Chapter 18:
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| Matthew Henry
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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 Joshua Ruth
Judges 18
The Danish spies call at Micah's house, ver. 1-6. The report
they bring back, ver. 7-10. The Danites send forces, who by the
way plunder Micah of his gods, ver. 11-26. They take Laish and
set up idolatry there, ver. 27-31.
Verse 1. Those days - Not long after Joshua's death. The tribe - A part of
that tribe, consisting only of six hundred men of war, with their
families, ver.
16, 21. Inheritance - The lot had fallen to them before this time,
but not the actual possession, because the Philistines and
Amorites opposed them.
Verse 2. There - Not in the same house, but near it.
Verse 3. Knew - By the acquaintance which some of them formerly had
with him.
Verse 5. Ask - By thine Ephod, and Teraphim, or images, which they
knew he had, ver. 14.
Verse 6. Before the Lord - That is, your design is under the eye of God;
that is, under his care, protection and direction. This answer he
either feigns to gratify their humour; or, did indeed receive from
the devil, who transformed himself into an angel of light, and in
God's name gave him answers, and those not sometimes very true,
which God suffered for the trial of his people. But it is observable,
his answer was, as the devil's oracles usually were, ambiguous,
and such as might have been interpreted either way.
Verse 7. Manner of the Zidonians - Who living in a very strong place,
and abounding in wealth, and perceiving that the Israelites never
attempted anything against them, were grown secure and careless.
Put to shame - Or, that might rebuke or punish any thing, that is,
any crime. Putting to shame seems to be used for inflicting civil
punishment, because shame is generally the effect of it. Zidonians
- Who otherwise could have succored them, and would have been
ready to do it. No business-No league or confederacy, nor much
converse with other cities, it being in a pleasant and plentiful soil,
between the two rivulets of Jor and Daniel, not needing supplies
from others, and therefore minding only their own ease and
pleasure.
Verse 10. Given - This they gather partly from God's promise which
they supposed they had from the Levite's mouth; and partly from
his providence, which had so disposed them, that they would be
an easy prey.
Verse 12. Mahaneh-dan - That is, the camp of Daniel.
Verse 13. To the house - That is, to the town in which his house was, for
they were not yet entered into it.
Verse 14. Answered - That is, spake, the word answering being often
used in scripture of the first speaker. These houses - That is, in
one of these houses. What to do - Whether it be not expedient to
take them for your farther use.
Verse 17. Thither - Into the house, and that part of it, where those things
were. The gate - Whither they had drawn him forth, that they
might without noise or hindrance take them away.
Verse 18. These - The five men.
Verse 19. Lay thy hand - That is, be silent. A family - Namely, a tribe,
that is, a family.
Verse 20. Was glad - Being wholly governed by his own interest. The
midst - Both for the greater security of such precious things, and
that Micah might not be able to come at him, to injure or upbraid
him; and, it may be, because that was the place where the ark used
to be carried.
Verse 21. Before them - For their greater security, if Micah should
pursue them.
Verse 24. I made - So far was he besotted with superstition and idolatry,
that he esteemed those gods, which were man's work. But he
could not be so stupid, as to think these were indeed the great
Jehovah that made heaven and earth; but only a lower sort of
gods, by whom, as mediators, he offered up his worship to the
true God, as divers of the Heathen did. What have I - I value
nothing I have in comparison of what you have taken away.
Which zeal for idolatrous trash may shame multitudes that call
themselves Christians, and yet value their worldly conveniences
more than all the concerns of their own salvation. Is Micah thus
fond of his false gods? And how ought we to be affected toward
the true God? Let us reckon our communion with God our
greatest gain; and the loss of God the sorest loss. Wo unto us, if
He depart! For what have we more.
Verse 25. Thy voice - Thy complaints and reproaches. Angry fellows -
The soldiers, who are in themselves sharp and fierce, and will
soon be enflamed by thy provoking words. Thy Life - Which, not
withstanding all thy pretenses, thou dost value more than thy
images.
Verse 27. Burnt - Not wholly, but in great measure, to make their
conquest more easy.
Verse 28. And they built a city - That is, rebuilt it.
Verse 29. Of Daniel - That it might be manifest, that they belonged to
the tribe of Daniel, though they were seated at a great distance
from them, in the most northerly part of the land; whereas the lot
of their tribe was in the southern part of Canaan.
Verse 30. Image - Having succeeded in their expedition according to the
prediction which, as they supposed, they had from this image,
they had a great veneration for it. The captivity - When the whole
land of the ten tribes, whereof Daniel was one, was conquered,
and the people carried captive by the Assyrian, 2 Kings xvii, 6,
23, which is called by way of eminency, the captivity. It is not
said, that the graven image was there so long, for that is restrained
to a shorter date, even to the continuance of the ark in Shiloh, ver.
31, which was removed thence, 1 Sam. iv, 3-5. But only that
Jonathan's posterity, (so his name is at last mentioned) were
priests to this tribe or family of Daniel, which they might be under
all the changes, even 'till the Assyrian captivity, sometimes more
openly, sometimes more secretly, sometimes in one way of
idolatry, and sometimes in another.
Chapter 18:
| 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 Joshua Ruth
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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