1 Kings opens with the succession of Solomon and the height of Israel’s united monarchy. It recounts Solomon’s wisdom, wealth, and the construction of the Temple in Jerusalem—God’s dwelling among His people. Yet the book also traces the kingdom’s decline through idolatry and division, culminating in the split between Israel in the north and Judah in the south. In Catholic interpretation, 1 Kings contrasts faithfulness and apostasy, showing that prosperity without fidelity leads to ruin. The Temple becomes both the sign of God’s presence and the measure of Israel’s obedience.
| Testament | Old Testament | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Section | 2. Historical Books | ||
| Category | Field | Explanation | 1 Kings |
| Canonical Identity | Name | Official title of the book | 1 Kings |
| Testament | Old or New Testament | Old Testament | |
| Canonical Group | Section of Scripture | Historical Books | |
| Order in Canon | Position in Catholic sequence | 11 | |
| Authorship and Origin | Attributed Author | Traditional writer | Prophet Jeremiah (according to Jewish tradition), drawing on royal chronicles |
| Approximate Date | Estimated time of composition | c. 600–550 BC | |
| Original Language | Primary written form | Hebrew | |
| Provenance | Cultural or geographic origin | Judah, during or shortly before the Babylonian exile | |
| Historical Context | Period Represented | Dates of events described | c. 970–850 BC |
| Dominant Powers | Civilizations or empires active | United and Divided Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, Egypt, Phoenicia | |
| Social / Religious Setting | Cultural background | Transition from Solomon’s golden age to national division and religious apostasy | |
| External Influences | Neighboring cultural echoes | Phoenician alliances (Tyre), Egyptian diplomacy, Canaanite cultic practices | |
| Structure and Content | Chapters | Total number of canonical chapters | 22 |
| Genre | Literary type | Historical and prophetic narrative | |
| Major Sections | Core divisions or movements | 1. Solomon’s Reign and Temple (1–11) 2. Division of the Kingdom (12) 3. Early Kings of Israel and Judah (13–16) 4. Elijah’s Prophetic Ministry (17–22) | |
| Key Figures | Central characters | Solomon, Rehoboam, Jeroboam, Elijah, Ahab, Jezebel | |
| Setting | Main geographic focus | Jerusalem, Samaria, Mount Carmel |
1 Kings ends amid spiritual and political decay. The once-glorious kingdom is fractured, and prophetic voices—especially Elijah’s—emerge to call Israel back to covenant faith. The book closes with a warning wrapped in mercy: divine judgment answers unfaithfulness, yet God continually sends prophets to restore His people. For Catholics, 1 Kings marks the shift from royal splendor to moral testing, foreshadowing the Church’s constant need for renewal and the coming of the true, incorruptible King in Christ.
The Book of 1 Kings continues the history of Israel beginning with the last days of David and the rise of Solomon. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition), the book marks the transition from united monarchy to divided kingdom. It portrays the height of Israel’s power under Solomon—when the Temple is built in Jerusalem—and the slow decline that follows through disobedience and idolatry. The narrative balances political history with theological meaning: every ruler is judged not by strength or wealth, but by fidelity to the covenant. God’s promise to David endures, but it is tested by human corruption and divided loyalties.
| Section Name | Chapters | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Reign of Solomon | 1–11 | Solomon ascends the throne after David’s death. He prays for wisdom, builds the Temple, and leads Israel to its greatest prosperity. His later idolatry brings God’s judgment and the prophecy of division. | David, Solomon, Bathsheba, Nathan | NABRE highlights Solomon’s reign as both fulfillment and warning: wisdom brings glory; disobedience brings decline. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 12–16 | The kingdom divides after Solomon’s death—Rehoboam rules Judah, Jeroboam rules Israel. Successive kings in both realms turn to idolatry. | Rehoboam, Jeroboam, Abijah, Asa | NABRE views this as consequence of unfaithfulness: unity broken when covenant loyalty fades. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 17–22 | Elijah the prophet confronts Ahab and Jezebel, defeats Baal’s prophets at Carmel, and announces judgment. Ahab dies in battle; Elijah’s mission continues. | Elijah, Ahab, Jezebel, Ahaziah | NABRE interprets Elijah’s story as the spiritual heart of the book—prophetic power recalling Israel to covenant faith. |
The Book of 1 Kings ends with a nation divided and faith in crisis. Solomon’s golden age gives way to corruption and conflict, but God’s word through the prophets remains steadfast. In NABRE interpretation, 1 Kings teaches that no kingdom can endure apart from fidelity to the Lord. The story of kings and prophets reveals divine sovereignty amid human failure. The power of the throne fades, but the power of God’s word continues—guiding Israel toward repentance and the hope of restoration.
The Book of 1 Kings continues Israel’s national story from David’s final days through the rise and fall of Solomon and the divided monarchy. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition), it is viewed as both theological history and prophetic commentary, showing that the nation’s fate hinges on fidelity to the covenant. The first half celebrates the glory of Solomon’s reign—his wisdom, wealth, and the building of the Temple as the dwelling place of God’s presence. Yet Solomon’s compromises sow the seeds of decline. After his death, the kingdom splits: Judah under Rehoboam and Israel under Jeroboam. From this division emerges the prophetic movement, embodied by Elijah, who confronts idolatry and calls Israel back to covenant loyalty. Through kings and prophets alike, 1 Kings teaches that wisdom and power without obedience lead to ruin. The true measure of leadership is faithfulness to God’s word, not political success.
| Section | Chapter | Title / Focus | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 1 | Solomon Becomes King | Adonijah attempts to seize the throne, but Solomon is anointed king through Nathan and Bathsheba’s intervention. | Solomon, David, Bathsheba, Nathan, Adonijah | NABRE highlights God’s providence in succession—divine promise to David continues through Solomon. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 2 | David’s Final Instructions and Adonijah’s Death | David’s last words charge Solomon to walk faithfully with God; Solomon consolidates his reign through justice. | Solomon, David, Joab, Shimei | NABRE interprets transition as both fulfillment and cleansing—Solomon establishes righteous order. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 3 | Solomon’s Prayer for Wisdom | Solomon asks for wisdom to govern; God grants him wisdom, riches, and honor. The judgment of the two women confirms his wisdom. | Solomon, two women | NABRE emphasizes divine wisdom as gift—true leadership grounded in discernment and justice. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 4 | Solomon’s Officials and Prosperity | Solomon’s administration is organized; Israel enjoys peace, prosperity, and influence under his rule. | Solomon, officials of Israel | NABRE views this as realization of covenant blessing—wisdom and obedience bring harmony and abundance. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 5 | Preparations for the Temple | Solomon forms alliances and secures materials for building the Temple. | Solomon, Hiram of Tyre | NABRE notes cooperation in sacred work—God’s dwelling place built through human unity and skill. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 6 | Construction of the Temple | Detailed description of the Temple’s dimensions and design; construction completed in seven years. | Solomon, craftsmen | NABRE interprets architecture as theology—beauty and order mirror divine presence and holiness. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 7 | Solomon’s Palace and Temple Furnishings | Solomon builds his royal palace and completes the sacred furnishings of the Temple. | Solomon, Hiram (craftsman) | NABRE highlights sacred artistry—human craftsmanship expressing divine glory. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 8 | Dedication of the Temple | Solomon prays at the Temple’s dedication; God’s glory fills the house, symbolizing His covenant dwelling. | Solomon, priests, Israelites | NABRE identifies this as spiritual climax—God’s presence confirms Israel’s vocation as holy nation. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 9 | God’s Covenant with Solomon | God reaffirms His covenant but warns Solomon that disobedience will bring destruction. | Solomon, God | NABRE reads this as conditional blessing—wisdom must remain rooted in fidelity to endure. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 10 | The Visit of the Queen of Sheba | The Queen of Sheba visits Solomon, marvels at his wisdom and wealth, and blesses the Lord. | Solomon, Queen of Sheba | NABRE emphasizes witness of the nations—Solomon’s wisdom draws the world to recognize Israel’s God. |
| The Reign of Solomon | 1 Kings 11 | Solomon’s Idolatry and Judgment | Solomon’s foreign wives lead him into idolatry; God declares that the kingdom will be divided after his death. | Solomon, Jeroboam, God | NABRE interprets this as moral decline—wisdom without obedience leads to downfall. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 1 Kings 12 | The Division of the Kingdom | Rehoboam’s harsh rule causes ten tribes to rebel; Jeroboam becomes king over Israel. | Rehoboam, Jeroboam | NABRE emphasizes covenant consequence—disunity arises when leadership forsakes wisdom and mercy. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 1 Kings 13 | The Man of God from Judah | A prophet condemns Jeroboam’s altar at Bethel; disobedience brings his death by lion. | Jeroboam, unnamed prophet | NABRE highlights prophetic integrity—obedience to God’s word surpasses all other authority. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 1 Kings 14 | Prophecy against Jeroboam | Jeroboam’s son dies as judgment for idolatry; Rehoboam’s reign in Judah is also corrupt. | Jeroboam, Rehoboam, Ahijah | NABRE interprets this as divine justice—idolatry poisons both kingdoms, revealing the cost of unfaithfulness. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 1 Kings 15 | Kings of Judah and Israel | Brief accounts of Abijam, Asa, Nadab, and Baasha; Asa restores partial faithfulness in Judah. | Asa, Baasha, Nadab | NABRE underscores moral contrast—faithful kings bring stability; corrupt rulers breed turmoil. |
| The Division of the Kingdom and Early Kings | 1 Kings 16 | Kings from Baasha to Ahab | A series of wicked kings in Israel culminates in Ahab’s idolatrous rule with Jezebel. | Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, Ahab, Jezebel | NABRE views this as deepening apostasy—corruption entrenched until divine judgment through the prophets. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 17 | Elijah and the Widow of Zarephath | Elijah announces drought, is sustained by a widow, and raises her son from death. | Elijah, widow of Zarephath | NABRE interprets Elijah’s miracles as signs of God’s compassion and power amid apostasy. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 18 | Elijah and the Prophets of Baal | Elijah challenges Baal’s prophets on Mount Carmel; God sends fire from heaven and ends the drought. | Elijah, Ahab, Jezebel, prophets of Baal | NABRE highlights prophetic triumph—God alone is Lord; covenant faith restored through fire and rain. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 19 | Elijah at Mount Horeb | Fleeing Jezebel, Elijah encounters God in a gentle whisper and receives a renewed mission. | Elijah, God, Elisha | NABRE emphasizes revelation through intimacy—divine presence encountered not in power but in silence. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 20 | Ahab’s Wars with Aram | Ahab defeats Ben-hadad of Aram but spares him; a prophet rebukes him for disobedience. | Ahab, Ben-hadad, prophets | NABRE interprets victory followed by failure—God’s deliverance wasted when rulers compromise truth. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 21 | Naboth’s Vineyard | Jezebel arranges Naboth’s death so Ahab can seize his vineyard; Elijah prophesies judgment on Ahab and Jezebel. | Ahab, Jezebel, Elijah, Naboth | NABRE emphasizes prophetic justice—God defends the innocent and condemns abuse of power. |
| The Ministry of Elijah | 1 Kings 22 | The Death of Ahab | Ahab rejects prophetic warning, goes to battle disguised, and is mortally wounded. Dogs lick his blood as Elijah foretold. | Ahab, Micaiah, Jehoshaphat | NABRE interprets this as divine retribution—God’s word always fulfills, exposing false security in worldly power. |
The Book of 1 Kings ends in judgment and transition. In NABRE interpretation, Ahab’s downfall and Elijah’s continuing mission reveal that God’s justice governs history even when rulers fail. Kings rise and fall, but the prophetic voice endures as the guardian of truth and covenant fidelity. What began in splendor under Solomon ends in division and corruption—a warning that idolatry erodes both nation and heart. Yet the presence of prophets ensures hope: God does not abandon His people but continually calls them back to righteousness. The story closes with the certainty that divine word prevails over worldly power. True kingship belongs to the Lord alone, whose purposes advance even through human failure.