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Jezebel
Jezebel (d. c. 842 BCE) was the Phoenician Princess of Sidon who married Ahab, King of Israel (r. c. 871 - c. 852 BCE) according to the biblical books of I and II Kings, where she is portrayed unfavorably as a conniving harlot who corrupts Israel and flaunts the commandments of God.
Her story is only known through the Bible (though recent archaeological evidence has confirmed her historicity) where she is depicted as the evil antagonist of Elijah, the prophet of the god Yahweh. The contests between Jezebel and Elijah are related as a battle for the religious future of the people of Israel as Jezebel encourages the native Canaanite polytheism and Elijah fights for the monotheistic vision of a single, all-powerful male god.
In the end, Elijah wins this battle as Jezebel is assassinated by her own guards, thrown from a palace window to the street below where she is eaten by dogs. Her death, the biblical authors note, was prophesied earlier by Elijah and is shown to have come to pass precisely according to his words and, so, in accord with the will of Elijah's god.
Her name has become synonymous with the concept of the evil seductress owing to the interpretation of some of her actions (such as putting on make-up in order to, allegedly, seduce her adversary Jehu, who is anointed by Elijah's successor, Elisha, to destroy her) and calling a woman a “jezebel” is to label her as sexually promiscuous and lacking in morals.
Recent scholarship, however, has tried to reverse this association and Jezebel is increasingly recognized as a strong woman who refused to abide by what she saw as the oppressive nature of her husband's religious culture and tried to change it.
Jezebel's Changing Reputation
The story as given in I and II Kings presents Jezebel as an evil influence from the moment of her arrival in Israel who corrupts her husband, the court, and the people by trying to impose her “godless” beliefs on the Chosen People of the one true god. I Kings 16: 30-33 presents King Ahab as a wicked king seduced by the corrupting influence of his new wife and is an audience's introduction to the story:
Ahab, son of Omri, did more evil in the eyes of the Lord than any of those before him. He not only , but he also married Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal, king of the Sidonians, and began to serve Baal and worship him. He set up an altar for Baal in the temple of Baal that he built in Samaria. Ahab also made an Asherah pole and did more to arouse the anger of the Lord, the God of Israel, than did all the kings of Israel before him.
Traditionally, the story of Jezebel is one of a corrupting influence on a king who had already shown himself a poor representative of his kingdom's religious culture. The biblical account assumes a reader's knowledge that Jezebel, coming from Sidon, would have worshipped the god Baal and his consort Astarte along with many other deities and also assumes one would know that the polytheism of the Sidonians was comparable to that of the Canaanites prior to the rise of Israel and monotheism in their land. Since monotheism and the kingdom of Israel are presented in a positive light, Jezebel, Sidon, and Ahab are cast negatively.
It could be that the biblical narrative depicts events, more or less, accurately but this view is challenged by modern-day scholarship which increasingly leans toward a new interpretation of the clash between Jezebel and Elijah as demonstrating the conflict between polytheism and monotheism in the region during the 9th century BCE. In this interpretation, Jezebel is understood as a princess, the daughter of a king and priest, trying to maintain her cultural heritage in a foreign land against a religion she could not accept. The historian and biblical scholar Janet Howe Gaines comments:
For more than two thousand years, Jezebel has been saddled with a reputation as the bad girl of the Bible, the wickedest of women. This ancient queen has been denounced as a murderer, prostitute and enemy of God, and her name has been adopted for lingerie lines and World War II missiles alike. But just how depraved was Jezebel? In recent years, scholars have tried to reclaim the shadowy female figures whose tales are often only partially told in the Bible. (1)
Although she has been associated with seduction, depravity, and harlotry for centuries, a more accurate understanding of Jezebel emerges as one considers the possibility she was simply a woman who refused to submit to the religious beliefs and practices of her husband and his culture. The recent scholarship, which has led to a better understanding of the civilization of Phoenicia, the role of women, and the struggle of the adherents of the Hebrew god Yahweh for dominance over the older faith of the Canaanites, suggests a different, and more favorable, picture of Jezebel than the traditional understanding of her. The scholarly trend now is to consider the likely possibility she was a woman ahead of her time married into a culture whose religious class saw her as a formidable threat.
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'Time's Difference in Cue' (Yeshuah)
'Time's Difference in Cue' (Yeshuah)...Elijah was afraid and ran for his life. When he came to Beersheba in Judah, he left his servant there, while he himself went a day's journey into the desert. He came to a broom tree, sat down under it and prayed that
Time's Difference in Cue (Yeshuah) there's still time until there's none you don't know this time this time when there's none it is not given to you freely it is your last stand to change your course of choice 'there are many who aren't given this time' so you say this isn's so every soul has their stand the moment they begin life inside the womb each soul in the making begins the process…
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Anytime you depend on a source that is not God, He will cut you off, because He will not allow your life to be sourced by something that cannot sustain your life. So He will cut you off for a little while so you will come back to what you needed all along - because He loves you that much.
Steven Furtick, Elevation Church, 5.7.2017
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And Elijah came to all the people, and said, “How long will you falter between two opinions? If the Lord is God, follow Him; but if Baal, follow him.” But the people answered him not a word. 1 Kings 18:21 #coptorthodox #authorityinchrist #chooselife #ourauthorityinchrist #1kings18 #1kings18v21 #coptic #orthodox #bibleverse #bible
#orthodox#coptic#coptorthodox#chooselife#1kings18v21#ourauthorityinchrist#bibleverse#1kings18#authorityinchrist#bible
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Definitely got caught off guard when it said "...I will make it rain..." #makeitrain #1kings18 I'm a bad person. Lol. (at World Harvest Christian Center)
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The best prayer we can pray is for God to glorify Himself thru us. #biblejournaling #1Kings18
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When he saw Elijah, he asked, “Is it you—·the biggest troublemaker in [L you troubler of] Israel?”Elijah answered, “I have not made trouble in Israel. You and your father’s ·family [L house] have made all this trouble by ·not obeying [forsaking; abandoning] the Lord’s commands. You have ·gone after [followed; worshiped] the Baals. - 1 Kings 18:17-18 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Kings18:17-18&version=EXB
Message to Trump and others
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1 Kings 1:1-53 (King James Version)
Published on http://www.accesstogod.com/index.php/2017/09/30/1-kings-11-53-king-james-version/ #1Kings1, #KingJames, #KingJamesVersion, #KJV, #OldTestament, #1Kings, #1Kings1, #1Kings11, #1Kings1153, #1Kings1153KJV, #1Kings110, #1Kings111, #1Kings112, #1Kings113, #1Kings114, #1Kings115, #1Kings116, #1Kings117, #1Kings118, #1Kings119, #1Kings12, #1Kings120, #1Kings121, #1Kings122, #1Kings123, #1Kings124, #1Kings125, #1Kings126, #1Kings127, #1Kings128, #1Kings129, #1Kings13, #1Kings130, #1Kings131, #1Kings132, #1Kings133, #1Kings134, #1Kings135, #1Kings136, #1Kings137, #1Kings138, #1Kings139, #1Kings14, #1Kings140, #1Kings141, #1Kings142, #1Kings143, #1Kings144, #1Kings145, #1Kings146, #1Kings147, #1Kings148, #1Kings149, #1Kings15, #1Kings150, #1Kings151, #1Kings152, #1Kings153, #1Kings16, #1Kings17, #1Kings18, #1Kings19
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The devil doesn't like it when you say "This is significant." The way he gets you to leave your assignment is to convince you that it doesn't matter what you're working on.
Steven Furtick, Elevation Church, 5.7.2017
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When you run from the resistance, you run from the rain. When you run from the battle, you run from the blessings. When you run from the problem, you run from the promise.
Steven Furtick, Elevation Church, 5.7.2017
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One thing I found out about dry seasons is that often, my situation can be doing a lot better than my soul.
Steven Furtick, Elevation Church, 5.7.2017
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1 Kings 18:1-46 (King James Version)
Published on http://www.accesstogod.com/index.php/2017/09/30/1-kings-181-46-king-james-version/ #1Kings18, #KingJames, #KingJamesVersion, #KJV, #OldTestament, #1Kings, #1Kings181, #1Kings18146, #1Kings18146KJV, #1Kings1810, #1Kings1811, #1Kings1812, #1Kings1813, #1Kings1814, #1Kings1815, #1Kings1816, #1Kings1817, #1Kings1818, #1Kings1819, #1Kings182, #1Kings1820, #1Kings1821, #1Kings1822, #1Kings1823, #1Kings1824, #1Kings1825, #1Kings1826, #1Kings1827, #1Kings1828, #1Kings1829, #1Kings183, #1Kings1830, #1Kings1831, #1Kings1832, #1Kings1833, #1Kings1834, #1Kings1835, #1Kings1836, #1Kings1837, #1Kings1838, #1Kings1839, #1Kings184, #1Kings1840, #1Kings1841, #1Kings1842, #1Kings1843, #1Kings1844, #1Kings1845, #1Kings1846, #1Kings185, #1Kings186, #1Kings187, #1Kings188, #1Kings189, #1Kings18
#1 Kings18#KingJames#KingJamesVersion#KJV#OldTestament#1 Kings#1 Kings 18:1#1 Kings 18:1-46#1 Kings 18:1-46 KJV#1 Kings 18:10#1 Kings 18:11#1 Kings 18:12#1 Kings 18:13#1 Kings 18:14#1 Kings 18:15#1 Kings 18:16#1 Kings 18:17#1 Kings 18:18#1 Kings 18:19#1 Kings 18:2#1 Kings 18:20#1 Kings 18:21#1 Kings 18:22#1 Kings 18:23#1 Kings 18:24#1 Kings 18:25#1 Kings 18:26#1 Kings 18:27#1 Kings 18:28#1 Kings 18:29
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