Chapter 20:
| 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
1 Kings 20
Ben-hadad's invasion of Israel and insolent demand, ver. 1-12. Ahab, encouraged by a prophet, overthrows him twice, ver.
13-30. Makes a covenant with him, ver. 31-34. Is reproved and
threatened by a prophet, ver. 35-43.
Verse 1. Gathered his host - To war against Israel: wherein his design
was to enlarge the conquest which his father had made, but God's
design was to punish Israel for their apostacy and idolatry.
Verse 3. Thy silver, &c. - I challenge them as my own, and expect to
have them forthwith delivered, if thou expect peace with me.
Verse 4. The king said - I do so far comply with thy demand, that I will
own thee for my Lord, and myself for thy vassal, and will hold my
wives, and children, and estate, as by thy favour, and with an
acknowledgment.
Verse 5. Saying, &c. - Although I did before demand not only the
dominion of thy treasures, and wives, and children, as thou mayst
seem to understand me, but also the actual portion of them;
wherewith I would then have been contented.
Verse 6. Yet, &c. - Yet now I will not accept of those terms, but together
with thy royal treasures, I expect all the treasures of thy servants
or subjects; nor will I wait 'till thou deliver them to me, but I will
send my servants into the city, and they shall search out and take
away all thou art fond of, and this to prevent fraud and delay; and
then I will grant thee a peace.
Verse 7. Seeketh mischief - Though he pretended peace, upon these
terms propounded, it is apparent by those additional demands, that
he intends nothing less than our utter ruin. I denied not - I granted
his demands in the sense before mentioned.
Verse 10. And said, &c. - If I do not assault thy city with so numerous
an army, as shall turn all thy city into an heap of dust, and shall be
sufficient to carry it all away, though every soldier take but one
handful of it.
Verse 11. Let not him, &c. - Do not triumph before the victory, for the
events of war are uncertain.
Verse 13. And behold, &c. - God, though forsaken and neglected by
Ahab, prevents him with his gracious promise of help: that Ahab
and the idolatrous Israelites, might hereby be fully convinced, or
left without excuse, that Ben-hadad's intolerable pride, and
contempt of God, and of his people, might be punished: and that
the remnant of his prophets and people who were involved in the
same calamity with the rest of the Israelites, might be preserved
and delivered. I am the Lord - And not Baal, because I will deliver
thee, which he cannot do.
Verse 14. He said, &c. - Not by old and experienced soldiers, but by
those young men; either the sons of the princes, and great men of
the land, who were fled thither for safety; or their pages, or
servants that used to attend them: who are bred up delicately, and
seem unfit for the business. Thou - Partly to encourage the young
men to fight courageously, as being the presence of their prince:
and partly, that it might appear, that the victory was wholly due to
God's gracious providence, and not to the valour or worthiness of
the instruments.
Verse 15. All Israel - All that were fit to go out to war; all, except those
whom their age, or the same infirmity excused.
Verse 18. Take them - He bids them not fight, for he thought they
needed not to strike one stroke; and that the Israelites could not
stand the first brunt.
Verse 20. His man - Him who came to seize upon him, as Ben-hadad
had commanded. Fled - Being amazed at the unexpected and
undaunted courage of the Israelites, and struck with a divine
terror.
Verse 21. The king went - Proceeded further in his march. Smote the
chariots - The men that fought from them.
Verse 22. Mark, and see - Consider what is necessary for thee to do by
way of preparation. The enemies of the children of God, are
restless in their malice and tho' they may take some breathing
time for themselves, they are still breathing out slaughter against
the church. It therefore concerns us always to expect our spiritual
enemies, and to mark and see what we do.
Verse 23. Said to him - They suppose that their gods were no better than
the Syrian gods and that there were many gods who had each his
particular charge and jurisdiction; which was the opinion of all
heathen nations; that some were gods of the woods, other of the
rivers, and others of the mountains; and they fancied these to be
the latter, because the land of Canaan was a mountainous land,
and the great temple of their God at Jerusalem, stood upon an hill,
and so did Samaria, where they had received their last blow: it is
observable, they do not impute their ill success to their
negligence, and drunkenness, and bad conduct, nor to the valour
of the Israelites; but to a divine power, which was indeed visible
in it. In the plain - Wherein there was not only superstition, but
policy; because the Syrians excelled the Israelites in horses, which
are most serviceable in plain ground.
Verse 24. Take the kings away - Who being of softer education, and less
experienced in military matters, were less fit for service; and
being many of them but mercenaries, and therefore less concerned
in his good success, would be more cautions in venturing
themselves. Captains - That is, experienced soldiers of his own
subjects, who would faithfully obey the commands of the general
(to which the kings would not so readily yield) and use their
utmost skill and valour for their own interest and advancement.
Verse 27. And went - Being encouraged by the remembrance of their
former success, and an expectation of assistance from God again.
And pitched - Probably upon some hilly ground, where they might
secure themselves, and watch for advantage against their enemies;
which may be the reason why the Syrians durst not assault them
before the seventh day, ver. 29. Little flocks - Few, and weak,
being also for conveniency of fighting, and that they might seem
to be more than they were, divided into two bodies.
Verse 30. The wall - Or, the walls (the singular number, for the plural)
of the city; in which they were now fortifying themselves. This
might possibly happen thro' natural causes; but most probably,
was effected by the mighty power of God, sending some
earthquake, or violent storm which threw down the walls upon
them; or doing this by the ministry of angels. And if ever miracle
was to be wrought, now seems to have been the proper season for
it; when the blasphemous Syrians denied the sovereign power of
God, and thereby in some sort obliged him, to give a proof of it;
and to shew, that he was the God of the plains, as well as of the
mountains; and that he could as effectually destroy them in their
strongest holds, as in the open fields; and make the very walls, to
whose strength they trusted for their defense, to be the instruments
of their ruin. But it may be farther observed, that it is not said, that
all these were killed by the fall of this wall; but only that the wall
fell upon them, killing some, and wounding others.
Verse 31. He will save thy life - This encouragement have all poor
sinners, to repent and humble themselves before God. The God of
Israel is a merciful God; let us rend our hearts and return to him.
Verse 32. My brother - I do not only pardon him, but honour and love
him as my brother. What a change is here! From the height of
prosperity, to the depth of distress. See the uncertainty of human
affairs! Such turns are they subject to, that the spoke of the wheel
which is uppermost now, may soon be the lowest of all.
Verse 33. Thy brother - Understand, Liveth: for that he inquired after,
ver. 32.
Verse 34. Streets - Or, Markets, &c. places where thou mayest either
receive the tribute which I promise to pay thee, or exercise
judicature upon my subjects in case of their refusal. So he made,
&c. - He takes no notice of his blasphemy against God; nor of the
injuries which his people had suffered from him.
Verse 35. In the word - ln the name, and by the command of God,
whereof doubtless he had informed him. Smite me - So as to
wound me, ver. 37. He speaks what God commanded him, though
it was to his own hurt; by which obedience to God, he secretly
reproacheth Ahab's disobedience in a far easier matter. And this
the prophet by God's appointment desires, that looking like a
wounded soldier, he might have the more free access to the king.
Refused - Not out of contempt of God's command, but probably,
in tenderness to his brother.
Verse 36. Slew him - We cannot judge of the case; this man might be
guilty of many other heinous sins unknown to us but known to
God; for which, God might justly cut him off: which God chose to
do upon this occasion, that by the severity of this punishment of a
prophet's disobedience, proceeding from pity to his brother, he
might teach Ahab the greatness of his sin, in sparing him through
foolish pity, whom by the laws of religion, and justice, and
prudence, he should have cut of.
Verse 38. With ashes - Or, with a cloath, or band; (as the Hebrew
doctors understand the word) whereby he bound up his wound,
which probably was in his face; for it was to be made in a
conspicuous place, that it might be visible to Ahab and others.
Verse 39. He said - This relation is a parable; an usual way of instruction
in the eastern parts, and most fit for this occasion wherein an
obscure prophet was to speak to a great king; impatient of a
down-right reproof, and exceeding partial in his own cause. A
man - My commander as the manner of expression sheweth.
Verse 40. Thy judgment - Thy sentence; thou must perform the
condition. Either suffer the one, or do the other.
Verse 42. Thy life - "What was the great sin of Ahab in this action, for
which God so severely punisheth him?" The great dishonour
hereby done to God, in suffering so horrid a blasphemer, to go
unpunished, which was contrary to an express law, Lev. xxiv, 16.
And God had delivered him into Ahab's hand, for his blasphemy,
as he promised to do, ver. 28, by which act of his providence,
compared with that law, it was most evident, that this man was
appointed by God to destruction, but Ahab was so far from
punishing this blasphemer, that he doth not so much as rebuke
him, but dismisseth him upon easy terms, and takes not the least
care for the reparation of God's honour, and the people were
punished for their own sins, which were many, and great; though
God took this occasion to inflict it.
Chapter 20:
| 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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