Chapter 12:
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| Wesley
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2 Samuel 2 Kings
1 Kings 12
Rehoboam succeeds and Jeroboam returns out of Egypt, ver.
1, 2. The peoples petition to Rehoboam, and his answer, ver. 3-15.
Ten tribes revolt and make Jeroboam king, ver. 16-20. God
forbids Rehoboam to make war upon them, ver. 21-24. Jeroboam
sets up two golden calves, ver. 25-33.
Verse 1. Were come - Rehoboam did not call them thither, but went
thither, because the Israelites prevented him, and had pitched
upon that place, rather than upon Jerusalem, because it was most
convenient for all, being in the center of the kingdom; and
because that being in the potent tribe of Ephraim, they supposed
there they might use that freedom of speech, which they resolved
to use, to get there grievances redressed. So out of a thousand
wives and concubines, he had but one son to bear his name, and
he a fool! Is not sin an ill way of building up a family?
Verse 3. They sent - When the people sent him word of Solomon's
death, they also sent a summons for him to come to Shechem.
That the presence and countenance of a man of so great interest
and reputation, might lay the greater obligation upon Rehoboam
to grant them ease and relief.
Verse 4. Grievous - By heavy taxes and impositions, not only for the
temple and his magnificent buildings, but for the expenses of his
numerous court, and of so many wives and concubines. And
Solomon having so grossly forsaken God, it is no wonder if he
oppressed the people.
Verse 7. This day - By complying with their desires, and condescending
to them for a season, till thou art better established in thy throne.
They use this expression, fore-seeing that some would dissuade
him from this course, as below the majesty of a prince. And
answer - Thy service is not hard, it is only a few good words,
which it is as easy to give as bad ones.
Verse 8. Young men - So called, comparatively to the old men:
otherwise they were near forty years old.
Verse 10. Shall be thicker - Or rather, is thicker, and therefore stronger,
and more able to crush you, if you proceed in these mutinous
demands, than his loins, in which is the principal seat of strength.
Verse 15. From the Lord - Who gave up Rehoboam to so foolish and
fatal a mistake, and alienated the peoples affections from him; and
ordered all circumstances by his wise providence to that end.
Verse 16. In David - In David's family and son; we can expect no benefit
or relief from him, and therefore we renounce all commerce with
him, and subjection to him. They named David, rather than
Rehoboam; to signify, that they renounced not Rehoboam only,
but all David's family. Son of Jesse - So they call David in
contempt; as if they had said, Rehoboam hath no reason to carry
himself with such pride and contempt toward his people; for if we
trace his original, it was as mean and obscure as any of ours. To
your tents - Let us forsake him, and go to our own homes, there to
consider, how to provide for ourselves.
Verse 17. Judah - The tribe of Judah; with those parts of the tribes of
Levi, and Simeon, and Benjamin, whose dwellings were within
the confines of Judah.
Verse 18. Sent Adoram - Probably to pursue the counsel which he had
resolved upon, to execute his office, and exact their tribute with
rigor and violence, if need were.
Verse 19. Rebelled - Their revolt was sinful, as they did not this in
compliance with God's counsel, but to gratify their own passions.
Verse 20. Was come - From Egypt; which was known to them before
who met at Shechem, and now by all the people. Was none - That
is, no entire tribe.
Verse 24. From me - This event is from my counsel and providence, to
punish Solomon's apostasy.
Verse 25. Shechem - He repaired, and enlarged, and fortified it; for it
had been ruined long since, Judg. ix, 45. He might chuse it as a
place both auspicious, because here the foundation of his
monarchy was laid; and commodious, as being near the frontiers
of his kingdom. Penuel - A place beyond Jordan; to secure that
part of his dominions.
Verse 26. Said, &c. - Reasoned within himself. The phrase discovers the
fountain of his error, that he did not consult with God, who had
given him the kingdom; as in all reason, and justice, and gratitude
he should have done: nor believed God's promise, chap. xi, 38,
but his own carnal policy.
Verse 27. Will turn - Which in itself might seem a prudent conjecture;
for this would give Rehoboam, and the priests, and Levites, the
sure and faithful friends of David's house, many opportunities of
alienating their minds from him, and reducing them to their
former allegiance. But considering God's providence, by which
the hearts of all men, and the affairs of all kingdoms are governed,
and of which he had lately seen so eminent an instance; it was a
foolish, as well as wicked course.
Verse 28. Calves - In imitation of Aaron's golden calf, and of the
Egyptians, from whom he was lately come. And this he the rather
presumed to do, because he knew the people of Israel were
generally prone to idolatry: and that Solomon's example had
exceedingly strengthened those inclinations; and therefore they
were prepared for such an attempt; especially, when his
proposition tended to their own ease, and safety, and profit, which
he knew was much dearer to them, as well as to himself, than their
religion. Too much - Too great a trouble and charge, and neither
necessary, nor safe for them, as things now stood. Behold thy
gods - Not as if he thought to persuade the people, that these
calves were that very God of Israel, who brought them out of
Egypt: which was so monstrously absurd and ridiculous, that no
Israelite in his right wits could believe it, and had been so far from
satisfying his people, that this would have made him both hateful,
and contemptible to them; but his meaning was, that these Images
were visible representations, by which he designed to worship the
true God of Israel, as appears, partly from that parallel place,
Exod. xxxii, 4, partly, because the priests and worshippers of the
calves, are said to worship Jehovah; and upon that account, are
distinguished from those belonging to Baal, chap. xviii, 21, xxii,
6, 7, and partly, from Jeroboam's design in this work, which was
to quiet the peoples minds, and remove their scruples about going
to Jerusalem to worship their God in that place, as they were
commanded: which he doth, by signifying to them, that he did not
intend any alteration in the substance of their religion; nor to draw
them from the worship of the true God, to the worship of any of
those Baals, which were set up by Solomon; but to worship that
self-same God whom they worshipped in Jerusalem, even the true
God, who brought them out of Egypt; only to vary a
circumstance: and that as they worshipped God at Jerusalem,
before one visible sign, even the ark, and the sacred cherubim
there; so his subjects should worship God by another visible sign,
even that of the calves, in other places; and as for the change of
the place, he might suggest to them, that God was present in all
places, where men with honest minds called upon him; that before
the temple was built, the best of kings, and prophets, and people,
did pray, and sacrifice to God in divers high places, without any
scruple. And that God would dispense with them also in that
matter; because going to Jerusalem was dangerous to them at this
time; and God would have mercy, rather than sacrifice.
Verse 29. Beth-el, &c. - Which two places he chose for his peoples
conveniency; Beth-el being in the southern, and Dan. in the
northern parts of his kingdom.
Verse 30. A sin - That is, an occasion of great wickedness, not only of
idolatry, which is called sin by way of eminency; nor only of the
worship of the calves, wherein they pretended to worship the true
God; but also of the worship of Baal, and of the utter desertion of
the true God; and of all sorts of impiety. To Daniel - Which is not
here mentioned exclusively, for they went also to Beth-el, ver. 32,
33, but for other reasons, either because that of Daniel was first
made, the people in those parts having been long leavened with
idolatry, Judg. xviii, 30, or to shew the peoples readiness and zeal
for idols; that those who lived in, or near Beth-el, had not patience
to stay 'till that calf was finished, but all of them were forward to
go as far as Daniel, which was in the utmost borders of the land,
to worship an idol there; when it was thought too much for them
to go to Jerusalem to worship God.
Verse 31. An house - Houses, or chapels, besides the temples, which are
built at Daniel and Beth-el; he built also for his peoples better
accommodation, lesser temples upon divers high places. Of the
lowest - Which he might do, either,
1. because the better sort refused it, or,
2. because such would be satisfied with mean allowances; and so
he could put into his own purse a great part of the revenues of the
Levites, which doubtless he seized upon when they forsook him,
and went to Jerusalem, 2 Chron. xi, 13, 14, or,
3. because mean persons would depend upon his favour, and
therefore be pliable to his humour, and firm to his interest, but the
words in the Hebrew properly signify, from the ends of the
people; which may be translated thus, out of all the people;
promiscuously out of every tribe. Which exposition seems to be
confirmed by the following words, added to explain these, which
were not of the sons of Levi; though they were not of the tribe of
Levi. And that indeed was Jeroboam's sin; not that he chose mean
persons, for some of the Levites were such; and his sin had not
been less, if he had chosen the noblest and greatest persons; as we
see in the example of Uzziah. But that he chose men of other
tribes, contrary to God's appointment, which restrained that office
to that tribe. Levi - To whom that office was confined by God's
express command.
Verse 32. A feast - The feast of tabernacles. So he would keep God's
feast, not in God's time, which was the fifteenth day of the
seventh month, and so onward, Levit xxiii, 34, but on the fifteenth
day of the eighth month. And this alteration he made, either,
1. to keep up the difference between his subjects, and those of
Judah as by the differing manners, so by the distinct times of their
worship. Or,
2. lest he should seem directly to oppose the God of Israel, (who
had in a special manner obliged all the people to go up to
Jerusalem at that time,) by requiring their attendance to celebrate
the feast elsewhere, at the same time. Or,
3. to engage as many persons as possibly he could, to come to his
feast; which they would more willingly do when the feast at
Jerusalem was past and all the fruits of the earth were perfectly
gathered in. Fifteenth day - And so onward till the seven days
ended. Like that in Judah - He took his pattern thence, to shew,
that he worshipped the same God, and professed the same religion
for substance, which they did: howsoever he differed in
circumstances. He offered - Either,
(1.) by his priests. Or, rather,
(2.) by his own hands; as appears from chap. xiii, 1, 4, which he
did, to give the more countenance to his new-devised solemnity.
Nor is this strange; for he might plausibly think, that he who by
his own authority had made others priests might much more
exercise a part of that office; at least, upon an extraordinary
occasion; in which case, he knew David himself had done some
things, which otherwise he might not do. So he did - He himself
did offer there in like manner, as he now had done at Dan.
Verse 33. Devised - Which he appointed without any warrant from God.
Chapter 12:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2 Samuel 2 Kings
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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