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Samaria and the approaches
Samaria was named by King Omri (ruled about 885-874 BCE) after the name of its previous owner Shemer. It is interesting and curious why King Omri did not honor himself with the place he bought:
1 Kings 16:23-24: “ 23 In the thirty-first year of Asa king of Judah, Omri became king of Israel, and he reigned twelve years, six of them in Tirzah. 24 He bought the hill of Samaria from Shemer for two talents of silver and built a city on the hill, calling it Samaria, after Shemer, the name of the former owner of the hill.”
After moving the capital city of the Northern Kingdom twice from Shechem (1 Kings 12:25) and Tirzah (1 Kings 15:33) in the past 50 years, King Omri’s son Ahab established Samaria as the capital of the Northern Kingdom permanently until its fall by Assyria’s invasion in 722 BCE.
Samaria was proclaimed by Yahweh as a blessing (Mt. Gerizim) and a curse (Mt. Ebal) before the Israelites went across the Jordan River (Deut 11:29). Jesus used its geographical area (from Jerusalem to Jericho) to teach the parable of the Good Samaritan. It was also a place where Jesus talked to a Samaritan woman at Jacob’s Well. The Samaritan woman was the one who spread the word in this area that Jesus was the Messiah (John 4:1-30). Samaria is one of the places where Jesus announced this important message in Acts 1:8: