It must have been a monstrous week in Tirzah. Zimri became king by killing Elah; he wiped out the family and friends of Baasha and Elah within a week, leaving no one alive; and when that news reached the besiegers of Gibbethon, the soldiers proclaimed their commander-in-chief, Omri, as king. He immediately moved the siege to Tirzah, the capital, and Zimri soon understood that it was an unequal battle and killed himself.
Here we hear the damning judgment again. Zimri doing evil in the sight of the Lord, walking in the way of Jeroboam
(who was king about thirty years earlier). He too—in the seven days that he was king—set a bad example to the people—a mortal sin for a king.
15 La vingt-septième année d'Asa, roi de Juda, Zimri régna sept jours à Thirtsa. Le peuple campait contre Guibbethon, qui appartenait aux Philistins.