ADONIJAH
(Ad·o·niʹjah) [Jah is my Lord].
1. David’s fourth son, born of Haggith in Hebron. (2 Sam. 3:4) Though of a different mother, Adonijah was quite similar to Absalom in being “very good looking in form” and in his ambition. (1 Ki. 1:5, 6; compare 2 Samuel 14:25; 15:1.) He becomes prominent in the Bible record during David’s waning years. Despite Jehovah’s declaration that the kingship would go to Solomon (1 Chron. 22:9, 10), Adonijah began boasting that he would be Israel’s next king. Though there was neither law nor precedent in Israel to show that the eldest son should be the king’s heir, Adonijah doubtless founded his claim on this basis, since Amnon and Absalom, and probably Chileab, were dead. Like Absalom, he made a showy display of his pretensions and went uncorrected by his father. He built up party support by gaining the favor of the head of the army, Joab, and the head of the priesthood Abiathar. (1 Ki. 1:5-8) He then held a sacrificial feast near En-rogel, a short distance from the city of Jerusalem inviting most of the royal household, but not Solomon, Nathan the prophet, and Benaiah. His obvious purpose was to have himself declared king.—1 Ki. 1:9, 10, 25.
Nathan the prophet acted promptly to block Adonijah’s scheme. He counseled Solomon’s mother Bath-sheba to remind David of his oath in favor of Solomon’s kingship and then appeared after her at the king’s quarters to confirm her words and alert David to the gravity of the situation, also, in effect, indicating that he felt David may have been acting behind the backs of his close associates. (1 Ki. 1:11-27) This stirred the old king to action and he promptly gave orders for the immediate anointing of Solomon as coregent and successor to the throne. This action provoked a joyful uproar by the people, which was heard at Adonijah’s banquet. Soon a runner, priest Abiathar’s son, appeared with the disquieting news of David’s proclamation of Solomon as king. Adonijah’s supporters quickly dispersed and he fled to the tabernacle courtyard seeking refuge. Solomon then granted him pardon on the provision of his good behavior.—1 Ki. 1:32-53.
However, following David’s death, Adonijah approached Bath-sheba and induced her to act as his agent before Solomon to request David’s youthful nurse and companion, Abishag, as his wife. Adonijah’s statement that “the kingship was to have become mine, and it was toward me that all Israel had set their face for me to become king” indicates that he felt he had been deprived of his right, even though he professedly acknowledged God’s hand in the matter. (1 Ki. 2:13-21) While his request may have been based solely on the desire for some compensation for the loss of the kingdom, it strongly suggested that the fires of ambition continued in Adonijah, since by Oriental custom the wives and concubines of a king could only become those of his legal successor. (Compare 2 Samuel 3:7; 16:21.) Solomon so viewed this request made through his mother and ordered Adonijah’s death, which order was promptly carried out by Benaiah.—1 Ki. 2:22-25.
2. A Levite sent by Jehoshaphat to teach in the cities of Judah.—2 Chron. 17:8.
3. One of the “heads of the people” whose descendant, if not himself, joined certain princes and Levites in attesting by seal the confession contract made by the returned Israelites in the days of Nehemiah and Ezra. (Neh. 9:38; 10:1, 14, 16) He is suggested by some to be the same as Adonikam at Ezra 2:13, whose descendants, numbering six hundred and sixty-six returned from Babylon under Zerubbabel in 537 B.C.E. A comparison of the names of those whose representatives sealed the resolution at Nehemiah chapter 10 and of those listed as heads of the returning exiles at Ezra chapter 2 seems to bear this out.—See ADONIKAM.