Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE
SECOND BOOK OF THE KINGS,
COMMONLY CALLED
THE FOURTH BOOK OF THE KINGS.
Commentary by ROBERT JAMIESON
[1] [2]
[3] [4]
[5] [6]
[7] [8]
[9] [10]
[11] [12]
[13] [14]
[15] [16]
[17] [18]
[19] [20]
[21] [22]
[23] [24]
[25]
CHAPTER 1
2Ki 1:1.
MOAB
REBELS.
1. Then Moab rebelled--Subdued by David
(2Sa 8:2),
they had, in the partition of Israel and Judah, fallen to the share of
the former kingdom. But they took advantage of the death of Ahab to
shake off the yoke (see on
2Ki 3:6).
The casualty that befell Ahaziah
[2Ki 1:2]
prevented his taking active measures for suppressing this revolt, which
was accomplished as a providential judgment on the house of Ahab for
all these crimes.
2Ki 1:2-8.
AHAZIAH'S
JUDGMENT BY
ELIJAH.
2-8. Ahaziah fell down through a lattice in his upper chamber--This
lattice was either a part of the wooden parapet, or fence, which
surrounds the flat roofs of houses, and over which the king was
carelessly leaning when it gave way; or it might be an opening like a
skylight in the roof itself, done over with lattice-work, which, being
slender or rotten, the king stepped on and slipped through. This latter
supposition is most probably the true one, as Ahaziah did not fall
either into the street or the court, but "in his upper chamber."
inquire of Baalzebub--Anxious to learn whether he should recover from
the effects of this severe fall, he sent to consult Baalzebub, that is,
the god of flies, who was considered the patron deity of medicine. A
temple to that idol was erected at Ekron, which was resorted to far and
wide, though it afterwards led to the destruction of the place
(Zec 9:5;
Am 1:8;
Zep 2:4).
"After visiting Ekron, 'the god of flies' is a name that gives me no
surprise. The flies there swarmed, in fact so innumerably, that I could
hardly get any food without these troublesome insects getting into it"
[VAN DE VELDE].
3. the angel of the Lord--not an angel, but the angel, who
carried on all communications between the invisible God and His chosen
people [HENGSTENBERG].
This angel commissioned Elijah to meet the
king's messengers, to stop them peremptorily on the idolatrous errand,
and convey by them to the king information of his approaching death.
This consultation of an idol, being a breach of the fundamental law of
the kingdom
(Ex 20:3;
De 5:7),
was a daring and deliberate rejection of the national religion. The
Lord, in making this announcement of his death, designed that he should
see in that event a judgment for his idolatry.
4. Thou shalt not come down from that bed--On being taken up, he had
probably been laid on the divan--a raised frame, about three feet
broad, extended along the sides of a room, covered with cushions and
mattresses--serving, in short, as a sofa by day and a bed by night, and
ascended by steps.
Elijah departed--to his ordinary abode, which was then at Mount
Carmel
(2Ki 2:25;
1Ki 18:42).
5. the messengers turned back--They did not know the stranger; but
his authoritative tone, commanding attitude, and affecting message
determined them at once to return.
8. an hairy man--This was the description not of his person, as in the
case of Esau, but of his dress, which consisted either of unwrought
sheep or goatskins
(Heb 11:37),
or of camel's haircloth--the coarser manufacture of this material like
our rough haircloth. The Dervishes and Bedouins are attired in this
wild, uncouth manner, while their hair flows loose on the head, their
shaggy cloak is thrown over their shoulders and tied in front on the
breast, naked, except at the waist, round which is a skin girdle--a
broad, rough leathern belt. Similar to this was the girdle of the
prophets, as in keeping with their coarse garments and their stern,
uncompromising office.
2Ki 1:9-16.
ELIJAH
BRINGS
FIRE FROM
HEAVEN ON
AHAZIAH'S
MESSENGERS.
9. Then the king sent unto him a captain of fifty--Any appearance of
cruelty that there is in the fate of the two captains and their men
will be removed, on a full consideration of the circumstances. God
being the King of Israel, Ahaziah was bound to govern the kingdom
according to the divine law; to apprehend the Lord's prophet, for
discharging a commanded duty, was that of an impious and notorious
rebel. The captains abetted the king in his rebellion; and they
exceeded their military duty by contemptuous insults.
man of God--In using this term, they either spoke derisively, believing
him to be no true prophet; or, if they regarded him as a true prophet,
the summons to him to surrender himself bound to the king was a still
more flagrant insult; the language of the second captain being worse
than that of the first.
10. let fire come down--rather, "fire shall come down." Not to avenge a
personal insult of Elijah, but an insult upon God in the person of His
prophet; and the punishment was inflicted, not by the prophet, but by
the direct hand of God.
15, 16. he arose, and went down with him--a marvellous instance of
faith and obedience. Though he well knew how obnoxious his presence was
to the king, yet, on receiving God's command, he goes unhesitatingly,
and repeats, with his own lips, the unwelcome tidings conveyed by the
messengers.
2Ki 1:17, 18.
AHAZIAH
DIES, AND
IS
SUCCEEDED BY
JEHORAM.
17. Jehoram--The brother of Ahaziah
(see on
2Ki 3:1).
CHAPTER 2
2Ki 2:1-10.
ELIJAH
DIVINES
JORDAN.
1-7. when the Lord would take up Elijah--A revelation of this event had
been made to the prophet; but, unknown to him, it had also been
revealed to his disciples, and to Elisha in particular, who kept
constantly beside him.
Gilgal--This Gilgal (Jiljil) was near Ebal and Gerizim; a school of the
prophets was established there. At Beth-el there was also a school of the
prophets, which Elijah had founded, notwithstanding that place was the
headquarters of the calf-worship; and at Jericho there was another
[2Ki 2:4].
In travelling to these places, which he had done through the impulse of
the Spirit
(2Ki 2:2, 4-6),
Elijah wished to pay a farewell visit to these several institutions,
which lay on his way to the place of ascension and, at the same time,
from a feeling of humility and modesty, to be in solitude, where there
would be no eye-witnesses of his glorification. All his efforts,
however, to prevail on his attendant to remain behind, were fruitless.
Elisha knew that the time was at hand, and at every place the sons of
the prophets spoke to him of the approaching removal of his master.
Their last stage was at the Jordan. They were followed at a distance by
fifty scholars of the prophets, from Jericho, who were desirous, in
honor of the great occasion, to witness the miraculous translation of
the prophet. The revelation of this striking event to so many was a
necessary part of the dispensation; for it was designed to be under the
law, like that of Enoch in the patriarchal age, a visible proof of
another state, and a type of the resurrection of Christ.
3. take away thy master from they head--an allusion to the custom of
scholars sitting at the feet of their master, the latter being over
their heads
(Ac 22:3).
8. Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the
waters--Like the rod of Moses, it had the divinely operating power
of the Spirit.
9. Elijah said unto Elisha, Ask what I shall do for thee--trusting
either that it would be in his power to bequeath it, or that God, at
his entreaty, would grant it.
let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me--This request was not,
as is commonly supposed, for the power of working miracles exceeding
the magnitude and number of his master's, nor does it mean a higher
endowment of the prophetic spirit; for Elisha was neither superior to,
nor perhaps equally great with, his predecessor. But the phrase, "a
double portion," was applied to the first-born
[De 21:17],
and therefore Elisha's request was, simply, to be heir to the prophetic
office and gifts of his master.
10. Thou hast asked a hard thing--an extraordinary blessing which
I cannot, and God only, can give. Nevertheless he, doubtless by the
secret directions of the Spirit, proposed to Elisha a sign, the
observation of which would keep him in the attitude of an anxious
waiter, as well as suppliant for the favor.
2Ki 2:11-18.
HE
IS
TAKEN
UP TO
HEAVEN IN A
CHARIOT OF
FIRE.
11. behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire--some
bright effulgence, which, in the eyes of the spectators, resembled
those objects.
went up by a whirlwind--a tempest or storm wind accompanied with vivid
flashes of fire, figuratively used for the divine judgments
(Isa 29:6).
12. Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father--that is, spiritual father,
as the pupils of the prophets are called their sons.
the chariot of Israel, and the horseman thereof--that is, that as
earthly kingdoms are dependent for their defense and glory upon warlike
preparations, there a single prophet had done more for the preservation
and prosperity of Israel than all her chariots and horsemen.
took hold of his own clothes and rent them--in token of his grief for
his loss.
13. He took up also the mantle of Elijah--The transference of this
prophetic cloak was, to himself, a pledge of his being appointed
successor, and it was an outward token to others of the spirit of Elijah
resting upon him.
14-18. smote the waters--The waving of the mantle on the river, and the
miraculous division of the waters consequent upon it, was an evidence
that the Lord God of Elijah was with him, and as this miracle was
witnessed by the scholars of the prophets from Jericho, they forthwith
recognized the pre-eminence of Elisha, as now the prophet of Israel.
16-18. fifty strong men, let them go, we pray thee, and seek thy
master--Though the young prophets from Jericho had seen Elijah's
miraculous passage of the Jordan, they had not witnessed the ascension.
They imagined that he might have been cast by the whirlwind on some
mountain or valley; or, if he had actually been admitted into heaven,
they expected that his body would still be remaining somewhere on
earth. In compliance with their importunity, he gave them permission,
but told them what the result would be.
2Ki 2:19-25.
ELISHA
HEALS THE
WATERS.
20. Bring me a new cruse, and put salt therein--The noxious qualities
of the water could not be corrected by the infusion of salt--for,
supposing the salt was possessed of such a property, a whole spring
could not be purified by a dishful for a day, much less in all future
time. The pouring in of the salt was a symbolic act with which Elisha
accompanied the word of the Lord, by which the spring was healed
[KEIL].
23, 24. there came forth little children out of the city--that is,
the idolatrous, or infidel young men of the place, who affecting to
disbelieve the report of his master's translation, sarcastically urged
him to follow in the glorious career.
bald head--an epithet of contempt in the East, applied to a person
even with a bushy head of hair. The appalling judgment that befell them
was God's interference to uphold his newly invested prophet.
CHAPTER 3
2Ki 3:1-3.
JEHORAM'S
EVIL
REIGN OVER
ISRAEL.
1, 2. Jehoram the son of Ahab began to reign over Israel in Samaria the
eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat--(compare
1Ki 22:51).
To reconcile the statements in the two passages, we must suppose that
Ahaziah, having reigned during the seventeenth and the greater part of
the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat, was succeeded by his brother Joram
or Jehoram, in the end of that eighteenth year, or else that Ahaziah,
having reigned two years in conjunction with his father, died at the
end of that period when Jehoram ascended the throne. His policy was as
hostile as that of his predecessors to the true religion; but he made
some changes. Whatever was his motive for this alteration--whether
dread of the many alarming judgments the patronage of idolatry had
brought upon his father; or whether it was made as a small concession
to the feelings of Jehoshaphat, his ally, he abolished idolatry in its
gross form and restored the symbolic worship of God, which the kings of
Israel, from the time of Jeroboam, had set up as a partition wall
between their subjects and those of Judah.
2Ki 3:4, 5.
MESHA,
KING OF
MOAB,
REBELS.
4-6. Mesha king of Moab, &c.--As his dominions embraced an extensive
pasture country, he paid, as annual tribute, the wool of a hundred
thousand lambs and a hundred thousand rams. It is still common in the
East to pay custom and taxes in the fruits or natural produce of the
land.
5. king of Moab rebelled--This is a repetition of
2Ki 1:1,
in order to introduce an account of the confederate expedition for
crushing this revolt, which had been allowed to continue unchecked
during the short reign of Ahaziah.
2Ki 3:6-24.
ELISHA
PROMISES
WATER AND
VICTORY OVER
MOAB.
6. King Jehoram . . . numbered Israel--made a levy from his own
subjects, and at the same time sought an alliance with Jehoshaphat,
which, as on the former occasion with Ahab, was readily promised
(1Ki 22:4).
8-12. Which way shall we go up? And he answered, The way through the
wilderness of Edom--This was a long and circuitous route, by the
southern bend of the Dead Sea. Jehoshaphat however preferred it, partly
because the part of the Moabite territory at which they would arrive,
was the most defenseless; and partly because he would thereby enlist,
in the expedition, the forces of the king of Edom. But, in penetrating
the deep, rocky valley of Ahsy, which forms the boundary between Edom
and Moab, the confederate army was reduced, both man and beast, to the
greatest extremities for want of water. They were disappointed by
finding the wady of this valley, the brook Zered
(De 2:13-18)
[ROBINSON], dry. Jehoram was in despair. But the
pious mind of Jehoshaphat inquired for a prophet of the Lord; and, on
being informed that Elisha was at hand, the three kings "went down to
him"; that is, to his tent, which was either in the camp, or close by
it. He had been directed thither by the Spirit of God for this special
purpose. They went to him, not only as a mark of respect, but to
supplicate for his assistance.
11. which poured water on the hands of Elijah--that is, was his
servant--this being one of the common offices of a servant. The phrase
is used here as synonymous with "a true and eminent prophet," who will
reveal God's will to us.
13, 14. What have I to do with thee? &c.--Wishing to produce a deep
spirit of humility and contrition, Elisha gave a stern repulse to the
king of Israel, accompanied by a sarcastic sneer, in bidding him go and
consult Baal and his soothsayers. But the distressed condition,
especially the imploring language, of the royal suppliants, who
acknowledged the hand of the Lord in this distress, drew from the
prophet the solemn assurance, that solely out of respect to Jehoshaphat,
the Lord's true servant, did he take any interest in Jehoram.
15. bring me a minstrel--The effect of music in soothing the mind is
much regarded in the East; and it appears that the ancient prophets,
before entering their work, commonly resorted to it, as a preparative,
by praise and prayer, to their receiving the prophetic afflatus.
the hand of the Lord--a phrase significantly implying that the gift of
prophecy was not a natural or inherent gift, but conferred by the power
and grace of God.
16. Make this valley full of ditches--capable of holding water.
17. Ye shall not see wind--It is common in the East to speak of
seeing wind, from the clouds of straw, dust, or sand, that are often
whirled into the air, after a long drought.
20-24. when the meat offering was offered--that is, at the time of
the morning sacrifice, accompanied, doubtless, with solemn prayers; and
these led, it may be, by Elisha on this occasion, as on a similar one
by Elijah
(1Ki 18:36).
behold, there came water by the way of Edom--Far from the Israelitish
camp, in the eastern mountains of Edom, a great fall of rain, a kind of
cloudburst, took place, by which the wady was at once filled, but they
saw neither the wind nor the rains. The divine interposition was shown
by introducing the laws of nature to the determined end in the
predetermined way [KEIL].
It brought not only aid to the Israelitish
army in their distress, by a plentiful supply of water, but destruction
on the Moabites, who, perceiving the water, under the refulgent rays of
the morning sun, red like blood, concluded the confederate kings had
quarrelled and deluged the field with their mutual slaughter; so that,
rushing to their camp in full expectation of great spoil, they were met
by the Israelites, who, prepared for battle, fought and pursued them.
Their country was laid waste in the way, which has always been
considered the greatest desolation in the East
(2Ki 3:24).
25. Kir-haraseth--(now Kerak)--Castle of Moab--then, probably, the only
fortress in the land.
27. took his eldest son that should have reigned in his stead, and
offered him for a burnt offering, &c.--By this deed of horror, to
which the allied army drove the king of Moab, a divine judgment came
upon Israel; that is, the besiegers feared the anger of God, which they
had incurred by giving occasion to the human sacrifice forbidden in the
law
(Le 18:21; 20:3),
and hastily raised the siege.
CHAPTER 4
2Ki 4:1-7.
ELISHA
AUGMENTS THE
WIDOW'S
OIL.
1. there cried a certain woman of the wives of the sons of the
prophets--They were allowed to marry as well as the priests and
Levites. Her husband, not enjoying the lucrative profits of business,
had nothing but a professional income, which, in that irreligious age,
would be precarious and very scanty, so that he was not in a condition
to provide for his family.
the creditor is come to take unto him my two sons to be bondmen--By
the enactment of the law, a creditor was entitled to claim the person
and children of the insolvent debtor, and compel them to serve him as
bondmen till the year of jubilee should set them free.
2-4. a pot--or cruet of oil. This comprising her whole stock of
domestic utensils, he directs her to borrow empty vessels not a few;
then, secluding herself with her children, [the widow] was to pour oil
from her cruse into the borrowed vessels, and, selling the oil,
discharge the debt, and then maintain herself and family with the
remainder.
6. the oil stayed--that is, ceased to multiply; the benevolent object
for which the miracle had been wrought having been accomplished.
2Ki 4:8-17.
PROMISES A
SON TO THE
SHUNAMMITE.
8. Elisha passed to Shunem--now Sulam, in the plain of Esdraelon, at
the southwestern base of Little Hermon. The prophet, in his journey,
was often entertained here by one of its pious and opulent inhabitants.
10. Let us make a little chamber--not build, but prepare it. She meant
a room in the oleah, the porch, or gateway
(2Sa 18:33;
1Ki 17:19),
attached to the front of the house, leading into the court and inner
apartments. The front of the house, excepting the door, is a dead wall,
and hence this room is called a chamber in the wall. It is usually
appropriated to the use of strangers, or lodgers for a night, and, from
its seclusion, convenient for study or retirement.
13-16. what is to be done for thee?--Wishing to testify his gratitude
for the hospitable attentions of this family, he announced to her the
birth of a son "about this time next year." The interest and importance
of such an intelligence can only be estimated by considering that
Oriental women, and Jewish in particular, connect ideas of disgrace
with barrenness, and cherish a more ardent desire for children than
women in any other part of the world
(Ge 18:10-15).
2Ki 4:18-37.
RAISES
HER
DEAD
SON.
19. My head, my head!--The cries of the boy, the part affected, and
the season of the year, make it probable that he had been overtaken by
a stroke of the sun. Pain, stupor, and inflammatory fever are the
symptoms of the disease, which is often fatal.
22. she called unto her husband--Her heroic concealment of the death
from her husband is not the least interesting feature of the story.
24. Drive, and go forward--It is usual for women to ride on asses,
accompanied by a servant, who walks behind and drives the beast with
his stick, goading the animal at the speed required by his mistress.
The Shunammite had to ride a journey of five or six hours to the top of
Carmel.
26-28. And she answered, It is well--Her answer was purposely brief
and vague to Gehazi, for she reserved a full disclosure of her loss for
the ear of the prophet himself. She had met Gehazi at the foot of the
hill, and she stopped not in her ascent till she had disburdened her
heavy-laden spirit at Elisha's feet. The violent paroxysm of grief into
which she fell on approaching him, appeared to Gehazi an act of
disrespect to his master; he was preparing to remove her when the
prophet's observant eye perceived that she was overwhelmed with some
unknown cause of distress. How great is a mother's love! how wondrous
are the works of Providence! The Shunammite had not sought a son from
the prophet--her child was, in every respect, the free gift of God. Was
she then allowed to rejoice in the possession for a little, only to be
pierced with sorrow by seeing the corpse of the cherished boy? Perish,
doubt and unbelief! This event happened that "the works of God should
be made manifest" in His prophet, "and for the glory of God."
29-31. take my staff . . . and lay . . . upon the face of the
child--The staff was probably an official rod of a certain form and
size. Necromancers used to send their staff with orders to the
messengers to let it come in contact with nothing by the way that might
dissipate or destroy the virtue imparted to it. Some have thought that
Elisha himself entertained similar ideas, and was under an impression
that the actual application of his staff would serve as well as the
touch of his hand. But this is an imputation dishonorable to the
character of the prophet. He wished to teach the Shunammite, who
obviously placed too great dependence upon him, a memorable lesson to
look to God. By sending his servant forward to lay his staff on the
child, he raised [the Shunammite's] expectations, but, at the same
time, taught her that his own help was unavailing--"there was neither
voice, nor hearing." The command, to salute no man by the way, showed the
urgency of the mission, not simply as requiring the avoidance of the
tedious and unnecessary greetings so common in the East
(Lu 10:1),
but the exercise of faith and prayer. The act of Gehazi was allowed to
fail, in order to free the Shunammite, and the people of Israel at
large, of the superstitious notion of supposing a miraculous virtue
resided in any person, or in any rod, and to prove that
it was only through earnest prayer and faith in the power of God and
for His glory that this and every miracle was to be performed.
34. lay upon the child, &c.--(see
1Ki 17:21;
Ac 20:10).
Although this contact with a dead body would communicate ceremonial
uncleanness, yet, in performing the great moral duties of piety and
benevolence, positive laws were sometimes dispensed with, particularly
by the prophets.
35. the child sneezed seven times, and the child opened his eyes--These
were the first acts of restored respiration, and they are described as
successive steps. Miracles were for the most part performed
instantaneously; but sometimes, also, they were advanced progressively
towards completion
(1Ki 18:44, 45;
Mr 8:24, 25).
2Ki 4:38-41.
PURIFIES
DEADLY
POTTAGE.
38. there was a dearth in the
land--(see on
2Ki 8:1).
the sons of the prophets were sitting before him--When receiving
instruction, the scholars sat under their masters. This refers to their
being domiciled under the same roof (compare
2Ki 6:1).
Set on the great pot--As it is most likely that the Jewish would
resemble the Egyptian "great pot," it is seen by the monumental
paintings to have been a large goblet, with two long legs, which stood
over the fire on the floor. The seethed pottage consisted of meat cut
into small pieces, mixed with rice or meal and vegetables.
39. went out into the field to gather herbs--Wild herbs are very
extensively used by the people in the East, even by those who possess
their own vegetable gardens. The fields are daily searched for mallow,
asparagus, and other wild plants.
wild vine--literally, "the vine of the field," supposed to be the
colocynth, a cucumber, which, in its leaves, tendrils, and fruit,
bears a strong resemblance to the wild vine. The "gourds," or fruit,
are of the color and size of an orange bitter to the taste, causing
colic, and exciting the nerves, eaten freely they would occasion such a
derangement of the stomach and bowels as to be followed by death. The
meal which Elisha poured into the pot was a symbolic sign that the
noxious quality of the herbs was removed.
lap full--The hyke, or large cloak, is thrown loosely over the left
shoulder and fastened under the right arm, so as to form a lap or
apron.
2Ki 4:42-44.
SATISFIES A
HUNDRED
MEN WITH
TWENTY
LOAVES.
43. They shall eat, and shall leave thereof--This was not a miracle of
Elisha, but only a prediction of one by the word of the Lord. Thus it
differed widely from those of Christ
(Mt 15:37;
Mr 8:8;
Lu 9:17;
Joh 6:12).
CHAPTER 5
2Ki 5:1-7.
NAAMAN'S
LEPROSY.
1. Naaman, captain of the host of the king of Syria, was a great man
with his master--highly esteemed for his military character and
success.
and honourable--rather, "very rich."
but he was a leper--This leprosy, which, in Israel, would have
excluded him from society, did not affect his free intercourse in the
court of Syria.
2-5. a little maid--who had been captured in one of the many
predatory incursions which were then made by the Syrians on the
northern border of Israel (see
1Sa 30:8;
2Ki 13:21; 24:2).
By this young Hebrew slave of his wife, Naaman's attention was
directed to the prophet of Israel, as the person who would remove his
leprosy. Naaman, on communicating the matter to his royal master, was
immediately furnished with a letter to the king of Israel, and set out
for Samaria, carrying with him, as an indispensable preliminary in the
East, very costly presents.
5. ten talents of silver--£3421; 6000 shekels of gold; a
large sum of uncertain value.
ten changes of raiment--splendid dresses, for festive occasions--the
honor being thought to consist not only in the beauty and fineness of
the material, but on having a variety to put on one after another, in
the same night.
7. when the king of Israel had read the letter, that he rent his
clothes--According to an ancient practice among the Eastern people,
the main object only was stated in the letter that was carried by the
party concerned, while other circumstances were left to be explained at
the interview. This explains Jehoram's burst of emotion--not horror at
supposed blasphemy, but alarm and suspicion that this was merely made
an occasion for a quarrel. Such a prince as he was would not readily
think of Elisha, or, perhaps, have heard of his miraculous deeds.
2Ki 5:8-15.
ELISHA
SENDS
HIM TO
JORDAN, AND
HE
IS
HEALED.
8-12. when Elisha the man of God had heard that the king of Israel had
rent his clothes, that he sent to the king, saying, . . . let him come
now to me--This was the grand and ultimate object to which, in the
providence of God, the journey of Naaman was subservient. When the
Syrian general, with his imposing retinue, arrived at the prophet's
house, Elisha sent him a message to "go and wash in Jordan seven
times." This apparently rude reception to a foreigner of so high
dignity incensed Naaman to such a degree that he resolved to depart,
scornfully boasting that the rivers of Damascus were better than all
the waters of Israel.
11. strike his hand over the place--that is, wave it over the diseased
parts of his body. It was anciently, and still continues to be, a very
prevalent superstition in the East that the hand of a king, or person
of great reputed sanctity, touching, or waved over a sore, will heal
it.
12. Abana and Pharpar--the Barrady and one of its five
tributaries--uncertain which. The waters of Damascus are still highly
extolled by their inhabitants for their purity and coldness.
14. Then went he down, and dipped himself seven times in
Jordan--Persuaded by his calmer and more reflecting attendants to
try a method so simple and easy, he followed their instructions, and
was cured. The cure was performed on the basis of God's covenant with
Israel, by which the land, and all pertaining to it, was blessed. Seven
was the symbol of the covenant [KEIL].
2Ki 5:15-19.
ELISHA
REFUSES
NAAMAN'S
GIFTS.
15, 16. he returned to the man of God--After the miraculous cure,
Naaman returned to Elisha, to whom he acknowledged his full belief in
the sole supremacy of the God of Israel and offered him a liberal
reward. But to show that he was not actuated by the mercenary motives
of the heathen priests and prophets, Elisha, though he accepted
presents on other occasions
(2Ki 4:42),
respectfully but firmly declined them on this, being desirous that the
Syrians should see the piety of God's servants, and their superiority
to all worldly and selfish motives in promoting the honor of God and
the interests of true religion.
17. two mules' burden of earth--with which to make an altar
(Ex 20:24)
to the God of Israel. What his motive or his purpose was in this
proposal--whether he thought that God could be acceptably worshipped
only on his own soil; or whether he wished, when far away from
the Jordan, to have the earth of Palestine to rub himself with,
which the Orientals use as a substitute for water; or whether, by
making such a request of Elisha, he thought the prophet's grant of it
would impart some virtue; or whether, like the modern Jews and
Mohammedans, he resolved to have a portion of this holy earth
for his nightly pillow--it is not easy to say. It is not strange to
find such notions in so newly a converted heathen.
18. goeth into the house of Rimmon--a Syrian deity; probably the
sun, or the planetary system, of which a pomegranate
(Hebrew, Rimmon) was the symbol.
leaneth on my hand--that is, meaning the service which Naaman rendered
as the attendant of his sovereign. Elisha's prophetic commission not
extending to any but the conversion of Israel from idolatry, he makes
no remark, either approving or disapproving, on the declared course of
Naaman, but simply gives the parting benediction
(2Ki 5:19).
2Ki 5:20-27.
GEHAZI, BY A
LIE,
OBTAINS A
PRESENT, BUT
IS
SMITTEN WITH
LEPROSY.
20-25. I will run after him, and take somewhat of him--The respectful
courtesy to Elisha, shown in the person of his servant, and the
open-handed liberality of his gifts, attest the fulness of Naaman's
gratitude; while the lie--the artful management is dismissing the
bearers of the treasure, and the deceitful appearance before his
master, as if he had not left the house--give a most unfavorable
impression of Gehazi's character.
23. in two bags--People in the East, when travelling, have their money,
in certain sums, put up in bags.
27. leper as white as
snow--(See on
Le 13:3).
This heavy infliction was not too severe for the crime of Gehazi. For
it was not the covetousness alone that was punished; but, at the same
time, it was the ill use made of the prophet's name to gain an object
prompted by a mean covetousness, and the attempt to conceal it by lying
[KEIL].
CHAPTER 6
2Ki 6:1-7.
ELISHA
CAUSES
IRON TO
SWIM.
1. the place where we dwell with thee--Margin, "sit before thee."
The one points to a common residence--the other to a common place of
meeting. The tenor of the narrative shows the humble condition of
Elisha's pupils. The place was either Beth-el or Jericho, probably the
latter. The ministry and miracles of Elisha brought great accessions to
his schools.
2. Let us go, we pray thee, unto Jordan--whose wooded banks would
furnish plenty of timber.
5. it was borrowed--literally, "begged." The scholar's distress arose
from the consideration that it had been presented to him; and that,
owing to his poverty, he could not procure another.
6. cut down a stick, and cast it in thither--Although this means was
used, it had no natural adaptation to make the iron swim. Besides, the
Jordan is at Jericho so deep and rapid that there were one thousand
chances to one against the stick falling into the hole of the axe-head.
All attempts to account for the recovery of the lost implement on such
a theory must be rejected.
the iron did swim--only by the miraculous exertion of Elisha's
power.
2Ki 6:8-17.
DISCLOSES THE
KING OF
SYRIA'S
COUNSEL.
8-12. the king of Syria warred against Israel--This seems to have been
a sort of guerrilla warfare, carried on by predatory inroads on
different parts of the country. Elisha apprised King Jehoram of the
secret purpose of the enemy; so, by adopting precautionary measures, he
was always enabled to anticipate and defeat their attacks. The
frequency of his disappointments having led the Syrian king to suspect
some of his servants of carrying on a treacherous correspondence with
the enemy, he was informed about Elisha, whose apprehension he
forthwith determined to effect. This resolution was, of course,
grounded on the belief that however great the knowledge of Elisha might
be, if seized and kept a prisoner, he could no longer give information
to the king of Israel.
13. Dothan--or, "Dothaim," a little north of Samaria
(see on
Ge 37:17).
15. his servant said unto him, Alas, my master! how shall we do?--When
the Syrian detachment surrounded the place by night, for the
apprehension of the prophet, his servant was paralyzed with fear. This
was a new servant, who had only been with him since Gehazi's dismissal
and consequently had little or no experience of his master's powers.
His faith was easily shaken by so unexpected an alarm.
17. Elisha prayed, and said, Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he
may see--The invisible guard of angels that encompass and defend us
(Ps 34:7).
The opening of the eyes, which Elisha prayed for, were those of the
Spirit, not of the body--the eye of faith sees the reality of the
divine presence and protection where all is vacancy or darkness to the
ordinary eye. The horses and chariots were symbols of the divine power
(see on
2Ki 2:12);
and their fiery nature denoted their supernatural origin; for fire, the
most ethereal of earthly elements, is the most appropriate symbol of
the Godhead [KEIL].
2Ki 6:18-23.
HIS
ARMY
SMITTEN WITH
BLINDNESS.
18. Smite this people, I pray thee, with blindness--not a total and
material blindness, for then they could not have followed him, but a
mental hallucination (see
Ge 19:11)
so that they did not perceive or recognize him to be the object of
their search.
19-23. This is not the way, neither is this the city--This statement
is so far true that, as he had now left the place of his residence,
they would not have got him by that road. But the ambiguity of his
language was purposely framed to deceive them; and yet the deception
must be viewed in the light of a stratagem, which has always been
deemed lawful in war.
he led them to Samaria--When they were arrived in the midst of the
capital, their eyes, at Elisha's request, were opened, and they then
became aware of their defenseless condition, for Jehoram had received
private premonition of their arrival. The king, so far from being
allowed to slay the enemies who were thus unconsciously put in his
power, was recommended to entertain them with liberal hospitality and
then dismiss them to their own country. This was humane advice; it was
contrary to the usage of war to put war captives to death in cold
blood, even when taken by the point of the sword, much more those whom
the miraculous power and providence of God had unexpectedly placed at
his disposal. In such circumstances, kind and hospitable treatment was
every way more becoming in itself, and would be productive of the best
effects. It would redound to the credit of the true religion, which
inspired such an excellent spirit into its professors; and it would not
only prevent the future opposition of the Syrians but make them stand
in awe of a people who, they had seen, were so remarkably protected by
a prophet of the Lord. The latter clause of
2Ki 6:23
shows that these salutary effects were fully realized. A moral conquest
had been gained over the Syrians.
2Ki 6:24-33.
BEN-HADAD
BESIEGES
SAMARIA.
24. Ben-hadad . . . besieged Samaria--This was the predicted
accomplishment of the result of Ahab's foolish and misplaced kindness
(1Ki 20:42).
25. an ass's head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver--Though the
ass was deemed unclean food, necessity might warrant their violation of
a positive law when mothers, in their extremity, were found violating
the law of nature. The head was the worst part of the animal. Eighty
pieces of silver, equal to £5 5s.
the fourth part of a cab--A cab was the smallest dry measure.
The proportion here stated was nearly half a pint for 12s.
6d.
dove's dung--is thought by BOCHART
to be a kind of pulse or pea, common
in Judea, and still kept in the storehouses of Cairo and Damascus, and
other places, for the use of it by pilgrim-caravans; by
LINNÆUS, and
other botanists, it is said to be the root or white bulb of the plant
Ornithogalum umbellatum, Star of Beth-lehem. The sacred historian does
not say that the articles here named were regularly sold at the rates
described, but only that instances were known of such high prices being
given.
26. as the king was passing--to look at the defenses, or to give some
necessary orders for manning the walls.
29. we boiled my son, and did eat
him--(See on
De 28:53).
30. had sackcloth within upon his flesh--The horrid recital of this
domestic tragedy led the king soon after to rend his garment, in
consequence of which it was discovered that he wore a penitential shirt
of haircloth. It is more than doubtful, however, if he was truly
humbled on account of his own and the nation's sins; otherwise he would
not have vowed vengeance on the prophet's life. The true explanation
seems to be, that Elisha having counselled him not to surrender, with
the promise, on condition of deep humiliation, of being delivered, and
he having assumed the signs of contrition without receiving the
expected relief, regarded Elisha who had proved false and faithless as
the cause of all the protracted distress.
32. But Elisha sat in his house, and the elders sat with him--The
latter clause of
2Ki 6:33,
which contains the king's impatient exclamation, enables us to account
for the impetuous order he issued for the beheading of Elisha. Though
Jehoram was a wicked king and most of his courtiers would resemble
their master, many had been won over, through the prophet's influence,
to the true religion. A meeting, probably a prayer-meeting, of those
was held in the house where he lodged, for he had none of his own
(1Ki 19:20, 21);
and them he not only apprised of the king's design against himself, but
disclosed to them the proof of a premeditated deliverance.
CHAPTER 7
2Ki 7:1-16.
ELISHA
PROPHESIES
INCREDIBLE
PLENTY IN
SAMARIA.
1. Hear ye the word of the Lord--This prediction, though uttered first
to the assembled elders, was intimated to the king's messengers, who
reported it to Jehoram
(2Ki 7:18).
To-morrow about this time shall a measure of fine flour be sold for
a shekel, &c.--This may be estimated at a peck of fine flour for
2s. 6d., and two pecks of barley at the same price.
in the gate of Samaria--Vegetables, cattle, all sorts of country
produce, are still sold every morning at the gates of towns in the
East.
2. a lord on whose hand the king leaned--When an Eastern king walks
or stands abroad in the open air, he always supports himself on the arm
of the highest courtier present.
if the Lord would make windows in heaven--The scoffing infidelity of
this remark, which was a sneer against not the prophet only, but the
God he served, was justly and signally punished (see
2Ki 7:20).
3. there were four leprous men--The account of the sudden raising of
the siege and the unexpected supply given to the famishing inhabitants
of Samaria, is introduced by a narrative of the visit and discovery, by
these poor creatures, of the extraordinary flight of the Syrians.
leprous men at the entering in of the gate--living, perhaps, in some
lazar house there
(Le 13:4-6;
Nu 5:3).
5. they rose up in the twilight--that is, the evening twilight
(2Ki 7:12).
the uttermost part of the camp of Syria--that is, the extremity nearest
the city.
6, 7. the Lord had made the host of the Syrians to hear a noise of
chariots--This illusion of the sense of hearing, whereby the besiegers
imagined the tramp of two armies from opposite quarters, was a great
miracle which God wrought directly for the deliverance of His people.
8-11. these lepers . . . did eat and drink--After they had appeased
their hunger and secreted as many valuables as they could carry, their
consciences smote them for concealing the discovery and they hastened
to publish it in the city.
10. horses tied, and asses tied, and the tents as they were--The
uniform arrangement of encampments in the East is to place the tents in
the center, while the cattle are picketed all around, as an outer wall
of defense; and hence the lepers describe the cattle as the first
objects they saw.
12-15. the king . . . said unto his servants, I will now show you what
the Syrians have done--Similar stratagems have been so often resorted
to in the ancient and modern wars of the East that there is no wonder
Jehoram's suspicions were awakened. But the scouts, whom he despatched,
soon found unmistakable signs of the panic that had struck the enemy
and led to a most precipitate flight.
2Ki 7:17-20.
THE
UNBELIEVING
LORD
TRODDEN TO
DEATH.
17. the king appointed the lord on whose hand he leaned,--&c. The
news spread like lightning through the city, and was followed, as was
natural, by a popular rush to the Syrian camp. To keep order at the
gate, the king ordered his minister to keep guard; but the impetuosity
of the famishing people could not be resisted. The lord was trodden to
death, and Elisha's prophecy in all respects accomplished.
CHAPTER 8
2Ki 8:1-6.
THE
SHUNAMMITE'S
LAND
RESTORED.
1. Then spake Elisha unto the woman--rather "had spoken." The
repetition of Elisha's direction to the Shunammite is merely given as
an introduction to the following narrative; and it probably took place
before the events recorded in
chapters 5 and 6.
the Lord hath called for a famine--All such calamities are
chastisements inflicted by the hand of God; and this famine was to be
of double duration to that one which happened in the time of Elijah
(Jas 5:17)
--a just increase of severity, since the Israelites still continued
obdurate and incorrigible under the ministry and miracles of Elisha
(Le 26:21, 24, 28).
2. she . . . sojourned in the land of the Philistines seven
years--Their territory was recommended to her from its contiguity
to her usual residence; and now that this state had been so greatly
reduced, there was less risk than formerly from the seductions of
idolatry; and many of the Jews and Israelites were residing there.
Besides, an emigration thither was less offensive to the king of Israel
than going to sojourn in Judah.
3. she went forth to cry unto the king for her house and for her
land--In consequence of her long-continued absence from the country,
her possessions were occupied by her kindred, or had been confiscated
by the crown. No statute in the law of Moses ordained that alienation.
But the innovation seems to have been adopted in Israel.
4-6. the king talked with Gehazi--Ceremonial pollution being conveyed
by contact alone, there was nothing to prevent a conference being held
with this leper at a distance; and although he was excluded from the
town of Samaria, this reported conversation may have taken place at
the gate or in one of the royal gardens. The providence of God so
ordained that King Jehoram had been led to inquire, with great
interest, into the miraculous deeds of Elisha, and that the prophet's
servant was in the act of relating the marvellous incident of the
restoration of the Shunammite's son when she made her appearance to
prefer her request. The king was pleased to grant it; and a state
officer was charged to afford her every facility in the recovery of her
family possession out of the hands of the occupier.
2Ki 8:7-15.
HAZAEL
KILLS
HIS
MASTER, AND
SUCCEEDS
HIM.
7, 8. Elisha came to Damascus--He was directed thither by the Spirit
of God, in pursuance of the mission formerly given to his master in
Horeb
(1Ki 19:15),
to anoint Hazael king of Syria. On the arrival of the prophet being
known, Ben-hadad, who was sick, sent to inquire the issue of his
disease, and, according to the practice of the heathens in consulting
their soothsayers, ordered a liberal present in remuneration for the
service.
9. forty camels' burden--The present, consisting of the rarest and
most valuable produce of the land, would be liberal and magnificent.
But it must not be supposed it was actually so large as to require
forty camels to carry it. The Orientals are fond of display, and would,
ostentatiously, lay upon forty beasts what might very easily have been
borne by four.
Thy son Ben-hadad--so called from the established usage of designating
the prophet "father." This was the same Syrian monarch who had formerly
persecuted him (see
2Ki 6:13, 14).
10. Go, say . . . Thou mayest certainly recover--There was no
contradiction in this message. This part was properly the answer to
Ben-hadad's inquiry
[2Ki 8:9].
The second part was intended for Hazael, who, like an artful and
ambitious courtier, reported only as much of the prophet's statement as
suited his own views (compare
2Ki 8:14).
11. he settled his countenance stedfastly until he was ashamed--that
is, Hazael. The steadfast, penetrating look of the prophet seemed to
have convinced Hazael that his secret designs were known. The deep
emotions of Elisha were justified by the horrible atrocities which, too
common in ancient warfare, that successful usurper committed in Israel
(2Ki 10:32;
13:3, 4, 22).
15. took a thick cloth, &c.--a coverlet. In the East, this
article of bedding is generally a thick quilt of wool or cotton, so
that, with its great weight, when steeped in water, it would be a fit
instrument for accomplishing the murderous purpose, without leaving any
marks of violence. It has been supposed by many doubtful that Hazael
purposely murdered the king. But it is common for Eastern people to
sleep with their faces covered with a mosquito net; and, in some cases
of fever, they dampen the bedclothes. Hazael, aware of those chilling
remedies being usually resorted to, might have, with an honest
intention, spread a refreshing cover over him. The rapid occurrence of
the king's death and immediate burial were favorable to his instant
elevation to the throne.
2Ki 8:16-23.
JEHORAM'S
WICKED
REIGN.
16. Jehoram the son of Jehoshaphat . . . began to
reign--(See on
2Ki 3:1).
His father resigned the throne to him two years before his death.
18. daughter of Ahab--Athaliah, through whose influence Jehoram
introduced the worship of Baal and many other evils into the kingdom of
Judah (see
2Ch 21:2-20).
This apostasy would have led to the total extinction of the royal
family in that kingdom, had it not been for the divine promise to David
(2Sa 7:16).
A national chastisement, however, was inflicted on Judah by the revolt
of Edom, which, being hitherto governed by a tributary ruler
(2Ki 3:9;
1Ki 22:47),
erected the standard of independence
(2Ch 21:9).
2Ki 8:24.
AHAZIAH
SUCCEEDS
HIM.
24. Ahaziah his son reigned in his
stead--(See on
2Ch 22:1).
CHAPTER 9
2Ki 9:1-23.
JEHU
IS
ANOINTED.
1. Ramoth-gilead--a city of great importance to the Hebrew people,
east of Jordan, as a fortress of defense against the Syrians. Jehoram
had regained it
(2Ki 8:29).
But the Israelitish army was still encamped there, under the command of
Jehu.
Elisha . . . called one of the children of the prophets--This errand
referred to the last commission given to Elijah in Horeb
(1Ki 19:16).
box of oil--(See
1Sa 10:1).
2. carry him to an inner chamber--both to ensure the safety of the
messenger and to prevent all obstruction in the execution of the
business.
3. I have anointed thee king over Israel--This was only a part of the
message; the full announcement of which is given
(2Ki 9:7-10).
flee, and tarry not--for fear of being surprised and overtaken by the
spies or servants of the court.
4-6. So the young man . . . went to Ramoth-gilead--His ready
undertaking of this delicate and hazardous mission was an eminent proof
of his piety and obedience. The act of anointing being done through a
commissioned prophet, was a divine intimation of his investiture with
the sovereign power. But it was sometimes done long prior to the actual
possession of the throne
(1Sa 16:13);
and, in like manner, the commission had, in this instance, been given
also a long time before to Elijah
[1Ki 19:16],
who, for good reasons, left it in charge to Elisha; and he awaited
God's time and command for executing it [POOLE].
10. in the portion of Jezreel--that is, that had formerly been the
vineyard of Naboth.
11. Is all well? &c.--Jehu's attendants knew that the stranger
belonged to the order of the prophets by his garb, gestures, and form
of address; and soldiers such as they very readily concluded such
persons to be crackbrained, not only from the sordid negligence of
their personal appearance and their open contempt of the world, but
from the religious pursuits in which their whole lives were spent, and
the grotesque actions which they frequently performed (compare
Jer 29:26).
13. they hasted, and took every man his garment--the upper cloak
which they spread on the ground, as a token of their homage to their
distinguished commander
(Mt 21:7).
top of the stairs--from the room where the prophet had privately
anointed Jehu. That general returned to join his brother officers in
the public apartment, who, immediately on learning his destined
elevation, conducted him to the top of the stairs leading to the roof.
This was the most conspicuous place of an Oriental structure that could
be chosen, being at the very top of the gate building, and fully in
view of the people and military in the open ground in front of the
building [KITTO].
The popularity of Jehu with the army thus favored the
designs of Providence in procuring his immediate and enthusiastic
proclamation as king, and the top of the stairs was taken as a most
convenient substitute for a throne.
14, 15. Joram had kept Ramoth-gilead--rather, "was keeping," guarding,
or besieging it, with the greater part of the military force of Israel.
The king's wounds had compelled his retirement from the scene of
action, and so the troops were left in command of Jehu.
16. So Jehu rode in a chariot, and went to Jezreel--Full of ambitious
designs, he immediately proceeded to cross the Jordan to execute his
commission on the house of Ahab.
17-24. there stood a watchman on the tower of Jezreel--The Hebrew
palaces, besides being situated on hills had usually towers attached to
them, not only for the pleasure of a fine prospect, but as posts of
useful observation. The ancient watchtower of Jezreel must have
commanded a view of the whole region eastward, nearly down to the
Jordan. Beth-shan stands on a rising ground about six or seven miles
below it, in a narrow part of the plain; and when Jehu and his retinue
reached that point between Gilboa and Beth-shan, they could be fully
descried by the watchman on the tower. A report was made to Joram in
his palace below. A messenger on horseback was quickly despatched down
into the plain to meet the ambiguous host and to question the object of
their approach. "Is it peace?" We may safely assume that this messenger
would meet Jehu at the distance of three miles or more. On the report
made of his being detained and turned into the rear of the still
advancing troops, a second messenger was in like manner despatched, who
would naturally meet Jehu at the distance of a mile or a mile and a
half down on the plain. He also being turned into the rear, the
watchman now distinctly perceived "the driving to be like the driving
of Jehu, the son of Nimshi; for he driveth furiously." The alarmed
monarch, awakened to a sense of his impending danger, quickly summoned
his forces to meet the crisis. Accompanied by Ahaziah, king of Judah,
the two sovereigns ascended their chariots to make a feeble resistance
to the impetuous onset of Jehu, who quickly from the plain ascended the
steep northern sides of the site on which Jezreel stood, and the
conflicting parties met "in the portion of Naboth the Jezreelite,"
where Joram was quickly despatched by an arrow from the strong arm of
Jehu. We were impressed with the obvious accuracy of the sacred
historian; the localities and distances being such as seem
naturally to be required by the incidents related, affording just time
for the transactions to have occurred in the order in which they are
recorded [HOWE].
25. cast him in the portion of the field of Naboth the Jezreelite,
&c.--according to the doom pronounced by divine authority on Ahab
(1Ki 21:19),
but which on his repentance was deferred to be executed on his son.
26. the blood of Naboth, and the blood of his sons, saith the
Lord--Although their death is not expressly mentioned, it is
plainly implied in the confiscation of his property (see
1Ki 21:16).
2Ki 9:27-35.
AHAZIAH
IS
SLAIN.
27. Ahaziah--was grandnephew to King Joram, and great-grandson to
King Ahab.
Ibleam--near Megiddo, in the tribe of Issachar
(Jos 17:11;
Jud 1:27);
and Gur was an adjoining hill.
30. Jezebel painted her face--literally, "her eyes," according to a
custom universal in the East among women, of staining the eyelids with
a black powder made of pulverized antimony, or lead ore mixed with oil,
and applied with a small brush on the border, so that by this dark
ligament on the edge, the largeness as well as the luster of the eye
itself was thought to be increased. Her object was, by her royal
attire, not to captivate, but to overawe Jehu.
35. found no more of her than the skull, and the palms of her hands,
&c.--The dog has a rooted aversion to prey on the human hands and
feet.
2Ki 9:36, 37.
JEZEBEL
EATEN BY
DOGS.
36. This is the word of the Lord--(See
1Ki 21:23).
Jehu's statement, however, was not a literal but a paraphrased
quotation of Elijah's prophecy.
CHAPTER 10
2Ki 10:1-17.
JEHU
CAUSES
SEVENTY OF
AHAB'S
CHILDREN TO
BE
BEHEADED.
1-4. Ahab had seventy sons in Samaria--As it appears
(2Ki 10:13),
that grandsons are included it is probable that this number
comprehended the whole posterity of Ahab. Their being all assembled in
that capital might arise from their being left there on the king's
departure for Ramoth-gilead, or from their taking refuge in some of the
strongholds of that city on the news of Jehu's conspiracy. It may be
inferred from the tenor of Jehu's letters that their first intention
was to select the fittest of the royal family and set him up as king.
Perhaps this challenge of Jehu was designed as a stroke of policy on
his part to elicit their views, and to find out whether they were
inclined to be pacific or hostile. The bold character of the man, and
the rapid success of his conspiracy, terrified the civic authorities of
Samaria and Jezreel into submission.
5. he that was over the house--the governor or chamberlain of the
palace.
the bringers-up of the children--Anciently, and still also in many
Eastern countries, the principal grandees were charged with the support
and education of the royal princes. This involved a heavy expense which
they were forced to bear, but for which they endeavored to find some
compensation in the advantages of their connection with the court.
6. take ye the heads of the men, your master's sons--The barbarous
practice of a successful usurper slaughtering all who may have claims
to the throne, has been frequently exemplified in the ancient and
modern histories of the East.
8. Lay ye them in two heaps at the entering in of the gate, &c.--The
exhibition of the heads of enemies is always considered a glorious
trophy. Sometimes a pile of heads is erected at the gate of the
palace; and a head of peculiarly striking appearance selected to grace
the summit of the pyramid.
9-11. said to all the people, Ye be righteous, &c.--A great
concourse was assembled to gaze on this novel and ghastly spectacle.
The speech which Jehu addressed to the spectators was artfully framed
to impress their minds with the idea that so wholesale a massacre was
the result of the divine judgments denounced on the house of Ahab; and
the effect of it was to prepare the public mind for hearing, without
horror, of a similar revolting tragedy which was soon after
perpetrated, namely, the extinction of all the influential friends and
supporters of the dynasty of Ahab, including those of the royal house
of Judah.
13, 14. We are the brethren of Ahaziah--that is, not full, but
step-brothers, sons of Jehoram by various concubines. Ignorant of the
revolution that had taken place, they were travelling to Samaria on a
visit to their royal relatives of Israel, when they were seized and put
to death, because of the apprehension that they might probably
stimulate and strengthen the party that still remained faithful in
their allegiance to Ahab's dynasty.
children of the queen--that is, of the queen mother, or regent,
Jezebel.
15-18. Jehonadab the son of Rechab--(See
1Ch 2:55).
A person who, from his piety and simple primitive manner of life
(Jer 35:1-19),
was highly esteemed, and possessed great influence in the country. Jehu
saw in a moment the advantage that his cause would gain from the
friendship and countenance of this venerable man in the eyes of the
people, and accordingly paid him the distinguished attention of
inviting him to a seat in his chariot.
give me thine hand--not simply to aid him in getting up, but for a
far more significant and important purpose--the giving, or rather
joining hands, being the recognized mode of striking a league or
covenant, as well as of testifying fealty to a new sovereign;
accordingly, it is said, "he [Jehonadab] gave him [Jehu] his hand."
2Ki 10:18-29.
HE
DESTROYS THE
WORSHIPPERS OF
BAAL.
19. call unto me all the prophets of Baal--The votaries of Baal are
here classified under the several titles of prophets, priests, and
servants, or worshippers generally. They might be easily convened into
one spacious temple, as their number had been greatly diminished both
by the influential ministrations of Elijah and Elisha, and also from
the late King Joram's neglect and discontinuance of the worship. Jehu's
appointment of a solemn sacrifice in honor of Baal, and a summons to
all his worshippers to join in its celebration, was a deep-laid plot,
which he had resolved upon for their extinction, a measure in perfect
harmony with the Mosaic law, and worthy of a constitutional king of
Israel. It was done, however, not from religious, but purely political
motives, because he believed that the existence and interests of the
Baalites were inseparably bound up with the dynasty of Ahab and because
he hoped that by their extermination he would secure the attachment of
the far larger and more influential party who worshipped God in Israel.
Jehonadab's concurrence must have been given in the belief of his being
actuated solely by the highest principles of piety and zeal.
22. Bring forth vestments for all the worshippers of Baal--The priests
of Baal were clad, probably, in robes of white byssus while they were
engaged in the functions of their office, and these were kept under the
care of an officer in a particular wardrobe of Baal's temple. This
treacherous massacre, and the means taken to accomplish it, are
paralleled by the slaughter of the Janissaries and other terrible
tragedies in the modern history of the East.
29. Howbeit from the sins of Jeroboam . . . Jehu departed not from
after them--Jehu had no intention of carrying his zeal for the Lord
beyond a certain point, and as he considered it impolitic to encourage
his subjects to travel to Jerusalem, he re-established the symbolic
worship of the calves.
CHAPTER 11
2Ki 11:1-3.
JEHOASH
SAVED FROM
ATHALIAH'S
MASSACRE.
1. Athaliah--(See on
2Ch 22:2).
She had possessed great influence over her son, who, by her counsels,
had ruled in the spirit of the house of Ahab.
destroyed all the seed royal--all connected with the royal family who
might have urged a claim to the throne, and who had escaped the
murderous hands of Jehu
(2Ch 21:2-4; 22:1;
2Ki 10:13, 14).
This massacre she was incited to perpetrate--partly from a
determination not to let David's family outlive hers; partly as a
measure of self-defense to secure herself against the violence of Jehu,
who was bent on destroying the whole of Ahab's posterity to which she
belonged
(2Ki 8:18-26);
but chiefly from personal ambition to rule, and a desire to establish
the worship of Baal. Such was the sad fruit of the unequal alliance
between the son of the pious Jehoshaphat and a daughter of the
idolatrous and wicked house of Ahab.
2. Jehosheba--or Jehoshabeath
(2Ch 22:11).
daughter of King Joram--not by Athaliah, but by a secondary wife.
stole him from among the king's sons which were slain--either from
among the corpses, he being considered dead, or out of the palace
nursery.
hid him . . . in the bedchamber--for the use of the priests, which
was in some part of the temple
(2Ki 11:3),
and of which Jehoiada and his wife had the sole charge. What is called,
however, the bedchamber in the East is not the kind of apartment that
we understand by the name, but a small closet, into which are flung
during the day the mattresses and other bedding materials spread on the
floors or divans of the sitting-rooms by day. Such a slumber-room was
well suited to be a convenient place for the recovery of his wounds,
and a hiding-place for the royal infant and his nurse.
2Ki 11:4-12.
HE
IS
MADE
KING.
4. the seventh year--namely, of the reign of Athaliah, and the rescue
of Jehoash.
Jehoiada sent and fetched the rulers, &c.--He could scarcely have
obtained such a general convocation except at the time, or on pretext,
of a public and solemn festival. Having revealed to them the secret of
the young king's preservation and entered into a covenant with them for
the overthrow of the tyrant, he then arranged with them the plan and
time of carrying their plot into execution
(see on
2Ch 22:10-23:21).
The conduct of Jehoiada, who acted the leading and chief part in this
conspiracy, admits of an easy and full justification; for, while
Athaliah was a usurper, and belonged to a race destined by divine
denunciation to destruction, even his own wife had a better and
stronger claim to the throne; the sovereignty of Judah had been
divinely appropriated to the family of David, and therefore the young
prince on whom it was proposed to confer the crown, possessed an
inherent right to it, of which a usurper could not deprive him.
Moreover, Jehoiada was most probably the high priest, whose official
duty it was to watch over the due execution of God's laws, and who in
his present movement, was encouraged and aided by the countenance and
support of the chief authorities, both civil and ecclesiastical, in the
country. In addition to all these considerations, he seems to have been
directed by an impulse of the Divine Spirit, through the counsels and
exhortations of the prophets of the time.
2Ki 11:13-16.
ATHALIAH
SLAIN.
13. Athaliah heard the noise of the guard and of the people--The
profound secrecy with which the conspiracy had been conducted rendered
the unusual acclamations of the vast assembled crowd the more startling
and roused the suspicions of the tyrant.
she came . . . into the temple of the Lord--that is, the courts, which
she was permitted to enter by Jehoiada's directions
(2Ki 11:8)
in order that she might be secured.
14. the king stood by a pillar--or on a platform, erected for that
purpose (see on
2Ch 6:13).
15. without the ranges--that is, fences, that the sacred place might
not be stained with human blood.
2Ki 11:17-20.
JEHOIADA
RESTORES
GOD'S
WORSHIP.
17, 18. a covenant between the Lord and the king and the people--The
covenant with the Lord was a renewal of the national covenant with
Israel
(Ex 19:1-24:18;
"to be unto him a people of inheritance,"
De 4:6; 27:9).
The covenant between the king and the people was the consequence of
this, and by it the king bound himself to rule according to the divine
law, while the people engaged to submit, to give him allegiance as the
Lord's anointed. The immediate fruit of this renewal of the covenant
was the destruction of the temple and the slaughter of the priests of
Baal (see
2Ki 10:27);
the restoration of the pure worship of God in all its ancient
integrity; and the establishment of the young king on the hereditary
throne of Judah
[2Ki 11:19].
CHAPTER 12
2Ki 12:1-18.
JEHOASH
REIGNS
WELL WHILE
JEHOIADA
LIVED.
2. Jehoash did that which was right in the sight of the Lord--so far
as related to his outward actions and the policy of his government. But
it is evident from the sequel of his history that the rectitude of his
administration was owing more to the salutary influence of his
preserver and tutor, Jehoiada, than to the honest and sincere dictates
of his own mind.
3. But the high places were not taken away--The popular fondness for
the private and disorderly rites performed in the groves and recesses
of hills was so inveterate that even the most powerful monarchs had
been unable to accomplish their suppression; no wonder that in the
early reign of a young king, and after the gross irregularities that
had been allowed during the maladministration of Athaliah, the
difficulty of putting an end to the superstitions associated with "the
high places" was greatly increased.
4. Jehoash said to the priests, &c.--There is here given an account
of the measures which the young king took for repairing the temple by
the levying of taxes: 1. "The money of every one that passeth the
account," namely, half a shekel, as "an offering to the Lord"
(Ex 30:13).
2. "The money that every man is set at," that is, the redemption price
of every one who had devoted himself or any thing belonging to him to
the Lord, and the amount of which was estimated according to certain
rules
(Le 27:1-8).
3. Free will or voluntary offerings made to the sanctuary. The first
two were paid annually (see
2Ch 24:5).
7-10. Why repair ye not the breaches of the house?--This mode of
collection not proving so productive as was expected (the dilatoriness
of the priests was the chief cause of the failure), a new arrangement
was proposed. A chest was placed by the high priest at the entrance
into the temple, into which the money given by the people for the
repairs of the temple was to be put by the Levites who kept the door.
The object of this chest was to make a separation between the money
to be raised for the building from the other moneys destined for the
general use of the priests, in the hope that the people would be more
liberal in their contributions when it was known that their offerings
would be devoted to the special purpose of making the necessary
repairs. The duty of attending to this work was no longer to devolve on
the priests, but to be undertaken by the king.
11, 12. they gave the money, being told, into the hands of them that
did the work--The king sent his secretary along with an agent of the
high priest to count the money in the chest from time to time
(2Ch 24:11),
and deliver the amount to the overseers of the building, who paid the
workmen and purchased all necessary materials. The custom of putting
sums of certain amount in bags, which are labelled and sealed by a
proper officer, is a common way of using the currency in Turkey and
other Eastern countries.
13-16. Howbeit there were not made . . . bowls, &c.--When the repairs
of the temple had been completed, the surplus was appropriated to the
purchase of the temple furniture. The integrity of the overseers of the
work being undoubted, no account was exacted of the way in which they
applied the money given to them, while other moneys levied at the
temple were left to the disposal of the priests as the law directed
(Le 5:16;
Nu 5:8).
17, 18. Then Hazael . . . fought against
Gath--(See on
2Ch 24:23).
2Ki 12:19-21.
HE
IS
SLAIN.
20. his servants arose . . . and slew Joash in the house of
Millo--(See on
2Ch 24:25).
CHAPTER 13
2Ki 13:1-7.
JEHOAHAZ'S
WICKED
REIGN OVER
ISRAEL.
1-3. Jehoahaz . . . reigned seventeen years--Under his government,
which pursued the policy of his predecessors regarding the support of
the calf-worship, Israel's apostasy from the true God became greater
and more confirmed than in the time of his father Jehu. The national
chastisement, when it came, was consequently the more severe and the
instruments employed by the Lord in scourging the revolted nation were
Hazael and his son and general Ben-hadad, in resisting whose successive
invasions the Israelitish army was sadly reduced and weakened. In the
extremity of his distress, Jehoahaz besought the Lord, and was heard,
not on his own account
(Ps 66:18;
Pr 1:28; 15:8),
but that of the ancient covenant with the patriarchs
(2Ki 13:23).
4. he saw the oppression of Israel--that is, commiserated the fallen
condition of His chosen people. The divine honor and the interests of
true religion required that deliverance should be granted them to check
the triumph of the idolatrous enemy and put an end to their blasphemous
taunts that God had forsaken Israel
(De 32:27;
Ps 12:4).
5. a saviour--This refers neither to some patriotic defender nor some
signal victory, but to the deliverance obtained for Israel by the two
successors of Jehoahaz, namely, Joash, who regained all the cities
which the Syrians had taken from his father
(2Ki 13:25);
and Jeroboam, who restored the former boundaries of Israel
(2Ki 14:25).
6. there remained the grove--Asherah--the idol set up by Ahab
(1Ki 16:33),
which ought to have been demolished
(De 7:5).
7. made them like the dust in threshing--Threshing in the East is
performed in the open air upon a level plot of ground, daubed over with
a covering to prevent, as much as possible, the earth, sand, or gravel
from rising; a great quantity of them all, notwithstanding this
precaution, must unavoidably be taken up with the grain; at the same
time the straw is shattered to pieces. Hence it is a most significant
figure, frequently employed by Orientals to describe a state of
national suffering, little short of extermination
(Isa 21:10;
Mic 4:12;
Jer 51:33).
The figure originated in a barbarous war custom, which Hazael literally
followed
(Am 1:3, 4;
compare
2Sa 18:31;
Jud 8:7).
2Ki 13:8-25.
JOASH
SUCCEEDS
HIM.
8. his might--This is particularly noticed in order to show that the
grievous oppression from foreign enemies, by which the Israelites were
ground down, was not owing to the cowardice or imbecility of their
king, but solely to the righteous and terrible judgment of God for
their foul apostasy.
12, 13. his might wherewith he fought against
Amaziah--(See on
2Ki 14:8-14).
The usual summary of his life and reign occurs rather early, and is
again repeated in the account given of the reign of the king of Judah
(2Ki 14:15).
14-19. Elisha was fallen sick of his sickness whereof he died--Every
man's death is occasioned by some disease, and so was Elisha's. But in
intimating it, there seems a contrast tacitly made between him and his
prophetic predecessor, who did not die.
Joash the king of Israel came down unto him, and wept over his face--He
visited him where he was lying ill of this mortal sickness, and
expressed deep sorrow, not from the personal respect he bore for the
prophet, but for the incalculable loss his death would occasion to the
kingdom.
my father, my father!
&c.--(See on
2Ki 2:12).
These words seem to have been a complimentary phrase applied to one who
was thought an eminent guardian and deliverer of his country. The
particular application of them to Elisha, who, by his counsels and
prayer, had obtained many glorious victories for Israel, shows that the
king possessed some measure of faith and trust, which, though weak, was
accepted, and called forth the prophet's dying benediction.
15-18. Take bow and arrows--Hostilities were usually proclaimed by
a herald, sometimes by a king or general making a public and formal
discharge of an arrow into the enemy's country. Elisha directed Joash
to do this, as a symbolical act, designed to intimate more fully and
significantly the victories promised to the king of Israel over the
Syrians. His laying his hands upon the king's hands was to represent
the power imparted to the bow shot as coming from the Lord through the
medium of the prophet. His shooting the first arrow eastward--to that
part of his kingdom which the Syrians had taken and which was east of
Samaria--was a declaration of war against them for the invasion. His
shooting the other arrows into the ground was in token of the number of
victories he was taken to gain; but his stopping at the third betrayed
the weakness of his faith; for, as the discharged arrow signified a
victory over the Syrians, it is evident that the more arrows he shot
the more victories he would gain. As he stopped so soon, his conquests
would be incomplete.
20, 21. Elisha died--He had enjoyed a happier life than Elijah, as he
possessed a milder character, and bore a less hard commission. His
rough garment was honored even at the court.
coming in of the year--that is, the spring, the usual season of
beginning campaigns in ancient times. Predatory bands from Moab
generally made incursions at that time on the lands of Israel. The
bearers of a corpse, alarmed by the appearance of one of these bands,
hastily deposited, as they passed that way, their load in Elisha's
sepulchre, which might be easily done by removing the stone at the
mouth of the cave. According to the Jewish and Eastern custom, his
body, as well as that of the man who was miraculously restored, was not
laid in a coffin, but only swathed; so that the bodies could be brought
into contact, and the object of the miracle was to stimulate the king's
and people of Israel's faith in the still unaccomplished predictions of
Elisha respecting the war with the Syrians. Accordingly the historian
forthwith records the historical fulfilment of the prediction
(2Ki 13:22-25),
in the defeat of the enemy, in the recovery of the cities that had been
taken, and their restoration to the kingdom of Israel.
CHAPTER 14
2Ki 14:1-6.
AMAZIAH'S
GOOD
REIGN OVER
JUDAH.
3-6. He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord, yet not like
David his father--The beginning of his reign was excellent, for he
acted the part of a constitutional king, according to the law of God,
yet not with perfect sincerity of heart (compare
2Ch 25:2).
As in the case of his father Joash, the early promise was belied by the
devious course he personally followed in later life (see
2Ch 20:14),
as well as by the public irregularities he tolerated in the
kingdom.
5. as soon as the kingdom was confirmed in his hand--It was an act of
justice no less than of filial piety to avenge the murder of his
father. But it is evident that the two assassins must have possessed
considerable weight and influence, as the king was obliged to retain
them in his service, and durst not, for fear of their friends and
supporters, institute proceedings against them until his power had been
fully consolidated.
6. But the children of the murderers he slew not--This moderation,
inspired by the Mosaic law
(De 24:16),
displays the good character of this prince; for the course thus pursued
toward the families of the regicides was directly contrary to the
prevailing customs of antiquity, according to which all connected with
the criminals were doomed to unsparing destruction.
2Ki 14:7.
HE
SMITES
EDOM.
7. He slew of Edom in the valley of salt ten thousand--In the reign of
Joram the Edomites had revolted (see
2Ki 8:20).
But Amaziah, determined to reduce them to their former subjection,
formed a hostile expedition against them, in which he routed their army
and made himself master of their capital.
the valley of salt--that part of the Ghor which comprises the salt and
sandy plain to the south of the Dead Sea.
Selah--literally, "the rock"; generally thought to be Petra.
Joktheel--that is, "given" or "conquered by God." See the history
of this conquest more fully detailed
(2Ch 25:6-16).
2Ki 14:8-16.
JOASH
DEFEATS
HIM.
8. Amaziah sent messengers to Jehoash, the son of Jehoahaz, son of
Jehu, king of Israel--This bold and haughty challenge, which was most
probably stimulated by a desire of satisfaction for the outrages
perpetrated by the discharged auxiliaries of Israel
(2Ch 25:13)
on the towns that lay in their way home, as well as by revenge for the
massacre of his ancestors by Jehu
(2Ki 9:1-37)
sprang, there is little doubt, from pride and self-confidence, inspired
by his victory over the Edomites.
9. Jehoash the king of Israel sent to Amaziah--People in the East very
often express their sentiments in a parabolic form, especially when
they intend to convey unwelcome truths or a contemptuous sneer. This
was the design of the admonitory fable related by Joash in his reply.
The thistle, a low shrub, might be chosen to represent Amaziah, a petty
prince; the cedar, the powerful sovereign of Israel, and the wild beast
that trampled down the thistle the overwhelming army with which Israel
could desolate Judah. But, perhaps, without making so minute an
application, the parable may be explained generally, as describing in a
striking manner the effects of pride and ambition, towering far beyond
their natural sphere, and sure to fall with a sudden and ruinous crash.
The moral of the fable is contained in
2Ki 14:10.
11-14. But Amaziah would not hear--The sarcastic tenor of this reply
incited the king of Judah the more; for, being in a state of judicial
blindness and infatuation
(2Ch 25:20),
he was immovably determined on war. But the superior energy of Joash
surprised him ere he had completed his military preparations. Pouring a
large army into the territory of Judah, he encountered Amaziah in a
pitched battle, routed his army, and took him prisoner. Then having
marched to Jerusalem
[2Ki 14:13],
he not only demolished part of the city walls, but plundered the
treasures of the palace and temple. Taking hostages to prevent any
further molestation from Judah, he terminated the war. Without leaving
a garrison in Jerusalem, he returned to his capital with all convenient
speed, his presence and all his forces being required to repel the
troublesome incursions of the Syrians.
2Ki 14:17-20.
HE
IS
SLAIN BY A
CONSPIRACY.
19, 20. they made a conspiracy against him in Jerusalem--Amaziah's
apostasy
(2Ch 25:27)
was followed by a general maladministration, especially the disastrous
issue of the war with Israel. The ruinous condition of Jerusalem, the
plunder of the temple, and the loss of their children who were taken as
hostages
[2Ki 14:13, 14],
lost him the respect and attachment not of the grandees only, but of
his subjects generally, who were in rebellion. The king fled in terror
to Lachish, a frontier town of the Philistines, where, however, he was
traced and murdered. His friends had his corpse brought without any
pomp or ceremony, in a chariot to Jerusalem, where he was interred
among his royal ancestors.
2Ki 14:21, 22.
AZARIAH
SUCCEEDS
HIM.
21. all the people of Judah took Azariah--or Uzziah
(2Ki 15:30;
2Ch 26:1).
The popular opposition had been personally directed against Amaziah as
the author of their calamities, but it was not extended to his family
or heir.
22. He built Elath--fortified that seaport. It had revolted with the
rest of Edom, but was now recovered by Uzziah. His father, who did not
complete the conquest of Edom, had left him that work to do.
2Ki 14:23-29.
JEROBOAM'S
WICKED
REIGN OVER
ISRAEL.
23. Jeroboam, the son of Joash king of Israel--This was Jeroboam II
who, on regaining the lost territory, raised the kingdom to great
political power
(2Ki 14:25),
but adhered to the favorite religious policy of the Israelitish
sovereigns
(2Ki 14:24).
While God granted him so great a measure of national prosperity and
eminence, the reason is expressly stated
(2Ki 14:26, 27)
to be that the purposes of the divine covenant forbade as yet the
overthrow of the kingdom of the ten tribes (see
2Ki 13:23).
CHAPTER 15
2Ki 15:1-7.
AZARIAH'S
REIGN OVER
JUDAH.
1-7. In the twenty and seventh year of Jeroboam--It is thought that
the throne of Judah continued vacant eleven or twelve years, between
the death of Amaziah and the inauguration of his son Azariah. Being a
child only four years old when his father was murdered, a regency was
appointed during Azariah's minority.
began Azariah . . . to reign--The character of his reign is described
by the brief formula employed by the inspired historian, in recording
the religious policy of the later kings. But his reign was a very
active as well as eventful one, and is fully related
(2Ch 26:1-23).
Elated by the possession of great power, and presumptuously arrogating
to himself, as did the heathen kings, the functions both of the real
and sacerdotal offices, he was punished with leprosy, which, as the
offense was capital
(Nu 8:7),
was equivalent to death, for this disease excluded him from all
society. While Jotham, his son, as his viceroy, administered the
affairs of the kingdom--being about fifteen years of age (compare
2Ki 15:33)
--he had to dwell in a place apart by himself (see on
2Ki 7:3).
After a long reign he died, and was buried in the royal burying-field,
though not in the royal cemetery of "the city of David"
(2Ch 26:23).
2Ki 15:8-16.
ZECHARIAH'S
REIGN OVER
ISRAEL.
8-10. In the thirty and eighth year of Azariah king of Judah did
Zechariah the son of Jeroboam reign over Israel--There was an
interregnum from some unknown cause between the reign of Jeroboam and
the accession of his son, which lasted, according to some, for ten or
twelve years, according to others, for twenty-two years, or more. This
prince pursued the religious policy of the calf-worship, and his reign
was short, being abruptly terminated by the hand of violence. In his
fate was fulfilled the prophecy addressed to Jehu
(2Ki 10:30;
also
Ho 1:4),
that his family would possess the throne of Israel for four
generations; and accordingly Jehoahaz, Joash, Jehoram, and Zechariah
were his successors--but there his dynasty terminated; and perhaps it
was the public knowledge of this prediction that prompted the murderous
design of Shallum.
13-17. Shallum . . . reigned a full month--He was opposed and slain
by Menahem, who, according to JOSEPHUS,
was commander of the forces,
which, on the report of the king's murder, were besieging Tirzah, a
town twelve miles east of Samaria, and formerly a seat of the kings of
Israel. Raising the siege, he marched directly against the usurper,
slew him, and reigned in his stead.
16. Menahem . . . smote Tiphsah--Thapsacus, on the Euphrates, the
border city of Solomon's kingdom
(1Ki 4:24).
The inhabitants refusing to open their gates to him, Menahem took it by
storm. Then having spoiled it, he committed the most barbarous
excesses, without regard either to age or sex.
2Ki 15:17-21.
MENAHEM'S
REIGN.
17. reigned ten years in Samaria--His government was conducted on the
religious policy of his predecessors.
19. Pul the king of Assyria--This is the first Assyrian king after
Nimrod who is mentioned in biblical history. His name has been recently
identified with that of Phalluka on the monuments of Nineveh, and that
of Menahem discovered also.
came against the land--Elsewhere it is said "Ephraim [Israel] went to
the Assyrian"
[Ho 5:13].
The two statements may be reconciled thus: "Pul, of his own motion,
induced, perhaps, by the expedition of Menahem against Thapsacus,
advanced against the kingdom of Israel; then Menahem sent him a
thousand talents in order not only to divert him from his plans of
conquest, but at the same time to purchase his friendship and aid for
the establishment of his own precarious sovereignty. So Menahem did not
properly invite the Assyrian into the land, but only changed the enemy
when marching against the country, by this tribute, into a confederate
for the security of his usurped dominion. This the prophet Hosea, less
concerned about the historical fact than the disposition betrayed
therein, might very well censure as a going of Ephraim to the Assyrians
(Ho 5:13; 7:1; 8:9),
and a covenant-making with Asshur"
(2Ki 12:1)
[KEIL].
a thousand talents of silver--Equal to £262,200. This
tribute, which Menahem raised by a tax on the grandees of Israel,
bribed Pul to return to his own country (see on
1Ch 5:26).
2Ki 15:22-24.
PEKAHIAH'S
REIGN.
23. Pekahiah . . . son of Menahem began to reign--On comparing the
date given with Azariah's reign, it seems that several months had
intervened between the death of Menahem and the accession of Pekahiah,
probably owing to a contest about the throne.
25. with Argob and Arieh, &c.--Many commentators view these as the
captain's accomplices. But it is more probable that they were
influential friends of the king, who were murdered along with him.
2Ki 15:27-31.
PEKAH'S
REIGN.
29. in the days of Pekah king of Israel came Tiglath-pileser--This
monarch, who succeeded Pul on the throne of Assyria, is the only one of
all the kings who does not give his genealogy, and is therefore
supposed to have been an usurper. His annals have been discovered in
the Nimroud mound, describing this expedition into Syria. The places
taken are here mentioned as they occurred and were conquered in the
progress of an invasion.
30. Hoshea the son of Elah made a conspiracy . . . and slew him--He
did not, however, obtain possession of the kingdom till about nine or
ten years after the perpetration of this crime [HALES].
in the twentieth year of Jotham--Jotham's reign lasted only sixteen
years, but the meaning is that the reign of Hoshea began in the
twentieth after the beginning of Jotham's reign. The sacred historian,
having not yet introduced the name of Ahaz, reckoned the date by
Jotham, whom he had already mentioned (see
2Ch 27:8).
2Ki 15:32-38.
JOTHAM'S
REIGN OVER
JUDAH.
33. Five and twenty years was he when he began to reign--that is,
alone--for he had ruled as his father's viceroy
[2Ki 15:5].
35. the higher gate of the house of the Lord--not the temple itself,
but one of its courts; probably that which led into the palace
(2Ch 23:20).
37. the Lord began to send against Judah Rezin the king of Syria,
&c.--This is the first intimation of the hostile feelings of the kings
of Israel and Syria, to Judah, which led them to form an alliance and
make joint preparations for war.
[See on
2Ch 27:5.]
However, war was not actually waged till the reign of Ahaz.
CHAPTER 16
2Ki 16:1-16.
AHAZ'
WICKED
REIGN OVER
JUDAH.
1-4. Ahaz . . . did not that which was right in the sight of the
Lord--[See on
2Ch 28:1.]
The character of this king's reign, the voluptuousness and religious
degeneracy of all classes of the people, are graphically portrayed in
the writings of Isaiah, who prophesied at that period. The great
increase of worldly wealth and luxury in the reigns of Azariah and
Jotham had introduced a host of corruptions, which, during his reign,
and by the influence of Ahaz, bore fruit in the idolatrous practices of
every kind which prevailed in all parts of the kingdom (see
2Ch 28:24).
3. walked in the way of the kings of Israel--This is descriptive of
the early part of his reign, when, like the kings of Israel, he
patronized the symbolic worship of God by images but he gradually went
farther into gross idolatry
(2Ch 28:2).
made his son to pass through the fire--
(2Ki 23:10).
The hands of the idol Moloch being red hot, the children were passed
through between them, which was considered a form of lustration. There
is reason to believe that, in certain circumstances, the children were
burnt to death
(Ps 106:37).
This was strongly prohibited in the law
(Le 18:21; 20:2-5;
De 18:10),
although there is no evidence that it was practised in Israel till the
time of Ahaz.
5. Then Rezin king of Syria and Pekah son of Remaliah king of Israel
came up to Jerusalem--Notwithstanding their great efforts and military
preparations, they failed to take it and, being disappointed, raised
the siege and returned home (compare
Isa 7:1).
6. Rezin . . . recovered Elath--which Azariah had got into his
possession
(2Ki 14:22).
the Syrians came to Elath, and dwelt there unto this day--The
Septuagint version has "the Edomites," which the most judicious
commentators and travellers [ROBINSON] prefer.
7-9. So Ahaz sent messengers to Tiglath-pileser--In spite of the
assurance given him by Isaiah by two signs, the one immediate, the
other remote
(Isa 7:14; 8:4),
that the confederate kings would not prevail against him, Ahaz sought
aid from the Assyrian monarch, to purchase which he sent the treasures
of the palace and temple. Tiglath-pileser marched against Damascus,
slew Rezin the king, and carried the people of Damascus into captivity
to Kir, which is thought to have been the city Karine (now Kerend), in
Media.
10-16. And king Ahaz went to Damascus to meet Tiglath-pileser--This
was a visit of respect, and perhaps of gratitude. During his stay in
that heathen city, Ahaz saw an altar with which he was greatly
captivated. Forthwith a sketch of it was transmitted to Jerusalem, with
orders to Urijah the priest to get one constructed according to the
Damascus model, and let this new altar supersede the old one in the
temple. Urijah, with culpable complaisance, acted according to his
instructions
(2Ki 16:16).
The sin in this affair consisted in meddling with, and improving
according to human taste and fancy, the altars of the temple, the
patterns of which had been furnished by divine authority
(Ex 25:40; 26:30; 27:1;
1Ch 28:19).
Urijah was one of the witnesses taken by Isaiah to bear his prediction
against Syria and Israel
(Isa 8:2).
2Ki 16:17-19.
HE
SPOILS THE
TEMPLE.
17. cut off the borders of the bases, &c.--It is thought that he
did this to use the elaborate sculpture in adorning his palace.
18. the covert for the Sabbath--the portico through which the priests
entered the temple on the Sabbath.
the king's entry without--a private external entrance for the king into
the temple. The change made by Ahaz consisted in removing both of these
into the temple from fear of the king of Assyria, that, in case of a
siege, he might secure the entrance of the temple from him.
CHAPTER 17
2Ki 17:1-6.
HOSHEA'S
WICKED
REIGN.
1. In the twelfth year of Ahaz king of Judah, began Hoshea . . . to
reign--The statement in
2Ki 15:30
may be reconciled with the present passage in the following manner:
Hoshea conspired against Pekah in the twentieth year of the latter,
which was the eighteenth of Jotham's reign. It was two years before
Hoshea was acknowledged king of Israel, that is, in the fourth of Ahaz,
and twentieth of Jotham. In the twelfth year of Ahaz his reign began to
be tranquil and prosperous [CALMET].
2. he did evil . . . but not as the kings of Israel--Unlike his
predecessors from the time of Jeroboam, he neither established the
rites of Baal, nor compelled the people to adhere to the symbolic
worship of the calves.
[See on
2Ch 30:1.]
In these respects, Hoshea acted as became a constitutional king of
Israel. Yet, through the influence of the nineteen princes who had
swayed the scepter before him (all of whom had been zealous patrons of
idolatry, and many of whom had been also infamous for personal crimes),
the whole nation had become so completely demoralized that the
righteous judgment of an angry Providence impended over it.
3. Against him came up Shalmaneser--or Shalman
(Ho 10:14),
the same as the Sargon of Isaiah
[Isa 20:1].
Very recently the name of this Assyrian king has been traced on the
Ninevite monuments, as concerned in an expedition against a king of
Samaria, whose name, though mutilated, COLONEL
RAWLINSON reads as Hoshea.
4. found conspiracy in Hoshea--After having paid tribute for several
years, Hoshea, determined on throwing off the Assyrian yoke, withheld
the stipulated tribute. Shalmaneser, incensed at this rebellion,
proclaimed war against Israel. This was in the sixth year of Hoshea's
reign.
he had sent messengers to So, king of Egypt--the Sabaco of the classic
historians, a famous Ethiopian who, for fifty years, occupied the
Egyptian throne, and through whose aid Hoshea hoped to resist the
threatened attack of the Assyrian conqueror. But Shalmaneser,
marching against [Hoshea], scoured the whole country of Israel,
besieged the capital Samaria, and carried the principal inhabitants
into captivity in his own land, having taken the king himself, and
imprisoned him for life. This ancient policy of transplanting a
conquered people into a foreign land, was founded on the idea that,
among a mixed multitude, differing in language and religion, they would
be kept in better subjection, and have less opportunity of combining
together to recover their independence.
6. carried Israel away--that is, the remaining tribes
(see on
2Ki 15:29).
and placed them, &c.--This passage GESENIUS
renders thus, omitting
the particle by, which is printed in italics to show it is not in
the original: "and placed them in Halah, and on the Chabor, a river of
Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes."
Halah--the same as Calah
(Ge 10:11, 12),
in the region of the Laycus or Zab river, about a day's journey from
the ruins of Nineveh.
Chabor--is a river, and it is remarkable that there is a river
rising in the central highlands of Assyria which retains this name
Khabour unchanged to the present day.
Gozan--("pasture") or Zozan, are the highlands of Assyria, which
afford pasturage. The region in which the Chabor and the Zab rise, and
through which they flow, is peculiarly of this character. The
Nestorians repair to it with their numerous flocks, spending the summer
on the banks or in the highlands of the Chabor or the Zab. Considering
the high authority we possess for regarding Gozan and Zozan as one
name, there can be no doubt that this is the Gozan referred to in this
passage.
cities of the Medes--"villages," according to the Syriac and
Vulgate versions, or "mountains," according to the Septuagint. The Medish inhabitants of Gozan, having revolted, had been destroyed by
the kings of Assyria, and nothing was more natural than that they
should wish to place in it an industrious people, like the captive
Israelites, while it was well suited to their pastoral life
[GRANT, Nestorians].
2Ki 17:7-41.
SAMARIA
TAKEN, AND
ISRAEL FOR
THEIR
SINS
CARRIED
CAPTIVE.
7. For so it was, that the children of Israel had sinned--There is here
given a very full and impressive vindication of the divine procedure in
punishing His highly privileged, but rebellious and apostate, people.
No wonder that amid so gross a perversion of the worship of the true
God, and the national propensity to do reverence to idols, the divine
patience was exhausted; and that the God whom they had forsaken
permitted them to go into captivity, that they might learn the
difference between His service and that of their despotic conquerors.
24-28. the king of Assyria brought men from Babylon, etc.--This
was not Shalmaneser, but Esar-haddon
(Eze 4:2).
The places vacated by the captive Israelites he ordered to be occupied
by several colonies of his own subjects from Babylon and other
provinces.
from Cuthah--the Chaldee form of Cush or Susiana, now Khusistan.
Ava--supposed to be Ahivaz, situated on the river Karuns,
which empties into the head of the Persian Gulf.
Hamath--on the Orontes.
Sepharvaim--Siphara, a city on the Euphrates above Babylon.
placed them in the cities of Samaria, &c.--It must not be supposed
that the Israelites were universally removed to a man. A remnant was
left, chiefly however of the poor and lower classes, with whom these
foreign colonists mingled; so that the prevailing character of society
about Samaria was heathen, not Israelite. For the Assyrian colonists
became masters of the land; and, forming partial intermarriages with
the remnant Jews, the inhabitants became a mongrel race, no longer a
people of Ephraim
(Isa 7:6).
These people, imperfectly instructed in the creed of the Jews, acquired
also a mongrel doctrine. Being too few to replenish the land, lions, by
which the land had been infested
(Jud 14:5;
1Sa 17:34;
1Ki 13:24; 20:36;
So 4:8),
multiplied and committed frequent ravages upon them. Recognizing in
these attacks a judgment from the God of the land, whom they had not
worshipped, they petitioned the Assyrian court to send them some Jewish
priests who might instruct them in the right way of serving Him. The
king, in compliance with their request, sent them one of the exiled
priests of Israel
[2Ki 17:27],
who established his headquarters at Beth-el, and taught them how they
should fear the Lord. It is not said that he took a copy of the
Pentateuch with him, out of which he might teach them. Oral
teaching was much better fitted for the superstitious people than
instruction out of a written book. He could teach them more effectually
by word of mouth. Believing that he would adopt the best and simplest
method for them, it is unlikely that he took the written law with him,
and so gave origin to the Samaritan copy of the Pentateuch [DAVIDSON, Criticism]. Besides, it is evident from
his being one of the exiled priests, and from his settlement at
Beth-el, that he was not a Levite, but one of the calf-worshipping
priests. Consequently his instructions would be neither sound nor
efficient.
29. Howbeit every nation made gods of their own--These Assyrian
colonists, however, though instructed in the worship, and acknowledging
the being of the God of Israel, did not suppose Him to be the only God.
Like other heathens, they combined His worship with that of their own
gods; and as they formed a promiscuous society from different nations
or provinces, a variety of idols was acknowledged among them.
30. Succoth-benoth--that is, the "tents" or "booths of the daughters,"
similar to those in which the Babylonian damsels celebrated impure
rites
(Am 2:8).
Nergal--The Jewish writers say this idol was in the form of a cock, and
it is certain that a cock is often associated with a priest on the
Assyrian monuments [LAYARD].
But modern critics, looking to the
astrological character of Assyrian idolatry, generally consider Nergal
as the planet Mars, the god of war. The name of this idol formed part
of the appellation of two of the king of Babylon's princes
(Jer 39:3).
Ashima--an idol under the form of an entirely bald he-goat.
31. Nibhaz--under that of a dog--that Egyptian form of animal-worship
having prevailed in ancient Syria, as is evident from the image of a
large dog at the mouth of the Nahr-el-Kelb, or Dog river.
Tartak--According to the rabbis, it was in the form of an ass, but
others understand it as a planet of ill-omen, probably Saturn.
Adrammelech--supposed by some to be the same as Molech, and in
Assyrian mythology to stand for the sun. It was worshipped in the form
of a mule--others maintain in that of a peacock.
Anammelech--worshipped in the form of a hare; others say in that of
a goat.
34. Unto this day--the time of the Babylonian exile, when this book
was composed. Their religion was a strange medley or compound of the
service of God and the service of idols. Such was the first settlement
of the people, afterwards called Samaritans, who were sent from Assyria
to colonize the land, when the kingdom of Israel, after having
continued three hundred fifty-six years, was overthrown.
CHAPTER 18
2Ki 18:1-3.
HEZEKIAH'S
GOOD
REIGN.
1, 2. Hezekiah . . . began to reign. Twenty and five years
old--According to this statement (compare
2Ki 16:2),
he must have been born when his father Ahaz was no more than eleven
years old. Paternity at an age so early is not unprecedented in the
warm climates of the south, where the human frame is matured sooner
than in our northern regions. But the case admits of solution in a
different way. It was customary for the later kings of Israel to
assume their son and heir into partnership in the government during
their lives; and as Hezekiah began to reign in the third year of Hoshea
(2Ki 18:1),
and Hoshea in the twelfth year of Ahaz
(2Ki 17:1),
it is evident that Hezekiah began to reign in the fourteenth year of
Ahaz his father, and so reigned two or three years before his father's
death. So that, at the beginning of his reign in conjunction with his
father, he might be only twenty-two or twenty-three, and Ahaz a few
years older than the common calculation makes him. Or the case may be
solved thus: As the ancient writers, in the computation of time, take
notice of the year they mention, whether finished or newly begun, so
Ahaz might be near twenty-one years old at the beginning of his reign,
and near seventeen years older at his death; while, on the other hand,
Hezekiah, when he began to reign, might be just entering into his
twenty-fifth year, and so Ahaz would be near fourteen years old when
his son Hezekiah was born--no uncommon age for a young man to become a
father in southern latitudes [PATRICK].
2Ki 18:4-37.
HE
DESTROYS
IDOLATRY.
4. He removed the high places and brake the images, &c.--The methods
adopted by this good king for extirpating idolatry, and accomplishing a
thorough reformation in religion, are fully detailed
(2Ch 20:3; 31:19).
But they are indicated very briefly, and in a sort of passing allusion.
brake in pieces the brazen serpent--The preservation of this remarkable
relic of antiquity
(Nu 21:5-10)
might, like the pot of manna and Aaron's rod, have remained an
interesting and instructive monument of the divine goodness and mercy
to the Israelites in the wilderness: and it must have required the
exercise of no small courage and resolution to destroy it. But in the
progress of degeneracy it had become an object of idolatrous worship
and as the interests of true religion rendered its demolition
necessary, Hezekiah, by taking this bold step, consulted both the glory
of God and the good of his country.
unto those days the children of Israel did burn incense to it--It is
not to be supposed that this superstitious reverence had been paid to
it ever since the time of Moses, for such idolatry would not have been
tolerated either by David or by Solomon in the early part of his reign,
by Asa or Jehoshaphat had they been aware of such a folly. But the
probability is, that the introduction of this superstition does not
date earlier than the time when the family of Ahab, by their alliance
with the throne of Judah, exercised a pernicious influence in paving
the way for all kinds of idolatry. It is possible, however, as some
think, that its origin may have arisen out of a misapprehension of
Moses' language
(Nu 21:8).
Serpent-worship, how revolting soever it may appear, was an extensively
diffused form of idolatry; and it would obtain an easier reception in
Israel because many of the neighboring nations, such as the Egyptians
and Phœnicians, adored idol gods in the form of serpents as the
emblems of health and immortality.
5, 6. He trusted in the Lord God of Israel--without invoking the aid or
purchasing the succor of foreign auxiliaries like Asa
(1Ki 15:18, 19)
and Ahaz
(2Ki 16:17;
Isa 7:1-25).
so that after him was none like him among all the kings of Judah--Of
course David and Solomon are excepted, they having had the sovereignty
of the whole country. In the petty kingdom of Judah, Josiah alone had a
similar testimony borne to him
(2Ki 23:25).
But even he was surpassed by Hezekiah, who set about a national
reformation at the beginning of his reign, which Josiah did not. The
pious character and the excellent course of Hezekiah was prompted,
among other secondary influences, by a sense of the calamities his
father's wicked career had brought on the country, as well as by the
counsels of Isaiah.
7, 8. he rebelled against the king of Assyria--that is, the yearly
tribute his father had stipulated to pay, he, with imprudent haste,
withdrew. Pursuing the policy of a truly theocratic sovereign, he was,
through the divine blessing which rested on his government, raised to a
position of great public and national strength. Shalmaneser had
withdrawn from Palestine, being engaged perhaps in a war with Tyre, or
probably he was dead. Assuming, consequently, that full independent
sovereignty which God had settled on the house of David, he both shook
off the Assyrian yoke, and, by an energetic movement against the
Philistines, recovered from that people the territory which they had
taken from his father Ahaz
(2Ch 28:18).
13. Sennacherib--the son and successor of Shalmaneser.
all the fenced cities of Judah--not absolutely all of them; for,
besides the capital, some strong fortresses held out against the
invader
(2Ki 18:17;
2Ki 19:8).
The following account of Sennacherib's invasion of Judah and the
remarkable destruction of his army, is repeated almost verbatim in
2Ch 32:1-33
and Isa 36:1-37:38.
The expedition seems to have been directed against Egypt, the conquest
of which was long a leading object of ambition with the Assyrian
monarchs. But the invasion of Judah necessarily preceded, that country
being the key to Egypt, the highway through which the conquerors from
Upper Asia had to pass. Judah had also at this time formed a league of
mutual defense with Egypt
(2Ki 18:24).
Moreover, it was now laid completely open by the transplantation of
Israel to Assyria. Overrunning Palestine, Sennacherib laid siege to the
fortress of Lachish, which lay seven Roman miles from Eleutheropolis,
and therefore southwest of Jerusalem on the way to Egypt [ROBINSON]. Among the interesting illustrations of sacred
history furnished by the recent Assyrian excavations, is a series of
bas-reliefs, representing the siege of a town, which the inscription on
the sculpture shows to be Lachish, and the figure of a king, whose name
is given, on the same inscription, as Sennacherib. The legend,
sculptured over the head of the king, runs thus: "Sennacherib, the
mighty king, king of the country of Assyria, sitting on the throne of
judgment before the city of Lachish [Lakhisha], I give permission for
its slaughter" [Nineveh and Babylon]. This minute confirmation
of the truth of the Bible narrative is given not only by the name
Lachish, which is contained in the inscription, but from the
physiognomy of the captives brought before the king, which is
unmistakably Jewish.
14-16. Hezekiah . . . sent to Lachish, saying,
. . . that which thou puttest on me will I
bear--Disappointed in his expectations of aid from Egypt, and
feeling himself unable to resist so mighty a conqueror who was menacing
Jerusalem itself, Hezekiah made his submission. The payment of 300
talents of silver, and 30 talents of gold--£351,000--brought a
temporary respite; but, in raising the imposed tribute, he was obliged
not only to drain all the treasures of the palace and the temple, but
even to strip the doors and pillars of the sacred edifice of the gold
that adorned them.
2Ki 18:17-37.
SENNACHERIB
BESIEGES
JERUSALEM.
17. king of Assyria sent Tartan--general
(Isa 20:1).
Rab-saris--chief of the eunuchs.
Rab-shakeh--chief cupbearer. These were the great officers employed in
delivering Sennacherib's insulting message to Hezekiah. On the walls of
the palace of Sennacherib, at Khorsabad, certain figures have been
identified with the officers of that sovereign mentioned in Scripture.
In particular, the figures, Rab-shakeh, Rab-saris, and Tartan, appear as
full-length portraits of the persons holding those offices in the reign
of Sennacherib. Probably they represent the very individuals sent on
this embassy.
with a great host to Jerusalem--Engaged in a campaign of three
years in Egypt, Sennacherib was forced by the king of Ethiopia to
retreat, and discharging his rage against Jerusalem, he sent an immense
army to summon it to surrender.
(See on
2Ch 32:30).
the conduit of the upper pool--the conduit which went from the
reservoir of the Upper Gihon (Birket et Mamilla) to the lower pool, the
Birket es Sultan.
the highway of the fuller's field--the public road which passed by
that district, which had been assigned them for carrying on their
business without the city, on account of the unpleasant smell
[KEIL].
18. when they had called to the king--Hezekiah did not make a
personal appearance, but commissioned his three principal ministers to
meet the Assyrian deputies at a conference outside the city walls.
Eliakim--lately promoted to be master of the royal household
(Isa 22:20).
Shebna--removed for his pride and presumption
(Isa 22:15)
from that office, though still royal secretary.
Joah . . . the recorder--that is, the keeper of the chronicles, an
important office in Eastern countries.
19. Rab-shakeh said--The insolent tone he assumed appears surprising.
But this boasting
[2Ki 18:19-25],
both as to matter and manner, his highly colored picture of his
master's powers and resources, and the impossibility of Hezekiah making
any effective resistance, heightened by all the arguments and figures
which an Oriental imagination could suggest, has been paralleled in
all, except the blasphemy, by other messages of defiance sent on
similar occasions in the history of the East.
27. that they may eat, &c.--This was designed to show the dreadful
extremities to which, in the threatened siege, the people of Jerusalem
would be reduced.
CHAPTER 19
2Ki 19:1-5.
HEZEKIAH IN
DEEP
AFFLICTION.
1-3. when king Hezekiah heard it, he rent his clothes--The rending
of his clothes was a mode of expressing horror at the daring
blasphemy--the assumption of sackcloth a sign of his mental
distress--his entrance into the temple to pray the refuge of a pious
man in affliction--and the forwarding an account of the Assyrian's
speech to Isaiah was to obtain the prophet's counsel and comfort. The
expression in which the message was conveyed described, by a strong
figure, the desperate condition of the kingdom, together with their own
inability to help themselves; and it intimated also a hope, that the
blasphemous defiance of Jehovah's power by the impious Assyrian might
lead to some direct interposition for the vindication of His honor and
supremacy to all heathen gods.
4. the living God--"The living God" is a most significant expression
taken in connection with the senseless deities that Rab-shakeh boasted
were unable to resist his master's victorious arms.
2Ki 19:6, 7.
COMFORTED BY
ISAIAH.
6. Isaiah said . . . Be not afraid--The prophet's answer was most
cheering, as it held out the prospect of a speedy deliverance from the
invader. The blast, the rumor, the fall by the sword, contained a brief
prediction that was soon fulfilled in all the three
particulars--namely, the alarm that hastened his retreat, the
destruction that overtook his army, and the violent death that suddenly
ended his career.
2Ki 19:8-13.
SENNACHERIB
SENDS A
BLASPHEMOUS
LETTER TO
HEZEKIAH.
8. So Rab-shakeh . . . found the king of Assyria warring against
Libnah--Whether Lachish had fallen or not, is not said. But
Sennacherib had transferred his battering-rams against the apparently
neighboring fortress of Libnah
(Jos 10:29;
compare
Jos 10:31; 15:42),
where the chief-cup-bearer reported the execution of his mission.
9-13. when he heard say of Tirhakah . . ., Behold, he is come out to
fight against thee, &c.--This was the "rumor" to which Isaiah
referred
[2Ki 19:7].
Tirhakah reigned in Upper Egypt, while So (or Sabaco) ruled in Lower
Egypt. He was a powerful monarch, another Sesostris, and both he and
Sabaco have left many monuments of their greatness. The name and figure
of Tirhakah receiving war captives, are still seen in the Egyptian
temple of Medinet Abou. This was the expected succor which was sneered
at by Rab-shakeh as "a bruised reed"
(2Ki 18:21).
Rage against Hezekiah for allying himself with Egypt, or the hope of
being better able to meet this attack from the south, induced him,
after hearing the rumor of Tirhakah's advance, to send a menacing
letter to Hezekiah, in order that he might force the king of Judah to
an immediate surrender of his capital. This letter, couched in the same
vaunting and imperious style as the speech of Rab-shakeh, exceeded it
in blasphemy, and contained a larger enumeration of conquered places,
with the view of terrifying Hezekiah and showing him the utter
hopelessness of all attempts at resistance.
2Ki 19:14-34.
HEZEKIAH'S
PRAYER.
14-19. Hezekiah received the letter . . . and went up into the house
of the Lord--Hezekiah, after reading it, hastened into the temple,
spread it in the childlike confidence of faith before the Lord, as
containing taunts deeply affecting the divine honor, and implored
deliverance from this proud defier of God and man. The devout spirit of
this prayer, the recognition of the Divine Being in the plenitude of
His majesty--so strikingly contrasted with the fancy of the Assyrians
as to His merely local power; his acknowledgment of the conquests
obtained over other lands; and of the destruction of their wooden idols
which, according to the Assyrian practice, were committed to the
flames--because their tutelary deities were no gods; and the object for
which he supplicated the divine interposition--that all the
kingdoms of the earth might know that the Lord was the only God--this
was an attitude worthy to be assumed by a pious theocratic king of the
chosen people.
20. Then Isaiah . . . sent--A revelation having been made to Isaiah,
the prophet announced to the king that his prayer was heard. The
prophetic message consisted of three different portions:--First, Sennacherib is apostrophized
(2Ki 19:21-28)
in a highly poetical strain, admirably descriptive of the turgid
vanity, haughty pretensions, and presumptuous impiety of the Assyrian
despot. Secondly, Hezekiah is addressed
(2Ki 19:29-31),
and a sign is given him of the promised deliverance--namely, that for
two years the presence of the enemy would interrupt the peaceful
pursuits of husbandry, but in the third year the people would be in
circumstances to till their fields and vineyards and reap the fruits as
formerly. Thirdly, the issue of Sennacherib's invasion is
announced
(2Ki 19:32-34).
33. shall not come into this city--nor approach near enough to shoot
an arrow, not even from the most powerful engine which throws missiles
to the greatest distance, nor shall he occupy any part of the ground
before the city by a fence, a mantelet, or covering for men employed in
a siege, nor cast (raise) a bank (mound) of earth, overtopping the city
walls, whence he may see and command the interior of the city. None of
these, which were the principal modes of attack followed in ancient
military art, should Sennacherib be permitted to adopt. Though the army
under Rab-shakeh marched towards Jerusalem and encamped at a little
distance with a view to blockade it, they delayed laying siege to it,
probably waiting till the king, having taken Lachish and Libnah, should
bring up his detachment, that with all the combined forces of Assyria
they might invest the capital. So determined was this invader to
conquer Judah and the neighboring countries
(Isa 10:7),
that nothing but a divine interposition could have saved Jerusalem. It
might be supposed that the powerful monarch who overran Palestine and
carried away the tribes of Israel, would leave memorials of his deeds
on sculptured slabs, or votive bulls. A long and minute account of this
expedition is contained in the Annals of Sennacherib, a translation of
which has recently been made into English, and, in his remarks upon it,
COLONEL RAWLINSON says the
Assyrian version confirms the most important features of the Scripture
account. The Jewish and Assyrian narratives of the campaign are,
indeed, on the whole, strikingly illustrative of each other
[Outlines of Assyrian History].
2Ki 19:35, 36.
AN
ANGEL
DESTROYS THE
ASSYRIANS.
35. in the morning . . . they were all dead corpses--It was the
miraculous interposition of the Almighty that defended Jerusalem. As to
the secondary agent employed in the destruction of the Assyrian army,
it is most probable that it was effected by a hot south wind, the
simoon, such as to this day often envelops and destroys whole caravans.
This conjecture is supported by
2Ki 19:7
and Jer 51:1.
The destruction was during the night; the officers and soldiers, being
in full security, were negligent; their discipline was relaxed; the
camp guards were not alert, or perhaps they themselves were the first
taken off, and those who slept, not wrapped up, imbibed the
poison plentifully. If this had been an evening of dissolute mirth (no
uncommon thing in a camp), their joy (perhaps for a victory), or "the
first night of their attacking the city," says JOSEPHUS, became, by its effects, one means of their
destruction [CALMET, Fragments].
36. So Sennacherib king of Assyria . . . went and returned--the same
way as he came
(2Ki 19:33).
The route is described
(Isa 10:28-32).
The early chariot track near Beyrout is on the rocky edge of Lebanon,
which is skirted by the ancient Lycus (Nahr-el Kelb). On the
perpendicular face of the limestone rock, at different heights, are
seen slabs with Assyrian inscriptions, which having been deciphered,
are found to contain the name of Sennacherib. Thus, by the preservation
of these tablets, the wrath of the Assyrian invaders is made to praise
the Lord.
dwelt at Nineveh--This statement implies a considerable period of
time, and his Annals carry on his history at least five years after his
disastrous campaign at Jerusalem. No record of his catastrophe can be
found, as the Assyrian practice was to record victories alone. The
sculptures give only the sunny side of the picture.
2Ki 19:37.
SENNACHERIB
SLAIN.
37. as he was worshipping in the house of Nisroch--Assarae, or Asshur,
the head of the Assyrian Pantheon, represented not as a vulture-headed
figure (that is now ascertained to be a priest), but as a winged figure
in a circle, which was the guardian deity of Assyria. The king is
represented on the monuments standing or kneeling beneath this figure,
his hand raised in sign of prayer or adoration.
his sons smote him with the sword--Sennacherib's temper, exasperated
probably by his reverses, displayed itself in the most savage cruelty
and intolerable tyranny over his subjects and slaves, till at length he
was assassinated by his two sons, whom, it is said, he intended to
sacrifice to pacify the gods and dispose them to grant him a return of
prosperity. The parricides taking flight into Armenia, a third son,
Esar-haddon, ascended the throne.
CHAPTER 20
2Ki 20:1-7.
HEZEKIAH'S
LIFE
LENGTHENED.
1. In those days was Hezekiah sick--As his reign lasted twenty-nine
years
(2Ki 18:2),
and his kingdom was invaded in the fourteenth
(2Ki 18:13),
it is evident that this sudden and severe illness must have occurred in
the very year of the Syrian invasion. Between the threatened attack and
the actual appearance of the enemy, this incident in Hezekiah's history
must have taken place. But according to the usage of the sacred
historian, the story of Sennacherib is completed before entering on
what was personal to the king of Judah (see also
Isa 37:36-38:1).
Set thine house in order--Isaiah, being of the blood royal, might have
access to the king's private house. But since the prophet was
commissioned to make this announcement, the message must be considered
as referring to matters of higher importance than the settlement of the
king's domestic and private affairs. It must have related chiefly to
the state of his kingdom, he having not as yet any son (compare
2Ki 20:6
with 2Ki 21:1).
for thou shall die, and not live--The disease was of a malignant
character and would be mortal in its effects, unless the healing power
of God should miraculously interpose.
2. he turned his face to the wall--not like Ahab
(1Ki 21:4),
in fretful discontent, but in order to secure a better opportunity for
prayer.
3. remember now how I have walked before thee, &c.--The course of
Hezekiah's thoughts was evidently directed to the promise made to David
and his successors on the throne
(1Ki 8:25).
He had kept the conditions as faithfully as human infirmity admitted;
and as he had been all along free from any of those great crimes by
which, through the judgment of God, human life was often suddenly cut
short, his great grief might arise partly from the love of life, partly
from the obscurity of the Mosaic dispensation, where life and
immortality had not been fully brought to light, and partly from his
plans for the reformation of his kingdom being frustrated by his death.
He pleaded the fulfilment of the promise.
4. afore Isaiah was gone out into the middle court--of the royal
castle.
5. Thus saith . . . the God of David thy father--An immediate answer
was given to his prayer, containing an assurance that the Lord was
mindful of His promise to David and would accomplish it in Hezekiah's
experience, both by the prolongation of his life, and his deliverance
from the Assyrians.
on the third day--The perfect recovery from a dangerous sickness,
within so short a time, shows the miraculous character of the cure (see
his thanksgiving song,
Isa 38:9).
The disease cannot be ascertained; but the text gives no hint that the
plague was raging then in Jerusalem; and although Arab physicians apply
a cataplasm of figs to plague-boils, they also do so in other cases, as
figs are considered useful in ripening and soothing inflammatory
ulcers.
2Ki 20:8-20.
THE
SUN
GOES
TEN
DEGREES
BACKWARD.
8-11. Hezekiah said unto Isaiah, What will be the sign that the Lord
shall heal me--His recovery in the course of nature was so unlooked
for, that the king asked for some token to justify his reliance on the
truth of the prophet's communication; and the sign he specified was
granted to him. The shadow of the sun went back upon the dial of Ahaz
the ten degrees it had gone down. Various conjectures have been formed
as to this dial. The word in the original is "degrees," or "steps," and
hence many commentators have supposed that it was a stair, so artfully
contrived, that the shadows on the steps indicated the hours and course
of the sun. But it is more probable that it was a proper instrument,
and, from the Hebrews having no term to designate it, that it was one
of the foreign novelties imported from Babylon by Ahaz. It seems to
have been of such magnitude, and so placed in the court, that Isaiah
could point to it, and the king see it, from his chamber. The
retrogression of the sun's shadow on the dial was miraculously
accomplished by the omnipotent power of God; but the phenomenon was
temporary, local, confined to the notice, and intended for the
satisfaction, only of Hezekiah and his court.
12-19. Berodach-baladan--
(Isa 39:1),
the first king of Babylon mentioned in sacred history; formerly its
rulers were viceroys of the Assyrian monarchs. This individual threw
off the yoke, and asserting his independence, made with varying
success, a long and obstinate resistance [RAWLINSON, Outlines]. The message of
congratulation to Hezekiah, was, in all likelihood, accompanied with
proposals for a defensive alliance against their common Assyrian enemy.
The king of Judah, flattered with this honor, showed the ambassadors
all his treasures, his armory and warlike stores; and his motive for
this was evidently that the Babylonian deputies might be the more
induced to prize his friendship.
13, 14. the silver, and the gold--He paid so much tribute to
Sennacherib as exhausted his treasury (compare
2Ki 18:16).
But, after the destruction of Sennacherib, presents were brought him
from various quarters, out of respect to a king who, by his faith and
prayer, saved his country; and besides, it is by no means improbable
that from the corpses in the Assyrian camp, all the gold and silver he
had paid might be recovered. The vain display, however, was offensive
to his divine liege lord, who sent Isaiah to reprove him. The answer he
gave the prophet
(2Ki 22:14)
shows how he was elated by the compliment of their visit; but it was
wrong, as presenting a bait for the cupidity of these rapacious
foreigners, who, at no distant period, would return and pillage his
country, and transfer all the possessions he ostentatiously displayed
to Babylon, as well as his posterity to be court attendants in that
country--(see on
2Ch 32:31).
19. Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken--indicating a
humble and pious resignation to the divine will. The concluding part of
his reply was uttered after a pause and was probably an ejaculation to
himself, expressing his thankfulness, that, though great afflictions
should befall his descendants, the execution of the divine judgment was
to be suspended during his own lifetime.
20. pool and a
conduit--(See on
2Ch 32:30).
CHAPTER 21
2Ki 21:1-18.
MANASSEH'S
WICKED
REIGN, AND
GREAT
IDOLATRY.
1-3. Manasseh was twelve years old when he began to reign--He must have
been born three years after his father's recovery; and his minority,
spent under the influence of guardians who were hostile to the
religious principles and reforming policy of his father, may account in
part for the anti-theocratic principles of his reign. The work of
religious reformation which Hezekiah had zealously carried on was but
partially accomplished. There was little appearance of its influence on
the heart and manners of the people at large. On the contrary, the true
fear of God had vanished from the mass of the people; corruption and
vice increased, and were openly practised
(Isa 28:7,
&c.) by the degenerate leaders, who, having got the young prince
Manasseh into their power, directed his education, trained him up in
their views, and seduced him into the open patronage of idolatry.
Hence, when he became sovereign, he introduced the worship of idols,
the restoration of high places, and the erection of altars or pillars
to Baal, and the placing, in the temple of God itself, a graven image
of Asherah, the sacred or symbolic tree, which represented "all the
host of heaven." This was not idolatry, but pure star-worship, of
Chaldaic and Assyrian origin [KEIL]. The sun, as
among the Persians, had chariots and horses consecrated to it
(2Ki 23:11);
and incense was offered to the stars on the housetops
(2Ki 23:12;
2Ch 33:5;
Jer 19:13;
Zep 1:5),
and in the temple area with the face turned toward the sunrise
(Eze 8:16).
5. the two courts of the house of the Lord--the court of the priests,
and the large court of the people.
6. made his son pass through the
fire--(See on
2Ki 16:3).
observed times--from an observation of the clouds.
used enchantments--jugglery and spells.
dealt with familiar spirits--Septuagint, "ventriloquists," who
pretended to ask counsel of a familiar spirit and gave the response
received from him to others.
and wizards--wise or knowing ones, who pretended to reveal secrets,
to recover things lost and hidden treasure, and to interpret dreams. A
great influx of these impostors had, at various times, poured from
Chaldea into the land of Israel to pursue their gainful occupations,
especially during the reigns of the latter kings; and Manasseh was not
only their liberal patron, but zealous to appear himself an adept in
the arts. He raised them to be an influential class at his court, as
they were in that of Assyria and Babylon, where nothing was done till
they had ascertained the lucky hour and were promised a happy issue.
7. And he set a graven image--The placing of the Asherah within the
precincts of the temple, which was dedicated to the worship of the true
God, is dwelt upon as the most aggravated outrage of the royal
idolater.
8. Neither will I make the feet of Israel move . . . out of the land
which I gave their fathers--alluding to the promise
(2Sa 7:10).
only if they will observe, &c.--This condition was expressed from the
first plantation of Israel in Canaan. But that people not only did not
keep it, but through the pernicious influence of Manasseh, were seduced
into greater excesses of idolatrous corruption than even the original
Canaanites.
10-17. And the Lord spake by his servants the prophets--These were
Hosea, Joel, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Isaiah. Their counsels, admonitions,
and prophetic warnings, were put on record in the national chronicles
(2Ch 33:18)
and now form part of the sacred canon.
12. whosoever heareth of it, both his ears shall tingle--a strong
metaphorical form of announcing an extraordinary and appalling event
(see
1Sa 3:11;
Jer 19:3;
also
Hab 1:5).
13. the line of Samaria, and the plummet of the house of Ahab--Captives
doomed to destruction were sometimes grouped together and marked off by
means of a measuring-line and plummet
(2Sa 8:2;
Isa 34:11;
Am 7:7);
so that the line of Samaria means the line drawn for the destruction of
Samaria; the plummet of the house of Ahab, for exterminating his
apostate family; and the import of the threatening declaration here is
that Judah would be utterly destroyed, as Samaria and the dynasty of
Ahab had been.
I will wipe Jerusalem, &c.--The same doom is denounced more strongly
in a figure unmistakably significant.
14. I will forsake the remnant of mine inheritance--The people of
Judah, who of all the chosen people alone remained. The consequence of
the Lord's forsaking them would be their fall into the power of their
enemies.
16. Moreover Manasseh shed innocent blood--Not content with the
patronage and the practice of idolatrous abomination, he was a cruel
persecutor of all who did not conform. The land was deluged with the
blood of good men; among whom it is traditionally said Isaiah suffered
a horrid death, by being sawn asunder
(see on
Heb 11:37).
2Ki 21:19-26.
AMON'S
WICKED
REIGN.
19-24. Amon was twenty and two years old when he began to reign--This
prince continued the idolatrous policy of his father; and, after an
inglorious reign of two years, he was massacred by some of his own
domestics. The people slew the regicide conspirators and placed his son
Josiah on the throne.
CHAPTER 22
2Ki 22:1, 2.
JOSIAH'S
GOOD
REIGN.
1, 2. Josiah was eight years old when he began to reign--Happier than
his grandfather Manasseh, he seems to have fallen during his minority
under the care of better guardians, who trained him in the principles
and practice of piety; and so strongly had his young affections been
enlisted on the side of true and undefiled religion, that he continued
to adhere all his life, with undeviating perseverance, to the cause of
God and righteousness.
2Ki 22:3-7.
HE
PROVIDES FOR THE
REPAIR OF THE
TEMPLE.
3, 4. in the eighteenth year of king Josiah--Previous to this period,
he had commenced the work of national reformation. The preliminary
steps had been already taken; not only the builders were employed, but
money had been brought by all the people and received by the Levites at
the door, and various other preparations had been made. But the course
of this narrative turns on one interesting incident which happened in
the eighteenth year of Josiah's reign, and hence that date is
specified. In fact the whole land was thoroughly purified from every
object and all traces of idolatry. The king now addressed himself to
the repair and embellishment of the temple and gave directions to
Hilkiah the high priest to take a general survey, in order to ascertain
what was necessary to be done
(see on
2Ch 34:8-15).
2Ki 22:8-15.
HILKIAH
FINDS THE
BOOK OF THE
LAW.
8-11. Hilkiah said . . . I have found the book of the law in the house
of the Lord, &c.--that is, the law of Moses, the Pentateuch. It
was the temple copy which, had been laid
(De 31:25, 26)
beside the ark in the most holy place. During the ungodly reigns of
Manasseh and Amon--or perhaps under Ahaz, when the temple itself had
been profaned by idols, and the ark also
(2Ch 35:3)
removed from its site; it was somehow lost, and was now found again
during the repair of the temple [KEIL]. Delivered
by Hilkiah the discoverer to Shaphan the scribe
[2Ki 22:8],
it was by the latter shown and read to the king. It is thought, with
great probability, that the passage read to the king, and by which the
royal mind was so greatly excited, was a portion of Deuteronomy, the
twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth, and thirtieth chapters, in which is
recorded a renewal of the national covenant, and an enumeration of the
terrible threats and curses denounced against all who violated the law,
whether prince or people. The impressions of grief and terror which the
reading produced on the mind of Josiah have seemed to many
unaccountable. But, as it is certain from the extensive and familiar
knowledge displayed by the prophets, that there were numbers of other
copies in popular circulation, the king must have known its sacred
contents in some degree. But he might have been a stranger to the
passage read him, or the reading of it might, in the peculiar
circumstances, have found a way to his heart in a manner that he never
felt before. His strong faith in the divine word, and his painful
consciousness that the woeful and long-continued apostasies of the
nation had exposed them to the infliction of the judgments denounced,
must have come with overwhelming force on the heart of so pious a
prince.
12-15. the king commanded . . . Go, inquire of the Lord for me,
&c.--The agitated feelings of the king prompted him to ask immediate
counsel how to avert those curses under which his kingdom lay; and
forthwith a deputation of his principal officers was sent to one
endowed with the prophetic spirit.
Ahikam--a friend of Jeremiah
(Jer 26:24).
14. Achbor--or Abdon
(2Ch 34:20),
a man of influence at court
(Jer 26:22).
The occasion was urgent, and therefore they were sent--not to Zephaniah
(Zep 1:1),
who was perhaps young--nor to Jeremiah, who was probably absent at his
house in Anathoth, but to one who was at hand and known for her
prophetic gifts--to Huldah, who was probably at this time a widow. Her
husband Shallum was grandson of one Harhas, "keeper of the wardrobe."
If this means the priestly wardrobe, [Harhas] must have been a Levite.
But it probably refers to the royal wardrobe.
she dwelt . . . in the college--rather, "in the Misnah," taking
the original word as a proper name, not a school or college, but a
particular suburb of Jerusalem. She was held in such veneration that
Jewish writers say she and Jehoiada the priest were the only persons
not of the house of David
(2Ch 24:15, 16)
who were ever buried in Jerusalem.
15-20. she said unto them, Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Tell the
man that sent you to me--On being consulted, she delivered an oracular
response in which judgment was blended with mercy; for it announced the
impending calamities that at no distant period were to overtake the
city and its inhabitants. But at the same time the king was consoled
with an assurance that this season of punishment and sorrow should not
be during his lifetime, on account of the faith, penitence, and pious
zeal for the divine glory and worship which, in his public capacity and
with his royal influence, he had displayed.
CHAPTER 23
2Ki 23:1-3.
JOSIAH
CAUSES THE
LAW TO
BE
READ.
1-3. the king sent, and they gathered unto him all the
elders--This pious and patriotic king, not content with the promise
of his own security, felt, after Huldah's response, an increased desire
to avert the threatened calamities from his kingdom and people. Knowing
the richness of the divine clemency and grace to the penitent, he
convened the elders of the people, and placing himself at their head,
accompanied by the collective body of the inhabitants, went in solemn
procession to the temple, where he ordered the book of the law to be
read to the assembled audience, and covenanted, with the unanimous
concurrence of his subjects, to adhere steadfastly to all the
commandments of the Lord. It was an occasion of solemn interest,
closely connected with a great national crisis, and the beautiful
example of piety in the highest quarter would exert a salutary
influence over all classes of the people in animating their devotions
and encouraging their return to the faith of their fathers.
2. he read in their ears--that is, "caused to be read."
3. all the people stood to the covenant--that is, they agreed to
the proposals made; they assented to what was required of them.
2Ki 23:4-28.
HE
DESTROYS
IDOLATRY.
4. the king commanded Hilkiah, &c.--that is, the high priest and
other priests, for there was not a variety of official gradations in
the temple.
all the vessels, &c.--the whole apparatus of idol-worship.
burned them without Jerusalem--The law required them to be consigned
to the flames
(De 7:25).
in the fields of Kidron--most probably that part of the valley of
Kidron, where lies Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives. It is a level,
spacious basin, abounding at present with plantations
[ROBINSON]. The
brook winds along the east and south of the city, the channel of which
is throughout a large portion of the year almost or wholly dry, except
after heavy rains, when it suddenly swells and overflows. There were
emptied all the impurities of the temple
(2Ch 29:15, 16)
and the city. His reforming predecessors had ordered the mutilated
relics of idolatry to be thrown into that receptacle of filth
(1Ki 15:13;
2Ch 15:16; 30:14);
but Josiah, while he imitated their piety, far outstripped them in
zeal; for he caused the ashes of the burnt wood and the fragments of
the broken metal to be collected and conveyed to Beth-el, in order
thenceforth to associate ideas of horror and aversion with that place,
as odious for the worst pollutions.
5. put down the idolatrous priests--Hebrew, chemarim, "scorched,"
that is, Guebres, or fire-worshippers, distinguished by a girdle
(Eze 23:14-17)
or belt of wool and camel's hair, twisted round the body twice and tied
with four knots, which had a symbolic meaning, and made it a supposed
defense against evil.
them also that burned incense unto Baal, to the sun, and to the
moon, &c.--or Baal-shemesh, for Baal was sometimes considered the sun.
This form of false worship was not by images, but pure star-worship,
borrowed from the old Assyrians.
and--rather, "even to all the host of heaven."
6. brought out the grove--that is, Asherah, the mystic tree, placed
by Manasseh in the temple
[2Ki 21:5;
2Ch 33:5],
removed by him after his conversion
[2Ch 33:15],
but replaced in the sanctuary by his wicked son Amon
[2Ki 21:20, 21].
Josiah had it taken to Kidron, burnt the wood, ground the metal about
it to powder, and strewed the ashes "on the graves of the children of
the people." The poor were buried in a common on part of the valley of
Kidron. But reference is here made to the graves "of those that had
sacrificed"
(2Ch 34:4).
7. brake down the houses of the sodomites--not solid houses, but
tents, called elsewhere
[2Ki 17:30]
Succoth-benoth, "the booths of the young women," who were
devoted to the service of Asherah, for which they made embroidered
hangings, and in which they gave themselves to unbridled revelry and
lust. Or the hangings might be for Asherah itself, as it is a popular
superstition in the East to hang pieces of cloth on trees.
8, 9. he brought all the priests out of the cities of Judah, and
defiled the high places, &c.--Many of the Levitical order, finding
in the reigns of Manasseh and Amon the temple-worship abolished and the
tithes and other offerings alienated, had been betrayed into the folly
of officiating on high places, and presenting such sacrifices as were
brought to them. These irregularities, even though the object of that
worship was the true God, were prohibited in the law
(De 12:11).
Those who had been guilty of this sin, Josiah brought to Jerusalem.
Regarding them as defiled, he debarred them from the service of the
temple, but gave them an allowance out of the temple revenues, like the
lame and disabled members of the priesthood
(Le 21:21, 22).
from Geba to to Beer-sheba--the most northern and the most southern
places in Judah--meaning all parts of the kingdom.
the high places . . . which were in the entering in of the gate of
Joshua--The governor's house and gate were on the left of the city
gate, and close by the entrance of that civic mansion house were public
altars, dedicated, it might be, to the true God, but contrary to His
own ordinance of worship
(Isa 57:8).
10. Topheth--so called from Toph--a "drum." It is the prevailing
opinion among Jewish writers that the cries of the terrified children
made to pass through the fire in that place of idolatrous horror were
drowned by the sound of that instrument.
11. took away the horses that the kings of Judah had given to the
sun--Among the people who anciently worshipped the sun, horses
were usually dedicated to that divinity, from the supposed idea that
the sun himself was drawn in a chariot by horses. In some cases these
horses were sacrificed; but more commonly they were employed either in
the sacred processions to carry the images of the sun, or for the
worshippers to ride in every morning to welcome his rise. It seems that
the idolatrous kings, Ahaz, Manasseh, and Amon, or their great
officers, proceeded on these horses early on each day from the east
gate of the temple to salute and worship the sun at his appearing above
the horizon.
12. the altars that were on the top of the upper chamber of
Ahaz--Altars were reared on the flat roofs of houses, where the
worshippers of "the host of heaven" burnt incense
(Zep 1:5;
Jer 19:13).
Ahaz had reared altars for this purpose on the oleah, or upper
chamber of his palace, and Manasseh on some portion of the roof of the
temple. Josiah demolished both of these structures.
13, 14. the high places . . . which Solomon . . . had
builded--(See on
1Ki 11:5).
the right hand of the mount of corruption--The Mount of Olives is a
hilly range on the east of Jerusalem. This range has three summits, of
which the central one is the Mount of Corruption, so called from the
idol temples built there, and of course the hill on the right hand
denotes the southernmost peak. Josiah is said not to have destroyed, but
only defiled, "the high places on the hill of corruption." It is most
probable that Hezekiah had long before demolished the idolatrous
temples erected there by Solomon but, as the superstitious people
continued to regard the spot as consecrated ground, Josiah defiled it.
14. filled their places with the bones of men--Every monument of
idolatry in his dominion he in like manner destroyed, and the places
where they stood he defiled by strewing them with dead men's bones. The
presence of a dead carcass rendered both persons and places unclean in
the eyes both of Jews and heathens.
15-20. Moreover the altar that was at Beth-el, &c.--Not satisfied with
the removal of every vestige of idolatry from his own dominion, this
zealous iconoclast made a tour of inspection through the cities of
Samaria and all the territory formerly occupied by the ten tribes,
destroying the altars and temples of the high places, consigning the
Asherim to the flames, putting to death the priests of the high places,
and showing his horror at idolatry by ransacking the sepulchers of
idolatrous priests, and strewing the burnt ashes of their bones upon
the altars before he demolished them.
16. according to the word of the Lord which the man of God
proclaimed, &c.--In carrying on these proceedings, Josiah was
prompted by his own intense hatred of idolatry. But it is remarkable
that this act was predicted three hundred twenty-six years before his
birth, and his name also was expressly mentioned, as well as the very
place where it should be done
(1Ki 13:2).
This is one of the most most remarkable prophecies in the Bible.
17. What title is that that I see?--The king's attention probably,
had been arrested by a tombstone more conspicuous than the rest around
it, bearing on an inscription the name of him that lay beneath; and
this prompted his curiosity to make the inquiry.
the men of the city--not the Assyrian colonists--for they could
know nothing about the ancient transactions of the place--but some of
the old people who had been allowed to remain, and perhaps the tomb
itself might not then have been discoverable, through the effects of
time and neglect, had not some "Old Mortality" garnished the sepulcher
of the righteous.
21-23. the king commanded all the people, saying, Keep the passover
unto the Lord your God, &c.--It was observed with great solemnity and
was attended not only by his own subjects, but by the remnant people
from Israel
(see on
2Ch 35:1-19).
Many of the Israelites who were at Jerusalem might have heard
of, if they did not hear, the law read by Josiah. It is
probable that they might even have procured a copy of the law,
stimulated as they were to the better observance of Jehovah's worship
by the unusual and solemn transactions at Jerusalem.
26. Notwithstanding, the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his
wrath,--&c. The national reformation which Josiah carried on was
acquiesced in by the people from submission to the royal will; but they
entertained a secret and strong hankering after the suppressed
idolatries. Though outwardly purified, their hearts were not right
towards God, as appears from many passages of the prophetic writings;
their thorough reform was hopeless; and God, who saw no sign of genuine
repentance, allowed His decree
(2Ki 21:12-15)
for the subversion of the kingdom to take fatal effect.
29. In his days Pharaoh-nechoh--(See
2Ch 35:20-27).
CHAPTER 24
2Ki 24:1-7.
JEHOIAKIM
PROCURES
HIS
OWN
RUIN.
1, 2. Nebuchadnezzar--the son of Nabopolassar, the founder of the
Chaldee monarchy. This invasion took place in the fourth year of
Jehoiakim's, and the first of Nebuchadnezzar's reign
(Jer 25:1;
compare
Jer 46:2).
The young king of Assyria being probably detained at home on account of
his father's demise, despatched, along with the Chaldean troops on his
border, an army composed of the tributary nations that were contiguous
to Judea, to chastise Jehoiakim's revolt from his yoke. But this
hostile band was only an instrument in executing the divine judgment
(2Ki 24:2)
denounced by the prophets against Judah for the sins of the people; and
hence, though marching by the orders of the Assyrian monarch, they are
described as sent by the Lord
(2Ki 24:3).
4. the Lord would not pardon--(see on
2Ki 23:26;
Jer 15:1).
6. Jehoiakim slept with his fathers--This phraseology can mean nothing
more than that he died; for he was not buried with his royal ancestors;
and whether he fell in battle, or his body was subjected to posthumous
insults, he was, according to the prediction
(Jer 22:19),
not honored with the rites of sepulture
(Jer 36:30).
Jehoiachin his son reigned in his stead--The very brief reign of this
prince, which lasted only three months, during which he was a humble
vassal of the Assyrians, is scarcely deserving to be taken into
account, and therefore is in no way contradictory to the prophetic
menace denounced against his father
(Jer 36:30).
7. the king of Egypt--that is, Pharaoh-nechoh.
2Ki 24:8, 9.
JEHOIACHIN
SUCCEEDS
HIM.
8. Jehoiachin--that is, "God-appointed," contracted into Jeconiah and Coniah
(Jer 22:24).
eighteen years old when he began to reign--At the age of eight his
father took him into partnership in the government
(2Ch 36:9).
He began to reign alone at eighteen.
9. he did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord--Untaught by
experience, and deaf to the prophetic warnings, he pursued the evil
courses which had brought so many disasters upon the royal family as
well as the people of Judah. This bad character is figuratively but
strongly depicted
(Eze 19:5-7).
2Ki 24:10-16.
JERUSALEM
TAKEN.
10-13. At that time--within three months after his accession to the
throne. It was the spring of the year
(2Ch 36:10);
so early did he indicate a feeling hostile to the interests of his
Assyrian liege lord, by forming a league with Egypt. Nebuchadnezzar
sent his generals to besiege Jerusalem, as Jeremiah had foretold
(Jer 22:28; 34:20),
and soon after he followed in person. Convinced of the hopelessness of
making any effectual resistance, Jehoiachin, going to the camp of the
besiegers, surrendered
(2Ki 24:12),
in the expectation, probably, of being allowed to retain his throne as
a vassal of the Assyrian empire. But Nebuchadnezzar's clemency towards
the kings of Judah was now exhausted, so that Jehoiachin was sent as a
captive to Babylon, according to Jeremiah's prediction
(Jer 22:24),
accompanied by the queen mother (the same who had held that dignity
under Jehoahaz)
(2Ki 23:31),
his generals, and officers. This happened in the eighth year of
Nebuchadnezzar's reign, computing from the time when he was associated
with his father in the government. Those that were left consisted
chiefly of the poorer sort of people and the unskilled workmen. The
palace and the temple were ransacked. The smaller golden vessels had
been taken on the first capture of Jerusalem and placed by
Nebuchadnezzar in the temple of his god as tokens of victory. They were
used by Belshazzar at his impious feast
[Da 5:2],
for the purpose of rewarding his army with these trophies, among which
were probably the golden candlesticks, the ark, &c. (compare
2Ch 36:7;
Da 1:2).
Now the gold plating was torn off all the larger temple furniture.
13-16. as the Lord had said--(compare
2Ki 20:17;
Isa 39:6;
Jer 15:13; 17:3).
The elite of the nation for rank, usefulness, and moral worth, all who
might be useful in Babylon or dangerous in Palestine, were carried off
to Babylon, to the number of ten thousand
(2Ki 24:14).
These are specified
(2Ki 24:15, 16),
warriors, seven thousand; craftsmen and smiths, one thousand; king's
wives, officers, and princes, also priests and prophets
(Jer 29:1;
Eze 1:1),
two thousand; equal to ten thousand captives in all.
2Ki 24:17-20.
ZEDEKIAH'S
EVIL
REIGN.
17-19. the king of Babylon made Mattaniah, his father's brother, king
in his stead--Adhering to his former policy of maintaining a show of
monarchy, Nebuchadnezzar appointed the third and youngest son of Josiah
(1Ch 3:15),
full brother of Jehoahaz, and uncle of the captive Jehoiachin. But,
according to the custom of conquerors, who changed the names of the
great men they took captives in war, in token of their supremacy, he
gave him the new name of
Zedekiah--that is, "The righteous of God." This being a purely
Hebrew name, it seems that he allowed the puppet king to choose his own
name, which was confirmed. His heart towards God was the same as that
of Jehoiakim, impenitent and heedless of God's word.
20. through the anger of the Lord . . . he cast them out from his
presence--that is, in the course of God's righteous providence, his
policy as king would prove ruinous to his country.
Zedekiah rebelled against the king of Babylon--instigated by
ambassadors from the neighboring states who came to congratulate him on
his ascension to the throne (compare
Jer 17:3,
with Jer 28:1),
and at the same time get him to join them in a common league to throw
off the Assyrian yoke. Though warned by Jeremiah against this step, the
infatuated and perjured
(Eze 17:13)
Zedekiah persisted in his revolt.
CHAPTER 25
2Ki 25:1-3.
JERUSALEM
AGAIN
BESIEGED.
1. Nebuchadnezzar . . . came . . . against Jerusalem--Incensed by the
revolt of Zedekiah, the Assyrian despot determined to put an end to the
perfidious and inconstant monarchy of Judea. This chapter narrates his
third and last invasion, which he conducted in person at the head of an
immense army, levied out of all the tributary nations under his sway.
Having overrun the northern parts of the country and taken almost all
the fenced cities
(Jer 34:7),
he marched direct to Jerusalem to invest it. The date of the beginning
as well as the end of the siege is here carefully marked (compare
Eze 24:1;
Jer 39:1; 52:4-6);
from which it appears, that, with a brief interruption caused by
Nebuchadnezzar's marching to oppose the Egyptians who were coming to
its relief but who retreated without fighting, the siege lasted a year
and a half. So long a resistance was owing, not to the superior skill
and valor of the Jewish soldiers, but to the strength of the city
fortifications, on which the king too confidently relied (compare
Jer 21:1-14; 37:1-38:28).
pitched against it, and . . . built forts--rather, perhaps, drew
lines of circumvallation, with a ditch to prevent any going out of the
city. On this rampart were erected his military engines for throwing
missiles into the city.
3. on the ninth day of the fourth month the famine prevailed--In
consequence of the close and protracted blockade, the inhabitants were
reduced to dreadful extremities; and under the maddening influence of
hunger, the most inhuman atrocities were perpetrated
(La 2:20, 22; 4:9, 10;
Eze 5:10).
This was a fulfilment of the prophetic denunciations threatened on the
apostasy of the chosen people
(Le 26:29;
De 28:53-57;
Jer 15:2; 27:13;
Eze 4:16).
2Ki 25:4-30.
ZEDEKIAH
TAKEN.
4. the city was broken up--that is, a breach was effected, as we
are elsewhere informed, in a part of the wall belonging to the lower
city
(2Ch 32:5; 33:14).
the men of war fled by night by the way of the gate between two walls,
which is by the king's garden--The king's garden was
(Ne 3:15)
at the pool of Siloam, that is, at the mouth of the Tyropæon. A
trace of the outermost of these walls appears to be still extant in the
rude pathway which crosses the mouth of the Tyropæon, on a mound
hard by the old mulberry tree, which marks the traditional spot of
Isaiah's martyrdom [ROBINSON]. It is probable
that the besiegers had overlooked this pass.
the king went . . . toward the plain--that is, the Ghor, or valley
of Jordan, estimated at five hours' distance from Jerusalem. The plain
near Jericho is about eleven or twelve miles broad.
6, 7. they took the king, and brought him . . . to
Riblah--Nebuchadnezzar, having gone from the siege to oppose the
auxiliary forces of Pharaoh-hophra, left his generals to carry on the
blockade, he himself not returning to the scene of action, but taking
up his station at Riblah in the land of Hamath
(2Ki 23:33).
they gave judgment upon him--They, that is, the council
(Jer 39:3, 13;
Da 6:7, 8, 12),
regarding him as a seditious and rebellious vassal, condemned him for
violating his oath and neglecting the announcement of the divine will
as made known to him by Jeremiah (compare
Jer 32:5; 34:2; 38:17).
His sons and the nobles who had joined in his flight were slain before
his eyes
(Jer 39:6; 52:10).
In conformity with Eastern ideas, which consider a blind man incapable
of ruling, his eyes were put out, and being put in chains, he was
carried to perpetual imprisonment in Babylon
(Jer 52:11),
which, though he came to it, as Ezekiel had foretold, he did not see
(Jer 32:5;
Eze 12:13; 17:16).
8-18. on the seventh day of the month . . . came
Nebuzar-adan--(compare
Jer 52:12).
In attempting to reconcile these two passages, it must be supposed
either that, though he had set out on the seventh, he did not arrive in
Jerusalem till the tenth, or that he did not put his orders in
execution till that day. His office as captain of the guard
(Ge 37:36; 39:1)
called him to execute the awards of justice on criminals; and hence,
although not engaged in the siege of Jerusalem
(Jer 39:13),
Nebuzar-adan was despatched to rase the city, to plunder the temple, to
lay both in ruins, demolish the fortifications, and transport the
inhabitants to Babylon. The most eminent of these were taken to the
king at Riblah
(2Ki 25:27)
and executed, as instigators and abettors of the rebellion, or
otherwise obnoxious to the Assyrian government. In their number were
Seraiah, the high priest, grandfather of Ezra
(Ezr 7:1),
his sagan or deputy, a priest of the second order
(Jer 21:2; 29:25, 29; 37:3).
18. the three keepers of the door--not mere porters, but officers
of high trust among the Levites
(2Ki 22:4;
1Ch 9:26).
19. five men of them that were in the king's presence--that is, who
belonged to the royal retinue. It is probable that there were five at
first, and that other two were found afterwards
(Jer 52:25).
22-26. Nebuchadnezzar . . . made Gedaliah . . .
ruler--The people permitted to remain were, besides the king's
daughters, a few court attendants and others
(Jer 40:7)
too insignificant to be removed, only the peasantry who could till the
land and dress the vineyards. Gedaliah was Jeremiah's friend
(Jer 26:24),
and having, by the prophet's counsel, probably fled from the city as
abandoned of God, he surrendered himself to the conqueror
(Jer 38:2, 17),
and being promoted to the government of Judea, fixed his provincial
court at Mizpeh. He was well qualified to surmount the difficulties of
ruling at such a crisis. Many of the fugitive Jews, as well as the
soldiers of Zedekiah who had accompanied the king in his flight to the
plains of Jericho, left their retreats
(Jer 40:11, 12)
and flocked around the governor; who having counselled them to submit,
promised them on complying with this condition, security on oath that
they would retain their possessions and enjoy the produce of their land
(Jer 40:9).
25. Ishmael . . . of the seed royal, came, and ten men with him, and
smote Gedaliah--He had found refuge with Baalis, king of the Ammonites,
and he returned with a bad design, being either instigated by envy of a
governor not descended from the house of David, or bribed by Baalis to
murder Gedaliah. The generous governor, though apprised of his
intentions, refused to credit the report, much less to sanction the
proposal made by an attached friend to cut off Ishmael. The consequence
was, that he was murdered by this same Ishmael, when entertaining him
in his own house
(Jer 41:1).
26. and all the people . . . came to Egypt--In spite of Jeremiah's
dissuasions
(Jer 43:7, 8)
they settled in various cities of that country
(Jer 44:1).
27. seven and thirtieth year of the captivity of
Jehoiachin--corresponding with the year of Nebuchadnezzar's death,
and his son Evil-merodach's ascension to the throne.
Evil-merodach . . . did lift up the head of Jehoiachin . . . and spake
kindly--gave him liberty upon parole. This kindly feeling is said to
have originated in a familiar acquaintance formed in prison, in which
Evil-merodach had lain till his father's death, on account of some
malversation while acting as regent during Nebuchadnezzar's seven
years' illness
(Da 4:32, 33).
But doubtless the improvement in Zedekiah's condition is to be traced
to the overruling providence and grace of Him who still cherished
purposes of love to the house of David
(2Sa 7:14, 15).
29. Jehoiachin . . . did eat . . . continually
before him--According to an ancient usage in Eastern courts, had a
seat at the royal table on great days, and had a stated provision
granted him for the maintenance of his exiled court.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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