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Jehu son of Omri kneeling at the feet of Shalmaneser III on the Black Obelisk.Jehu (יְהוּא "The Lord is he", Standard Hebrew Yehu, Tiberian Hebrew Yəhû) was king of Israel, the son of Jehoshaphat [1], and grandson of Nimshi. William F. Albright has dated his reign to 842 B.C.E.-815 B.C.E., while E. R. Thiele offers the dates 841 B.C.E.-814 B.C.E. Our principal source for the events of his reign comes from 2 Kings 9-10.
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The reign of Jehu's predecessor, Jehoram, was marked by the Battle of Ramoth-Gilead against the army of the Arameans, where Jehoram was wounded and afterwards returned to Jezreel to recover, and where Ahaziah, the king of Judah and his nephew, had also gone to attend on Jehoram (2 Kings 8:28f). The author of Kings describes, while the commanders of the army were assembled away from the eyes of the king, that the prophet Elisha sent one of his students to this meeting, where this student led Jehu away from his peers and anointed him king in an inner chamber, then immediately departed (2 Kings 9:5,6). 2 Kings is silent about the exact identity of this student. Jehu's companions, inquiring after the object of this mysterious visit, were told, and immediately, with enthusiasm, blew their trumpets and proclaimed him king (2 Kings 9:11-14).
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[[File:Jehu.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Jehu, depicted in [[Guillaume Rouillé]]'s ''[[Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum]]'']]
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'''Jehu''' ('''יְהוּא''', '''Yehu'''—"[[Yahweh|The Lord]] is he") was king of [[Kingdom of Israel|Israel]], 842–815 B.C.E. He assumed the throne after being anointed by a messenger of the prophet [[Elisha]] and carried out one of history's most violent coups. In the process he killed both the reigning King of Israel, [[Joram of Israel|Joram]], and the King of Judah, [[Ahaziah of Judah|Ahaziah]], at the same time. An adamant opponent of [[Baal]] worship, Jehu also murdered the infamous Queen [[Jezebel]], Joram's mother, whom the [[prophet]]s blamed for the resurgence of Baal in [[Israel]], and went on to slaughter dozens of her husband [[Ahab]]'s sons, as well as numerous members of the royal house of [[kingdom of Judah|Judah]]. He ended his coup by gathering the priests of Baal in their temple in the city of [[Samaria]] and killing them all. While the Bible strongly praises Jehu for these acts, the [[Book of Kings]]—our principal source for the events of his reign—criticizes him for failing to destroy the [[Israelite]] shrines at [[Bethel]] and Dan which competed with the [[Temple of Jerusalem]] for the loyalty of Israel's worshipers.
  
With a chosen band, Jehu set forth with all speed to Jezreel, where he slew Jehoram with his own hand, shooting him through the heart with an arrow (9:24). The king of Judah, when trying to escape, was fatally wounded by one of Jehu's soldiers at Beth-gan. The author of Kings describes how Jehu entered the city without any resistance, and saw Jezebel, the mother of king Jehoram, presenting herself from a window in the palace, who received him with insolence; Jehu commanded the eunuchs of the royal palace to cast her down into the street; the fall was fatal, and her mangled body was devoured by the dogs (9:35-7).
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As king, Jehu's military record was not nearly as successful as his immediate predecessors against the [[Syria]]ns, and he lost considerable territories to the [[Hazael]] of [[Damascus]]. Outside the Bible, Jehu is depicted on the [[Black Obelisk]] of Shalmanezzer III as prostrating himself and offering tribute before the Syrian king. The recently discovered [[Tel Da]] inscription contradicts some of the main events in the biblical story of Jehu, giving credit to Hazael for some of Jehu's most famous deeds.
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While the Book of Kings considers Jehu one of Israel's few good kings, the prophet [[Hosea]] appears to denounce his coup and to predict that God would strongly punish Israel for Jehu's violent deeds.  
  
However, Nadav Na'aman of Tel Aviv University has interpreted the evidence of archaeological excavations at the site of the city of Jezreel to show it had been taken by a successful siege, perhaps by the Aramean army of Hazael. Further, the author of the Dan Stele (found in 1993 and 1994 during archaeological excavations of the site of Laish) claimed to have slain both Ahaziah, and Jehoram; the most likely author of this monument is Hazael of the Arameans. Although the inscription is a contemporary witness of this period, kings of this period were inclined to boast and make exaggerated claims; it is not clear whether Jehu killed the two kings (as the Bible reports) or Hazael (as the Dan Stele reports). This suggests that this memorable scene was created (perhaps as a tradition) long after the principals of the coup had died.
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==Biography==
  
Now master of Jezreel, Jehu wrote to the chief men in the capital Samaria, and commanded them to send to him by the morning the heads of all the royal princes of the kingdom. Accordingly, seventy heads were brought to him, which he had piled up in two heaps at his gate. Shortly afterwards, Jehu encountered the "brethren of Ahaziah" at "the shearing-house" (10:12-14), and slaughtered another forty-two people connected with the Omrides (10:14).
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===Background===
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Jehu's story is cast against the background of the reign of the Omride dynasty, consisting of Omri, [[Ahab]], and Ahab's two sons, Ahaziah and Joram/Jehoram.<ref>Not to be confused with the two kings of the same name who ruled in Judah during the same era.</ref> These kings, especially Ahab, were considered evil by the biblical writers because of their tolerance of [[Baal]] worship.<ref>Another issue the [[prophet]]s had against Ahab was his mistreatment of a man named Naboth, whose property Ahab usurped after having him killed. Naboth is mentioned several times in the Jehu narrative, and it is in Naboth's field that Jehu ends up assassinating Ahab's son Joram.</ref> While each of these kings seems to have honored [[Yahweh]] personally, they also allowed and even supported Baal worship, in part because of the influence of Ahab's wife [[Jezebel]], who was not an [[Israelite]] but a [[Phoenicia]]n princess. Although some of the prophets had occasionally supported Ahab and his sons in their battles against Syria, in Jehu's time, a militant Yahweh-only faction led by the prophet [[Elisha]] had emerged as a significant political faction opposed to the Omrides. This faction may also have been critical of the southern royal house of [[Jehoshaphat]] of Judah, who allied himself with Ahab against the Syrians and allowed Ahab and Jezebel's daughter [[Athaliah]] to marry into the Davidic lineage.
  
Jehu's revolt was rooted in more than his quest for power and the favor of Yahweh. This account frequently invokes the slogan of "avenging the blood of Naboth" (9:21,25,26), whose vineyard Jehoram's father Ahab had taken by force (1 Kings 21:4); this fact suggests that perhaps the burden of making the northern kingdom a regional power had grown too heavy for its citizens, and Jehoram's defeat at Ramoth-Gilead gave them an opportunity to throw this burden off.
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So strong was the opposition of the prophets to Ahab's line that they resolved to inspire a violent coup against his descendants, even conspiring with the Syrians in the effort. In 1 Kings 19, God had commissioned Elijah to anoint Jehu as the new king of Israel and to anoint [[Hazael]] as the new king of Syria. A violent result is clearly envisioned:
  
Following Jehu's slaughter of the Omrides, he met Jehonadab the Rechabite, whom he took into his chariot, and they entered the capital together. This adds support to the inference that, at least at the beginning of his reign, Jehu was supported by the pro-Yahweh faction. Once in control of Samaria, he summoned all of the worshippers of Baal to the capital, slew them (2 Kings 10:19-25), and destroyed the temple of that deity (10:27).
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:Go to the Desert of [[Damascus]]. When you get there, anoint Hazael king over Aram (Syria). Also, anoint Jehu son of Nimshi king over Israel, and anoint Elisha son of Shaphat from Abel Meholah to succeed you as prophet. Jehu will put to death any who escape the sword of Hazael, and Elisha will put to death any who escape the sword of Jehu. (1 Kings 19:15-17)  
  
Beyond his bloody coup d'etat, and his tolerance for the golden calves at Dan and Bethel (which drew the disdain of the author of Kings), little is known of the events of Jehu's reign. He was hard pressed by the predations of Hazael, king of the Arameans, who is said to have defeated his army "throughout all of the territories of Israel" beyond the Jordan river, in the lands of Gilead, Gad, Reuben, and Manasseh (10:32f). This would explain why Jehu is offering tribute to Shalmaneser III on his Black Obelisk (where his name appears as mIa-ú-a mar mHu-um-ri-i or "Jehu son of Omri"); Jehu was encouraging the enemy of the Arameans into being his friend.
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Elijah, however, had left this task unfulfilled, and it was left to Elisha to accomplish it.
  
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===Jehu's call===
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Jehu's story begins when he was serving as a commander of chariots under [[Jehoram of Israel|Joram]] after the battle of [[Ramoth-Gilead]] against the army of the Syrians. There, Joram (also called Jehoram) had been wounded and returned to [[Jezreel]] to recover. Joram's ally and nephew, King [[Ahaziah of Judah|Ahaziah]] of [[kingdom of Judah|Judah]],<ref>Not to be confused with Ahaziah of Israel, who was Joram's brother and immediate successor.</ref> had also gone to Jezreel to attend Joram (''2 Kings'' 8:28). While the commanders of the army were assembled at Ramoth-Gilead, the prophet [[Elisha]] sent one of his disciples to anoint Jehu as the future king of Israel.<ref>A rabbinical tradition holds that this young man was the future [[prophet]] Jonah. (See [[Book of Jonah]].)</ref> The messenger found Jehu meeting with other officers and led him away from his peers. Pouring oil on Jehu's head, the young [[prophet]] declared God's words:
  
[edit] Jehu in sources
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:You are to destroy the house of [[Ahab]] your master, and I will avenge the blood of my servants the prophets and the blood of all [[Yahweh|the Lord]]'s servants shed by [[Jezebel]]. The whole house of Ahab will perish. (2 Kings 9:1-10).
Aside from the Hebrew Bible, Jehu appears in Assyrian documents, notably in the Black Obelisk where he is depicted as kissing the ground in front of Shalmaneneser III. In the Assyrian documents he is simply referred to as "Jehu son of Omri," that is, Jehu of the House of Omri, an Assyrian name for the Kingdom of Israel.
 
  
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Jehu's companions, inquiring after the object of this mysterious visit, greeted the news of prophetic support for Jehu with enthusiasm, blowing a trumpet and cheering him as king (2 Kings 9:11-14).
  
[edit] Notes
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===Jehu's coup===
^ Jehu’s father was not the roughly contemporaneous King Jehoshaphat of Judah, whose own father was King Asa of Judah. “Generally Jehu is described as the son only of Nimshi, possibly because Nimshi was more prominent or to avoid confusing him with the King of Judah (R’Wolf)”. Scherman, Nosson, ed., “I-II Kings”, The Prophets, 297, 2006. See (2 Kings 9:2)
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Jehu and his supporters promptly rode to [[Jezreel]], where [[Joram of Israel|Joram]] was recovering from his wounds. "Do you come in peace, Jehu?" the king asked. Jehu replied: "How can there be peace, as long as all the [[idolatry]] and [[witchcraft]] of your mother [[Jezebel]] abound?" Jehu then shot Joram in the back with an arrow as he turned to flee. Jehu also ordered the murder of [[Ahaziah]] in the coup.
The name Jehu has also been adopted by natives of Ghana, who previously went by the name 'Appiah'. In order to separate themselves from other Appiahs in Ghana, they chose to extend their surname to the double barrelled name Jehu-Appiah. The founding Minister of one of the biggest and most renowned churches in Ghana, the Musama Disco Christo Church, (MDCC), translated to mean the Army of the Cross of Christ, was also a Jehu-Appiah, who went by the name of Jemisimiham Jehu-Appiah, Akaboah I.  
 
  
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[[Image:The Death of Jezebel.jpg|thumb|right|200px|At Jehu's command, Joram's mother Jezebel is cast down and trampled to death.]]
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Seeing his duty to destroy the entire "house of Ahab," Jehu turned next to Joram's monther Jezebel, Ahab's widow. The queen-mother died after being thrown down from a high window by her own [[eunuchs]] at Jehu's command. Following this, Jehu engineered the killing of 70 of Ahab's male descendants, ordering their heads left in piles at the gates of Jezreel.
  
House of Jehoshaphat
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Turning toward the northern capital of [[Samaria]], Jehu encountered 42 relatives of Ahaziah coming from Judah to pay their respects to Joram and Jezebel. These too, he slaughtered. Arriving at Samaria, Jehu continued the bloodbath: "He killed all who were left there of Ahab's family."  (2 Kings 10:17)
Preceded by
 
Jehoram King of Israel
 
Albright: 842 B.C.E. – 815 B.C.E.
 
Thiele: 841 B.C.E. – 814 B.C.E.
 
Galil: 842 B.C.E. – 815 B.C.E. Succeeded by
 
Jehoahaz
 
  
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jehu"
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Carrying Elisha's program to its logical conclusion, Jehu then summoned the priests of [[Baal]], whom Joram had tolerated, to a solemn assembly in the capital. His invitation declared: "Ahab served Baal a little; Jehu will serve him much." Once they assembled in Baal's temple, Jehu—supported by the Yahwist partisan Jehonadab son of Recab—proceeded to order them all slaughtered, demolishing the temple, and turning it into a public latrine.
Category: Kings of ancient Israel
 
  
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===Jehu as king===
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Despite his uncompromising zeal for [[Yahweh]], Jehu's reign does not receive the complete endorsement of the pro-Judah authors of the [[Books of Kings]]. He is particularly criticized for failing to destroy the shrines at Dan and [[Bethel]], which competed with Judah's central shrine at [[Jerusalem]].<ref>Most scholars believe these shrines honored [[Yahweh]], although the biblical writers make much of the golden calf icons which these sites featured.</ref> Nevertheless, the biblical writers preserve a prophecy in which God tells Jehu:
  
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:Because you have done well in accomplishing what is right in my eyes and have done to the house of [[Ahab]] all I had in mind to do, your descendants will sit on the throne of Israel to the fourth generation. (2 Kings 10:30)
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The prophet [[Hosea]], on the other hand, took the opposite view to that of the authors of ''Kings'', indicating that God would not reward but would instead punish the House of Jehu for the slaughter of Ahab's family at Jezreel. Indeed, Hosea's prophecy seems to indicate that Jehu's actions at Jezreel would be responsible for the ultimate destruction of Israel as a kingdom:
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:So he married Gomer daughter of Diblaim, and she conceived and bore him a son. Then the Lord said to Hosea, "Call him Jezreel, because I will soon punish the house of Jehu for the massacre at Jezreel, and I will put an end to the kingdom of Israel." (Hosea 1:3-4)
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Militarily, Jehu's severing of Israel's alliance with Judah left him hard pressed by [[Hazael]] of [[Syria]]. Paradoxically, this enemy of Israel himself had been anointed to his office by none other than the prophetic kingmaker [[Elisha]]. Adding to the complications in unraveling the mystery of the "historical" Jehu is the fact that the [[Tel Dan Stele]], discovered in 1993-1994 gives the credit for killing Joram and Ahaziah to a Syrian king, apparently Hazael. This leads some commentators to suggest that Jehu may have even acted as Hazel's agent in the destruction of Ahab's dynasty.
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[[Image:Tel dan inscription.png|thumb|250px|The Tel Dan inscription credits Hazael, not Jehu, for killing Joram and Ahaziah.]]
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[[image:jehu-on-black-obelisk.jpg|thumb|250px|Jehu, center, kneels before Shalmaneser III on the Black Obelisk.]]
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In any case, the biblical account admits that Jehu's army was defeated by Hazael "throughout all of the territories of [[Israel]]" beyond the [[Jordan river]], in the lands of [[Gilead]], [[tribe of Gad|Gad]], [[tribe of Reuben|Reuben]], and [[tribe of Manasseh|Manasseh]] (10:32). In this desperate state of affairs, Jehu may have turned to the emerging Assyrian power for support. This would explain why the one extra-biblical mention of Jehu, the the Black Obelisk of [[Shalmaneser III]], depicts him as humbly offering tribute to the Assyrian king.
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==Who Jehu is not==
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It is easy to confuse Jehu with another, roughly a contemporaneous biblical figure of the same name, and also to confuse his lineage with the royal lineage of [[Judah]].
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Jehu should not be confused with the '''Jehu the son of Hanani''', a [[prophet]] active both before and during the reign of [[Jehoshaphat]] of Judah and who criticized Jehoshaphat for his alliance with [[Ahab]] (2 Chron. 19: 2-3).
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Jehu was the son of a man named Jehosophat, son of Nimshi. This was not the [[Jehoshaphat]] who reigned as king of [[kingdom of Judah|Judah]] a generation or two earlier. The royal Jehoshaphat of Judah was the father of King [[Joram/Jehoram of Judah]] and the grandfather of [[Ahaziah of Judah]], whom Jehu ordered slain during his coup against [[Joram of Israel]]. To make matters even more confusing, both the [[Kingdom of Israel]] also had kings named Ahaziah and Joram/Jehoram during roughly the same period.
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==Jehu's legacy==
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Jehu's ascension to the throne marked a turning point in the history of the northern kingdom. Externally, Israel had always been the more powerful of the two "Israelite" states, while Judah had been the more strongly devoted to [[Yahweh]].
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Suddenly, however, the spiritual tables were turned. Under Jehu, [[Baal]] worship was violently suppressed in Israel. However, Jehu's murder of [[Ahaziah of Judah]] at Jezreel unwittingly paved the way of Ahaziah's grandmother, [[Athaliah]], to seize the throne in [[Jerusalem]]. The daughter of none other than [[Jezebel]], the nemesis of Jehu's patron [[Elisha]], Athaliah carried out a bloodbath of her own in the southern capital. She also reportedly either constructed or patronized a temple of Baal in the holy city itself. The only reigning queen in the history of either Judah or Israel, her rule lasted six years until she was slain in a counter coup engineered by the Yahwist priests of the [[Temple of Jerusalem]], who put her great-grandson [[Joash]] on the throne in her place.
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[[Image:Joash-athaliah.jpg|thumb|right|220px|The doomed Athaliah hides as priests install young Joash as king.]]
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Politically, by ending the former alliance between Israel and Judah which had fared well against the Syrian power, Jehu left himself vulnerable to forces of [[Hazael]], who succeeded in conquering significant portions of the small empire built under the Omride dynasty. For protection, Jehu was forced to humble himself before [[Shalmaneser III]] of Assyria, an act notoriously memorialized in the [[Black Obeslisk]].
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Nevertheless, under Jehu's son Jehoahaz, Israel was reduced to a vassal state of [[Damascus]]. After the death of Hazael, Assyria moved against Damascus again. This enabled Jehoahaz' son Joash (also called Jehoash to distinguish him from the Judean king of the same name) to defeat Damascus' new king, [[Ben-hadad III]], and recapture lost territory. He also struck against the [[Kingdom of Judah]], where he reportedly sacked Jerusalem and looted its Temple (2 Kings 14).
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Israel reached the zenith of its power after the ascension of [[Jeroboam II]] (c. 783), who recaptured substantial Syrian and transjordanian territories and made Israel an even greater power than it had been in the days of the Omride dynasty. However, this external glory was short-lived. Affluence gave rise to moral corruption, which was eloquently decried in the oracles of the literary prophets [[Amos]] and [[Hosea]], the latter of whom declared Jehu's massacre in Jezreel to have been counter to God's will, dooming the northern kingdom to ultimate destruction.
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{{start}}
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{{s-bef|before=[[Jehoram of Israel|Jehoram (Joram)]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=[[Kingdom of Israel|Jehu, King of Israel]]|years=<small>[[William F. Albright|Albright]]: </small>842 B.C.E.&ndash; 815 B.C.E.<br/><small>[[Edwin R. Thiele|Thiele]]: </small>841 B.C.E.&ndash; 814 B.C.E.<br/><small>[[Gershon Galil|Galil]]: </small>842 B.C.E.&ndash; 815 B.C.E.}}
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{{s-aft|after=[[Jehoahaz of Israel|Jehoahaz]]}}
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{{end}}
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== Notes ==
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<references/>
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==References==
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*Bright, John. ''A History of Israel''. Westminster John Knox Press; 4th edition, 2000. ISBN 0664220681
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*Dutcher-Walls, Patricia. ''Jezebel: Portraits of a Queen''. Michael Glazier Books, 2004. ISBN 978-0814651506
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*Galil, Gershon. ''The Chronology of the Kings of Israel and Judah''. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1996. ISBN 9004106111
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*Grant, Michael. ''The History of Ancient Israel''. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1984. ISBN 0684180812
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*Keller, Werner. ''The Bible as History''. Bantam, 1983. ISBN 0553279432
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*Lowrie, John M. ''The Prophet Elisha''. Reprint Series. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library, 2005. ISBN 9781425527532
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*Miller, J. Maxwell. ''A History of Ancient Israel and Judah''. Westminster John Knox Press, 1986. ISBN 066421262X
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==External links==
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All links retrieved July 30, 2022.
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*[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=293&letter=E&search=elisha Elisha] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''.
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*[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=208&letter=J&search=jehu Jehu] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''.
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[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
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Latest revision as of 04:42, 31 July 2022


Jehu, depicted in Guillaume Rouillé's Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum

Jehu (יְהוּא, Yehu—"The Lord is he") was king of Israel, 842–815 B.C.E. He assumed the throne after being anointed by a messenger of the prophet Elisha and carried out one of history's most violent coups. In the process he killed both the reigning King of Israel, Joram, and the King of Judah, Ahaziah, at the same time. An adamant opponent of Baal worship, Jehu also murdered the infamous Queen Jezebel, Joram's mother, whom the prophets blamed for the resurgence of Baal in Israel, and went on to slaughter dozens of her husband Ahab's sons, as well as numerous members of the royal house of Judah. He ended his coup by gathering the priests of Baal in their temple in the city of Samaria and killing them all. While the Bible strongly praises Jehu for these acts, the Book of Kings—our principal source for the events of his reign—criticizes him for failing to destroy the Israelite shrines at Bethel and Dan which competed with the Temple of Jerusalem for the loyalty of Israel's worshipers.

As king, Jehu's military record was not nearly as successful as his immediate predecessors against the Syrians, and he lost considerable territories to the Hazael of Damascus. Outside the Bible, Jehu is depicted on the Black Obelisk of Shalmanezzer III as prostrating himself and offering tribute before the Syrian king. The recently discovered Tel Da inscription contradicts some of the main events in the biblical story of Jehu, giving credit to Hazael for some of Jehu's most famous deeds.

While the Book of Kings considers Jehu one of Israel's few good kings, the prophet Hosea appears to denounce his coup and to predict that God would strongly punish Israel for Jehu's violent deeds.

Biography

Background

Jehu's story is cast against the background of the reign of the Omride dynasty, consisting of Omri, Ahab, and Ahab's two sons, Ahaziah and Joram/Jehoram.[1] These kings, especially Ahab, were considered evil by the biblical writers because of their tolerance of Baal worship.[2] While each of these kings seems to have honored Yahweh personally, they also allowed and even supported Baal worship, in part because of the influence of Ahab's wife Jezebel, who was not an Israelite but a Phoenician princess. Although some of the prophets had occasionally supported Ahab and his sons in their battles against Syria, in Jehu's time, a militant Yahweh-only faction led by the prophet Elisha had emerged as a significant political faction opposed to the Omrides. This faction may also have been critical of the southern royal house of Jehoshaphat of Judah, who allied himself with Ahab against the Syrians and allowed Ahab and Jezebel's daughter Athaliah to marry into the Davidic lineage.

So strong was the opposition of the prophets to Ahab's line that they resolved to inspire a violent coup against his descendants, even conspiring with the Syrians in the effort. In 1 Kings 19, God had commissioned Elijah to anoint Jehu as the new king of Israel and to anoint Hazael as the new king of Syria. A violent result is clearly envisioned:

Go to the Desert of Damascus. When you get there, anoint Hazael king over Aram (Syria). Also, anoint Jehu son of Nimshi king over Israel, and anoint Elisha son of Shaphat from Abel Meholah to succeed you as prophet. Jehu will put to death any who escape the sword of Hazael, and Elisha will put to death any who escape the sword of Jehu. (1 Kings 19:15-17)

Elijah, however, had left this task unfulfilled, and it was left to Elisha to accomplish it.

Jehu's call

Jehu's story begins when he was serving as a commander of chariots under Joram after the battle of Ramoth-Gilead against the army of the Syrians. There, Joram (also called Jehoram) had been wounded and returned to Jezreel to recover. Joram's ally and nephew, King Ahaziah of Judah,[3] had also gone to Jezreel to attend Joram (2 Kings 8:28). While the commanders of the army were assembled at Ramoth-Gilead, the prophet Elisha sent one of his disciples to anoint Jehu as the future king of Israel.[4] The messenger found Jehu meeting with other officers and led him away from his peers. Pouring oil on Jehu's head, the young prophet declared God's words:

You are to destroy the house of Ahab your master, and I will avenge the blood of my servants the prophets and the blood of all the Lord's servants shed by Jezebel. The whole house of Ahab will perish. (2 Kings 9:1-10).

Jehu's companions, inquiring after the object of this mysterious visit, greeted the news of prophetic support for Jehu with enthusiasm, blowing a trumpet and cheering him as king (2 Kings 9:11-14).

Jehu's coup

Jehu and his supporters promptly rode to Jezreel, where Joram was recovering from his wounds. "Do you come in peace, Jehu?" the king asked. Jehu replied: "How can there be peace, as long as all the idolatry and witchcraft of your mother Jezebel abound?" Jehu then shot Joram in the back with an arrow as he turned to flee. Jehu also ordered the murder of Ahaziah in the coup.

At Jehu's command, Joram's mother Jezebel is cast down and trampled to death.

Seeing his duty to destroy the entire "house of Ahab," Jehu turned next to Joram's monther Jezebel, Ahab's widow. The queen-mother died after being thrown down from a high window by her own eunuchs at Jehu's command. Following this, Jehu engineered the killing of 70 of Ahab's male descendants, ordering their heads left in piles at the gates of Jezreel.

Turning toward the northern capital of Samaria, Jehu encountered 42 relatives of Ahaziah coming from Judah to pay their respects to Joram and Jezebel. These too, he slaughtered. Arriving at Samaria, Jehu continued the bloodbath: "He killed all who were left there of Ahab's family." (2 Kings 10:17)

Carrying Elisha's program to its logical conclusion, Jehu then summoned the priests of Baal, whom Joram had tolerated, to a solemn assembly in the capital. His invitation declared: "Ahab served Baal a little; Jehu will serve him much." Once they assembled in Baal's temple, Jehu—supported by the Yahwist partisan Jehonadab son of Recab—proceeded to order them all slaughtered, demolishing the temple, and turning it into a public latrine.

Jehu as king

Despite his uncompromising zeal for Yahweh, Jehu's reign does not receive the complete endorsement of the pro-Judah authors of the Books of Kings. He is particularly criticized for failing to destroy the shrines at Dan and Bethel, which competed with Judah's central shrine at Jerusalem.[5] Nevertheless, the biblical writers preserve a prophecy in which God tells Jehu:

Because you have done well in accomplishing what is right in my eyes and have done to the house of Ahab all I had in mind to do, your descendants will sit on the throne of Israel to the fourth generation. (2 Kings 10:30)

The prophet Hosea, on the other hand, took the opposite view to that of the authors of Kings, indicating that God would not reward but would instead punish the House of Jehu for the slaughter of Ahab's family at Jezreel. Indeed, Hosea's prophecy seems to indicate that Jehu's actions at Jezreel would be responsible for the ultimate destruction of Israel as a kingdom:

So he married Gomer daughter of Diblaim, and she conceived and bore him a son. Then the Lord said to Hosea, "Call him Jezreel, because I will soon punish the house of Jehu for the massacre at Jezreel, and I will put an end to the kingdom of Israel." (Hosea 1:3-4)

Militarily, Jehu's severing of Israel's alliance with Judah left him hard pressed by Hazael of Syria. Paradoxically, this enemy of Israel himself had been anointed to his office by none other than the prophetic kingmaker Elisha. Adding to the complications in unraveling the mystery of the "historical" Jehu is the fact that the Tel Dan Stele, discovered in 1993-1994 gives the credit for killing Joram and Ahaziah to a Syrian king, apparently Hazael. This leads some commentators to suggest that Jehu may have even acted as Hazel's agent in the destruction of Ahab's dynasty.

The Tel Dan inscription credits Hazael, not Jehu, for killing Joram and Ahaziah.
Jehu, center, kneels before Shalmaneser III on the Black Obelisk.

In any case, the biblical account admits that Jehu's army was defeated by Hazael "throughout all of the territories of Israel" beyond the Jordan river, in the lands of Gilead, Gad, Reuben, and Manasseh (10:32). In this desperate state of affairs, Jehu may have turned to the emerging Assyrian power for support. This would explain why the one extra-biblical mention of Jehu, the the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III, depicts him as humbly offering tribute to the Assyrian king.

Who Jehu is not

It is easy to confuse Jehu with another, roughly a contemporaneous biblical figure of the same name, and also to confuse his lineage with the royal lineage of Judah.

Jehu should not be confused with the Jehu the son of Hanani, a prophet active both before and during the reign of Jehoshaphat of Judah and who criticized Jehoshaphat for his alliance with Ahab (2 Chron. 19: 2-3).

Jehu was the son of a man named Jehosophat, son of Nimshi. This was not the Jehoshaphat who reigned as king of Judah a generation or two earlier. The royal Jehoshaphat of Judah was the father of King Joram/Jehoram of Judah and the grandfather of Ahaziah of Judah, whom Jehu ordered slain during his coup against Joram of Israel. To make matters even more confusing, both the Kingdom of Israel also had kings named Ahaziah and Joram/Jehoram during roughly the same period.

Jehu's legacy

Jehu's ascension to the throne marked a turning point in the history of the northern kingdom. Externally, Israel had always been the more powerful of the two "Israelite" states, while Judah had been the more strongly devoted to Yahweh.

Suddenly, however, the spiritual tables were turned. Under Jehu, Baal worship was violently suppressed in Israel. However, Jehu's murder of Ahaziah of Judah at Jezreel unwittingly paved the way of Ahaziah's grandmother, Athaliah, to seize the throne in Jerusalem. The daughter of none other than Jezebel, the nemesis of Jehu's patron Elisha, Athaliah carried out a bloodbath of her own in the southern capital. She also reportedly either constructed or patronized a temple of Baal in the holy city itself. The only reigning queen in the history of either Judah or Israel, her rule lasted six years until she was slain in a counter coup engineered by the Yahwist priests of the Temple of Jerusalem, who put her great-grandson Joash on the throne in her place.

The doomed Athaliah hides as priests install young Joash as king.

Politically, by ending the former alliance between Israel and Judah which had fared well against the Syrian power, Jehu left himself vulnerable to forces of Hazael, who succeeded in conquering significant portions of the small empire built under the Omride dynasty. For protection, Jehu was forced to humble himself before Shalmaneser III of Assyria, an act notoriously memorialized in the Black Obeslisk.

Nevertheless, under Jehu's son Jehoahaz, Israel was reduced to a vassal state of Damascus. After the death of Hazael, Assyria moved against Damascus again. This enabled Jehoahaz' son Joash (also called Jehoash to distinguish him from the Judean king of the same name) to defeat Damascus' new king, Ben-hadad III, and recapture lost territory. He also struck against the Kingdom of Judah, where he reportedly sacked Jerusalem and looted its Temple (2 Kings 14).

Israel reached the zenith of its power after the ascension of Jeroboam II (c. 783), who recaptured substantial Syrian and transjordanian territories and made Israel an even greater power than it had been in the days of the Omride dynasty. However, this external glory was short-lived. Affluence gave rise to moral corruption, which was eloquently decried in the oracles of the literary prophets Amos and Hosea, the latter of whom declared Jehu's massacre in Jezreel to have been counter to God's will, dooming the northern kingdom to ultimate destruction.


Preceded by:
Jehoram (Joram)
Jehu, King of Israel
Albright: 842 B.C.E.– 815 B.C.E.
Thiele: 841 B.C.E.– 814 B.C.E.
Galil: 842 B.C.E.– 815 B.C.E.
Succeeded by: Jehoahaz

Notes

  1. Not to be confused with the two kings of the same name who ruled in Judah during the same era.
  2. Another issue the prophets had against Ahab was his mistreatment of a man named Naboth, whose property Ahab usurped after having him killed. Naboth is mentioned several times in the Jehu narrative, and it is in Naboth's field that Jehu ends up assassinating Ahab's son Joram.
  3. Not to be confused with Ahaziah of Israel, who was Joram's brother and immediate successor.
  4. A rabbinical tradition holds that this young man was the future prophet Jonah. (See Book of Jonah.)
  5. Most scholars believe these shrines honored Yahweh, although the biblical writers make much of the golden calf icons which these sites featured.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bright, John. A History of Israel. Westminster John Knox Press; 4th edition, 2000. ISBN 0664220681
  • Dutcher-Walls, Patricia. Jezebel: Portraits of a Queen. Michael Glazier Books, 2004. ISBN 978-0814651506
  • Galil, Gershon. The Chronology of the Kings of Israel and Judah. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1996. ISBN 9004106111
  • Grant, Michael. The History of Ancient Israel. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1984. ISBN 0684180812
  • Keller, Werner. The Bible as History. Bantam, 1983. ISBN 0553279432
  • Lowrie, John M. The Prophet Elisha. Reprint Series. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library, 2005. ISBN 9781425527532
  • Miller, J. Maxwell. A History of Ancient Israel and Judah. Westminster John Knox Press, 1986. ISBN 066421262X

External links

All links retrieved July 30, 2022.

  • Elisha Jewish Encyclopedia.
  • Jehu Jewish Encyclopedia.

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