The queen of Sheba and Solomon's splendor
The queen of Sheba confirms that Solomon’s wisdom and splendor are real and that the LORD has blessed Israel by placing him on the throne. The chapter then displays the height of Solomon’s prosperity, but the very magnitude of his wealth and military accumulation also hints at the tensions that will
Commentary
10:1 When the queen of Sheba heard about Solomon, she came to challenge him with difficult questions.
10:2 She arrived in Jerusalem with a great display of pomp, bringing with her camels carrying spices, a very large quantity of gold, and precious gems. She visited Solomon and discussed with him everything that was on her mind.
10:3 Solomon answered all her questions; there was no question too complex for the king.
10:4 When the queen of Sheba saw for herself Solomon’s extensive wisdom, the palace he had built,
10:5 the food in his banquet hall, his servants and attendants, their robes, his cupbearers, and his burnt offerings which he presented in the Lord’s temple, she was amazed.
10:6 She said to the king, “The report I heard in my own country about your wise sayings and insight was true!
10:7 I did not believe these things until I came and saw them with my own eyes. Indeed, I didn’t hear even half the story! Your wisdom and wealth surpass what was reported to me.
10:8 Your attendants, who stand before you at all times and hear your wise sayings, are truly happy!
10:9 May the Lord your God be praised because he favored you by placing you on the throne of Israel! Because of the Lord’s eternal love for Israel, he made you king so you could make just and right decisions.”
10:10 She gave the king 120 talents of gold, a very large quantity of spices, and precious gems. The quantity of spices the queen of Sheba gave King Solomon has never been matched.
10:11 (Hiram’s fleet, which carried gold from Ophir, also brought from Ophir a very large quantity of fine timber and precious gems.
10:12 With the timber the king made supports for the Lord’s temple and for the royal palace and stringed instruments for the musicians. No one has seen so much of this fine timber to this very day.)
10:13 King Solomon gave the queen of Sheba everything she requested, besides what he had freely offered her. Then she left and returned to her homeland with her attendants. Solomon’s Wealth
10:14 Solomon received 666 talents of gold per year,
10:15 besides what he collected from the merchants, traders, Arabian kings, and governors of the land.
10:16 King Solomon made two hundred large shields of hammered gold; 600 measures of gold were used for each shield.
10:17 He also made three hundred small shields of hammered gold; three minas of gold were used for each of these shields. The king placed them in the Palace of the Lebanon Forest.
10:18 The king made a large throne decorated with ivory and overlaid it with pure gold.
10:19 There were six steps leading up to the throne, and the back of it was rounded on top. The throne had two armrests with a statue of a lion standing on each side.
10:20 There were twelve statues of lions on the six steps, one lion at each end of each step. There was nothing like it in any other kingdom.
10:21 All of King Solomon’s cups were made of gold, and all the household items in the Palace of the Lebanon Forest were made of pure gold. There were no silver items, for silver was not considered very valuable in Solomon’s time.
10:22 Along with Hiram’s fleet, the king had a fleet of large merchant ships that sailed the sea. Once every three years the fleet came into port with cargoes of gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks.
10:23 King Solomon was wealthier and wiser than any of the kings of the earth.
10:24 Everyone in the world wanted to visit Solomon to see him display his God-given wisdom.
10:25 Year after year visitors brought their gifts, which included items of silver, items of gold, clothes, perfume, spices, horses, and mules.
10:26 Solomon accumulated chariots and horses. He had 1,400 chariots and 12,000 horses. He kept them in assigned cities and in Jerusalem.
10:27 The king made silver as plentiful in Jerusalem as stones; cedar was as plentiful as sycamore fig trees are in the lowlands.
10:28 Solomon acquired his horses from Egypt and from Que; the king’s traders purchased them from Que.
10:29 They paid 600 silver pieces for each chariot from Egypt and 150 silver pieces for each horse. They also sold chariots and horses to all the kings of the Hittites and to the kings of Syria.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
Following the temple dedication and the LORD’s reaffirmation to Solomon in 1 Kings 9, this unit presents Solomon at the height of his international fame, wealth, and courtly splendor.
Historical setting and dynamics
The queen of Sheba likely represents a wealthy South Arabian kingdom tied to long-distance trade in spices and luxury goods. Her visit is both diplomatic and evaluative: a foreign ruler comes to test Solomon’s reputed wisdom and to witness the court that had become famous throughout the region. The passage also reflects the scale of Solomon’s international commerce through maritime trade, tribute, and royal accumulation. At the same time, the catalog of horses, chariots, gold, and silver places his reign within the larger Torah warning that kings must not multiply military power and wealth in a self-exalting way.
Central idea
The queen of Sheba confirms that Solomon’s wisdom and splendor are real and that the LORD has blessed Israel by placing him on the throne. The chapter then displays the height of Solomon’s prosperity, but the very magnitude of his wealth and military accumulation also hints at the tensions that will later trouble the kingdom. The passage therefore celebrates divine gift while quietly exposing the fragility of human kingship.
Context and flow
This unit follows the temple dedication and divine confirmation of Solomon’s rule in chapters 8–9, showing the outward reach of his wisdom and wealth. The queen’s visit functions as a public test and recognition scene, and the unit then broadens into an inventory of Solomon’s revenue, trade, throne, and military resources. It prepares the reader for the tragic turn in chapter 11, where the splendor described here begins to give way to disobedience and decline.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter opens with a wisdom contest scene. The queen of Sheba comes not as a mere sightseer but as a ruler who has heard of Solomon’s reputation and brings difficult questions to test him. The narrative emphasizes Solomon’s complete success: he answers everything, and nothing is too complex for him. The text then widens from verbal exchange to embodied evidence. The queen observes not only Solomon’s wisdom but also his palace, banquet, servants, royal order, and his burnt offerings at the LORD’s temple. That final detail matters: Solomon’s splendor is not detached from worship but is publicly tied to the temple, where his rule is meant to stand under the LORD’s name.
Her response is carefully worded. She does not merely flatter Solomon; she first verifies the report, then blesses the LORD, and finally interprets Solomon’s throne as an act of divine favor and covenant love for Israel. The queen correctly identifies that Solomon’s kingship is derivative: the LORD favored him and, for Israel’s sake, placed him on the throne to administer justice and righteousness. Her words are therefore a Gentile acknowledgment of Israel’s God and of the theological purpose of Davidic rule.
The gifts she brings and Solomon’s generous return gift reinforce the diplomatic and royal nature of the scene. The narrative then shifts, without a hard break, into a wealth catalogue. The annual intake of gold, the gold shields, the ivory-and-gold throne, the sea trade, and the imported luxuries all communicate unmatched abundance. The repeated superlatives are not accidental; they show Solomon as the benchmark king of the earth. Yet the unit is not simply triumphal. The accumulation of horses, chariots, and gold sits uncomfortably alongside the Torah’s warning that Israel’s king must not multiply military power, wealth, or dependence on Egypt. The narrator does not explicitly condemn Solomon here, but the material is selected in a way that invites readers to feel both admiration and unease. Solomon’s splendor is real, but it is already marked by the seeds of overreach.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands at the peak of the united monarchy under the Davidic covenant and in the immediate aftermath of the temple’s completion. The nations begin to acknowledge the wisdom and blessing that flow from the LORD’s choice of Israel’s king, which previews the broader biblical hope that the nations will one day come to Zion. Yet the passage also reveals that even the highest Old Testament expression of covenant blessing remains provisional: Solomon is greater than surrounding kings, but he is not the final king. The splendor of his reign points forward to a greater Son of David whose wisdom, righteousness, and kingdom will not decay.
Theological significance
The text teaches that wisdom, wealth, and political success are gifts from the LORD, not self-generated achievements. It also shows that true honor comes when even a foreign ruler recognizes that the LORD rules history and establishes kings for just governance. At the same time, the chapter warns that prosperity can become morally dangerous when it expands beyond covenant limits. God’s blessing is real, but it is never morally neutral; it is given for righteous rule, worship, and the good of the people, not for self-exaltation.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No direct prophecy is issued in this unit, but the visit of a foreign queen bringing gifts to Solomon is an important historical pattern. It anticipates the wider biblical theme of nations coming to Israel’s king and, ultimately, to Zion under the ideal Davidic ruler. The queen herself should not be allegorized, but her homage is canonically suggestive and later helps shape messianic expectation.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The scene is shaped by ancient Near Eastern royal court culture, where visitors test a king’s reputation, offer tribute, and honor a ruler through lavish gifts. The queen’s recognition of Solomon includes honor-shame logic: she publicly acknowledges his superiority and the LORD’s favor upon him. The wealth list also uses courtly hyperbole and comparison to communicate scale—silver becomes common, no throne equals his throne, and no kingdom rivals his splendor. The passage assumes a concrete, public, status-laden world rather than a private, inward spirituality.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the canon, this passage later becomes part of the broader pattern of Gentile recognition of Solomon’s wisdom, and Jesus himself appeals to the queen of Sheba as a historical witness to that wisdom. That later use does not erase the original meaning; rather, it shows that Solomon’s fame genuinely anticipates the greater Son of David. The movement from a foreign queen seeking Solomon’s wisdom to the Bible’s larger hope of the nations coming to the Davidic ruler contributes to the messianic trajectory that points toward Christ, whose wisdom and kingdom surpass Solomon’s.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should read success as stewardship under God, not as a warrant for pride. Wisdom should lead to worship, justice, and generosity, not merely to reputation. The passage also cautions against treating material prosperity as the measure of divine approval, especially where accumulation begins to echo disobedient patterns. Finally, leaders should note that public credibility matters: Solomon’s wisdom is seen not only in answers but in ordered life, worship, and just rule.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive question is how strongly the wealth inventory should be read as implicit critique. The text unquestionably celebrates Solomon’s greatness, but the selection of horses, chariots, gold, and Egyptian imports also fits the Deuteronomic warning to kings and prepares for the kingdom’s later instability. The passage is therefore best read as genuinely celebratory yet not naïvely approving of every aspect of Solomon’s accumulation.
Application boundary note
Readers should not flatten this royal narrative into a simple prosperity model for the church. Solomon’s wealth is part of a unique covenantal moment in Israel’s history, and the passage must be read in light of the Davidic kingdom, the temple, and the Torah’s limits on kingship. Nor should the queen of Sheba be over-symbolized beyond what the text supports.
Key Hebrew terms
ḥidôt
Gloss: riddles; difficult sayings
Describes the queen’s test of Solomon and highlights the depth of his wisdom, not merely his administrative skill.
ḥokmâ
Gloss: wisdom
The key theme of the chapter; Solomon’s God-given wisdom is the basis of his international fame and the queen’s praise.
mishpāṭ
Gloss: justice; right decision
In the queen’s blessing, Solomon’s throne is for the exercise of just rule, not merely for prestige.
tsĕdāqâ
Gloss: righteousness
Paired with justice, it frames Solomon’s kingship in covenantal moral terms; his authority is meant to embody right order under the LORD.
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