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Sunday, September 14th, 2025
the Week of Proper 19 / Ordinary 24
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Biblia Gdańska

I Księga Królewska 11:9

I rozgniewał się Pan na Salomona, że się odwróciło serce jego od Pana, Boga Izraelskiego, który się mu był ukazał po dwa kroć.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Anger;   Backsliders;   Disobedience to God;   God;   Government;   Judgments;   Probation;   Rulers;   Solomon;   Women;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Backsliding;  

Dictionaries:

- Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Solomon;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Leadership;   Woman;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Ecclesiastes, the Book of;   Solomon;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Divided Kingdom;   Kings, 1 and 2;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Israel;   Solomon;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Kings;   Solomon;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Kingdom of Israel;  

Parallel Translations

Biblia Brzeska (1563)
A przetoż się Pan rozgniewał na Salomona, przeto iż serce jego odstąpiło od Pana, Boga izraelskiego, który się mu był po dwakroć ukazał.
Nowe Przymierze Zaremba
PAN rozgniewał się więc na Salomona za to, że odstąpił od bycia przy PANU, Bogu Izraela, który dwukrotnie mu się ukazał
Nowa Biblia Gdańska (2012)
Zatem WIEKUISTY rozgniewał się na Salomona, że odwrócił swoje serce od WIEKUISTEGO, Boga Israela, który dwukrotnie mu się objawił;
Biblia Tysiąclecia
I rozgniewał się Pan na Salomona, że się odwróciło serce jego od Pana, Boga Izraelskiego, który się mu był ukazał po dwa kroć.
Uwspółcześniona Biblia Gdańska
PAN rozgniewał się więc na Salomona za to, że jego serce odwróciło się od PANA, Boga Izraela, który dwukrotnie mu się ukazał;
Biblia Warszawska
Toteż Pan rozgniewał się na Salomona za to, że odwrócił serce swoje od Pana, Boga izraelskiego, który mu się dwukrotnie ukazał

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

angry: Exodus 4:14, Numbers 12:9, Deuteronomy 3:26, Deuteronomy 9:8, Deuteronomy 9:20, 2 Samuel 6:7, 2 Samuel 11:27, 1 Chronicles 21:7, Psalms 78:58-60, Psalms 90:7, Psalms 90:8

his heart: 1 Kings 11:2, 1 Kings 11:3, Deuteronomy 7:4, Proverbs 4:23, Isaiah 29:13, Isaiah 29:14, Hosea 4:11, 2 Timothy 4:10

which had appeared: 1 Kings 3:5, 1 Kings 9:2

Reciprocal: 1 Kings 11:33 - they have forsaken 1 Chronicles 28:7 - if

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And the Lord was angry with Solomon, because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel,.... Or from the fear of him, as the Targum, which must in a great measure be cast off, or he could not have given in to idolatry in any shape as he did; for it was for that the Lord was displeased, the which nothing is more provoking to him, as may be often observed:

which had appeared unto him twice; once at Gibeon, and again after his prayer at the dedication of the temple, 1 Kings 3:5, which is mentioned here as an aggravation of his sin, that he should fall into it, when the Lord had condescended to appear to him so graciously.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse 1 Kings 11:9. The Lord was angry with Solomon — Had not this man's delinquency been strongly marked by the Divine disapprobation, it would have had a fatal effect on the morals of mankind. Vice is vice, no matter who commits it. And God is as much displeased with sin in Solomon as he can be with it in the most profligate, uneducated wretch. And although God sees the same sin in precisely the same degree of moral turpitude as to the act itself, yet there may be circumstances which greatly aggravate the offense, and subject the offender to greater punishment. Solomon was wise; he knew better; his understanding showed him the vanity as well as the wickedness of idolatry. God had appeared unto him twice, and thus given him the most direct proof of his being and of his providence. The promises of God had been fulfilled to him in the most remarkable manner, and in such a way as to prove that they came by a Divine counsel, and not by any kind of casualty. All these were aggravations of Solomon's crimes, as to their demerit; for the same crime has, in every case, the same degree of moral turpitude in the sight of God; but circumstances may so aggravate, as to require the offender to be more grievously punished; so the punishment may be legally increased where the crime is the same. Solomon deserved more punishment for his worship of Ashtaroth than any of the Sidonians did, though they performed precisely the same acts. The Sidonians had never known the true God; Solomon had been fully acquainted with him.


 
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