1 Kings 12:25-33 AND 2 Chronicles 11:15-17
While Kings goes into some detail to tell how Jeroboam set up false religion in the northern kingdom, Chronicles gives a short account of the apostasy. Jeroboam built up the city of Shechem in his own tribe of Ephraim to be his capital and also fortified Penuel on the east side of the Jordan, in the land of Gilead. His lack of wealth, such as that enjoyed in Jerusalem, probably kept him from more extensive developments. Furthermore he wished to take measure to keep his people from reconsidering the situation and going back. to Rehoboam. He could see a major possibility of that event in the continued worship of his people in the temple at Jerusalem. Nominally all Israel were the people of the Lord God, and since He had made Jerusalem His meetingplace with Israel it would be logical for the people to continue to think of Jerusalem as the center of their worship.
In his reasoning Jeroboam considered that the people would eventually reunite with Judah, turn against him and kill him. The solution to this problem, he surmised, was to establish their religion along other lines that would keep them from Jerusalem and Judah. Consequently he decided to make two golden calves, probably taking his cue from the golden calf which Aaron constructed in the wilderness (Exodus 32:1-6). He certainly should have known the Lord’s displeasure with such. His excuse for the people was that it was too inconvenient for them to go down to Jerusalem. How many people today still treat the matter of the Lord’s service as one of convenience only? True worship then, and now, requires sincerity of the worshipper (Joshua 24:14; 2 Corinthians 2:17). Jeroboam did not purport to start a new religion, but in setting up the golden calves he referred to them as the god who brought Israel out of Egypt. It was simply meant to be the worship of Jehovah under the guise of a calf.
The calf was the standard of the camp of Ephraim in the wilderness, traditionally, and as such is one of the faces of the cherubim in the divine representation revealed to the prophet Ezekiel (Ezekiel 1:10). One of the calves Jeroboam set up at Bethel, a desecration of that shrine where the Lord had appeared in vision to their forefather, Jacob, and vouchsafed to him the covenant of Abraham (Genesis, chap. 28). The other was set up in far northern Dan, which had been a place of idol worship from the beginning (Judges 18:30-31). The people of these tribes, for the major part, fell in readily with this sin, some of them actually going to far off Dan to worship the calf there.
Jeroboam could not trust the Levitical priests of the Levites; who might have turned the people back to the right worship of the Lord. Therefore he ordained his own priesthood, taking from the "lowest" (commonest) of the people to be his priests. The popular feast of tabernacles which was held during the eighth month of the Hebrew year was another occasion for the gathering of the Israelites to the temple in Jerusalem. To offset this Jeroboam proclaimed his own feast in worship of the calves at the same time. In fact, he seems to have inaugurated his new system at the very time of this feast, at which time he sacrificed and offered incense to the calf of Bethel.
All of this was of Jeroboam’s own device and from his evil heart. The Chronicles account calls these shrines after the pagan terminology, high places and devil-worship. The word devils is literally "satyrs", a demonic figure of paganism. Many of the good, God-fearing people of the northern tribes left their homes and emigrated along with the priests and Levites into Judah. This resulted in strengthening of Rehoboam and his kingdom for a period of three years, after which the intimation is they felt sure of themselves and were not as careful to seek the will of the Lord. Then the kingdom was weakened, as shall be seen.
Continuing comment, specifically on 2 Chronicles 11:18-23. Included in 1st edition Hardbound Commentary under 1 Kings chapter 12.
House of Rehoboam, 2 Chronicles 11:18-23
Rehoboam had some of the characteristics as his father, as indicated in the last statement of this passage, "And he desired many wives." As a matter of fact he acquired many wives, though not nearly as many as Solomon. This was no doubt due to his far lesser fame as well as a depleting fortune. Yet eighteen wives and sixty concubines are an ample number to correspond with the statement of his desire.
Rehoboam married his cousins in three instances, princesses,
who seem to have been favored among the many. His first wife, Mahalath, was the daughter of David’s son, Jerimoth, about whom nothing more is known. Abihail, the second, was the daughter of Eliab, the elder brother of David, (though it is probable a grand-daughter is meant, since the time is several generations removed from that of Eliab). She was the mother of three of his sons. The third wife, and Rehoboam’s favorite, was Maachah, the daughter of Absalom. She was the mother of four of his sons, including Abijah, the crown prince. In all Rehoboam was the father of twenty-eight sons and sixty daughters.
Rehoboam also evidenced a trait of wisdom with regard to his sons. He dispersed them into the cities which he had fortified, evidently providing each of them with military training and preventing them from becoming play-boys as he had evidently been. Rehoboam made Abijah the chief of all his sons and groomed him to be king after him. Rehoboam gave them a good allowance, indicated by "victual in abundance."
Lesson to be noted: 1) having a wise father does not always assure a wise son after him; 2) belligerence will not beget a congenial response; 3) there should never be resistance of the known will of the Lord; 4) God has one way of worship, and men change this to their own condemnation; 5) sons are more apt to adopt their fathers’ bad traits than his good.