Chapter 5:
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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 5
Hiram congratulates Solomon on his accession, and agrees to
furnish him with workmen and timber for the temple, ver. 1-9.
The work is well done, and the workmen paid, ver. 10-18.
Verse 6. They - That is, thy servants. And this assistance which these
Gentiles gave to the building of Solomon's temple, was a type of
the calling of the Gentiles, and that they should be instrumental in
building and constituting Christ's spiritual temple. Cedar-trees -
Which for their soundness, and strength, and fragrancy, and
durableness, were most proper for his design. Of these David had
procured some, but not a sufficient number. Lebanon - Which was
in Solomon's jurisdiction: and therefore he doth not desire that
Hiram would give him the cedars, because they were his own
already; but only that his servants might hew them for him; which
the ingenious Tyrians well understood. With thy servants - Either
to be employed therein as they shall direct; or to receive the
cedars, from their hands, and transmit them to me. Hire - Pay
them for their labour and art. Sidonians - Or Tyrians: for these
places and people being near, are promiscuously used one for
another.
Verse 7. Rejoiced - Being a faithful friend to David and his house, and
tho' it is not probable he was a sincere proselyte, yet he had
sufficient information concerning the nature and excellency of the
God of Israel, and had honourable thoughts of him.
Verse 9. The sea - The mid-land sea. Floats - Or, rafts. It is thought the
timber were tied together in the water, as now is usual, and so by
the help of boats or ships, conveyed to the appointed place, which
was at no great distance. Household - My family and court, which
most properly is called his house.
Verse 11. Measures - Hebrew. twenty cors pure oil; but in 2Chr ii, 10, it
is twenty thousand baths of oil. To which there is added twenty
thousand measures of barley, and twenty thousand baths of wine.
Either therefore, first, he speaks of several things. Or, secondly,
he speaks there of what Solomon offered: for it runs thus, I will
give; and here of what Hiram accepted. Or, thirdly, the barley, and
wine, and twenty thousand baths of common oil, mentioned 2
Chron. ii, 10, must be added to the twenty thousand measures of
wheat, and the twenty measures of pure oil here expressed, and
the whole sum is to be made up from both places; that book of
Chronicles being written to supply and compleat the histories of
the books of Samuel, and of the Kings. Gave Hiram - Either, first,
for sustenance to the workmen, during the years wherein they
were employed in the cutting down and hewing of timber. Or, for
the yearly support of the king's house, during the said time. Thus
by the wise disposal of providence, one country has need of
another, and is benefited by another, that there may be a mutual
correspondence and dependence, to the glory of God our common
Parent.
Verse 13. The levy - Which were to be employed in the most honourable
and easy parts of the work relating to the temple; and these were
Israelites; but those fifteen hundred thousand mentioned ver. 15,
were strangers. If it seem strange, that so many thousands should
be employed about so small a building as the temple was; it must
be considered,
1. that the temple, all its parts being considered, was far larger
than men imagine;
2. that it is probable, they were employed by turns, as the thirty
thousand were, ver. 14, else they had been oppressed with hard
and uninterrupted labours.
3. that the timber and stone hewed and carried by them, was
designed, not only for the temple, but also for Solomon's own
houses, and buildings; because we read of no other levy of men,
nor of any care and pains taken after the building of the temple,
for the procurement, or preparation of materials for his own
houses, or his other buildings; nay, that this very levy of men was
made and employed for the building of the Lord's house, and
Solomon's house, and Millo, and the wall of Jerusalem, and
Hazor, and Megiddo, and Gezer, is expressed chap. ix, 15.
Verse 16. Three thousand &c. - Whereof three thousand were set over
the fifteen hundred thousand, expressed ver. 15, each of these,
over fifty of them, and the odd three hundred were set over these
three thousand, each of these to have the oversight of ten of them,
to take an account of the work for them. But in 2 Chron. ii, 18,
these overseers are said to be thirty-six hundred. The three
thousand added in 2 Chron. ii, 2, might be a reserve, to supply the
places of the other three thousand: yea, or of the thirty-three
hundred, as any of them should be taken off from the work by
death, or sickness, or weakness, or necessary occasions; which
was a prudent provision, and not unusual in like cases. And so
there were thirty-six hundred commissioned for the work, but
only thirty-three hundred employed at one time; and therefore
both computations fairly stand together.
Verse 17. Great and costly - Marble and porphyry, or other stones of
great size and value. The foundation - Where they could not
afterward be seen: and therefore that this was done, is mentioned
only as a point of magnificence, except it was intended for a type,
or mystical signification of the preciousness of Christ, who is the
foundation of the true temple, the church of God.
Verse 18. Stone-squarers - Hebrew. the Giblites, the inhabitants of
Gebel, a place near Zidon, famous for artificers and architects,
Josh. xiii, 5. These are here mentioned apart, distinct from the rest
of Hiram's builders, as the most eminent of them.
Chapter 5:
| 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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