Prayer Vow and Decisive Action: Solomon’s Response to Adonijah’s Scheme (1 Kings 2.23)

Then King Solomon swore by the LORD, “So may God do to me, and more also, for Adonijah has devised this scheme at the risk of his life!

Background

King David is dead, and Solomon’s time as co-regent is over—he is now king. Before his death, David gave Solomon some instructions: be faithful to God’s ways and take care of some unfinished business for him.

Not long after David’s death, Solomon faces the same problem his father faced with his rebellious son. Adonijah, the son who tried to wrest the kingship away from David, goes to Bathsheba (the Queen mother). He reminds her that he would have been king if God had not chosen Solomon. He asks that he be allowed to marry a woman named Abishag. Bathsheba goes to Solomon with the request, but Solomon sees through the trick. Abishag was a royal concubine of David’s, the one who cared for him in his old age. To take a King’s concubine was to claim kingly power.

This was the first domestic test of Solomon’s reign. Unlike his father, who failed to take care of family problems, Solomon acts swiftly. He offers the vow above, then acts on it. He sent an officer to execute Adonijah.

Meaning

The prayer is similar to other prayer vows we have encountered. It is the type where the offerer vows to do something or else be cursed by God. In this passage, the prayer vow serves to emphasize a major point the author wants us to see: Solomon is a strong, decisive leader, even when it comes to his own family. He does not have the flaws that David has. Prayer-vows are not to be made lightly. If we make them, we must keep them.

Read the full study of this prayer by becoming a patron of the Praying Through the Bible project for less than a cup of coffee per month.

Give

Subscribe to the Daybreak Devotions for Women

Be inspired by God's Word every day! Delivered to your inbox.


More from Mark McDowell

Editor's Picks

  • featureImage

    When Worry Steals Your Joy

    My husband, Steve, and I sat anxiously in our seats. I wondered if I was going to be able to endure the ride, especially knowing my propensity for motion sickness. But we began nonetheless. The guide strapped all passengers into the tiny boats and gave last minute instructions. Of course there were life preservers, but what good would they do in the fierce rapids that threatened to suck its prey below the surface? Read more...

    4 min read
  • featureImage

    The Harvest: Embracing the Call for Laborers

    In this Sunday's gospel reading, Jesus sends his disciples "two-by-two" before Him to find "laborers for the harvest." This is the Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time. Please share your thoughts on the article in the "Comments" section.Peacehttps://www.patheos.com/blogs/faith4today/2025/07/the-harvest-embracing-the-call-for-laborers/

    1 min read
  • featureImage

    How we Maximize our Spiritual Potential-

    Every believer in Jesus is literally bursting with all sorts of spiritual potential. It’s true.Even those who don’t think they have it, have it. Spiritual potential is a fundamental component of th…

    5 min read

More from Mark McDowell