Chapter 27:
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| Matthew Henry
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2 Kings 2 Chronicles
1 Chronicles 27
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have the civil list, including the military,
I. The twelve captains for every separate month of the year (v. 1-15). II. The
princes of the several tribes (v. 16-24). III. The officers of the court (v.
25-34).
Verses 1-15
We have here an account of the regulation of the militia of the
kingdom. David was himself a man of war, and had done great things with the
sword; he had brought into the field great armies. Now here we are told how he
marshalled them when God had given him rest from all his enemies. He did not
keep them all together, for that would have been a hardship on them and the
country; yet he did not disband and disperse them all, for then he would have
left his kingdom naked, and his people would have forgotten the arts of war,
wherein they had been instructed. He therefore contrived to keep up a constant
force, and yet not a standing army. The model is very prudent. 1. He kept up
24,000 constantly in arms, I suppose in a body, and disciplined, in one part or
other of the kingdom, the freeholders carrying their own arms and bearing their
own charges while they were up. This was a sufficient strength for the securing
of the public peace and safety. Those that are Israelites indeed must learn war;
for we have enemies to grapple with, whom we are concerned constantly to stand
upon our guard against. 2. He changed them every month; so that the whole number
of the militia amounted to 288,000, perhaps about a fifth part of the able men
of the kingdom. By being thus distributed into twelve courses, they were all
instructed in, and accustomed to, military exercises; and yet none were
compelled to be in service, and at expenses, above one month in the year (which
they might very well afford), unless upon extraordinary occasions, and then they
might all be got together quickly. It is the wisdom of governors, and much their
praise, while they provide for the public safety, to contrive how to make it
effectual and yet easy, and as little as possible burdensome to the people. 3.
Every course had a commander in chief over it. Besides the subaltern officers
that were rulers over thousands, and hundreds, and fifties, there was one
general officer to each course or legion. All these twelve great commanders are
mentioned among David's worthies and champions, 2 Sa. 23 and 1 Chr. 11. They
had first signalized themselves by their great actions and then they were
advanced to those great preferments. It is well with a kingdom when honour thus
attends merit. Benaiah is here called
a chief priest, v. 5. But,
cohen
signifying both a
priest and a
prince, it might better be
translated here
a chief ruler, or (as in the margin)
a principal
officer. Dodai had Mikloth (v. 4) either for his substitute when he was
absent or infirm, or for his successor when he was dead. Benaiah had his son
under him, v. 6. Asahel had his son after him (v. 7), and by this it seems that
this plan of the militia was laid in the beginning of David's reign; for
Asahel was killed by Abner while David reigned in Hebron. When his wars were
over he revived this method, and left the military affairs in this posture, for
the peaceable reign of his son Solomon. When we think ourselves most safe, yet,
while we are here in the body, we must keep in a readiness for spiritual
conflicts.
Let not him that girdeth on the harness boast as he that puts it
off.
Verses 16-34
We have here an account,
I. Of the princes of the tribes. Something of the ancient order
instituted by Moses in the wilderness was still kept up, that every tribe should
have its prince or chief. It is probable that it was kept up all along, either
by election or by succession, in the same family; and those are here named who
were found in that office when this account was taken. Elihu, or Eliab, who was
prince of Judah, was the eldest son of Jesse, and descended in a right line from
Nahshon and Salmon, the princes of this tribe in Moses's time. Whether these
princes were of the nature of lord-lieutenants that guided them in their
military affairs, or chief-justices that presided in their courts of judgment,
does not appear. Their power, we may suppose, was much less now that all the
tribes were united under one king than it had been when, for the most part, they
acted separately. Our religion obliges us to be subject, not only to
the king
as supreme, but unto governors under him (1 Pt. 2:13, 14), the princes that
decree justice. Of Benjamin was Jaaziel the son of Abner, v. 21. Though Abner
was David's enemy, and opposed his coming to the throne, yet David would not
oppose the preferment of his son, but perhaps nominated him to this post of
honour, which teaches us to render good for evil.
II. Of the numbering of the people, v. 23, 24. It is here said,
1. That when David ordered the people to be numbered he forbade the numbering of
those under twenty years old, thinking thereby to save the reflection which what
he did might otherwise cast upon the promise that they should be innumerable;
yet it was but a poor salvo, for it had never been customary to number those
under twenty, and the promise of their numbers chiefly respected the effective
men. 2. That the account which David took of the people, in the pride of his
heart, turned to no good account; for it was never perfected, nor done with
exactness, nor was it ever recorded as an authentic account. Joab was disgusted
with it, and did it by halves; David was ashamed of it, and willing it should be
forgotten, because there fell wrath for it against Israel. A good man cannot, in
the reflection, please himself with that which he knows God is displeased with,
cannot make use of that, nor take comfort in that, which is obtained by sin.
III. Of the officers of the court. 1. The
rulers of the
king's
substance (as they are called, v. 31), such as had the oversight
and charge of the king's tillage, his vineyards, his olive-yards, his herds,
his camels, his asses, his flocks. Here are no officers for state, none for
sport, no master of the wardrobe, no master of the ceremonies, no master of the
horse, no master of the hounds, but all for service, agreeable to the simplicity
and plainness of those times. David was a great soldier, a great scholar, and a
great prince, and yet a great husband of his estate, kept a great deal of ground
in his own hand, and stocked it, not for pleasure, but for profit; for the king
himself is
served of the field, Eccles. 5:9. Those magistrates that would
have their subjects industrious must themselves be examples of industry and
application to business. We find, however, that afterwards the poor of the land
were thought good enough to be vine-dressers and husbandmen, 2 Ki. 25:12. Now
David put his great men to preside in these employments. 2. The attendants on
the king's person. They were such as were eminent for wisdom, being designed
for conversation. His uncle, who was a wise man and a scribe, not only well
skilled in politics, but well read in the scriptures, was his counsellor, v. 32.
Another, who no doubt excelled in learning and prudence, was tutor to his
children. Ahithophel, a very cunning man, was his counsellor: but Hushai, an
honest man, was his companion and confidant. It does not appear that he had many
counsellors; but those he had were men of great abilities. Much of the wisdom of
princes is seen in the choice of their ministry. But David, though he had all
these trusty and well-beloved cousins and counsellors about him, preferred his
Bible before them all. Ps. 119:24,
Thy testimonies are my delight and my
counsellors.
Chapter 27:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2 Kings 2 Chronicles
Genesis
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