Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n aaron_n according_a ark_n 29 3 8.5150 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46811 Annotations upon the remaining historicall part of the Old Testament. The second part. to wit, the books of Joshua, Judges, the two books of Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles, and the books of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther : wherein first, all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity : secondly, in many clauses those things are discovered which are needfull and usefull to be known ... and thirdly, many places that mights at first seem to contradict one another are reconciled ... / by Arthur Jackson. Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1646 (1646) Wing J65; ESTC R25554 997,926 828

There are 45 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

former verse it is said they went up though in after times the Ark was a long while out of the Tabernacle yet in those dayes it was there in the house of God in Shiloh Vers 28. And Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron stood before it in those dayes That is ministred before the Lord in the priests office Deut. 10.8 The Lord separated the tribe of Levi to bear the Ark of the covenant of the Lord to stand before the Lord and to minister unto him and enquired of the Lord by Urim and Thummim before the Ark in the behalf of the people And hereby it appears that this story of Israels warre with Benjamin did not fall out after Samsons death according as it is here set down in order of the Historie but long before for had Phinehas lived after Samson he had been well nigh foure hundred years old whereas in this time it was a rare thing to live till fourescore years Psal 90.10 The dayes of our years are threescore years and ten and if by reason of strength they be fourescore years yet is their strength labour and sorrow for it is soon cut off and we flie away Vers 29. And Israel set liers in wait round about Gibeah c. Though the last time the Israelites enquired of the Lord what they should do God had assured them that they should prevail against the Benjamites Go up for to morrow I will deliver them into thy hand yet were they never a whit lesse carefull to trie if by policie they could get any advantage against them and as may be gathered by severall passages in the following part of the chapter though the relation be somewhat intricate the course which they took seems to be this they divided their army into three parts one part was laid in ambush in the meadows of Gibeah vers 33. the other part was sent against Gibeah who were presently to flie before the Benjamites that they might draw them farre off from the citie vers 30 31. and the third was to stay in Baaltamar and to renew the battel when the Benjamites came thither pursuing the Israelites that fled before them Vers 30. And the children of Israel went up against the children of Benjamin c. That is that part of their army that was to make an assault upon the Benjamites and then presently to give back and flie See the foregoing note Vers 31. In the high wayes in which one goeth up to the house of God and the other in Gibeah in the field This surely was another Gibeah called Gibeah in the field to distinguish it from that Gibeah against which the Israelites now warred which stood on a hill happely it is the same which is called Gaba Josh 18.24 Vers 33. And all the men of Israel rose up out of their place and put themselves in array at Baal-tamar That is the main body of the army which stayed in that place to receive the Benjamites when they should follow on in the pursuit of the flying Israelites See the note vers 19. Vers 34. And there came against Gibeah ten thousand chosen men out of all Israel c. These ten thousand were I conceive the liers in wait mentioned vers 33. but yet that which follows and the battel was sore but they knew not that evil was near them must be meant of the battel betwixt the Israelites that set themselves in array in Baal-tamar vers 33. and the Benjamites that were fallen upon them as they came pursuing the Israelites who did purposely flie before them for these Benjamites they were that knew not that evil was near them but fought courageously till afterward they saw the smoke of the citie arise and then they fled before the Israelites as it is afterward more particularly described vers 38 c. Vers 35. And the Lord smote Benjamin before Israel Though they used now a stratagem which they used not before yet it was not thence that they prevailed but because the Lord was at peace with them and gave them the victorie And the children of Israel destroyed of the Benjamites that day twenty and five thousand and an hundred men To wit eighteen thousand in the fight vers 44. And there fell of Benjamin eighteen thousand men and five thousand which they gleaned in the high-wayes as they found them in the pursuit scattered here and there vers 45. and two thousand which they slew at Gidom vers 45. and the odde hundred which is not expressed in the particulars was slain it seems some in one place and some in another Vers 41. And when the men of Israel turned again the men of Benjamin were amazed This is added to clear that which was said vers 40. to wit how the Benjamites came to look back and see the flame of the citie the reason was that they were amazed to see the flying Israelites on a sudden turn head and renew the battel with such courage and violence and thereupon looking behind them saw their citie was taken and set on fire Vers 46. So that all which fell that day of Benjamin were twenty and five thousand c. There fell that day twenty five thousand one hundred See vers 35. And the children of Israel destroyed of the Benjamites that day twenty and five thousand and an hundred men but here the great number is onely expressed Vers 48. And the men of Israel turned again upon the children of Benjamin c. That is having slain all the Benjamites that were in arms for the defence of Gibeah together with all the inhabitants of the citie they then addressed themselves to take vengeance on the rest of the tribe of Benjamin because they also had a hand in the sending out men for the defence of Gibeah and herein proceeded with such fury and rage that they utterly destroyed both in town and citie where ever they came all that came to hand both man and beast that is they spared neither women nor children nor any living thing that came in their way and this they did either as judging that they were bound to deal with them as with those that were anathematized or devoted to destruction according to the direction which was given by the Lord concerning any citie that should set up idolatrie amongst them Deut. 13.15 16. Then thou shalt enquire and make search and ask diligently and behold if it be true and the thing certain that such abomination is wrought among you thou shalt surely smite the inhabitants of that city with the edge of the sword destroy it utterly and all that is therein and the cattel thereof with the edge of the sword or rather onely out of the fury and rage wherewith they were transported partly because it was such a horribe villanie which the Benjamites had undertaken to defend and partly because so many thousands of their own tribes had perished in this warre against the Benjamites concerning which see what is further noted in the
bring the following judgement upon them or rather that this was an extraordinary act of devotion whereto the Priests were led by reasons grounded upon this strange and extraordinary work which God had wrought and perhaps also by a speciall instinct of Gods Spirit and is not therefore to be judged of according to the rules of other ordinary burnt offerings They considered that these kine had been given up by the Philistines to the service of the Lord in bringing home the Ark and that having been employed in so sacred of service it was not fit they should be imployed to any other use or much lesse that they should be sent back to the Philistines again and therefore they resolved by this way of an extraordinary burnt-offering to yield them up to the Lord by whose all-ruling providence they were so miraculously swayed to bring back the Ark unto that place And indeed had they sinned in offering these kine for a burnt-offering why should not this be mentioned vers 19. as the cause of Gods displeasure against them as well as their looking into the Ark. Vers 15. And the Levites took down the Ark of the Lord c. That is the Priests who were of the tribe of Levi for Bethshemesh as is before noted was one of the Priests cities Josh 21.16 nor was it lawfull for the Levites to touch the Ark Num. 4.15 And when Aaron and his sonnes have made an end of covering the Sanctuarie and all the vessels of the Sanctuarie as the camp is to set forward after that the sonnes of Kohath shall come to bear it but they shall not touch any holy thing lest they die Vers 18. And the golden mice according to the number of all the cities of the Philistines belonging to the five lords both of fenced cities and of countrey villages c. That is according as all the cities and villages of the Philistines were divided into five parts and were under the command of their five great lords each of those cities before mentioned being the mother citie in each division so accordingly there were five golden mice given as was said before vers 4. and that in the name and happely at the charge not of the mother-cities onely but of all the severall circuits or provinces that belonged to them because all had been punished with that plague of mice which were sent amongst them even all the land of the Philistines unto the great stone of Abel that is mourning so called doubtlesse because of the peoples lamentation vers 19. as upon a like occasion the floore of Atad where the sonnes of Jacob with the Egyptians mourned for the death of Jacob was called Abel-mizraim Gen. 50.11 that is the mourning of the Egyptians Vers 19. And he smote the men of Bethshemesh because they had looked into the Ark of the Lord. It was not lawfull for any but the Priests no not the Levites who carried it to look upon the Ark bare and uncovered Num. 4.20 But they shall not go in to see when the holy things are covered lest they die It was therefore sufficient to render the people obnoxious to the judgement that fell upon them if we suppose that it came covered from the Philistines and they uncovered it to look upon it or that it came uncovered and they took libertie without any fear or reverence to stare and gaze upon it But yet the words seem to import that they proceeded further even to look into the Ark either merely out of curiositie or perhaps to see whether the Philistines had not put any thing into it or taken any thing out of it onely I see not how so many could offend in this kind Even he smote of the people fiftie thousand and threescore and ten men That is of them and of the people together that came flocking from all parts to see the Ark there were slain fiftie thousand and threescore and ten men It were much that there should be so many found in so little a citie as Bethshemesh was but amongst those multitudes that might come from all parts to see the Ark there might well be fiftie thousand and threescore and ten slain Vers 21. And they sent messengers to the inhabitants of Kirjath-jearim c. Pretending happely that their citie of Bethshemesh was not a place of such safetie for the Ark to be in as Kirjath-jearim was they sent to the inhabitants of Kirjath-jearim to desire them to fetch the Ark thither The Philistines say they have brought again the Ark of the Lord come ye down and fetch it up to you CHAP. VII Vers 1. ANd the men of Kirjath-jearim came and fetcht up the Ark of the Lord c. Three particulars are here related concerning this removall of the Ark. The first is that it was fetcht up from Bethshemesh by the men of Kirjath-jearim a citie in the tribe of Judah not farre from Bethshemesh called formerly Baalah and Kirjath-Baal Josh 15.9 60. and 18.14 Now this being none of the cities of the Priests who onely might touch the Ark though it be said that the men of Kirjath-jearim fetcht up the Ark yet thereby is meant onely that they came up to have it carried to their citie and attended it when it was removed for they were doubtlesse priests either of Bethshemesh or of some other place that carried the Ark. Notwithstanding the men of Bethshemesh were smitten for looking into the Ark chap. 6.19 yet the men of Kirjath-jearim did not oppose the removing of it to their citie but themselves fetched it thither no doubt with much joy and that because they knew that it was not the presence of the Ark amongst the men of Bethshemesh but their unreverend carriage of themselves in gazing upon the Ark or looking into it that was the cause of their miserie The second thing related is that they brought the Ark into the house of Abinadab in the hill It is likely that Abinadab was a man of singular holinesse and perhaps as some hold a Levite too but yet the reason which the text implies why his house was chosen for the keeping of this sacred treasure is this that it was in the hill to wit first because high places were in these times in great request and judged fittest for holy employments and secondly because it might be a place of strength and so of safetie for the Ark to be kept in whence it was that the Ark was kept there till Davids time when it was fetched away from thence 1. Chron. 13.6 7. And David went up and all Israel to Baalah that is to Kirjath-jearim which belonged to Judah to bring up thence the Ark of God the Lord. And they carried the Ark of God in a new cart out of the house of Abinadab Indeed in 2. Sam. 6.3 it is said that the Ark was brought out of the house of Abinadab that was in Gibeah but by Gibeah there is meant the hill as it is translated there in the margin of our Bibles
or else they were not seen without that is the staves were drawn out so little that in the most holy place they might be discerned or happely at the very doore where they went out of the most holy place into the Temple but further out in the Temple they could not be discerned Vers 9. There was nothing in the ark save the two tables of stone For though the pot of Manna Exod. 16.34 and Aarons rod Numb 17.10 and the book of the Law Deut. 31.26 were laid up before the ark yet they were not put into the ark as were the two tables of stone and accordingly we must understand that place Heb. 9.3 4. And after the second vail the tabernacle which is called the holiest of all Which had the golden censer and the ark of the covenant overlaid round about with gold wherein was the golden pot that had Manna and Aarons rod that budded and the tables of the covenant Vers 10. And it came to passe when the priests were come out of the holy place that the cloud filled the house of the Lord. When the priests had set the ark in his place and were come out immediately there were an hundred and twenty priests with trumpets and the Levite-singers standing at the east end of the altar with their Cymballs Psalteries and Harps appointed to sound forth the praises of God and whilest they were thus employed suddenly the house of the Lord was filled with a cloud so that the priests were not able to minister no not in the court where the brasen altar stood for thus it is expressed 2. Chron. 5.11 c. Vers 12. Then spake Solomon The Lord said that he would dwell in the thick darknesse Solomon standing where he saw how on a sudden the house was filled with a cloud to wit upon the brasen scaffold that was built for him in the outward court which was therefore it seems right before the door of the priests court through which he might look 2 Chron. 6.13 For Solomon had made a brasen scaffold of five cubits long and five cubits broad and three cubits high and had set it in the midst of the court and upon it he stood c. apprehending rightly that it was sent of God as a signe of his presence in that rapture of his joy he brake forth into these following words the Lord said that he would dwell in the thick darknesse c. that is the Lord hath said he would appear in a cloud Levit. 16.2 I will appear in the cloud upon the mercy seat and by a cloud he hath usually testified his presence amongst his people as in the leading of the Israelites by a cloud Exod 13.21 in the thick cloud that was upon mount Sinai at the giving of the law Exod. 19 16. in the cloud that covered and filled the tabernacle so soon as it was reared up by Moses Exod. 40.34 and therefore saith Solomon doubtlesse by this cloud the Lord doth shew us that he hath favourably accepted our service in building this house and that he hath taken it to be the settled place wherein he will abide for ever Vers 14. And the king turned his face about and blessed all the congregation of Israel For hitherto he had stood with his face toward the altar observing what was done at the carrying in of the ark Vers 16. Since the day that I brought forth my people Israel out of Egypt I chose no city out of all the tribes of Israel to build an house c. See this more fully expressed 2. Chron. 6.5 6. Vers 18. Thou didst well that it was in thine heart See the notes 2 Sam. 7.5 6. Vers 22. And Solomon stood before the altar of the Lord c. That is having turned himself from the people he stood upon the brasen scaffold with his face toward the altar and then kneeling down upon his knees as is expressed vers 54. and 2. Chron. 6.13 he lift up his hands towards heaven and so prayed unto the Lord. Vers 25. Therefore now Lord God of Israel keep with thy servant David my father that thou promisedst him That is seeing thou hast kept with thy servant David my father that thou promisedst him in raising me his son up to build a Temple for thee therefore now also keep with thy servant David my father that thou promisedst him saying There shall not fail thee a man in my sight to sit upon the throne of Israel c. Vers 27. Behold the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain thee See the note Deut. 10.14 Vers 30. And hearken thou to the supplication of thy servant and of thy people Israel when they shall pray towards this place Or in this place as it is in the margin even herein as in other things was this Temple a type of Christ As the prayers of Gods people were the more accepted of God when they prayed in the Temple or but with their faces towards the Temple so are now the prayers of Gods righteous servants accepted of God because they are put up in Christs name with an eye of faith fixt upon him as their Mediatour Joh. 14.13 14. Whatsoever ye ask in my name that I will do c. And when thou hearest forgive This clause is added first because pardon of sin is the chief thing to be begged of God in all our prayers for hereby a way is made for the obtaining of other blessings and besides there is no true comfort in obtaining any blessing if our sins should still remain unforgiven and secondly because the best are subject to so many failings in prayer that should not the Lord pardon the sin of their prayers there would be no hope that any prayer of theirs should do them good Vers 31. If any man trespasse against his neighbour and an oath be laid upon him c. That is if a man be charged that he hath trespassed against his neighbour and be brought before the altar to clear himself by oath as in case where sufficient proof and witnesse was wanting they used to do Exod. 22.8.11 Numb 5.12.19 do thou accordingly deal with the man that takes the oath punishing him if he be faulty and acquitting him if he be innocent Vers 33. When thy people Israel be smitten and shall turn again to thee and confesse thy name c. To wit thy Justice by laying all the blame upon themselves acknowledging that they have deservedly suffered and thy mercy and power by seeking to thee for pardon and succour Vers 34. And bring them again unto the land which thou gavest unto their fathers This may be meant either of those that were taken prisoners in battel to wit that upon the prayers of their brethren in the Temple or their own prayers towards the Temple the Lord would be pleased to bring them again into the land or else of those that by the enemy should be driven out of their dwelling places yet not out of the land of Canaan to
kingdome so that till the one and thirtieth yeare of Asa he was not settled in the throne of Israel yet because he was first made king when he slew Zimri therefore it is added he reigned twelve yeares to wit from his first election for otherwise if we account his reigne from the one and thirtieth yeare of Asa when he was settled in the throne to the eight and thirtieth yeare of Asa when he dyed and his sonne Ahab succeeded him vers 29. it is manifest then that he reigned according to that account but eight yeares Vers 24. And he bought the hill Samaria c. This is given as the reason why it is said in the foregoing verse that he had reigned but six yeares in Tirzah it was because Zimri having burnt the royall pallace in Tirzah Omri bought the hill which was called Samaria of Shemer the owner of it and thereon built the citie Samaria which he made his royall citie the metropolis of his kingdome and so the other six yeares of his reigne he lived there Vers 26. For he walked in all the way of Jereboam c. If he onely continued in the sinnes of Jeroboam how is this rendered as a reason of that which is said before in the former verse that he did worse then all that were before him surely because having seen such fearefull effects of Gods wrath against the former kings of Israel for this their idolatry he notwithstanding continued obstinately therein as it were purposely to provoke the Lord yea and happely did with more violence force and presse the people to that idolatry whence we see there is mention made Mich. 6.16 of the slatutes of Omri to wit concerning that their idolatrous worship of the golden calves Vers 31. He took to wife Jezabel the daughter of Ethbaal king of the Zidonians and went and served Baal c. This wife of Ahabs proved a most wicked wretch and a cruell scourge to the people of God we see Jehu complained of her witchcrafts and whoredomes 2 Kings 9.22 and it is often mentioned that she was the great persecutour of Gods prophets and the great promoter of the idolatry of Baal in the land and therefore it is that S. John cals that false prophetesse that in his time in the Church of Thyatira had seduced many to uncleannesse and idolatry Jezabel Revel 2.20 Baal it seems was the god of the Zidonians and so Ahab marrying a wife from thence did soon set up his wives god in the land of Israel Now this idolatry was farre worse then that of Jeroboams for in that though they had idols to wit the golden calves yet in them they pretended the worship of the true God but in the other they worshipped Baal as their god as is evident in that of Elijah to the Israelites chap. 18.21 If the Lord be God follow him but if Baal then follow him and so again vers 27. Cry aloud for he is a god c. Vers 34. In his dayes did Hiel the Beth-elite build Jericho c. This is here added to shew how many yeares after the curse which Joshua denounced was accomplished Josh 6.26 and that happely the rather as an instance of the horrible profanenesse and contempt of God in these dayes of Ahab for though Jericho belonged to the tribe of Benjamin yet it was at this time it seems under the power of the king of the ten tribes Hitherto Jericho had continued a heap of rubbish no man daring to hazard that curse by rebuilding of it but now this bold wretch Hiel the Beth-elite that is that dwelt in Beth-el undertook the work and paid dearly for it as Joshua had threatned See the note upon Josh 6.26 CHAP. XVII Vers 1. ANd Elijah the Tishbite who was of the Inhabitants of Gilead said unto Ahab c. Of all the Prophets that God raised up in the kingdome of Israel we find not any of whom so many strange passages are recorded both for his courage and miracles as there are of Elijah and therefore at the transfiguration of Christ Matth. 17 3. Elijah as chief of the prophets appeared together with Moses talking with Christ to signifie that both Moses and the prophets had in their severall seasons given testimony to Christ The people of Israel were never so corrupt as they were at this time for now the worship of Baal was established in the land and the worship of the true God was quite disregarded and the prophets and servants of God that would not bow to Baal were persecuted and slain as Elijah complaines chap. 19.10 and yet there were never more prophets sent unto them then there was at that time we see that Obadiah hid an hundred of them in caves chap. 18.13 nor never more glorious prophets as we see amongst the rest in this Elijah a man of transcendent courage and zeal as sitted for these corrupt times whence it is said of the Baptist who in his ministery was also fiery and fervent Luke 1.17 And he shall go before him in the spirit and in the power of Elias c. Against Ahab and Jezabels zeal to promote Idolatry the Lord raised up a prophet that should be as zealous for the opposing of their idolatry and the defence of Gods true worship as we see in this his first encounter with Ahab As the Lord God of Israel liveth saith he before whom I stand that is whom I continually serve according to that in Deut. 10.8 The Lord separated the tribe of Levito beare the ark of the covenant of the Lord to stand before the Lord or in whose presence I now am who is therefore a witnesse of the truth of that which I say there shall not be dew nor rain these yeares but according to my word that is there shall not be dew nor rain these ensuing yeares till I from the Lord shall say that again it shall rain Elijah moved with the horrible wickednesse of Ahab and Jezabel and particularly perhaps with their contempt and scorn of Gods prophets did it seemes by the instinct of Gods spirit pray that the Lord would shut up the heavens for some yeares and not suffer it to rain till he sought unto God that it might rain that so the wrath of God against the iniquitie of those times might be discovered and the pretious account he makes of his Prophets might be manifested and being by the same spirit of God assured that his prayer was heard he came to Ahab and threatned him before hand as is here expressed that he might see it was of God with this approaching drought and as he threatned it came to passe for three yeares and six moneths it rained not Jam. 5.17 Vers 3. Turn thee eastward and hide thy self by the brook Cherith c. When Elijah was gone from Ahab or at least when Ahab began to see there was no rain indeed for a long time as Elijah had said he began to be nettled with his words and enraged against the Prophet
was certainly given them at Shittim it could not be given them when they came to Jordan where they lodged onely one night as it is said here and then passed over the next day and must needs therefore be given them before the spies came back if Joshua went away from Shittim the very next morning after their return But now because it is very improbable that Joshua would appoint the people to prepare to passe over Jordan within three dayes when as yet he could not tell whether the spies would return within that time or no neither was it to any purpose to send them if he had not resolved to wait for their return that according to the information they should give him they might order their journey therefore I conceive rather that the drift of these words is onely to shew that when they removed from Shittim to Jordan Joshua rose early in the morning that day to dispose of all things for their intended journey and not that it was early the next morning after the spies returned And so in this order I conceive those things were done which are here related First after the return of the spies the people being much encouraged by the tidings they brought Joshua commanded the Officers of the people as is noted before chap. 1.10 11. saying Passe through the host and command the people saying Prepare you victuals for within three dayes ye shall passe over this Jordan Secondly when the people had according to this direction made provision for their journey Joshua rose early in the morning and they removed from Shittim and came to Jordan And then thirdly the three dayes being expired after which they had been told they should passe over Jordan and that was the very day it seems when they were come to Jordan Joshua again sent the officers through the host to give direction to the people how they should follow the ark the next day in passing over the river Jordan and this is that which follows in the next verse And it came to passe after three dayes that the officers went through the host c. Vers 3. When ye see the Ark of the covenant of the Lord your God and the Priests the Levites bearing it c. See the note upon Numb 4.15 Vers 4. Yet there shall be a space between you and it about two thousand cubits by measure c. As near as they could guesse by their eye and two thousand cubits was a thousand yards of our measure But why were the people enjoyned in following the ark as it was carried by the Priests before them to lead them over Jordan to keep so farre behind it I answer first That all Expositours do joyntly agree that this was partly to teach them to fear the Lord their God of whose presence amongst them the ark was a signe But secondly another reason is here rendred in the following words Come not near unto it that ye may know the way by which ye must go for ye have not passed this way heretofore The meaning whereof is somewhat questionable for there are some that conceive of these words thus to wit That they were enjoyned to keep thus farre behind the ark to the end they might all the more commodiously see the ark when the Priests went with it into the river Jordan and how the waters of the river were divided before them and so might know the way by which they were to go But I see not how their being two thousand cubits behind the ark could be an advantage for the seeing of this and not rather a hinderance unlesse we suppose that being so farre behind the ark they were upon the asscent of a hill which led down to the river Jordan from whence they might behold how the Priests went on with the ark and entred the river Better therefore I conceive these words may be understood thus Come not near unto it that ye may know the way by which ye must go That is that the Priests bearing the ark may discover a sure and safe passage for you through the river before you come near to enter into it Indeed when the river was divided before them there could be no question of seeing the way they were to go But as yet God did not make known to them the miracle he meant to work but held them as it were in suspence onely intimating the danger of this passage by commanding this distance betwixt the ark and them to the end the Lord by the ark which went before them might find out a safe way for them before they might offer to set a foot in the channel And thus this foregoing apprehension of the danger of the passage might make them with the more admiration and thankfulnesse acknowledge the mercie of the following miracle Vers 5. And Joshua said unto the people Sanctifie your selves c. To wit by endeavouring to bring your hearts to a holy temper vvith all faith and reverence and admiration to observe the great works which God will do for you and happely also by those Legal rites of washing their clothes and keeping themselves apart from their wives formerly likewise enjoyned at the giving the Law See Exod. 19. ver 10. and 15. Vers 7. This day will I begin to magnifie thee in the sight of all Israel Herein was Joshua a type of Christ whom God magnified at his first entrance upon the publick discharge of his Office to wit at his baptisme Mat. 3.16 17. And Jesus when he was baptised went straightway out of the water and lo the heavens were opened unto him and he saw the spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting upon him And lo a voice from heaven saying This is my beloved sonne in whom I am well pleased as he did also afterwards by his many miracles for he was a man approved of God amongst them by miracles and signes and wonders which God did by him in the midst of them Acts 2.22 Vers 8. When you are come to the brink of the water of Jordan ye shall stand still in Jordan This is meant onely of a little stop the priests were to make upon their first setting their feet into the waters of Jordan which had at that time overflowed the banks vers 15. namely till thereupon the Lord had miraculously divided the waters and opened a fair passage for them and the people to go through For that being done the priests went immediately forward with the ark upon their shoulders into the midst of Jordan And then indeed they stood still there till all the people were gone over as it is afterwards expressed vers 17. And the priests that bare the ark of the Covenant of the Lord stood firm on dry ground in the midst of Jordan and all the Israelites passed over on dry ground untill the people were passed clean over Jordan Vers 10. He will without fail drive out from before you the Canaanites and Hittites c. See the note upon
Deut. 7.1 Vers 12. Now therefore take ye twelve men out of the tribes of Israel out of every tribe a man Here it is not expressed for what imployment these twelve men were to be chosen but Chap. 4.2 we are told for what service it was namely to take twelve stones out of the midst of the river and to set them up in Gilgal as a memoriall of this miraculous passage For that they are the same here spoken of seems implyed chap. 4.4 where it is said at the second repeating this charge that Joshua called the twelve men whom he had prepared to wit before they passed over Jordan Yet the giving the charge here may also happely implie that the same twelve men were also to go along with the Priests that they might be the more present eye-witnesses of this miraculous work of Jordans dividing Vers 13. Assoon as the soles of the feet of the Priests that bare the ark of the Lord the Lord of all the earth c. Here Joshua makes known to the people the miracle that God intended to work to give them entrance into the land of Canaan namely that the Lord would divide the waters of Jordan before them that so they might passe over on drie land And observable it is that in relating this to them first he particularly informs them that this should be done at the very first setting of the Priests feet that bare the ark in the waters of Jordan thereby to assure them both that it was the Lord their God of whose presence the ark was a signe by whose almighty power the waters should be divided and likewise that the Lord did this for them because of the Covenant which he had made with them whence that is so often repeated vers 11. and again vers 14. that it was the ark of the Covenant that passed over before them And secondly that they might not question the Lords doing of this he puts them in mind of the Lords sovereigne power in ruling and governing the whole world under this Title the Lord of all the earth Assoon saith he as the soles of the feet of the Priests that bare the ark of the Lord the Lord of all the earth shall rest in the waters of Jordan the waters of Jordan shall be cut off c. Vers 15. For Jordan overfloweth all his banks at the time of harvest To wit of barly-harvest which was in that hot countrey in their first moneth called Abib or Nisan the moneth wherein the Passeover was kept as is evident Levit. 23.10 where it is said that at the feast they were to bring a sheaf of the first-fruits of their harvest unto the Priest and therefore we find it elsewhere so expressed 1. Chron. 12.15 These are they that went over Jordan in the first moneth when it had overflown all his banks And indeed observable it is that the Lord brought his people into the land of Canaan in harvest time just when it was ready furnished with the fruits of the earth that were to be for their provision and store the following yeare As for Jordans overflowing his banks at this time either it was the nature of this river so to do or else it was as some conceive because the sunne growing hot at this time of the yeare great streams of water came running down from the mountains about Jordan by reason of the melting of the snow that lay there and so caused the river to overflow his banks But however the reasons why this clause is here inserted we may conceive to be these First to shew how God did herein trie the faith of the Israelites seeming herein as it were to oppose their entrance into the land Secondly to shew the necessitie of the miraculous dividing of the waters of Jordan because by reason of this inundation of the waters they could not passe over the foords as at other times Thirdly to shew how the feet of the Priests could touch the brim of the waters as is said in the foregoing words before they came at the chanell in a place convenient for them to stand on awhile it was because Jordan at that time overflowed his banks Vers 16. The waters which came down from above stood and rose up upon an heap c. The meaning of the first clause of this verse concerning the waters above the place where Jordan was divided is not much questioned by expositours all in a manner making this to be the meaning of them that those upper waters stood firm as a wall swelling continually and rising up higher and higher even as farre backward as from the citie Adam that is besides Zaretan unto the place where the Israelites passed over and that by reason of the successive coming down of the waters from above and their stay in that place where they were bounded and barred up by the Almighty power of God But now the second clause which speaks of waters beneath the place where the river was divided and those that came down towards the sea of the plain even the salt sea failed and were cut off is somewhat more questionable and that because some by the failing and cutting off those lower waters understand onely this that they rolled a little way toward the salt sea till there was a space broad enough for the people to go over and then not being supplied still as before by the waters from above failed and were cut off from the upper waters and there stood on a heap vers 13. and so the ground lay bare for the Israelites to passe over But then others again by the failing and cutting off those waters understand that those lower waters after they were divided from those that were above passing away by degrees toward the dead sea they failed and were cut off for want of a supplie from above and so the whole channell down toward the sea was left quite without water And this I conceive is most agreeable to the words of the Text. Vers 17. And all the Israelites passed over on drie ground untill all the people were passed clean over Jordan That is the waters of Jordan being thus divided the whole people of Israel went quietly over there being no body on the other side to withstand them which is indeed very observable It hath alwayes been the constant policie of all nations to guard the rivers through which the enemie must passe into their countreys because there they have a great advantage over them to hinder their entrance into their land and how was it then that the Canaanites had not then set a guard upon these foords of Jordan I answer Sure because they were confidently perswaded that the Israelites could not have passed over by reason of the overflowing of Jordan at that time or else because God had stricken them with such a fear and trembling of heart that they durst not stirre out of their walled cities or else because he had infatuated them and deprived them of that wisdome
which is ordinarily found in other men for the defence of their countrey against an enemie CHAP. IV. Vers 2. TAke ye twelve men out of the people out of every tribe a man c. being passed over Jordan the Lord repeats the charge given them before chap. 1. vers 12. And indeed therefore was it there onely briefly touched because it was to be here again more largely expressed Vers 3. Take you hence out of the midst of Jordan out of the place where the Priests feet stood firm twelve stones c. In the seventh verse the reason is expressed why these twelve stones were to be taken up out of Jordan about the place where the Priests had stood with the ark and to be carried to the place where they were to lodge that night which was Gilgal vers 19. namely that they might there stand as a memoriall to succeeding generations of this miraculous work when the Lord was pleased to divide Jordan before the ark that the twelve tribes might passe over to take possession of the land which he had given them for an inheritance But may some say seeing the tribes of Reuben and Gad and one half of the tribe of Manasseh had already their inheritance assigned them without Jordan yea and were already in possession of it why were these tribes with the rest to testifie their thankfulnesse by setting up this memoriall of Gods miraculous dividing of Jordan before them Now for the answer of this it is not enough to say that about fourtie thousand of these tribes went over Jordan at this time with the rest of their brethren to assist them in their warres and that because these stones were set up in the name of the whole tribes and therefore the question still remains why these tribes were to come in for a share in erecting this monument of Gods praise that had for their particular no share in the mercie The truer answer therefore I conceive to be this That these tribes were to joyn with the rest herein first Because the whole people of Israel though consisting of twelve severall tribes were yet all one body and therefore no good could be done to any of the tribes but the whole body must needs have an interest in it and ought to be thankfull for it and secondly Because hereby they might shew that the land which was allotted them without Jordan was a part of that land of promise the possession whereof was thankfully acknowledged in those twelve stones which were now set up in Gilgal Vers 9. And Joshua set up twelve stones in the midst of Jordan c. even this also no doubt the Lord had given in charge to Joshua though it be not expressed and that for the same end that the other were set in Gilgal For though they were hid under water yet the report of their being there set might be a memoriall of that great work and besides at a low ebbe they might happely be seen at least the dashing of the waters against them might be perceived And they are there unto this day This clause could not be written by Joshua and yet that proves not that Joshua wrote not this book since many such passages we find here and there even in the books of Moses Vers 10. For the Priests that bare the ark stood in the midst of Jordan untill every thing was finished that the Lord commanded Joshua to speak unto the people according to all that Moses commanded Joshua This clause according to all that Moses commanded Joshua cannot be so understood as if Moses had particularly commanded Joshua that which was now done by the Priests and people in their passage over Jordan For Moses had never spoken of any such thing to Joshua but Joshua had received these directions immediately from God But the meaning of these words is onely this that all was done as God commanded Joshua which was according to what Moses had given Joshua in charge Moses had commanded Joshua to see that all things were done according to the word of the Lord and so it was in this particular of their passage over Jordan according to the charge he had received from Moses all things were done as the Lord commanded And the people hasted and passed over This haste which they made in passing over was not so much because a multitude of people were to passe over in a few houres and were afterwards to go as farre as Gilgal that day as from their fear and weaknesse of faith the sight of that mountain of waters which seemed ready to overwhelm them could not but scare them and hence it was that every man made all the speed he could out of that vale of the shadow of death Now this is the rather added in this place the more hereby to extoll the faith of the priests who stood still without moving in the midst of Jordan till the whole camp of Israel were gotten over into the land of Canaan and all other things were done concerning the stones set up in Gilgal and in the midst of Jordan as God had appointed Vers 13. About fourty thousand prepared for warre passed over c. To wit of Ruben Gad and the half tribe of Manasseh the rest being left in garrison for the defence of the land their wives children and cattell for at the last numbring of the people there was of the Reubenites fourty three thousand seven hundred and thirty and of the Gadites fourty thousand five hundred Numb 26.7 18. besides the half of Manassehs tribe who were in all fifty two thousand seven hundred Numb 26.34 Vers 19. And the people came up out of Jordan on the tenth day of the first moneth Which was the very day whereon by the Law the lambe for the Passeover was to be set apart Exod. 12.3 And hereby it is clear that it was full fourty years within foure or five dayes from the coming of the Israelites out of Egypt to their entrance into the land of promise for they came out of Egypt on the fifteenth day of the first moneth and now on the tenth day of the first moneth they entred the land of Canaan Vers 23. For the Lord your God dried up the waters of Jordan from before you untill ye were passed over c. The Israelites are appointed thus to answer their children for many generations after when they should inquire concerning those stones that were set up in Gilgal even as if that miracle had been wrought for them in their own persons the Lord your God dried up the waters of Jordan from before you c. and that because in that the Lord did this for their Ancestours he did it for them who were then in the loyns of their Ancestours and that in regard of the profession of the same faith they might look upon that which was done for their Ancestours as a pledge of his fatherly love to them also and his care of their welfare CHAP. V. Vers 2. AT that
this order prescribed here by Joshua for the peoples marching about the citie was formerly given him in charge by the Lord though it be not there expressed However very observable is the peoples readinesse in obeying his command which makes it to me most probable that Joshua had told them what the Lord had imparted to him concerning the falling of the citie wall which they believing the rather because of the miracle they had so lately seen of the dividing of Jordan were the readier to do what Joshua enjoyned them and thence is that which the Apostle saith Heb. 11.30 By faith the walls of Jericho fell down after they were compassed about seven dayes It is questioned by some why those Israelites were armed that went before the ark seeing the wall was to fall of it self But this scruple is altogether causelesse for it was fit they should be armed for their own defence and the defence of the ark in case the inhabitants should sally out upon them and besides they were to go up upon the citie to destroy the inhabitants so soon as ever the wall was fallen and their going armed beforehand did testifie that they believed what God had said herein and were ready to execute the Lords command The greatest difficulty in these words is who are here meant by the rereward that came after the ark Some hold that this is meant of the tribes of Dan Asher and Naphtali and that because Numb 10.25 their camp is called the rereward and used alwayes as the Israelites travelled through the wildernesse to march in the rere which order they conceive was here observed for the greater pomp and state But yet because the words seem so plainly to imply that all the people that were armed went before the ark Let him that is armed passe on before the ark of the Lord vers 7. and here again the armed men went before the priests that blew with the trumpets therefore it may seem more probable which others say that by rereward here is meant the remainder of the people that were not armed Vers 16. Joshua said unto the people Shout c. The following reason for the Lord hath given you the citie shows the ground why this shouting was enjoyned them to wit first to strike the hearts of the men of Jericho with fear secondly to testifie their faith in Gods promise and their joyfull assurance that now the citie should be delivered up unto them and thirdly to encourage one another in the following assault Vers 17. And the city shall be accursed even it and all that are therein to the Lord. This Joshua received in charge from the Lord though it were not formerly expressed as is evident 1. Kings 16.34 In his dayes did Hiel the Bethelite build Jericho he laid the foundation in Abiram his first-born and set up the gates thereof in his youngest sonne Segub according to the word of the Lord which he spake by Joshua the sonne of Nun. And by Joshua no doubt this charge was given to the people before the time when they were to shout but here it is inserted vvhen it vvas to be put in execution to make vvay to the follovving story of Achans transgression chap. 7. Why this citie vvas thus destroyed rather then the other cities vve need not enquire since it is enough that it pleased God so to appoint But probably tvvo reasons may be given first that hereby the other inhabitants might be vvarned not to stand out against God or if they did to render them the more inexcusable and secondly that it might be offered to the divine justice as a kind of first-fruits as the words implie the citie shall be accursed to the Lord thereby acknowledging that the whole land was his but that he was pleased to give it them As concerning things accursed or devoted see the notes upon Levit. 27.28 Vers 19. But all the silver and gold and vessels of brasse and iron are consecrated unto the Lord. Under these we may probably conceive that all other metalls are comprehended and happely they were made to passe through the fire ere they were brought into the Lords treasurie as those were Num. 31.22 23. Onely the gold the silver the brasse the iron the tinne and the lead Every thing that may abide the fire ye shall make it go through the fire and it shall be clean concerning their images of gold and silver there is no question to be made but that either they were melted and so brought into the treasurie or else utterly wafted with the things in the citie according to that law Deut. 7.25 The graven images of their gods shall ye burn with fire thou shalt not desire the silver or gold that is on them nor take it unto thee lest thou be snared therein for it is an abomination to the Lord thy God Vers 20. The wall fell down flat so that the people went up into the citie c. Thus God without the help of the Israelites beat down the walls of Jericho wherein the Israelites were to have no part of the spoil See the former note upon vers 5. Vers 23. And they brought out all her kindred and left them without the camp of Israel That is having fetched Rahab her kindred and all she had out of her house they carried them to some place without their camp and there they left them And thus both the Israelites testified what an esteem they had of the holinesse of their camp where God was pleased to dwell amongst them and withall Rahab and her kindred were hereby taught to acknowledge bewail and forsake the impuritie of their gentile condition and were kept as aliens from the common-wealth of Israel till they had made profession of their desire to imbrace the religion and faith of Israel and were cleansed from their former pollutions according to the Law Numb 31.19 And do ye abide without the camp seven dayes whosoever hath killed any person and whosoever hath touched any slain purifie both your selves and your captives on the third day and on the seventh day Vers 24. And they burnt the citie with fire and all that was therein It might well in reason have been very grievous to the people to destroy such goodly houses wherein they might so conveniently have seated themselves and the whole prey and spoil of so fair a citie which might so greatly have enriched them But herein is noted their observable obedience at present to the Lords command not a man of them offering to meddle with one jot of the spoil save onely Achan of whose sacriledge we have the relation in the following chapter Vers 26. Cursed be the man before the Lord that riseth up and buildeth this citie Jericho God would have the ruines of this town remain as a perpetuall monument of the power of God shewed both in his severitie against this idolatrous citie and his mercie to his people and therefore Joshua is by the Lord appointed to curse him that should
near which under an oke there was a stone erected as a witnesse of the covenant which the people had made with God But it is more probable that this assembly was in Shechem and that the Tabernacle and Ark were removed hither upon this occasion 1. Because Shechem was in the tribe of Ephraim as well as Shiloh and perhaps nearer unto Joshua his city and so the more convenient for him to come thither 2. Because we no where reade that Shiloh is called Shechem which is the onely ground of the other opinion 3. Because it is evident that upon speciall extraordinary occasions they were wont sometimes to remove the Ark 1. Sam. 4.4 So the people sent to Shiloh that they might bring from thence the Ark of the covenant of the Lord of hosts But why should they not have met at Shiloh that so there might be no need to remove the Ark I answer that Shechem was a city of great note a city of refuge chap. 21.21 a place famous for the abode of the Patriarchs there yea and there God did at first enter into a covenant with Abraham Gen. 12.6 7. and the people there had lately renewed their covenant with God upon mount Gerizim and mount Ebal in which regard Joshua might think it the fitter to bring the people now to renew it again in the same place And then besides there might be some other speciall occasion for some other businesse that was to be done at Shechem as happely the buriall of Josephs bones there whereof mention is made in the 32. verse of this chapter Vers 2. Your father 's dwelt on the other side of the floud in old time even Terah the father of Abraham and the father of Nachor That is Euphrates which is by way of eminency usually in the Scripture called the river And they served other gods That is their fathers to wit Terah and Abram and Nachor of whom they were descended by the mothers side for they are all mentioned in the foregoing words Neither need it seem strange unto us that Abraham should serve other Gods before his calling for therein was Gods mercy the more magnified And indeed if Abraham had continued incorrupt in an idolatrous family the posterity of Abraham might have boasted in this whereas the drift of Joshua in these words is quite contrary even to set forth Gods goodnesse in rescuing him out of that way of danger and chusing him to be the father of his peculiar people when there was nothing in him to move the Lord to shew him such speciall favour Vers 3. And I took your father Abraham from the other side of the floud and led him throughout all the land of Canaan The mention which is here made of Gods leading Abraham through the severall parts of Canaan is to intimate Gods goodnesse to him that he did not onely preserve him being in a strange land in the midst of so many barbarous people but also blesse and prosper him and cause him to be so greatly esteemed amongst them And multiplied his seed and gave him Isaac That is gave him severall sonnes to wit Ishmael and the sonnes of Keturah and amongst the rest Isaac and therefore I conceive mention is made of his other children to illustrate Gods singular favour to the Israelites in passing by so many of Abrahams issue and choosing their father to be the heir of promise Vers 4. And I gave unto Isaac Jacob and Esau and I gave unto Esau mount Seir c. Esau is here also mentioned to intimate the free grace of God in passing by Esau though his posterity grew presently great and inhabited mount Seir and establishing his covenant with their father Jacob his younger brother Vers 7. And your eyes have seen what I have done in Egypt Many might be now living as well as Joshua and Eleazar that came out of Egypt for onely those that were above twenty years old when they came out of Egypt did the Lord threaten to destroy in the wildernesse Num. 14.29 As for the next clause and ye dwelt in the wildernesse a long season it is added to intimate Gods wonderfull providence in feeding them and preserving them for so many years in their travels there Vers 9. Then Balak the sonne of Zippor king of Moab rose and warred against Israel c. That is prepared to make warre against them intending to have set upon them if he could have gotten Balaam to curse them Num. 22.11 Behold there is a people come out of Egypt which covereth the face of the earth Come now curse me them peradventure I shall be able to overcome them and drive them out Vers 11. And the men of Jericho fought with you c. That is made preparation to resist you shutting up their city against you and fortifying themselves which is a kind of defensive warre though indeed they never durst stir out of their gates to fight against the Israelites nor had the heart once to lift a weapon in defence of themselves when they saw their walls so miraculously to fall down before them Vers 12. And I sent the hornet before you which drave them out from before you c. See the note upon Exod. 23.28 Vers 14. And put away the gods which your fathers served c. So likewise vers 23. he sayes Put away the strange gods that are among you Their zeal against their brethren for building that altar on the banks of Jordan chap. 22.16 Thus saith the whole congregation of the Lord What trespasse is this which ye have committed against the God of Israel to turn this day from following the Lord in that ye have builded you an altar that ye might rebell this day against the Lord and that which is said of them in this chapter vers 31. And Israel served the Lord all the dayes of Joshua sh●ws plainly that for the generall they were not yet corrupted and that there was no idolatry publickly allowed Besides had Joshua known any particular families or persons that had worshipped idols no doubt he would have punished them according to the Law but it seems in his government he had found that many of them were still lingring after these superstitions of their fathers and therefore feared that though they durst not openly do it there were some that secretly were worshippers of idols whence it is that he admonisheth them in this wise to put away the strange gods from amongst them and indeed that in the wildernesse many secretly did worship idols is evident by that place Amos 5.25 26. which is cited by S. Stephen Acts 7.42 43. Then God turned and gave them up to worship the host of heaven as it is written in the book of the Prophets O ye house of Israel have ye offered to me any beasts and sacrifices by the space of fourty years in the wildernesse Yea ye took up the Tabernacle of Moloch and the starre of your God Remphan figures which you made to worship them Vers 15.
And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord choose you this day whom ye will serve c. Not that Joshua did now lay the reins upon their necks and give them liberty to change their Religion and to serve strange gods if that way liked them best Had they revolted from God doubtlesse he would have punished them severely But he useth this kind of speech first as a powerfull perswasion to keep them constant to God by implying that there is such a difference betwixt these two the worshipping the Lord that had delivered them out of Egypt and done so many great things for them and bowing to Idol-gods that one would not think it possible that they should forsake the Lord to follow them though it should be left to their choice as if one should say choose you whether you will go to heaven or to hell So that this is much like that speech of Elijahs 1. Kings 18.21 How long halt ye between two opinions if the Lord be God follow him but if Baal then follow him Secondly to sift them how they stood inwardly affected and to imply that unlesse they served God willingly without any constraint so that if it were left to their choice they would take no other way God would not regard their outward obedience And thirdly that having now of their own accord accepted the Lord to be their God they might hereby be the more tyed to cleave constantly unto him But as for me and my house we will serve the Lord. This Joshua added not so much to make known to them what he was resolved to do to wit that though they should all forsake the Lord yet that should not one whit move him but principally that his resolute determination herein of whose wisdome and piety they had had so great experience might covertly but yet sweetly and effectually perswade them to keep constant in that way of religion wherein they found him so zealously and settledly resolved to continue Vers 19. Ye cannot serve the Lord for he is an holy God He is a jealous God c. This is spoken upon supposition not onely of Gods holinesse and severe jealousie against all those that are not faithfull in keeping covenant with him but also of the perverse refractary disposition and untamed stubbornesse of this rebellious people as if he should have said Consider well what you say God will not be content with a profession of being his people if ye take liberty to live as you list as you have done No God is a holy God c. so that this is added not to discourage them but rather by way of caution to awake them out of their security and to let them know that they must be more carefull of walking uprightly with God if they meant to serve him as if when a company of souldiers that had not so well behaved themselves in former times should untertake some speciall service and the Generall should answer not to beat them off from it but rather to enflame them and make them go through it with the more courage and care why should you think of undertaking such a piece of service you cannot do it implying onely thus much that they must be more valiant and constant then they had been if they would meddle with it Vers 23. Now therefore put away said he the strange Gods which are among you c. See the note above verse 13. Vers 25. So Joshua made a covenant with the people that day and set them a statute and an ordinance in Shechem That is as Gods servant and minister he caused the people to renew their covenant with God and doubtlesse it was done in a solemn manner being accompanied with sacrifices and other usuall rites of that sacred service and so he set them a statute and an ordinance in Shechem that is he established it as a thing fully settled and ratified for future times that they should constantly continue in the service of the Lord God alone as became his peculiar people and to that end did fully make known and confirm all the conditions of the covenant which they had made with God To which purpose happely the whole law of God was at this time distinctly read amongst them which some conceive is one of the principall things intended in this last clause Vers 26. And Joshua wrote these words in the book of the law of God That is these promises of the people and the whole carriage of this businesse when they did with such solemnity renew their covenant with God that knowing there was such a record kept of this businesse even in Gods Tabernacle they might be carefull to keep their covenant But yet withall hereby may be meant that this book of Joshua was now added to the book of Moses law which was laid up long since before the ark Deut. 31.26 saving onely those passages which are apparently since inserted for no doubt that which Joshua wrote was written for all future times Now we have in the Church no other records of it but this book of Joshua And took a great stone and set it up there under an oke that was by the Sanctuary of the Lord. This stone was also set up as a memoriall of this covenant now thus solemnly renewed between God and the people The place where it was set to wit under an oke that was by the Sanctuary is thus precisely expressed for the better evidencing of the certain truth of that which is here related Some indeed suppose that this was the very oke under which Jacob had many years since buried all the Idolatrous trash which he found amongst those of his family Gen. 35.4 And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods that were in their hand and all the ear-rings which were in their ears and Jacob hid them under the oke which was by Shechem and that Joshua for that cause did purposely set up this stone under that oke But though it be certain and well known that okes will continue many hundred years yet that this was that oke we cannot certainly determine As for the Sanctuary of the Lord here mentioned some conceive it is the place onely where all this was done that is so called and that because of the ark that was there but I think it is farre more probable that the Tabernacle was brought thither together with the ark and that this it is which is here called the Sanctuary of the Lord. However certain it is that in future times this place where this stone was set up by Joshua was from hence called the plain of the pillar or the oke of the pillar Judges 9.6 Vers 27. Behold this stone shall be a witnesse unto us for it hath heard all the words of the Lord which he spake unto us This is a figurative speech and implies thus much that it should as truly witnesse against them if they should falsifie their promise as if it had heard the words that were
something that concerned Baals sacrifice it was called the second bullock and that this bullock was chosen by the Lord rather then another because it was seven years old and hereby might signifie that the Midianites tyranny which had lasted seven years should now have an end together with the suppressing of Baals worship in the land And throw down the altar of Baal that thy father hath and cut down the grove that is by it This is the second direction that is given here to Gideon to wit that he should throw down Baals altar and cut down the grove by it That all the inhabitants of Ophrah had an interest in this altar and grove we may see by their contestation with Gideons father about it vers 30. Then the men of the city said unto Joash Bring out thy sonne that he may die because he hath cast down the altar of Baal and because he hath cut down the grove that was by it It seems therefore that Joash Gideons father as being the chief magistrate of that place had built this altar at his own expence and upon his own ground though not for his use onely but for the publick use of all the inhabitants of Ophrah and that therefore the Lord calls it here his fathers altar However observable it is first that ere Gideon might go to fight against the Midianites the enemies of God and his people he was enjoyned to set on foot the reformation of Religion and the extirpation of superstition and idolatry which had provoked the Lord to displeasure against them thereby as it were to make way for a happy victory secondly that he was enjoyned to begin this work of reformation in the throwing down of his fathers altar c. Take thy fathers young bullock and throw down the altar of Baal that thy father hath the Lord thereby teaching him that he that would reform publick abuses must begin with his own family and friends and that in yielding obedience to God he might not fear to offend his father or any other that was dearest to him and that his affection to his father should make him most carefull to winne him from every way of false worship thirdly that before that charge is given him which followeth in the next verse concerning his building an altar to the Lord he is first here appointed to throw down Baals altar Gods altar and Baals the Ark and Dagon cannot stand together the true worship of God will not be accepted of God where Baals altars are not first thrown down Vers 26. And build an altar unto the Lord thy God upon the top of this rock in the ordered place Or as it is in the margin in an orderly manner This is the third direction given to Gideon that when he had thrown down Baals altar and cut down the grove he must build an altar unto the Lord in that very place upon the top of the rock whereat the Angel first appearing to him the Lord had given him a signe by causing fire to come out of that rock to consume the provision that was laid thereon brought forth for the Angel Here therefore we have the command for the building of the altar the building whereof is related before and that place was no doubt purposely chosen for the building of this new altar to signifie that it was built to the honour of that God who had there appeared to him and that both by way of thankfullnesse for the mercy there promised and by way of imploring the accomplishing of that promise in the deliverance of his people from the oppression of the Midianites As for the last words if we reade them as they are in the margin in an orderly manner then the meaning may be either that he was to build the altar of earth and unhewen stones as was ordered in the Law of Moses Exod. 20.24 25. or else that he was to build it in such a manner that it might be convenient for the service that was to be done upon it the laying of the wood in order upon it and then the burning of the sacrifice thereon But if we reade it as it is in our text in the ordered place then thereby I conceive is onely meant that the altar was to be built in that very place of the rock which was before ordered to be the place whereon the provision was to be laid that Gideon had brought out for the Angel vers 20. and which was chosen as being plain and fit for this service And take the second bullock and offer a burnt sacrifice with the wood of the grove which thou shalt cut down It was not lawfull for any but the priest to offer sacrifice or to build any altar or to offer sacrifice any where but onely in the Tabernacle but here Gods speciall command was a sufficient warrant for Gideon Vers 27. Then Gideon took ten men of his servants and did as the Lord had said unto him He took so many of his servants that it might be the more speedily dispatched because it was to be done before morning and observable it is that Gideon being a man that feared God even in those corrupt times had ten servants that were ready to joyn with him in suppressing the idolatry of Baal And so it was because he feared his fathers houshold c. That is because he feared them lest they should hinder him in that he had to do He was not affraid of any evil that they could do to him for he might well know that it would be known who had done it and this would prove as dangerous for him as if he had been taken in the doing of it but which he feared was lest he should be interrupted by them and kept from doing what God had charged him to do So that it is the wisdome and prudence of Gideon that is here commended that taking the advantage of the night and setting as many hands together at work as he could no body knew any thing of it to make head against him ere the work was done Vers 29. They said Gideon the sonne of Joash hath done this thing He might soon be suspected because he was known to be no friend of Baal but many other wayes also it might be discovered Vers 30. Then the men of the city said unto Joash Bring out thy sonne that he may die c. Herein was discovered the violent rage wherewith they were carried in their zeal for Baal Joash it seems was either their chief Magistrate or at least a man of chief note and esteem amongst them and well they might think that it would go much against him to deliver up his son to such an enraged multitude but so far were they transported with fury when they saw the altar of their idol-god thrown down that they regarded Joash no more now then another man nor will they stand to examine the cause nor to heare what Gideon can say for himself he had pulled down Baals altar and
answered c. and her father his father in law in severall places Why Bethlehem from whence this Levite had his concubine is called Bethlehem-Judah See in the note chap. 17.7 Vers 2. And his concubine plaid the whore against him went away from him unto her fathers house c. It seems upon some discoverie of her whoredome or at least some suspition the Levite had of it there arose some quarrell betwixt him and his concubine and thereupon she left him and went home again to her fathers house who was too ready to entertain her The sad effects that followed upon this Levites taking a concubine makes it manifest that even in those times though it were an ordinary thing amongst all sorts of men even amongst the Levites to have concubines yet God was not pleased with it from the beginning it was not so saith our Saviour Matth. 19.8 Vers 3. And her husband arose and went after her to speak friendly unto her and to bring her again having his servant with him and a couple of asses To wit to carrie their provision and happely that both himself and his concubine if she would return with him might sometimes ease themselves by riding as occasion served Vers 11. Come I pray thee and let us turn in unto this citie of the Jebusites and lodge in it For though the children of Judah had taken from the Jebusites that part of Jebus that is Jerusalem which was in their tribe chap. 1.8 The children of Judah had fought against Jerusalem and had taken it and had smitten it with the edge of the sword yet out of that part which belonged to Benjamin on which side the Levite was now travelling the Jebusites were not wholly expelled chap. 1.21 The children of Benjamin did not drive out the inhabitants of Jerusalem but the Jebusites dwell in Jerusalem with the children of Benjamin unto this day Vers 14. And the sunne went down upon them when they were by Gibeah which belongeth to Benjamin There was a Gibeah in the tribe of Judah Josh 15.57 to distinguish this from that it is here called Gibeah which belongeth to Benjamin and else where Gibeah of Saul 1. Sam. 11.4 it is thought to be the same which Josh 21.17 is called Gebah which was a citie given to tho Priests the sonnes of Aaron Against which it makes nothing that here it is said vers 16. the men of the place were Benjamites for the priests did not dwell alone in such cities though they were the lords and owners of them Vers 15. And they turned aside thither to go in and to lodge in Gibeah Though it were a pious resolution in the Levite rather to chose to lodge in Gibeah then in Jebus and that because Jebus was a citie wherein the idolatrous and uncircumcised Jebusites dwelt yet this proved fatall both to him and his as the best counsell may have the worst successe and that because there is a secret over-ruling hand of God that may by this means bring about what he hath determined for the punishment of some other sinnes which we mind not Vers 16. And behold there came an old man from his work out of the field at even which was also of mount Ephraim Though he were an old man yet he followed his work in the field and that untill the even which is doubtlesse noted to his praise As for that last clause that he was also of mount Ephraim that no doubt is expressed to intimate that this amongst other things made the old man the readier to entertain the Levite when he heard him say vers 18. that he was of mount Ephraim too Vers 18. But I am now going to the house of the Lord. The Tabernacle at this time was in Shiloh Josh 18.1 and Shiloh was in the tribe of Ephraim either therefore there the Levites dwelling was or else he meant first to go to the house of the Lord to do his service there and then afterwards to passe forward on his journey homeward However it is probable that he mentions his going to the house of the Lord that he might know him to be a Levite Vers 22. Behold the men of the city certain sonnes of Belial beset the house round about c. A like fact to this we have formerly related concerning the Sodomites of which see the note Gen. 19.4 as for this term Sonnes of Belial see Deut. 13.13 Vers 24. Behold here is my daughter a mayden and his concubine them I will bring out now c. See the note Gen. 19.8 Vers 25. So the man took his concubine and brought her forth unto them and they knew her c. In the foregoing words it is said that when the old man the Levites host proffered these varlets his daughter a virgin and the Levites concubine thereby to take them off from that unnaturall uncleannesse wherewith they meant to satisfie their lust upon the Levite himself the men would not hearken to him yet when immediately by the Levites means his concubine was indeed brought out unto them and left amongst them they fell upon her and defiled her and that in such an outrageous barbarous manner that she died of it which was doubtlesse because having once an object for their lust in their power they could not forbear and so forgetting their former resolutions they laid hold on her and abused her in a most inhumane and execrable manner Vers 26. Then came the woman in the dawning of the day and fell down at the doore of the mans house c. That is she fell down dead at the doore of the mans house and there lay till break of day when her husband going forth to see what was become of her found her dead and thus though her husband had pardoned her whoredome yet God punished it and that too with her own sinne adulterie was her sinne and adulterie was her death she had dealt treacherously against her husband one would not satisfie her but she exposed her self to the lust of a stranger and now she was abused to death by the lusts of so many barbarous wretches whom she knew not that by so abusing her they murdered her Vers 27. And her hands were upon the threshold This is added to implie the reason of that which follows why the Levite spake to her to rise vers 28. And he said unto her Vp let us be going to wit because she lay in such a manner her hands laid upon the threshold under her head as if she had been asleep Vers 29. He took a knife and laid hold on his concubine and divided her together with her bones into twelve pieces and sent her into all the coasts of Israel That is to each of the twelve tribes a piece for to the tribe of Levi that was dispersed through all the land there was none sent and this was done that the fight of her dead limbs might affect them the more and stirre them up to be the more zealous for the punishment
affraid to commit such horrible sinnes and do what we can to divert the evil of punishment which God may else justly lay upon us even by cutting them off which have committed this crying villany But the children of Benjamin would not hearken to the voice of their brethren the children of Israel c. That is though the Israelites were their brethren whose advice therefore they might well think tended equally to the good of them all and against whom to fight in the defence of such wretches must needs be counted a most unnaturall and ungodly course yet because they thought it a dishonour to them that the other tribes should intermeddle with punishing any within their territories and were so proud of their strength and highly conceited of their abilities for martiall affairs that they thought themselves able enough to make good their part against all the tribes of Israel beside they would not hearken to their brethren but prepared to fight it out Vers 15. And the children of Benjamin were numbred at that time out of the cities twenty and six thousand c. This is added to imply what it was that made them despise the counsell of their brethren to wit their confidence in their own strength of this six and twenty thousand and seven hundred there were slain by the Israelites twenty five thousand and an hundred vers 35. and there were onely six hundred of them that saved themselves in the rock Rimmon vers 47. It seems therefore that the other thousand were slain in the two first battels wherein the Benjamites overcame the Israelites for it is not likely they should vanquish the Israelites in two set battells and kill so many thousand of them without any losse in their own army Vers 18. And the children of Israel arose and went up to the house of God c. The house of God was at this time in Shiloh see vers 27. thither therefore they went to ask counsell of God saying Which of us shall go up first to the battell c. It may seem strange that the people of God undertaking so just a warre as this was against the Benjamites out of a zeal to punish those that had committed so foul a sinne because the Benjamites did undertake the defence of them that they might not be punished should notwithstanding be twice beaten and vanquished by those Benjamites as we see afterwards they were not without the losse of fourty thousand of their men especially if we consider this which is here said that before they went to fight with them they were so carefull to go to the house of the Lord that there they might ask counsell of God but to remove this scruple we must know that God is wont in great wisdome and without any stain either to his justice or mercy towards his people to suffer a while those that have a just cause to go by the worst as first to prevent the ascribing of their victory to their own prowesse or strength by letting them see how little good their great armies could do if the Lord should withhold his help from them secondly to beat them off from that confidence in their great strength and in the justnesse of their cause which beforehand he perceives in them till men have learnt to go out of themselves and to rely onely upon God they are not fit for his aid thirdly to punish them for some sinnes wherein he perceives them to runne on without fear that so by their losse they may be brought to see bewail and forsake those sinnes And for these reasons doubtlesse God did suffer these Israelites to be so shamefully beaten by the Benjamites for both idolatry and many other sinnes were rife amongst them as we see chap. 17.6 and particularly in the idolatry of Micah and the Danites 2. trusting in the justnesse of their cause and the multitude of their men in regard of whom the Benjamites were but a handfull their spirits were too much puffed up with assurance of victory and hence it was that they never asked God whether they should go against the Benjamites or whether they should prevail they never prayed to God for his help they never sought by fasting humiliation by repenting of their own sinnes and by offering up sacrifices of atonement to make their peace with God but onely as men assured of victory to prevent variance amongst themselves they desired to know which of the tribes should go up first against Benjamin they concluded that having eleven tribes against one four hundred thousand against six and twenty thousand they must needs prevail Vers 21. And destroyed down to the ground of the Israelites that day twenty and two thousand men See the note before on vers 18. Vers 23. And the children of Israel went up and wept before the Lord untill even c. But they did not fast and afflict their souls and offer up sacrifices to make an atonement with God as afterwards they did vers 26. It seems their weeping now was more for their losse in the former battell then for their sinnes or at least that they were not so throughly humbled and so truly penitent as was fitting and therefore again after this their enemies prevailed Indeed now they began to see that their multitude and strength was vain without Gods help and therefore enquired whether they should go forth to battell against the Benjamites or no but withall they pitched upon a wrong cause of their ill successe supposing it was onely because God was not pleased with their making warre against their brethren never thinking of their sinnes and therefore God answers them accordingly Go up against him which was no more in effect then this though he be your brother you may fight against him Vers 26. All the people came up and came unto the house of God and wept and sat there before the Lord and fasted c. Now they not onely wept as they did before vers 23. which might onely be for the losse they sustained but also fasted and offered burnt-offerings and peace-offerings before the Lord which shews that now they perceived that though God liked the cause they had undertaken yet he was displeased with their persons and that therefore they fasted and afflisted their souls in a most solemne manner repenting them of their sinnes and turning to the Lord and offered burnt-offerings and peace-offerings to make an atonement for their sinnes and to obtain Gods favour that he would now prosper them in this their warre against Benjamin Vers 27. For the ark of the covenant of God was there in those dayes That is in those parts about Gibeah to wit in Shiloh which was not farre from Gibeah chap. 21.12 And they found among the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead four hundred young virgins that had known no man by lying with any male and they brought them to the camp at Shiloh or rather the ark was there that is in the house of God whether in the
not bound thereto by the Law And the two sonnes of Eli Hophni and Phinehas the Priests of the Lord were there This Eli was at this time Judge of Israel the next after Samson chap. 4.18 He had judged Israel fourtie years and withall as it is generally thought by all Expositours he was high Priest too Indeed how he should come to be high Priest we cannot say For Aaron leaving two sonnes behind him Eleazar and Ithamar the high Priesthood was to have descended successively to the posteritie of Eleazar Aarons eldest sonne and accordingly we reade that Eleazar was high Priest after Aaron died Deut. 10.6 and after Eleazar died Phinehas Judg. 20.28 Now it is evident that Eli was of the posteritie of Ithamar Aarons second sonne because it appears that Abiathar who was deposed from being high Priest by Solomon was of the posteritie of Eli 1. Kings 2.27 and of Ahimelech who was the sonne of Abiathar it is expressely said 1. Chron. 24.3 that he was of the sonnes of Ithamar and how therefore the high Priesthood came to be transferred from the posteritie of Eleazar to Eli that was of the house of Ithamar cannot be cleared by any place of Scripture onely because it is said chap. 2.30 that God had promised Eli that his house and the house of his father should walk before him for ever thence some conclude that it was not without Gods appointment that the high Priesthood was removed to the house of Ithamar and that because the high Priests of Eleazars familie had some way provoked God by their evil wayes in the dayes of the former Judges As for Elies two sonnes Hophni and Phinenas it is expressely inserted here that they were then in Shiloh when Elkanah used yearly to go up thither to sacrifice to intimate thereby the wisdome and pietie of Elkanah who would not neglect his dutie in going up thither with his sacrifices according to the rule of Gods Law because of the horrible wickednesse of these wretches who were of chief sway amongst the Priests that attended the service of the Tabernacle no though others stumbled so at their lewdnesse that chap. 2.17 they abhorred the offering of the Lord yet Elkanah would not do so but went up yearly at the appointed feasts to the house of God though Hophni and Phinehas were there Vers 4. He gave to Peninnah his wife and to all her sonnes and daughters portions That is portions of the peace offerings which he offered to the Lord the fat onely of the peace-offerings was burnt upon the altar the right shoulder and the breast was given to the Priest and the remainder of the sacrifices were for the offerer to eat and those that belonged to him of this therefore Elkanah gave portions to Peninnah and her children according to the ancient manner of feasts of which see Gen. 43.34 Vers 5. But unto Hannah he gave a worthy portion for he loved Hannah c. Peninnah had a great share as having many children for she and her sonnes and her daughters had each of them severall portions whereas Hannah being but one was to have but a single portion But her husband therefore because he loved her dearly as being a gracious woman and withall of a meek and quiet melting disposition that she might not be discouraged took care that her one portion should be the larger and better a double portion as some read it and happely of the choice and best of the sacrifices Vers 6. And her adversary also provoked her sore c. This her adversary was Peninnah as indeed where one man contrary to the Ordinance of God hath two wives they must needs be adversaries as being corrivalls in his love and live in continuall variance one with the other and she provoked her sore to make her to fret because the Lord had shut up her wombe That is she provoked her purposely to make her vex and disquiet her self and that by upbraiding her with her barrennesse as an effect of the Lords displeasure Now this is added here as a second reason why Elkanah gave Hannah such a worthy portion It was not onely because of the singular love he bare to her but also because he saw that Peninnah vexed her and so he was the more carefull to comfort her and chear her up Vers 7. And as he did so yeare by yeare when she went up to the house of the Lord so she provoked her c. That is whereas Elkanah did this yearly to chear Hannah Peninnah was hereby rendred the more ready to vex her Now this petulancy of Peninnah in provoking Hannah by upbraiding her with her barrennes is hereby much aggravated that she did not forbear at those times when they went up to pray and offer sacrifices to the Lord. See Mat. 5. And withall it implies that she upbraided her with the fruitlessenes of her seeking to God so earnestly at those times for a child Vers 9. So Hannah rose up after they had eaten in Shiloh and after they had drunk That is after Elkanah and his family had eaten and drunk together with whom Hannah sat It may be indeed that Hannah upon her husbands words vers 8. did eat a little yet it is most probable that she did neither eat nor drink for besides what she said afterward to Eli vers 15. I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink it seems to have been against the expresse letter of the Law for any body to partake of these holy feasts whilst they were in sadnesse and heavinesse of spirit Deut. 12.7 And there you shall eat before the Lord your God and ye shall rejoyce in all that ye put your hand unto ye and your housholds Levit. 10.19 And Aaron said unto Moses Behold this day have they offered their sinne offerings and their burnt offerings before the Lord and such things have befallen me and if I had eaten the sinne offering to day should it have been accepted in the sight of the Lord Now Eli the Priest sat upon a seat by a post of the Temple of the Lord. That is of the Tabernacle for as Solomons Temple is sometimes called a Tabernacle Jer. 10.20 My Tabernacle is spoyled and all my cords are broken so the Tabernacle is here called the Temple of the Lord. But yet it seems too that the Tabernacle was at this time within some house built for that purpose in Shiloh and hence there is mention here of a seat by a post where Eli sat and afterwards of doores chap. 3.15 And Samuel lay untill the morning and opened the doores of the house of the Lord whereas the Tabernacle had neither gates nor posts nor seats before it but onely a vail that was hung up at the entring into it Exod. 26.36 Vers 11. And she vowed a vow and said c. To wit as it followeth afterwards that if the Lord would give her a man-child she would give him unto the Lord all the dayes of his life and that he should be
that is the Lord shall rule the whole world and at the last day he shall judge all the inhabitants of the earth yea and that by the Messiah the Lord Christ his anointed King who though at first he shall live in a low and mean estate and condition yet when he hath finished the work of mans redemption he shall then be exalted above all principalities and powers and shall sit down at the right hand of his father all power shall be given him both in heaven and in earth he shall gather in his elect people among all nations govern them by his word and spirit and destroy all his and their enemies Thus I say it is generally thought by Interpreters that these words are a prophecie concerning Christ the Lords anointed yet in regard the kingdome afterward established amongst the Jews was a figure of the kingdome of Christ it may also be well understood of that Vers 11. And the child did minister unto the Lord before Eli the Priest This is repeated again vers 18. where it is also added that in his ministring before the Lord he was girded with a linen Ephod It is expressely said in the former chapter vers 24. that Samuel was carried by his parents to the Tabernacle and left there so soon as even he was weaned But we cannot possibly think that there was any service of the Tabernacle that at those years Samuel was able to do and therefore the meaning of this clause is onely that afterwards even whilest he was yet but a child de did such service in the Tabernacle as according to his years and strength he was capable of doing The Levites indeed did not enter upon the service of the Tabernacle till they were twentie five years old Levit. 8.24 But now Samuels case was extraordinary because by the speciall vow of a Nazarite he was even from his tender years consecrated to the service of the Lord and therefore we see even in his childhood he did wait upon the service of the Tabernacle to wit in such services as still by degrees he grew able to do as happely in locking and unlocking the doores of the Tabernacle in laying up and fetching out the vestments of the Priests and such like for that it was some ministerie in the Tabernacle that he was employed in is evident because vers 18. it is said that he wore a linen Ephod which was an holy garment in the doing of it We find not indeed in the law of Moses that there was any such linen Ephods appointed for the Levites but for the inferiour Priests onely the sonnes of Aaron Exod. 39.27 And they made coats of fine linen of woven work for Aaron and for his sonnes either therefore afterwards when the Tabernacle came to be settled in the land of Canaan it was ordered and that by divine authoritie that the Levites also should wear such linen Ephods when they attended upon the service of the Tabernacle or else Samuel was by speciall dispensation because of the Nazarites vow or some other reason appointed to wear this holy vestment which yet seems not so probable because it appears that this linen Ephod was so commonly worn by all that were employed in holy services that even David also when he danced before the Ark 2. Sam. 6.14 was girded with a linen Ephod However hereby I say it is clear that Samutl in his childhood and youth did attend upon the service of the Tabernacle in such services as he could then discharge and that before Eli the Priest that is according as he was ordered and directed by Eli who undertook the training of him up and upon whom he chiefly attended in the service he did Vers 12. Now the sonnes of Eli were sonnes of Belial they knew not the Lord. This is meant of the effectuall knowledge of faith so they knew not the Lord they had no lively knowledge nor apprehension of God They that have a floating knowledge in their brains of those things which they believe not in their hearts may be well said not to know that which by a speculative knowledge they understand well enough and so they that understand well enough those things which God hath revealed concerning himself either by his word or works if this their knowledge be not accompanied with faith and the fear of God and so though they know God yet they do not glorifie him as God Rom. 1.21 these men do not indeed know God they may say they know him but their own works may confute them for if they did indeed know him they would fear him and honour him as God They professe that they know God saith the Apostle concerning such men as these Tit. 1.16 but in their works they denie him being abominable and disobedient and unto every good work reprobate He that saith I know him saith S. John 1. John 2.4 and keepeth not his commandments is a liar and the truth is not in him and thus it is said here of the sonnes of Eli that they knew not the Lord Though they were Priests whose office it was to teach and instruct the people in the knowledge of God yet because they were wicked ungodly wretches sonnes of Belial concerning which expression see the note Deut 13.13 therefore they are said not to have known the Lord as upon the same ground the Prophet Hosea complained of the people of God in his time that there was no knowledge of God in the land Hos 4.1 And this is here inserted concerning the sonnes of Eli to intimate both the faith of Samuels parents in leaving him and also the singular grace of God in preserving him pure and incorrupt where there was such danger of infection by reason of these sonnes of Belial with whom he was to live Vers 13. The Priests servant came whilest the flesh was in seething with a flesh-hook of three teeth in his hand c. Concerning this flesh-hook see Exod. 27.3 The sinne of these sonnes of Eli here set forth was this first that not content with the breast and shoulder which onely were the Priests portion of the peace-offerings Levit. 7.31 32 33 34. they used to take out of that which was seething for the sacrifices as their customarie fees not having any Law of God for it all that their flesh-hook could take out and it is said that this they did not now and then but alwayes vers 14. So they did in Shiloh unto all the Israelites that came thither Again sometimes they would have this their overplus customarie portion before the flesh was seething that they might rost it yea before the fat was burnt directly against that Law Levit. 7.31 And the Priest shall burn the fat upon the altar but the breast shall be Aarons and his sonnes yea and perhaps before the fat was taken off which may be the reason why vers 29. they are said to have made themselves fat with the chiefest of the offerings Vers 18. But Samuel ministred before the Lord
that whereas when one man wrongs another the Judge or umpire chosen between may compose the difference and reconcile them together it is otherwise when a man wittingly maliciously and presumptuously sinnes against God for there all hope of pardon is denied there remains no more sacrifice for sinne that is for such a mans sinne Heb. 10.26 neither should such an one be prayed for 1. John 5.16 If any man see his brother sinne a sinne which is not unto death he shall ask and he shall give him life for them that sinne not unto death There is a sinne unto death I do not say he shall pray for it But this Exposition agreeth not with Eli his aim which was doubtlesse to winne his sonnes to true repentance and besides why should sinning against the Lord be here restrained to sinning against him maliciciously and with a high hand I rather therefore think that the drift of these words is onely to shew them what a grievous and dangerous thing sinne is especially such sinnes whereby God is immediately wronged and provoked that so he might scarre them from their evil courses to wit either because if God by his Judges punish offences against man he must needs be more severe when men rise against him or else because no mediation nor satisfaction by man can here take up the quarrell as may be done when the difference is between one man and another If one man saith he sinne against another the Judge shall judge him that is an Umpire may come and take up the controversie the partie may be adjudged to make satisfaction and there will be an end of the quarrell but if a man sinne against the Lord who shall intreat for him that is no mediation nor satisfaction of man can here make a mans peace no reconciliation can be here hoped for unlesse the sinner repenting of his sinnes do by faith in Christ turn to God So that herein also is implied the desperate danger of their condition who by kicking against the sacrifices did in a manner despise this onely means of their reconciliation with God Notwithstanding they hearkened not unto the voice of their father because the Lord would slay them That is because the Lord had determined to destroy them and so consequently not to give them grace to repent but to leave them to the stubbornesse of their own wicked hearts for though it be true that God wills not the death of a sinner Ezek. 33.11 As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live that is he desires not that sinners should perish but would rather that they should repent c. yet it doth not hence follow but that God may determine in a way of justice not to give any effectuall grace to such and such men as have grievously provoked him by their sinnes but rather to deliver them up to hardnesse of heart and so it was here for their sinnes God determined to destroy them and consequently to leave them to themselves and therefore it was no wonder though they minded not the reproofs and counsell of their father Vers 26. And the child Samuel grew on and was in favour both with the Lord and also with men This is here inserted first for the greater praise of Samuel who grew in grace even in these declining times and secondly especially to shew how God remembred mercie in the midst of judgement by raising up such a glorious instrument to be a stay to his poore people in those dismall times that were now coming upon them Vers 27. Did I plainly appear unto the house of thy father when they were in Egypt in Pharaohs house to wit by choosing Aaron of whom Eli was descended to joyn himself with Moses for the deliverance of the Israelites when they were in bondage to Pharaoh in Egypt Vers 29. Wherefore kick ye at my sacrifice and at mine offering which I have commanded in my habitation and honourest thy sonnes above me c. In this clause first Eli and his sonnes are reproved for kicking against Gods sacrifices and offerings and they are said to kick at his sacrifices c. 1. because they seemed not pleased that God had so much and they so little of the sacrifices and offerings and therefore in a proud and scornfull manner took from the sacrifices for their own use what they pleased themselves and 2. because by their doing what they listed about Gods sacrifices and by carrying themselves as if they thought any thing that they were pleased to leave after they had served themselves good enough for Gods altar and generally by their profane and carelesse carriage of themselves in the sacred service whereto they could not have addressed themselves with too much reverence and fear they discovered what a sleight and base esteem they had of Gods sacrifices which was all one in effect as if they had trampled them under their feet and 3. because by their insolent and wilfull disobeying the law of the sacrifices which God had given them in charge they did as it were kick and spurn against God in his Ordinances And though Eli did not this but his sonnes onely yet because he did not restrain them from these evil practises and punish them for their wickednesse herein it is charged upon him as well as upon them Wherefore kick ye at my sacrifice c. and secondly Eli is reproved for honouring his sonnes above God and that because he was more carefull to please his children then to please God to keep them in their places then to vindicate Gods sacrifices from being polluted Vers 30. I said indeed that thy house and the house of thy father should walk before me for ever c. Because the taking away the high Priests place from Eli and his familie is not the onely punishment here threatned though the chief for the cutting off many of his posteritie from the inferiour priesthood is also included in the evil denounced against him in this place vers 31. Behold the dayes come that I will cut off thine arm and the arm of thy fathers house that there shall not be an old man in thine house therefore this which is here said of a conditionall promise formerly made which should now be reversed because the condition was not performed cannot be referred to any particular promise made to Eli or any decree of Gods concerning Eli that the high Priesthood should be continued in his line but to that promise made to Aaron and his seed in generall Exod. 29.9 Thou shalt qird them with girdles Aaron and his sonnes and put the bonnets on them and the Priests office shall be theirs for a perpetuall statute which is now reversed as concerning Eli his familie whom the Lord threatens to cut off in a great part from the priesthood given at first to Aaron and his seed Vers 31. Behold the dayes come that I will cut off
types and who was at his coming to abolish the Leviticall priesthood Vers 36. Every one that is left in thy house shall come and crouch to him for a piece of silver c. That is those of thy posteritie that shall not be cut off shall come and bow and crouch before the posteritie of Zadok to beg some relief and to sue that they may be employed though it were but in some of the meanest services of the Temple onely that they may have bread wherewith to sustain themselves and indeed if we yield what is most probable to wit that the Priests were many times degraded for their evil deeds and turned out of their office it needs not seem strange that many of Elies posteritie should fall into such extreme povertie and miserie Some conceive that we have some footsteps of this curse in that which is said of the Priests that were not of Zadoks posteritie Ezek. 44.13 14. And they shall not come near unto me to do the office of a Priest unto me nor to come near to any of my holy things in the most holy place but they shall bear their shame and their abominations which they have committed But I will make them keepers of the charge of the house for all the service thereof and for all that shall be done therein CHAP. III. Vers 1. ANd the child Samuel ministred unto the Lord before Eli See the note chap. 2.11 Vers 3. And the word of the Lord was precious in those dayes c. That is rare for so this word is used elsewhere Esa 13.12 I will make a man more precious then fine gold and so it is explained here in the following clause The word of the Lord was precious in those dayes there was no open vision That is there was not a known Prophet in those dayes there was not a man openly known to whom the Lord appeared in visions as afterwards he did to his Prophets or whom the Lord did send forth among the people with a word of prophecie in his mouth Now this is thus expressed partly to shew how the Lord hereby punished the profanenesse of these times many of the Priests were grown in these dayes desperately wicked and by their means the worship of God grew into contempt for men abhorred the offerings of the Lord chap. 2.17 and so by degrees idolatrie and all other sinnes grew rife amongst them as is evident by the reformation following immediately after this when Samuel came to be their Judge chap. 7.3 4. Now hereupon as these words implie the Lord hid himself in a great measure from his people and did not reveal his will by his Prophets to them as at other times according to that which is threatned Amos 8.11 I will send a famine in the land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the words of the Lord and that complaint of the Church Psal 74.9 We see not our signes there is no more any Prophet c. and then again it is expressed partly for the honour of Samuel by and in whom the Lord was pleased to reestablish in his Church this propheticall office whence it is that often in the Scripture Samuel is mentioned as the first of the Prophets as 2. Chron. 35.18 And there was no Passeover like to that kept in Israel from the dayes of Samuel the Prophet and Acts 3.24 Yea and all the Prophets from Samuel and those that follow after as many as have spoken have likewise foretold of these dayes and so also Heb. 11.32 Vers 2. And it came to passe at that time when Eli was laid down in his place c. Here the time is set down when the Lord appeared first to Samuel first more generally that it was in those dayes when the word of the Lord was so precious so rare for to this in the words immediately foregoing I conceive this clause may best be referred And it came to passe at that time though indeed others referre it to that which is related in the foregoing chapter vers 27. concerning a message that was brought unto Eli by a man of God that was sent unto him to wit that at that time when the aforesaid Prophet had spoke unto Eli then also the Lord appeared to Samuel and told him of the judgements that should fall upon Eli and his house and then secondly more particularly as first that it was in the night when Eli was laid down in his place that is when he was gone to bed and laid down to his rest to wit in some lodging of the house wherein the Tabernacle was kept of which see the note before chap. 19. and secondly that it was towards morning vers 3. ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of the Lord where the Ark of God was that is before the lamps that were in the golden candlestick in the Tabernacle were gone out the oyl being wasted for in the evening the lamps were lighted and so burnt all night till they went out in the morning concerning which see the note Exod. 30.7 whence it is said 2. Chron. 13.11 that the lamps of the golden candlestick were to burn every evening as for that clause vers 2. concerning the dimnesse of Elies eyes when Eli was laid down in his place and his eyes began to wax dim that he could not see that is inserted either to implie also the time when the Lord appeared to Samuel namely that it was when Eli was now grown very old insomuch that he began to be blind with age or else rather to implie beforehand the reason why Samuel supposing that Eli had called him when the Lord spake to him was so ready even in the night time to run to him namely because Eli could not see and therefore often wanted help in regard whereof Samuel who now in his young years attended upon Eli was wont to rise and go to him if he heard him call though it were at midnight Vers 7. Now Samuel did not yet know the Lord c. That is he was not yet acquainted with Gods manner of revealing himself to his Prophets by visions Vers 8. And Eli perceived that the Lord had called the child By this we may perceive the reason why the Lord suffered Samuel so often to mistake the voice that he heard and run to Eli to wit that Eli might certainly be assured when he heard Gods message from him that indeed the Lord had appeared to him Vers 10. And the Lord came and stood and called c. This proves not that God appeared in a visible shape rather it is a speech of God after the manner of men yet happely withall to implie either that whereas before the voice he heard was as of one afarre off now it was as of one that stood near by him or else that whereas before the Lord onely called him now he did not onely call him but also proceeded to make known what he had to say to him
but also of other things revealed to him by the Lord at other times in regard whereof that is added which follows in the next verse the Lord appeared again in Shiloh to wit to Samuel Vers 21. For the Lord revealed himself to Samuel in Shiloh by the word of the Lord. That is by Christ the word of his Father or by revealing his will and word unto him which afterwards was to be delivered by him to others to wit by propheticall revelation and not by any corporall or visible apparition CHAP. IV. Vers 1. ANd the word of Samuel came to all Israel Or came to passe the meaning is that Samuel as a Prophet made known the word of the Lord as to Eli before so afterwards to all Israel reproving them for their sinnes and telling them beforehand the judgements that would fall upon them if they did not repent All which did accordingly come upon them Now Israel went against the Philistines to battel c. Who began now again to invade the land of Israel It may seem that all the fourtie years of Elies judging Israel they had been quiet happely because they had been so exceedingly weakned by the slaughter which Samson made so often among them especially at his death where no doubt most of their princes and lords were slain Judg. 16.30 And Samson said Let me die with the Philistines and he bowed himself with all his might and the house fell upon the lords and upon all the people that were therein so the dead which he slew at his death were mo then they which he slew in his life But now they began again to quarrell with the Israelites and that no doubt not without the secret counsell of God who intended to punish hereby both the Priests and people of Israel and hereupon it was that the Philistines being entred upon the land of Israel the Israelites were gathered together to fight with them now the camp of the Israelites was besides Eben-ezer that is a place where afterward a stone was erected that was called Eben-ezer the occasion whereof we may see chap. 7.11 12. and the camp of the Philistines was in Aphek a citie in the tribe of Judah which bordered upon the land of the Philistines see Josh 15.53 Vers 3. Wherefore hath the Lord smitten us to day before the Philistines Let us fetch the Ark c. Though idolatrie and many other grosse sinnes were at this time rife amongst the Israelites They provoked him to anger with their high places and moved him to jealousie with their graven images saith the Psalmist concerning these very times Psal 78.58 yet so blind and stupid they were that because they were the seed of Abraham and the people of God they wondered why God should take the uncircumcised Philistines part against them never minding or mentioning their own wickednesse which had provoked the Lord to bring these miseries upon them Wherefore say they hath the Lord smitten us to day before the Philistines and vainly they thought to mend all for the future by fetching the Ark of God to be amongst them Let us say they fetch the Ark of the covenant of the Lord out of Shiloh unto us that when it cometh among us it may save us out of the hand of our enemies Now however they were moved no doubt to take this course first because the Ark was the signe of Gods presence amongst them whence it is said vers 4. that the people sent to Shiloh that they might bring from thence the Ark of the covenant of the Lord of hosts which dwelleth between the Cherubims and secondly because the Israelites in former times had prevailed mightily against their enemies when the Ark was amongst them as when they vanquished the Midianites Num. 31.6 and at the sacking of Jericho when the walls of the citie fell down before them Josh 6.4 5. and on the other side when the Ark was not with them they had gone by the worst as when they went out to fight against the Canaanites Num. 14.44 45. They presumed to go up unto the hill top nevertheles the Ark of the covenant of the Lord and Moses departed not out of the camp Then the Amalekites came down and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill and smote them and discomfited them even to Hormah and therefore it seems afterwards to have been an usuall custome to carrie forth the Ark into the field with them for Saul had it with him when he was in arms against the Philistines chap. 14.18 Saul said unto Ahiah Bring hither the Ark of God for the Ark of God was at that time with the children of Israel and Joab as some think had it with him when he went out against the Ammonites the Ark and Israel and Judah abide in tents said Uriab 2. Sam. 11.11 yet because at present they did merely rest upon the outward signe and did not repent them of their sinnes whereby they had forfeited their interest in God nor seek to make their peace with God as they ought to have done therefore their confidence in the Ark was groundlesse and vain and the signe of Gods presence became ineffectuall amongst them And doubtlesse there was a secret overruling hand of God in this their sudden resolution to fetch the Ark into the camp whereby he made way to the delivering up the Ark into the power of the enemie and to the death of the two sonnes of Eli who coming along with the Ark were slain by the Philistines Vers 4. And the two sonnes of Eli Hophni and Phinehas were there with the Ark of the covenant of God To wit either to carrie it as Num. 4.15 or at least to attend it Vers 7. And the Philistines were afraid for they said God is come into the camp This happely the Philistines spake as thinking the Ark to be some representation of the God of the Israelites and having the same opinion of it as they had of their own idols at least they conceived that there was some divine power that went along with the Ark where it went which was the reason why they were stricken with such astonishment and fear And they said Wo unto us for there hath not been such a thing heretofore That is in former conflicts we have had with them they used not to bring their Ark into the camp even by this unwonted shout of the Israelites we may see how much greater their hope and confidence is now then it hath been formerly Vers 8. These are the Gods that smote the Egyptians with all the plagues in the wildernesse In the former part of this clause it is manifest that the Philistines speak of those divers great plagues wherewith the Lord smote both Pharaoh and his people in Egypt thereby forcing them to let his people go but these words in the wildernesse are added in the close because in the overthrow of the Egyptians in the red sea which joyned to the desert of Etham Exod. 13.20 there was a
consummation of all the former plagues Vers 13. For his heart trembled for the Ark of God Which proceeded partly from the guiltinesse of his conscience and the remembrance of those heavie things which had been spoken to him first by the man of God chap. 2.27 and then by Samuel chap. 3.18 and partly from the great care be took above all for the Ark lest that should fall into the hands of the uncircumcised Philistines Vers 15. Now Eli was ninetie and eight years old and his eyes were dim that he could not see His age is mentioned as the cause of his blindnesse his blindnesse as the cause why he took no notice of this dolefull messenger till he perceived somewhat was amisse by the crie of the people Vers 18. And it came to passe when he made mention of the Ark of God that he fell from off the seat This implies first the suddennesse of his death no sooner did the messenger make mention of the Ark but presently his heart died within him and so falling down backward he brake his neck and secondly how grievous it was to him to heare the Ark was taken though he was able to endure the relation of the flight and slaughter of the people yea of the death of his two sonnes yet as soon as he began the relation of the arks being taken that presently struck him into a deadly swo●n As for the gate from the seat whereof he fell either it was the gate of the city or of the Tabernacle and if the last be meant very observable it is that in the place where his sonnes had so grievously sinned chap. 2.22 this heavy hand of God should fall upon him For he was an old man and heavy Both his weaknesse through age and the corpulency and unwieldnesse of his body were the cause that falling he brake his neck and therefore are they here expressed Vers 19. When she heard the tydings that the ark of God was taken and that her father in law and her husband were dead she bowed her self c. As women are wont to do when the pains of travell come upon them Vers 20. But she answered not neither did she regard it That is she made no answer to that wherewith they sought to comfort her as indeed not regarding it but rather proceeded on in expressing her sorrow by giving that name Ichabod that is Where is the glorie or there is no glorie to her sonne that was born Vers 21. The glorie is departed from Israel c God was the glorie of his people because rejecting other nations he had chosen them to be his peculiar treasure Psal 106.20 Thus they changed their glorie into the similitude of an oxe that eateth grasse Jer. 2.11 Hath a nation changed their gods which are yet no gods but my people have changed their glory for that which doth not profit and therefore she saith that the glorie was departed from Israel because they had lost the ark which was the signe of Gods presence amongst them and consequently their glorie Psal 26.8 Lord I have loved the habitation of thy house and the place where thine honour dwelleth and Psal 78.60 61. So that he forsook the Tabernacle of Shiloh the tent which he placed among men and delivered his strength into captivitie and his glorie into the enemies hands CHAP. V. Vers 2. WHen the Philistines took the ark of God they brought it into the house of Dagon and set it by Dagon This they did either in contempt of the ark presenting it as a captive before their Dagon by whose help they perswaded themselves it was that they had overcome both the Hebrews and their God or else out of a kind of reverence they bare to this God of the Hebrews whom therefore they thought good to place with Dagon in his Temple Whence also perhaps it was that they feared to offer any violence to it by opening it and taking forth those holy things that were in it Vers 3. Behold Dagon was fallen upon his face to the earth before the ark of the Lord. And hereby did the Lord discover to the Philistines what a vain idol their Dagon was and that the God of Israel was the onely true almightie God yea the more the Lord was magnified herein because he cast down this idol-god in his own temple enemies being never foyled with more glorie to the conquerour then when they are overcome in their own dominions Besides the ark being a type of Christ by whom God reveales his will unto men in the ministerie of the Gospel the fall of Dagon before the ark did notably shadow forth the ruine of idolatrie by the preaching of the Gospel God will not suffer any rivall-gods to stand cheek by jowl with him but when the Gospel comes in idolatrie shall down And they took Dagon and set him in his place again Had Dagon fallen but once being at first dashed in pieces they might have pretended that it came by some casualtie but now when upon the first fall they set it up again and no doubt used all the skill they could to fasten it this made it beyond all excuse manifest that by the mightie power of God onely it was beaten down Vers 4. And the head of Dagon and both the palms of his hands were cut off upon the threshold c. The head the seat of wisedome and the hands wherewith the strength of man is put forth were cut off to shew that there was neither knowledge nor power in this their idol-god Besides now the priests could not set up their idol again and conceal his overthrow from the people as before perhaps they did By casting the head and hands upon the threshold that those that entred might presently trample upon them the Lord shewed the basenesse of this their idol-god or that he would have this spectacle scarre them from coming any more into that Temple for that grosse idolatry whereto they had formerly given themselves As for that last clause onely the stump of Dagon was left to him in the Originall it is onely Dagon remained the ground whereof may be because the most of the idol that remained was the fishie part For Dag signifieth a fish now because this idol was so called in regard that in the nether parts it resembled a fish the hands and head being cut off it is said that onely Dagon remained see the note Judges 16.23 Vers 5. Therefore neither the priests of Dagon nor any that come into Dagons house tread on the threshold c. This they did either by way of veneration as accounting the threshold sanctified by the touch of the head and hands of their idol or rather by way of detestation as thinking that it was the falling of their idol upon the threshold that had dashed it in pieces for why else should they not as well have forborn to tread upon the pavement where the body of their idol lay however thus by the alruling Providence of God even
their superstition became a means to perpetuate the memorie of this wonderfull work of God in the confusion of their idol which otherwise within some short time might have been forgotten Vers 6. But the hand of the Lord was heavy upon them of Ashdod and he destroyed them and smote them with emerods Because that the Lord had so clearly discovered to the men of Ashdod that their Dagon was a vain idol and that the God of Israel whose ark they had boldly surprized was the onely true almighty God to wit by casting down their idol before the Ark and at last breaking it in pieces and yet notwithstanding they continued still as superstitiously devoted to their idol as they were before and were not afraid still to detain the ark of God in captivity as at the first therefore now the Lord began to take vengeance on the men of Ashdod the hand of the Lord was heavy upon the men of Ashdod c. Many Expositours understand the next words and he destroyed them of the plague of mice wherewith also that this time he destroyed and wasted their land chap. 6.5 and others of some other mortall disease which God sent amongst them besides the emerods but I rather conceive that all the following words are meant of the plague of the emerods wherewith God smote them and he destroyed them and smote them with emerods onely these words and he destroyed them are prefixed to make known that this disease of the emerods was amongst them not onely painfull and disgracefull Psal 78.66 And he smote his enemies in the hinder parts he put them to a perpetuall shame but mortall also so that many died of them and therefore the Ekronites cried out vers 10. They have brought about the Ark of the God of Israel to us to slay us and our people Vers 8. And they answered Let the Ark of the God of Israel be carried about unto Gath. This the Lords of the Philistines resolved upon to try hereby whether it were the presence of the ark that had caused those plagues or whether they came by chance with which conceit as yet they chuckered themselves else the Princes of Gath who were in this counsell amongst the other Lords of the Philistines would never have consented to the removing of the Ark to their city Vers 11. Send away the Ark of the God of Israel c. The men of Ekron being fully now convinced that it was because of the Ark that so much misery was fallen on them desire plainly that it might be sent back to the land of Israel but it seems their Princes loth yet to part with such a glorious trophee of their victory desired to try yet a little further for that after this it was sent both to Gaza and Ashkelon is evident chap. 6. vers 4. Then said they What shall be the trespasse-offering which we shall return to him They answered Five golden emerods and five golden mice according to the number of the lords of the Philistines for one plague was on you all and on your Lords and again vers 17. And these are the golden emerods which the Philistines returned for a trespasse-offering unto the Lord for Ashdod one for Gaza one for Ashkelon one c. Vers 12. And the men that died not were smitten with the emerods The meaning of this may be that there were many smitten with the emerods besides those that died of them or else we must hold that there was some other deadly disease which God sent amongst them besides the emerods which is called in the foregoing verse a deadly destruction CHAP. VI. Vers 2. ANd the Philistines called for the priests and the diviners saying What shall we do to the Ark of the Lord c. Thus was God the more glorified when their very priests the most zealous maintainers of their idol-gods were brought to give this following advice which tended so much to the honour of the Lord and the shame of their idols The question they propounded to their priests was not What shall we do with the Ark but What shall we do to the Ark of the Lord Tell us wherewith we shall send it to his place that is in what manner and with what gifts shall we send back the Ark Being convinced by the heavy hand of God that lay upon them that they had trespassed some way against the Ark it seems their reason led them to think that some satisfaction or other was to be made and thereupon being resolved to send it away they consulted wherewith they should send back the Ark Vers 3. Then ye shall be healed and it shall be known to you why his hand is not removed from you That is if they were healed as they confidently assured themselves it would prove then hereby they should know why hetherto his hand had not been removed from them Vers 4. They answered Five golden emerods and five golden mice according to the number of the lords of the Philistines These were the trespasse-offerings which their priests and diviners advised them to send back with the Ark to wit as by way of acknowledgement that the God of Israel had brought upon them those plagues of the emerods and mice for their holding of the Ark of God captive amongst them and therefore the reason given in the following verse why they would have these presents sent back with the Ark is that they might hereby give glory to the God of Israel namely by an acknowledgement and confession of their sinne and the just hand of God that had been upon them for their sinne vers 5. Ye shall make images of your emerods and images of your mice that marre the land and ye shall give glory unto the God of Israel the very same expression which Joshua used when he advised Achan to confesse his fault Josh 7.19 My sonne saith he give I pray thee glory to the Lord God of Israel It may well be indeed which some conceive that the sending of such absurd and ridiculous gifts with the Ark as emerods and mice was suggested by Sathan to their diviners in contempt of God but if it were so whilst Sathan intended hereby to dishonour God the Lord by his alruling providence intended hereby to cast the shame upon them and to bring great glory to his own name whilst the Philistines themselves were made to send into the land of Israel such things as might there remain perpetuall monuments and memorialls of those shamefull punishments wherewith God had humbled them It cannot well be conceived how they could make images of their emerods without making images of their secret parts where they were smitten with those ulcers which we call piles or emerods Now what a shame must it needs be to the Philistines to send to the Israelites the images of their secret parts thus tortured with an ignominious disease Doubtlesse they must needs judge it a great reproch to their nation but when men are under the wrath of the
Almighty what will they not do to be rid of the judgements that lie upon them Vers 5. Peradventure he will lighten his hand from off you and from off your gods From this passage some Expositours gather that not Dagon onely but many other of their idol-gods were thrown down and broken to pieces by a secret hand of God in all the cities whither the Ark was brought as indeed it is probable the like was done in Egypt when the Lord punished Pharaoh and his people because they would not let the Israelites go Against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgement saith the Lord Exod. 12.12 and Num. 33.4 it is said The Egyptians buried all their first-born upon their gods also the Lord executed judgements But yet because this is not expressed in the story others understand this which is said here of the hand of the Lord which was upon their gods onely of the reproch and dishonour that was brought upon their idols partly by the Lords casting down Dagon and partly by the heavy judgements he had infflicted upon the people that served them and that this hand of God it was which the Philistine-priests hoped would be lightned from off their gods if the Ark were sent back with those trespasse-offerings they had now prescribed Vers 6. Wherefore then do ye harden your hearts as the Egyptians and Pharaoh hardned their hearts c. By this it may seem that though the greatest number enclined to the sending of the Ark back vers 2. What shall we do say they to the Ark of the Lord Tell us wherewith we shall send it to his place yet some were of a contrary judgement and opposed it and therefore are here blamed for hardning their hearts against the means which God had used to convince them of their sinne Vers 7. Now therefore make a new cart and take two milch-kine on which then hath come no yoke c. It may well be that these idolatrous priests and diviners of the Philistines did not merely of their own invention prescribe this strange way of sending home the Ark to make tryall whether the God of Israel would by a supernaturall power cause these milch-kine to go the right way with it but were herein directed to do what they did by their practices of sorcerie and divination but if it were so even herein too there was an over-ruling hand of providence that disposed of all as might be most for Gods glorie A new cart was doubtlesse appointed as a signe of their reverencing the Ark their choosing young heifers that had never been employed in any profane service might also be done for the same cause out of reverence to the Ark but the main end was to make the hand of God the more manifest if they should go along the right way to the land of Israel Custome might make cattel used to the yoke to go on right forward when they are once entred into a beaten way but young things not used to the yoke especially when their calves were shut up from them were not like to do so it was a wonder that they should endure the yoke at all Vers 8. And put the jewels of gold which ye return him for a trespasse-offering in a coffer c. These jewels of gold were the golden images of the emerods and mice which they put in a coffer as not daring to venture it seems to put them into the Ark. Vers 9. And see if it goeth up by the way of his own coast to Bethshemesh A citie of Judah Josh 15.10 close by the confines of Judea and Philistea and in the way to Shiloh and therefore propounded here by the Philistines Priests as the citie whither the kine would go if Gods hand were in the businesse Vers 12. And the kine took the straight way to the way of Bethshemesh c. And thus did the Lord by his all-ruling power and providence prosper the device which they had contrived to discover whether it was by him and for their detaining the Ark that they had been of late so severely punished that he might confound them by their own inventions Bethshemesh was one of the Priests cities Josh 21.16 so that the kines carrying the Ark thither was as if they had intended to deliver it up into their hands to whom the custodie of it did of right appertain And the lords of the Philistines went after them unto the border of Bethshemesh Thus by the providence of God it was brought about that they who ere-while as victours did carrie away the Ark as their captive do now as servants and pages attend upon it when it returned home into the land of Israel Vers 13. And they of Bethshemesh were reaping their wheat-harvest Wheat-harvest in that countrey used to be in our May at the feast of Pentecost Lev. 23.16 Whence we may gather that the Ark was taken about November since it was vers 1. seven moneths in the countrey of the Philistines Vers 14. And they clave the wood of the cart and offered the kine a burnt-offering unto the Lord. That this is spoken of the men of Bethshemesh and not as some would have it of the Lords of the Philistines that came after the Ark to see what would become of it is evident by the very connexion of the words In the foregoing verse it is said that they of Bethshemesh were reaping c. and they lifted up their eyes and saw the Ark and rejoyced to see it and in this verse now it follows And they clave the wood of the cart and offered the kine a burnt-offering to the Lord. Besides when the men of Bethshemesh came flocking about the Ark and the Levites had taken down the Ark out of the cart as it followeth in the next verse is there any likelihood that they would suffer the uncircumcised Philistines to come amongst them to offer up a sacrifice to the God of Israel they standing by and as it were communicating with them in their sacrifice Surely no rather we may well think that the lords of the Philistines followed the Ark aloof off onely desiring to see what would become of it and came not near the Israelites and therefore it is said vers 16. that when the five lords of the Philistines had seen it that is when they had seen what was done they returned to Ekron the same day The greatest difficultie is concerning the offering up of kine which we know was not according to Gods Law and therefore liker to be the act of the Philistines then of the Priests of Israel for the Law did expressely command that none but males should be offered in burnt-offerings Levit. 1.3 If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd let him offer a male without blemish But to this it may be answered that either the men of Bethshemesh did sinne herein being transported by the excesse of their joy and that this might be one thing wherewith they displeased God and provoked him to
for it is expressely said in that very place vers 2. that the city out of which the Ark was then fetched was Baal of Judah which was Kirjath-jearim as is before noted Josh 15.9 and the city Gibeah was in the tribe of Benjamin Josh 18.28 Judg. 19.14 The third particular here related is that having carried the Ark into the ●o●se of Abinadab in the hill they sanctified Eleazar his sonne to keep the Ark of the Lord that is they chose him to be set apart to this holy imployment even to give continuall attendance upon the Ark that he might keep others from coming near to pollute or defile it and to that end they caused him to fit and prepare himself in all holy manner for this sacred charge under which the washing of his garments with water and such other ceremonies of legall purifying may be comprehended as we see Exod. 19.10 And the Lord said unto Moses Go unto the people and sanctifie them to day and to morrow and let them wash their clothes But may some say when the Israelites had gotten the Ark again out of the land of the Philistines why did they not carry it back to the Tabernacle in Shiloh I answer at first the terrour of the men of Bethshemesh might be the cause that it was presently removed to Kirjath-jearim a city near unto Bethshemesh yet because the Ark stayed there so long it is most probable that either it was at first removed thither or at least afterward continued there not without the consent of Samuel their Judge and the other Elders of Israel yea happely not without expresse direction from the Lord and that because Shiloh was destroyed when the Ark was taken by the Philistines or else rather because the Lord would still shew his indignation against the former wickednesse of that place by not suffering the Ark to be carried thither again Vers 2. And it came to passe while the Ark abode in Kirjath-jearim that the time was long for it was twenty years c. This is not meant of the whole term of the Arks remaining in Kirjath-jearim for between the death of Eli presently after which the Ark was brought to this place and the beginning of Davids reigne when it was first removed thence 2. Sam. 6.2 3. there must needs be fourty years allowed for the government of Saul and Samuel Act. 13.21 all which time the Ark continued in Kirjath-jearim unlesse when it was for a while onely carried forth into the camp in the warre against the Philistines chap. 14.18 And Saul said unto Ahiah Bring hither the Ark of God for the Ark of God was at that time with the children of Israel The meaning therefore of this clause is onely thus that twenty years were expired ere the people by the exhortations of Samuel or by the troubles that God brought upon them could be wonne to that solemne conversion related in the following verses concerning which it is said here in the last clause of this verse that all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord that is they were brought to bethink themselves of their sinnes and began with all humiliation and sorrow to seek the recovery of Gods love and favour and that no doubt because of the heavy oppression of the Philistines for it seems that ever since the taking of the Ark they had kept many of Israels cities in their hands and many wayes tyrannized over them as is evident vers 7. The Lords of the Philistines went up against Israel and when the children of Israel heard it they were afraid of the Philistines And vers 14. The cities which the Philistines had taken from Israel were restored to Israel c. Vers 3 And Samuel spake unto all the house of Israel c. That is to the Elders of Israel resorting to him from all places or to the people as he went about in his circuit Put away the strange gods and Ashtaroth from among you and prepare your hearts unto the Lord and serve him onely That is Content not your selves with the outward act of removing your strange gods but labour to bring your hearts into a fit temper for God purified by faith humbled with the sight and detestation of your sinnes and settled in a full purpose of amendment of life Concerning Ashtaroth see the Note Judges 2.13 Vers 5. And Samuel said Gather all Israel to Mizpeh and I will pray for you unto the Lord. Of Mizpeh see Judges 20.1 Thither the people are at present appointed to gather themselves 1. That they might there in a publick and solemn manner renew their Covenant with God and pray unto him for pardon and favour and 2. That they might there consult about means both for reforming of publick abuses and for making warre against the Philistines Vers 6. And they gathered together to Mizpeh and drew water and poured it out before the Lord and fasted on that day c. What this pouring forth of water before the Lord was and to what end it was done it is hard to say Many Expositours understand it merely of drawing and pouring forth water to wit as a kind of sacrifice or rather as a sacred Ceremony whereby they desired to signifie either First That they wished that those that should return to their idolatry again might utterly perish without hope of recovery as that water that was poured forth that could not be gathered up again according to that of the widdow of Tekoah 2. Sam. 14.14 We must needs die and are as water spilt upon the ground which cannot be gathered up again or Secondly That they did utterly renounce and cast away their idolatry even as that water was wholly poured forth out of their vessels not the least drop remaining behind and were resolved never more to take up their superstitious practises again no more then they would think of taking up that water again which they had so poured forth or Thirdly That they hoped that as the water being poured forth was streight gone out of sight and was not to be seen so the very remembrance of their sinnes should be blotted out before the Lord should be as it were perfectly washed away or Fourthly That in their confessions and prayers that day they did sincerely poure out their hearts to God even as that water was poured forth Thus I say many Expositours understand this to have been done according to the letter of the words and that it is said to be done before the Lord because it was done where they were met together in a way of religion to fast and pray before the Lord and where happely they had for the time the Ark of God amongst them But yet because we find no such ceremony any where enjoyned by Gods Law nor at any other time practised by Gods people others do I think upon better grounds conceive otherwise of these words For some hold that it is a figurative and hyperbolicall expression of their great lamentation and weeping to wit
this dignity that God had conferred upon him but of a modest and humble spirit and therefore not prone to boast and brag of it as others would have been Secondly because he feared to provoke his uncle and others of his family and kindred to envy him for this honour to which God had designed him And thirdly because he remembred how carefull Samuel had been to anoint him in secret where no body should be present chap. 9.25 26 27. which was intimation enough to Saul not to discover this secret till God should himself openly make known his will herein Notwithstanding this prudence of Saul in concealing what had passed betwixt Samuel and him yet when he was publickly chosen certain sonnes of Belial did openly despise him vers 27. and what then would they have done had it been known that Samuel had beforehand anointed him would not this have been a fair pretence for them to have said that this had been plotted beforehand betwixt Samuel and him Vers 17. And Samuel called the people together unto the Lord to Mizpeh See the note upon Judges 20.1 Vers 18. Thus saith the Lord God of Israel I brought up Israel out of Egypt c. This recitall of the mercies which God had afforded the Israelites is premised for the aggravation of their present sinne in rejecting the government which God had established amongst them Vers 19. And ye have this day rejected your God c. That is by your desiring a king the businesse which this day you are come about And herein doth Samuel covertly strike at their willfull persisting in this their requiring a king Samuel had done what he could to beat them from it but they continued resolved that so they would have it whereupon it was that he had now called them together to discover by lots who it was that God had chosen and therefore Samuel useth these words Ye have this day rejected your God c. See the notes chap. 8.7 Now therefore present your selves before the Lord by your tribes and by your thousands That is your families Mich. 5.2 But thou Beth-leem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel and this was done that by casting lots it might be discovered whom God had chosen to be their king Vers 22. Therefore they enquired of the Lord further if the man should yet come thither To wit either by Urim and Thummim in the high Preist or by desiring Samuel as a Prophet to enquire of the Lord for them And the Lord answered Behold he hath hid himself among the stuff That is among the publick carriages of the camp or among the baggage and implements of his own tent and this he did out of modesty as not deeming himself fit for so high an advancement or able to bear so great a burden especially the common-wealth of Israel being in such an unsettled and perillous condition as now it was Vers 25. Then Samuel told the people the manner of the kingdome c. That is both the duty of the king towards his subjects and the subjects toward their king and these were the fundamentall laws of the kingdome all which he wrote in a book as it follows in the next words and laid it up before the Lord that is before the Ark or in the Tabernacle and the reasons why this book vvas thus carefully laid up before the Lord we may well conceive were these First for the sure preservation of it Secondly to signifie that even these civill laws were the ordinance of God which men were bound to obey not onely for wrath but for conscience sake Rom. 13.2 5. And thirdly to intimate that God would take care of those laws to uphold and maintain them and to punish those that should vilifie and break them Vers 26. And there went with him a band of men whose hearts God had touched Though he was but a mean man to speak of and onely yet chosen and designed to the kingdome not inthroned for afterward he was solemnly confirmed and settled in the kingdome yet some were moved of God to think that it was fit they should attend upon him in his return home and accordingly there was a band of men who did voluntarily yeild him this service going along with him as a royall guard to attend and conduct him on the way Vers 27. But the children of Belial said How shall this man save us and they despised him and brought him no presents Because Saul was but a mean man to speak of therefore there was a company of proud dissolute lawlesse wretches that despised him as one altogether unfit to be king and unlikely to govern them and defend them from their enemies as a king should do and hence it was that they brought him no presents as it seems the rest of the people did to wit as a signe of their subjection and their acknowledging him to be their king for that was the custome of those times as is noted concerning Jehoshaphat 2. Chron. 17.5 The Lord established the kingdome in his hand and all Judah brought to Jehoshaphat presents whence it was also that when the wise men had found out Christ to whom they were directed by a starre as the king of the Jews they fell down and worshiped him Matt. 2.11 And when they had opened their treasures they presented unto him gifts gold and frankincense and myrrhe And indeed observable it is that though the Lord was highly displeased with the Israelites for desiring a king yet when he had once chosen Saul to be their king and conferred the royall dignity upon him those that despised him and would not submit to his government are for that branded to be children of Belial concerning which expression see the note Deut. 13.13 But he held his peace To avoid sedition and to winne them by lenity as considering that it was no wisdome to use severity being not yet settled in the kingdome CHAP. XI Vers 1. THen Nahash the Ammonite came up and encamped against Jabesh-Gilead A city without Jordan nigh unto the Ammonites This invasion was brewing against the Israelites before they desired a king and was in part the occasion of that their desire chap. 12.12 And when ye saw that Nahash the king of the children of Ammon came against you ye said unto me Nay but a king shall reigne over us when the Lord your God was your king But now happely it was the more hastened by Nahash the Ammonite because of the report which might be brought to him of the Israelites shaking off the government of Samuel and desiring a king to reigne over them and the division newly begun amongst them by reason of the discontent of some who would not acknowledge their new chosen king What they made the ground of their quarrell it is not expressed Like enough it was that old pretence which they stood upon Judg. 11.13 when
of Canaan is ascribed to Moses and Aaron First because they led the people from Egypt through the wildernesse and brought them unto the land which God had promised them and secondly because Moses put them in possession of that part of the land which was without Jordan and substituted Joshua in his place who afterward gave them the possession of the rest of the land But the chief thing intended is to put them in mind of Gods mercy in giving them that land without whom neither Moses nor Aaron nor Joshua could have done it Vers 9. And when they forgat the Lord their God he sold them into the hand of Sisera c. Samuel here calls the rebellion of the Israelites against God a forgetting of the Lord because if men did indeed think upon God as they ought to do they would not dare so to transgresse his commandments and thence it is also that David saith of wicked men that God is not in all their thoughts Psal 10.4 Vers 11. And the Lord sent Jerubbaal and Bedan and Jephthah and Samuel c. Some conceive that Jair is here called Bedan and that to distinguish him from that former Jair of whom Moses speaks Numb 32.41 and indeed there is one Bedan a Manassite mentioned 1. Chron. 7.17 Others again think that this Bedan was some Judge of Israel that is not mentioned in the book of Judges But the more common and I think the more probable exposition is that Samson is here meant and that he is called Bedan because he was of the tribe of Dan for Bedan signifieth in Dan or of Dan and Bendan signifieth the sonne of Dan. As for Samuels speaking of himself as of a third person it is usuall in the Scripture as we see Gen. 4.23 And Lamech said unto his wives Adah and Zillah Hear my voice ye wives of Lamech hearken unto my speech for I have slain a man to my wounding and a young man to my hurt He particularly puts them in mind of Gods delivering them by him because the deliverance which God had given them by him was best known to them and best served to condemn them for rejecting in his dayes that government which God had settled among them and that in part for fear of their enemies Vers 14. Then shall both ye and also the king that reigneth over you continue following the Lord your God That is God will not destroy you but you shall still continue a peculiar people to the Lord shrouded under his conduct and protection Vers 17. Is it not wheat-harvest to-day I will call unto the Lord and he shall send thunder and rain In Palestina thunder and rain in wheat-harvest was most unusuall whence is that of Solomon Prov. 26.1 As snow in summer and as rain in harvest so honour is not seemly for a fool and that Amos 4.7 And also I have with-holden the rain from you when there were yet three moneths to the harvest and I caused it to rain upon one city and caused it not to rain upon another city Now the rather did the Lord convince them of their sinne by this miracle because hereby they might see their folly both in rejecting the Lord such a mighty protectour who was able by thunder to destroy their enemies as they had seen formerly chap. 7.10 and likewise in rejecting Samuel who could by his prayers fetch down thunder and rain from heaven Vers 18. And the Lord sent thunder and rain that day To wit in some very extraordinary manner in so much that the people were not onely fully convinced hereby that they had sinned in desiring a king but were also afraid that by this terrible tempest they should have been destroyed whence is that in the following verse Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God that we die not Vers 20. And Samuel said unto the people Fear not That is despair not of Gods goodnesse and mercy Vers 21. And turn ye not aside for then should ye go after vain things which cannot profit nor deliver Idols may be the vain things here principally meant as Deut. 32.21 They have moved me to jealousie with that which is not God they have provoked me to anger with their vanities and Jer. 2.5 Thus saith the Lord What iniquity have your fathers found in me that they are gone farre from me and have walked after vanitie and are become vain but withall we may well understand it of every thing else wherein they should seek for help and happinesse having turned aside from following the Lord. Vers 22. For the Lord will not forsake his people for his great names sake That is because Gods name is called upon you and so it would not be for his glory to forsake you and indeed all the good which God doth for his Church and people is more for his own glory then for any good he sees in them Vers 23. Moreover as for me God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you They had desired him to pray for them vers 19. but the injury they had done him might make them fear he would not regard them the rather because the thunder he had prayed for might argue some displeasure conceived in him against them and therefore he assures them that he would not cease neither to pray for them nor to instruct them but saith he I will teach you the good and the right way Vers 24. Onely fear the Lord and serve him in truth c. As though he should say else my praying for you will do you no good CHAP. XIII Vers 1. SAul reigned one yeare and when he had reigned two years over Israel The first clause Saul reigned one yeare hath reference to the time when those things were done mentioned in the two former chapters when Saul by occasion of his victory over the Ammonites and his raising the siege of Jabesh-gilead was at Gilgal confirmed and solemnly inaugurated king of Israel then he had reigned one yeare to wit from the time that he was chosen and publickly declared king at Mizpeh chap. 10.24 and then the second clause And when he had reigned two years over Israel hath relation to that which is here related in this chapter to wit that a full yeare after his solemne inauguration at Gilgal when he had in all reigned two years then he began to raise an army of three thousand men as intending now to drive the Philistines out of those forts which they held in the land of Israel and to save the people from the cruell oppression of those their insulting enemies Vers 2. And the rest of the people he sent every man to his tent Having appointed the people to assemble themselves as at other times out of them he chose three thousand to be in arms with him and his sonne Jonathan and the rest he dismissed Vers 3. And Jonathan smote the garrison of the Philistines that was in Geba That is in Gibeah of Benjamin One main
David had called together thirty thousand men of the chief of Israel both priests and others there should not be one amongst them all that should stumble at this but that they should all runne on so confidently in so grosse an errour But we must consider that they had been long strangers to the ark and never questioned but that they might safely do what the Philistines had done before them without any danger and then besides God would let us see how easily multitudes of Gods people may erre if they do not the more heedfully examine all by the rules of the word Vers 4. And Ahio went before the Ark. To wit to look to the oxen as Uzzah went behind to take care of the cart and the ark that was in it Vers 6. And when they came to Nachons threshing floor c. This Nachon is also called Chidon 1. Chron. 13.9 and the last clause of this verse which is here translated for the oxen shook it is there translated for the oxen stumbled and it may well be that the oxens stumbling shook the ark and so thereupon Uzzah laid hold on the ark to stay it for fear it should have fallen Where this threshing floor of Nachon or Chidon was it is not expressed but most probable it is that they had not gone farre from the house of Abinadab in Kirjath-jearim ere the Lord by this sad disaster testified his displeasure against them for carrying the ark in a cart Vers 7. And God smote him there for his errour c. To wit because having put the ark into a cart which should have been carried on the Levites shoulders he now also laid hold on the ark which no man might touch but the priests onely Num. 4.15 The sonnes of Kohath shall come to bear it but they shall not touch any holy thing lest they die Indeed the ark was to be covered by the law but perhaps in this as in other things they had neglected the direction of the law or else being covered onely with a loose covering that might flie up with the tottering of the cart Uzzah might touch the bare ark with his hand and for this God presently struck him dead in the place A most remarkable example of Gods severity against those that will not keep close to the direction of his word in all things that concern his worship upon what pretence soever they do it Though Abinadab the father of this Uzzah had entertained the ark in his house above fourty years together and took it in at a time when others were afraid to receive it through the terrour of the judgement which fell upon the men of Bethshemesh 1. Sam. 6.19 20. Yet was his sonne now struck suddenly dead because he reached forth his hand and touched the ark and yet he did it too with a good intention to stay the ark from falling and suddenly not thinking of the unlawfulnesse of this act as is intimated in these words God smote him there for his errour or rashnesse as it is in the margin of our bibles Vers 8. And David was displeased because the Lord had made a breach upon Vzzah That is he was grieved troubled and disquieted because of this heavy judgement wherewith the Lord had broken forth upon Uzzah Some will have this understood that David was merely displeased with themselves for their heedlesnesse as thinking it too harsh to say of David that he was displeased with God but doubtlesse it was partly the very judgement it self that befell Uzzah that he was troubled at he could not well keep his heart from murmuring and rising against this severitie of God in striking Uzzah dead in the place for so small a matter he was discontented that when they had undertaken such a work of piety on a sudden all the joy of the people should be dashed and damped with such a sad disaster and so partly because he did not so quietly stoop at first under Gods hand as he ought to have done therefore it is said David was displeased Vers 9. How shall the ark of the Lord come to me That is I shall not do it without danger yea it seems the Lord is not pleased that the ark should be carried to Jerusalem and therefore it will be safer to desist from my purpose Vers 10. But David carried it aside to the house of Obed-edom the Gittite Who it seems gladly entertained it Though no doubt he knew well enough what a slaughter was made amongst the men of Bethshemesh at the first coming of the ark thither and though now also perhaps he saw when Uzzah was stricken dead by the hand of God for touching the ark and that David himself trembled and was afraid to to carry home the ark to his house yet considering that there was no danger in harbouring the ark if they carried themselves with that respect and reverence therein that God required he gladly received the ark into his house That this Obed-edom was a Levite is evident 1. Chron. 15.17 18. and therefore it seems he is here called Obed-edom the Gittite because he was of Gathrimmon a citie which was given in common by the tribes of Dan and Manasseh to the Levites of the family of Kohath as we may see Josh 21.24 25. Vers 12. And it was told king David saying The Lord hath blessed the house of Obed-edom c. It is not expressed what it was wherein they perceived that God had blessed Obed-edom and all his family but doubtlesse it was some extraordinary and wonderfull blessing that God poured forth upon him and his in the encrease of his cattell and the successe of all his affairs c. because it was so presently discovered and notice taken of it by those that dwelt about him in so short a time for the ark was in his house but three moneths in all as is noted in the foregoing verse Indeed in the 1. Chron. 26.5 it is said that the numerousnesse of his children was because the Lord blessed him but this could not be the blessing here spoken of that in the space of three moneths was so clearly discerned by those that lived about him So David went and brought up the Ark of God c. That is perceiving by Gods bounty to Obed-edom that the ark might be entertained without danger he at length found out where their former errour had been and so resolving to amend that he undertook again to fetch the ark to Jerusalem and having again assembled the people and given the Priests and Levites their charge to wit to carry the ark on their shoulders he fetched it with great solemnity from the house of Obed-edom as is largely related in the 15. and 16. chapters of the first book of Chronicles Vers 13. When they that bare the ark of God had gone six paces he sacrificed oxen and fatlings And this he did First by way of testifying their thankfulnesse to God for their successefull entrance upon this great work so soon as
David perceived that they had begun this work and that as yet there was no signe of Gods displeasure against them as there had been formerly in the smiting of Uzzah it greatly cheared his heart and thereupon he judged it fit to stay a while there and offer God some sacrifices by way of thanksgiving to wit upon some altar for that purpose erected He knew well that it was of Gods mercy that they had found out their former errour in carrying the ark in a cart and had now reformed it by appointing the Levites to carry it on their shoulders according to the Law and he considered besides that for many other things the Lord might have taken advantage against them and punished them as formerly and therefore presently by way of thankfulnesse he sacrificed oxen and fatlings and indeed so much is plainly intimated 1 Chron. 15.26 where also the number of the sacrifices offered is expressed And it came to passe when God helped the Levites that bare the Ark of the covenant of the Lord that they offered seven bullocks and seven rammes And secondly by way of imploring Gods mercy that he would shew them favour in the rest of the way as he had done hitherto The remembrance of that dolefull disaster that befell Uzzah made him the more fearfull and so the more carefull to seek Gods favour Vers 14. And David was girded with a linen ephod That is a linen garment like that of the Priests ephod which doubtlesse he put on not onely that he might be lighter to dance before the ark but also to shew his devotion Vers 17. And they brought in the ark of the Lord and set it in his place in the midst of the tabernacle that David had pitched for it For the tabernacle and altar of burnt-offerings which Moses had made were both still at Gibeon 2. Chron. 1.3 4. So Solomon and all the congregation with him went to the high place that was at Gibeon for there was the tabernacle of the congregation of God which Moses the servant of the Lord had made in the wildernesse But the ark of God had David brought up from Kiriath-jearim to the place which David had prepared for it for he had pitched a tent for it at Jerusalem and 1. Chron. 21.29 For the tabernacle of the Lord which Moses made in the wildernesse and the altar of the burnt-offerings were at that season in the high place at Gibeon At this time David did also deliver to the Levites a Psalme to be sung before the ark as we may see 1. Chron. 16.7 c. Vers 20. Then David returned to blesse his houshold That is to rejoyce with them in private and to worship God with them and to crave a blessing from God on them as he had done on the people How glorious was the king of Israel to day who uncovered himself to day in the eyes of the handmaids of his servants c. That is who forgetting or casting off the respect of his regall dignity both in apparell and behaviour mixed himself with the base multitude dancing and leaping in the open streets as fools will do and vain men when they are hired to make others sport as one of the vain fellows shamelessely uncovereth himself Some conceive that whilest David danced having onely a loose linen garment upon him some part of his bare legs or thighs might be discovered which they judge the more probable because his wife upbraids him that he had uncovered himself in the eyes of the handmaids But I conceive there is no necessity that the discovering his naked skin should be hereby meant but onely that laying by his princely attire he had used light behaviour not beseeming the gravity of a king and had thereby exposed himself to the scorn and contempt of every girl that came to see the pomp of this removall of the ark Vers 21. And David said unto Michal It was before the Lord which chose me before thy father c. Considering how grievous a thing it is to any woman to be upbraided with the faults and miseries of her parents and how farre every husband is bound to bear with the infirmities of his wife as the weaker vessel it may seem that David was somewhat too tart in this reply of his upon his wife for it must needs cut her to the heart to heare her self twitted with the Lords rejecting of her father and his family But indeed David had just cause to be thus sharp not onely because the flouts and insolencies of a wife are most insufferable but also especially because it was his zeal and devotion in the service of God which she derided that it was that chiefly moved his spirit that it should be cast in his teeth as a matter of reproch and disparagement that he had humbled himself so in a way of religion which was indeed a reproching of God Vers 23. Therefore Michal the daughter of Saul had no child unto the day of her death And thus when David came to blesse his house Michal by her sinne brought a curse upon it If she were barren before as indeed we read not of any children she had hitherto yet Davids prayers might have prevailed for this blessing but now because of this wickednesse God adjudged her to perpetuall barrennesse and so she died childlesse CHAP. VII Vers 1. ANd it came to passe when the king sat in his house c. This clause when the king sat in his house is here inserted First to imply though more obscurely what is afterwards more fully expressed to wit that David for the present had rest from warre he sat quietly in his house the Lord had given him rest round about from all his enemies as it follows in the next words and so being freed from former troubles he began to think of further promoting the cause of religion and of building a temple for the ark which he had lately brought to Jerusalem And secondly to intimate what it was that made him think of building a temple to wit that he was come to dwell in that stately house which he had built for himself for the building whereof Hiram had sent him both cedar trees and carpenters and masons chap. 5.11 and so sitting in this his palace he began to think with himself how unreasonable it was that he should dwell in such a stately house and the ark of God should be lodged the whilest in a poore tent or tabernacle for though when the people of Israel removed from one place to another the Lord chose to dwell in a tent which might be removed yet now that Israel had been a long time settled in the land which God had given them it was no longer necessary that Gods dwelling place should be a tent and therefore David conceived that his purpose of building a settled house for God would not be a crossing of that which God himself had ordered in choosing a tent to be his dwelling place Vers 3. And
Nathan said to the king Go do all that is in thine heart c. Yet afterwards by expresse direction from God he was appointed to crosse this which now he said whereby is manifest that the Prophets had not alwayes the spirit of prophecy upon them but spake sometimes as private men as Samuel did 1. Sam. 16.6 And it came to passe when they were come that he looked on Eliab and said Surely the Lords anointed is before him and 2. Kings 4.27 And when she came to the man of God to the hill she caught him by the feet but Gehazi came near to thrust her away And the man of God said Let her alone for her soul is vexed within her and the Lord hath hid it from me and hath not told me But before Nathan came to David with that message this present approbation had encouraged him to bind his resolution with a solemne vow to wit that which we reade of Psal 132.1 2 3 4 5. Lord remember David and all his afflictions How he sware unto the Lord and vowed unto the mighty God of Jacob. Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house nor go up into my bed I will not give sleep to mine eies or slumber to mine eye-lids Untill I find out a place for the Lord an habitation for the mighty God of Jacob. Vers 5 Shalt thou build me an house for me to dwell in That is thou shalt not The Lord purposed to have a house built which should be the peculiar place of his worship and service and had made known so much long since to his people Deut. 12.11 Then there shall be a place which the Lord your God shall choose to cause his Name to dwell there thither shall ye bring all that I command you your burnt-offerings and your sacrifices c. But David was not the man he had appointed for this work and therefore though the Lord commended David for this holy intention as is evident 1. Kings 8.18 And the Lord said unto David my father Whereas it was in thine heart to build an house unto my Name thou diddest well that it was in thine heart and made many gracious promises unto him at this time ver 10 11 12 c. to testifie how well he took it that he had such a purpose in his mind yet withall he made known to him that he meant not that it should be done by him but by his sonne and shewed him also the reasons why he might not do it though they be not here expressed to wit First because he should still be so encumbred with warres that he should not have leasure or opportunity to effect so qreat a work 1. Kings 5.3 Thou knowest how that David my father could not build an house unto the Name of the Lord his God for the warres that were about him on every side untill the Lord put them under the soles of his feet Secondly because he had been a man of warre and had shed bloud 1. Chron. 22 7 8. And David said to Solomon My sonne as for me it was in my mind to build an house unto the Name of the Lord my God But the word of the Lord came to me saying Thou hast shed bloud abundantly and hast made great warres thou shalt not build an house unto my Name because thou hast shed much bloud upon the earth in my sight and it must be a peaceable king that was to build the Temple that he might be a type of Christ the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 Vers 6. Whereas I have not dwelt in any house since the time that I brought up the children of Israel out of Egypt c. Though Davids intent was generally in it self good insomuch that the Lord himself commended him for it as is manifest in that place before cited 1. Kings 8.18 yet it was not without some mixture of errour for herein he failed because he undertook to do it without any particular direction or warrant from God led hereto onely by the judgement of his own reason that it was not fit God should dwell within curtains when he dwelt in an house of cedar and therefore though the Lord told him that his purpose was in the generall commendable yet withall he rejected his purpose and discovered thereby that he should have waited his leasure and direction and disproved his reason shewing that till he required a Temple to be built the ark was altogether as well in a tabernacle as in a Temple which was evident because he had never charged any of the Judges with this fault Why build ye not me an house of cedar See the note upon 1. Chron. 17.6 Vers 8. Thus saith the Lord of hosts I took the from the sheep-cote from following the sheep c. That David might not be discouraged and fear that this inhibition that he should not go forward in the work intended did proceed from the Lords disregarding of him or from any displeasure the Lord had conceived against him as a loving wife will grieve if her husband refuse any service she proffers to do him in these following words he shews how well he esteemed of him both by recounting what he had done for him by promising what he would do more But yet withall in these words I took thee from the sheep-cote c. to be ruler over my people the Lord implies that in doing this for which he had exalted him in ruling his people he might sufficiently approve his thankfulnesse to God and leave the care of building a Temple to whom God should choose Vers 10. Moreover I will appoint a place for my people Israel and will plant them c. This passage included in our Bibles in a Parenthesis is very intricate and obscure According to our translation the meaning I conceive is this Because the glory and happines of a king depends much upon the pro●perous and flourishing estate of his people therefore the Lord doth promise David that the Israelites should be now settled peaceably and quietly in the land of Canaan and should not be molested and oppressed as they had formerly been in the dayes of the Judges I will appoint a place saith the Lord and will plant them that they may dwell in a place of their own and move no more that is I will now settle them so in the land of Canaan that they shall quietly enjoy it as their own lawfull inheritance and not be dispossessed and tossed up and down as formerly they have been neither shall the children of wickednesse afflict them any more as before time that is neither shall they be molested and vexed continually by their oppressing neighbours as in former times they have been and observable it is that speaking of those that had afflicted and distressed the poore people of God he terms them in that respect children of wickednesse and as since the time that I commanded Judges to be over my people Israel and have caused thee to rest
God should plead against us with his great power as Job speaks chap. 23.6 it would soon grind us to powder but his purpose in smiting his children is onely to amend and not to destroy and therefore he doth it with great moderation and pitie Vers 15. But my mercy shall not depart away from him c. That is I will not cast him off from being king as I did Saul It is not that mercy which is the portion of Gods redeemed ones of which the Lord saith here that it should not depart away from Solomon as he took it from Saul for Saul never had any share in this mercy and where God affords this mercy he never takes it away But the mercy here spoken of is onely that of continuing the kingdome to him this mercy the Lord saith should not depart from Solomon he would not utterly cast him off from being king as David had seen Saul cast off whence is that last clause whom I put away before thee Vers 16. And thine house and thy kingdome shall be established for ever before thee c. These words before thee are added because his kingdome should be established in him unto the day of his death and should whilest he yet lived be settled upon his sonne and so should continue in his posterity they seeing and enjoying it till the coming of Christ in whom it should be established for ever Vers 17. According to all these words and according to all this vision so did Nathan speak unto David And herein did Nathan approve his integrity and fidelity he was not ashamed at Gods command to unsay and recant what he had formerly said and to contradict the counsel which himself had given to David ver 3. And Nathan said to the king Go do all that is in thine heart for the Lord is with thee Vers 18. Then went king David in and sat before the Lord c. That is he went into the tent where the ark was and continued there before the Lord for the Hebrew word here used signifies as properly and usually to remain and abide in a place or at a thing as to sit as Gen. 27.44 Lev. 14.8 1. Sam. 1.22 and 20.19 I deny not but that perhaps David might in these his private soliloquies even sitting as elsewhere walking and lying in his bed powre forth his soul unto the Lord in prayer as Moses prayed sitting Exod. 17.12 But Moses hands were heavy and they took a stone and put under him and he sat thereon and Elijah 1. Kings 19.4 But he himself went a dayes journey into the wildernesse and came and sat down under a juniper tree and he requested for himself that he might die and said It is enough now O Lord take away my life But the more probable opinion is either that by this word sat is meant tarried before the Lord or else that he at first sat down in the tabernacle and meditated of Gods goodnesse and mercy to him and afterwards addressed himself to pray unto the Lord that kneeling as the greatest of Gods servants were wont to do Psal 95.6 O come let us worship and bow down let us kneel before the Lord our maker 1. Kings 8.54 It was so that when Solomon had made an end of praying all this prayer and supplication unto the Lord he arose from the altar of the Lord from kneeling on his knees with his hands spread up to heaven Vers 19. And is this the manner of man O Lord God That is this is not the manner of man And some Expositours understand this thus that the settling of such blessings as God had promised upon his posterity was not according to the law of nature that children should inherit the estates and honours of their parents but of Gods mere grace and good will to them But there is more I conceive then this intended in these words David having acknowledged the great goodnesse of God in promising the kingdome to his seed after him and especially in assuring him that his seed should be the Sonne of God and should rule over his people for ever he breaks forth at length into an admiration of this wonderfull goodnesse and mercy of God And is this the manner of man O Lord God thereby implying either that it was not the manner of man to afford such favour of mere grace above all desert or to deal so freely and familiarly with those that are beneath them as God had dealt with him or else that this goodnesse and mercy of God especially in giving his own Sonne to be made man that he might redeem them to himself that were before the enemies of God and the slaves of Sathan and so rule over them as his own peculiar people was far above the mercy that could be expected from the most gracious and mercifull man or else that poore base man could not be in any degree worthy of such mercies as those were nor indeed capable of them according to the ordinary condition of man and so is this place parallel with that Psal 8.4 What is man that thou art mindfull of him or the son of man that thou visitest him which the Apostle applies particularly to Gods mercy in the incarnation of his onely begotten sonne and the advantages and honour that redound to man by this and by the work of our redemption performed by him Heb. 2.6 c. Vers 20. And what can David say more unto thee for thou Lord God knowest thy servant The first clause here And what can David say more unto thee may be understood two severall wayes either that David knew not how to ask more then God of his own free grace had promised him and was ready to conferre upon him and indeed as this passage of Davids prayer is expressed 1. Chron 17.18 it seems best to bear this sense And what can David speak more to thee for the honour of thy servant But then the meaning of the next clause is this For thou knowest thy servant that is thou knowest what is good for me thou knowest my wants and desires better then I can discover them to thee according to that of our Saviours Matth. 6.8 Your father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask them or else that he was not able to expresse how highly he esteemed of that goodnesse and mercy he had shewne to him and then the next words for thou Lord knowest thy servant are added to imply that God knew well enough the motions and desires of his heart to praise his name though with his tongue he was not able to expresse them Vers 21. According to thine own heart hast thou done all these great things to make thy servant know them That is of thine own free grace hast thou made all these glorious promises to me and mine that thy servant might know what thou meanest to do for him and his in time to come Vers 23. And to do for you great things and terrible
with all the servants of his Lord. That is with the kings guard whose custome it was to watch at the doore of his house all night Vers 11. And Vriah said unto David The ark and Israel and Judah abide in tents c They used in perillous warres to carry the ark with them into the camp both as a testimony of Gods presence and that they might ask counsel of God as occasion served as is evident 1. Sam. 4.4 and 14.18 and therefore the most of Expositours conceive that accordingly at this time the ark was with Joab in the camp at the siege of Rabbah and that this was the reason why Uriah spake of the arks abiding in tents together with Israel and Judah but yet because it seems not probable that they would carry the ark the signe of Gods presence amongst his people out of the land of Canaan into the countrey of the Ammonites I should rather think that being to speak of the abiding of Israel and Judah in tents in regard that the ark was also in the tent which David had set up for it chap. 6.17 Therefore onely it is that he joyns the ark with Israel and Judah The ark saith he and Israel and Judah abide in tents and my Lord Joab and the servants of my Lord are encamped in the open fields shall I then go into mine house to eat and to drink and to lie with my wife c. But however the drift of these words is evident to wit that Uriah herein rendred a reason why he would not go home to his house namely because he judged it unfit and unreasonable that he should take his ease and pleasure whilest his Generall and his brethren lay abroad in continuall danger in the open fields and then besides there was withall in these words by the providence of God a secret check given to David that Uriah should make conscience of taking pleasure with his own wife at a time when the people of God were in continuall danger and yet David had not scrupled at that very time to satisfie his lust with the wife of Uriah Vers 13. And when David had called him he did eat and drink before him and made him drunk It is not probable that Uriah that had so resolutely refused to feast and frolick with his wife would yeild to do that with the king which he had refused to do with his wife onely when David had invited him to his table he thought it too much to reject the kings favour and therefore resolved to yeild herein to the kings commandment no further then might stand with his resolved course of austerity fully purposing not to let loose himself to any delight or freedome in eating or drinking but we see the event by degrees he was overtaken and e●snared contrary to what he had purposed with himself and so was made drink which was that David aimed at hoping that when he was heated with wine he would then go home to his wife which hitherto he had refused to do And at even he went out to lie on his bed with the servants of his lord but went not down to his house He went not to sleep as the night before at the doore of the kings house vers 9. to wit because he had drunk too freely but yet he went not home to his wife but lay in the court amongst the kings houshold servants so that though he were a little overgone with excesse yet he still remembred and stuck to his former resolution of not going home to his wife A passage very observable whilest David used all his skill to get him home doubtlesse his wife was not wanting to act her part too it cannot be thought but that she sent and came to him again and again and solicited him earnestly to come home to her for it much concerned her and yet all this could not move him even when he was drunk he would not home to his house for whence was this doubtlesse there was a secret hand of Providence in it it is like enough he was displeased that he was so causelessely taken off from that noble enterprise of the siege of Rabbah and deemed it unfitting as he had said before to take his pleasure whilest his brethren and fellow souldiers were in such hard service but yet considering how many means were used to overcome him we may well conclude that there was a speciall hand of Providence in the firmnesse of his resolution the Lord intending hereby to counterplot David and not to suffer him to smother his sinne as he desired to have done Vers 16. He assigned Uriah unto a place where he knew that valiant men were To wit that he might be slain by them as David had in his letter commanded There was no reason given in the letter why this plot must be laid for his life it was sufficient to Joab that the king commanded it he knew how much advantage it might be to him to have the favour of his prince and what danger there might be in opposing his commands and therefore he stuck not at doing what he had enjoyned yea and perhaps too remembring what himself had done in the murder of Abner he was the more willing that David should be involved in the same sinne as thinking that he would be the readier to pardon him when himself was become guilty in the s●e kind Vers 21. Wh● smote Abimelech the sonne of Jerubesheth That is Gideon who was called Jerubbaal Judges 6.32 Vers 25. Let not this thing displease thee for the sword devoureth one as well as another c. The time was when Davids conscience smote him for cutting off tho lap of Sauls garment though he was his deadly enemy and yet now his heart being hardened upon his adultery with Bathsheba he could sleight the murder of Uriah and many other of Gods people slain by his means as if it had been a matter of nothing Vers 26. And when the wife of Vriah heard that Uriah her husband was dead she mourned for her husband Considering what shame would have fallen upon her if her husband had lived and the hope she might well conceive of becoming now the wife of so great a Prince as David was we may well think that she was inwardly glad of these tidings but yet the better to conceal her sinne she would not omit the customary wayes that were used in those times of mourning for her deceased husband Vers 27. But the thing that David had done displeased the Lord. This is added to shew the vanity of Davids comforting himself in what was done he chuckered himself now as concluding that now the shame he feared would be prevented and so all would be well But saith the text the thing that David had done displeased the Lord and this he found to be bitternesse in the end little cause had he therefore to be so well satisfied with the secresie of his sinne the Lord being so highly offended with him CHAP. XII
sonnes Ahimaaz and Jonathan went not with their fathers into Jerusalem is evident chap. 17.17 Now Jonathan and Ahimaaz stayed by En-rogel for they might not be seen to come into the citie and therefore it seems their fathers appointed them to stay at En-rogel Vers 30. And David went up by the ascent of mount Olivet and wept as he went up and had his head covered c. His weeping was no doubt especially because he was afflicted with the remembrance of his sinne that had brought these troubles upon him and his covering his head was suitable hereto for so was the custome of mourners to wit partly that their tears might not be seen and partly that the seeing of other objects might not divert their minds from intending their sorrows as being desirous to give up themselves wholly to bewail their mi●eries of which custome see Jer. 14.3 And their nobles have sent their little ones to the waters they came to the pits and found no water they returned with the vessels emptie they were ashamed and confounded and covered their heads chap. 19.4 The king covered his face and cried with a loud voice c. and Esther 6.12 Haman hasted to his house mourning and having his head covered Vers 32. When David was come to the top of the mount where he worshipped God behold Hushai the Archite came to meet him c. He worshipped the Lord on the top of the mount because thence he might best behold the ark the testimony of Gods presente as the priests were carrying it back to Jerusalem and be thereby stirred up the more affectionately and effectually to call upon the Lord and because being gone over that mount he was like for a time to see it no more but that which is most observable is that no sooner had David prayed against the counsels of Ahithophel O Lord I pray thee turn the counsel of Ahithophel into foolishnesse but presently there came to him Hushai who is called the Archite from the place of his birth or habitation to wit Archi a place mentioned Josh 16.2 which was in the borders of the children of Joseph by whom God had determined to defeat his counsels Vers 33. Unto whom David said If thou passest on with me then thou shalt be a burden unto me Whereas by going back to Jerusalem he might there do him better service and withall be no way burdensome to him and indeed though David had cause enough to be glad to see his party encrease yet no wonder it is that he should tell Hushai that staying with him he would be a burden to him first because he and his attendants that came with him would help to expend their provision which was yet but small and secondly because his care for those that went with him and his grief for the misery they were like to sustain was ●ch that the more his company encreased the more his burden encreased too Vers 34. Say unto Absalom I will be thy servant O king c. Herein David teacheth Hushai to dissemble with Absalom and an easie thing it is for the best men in their extremities to pitch upon such counsels as are not exactly such as they ought to be CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ZIba the servant of Mephibosheth met him with a couple of asses sadled c. Though David was under a cloud for the time yet Ziba concluded that ere long this rebellion against him would be suppressed and then they that shewed him favour in this time of his affliction would be well rewarded for it and this made him come now with these presents to David And thus many side with Christ and that too in the time of persecution and trouble that yet have false hearts and aim merely at their own advantage though his Church be for the present the weakest yet they hope it will prove the strongest and upon that ground they side with them they follow Christ for his loaves and fishes Joh. 6.26 Vers 2. And the king said unto Ziba What meanest thou by these The king might easily guesse that the provision which Ziba brought was brought for his supply yet to invite him to declare why he had brought them the rather happely because he questioned whether it was done by his masters command or of his own mind he asketh him concerning those things What meanest thou by these And Ziba said The asses be for the kings houshold to ride on and the bread and summer-fruit● for the young men to eat c. As if he should have said the things which I have brought though too mean for thy self yet might I thought be usefull for thy servants and such as belong to thee Vers 4. Then said the king to Ziba Behold thine are all that pertained to Mephibosheth It is very strange that David so just and good a king should now when the hand of God was upon him pronounce such an unjust sentence as this was against a poore cripple that was not very likely to affect the crown as Ziba had slandered him nor very well able to come and plead for himself yea against the sonne of his dear friend Jonathan who had alwayes been so loving to him and with whom he had made a solemn covenant that he would shew kindnesse both to him and to his seed after him 1. Sam. 20.14.17 but for this we must consider first that there were many probabilities to induce David to believe that false tale that Ziba had told him as because Mephibosheth came not out to David as other his friends did and because for all his lamenesse Mephibosheth the true heir of Saul might in these troublous times hope that Sauls family might be remembred and so might prove treacherous as many others did and secondly that David did this in a passon being mightily enraged to heare that Mephibosheth should so requite all the kindnesse he had shewn him and thirdly doubtlesse God was pleased herein to leave David to himself that so he might see by this grosse failing that it was not for any merits in him but of Gods own free grace that his enemies were afterwards suppressed and he again settled in the throne And Ziba said I humbly beseech thee that I may find grace in thy sight my Lord O king That is I acknowledge thankfully the bounty of my Lord yet I esteem thy favour more then the gift which thou hast given me I came not to accuse Mephibosheth that so I might wrest his estate from him but I came to procure thy favour O king and that it is which I chiefly desire may be continued to me Vers 5. And when king David came to Bahurim See the note chap. 3.16 Vers 8. The Lord hath returned upon thee all the bloud of the house of Saul c. Shimei might in these words have respect to the death of Ishbosheth and Abner as pretending that David had secretly a hand therein yea and perhaps too it was before this that those seven sonnes of Saul were
basons 2. Chron. 4.8 It is expressed that there were an hundred basons CHAP. VIII Vers 1. THen Solomon assembled the Elders of Israel c. To wit to attend upon the ark when it was removed out of the City of David which is Zion where it had been ever since David brought it thither 2 Sam. 6.12 of which see the note there unto the Temple which Solomon had now built in mount Moriah for by this personall attendance both of Princes and people upon the ark they did acknowledge the Lord of whose presente the ark was a type to be the God and Lord of Israel and themselves his servants A great question indeed it is how it can be said here that the ark was carried out of Sion that it might be placed in the Temple seeing ordinarily in the Scripture Sion is spoken of as the place where God dwelt in his Temple amongst his people as Psal 78.68.69 where it is said that God chose the tribe of Judah the mount Zion which he loved and he built his Sanctuary like high places c. and Esa 8.18 where God is called the Lord of hosts that dwelleth in mount Zion and so in many other places But for this we must know that to speak properly and in a strict sence the Temple was not built in mount Sion but in mount Moriah 2. Chron. 3.1 therefore it is said here that the ark was carried out of the citie of David which is Zion into the Temple but because the whole citie of Jerusalem is usually called Sion and mount Sion from that mount which was a chief part of it thence it is that the Temple Gods dwelling place is so usually said to have been in Sion Vers 2. And all the men of Israel assembled themselves unto king Solomon at the feast c. That is at the time when they were from all parts of the land to assemble themselves together to keep the feast in the moneth of Ethanim which is the seventh moneth By the feast is meant as is most probably held by the most of Interpreters the feast of tabernacles which began the 15 day of the seventh moneth Levit. 23.34 and was indeed the chief feast of this moneth as being one of those three feasts whereto all the males of Israel were bound to resort yet it must needs be that the people assembled at least the heads of the tribes and the chief of the fathers seven or eight dayes before the feast of tabernacles for the feast of tabernacles was kept from the fifteenth to the end of the two and twentieth day and on the three and twentieth day Solomon dismissed the people 2. Chron. 7.10 And on the three and twentieth day of this seventh moneth he sent the people away unto their tents so that the seven dayes which he kept for the dedication of the temple whereof mention is made vers 65. of this chapter and 2. Chron. 7.9 were before the feast of tabernacles yet if they were the seven dayes immediately foregoing the feast of tabernacles which was on the fifteenth day of the moneth doubtlesse the tenth day was excepted which was the day wherein they afflicted their souls with fasting Levit 23.27 and therefore not likely to have been one of the dayes of this festivitie of the Temples dedication now whereas it may be objected that till the eight moneth the Temple was not finished chap. 6.38 And in the eleventh yeare in the moneth Bul which is the eight moneth was the house finished to this I answer that the dedication therefore was doubtlesse in the seventh moneth of the following yeare that moneth being chosen for the peoples convenience who were then to assemble themselves to keep the feast of Tabernacles and that in the interim there might be time for the drying of the walls and to make all things ready for the dedication of it Vers 3. And the priests took up the ark In 2. Chron. 5.4 it is and the Levites took up the ark but that is onely because the priests also were of the tribe of Levi. Vers 4. And they brought up the ark of the Lord and the tabernacle of the congregation c. To wit that which was made by Moses which onely was called the tabernacle of the congregation this had been hitherto in Gibeon 2. Chron. 1.3 but was now removed thence with all the holy vessels thereof and laid up in the treasuries of the Temple not onely because they had been consecrated to God but also to make sure that the Temple should now be the onely place of Gods worship Vers 5. Sacrificing sheep and oxen that could not be told nor numbred for multitude To wit when they were going in a solemn manner before the ark to remove it from the citie of David into the Temple and therefore perhaps in the same manner too that was observed by David when he removed the ark from the house of Obed Edom 2. Sam. 6.13 And it was so that when they that bare the ark of the Lord had gone six paces he sacrificed oxen and fatlings Vers 8. And they drew out the staves that the ends of the staves were seen out in the holy place c. Some conceive the meaning of this hard place is this to wit that they drew out the staves quite out of the rings of the ark thereby to signifie that the ark was now to be removed no more and so the staves being laid upon the ground in the fore part of the Sanctuary their foure ends or heads might be seen as one went out of the holy place into the most holy but out of that place they were never seen because the ark was never removed but it is hard to make this exposition agree with the words the most approved exposition therefore is this when they had set the ark in his place behind the Cherubims to wit the two great Cherubims which Solomon had made neither the ark nor the staves could be seen but then they drew out the staves eastward that so though the ark was not seen yet the end of the staves might be seen to put them in mind of the ark which was behind the wings of the Cherubims for by this means the ends of the staves were seen out in the holy place before the oracle that is in that part of the most holy place which was before the ark which was more especially called the oracle and they were not seen without that is they were not seen out of the ark they that were before the oracle in the most holy place might discern by the ends of the staves that they were in the ark as it is expressed 2. Chron. 5.9 And they drew out the staves of the ark that the ends of the staves were seen from the ark before the oracle but the staves were never seen out of the ark for that was against Gods Law Exod. 25.15 The staves shall be in the rings of the ark they shall not be taken from it
wit that God would be pleased when they prayed in or towards the Temple to hear their prayers and restore them again to the land of their inheritance Vers 35. If they pray toward this place and confesse thy name and turn from their sinne when thou afflictest them c. As if he should have said though they did not repent and turn unto thee till thine hand was heavie on them yet let not that hinder the acceptance of their prayers if they do then sincerely repent and seek thy face and favour Vers 36. Forgive the sinne of thy servants and of thy people Israel that thou teach them the good way c. This is added because first there is no hope of saving instruction till sinne be pardoned secondly the removing of a judgement yields little comfort unlesse men become better then they were before and thirdly no chastisement will ever instruct men unlesse God teach them by his spirit Vers 38. What prayer and supplication soever be made by any man or by all thy people Israel which shall know every man the plague of his own heart c. By the plague of the heart here is meant both the sinnes for which they are punished which proceed all from the wickednesse of the heart and must be acknowledged and bewailed or else men will never seek seriously to God that the punishment may be removed and also the punishment it self because it is inflicted for sinne which is rooted in the heart and doth alwayes oppresse and wound especially when we apprehend it to be an effect of Gods wrath Vers 41. Moreover concerning a stranger that is not of thy people Israel Either this is meant of such strangers as were converted to the Jewish Religion called therefore Proselytes such as was that Ethiopian Eunuch Acts 8.27 who had been at Jerusalem to worship or else of such strangers as were also unbelievers for whom the Jews say there was a court without that where the people of Israel met together Indeed there is no question but strangers of another religion by the victories of the Jews and other discoveries of Gods speciall love to them might be brought to have a reverent opinion of the God of the Hebrews for this was usuall with the heathens as we may see in that example of the Philistines 1. Sam. 4.7 8. and 6.2 3. and thereupon might come with their gifts and prayers to the temple but then doubtlesse Solomon hoped not that their persons and prayers should be accepted with God for any such devotion in them for there was never any way of obtaining favour with God but onely in and through the Messias but desired onely that God would make his power known by doing what they should so desire of him that so his name might be rendred the more glorious Thus this place may be understood of infidell strangers yet I think it is rather meant of Proselytes Vers 44. If thy people go out to battel against their enemy whithersoever thou shalt send them c. Thus he implyeth that even when they had a commission from God to take up arms yet they ought by prayer to seek Gods assistance and withall that unlesse the warre was just it would be in vain to seek to God for help Vers 51. Thine inheritance which thou broughtest forth out of Egypt from the midst of the furnace of iron Why the Israelites are called Gods inheritance see the note Deut. 32.9 and why Egypt is called a furnace of iron see the note Deut. 4.20 it implies the heavinesse of their oppression there and that it was to purge them and not to consume them Vers 52. That thy eyes may be open unto the supplication of thy servant That is of me thy servant as before vers 28.29 30. Vers 54. And it was so that when Solomon had made an end of praying c. In 2 Chron. 6.41 some particulars are added which here are omitted to wit that having ended his prayer he added these words Now therefore arise O Lord God into thy resting place thou and the ark of thy strength c. which is a clause of the 132. Psalme vers 8.9 10. and therefore doubtlesse that Psalme was made either by his father David at his removing of the ark or else by Solomon at this time and that hereupon fire came down from heaven and consumed the burnt offerings and the sacrifices which the Priests had then laid upon the altar whereupon the people bowed themselves and worshiped the Lord 2 Chron. 7.1 3. Now therefore when the Lord had thus testified his presence and assent to Solomons prayers the King rose up and blessed the people as in the following words is expressed Vers 59. That he maintain the cause of his servant That is of me his servant or of the king of Israel indefinitely Vers 64. The same day did the king hallow the middle of the court c. That is the middle part of the pavement of the inner Court to wit either by offering sacrifices thereon or by building many and severall altars there for the present occasion because one altar could not suffice for such a multitude of sacrifices Vers 65. Solomon held a feast seven dayes even fourteen dayes That is seven dayes for the dedication of the Temple which began with the beginning of the seventh day of the seventh moneth and ended with the end of the fourteenth day if the tenth day be accepted as being the day of their publick fast as is above noted vers 2. and then seven days for the feast of Tabernacles which began with the beginning of the fifteenth day and ended with the ending of the one and twentieth day Vers 66. On the eighth day he sent the people away c. To wit the day following the last seven of the feast of Tabernacles which was the two and twentieth day of the moneth for that eighth day was an holy day added as it were to the seven dayes of the feast of tabernacles Levit. 23.36 at the end of this day he dismissed the people yet because they went not away till the twenty third day of the moneth therefore it is said 2 Chron. 7.10 that on the three and twentieth day of the seventh moneth he sent the people away unto their tents glad and merry in heart for the goodnesse that the Lord had shewed unto David and to Solomon and to Israel his people where Solomon is also mentioned though it be not so here CHAP. IX Vers 1. WHen Solomon had finished the building of the house of the Lord and the kings house c. Some would have these words and the kings house and all Solomons desire which he was pleased to doe to be included in a parenthesis and that because they would have the meaning of this clause to be that when Solomon had finished the building of the house of the Lord the Lord appeared to Solomon c. before he had built his own house and his other buildings but I see
is expressely noted that he began to prophecy in the thirteenth yeare of Josiahs reigne Jerem. 1.1 2. The words of Jeremiah to whom the word of the Lord came in the dayes of Josiah the sonne of Amon king of Judah in the thirteenth yeare of his reigne and this was that Josiah who was by name mentioned by the Prophet that foretold the polluting of Jeroboams altar about three hundred years before he was borne 1. Kings 13.2 And he cryed against the altar in the word of the Lord and said O altar altar thus saith the Lord Behold a child shall be born unto the house of David Josiah by name and upon thee shall he offer the priests of the high places c. Vers 3 And it came to passe in the eighteenth yeare of king Josiah that the king sent Shaphan c. That is in the eighteenth yeare not of his age but of his reigne for so it is expressed 2. Chron. 34.8 Now in the eighteenth yeare of his reigne when he had purged the land and the house he sent Shaphan the sonne of Azaliah c. Nor may we think that this was the first act of his piety and that till he had reigned eighteen years he did nothing this way for in the Chronicles we see where his acts are related according to the order of time wherein they were done first that in the eighth yeare of his reigne being then sixteen years old he began to bend himself to seek information how he might serve God as David had done secondly that in the twelfth yeare of his reigne he began to purge Judah and Jerusalem of all their idolatry which he did also with a great deale of zeal 2. Chron. 34.3 For in the eight yeare of his reigne while he was yet young he began to seek after the God of David his father and in the twelfth yeare he began to purge Judah and Jerusalem from the high places and the groves c. and then thirdly that in the eighteenth yeare of his reigne when he was twenty six years old he set upon the work of repairing the temple as is here also related Vers 4. Go up to Hilkiah the high priest that he may summe the silver c. The prophet Jeremiah was the sonne of Hilkiah a priest Jer. 1.1 but whether he were the sonne of this Hilkiah the priest it is uncertain Vers 5. And let them deliver it into the hand of the doers of the work c. That is into the hand of the overseers of the work who were Levites 2. Chron. 34.12 And the men did the work of the Lord faithfully and the overseers of them were Jahath and Obadiah c. Vers 8. And Hilkiah the high priest said unto Shaphan the Scribe I have found the book of the law in the house of the Lord. That is the authentick and originall copy of it written by Moses and delivered by him to the Levites to be laid up in the side of the ark Deut. 31.24 25 26. and thus did the Lord abundantly recompence their zeal for the repair of his Temple by bringing to their hands this precious jewell though it be most probable which the Hebrew writers say that Manasseh and Amon had endeavoured to burn up all the books of the law and so this book was hid in some secret place in the Temple by some faithfull priests that it might be preserved for future times yet it is not likely but that there were some transcripts of this sacred volume preserved amongst the people at least some parcels of it and that Josiah amongst others had not been a mere stranger to the book of the law for strange it were that he should live till the eighteenth yeare of his reigne and so piously reform what was amisse and never see the law of God till now rather because this was the originall book of the law which Moses himself had written there was great joy at the finding of it and to the king it was brought as a rare jewell indeed Josiahs astonishment vers 11. And it came to passe when the king had heard the words of the book of the law that he rent his clothes makes it clear that he had not formerly read or heard read those dreadfull threats of judgements against idolatry Levit. 26. or Deut. 28. which now were read to him out of this book but that might be though he had before seen many copies of the law his respect to this originall of Moses writing might make him desirous to heare it all read and so he might heare those terrible passages now which he had not read or heard before Vers 12. Achbor the sonne of Michaiah c. Or Abdon the sonne of Micah 2. Chron. 34.20 Vers 14. Now she dwelt in Jerusalem in the colledge Or as it is in the margin in the second part now if we read it so by the second part we must understand the second citie or the suburbs of Jerusalem which was encompassed with walls and gates severall from the citie but however it may well be that the reason why this clause is added is to intimate the reason why Hilkiah and those that were sent with him to enquire of the Lord went to Huldah the prophetesse rather then to Jeremiah or Zephaniah who at this time prophecyed in the land of Judah it was because she dwelt in Jerusalem and so was near at hand whereas they were at present in other parts of the kingdome and indeed we read that Anathoth was the place of Jeremiahs usuall dwelling Jer. 29.27 Vers 20. Thou shalt be gathered into thy grave in peace c. That is before these troubles and miseries fall upon this place and the inhabitants thereof whilest the kingdome doth yet flourish in prosperity and peace for though Josiah was slain by Pharaoh Necho chap. 23.29 yet because he died before that desolation came upon the land whereof Huldah had spoken and died in the love and favour of God also therefore she said that he should be gathered to his grave in peace CHAP. XXIII Vers 2. ANd the king went up into the house of the Lord and all the men of Judah c. To wit to renew solemnly their covenant with God that if it were possible the wrath of the Lord might be appeased and those judgements prevented which the prophetesse Huldah had told him were to come upon the land and because all were concerned in the danger all were called to this assembly the priests and the prophets and all the people where by the prophets may be meant not onely the prophets that at this time prophecyed in the land as Jeremiah Zephaniah and Urijah but likewise also those that lived in the schools of the prophets whereof there is often mention made in the Scripture Vers 3. And the king stood by a pillar c. That is on the brazen scaffold erected by Solomon which was made with pillars or on a throne which was according to the custome erected by
of those which Solomon did at first set up therefore they were still called the high places which Solomon built Vers 15. Moreover the altar that was at Beth-el c. See the notes above upon vers 4. Vers 16. And sent and took the bones out of the Sepulchres and burnt them upon the altar c. That is the bones of the priests that were there buried out of a superstitious respect to the holinesse of the place 2. Chron. 34.5 And he burnt the bones of the priests upon their altar above three hundred years it was now since a Prophet sent from God had foretold that the bones of the priests should be burnt upon Jeroboams altar 1. Kings 13.1 2. which was now accordingly accomplished Vers 17. Then he said What title is that that I see Because the man of God sent to prophecy against Jeroboams altar had foretold that the bones of the priests should be burnt upon the altar the old prophet that seduced him both buried him in the sepulchre provided for himself and gave order to his sonnes to bury him there also and withall took order to erect a statue or pillar in the sepulchre whereon was engraven that there the man of God was buried that had prophecyed against the altar and was afterwards torn with a lion that so when the time came of which the man of God had prophecyed his sepulchre might hereby be known from the rest and so his bones with the bones of that man of God might lie at rest this was the title or inscription which Josiah now espied and being satisfied what it was he accordingly gave order to let their bones alone and so the old prophet had his desire See 1. Kings 13.31 32. Vers 18. So they let his bones alone with the bones of the prophet that came out of Samaria See the note 1 Kings 13.11 Vers 19. And all the houses also of the high places that were in the cities of Samaria c. See the note above vers 4. Vers 20. And he slew all the priests of the high places that were there upon the altars c. Though upon the priests the sonnes of Aaron that had worshipped the true God in a false manner in the high places he laid no other punishment but this that they should be for ever disabled from coming up to the altar of the Lord in Jerusalem vers 8 9. yet these he slew as not being the Lords priests but made priests after the order and institution of Jeroboam 1 Kings 12.31 and such as sacrificed to false gods and perhaps obstinately opposed Josiah in this reformation yea he slew them upon the altars and therein fulfilled what was long since prophecyed of him 1. Kings 13.1 2. and hereby it appears that even after the ten tribes were carried away captive into Assyria yet there were some both of the priests and people that either were left behind or returned again into the land of Samaria Vers 22. Surely there was not holden such a Passeover from the dayes of the Judges c. In 2. Chron. 35.18 it is from the dayes of Samuel the prophet c. doubtlesse there could not be so great a concourse of the people to eat the Passeover now when ten of the twelve tribes were carried captive into Assyria as there had been in former ages when all the tribes of Israel lived under the government of Saul and David and Solomon successively but this is spoken with respect to the multitude of sacrifices that were offered at this passeover given bountifully by the king and princes to the people but especially with respect to the exceeding joy of the good people because religion was restored again in its purity amongst them and the solemnity of all the service that was then performed in the house of God Josiah gave then to the people for the passeover offering thirty thousand lambs and kids and three thousand bullocks and his princes and the chief of the Levites gave proportionably many thousands more as is largely set down 2. Chron. 35.7 8 9. and all the service of the feast was performed with very great solemnity Vers 25. And like unto him was there no king before him c. See the note chap. 18.5 Vers 26. His anger was kindled against Judah because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withall So it is said Jer. 15.4 And I will cause them to be removed into all the kingdomes of the earth because of Manasseh It is evident that Manasseh repented him of his sinnes 2. Chron. 33.12 19. and therefore as sure it is that the Lord did fully pardon him all his sinnes Isa 1.16 17 18. Wash ye make you clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes cease to do evil learn to do well relieve the oppressed judge the fatherlesse plead for the widow come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes were as scarlet they shall be made as white as snow yet here the wrath of God against Judah is ascribed to the sinnes of Manasseh which is because the Lord doth many times correct his servants for their sinnes though he hath fully perdoned them and that not onely in their own persons but in their posterity too Secondly because those sinnes of Manasseh were still secretly harboured amongst the people though they yielded to Josiahs reformation for fear yet in their hearts and many of them secretly in their practises too they did still uphold Manassehs wicked wayes as was indeed most remarkably evident in that so soon as ever Josiah was dead even all his children with the people did soon return to Manassehs idolatry again whence it was that the Lord complained of Judah Jer. 3.10 that they had not turned to him with their whole hearts but fainedly and it was in the dayes of Josiah the king vers 6. Vers 29. In his dayes Pharaoh Necho king of Egypt went up against the king of Assyria c. To wit in the last yeare of Josiahs reigne which was thirteen years after he kept that solemn passeover and perfectly suppressed idolatry both in Judah and in a great part of Samaria it is hard to say who this king of Assyria was against whom the king of Egypt went up Some conceive it was Esar-haddon the son of Sennacherib and that it was the revolt of the Medes and the Babylonians from him that invited the king of Egypt at this time to invade his countrey but others farre more probably hold that it was Nebulasser the sonne of Ben-meradach king of Babylon for the Babylonians had now gotten the empire from the Assyrians and therefore it is no wonder that he should be here called the king of Assyria And king Josiah went against him To wit to hinder him from passing thorough his countrey Pharoah sent Embassadours to him to desire him that he might quietly passe thorough his countrey protesting that he directed himself against the Assyrians onely without any harmfull purpose
Vers 4. Eleazar begat Phinehas Phinehas begat Abishua c. Eleazar succeeded his father Aaron in the high priesthood in the fourtieth yeare after their coming out of Egypt Numb 20.25 c. and 33.18 and was high priest all the time of Joshua and died immediately after him as may seem by the relation of their deaths together Josh 24.29 33. Phinehas his sonne that succeeded him was he that slew Zimri and Cozbi in the wildernesse and had thereupon a promise from God that the high priesthood should be settled upon him and his seed for ever see Numb 25.7 13. He succeeded his father Eleazar about the death of Joshua Josh 24.29 33. How long he lived high priest it is no where expressed but probable it is he was high priest all the time that the people served the Lord after Joshuahs death in the dayes of the elders that out-lived Joshua Judg. 2.7 and perhaps in the time of the first revolting of the people in the time of the Judges which must needs then be a matter of much grief to a man of such zeal as he was for it is evident that when the Israelites made warre against Benjamin he was high priest Josh 20.28 And Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar the sonne of Aaron stood before it in those dayes As for the next three that follow Abishau Bukki his sonne and Vzzi his sonne they were it seems high priests in those corruptest times of Israel under the Judges whereto agrees that which is by some said that in the dayes of Uzzi it was that Eli and so his posterity after him got the high priests office not being of Eleazars stock but of the stock of Ithamar and if so it were then the foure next following of the stock of Eleazar were never high priests to wit Zerahiah and Meraioth and Amariah and Ahitub but Zadok the sonne of Ahitub vers 8. was the first that recovered that dignity again which was in the dayes of Solomon who thrust out Abiathar of the posterity of Eli and of the stock of Ithamar from being high priest and put Zadok the sonne of Ahitub in his room 1. Kings 2.27 35. Vers 10. And Johanan begat Azariah he it is that executed the priests office in the temple that Solomon built in Jerusalem That is this is that Azariah of whom such honourable mention is made in the book of the Chronicles 2. Chron. 26.16 c. who did so worthily execute maintain the honour and office of the priesthood against the intrusion and usurpation of Uzziah the king of Judah and it is expressely noted that it was in the temple which Solomon built in Jerusalem because at the time when this was written there was another Temple in Jerusalem built by Zerub-babel Yet some understand these words of Johanan the father of Azariah that he was that Jehoiada that was high priest in the dayes of Athaliah by whom both the Temple and Common-wealth were preserved when they were in danger to be ruined by her Vers 13. And Shallum begat Hil●iah Who found the book of the Law in the dayes of Josiah 2. Kings 22.8 Vers 14. And Azariah begat Seraiah c. Seraiah was the high priest whom Nebuchadnezzar slew see 2. Kings 25.18 21. He was also the father or grand-father of Ezra Ezra 7.1 Now after these things in the reigne of Artaxerxes king of Persia Ezra the sonne of Seraiah the sonne of Azariah the sonne of Hilkiah c. and then Jehozadak his sonne was the father of Josuah who was so famous at the return of the Jews and the rebuilding of the Temple Hag. 1.1 In the second yeare of Darius the king in the sixth moneth in the first day of the moneth came the word of the Lord by Haggai the Prophet unto Zerubbabel the sonne of Shealtiel governour of Judah and to Josuah the sonne of Josedech the high priest Vers 19. And these are the families of the Levites according to their fathers That is of these before named were the severall families of the Levites called to wit the family of the Libnites c. Vers 20. Of Gershom Libni his sonne Jahath his sonne Zimmah his sonne c. Here follows a catalogue of those that were successively the Heads both of the Gershonites Kohathites and Merarites perhaps unto the dayes of David who did dispose of the Levites into new orders and whereas Zimmah is here said to be the sonne of Jahath thereby is meant that he was his grandchild for Shimei was the sonne of Jahath and Zimmah the sonne of Shimei vers 42 43. Vers 25. And the sonnes of Elkanah Amasai and Ahimoth The sonnes of Elkanah are here more particularly expressed because from him descended that Elkanah who was the father of Samuel Vers 26. As for Elkanah the sonnes of Elkanah Zophai his sonne c. This is another Elkanah who was the sonne of Mahath and grandchild of Amasai mentioned in the former verse as is evident vers 35 36. Vers 27. Jeroham his sonne Elkanah his sonne The father of Samuel Vers 31. And these are they whom David set over the service of song in the house of the Lord c. That is these are they that David made chief in the three quires of singers after the Ark had rest that is after it was brought to Davids house for before it was removed from one place to another to wit these mentioned in the sequel of this chapter Heman of the Kohathites ver 33. who was the chief and therefore had the middle quire and Asaph who stood on Hemans right hand v. 39. and was of the Gershonites and Ethan who was also called Jeduthun chap. 25.1 and was of the Merarites and stood on Hemans left hand ver 44. These were in their times famous men as being the chief singers and withall Prophets and pen-men of some of the Psalmes 2. Chron. 29.30 Moreover Hezekiah the king and the princes commanded the Levites to sing praise unto the Lord with the words of David and of Asaph the seer Vers 33. Heman a singer the sonne of Joel the sonne of Shemuel That is Samuel for Heman was Samuels grandchild Vers 50. And these are the sonnes of Aaron Eleazar his sonne Phinehas his sonne c. By occasion of the mention that is made of the severall offices and imployments of the priests in the foregoing verse the catalogue of the sonnes of Eleazar is here again set down unto the dayes of David by whom the priests were divided into foure severall orders Vers 57. And to the sonnes of Aaron they gave the cities of Judah c. And Simeon Josh 21.9 And they gave out of the tribe of the children of Judah and out of the tribe of the children of Simeon these cities which are here mentioned by name Vers 60. All their cities throughout their families were thirteen cities To wit the eleven here mentioned and Ain in Judahs portion and Gibeon in Benjamins which are reckoned amongst the rest Josh 21.16 17. but
was the base which being the most gracefull part of musick is therefore said to excell Vers 23. And Berechiah and Elkanah were doore-keepers for the ark That is they were appointed to keep the doore of the tent where the ark was afterwards kept and accordingly were imployed now in observing that no body should presse in upon the ark the like is again said vers 24. of Obed-Edom and Jehiah and happely two went before the ark and two came after it Vers 26. And it came to passe when God helped the Levites that bare the ark c. That is so soon as they perceived that God was with them in the businesse and did not strike them with death as Uzza was by way of thankfulnesse they offered up sacrifices and this was so soon as they had gone six paces 2. Sam. 6.13 yet others very probably understand this place thus that when the Levites that had carried the ark did by the Lords appointment set it down that so others might take it up and they might be eased at every such resting place they offered seven bullocks and seven rammes Vers 27. David also had upon him an ephod of linnen See 2. Sam. 6.14 CHAP. XVI Vers 1. SO they brought the ark of God and set it in the middest of the tent c. See 2. Sam. 6.17 Vers 5. Asaph the chief c. Heman is named in the first place as chief of the three principall singers chap. 6.33 but Asaph it seems was the chief of those that were deputed to this service in the house of David where the ark was now placed the rest being imployed at present in the Tabernacle at Gibeon vers 39 40. And Zadok the priest and his brethren the priests before the tabernacle of the Lord in the high place that was at Gibeon to offer burnt offerings unto the Lord upon the altar of the burnt offering continually morning and evening and to do according to all that is written in the law of the Lord which he commanded Israel Vers 7. Then on that day David delivered first this Psalme to thank the Lord c. That is this was the first Psalme he delivered them to sing the severall parts whereof were afterward much enlarged by David and reduced into severall Psalmes as we may see Psal 105. and Psal 96. Vers 8. Give thanks unto the Lord c. From hence to the end of the two and twentieth verse is the beginning of the hundred and fifth Psalme and the summe of it is to praise God for the publick benefits afforded to his Church and people the children of Israel in regard whereof in times of any great joy Gods people used to sing this Psalme as may be probably gathered from that which we reade Isa 12.4 And in that day shall ye say Praise the Lord call upon his name c. Vers 11. Seek the Lord and his strength seek his face continually That is seek to know and to assure unto your selves the Lord and his strength by which you can onely hope to be strengthened defended and delivered in times of trouble and his favourable presence and that by resorting to the ark which is the outward signe of his presence amongst you to counsell and instruct you and therefore from thence he used to give his oracles Exod. 25.22 and to be your strong fortresse and defence in regard whereof the ark is elsewhere called the strength of God Psal 78.61 And he delivered his strength into captivity and the ark of his strength Psal 132.8 Arise O Lord into thy rest thou and the ark of thy strength yea and this must be done with perseverance and therefore is the word continually added seek his face continually Vers 12. Remember his marvellous works that he hath done his wonders and the judgements of his mouth That is his law and statutes given on mount Sinai or rather the judgements which he executed upon the adversaries of his people called the judgements of his mouth because they came by his decree and appointment and because of many of them he spake beforehand to Moses and Moses as Gods herald threatened Pharaoh and his people Exod. 7.1 Vers 13. O ye seed of Israel his servant c. Psalm 105.6 it is O ye seed of Abraham and then O ye children of Jacob his chosen ones that is his adopted and peculiar people and that merely of Gods free grace and election Vers 15. Be ye mindfull alwayes of his covenant Psal 105.8 it is He hath remembred his covenant for ever The word which he commanded to a thousand generations That is the conditions of the covenant which on Israels part was the law of faith and obedience on Gods part the promises which for the greater certainty may be also said to be commanded Psal 133.3 There the Lord commanded the blessing even life for evermore Vers 19. When ye were but few even a few c. Psal 105.12 it is when they were but few this is expressed first to imply the freedome of Gods grace in choosing them to be his people Deut. 7.7 secondly to magnifie the more the Lords protecting them Vers 20. And when they went from nation to nation c. To wit when they went up and down in the land of Canaan where were seven mighty nations Deut. 7.1 and sometimes removed thence to other kingdomes as to Egypt Gen. 12.10 and Gerar Gen. 20.1 for under this clause all the travels of the Patriarchies are comprehended Vers 21. Yea he reproved kings for their sakes As Pharaoh Gen. 12.17 and Abimelech Gen. 20.3 Vers 22. Saying Touch not mine anointed and do my prophets no harm That is wrong not those whom I have consecrated to my self by the anointing of my holy spirit my Christians according to that 1. John 2.20 But ye have an unction from the holy one c. and vers 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you c. to whom therefore I do familiarly reveal my will that they may teach instruct others Gen. 20.7 Restore therefore to the man his wife for he is a prophet and he shall pray for thee and thou shalt live c. and thus the Prophet implies that the Lord did thus defend them not onely because they were poore helplesse miserable men unjustly oppressed but also because by speciall covenant God had taken them into his protection Vers 23. Sing unto the Lord all the earth c. From hence to the 34. verse is the ninety sixth Psalme and the chief drift of it is to stirre up all nations to praise the Lord and consequently it includes a prophesie of Christ and of the gathering of all nations into the Church by the preaching of the Gospel and therefore Psal 96.1 to expresse the strange and unlooked for change that should be then in the Church these words a new song are added and sing unto the Lord a new song Vers 27. Glory honour are in his presence strength
the Princes of the tribes it might be expected that in the next place should be set down the number of each tribe that were under these Princes especially because the people had been so lately numbred by David In answer whereto therefore this clause is inserted and two things concerning this are affirmed First that David gave order to number onely those of twenty years old and upwards and that because the Lord had said he would increase Israel like to the starres of the heavens and so David would not attempt to have them so numbred to wit because he would not seem to question the truth of that promise and withall because he did indeed think it would be an endlesse and tedious work And secondly vers 24. Joab the sonne of Zeruiah began to number but finished not because there fell wrath for it against Israel to wit because the plague being begun he saw the work was displeasing to God and so gave it over chap. 21.6 But Levi and Benjamin counted he not for the kings word was abominable to Joab Vers 24. Neither was the number put in the account of the Chronicles of king David To wit both because the work was not finished and because their proceeding so farre in it had brought so great wrath upon Israel Vers 32. And Jehiel the sonne of Hachmoni was with the kings sonnes That is their tutour one that was to see that they were in all things trained up and instructed as beseemed the princes of Israel Vers 33. And Hushai the Archite was the kings companion That is his chief favourite in whose company he most delighted Vers 34. And after Ahithophel was Jehoiada the sonne of Benaiah and Abiathar That is after Ahithophels death Jehoiada and Abiathar were his chief counsellours CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. ANd David assembled all the Princes of Israel Here is repeated what was said before chap. 23.2 for both that and this are meant of the same assembling of the princes Vers 2. Then David the king stood up upon his feet and said c. This phrase here used for Davids standing up upon his feet may seem to imply that though he were now in the generall assembly of the princes and people yet even now he began to be so farre infeebled with age that he used to lie along upon a bed or couch onely being now to be speaker in the assembly to make known the will of God concerning Solomon his sonne he strengthened himself being happely assisted therein by his nobles or servants to stand up upon his feet And indeed within a while after this we see he lay bedrid in great extremity of weaknesse 1. Kings 1.1 I had in my heart to build an house of rest for the ark of the covenant of the Lord and for the footstool of our God That is the ark or the propitiatory or mercy-seat wherewith the ark was covered for elsewhere also we find the ark termed Gods footstool as Psal 99.5 Exalt ye the Lord our God and worship at his footstool and Psal 132.7 We will go into his tabernacle we will worship at his footstool And the reasons why the ark is so called may be first because the Lord being represented as sitting between the wings of the Cherubims as in a throne the body of the ark was in that respect in stead of a footstool to him and secondly to intimate how they ought to judge of Gods presence there in a spirituall manner that the people might not entertain any carnall and earthly conceits of Gods presence there not consonant to the infinite glory and majesty of God the ark is called Gods footstool so to raise their thoughts of God above the world and to teach them so to conceive of Gods presence in the ark as withall to acknowledge that he dwelleth on high and filleth heaven and earth with his glory yea that the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain him 1. Kings 8.27 Vers 4. Howbeit the Lord God of Israel chose me before all the house of my father to be king over Israel for ever To wit in my posterity and this was accomplished in Christ See Luke 1.32 33. Vers 14. He gave of gold by weight for things of gold for all instruments of all manner of service silver also for all instruments of silver c. To wit the golden vessels for the service of the holy place the silver vessels for the Priests court Vers 15. Even the weight for the candlesticks of gold For the holy place were these candlesticks made for though there was but one candlestick in the tabernacle of Moses yet in the Temple there were ten candlesticks of pure gold for the holy place 1. Kings 7.49 As for the candlesticks of silver here also mentioned they were doubtlesse for the porch of the courts and happely also for the chambers that were about the courts Vers 16. And by weight he gave gold for the tables of shew-bread c. For in the temple there were severall tables of shew-bread 2. Chron. 4.19 As for the silver tables here mentioned also they were for the chambers of the Priests and other places of the temple Vers 18. And gold for the pattern of the chariot of the Cherubims c. This must needs be meant not of the two Cherubims that were upon the Mercy-seat one at each end for they were made in Moses time and now carried by Solomon into the Temple but of those two greater Cherubims made by Solomons appointment of Olive wood and covered over with plates of gold and that to stand before the ark to hide and cover it even from the eyes of the high Priest when he came into the most holy place 1. Kings 6.23 And it is called the chariot of the Cherubims not onely because it was the representation of Gods presence there attended with his holy Angels who are called the Lords chariots Psal 68.17 The chariots of God are twenty thousand even thousands of Angels but also happely because there was in these Cherubims thus standing before the ark some resemblance of the chariots used in those times yea and some adde that hereby was signified also that Gods presence in the ark was not so fixed amongst them but that he would leave them if his people should too farre provoke him by their sinnes CHAP. XXIX Vers 1. SOlomon my sonne whom alone God hath chosen is yet young and tender c. See 1. Kings 3.7 Vers 4. Three thousand talents of gold of the gold of Ophir and seven thousand talents of refined silver to overlay the walls of the house withall To wit the gold to overlay the walls of the Temple and the silver to overlay the walls of the other houses and buildings adjoyning to the Temple and as ordinarily we account the value of the talents there was prepared by David of gold eleven millions two hundred and fifty thousand pound sterling and of silver two millions six hundred twenty five thousand pound sterling and accordingly we
may compute what the Princes gave vers 7. Vers 11. Thine O Lord is the greatnesse and the power and the glory c. That is thou art great and powerfull and glorious c. And all greatnesse and power and glory that is conferred upon any man comes from thee and therefore ought to be imployed to thy service at thy command Vers 15. For we are strangers before thee and sojourners as were all our fathers c. As if he should have said even the land wherein we live it is but lent to us for a time and but a short time do we continue in it being all as a shadow that passeth suddenly away and continueth not so that the very land being thine and we but as wayfaring men that onely make use of it for a while consequently all that we enjoy is thine and not ours and of thine own have we given thee But besides the drift of this clause may be also to shew another motive that made them willing to give so freely to the building of the Temple to wit because they by reason of the brevity of their lives could not hope long to enjoy these things and therefore could not but think them better bestowed upon this service of God then kept for themselves Vers 18. Keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of thy people That is this readinesse to consecrate themselves and all that they have to thy service Vers 21. And they sacrificed sacrifices unto the Lord c. To wit before the ark which which was now in Davids house in the tent which there he had prepared for it and therefore it is said vers 22. that the people did eat and drink before the Lord on that day And sacrifices in abundance for all Israel That is the sacrifices were offered in the name of all the people and in such abundance that all the Israelites present might eat of the peace-offerings that were then offered to the Lord. Vers 22. And they made Solomon the sonne of David king the second time c. This though subjoyned immediatly to that which went before concerning their sacrificing the next day after that David had made known his mind to the people is yet to be understood of the annointing of Solomon after Davids death as is evident first because the making of Zadok the sole high priest instead of Abiathar is here joyned with it and it cannot be denied but that was done after Davids death 1. Kings 2.35 secondly because it followeth in the next verse that Solomon sate on the throne as king instead of his father David thirdly because when David made these things known in a publick assembly of his Princes he was not yet bed-rid chap. 18.1 2. so that Adonijahs attempting to make himself king at which time Solomon was first anointed 1. Kings 1.33 34. was after this And last of all because it followeth vers 24. that the other sonnes of David submitted themselves to Solomon which was not till Adonijahs usurpation was defeated 1. Kings 1.9.49.50 Vers 23. Then Solomon sate on the throne of the Lord. All kingdomes and thrones are the Lords because all kings are the Lords vice-gerents and have their power from him but the throne of the kingdome of Israel is upon more peculiar grounds called the throne of the Lord to wit first because the disposing of this throne the Lord wholly challenged to himself Deut. 17.15 Thou shalt in any wise set him king over thee whom the Lord thy God shall choose and secondly because the kings of Judah were figures of Christ the true anointed to whom the throne of David was promised that is that he should be king of the Israel of God for ever Luke 1.33 And he shall reigne over the house of Jacob for ever c. Vers 28. And he died in a good old age To wit when he was seventy years old for David was thirty years old when he began to reigne and he reigned fourty years 2. Sam. 5.4 Vers 29. Now the acts of David the king first and last Behold they are written in the book of Samuel the Seer and in the book of Nathan c. Some understand this thus that the acts of David were related in the history or books of Samuel which are written by Nathan the prophet and Gad the Seer ANNOTATIONS Upon the second book of the CHRONICLES CHAP. I. Vers 3. SO Solomon and all the congregation with him went to the high place that was at Gibeon c. To wit because being now settled in his kingdome maugre the opposition of those that favoured not his cause he desired now in a solemne manner to praise God for his mercies and to seek unto the Lord for wisdome that he might be the better able to govern the people committed to his charge Vers 5. The brazen altar that Bezaleel the sonne of Uri the sonne of Hur had made he put before the tabernacle of the Lord. That is Moses of whom mention was before made vers 3. Vers 7. In that night did God appear unto Solomon To wit in that night after they had made an end of sacrificing those thousand burnt offerings mentioned in the former verse for it is not likely they offered a thousand burnt offerings in one day upon one altar and that in a dream as is expressed 1. Kings 3.6 where see also what is to be noted either in Solomons prayer or Gods answer to him Vers 14. And he had a thousand and foure hundred chariots c. See 1. Kings 10.26 and 1. Kings 4.26 Vers 16. And Solomon had horses brought out of Egypt and linen yarn c. See 1. Kings 10.28 29. CHAP. II. Vers 2. ANd Solomon told out threescore and ten thousand men to bear burdens See 1. Kings 5.15 16. Vers 3. And Solomon sent to Huram the king of Tyre saying As thou didst deal with David my father c. In the 1. Kings 5.3 it is said also that he alledged to Huram that he knew that David could not build an house for the worship of God by reason of his continuall warres whereof himself being eased he was now resolved to undertake the work where also such other passages in this message of Solomon to Huram as need any exposition are already explained Vers 8. For I know that thy servants can skill to cut timber in Lebanon That is excellently better than any of my servants see 1. Kings 5.6 Vers 10. I will give to thy servants the hewers that cut timber twenty thousand measures of beaten wheat c. Or if this did not like him whatsoever hire himself did appoint 1. Kings 5.6 Vers 12. Huram said moreover Blessed be the Lord God of Israel c. See 1. Kings 5.7 Vers 13. And now I have sent a cunning man c. His name was Huram chap. 4.16 or Hiram 1. Kings 7.13 concerning which and what is further herein to be noted see the note there Vers 15. The
wheat and the barley the oyle and the wine which my lord hath spoken of let him send unto his servants Thus he accepts of the hire for his servants which Solomon had profered vers 10. but withall he made a request to him for a certain yearely provision for his own houshold which Solomon granted him also 1 Kings 5.9 11. Of which and some other passages in the king of Tyres answer see the note there Vers 17. And Solomon numbred all the strangers that were in the land of Israel See 1. Kings 5.15 16. CHAP. III. Vers 1. THen Solomon began to build the house of the Lord at Jerusalem in mount Moriah c. See the notes for the first part of this chapter in the sixth chapter of the first of Kings Vers 14. And he made the vail of blew and purple c. Which was hung upon chains of gold betwixt the holy and the most holy place see 1. Kings 6.21 Vers 15. Also he made before the house two pillars c. Concerning these two pillars see the notes 1. Kings 17.15 c. Vers 16. And he made chains as in the oracle and put them on the heads of the pillars That is wreaths of chain-work See 1. Kings 7.17 And made an hundred pomegranates and put them on the chains That is an hundred in each of the two rows that went round about upon the net-work of each chapiter see 1. Kings 7.18 CHAP. IIII. Vers 1. ANd ten cubits the height thereof If their cubites contained a foot and an half as is usually held then according to our measures this altar was five yards high and consequently there was some way for the priests to ascend up to offer their sacrifices on this altar though they might not ascend by such steps as are in a ladder lest their nakednesses should be thereby discovered Exod. 20.26 Neither shalt thou go up by steps unto mine altar that thy nakednesse be not discovered thereon See the notes Exod. 27.1 c. Vers 2. Also he made a molten sea of ten cubits c. Concerning this sea see the notes 1. Kings 7.23 c. Vers 6. He made also ten lavers and put five of them on the right hand c. See the notes 1. Kings 7.39 c. they were set upon so many severall bases which are there also largely described Vers 7. And he made ten candlesticks of gold according to their form c. To wit which the Lord made David to understand in writing much alike to that in the Tabernacle as it seems by the description which is given of them 1. Kings 7.49 And the candlesticks of pure gold five on the right hand and five on the left before the oracle with the flowers and the lamps and the tonges of gold concerning which see the note there Vers 9. Furthermore he made the court of the priests Called the inner court 1. Kings 6.36 Vers 16. All their instruments did Huram his father make to king Solomon c. To wit Solomons father so Solomon it seems called him out of the great respect he bare him for his singular wisdome and skill and the good service he did him in making all these things for the Temple CHAP. V. Vers 2. THen Solomon assembled the elders of Israel c. What needs explanation in this chapter is already explained in the nine first verses of the eight chapter of the first book of the Kings CHAP. VI. Vers 1. THen said Solomon The Lord hath said that he would dwell in the thick darknesse The annotations of this chapter unto the 41. verse see 1. Kings 8.12 c. Vers 41. Now therefore arise O Lord God into thy resting place thou and the ark of thy strength In these words Solomon doth as it were invite the Lord in the ark the signe of his presence to enter and take possession of the Temple as his resting place that is the place of his settled abode and that because the ark was now no longer to be removed from place to place but to continue there and herein he seems to allude to the prayer which Moses used at the removall of the ark as they travelled through the wildernesse Numb 10.35 Rise up O Lord and let thine enemies be scattered c. And he calls the ark the ark of Gods strength as elsewhere it is called Gods strength and glory Psal 78.61 He delivered his strength into captivity and his glory into the enemies hand because it was the signe of Gods presence amongst them as their strength and defence which had been manifested by many mighty works which the Lord had wrought as it were by the presence of the ark as the dividing of Jordan and the fall of the walls of Jericho c. Now because we find this last clause of Solomons prayer Psal 132.8 9 10. that Psalme it may well be was composed by Solomon upon this occasion of the dedication of the Temple See the note 1. Kings 8.54 Let thy priests O Lord be clothed with salvation and let thy saints rejoyce in goodnesse The first clause may be understood two severall wayes either of Gods saving and preserving the priests Let thy priests O Lord be clothed with salvation that is let thy salvation be as a garment to defend them or as a robe to adorn them for it is indeed an honour and glory to men that the great God of heaven and earth should make such precious account of them as to be alwayes watchfull over them to preserve and save them or else of the preservation and salvation of the whole people this being a decking and glorious ornament to the priests that they stood as typicall mediatours betwixt God and them and were the instrumentall meanes of their preservation and salvation even as it is now the glory of the ministers of the Gospel that they are the meanes of saving soules whence it is that S. Paul saith of the converted Thessalonians that they were his joy his glory and crown of rejoycing 1. Thes 2.19.20 Indeed in Psal 132.9 this clause is expressed thus Let thy priests be clothed with righteousnesse but even that also the most Expositours understand of Gods righteousnesse in saving and defending his priests as for that last clause of this verse it is meant doubtlesse of the goodnesse of God let thy saints rejoyce in goodnesse that is let thy holy people rejoyce in thy goodnesse and bountie to them in all regards yet because the goodnesse of God to his people consists chiefly in his making them good even this may be also comprehended in this request of Solomons that Gods people may rejoyce in goodnesse and grace rather then in outward blessings Vers 42. O Lord God turn not away the face of thine anointed That is deny not the request of me thine anointed because when petitioners are denyed their requests their faces are turned away with shame and confusion hence is this phrase turn not away the face of thine anointed Vers 42. Remember the
mercies of David thy servant That is the mercies which thou hast promised to David CHAP. VII Vers 1. NOw when Solomon had made an end of praying the fire came down from heaven c. See the notes Levit. 9.24 and 1. Kings 8.54 Vers 3. And praised the Lord saying For he is good for his mercy endureth for ever That is they sang Psalmes of praise the burthen and foot whereof was this for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever And such we see the 136. Psalme was and therefore happely that was sung at this time the like expression we have again vers 6. Vers 6. David praised by their ministery That is the Levites sung the Psalmes which David composed and appointed to be sung Vers 7. Moreover Solomon hallowed the middle of the court c. See 1. Kings 8.64 Vers 8. Also at the same time Solomon kept the feast c. Concerning this feast see also the notes 1. Kings 8.65.66 Vers 12. And the Lord appeared to Solomon by night c. See 1. Kings 9.1 2. CHAP. VIII Vers 2. THe cities which Huram had restored to Solomon Solomon built them c. Solomon had given them to Huram and Huram not liking them had restored them to Solomon and so Solomon built them See 1. Kings 9.11 12. In which chapter we have also most of the other passages of this chapter and therefore I must referre the reader to the annotations there Vers 11. For he said My wife shall not dwell in the house of David c. In the foregoing words it is said that Solomon brought up the daughter of Pharaoh out of the city of David unto the house that he had built for her and here the reason given for this is for he said My wife shall not dwell in the house of David king of Israel and why so Because the places are holy whereunto the ark of the Lord hath come Concerning which a question of great difficulty may be moved to wit why the house of David should be counted so holy that Solomons wife might not be suffered to dwell there and that even after the ark was already removed thence into the Temple we reade not any where else that the presence of the ark made any place holy any longer then it continued there for was the house of Obed-edom holy after the ark was carried from thence yet here thirteen years after the ark was carryed into the Temple for so long it was after the finishing of the Temple ere Solomon had built his own house and the queens house 1. Kings 7.1 Solomon refused to let his wife dwell in Davids house because the ark had been there yea the words seem to imply that all places were esteemed holy where the ark had been the places are holy saith Solomon whereunto the ark of the Lord hath come But for resolving of this two answers may be given First that those words for he said My wife shall not dwell in the house of David king of Israel because the places are holy c. contain the reason why Solomon resolved to build an house for his wife at which time the ark was yet in the house of David not why he brought up his wife into the house he had built for her when indeed the ark had been long before removed into the Temple and so must be referred to the words immediately foregoing the house that he had built for her Solomon brought up the daughter of Pharaoh out of the city of David unto the house that he had huilt for her and then to shew what moved him to build an house for her this clause is added for he said My wife shall not dwell in the house of David king of Israel because the places are holy whereunto the ark of the Lord hath come Or secondly that Solomon resolved that because the places were holy whereunto the ark was brought therefore it was not fit that his wife who was born of heathen parents and had not her self perhaps at that time embraced the faith of Israel should dwell in the house which had been holy in this regard though Davids house ceased to be holy after the ark was removed thence in regard of the Symbolicall signe of Gods presence yet out of his superabundant respect unto that signe of Gods presence he thought it not fit to make that a dwelling place for her and her followers that were aliens and strangers to the house of Israel which had been the holy dwelling place of the most high God and this I conceive to be the best and most satisfying answer CHAP. IX Vers 1. ANd when the Queen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon c. See 1. Kings 10.1 where also many other passages of this chapter are explained in the Annotations upon the severall passages there Vers 8. Which delighted in thee to set thee on his throne That is the throne of Israel 1. Kings 10.9 All thrones are Gods because all power is of God and he disposeth all the kingdomes in the world to whom he pleaseth Daniel 4.32 The most high ruleth in the kingdome of men and giveth it to whomsoever he will But the throne of Israel was the Lords in a more speciall respect because there was a speciall covenant betwixt God and Israel in regard whereof he was more peculiarly their God and king and their kings his deputies and types of Christ Psal 2.6 I have set my king upon my holy hill of Sion Vers 10. And the servants of Huram c. See 1. Kings 10 11 12. Vers 12. And king Solomon gave to the Queen of Sheba all her desire whatsoever she asked besides that which she had brought unto the king That is besides what he gave her of his own royall bounty 1. Kings 10.13 in lieu of those guifts which she had brought to him or rather besides what he gave her in gifts of the same kind with those which she had given him to wit gold and spices and precious stones he gave her also other things that were greater rarities to her because she had them not in her own countrey Vers 13. Now the weight of gold that came to Solomon c. See 1. Kings 10.14 c. Vers 25 And Solomon had foure thousand stalls for horses and chariots c. See 1. Kings 4.26 Vers 28. And they brought unto Solomon horses out of Egypt c. See 1. Kings 10.28 Vers 29. Now the rest of the acts of Solomon first and last are they not written in the book of Nathan c. See 1. Kings 11.41 CHAP. X. Vers 1. ANd Rehoboam went to Sechem This story is related as here in 1. Kings 12.1 Concerning which therefore see the Annotations there CHAP. XI Vers 4. ANd they obeyed the words of the Lord c. See 1. Kings 12.24 Vers 11. And he fortified the strong holds and put captains in them c. That is many places that were by situation and nature strong he fortified also
thickets Vers 14. Even to the entring in of the fish-gate c. So called because there they used to sell fish Vers 15. And he took away the strange gods and the idols out of the house of the Lord. That idol mentioned vers 7. Vers 20. And they buried him in his own house To wit in the garden of his house called the garden of Vzza 2. Kings 21.18 CHAP. XXXIIII Vers 2. ANd he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord c. See many severall notes for this chapter 2. Kings 22.2 c. and 23.1 c. Vers 11. And to floor the houses which the kings of Judah had destroyed That is the chambers of the priests and Levites which joyned to the Temple Vers 12. And the overseers of them were Jahath c and other of the Levites all that could skill of instruments of musick Those being purposely it seems chosen to oversee the work that might also at set times praise the Lord whilest the work went forward with instruments of musick CHAP. XXXV Vers 3. ANd said unto the Levites that taught all Israel which were holy unto the Lord Put the holy ark in the house which Solomon the sonne of David king of Israel did build It seems that in his father Ammons reigne either the ark had been put out of the most holy place that some idol might be set up in the place thereof and so was set aside in some other place of the Temple or perhaps quite removed out of the Temple or else it had been purposely carried out by the priests that it might not stand there amongst those heathenish idols that were brought into the Temple and therefore now Josiah calls upon the Levites to restore the ark to its own place again in the Temple where formerly it stood Indeed the Levites might not enter the holy place but they might bring it to the entrance of the Temple and there the priests might receive it of them and perhaps by the Levites here are meant all the tribe of Levi both priests and Levites It shall not be a burden upon your shoulders That is the ark the testimony of Gods presence must abide in the Temple his dwelling place and must not be carried from one place to another upon your shoulder as it was before the Temple was built Vers 5. And stand in the holy place according to the divisions of the families of the fathers of your brethren the people c. It seems the severall families of the Levites were severally appointed to attend upon the sacrifices and offerings of the severall families of each tribe some to be employed in that holy service for such and such families and other for others and hence it is that they are here appointed to stand in the holy place that is to attend the service that was to be done according to the divisions of the families of the people and after the division of their own families Vers 11. And they killed the passeover and the priests sprinkled the bloud c. See chap. 30.17 Vers 12. And they removed the burnt offerings that they might give according to the divisions of the families of the people c. That is of those cattell that were given both for sacrifices of all kinds and for the passeover they set apart such cattell as should be for burnt offerings which were wholly to be offered upon the altar that so then of the rest they might give unto the people partly for paschall lambs partly for peace offerings whereof both priests and people had their share or else it may be meant of removing from the peace offerings the fat the kidnies c. that were to be burnt upon the altars Vers 13. But the other holy offerings sod they in pots c. To wit so much of the peace offerings as was to be prepared for the offerers to eat before the Lord. Vers 18. And there was no passeover like to that c. See 2. Kings 23.22 where are also many other notes for the following part of this chapter Vers 25. And all the singing-men and the singing-women spake of Josiah in their lamentations to this day and made them an ordinance in Israel c. The meaning of this may be that it grew to a custome which they observed as a law or else that it was indeed established for an ordinance that in all the mournfull ditties which were sung upon occasion of any publick calamitie they should still mention the mourning that was at the death of Josiah which accordingly the singing-men and the singing-women did upon all such occasions constantly observe As for that following clause And behold they are written in the Lamentations thereby may be meant some volume of mournefull ditties extant in those times wherein it was evident how this was practised amongst the people or else it may be referred to Jeremiahs Lamentations for the death of Josiah CHAP. XXXVI Vers 5. THen the people of the land took Jehoohaz the sonne of Josiah and made him king c. See 2. Kings 23.30 2. And he reigned three moneths in Jerusalem In which time he set up Idolatry again and did evil according to all that his fathers had done See 2. Kings 23.32 Vers 3. And the king of Egypt put him down at Jerusalem That is he deposed him from being king at or in Jerusalem to wit that he should no more reigne as king in that citie but at Riblah this was done for thither the king of Egypt sent for him and there he deposed him and put him in bands or else it may be that he was deposed at Jerusalem and put in bands at Riblah as is expressed 2. Kings 23.33 concerning which see the note there And condemned the land in an hundred talents of silver and a talent of gold which accordingly Eliakim exacted of the people and then paid it to Pharaoh 2. Kings 23.35 Vers 4. And turned his name to Jehoiakim As a memoriall that he was his vassall and that he had made him king And Necho took Jehoahaz his brother and carried him to Egypt Where he died 2. Kings 23.34 Vers 5. Jehoiakim was twenty and five years old when he began to reigne c. See 2. Kings 23.36.37 Vers 6. Against him came up Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon and bound him in fetters c. See 2 Kings 24.1 2. Vers 8. His abominations which he did and that which was found in him c. To wit his rebellion against Nebuchadnezzar and other things which he did 2. Kings 24.1 2 c Vers 9. Jehoiachin was eight years old when he began to reigne c. See 2. Kings 24.8 9. Vers 10. When the yeare was expired king Nebuchadnezzar sent c. That is when the new yeare came in Nebuchadnezzar sent his servants as is related 2. Kings 24.10 who besieged Jerusalem whereupon Jehoiachin by the advice of Jeremiah yielded up himself and his into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar who carried him to
that they poured forth whole streams of tears before the Lord drawn from the inward fountain of a broken heart and so paralell it with those expressions of Jeremy Jer. 9.1 Oh that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountain of tears that I might weep day and night c. of Job Job 16.20 Mine eye poureth out tears unto God and so also of David Psal 6.6 All the night make I my bed swimme I water my couch with tears and Psal 42.3 My tears have been my meat day and night And again others conceive that it is meant of their drawing and pouring forth water for the use of their legall purifying which was frequently used in those times as a signe that they acknowledged their own filthinesse and expected to be cleansed by the bloud and spirit of Christ And indeed this last best agreeth with the letter of the Text. Vers 9. And Samuel took a sucking lambe and offered it for a burnt-offering c. If Samuel offered this himself and not by the hands of the priests it was by extraordinary dispensation in regard he was a prophet for so we see also Elijah did 1. Kings 18.31 c. The like we must judge also concerning the place wherein this sacrifice was offered at least if the Ark were not at present in Mizpeh Vers 10. But the Lord thundred with a great thunder on that day upon the Philistines This was according to Hannahs prophecy chap. 2.10 But yet the Israelites were fighting not idly looking on when the Lord thundred upon them as is evident in the next clause and they were smitten before Israel No doubt in the best manner they were able they set themselves in battel array against the Philistines yea and when the Philistines were discomfited it seems the rest that staid in Mizpeh came out too as seems to be expressed in the following verse Vers 12. Then Samuel took a stone and set it between Mizpeh and Shen and called the name of it Eben-ezer c. This shews that this glorious victory was gotten in the very same place where before the ark was taken and the Israelites vanquished chap. 4. verse 1. Now Israel went out against the Philistines to battel and pitched beside Eben-ezer Vers 13. So the Philistines were subdued and they came no more into the coast of Israel c. It may be questioned how these words must be understood that the Philistines came no more into the coast of Israel and that first Because it is evident that the Philistines did often after this invade the land of Israel as is clear chap. 17.1 and 31.1 many other places Yea and secondly It was not long after this ere they did enter the land and that with a mighty army For in the beginning of Sauls reign chap. 13.1 5. which was not long after this the Philistines gathered themselves together to fight with Israel thirty thousand charets and six thousand horsemen and people as the sand which is on the sea-shore in multitude and they came and pitched in Michmash c. and thirdly The very following words here and the hand of the Lord was against the Philistines all the dayes of Samuel seem clearly to imply that after this even in Samuels dayes there were many conflicts between the Philistines and the Israelites wherein the Israelites still prevailed against them But for the resolving of this doubt we must know that the meaning of these words And they came no more into the coast of Israel is that they did no more at that time rally their scattered troops together and come back again into the land of Israel to revenge their former defeat or else that they came no more into the land whilst Samuel governed Israel alone and indeed this is the utmost extent that can be given to these words for after Saul was chosen to be their King it is evident that the Philistines did often with their armies enter the land Vers 14. And the cities which the Philistines had taken from Israel were restored to Israel from Ekron even unto Gath c. It is plain by many places that in the beginning of Sauls reigne the Philistines had garrisons in severall places of the land of Israel for so we reade chap. 10.5 Thou shalt come to the hill of God saith Samuel to Saul when he had newly anointed him King where is the garrison of the Philistines and again chap. 13.3 Jonathan smote the garrison of the Philistines that was in Geba and the like in other places either therefore the Philistines did again after this surprise some strong forts which they had now delivered up and did again place garrisons there or else though they now restored to Israel the cities they had formerly taken from them yet they still reserved some places of strength wherein they kept garrisons for the better awing of the Israelites that they might not break out against the Philistines And there was peace between Israel and the Amorites That is there was no warre between them By the Amorites here some conceive the Philistines are meant but it may also be meant of the remainder of the Canaanites who being terrified with this victory which the Israelites had gotten over the Philistines did hereupon also desist from troubling the Israelites for this is here set down as an effect of that victory Vers 15. And Samuel judged Israel all the dayes of his life For though Saul were anointed King in Samuels time and had the supreme power in his hand yet Samuel gave not over the government altogether but exercised the jurisdiction of a Judge or a kind of extraordinary power derived unto him from God as appears by many things he did after Saul was King as his killing of Agag chap. 15.32 33. Then said Samuel Bring you hither to me Agag the King of the Amalekites and Agag came unto him delicately And Agag said Surely the bitternes of death is past And Samuel said As thy sword hath made women childlesse so shall thy mother be childles among women And Samuel hewed Agag in pieces before the Lord in Gilgal And his anointing of David chap. 16.13 Then Samuel took the horn of oyle anointed him in the midst of his brethren and therefore are Saul Samuel joyned together chap. 11.7 And he took a yoke of oxen hewed them in pieces and sent throughout all the coasts of Israel by the hands of messengers saying Whosoever cometh not forth after Saul and after Samuel so shall it be done unto his oxen And the years of both their government are joyned together Act. 13.20 21. And after that he gave unto them Judges about the space of foure hundred and fifty years untill Samuel the prophet And afterward they desired a king and God gave unto them Saul the sonne of Cis a man of the tribe of Benjamin by the space of fourty years Vers 17. And there he built an altar unto the Lord. This he might do by an extraordinary Propheticall
instinct especially in these times when it is very questionable whether they were bound to that Law Deut. 12.15 to wit because the Tabernacle and the Ark were now in severall places and so a long time continued CHAP. VIII Vers 1. ANd it came to passe when Samuel was old that he made his sonnes judges over Israel To wit as his deputies and substitutes being through age unable to go through the land to judge the people as formerly he had done he appointed his sonnes to judge the people in some part of the land in his stead and that happely not without Gods permission and consent Vers 2. Now the name of his first-born was Joel Who was also called Vashni 1 Chron. 6.28 They were judges in Beersheba Though they exercised authority and power of Judges over all the people at least in those parts and went happely in their circuits as their father had done yet there they dwelt as their father did in Ramah and there most an end they judged the people and that it may be purposely either because that town was in the utmost southpart of the land the furthest off from Ramah from whence it was most trouble for the people to come to Samuel in Ramah or because it bordered close upon the land of the Philistines over whom they might the better keep a vigilant eye Vers 3. And his sonnes walked not in his wayes but turned aside after lucre Not onely the singular piety of Samuel but also the experience he had of Gods severity against Eli for his indulgence to his children may well induce us to think that he did what he could to train up his sonnes in the wayes of righteousnesse nor can we indeed think that he would have entrusted them with the subordinate power of governing the people under him had they not to that time behaved themselves well and given hope of managing the trust well that was committed to them but being advanced to these places of dignity and power it seems they soon degenerated and proved the occasion of much mischief to the commonwealth Vers 5. Behold thou art old and thy sonnes walk not in thy wayes now make us a King c. They expressely pretend onely Samuels age and his sonnes wickednesse as the reasons why they desired a King but there were other things that did chiefly move them in this attempt to wit first their fear of the great preparations which they perceived Nahash the king of the children of Ammon made against them whereupon as men not having any confidence in Gods protection they fly to other devices and pi●ch upon this of making them a king chap. 12.12 And when ye saw that Nahash the king of the children of Ammon came against you ye said unto me Nay but a king shall reigne over us and secondly an ambitious affectation of being like other nations by turning their government into an absolute Monarchy which is implyed in their last words Now make us a king to judge us like all the nations But though they were resolved to have a king yet they referre the choice of him that should reigne over them to the Lord for they came to Samuel as a Prophet that might enquire in this businesse of God and that no doubt as pretending respect to that which was written in their Law Deut. 17.14 15. When th●● art come unto the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee and shalt possesse it and shalt dwell therein and shalt say I will set a king over me like as all the nations that are about me Thou shalt in any wise set him king over thee whom the Lord thy God shall choose Vers 6. But the thing displeased Samuel c. It could not but greive him that the people of whom he had deserved so well should thus unthankfully shake off his government but the cheif thing that troubled him was because he knew their desire was sinfull and would be displeasing to God and therefore that clause is added that Samuel prayed unto the Lord that is he prayed him to forgive this their sinne to help in this danger and to direct him what course he should take with them Vers 7. And the Lord said unto Samuel Hearken unto the voice of the people in all that they say unto thee Thus God yields to their desire but in his anger Hosea 13.11 For they have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reigne over them That is For they have rejected me rather then thee we have the like phrase in many places of Scripture as Matth. 10.20 For it is not ye that speak but the spirit of your father which speaketh in you It is the spirit of your father rather then you that speaks Hos 6.6 For I desired mercie and not sacrifice that is mercie rather then sacrifice Acts 5.4 Thou hast not lied unto men but unto God that is unto God rather then men And this God saith first because they cast off that government which God had established amongst them for though God had a purpose to erect a regall throne amongst them and to give them Kings out of whose seed the Messiah should come and now made use of their inordinate desire to accomplish his own purpose as usually he doth turn the evil actions of men to a good end yea though he had partly made known this to his people Gen. 17.6 And I will make thee exceeding fruitfull and I will make nations of thee and kings shall come out of thee and 49.10 The sceptre shall not depart from Judah nor a law-giver from between his feet untill Shiloh come Deut. 17.18 And it shall be when he sitteth upon the throne of his kingdome that he shall write him a copie of this law in a book yet they should have waited Gods leisure neither was it therefore lawfull to make an innovation in the government without any direction from the Lord especially in such a sinfull manner out of a distrustfull fear and proud affectation to be therein like all other nations as is noted before upon Deut. 17.14 secondly because though God do govern by kings also Prov. 8.15 16. By me Kings reigne and Princes decree justice By me Princes rule and Nobles even all the Judges of the earth yet his government was more immediate which he now exercised over them by Judges both because they were extraordinarily raised up of God and because they had not that absolute power which kings usually have but judge them chiefly by making known to them the will of God and to that end did often enquire of the Lord in difficult cases see Judg. 8.23 And thus the Lord shews Samuel first the grievousnesse of their sinne and that this moved him in his displeasure to yield them their desire and secondly he sought to prevent the wonder and indignation of Samuel for why they dealt no otherwise with him then with the Lord himself as Christ saith to his disciples Matt. 10.24 ●5 The disciple
and Gibeah where Saul and Jonathan and the forces of the Israelites were chap. 13.16 lay North and South the one from the other and that these two rocks here mentioned Bozez and Seneh lay together in the midst the one Northward the other Southward for how else could it be said in the following verse that the forefront of the one was situate Northward over against Michmash and the other Southward over against Gibeah But now the difficulty is how therefore it can be here said that these rocks were between the passages by which Jonathan sought to go over and yet withall that there was a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side which seem to be contrary the one to the other But for the resolving of this I know no other probable answer that can be given but this to wit first that the passages between which the rocks are said to be were the two severall streights or inlets whereat there was a passable way though craggy through these rocks the one as they came from Michmash to go to Gibeah the other as they went from Gibeah to go to Michmash so that indeed there was but one passage through these rocks and that was surely the passage mentioned in the last verse of the foregoing chapter which the Philistines had surprized onely the two inlets into this are the passages here intended the one called the passage of Michmash as we see chap. 13.23 the other the passage of Gibeah And secondly that whereas it is said there was a sharp rock on the one side a sharp rock on the other the meaning is not that as men went along in this passage there was a sharp rock on each side to wit on the right hand and on the left for the rocks standing the one with the forefront Northward and the other with the forefront Southward that could not be He that went through this passage from Gibeah to Michmash must go over both rocks one after another and could not have one on his right hand and the other on his left but that there was a sharp rock on the one side toward Michmash and a sharp rock on the other side toward Gibeah which is mentioned to shew that unlesse it were by that passage which the Philistines kept there was no going over a sharp steep craggie rock making the way unpasseable in all other places all which notwithstanding Jonathan with his armour-bearer clambered over this rock on his hands and feet and so got to the garrison of the Philistines Vers 6. Come and let us go over unto the garrison of these uncircumcised This calling the Philistines uncircumcised was to intimate that Jonathan relyed upon the covenant which God had made with his people and consequently upon the promises which the Lord had given them that they should vanquish their enemies and happely more particularly upon that which the Lord had said concerning Saul that he should save his people out of the hand of the Philistines chap. 9.16 Yet he addes It may be that the Lord will work for us for though he were carried to this attempt by a powerfull instinct of Gods spirit and a strong faith in the promises of God yet because he had not a speciall promise of victory at this time he is not confident of the successe but leaveth that to God It may be c. Vers 7. Behold I am with thee according to thy heart That is as willing and ready to follow thee in this enterprise as thine own soul can desire Vers 9. If they say thus unto us Tarty untill we come to you then we will stand still c. By the secret guidance of Gods holy spirit he pitcheth no doubt upon this as a signe whereby he should know whether they might with hope of successe undertake this attempt and no doubt prayed that it might prove a true token as Abrahams servant did in alike case Gen. 24.13 concerning which see the note there Yet was not this chosen without some ground of naturall reason for if they said Tarry untill we come to you it might argue courage and boldnesse but if they said Come up to us that might bewray some fearfulnesse in them Vers 11. And both of them discovered themselves unto the garrison of the Philistines c. To wit in the way that led to the ordinary passage which was now kept by the Philistines As for that scoff of the Philistines when they espied them Behold the Hebrews come forth out of the holes see the note above vers 2. Vers 12. And the men of the garrison answered Jonathan and his armour-bearer and said Come up to us and we will shew you a thing This they say by way of derision as implying that they durst not come up or that if they did they would give them their payment but God intended it as a token advising Jonathan what he should do Vers 13. And Jonathan climbed up upon his hands and upon his feet c. To wit because the way where they went was so steep that otherwise they could not have clambered up and because by this means they might the better shelter themselves under the rocks and so get up unespyed for we must know that they went not up in the ordinary passage which was kept by the Philistines but when they had discovered themselves to the Philistines in that way and the Philistines had in a scoffing manner challenged them to come up as is before noted vers 11 12. then they turned aside and crept up on the sharp rock above mentioned vers 4. where the Philistines never dreamt of an enemies coming upon them and so came upon them unawares Had they climbed up in any place where the Philistines could have seen them we may well think that they might easily have beaten them down but they therefore wound about some other way and clambering up on all foure as we use to say did shelter themselves under the covert of those craggy rocks till they were gotten up in a place where the Philistines looked not for them Vers 15. And there was trembling in the host c. In these words is shewn whence it was that Jonathan and his armour-bearer should so strangely beat down the garrison of the Philistines before them and that presently upon this the whole army of the Philistines should so easily be put to disorder and flight it was because the Lord had stricken them all with a mighty terrour there was trembling in the host c. not onely the garrison was thus affrighted whom Jonathan at first assaulted but those also in the camp and the spoilers to wit those mentioned before chap. 13.17 they also trembled all which too was helped forward with a terrible earthquake that was sent at the same time the earth quaked that is that also was moved under them and seemed as it were to quake for fear which I say no doubt the Lord sent the more to terrifie and
affright the Philistines Vers 18. And Saul said unto Ahiah Bring hither the Ark of God c. This he enjoyned that Ahiah having put on the Ephod might enquire of God what was the cause of that tumult in the camp of the Philistines and what he should do Saul had already been a long time in great straits for all his souldiers except six hundred were gone away from him the Philistines lay close upon him with a mighty army insomuch that he durst not stirre out of his trenches in Gibeah and the enemy taking the advantage thereof had sent out three companies of spoilers to wast and spoil the countrey round about and yet all this while we reade no that he enquired of God though he had the Ark all this while with him But now when his watchman had descried a tumult in the camp of the Philistines and that he perceived by the absence of his sonne and his armour-bearer that they were engaged amongst them and that it was probable by the relation of his watchman that the Philistines were disordered now on a sudden not knowing what he should do the Priest was called to enquire of God and yet it was but a sudden fit of devotion to which he was forced by his present distresse as is evident by that which follows immediately in the next verse Vers 19. The noise that was in the host of the Philistines went on and increased and Saul said unto the Priest Withdraw thine hand This did notably discover Sauls profanenesse being at first perplexed and not knowing what to do he called for the Ark to enquire of God but presently again perceiving by the increasing noise and tumult in the camp of the Philistines that some greivous disaster had indeed befallen them then away with the Ark away with the Priest and his Ephod Ahiah saith he withdraw thine hand as if he should have said Give over it is no time now to stand consulting and enquiring of God the increasing of the tumult sheweth evidently enough what we have to do we shall lose an opportunity of victory which afterwards we may wish for when it is too late and therefore must not now lose time to ask counsel of God And indeed by the many sad effects that accompanied the following victory we may see how much God was displeased with this his profane contempt of the ordinance of God Vers 21. Moreover the Hebrews that were with the Philistines even they also turned to be with the Israelites that were with Saul and Jonathan That is their bondmen and servants yea and those also that for fear were forced to come up with their carriages and provision c. to the camp of the Philistines Vers 24. And the men of Israel were distressed that day Being weary through labour and toil and ready to faint they durst not eat any thing because of Sauls oath and herein they were distressed But if besides they were hunger-bitten before by reason of the spoiling bands of the Philistines that kept all provisions from them this must needs make their misery the greater For Saul had adjured the people saying Cursed be the man that eateth any food untill evening That is he had with an oath pronounced concerning the people that he should be accursed and as an accursed thing should be put to death whosoever he was amongst them that should eat any thing untill the evening as is evident by that sentence pronounced against Jonathan when he had onely tasted of the honey in the wood vers 44. And Saul answered God do so and more also for thou shalt surely die Jonathan The reason why Saul did this was that the people might not loose any time from pursuing the enemy But the oath was rash and inconsiderate and like enough to have proceeded from a proud desire to seem very zealous in the pursuing of these enemies against whom erewhile he durst not shew his head Vers 27. He put forth the end of the rod that was in his hand and dipt it in an hony-combe and put his hand to his mouth and his eyes were enlightened Being enfeebled with extreme labour and emptinesse his eyes waxed dimme which now by this little refreshing were enlightened again Vers 28. Then answered one of the people and said Thy father straitly charged the people with an oath c. That which is spoken with reference to any thing before done by another man is called an answer in the Scripture phrase as well as that which is spoken with reference to something before said by another so when Christ had whipped out those that profaned the Temple it is said Joh. 2.18 Then answered the Jews and said unto him What signe c. and so it is here Yet it may be conceived that Jonathan encouraging the people in the pursuit of the enemy one of the company returned him this answer to shew the reason why the souldiers were faint and could not follow on Vers 31. And they smote the Philistines that day from Michmash to Aijalon Which was in the tribe of Dan Josh 19.42 and therefore not farre from the Philistines countrey yet some hold that it was anothet Ajalon in the tribe of Judah 2. Chron. 11.10 Vers 32. And the people flew upon the spoil and took sheep and oxen c. To wit when the evening was come and the time prefixed by Saul expired being then pressed with extreme hunger through long fasting and labour they greedily flew upon the spoyl dressed and eat it not staying till it could be throughly cleansed of the bloud the life as it were yet panting in the flesh which was contrary to the Law Deut. 12.16 Onely ye shall not eat the bloud ye shall poure it upon the earth as water and thus they that were so very carefull to observe the kings edict never regarded the breach of Gods commandment Vers 33. And he said Ye have transgressed Or Ye have dealt treacherously Thus he was eager against the people for eating with the bloud but never charged himself who by a rash vow had thus caused the people to sinne Roll a great stone unto me this day To wit either that thereon in Sauls sight they might kill and eat to the end he might see them let the bloud run clearly out from the cattell they killed or else for the building of the Altar mentioned vers 35. that they might kill and eat as it were in the presence both of God and their king that so he might be sure to prevent their eating with the bloud any more Vers 35. And Saul built an altar unto the Lord. To wit either as a monument of this his late victory or rather that he might offer thereon gratulatory sacrifices for that glorious victory which God had given them And this is said to be the first altar that he built unto the Lord either because those altars in Gilgal and elsewhere whereon he had formerly sacrificed were built by others before and this was the first