiper of Astarte and Milcom (11:7). Because of Solomon’s unfaithfulness, the Lord revealed to him that the kingdom would be divided, after Solomon’s death (11:11-13, 29-38). And so “the everlasting reign of David and his descendants over Israel” lasted just through the lifetime of his son; David’s grandson Rehoboam had only just been crowned when the kingdom fell apart (12:12-16).

* * * * *

It is our desire, O Lord, that through the generations we will live in faithfulness to your covenant forever: but we only manage to do this for brief moments of time. We cannot make it true for our children and grandchildren. All we can do is pray for your grace, that somehow you will reach them and move in their hearts, as you have in ours.

Leave a comment

Discover more from

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading