Arthur Peake's Commentary on the Bible
1 Kings 15:33,34
1 Kings 15:33 to 1 Kings 16:34. Baasha's Dynasty. Rise of the House of Omri. Nothing is told us of Baasha except the usual annalistic details, and, that a prophet named Jehu foretold the destruction of his whole house. His son Elah was at war with the Philistines (1 Kings 16:15), but remained at Tirzah (p. 30), which at this time was the chief residence of the kings of Israel. Zimri slew him and reigned but seven days, and was then attacked by the army under Omri, and burned himself in his house. For four years, (cf. 1 Kings 16:15 with 1 Kings 16:23), there was civil war between Omri and Tibni. Finally (1 Kings 16:22) Omri prevailed. Omri is described as more wicked than any of his predecessors. The only thing recorded of him is that he built a city on a hill bought from a man named Shemer (1 Kings 16:24), and called it after his name Shomeron, more familiar to us as Samaria (p. 30), the Greek form, which is more akin to the Assyrian word found on the monuments, Sa-ma-ri-na. Omri was so important that on the Assyrian monuments Jehu, who destroyed his dynasty, is called son of Omri, and in the eighth century the district of Samaria is the Land of Humri (Omri).
Ahab, according to the Heb., began to reign in the thirty-eighth year of Asa (1 Kings 16:29); but the LXX has the second year of Jehoshaphat.-' The Greek version makes the reign of Omri begin with the fall of Tibni (1 Kings 16:23), and not with the death of Zimri four years earlier (1 Kings 16:15). Ahab is singled out for especial condemnation. His personal religion was that of his people. That is, he walked in the sins of Jeroboam (1 Kings 16:31). Strangely enough, after him names compounded with Yahweh first became common both in Israel and Judah. His sons were Jehoram and Ahaziah, his daughter (or sister, 2 Kings 8:26), Athaliah, his trusted servant Obadiah. He may be said to have followed Solomon's policy in making a close alliance with the Zidonians. The god of his wife, Jezebel is called Baal (1 Kings 16:32). The word baal (p. 87) is ambiguous: it means (a) an owner, e.q. of an ox (Exodus 21:28), or in the case of a woman she is baalath of familiar spirits (1 Samuel 28:7); (b) a local god so in Judges we have the plural Baalim; (c) applied to Yahweh, who is called the baal of Israel (Hosea 2:16); (d) as here a proper name, the Baal of Tyre, i.e. Melkarth. In the LXX the fem, article is generally prefixed to Baal since the Hebrews sometimes called him Shame (bosheth, a fem, noun, Numbers 32:38 *, 1 Samuel 14:47 *). In this narrative the masc, article is used. Jezebel was the daughter of Ethbaal (1 Kings 16:31). Josephus (Apion, i. 18) enumerates the kings of Tyre; the last are Ithobalus (Ethbaal) a priest of Astarte, Bedezor his son, Matgen and Pygmalion, the brother of Dido. Jezebel was thus an aunt of Dido. But as she lived in the ninth century B.C. she can hardly be fitted in with the scheme of chronology which makes Dido live at the time of the fall of Troy.
1 Kings 15:34. The rebuilding of Jericho by Hiel the Bethelite. Joshua pronounced a curse on the man who should rebuild Jericho (Joshua 6:26 *), and it was fulfilled when Hiel built, i.e. fortified it. But it had been a place of some importance in the interval (2 Samuel 10:5), and soon after Hiel it was called a city (2 Kings 21:9). The plain meaning is that Hiel lost his firstborn son when he laid the foundations of the city, and his younger son when he set up the gates. It has even been suggested that he inaugurated and finished his work by a human sacrifice as was usual among the Canaanites witness the excavation of human bones at Taanach and Gezer (pp. 83, 99, Exodus 13:2 *).