A. Leaders in Jerusalem
at the return from exile.
1. (1-2) Summary of the genealogies.
So all Israel was recorded by genealogies, and indeed, they were
inscribed in the book of the kings of Israel. But Judah was carried away
captive to Babylon because of their unfaithfulness. And the first inhabitants
who dwelt in their possessions in their cities were Israelites,
priests, Levites, and the Nethinim.
a. So all Israel was recorded: The first eight chapters of 1 Chronicles list these genealogical records. These records were inscribed in the book of the kings of Israel, but these are not the same books we know today as 1 or 2 Kings.
i. “Not in that sacred and canonical book so called, but (as hath been oft observed before) in the public records, wherein there was an account of that kingdom, and of several families in it, according to their genealogies.” (Poole)
b. But Judah was carried away captive to Babylon because of their unfaithfulness: In one sentence, the Chronicler reminds is that it was the clash of empires or the intrigues of the geopolitical scene that doomed the Kingdom of Judah. It was their unfaithfulness to God. If they had remained faithful, God would have protected them amid the rise and fall of a hundred powerful empires.
c. And the first inhabitants who dwelt in their possessions in their cities were Israelites: The Chronicler completely skips over the 70 years of captivity between verses 1 and 2. His interest is not only in the past (demonstrated by 8 previous chapters of genealogies), but also in the present and in the future. The Israelites were back in the land.
i. “All this means that Chronicles has taken the history of Israel a stage further than 1 and 2 Kings. Although 2 Kings end on a note of genuine hope (2 Kings 25:27-30), it is restrained and Israel is still in exile. But now winter is over, and these lists are a definite sign that spring has begun to arrive.” (Selman)
ii. No longer was there a kingdom of Judah and another kingdom of Israel; now they were all Israelites. “Called here by the general name of Israelites, which was given to them before that unhappy division of the two kingdoms, and now is restored to them when the Israelites are united with the Jews in one and the same commonwealth, so that all the names and signs of their former division might be blotted out.” (Poole)
d. Who dwelt in their possessions: The idea is that the people of the tribes of Israel came back to their ancestral lands, promised to them by God and first possessed in the days of Moses and Joshua.
i. In their possessions: “‘Their ancestral land’ (neb; their own property, niv) is a term rarely found in Chronicles (only 1 Chronicles 7:28; 2 Chronicles 11:14; 31:1. Its occurrence here evokes its frequent use in the time of Moses and Joshua.” (Selman)
ii. God kept the land empty for
them during the exile. “A wonderful providence of God it was,
that as the land kept her Sabbaths for those seventy years, so the
country should be all that while kept empty, till the return of the natives.”
(Trapp)
d. Priests, Levites, and the Nethinim: These were three categories of workers at the temple, who had the work of restoring the temple and its worship in the days of Ezra.
· Priests were the descendents of Aaron who had the right to offer sacrifice and take care of the Holy Place in the temple.
· Levites were the much broader class of religious workers, who served in many ways: practical, artistic, and spiritual.
·
The Nethinim were
special servants given to the temple.
i. “The ‘temple
servants’ were literally ‘given ones.’ They might consist of captives
who had been spared but enslaved to temple service. Early Hebrew examples
include the certain Midianite women (Numbers 31:35, 47) or the people of Gibeon
(Joshua 9:22-23), but their organization as a class is credited to David (Ezra
8:20).” (Payne)
2.
(3-9) Leading post-exilic citizens of Jerusalem.
Now in Jerusalem the children of Judah dwelt, and some of
the children of Benjamin, and of the children of Ephraim and Manasseh: Uthai
the son of Ammihud, the son of Omri, the son of Imri, the son of Bani, of the
descendants of Perez, the son of Judah. Of the Shilonites: Asaiah the firstborn
and his sons. Of the sons of Zerah: Jeuel, and their brethren; six hundred and
ninety. Of the sons of Benjamin: Sallu the son of Meshullam, the son of
Hodaviah, the son of Hassenuah; Ibneiah the son of Jeroham; Elah the son of
Uzzi, the son of Michri; Meshullam the son of Shephatiah, the son of Reuel, the
son of Ibnijah; and their brethren, according to their generations; nine
hundred and fifty-six. All these men were heads of a father’s house in
their fathers’ houses.
a. Now
in Jerusalem the children of Judah dwelt: This begins a list
(1 Chronicles 9:2-17) that is in some ways similar to a list in Nehemiah 11 and
in some ways different. Biblical researchers debate if the lists are more
similar or more different, and the exact points of connection and difference
can be difficult to assess.
B. Other post-exilic
leaders in Jerusalem.
1.
(10-13) Leaders among the priests.
Of the priests: Jedaiah, Jehoiarib, and Jachin; Azariah the
son of Hilkiah, the son of Meshullam, the son of Zadok, the son of Meraioth,
the son of Ahitub, the officer over the house of God; Adaiah the son of
Jeroham, the son of Pashur, the son of Malchijah; Maasai the son of Adiel, the
son of Jahzerah, the son of Meshullam, the son of Meshillemith, the son of
Immer; and their brethren, heads of their fathers’ houses; one thousand
seven hundred and sixty. They were very able men for the work of the
service of the house of God.
a. They were very able men: This same phrase is translated mighty men of valor in many other Old Testament passages (Joshua 1:14, Judges 6:12, 1 Samuel 16:18, and many others). It shows that when it came to doing the work of the service of the house of God, it takes a man of strength and courage, the same qualities that are needed in a warrior.
i. “The phrase ‘very able men’
means ‘might men of valour’ and is so rendered in this historic connection in
Nehemiah (11:14). The description is usually employed with reference to
military men, and that makes its use here the more arresting.” (Morgan)
2.
(14-16) Leaders among the Levites.
Of the Levites: Shemaiah the son of Hasshub, the son of
Azrikam, the son of Hashabiah, of the sons of Merari; Bakbakkar, Heresh, Galal,
and Mattaniah the son of Micah, the son of Zichri, the son of Asaph; Obadiah
the son of Shemaiah, the son of Galal, the son of Jeduthun; and Berechiah the
son of Asa, the son of Elkanah, who lived in the villages of the Netophathites.
3.
(17-34) Levite gatekeepers and temple workers.
And the gatekeepers were
Shallum, Akkub, Talmon, Ahiman, and their brethren. Shallum was the
chief. Until then they had been gatekeepers for the camps of the
children of Levi at the King’s Gate on the east. Shallum the son of Kore, the
son of Ebiasaph, the son of Korah, and his brethren, from his father’s house,
the Korahites, were in charge of the work of the service, gatekeepers of
the tabernacle. Their fathers had been keepers of the entrance to the camp of
the Lord. And Phinehas the son of
Eleazar had been the officer over them in time past; the Lord was with him. Zechariah the
son of Meshelemiah was keeper of the door of the tabernacle of meeting.
All those chosen as gatekeepers were two hundred and twelve. They were
recorded by their genealogy, in their villages. David and Samuel the seer had
appointed them to their trusted office. So they and their children were in
charge of the gates of the house of the Lord,
the house of the tabernacle, by assignment. The gatekeepers were assigned to
the four directions: the east, west, north, and south. And their brethren in
their villages had to come with them from time to time for seven days.
For in this trusted office were four chief gatekeepers; they were
Levites. And they had charge over the chambers and treasuries of the house of
God. And they lodged all around the house of God because they had the
responsibility, and they were in charge of opening it every
morning. Now some of them were in charge of the serving vessels, for
they brought them in and took them out by count. Some of them were appointed
over the furnishings and over all the implements of the sanctuary, and over the
fine flour and the wine and the oil and the incense and the spices. And some
of the sons of the priests made the ointment of the spices. Mattithiah of
the Levites, the firstborn of Shallum the Korahite, had the trusted office over
the things that were baked in the pans. And some of their brethren of the sons
of the Kohathites were in charge of preparing the showbread for every
Sabbath. These are the singers, heads of the fathers’ houses of the
Levites, who lodged in the chambers, and were free from other
duties; for they were employed in that work day and night. These
heads of the fathers’ houses of the Levites were heads throughout
their generations. They dwelt at Jerusalem.
a. And the gatekeepers were: This describes the re-institution of the organization of the temple work and workers in the early days of the second temple. They were anxious to organize things in the same manner as King David did originally.
i. It also denotes that there was definite organization and division of labor among the Levites. “When the morning broke, it called to duty first the porters who opened the House of God; and then, after due ablution, each band of white-robed Levites began its special service. There was no running to and fro in disorder, no intrusion on one another’s office, no clashing in duty, no jealousy of each other’s ministry. It was enough to know that each had been appointed to his task, and was asked to be faithful to it. The right ordering of the whole depended on the punctuality, fidelity, and conscientiousness of each.” (Meyer)
ii. “Since both Meshelemiah and Zechariah served under David (1 Chronicles 26:8-11), this ‘Tent of Meeting’ would seem to refer to the curtained form of God’s house erected prior to Solomon’s permanent temple.” (Payne)
b. Phinehas
the son of Eleazar had been the officer over them in time past; the Lord was with him: The
Chronicler remembered the faithful work of Phinehas in the days of Moses
(Numbers 25:7-13), and linked his faithfulness to the work of the gatekeepers
in the days of Ezra.
i. “The fact
that the Lord was with him [Phinehas] indicates that the Lord was
also with those gatekeepers of the Chronicler’s day who followed in the same
living tradition of divine service.” (Selman)
4.
(35-44) The ancestors and descendents of King Saul.
Jeiel the father of Gibeon, whose wife’s name was Maacah, dwelt at Gibeon. His firstborn son was Abdon, then Zur, Kish, Baal, Ner, Nadab, Gedor, Ahio, Zechariah, and Mikloth. And Mikloth begot Shimeam. They also dwelt alongside their relatives in Jerusalem, with their brethren. Ner begot Kish, Kish begot Saul, and Saul begot Jonathan, Malchishua, Abinadab, and Esh-Baal. The son of Jonathan was Merib-Baal, and Merib-Baal begot Micah. The sons of Micah were Pithon, Melech, Tahrea, and Ahaz. And Ahaz begot Jarah; Jarah begot Alemeth, Azmaveth, and Zimri; and Zimri begot Moza; Moza begot Binea, Rephaiah his son, Eleasah his son, and Azel his son. And Azel had six sons whose names were these: Azrikam, Bocheru, Ishmael, Sheariah, Obadiah, and Hanan; these were the sons of Azel.
a. Kish
begot Saul, and Saul begot Jonathan: For emphasis, some of
the genealogy of the line of Saul (both before him and after him) is listed.
This was to emphasize the fact that God did not wipe out the line of Saul, and
that his descendants lived to the days of Ezra and the return from exile.
i. “Since the genealogy continues
for twelve generations after Saul, the fact that his dynasty crashed and his
kingship was transferred to David did not remove his family’s place in
Israelite history. They too had lived in Jerusalem
(1 Chronicles 9:38), and though we do not know whether this continued after the
exile, even for them there were signs of hope.” (Selman)
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