Solomon not only embodies divine rule over all creation, but also divine creative activity. Much like Moses embodied the divine kavod when he spoke forth the tabernacle in seven divinely given speeches, so too Solomon is the builder of the temple, the cosmic microcosm. What is even more remarkable about this is how it creates a parallel between Solomon as the embodiment of divine wisdom (1 Kgs 3:7–13) and God’s hypostatized Wisdom as it is described in Proverbs 8. This scripture describes holy Wisdom as an offspring of the deity (Prov 8:22–29). Solomon/Israelite king is described as God’s Son (2 Sam 7:14, Ps 2:7) and as one that has also been begotten of God (Ps 2:7). Solomon is the builder of the temple (1 Kgs 6–8), the cosmic microcosm. God’s hypostatized Wisdom is described as a “craftsman at his [God’s] side” (Prov 8:30) in creation. Therefore, as the ultimate fulfillment of the Davidic testament, it is not for arbitrary reasons that the Apostle Paul identifies Christ as the hypostatized Wisdom of God (1 Cor 1:29, Col 1:16). It was therefore fitting that Christ was a carpenter (Mark 6:3) in that both Solomon and holy Wisdom are builders, and the Messiah is promised as one who will build God’s house (2 Sam 7:13). Just as Christ in his preincarnate state as God’s hypostatized Wisdom brought about creation, so he brings forth new creation through his incarnation, life, death, and resurrection (2 Cor 5:17). Solomon, as a type of Christ, prefigures his coming incarnation and divine creativity as the wise builder of the cosmic microcosm.
Beyond these connotations of divinity, there is (as has previously been mentioned) a prevalent use of the language of sonship in monarchic and messianic texts throughout the Old Testament: “I will be to him a father, and he shall be to me a son” (2 Sam 7:12–14).204 Traditions describing the king as divine are by no means unprecedented within the environment of the Ancient Near East. Kraus has noted Egyptian and Mesopotamian parallels.205 Eichrodt has pointed to Urgaritic examples.206 This prevalence of divine kingship language should not surprise us in the least. In light of the protevangelium’s promise of a divine Messiah that would renew creation, it would appear that many ancient peoples understood their divine kings as fulfilling this role.
Nevertheless, although the Israelite king embodies God’s rule, he is not divine himself. Gerhard von Rad and Sigmund Mowickel emphasize that the Hebrew Scriptures do not designate the king as divine, but rather the king embodies the divine to the extent that he is a representative of YHWH’s rule.207 The king is, as Walter Brueggemann notes, an Israelite among Israelites, standing under the authority of the law.208 Kraus also observes that the formula of the public pronunciation of someone as one’s own “Son” (such as in Psalm 2) was a common way of designating them as an heir by adoption in ancient law codes (he mentions the code of Hammurabi).209
Beyond its divine connotations, it should also be noted that the language of divine sonship meant the Israelite king represented the restoration of Adamic humanity. Israel is also referred to in Exodus as “my firstborn Son” (Exod 4:22). We also have seen that Genesis views Israel as a type of the ultimate fulfillment and restoration of human freedom and dominion. For this reason, the kingly mediators also stand as representatives of Israel before God and Israel.
Through the historical record of the Old Testament, this representative quality becomes clearer in that the nation fares as well as the behavior of its king allows. According to the accounts of the so-called Deuteronomistic history, Israel prospers during the righteous reigns of David, the younger Solomon, and Hezekiah (even if in this last case “prosper” means a last minute reprieve from destruction (see 2 Kgs 18–22). In the same manner, David’s sins result in the punishment of the nation (2 Sam 24), just as the nation is punished because of the wickedness of the reign of Manasseh (2 Kgs 21:1–17).
This relationship is a two-way street, in that some kings also suffer for the sins of the nation. At the end of 2 Kings, during the reign of Josiah, though righteous, he was still cursed by God because of the previous sins of Manasseh and the people of Judah in general (2 Kgs 23:26–27). Although 2 Chronicles connects his death with disobedience to God (2 Chr 35:22), this is not incompatible with the account in 2 Kings. His death could represent both punishment for Manasseh and his own disobedience. In any case, Josiah is killed at Megiddo and the exile follows not far behind (2 Kgs 23:29–30). Therefore Josiah bears the nation’s sin and thereby represents them before God and the nation. The king then stands as a sin bearer, much as we observed both Moses and the high priest doing earlier. This role of the Israelite king was also prefigured earlier in the history of Genesis, where Judah (David’s forefather and the inheritor of an eternal kingship) offers himself as a substitute for his brother Benjamin (Gen 44:33).
For the Old Testament, God’s promises to David (2 Sam 7) would find fulfillment in spite of human failings.210 David’s kingship is an eternal one and not dependent on obedience to the law. This promise was a fulfillment of Israel’s prophecy to Judah that eternal kingship would come from his line (Gen 49:8–13).211
Just as Isaiah prophesies about the fulfillment of the prophet like Moses, he also predicted the fulfillment of the Davidic testament. The Davidic Messiah, much like the figures prophesied to fulfill priestly and prophetic mediation, takes on divine qualities. He is described as “Immanuel” (Isa 7:14), that is, “God with us.”212 In chapter 9, he is also described as giving those in darkness a “great light” (v. 2). This is more than reminiscent of the Servant of YHWH in chapter 49, who is therein described as a “light to the nations,” a phrase we earlier connected to the manifestation of the divine kavod.213 In Isaiah 42:7 the Servant’s task is described as to “bring out the prisoners from the dungeon, from the prison those who sit in darkness” (emphasis added). In Isaiah 9 he is described as “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (v. 6). The adjectives “Mighty” (’êl gib·bō·wr,) and “Everlasting” (which is one word in Hebrew with “Father,” ’ă·bî·‘ad) are consistently associated with God elsewhere in the Old Testament.214
There also might be a connection between the Messianic figure of chapter 9 and the Angel of YHWH. The LXX translates the verse not as “Wonderful Counselor” but rather as the “Angel of Great Council.”215 There is little in the Hebrew text that would definitively suggest this translation. Nevertheless,