Verses 1–9
First Kings - Chapter 3 AND Second Chronicles - Chapter 1
Solomon’s Dream, 1 Kings 3:1-9 AND 2 Chronicles 1:2-10
While these two passages under study are parallel and complementary, both also provide supplementary information about the event being recorded. The Chronicles account tends to provide more about the tabernacle and worship, possibly because it was likely written after the Babylonian exile, when the priests and scribes of the Levites had a great deal to do with its writing. Kings begins with a purely secular statement, on its face, in that it tells of an initial mistake of the young king at the very outset of his reign. He made a treaty of friendship with Pharaoh of Egypt, a part of the bargain being, it seems, Solomon’s taking of an Egyptian princess into his harem. This was contrary to God’s will and law against marriage with pagan people. He seems to have kept her with him in the palace in the city of David while he was building his own palace, the temple, and the city wall, after which, it will be found, he built her a palace of her own.
The situation with regard to worship in Israel at the time was somewhat confused. Although David had brought the ark into a tent he had prepared for it in Jerusalem, the remainder of the tabernacle and its furniture was located in Gibeon. The ark had been separated from the tabernacle while it was at Shiloh, during the judgeship of Eli the priest, when it was captured by the Philistines (1 Samuel 4:10-11). When the Lord sent plagues on the Philistines they returned it to Israel, where it was housed in Kirjath-jearim until David brought it to Jerusalem (1 Samuel 6:1 ff; 2 Samuel 6:1-11). Meanwhile, the tabernacle was removed to Nob, where it was when Saul slew the priests (1 Samuel 22:18-19), and at some unknown time it was moved again to Gibeon, possibly so it could be tended by the Gibeonites (who were temple servants), at a time when eligible priests had been largely exterminated. And here it was when Solomon became king.
The tabernacle in Gibeon is called the "great high place," a pagan designation, possibly because of the bent of mind in Israel, who had been so long separated from true worship and under influence of pagans still among them. The Kings account is careful to note that Solomon "loved the Lord, walking in the statutes of David," so that, although he led the congregation in assembly for worship at "the great high place," it was for the purpose of worshipping God in the proper manner, not in paganistic ritual. Here he sacrificed a thousand burnt offerings in leading the people in worship.
During the night the Lord came to Solomon in a dream offering to do for him whatever he might ask. Solomon showed astuteness even here in his humble request. While the Chronicles account emphasizes Solomon’s concern for the covenant the Lord had made for David, that of Kings has considerably more details. First, Solomon recalled the great mercy and kindness from the Lord to his father, because of his righteous walk before Him. Then he recognized an extension of that mercy and kindness in his own succession to the throne of his father. Next Solomon remembered the momentous task of ruling over a great people of the Lord like Israel, with his own mediocrity in comparison. On this basis, the young king concluded, it was expedient to seek wisdom to discern between the good and the bad in his judgment, and that he might set the proper example for his people as he went in and out before them. Solomon sought true wisdom (1 Corinthians 1:18 ff).