The legendary first king of Israel, from the period of the Judges:
The legendary kings of the United Monarchy of Israel. Scholars are divided as to whether these kings really existed, and if they did whether they were simply tribal chieftains:
Kings who ruled the northern kingdom of Israel, as stated in The Bible. The earlier kings may be uncertain, with the notable exception of Omri and Ahab:
The prophet Samuel served as a bridge between the Judges and the Kings of Israel. He anointed both Saul and David as the first two kings of Israel, transitioning the nation from a period of judges to a monarchy.
According to the Books of Kings, written in the southern kingdom, Judah, every king of the northern kingdom, Israel, was absolutely polytheistic. If the term 'godly' is meant to imply service to the God of Judaism, then the evidence is that Israel and its kings were certainly not godly.
Your question is somewhat vague. There were many kings mentioned in the Bible. You probably referring to the first three kings in Israel. Those are : Saul, David and Solomon. If that was not the answer you wanted, please edit your question or post a more precise one. Maybe the three kings came to the stable when Jesus was born. The three kings came from Persia now Iran, Melchor, Baltazar and Gasparwhich offered gifts, Myrr, incense & gold.
The first king was: Jeroboam The second king was: Nadab
Yes. The account of Samuel anointing Saul is found in 1 Samuel 9 and 10, and his anointing of David is found in 1 Samuel 16.
Israel had three famous kings, David, saul and Solomon.
they were not kings as Saul was their first king.
The first kings of Judah and Israel were Saul, David, Solomon. They ruled from 1020 BCE to 931 BCE.
David, Solomon, and Saul.
Saul, David, and SolomanSaulDavidSolomon
The prophet Samuel served as a bridge between the Judges and the Kings of Israel. He anointed both Saul and David as the first two kings of Israel, transitioning the nation from a period of judges to a monarchy.
The first king was Rehoboam, Solmon's son.
They are the generations of kings of the Israelites who ruled over the two separate houses of "Israel" and "Judah" (the Jews) after David's death, through the House of Israel's scattering by Assyria... and the House of Judah's (the Jew's) captivity by Babylon some 130 years after Israel disappeared.They also chronicle some of the kings' behavior and God's Prophets' warnings and interaction with them.First and second Kings, according to the KJV subtitles them: "Commonly called THE THIRD AND FOURTH BOOKS OF THE KINGS"... with first and second "Samuel" being the "otherwise called the FIRST AND SECOND BOOKS OF KINGS."I Samuel actually begins the chronicling of the kings of Israel, beginning with Israel's emerging from the "Judges" era... their rejection of God as their Sovereign King, and the anointing of Saul.
1 King refers to the first book of 1 Kings in the Old Testament. 1 Kings and 2 Kings tell the stories of some the kings of Judah and Israel.
King David was the one who, through conquering all the enemies round about, finally ushered in an era of peace, which enabled his son, King Solomon, to build the First Temple.
Saul, David, and Solomon. After that, the kingdom broke into two nations - Israel and Yehuda
1) The word "together" does not occur in the verse. At least not in the original. 2) The verse in context is saying that (Yehoram) the King of Israel was fearful that "God has called (brought) these three kings together (their armies)" to deliver them (in defeat) into the hands of Moab. The kings of Israel, Judah and Edom were attempting to attack Moab for having rebelled against Israel. On the way, they suffered from lack of water and Yehoram feared this would bring about their defeat. Answer. The three kings together are, "Wisdom, Knowledge, and Understanding".