1 Kings 1:6
"His father had never rebuked him at any time by asking, 'Why have you done thus?' He was also very handsome, and he was born after Amnon." — David's parental failure (*lo-`atzvo avi kol-yomim lemar madu'a kach asita*, literally "his father never grieved him all his days saying why have you done thus") is presented as a direct cause of Adonijah's rebellion—a tragic echo of Eli's failure with his sons (1 Sam 3:13). The phrase *vaya'aseh ken* (he was also handsome) uses the participle form of *asah* (to make/do), suggesting Adonijah has *made* or *constructed* his handsomeness as a tool. Born after Amnon (the firstborn killed by Absalom), Adonijah inherits the position of eldest surviving son, creating plausible dynastic claim. The narration indicts permissive parenting as antecedent to rebellion.