Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab
This passage shows the rapid moral and political collapse of the northern kingdom when its kings persist in Jeroboam’s idolatry. The Lord’s prophetic word governs the rise and fall of these dynasties, and every new ruler either fulfills or intensifies covenant judgment. Ahab stands as the darkest es
Commentary
15:33 In the third year of Asa’s reign over Judah, Baasha son of Ahijah became king over all Israel in Tirzah; he ruled for twenty-four years.
15:34 He did evil in the sight of the Lord; he followed in Jeroboam’s footsteps and encouraged Israel to sin.
16:1 Jehu son of Hanani received from the Lord this message predicting Baasha’s downfall:
16:2 “I raised you up from the dust and made you ruler over my people Israel. Yet you followed in Jeroboam’s footsteps and encouraged my people Israel to sin; their sins have made me angry.
16:3 So I am ready to burn up Baasha and his family, and make your family like the family of Jeroboam son of Nebat.
16:4 Dogs will eat the members of Baasha’s family who die in the city, and the birds of the sky will eat the ones who die in the country.”
16:5 The rest of the events of Baasha’s reign, including his accomplishments and successes, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
16:6 Baasha passed away and was buried in Tirzah. His son Elah replaced him as king.
16:7 The prophet Jehu son of Hanani received from the Lord the message predicting the downfall of Baasha and his family because of all the evil Baasha had done in the sight of the Lord. His actions angered the Lord (including the way he had destroyed Jeroboam’s dynasty), so that his family ended up like Jeroboam’s. Elah’s Reign over Israel
16:8 In the twenty-sixth year of King Asa’s reign over Judah, Baasha’s son Elah became king over Israel; he ruled in Tirzah for two years.
16:9 His servant Zimri, a commander of half of his chariot force, conspired against him. While Elah was drinking heavily at the house of Arza, who supervised the palace in Tirzah,
16:10 Zimri came in and struck him dead. (This happened in the twenty-seventh year of Asa’s reign over Judah.) Zimri replaced Elah as king.
16:11 When he became king and occupied the throne, he killed Baasha’s entire family. He did not spare any male belonging to him; he killed his relatives and his friends.
16:12 Zimri destroyed Baasha’s entire family, just as the Lord had predicted to Baasha through Jehu the prophet.
16:13 This happened because of all the sins which Baasha and his son Elah committed and which they made Israel commit. They angered the Lord God of Israel with their worthless idols.
16:14 The rest of the events of Elah’s reign, including all his accomplishments, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel. Zimri’s Reign over Israel
16:15 In the twenty-seventh year of Asa’s reign over Judah, Zimri became king over Israel; he ruled for seven days in Tirzah. Zimri’s revolt took place while the army was deployed in Gibbethon, which was in Philistine territory.
16:16 While deployed there, the army received this report: “Zimri has conspired against the king and assassinated him.” So all Israel made Omri, the commander of the army, king over Israel that very day in the camp.
16:17 Omri and all Israel went up from Gibbethon and besieged Tirzah.
16:18 When Zimri saw that the city was captured, he went into the fortified area of the royal palace. He set the palace on fire and died in the flames.
16:19 This happened because of the sins he committed. He did evil in the sight of the Lord and followed in Jeroboam’s footsteps and encouraged Israel to continue sinning.
16:20 The rest of the events of Zimri’s reign, including the details of his revolt, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel. Omri’s Reign over Israel
16:21 At that time the people of Israel were divided in their loyalties. Half the people supported Tibni son of Ginath and wanted to make him king; the other half supported Omri.
16:22 Omri’s supporters were stronger than those who supported Tibni son of Ginath. Tibni died; Omri became king.
16:23 In the thirty-first year of Asa’s reign over Judah, Omri became king over Israel. He ruled for twelve years, six of them in Tirzah.
16:24 He purchased the hill of Samaria from Shemer for two talents of silver. He launched a construction project there and named the city he built after Shemer, the former owner of the hill of Samaria.
16:25 Omri did more evil in the sight of the Lord than all who were before him.
16:26 He followed in the footsteps of Jeroboam son of Nebat and encouraged Israel to sin; they angered the Lord God of Israel with their worthless idols.
16:27 The rest of the events of Omri’s reign, including his accomplishments and successes, are recorded in the scroll called the Annals of the Kings of Israel.
16:28 Omri passed away and was buried in Samaria. His son Ahab replaced him as king.
16:29 In the thirty-eighth year of Asa’s reign over Judah, Omri’s son Ahab became king over Israel. Ahab son of Omri ruled over Israel for twenty- two years in Samaria.
16:30 Ahab son of Omri did more evil in the sight of the Lord than all who were before him.
16:31 As if following in the sinful footsteps of Jeroboam son of Nebat were not bad enough, he married Jezebel the daughter of King Ethbaal of the Sidonians. Then he worshiped and bowed to Baal.
16:32 He set up an altar for Baal in the temple of Baal he had built in Samaria.
16:33 Ahab also made an Asherah pole; he did more to anger the Lord God of Israel than all the kings of Israel who were before him.
16:34 During Ahab’s reign, Hiel the Bethelite rebuilt Jericho. Abiram, his firstborn son, died when he laid the foundation; Segub, his youngest son, died when he erected its gates, just as the Lord had warned through Joshua son of Nun.
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Historical setting and dynamics
This unit spans the unstable northern kingdom from Baasha through Ahab during the reign of Asa in Judah. Israel’s throne is marked by coups, short reigns, military mutiny, and civil division, first in Tirzah and then under Omri in the new capital Samaria. The passage also reflects the international dimension of royal politics: Omri secures a strategic capital site, and Ahab’s marriage to Jezebel represents a powerful Phoenician alliance that becomes a vehicle for official Baal worship. Hiel’s rebuilding of Jericho directly confronts an older covenant curse, showing that political strength does not отменate divine word.
Central idea
This passage shows the rapid moral and political collapse of the northern kingdom when its kings persist in Jeroboam’s idolatry. The Lord’s prophetic word governs the rise and fall of these dynasties, and every new ruler either fulfills or intensifies covenant judgment. Ahab stands as the darkest escalation: he not only repeats prior sins but institutionalizes Baal worship in Israel.
Context and flow
This unit closes the reign of Baasha and then moves in quick succession through Elah, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab. It begins with Jehu’s oracle against Baasha, then narrates its fulfillment through assassinations, dynastic collapse, and political consolidation. The flow is deliberately compressed, using repeated royal-annals formulas to show that the decisive issue is not administrative success but covenant fidelity. The section ends with a final sign of judgment in Hiel’s rebuilding of Jericho, setting up the prophetic confrontation with Ahab that follows in the book.
Exegetical analysis
The passage is arranged as a rapid series of royal notices, but the narrator is not merely recording political turnover. He interprets each reign by the same covenantal standard: whether the king walked in Jeroboam’s sins, led Israel into sin, and provoked the Lord. Baasha’s accession is noted without endorsement; his rule is immediately judged because he perpetuated the northern kingdom’s foundational idolatry. Jehu son of Hanani’s oracle explains that kingship itself was a gift from God—Baasha was raised up from the dust—so his abuse of power is both rebellion and ingratitude. The announced punishment mirrors Jeroboam’s house, showing that divine judgment is consistent, measured, and already embedded in prior prophetic warning.
Elah’s reign is brief and morally empty. Zimri’s assassination is narrated as treachery, not reform; his slaughter of Baasha’s house is not presented as righteous zeal but as another stage in the same cycle of violence and judgment. The note that Elah was drinking heavily underscores his vulnerability and irresponsibility, while Zimri’s seven-day reign highlights the instability that follows when a kingdom is detached from covenant faithfulness. Omri’s rise demonstrates political strength, and the narrator even records his building project at Samaria, yet immediately judges him worse than his predecessors. The mention of accomplishments in the royal annals reminds the reader that human records may celebrate success while Scripture weighs the heart and worship of the king.
Ahab is the climactic development. His marriage to Jezebel is not a neutral diplomatic detail; it is the doorway to imported Baal worship and its institutionalization in Samaria. He does not merely continue Jeroboam’s legacy; he expands it by building a Baal temple and an Asherah pole, making idolatry public, royal, and entrenched. The final verse about Hiel of Bethel rebuilding Jericho functions as a narrative coda and a concrete proof that the Lord’s word still stands over Israel’s land. The deaths of Hiel’s sons fulfill Joshua’s ancient warning and show that covenant curses are not empty threats. The whole unit therefore presents the northern kingdom as spiraling deeper into judgment while God’s prophetic word remains precise and effective.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage sits squarely in the Deuteronomistic history, where Israel’s kings are assessed by covenant obedience under the Mosaic covenant. The repeated judgments against Baasha, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab show the working out of covenant curses for idolatry in the land, especially as the northern kingdom embraces Jeroboam’s false worship. At the same time, the narrative implicitly preserves the distinction between Israel and Judah, since the Davidic line in Judah continues through Asa while the northern kingdom destabilizes. The Jericho episode reaches back to Joshua and confirms that the land remains under the authority of the Lord’s spoken word. This unit therefore advances the biblical storyline toward the need for a faithful king who will not repeat the covenant-breaking pattern of the northern house.
Theological significance
The passage reveals the Lord as sovereign over kings, dynasties, and history itself. Human power is shown to be contingent and accountable: God raises rulers up, removes them, and judges them by their response to his word. Idolatry is not a minor flaw but a covenantal offense that corrupts leadership and spreads sin through the people. The text also highlights the reliability of prophetic speech: what the Lord announces through Jehu and Joshua comes to pass exactly. Finally, the passage exposes the tragic escalation of sin, where political instability, personal vice, and false worship reinforce one another.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
The Jehu oracle against Baasha is direct prophecy that is fulfilled in the narrated collapse of his house. Hiel’s rebuilding of Jericho is the clearest symbolic-historical sign in the unit: it demonstrates the continuing force of Joshua’s curse and the seriousness of covenant unfaithfulness in the land. The repeated destruction of dynasties is not typology in a strict redemptive-historical sense, but it does establish a pattern of judgment that prepares for later prophetic ministry against the northern kingdom. No stronger messianic typology is present here.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
Several ancient Near Eastern and biblical royal-world dynamics clarify the text: throne seizure through assassination, palace intrigue, military loyalty, and marriage alliances as instruments of statecraft. The army at Gibbethon can determine kingship because control of armed force mattered more than formal succession in a fractured monarchy. The narrator’s use of royal annals reflects the common practice of court records, but Scripture selectively summarizes them to make a theological point. Honor-shame logic also matters: to be ‘raised from the dust’ and then rebel against the benefactor is a striking image of ingratitude and dishonor.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage is not direct messianic prophecy, but it intensifies the need for a faithful king who will not repeat Jeroboam’s sin. The northern kings’ failure throws the contrast with the Davidic line into sharper relief and strengthens the expectation that God must provide a righteous ruler who honors the covenant. The reliable fulfillment of Jehu’s and Joshua’s words also reinforces the trustworthiness of later prophetic promises. Within the larger canon, the corruption of Ahab and Jezebel becomes part of the backdrop for subsequent prophetic conflict and for the enduring hope of a true king under whom idolatry is finally judged.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s evaluation of leaders is moral and covenantal, not merely pragmatic. Political success, strategic building, or dynastic consolidation cannot offset disobedience. Repeated sin hardens into institutionalized corruption when leaders normalize what God condemns. The passage warns against alliances, habits, and worship patterns that bring compromise into the center of life. It also calls readers to trust God’s word of judgment and warning, since what he says about sin, idolatry, and accountability is never empty.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Readers should not flatten this passage into a generic anti-politics lesson or treat every narrated event as a model for action. The text is a covenantal evaluation of specific kings in the divided monarchy, and its judgments belong to that historical setting. Hiel’s death of his sons should be read as fulfillment of an ancient curse, not as permission to draw speculative conclusions about every instance of suffering.
Key Hebrew terms
vayya‘as hara‘
Gloss: did evil
This repeated royal evaluation is the narrator’s theological verdict. It measures kings by covenant loyalty, not by political skill or military success.
hik‘is
Gloss: provoked to anger
The verb frames Israel’s idolatry as personal offense against the Lord, not merely a policy mistake. It explains why judgment falls on households and dynasties.
havalim
Gloss: vanities, worthlessness
The term sharply devalues the false gods and images behind Israel’s sin. Their emptiness contrasts with the living Lord who speaks and acts in judgment.
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