Monday - March 4, 2024

Dan Peeler

 SCRIPTURE


1 Kings 6. 1-4

In the four hundred and eightieth year after the Israelites came out of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel, in the month of Ziv, the second month, he began to build the temple of the Lord.

The temple that King Solomon built for the Lord was sixty cubits long, twenty wide and thirty high. The portico at the front of the main hall of the temple extended the width of the temple, that is twenty cubits, and projected ten cubits from the front of the temple.


WORDS OF HOPE


During the Season of Lent, the Lectionary readings are centered on sacrifice, meditation, accomplishment, and other noble virtues that characterize the journey of Jesus in the 40 day-long period that anticipates the events of Holy Week. Today’s readings from 1 Kings are the first four verses of a chapter that details the building and lavish appearance of the Temple Solomon’s father David had envisioned. 

In the next 33 verses, we are given minute details of every wall, door, window, and religious decor item that constitute the magnificent structure. Nearly every aspect of the building and everything that it contained had one thing in common. They were encrusted in gold.


Of course, King Solomon himself didn’t build the Temple. It was just named after him, and Solomon’s Temple was expected to stand for all time as the symbol of his noble reign. The people who built it were slaves, captives of prior wars, or indentured servants of Solomon’s own people. The mining of the distinctive features of the Temple, the gold, no doubt cost many of them their lives. 


Ancient gold mines were deep and oppressive, with little ventilation, lit only by oxygen-devouring torches that further poisoned the air. The death rates of the miners increased by the day as the mine was deepened, the exhaustion levels increased, and as the air grew thinner. The Bible narrative never makes mention of this cost of life, but some of the Egyptian writings of the day count the death rates as positive additions to the value of their opulent artifacts.


All these facts make me wonder why this 1 Kings reading was chosen for the Season of Lent. Perhaps it was intended to remind us of the rewards we receive when we are centered on our goals or the degree of worship we should feel toward God. To me, it means to meditate on what worshipping God is all about to us as individuals. Is our worship demonstrated through the tonnage of spiritual gold we can display to others or the amount of love we show to them because of our worship?


The building of the golden Temple was started in 975 BCE and completed 7 years later. It was built and designed to last forever, to the glory of God, but also to the glory of the king who built it. Remember, it’s always referred to as Solomon’s temple. 


But the supposedly eternal symbol of the king’s power was a pile of rubble by 587 BCE, destroyed by the Babylonian empire, its tons of gold salvaged to plate the temple of another king in another land that would eventually be conquered by yet another ancient empire. 


We can still see all that recycled gold, pillaged by modern expeditions, and distributed to various museums around the world. The gold does not tarnish, but the reputations of those who worshipped it have been blemished forever.


PRAYER


May we remember this Lent the only true gold of our faith is found in the life and words of Jesus. Amen.


DEVOTION AUTHOR


Dan Peeler

Order of St. Francis and St. Clare



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