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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

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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
therefore he must suffer for it yea the father must deliver his own sonne to death this they demanded peremptorily and nothing else would serve their turn wherein we see how God tryed the faith of Gideon in this first act of his obedience to Gods command Vers 31. And Joash said unto all that stood against him Will ye plead for Baal c. It seems that Joash had hitherto himself been a worshiper of Baal either therefore God did now extraordinarily change his mind and move him thus to plead against Baal or else Gideon had acquainted his father with the vision he had seen and so wonne him to approve of his fact and to desire the suppressing of that idol-worship which formerly himself had practised or else being a man indifferent for matters of Religion he sayes this to save his sonne not being very zealous for his idol-god as pretending it a wrong to plead for Baal as if he could not plead for himself Vers 32. Therefore on that day he called him Jerubbaal saying Let Baal plead against him c. As it were in memorie of this fact and to testifie his resolution to defend him in it For Jerubbaal is by interpretation Let Baal plead for himself In 2. Sam. 11.21 he is called Jerubbesheth Vers 33. Then all the Midianites and the Amalekites and the children of the East were gathered together and went over and pitched in the valley of Jezreel That is they came over Jordan for they came out of the east and pitched in the valley of Jezreel which was in the tribe of Manasseh Josh 17.16 And the children of Joseph said The hill is not enough for us and all the Canaanites that dwell in the land of the valley have chariots of iron both they which are of Bethshean and her towns and they who are of the valley of Jezreel and borders upon Issachar Josh 19.18 and not farre therefore from Ophrah where Gideon was there was another Jezreel in the tribe of Judah Josh 15.56 But the city which gave the name to this valley was in the tribe of Manasseh where the kings of Israel had a stately pallace 1. Kings 21.1 And it came to passe after these things that Naboth the Jezreelite had a vineyard which was in Jezreel hard by the pallace of Ahab king of Samaria Vers 34. But the Spirit of the Lord came upon Gideon That is God by his Spirit did work upon him in an unusuall manner by stirring up in him a zealous desire to go against the Midianites and furnished him with all gifts requisite for the service he had called him to and because happely his carriage of himself in the businesse was such that every one might plainly see that it was a Spirit above that of mans that carried him on in this work therefore is it that in the Hebrew the word is clothed But the Spirit of the Lord clothed Gideon And he blew a trumpet and Abiezer was gathered after him That is his own family the Abiezrites who now saw their folly in opposing him in Baals behalf or if not so were at least in their necessity glad to cleave to him Vers 35. And he sent messengers throughout all Manasseh c. That is both those within and those without Jordan And he sent messengers unto Asher and unto Zebulun and unto Naphtali and they came up to meet them The meaning is that he sent messengers to all the neighbouring tribes except Ephraim which occasioned that quarrell related afterwards in the eight chapter and so from all these tribes there came many in to Gideon for that is the meaning of the last clause And they came up to meet them that is from these tribes there came many to meet and to joyn themselves with those forces he had already gathered Vers 37. Behold I will put a fleece of wooll on the floore c. See the former note vers 13. No doubt Gideon had respect in these two following signes which he desired onely to be assured of Gods will concerning the event of his fighting with the Midianites and happely thereby to encourage his followers and souldiers whom he gathered together yet herein also we have a sweet resemblance of Gods dealing with the Jews first and afterward with the Gentiles the doctrine of salvation and spirit of grace are often in the Scripture compared to a dew distilling down from heaven Deut. 32.2 My doctrine shall drop as the rain my speech shall distill as the dew as the small rain upon the tender herb and as the showers upon the grasse Hos 14.5 I will be as the dew unto Israel he shall grow as the lillie and cast forth his roots as Lebanon A long time the Jews were filled with this dew whilst all the nations of the earth besides were dry and barren Psal 147.19 20. He sheweth his word unto Jacob his Statutes and judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any nation and as for his judgements they have not known them But now since Christs coming this fleece the people of the Jews are become dry whilst all nations of the earth about them are continually watered with this dew of grace Psal 107.33 34 25. He turneth rivers into a wildernesse and the water springs into dry ground A fruitfull land into barrennesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein He turneth the wildernesse into a standing water and dry ground into water springs Esa 35.6 7. Then shall the lame man leap as an hart and the tongue of the dumbe sing for in the wildernesse shall waters break out and streams in the desert Esa 43.19 20. Behold I will do a new thing now it shall spring forth Shall ye not know it I will even make a way in the wildernesse and rivers in the desert The beasts of the field shall honour me the Dragons and the Owls because I give waters in the wildernesse and rivers in the desert to give drink to my people● my chosen CHAP. VII Vers 1. THen Jerubbaal who is Gideon and all the people that were with him rose up early and pitched beside the well of Harod Which signifieth fear probable it is therefore that it was so called from the fear of those cowardly Israelites which here forsook their Captain and brethren Vers 2. The people that are with thee are too many for me to give the Midianites into their hands lest Israel vaunt themselves c. The whole army that Gideon had gathered when they were all together was but two and thirty thousand and the Midianites on the other side were at least a hundred thirty and five thousand for there were an hundred and twenty thousand of them slain in the first overthrow and the remainder that were left with Zebah and Zalmunna were fifteen thousand chap. 8.10 So that the Midianites were above foure times so many as the Israelites when Gideon had his whole army together Now considering first this great disproportion that was already betwixt the forces of
ever a whit the more question these divine Oracles Surely the Scripture is the Churches Magna Charta whereon all our priviledges and all our hopes depend as we are Christians and therefore I hope none that professe themselves fellow-citizens of the saints will suffer such a treasure as this to be taken from them No but the more violently Satan rageth against it the more we should prize it and the more diligently we should exercise our selves in the study of it Now Reader if herein this which I send forth abroad for the good of the Church shall afford thee any help blesse God for it and pray for him who is Thine in the Lord Jesus ARTHUR JACKSON Faults escaped Page 19 line 14 for now they reade and so now they p. 56. l 7 devided r. decided p. 8. l. 13. into parts r. into two parts p 135. l. 11. Ephraim quarrelled r. Ephraims quarrell p. 149. l. 10. retained r. reclaimed p. 181. l. 26 Michael r. Michal and l. 27 Michaels r. Michals p. 291. l. 4 understanding r. undertaking p. 301. l 45. pillars r. pillows p. 337. l. 4. and lived r. that is he lived p. 429. l. 29. it is Isaiah r. is that Isaiah p. 468. l. 17. after set out adde for the most holy place p. 507. l. 3● after what God adde required p 513. l. 30. between r. from p 514 l. 3 indeed after r. indeed because after p. 656. l. 7. were carried r. were not carried l 40 off him r. off to him p. 669 l. 4. foure r. foure and twenty l. 31. we r. a●e p. 684. l. ult 2. 6. r. 2. Sam 6 p 712. l. 1. observed r. offered p. 736. l. 17. was absolute r. was not absolute and for also r. all p. 741. l. 24. at least r. at last p. 757. l. 20. the readily r the more readily p 760. l 37. Hanani r. Nehemiah p 773. l. 3 quality r. quantity l 4. durst do r. durst not do p. 805 l. 43 dele him ANNOTATIONS Upon the book of JOSHUA CHAP. I. NOw after the death of Moses the servant of the Lord it came to passe that the Lord spake unto Joshua c. Here begins the history of Israels commonwealth under the government of Joshua and therefore is this book called the book of Joshua Some adde also that it was so called because it was written by Joshua which may be judged the more probable first because the example of Moses herein who wrote the State of Israels common-wealth in his time might be a strong inducement to Joshua to do the like and secondly because that place chap 24.26 And Joshua wrote these words in the book of the Law of God c. is an evident proof that he wrote some part of this book if not that he wrote it all It is true there are some passages in this book which could not be written by Joshua as 1. That mention which is made of the book of Jasher Chap. 10.13 And the Sunne stood still and the Moon stayed untill the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies Is not this written in the book of Jasher for this book of Jasher was written after Davids time as is evident 2. Sam. 1.18 where it is said that David bid them teach the children of Judah the use of the bow behold it was written in the book of Jasher 2. That story of the expedition of the Danites when they took Laish mentioned in this book of Joshua chap. 19.47 which was long after that Judges 18.1 c. and 3. The relation of Joshua his death and buriall chap. 24.29 30. These things and some others that might be picked out could not indeed be written by Joshua but though the book it self were written by Joshua yet these passages might be inserted afterwards by some other Penman of the holy Ghost for so also in the foregoing books which all men yield were written by Moses we find some passages too that could not be written by Moses himself but were afterwards added by some other as is noted upon that relation of the death buriall of Moses Deut. 34.5 c. However sufficient it is for us to know that whoever wrote this book he wrote it by the inspiration of the holy Ghost for hereto there is a testimonie given in the new Testament where some passages thereof are cited as parts of the sacred Scripture the word of God as that which in this chapter is spoken to Joshua and cited by S. Paul Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee As for this first passage wherewith this book begins it shews how Joshua received a command from God to lead the Israelites over Jordan into the land of Canaan the Lord had before appointed that Joshua should succeed Moses in the government of Israel Numb 27.18 and upon the laying of Moses hands upon him he had received an extraordinary measure of the gifts of Gods spirit to inable him for the government Deut. 34.9 And therefore doubtlesse immediately after the death of Moses Joshua took upon him the supreme Magistracy But here now we are told how either at that time so soon as Moses was dead or rather after the thirty dayes that were spent in lamenting the death of Moses Deut. 34.8 the Lord spake unto Joshua the sonne of Nun Moses minister and gave him that charge which is here after related Whether God spake this to Joshua by an audible voice by the secret instinct of his spirit in some dream or vision or by the high-priests inquiring for him by the Vrim and Thummim we cannot conclude because we find it not expressed onely we find that God had formerly promised that Eleazar the priest should ask counsel for him after the judgement of Vrim before the Lord Num. 27.21 But for this title given here to Joshua that he was Moses minister the Lord spake unto Joshua Moses minister we may well think that was purposely added to imply one reason amongst others why Joshua was most fit to succeed Moses in the government to wit because having been so many years together his minister by his continuall daily conversation with Moses he could not but learn much thereby to prepare and fit him the better for this service Vers 2. Moses my servant is dead now therefore arise c. Here the Lord exhorts Joshua that since Moses was dead he should now lead the Israelites over Jordan and carry them into the land which according to his former promises made to their fathers he was now ready to conferre upon them Now in mentioning the death of Moses he useth this expression Moses my servant is dead first and principally to imply what it was he required of him to wit that as their captain and supreme governour he should now conduct them into the land of Canaan for Moses is here called Gods servant in regard of the supreme magistracy whereto God had advanced him and so the drift of the words is that since Moses
their governour was dead he should now as his successour go before the people in his stead secondly to imply that as Moses in his magistracy was subordinate to Gods will and was onely to do all things according to his direction so must it be with Joshua too and thirdly that by speaking thus honourably of Moses Moses my servant Joshua might be encouraged faithfully to serve God in his place as Moses had done that he also might gain such favour and esteem with God as Moses had gained Vers 3. Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon that have I given unto you c. That is every place in the land formerly promised them which is described and bounded in the following words first by the wildernesse that they had passed through which was their South bound secondly the mountain Lebanon and the great river the river Euphrates which was their North border and thirdly the great Sea that is the midland-sea which was their West border as for their Eastern border that is not here mentioned because the Israelites were now at the East side of the land and the drift of these words was onely to shew Joshua how farre the land he would give them should reach every where from the place where they now were Indeed that the Israelites did never extend the bounds of the land thus farre is evident for though in Davids and Solomons time all the nations as farre as Euphrates became tributaries to the crown of Israel 1. Kings 4.21 Solomon raigned over all kingdomes from the river that is the great river Euphrates unto the land of the Philistines and unto the border of Egypt c. yet they never destroyed the inhabitants there and planted themselves in their countrey as they did in the land of Canaan and therefore in that place before cited ver 25. the land of Israel is said to reach onely from Dan to Beersheba as formerly But the reason of this was because the people of Israel failed in keeping covenant with God and it was onely upon condition of their obedience that God promised thus farre to inlarge their borders Vers 5. As I was with Moses so I will be with thee c. In these words the Lord doth not onely promise Joshua to assist him as he had assisted Moses but withall likewise by putting him in mind of the great things he had done for Moses he doth covertly encourage him against the fear of those mighty nations with whom he was to encounter Vers 6. Be strong and of a good courage c. We find this often pressed upon Joshua first by Moses Deut. 31.7 And Moses called unto Joshua and said unto him in the sight of all Israel Be strong and of a good courage c. for which he had a speciall command from God Deut. 1.38 and 3.28 Charge Joshua and encourage him and strengthen him c. secondly by the Lord himself Deut. 31.23 and so again three severall times in this chapter here and vers 7. and vers 9. and last of all by the people And why was this not because Joshua had discovered any faintheartednesse or cowardise but first because the work he was to undertake was so weighty and perillous and that not onely in regard of those many and mighty nations whom he was to destroy and plant the Israelites in their room but especially also in regard of the stubbornnesse of the people whom he was to govern of whose rebellion against Moses yea against God he had often been an eye-witnesse secondly because the Lord knew well that Joshua had humble and low thoughts of himself and feared much his insufficiency for so great a charge as indeed the wiser and the more able men are the more jealous they are of themselves in such cases and thirdly because even those that are best resolved do yet need to be quickned and stirred up and that principally lest they should shrink from doing exactly what God hath enjoyned them for fear of any difficulty that may lie in their way of which God gives Joshua speciall warning in the following verse Onely be thou strong and very couragious that thou mayest observe to do according to all the Law which Moses my servant commanded thee c. For unto this people shalt thou divide for an inheritance the land c. As if he had said this I have appointed to be thy honour and therefore be not afraid to undertake the charge And indeed this was the principall thing wherein Joshua was a type of Christ Moses did not carry the Israelites into the land of Canaan but Moses being dead Joshua did it so neither could the Law carry us into the heavenly Canaan for by the righteousnesse of the Law can no man be saved but Christ our Jesus our Saviour hath by his merits opened a way for us into the heavenly Canaan and is gone before to prepare a place for us John 14.2 3. I go to prepare a place for you And if I go to prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you to my self that where I am there you may be also Vers 7. Turn not from it to the right hand or to the left that thou mayest prosper whithersoever thou goest If we reade the words as it is in our Bibles then there is here a promise implyed That if Joshua did strictly observe Gods law not yielding any way to turn aside from that rule he should prosper in every thing that he undertook But if we reade the last clause as it is in the margin of our Bibles that thou mayest do wisely whithersoever thou goest then the drift of these words must be either to give Joshua to understand that it would be his greatest wisdome to do in all things as God in his Law had enjoyned him whatever his own reason might suggest to the contrary which agrees with that of the Prophet Jer. 8.9 They have rejected the word of the Lord and what wisdome is in them Or else to assure him that if he did sincerely observe to do all things according to Gods law then the Lord would more abundantly poure forth the spirit of wisdome upon him which agreeth with that of David Psal 25.12 What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall chuse and that of our Saviour Matth. 13.12 Whosoever hath to him shall be given and he shall have more abundance Vers 8. This book of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth c. The book of the Law which Moses wrote was delivered to the Levites to be laid up by them in the side of the ark Deut. 31.25 26. it was therefore a copy of this law whereof the Lord here spake to Joshua This book of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth and the meaning of this is that by frequent and continuall reading and conference he should labour to be so expert in it that in all his
Canaanites and touched not one of the Israelites Vers 12. Then spake Joshua unto the Lord in the day when the Lord delivered up the Amorites c. For the better understanding of this miraculous passage concerning Joshuas commanding the sunne to stand still we must know first That whereas it is said in the first place that Joshua spake to the Lord thereby is meant that he did first pray unto the Lord that this miracle might be wrought and that to the end they might have the more time to pursue and destroy the Amorites and then by the same speciall instinct of Gods spirit that moved him to desire this of God being fully assured that God had heard his prayer and that what he desired should be done he commanded the sunne to stand still c. secondly That whereas in the next clause it follows and he said in the sight of all Israel Sunne stand thou still c. this is added to shew the assurance of his faith because he was so undoubtedly perswaded that God would certainly do what he had prayed for and desired the people should take notice of it for their future encouragement openly in the presence of all the people he looked up to the heavens and speaking as it were to the sunne said Sunne stand thou still c. and happely with relation to the peoples gazing upon him when in so strange a manner they saw him look up to the sunne and command the sunne to stand still this phrase is used and he said not in the audience but in the sight of all Israel Sunne stand thou still c. thirdly That for the words themselves which Joshua spake Sunne stand thou still upon Gibeon and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon there is nothing can be certainly concluded but that he did as it were adjure the sunne and moon by the Almighty power of God to stand still just in the place wherein they were when he spake unto them that so the sunne might still give light till they had made an end of pursuing and destroying their enemies and that hereby must needs be intended the stay of the whole body of the moveable heaven together with the sunne and the moon for it cannot be meant of staying that peculiar motion of the Orbs of the sunne and moon whereby they move severally from the west to the east for the lengthening of the day could not depend upon that but it must be meant of the motion of the heaven whereby the sunne and moon together with all the other heavenly Orbs are carried about by the motion of the supreme Sphere in the space of foure and twenty houres from the east to the west Some indeed would conclude from these words that it was at noon day when Joshua commanded the sunne to stand still namely because it was when the sunne was right over Gibeon as the words they say implie Sunne stand thou still upon Gibeon and that therefore also it is said vers 13. so the sunne stood still in the midst of heaven and then they take the next clause to be added and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon by way of expressing the same thing in other words to wit that the moon also should stand still and not bring in night upon them Again others would inferre from these words that it was towards sunneset when Joshua commanded the sunne to stand still and that first Because it is most probable that the fear of want of daylight to pursue the enemie when he saw the sunne decline apace towards its setting was the occasion that moved Joshua to desire this miraculous stay of the sunne and secondly Because the words seem to implie that he saw the moon also when he said and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon as indeed about the new of the moon it is usually seen towards sunne-setting But I say neither of these can be gathered from the text The drift doubtlesse of Joshua was onely to expresse that the heavenly Orbs should stand still to the end the sunne might not set but continue still to give them light in those parts onely the more rhetorically to set forth the wonder of the miracle he mentions both sunne and moon the two great lights of heaven together with Gibeon and Ajalon two places not farre distant one from another Sunne stand thou still upon Gibeon and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon Vers 13. Is it not written in the book of Jasher That is in the book of the upright which seemeth to have been some historie or continued chronicle of the memorable acts of Gods worthies in those times which is now lost it is mentioned again 2. Sam. 1.18 So the sunne stood still in the midst of heaven and hasted not to go down a whole day So that this day was twice as long as it should otherwise have been Vers 14. And there was no day like that before it or after it that the Lord hearkened to the voyce of a man c. For though in Hezekiahs time the day was miraculously lengthened by the sunnes going backward 2. Kings 20.11 And Isaiah the Prophet cried unto the Lord and he brought the shadow ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the diall of Ahaz yet it was not lengthened so much by farre as this was to wit not above two houres and a half and besides that was not done upon the motion of a man desiring it and after prayer commanding as it were that it should be so as this was which is that which is here principally intended and therefore is it that the prophets do often allude to this where they speak of the great things which God had done or would do for his people Hab. 3.11 The sunne and moon stood still in their habitation at the light of thine arrows they went and at the shining of thy glittering spear and Isa 28.21 For the Lord shall rise up in mount Perazim he shall be wrath as in the valley of Gibeon that he may do his work his strange work and bring to passe his act his strange act Vers 15. And Joshua returned and all Israel with him unto the camp at Gilgal It is evident that the severall passages related in the sequel of this chapter were done before they returned to the camp at Gilgal We must therefore know that here is set down beforehand the issue of this warre and then afterward the Authour proceeds to relate the particulars and then concludes with these very words again vers 43. And Joshua returned and all Israel with them unto the camp at Gilgal Vers 21. And all the people returned to the camp to Joshua at Makkedah in peace The settled camp of the Israelites was in Gilgal as is evident by that which is said before vers 15. And Joshua returned and all Israel with him to the camp at Gilgal But because Joshua with the greatest part of the armie which he had brought out to raise the
is I told him truly what I thought of the land and of our going to possesse it nor did either for fear or favour of any man speak one word otherwise then as in my conscience I thought I did not say as the other spies said to please them nor did I on the other side encourage the people to enter upon the land thereby to currie favour either with Moses or the people but I did it sincerely because I did indeed verily believe that God would certainly deliver it into our hands Nor can this be counted any blemish to Caleb that he thus speaks in his own commendation That his brethren might not tax him either of injustice or ambition for that which he was now about to require of Joshua it was fit he should shew upon what just grounds it was at first promised him Vers 8. My brethren that went up with me made the heart of the people melt but I wholly followed the Lord my God To wit by perswading the people to enter the land which the Lord had brought them to even when the rest of the spies did so exceedingly discourage them which was a singular proof of the uprightnesse of Calebs heart towards God Vers 9. And Moses sware on that day saying Surely the land whereon thy feet have troden shall be thine inheritance c. Hereby it is evident that there was a particular promise made unto Caleb at Kadesh-Barnea that Hebron and the land adjoyning should be his when the Israelites came to possesse Canaan and that this place in the land was given him rather then any other because when the spies had seen those giants the Anakims and were stricken with fear when they saw them there Numb 13.22 And they ascended by the south and came unto Hebron where Ahiman Sheshai and Talmai the children of Anak were and yet Caleb afterward opposed these his fainthearted brethren and when they objected the invincible strength of the place and people he encouraged his people and assured them that they should easily vanquish them either therefore those places in Moses his story concerning Caleb must be understood of this particular gift though at first reading they would not seem to import so much Numb 14.24 But my servant Caleb because he had another spirit with him and hath followed me fully him will I bring into the land whereinto he went and his seed shall possesse it And again Deut. 1.36 Save Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh he shall see it and to him will I give the land that he hath troden upon and to his children because he hath wholly followed the Lord or else there was some particular promise made to him concerning this inheritance together with that mentioned in those places forenamed though it be not expressed and that confirmed with an oath pronounced by Moses in the name of the Lord. For so we reade it Num. 14.21 23 24. But as truly as I live all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord c. Surely they shall not see the land which I sware unto their fathers neither shall any of them that provoked me see it But my servant Caleb because he had another spirit with him and hath followed me fully him will I bring into the land whereinto he went and his seed shall possesse it Vers 10. And now behold the Lord hath kept me alive as he said these fourty and five years c. As if he should have said God hath you see even miraculously preserved my life and strength and so reserved me as it were to enjoy this portion of land which was then promised me Vers 11. As my strength was then even so is my strength now for warre both to go out and come in See the note upon Numb 27.17 Vers 12. Now therefore give me this mountain whereof the Lord spake in that day That is the mountainous countrey promised him by Moses wherein Hebron Debir and some other towns stood See chap. 11.21 For thou heardest in that day that the Anakims were there and that the cities were great and fenced This he may speak as intimating that seeing he himself would undertake the expelling of the giants that dwelt there though the most formidable in all the land of Canaan his desire was the more reasonable because he was to get with so much danger and difficulty the place that he desired of them But I rather conceive that this is added to clear it that this was the place promised him to wit because it was the place where the Anakims dwelt whose huge bodies and great fenced cities were formerly so dreadfull to the other spies that went with him If so be the Lord will be with me then I shall be able to drive them out as the Lord said This he saith not as doubting Gods faithfulnesse and assistance but as thereby implying the difficulty of the work but that he reposed himself on the help and assistance of God see the note chap. 11.24 Vers 13. And Joshua blessed him and gave unto Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh Hebron for an inheritance That is he commended him approved his motion granted his request and desired God to blesse it both to him and his How this is said to be Calebs inheritance that was afterwards given to the Levites see chap. 21.11 Vers 15. And the land had rest from warre We have this clause before chap. 11.23 Here it is repeated again 1. to intimate That though the foregoing passage concerning Calebs desiring Hebron be here inserted yet it was done before Joshua had ended his warres and that however all the victories of Joshua be recorded in the tenth and eleventh chapters because he would joyn them altogether yet many of these things hereafter expressed were done before the warres were ended and secondly To make way hereby to the relation of that which was further done concerning the division of the land which was not till the land had rest CHAP. XV. Vers 1. THis then was the lot of the tribe of the children of Judah by their families even to the border of Edom c. In this chapter the narration of the dividing the land within Jordan by lot is continued which was broken off in the foregoing chapter to shew how Caleb demanded that Hebron and the adjacent mountain might be reserved to him as his by an extraordinary promise which God had long since made to him That the lots were onely to decide in what part of the countrey each tribe should be planted and that afterwards the quantitie of the land which each tribe should have was set out by Joshua Eleazar and the heads of the tribes chosen to be the men that should divide the land is noted before upon the second verse of the foregoing chapter as likewise Num. 26.55 What manner of lottery they used in this businesse is no where expressed The common opinion of the Hebrew writers is that there were two pots or other vessels set before the Tabernacle the
to the wicked wayes of their idolatrous fathers yea and did worse then they indeed as relapses in regard of sicknesse bring men usually into a more dangerous condition then they were in before so it is with relapses to idolatrie a Church and people that have been reformed and fall back to idolatry are usually farre worse and more grossely superstitious then they were before Vers 22. That through them I may prove Israel whether they will keep the way of the Lord c. These words may be understood two severall wayes for first they may have reference to that clause in the latter end of the foregoing verse where there is mention made of Joshua his leaving the Canaanites unexpelled the nations which Joshua left when he died and then the meaning must be that the nations were not wholly driven out in Joshua's time but were left for the tryall of Israel to wit to see whether they would be drawn away by their idolatries or no And secondly they may have reference to all that which is said in the two foregoing verses Because this people have transgressed my covenant c. I also will not henceforth drive out any from before them of the nations which Joshua left when he died That through them I may prove Israel whether they will keep the way of the Lord c. and then the meaning must be that God for the sinne of the Israelites resolved not to cast out any more of the Canaanites that remained in the land that they might continually oppresse and vex the Israelites and so thereby he might prove them namely whether by these afflictions they would be brought to repent and turn to the Lord and so again to walk in his wayes And indeed both these may be well here comprehended CHAP. III. Vers 2. ONely that the generation of the children of Israel might know to teach them warre c. Two reasons were given in the latter end of the foregoing chapter why the Lord did not wholly cast out the Canaanites out of the land in the dayes of Joshua and here now a third is added Some conceive indeed the meaning of this clause to be this that by leaving the Canaanites amongst them God would now let this wicked generation know to their cost what warre is their fathers by the extraordinary help which the Lord afforded them did soon vanquish their enemies and knew not the misery that warre usually brings with it but this their degenerate posterity being now forsaken of God should know to their sorrow what warre is But according to our translation I conceive the meaning of the words to be rather this that God left these inhabitants of the land unexpelled that the future generations might hereby be made carefull to train up their people in martiall discipline that so they might be the better able to perform what God had enjoyned them in not suffering any of the Canaanites to remain in the the land And this it is I conceive that in these words the holy Ghost doth chiefly aim at not so much their teaching the people the skill of the warre as their intention therein to wit that they might obey the Lords command in driving out the remainder of this people Vers 3. Namely five Lords of the Philistines c. Here the nations are reckoned that were not cast out of Canaan and the first mentioned are the five Lords of the Philistines to wit the Lords of Ashdod Gaza Askelon Gath and Ekron indeed three of these cities were at first taken by the men of Judah after the death of Joshua to wit Gaza Askelon and Ekron but it seems the Philistines soon recovered them again See chap. 1.18 Vers 5. And the children of Israel dwelt amongst the Canaanites c. from the eleventh verse of the foregoing chapter unto this place we have had a summary description of the state of Israel in the dayes of the Judges and here now the Authour of this story enters upon the particular story of Othniel the first of the Judges telling us in the first place what their sinnes were that brought them into that bondage out of which Othniel delivered them Vers 7. And served Baalim and the groves That is the idols which they set up and worshipped in the groves Vers 8. And he sold them into the hand of Cushan-rishathaim king of Mesopotamia See the note chap. 2.14 And the children of Israel served Cushan-rishathaim eight years It seems to me evident that for some years after the death of Joshua the people continued constant in the worship of the true God chap. 2.7 And the people served the Lord all the dayes of Joshua and all the dayes of the Elders that out-lived Joshua c. and doubtlesse some few years it was after they fell to idolatry ere God sold them into the hand of this king of Mesopotamia and therefore how long after the death of Joshua these eight years began of Israels bondage under the king of Mesopotamia we cannot say Vers 9. And when the children of Israel cryed unto the Lord the Lord raised up a deliverer c. The word in the Hebrew signifieth a saviour but thereby is meant one that delivered them from the bondage they were in and this was Othniel who was the sonne of Calebs brother and withall his sonne in law as being married to Achsah his daughter chap. 1.13 for that noble exploit of his in taking Debir and this was the honour of the children of Judah that the first judge after Joshua was of their tribe the Lord therein making good that prophecy of Jacob Gen. 49.8 Judah thou art he whom thy Brethren shall praise thine hand shall be in the neck of thine enemies thy fathers children shall bow down before thee Many hold that Othniel became Judge of Israel immediately after the death of Joshua but me thinks it is clear in this place that it was not till towards the end of the eight years of Israels bondage under Cushan-rishathaim king of Mesopotamia for it is said that then the children of Israel cryed unto the Lord and thereupon God raised up Othniel to be a deliverer that is God did then by a speciall instinct of his Spirit stirre him up to make warre against this tyrant for the deliverance of his people and furnished him with all necessary gifts and graces of his Spirit both for the vanquishing of the enemie and for the government of the people which it seems upon this occasion he took upon him But yet if Othniel took Debir and thereupon married Calebs daughter whilst Joshua was yet living as many Expositours hold he did hereby we may probably gather that it was not many years after Joshuas death ere the Israelites were thus oppressed by this king and so thereupon Othniel was raised up of God to be their Judge Vers 10. And the Spirit of the Lord came upon him That is God by his Spirit did poure forth upon him an extraordinary measure of all gifts requisite
chap. 4.3 Twenty years he mightily oppressed the children of Israel and thus when lighter corrections did no good the next were sorer and of longer continuance and because they abused Gods readinesse to repent and withdraw his hand when they cried unto him he continued the next judgements the longer upon them Vers 15. The Lord raised them up a deliverer Ehud the sonne of Gera a Benjamite a man left-handed Some conceive that this last particular of his being left-handed is purposely expressed to intimate by what weak means and dispised instruments God is wont many times to effect his greatest works but because it is generally held that no men are ordinarily more able and strong and fit for any service then left-handed men whence it is noted chap. 20.16 that amongst the children of Benjamin there were seven hundred chosen men left-handed every one could sling stones at an hairs breadth and not misse therefore I conceive that this is here noted of Ehud the second judge that God raised to the Israelites to imply rather the fitnesse of the instrument whom God chose for this service of killing Eglon to wit in that the stroke of such men is far the more harder either espied or guarded When Ehud began first to be judge of Israel it is not expressed Some conceive that Ehud was judge immediately after Othniels death and that he was their judge both in the time of their apostasie after Othniels death and likewise all the eighteen years that the Israelites were in bondage under Eglon king of Moab and whereas it is here said that when the children of Israel cryed unto the Lord the Lord raised them up a deliverer Ehud the sonne of Gera they take the meaning hereof to be onely this that God raised up the spirit of Ehud their judge to undertake the deliverance of the Israelites from their bondage and not that he was then first raised to be their judge But methinks according to the plain order of the words it should rather seem that upon the crying of the Israelites to the Lord when they had been eighteen years under the bondage of Eglon the Lord stirred him up to undertake their deliverance and thereupon afterwards he became their judge And by him the children of Israel sent a present unto Eglon king of Moab Which Ehud embraced as a fit opportunity for the killing of Eglon because it would make him to be the lesse suspected Vers 16. But Ehud made him a dagger which had two edges of a cubit length and he did gird it under his raiment upon his right thigh Having resolved with himself to kill Eglon he provided him a dagger accordingly concerning which it is noted 1. That it had two edges that it might peirce the more readily and make the more deadly wound 2. That it was but of a cubit length to wit that it might be the better carried unseen under his garment and 3. That he did gird it upon his right thigh namely for the conveniency of drawing it forth with his left hand as for the same reason those that are right-handed use alwayes to wear their weapons on their left side Vers 17. And Eglon was a very fat man This is expressed to intimate that hereby Ehud had the better advantage to do what he intended for being such a corpulent and unwieldy man he was the lesse able to decline the stroke which Ehud gave him and besides the wound was like to be the more deadly Vers 18. And when he had made an end of offering the present he sent away the people that bare the present These words he sent away the people may imply the greatnesse of the present because there were so many to bear it to the king he sent them away before he would do the act he intended going himself along with them till he came to Gilgal and then returning again both that being alone he might the more conveniently accomplish his designe and also that they might be out of danger and himself not be incumbred with care for them when he was to slie for his life Vers 19. But he himself turned again from the quarries that were by Gilgal and said I have a secret errand to thee O king The word translated quarries may also be traslated graven images as it is in the margine of our bibles and indeed it might well be that this Moabitish king had set up certain idols in Gilgal either to vex the Israelites therewith who happely esteemed Gilgal the more because there their forefathers had been circumcised and there the Tabernacle was for many years together or else that the Israelites might be wonne to worship them or else by way of honouring his idol-gods as it were testifying hereby that by their help he had entred successefully upon the land of Israel and then the mention that is here made of these images may be to intimate one reason amongst other wherewith God stirred the spirit of Ehud against Eglon namely because he had set up his idol-gods in the land of Israel But if we reade the word as it is in our bibles quarries that is pits out of which they cut hewed stones for their buildings then doubtlesse the drift of this clause is onely to shew how far Ehud went back with those that went with him before he returned again to the king of Moab As for those first words which he spake to Eglon when he came back to him I have a secret errand to thee O king it might be truly said in relation to that which he had to do an errand he had which was to be delivered to him in secret though not by word of mouth but by the stroke of his dagger and it was from God from whom he had his commission Yet surely Ehud intended that Eglon should understand him so as if in his return home he had been sent back with some message of great secresie which he was now come back to deliver Neither yet can we say that Ehud did evil in this his dissembling with Eglon and that because he had no doubt his call and warrant from God for what he did Who said Keep silence c. That is he bad Ehud forbear delivering his errand till his servants and attendants were gone out of the room Vers 20. And he was sitting in a summer parlour which he had for himself alone That is wherein Eglon used to be private by himself which is added that it may not seem strange that his servants waited so long without after Ehud was gone it was because it was a room wherein he used ordinarily to be alone by himself And Ehud said I have a message from God unto thee And he arose out of his seat Ehud had told the king before ver 19. that he had a secret errand unto him concerning which see the note there now he addes that the message he brought him was from God partly perhaps that being astonished with that word he might take the
Shamgar the sonne of Anath therefore it is commonly held that he was the next Judge after Ehud onely they say it was but for a very short time and thence it is that there is no mention of the lands resting under him and the story of Deborah in the following chapter begins as if she were the next after Ehud there being no mention made there of Shamgar at all vers 1. And the children of Israel did evill in the sight of the Lord when Ehud was dead However this miraculous deliverence which he wrought for the Israelites was certainly after Ehuds death for then it seems the people returned to their former sinnes and the Lord suffered the Philistines thereupon to invade the land but then he also delivered them miraculously by this worthy till finding that they would not be warned by these things he sold them into the hands of Jabin as it is expressed in the following chapter CHAP. IV. Vers 1. ANd the children of Israel again did evill in the sight of the Lord when Ehud was dead In none of the Judges dayes did the Israelites enjoy so long a peace as in the dayes of Ehud as is evident in that clause however we understand it chap. 3.30 Moab was subdued under the hand of Israel and the land had rest fourscore years and here we see what effect this long peace wrought amongst them and how ill they requited the Lord for so great a mercy even as standing waters are wont to putrifie so they were corrupted by their long peace and by degrees fell off from God as they had formerly done Vers 2. And the Lord sold them into the hand of Jabin king of Canaan that reigned in Hazor See the note chap. 2.14 There was a Jabin that reigned in Hazor formerly who it is likely was called as this is here king of Canaan for Hazor is there said to be the head of all the neighbouring kingdomes Josh 11.10 the same who was the cheif in that confederacy against Joshua Joshua 11.1 but he was slain by Joshua and his city burnt with fire Josh 11.11 It seems therefore that this was some one of that stock who afterward recovered from the Israelites that part of the land and repaired the city Hazor and so reigned there again as his predecessours had done When this was done we cannot say but doubtlesse it was not in Joshuas time as some think for it is not to be thought that the Lord ever suffered the Canaanites to recover any part of the land which the Israelites had taken from them till they by their sinnes had provoked the Lord to anger against them But now at last not contented with his own kingdome it seems he made warre with the Israelites in generall brought them into bondage and no doubt oppressed them the more cruelly in revenge of that Joshua had done to Hazor and Jabin king thereof Josh 11.11 who perhaps was his father or grandfather And besides it must needs be most terrible to the Israelites to be oppressed by the Canaanites of all other nations because God had promised to cast them out before the Israelites so that their prevailing over them was in a speciall manner a signe that God had cast them off The Captain of whose host was Sisera which dwelt in Harosheth of the Gentiles So called as it is probably thought because in the time of the Israelites prevailing against the severall nations of the Canaanites many of them fled thither as to a place of great strength and there fortified themselves unto this time or else for the reasons given in a like case Josh 12.23 Vers 3. For he had nine hundred chariots of iron and twenty years he mightily oppressed the children of Israel Concerning these chariots of iron see the note Josh 17.16 This clause and he mightily oppressed the children of Israel is no where else inserted where mention is made of the bondage of Israel under other kings and therefore it seems this king did farre more cruelly oppresse them then the rest had done which might be partly from the deadly hatred which the Canaanites above other nations did bear to the Israelites because the Israelites had taken their land from them and partly from the just vengeance of God upon the Israelites because God had afforded them so long a peace in the dayes of Ehud chap. 3.30 and they had made so ill an use of his long-suffering and goodnesse therein See the note also chap. 3.14 Vers 4. And Deborah a prophetesse c. A woman the weaker sex that the glory of the work might be given to God and not to the instrument he used Vers 6. And she sent and called Barak the sonne of Abinoam out of Kedesh-naphtali c. That is Kedesh in the tribe of Naphtali to distinguish it from other towns of the same name in other tribes as Kedesh in Issachar 1. Chron. 6.72 Kedesh in Judah Josh 15.23 and others Now Deborah did thus send for Barak not of her own head chusing him as a man of eminency for the undertaking of the service but by speciall direction from God as the words she spake to Barak when he came to her do imply Hath not the Lord God of Israel commaded saying Go and draw toward mount Tabor c Deborah was a prophetesse and therefore no doubt God had revealed unto her that which now she imparted to Barak to wit either by secret instinct of his Spirit or perhaps by the ministry of an Angel for that some Angel did appear to her either before or after the battell which they fought with Sisera seems evident in that clause of Deborahs song chap. 5.26 Curse ye Meroz saith the Angel of the Lord curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof And take with thee ten thousand men of the children of Naphtali and of the children of Zebulun To wit first because they were nearest at hand secondly because Naphtali was likely to be the forwardest in this work because Barak was of that tribe and they were most oppressed Hazor and Harosheth being both in their tribe Vers 8. And Barak said unto her If thou wilt go with me then I will go c. Barak no doubt believed what Deborah had told him in the foregoing words as from the Lord namely that Sisera should be vanquished by him and therefore we see that he was willing to hazard his life and all that he had in rising against this mighty king that had brought the Israelites into bondage whence it is that Barak is commended for his faith by S. Paul and reckoned amongst those who through faith subdued kingdomes Heb. 11.32 33. But why then did he refuse to undertake the service enjoyned him unlesse Deborah would go along with him I answer partly because he considered that Deborah being a prophetesse he should have a great advantage in having her with him to pray for them to give them counsell and to advise them what to do upon every occasion but partly also no
Though Gideon brought these things forth for the repast of this man of God for such he conceived him to be yet at his command he thus disposed of them as perceiving that he intended to shew some signe thereby as he himself had desired ver 17. Vers 21. And there rose up fire out of the rock and consumed the flesh c. So soon as the Angel had touched these things with the end of his staff fire out of the rock consumed them notwithstanding the broth was poured forth upon the rock and the flesh that was laid thereon which was doubtlesse enjoyned that the miracle might be the greater as for the same cause Elijah poured water upon his sacrifice 1. Kings 18.33 and thus he made a kind of sacrifice of that which Gideon brought for him to eat and by causing fire to come miraculously out of the rock to consume it did both make known to Gideon who he was and also might signifie first Gods acceptance of that offering for the miraculous burning of sacrifices was an usuall signe of Gods accepting them secondly that God would accept of the service which Gideon should afterwards do him thirdly that it was as easie for the Lord to consume his adversaries as to burn up that his offering And besides we may look upon this as a sweet representation of our Evangelicall sacrifices The rock whereon our sacrifices must be laid is Christ and the Spirit which is as fire from him derived to us is that which must make our services pure and holy and fit to be offered to the Lord. Vers 22. Gideon said Alas O Lord God! for because I have seen an Angel of the Lord face to face It seems that in those dayes they apprehended that the seeing of an Angel of God was very perillous for the life of a man for thus also Manoah was affrighted upon the same occasion chap. 13.22 And Manoah said unto his wife We shall surely die because we have seen God Gideon therefore perceiving now that it was an Angel partly by the miraculous and sudden burning up of the provision he had brought forth with fire that came out of the rock but especially by the sudden vanishing of the Angel out of his sight he was so far over-born with fear that he could scarce think he should live notwithstanding the Angel himself had immediately before told him that he should smite the Midianites as one man And thus by this grievous affrightment he that ere-while was saluted by the Angel as a mighty man of valour was taught what the most valiant men are if they be but a little left to themselves and not supported by God Vers 23. And the Lord said unto him Peace be unto thee fear not thou shalt not die It is said before ver 21. that the Angel departed out of his sight this therefore he spake unto him out of the aire immediately after his vanishing away or else the meaning may be that he said this to him the next night for so long his fear might well continue and therefore it is happely said vers 15. that the same night the Lord said unto him Take thy fathers young bullock c. that is the same night wherein he had comforted him against this his fear Vers 24. Then Gideon built an altar there unto the Lord. That is in the place where this signe had been wrought it was therefore the same altar mentioned vers 26. for that was built upon the top of this rock onely here it is generally set down as it is usually in the Scriptures and afterward the warrant he had from God and the manner how he did it is expressed Vers 25. And it came to passe the same night that the Lord said unto him c. In this and the following verse we have the relation of the Lords appearing to Gideon the second time and the directions he gave him for some things he was to do before he undertook the deliverance of the people from the oppression of the Midianites But whether this were by a visible apparition of an angel as the former was or onely in a dream it is not expressed onely it is said that it was in the night which may make it probable that it was in a dream or nightly vision yea the same night that is either the same night wherein the Angel had comforted him as before-said vers 23. And the Lord said unto him Peace be unto thee fear not thou shalt not die or rather the same night after the Angel of the Lord appeared to him of which the story hath hitherto spoken The first direction given him may be diversly read to wit Take thy fathers young bullock and the second bullock of seven years old for so it is in the margin of our Bibles or Take thy fathers young bullock even the second bullock of seven years old If we reade it as it is in the margin then it is evident that there were two bullocks that Gideon was commanded to seize upon and doubtlesse both were to be sacrificed though there be expresse mention made of his sacrificing but one of them vers 26. Onely it is then questionable whether the words were intended to imply that one of them onely was his fathers and the other happely the peoples known by the name of the second bullock and provided for the publick service to be offered as a sacrifice to Baal or to imply onely the difference of their age both being his fathers the one his young bullock the other the second bullock of seven years old But now if we reade it as it is in our Bibles Take thy fathers young bullock even the second bullock of seven years old then there was but one bullock he was to seize upon to wit his fathers young bullock even the second bullock of seven years old which seems most probable because there is afterwards no mention made of the sacrificing any other but one bullock to wit the second bullock of seven years old but why was this called the second bullock I answer it might be so called in diverse respects as because it was the second in their order of standing in the stall or of their drawing in the plow or wain or because it was the second in regard of age or worth or because it was the second in order of those that were prepared and set apart for Baals sacrifice and indeed this last seems to me the most probable for though there be nothing in the text whereby we can certainly conclude for which of these reasons it was called the second bullock yet because it is evident that this bullock was devoted to Baals service for vers 28. we see the inhabitants of Ophrah reckoned this as a main part of Gideons sacriledge Behold the altar of Baal was cast down and the grove was cut down that was by it the second bullock was offered upon the altar that was built we may the rather think that in respect of
Gideon and the host of the Midianites and secondly how unexpectedly the Lord had raised the spirit of Gideon to undertake this attempt and made the people so willing to follow him that ere while had hid themselves in caves and dennes of the earth chap. 6.2 and thirdly that God had beforehand told Gideon that he would deliver the Midianites into their hands and confirmed his promise with many miraculous signes I say considering these things one would have thought that had the Israelites vanquished the Midianites with these two and thirty thousand that were now come in to Gideon they would never have attributed their victory to themselves and robbed God of his glory But the Lord knew well how prone men are upon any successe in this kind to vaunt themselves and to forget God and therefore being very tender of his glory this way he would not let the Israelites be so many as they were but would have them brought to a handfull of three hundred men that they might be the more abundantly convinced that their victory was merely of God and not of themselves Vers 3. Whosoever is fearfull and afraid let him depart early from mount Gilead That the Israelites should make such a proclamation as this when they were to go out to battell God had formerly enjoyned in his Law Deut. 20.8 Concerning which see the the note in that place Now for the mount Gilead from which they were now to depart because that mount Gilead which is so frequently mentioned in the Scripture was without Jordan and Gideon and his army were now within Jordan chap. 6. it must needs be yielded that this mount Gilead here spoken of was another mount of the same name in the tribe of Manasseh within Jordan near the valley of Jezreel where the Midianites now lay which is probable enough considering that we may well think that a great many of this half of Manasseh within Jordan were also descended from Gilead the sonne of Machir the sonne of Manasseh and night therefore call this mountain Gilead either in remembrance of their father or else as a witnesse that though they were parted from their brethren by Jordan yet they were of the same tribe with those of their brethren the Manassites that inhabited mount Gilead without Jordan And there returned of the people twenty and two thousand and there remained ten thousand For though they had before of their own accord as volunteirs couragiously proffered their services against the Midianites yet now when they came to see the power and strength of the enemy their hearts began to fail them and thereupon they soon imbraced this liberty given them to depart away Vers 4. The people are yet too many bring them down unto the water and I will try them for thee there That is I will discover who they be that are indeed fit for this service Vers 5. Every one that lappeth of the water with his tongue as a dog lappeth him shalt thou set by himself c. That is every one that takes up water in the palm of his hand and so laps it up Those that were to be dismissed were such as kneeling down upon their knees bowed their heads down to the river and so putting their mouthes into the water drunk and sucked up their fill the other sort that were to be retained were such as onely bending their bodies a little did with their hands snatch up a little water for the refreshing of themselves and so lapping it up went away And these are said to lappe as a dog lappeth because this kind of drinking in such a snatching manner without thrusting their mouths into the water as horses and other cattell do is most like the lapping of dogs who put not their mouths into the water but snatch it up with their tongues nor drink so soakingly as other cattell especially when they are hunting but onely lappe a little and make hast presently away and why were these chosen and the other sent away because that other kind of drinking argued weaknesse and faintnesse sloth and a greedy desire of filling themselves as men impatient of the thirst they had indured this on the other side argued strength and abilitie of body and that they were content with a little refreshing more minding the businesse they had in hand then the filling themselves Vers 7 By the three hundred men that lapped will I save you c. Whereas of the enemy there were at least a hundred thirty five thousand chap. 8.10 so that for every souldier Gideon had left there were foure hundred and fifty of his enemies and in this poore remainder of Gideons troups which he brought we see a shadow of that Christ saith Matt. 22.14 Many are called but few are chosen Vers 8. So the people took victualls in their hands and their trumpets That is the trumpets of the whole army even those that were dismissed for amongst thirty two thousand there might well be three hundred trumpets Vers 9. And it came to passe the same night the Lord said unto him c. That is the same night after he had dismissed all his souldiers save onely those three hundred men that lapped the water so that it seems this also the Lord revealed to him in a nightly vision or dream The like is noted before in the foregoing chapter Vers 10. But if thou fear to go down go thou with Phurah thy servant down to the host That is if thou fearest to go down and set upon the enemy because thy army is reduced to so small a number then go first with thy servant privately to their army and there thou shalt hear what shall further stregthen thy faith Vers 12. And the Midianites and the Amalekites and all the children of the east lay along in the valley like grassehoppers for multitude There is expresse mention made of a hundred thirty five thousand of them chap. 8.10 Now Zebah and Zalmunna were in Karkor and their host with them about fifteen thousand men all that were left of the children of the east for there fell a hundred twenty thousand men that drew sword Vers 13. Behold I dreamed a dream and lo a cake of barley bread tumbled into the host of Midian c. The analogy betwixt Gideon and this barley cake consists chiefly in this that being a man comparatively base and of no esteem nor likely in the eye of reason with those poore weak troops which he had so suddenly scrambled together to ruine the whole army of the Midianites no more then that the fall of a barly cake should overthrow one of their strongest and goodliest tents but rather likely to be devoured by them so soon as ever he should show himself amongst them even to be eaten up by them as men eat bread Psalm 14.4 he should notwithstanding utterly ruine and overthrow that huge army of the Midianites and lay their pomp and glory in the dust Vers 15. And it was so when Gideon heard
herewith Abimelech hired vain and light persons that is worthlesse and unsettled men men of no wisdome nor grace nor yet abilitie for their outward estate idle giddyheaded loose and wandring rascalls of the froth and scumme of the people that for a little hire were easily drawn to undertake any cause though never so bad and these he armed that with their aid he might by force accomplish what he had projected with himself Vers 5. And slew his brethren the sonnes of Jerubbaal being threescore and ten persons upon one stone notwithstanding yet Jotham c. That is there being seventy of his brethen he slew all but Jotham and that doubtlesse under some pretence of Justice as if they had some plot upon the state tending to the utter ruine of the whole land Vers 6. And all the men of Shechem gathered together and all the house of Millo and went and made Abimelech king c. By the house of Millo may be meant either the Magistrates of the city who were wont to meet in a town-house or common-hall called the house of Millo or else the inhabitants of some village or town adjoyning that belonged to Shechem or else the Garrison of some fort happely the same which vers 17. is called the tower of Shechem or it may be meant of his mothers family who are named a part by themselves because they had been and were still the chief stirrers in this businesse However when Abimelech had slain his brethren the men of Shechem and this house of Millo joyned together and chose and proclaimed him king of Israel and happely annoynted him for so ancient was the custome of anointing kings as Jotham in his parable doth plainly imply vers 8. The trees went forth on a time to anoint a king over them Manifest it is that he was made king not of Shechem onely but of all Israel in generall vers 22. When Abimelech had reigned three years over Israel Indeed it may seem strange that the inhabitants of one city should dare to do this alone of themselves it being expressely too against the Law of God Deut. 17.14 15. Thou shalt in any wise set him king over thee whom the Lord thy God shall chuse but the wonder of this may be removed by considering first that though the Shechemites be onely here mentioned because they were the ringleaders in this businesse yet it may be that many other Israelites both of other towns and tribes did come in moved by their example and perswasion and joyned in the election of Abimelech and secondly that they well might hope to carry it now his brethren were slain though some should oppose it both because of his pretended title to wit that proffer of settling the kingdome upon Gideons posterity chap. 8.22 Then the men of Israel said unto Gideon Rule thou over us both thou and thy sonne and thy sonnes sonne also and likewise because they might know that generally the people began to be weary of the government God had established over them and longed to be like other nations in having a king to reigne over them as was manifest by the proffer they made to Gideon and that which Jotham saith in his parable vers 8. and if they would have a king who so likely to be the man as Gideons sonne and thirdly because however by those forces he had suddenly raised he was able to effect it by constraint As for the place where he was made king called here the plain of the pillar or as some reade it the oke of the pillar that was in Shechem see Josh 24.25 26. Vers 7. And when they told it to Jotham he went and stood in the top of mount Girizim c. The Lord intending to punish Abimelech the Shechemites for their changing of the government which God had established in Israel and especially for the bloudy murther committed upon the sonnes of Gideon it seems by a speciall instinct of his Spirit he moved Jotham who alone of the sonnes of Gideon escaped the hands of Abimelech to go to the inhabitants of Shechem when the tydings was brought him that they had made Abimelech king and to give them warning before hand of the calamities and judgements that were likely to befall them if they did not repent of this their wickednes therefore it was that he began his speech with those words Hearken unto me you men of Shechem that God may hearken unto you intimating both that God had sent him with that message to them and that if they would not now hearken to the admonition that was given them God would not hear them in the time of their distresse when they called upon him As for mount Girizim from the top whereof Jotham spake to the Shechemites it seems it stood very close upon Shechem and was purposely chosen by Jotham as a place convenient whence he might speak in the audience of the inhabitants at that time perhaps upon some occasion assembled together and likewise as a place of safety whence he might presently fly and escape away if they should offer to surprise him for so it is said he did vers 21. And Jotham ran away and fled but withall it may seem to be not without a mystery that Girizim the mountain whence the blessings were to be pronounced by the tribes of Israel Deut. 11.29 was chosen for this work rather then mount Ebal for what a terrible token was this that they were to expect no mercy from God when from the mountain of blessings they heard nothing but Gods curses denounced against them Vers 8. The trees went out on a time to anoint a king over them c. The drift of Jotham in propounding this fable to the men o Shechem was to shew first the folly of the Israelites in going about to change the government which God had established amongst them out of a fond affectation of having a king to reigne over them secondly the vain and causelesse pride and ambition of that tyrant Abimelech in exalting himself to be their king and thirdly the misery that would certainly befall both the men of Shechem and their new made king for their casting off Gods government and their dealing so wickedly with the sonnes of Gideon So that first by the trees that went to make them a king he intended the Israelites in generall that were fond to have a king reigne over them but more particularly the men of Shechem that had actually made Abimelech king secondly by the olive tree fig tree and vine that are good noble and usefull trees that yield yearly sweet and pleasant fruit and that refused to accept of being king over the trees may be meant not onely Gideon who had refused the kingdome when the Israelites proffered it to him and his posterity successively chap. 8.22 23. but also the foregoing Judges Ehud and Deborah and happely too the other sonnes of Gideon for though we reade not that they refused the kingdome or had it ever
possesse c. Molech or Melchom was the idol-god of the Ammonites 1. Kings 11.7 Then did Solomon build an high place for Chemosh the abomination of Moab in the hill that is before Jerusalem and for Molech the abomination of the children of Ammon and vers 33. Because they have forsaken me and worshipped Ashtaroth the goddesse of the Sidonians Chemosh the god of the Moabites and Milcom the god of the children of Ammon see also 2. Kings 23.13 but Chemosh was the god of the Moabites Num 21.29 Wo to thee Moab thou art undone O people of Chemosh Jer. 48.13 Moab shall be ashamed of Chemosh Now in that Jephthah speaking to the king of the Ammonites calls Chemosh his god it seems hereby also not improbable that this king of the Ammonites was at present king of the Moabites and because the Moabites yea the children of Ammon too had formerly taken their land from other people that had anciently inhabited it Deut. 2.9 10. And the Lord said unto me Distresse not the Moabites neither contend with them in battell for I will not give thee of their land for a possession because I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a possession The Emims dwelt therein in times past a people great and many and tall as the Anakims and vers 19 20. And when thou comest nigh over against the children of Ammon distresse them not because I have given it unto the children of Lot for a possession that also was counted a land of gyants gyants dwelt therein in old time and the Ammonites call them Zamzummims and were ready enough to ascribe this to the help they had received from their god Chemosh hence Jephthah wisheth the king to consider whether it were not as just that the Israelites should keep that land which the Lord their God had given them to possesse as that the Moabites should hold that which they pretended their god Chemosh had conferred upon them Vers 25. And now art thou any thing better then Balak the sonne of Zippor king of Moab did he ever strive against Israel c. That is art thou wiser or more puissant or hast thou any better title then Balak had that was king of Moab now if he would never strive against Israel nor fight against them to wit to recover that land out of their hands which they had taken from the Amorites why then shouldest thou so many years after pretend a title and think by force to carry it away indeed Balak opposed the Israelites for fear they would have entered his land but neither he nor any of his posterity did ever make warre with them after they were settled in the land of the Amorites under pretence the land was theirs of which onely Jephthah speaks as is evident by the words of the following verse Vers 26. While Israel dwelt in Heshbon and her towns and Aroer and her towns and in all the cities that be along by the coasts of Arnon three hundred years Here he pleads prescription having peaceably enjoyed the land so many years it was a silly thing in the king of the Ammonites now to pretend a title to it For the computation of these three hundred years it is hard to say how they must be reckoned They that reckon the years of the Ifraelites oppression apart from the years of the Judges must needs find from the Israelites conquest of this land to this time at least three hundred thirty six years which discovers this computation to be erroneous no doubt Jephthah would have made the most he could of the years they had enjoyed the land But now reckoning onely the years of the Judges allowing to Joshua seventeen years see the note upon Josh 24.29 to Othniel fourty to Ehud eighty to Barak fourty to Gideon fourty to Abimelech three to Tola three and twenty and to Jair two and twenty we find lesse then three hundred years to wit but two hundred sixty five But to this we answer either that Jephthah to help his cause made the most of the time this being usuall in the Scripture yea and in mens ordinary speech to reckon a full round number when the years of which they speak are not exactly so many but near about so many or else that these two hundred sixty five years wherein the Israelites had possessed it must needs be made up three hundred by the addition of those years wherein Sihon and Og held it after they took it from the Moabites and Ammonites whose right the Israelites had by the law of conquest Vers 27. The Lord the Judge be Judge this day between the children of Israel and the children of Ammon That is by giving victory at this time to the innocent party may the Lord the great Judge of all the world make it manifest whether the Israelites have unjustly detained from the Ammonites that which belonged to them or whether the children of Ammon do not most unjustly upon a groundlesse pretence make warre now against the children of Israel Vers 29. Then the spirit of the Lord came upon Jephthah c. See the note chap. 3.10 Vers 31. Whatsoever cometh forth of the doores of my house to meet me c. shall surely be the Lords and I will offer it up for a burnt offering It is a great question whether Jephthah did by this vow intend to bind himself to offer as a burnt offering whatsoever should first come out of his house to meet him and indeed according to the Hebrew the words may be reade disjunctively as it is in the margin It shall surely be the Lords or I will offer it up for a burnt offering and then his meaning must needs be that whatsoever should first meet him out of his house should some way be consecrated to the Lord and if it were any thing fit for Gods altar it should be offered for a burnt offering But I conceive that Jephthah did absolutely intend that which he vowed for a burnt offering and that for these two reasons first because the first clause being generall It shall surely be the Lords and comprehending that which follows of offering a burnt offering it cannot with any propriety of speech be read disjunctively It shall surely be the Lords or I will offer it up for a burnt offrring no more then he could have said I will offer a clean beast or a sheep and secondly because the bitter lamentation which he made when he saw his daughter come forth to meet him is a strong argument to prove that he apprehended himself bound by his vow to offer her for a burnt offering yea indeed I make little question but he meant what he said merely concerning a humane sacrifice to wit that whatsoever it were either man or woman that came first out of his house to meet him it should be sacrificed to the Lord as indeed the manner of speech here used doth plainly imply for what else but a man or woman could come out
the stream of a river it seems they chose this word to discover them by upon their desire to passe over the foards of the river Jordan And there fell at that time of the Ephraimites fourty and two thousand This was done in the land of the half tribe of Manasseh without Jordan and because we reade of a place in their countrey that was called the wood of Ephraim 2. Sam. 18.6 we may well conceive that it was so called because of this notable slaughter of the Ephraimites there Vers 15. And was buried in Pirathon in the land of Ephraim in the mouth of the Amalekites So called as it seems because the Amalekites had formerly 〈…〉 that mountain CHAP. XIII Vers 1. ANd the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the Lord c. This Apostacie of the children of Israel was doubtlesse in the dayes of Ibzan the next Judge after Jephthah chap. 12. vers 8. as may appear by the computation of those fourtie years wherein the Philistines oppressed Israel mentioned in the following words And the Lord delivered them into the hand of the Philistines fourtie years for the twenty years wherein Samson judged Israel must necessarily be accounted one half of these fourtie years of the Philistines oppression as is evident chap. 15. vers 20. And he judged Israel in the dayes of the Philistines twenty years and the other half to wit the other twenty years must needs begin before Samson was born to wit about the fifth yeare of Ibzans judging Israel for when the Angel appeared to Samsons mother the Philistines oppressed Israel whence he tells her for her comfort verse 5. that he should deliver Israel out of the hands of the Philistines And indeed Jephthahs slaying two and fourty thousand of the Ephraimites chap. 12. vers 6. must needs be a great weakning to the Israelites in those parts and was like enough to encourage the Philistines to invade their land within a short time after Jephthah was dead Vers 2. And there was a certain man of Zorah of the family of the Danites whose name was Manoah So that Samson the sonne of this Manoah was of the tribe of Dan This tribe bordering upon the land of the Philistines was most exposed to their incursions and therefore God was pleased now to raise up a Judge for the Israelites out of this tribe to wit Samson the sonne of this Manoah to whose exploits against the Philistines some conceive that Jacob had respect in that his prophecy concerning this tribe Gen. 49.16 17. Dan shall Judge his people as one of the tribes of Israel Dan shall be a serpent in the way an adder in the path that biteth the horse heels so that his rider shall fall backward Vers 3. And the Angel of the Lord appeared unto the woman and said unto her behold now thou art barren c. He first mentions her barrennesse that the following tydings concerning her conceiving with child might be the more joyfully received by her it is a great question among Expositours what this Angel of the Lord was that now appeared to Manoahs wife some conceiving that it was a created Angel and that because as they say he afterwards chargeth Manoah not to sacrifice to him but to the Lord vers 16. If thou wilt offer a burnt offering thou must offer it unto the Lord. And others again conceiving that it was the very sonne of God that great Angel of the covenant and that because vers 18. he saith his name was secret or wonderfull but especially because vers 22. Manoah saith they had seen God and vers 23. his wife calls him the Lord that is the Jehovah and indeed though these be not unanswerable proofes yet considering that it is unquestionably evident in other places that in these times the sonne of God did usually appear to other the servants of God I should judge it most probable that it was he that did now also appear in the shape of a man to the wife of Manoah Vers 4. Drink not wine nor strong drink and eat not unclean any thing Because her child was to be a Nazarite from the wombe as it follows vers 5. therefore she might not eat or drink those things that were unlawfull for the Nazarites to wit neither whilst she was with child nor whilst she gave suck in regard that all that time that which she did eat or drink was for the nourishment of her child too Indeed by the unclean meat forbidden her may be meant any meat forbidden in the Law Levit. 11. for it is no wonder though the Angel charges her to beware of such meats which were unlawfull for any Israelite to eat as well as Nazarites first because it is likely in these times so full of confusion and disorder both this and many other of Gods Laws were altogether disregarded by the people in generall secondly because though such meats were unlawfull for any Israelite yet much more for Nazarites But yet here I rather think such meats are meant as were unclean for the Nazarites though not for others such as were grapes moist or dryed yea any meats that were made of the vine tree from the kernel even to the husk Num. 6.3 4. He shall separate himself from wine and strong drink and shall drink no vinegar of wine or vinegar of strong drink neither shall he eat any liquour of grapes nor eat moist grapes or dried All the dayes of his separation shall he eat nothing that is made of the vine tree from the kernel even to the husk Concerning which Law see the note there Vers 5. The child shall be a Nazarite unto God from the womb This is a commandment not a prediction as is also the other clause before no rasour shall come on his head for we see his hair was afterwards cut off chap. 16.19 And she made him sleep upon her knees and she called for a man and she caused him to shave off the seven locks of his head and she began to afflict him and his strength went from him And he shall begin to deliver Israel out of the hand of the Philistines It is said here that Samson should begin to deliver Israel out of the hand of the Philistines first because the Israelites were many years oppressed by the Philistines and the Lord sent them no saviour till at length Samson when he came of age was stirred up by the spirit of God to undertake this work and so he was the first that did any thing towards the foiling of the Philistines secondly because though he did not wholy vanquish them for after Samsons death they did often infest annoy the Israelites yet did he so farre weaken them especially by the last blow that he gave them at his death when he slew all their Princes and many of the people that they scarse ever recovered their former strength and thirdly because the work of shaking off the yoke of the Philistines that was begun by
conceive how is it possible that we should determine any thing concerning their names Sufficient it is for us to know that even in this regard the angel might well answer Manoah that his name was secret or wonderfull that is that it was a thing not to be revealed and therefore not to be enquired into or a thing too wonderfull for him to understand or that as the other angels so he also had no other name but this that he was one of those ministring spirits whom God did continually employ in the effecting of many wonderfull works for his people with respect whereto therefore it may well be that vers 19. it is expressely noted that the angel did wondrously But now granting what was formerly said that this angel of the Lord was the Sonne of God the great angel of the Covenant it must needs seem the lesse strange that he should tell Manoah that his name was secret and not to be searched into or wonderfull and incomprehensible and that because first as he is very God his name that is his essence or being is infinitely above our understanding it is a secret we must not prie into it is too wonderfull for us onely we know of him what by his word and works he hath been pleased to reveal to us and that is enough to astonish any man that will seriously ponder it with himself and secondly as he was appointed of God to be in our nature the mediatour between God and man there was nothing in him nor nothing that was to be done by him but was every way wonderfull whence it is that the prophet said of him His name shall be called wonderfull Isa 9.6 Vers 19. So Manoah took a kid with a meat-offering and offered it c. Neither the person sacrificing nor the place where they offered this sacrifice were warrantable by the law but the allowance of the angel vers 16. If thou wilt offer a burnt offering thou must offer it unto the Lord was warrant sufficient Vers 20. For it came to passe when the flame went up towards heaven from off the altar c. Because there is no mention made either of wood or of fire that was brought by Manoah for the offering of this sacrifice therefore many Expositours hold that by the ministerie of the angel there came fire out of the rock to consume the burnt offering as it was before in Gideons sacrifice chap. 6.21 But that cannot certainly be concluded from thence However it was doubtlesse the angels ascending up in the flame of the altar that was the principall miraculous work whereby the angel did discover what he was to Manoah and his wife and methinks too this is one of the strongest evidences to make it most probable that this angel was the Sonne of God and that because his going up to heaven in the flame of the sacrifice did most sweetly represent and shadow forth the office of Christ the great Angel of the covenant whose work it is to present all our services before God and to procure them to be graciously accepted of him Vers 22. And Manoah said unto his wife We shall surely die c. See the note chap. 6.22 Vers 23. But his wife said unto him If the Lord were pleased to kill us he would not have received a burnt offering c. By three severall arguments doth Manoahs wife comfort him first from Gods accepting of their sacrifice and that she takes for granted because the angel advised them to offer that their sacrifice vers 16. If thou wilt offer a burnt offering thou must offer it unto the Lord and secondly because he had made known Gods accepting of it both by that his miraculous ascending up to heaven in the flame of it whereby they might see that their sacrifice went up with him into the presence of God and also as Expositours generally conceive by causing fire miraculously to ascend out of the rock and consume the sacrifice as formerly in that of Gideons Judg. 6.21 The angel of the Lord put forth the end of the staff that was in his hand and touched the flesh and the unleavened cakes and there arose fire out of the rock consumed the flesh and the unleavened cakes secondly from those wonders God had shewed them neither saith she would he have shewed us all these things that is all these miraculous signes of Gods favour towards us to wit the strange burning of the sacrifice and ascending of the angel in the flame thereof and thirdly from his imparting those secrets to them concerning their child Nor saith she would he as at this time have told us such things as these that is neither would he thus beforehand in a time of such great distresse have told us such comfortable tidings concerning the birth and education of our child and the worthy service he should do for the deliverance of his Church and people Vers 24. And the child grew and the Lord blessed him That is he indued him with admirable strength of body courage of mind and all other gifts requisite for those worthy services God had appointed him to do Vers 25. And the spirit of the Lord began to move him at times in the camp of Dan c. The camp of Dan was either the place of Samsons dwelling so called by occasion of that which we find written concerning the expedition of the Danites against Laish which it seems was before the dayes of Samson chap. 18.11 12. And there went from thence of the familie of the Danites out of Zorah and out of Eshtaol six hundred men appointed with weapons of warre And they went up and pitched in Kiriath-jearim in Judah wherefore they call that place Mahaneh-Dan unto this day or else it may be meant of a camp which the Danites had formed at present in this place having raised an army to withstand the incursions of the Philistines who did sorely now oppresse them where Samson serving in his young years began to give proof of the noble acts he should afterwards do For the spirit of God began now and then at times to come upon him and to put him upon strange and admirable exploits even beyond the ordinary courage and strength of man CHAP. XIV Vers 1. ANd Samson went down to Timnath c. A citie that was at first in the lot of Judah Josh 15.57 and afterward was separated for the tribe of Dan Josh 19.43 but was often if not alwayes in the possession of the Philistines in the confines of whose land it stood and so now it seems it was Vers 2. I have seen a woman in Timnath of the daughters of the Philistines now therefore get her for me to wife It was unlawfull for any Israelite much more for a Nazarite to marry with a daughter of the Philistines Deut. 7.3 but it seems Samson did this not without a speciall warrant from God either by revelation or by a strong instinct of the spirit which he knew well
was of God as appears first because it is said vers 4. that he sought an occasion against the Philistines secondly because it is expressed there also that his father and his mother knew not that it was of the Lord which implies that Samson knew it well enough and yet though he had a speciall warrant from God he would not do it without desiring the consent of his parents Vers 3. Is there never a woman among the daughters of thy brethren or among all my people c. That is neither amongst thy kindred nor amongst all the people of Israel thus his parents at first sought to disswade him from this match because it was against the Law of God And Samson said unto his father Get her for me for she pleaseth me well In these words Samson might have respect to this that it pleased him well to marry with a daughter of the uncircumcised Philistines because he had a warrant from God thereby to pick a quarrell against them but doubtlesse he could not intend that his father by those words of his should think of any such thing but onely that he was pleased with her person and had thereupon set his affection on her yea it is evident that he did purposely conceal this from his parents that he sought an occasion against the Philistines lest that should have made them the more eager to oppose him herein Indeed it is strange that his godly parents should yield as we see vers 5. they did to make such a match for him with a Philistines daughter onely because he had a mind to her but godly parents are many times too fond and indulgent to their children and so it seems it was with Manoah and his wife Vers 4. But his father and his mother knew not that it was of the Lord that he sought an occasion c. This last clause many Expositours referre to the Lord to wit that he sought an occcasion against the Philistines by suffering Samson thus to fall in love with a daughter of the Philistines but first because if the meaning of these words had been that the Lord sought an occasion against the Philistines it might as well have been said that neither Samson nor his parents knew it as that his father and his mother knew it not secondly because it is manifest in the sequel of the story that Samson did indeed seek an occasion against the Philistines as we may see by the riddle he propounded to them at the wedding and his carefull concealing of that which he did to the lion from his very parents that so the meanning of his riddle might not be known and especially by that which he said when he addressed himself to be revenged on the Philistines because his wife was given to another chap. 15.3 Now saith he shall I be more blamelesse then the Philistines though I do them a displeasure as if he should have said now have I gotten a just occasion to be revenged on the Philistines and thirdly because Samson is numbred by the Apostle Heb. 11.32 amongst those that by faith did notably subdue the enemies of God which seems to imply that he had a word and warrant from God for it therefore I rather conceive that the meaning of these words is that his father and his mother knew not that that it was of the Lord that he that is Samson sought an occasion against the Philistines and then it is manifest by this place that Samson knew that it was Gods will that by seeking a wife amongst the Philistines he should take some occasion to be revenged on them though his parents thought not of any such thing But may some say Considering that the Philistines were of those nations whom God had commanded the Israelites utterly to destroy and so to take their land into their possession and likewise that the Philistines had for many years oppressed the Israelites what need was there that Samson should seek any other occasion against them to be revenged on them Now to this I answer first that it might well be that the Israelites had by covenant submitted themselves to be in subjection to the Philistines and in that regard Samson was to seek an occasion against them that he might without breach of covenant be revenged on them and thence it may be that those words are added immediately upon these for at that time the Philistines had dominion over Israel and secondly that Samson not being called of God to undertake the rescuing of the Israelites in a publick way out of the power of the Philistines by raising up an army against them but being onely appointed in his own person to make havock amongst them and by that means to weaken their power and abate their pride he was in that regard to take occasion from some private personall wrong to set upon them Vers 5. And behold a young lyon roared against him c. Either therefore Samson was upon some occasion turned out of the way or else his parents being either before or behind Samson was at present going alone by himself and thus God encouraged him for those encounters against the Philistines which afterwards followed as David was prepared in the like kind to fight with Goliah 1. Sam. 17.36 Thy servant slew both the lyon and the beare and this uncircumcised Philistine shall be as one of them Vers 6. And the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him c. That is on a sudden the Lord by his Spirit did endue him with such an exceeding measure of courage and strength that though he had nothing in his hand not so much as a staff to defend himself yet with his naked hands he said hold on the lion and rent him as he would have rent a kid and herein was Samson a notable type of Christ in his victory over the devil that roaring lion as S. Peter calls him 1. Pet. 5.8 that is continually walking about seeking whom he may devoure As for that which is added in the next words that he told not his father or his mother what he had done the reason of this might be lest it should prove perillous to have the Philistines heare of an Israelite endued with such admirable prowesse and strength but withall it was an argument of Samsons singular modesty that having performed such a strange and heroicall exploit he could presently go away after his parents and when he overtook them never spake the least word to them of it and herein too was there some shadow of that which is related concerning Christ that when he had wrought many miraculous works did often give charge that there should be no speech of it as when he had cured a blind man he sent him away to his house saying Neither go into the town nor tell it to any in the town Mark 8.26 Vers 8. And after a time he returned to take her and he turned aside to see the carcase of the lion c. Having it seems
sent and called for the lords of the Philistines saying Come up this once c. Vers 11. And he said unto her If they bind me with new ropes c. Though he had now found by experience that she would not take what he said for truth but would try the truth of what he said yet either because he was content to make himself sport in deluding her or rather because her importunity was such that without pretending to satisfie her he could not be rid of her for that he was troubled with her importunity is evident vers 16. he again fained a false way how he might be bound and so again a third time vers 13. Vers 14. And she fastned it with the pin c. That is having woven his locks with the web and so rolled the web whereunto his locks were woven about the beam as Samson had appointed her she fastned the beam with the pin that so the beam might not turn back when he should lift up his head then wakened him c. Vers 16. When she pressed him dayly with her words and urged him so that his soul was vexed unto the death c. The meaning of this is either that through the distraction of his thoughts and affections being exceeding loth to reveal this secret unto her and yet as loth still to deny her he was indeed ready to faint or at least was even weary of his life so that he had rather have died then have continued still in such perplexity or rather that it was even death to him to deny her any longer especially when she began to upbraid him now with mocking her as he had done and to challenge him that he did not love her and so thereupon he told her all his heart as it follows in the next verse Indeed considering the usuall unfaithfulnesse and treacherie of harlots it is strange that neither her importunate desiring to know a secret the discoverie whereof might prove so perillous to him nor her assaying three severall times to bind him in those wayes which he had propounded onely to deceive her should not make him begin to suspect her or fear some mischief plotting against him but for this we must remember that the love of harlots doth usually besot men and make them very slaves to those their mistresses especially when God intends to bring some mischief upon them as now he intended to have Samson punished for his sinne Vers 17. If I be shaven then my strength will go from me c. Thus Samson at last told her the truth of that secret which he was so loth to disclose Yet this was not because his strength proceeded from his long hair for it was merely the gift of God in a supernaturall way and therefore vers 20. where the reason is given why he lost his strength upon the cutting of his hair it is said that the Lord was departed from him nor was it because by the ordinary law of a Nazarite if his head were shaven he was to lose his strength for neither had all Nazarites this gift of such admirable strength as Samson had nor was there any such thing in the law of the Nazarite that those that had their hair cut off should lose such gifts as God by his Spirit had conferred upon them But it seems God had bestowed this as a singular gift upon Samson and that upon condition of his strict observing this law of the Nazarite in keeping his hair uncut to wit that he might be herein a type of Christ in regard of his invincible strength and to signifie also that the Spirit of grace deprived from Christ to his members is a Spirit of power 2. Tim. 1.7 and it seems too either by revelation or otherwise God had expressely declared thus much to Samson and hence it was that he told Delilah now that if he were shaven he should become weak like any other man Vers 18. When Delilah saw that he had told her all his heart c. Before she perswaded her self or was at least in great hopes that he had dealt truly with her but now it seems she might perceive by his countenance gesture and the manner of his expressing himself that he did indeed tell her the truth from his heart Then the Lords of the Philistines came up to her and brought money in their hand That is the money promised vers 5. that is each of them eleven hundred pieces of silver which was five thousand and five hundred pieces of silver if there were five Lords of the Philistines as afterwards 1. Sam. 6.16 it is said there were Perhaps they conceited that hitherto she had dallied with them because she saw not the reward promised tendered to her and therefore they brought the money now with them the more strongly to tempt her Vers 19. And she began to afflict him and his strength went from him That is she shock him to awake him out of his sleep and scared him with crying out as formerly the Philistines be upon thee Samson yea it is likely that she bound him whilst he slept for how else could she perceive that his strength was gone from him that she might call the Philistines that were lying in wait to come in and set upon him Vers 20. And he wist not that the Lord was departed from him To wit because on a sudden at his first waking he perceived not that his locks were cut off As for this expression the Lord was departed from him thereby onely is meant that God had withdrawn himself from yielding him that supernaturall strength which formerly he had given him for it is evident that it cannot be understood of the totall losse of Gods favour or the graces of his sanctifying Spirit Vers 21. But the Philistines took him and put out his eyes and brought him down to Gaza c. Thus no doubt God by his providence did dispose of it that his eyes might first smart for his sinnes by means whereof he was first intangled and drawn into sinne and that thither he might be carried away captive where first his lustfull eyes had made him a slave to an harlot As for the Philistines first they put out his eyes onely by way of revenge and to make sure he might not hurt them if he recovered his strength secondly they carryed him to Gaza a sea coast town because being carried so farre through the land of the Philistines the more of the people might come out to see him and rejoyce in the shamefull captivitie of that their invincible enemie thirdly because he should be there furthest out of the reach of the Israelites if they should think to attempt his rescue and fourthly that they might wipe off the stain of that dishonour which lately he had there done them by carrying him as a prisoner through that gate which he had ere while to their great infamie taken up in his arms and carryed away As for their putting him to grind
in the prison house that was according to the custome of those times for then it seems they would not suffer their prisoners to live idely but made them grind at the mill and thence is that expression where Babylons captivitie is threatned Isa 47.2 Take the milstones and grind meal uncover thy locks make bare the leg c. Yet withall it is likely they chuckered themselves to think what good use they should make herein of his great strength Vers 22. Howbeit the hair of his head began to grow again after he was shaven This shews that Samson was kept a good while in prison ere he was brought out to this their solemne festivitie and it is noted not as if his strength lay merely in the length of his hair but to implie his repentance the reassuming of his vow of the Nazarite which he had broken the recoverie of Gods former favour and the restoring of his former strength together with the signe of his reassumed vow his Nazarites hair Vers 23. Then the Lords of the Philistines gathered themselves together for to offer a great sacrifice unto Dagon their god This Dagon was an idol-god amongst the Philistines and his image was in the upper part like a man and in the nether part like a fish as many gather from 1. Sam. 5.4 concerning which see the note upon that place and that because happely the Philistines whose land lay altogether on the sea-coast did worship him as the god of the sea he had a temple in Ashdod 1. Sam. 5.4 And by this which is said here that all the lords of the Philistines met here together from all the severall lordships of their countrey to offer a great sacrifice to Dagon to wit for delivering Samson into their hands it seems he had another temple in Gaza too Vers 25. And they called for Samson out of the prison house and he made them sport To wit passively as being abused derided buffered and happely forced to run up and down that he might dash his head against the pillars yea and generally by suffering whatever such a poore blind prisoner can expect from enraged proud insulting enemies when they were now flushed with wine and good chear and herein was Samson also a type of Christ for thus did they sport themselves with our Saviour Matth. 26 67 68. Then did they spit in his face and buffeted him and others smote him with the palms of their hands Saying Prophecie unto us thou Christ who is he that smote thee and Matth. 27.29 And when they had platted a crown of thorns they put it upon his head and a reed in his right hand and they bowed the knee before him and mocked him saying Hail King of the Jews And they set him between the pillars To wit because there he might be most conveniently seen by the princes and people that were met together but withall by the secret providence of God this was so ordered that he might by thrusting away those pillars pull down the house upon the heads of the Philistines Vers 26. Suffer me that I may feel the pillars whereupon the house standeth that I may lean upon them This he spake to the lad that led him that the lad might think it was onely wearinesse partly through his continuall grinding at the mill and partly through their turmoyling him at present to make themselves sport that made him now desire to rest his hands upon the two pillars Vers 28. And strengthen me I pray thee onely this once O God that I may be at once avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes Thus by his calling upon God for help it was evident that he relyed not upon his grown hair but expected the renewing of his strength merely from God Neither did Samson by seeking to revenge his own wrong take Gods work out of his hand contrary to that precept Rom. 12.19 Avenge not your selves but rather give place to wrath for it is written Vengeance is mine and I will repay it saith the Lord and that because he was a publick person raised of God to punish those that wronged his people and besides what he did now it is likely he did it by the speciall instinct of Gods Spirit Vers 30. And Samson said Let me die with the Philistines and he bowed himself c. This is onely an expression of his contempt of death upon this consideration that he should execute such a remarkable judgement upon the Philistines His primary and direct intention was not such as is theirs that make away themselves but his direct aim was to destroy the Philistines onely he was content to lose his life in an action so advantageous to the people of God and whereby he should give such a deadly blow to their enemies which is expressed in the following words so that the dead which he slew at his death were mo then they that he slew in his life and herein doubtlesse he was a type of Christ who by death overcame death Heb. 2.14 And him that had the power of death which is the devil To which some adde also that dying thus with one hand reaching out to one pillar and the other to another and so bowing himself he did the more fitly shadow forth Christ dying with his hands stretched out upon the crosse John 19.30 When Jesus therefore had received the vineger he said It is finished and he bowed his head and gave up the ghost Vers 31. Then his brethren and all the house of his father came down and took him c. It is indeed strange that the Philistines should yield his body to his kindred to be buried by them But for this we must consider first that happely the Philistines did not know or would not acknowledge that this house fell by Samsons means but rather by some other casualty secondly that the power of the Philistines as also their pride and wrath against Gods people must needs by this fatall blow given to all their princes and so many of the people be much abated and pulled down so that this was no time to domineer over the Israelites or to provoke them by any harsh answer but rather to provide by all means for their own safety thirdly that the hearts of all men are in Gods hands Prov. 16.1 The preparations of the heart of man and the answer of the tongue is from the Lord who might therefore move them to yield Samsons body to his brethren as he did Pilate to yield to the like suit concerning Christ John 19.38 Joseph of Arimathea being a disciple of Jesus but secretly for fear of the Jews besought Pilate that he might take away the body of Jesus and Pilate gave him leave And he judged Israel twenty years See the note chap. 13. vers 1. CHAP. XVII Vers 1. ANd there was a man of mount Ephraim c. All the particular passages related from hence to the end of this book were certainly in the time of some of the forementioned
a Nazarite which she expresseth in the last clause of this verse and there shall no rasour come upon his head Indeed being by birth a Levite the Lords he was without her vow as being one of that tribe whom God had separated from the rest of the people for his speciall service but then we must consider that many of the Levites were dispersed abroad in severall places of the land where their chief imployment was to teach and instruct the people and did not at least continually but onely at some set times when their course came attend upon the service of the Tabernacle and again that the Levites were not bound to the service of the Tabernacle till five and twenty or thirty years of age and were again exempted at fifty concerning which see the note Numb 4.3 either therefore the speciall thing intended in her vow was the consecrating him wholly to the service of the Tabernacle or else the time when he should begin to attend there that he should not stay till the usuall years of other Levites but should be brought thither and trained up there even from his child-hood and all that while continue under the strict vow of a Nazarite which ordinarily the Levites were not bound unto As for her power to vow this we must understand that she onely vowed to do what in her lay that it might be thus to wit the child being by no defect of body or mind unfit for Gods service and willing when he came to years of discretion to take upon him the vow and again her husband consenting thereto without which the womans vow was of no force Deut. 30.8 But if her husband disallow her on the day that he heard it then he shall make her vow which she vowed and that which she uttered with her lips wherewith she bound her soul of none effect and the Lord shall forgive her Indeed it is evident in the sequel of Samuels story that he did not alwayes continue in the Tabernacle chap. 7.16 And he went from yeare to yeare in circuit to Bethel and Gilgal and Mizpeh and judged Israel in all those places and hence it seems probable that after Samuel became Judge in Israel he was by speciall dispensation from God freed from this vow of his mother Vers 14. And Eli said unto her How long wilt thou be drunken put away thy wine from thee That is How long wilt thou carry thy self as a drunken woman How long wilt thou continue here in thy drunkennesse and profane this holy place thou art come into go home and sleep and rid thee of this distemper and then come with a penitent heart and make thy peace with God because he saw her stand so long together mumblimg with her lips after an unusuall manner and yet could not perceive that she was praying he perswaded himself she was drunk and thereupon did thus sharply chide her the rather happely inclining to this rash judgement because of some incomposednesse in the gesture of her body arising from the vehemency of a transported mind which at the same time he might also discern in her but especially because it was immediately after they were risen from eating and drinking before the Lord vers 9. Vers 15. And Hannah answered and said No my Lord I am a woman of a sorrowfull spirit c. Though Eli had most unjustly charged Hannah with drunkennesse yet we see with what meeknesse she seeks to clear her self of that fault by giving him to understand first that she was a woman of a sorrowfull spirit and therefore in a condition altogether unlikely to give her self to such excesse secondly that she had at present drunk neither wine nor strong drink and thirdly that she had been imployed in a duty for which she had been very unfit had she been drunk namely in prayng to the Lord I have saith she powred out my soul before the Lord for it is usuall in the Scripture to call prayer the powring forth of the soul to God as Psal 62.8 Trust in him at all times ye people poure out your heart before him and Lam. 2.19 Arise cry out in the night in the beginning of the watches poure out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord and that I conceive for these two reasons first because Gods servants are wont in prayer as his friends and favourites to discover all their sinnes and make known all their wants and griefs and cares and troubles and all the complaints and desires of their souls not hiding any thing from him and secondly because they do this too with much vehemency and earnestnesse their prayers come not from them sleepingly and dreamingly but are poured forth with strong affections and fervency of spirit Vers 16. Count not thy hand-maid a daughter of Belial c. See the note Deut. 13.13 Vers 17. Then Eli answered and said Go in peace That is be not troubled with that which I said for I see now that I was deceived neither let this affliction thou art in disquiet thy mind but repose thy self on the providence of God who no doubt will provide for thee as may be most for thy good Vers 18. And she said let thy hand-maid find grace in thy sight That is I desire that thou wouldest still continue this good opinion of me and still pray to the Lord in my behalf So the woman went away did eat and her countenance was no more sad Which was an effect of faith wrought in her by the spirit of God upon the prayer she had poured forth unto the Lord and the gracious encouragement she had received from the high priest whose words she entertained as if a promise had been made to her from heaven Vers 20. She bare a sonne and called his name Samuel That is asked of God whereof she gives the reason in the following words because saith she I have asked him of the Lord so that hereby it is clear that she gave him that name first to testifie the comfort she took in that she had obtained this sonne by prayer from the Lord though the having of a child a sonne after so long a time of barrennesse the taking away of her reproch and the stopping of her adversaries mouth were all blessings wherein she could not but much rejoyce yet that this sonne was given her as a return of her prayer was in her esteem above all these and secondly that this name of her sonne might put them continually in mind in what a singular extraordinary way he was given them of God that so she might be rendred thereby the more carefull to perform the vow she had made and her husband too having consented to it and that the child might be the readier to submit himself to the service of God in that strict way of a Nazarite according to that which his mother had vowed Vers 21. And the man Elkanah and all his house went up to offer unto the Lord the yearly sacrifice
and his vow That is some sacrifice which he had vowed to the Lord and what can we rather think this to have been then a vow of peace-offerings which he had vowed to give unto the Lord by way of thankfulnesse for this sonne which by his beloved Hannah the Lord had now given him Vers 22. She said unto her husband I will not go up untill the child be weaned c. Hereby it appears that Hannah had acquainted her husband with her vow and that he had consented to it Some Expositours question whether Hannahs keeping the child at home till he was weaned was not a transgression of the law but causelessely for first for that Law concerning the presenting the first born before the Lord which the Virgin Mary observed Luke 2.22 And when the dayes of her purification were accomplished they brought him to Jerusalem to present him before the Lord this concerned not the Levites but onely those first born that were to be redeemed and secondly for that Law concerning the appearing of all the males thrice a yeare before the Lord Exod. 23.17 three times in a yeare all thy males shall appear before the Lord God it was meant onely of those that were capable in some measure of joyning in the worship and service of God Hannah therefore was not bound to go up with her young child immediately and being not bound she chooseth rather to stay till he was weaned because it went against her to think of bringing away a child vowed to God after she had once brought him to the Tabernacle of the Lord resolving that after he was weaned she would then carry him and leave him there that he might continue in the service of the Lord for ever Concerning which see the foregoing note upon verse 11. Vers 23. Tarrie untill thou have weaned him onely the Lord establish his word This word of the Lord which Elkanah speaks of must either be the gracious answer which Eli returned to Hannah vers 17. Then Eli answered and said Go in peace and the God of Israel grant thee thy petition which thou hast asked of him which she took as a kind of promise sent her from heaven or rather the answer which God returned to her prayers by giving her a sonne which was all one at if a voice had come from heaven Hannah thy desire is granted and this word it is which he desires the Lord would establish she had not onely craved a sonne but also with this condition by way of vow annexed that he might live a perpetuall Nazarite consecrated to the service of God and in this he prayes that the Lord would perfect what he had begun or else it must be understood generally that God would perform what he had determined concerning this his sonne as taking it for granted that surely a child so miraculously given was determined for some great service Vers 24. She took him up with her with three bullocks and one ephah of floure There is mention afterwards of the sacrificing of one of these bullocks onely vers 25 And they slew a bullock and brought the child to Eli but it cannot be thence gathered that one onely was intended for sacrifices the other for other uses that one might be offered when they presented the child and delivered him up to the service of God which is therefore onely mentioned the other afterwards in other oblations or the one might be offered as a burnt offering the other for a peace offering As for the Ephah of floure which he carried also an ephah contained ten omers or tenth deales now the Law perscribing three tenth deales to be offered with a bullock Num. 15.9 Then shall he bring with a bullock a meat offering of three tenth-deales of floure mingled with half an hin of oyle nine tenth-deales of this ephah were for the three bullocks and the other tenth deale which was overplus might be intended for a voluntary meat-offering Vers 28. And he worshipped the Lord there This may be me●●t of Eli that he blessed God for hearing both his and her prayer and for Hannah her voluntary consecrating her child to be a perpetuall Nazarite unto God but I rather conceive that it is meant of Elkanah he with Hannah brought the child to Eli vers 25. And they slew a bullock and brought the child to Eli. Hannah made known their errand to him and now it is added that he that is Elkanah worshiped the Lord implying thereby his assenting to that which Hannah had said and that he besought the Lord to accept the child and blesse him c. And Hannah prayed and said c. It is not improbable that Hannah joyned petitions at this time with her thanksgiving though the gratulatory part be expressed onely but however it is not improper to say she prayed when she praised God for this is a part of prayer Prayer being if generally defined a holy expression of our minds to God either by way of desiring any thing from him or by returning him thanks and giving him the glory of what he hath done 1. Tim. 2.1 I exhort therefore that first of all supplication prayers intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men Col. 4.2 Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiving CHAP. II. Vers 1. MY heart rejoyceth in the Lord mine horn is exalted in the Lord c. In this song of Hannahs her drift is to set forth the praises of God by way of testifying her thankfulnesse for the great mercy he had shown to her in her sonne Samuel yet she doth not onely insist upon this particular but takes occasion from thence to set forth his infinite holinesse and wisdome and power and speaks of the marvellous works of his providence which he dayly doth in the world and of the manifold benefits both temporall and spirituall and eternall which he is alwayes ready to impart to his Church and people Indeed in the first words of the song she begins with that which God at present had done for her wherein we must note first that though she did doubtlesse rejoyce much in the child that God had given her yet the chief thing that cheared her heart was that the Lord by granting her request in giving her a sonne had discovered his love to her and the precious account that he made of her and therefore when she comes to set forth the ground of her joy she insists altogether upon her interest in God and his favour to her My heart rejoyceth in the Lord mine horn is exalted in the Lord secondly that by exalting her horn is meant the advancing of her power and glorie and the cheerfulnesse and joy of her spirit the metaphor is taken either from horn beasts whose power and beautie is chiefly in their horns and who being lustie and full of spirit do the more advance and lift up their horns as they go up and down or else from captains and souldiers who were wont in those times
as some say to wear a kind of horn made of brasse upon their helmets and when they were conquerers and triumphed over their enemies then they wore it up but when they were conquered and foiled they drew it down However Hannah intends hereby to intimate that through the Lords goodnesse to her in giving her a sonne she was become stronger and more renowned then before for children are the strength and glorie of their parents and that she was cheared and encouraged to triumph over all her enemies thirdly that whereas she addes my mouth is enlarged over mine enemies thereby is meant both that she had now more abundant matter for the praising of God then her enemies and likewise that she had now enough to say wherewith to stop the mouth of her insulting adversarie before when she was barren she had nothing to replie against Peninnah but was fain to bear her reproches in silence but now Peninnah could not insult over her as before and if she did she had enough to answer her and fourthly that the reason of this is rendred in the last words because I rejoyce in thy salvation that is because thou hast saved me to wit from the affliction and reproch of my barrennesse and the insulting of mine enemies Vers 2. There is none holy as the Lord c. To wit because there is no creature that is perfectly holy without spot or blemish essentially and independently holy and the fountain of all holinesse that is in others as the Lord is and therefore it follows for there is none besides thee that is there is no God beside thee neither is there any rock like our God but concerning this last clause see the note Deut. 32.4 Vers 4. For the Lord is a God of knowledge c. By two reasons Hannah shews the follie of those that proudly insult over Gods people first the Lord saith she is a God of knowledge that is a God that knows all that in your pride and arrogancie you think or speak or attempt against his poore servants and from whom you have even that knowledge wisdome and understanding in the confidence whereof you are so ready to exalt your selves wherein there are many strong arguments included to disswade all men and women from such proud and arrogant boasting as Peninnah had used first because he that is the just avenger of all wickednesse must needs know it secondly because he discerning all their thoughts and projects could easily infatuate them and crosse them many wayes in their purposes and thirdly because they may be sure that he ordereth all with great wisdome for the good of those that fear his name Again a second reason is that by him actions are weighed whereby is meant that he exactly ponders all the actions of men and will therefore as a just Judge repay them as he finds them good or evil yea according to the degree of good and evil which he finds in them or rather it is meant of all the actions of men as they are disposed by the providence of God that he weighs them that is he orders them in great wisdome even as the Apothecarie weighs the drugs he puts into his medicines so the Lord moderates or enlargeth the rage of wicked men against his children as may be most for their good and therefore though they be insatiably desirous to lay load upon his children yet they are restrained many times and can proceed no further then God sees shall be for their good Vers 4. The bows of the mighty men are broken and they that stumbled are girt with strength In these words is implied that God doth many times abate the strength of the mightie or at least blasts their attempts and makes them successelesse and so as when the bow of a mightie man breaks all their endeavours come to nothing and on the other side he many times so strengthens the feeble that of themselves are ready to stumble or at least so prospers their weak endeavours that unexpectedly they bring mightie things to passe Those that are strong of bodie strong in militarie forces in power and authoritie in the Common-wealth in wisedome wit judgement and memorie become many times as Samson when his hair was cut off like other men yea though their strength remains their bow is oft broken their attempts are vain and end in shame and reproch whereas those that are weak in these regards become mightie and strong at least they prevail successefully in all their affairs Vers 5. They that were full have hired out themselves for bread and they that were hungry ceased That is they that were hungry became rich or at least were well provided for so that there was not a poore man any longer left amongst them So that the barren hath born seven and she that hath many children is waxed feeble That is those that were barren have born many children for seven is usually in the Scripture put for many as Deut. 28.7 they shall come out against thee one way and flie before thee seven wayes and so in divers other places and on the other side they that have had many children have either grown weak and so through feeblenesse have left bearing or else have buried the children they have had and so became feeble children being still esteemed the strength of their parents Now this particular passage of Gods providence it is likely that Hannah did the rather mention amongst the rest as having respect to the Lords mercy in opening her barren wombe and perhaps to the hope she had also if not the assurance she had by the spirit of prophecy that the Lord would give her many children more as indeed we find vers 21. of this chapter that she had after this three sonnes and two daughters Vers 6. The Lord killeth and maketh alive c. These following passages in this and the next verse may either be meant of severall men to wit that the Lord killeth one and maketh alive another that he maketh one man poore and another man rich c. or else of the same persons that the Lord killeth men and then maketh them alive again that he maketh a man poore and then afterwards rich again that he bringeth a man low and then afterwards lifteth him up again The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich he bringeth low and lifteth up as for these expressions of killing and making alive of bringing down to the grave and bringing up though they may be meant first literally that the Lord sometimes killeth men and yet restoreth them to life again as he did the good Shunamites sonne 2. Kings 4.35 and secondly spiritually that the Lord with the terrours of the Law and the lashes and sting of conscience for sinne hath humbled men and laid them as it were for dead according to that of the Apostle sinne revived and I died Rom. 7.9 whence the Law is called the ministration of death 2. Cor. 3.7 and yet afterwards he revives them and
cheers them up again by the promises of mercy and the sweet comforts of his spirit yet thirdly I conceive they may be best understood of the desperate dangers the grievous and heavy afflictions whereinto the Lord many times brings men and yet afterwards raiseth them up again when men by sicknesse or any other dismall calamity are brought to desperate extremities of danger heart-breaking sorrows and miseries out of which there seems to be no hope of recovery they are said in the Scripture to be as dead men and to be brought to the brink of the grave there is but a step between me and death saith David chap. 20.3 For thy sake are we killed all the day long saith the Apostle Rom. 8.36 and so also when the Lord delivereth them from these dangers and miseries they are said to be revived and raised up from the grave Hos 6.2 After two dayes will he revive us in the third day will he raise us up and we shall live in his sight Esa 26.19 Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust c. And thus Hannah here speaks of the strange changes and alterations which God makes amongst men The Lord killeth and maketh alive he bringeth down to the grave and bringeth up because first men will not be humbled many times till they be brought to such depths of miserie and secondly men are most affected with Gods goodnesse when they have given themselves for lost and are then raised up again thirdly the Lords power is most magnified when men are restored from such inextricable miseries therefore usually the Lord doth thus kill men when he means nothing lesse then that they should be lost but within a while revives them again and puts them into a better estate and condition then they were in before Vers 8. For the pillars of the earth are the Lords and he hath set the world upon them That is the whole earth is the Lords even to the centre and foundation thereof upon which the Lord hath settled and built up the whole frame of the world as it were upon pillars The earth hangs we know in the midst of the aire having nothing to support it but the mighty power command of God but because it stands firm and fast as if it were supported with pillars hence is this expression The pillars of the earth are the Lords c. and this clause is added to shew that it is no wonder that God should thus turn things upside down in the government of the world as is expressed in the foregoing verse since he that thus made the world at the first must needs be of power to do what he will may well also take libertie to do what seems good in his own eyes for with his own why should he not do what himself pleaseth Vers 9. He will keep the feet of his saints and the wicked shall be silent in darknesse By keeping the feet of his saints is meant the Lords preserving them from all dangers bodyly and spirituall and that especially by the inward guidance of his spirit and as for the second clause the wicked shall be silent in darknesse this may be understood either of the great calamities that shall fall upon them Eccles 5.17 All his dayes also he eateth in darknesse and he hath much sorrow and wrath with his sicknesse Zeph. 1.15 That day is a day of wrath a day of trouble and distresse a day of wastnesse and desolation a day of darknesse and gloominesse a day of clouds and thick darknesse wherein Hannah foretells here that they should be silent that is even overwhelmed with confusion and astonishment not having any thing to say for themselves according to those expressions Matth. 22.12 And he said unto him friend how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment and he was speechlesse Job 5.16 So the poore hath hope and iniquitie stoppeth her mouth and Jer. 8.14 Why do ye sit still assemble your selves and let us enter into the defenced cities and let us be silent there for the Lord our God hath put us to silence and given us waters of gall to drink because we have sinned against the Lord or else of their being cut off from the land of the living for such are said to dwell in silence Psal 94.17 Vnlesse the Lord had been my help my soul had almost dwelt in silence and in darknesse Job 10.21 22. Before I go whence I shall not return even to the land of darknesse and the shadow of death and especially the wicked whose souls are cast into outer darknesse Matth. 8.12 But the children of the kingdome shall be cast into outer darknesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth For by strength shall no man prevail That is by their own strength This is added as a reason of both the foregoing clauses the Lord will keep the feet of his saints for should not the Lord keep them they could never preserve themselves by their own strength and the wicked shall be silent in darknesse for if the Lord undertakes to punish them they cannot by their strength secure themselves the weak and strong are both alike to him he can pull down the mightiest as well as the meanest Vers 10. The adversaries of the Lord shall be broken in pieces out of heaven shall he thunder upon them This last clause being a branch of the propheticall part of Hannahs song may have reference to that particular judgement upon the enemies of Gods people in the time of her sonne Samuels government 1. Sam. 7.10 The Lord thundred with a great thunder on that day upon the Philistines discomfited them they were smitten before Israel or that 1. Sam. 12.18 So Samuel called unto the Lord and the Lord sent thunder and rain that day all the people greatly feared the Lord Samuel Yet withall it may be meant generally of the Lords pouring down vengeance from heaven upon his adversaries for we see 2. Sam. 22.14 15. David saith The Lord thundred from heaven and the most high uttered his voice and he sent out arrows and scattered them lightning and discomfited them c. And yet we reade not of any such storm of thunder and lightning that ever fell upon the enemies of David because God had many times destroyed his enemies by thunder from heaven it grew to be as it seems a proverbiall speech to say that the Lord would thunder upon them when they meant that the Lord would terribly destroy them The Lord shall judge the ends of the earth c. This is a prophecie concerning the exaltation kingdome of Christ the Messiah and indeed it is the first place in the old Testament where Christ is mentioned under the name of the Messiah the anointed The Lord shall judge the ends of the earth he shall give strength unto his king exalt the horn of his anointed
servant answered Saul again and said Behold I have here at hand the fourth part of a shekel of silver that will I give to the man of God to tell us our way and besides we see that it was a constant custome in those dayes to go with a present to the Prophets 1. Kings 14.2 3. And Jeroboam said unto his wife Arise I pray thee and disguise thy self that thou be not known to be the wife of Jeroboam and get thee to Shiloh Behold there is Ahijah the Prophet which told me that I should be king over this people And take with thee ten loves and cracknels and a cruse of honey and go to him he shall tell thee what shall become of the child 2. Kings 4.42 And there came a man from Baal-shalisha and brought the man of God bread of the first-fruits twentie loaves of barley and full ears of corn in the husk thereof c. Vers 12. Behold he is before you make haste now for he came to day to the citie The citie they speak of was Ramah where Samuel dwelt as is evident by the servants words vers 6. And he said unto him Behold now there is in this citie a man of God and he is an honourable man c. how then do these young maidens say He came to day to the citie I answer either they intend onely his going forth out of his house into the citie or else that he was come out of that Ramah where his dwelling was into this where the feast was to be kept for here were two towns joyned in one whence it is called in the duall number Ramathaim chap. 1.1 or else that having been abroad about some employments he was this day returned to Ramah For there is a sacrifice of the people to day in the high place To wit a sacrifice of peace-offerings wherewith the offerers were wont to feast together with their friends and it may be Samuel had purposely appointed this sacrifice for the entertainment of the man that was to be anointed king and for the procuring of Gods favour in that great and weightie businesse for it is evident vers 15 16. that God had the day before told Samuel that he would this day send him a man out of the land of Benjamin whom he should anoint Captain over his people Israel But what was this high place where they offered their sacrifices were not the Israelites bound by the law onely to offer up sacrifices on the altar that was in the Tabernacle Deut. 12.4 5. Vnto the place which the Lord your God shall choose out of all your tribes to put his name there even unto his habitation shall ye seek and thither thou shalt come And thither ye shall bring your burnt-offerings and your sacrifices c. I answer Many Expositours hold that this was meant onely of the Temple and that till the Temple was built the people might lawfully offer their sacrifices in any other places but yet first because Jer. 7.12 Shiloh is called the place where God set his name at the first and secondly because it was to no end to have an altar in the Tabernacle if the people might set up altars and offer sacrifices where they listed themselves and thirdly because in the beginning of Solomons reigne before the Temple was built it is mentioned as the onely blemish of the Israelites in those flourishing times 1. Kings 3.2 Onely the people sacrificed in high places therefore many other Expositours hold that even before the Temple was built the people used to bring their sacrifices to the Tabernacle as afterwards to the Temple till the Ark was taken by the Philistines in the dayes of Eli but that afterwards the Tabernacle and Ark being still kept in severall places the people began to question whether they were then tied to bring their sacrifices to any of those places and so by degrees did at length offer their sacrifices in such places as they judged meetest for such services to wit upon hills and clifts which were therefore called high places Vers 15. Now the Lord had told Samuel in his eare a day before Saul came c. Before the story relates the meeting of Samuel and Saul this is here inserted that the day before Saul came the Lord had told Samuel in his eare that is by the secret instinct of his spirit that the next day he would send him a man out of the land of Benjamin whom he should anoint to be king of Israel first to intimate that this was the occasion of the sacrifice and feast which Samuel had appointed knowing that the man chosen of God to be their king was to come thither this day he had appointed this feast for his entertainment and secondly to shew that it was no wonder that Samuel should presently entertain Saul as the elect king of Israel because the Lord having told Samuel the day before that he would send him a man out of Benjamin the next day when this came to passe as God had told him this must needs be a notable means to strengthen Samuels faith Vers 16. And thou shalt anoint him to be captain over my people Israel that he may save my people out of the hand of the Philistines It seems the Philistines who had been quiet all Samuels time chap. 7.13 So the Philistines were subdued and they came no more into the coast of Israel and the hand of the Lord was against the Philistines all the dayes of Samuel began now again to raise warre against the Israelites having happely made an agreement to that purpose with the king of Ammon that the one should invade the land on one hand and the other on the other side for that the Ammonites did also invade the land at this time is evident 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 This made the people cry and their cry the Lord heard and taking pitty on them promised now to save them from the Philistines of whom it seems they were most afraid and that by the hand of Saul And indeed though the warre betwixt Saul and the Philistines continued all his dayes and at his death they prevailed much yet oftentimes he prevailed against them and so saved them from much of that oppression which otherwise the Philistines would have laid upon them wherein also observable it is that God intended mercy to them in that which they notwithstanding had sinned in desiring to wit the raising up of a king amongst them Vers 19. Go up before me unto the high place for ye shall eat with me to day and to morrow I will let thee go and tell thee all that is in thine heart Though Samuel knew that Sauls soveraignty would deprive him of that supreme dignity he had formerly enjoyed yet knowing it was Gods will that Saul should be king we
by Gods command as we find it expressed chap. 15.1 Samuel also said unto Saul The Lord sent me to anoint thee to be king over his people over Israel and this was doubtlesse to signifie first that the Lord had chosen him and set him apart to that sacred and supreme office of being Gods Vicegerent in ruling and governing his people for oyl being ordinarily used in the consecrations of the Old Testament by the anointing of the kings of Israel the Lord was pleased to shew forth that he had called them and separated them to this place of singular and highest authoritie over the people and the rather say some Expositours beause oyl being mingled with other liquours will be still uppermost and so was the fitter to shadow forth that eminencie of dignitie and power whereto God had advanced them and secondly that the Lord would poure forth upon him an extraordinary measure of the gifts of his Spirit figured by the oyl thereby to enable him for that great service whereto he was called whence it is noted in the ninth verse of this chapter to shew as it were the accomplishment of that which was signified by this outward ceremony that God gave him another heart and vers 6. that he was turned into another man he was not the same man that he was before Besides because by that speech of Jothams Judg. 9.8 The trees went forth on a time to anoint a king over them it is evident that it had been many years before this a constant custome amongst other nations to anoint their kings and so was alwayes continued whence it is that Cyrus the king of Persia is called the Lords anointed Esa 45.1 it may well be that the people desiring a king like other nations the Lord might in this regard appoint this their new chosen king to be designed to his soveraignty by the same ceremony that was used amongst other nations It is a great question amongst Expositours whether the kings of Israel were anointed with that holy anointing oyl of the Tabernacle wherewith the Preists were anointed or with any other ordinary oyl but because there is nothing can be alledged that gives the least intimation that Saul was anointed with the oyle of the Sanctuary but onely that David and his successours were I shall referre the resolving of this doubt to the note upon chap. 16.1 The second ceremony used here by Samuel at the anointing of Saul was that he kissed him which he did either by way of congratulation for that dignitie whereto God had now advanced him as making this a token of Gods favour and his own voluntary and peaceable resigning the government over to him or rather by way of homage for in those times it seems subjects used to acknowledge the sovereignty of their kings by kissing them whence is that expression concerning Christ of whom it is said there that God had set him to be king upon his holy hill of Sion Psal 2.11 12. Serve the Lord with fear Kisse the sonne lest he be angry and the ground of this civill ceremony was to signifie the willingnesse of their subjection that they loved their kings and not so much out of fear as love would be ready to serve them And thence it well may be too that in times of idolatry they used to kisse their idols as is evident 1. King 19.18 Yet I have left me seven thousand in Israel all the knees which have not bowed unto Baal and every mouth which hath not kissed him and again Hos 13.2 And now they sinne more and more and have made them molte● images of their silver and idols according to their own understanding all of it the work of the craftsmen they say of them Let the men that sacrifice kisse the calves And said Is it not because the Lord hath anointed thee to be captain over his inheritance In rendring this reason why he had used those outward ceremonies the Prophet chiefly presseth him to remember first that it was not he but the Lord that had chosen him to be king and secondly that it was Gods own inheritance over whom he was to reigne a strong argument to render him the more carefull how he ruled over them 1. Kings 3.9 Give therefore thy servant an understanding heart to judge thy people that I may discern between good and bad for who is able to judge this thy so great people Why the Israelites were called the Lords inheritance see the note Deut. 32.9 Vers 2. Thou shalt find two men by Rachels sepulchre in the border of Benjamin Though Bethlehem was in the portion of Judah Mich 5.2 But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be a ruler in Israel and Rachels sepulchre in the way to Bethlehem Gen. 35.19 20. And Rachel dyed and was buried in the way to Ephrath which is Bethlehem And Jacob set a pillar upon her grave that is the pillar of Rachels grave unto this day yet might her sepulchre be in the border of Benjamin or near to it for the portion of these two tribes lay together Vers 3. And there shall meet thee three men going up to God to Bethel one carrying three kids c. To wit because they were going thither to sacrifice whereby it appears that as in many other places so in Bethel also there was an high place at this time wherein they used to sacrifice to which they might partly be induced out of an opinion of the holynesse of the place because there God appeared to Jacob Gen. 28.19 Now the more punctually these particulars are here expressed which these men carried with them the more it must needs strengthen Sauls faith when the least thing failed not of that which was now foretold him Vers 4. And they will salute thee and give thee two loaves of bread which thou shalt receive of their hands It is most probable that these men did never formerly know Saul nor were at all acquainted with him because Samuel gives him order to take the loaves which they should proffer him which there would have been no need to have done had they been his known and familiar freinds now the lesse reason could be conceived why mere strangers should carry themselves thus towards him the more admirable it was that God should secretly move their hearts thus to honour him as it were with a present as if they had known of the advancement which the Lord had conferred upon him and the more admirable and strange this was which Samuel foretold the more it must needs confirm Sauls faith when it came to passe Vers 5. After that thou shalt come to the hill of God where is the garrison of the Philistines Concerning the garrisons which the Philistines kept now in the land of Israel see the note chap. 7.14 It is probable that this was in Gibeah of Benjamin where Sauls father dwelt or near to it first
because this happened towards the end of his journey where his uncle dwelt and where himself was well known as is evident vers 11. And it came to passe when all that knew him before time saw that behold he prophecyed among the Prophets then the people said one to another What is this that is come unto the sonne of Kish Is Saul also among the Prophets and again vers 13.14 And when he had made an end of prophecying he came to the high place And Sauls uncle said unto him and to his servant Whither went ye and secondly because we reade chap. 13.3 of a garrison of the Philistines which was kept in Gibeah However it was doubtlesse called the hill of God both because there was in that place a Colledge of the prophets consecrate to the service of God and also because of the high place there wherein the people used to offer sacrifices to God Thou shalt meet a companie of Prophets coming down from the high place with a psalterie c. Not onely those that had the extraordinary gift of foretelling things to come are in the Scripture called Prophets but also first those who did interpret the holy Scriptures and as the messengers of God did teach and instruct the people concerning the will of God revealed in holy writ see Rom. 12.6 Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us whether prophecie let us prophecie according to the proportion of faith Eph. 4.11 And he gave some Apostles and some Prophets 1. The●s 5.20 Despise not prophecying 1. Cor. 14.31 32. For ye may all prophesie one by one that all may learn and all may be comforted And the spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets Prov. 29.18 Where there is no vision the people perish but he that keepeth the law happie is he and secondly those also that were set apart to compose and sing songs and Psalmes of praise and that happely because these were intended for instruction and oft contained predictions of future things 1. Chron. 25.1 2 3. Moreover David and the captains of the host separated to the service of the sonnes of Asaph and of Heman and of Jeduthun who should prophesie with harps with psalteries and with cymbals and the number of the workmen according to their service was Of the sons of Asaph Zaccur and Joseph and Nethaniah and Azarelah the sonnes of Asaph under the hands of Asaph which prophesied according to the order of the king Of Jeduthun the sonnes of Jeduthun Gedaliah and Zeri and Jeshaiah Hashabiah and Mattithiah six under the hands of their father Jeduthun who prophesied with a harp to give thanks and to praise the Lord and to this some applie that place also 1. Cor. 11.4 Every man praying or prophecying having his head covered dishonoureth his head And such doubtlesse were these prophets It appears by this and other places that there were in these times certain Colledges erected wherein many holy men lived consecrated to God whose continuall employment it was to studie the Law and other holy writings to teach and instruct others therein to sing in a solemne manner Psalmes of praise unto the Lord and to train up other young students who studied this way of prophecying under them One of these there was at Bethel another at Jericho 2. Kings 2.3.5 Yea so did the Lord blesse this course that upon many of them he bestowed that extraordinary gift of foretelling future things as is evident by that place before-cited 2. Kings 2.3 And the sons of the Prophets that were at Bethel came forth to Elisha and said unto him Knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy Master from thy head to day And he said yea I know it hold you your peace And so vers 5. where the same is said of the sonnes of the Prophets that were at Jericho Such a Colledge there was here and of these were the Prophets that met Saul whence it is said that they had a psalterie and a tabret and a pipe and a harp before them for these they made use of in their singing and praising God and if that were not all that was intended when they are said to have prophesied we may conceive that this musick was used to stirre up their own hearts and the hearts of the people before they prophesied as Elisha did 2. Kings 3.15 But now bring me a minstrell And it came to passe when the minstrell played that the hand of the Lord came upon him Concerning this their prophecying see the note upon Numb 11.25 Vers 6. Thou shalt prophesie with them and shalt be turned into another man That is he should become a man of a more princely and heroicall spirit then now he was and filled with new and divine gifts and qualities and so those whom God advanceth to be spiritually Kings and Priests Rev. 1.6 And hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to whom be glorie and dominion for ever and ever Amen he makes them new men 2. Cor. 5.17 Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are past away behold all things are become new Vers 7. Do as occasion shall serve thee for God is with thee That is as any occasion or opportunitie shall be given of doing any thing that belongs to this regall dignity whereunto God hath now advanced thee fear not to undertake it for God who hath called thee to this honour is with thee to prosper thee in it Vers 8. And thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal and behold I will come down unto thee to offer burnt-offerings c. In these words Samuel appoints Saul 1. to go down to Gilgal promising that he would come thither to him to offer up sacrifices for him and to direct him what he should do 2. to stay there for him seven dayes as it is in the last words of this verse seven dayes shalt thou tarry till I come to thee shew thee what thou shalt do and the joyning of this to that which went before may seem to import that he enjoyned Saul to do this immediately upon the accomplishment of the signes before mentioned whereas indeed it is evident in the 13. chapter that it was two years after Sauls being anointed by Samuel ere Saul waited for Samuel at Gilgal and was sharply reproved because he did not wait fully to the end of the seventh day as Samuel had enjoyned him for so we reade 1. Sam. 13.1 2. Saul reigned one yeare and when he had reigned two years over Israel Saul chose him three thousand men c. then it follows v. 8. And he tarried seven dayes according to the set time that Samuel had appointed c. Either therefore we must conceive that this charge which Samuel now gave to Saul concerning his staying for him at Gilgal was so delivered by him that Saul might know that it was meant of that particular time when he was to raise an
Jephtha foyled them to wit a claim which they laid to the land of Gilead where Jabesh stood which now to recover and withall to revenge that shamefull overthrow which Jephtha had given them they might be the rather emboldened because the Philistines on the other side of the countrey had exceedingly weakned and oppressed the Israelites Vers 2. On this condition will I make a covenant with you that I may thrust out all your right eyes and lay it for a reproch upon all Israel To wit to disable them for the warre for with their shields they covered their left eyes and therefore having lost their right eyes what service of warre could they be fit for and consequently that the accepting of such dishonourable conditions might be a perpetuall reproch to all the people because it would be said hereupon what a base people the Israelites were that would buy off death upon any terms yea to the God of Israel on whom his people durst not rely for help and thus Sathan labours to put out the right eye of faith and to leave us onely the left eye of reason Vers 4. Then came the messengers to Gibeah of Saul c. That is as to other towns so also to this or rather knowing that Saul their Prince elect was at Gibeah and Samuel with him these messengers of Jabesh-gilead went directly thither that they might acquaint them with the extremity of streights they were in that so they might speedily send into all the coasts of Israel for help Had Nahash the king of the Ammonites yielded to the submission of the inhabitants of Jabesh-gilead he might not only have had that town delivered up to him but in all probability many more would have yielded themselves to him after their example Yea and when they desired seven dayes respite that they might send messengers into all the coasts of Israel promising that if in that time they had not help they would yield up the town had not he yielded to this he might happely in that time have taken the town by force But first he proudly and scornfully refused the tender of their service and sent them word that nothing should satisfie him unlesse he might thrust out all their right eyes and when they desired a truce of seven dayes to try if they could call in their brethren to their aid ere they yielded to so hard a condition he granted them their request and as we see here suffered them to send their messengers as being puft up with such an opinion of his own strength that he thought it impossible that in that time their brethren either could or durst come to relieve them and so by this means through his arrogancy and cruelty he was carried headlong to his own destruction whereas by granting them fair quarter he might have brought them under his yoke and have spread his victories much further Vers 5. And behold Saul came after the herd out of the field Being onely yet elected king and finding many to repine against it returning home he betook himself as most Interpreters hold to his wonted countrey imployments But this agreeing not with the state of his being conducted home chap. 10.26 may rather be understood of casuall coming after the herd and that it is here expressed onely because of that which followeth his taking a yoke of the oxen and hewing them c. Vers 6. And the spirit of God came upon Saul when he heard those tidings and his anger was kindled greatly Herein we see how fairly Saul carried himself as long as those gifts of Gods spirit were continued to him wherewith the Lord had fitted him for the government of his people He that was so patient in his own cause that when certain children of Belial scorned and despised him he passed it by as if he had taken no notice of it chap. 10.27 was now impatient of the wrong that was done to the Lord and his people by the Ammonites that had propounded such intollerable conditions to the men of Jabesh-gilead now his anger was kindled greatly and it never abated till he had rescued his poore oppressed brethren out of the danger they were in As for that expression And the spirit of God came upon Saul see the note Judg. 3.10 Vers 7. Whosoever cometh not forth after Saul and after Samuel so shall it be done unto his oxen It may well be that Saul took this course of hewing a yoke of oxen in pieces and sending the pieces to the severall tribes of Israel in imitation of the Levite Judg. 19.29 who did thus cut his concubine in pieces and sent them to the severall tribes the better to stirre up their indignation And in the message he sent to the tribes because he was not yet generally approved and received as king of all the people he useth not his own name onely but Samuels also who it seems accompanied him home from Mizpeh as others did chap. 10.26 and so was now with him that by this means he might make sure that all should come if not for respect of him their king yet out of regard had to Samuel Gods Prophet and formerly their Judge And the fear of the Lord fell on the people and they came out with one consent That is though Saul did what he could to make the people afraid to disobey his command yet it was of God that they were so generally stricken with fear and thereupon ready to come forth at the command of their new chosen king as it is said of the Canaanites that were restrained from pursuing Jacob and his family when his sonnes had made that massacre in Schechem Gen. 35.5 And they journeyed and the terrour of God was upon the cities that were round about them and they did not pursue after the sonnes of Jacob. Vers 8. The children of Israel were three hundred thousand and the men of Judah thirty thousand The men of Judah are reckoned apart from the children of Israel and these reasons may be given for it 1. Because they usually had the priviledge of going first against the enemy in any common danger 2. To let us see that the tribe of Judah though the chief and the tribe wherein God had said the throne should be established Gen. 49.10 yielded to obey Saul chosen out of the least of the tribes or thirdly because this would intimate how willingly the people flocked together when out of Judah alone there came thirty thousand though by the continuall incursions of the Philistines they were forced to look to the defence of their own coasts against these their neighbours Vers 9. And they said unto the messengers that came c. That is Saul and Samuel Vers 10. Therefore the men of Jabesh said To morrow we will come out unto you c. They repeat the main head of the covenant they had made with the king of Ammon to wit that they would come forth and yield themselves concealing the condition that is if help came not in
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
would not lie nor repent as being almighty and therefore able to do whatever he pleased in despite of all that Saul should do against David the kingdome should be taken from him and given to David And thirdly It might be to answer an objection that might arise in Sauls mind Saul might think that surely the Lord would not indeed take away the kingdome from him because the Lord himself had said that he should save Israel out of the hands of the Philistines chap. 9.16 To beat him from this refuge Samuel puts him in mind that God was the strength of his people and so could save and deliver them and yet make good his word in removing him from being king Vers 30. Then he said I have sinned See the note vers 24. Vers 31. So Samuel turned again after Saul c. Though he had formerly refused to go with Saul to wit at that time and that upon this ground that he might not seem to allow of Sauls sinne yet now upon another ground he yields to go to wit that the people might not take any occasion of not yielding to Saul that honour which was yet due to him as the anointed of the Lord the rather because he intended to take away the offence of seeming to allow Sauls sinne by executing Gods sentence upon Agag whom Saul had spared Vers 32. And Agag came unto him delicately That is in the attire and with the gesture and gate of a king as one that thought not of death but onely took care that both his apparell and every thing else about him yea his deportment and carriage of himself should be Prince-like and such as beseemed the dignity of his person though now a captive Because he was brought not to Saul the king that had taken him prisoner but to Samuel an aged prophet this it may be made him so confident that now the danger of death was over now thinks he with himself Surely the bitternesse of death is past Vers 33. And Samuel hewed Agag in pieces before the Lord in Gilgal Whether Samuel did this by himself or by others he did it doubtlesse by the speciall instinct of Gods spirit Vers 35. And Samuel came to see Saul no more untill the day of his death That is he never went after this to visit him as formerly to give him instruction and direction in his affairs For that Samuel did before his death see Saul after this is evident chap. 19.24 And he stript off his clothes also and prophesied before Samuel in like manner c. CHAP. XVI Vers 1. ANd the Lord said unto Samuel How long wilt thou mourn for Saul seeing I have rejected him from reigning over Israel That it was a sinne in Samuel to mourn for Saul when God had rejected him from being king we cannot say for it is a work of charity well-pleasing to God to mourn for wicked men that lie under Gods wrath and yet mourn not for themselves especially in Gods Prophets and Messengers whose duty it is to interpose themselves when God is angry with his people by their prayers and tears to sue for mercy for them And therefore we see the Lord complains of these prophets Ezek. 13.5 that had not gone up into the gaps neither made up the hedge for the house of Israel to stand in the battell in the day of the Lord. And besides Samuel might well fear that if Saul were cut off a great deal of trouble and confusion might happen amongst the people In which case he had just cause to mourn in their behalf And why then did the Lord expostulate with Samuel How long wilt thou mourn for Saul c. Surely to make known to Samuel that all his mourning for Saul was in vain partly because he continued still obstinate and impenitent and partly because God had absolutely rejected him from being king In which case though Samuel might bewail Sauls condition for all mourning for that which we know God hath decreed is not unlawfull when we loose deare friends we know it is Gods will and yet may mourn for their death yet he might not bewail it so as might imply an unwillingnesse to submit to the will of God and therefore we see it is not for his mourning but for his mourning so long that God expostulates with him How long wilt thou mourn for Saul seeing I have rejected him from being king Fill thine horn with oyl and go I will send thee to Jesse the Bethlehemite for I have provided me a king among his sonnes Though the Lord intended not that Saul should be presently deposed from being king and therefore David after he was anointed did alwayes acknowledge Saul to be his Lord and Sovereigne chap. 24.6 The Lord forbid that I should do this thing unto my Master the Lords anointed to stretch forth mine hand against him seeing he is the anointed of the Lord yet he would have him anointed before-hand that was to succeed Saul 1. For the comfort of Samuel and others that knew the Lord had forsaken and cast off Saul who by this might be assured that for all this God intended not to cast off the care of his people 2. That David being anointed when he was in the eye of reason so unlikely to come to the Crown it might be the more evident when it came to passe that it was of God 3. That hereby David might be supported in his many following troubles And 4. That the same hand that had anointed Saul might testifie Gods rejecting Sauls posterity by anointing one of another family to succeed him in the throne for Samuel drawing now to his end had therefore this businesse now imposed upon him and was sent to Jesse the Bethlehemite who was the sonne of Obed and grandchild of Boaz and Ruth the Lord making known to him that one of his sonnes was to be anointed king The expression the Lord useth in making this known to Samuel is very observable because it implies that the king that was now to be anointed was in a peculiar manner the Lords king for saith he I have provided me a king among his sonnes Saul was chosen by the Lord to be the king of Israel but it was upon the importunity of the people who would needs have it so and could not be beaten off from it so that Saul was the peoples king rather then Gods given them because of the peoples preposterous and unruly desires and therefore his government being abortive continued not nor thrived well for the best things whilest it did continue but how when David was anointed king there was no such matter but he was merely chosen of God there was no body desired or spake the least word for the erecting of his government yea even Samuel himself by his desire after Saul and mourning for him did unwittingly what he could to oppose the advancing of David onely God did then of his own freewill when no body thought any thing of it send Samuel
to anoint David and so he was a king of Gods own providing the king in whose seed the kingdome was to be established Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Judah nor a Law-giver from between his feet untill Shiloh come and who would in his government carefully perform the will of God chap. 13.14 The Lord hath sought him a man after his own heart And indeed in all these things David was a notable type of Christ for first he was the Sonne of David Matth. 1.1 and the king of Israel Joh. 1.49 upon whom the kingdome was settled for ever Luke 1.33 And he shall reigne over the house of Israel for ever and of his kingdome there shall be no end secondly he was given of God to be the king of his Church that he might save them out of the hands of their enemies when no man desired it when we thought not of any such mercy nor begged it of God he of his own free grace gave us his sonne to be our king I have set my king upon my holy hill of Sion saith the Lord Psal 2.6 Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyl of gladnesse above thy fellows Heb. 1.9 and thirdly he doth administer this kingdome according to Gods own heart Psal 40 7 8. Then said I Lo I come in the volume of the book it is written of me I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy Law is within my heart which the Apostle doth plainly apply to Christ Heb. 10.6 7. So that besides the reasons formerly given why the Lord appointed the kings of Israel to be anointed with oyl chap. 10.1 this also may be added concerning David and his posterity to wit that they were anointed to shadow forth that there was a Messiah to come whom God had anointed to be king over his Church even the Lord Christ upon whom the Spirit of God and the true oyl of anointing was poured forth without measure whence it was that Christ did apply to himself that prophesie Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel c. Luke 14.18 It is much argued amongst expositours whether David and so his posterity also if not all the kings of Israel too were not anointed with the holy oyl of the Tabernacle wherewith the Preists were anointed and there are many who though they think it altogether improbable that the Prophets would use the sacred oyl of the Tabernacle in anointing the idolatrous kings of Israel yet they hold that David and his successours were anointed with that oyl first because it is said that David was anointed with holy oyle Psal 89.20 I have found David my servant with my holy oyl have I anointed him And secondly because it is expressely said of Solomon 1. King 1.39 that Zadok took an horn of oyl out of the Tabernacle and anointed Solomon But now on the other side first because that Law of the Preists oyl Exod. 30.32 seems to imply that it was not to be used for any other but the Priests onely secondly because we find no command that this service should be performed with that sacred oyl and thirdly because when David was anointed the second time by the men of Judah 2. Sam. 2.4 the Tabernacle was then at Gibeon that was under the power of Ishbosheth the sonne of Saul and so David could not then be anointed with that oyl of the Tabernacle therefore it is judged most probable by many other Expositours that neither David nor Solomon were anointed with that oyl but say they because the office and imployment of the supreme Magistrate who sits in Gods seat and executes Gods judgements may be called holy as the Seat of Justice is called the holy place Eccles 8.10 therefore it is said that David was anointed with holy oyl And for that place 1. Kings 1.39 they answer that it may well be that this horn of oyl wherewith Samuel was now sent to anoint David was afterwards laid up in the Tabernacle and so Solomon was anointed therewith But however there was much oyl in the Tabernacle besides that which was made for the Priests anointing which Zadok might take thence for the anointing of Solomon Vers 2. And Samuel said How can I go If Saul heare it he will kill me This question might well proceed both from a fearfull apprehension of the danger of this act a desire to be instructed how with least danger this businesse might be carried And the Lord said Take an heifer with thee and say I am come to sacrifice unto the Lord. Thus the Lord advised him to conceal the principall cause of his coming and to alledge onely that businesse which he had to do there that might be safely made known which was not unlawfull Vers 3. And call Jesse to the sacrifice c. That is invite him to the feast thou makest with thy peace-offerings Vers 4. And the Elders of the town trembled at his coming c. Bethlehem was but a little obscure town Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlehem-Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Judah c. Either therefore because it was such news to see Samuel there they feared he came as a Prophet with some heavy message of Gods displeasure against them or else because he came so unexpectedly and withall so privately and without attendance they feared he had fled from Saul as having happely heard of that which had passed betwixt him and the king related in the former chapter and so were troubled for him and withall perhaps afraid lest Saul should be enraged against them for entertaining him Vers 5. And he sanctified Jesse and his sonnes and called them to the sacrifice That is he appointed them to prepare and sanctifie themselves both legally and spiritually that they might eat of the sacrifices See the note on Josh 3.5 Vers 6. And it came to passe when they were come that he looked on Eliab c. Somewhat is here left to be supposed as necessarily following upon that which is expressed to wit that Samuel had acquainted Jesse with the cause of his coming and that hereupon Jesse brought in his sonnes one by one into some private place whither before they sat down to eat of the sacrifice they had retired themselves for that purpose that he might be anointed whom God had chosen and so when Samuel beheld Eliab the first-born he said to himself Surely this is the man The comelinesse of his person made him think this was he whom God had chosen but herein he was led by his own spirit as Nathan in a like case was when he encouraged David to build a Temple 2. Sam. 7.3 And Nathan said to the King Go do all that is in thy heart for the Lord is with thee and hereby it was the more manifest that it was not Samuel but God that chose David to be King Vers 7.
But the Lord said unto Samuel Look not on his countenance c. To wit by a secret voice of his spi●it within him Vers 8. Then Jesse called Abinadab To wit after Samuel had told him that Eliab was not he whom God had chosen Vers 9. Then Jesse made Shammah to passe by Called also Shumma 1. Chron. 2.13 Vers 10. Again Jesse made seven of his sonnes to passe before Samuel Hereby it is manifest that Jesse had eight sonnes as it is also expressed chap. 17.12 Now David was the sonne of that Ephrathite of Bethlehem-Judah whose name was Jesse and he had eight sonnes c. though there be but seven mentioned 1. Chron. 2.13 14 15. because happely one of these died immediately after this and onely those are mentioned there that were men of fame in after-times for it hath no probability in it which some say that he had amongst these brought one of his grandchildren to Samuel since we see that as yet he had not brought David his youngest sonne Vers 11. And Samuel said unto Jesse Are here all thy children Jesse had omitted to bring his youngest sonne as concluding that it could not be he of all the rest whom God had chosen which was doubtlesse so ordered by the speciall providence of God that Samuel being brought to this demurre it might be the more evident that David was truely chosen of God Vers 13. Then Samuel took the horn of oyl and anointed him in the midst of his brethren That is amongst all the sonnes of Jesse Samuel by Gods appointment anointed David from amongst the rest of his brethren he was taken and anointed to succeed Saul in the kingdome The phrase is not unlike that Deut. 18.15 The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy brethren c. The meaning is not therefore that his brethren stood about him when he was anointed For though it be evident that Samuel acquainted Jesse with that which God had commanded him to do and that he was an eye-witnesse of Davids anointing yet it is not likely that his brethren stood by and looked on when this was done and heard what Samuel said unto him who no doubt made it known to David why he anointed him as may seem to be implyed in that place 2. Sam 5.2 And the Lord said to thee Thou shalt feed my people Israel and shalt be a Captain over Israel For first though Jesse might be enjoyned secresie yet it is not likely that his envious brethren seeing him anointed by Samuel that famous Prophet should either not suspect any thing thereby or not blazon it abroad And to what end was Samuel sent so secretly under the colour of a solemne sacrifice if David were to be anointed so openly amongst so many witnesses that might publish it whereever they came secondly how can we think that Davids brethren had they known of Samuels anointing him would have used him so scornfully as after this they did chap. 17.28 And Eliab his eldest brother heard when he spake unto the men and Eliabs anger was kindled against David and he said Why camest thou down hither and with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wildernesse I know thy pride and the naughtinesse of thine heart c. Surely they would never have used him with such scorn had they known he was anointed by Samuel yea though we should suppose what some affirm that they imagined that he was anointed to be a Prophet not a King Many Expositours indeed answer that either they understood not or believed not Gods purpose in the anointing of David But Samuel was a prophet of such fame in those dayes that me thinks such a solemne action of his should not so be sleighted And the spirit of the Lord came upon David from that day forward That is the Lord gave him an extraordinary measure of the gifts and graces of his holy spirit whereof his anointing was an outward signe and so he was moved and led on by the spirit of God to undertake great and noble enterprises such as was that of his killing the lion and the bear mentioned in the following chapter vers 34 35 36. Whence it was that he became so famous that Sauls Courtiers could say of him vers 18. that he was a mighty valiant man and a man of warre and prudent in matters Yea and besides it may well be that from that time forward he had also a spirit of prophecy and the gift of Poetry and Musick conferred upon him wherein he became afterward exceeding eminent Vers 14. But the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evil spirit from the Lord troubled him That is the Lord bereaved him of those gifts he had formerly bestowed upon him and then by degrees he began to be troubled with melancholly and frantick fits as is evident chap. 28.10.11 And that by means of an evil spirit sent from God for even the devils stirre not without Gods allowance Doubtlesse he was tormented with the terrours of an evil and guilty conscience oppressed with grief and sadnesse of heart for the losse of his kingdome and then Sathan making use of this distemper both of body and mind drove him into fits of phrensie and rage that he was for the time as one possessed with a devil He had preferred his own reason before Gods directions in the businesse of the Amalekites and so made an idole of his own wisdom and reason and now God deprives him of the use of his reason and brake as it were this his idole in pieces Vers 15. And Sauls servants said unto him c. That is his Physicians who were called to advise about this distemper of Saul Vers 16. And it shall come to passe when the evil spirit from God is upon thee that he shall play with his hand and thou shalt be well Not that Musicall sounds have any force to drive away devils but because they conceived that his sad heart his dead and pensive spirits which were the instruments of Sathans working might be cheared and revived hereby and his melancholly passions much allayed and so be the lesse subject to the devils operations And indeed so as they said it fell out vers 23. And it came to passe when the evil spirit from God was upon Saul that David took an harp and played with his hand so Saul was refreshed and was well and the evil spirit departed from him yet not so much I conceive through the virtue or naturall power of musick as by the speciall hand of God who was pleased extraordinarily to cause it thus to work upon Saul however herein we may well look upon David as a type of Christ who cast out many devils out of men possessed and now by the glad tidings of the Gospel doth daily cast them out of the hearts of naturall men and quiets those souls that are distempered with greif or fear working peace unspeakable in those that lie
meant either of the tent which David afterwards provided for the Ark of God 1. Chron. 15.1 and therefore called his tent Or else rather it is meant of his own private tent where it seems he kept all Goliahs armour for a time though afterward it is evident that his sword was laid up in the Tabernacle of the Lord at Nob Chap. 21.9 And the Priest said The sword of Goliath the Philistine whom thou slewest in the valley of Elah behold it is wrapt up in a cloth behind the Ephod Vers 55. He said unto Abner captain of the host Abner whose sonne is this youth This may well seem strange considering what is said before concerning Saul and David chap. 16.21 And David came to Saul and stood before him and he loved him greatly and he became his armour bearer And indeed some Expositours do certainly hereupon conclude that there is here a transposition of the history and that these things related in this chapter were done before that which is related in the foregoing chapter concerning Sauls sending for David to play before him c. But yet it is not safe to change the order of the history without necessary cause and that here I find not For notwithstanding all that had formerly passed between Saul and David how this might be that Saul should not now know David we may well enough conceive if we consider First That the countenance of young men when they grow toward ripenesse of years and begin to have hair on their faces many times doth much alter in a little while Secondly That great Personages do take little notice of their meaner servants and therefore easily forget them Thirdly That Saul was troubled with melancholly and frantick fits and such men will often forget those that formerly they have seemed much to respect For all this considered it needs not seem impossible that Saul should before this greatly love David to wit according to the respect which musitians or servants find with Princes and appoint him to be one of those that sometimes carried his sheild before him and yet having afterwards sent him home to his father should not know him when he came to the camp in other apparell and with another countenance to visit his brethren And as for Abner being a martiall man and often abroad he might in those times take little notice of David CHAP. XVIII Vers 1. ANd it came to passe when he had made an end of speaking unto Saul that the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David c. That is his heart and affections were in an extraordinary manner set upon David and the causes thereof are easily conceived to wit First Those amiable graces which he discerned in David his wisdome his courage and undaunted spirit his zeal for Gods glory and above all his faith and confidence in Gods protection and assistance Secondly The likenesse and suitablenesse of their qualities and dispositions Jonathan was a stout couragious Prince pious and faithfull and therefore when David had manifested himself to be eminently such likewise the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David Thirdly The glory that God had done him in giving him the victory over that proud Gyant that had both defied and terrified the whole army of Israel this shewed plainly that he was highly esteemed of God and pretious in his eyes and so he loved him as one that was dearly beloved of God Fourthly The gratious speeches that came from David upon every occasion for that seems to be specially aimed at in those words when he had made an end of speaking unto Saul the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David And Fifthly There was doubtlesse a speciall hand of God in inclining the affections of Jonathan thus unto David for by this means God provided David a freind in Sauls court to plead for him to reveal Sauls plots and intendments against him and to be by his true love a comfort and support to David in all his approching troubles and sorrows Vers 3. Then Jonathan and David made a covenant That is a covenant of entire friendship and brotherly love Vers 4. And Jonathan stript himself of the robe that was upon him and gave it to David To wit that hereby he might testifie that he esteemed him as his second self and that whatever he had all his authority and power and wealth he should be alwayes ready to bestow and imploy it for Davids welfare and service Vers 5. And Saul set him over the men of warre That is he made him a Captain over some of his troops and imployed him as a commander in his warres For this is not meant of that dignity which Saul had formerly conferred upon Abner chap. 14.50 who was the Captain of his host that is the chief Generall of his Armies that place he still retained as is evident in many places of the following story Vers 6. The women came out of all the cities of Israel singing and dauncing to meet king Saul c. It was it seems the usuall custome of these times amongst the people of God that when God had given them any great victory over their enemies the women were wont with dances and songs of triumph to celebrate the praises of God For so it was with the women of Israel when the Egyptians were drowned in the red sea Exod 15.20 And with Jephthahs daughter and her company when Jephthah had vanquished the Ammonites his daughter came out to meet him with timbrels and with dances Judges 11.32 And therefore now from all the cities of Israel that Saul passed by with his army as he returned home from the valley of Elah where he had vanquished the Philistines the women came out with songs and dances to congratulate his victory As women have usually the heaviest share in the calamities of a land that is overrun by an enemy and that because they are least able to resist and so are frequently taken for slaves ravished and abused in the most savage manner so have they likewise therefore the greatest cause to rejoyce when the enemy is vanquished and hence it may be was this custome of womens triumphing at every great victory But however in this triumphing of Gods people for the fall of Goliath and the vanquishing of the Philistines there was a kind of figure and shadow of the triumphant joy of Gods elect people for Christs conquest over Sathan and their prevailing over their spirituall enemies through the merits and assistance of Christ Rev. 12.10 11. I heard a loud voice saying in heaven now is come salvation and strength and the kingdome of our God and the power of his Christ for the accuser of our brethren is cast down c. and they overcame him by the bloud of the Lambe and by the word of their testimony such was the rejoycing of the virgin Mary and Zachary Luke 1.46 My soul doth magnifie the Lord saith Mary and my spirit hath rejoyced in
God my Saviour And blessed be the Lord God of Israel saith Zachary for he hath visited and redeemed his people and hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David vers 68.69 Yea thus do all Gods redeemed ones triumph because Christ hath made them more then Conquerours over all their enemies Rom. 8.33 39. Vers 7. Saul hath slain his thousands and David his ten thousands To David they ascribed ten times as much as to Saul because by his killing of Goliath he was the cause of the routing of the whole army Now so solemn and glorious was the triumph of the Israelites and such generall notice was taken of this particular passage in the womens song that it came to be reported and known to the Philistines as we may see chap. 21.11 And the servants of Achish said unto him Is not this David the king of the land Did not they sing one to another of him in dances saying Saul hath slain his thousands and David his ten thousands And chap. 29.5 Is not this David of whom they sang one to another in dances saying Saul hath slain his thousands and David his ten thousands Vers 8. And he said They have ascribed unto David ten thousands and to me they have ascribed but thousands and what can he have more but the kingdome The meaning is that from thenceforth he began to suspect that David was the man of whom Samuel had told him that should be king in his room chap. 13.14 The Lord hath sought him out a man after his own heart and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over his people Vers 9. And Saul eyed David from that day forward That is he looked upon him with an envious and malitious eye and watched for an opportunity to make him away Vers 10. The evil spirit from God came upon Saul and he prophesied in the midst of the house In his frantick fits it is said that Saul prophesied either because he sung songs perhaps such hymns and songs as were usually sung by the sonnes of the Prophets which is usually called prophesying in the Scriptures as we may see in a former note chap. 10.5 And this he might do by the suggestion of Sathan Or else because generally being besides himself and possessed with an evil spirit both his behaviour and speech in some regard was outwardly such as when the Prophets were stirred by the spirit of God who in their extasies and raptures had some uncomposed kind of motions and actions and were as men besides themselves for the time and therefore often termed mad men 2. Kings 9.11 Wherefore came this mad fellow to thee so Jer. 29.26 Every man that is mad and maketh himself a prophet c. Men possessed do many times utter strange languages and words which they formerly never learned nor understood yea many times they will divine of secret things as no doubt that damsel did that was possessed with a spirit of divination Acts 16.16 As therefore those idolatrous seducers of the people that were never sent of God were yet usually called prophets so here Saul because his speech and carriage was in some particulars like that of Gods prophets is here said to have prophesied Vers 11. And Saul cast the javelin for he said I will smite David to the wall with it And this he did twice perhaps in two severall fits as the folloing words imply and David avoided out of his presence twice Whilest David sought to cure Saul of his phrensie Saul sought to take away his life And so likewise whilest our Saviour sought the health of the Jews and their recovery out of Sathans power by preaching to them the glad tidings of the Gospel they often sought to kill him sometimes openly sometimes secretly that he was oft forced to withdraw himself from them as there at Nazareth Luke 4 28 29 30. And they all in the Synagogue when they heard these things were filled with wrath And they rose up and thrust him out of the city and lead him to the brow of the hill whereon the city was built that they might cast him down headlong But he passing through the midst of them went his way Vers 13. Therefore Saul removed him from him and made him his Captain over a thousand c. That is a Colonel or a chief Commander in his army Perceiving that David by his watchfulnesse did still decline the stroke of his javelin and perhaps that he did forbear to come at him any more in his frantick fits he removed him from him that is he resolved to imploy him abroad that he might not be vexed any more with the sight of him and so he made him one of his Collonels hoping also that he would some time or other be slain in the battel and thence it is said of David in the following words that he went out and came in before the people that is he led them out to battel and brought them back again Vers 17. And Saul said to David Behold my elder daughter Merab her will I give thee to wife And thus under a pretence of performing that promise formerly made to him that should kill Goliath chap. 17.25 he sought to expose David to the sword of the Philistines For this renued promise of his daughter he hoped would make him the more eagerly prosecute his warres against them and then one time or other he thought the Philistines might slay him but now all this while he never seriously intended she should be his wife or else he soon changed his mind for within a while after he gave her to another man of which see the note upon vers 19. Vers 18. What is my life or my fathers family in Israel that I should be sonne in law to the king What is my parentage education condition of life that I should think my self a fit husband for a kings daughter And thus he modestly refused the honour that was tendered him as knowing that as yet they understood nothing of his being anointed to succeed Saul Vers 19. But it came to passe at the time when Merab Sauls daughter should have been given to David that she was given to Adriel the Meholathite to wife This Adriel the Meholathite was the sonne of Barzillai as is expressely noted 2. Sam. 21.8 Where also it is recorded that all the sonnes that he had by this daughter of Saul that we may see how the curse of God followed this unlawfull match were hanged up in satisfaction to the Gibeonites for they are certainly Adriels sonnes by Merab that are mentioned there onely they were brought up by Michal of which see the note there It seems the promise of giving her to David to wife carried on so farre that the time was set for solemnizing the marriage and yet then at the time when Merab should have been given to David she was given to Adriel which is very observable in many regards For first we see that God having
that shall never be even what might be and would be if he did not otherwise dispose of it Vers 13. Then David and his men which were about six hundred arose c. It seems the number of Davids followers still encreased for before he had but foure hundred chap. 22. but now he had six hundred with whom he departed out of Keilah and went whithersoever they could go that is being perplexed and not knowing whither to go they sought up and down for some place or other to shelter themselves in Vers 16. And Jonathan Sauls sonne arose and went to David into the wood and strengthened his hand in God That is he laboured to make him comfortable and couragious by putting him in mind of Gods promises and Gods power and by assuring him of Gods grace and favour towards him Vers 17. Thou shalt be king over Israel and I shall be next unto thee To wit by promise and covenant betwixt them But God otherwise disposed of it Jonathan was taken to a better kingdome and never lived to see David sit in the throne of Israel Vers 18. And they two made a covenant before the Lord. That is a covenant confirmed by oath as in Gods presence Vers 19. Then came up the Ziphites to Saul to Gibeah saying Doth not David hide himself with us c. Though David had lately driven the Philistines out of the land yet like ungratefull wretches partly to curry favour with Saul partly perhaps terrified with that severity wh●ch Saul had used against Nob and the Priest of the Lord chap. 22.18.19 they went to him and discovered where David was in a wood near them to wit in the wildernesse of Ziph. This no doubt sorely wounded Davids heart that his own brethren of the tribe of Judah should deal thus treacherously with him But therefore we see that God had immediately before this triall sent Jonathan to comfort him and strengthen his hand in God ver 16. that so he might be the better able to endure it as captains use to encourage their souldiers before the fight and as Physicians use to give some preparative before sharper physick that it may not be too tedious and hard to be born and indeed that David did support himself now with hope in Gods promises is evident by the 54. Psalme which he composed at this time as appears by the expresse words of the title of that Psalme A Psalme of David when the Ziphims came and said to Saul Doth not David hide himself with us Vers 24. But David and his men were in the wildernesse of Maon in the plain on the south of Jeshimon For it was told David that the Ziphites had discovered him and that Saul with them and his army was coming to take him as is expressed in the next verse they told David and thereupon he left the wildernesse of Ziph and fled to a plain in the wildernesse of Maon which lay more southward from Jeshimon Vers 29. And David went up from thence and dwelt in strong holds at Engedi Called aso Hazazon Tamar 2. Chron. 20.2 a city of Judah Josh 15 62. It was it seems a place exceeding fruitfull for vines and other pleasant fruit whence is that expression in Solomons song chap. 1.14 My beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi but yet there was a wildernesse adjoyning to it whither it was that David now fled chap. 24.1 CHAP. XXIIII Vers 2. ANd went to seek David and his men upon the rocks of the wild goats That is high steep and craggy rocks such as wild goats do usually delight in and this is thus expressed to shew the violence of Sauls rage and how greedily he thirsted after the destruction of David We may see that he resolved to leave no place unsearched when he looked up and down for him in these rocky places which could not but be very tedious both to himself and his souldiers to march in Vers 3. And Saul went in to cover his feet Concerning this phrase of Sauls covering his feet see the note Judg. 3.24 And David and his men remained in the sides of the cave It may seem strange that David and his six hundred men chap. 23 13. could be in this cave and yet Saul when he came into it should not perceive it but it is well known by the testimony of many writers that in some countreys there are such huge caves that many souldiers may lie within them as also that those that are in such caves may see what is done in the mouth of those caves when they which are at the entrance perceive not what is within and such a cave was this wherein David and his men had hid themselves that Saul might not find them out Vers 4. Behold the day of which the Lord said unto thee Behold I will deliver thine enemy into thy hand c. There might be some particular promise though it be no where expressed in the story which David had received from Gad or Samuel or which God had immediately by his spirit given him concerning Sauls falling into Davids hands of which his followers did now put him in mind but because such a promise might imply that the Lord intended David should cut off Saul it seems most probable that this word of the Lord which they spake of was onely either that promise which Samuel had made him concerning the kingdome or else some generall promise that he should prevail over all his enemies which they now reached further then God intended them as if the promise of conferring the kingdome upon David did by consequence imply that he might take away his life that now stood in his way to keep him from it or the promise of prevailing over his enemies did include this of putting him to death if God should deliver him into his power At least from this act of Gods providence in bringing Saul into his power they sought to perswade David that God intended he should be cut off and that David should wilfully despise Gods favour to him if he should not do it Then David arose and cut off the skirt of Sauls garment privily To wit that he might thereby afterward make it evident to Saul that he could as well have killed him But how could he do this and Saul not perceive it I answer first considering the tumult of the souldiers without might drown the noise within it is probable enough that David might in this dark cave steal behind Saul and cut off the outward lap of his garment without being felt or perceived Secondly if Saul came in to ease himself it is likely he had laid aside his upper robe or garment to which David might go closely and unespied might cut off the skirt of it but thirdly if we understand those foregoing words that Saul went into the cave to cover his feet of his going in to lie down and sleep there then there can be no more question made how
me accordingly Vers 37. His heart died within him and he became as a stone That is he fell as it were into a swoun and so there he lay like a stock or stone for ten dayes together the very thinking how near he was to death upon his wives relation made his heart to die within him Vers 39. And wen David heard that Nabal was dead he said Blessed be the Lord c. Though he rejoyced not in the evil that was fallen upon Nabal yet he could not but rejoyce in the manifestation of Gods justice upon him in his behalf and in seeing that the Lord had pleaded his cause against him And David sent and communed with Abigail to take her to him to wife David would rather send then go himself that she might the more freely either grant or denie his suit and that it might be the more evident that he took her not by force and violence Vers 41. Behold let thine handmaid be a servant to wash the feet of the servants of my Lord. Herein was the faith of Abigail discovered who could think so honourably of David when he lived in such a persecuted estate and despised condition Vers 43. David also took Ahinoam of Jezreel A town in Judah Josh 15.56 Vers 44. But Saul had given Michal his daughter Davids wife to Phalti c. This Phalti of Gallim a place in the tribe of Benjamin ●a● 10.30 is also called Phaltiel 2 Sam. 3.15 to whom Saul gave Michal Davids wife not onely out of hatred and malice against David but also out of policy as he thought that the title of having his daughter to wife might not be any furtherance to him in climbing to the kingdome CHAP. XXVI Vers 1. ANd the Ziphites came unto Saul to Gibeah saying Doth not David hide himself c. Though David had been once before in great danger in these parts the Ziphites discovering him to Saul and seeking to intrap him yet hither he was come again from the wildernesse of Paran chap. 25.1 and good reason might be given for it For it might be occasioned by his marriage with Abigail whose estate lay in these parts and again his hope that Saul would keep his covenant and oath chap. 24. might encourage him the rather because since that for a time he had now been quiet but he found his enemies as violent as ever Indeed if David should come to the crown the Ziphites might well fear the● former treachery would be remembred and therefore it stood them upon to seek Davids ruine if by any means they could Vers 3. David abode in the wildernesse and he saw that Saul came after him c. But why is it said in the very next words vers 4. That he sent forth spies and so understood that Saul was come in very deed I answer that these first words are meant onely of some notice that David had of Sauls coming of the certainty whereof he was not at first fully satisfied and so sending out scouts to see if it were true was by them fully informed that it was so indeed Vers 6. Then answered David and said to Ahimelech the Hittite and to Abishai the sonne of Zeruiah brother to Joab saying Who will go down with me c. The two Captains whom he desired to go with him to Sauls camp were Ahimelech called the Hittite either because he was so by birth though in Religion he was an Israelite or else because though he was an Israelite by birth yet he lived among the Hittites and Abishai the sonne of Zeruiah Davids sister 1. Chron. 2.15.16 and therefore it is that she the mother is still mentioned and not the father who was perhaps of meaner descent at least not of so great a family David having before closely approached Sauls camp alone by himself as is before noted vers 5. and finding them all fast asleep being carried no doubt also by a speciall instinct of the spirit of God he resolved once more to manifest his fidelity to Saul and therefore demanded of these his followers which of them would venture to go with him into the camp to Saul where he had found all the Army securely sleeping Vers 8. Then said Abishai to David God hath delivered thine 〈◊〉 thine hand this day c. Davids sparing Saul in the like case formerly ha● done no good upon him and besides the Lords proffering him the like opportunitie 〈◊〉 second time seemed to Abishai a manifest declaration of Gods will that he wou● have him cut off Saul and therefore though he rejected this motion before 〈◊〉 Abishai hoped he would hearken to it now and therefore again pressed him 〈…〉 might be done Vers 10. The Lord shall smite him or his day shall come c. That 〈…〉 God should strike him with sudden death or he should die his naturall 〈…〉 other men die by sicknesse or old age or he should come to his end by some casualty as by being slain in battel c. Vers 11. Take thou now the spear that is at his bolster and the cruse of water c. Which stood happely by him for the quenching of his thirst or else to wash with for some conceive that in those hot countreys they used to wash sometimes in the night especially if any pollution had befallen them Vers 14. Then Abner answered and said Who art thou that criest to the king That is say some to the disturbance of the king in his rest But I rather think that though it be onely expressed in the foregoing words that David cried to the people and to Abner yet he mentioned also the king at least so farre as to ask Who is there about the king whereupon Abner answered thus Who art thou that criest to the king Vers 19. If the Lord have stirred thee up against me let him accept an offering Some understand this as if David had said that in case it were manifest that it were of the Lord onely that Saul was stirred up against him he for his part would most willingly yield himself to the triall of justice that he might if he had offended undergo deserved punishment and so this might be accepted of the Lord as a sacrifice well-pleasing in his sight But there is another exposition given by others which is plainer and seems more clearly to be gathered from the text to wit that David desires that the Lord might be appeased by sacrifices if really it were of him that Saul was stirred up against David and of no body else David considered that perhaps no enemy urged Saul to these courses but that it was of God to wit by letting loose the evil spirit upon him 2. Sam. 24.1 and that herein the Lord might have respect both to the sinne of David and Saul why then saith David if the case be so let us both labour to make our peace with God let us offer up sacrifices that may be acceptable in his sight humbly acknowledging our offences and calling to
made a rode against the south of Judah and sometimes again that he had made a rode against the south of Jerahmeelites who were a particular family of the tribe of Judah 1. Chron. 2.9.25 and sometimes also against the south of the Kenites and thus he either told Achish again and again many deliberate lies to secure himself and his from danger or at least he purposely deceived Achish with the ambiguity of his words which ill-became so good a man intending that Achish should understand him that he had invaded the south parts of Judah c. whereas he meant he had invaded those bordering countreys that lay south-ward of Judah and of the Jerahmeelites and of the Kenites Vers 11. Lest they should tell on us c. To wit because these nations were tributaries to Achish or at least his confederates and neighbours It is strange indeed how these things could be concealed from the Philistines but first we must consider that the people smitten dwelt somewhat farre from the Philistines and scattered in severall places of a solitary wildernesse and secondly there might be some speciall hand of God in concealing these things for Davids safety CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. THe Philistines gathered their armies together for warfare to fight against Israel That is not onely Achish but with him all the other Princes of the Philistines encouraged no doubt by the distractions that were now in the land of Israel and the weak state of the kingdome by means hereof Vers 2. And David said to Achish Surely thou shalt know what thy servant can do The ambiguity of these words seems to imply that he meant not fight against the people of God though he durst not but make semblance of being readie to do what the king should require And Achish said to David Therefore will I make thee keeper of mine head forever That is I will make thee Captain of my life-guard so long as we shall live together Vers 2. Now Samuel was dead c. This is here inserted because of the following story wherein is related how Saul being destitute of all counsell sought to have Samuel raised from the dead that he might talk with him of late Saul disregarded Samuel now he would have wished he had been living And Saul put away those that had familiar spirits and the wizards out of the land This is added to shew that Saul seeking to the witch sinned against his own conscience Vers 4. And the Philistines gathered themselves together and came and pitched in Shunem A town in the border of Issachar Josh 19.18 Vers 5. And when Saul saw the host of the Philistines he was afraid and his heart greatly trembled Through the terrours of a guilty conscience which now seized upon him Vers 6. And when Saul enquired of the Lord the Lord answered him not c. How Saul enquired of the Lord it is not expressed onely this we may conclude that by Urim he could not enquire of God that because Abiathar had carried away the high priests Ephod to David wherein the Urim was chap. 23.6 onely because the holy Ghost would the more fully expresse the comfortlesse condition of Saul how wholly he was forsaken of God and left destitute of all direction from him amongst other wayes whereby he could have no answer from God this of the Urim is also put in the Lord answered him not neither by dreams nor by Vrim to wit because the Urim was now with David and not with him Most probable it is that Saul enquired of God partly by prayer partly by consulting with the priests and Prophets for it is evident in severall places of this history that there were at this time divers Colledges of Prophets in the land and like enough it is that though before he had killed Gods priests and despised his Prophets yet now in his distresse he was glad to seek both to priests and Prophets to try if they could advise him or would enquire of God in his behalf but however by what means soever he enquired it was not done in faith for had he sought in faith he would have continued seeking and not have given over to run to a witch and therefore 1. Chron. 10.14 it is said that he enquired not of the Lord and accordingly we see the Lord dealt with him the Lord answered him not neither one way nor other which was an evidence that the Lord was highly displeased with him for the like is mentioned we see elsewhere as a great argument of Gods high indignation against his people Lam. 2.9 The Law is no more her Prophets also find no vision from the Lord. Vers 7. Then said Saul to his servants Seek me a woman that hath a familiar spirit c. It seems that in those dayes women by reason of their weaknesse were most deceived by Sathan and brought to give themselves to sorcery and witchcraft and therefore he commanded his servants to seek him out a woman that had a familiar spirit not doubting but there were still some of these that lurked secretly in the land though he had endeavoured to root them all out vers 3. and this is here recorded as the last and most desperate wickednesse that he fell into and upon which he was immediately cut off by Gods revenging hand as is fully expressed 1. Chron. 10 13 14. Behold there is a woman hath a familiar spirit at Endor A town of the Manassites within Jordan Josh 17.11 Vers 8. And Saul disguised himself and put on other raiment c. This he did not onely that the witch might not know him and so not fear to satisfie his desire but also doubtlesse out of very shame because he now yielded to make use of those base courses which himself ere while had so severely punished Vers 9. Behold thou knowest what Saul hath done how he hath cut off those that have familiar spirits c. Thus is Saul put in mind even by the words of the witch though she intended it not how hainously he now sinned in seeking to the devil for help even against the light of his own conscience Vers 10. As the Lord liveth there shall no punishment happen to thee for this thing That is I will not discover thee Vers 11. And he said Bring me up Samuel Saul despised Samuel when he lived and would not follow his direction and now his thoughts could be satisfied with nothing but to speak with Samuel and rather then fail herein he would go to a witch to raise up the Ghost of Samuel to talk with him Vers 12. And when the woman saw Samuel she cried out with a loud voice c. It was not doubtlesse Samuel himself that appeared now to the Witch but the devil in Samuels likenesse for first the souls of Saints departed are presently at rest with God and are taken up when they die out of the devils reach he hath no power over the spirits of Gods faithfull servants departed for then he
his mind was all should be put to the sword not so much as the blind and the lame should be spared and that because he had been upbraided with them but according to the second Exposition of that speech of the Jebusites that it is meant of their blind and lame gods which may seem the more probable because here the Jebusites and the blind and lame are distinguished from each other who so smiteth the Jebusites and the blind and the lame the meaning of this clause is more evident to wit that these their idol-gods were abhorred of David and that he would utterly destroy them Wherefore they said the blind and the lame shall not come into the house That is it grew to be a Proverb to wit the blind and the lame shall not come into the house They that understand that speech of the Jebusites vers 6 Except thou take away the blind and the lame thou shalt not come in hither of the blind and lame amongst the people find it somewhat difficult to give the sence of this Proverb Some conceive that against those that were confident of keeping any fort which they could not keep or generally that bragged of any thing which they could not effect this used to be objected as a Proverb the blind and the lame shall not come into the house that is take heed your confidence prove not like that of the Jebusites or if you do it it must not be by the blind and the lame as the Jebusites thought to defend their walls or take heed that be not done to you which you threaten against others as David cast out the blind and lame which should have kept out him others think that the people did thus insult over the Jebusites your blind and lame that should have kept out us are never likely to enter again into this fort or that David did indeed make this order as a perpetuall monument of this victory that neither blind nor lame should enter his pallace called the citie of David but did Mephibosheth think we never enter it But now if we understand that speech of the Jebusites vers 6. of their idol-gods then the meaning of this Proverb is plain to wit that no blind nor lame gods should be tolerated in the Temple or in the citie or any where amongst them that were the people of the everliving God Vers 9. And David built round about from Millo and inward This Millo was the town-house in the citie of David where the people had their solemn assemblies or rather some tower or fortresse and place of munition belonging to the citie for 2. Chron. 3.5 it is said of Hezekiah that he repaired Millo in the city of David and made darts and shields in abundance and we see there was the like place in Shechem or near unto it Judg. 9.6 And all the men of Shechem gathered together and all the house of Millo and went and made Abimelech king Now from thence inward onely David is said to have built because the rest of the citie without Joab repaired 1. Chron. 11.8 And he built the citie round about even from Millo round about and Joab repaired the rest of the citie Vers 11. And Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers to David and cedar trees and carpenters c. This may be inserted here either with reference to that which is related in the foregoing verse concerning the continuall increase of Davids glory and greatnesse David went on and grew great and so though hitherto we reade of no Embassie that any of the neighbouring kings sent unto him yet now Hiram king of Tyre sent messengers unto him to wit to congratulate his settling in the kingdome or else to the last words of the former verse and the Lord God of hosts was with him to wit as an effect of Gods favour the Lord being with him even Hiram though a stranger shewed him great respect and kindnesse howsoever we may surely conclude that it was upon Davids request that he sent in these Cedar trees and Carpenters and Masons it seems that when Hiram sent his Embassadours to David David took this occasion to desire of Hiram both Cedar trees and workmen to build him an house because there was plenty of Cedar trees in Lebanon which was the greatest part at least in his dominion and the Tyrians were esteemed the most excellent workmen that were both in wood and stone and so the king of Tyre fulfilled his desire and indeed the like is clearly expressed concerning Solomon 1. Kings 5.1 2 3. Vers 12. And David perceived that the Lord had established him c. That is he saw it by daily experience the spirit of the Lord withall inwardly perswading his heart that it was so Vers 13. And David took him mo● concubines and wives c. Which was expressely against the Law of God concerning the kings of Israel Deut. 17.17 Neither shall he multiply wives to himself that his heart turn not away Vers 14. Shammua and Shobab c. This Shammua is called Shimea 1. Chron. 3.5 and so also Elishua vers 15. Elishamah 1. Chron. 3.6 and Eliada vers 16. Beeliada 1. Chron. 14.7 Vers 17. But when the Philistines heard that they had anointed David king over Israel all the Philistines came up to seek David Whilest there were civil warres betwixt David and Ishbosheth they were content to stand by and look on but when they saw the people generally to submit to the government of so puissant a Prince and that he had driven out the Jebusites from Jerusalem and that the king of Tyre had made a league with him they thought it was time then for them to oppose him and what they could to hinder the growth of his Royall power And David heard of it and went down to the hold To wit there to muster and arm his souldiers that then he might go out against the Philistines 1. Chron. 14.8 And when the Philistines heard that David was anointed king over all Israel all the Philistines went up to seek David and David heard of it and went out against them It may be meant of any strong fort but most probably we may think that it was some fort nigh the Philistines convenient for the keeping of them in that they might not invade the land of Israel Vers 18. The Philistines also came and spread themselves in the valley of Rephaim Or the valley of the giants which was in the border of Judah Josh 15.8 Vers 20. And David came to Baal-perazim c. A place so called because of the victory here obtained whither the Philistines were now come up from the valley of Rephaim 1. Chron. 14.11 So they came to Baal-perazim and David smote them there then David said God hath broken in upon mine enemies by mine hand like the breaking forth of waters therefore they called the name of that place Baal-perazim and so much is expressed in the following words of David the Lord hath broken forth upon mine
delivered up to the Gibeonites to be hanged by them though the story of that be related after this chap. 21. but besides all this it is very probable which some say that the enemies of David did charge him that he had stirred up the Philistines to make that invasion upon the land wherein Saul and his sonnes were slain and therefore Shimei here chargeth all the bloud of the house of Saul upon David And the Lord hath delivered the kingdome into the hand of Absalom thy son As thou hast done to others so now through Gods just judgement others do to thee thou didst rise up against thy father-in-law to take the kingdome from him and now thine own sonne is risen up to take the kingdome from thee thus David lying under the crosse is reviled as our Saviour was by the Jews when he was crucified for our sinnes Vers 10. And the king said What have I to do with you ye sonnes of Zeruiah As if he had said trouble me not I will in this take none of your counsell nor will I have a hand in your wayes of revenge Vers 12. It may be that the Lord will look on mine affliction and that the Lord will requite good for his cursing this day This hope of Davids was grounded doubtlesse upon the Lords usuall dealing with his children for as Physicians are wont to give cordialls after purges to support and cherish the spirits of their patients so when the Lord suffers wicked men to abuse his servants he is wont usually as pitying them for their sorrows to recompence the evil they have done them even here in this world with some speciall mercy Vers 13. And as David and his men went by the way Shimei went along on the hills side over against him and cursed as he went c. This is added first to shew the violence of Shimie's malice secondly the constancy of Davids patience and thirdly the obedience of Davids captains who now were quiet though Shimei still ceased not to revile their Lord and would not give over Vers 14. And the king and all the people that were with him came weary and refreshed themselves there That is at Bahurim vers 5. Vers 16. Hushai said unto Absalom God save the king c. This Hushai might mean of David and so also that he addes afterward vers 18. And thus he deluded Absalom with ambiguous speeches Vers 17. And Absalom said to Hushai Is this thy kindnesse to thy friend c. This he saith to sift and try Hushai as wondring at and suspecting his revolt from David not as disliking any such ingratitude for why then should he not as well condemn himself for rising up against his father that begat him and that had alwayes been so loving yea indulgent towards him and indeed in his speaking of this to Hushai one may see that his conscience did inwardly accuse him for doing as bad himself as that he seemed to charge Hushai with and therefore he said not is this thy kindnesse to my father thy friend and why wentest thou not with my father but is this thy kindnesse to thy friend and Why wentest thou not with thy friend as being ashamed to mention the name of father or to utter a word that would condemn him of so foul a sinne Vers 21. All Israel shall heare that thou art abhorred of thy father then shall the hands of all that are with thee be strong That is then shall all thy followers be bold and resolutely firm for thee when they shall see by this fact of thine that there will be no possibilitie of reconciliation Ahithophel know well how easily parents and children are reconciled if it should to prove betwixt David and Absalom what would become of him and the rest of Absaloms abettours yea if the people did but fear this it might keep them from siding with Absalom to prevent these mischiefs therefore he seeks to engage Absalom in this as he judged unpardonable villany Vers 22. So they spread Absalom a tent upon the top of the house and Absalom went in unto his fathers concubines c. And thus was that accomplished which God had threatned chap. 12.11 of which see the note there he that slew Amnon because he had committed incest with his sister Tamar did now himself commit the same sinne with his fathers concubines and this he did too not drawn thereto with the strength of his lusts but advisedly upon politick respects led thereto by the counsel of Ahithophel which doubtlesse was a great aggravation of his sin Vers 23. And the counsell of Ahithophel which he counselled in those dayes was as if a man had enquired at the Oracle of God That is it was highly prized and for the successe counted most sure and certain CHAP. XVII Vers 2. ANd I will come upon him while he is weary and weak-handed c. That is whilest he is weary with the great march he hath taken that he might suddenly get out of thy reach and weak-handed as being daunted with the suddennesse of this rising of the people against him Vers 4. And the saying pleased Absalom well and all the Elders of Israel This is noted to shew the villany of Absalom who could applaud him that had counselled to have his father slain by a sudden surprize but especially as a circumstance that did wonderfully illustrate the mighty power of God in defeating the counsel of Ahithophel that however at the first propounding of his advice at the counsel board it seemed incomparably good not to Absalom onely but to all the rest of his counsel yet God so brought it about that afterward the same Absalom misliked this counsel which he had at first so much applauded and preferred the counsel of Hushai before it Vers 8. They be mighty men and they be chafed in their minds as a beare robbed of her whelps in the field That is running up and down in the fields when she hath lost her whelps both their known valour and their anger being now driven from their wives children and estates might assure Absalom that it would not be so easie a matter to terrifie them and make them flee with a sudden assault as Ahithophel had suggested And thy father is a man of warre and will not lodge with the people That is he is a man skilfull in martiall affairs and knows well how to order his affairs for the prevention of all the dangers of warre and therefore knowing that your aim will be presently to surprize him if it be possible he will not at this time lodge in the ●amp amongst the souldiers for fear there should be any traitours amongst them that should seek to betray him but in some other place so that it will not be so easie a matter to smite the king and seize upon the king and so put an end to the warre as Ahithophel hath apprehended it will be thus these words of Hushai must be understood for he doth not speak
to God and he regarded them not then he addes then did I beat them c. when God once withdraws his protection and help from a people it is an easie matter to tread them down and beat them in pieces Vers 44. Thou also hast delivered me from the strivings of my people thou hast kept me to be the head of the heathen c. That is thou hast not onely delivered me from mine own people over whom thou wert pleased to anoint me king when they rose up against me as we know they did in the warres that Saul made against him in the rebellion of Absalom the insurrection of Sheba but hast also brought many nations of the heathens to be in subjection under me and to acknowledge me to be their Lord and head now herein was David also a type of Christ for first the Jews that were Gods own peculiar people and that pretended to trust in the promised Messiah were the cruellest enemies to Christ that ever he had and so it hath been since too amongst those that have professed themselves Christians never did Turks and infidels more for the ruin of Christs kingdome then they have done onely still the strivings of his people against his Scepter and government have been in vain and secondly when the Gentiles were converted to the faith of Christ he became then more truely then ever David was the head of the heathen Vers 45. Strangers shall submit themselves unto me c. This is still intended both of David and of Christ of whom David was a type of David in regard of the many neighbouring nations that should become tributaries to him of Christ in regard of the conversion of the Gentiles who were aliens and strangers from the commonwealth of Israel and did yet come in and submit themselves to Christ the sonne of David In the margin these words are rendred thus Strangers shall yield fained obedience unto me and indeed as it was no doubt true of many of the heathens that were subdued by David that they submitted themselves to him because they durst do no other either for fear of being destroyed or because the greatest number yielded and then it was in vain for them to stand out for this is the lot of conquerours their yoke is received but they have not the hearts of them that stoop to it so is it usually with those that become Christians they yield Christ onely fained obedience they call him Lord but his yoke is burthensome to them and they are farre from being such indeed as they professe themselves to be As soon as they heare they shall be obedient unto me That is speedily as soon as they heare of any coming against them without any more ado so terrible the very name of David should be unto them but especially is this verified in Christ of whom David in this was a type for the hearing of the word of Christ preached is that whereby they are brought to stoop to his Sceptre Rom. 10.17 So then faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God Ephes 1.13 In whom ye also trusted after you heared the word of truth Vers 46. Strangers shall fade away c. The meaning of this is either that the glory and strength of the heathens should by little and little decay and waste away untill they came to submit themselves unto him or else rather that their hearts should die and fade and faint away within them for fear and therefore it follows and they shall be afraid out of their close places though they be in places of never such impregnable strength even from these close places these fortified cities towers and castles they shall be no lesse afraid then if they were in some poor unwalled villages and this also may be not unfitly applyed to Christ for it must be the fear of Gods wrath the spirit of bondage that must bring men in to submit to Christs sceptre as long as a man doth hope that his own righteousnesse will shelter him and can trust in his prayers his alms c. in these close places he will abide and despise Christ but if once he is afraid in his close places he seeth the weaknesse and vanitie of these things then he will come out of them and disclaim all hope in them and submit himself to Christ Vers 52. Therefore I will give thanks unto thee O Lord among the heathen c. The meaning is that he would labour to spread the knowledge of God and so to praise his name among the heathen nations that God had brought in subjection under him but especially by a propheticall spirit the prophet speaks this with reference to Christs calling in of the Gentiles to be with the Jews one people and therefore the Apostle to prove that God intended to call in the Gentiles cites this very place Rom. 15.8 9. Jesus Christ was a minister of the circumcision for the truth of God to confirm the promises made unto the fathers And that the Gentiles might qlorifie God for his mercy as it is written For this cause I will confesse to thee among the Gentiles Vers 51. He is the towre of salvation for his king and sheweth mercy unto his anointed unto David and to his seed for evermore That is Christ Who was made of the seed of David according to the flesh Rom. 1.3 Acts 13.23 Of this mans seed hath God according to his promise raised unto Israel a Saviour Jesus and so consequently to the faithfull members of Christ who are by faith the seed of Christ Isaiah 53.10 He shall see his seed c. and therefore it is Isai 8.18 applyed to Christ Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the children which God hath given me CHAP. XXIII Vers 1. NOw these be the last words of David That is the last that he wrote by the inspiration of the holy Ghost for the use of the Church David the sonne of Jesse said and the man who was raised up on high c. He mentions here of what house he came and how God exalted him that hereby the grace and mercy of God to him might be the more magnified in raising him from so mean an estate to that height of honour wherein he lived Vers 4. And he shall be as the light of the morning when the sunne riseth even a morning without clouds c. That is who so ruleth as is before said he shall reign prosperously and still encrease in glory his glory shall be like the morning light that shines more and more unto the perfect day as the tender grasse springing out of the earth by clear shining after rain that is the glory of his kingdome shall be great and shall dayly encrease like the grasse that hath seasonably the moistening rain and warming sunne to make it sprout up and grow Vers 5. Although my house be not so with God yet he hath made with me an everlasting covenant This clause hath reference both to that which is
David to number Israel and the like we have 1. Sam. 26.19 If the Lord have stirred thee up against me let him accept an offering 1. Kings 22.22 I will go forth and be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his Prophets Vers 2. For the king said to Joab the captain of the host which was with him c. That is he spake to Joab who had the command in chief over the host which were at that time in their course attending upon David In 1. Chron. 27.1 c. it is expressely said that for every severall moneth there were severall bands of four and twenty thousand that did in their courses attend upon the king and hence is this expression captain of the host which was with him and the rather happely is this clause added because the host which now attended in Jerusalem upon the king was to go out with Joab to attend him in this service of numbring the people Go now through all the tribes of Israel from Dan even to Beer-sheba and number ye the people c. He enjoynes them to number the people that is all that were fit for warre vers 9. and there were in Israel eight hundred thousand valiant men that drew the sword and the men of Judah were five hundred thousand men and gives no other reason but this that I may know the number of the people and herein the sin of David is intimated to wit that he did it causelessely merely out of curiositie and pride and carnall confidence in the multitude and strength of his people Vers 3. But why doth my Lord the king delight in this thing That is why should this be done there being no other cause for it onely to satisfie thy curiositie and to delight thy self therein In 1. Chron. 21.3 there are other reasons added which Joab used also to disswade the king from this his purpose of numbring the people as are they not all my lords servants why then doth my lord require this thing why will he be a cause of trespasse to Israel concerning which see the note there Vers 4. Notwithstanding the kings word prevailed against Joab and against the captains of the host c. Though not Joab onely but the captains also with him did what they could to disswade David yet David resolved it should be so and so it was done though he could not over-ballance them with reasons yet his word prevailed he had said it should be so and therefore it must be it is indeed a very disputeable question whether Joab and the other captains did well in yielding to David for the numbring of the people Some hold that they did well therein and that because when Princes enjoyn that which is not in it self sinfull as doubtlesse it was not evil in it self to number the people the subject then is bound to obey others hold that Joab did sinne in obeying the kings command herein first because Joab perceived plainly that David commanded this causelessely and onely to satisfie his vain glorious humour and so as the commanding of this with such an intention made it sinfull in David so the obeying of this command in Joab when he knew the kings intention was evil could not be warrantable and secondly because it appears that Joab did it against conscience for so it is said 1. Chron. 21.6 the kings word was abominable to Joab yea and when he did it his mind gave him it seems that there would come some judgement upon the kingdome for it why doth my lord saith he require this thing and indeed in these regards this last opinion seems to be the most probable Joabs conscience was against this unnecessary numbring of the people the rather happely because it was like to be some way chargeable and burdensome to the people but he had once angered David before by going against his command in the death of Absalom and he was loth to hazard his displeasure again Vers 5. And they passed over Jordan and pitched in Aroer c. A citie of the Gadites Numb 32.34 which lay in the midst of the river Arnon Deut. 2.36 called here the river of Gad but that which is most observable is the phrase here used that they pitched in Aroer which is a military word with bands and troops of souldiers for of this I know no reason that can be given but that it was to over aw the people lest they disliking what was done should refuse to submit to the kings command and that it may be because there was alwayes some tribute or pollmoney paid at the numbring of the people at least some Officers had their sees which was a great burthen to the subject being done especially with out any just cause this might well be one chief reason why the businesse was as is noted before so abominable to Joab Vers 6. And they came to Dan-jaan Which is usually called Dan without any other addition as we may see Josh 19.47 Vers 7. And came to the strong hold of Tyre and to all the cities of the Hivites and of the Canaanites That is all the cities formerly possessed by those nations or where some remainders of those nations did still live mixed among the Israelites Vers 9. And there were in Israel eight hundred thousand valiant men that drew the sword Hereby it is evident that onely those men were numbred that were of years and of abilitie of body to bear arms the reason whereof is given 1. Chron. 27.23 But David took not the number from twenty years old and under because the Lord had said he would encrease Israel like the starres in the heavens and besides the intention of David was chiefly to know the strength of his kingdome for that was it wherein his heart was exalted he desired to know how many armed men fit for warre he was able if need required to bring into the field besides though it be said in generall that in Israel that is in the tribes of Israel considered apart from Judah there were eight hundred thousand valiant men yet we must know that the tribes of Levi and Benjamin were not included in this number for so it is expressed 1. Chron. 21.6 But Levi and Benjamin counted he not amongst them for the kings word was abominable to Joab concerning which see the note in that place but why is it said 1. Chron. 21.5 that there were found in Israel eleven hundred thousand and here it is said that there were found of them but eight hundred thousand I answer that in the Chronicles it is likely that the ordinary companies of the trained bands are included which in their turns did every moneth attend in Jerusalem which are here omitted because their names were alwayes kept enrolled and therefore there was no need now to take the account of them but was there then three hundred thousand of them I answer there were two hundred eighty and eight thousand of them for there were four and twenty thousand which
Jehoshaphat Did I not tell thee that he would prophecie no good concerning me but evil as if the Prophet had said seeing thou art displeased at what I have said and wilt not believe but that I have spoken it out of ill will I will now largely shew you the whole vision that I saw I saw the Lord sitting on his throne and all the host of heaven standing by him on his right hand and on his left That is the Angels who are the ministers of the God of heaven at whose command they are continually imployed and if in this host the evil spirits are also included they are called the host of heaven onely because they also are under the overruling power of God and are ministers to execute his vengeance on the wicked and were happely such as stood now on his left hand Vers 20. And one said on this manner and another said on that manner This is added onely to imply that God hath divers wayes and means whereby he can accomplish that which he hath purposed in himself Vers 25. Thou shalt see in that day when thou shalt go into an inner chamber to hide thy self To wit lest he should be slain for incouraging the king to go against Ramoth Gilead by his false prophecy Vers 26. Take Micaiah and carry him back unto Amon the governour of the city and to Joash the kings sonne This Joash was it seems either the sonne of Ahab or rather the sonne of Omri the father of Ahab and called usually amongst the people the kings sonne and being in some place of authority in the citie the Prophet was sent to him together with Amon the governour of the citie As for these words of Ahabs Take Micaiah and carry him back from hence it may be probably gathered that when at first they fetched Michaiah they fetched him out of prison whither he is now sent back again and because of this many Expositours incline to think that this Micaiah was that Prophet that formerly threatned that his life should go for the life of Ben-hadad whom he had sent away in peace chap. 20.42 and that for this he had been ever since kept in prison Vers 27. Put this fellow in prison and feed him with bread of affliction c. That is with a diet course and scanty a poore pittance enough to hold life and soul together such as is usually allowed to poore captives and slaves and will onely serve to prolong their affliction and misery See Deut. 16.3 Vers 29. So the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah went up to Ramoth Gilead It was much that good Jehoshaphat should cause Micaiah to be sent for and then suffer a proud Baalitish priest to smite him on the cheek before his face and heare the king with such a severe charge send him back to prison and never open his mouth to speak a word for the poore Prophet but that he should go up to Ramoth Gilead with Ahab after the Prophet had foretold the dangerous event of this expedition is farre more strange and indeed all that can be said herein is this that either he was so farre overborn with the confidence of those foure hundred Prophets that promised victory that he began to think however at first he suspected them that their words might prove true rather then Micaiahs the rather because he knew that they should fight in a just cause which God usually favours or else that having engaged his word already to Ahab with whom he had lately joyned himself in affinitie he was loth to shrink now upon the words of Micaiah but chose rather to hazard the successe and to make triall what the event would be Vers 30. And the king of Israel said unto Jehoshaphat I will disguise my self c. Great personages are usually most laid at in battels and besides the prophesie of Micaiah had scared Ahab doubtlesse though he seemed to slight it yea perhaps he might also heare of the king of Syrias charge to his souldiers concerning him to avoid therefore this danger and so if it might be to elude Micaiahs threat he resolves to disguise himself and to enter the battel in the habit of an ordinary captain But yet happely Ahab pretended that he did this onely that the Syrians might not know there were two kings in the battel lest they should thereby be rendred the more cautelous and wary in their fight And thus he might indeed upon a fair ground wish Jehoshaphat to go on in his robes because he would not put upon him the disguising of himself in the attire of a common souldier or captain Vers 31. Fight neither with small nor great save onely against the king of Israel This the king of Syria commanded his two and thirty captains 1. Kings 22.31 first because he might well hope that the death or taking of the king would be the readiest means to rout the whole army or secondly because he desired to wipe off the dishonour that fell upon him in the last battel by bringing Ahab under his mercie as he was then exposed to the mercy of Ahab So well doth he repay the mercie which the king of Israel had then shown him and that no doubt by the speciall hand of Gods providence to convince him of his folly in sparing him whom God would have had destroyed Vers 32. Jehoshaphat cried out That is he cried out for help to wit both by calling upon Ahab to help him whereby it may be the Syrian captains perceived that he was not the king of Israel and by calling upon God for succour who thereupon helped him as it is said 2. Chron. 18.31 and moved the Syrians to depart from him onely the Lord was pleased by bringing him into this danger to let him see his folly in going out with Ahab notwithstanding the Prophet Micaiah had given him so fair a warning Vers 34. Turn thine hand and carrie me out of the host for I am wounded That is out of the battel for he left not the camp lest his souldiers should fly but was stayed up in his chariot untill the evening vers 35. and thus at last the vengeance of God fell upon him for his idolatry and for his persecuting Gods prophets but especially for the death of Naboth Vers 38. And one washed the chariot in the pool of Samaria and the dogs licked up his bloud c. See the note chap. 21.19 41. Vers 42. Jehoshaphat was thirty and five yeares old when he began to reigne and he reigned twenty and five yeares in Jerusalem Seeing therefore he began his reigne in the fourth yeare of Ahab as it is said in the foregoing verse who reigned two and twenty years in Samaria it must needs follow that whilest Jehoshaphat sate in the throne of Judah Ahab reigned in Israel about seventeen or eighteen years Ahaziah the sonne of Joram two years and Jehoram his brother the second sonne of Ahab about foure years and then Jehoshaphat dyed and
mouth that message which he had formerly sent him by his servants so mightily did God over-aw him that erewhile was so resolute to be revenged on the prophet and happely the unexpected confidence of the prophet in delivering this message made him feare that he came armed with power from God to execute some judgement on him and so that might over-aw him Vers 17. And Jehoram reigned in his stead in the second yeare of Jehoram the sonne of Jehoshaphat c. Ahaziah dying without children his brother Jehoram a second sonne of Ahab chap. 3.1 reigned in his stead But may some say Ahaziah his brother began to reign in the seventeenth yeare of Jehoshaphat 1 Kings 22.51 Jehoram therefore though we should assigne to Ahaziahs reigne two complete yeares as is there said must needs succeed in the nineteenth yeare of Jehoshaphat who reigned in all twenty five yeares 1 Kings 22.42 and how is it then said that he began his reigne in the second yeare of Jehoram the sonne of Jehoshaphat I answer that Jehoshaphat in the seventeenth yeare of his reigne when he went with Ahab to recover Ramoth Gilead from the Syrians designed as king his sonne Jehoram and though when he returned he reassumed the government into his own hands yet the eighteenth yeare of his reigne wherein Jehoram the sonne of Ahab entred upon the crown of Israel chap. 3.1 is here called the second yeare of Jehoram his sonne as counting from his first designement to the crown in the life of his father CHAP. II. Vers 2. ANd Elijah said unto Elisha Tarry here c. God had revealed to Elijah that he should be taken up to heaven as is manifest vers 9. and withall had enjoyned him first to visit those schools of the prophets which were at Beth-el and Jericho that he might both by his counsell and prayers leave a blessing amongst them before his departure and perhaps that he might put into their hands that prophecy against Jehoram the king of Judah which some yeares after was to be delivered to him whereof mention is made 2. Chron. 21.12 And there came a writing to him from Elijah the Prophet c. Elijah therefore addressing himself to this journey immediately after which he was to be taken up into heaven either because he knew not what witnesses God would allow to be present at that miraculous act and affected not the spreading of his fame thereby or because he desired to be alone that he might the better prepare himself for this his strange passage to heaven or because he desired to trie the constancie of Elishaes love or whether the Lord had revealed any thing to him concerning his rapture or lastly to make him the more desirous to go along with him when he was going from Gilgal he advised Elisha to stay there Vers 3. Knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy master from thy head to day This phrase of taking away Elijah from the head of Elisha is either used to imply that he should be taken upward to heaven or else rather in relation to the manner of their sitting in the schools of the Prophets where Elijah as the father and teacher of the Prophets used to sit in a higher place as it were above their heads and Elisha and the rest at a lower place as it were at his feet as it is said of the Apostle Paul Acts 22.3 that he was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel And he said Yea I know it hold you your peace The Lord had revealed to Elisha that his master should be that day taken up into heaven yea as it seems he had enjoyned him to attend diligently his going away and had perhaps promised him that if he saw him when he was taken up from him he should have a double portion of Elijahs spirit as Elijah afterwards told him vers 10. So eagerly therefore did he intend the expectation of this miraculous rapture of his master that he was loth to entertain the least discourse with the Prophets lest his master should on a sudden be taken away and he not see it and therefore he answers them so shortly Yea I know it and enjoyns them presently to hold their peace Vers 7. And fifty men of the sonnes of the prophets went and stood to view afarre off To wit to see the assumption of Elijah into heaven and thus by Gods providence there were many eye-witnesses of this miracle and so likewise had Christ many eye-witnesses of his resurrection and ascension 1. Cor. 15.5 6. c. and Acts 1.9 Vers 9. Elijah said unto Elisha Ask what I shall do for thee before I be taken away from thee Thus it was also with Christ John 16.23 Whatsoever you shall ask the father in my name I will give it you Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivitie captive and gave gifts unto men And Elisha said I pray thee let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me That is say some the gift of prophesie to foretell future things and the gift of working miracles and others conceive that he asked twice as much of the gift of the spirit as Elijah had out of a zealous unsatisfied desire to promote Gods glory and to do good to his people and accordingly say they whereas Elijah wrought eight miracles Elisha wrought sixteen but I rather conceive that hereby is meant onely a great and eminent measure of the gifts of the spirit double in regard of the other Prophets as alluding to the priviledges of the first-born Deut. 21.17 he was to succeed in the room of Elijah 1. Kings 19.16 He was to be a father to the schools of the Prophets and to be chiefly imployed in opposing the corruptions of the times and therefore he craves a double portion of his spirit that he might be furnished according to the eminencie of the place and work he was to undertake Vers 10. And he said Thou hast asked a hard thing c. That is that which God doth very rarely afford to any man no not to his servants the Prophets so that to obtain this for thee from God thou mayest well think it is no easie thing Neverthelesse saith Elijah if thou see me when I am taken from thee it shall be so unto thee and this Elijah prescribed as the condition of his obtaining his desire because though the seeing of Elijah when he was taken away could no way be an advantage in it self to draw down a double portion of his spirit upon Elisha yet this would be both a triall of his faith which where it is in truth makes men with much vigilancie and intention of mind wait for the accomplishment of Gods promises and that in the use of the means which he hath appointed how unlikely soever they seem to be for the procuring of the promised blessing in the eye of our reason and might also inform him how vehement his desire ought to be in seeking to obtain that great
blessing from God which he now desired and as a signe whereby he should know whether God would grant him his desire or no. Vers 11. There appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire And thus this zealous fiery spirited Prophet after he had long and happily fought a good fight of faith and contended for God against all the errours and corruptions of his times was at last carried triumphantly in a chariot of fire into heaven that is by the holy Angels appearing in the likenesse of a chariot of fire and horses of fire according to that of the Psalmist Psal 104.4 Who maketh his Angels spirits his ministers a flaming fire and so by this means the Lord did exceedingly honour his faithfull servant and withall as before the Law by the taking up of Enoch into heaven so now under the Law by this rapture of Elijah and then in the dayes of the Gospel by the ascention of Christ God was pleased to give evident and sensible proofs that he hath prepared the heavens for the perpetuall abode of his Saints and that though our bodies be laid for a time in the grave yet they shall at last be taken up into heaven there to live with God in everlasting glory onely they must be changed and of naturall weak corruptible bodies they must be made spirituall glorious incorruptible bodies and such a change no doubt there was now made in the body of Elijah that it might be fitted for heaven Vers 12. And he cried My father my father the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof That is the strength and defence both of the Church and commonwealth of Israel who by his doctrine and prayers did more for the defence of the Israelites then all their forces of chariots and horsemen could do and this Elisha spake either as bewailing the losse of Elijah in this regard or else to expresse his thoughts concerning this manner of Elijahs rapture namely that because he had been as the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof for their defence and safetie therefore he was now taken up with a chariot of fire and horses of fire and so carried triumphantly into heaven Vers 13. He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him When Elijah was caught up into heaven his mantle fell from him first to shew that he was gone where he should no more have any need of his garments or any such thing and secondly that it might be left to Elisha as a token that God had designed him to succeed in Elijah place out of grief for the losse of his master he had torn his own garments and now to comfort him again that very mantle is as it were given him from heaven wherewith at his first calling he was assured that he should succeed him in his propheticall office Vers 14. And said Where is the Lord God of Elijah c. These were no words of distrust and doubting but of invocation and faith as if he had said I shall now see whether the spirit of Elijah rests upon me or no by attempting to work the same miracle or O Lord who by thy servant Elijah didst divide these waters make it now manifest by the same miracle that thou hast given me the spirit of Elijah Vers 15. And they came to meet him and bowed themselves to the ground before him As to the father of the Prophets Vers 16. Lest peradventure the spirit of the Lord hath taken him up and cast him upon some mountain c. See the note upon the 1 Kings 18.12 Vers 17. They sent therefore fifty men and they sought three dayes but found him not Thus through their mistake the rapture of Elijah to heaven was confirmed Vers 19. But the water is nought and the ground barren The land of Canaan was a most fruitfull land and had the waters of Jericho been alwayes nought and the ground barren it is not likely they would have built a city there or that Hiel the Beth-elite would so lately have reedified it in the dayes of Ahab if it had been then so annoyed but we see what the Psalmist saith Psal 107.33 34. He turneth rivers into a wildernesse and the watersprings into dry ground A fruitfull land into barrennesse for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein The sinnes of the inhabitants and perhaps the reedifying of Jericho had brought this curse upon the place which now therefore they commend to Elishaes consideration as expecting that the Lord would now by miracles confirm the calling of this new father of the Prophets Vers 20. Bring me a new cruse and put salt therein c. Salt was more likely to make the waters brackish then any way to heal them and the more was Gods power magnified who could work this alteration in the waters by such contrary means as for his appointing the salt to be brought in a new cruse that might be enjoyned either first to make sure that it should not be any way legally unclean or secondly to signifie the new change that should be made in the waters or rather thirdly that it might not be supposed that the salt had virtue to cure the waters from the cruse by reason of any thing that had formerly been put into it but that it was merely of God that it was effectuall for this end according to the words of Elisha in the following verse when he cast the salt into the spring Thus saith the Lord I have healed these waters And indeed it is probable that for this very reason the Prophet did appoint the men of the citie to fetch a new cruse of salt namely that they might be assured that there was no underhand dealing in working this miracle Vers 23. And he went up from thence unto Beth-el Having visited the colledge of the Prophets at Jericho he went thence to that also at Beth-el both to inform them of Elijahs rapture and the Lords designing him to succeed in his place and to confirm them in the truth both by his counsel and prayers And as he was going up by the way there came forth little children out of the city and mocked him c. Beth-el was the chief place where Jeroboams idolatry was practised 1 Kings 12.28 29. though therefore the prophets had seated themselves there because there was most need of their presence where was the springhead of that corruption yet it seems the inhabitants were most of Jeroboams religion and no marvell then though the little children had learnt of their idolatrous parents to scoff at Gods prophets as here they did Elisha crying after him as he went along Go up thou bald-head go up thou bald-head wherein they did not onely revile him with the name of bald-head but also scoffed at that report which no doubt was soon spread abroad of Elijahs rapture into heaven as if they should have said you that report your master is gone up into heaven why do not you go up after him for indeed why
because knowing how much the prophets of God were despised and slighted in those dayes he thought it requisite by this great honour done to Elisha to let the people see how highly they ought to esteem them Vers 13. And Elisha said unto the king of Israel What have I to do with thee get thee to the prophets of thy father c. Though the king of Israel had suppressed the idolatry of Baal in his kingdome yet because he continued still in the idol-worship of his golden calves therefore Elisha professeth to him with great boldnesse as became him upon whom the spirit of Elijah did rest that there was no reason that a worshiper of idols should come to the prophet of the true God in the time of his extremitie but ironically wills him to go to the prophets of his father and the prophets of his mother to see if they could now yield him any comfort Nay for the Lord hath called these three kings together to deliver them into the hand of Moab As if he should have said Nay Elisha do not now charge these things upon me for as it is the Lord that hath brought us into these straits so it is he onely I know that can halp us out and not these idol-gods which those false prophets worship thou speakest of yea if succour come not speedily we are like to be undone you see we are like to fall into the hands of the Moabites if they should come upon us not I onely but even these kings that are with me whom I know thou doest highly esteem it is no time therefore now to chide but to help wherefore enquire I pray of the Lord for us and call upon him that we may be delivered Vers 14. As the Lord of hosts liveth before whom I stand See the note 1. Kings 17.1 Vers 15. But now bring me a minstrell This he called for either to compose his affection and to quiet his mind that was somewhat moved against Jehoram or rather that by singing some holy psalm or hymn both himself and those that were with him present might have their hearts raised to such holy and heavenly meditations as might render him the fitter to ask and receive propheticall inspirations and them the fitter to heare what God would say unto them The hand of the Lord came upon him That is the spirit of prophesie Vers 19. And ye shall smite every fenced citie and every choice citie and shall fell every good tree Thus God by this speciall direction of the prophet gave allowance to the Israelites to do that for the punishing of the Moabites as devoted to utter destruction which by the generall rule of the law they might not have done Deut. 20.19 When thou shalt besiege a city a long time in making warre against it to take it thou shalt not destroy the trees thereof by forcing an ax against them or else that law was meant onely of the warres they were to make against the cities in the land of Canaan Vers 20. And it came to passe in the morning when the meat-offering was offered that behold there came water c. This time God was pleased to choose wherein to send them water thereby to honour that service which was done him then by his people and to teach them that all blessings come to us by Christ who was the summe of all those sacrifices and are to be obtained by the prayers of his people for the time of the morning sacrifice was also the time of publick prayer Acts 3.1 Now Peter and John went up together into the temple at the houre of prayer being the ninth houre Vers 23. And they said This is bloud c. The glistering of the sunne-beams upon the waters made them think the place where the Israelites were to be covered over with bloud which conceit was doubtlesse the more readily entertained First because they never dreamed of any water in those deserts of Edom where the Israelites lay now encamped Secondly because not long before the like had befallen their people when they went with the Ammonites and Edomites against Jehoshaphat dissension arising among them they fell upon and slew one another 2 Chron. 20.22 23. and why might not the same now happen amongst these kings that had combined together against them And thus the Moabites were by a misconceit drawn forth from their borders which were happely strong and through which the Israelites could not so easily have broken being so confident of what they supposed that they sent not forth scouts to see whether it were so as they conceived or no. Vers 25. And they beat down the cities and on every good peice of land cast every man his stone c. That is whereever they came in the land of Moab they did what they could utterly to spoile their countrey razing their cities casting stones upon their lands stopping their wells and felling their trees Onely in Kir-haraseth left they the stones thereof c. That is onely the city of Kir-haraseth stood in her strength and was not razed to wit because thither the king of Moab fled with his souldiers and so manned it and defended it against the Israelites Kir-haraseth was indeed the chief and best fortified citie in the land of Moab as we may see Esay 16.7 and therefore no marvell it is though that endured a siege when the other were presently taken the king being also retired thither for shelter with all his forces Howbeit the slingers went about it and smote it c. That is though they could not presently take this city yet they besieged it the slingers seeking to beat the defendants from the walls that they might scale them or batter them with engines or dig them down with mattocks and so take the city yet some by slingers here understand engineers which with their engines did force stones against the walls to batter them with violence as now gunners shoot bullets Vers 26. And when the king of Moab saw that the battell was too sore for him c. That is when he saw that his enemies were too strong for him and were like to prevail and take the city he sallied forth with seven hundred men upon that quarter where the king of Edom lay hoping to break through and so to escape neither was it perhaps without cause that he chose to make his salley upon Edoms quarter for it might be either because that quarter was weakest or because his rage was most against those their neighbours for helping the Israelites especially considering that a while before the Edomites and they had joyned together against Jehoshaphat 2. Chron. 20.22 or because he might hope to find them no sure friends to this enterprize of the Israelites against him Vers 27. Then he took his eldest sonne that should have reigned in his stead c. This may be meant of the king of Edoms eldest sonne and so it is evident by the contents of this chapter our translatours understood
time all their chief officers were called Eunuchs As we see Potiphar to whom Joseph was sold though he were a married man is termed an Eunuch Gen. 37.36 Vers 7. And Elisha came to Damascus and Ben-hadad the king of Syria was sick c. The most received opinion is that Elisha went now to Damascus according to a charge given him by Elijah purposely to anoint Hazael king but why was Elijah sent from mount Horeb to Damascus if God meant not that he himself should anoint Hazael 1. Kings 19.15 And the Lord said unto him Go return on thy way to the wildernesse of Damascus and when thou comest anoint Hazael to be king over Syria rather therefore I conceive that Elisha went now by the speciall instinct of Gods Spirit to confirm that to Hazael by a second prediction which formerly upon Elijahs anointing he did not much believe and that the rather because of the present famine in Israel and so coming thither found Ben-hadad sick whether his sicknesse was occasioned through grief as Josephus saith for the shamefull flight of his armie from the siege of Samaria chap. 7.6 especially when he heard it was occasioned by a causelesse feare the Scripture expresseth not but onely notes how in his sicknesse he was glad to consult with the Prophet concerning his recovery whom ere while he sent to apprehend in Dothan chap. 6.13 14. encouraged happely thereto also by the miraculous cure that he had wrought upon the leprosie of his servant Naaman Vers 10. Go say unto him Thou mayest certainly recover c. That is thy disease is not mortall Thou mayest certainly recover of thy sicknesse that therefore which the Prophet addes concerning his death howbeit the Lord hath shewed me that he shall surely die doth not contradict this which he said concerning his sicknesse The question was whether he should recover of that sicknesse wherewith he was visited to this a direct answer is given that he might well recover notwithstanding his sicknesse but withall an intimation is given to the messenger that he should surely die to wit by another means though not by his sicknesse Vers 11. And he settled his countenance stedfastly till he was ashamed That is Elisha did fix his eyes stedfastly upon Hazael untill he began to be ashamed because he saw he could not forbear weeping or rather untill Hazael began to blush and to be ashamed because he saw the Prophet look so earnestly upon him Vers 13. And Elisha answered The Lord hath shewed me that thou shalt be king over Syria Intimating that in this regard it was likely enough he would exercise those cruelties upon the Israelites which now he made so strange of and that because he should then have power to do it and withall when once he sate in the throne of Syria he would bear the same deadly hatred against Gods people which his predecessours had done before him and thence is Damascus threatned under those terms Amos 1.4 I will send a fire into the house of Hazael which shall devoure the palaces of Ben-hadad Vers 15. He took a thick cloth and dipt it in water and spread it on his face c. And thus Ben-hadad was strangled by Hazael and that so that no signe or token could be seen in his dead body of any violence that was offered him and perhaps too under a pretence of allaying the distemper of heat he was in by reason of his sicknesse Vers 16. And in the fifth yeare of Joram the sonne of Ahab king of Israel c. Jehoshaphat had designed his sonne Jehoram to be king and appointed him to govern the kingdome in his absence in the seventeenth yeare of his reigne a little before he went with Ahab against Ramoth Gilead and thence the yeare of Jehoram king of Israel his beginning to reigne is counted to be both the eighteenth yeare of Jehoshaphat 2. Kings 3.1 and the second yeare of Jehoram the sonne of Jehoshaphat 2. Kings 1.17 but at his return he resumed the royall power wholly to himself not communicating the same again to his sonne untill the fifth yeare of Joram king of Israel which was the two and twentieth of Jehoshaphat and then this old king took unto him this his eldest sonne as partner in the government himself yet living the cause whereof in all probabilitie was some discord and differences which brake out even then between him and his younger brethren which as they moved Jehoshaphat to commit to his younger sonnes the custody of strong fenced cities in Judah 2. Chron. 21.3 the better to assure them if it might have been against the power of their elder brother so also on the other side it caused him to put this his eldest sonne in possession of the kingdome whilest himself was living for fear of tumult after his death Vers 17. And he reigned eight years in Jerusalem To wit foure years together with his father and foure years himself alone Vers 18. For the daughter of Ahab was his wife To wit Athaliah vers 26. Vers 19. Yet the Lord would not destroy Judah for David his servants sake as he promised him to give him alway a light c. That is one of his seed in whom the soveraigntie of Judah should be continued though farre short of the glory that formerly they enjoyed before the revolt of the ten tribes Vers 20. In his dayes Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah c. The Edomites ever since Davids time 2. Sam. 8.14 had been tributaries to the kings of Judah and had been governed by a Viceroy whom they set over them 1. Kings 22.47 There was no king in Edom a deputy was king But now they cast off this yoke and so the prophecie of Isaac began to take effect Gen. 27.40 that Esau should break the yoke of his brother Jacob from off his neck 2. Chron. 21.2 we reade first that so soon as his father was dead he presently made use of his power against his six younger brethren and having gotten them into his hands slew them and together with them for company many of the great men of the land such belike as either formerly or then had taken their part that withall he took upon him to make innovations in Religion erecting high places in the mountains of Judah and forcing the people to embrace that idolatry which himself had learned from the house of Ahab vers 10.11 And these combustions in the land of Judah we may well think gave encouragement to the Edomites to revolt at this time and so God punished these his abominable courses Vers 22. Yet Edom revolted from under the hand of Judah unto this day That is though Joram overthrew the Edomites in that forementioned battel vers 21. yet they retiring into their places of advantage persisted resolutely in their revolt and so he was forced to return again into his own land which indeed is not so strange if we consider that he might perhaps heare of the revolt of
14. And Hezekiah went up into the house of the Lord and spread it before the Lord. That is he spread Sennacheribs letter before the altar the signe of Gods presence amongst them and this he did partly to quicken his own spirit and to strengthen his own faith in prayer by the sight of that blasphemous writing and partly by that outward signe to imply what he desired of God namely that God would take notice of and revenge the horrible blasphemies of that daring wretch against his great and glorious name Vers 16. And heare the words of Sennacherib which hath sent him to reproch the living God That is the messenger that brought his letter Vers 21 This is the word that the Lord hath spoken concerning him The virgin the daughter of Sion hath despised thee c. That is the inhabitants of Sion Jerusalem shall laugh thee to scorn The people inhabiting any citie or countrey are in the Scripture usually called the daughter of that citie or countrey Psal 45.12 And the daughter of Tyre shall be there with a gift Psal 137.8 O daughter of Babylon who art to be destroyed because they have been bred born and nourished the●e and have lived under the defence government thereof and ought to be faithfull and obedient to the government under which they live whence naturally all nations are wont to stile their countrey their mother 2. Sam. 20.19 Thou seekest to destroy a citie and a mother in Israel and they are called the virgin daughter of Sion not so much because they were not now defiled with idolatry which is spirituall fornication for even heathen people are so called Isa 47.1 Come down and sit in the dust O virgin-daughter of Babylon sit on the ground there is no throne O daughter of the Caldeans Jer. 46.11 Go up into Gilead and take balme O virgin the daughter of Egypt and where had been grosser idolatry then amongst the inhabitants of Jerusalem in the dayes of Ahaz nor because she had never yet been subdued and brought under the command of any forrain prince for after they were under the Babylonian command they are still called so Lam. 1 15. the Lord hath troden the virgin the daughter of Judah as in a winepresse and 2.13 What thing shall I liken to thee O daughter of Jerusalem what shall I equall to thee that I may comfort thee O virgin daughter of Sion but rather because of their constant abode in those places for in that regard they might most fitly be resembled to a virgin daughter that lives with her mother tenderly and delicately brought up by her yea perhaps in this place this phrase is used also to imply the weaknesse of Jerusalem at this time Vers 23. By thy messengers thou hast reproched the Lord. By this circumstance doth the Prophet aggravate the insolent pride of Sennacherib that he set his servants to blaspheme the holy name of God With the multitude of my chariots I am come up to the height of the mountains c. That is the strongest places of the kingdome I have subdued and passed through as a conquerour even those that seemed to them most inaccessible and am now come to the sides of Lebanon that is their chief citie and strength the citie Jerusalem and hereby is intimated that nothing could or should stand in the way of his armies that as he had hitherto so he would still subdue the land before him take possession of their forts and castles cut down the tall cedar trees and the choice firre trees that is destroy there Princes Nobles and great men enter the lodgings of his borders and into the forrest of his Carmel that is possesse himself of their frontier towns and all the fruitfull and pleasant places of their countrey even as conquerours in a land subdued are wont to do as they go along what they please themselves Vers 24. I have digged and drunk strange waters and with the sole of my feet have I dried up all the rivers of besieged places That is when I have come in places most destitute of water it hath been no hindrance to me because even there I have digged up strange waters that is fountains waters where never any were seen before on the other side where cities have been environed with great deep waters no sooner have I set my foot there to besiege them but with the multitude of my souldiers I have dried them up Thus he boasts that nothing could be a let to his numerous army and laughs to scorn Hezekiahs policie in cutting of the waters 2. Chron. 32.3 Vers 25. Hast thou not heard long ago how I have done it and of ancient times that I have formed it c. As if the Lord should have said Thou boastest of the conquest of many nations but didst thou never heare that there is a God in heaven that ruleth the world by whose providence and decree all such things are done surely thus it is with thee now have I brought it to passe that thou shouldest be to lay waste fenced cities into ruinous heaps that is that which I before determined I have now by thee brought to passe using thee as my scourge to punish the wickednesse of men and to turn their strong fenced cities into ruinous heaps which agrees with that which the Prophet saith elsewhere Isaiah 10.5 6. O Assyrian the rod of mine anger and the staffe in their hand is mine indignation I will send him against an hypocriticall nation and against the people of my wrath will I give him a charge to take the spoil and to take the prey and to tread them down like the mire in the streets there is indeed another translation of these words which is set in the margin of our Bibles Hast thou not heard how I have made it long ago and formed it of ancient times should I now bring it to be laid waste and fenced cities to be ruinous heaps and according to this translation the meaning may be that God had long ago and of ancient times made and formed the Israelites to be his peculiar people and had planted them in the land of Canaan which he had provided for their inheritance a thing so famously known that Sennacherib must needs have heard of it and that therefore it was not likely that God would now suffer him wholly to lay waste their countrey and to turn their cities into ruinous heaps but the first exposition doth farre best agree with the scope of the Lords upbraiding the pride of Sennacherib in boasting of what he had done to so many nations Vers 26. Therefore their inhabitants were of small power they were dismaied and confounded they were as the grasse of the field c. That is because I gave them up into thy power therefore they were soon and easily destroyed Vers 27. But I know thy abode and thy going out c. That is I know all thy counsels and enterprizes there is nothing thou
way of comparing of Jehoshaphat to Ahab we may see by that which follows vers 4. But sought to the Lord God of his father and walked in his commandments and not after the doings of Israel Vers 6. And his heart was lifted up in the wayes of the Lord. That is he became zealous and very couragious in Gods cause and went forward with an high and magnanimous spirit without any basenesse fear or carnall respects Moreover he took away the high places and groves out of Judah The high places whereon the God of Israel was worshipped though contrary to his Law were not by Jehoshaphat taken away chap. 20.33 and therefore this must be meant of such high places and groves wherein they worshipped idol-gods These indeed Asa his father had taken away chap. 14.3 but it seems in the latter and declining dayes of Asa when he lay sick some of the people that lingred still after their former idolatry made use of the advantage of these times and did secretly set up their high places and groves again and these they were that Jehoshaphat after search made did now take away Vers 7. And in the third yeare of his reigne he sent to his princes c. to teach in the cities of Judah To see that they were taught We may not think that at other times the people of God did now live in the kingdome of Judah without any ordinary teaching but because he found that the people were in many places so inclined to idolatry as having set up their high places which his father Asa had pulled down these choice priests and Levites mentioned vers 8. were sent as visitours into the severall parts of his kingdome to see whether they were truely taught and by their own personall teaching both to confirm those that were rightly instructed and to convince those that were corrupt and to shew them how expressely the Law did forbid and threaten all idolatry whatsoever And with them these princes were sent to countenance and incourage them and happely to punish those that should oppose them or that should be found obstinate in their errours Vers 13. And the men of warre mighty men of valour were in Jerusalem That is his Generalls and captains and some companies of their souldiers still attended with them Vers 14. Adnah the chief and with him mighty men of valour three hundred thousand That is under his command Vers 16. Amasiah the sonne of Zichri who willingly offered himself unto the Lord. To wit to fight his battels some say as a Nazarite Vers 19. These waited on the king besides those whom the king put in the fenced cities throughout all Judah That is these captains before mentioned and some of their bands by course for it is not likely that so many hundred thousand did at one time attend on the kings person at Jerusalem Yea because the totall number of the souldiers here mentioned amounts to eleven hundred and threescore thousand and it seems not probable that Jehoshaphat would have been so affrighted with the multitude of the Moabites and Ammonites that came against him chap. 20.12 if he had had eleven hundred and threescore thousand trained men in his kingdome besides those wherewith his strong cities were manned Therefore some conceive it more likely that he had not all these at one time but successively the trained band of Judah being first under the command of Adnah and then Adnah being dead under the command of Jehohanan and so likewise the trained band of Benjamin under the command of Amasiah first then Eliada and then Jehozabad and were in the severall times of these Generalls sometimes more and sometimes lesse CHAP. XVIII Vers 1. NOw Jehoshaphat had riches and honour in abundance and joyned affinity with Ahab To wit by marrying his eldest sonne Joram to Athaliah Ahabs daughter chap. 21.6 and 2. Kings 8.18 Vers 2. And after certain years he went down to Ahab to Samaria To wit about the seventeenth yeare of his reigne See the notes for this chapter 1. Kings 22.1 c. CHAP. XIX Vers 2. ANd Jehu the sonne of Hanani the seer went out to meet him Who reproved Asa Jehoshaphats father see chap. 16.7 And said to king Jehoshaphat Shouldest thou help the ungodly and love them that hate the Lord That is oughtest thou thus to joyn thy self in such strict wayes of love and friendship with such a wicked idolatrous wretch such an enemy to God and all goodnesse as Ahab is In some cases to joyn in league with infidels and idolaters is not unlawfull Gen. 14.13 when it is done onely to uphold peace to maintain mutuall traffick or for the common defence of their countreys but otherwise unnecessarily as out of love and friendship to joyn with them and help them is doubtlesse unlawfull and so it had been now with Jehoshaphat Therefore is wrath upon thee from before the Lord. That is God is highly displeased with thee and hath determined to poure forth his displeasure upon thee and this might have respect to that invasion of the Moabites and Ammonites which followed not long after chap. 20.1 or happely to some dissension that began at present betwixt his sonnes the seeds of that horrid slaughter which his eldest sonne did afterwards make amongst them chap. 21.4 Vers 3. Neverthelesse there are good things found in thee c. This is added to intimate that because of this the Lord would deal gently with him and even in judgement remember mercy Vers 4. And he went out again c. and brought them back unto the Lord God of their fathers That is where he found any idolatry or any corruptions amongst the people he reduced them to the true worship of God and reformed what was out of order amongst them Vers 5. And he set judges in the land c. To wit where he found any wanting Vers 6. Ye judge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgement That is whose person ye represent and who is present seeing all you do and accordingly ready to stand by you and defend you if you judge aright and to punish you if you deal unjustly Vers 8. In Jerusalem did Jehoshaphat set of the Levites and of the priests and of the chief of the fathers of Jerusalem c. See above vers 5. This is meant of the high senate or councel of the Sanhedrim in Jerusalem to which all appeals were made from inferiour courts and to which all causes of difficulty were referred both for ecclesiasticall and civill affairs and therefore it is said here that they were for the judgement of the Lord that is for ecclesiasticall causes concerning which God had determined in his law what should be done and for controversies to wit in causes merely civill See Deut. 17.8 9 10. Vers 10. And what cause soever shall come to you of your brethren that dwell in their cities between bloud and bloud between law and commandment c. That is where each party
there were so many of the people that were not sanctified but were unclean and consequently there were so many sacrifices to be offered for their purifying and cleansing that the priests alone could not do the work and therefore the Levites were imployed therein Vers 18. For a multitude of the people even many of Ephraim and Manasseh Issachar and Zebulun had not cleansed themselves c. That is though the Levites did help the priests as is before said yet very many of the Israelites did eat the Passeover being not purified from their uncleannesse Vers 20. And the Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people That is he sanctified them by his spirit in an extraordinary way or he did not punish them but forgive them that their infirmity and accepted them as if they had been purified Vers 22. And Hezekiah spake comfortably to all the Levites that taught the good knowledge of the Lord. That is he encouraged them in their work and gave them hope of Gods mercy to the people as concerning those that had eaten the Passeover and were not cleansed according to the Law Vers 24. And a great number of the priests sanctified themselves To wit that were not before sanctified see vers 3. and chap. 29.34 Vers 26. For since the time of Solomon the sonne of David king of Israel there was not the like in Jerusalem That is since the Israelites were divided from Judah and Benjamin Vers 27. Then the priests the Levites arose and blessed the people and their voice was heard c. That is the Lord heard their prayer and blessed them as was promised Numb 6.27 And they shall put my name upon the children of Israel and I will blesse them CHAP. XXXI Vers 1. NOw when all this was finished all Israel that were present went out to the cities of Judah and brake the images in pieces c. See chap. 30.14 In Ephraim also and Manasseh untill they had utterly destroyed them all To wit in those cities of Ephraim and Manasseh that had been taken in the warres by the kings of Judah from the kings of Israel for all this was done by the authority and command of Hezekiah See 2. Kings 18.4 Vers 2. And Hezekiah appointed the courses of the priests and the Levites c. to minister and to give thanks and to praise in the gates of the tents of the Lord. That is in the Temple called the tents of the lord because there the priests and Levites who for their severall functions number and order are called an army or host Levit. 4.3 kept the watch of the Lord and there the people assembled together in troops as souldiers in the camp and that to pray unto the Lord which is the chief service of our spirituall warfare Vers 3. He appointed also the kings portion of his substance for the burnt-offerings to wit for the morning and evening burnt-offerings c. All the particular sacrifices here mentioned as is written in the law of the Lord that is which in the law were severally prescribed for every feast and for the daily sacrifice Num. 28. they were ordinarily provided by the people in generall as it was also afterward Nehem. 10.32 33. Also we made ordinances for us to charge our selves yearely with the third part of a shekel for the service of the house of our God for the shew-bread and for the continuall meat-offering and for the continuall burnt-offerings of the Sabbaths and of the new moons c. but now it seems to ease the people in their poverty Hezekiah appointed a portion for and toward these services out of his own substance Vers 4. He commanded the people that dwelt in Jerusalem to give the portion of the priests and the Levites that they might be encouraged in the law of the Lord. That is that they might not be distracted with worldly cares of providing for themselves nor follow their callings heavily for want of maintenance but might chearfully bend themselves wholly to the service of the Lord. Vers 5. The children of Israel brought in abundance the first fruits of corn wine and oyle c. To wit those in and about Jerusalem where the commandment was first given for of the Israelites inhabiting the other cities of Judah the following verse speaks or else in this verse there is mention of the tithes and first-fruits of such as grew out of the earth and in the following verse of the tithes of cattell and such other things And concerning the children of Israel and Judah that dwelt in the cities of Judah they also brought in the tythes of oxen and sheep and the tithe of holy things that is all other tithes that were by the Law of God due which are here called the tithe of holy things because the tithes were to be set apart from the rest of their goods as things consecrated and holy to the Lord yet happely these words are specially intended of those second tithes which were not given for the maintenance of the Levites but separated for other holy uses for which see Deut. 14.22 and Levit. 27.30 Vers 7. In the third moneth they began to lay the foundation of the heaps and finished them in the seventh moneth For in the third moneth was their harvest and therefore the feast of Pentecost which was in that moneth was called the feast of harvest and in the seventh moneth they gathered all other fruits of the land and therefore the feast of Tabernacles which was in that moneth was called the feast of in gathering in the end of the yeare Exod. 23.16 Vers 9. Then Hezekiah questioned with the priests and the Levites concerning the heaps That is he demanded how it came to passe that they had spent no more of that provision that was brought in for them Vers 10. And Azariah the chief priest of the house of Zadok answered him c. There were still two chief priests of the two severall families of Eleazar and Ithamar that had the chief command in the Temple under the high priest of which it seems this Azariah was one who is therefore also called vers 13. the ruler of the house of God For the Lord hath blessed his people and that which is left is this great store That is since they brought in their first fruits and tithes God hath so abundantly blessed the people that their offerings have yielded us sufficient provision and this overplus which is left besides Vers 12. And brought in the offerings and the tithes and the dedicate things faithfully over which Cononiah the Levite was ruler c. To wit to see the offerings and the tithes and the dedicate things safely stored up and carefully preserved in the severall garners or chambers appointed for them and to keep an account both of what was brought in and what was delivered forth according to the order established 1. Chron. 26.20 Vers 14. And Kore the sonne of Imnah the Levite the porter toward the east was over the
Persia above twenty years he gave the Jews libertie to return again into their own countrey we must know that Nebuchadnezzar after the taking of Jerusalem had subdued all the nations round about as was prophesied of him yea even Egypt amongst the rest the greatest and strongest of all those bordering nations Jer. 25.9 10 11. Behold I will send and take all the families of the north saith the Lord and Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon my servant and will bring them against this land and against the inhabitants thereof and against all these nations round about c. And this whole land shall be a desolation and an astonishment and these nations shall serve the king of Babylon seventy years Isa 20.4 So shall the king of Assyria lead away the Egyptians prisoners and the Ethiopians captives young and old naked and barefoot see also Jer. 43.10 11. and 44.30 and thus was the Babylonian Empire raised by Nebuchadnezzar which he left to Evilmerodach his sonne and he to Belshazzar his sonne according to that Jer. 27.7 All nations shall serve him and his sonne and his sonnes sonne But then in Belshazzars time this great Empire was ruined by the Medes and Persians who besieged Babylon took it and destroyed it utterly and slew Belshazzar and so fulfilled what was prophesied Isa 47.1 Come down and sit in the dust O virgin daughter of Babylon sit on the ground there is no throne O daughter of the Chaldeans c. and so Jer. 50.1 2 3. and thus the Empire was translated from the Babylonians to the Persians indeed in this warre against Babylon the Medes had the chief stroke for Darius Medus or Cyaxares did command in chief in this warre and the army consisted most of his people Isa 13.17 Behold I will stirre up the Medes against them which shall not regard silver c. and Jer. 51.11 The Lord hath raised up the spirit of the kings of the Medes for his device is against Babylon c. and therefore when Balthazar or Belshazzar was slain he was made king Dan. 5.30 31. In that night was Belshazzar the king of the Chaldeans slain and Darius the Median took the kingdome being about threescore and two years old but yet withall first because Cyrus who was then absolute king of Persia or Viceroy thereof under Darius the Mede did joyn with Darius in this expedition against Babylon and by his valour and policie chiefly the citie was taken as being the man preordained and forenamed by God himself for this great action secondly because Darius it seems stayed not in Babylon but returned into Media and left Cyrus as his Viceroy in his room and thirdly because Darius who was Cyrus his great uncle and as some think his father in law also lived not full two years after but left all to Cyrus his heir therefore even from the first Cyrus was esteemed the Monarch of those parts and however in truth till the death of his uncle Darius the Mede he was absolute Monarch but held also under him as his Viceroy as is evident Dan. 6.28 This Daniel prospered in the reigne of Darius and in the reigne of Cyrus the Persian yet the very first yeare after the conquest of Babylon was reckoned as the first yeare of Cyrus reigne as we see here where it is said that in the first yeare of Cyrus king of Persia God stirred up his spirit to let the Jews go home to their own countrey c. that the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah might be fulfilled to wit the promise concerning the deliverance of the Jews out of their captivitie at the end of seventy years through the favour of Cyrus Jer. 29.10 After seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you and perform my good word towards you in causing you to return this place Vers 2. Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia The Lord God of heaven hath given me all the kingdomes of the earth c. It seems that by Daniel or some other of the Jews that it was discovered to Cyrus that many years before the Lord had told them by his prophets that one Cyrus should vanquish Babylon with other nations and then should freely deliver the Jews out of their captivitie and cause their citie and Temple to be again built all which for his better satisfaction they might shew him in the writings of the Prophet Isaiah Isa 44.1 13. And hence it was that he acknowledged that God had charged him to build the Temple and confessed that those kingdomes which he had subdued were given him of God using these high terms The Lord God hath given me all the kingdomes of the earth either out of an affectation of the universall Monarchy of the whole world or out of an hyperbolicall ostentation of the largenesse of his Empire to which all the kingdomes in those parts of the world were subdued according to those expressions we meet with elsewhere Luke 2.1 There went out a decree from Cesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed and Acts 2.5 And there was dwelling at Jerusalem Jews devout men out of every nation Vers 4. And whosoever remaineth in any place where he sojourneth let the men of his place help him with silver c. That is whosoever abideth as a stranger or sojourner in any place of my dominion and hath a mind to go up to Jerusalem let the men that dwell in that place furnish him with all provisions requisite for his journey beside that which they shall send by them as a free-will-offering for the building or service of the Temple the transporting of silver and gold and other commodities is in many places severely forbidden and so happely it was there the king therefore gives licence to the Jews by his proclamation for the carrying away of these things and withall encourageth the people to afford them what help they could by letting them know that his desire was they should be plentifully furnished with all things necessary Vers 5. Then rose up the chief of the fathers of Judah and Benjamin and the priests and the Levites with all them whose spirit God had raised to go up c. To wit both of these and the other tribes also some even of Judah and Benjamin went not as being well settled where they were and loth to remove or desirous to see first how these will speed but those whose spirits God had stirred up went not of these tribes onely but of others also 1. Chron. 9.3 And in Jerusalem dwelt of the children of Judah and of the children of Benjamin and of the children of Ephraim and Manasseh and therefore some conceive that at this time that prophesie of Ezekiel was fulfilled Ezek. 37.16 17.21 22. Sonne of man take thee one stick and write upon it For Judah and for the children of Israel his companions then take another stick and write upon it For Joseph the stick of Ephraim and for all the house of Israel his