Adonijah in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
(See ABIATHAR) and ABSALOM). Means "My Lord is Jehovah", or,
"Jah my Father".
1. Fourth son of David, by Haggith, born at Hebron.
Very goodly in looks, like Absalom. Foolishly indulged by
his father, who "had not displeased him at any time in
saying, Why hast thou done so?" Never crossed when young, he
naturally expected to have his own way when old; and took
it, to his father's grief in his old age, and to his own
destruction. Compare Proverbs 13:24; Proverbs 22:6; "Train
up a child in the way he should go;" not in the way he would
go: 1 Kings 1:6. When David was seemingly too old to offer
energetic resistance, Adonijah as now the oldest son, about
35 years old (compare 2 Samuel 3:2-4 with 2 Samuel 5:5),
Amnon, Chileab, and Absalom being dead, claimed the throne,
in defiance of God's expressed will, and David's oath to
Bathsheba that Solomon should inherit the throne (1
Chronicles 22:9-10). Like Absalom (2 Samuel 15:1) he assumed
regal state, with chariots, horsemen, and 50 men to run
before him (2 Kings 1; 2).
Nathan the prophet, Zadok (Eleazar's descendant, and
so of the older line of priesthood), Benaiah son of
Jehoiada, captain of the king's guard, Shimei and Rei (or
Shimma, Raddai), David's own brothers, supported Solomon.
Adonijah was supported by Abiathar, Eli's descendant of
Ithamar's (Aaron's fourth son's) line, the junior line, and
Joab who perhaps had a misgiving as to the possibility of
Solomon's punishing his murder of Abner and Amasa, and a
grudge toward David for having appointed the latter
commander in chief in his stead (2 Samuel 19:13). Adonijah
had also invited to a feast by the stone Zoheleth at En-
rogel all the king's sons except Solomon, and the captains
of the host, the king's servants, of Judah. A meeting for a
religious purpose, such as that of consecrating a king, was
usually held near a fountain, which En-rogel was. Nathan and
Bathsheba foiled his plot by inducing David to have Solomon
conducted in procession on the king's mule to Gihon, a
spring W. of Jerusalem (2 Chronicles 32:30).
Upon his being anointed and proclaimed by Zadok, all
the people hailed him, God save the king! Adonijah's party,
surprised suddenly amidst their feasting, typify sinners'
carnal security, from which the Lord's coming suddenly shall
startle them to their destruction (Matthew 24:48; Luke
12:45; 1 Thessalonians 5:2-3; compare 1 Kings 1:49).
Adonijah, at the tidings announced by Jonathan, Abiathar's
son, fled for sanctuary, to the horns of the altar. Solomon
would have spared him had he shown himself "a worthy man."
But on David's death he, through the queen mother Bathsheba,
now exalted to Special dignity, sought Abishag, David's
virgin widow, to be given him, a contemplated incest only
second to that perpetrated by Absalom, whom he so much
resembled, and also a connection which was regarded in the
East as tantamount to a covert claim to the deceased
monarch's throne. (See ABNER and (See ABSALOM.) Benaiah
dispatched him.
2. A Levite in Jehoshaphat's reign (2 Chronicles
17:8), sent with the princes to teach the book of the law
throughout Judah.
3. Nehemiah 10:16, called Adonikam in Ezra 2:13,
whose children were 666 (compare Revelation 13:18, the
numerical mark of the beast), Revelation 8:13; Nehemiah
7:18; Nehemiah 10:16, but 667 in Nehemiah 7:18.
Read More about Adonijah in Fausset's Bible Dictionary