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[266]
HOWEVER, God was in no long time ready to return Jeroboam's wicked
actions, and the punishment they deserved, upon his own head, and upon
the heads of all his house. And whereas a soil of his lay sick at that
time, who was called Abijah, he enjoined his wife to lay aside her robes,
and to take the garments belonging to a private person, and to go to Ahijah
the prophet, for that he was a wonderful man in foretelling futurities,
it having been he who told me that I should be king. He also enjoined her,
when she came to him, to inquire concerning the child, as if she were a
stranger, whether he should escape this distemper. So she did as her husband
bade her, and changed her habit, and came to the city Shiloh, for there
did Ahijah live. And as she was going into his house, his eyes being then
dim with age, God appeared to him, and informed him of two things; that
the wife of Jeroboam was come to him, and what answer he should make to
her inquiry. Accordingly, as the woman was coming into the house like a
private person and a stranger, he cried out, "Come in, O thou wife
of Jeroboam! Why concealest thou thyself? Thou art not concealed from God,
who hath appeared to me, and informed me that thou wast coming, and hath
given me in command what I shall say to thee." So he said that she
should go away to her husband, and speak to him thus: "Since I made
thee a great man when thou wast little, or rather wast nothing, and rent
the kingdom from the house of David, and gave it to thee, and thou hast
been unmindful of these benefits, hast left off my worship, hast made thee
molten gods and honored them, I will in like manner cast thee down again,
and will destroy all thy house, and make them food for the dogs and the
fowls; for a certain king is rising up, by appointment, over all this people,
who shall leave none of the family of Jeroboam remaining. The multitude
also shall themselves partake of the same punishment, and shall be cast
out of this good land, and shall be scattered into the places beyond Euphrates,
because they have followed the wicked practices of their king, and have
worshipped the gods that he made, and forsaken my sacrifices. But do thou,
O woman, make haste back to thy husband, and tell him this message; but
thou shalt then find thy son dead, for as thou enterest the city he shall
depart this life; yet shall he be buried with the lamentation of all the
multitude, and honored with a general mourning, for he was the only person
of goodness of Jeroboam's family." When the prophet had foretold these
events, the woman went hastily away with a disordered mind, and greatly
grieved at the death of the forenamed child. So she was in lamentation
as she went along the road, and mourned for the death of her son, that
was just at hand. She was indeed in a miserable condition at the unavoidable
misery of his death, and went apace, but in circumstances very unfortunate,
because of her son: for the greater haste she made, she would the sooner
see her son dead, yet was she forced to make such haste on account of her
husband. Accordingly, when she was come back, she found that the child
had given up the ghost, as the prophet had said; and she related all the
circumstances to the king.
Flavius Josephus. The Works of Flavius Josephus. Translated by. William Whiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo. John E. Beardsley. 1895.
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(4):
- LSJ, ἐξολεθρ-εύω
- LSJ, ἰδι?́ωτ-ις
- LSJ, κλαίω
- LSJ, μετασχημα^τ-ίζω
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