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12/8/21 7th/8th Grade: Kings

 

7th/8th gr. Axis Guide Sheet: Kings – I don’t know why the Israelites needed kings.

 

-          Topic intro (can also read the introduction page in your Bibles) 

o   Kings – “After the generations of the Judges, the Israelites continually asked God to give them a king like other nations had. God didn’t want the people to have a king (they already have God!) but then relented & the people suffered the consequences of their request for a human king. These kings were as flawed as any other people in the Bible. They got greedy, made mistakes, & hurt the people they were meant to help. They took the Israelites through more generations of triumph & turmoil.” –Colaborate.

o   Think about this: What are the pros & cons of having a president or some such leader?

 

Discussion starters:

 

 

-          Tell about a time you were really let down, when something you were excited about/really hoped for, ended up falling short of your expectations…

 

-          Is asking questions a faithful response when things go wrong?

 

-          How do you react when things go wrong? Who do you blame?

 

-          What kind of leader do you think God looks for?

 

-          Why does God allow the ancient Israelites – and us too – so much control in their/our lives?

 

-          What would be better if God just denied us the ability to make wrong choices? Worse?

 

-          Why would God allow us to do or have things that could lead us toward trouble?

 

 

 

 

Bible talk:

-          Have a volunteer read 1 Samuel 8:7.

o   Have you ever felt rejected?

o   God responds to the people’s rejection by giving them a king. Why would God do this?

o   What is the main job of a king or queen?

o   God’s covenant with the people of Israel involved them being a blessing to the whole world. How would having a king make this more difficult for God’s people?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maintain the Monarchy!

1 –Sit in a circle facing in.

2 – Designate a king/queen & an action symbolizing their position (i.e. placing a crown on their head).

3 – Designate a court position (prince/princess, advisor, duke/duchess, earl, lady, jester, peasant, etc) & symbol for each position, moving toward the increasingly lower positions.

4 – The king/queen starts the rhythm & everyone follows: knee slap – clap. Without missing a beat, make your symbol (slap, clap crown), then another’s (i.e. slap, clap, open book [advisor]).

5 – The person who’s action is done, must follow the rhythm (slap, clap, open book in this example), then do it with another person’s action (slap, clap, funny face [jester]).

6 – Continue until someone loses the rhythm, makes the wrong symbol, or makes theirs without being called out. They lose their place in court & must move to the lowest position. Everyone then moves up one position.

7 – The goal is to ascend to the throne & stay there as long as possible. Set a timer for how long you want to play.

 

 

 

The Letdown – Kings are an example of something people wanted, but didn’t work out the way they expected. List some things you really wanted that turned out to be less exciting than you thought they would be. Then talk about how these examples might connect with the stories of the Israelite kings.

Examples – a toy or game, a movie or concert, an experience you couldn’t wait for…



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For the history buffs - Kings of the Bible

source patheos.com


Here is a list of kings mentioned in the Bible for Israel, and when Israel and Judah became separate nations.


King Saul

King Saul was the first king of Israel and for a time was a good king, even prophesying (1st Sam 10:11-13) but God rejected him because of his disobedience to God. He never fully obeyed God and David was chosen to be the next king even though it would be roughly ten years before David would actually sit on the throne as King Saul sought after David’s life before he finally died.


King David

King David is the favorite of all kings for the Jews and in his lineage of course is Jesus Christ (Matt 1:6-17). Even though he committed adultery and conspired to have Bathsheba’s husband murdered, he repented (Psalm 51) and became Israel’s greatest earthly king and one of the most prolific writers in the Bible with the Book of Psalms.


King Solomon

King Solomon was the third king of Israel and as the son of David and became the heir to the throne. He later married foreign wives who led his heart away from the Lord and into idolatry but he would later repent and wrote the greatest book of wisdom ever written; the Book of Proverbs as well as the wisdom literature of the Book of Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon.


Israel Divides

This was the time when the nation of Israel split and now there would be two lines of kings and Jesus’ saying proved to be true; a house divided against itself cannot stand (Mark 3:25). After Israel divided into two separate nations, they would eventually fall and be taken into captivity. The nation of Israel would fall into the hands of the Assyrian Empire and most of the nation of what is known as the Northern Kingdom, would be taken captive. The Southern Kingdom, or Judah, would survive much longer, but in time they too would fall into idolatry and disobedience. Judah would be taken into captivity by the Chaldeans or the Babylonian Empire for seventy years.


He-changes-times-and


The Kings of Israel

King Jeroboam


King Nadab


King Baasha


King Elah


King Zimri


King Omri


King Ahab


King Ahaziah


King Jehoram


King Jehu


King Jehoahaz


King Joash


King Jeroboam II


King Zachariah


King Shallum


King Menaham


King Pekahiah


King Pekah


King Hoshea


This was the last king of the Northern Kingdom of Israel as God sent them into captivity for continually falling into idolatry. The nation of Israel or the northern ten tribes of Israel would disappear from history but not forever.


The Kings of Judah

King Rehoboam


King Rehoboam was not the king of Israel but of Judah since only the tribes of Benjamin and Judah were included but the Levites were among those staying loyal to King Rehoboam and the nation of Judah.


King Abijam


King Asa


King Jehoshaphat


King Jehoram


King Ahaziah


King Athaliah


King Joash


King Amaziah


King Uzziah


King Jotham


King Ahaz


King Hezehiah


King Manasseh


King Amon


King Josiah


King Jehoahaz


King Jehoiakim


King Jehoiachin


King Zedekiah


This was the last king of Judah before they fell into the captivity of the Babylonians and would remain there for seventy years as written about in the Book of Daniel.


Conclusion

The cycle of prosperity included; forgetting God and His laws, falling into idolatry, being taken into captivity, repentance, restoration to the land and then prosperity again only to start the vicious cycle all over again. It was as if Israel never learned her lesson but many nations are falling into this same trap today. Once a nation is prosperous, they tend to forget the God Who brought them that prosperity. People are like this too. They cycle through times of prosperity, idolatry (might be money or possessions), troubles, repentance, restoration, prosperity, and then back into forgetting God again. How am I like this? How are believers like this? How are nations like this? We see what has happened to Israel in the past; can it happen again to the nations of the world? We often repeat history because we have failed to learn from it. Any nation that turns their back on God will have God turn His back on them and pay for that in a substantial way.



 

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