Chapter 20:
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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 2 Samuel 2 Kings
1 Kings 20
Complete Concise
This chapter is the history of a war between Ben-hadad king of
Syria and Ahab king of Israel, in which Ahab was, once and again, victorious. We
read nothing of Elijah or Elishain all this story; Jezebel's rage, it is
probable, had abated, and the persecution of the prophets began to cool, which
gleam of peace Elijah improved. He appeared not at court, but, being told how
many thousands of good people there were in Israel more than he thought of,
employed himself, as we may suppose, in founding religious houses, schools, or
colleges of prophets, in several parts of the country, to be nurseries of
religion, that they might help to reform the nation when the throne and court
would not be reformed. While he was thus busied, God favoured the nation with
the successes we here read of, which were the more remarkable because obtained
against Ben-hadad king of Syria, whose successor, Hazael, was ordained to be a
scourge to Israel. They must shortly suffer by the Syrians, and yet now
triumphed over them, that, if possible, they might be led to repentance by the
goodness of God. Here is, I. Ben-hadad's descent upon Israel, and his insolent
demand (v. 1-11). II. The defeat Ahab gave him, encouraged and directed by a
prophet (v. 12-21). III. The Syrians rallying again, and the second defeat
Ahab gave them (v. 22-30). IV. The covenant of peace Ahab made with Ben-hadad,
when he had him at his mercy (v. 31-34), for which he is reproved and
threatened by a prophet (v. 35-43).
Verses 1-11
Here is, I. The threatening descent which Ben-hadad made upon
Ahab's kingdom, and the siege he laid to Samaria, his royal city, v. 1. What
the ground of the quarrel was we are not told; covetousness and ambition were
the principle, which would never want some pretence or other. David in his time
had quite subdued the Syrians and made them tributaries to Israel, but Israel's
apostasy from God makes them formidable again. Asa had tempted the Syrians to
invade Israel once (ch. 15:18-20), and now they did it of their own accord. It
is dangerous bringing a foreign force into the country: posterity may pay dearly
for it. Ben-hadad had with him thirty-two kings, who were either tributaries to
him, and bound in duty to attend him, or confederates with him, and bound in
interest to assist him. How little did the title of king look when all these
poor petty governors pretended to it!
II. The treaty between these two kings. Surely Israel's
defence had departed from them, or else the Syrians could not have marched so
readily, and with so little opposition, to Samaria, the head and heart of the
country, a city lately built, and therefore, we may suppose, not well fortified,
but likely to fall quickly into the hands of the invaders; both sides are aware
of this, and therefore,
1. Ben-hadad's proud spirit sends Ahab a very insolent demand,
v. 2, 3. A parley is sounded, and a trumpeter (we may suppose) is sent into the
city, to let Ahab know that he will raise the siege upon condition that Ahab
become his vassal (Nay, his
villain), and not only pay him a tribute out
of what he has, but make over his title to Ben-hadad, and hold all at his will,
even his wives and children, the godliest of them. The manner of expression is
designed to gall them; "All shall be mine, without exception."
2. Ahab's poor spirit sends Ben-hadad a very disgraceful
submission. It is general indeed (he cannot mention particulars in his surrender
with so much pleasure as Ben-hadad did in his demand), but it is effectual:
I
am thine, and all that I have, v. 4. See the effect of sin. (1.) If he had
not by sin provoked God to depart from him, Ben-hadad could not have made such a
demand. Sin brings men into such straits, by putting them out of divine
protection. If God may not rule us, our enemies shall. A rebel to God is a slave
to all besides. Ahab had prepared his silver and gold for Baal, Hos. 2:8. Justly
therefore is it taken from him; such an alienating amounts to a forfeiture. (2.)
If he had not by sin wronged his own conscience, and set that against him, he
could not have made such a mean surrender. Guilt dispirits men, and makes them
cowards. He knew Baal could not help, and had no reason to think that God would,
and therefore was content to buy his life upon any terms. Skin for skin, and all
that is dear to him, he will give for it; he will rather live a beggar than not
die a prince.
3. Ben-hadad's proud spirit rises upon his submission, and
becomes yet more insolent and imperious, v. 5, 6. Ahab had laid his all at his
feet, at his mercy, expecting that one king would use another generously, that
this acknowledgment of Ben-hadad's sovereignty would content him, the honour
was sufficient for the present, and he might hereafter make use of it if he saw
cause
(Satis est prostrasse leoni
It suffices the lion to have laid
his victim prostrate); but this will not serve. (1.) Ben-hadad is as
covetous as he is proud, and cannot go away unless he have the possession as
well as the dominion. He thinks it not enough to call it his, unless he have it
in his hands. He will not so much as lend Ahab the use of his own goods above a
day longer. (2.) He is as spiteful as he is haughty. Had he come himself to
select what he had a mind for, it would have shown some respect to a crowned
head; but he will send his servants to insult the prince, and hector over him,
to rifle the palace, and strip it of all its ornaments; nay, to give Ahab the
more vexation, they shall be ordered, not only to take what they please, but, if
they can learn which are the persons or things that Ahab is in a particular
manner fond of, to take those:
Whatsoever is pleasant in thy eyes they shall
take away. We are often crossed in that which we most dote upon; and that
proves least safe which is most dear. (3.) He is as unreasonable as he is
unjust, and will construe the surrender Ahab made for himself as made for all
his subjects too, and will have them also to lie at his mercy: "They shall
search, not only thy house, but
the houses of thy servants too, and
plunder them at discretion." Blessed be God for peace and property, and
that what we have we can call our own.
4. Ahab's poor spirit begins to rise too, upon this growing
insolence; and, if it becomes not bold, yet it becomes desperate, and he will
rather hazard his life than give up all thus. (1.) How he takes advice of his
privy-council, who encourage him to stand it out. He speaks but poorly (v. 7),
appeals to them whether Ben-hadad be not an unreasonable enemy, and do not seek
mischief. What else could he expect from one who, without any provocation given
him, had invaded his country and besieged his capital city? He owns to them how
he had truckled to him before, and will have them advise him what he should do
in this strait; and they speak bravely (
Hearken not to him, nor consent,
v. 8), promising no doubt to stand by him in the refusal. (2.) Yet he expresses
himself very modestly in his denial, v. 9. He owns Ben-hadad's dominion over
him:
"Tell my lord the king I have no design to affront him, nor to
receded from the surrender I have already made; what I offered at first I will
stand to,
but this thing I may not do; I must not give what is none of my
own." It was a mortification to Ben-hadad that even such an abject spirit
as Ahab's durst deny him; yet it should seem, by his manner of expressing
himself, that he durst not have done it if his people had not animated him.
5. Ben-hadad proudly swears the ruin of Samaria. The threatening
waves of his wrath, meeting with this check, rage and foam, and make a noise. In
his fury, he imprecates the impotent revenge of his gods,
if the dust of
Samaria serve for handfuls for his army (v. 10), so numerous, so resolute,
an army will be bring into the field against Samaria, and so confident is he of
their success; it will be done as easily as the taking up of a handful of dust;
all shall be carried away, even the ground on which the city stands. Thus
confident is his pride, thus cruel is his malice; this prepares him to be
ruined, though such a prince and such a people are unworthy of the satisfaction
of seeing him ruined.
6. Ahab sends him a decent rebuke to his assurance, dares not
defy his menaces, only reminds him of the uncertain turns of war (v. 11):
"Let not him that begins a war, and is girding on his sword, his armour,
his harness, boast of victory, or think himself sure of it,
as if he had put
it off, and had come home a conqueror." This was one of the wisest
words that ever Ahab spoke, and is a good item or momento to us all; it is folly
to boast beforehand of any day, since we know not what it may bring forth (Prov.
27:1), but especially to boast of a day of battle, which may prove as much
against us as we promise ourselves it will be for us. It is impolitic to despise
an enemy, and to be too sure of victory is the way to be beaten. Apply it to our
spiritual conflicts. Peter fell by his confidence. While we are here we are but
girding on the harness, and therefore must never boast as though we had put it
off.
Happy is the man that feareth always, and is never off his watch.
Verses 12-21
The treaty between the besiegers and the besieged being broken
off abruptly, we have here an account of the battle that ensued immediately.
I. The Syrians, the besiegers, had their directions from a
drunken king, who gave orders over his cups, as he was
drinking (v. 12),
drinking
himself drunk (v. 16)
with the kings in the pavilions, and this at
noon. Drunkenness is a sin which armies and their officers have of old been
addicted to. Say not thou then that the former days were, in this respect,
better than these, though these are bad enough. Had he not been very secure he
would not have sat to drink; and, had he not bee intoxicated, he would not have
been so very secure. Security and sensuality went together in the old world, and
Sodom, Lu. 17:26, etc. Ben-hadad's drunkenness was the forerunner of his fall,
as Belshazzar's was, Dan. 5. How could he prosper that preferred his pleasure
before his business, and kept his kings to drink with him when they should have
been at their respective posts to fight for him? In his drink, 1. He orders the
town to be invested, the engines fixed, and every thing got ready for the making
of a general attack (v. 12), but stirs not from his drunken club to see it done.
Woe unto thee, O land! when thy king is such
a child. 2. When the
besieged made a sally (and, by that time, he was far gone) he gave orders to
take them alive (v. 18), not to kill them, which might have been done more
easily and safely, but to seize them, which gave them an opportunity of killing
the aggressors; so imprudent was he in the orders he gave, as well as unjust, in
ordering them to be taken prisoners though they came for peace and to renew the
treaty. Thus, as is usual, he drinks, and forgets the law, both the policies and
the justice of war.
II. The Israelites, the besieged, had their directions from an
inspired prophet, one of the prophets of the Lord, whom Ahab had hated and
persecuted:
And behold a prophet, even one, drew near to the king of Israel;
so it may be read, v. 13.
1. Behold, and wonder, that God should send a prophet with a
kind and gracious message to so wicked a prince as Ahab was; but he did it, (1.)
For his people Israel's sake, who, though wickedly degenerated, were the seed
of Abraham his friend and Jacob his chosen, the children of the covenant, and
not yet cast off. (2.) That he might magnify his mercy, in doing good to one so
evil and unthankful, might either bring him to repentance or leave him the more
inexcusable. (3.) That he might mortify the pride of Ben-hadad and check his
insolence. Ahab's idolatry shall be punished hereafter, but Ben-hadad's
haughtiness shall be chastised now; for God resists the proud, and is pleased to
say that
he fears the wrath of the enemy, Deu. 32:26, 27. There was but
one prophet perhaps to be had in Samaria, and he drew near with this message,
intimating that he had been forced to keep at a distance. Ahab, in his
prosperity, would not have borne the sight of him, but now he bids him welcome,
when none of the prophets of the groves can give him any assistance. He enquired
not for a prophet of the Lord, but God sent one to him unasked, for he waits to
be gracious.
2. Two things the prophet does:(1.) He animates Ahab with an
assurance of victory, which was more than all the elders of Israel could give
him (v. 8), though they promised to stand by him. This prophet, who is not named
(for he
spoke in God's name), tells him from God that this very day the
siege shall be raised, and the army of the Syrians routed, v. 13. When the
prophet said,
Thus saith the Lord, we may suppose Ahab began to tremble,
expecting a message of wrath; but he is revived when it proves a gracious one.
He is informed what use he ought to make of this blessed turn of affairs:
"Thou
shalt know that I am Jehovah, the sovereign Lord of all." God's
foretelling a thing that was so very unlikely proved that it was his own doing.
(2.) He instructs him what to do for the gaining of this victory. [1.] He must
not stay till the enemy attacked him, but must sally out upon them and surprise
them in their trenches. [2.] The persons employed must be the
young men of
the princes of the provinces, the pages, the footmen, who were few in
number, only 232, utterly unacquainted with war, and the unlikeliest men that
could be thought of for such a bold attempt; yet these must do it, these weak
and foolish things must be instruments of confounding the wise and strong, that,
while Ben-hadad's boasting is punished, Ahab's may be prevented and
precluded, and the
excellency of the power may appear to be of God. [3.]
Ahab must himself so far testify his confidence in the word of God as to command
in person, though, in the eye of reason, he exposed himself to the utmost danger
by it. But it is fit that those who have the benefit of God's promises should
enter upon them. Yet, [4.] He is allowed to make use of what other forces he has
at hand, to follow the blow, when these young men have broken the ice. All he
had in Samaria, or within call, were but 7000 men, v. 15. It is observable that
it is the same number with theirs that he not
bowed the knee to Baal (ch.
19:18), though, it is likely, not the same men.
III. The issue was accordingly. The proud Syrians were beaten,
and the poor despised Israelites were more than conquerors. The young men gave
an alarm to the Syrians just at noon, at high dinner-time, supported by what
little force they had, v. 16. Ben-hadad despised them at first (v. 18), but when
they had, with unparalleled bravery and dexterity,
slain every one his man,
and so put the army into disorder, that proud man durst not face them, but
mounted immediately, drunk as he was, and made the best of his way, v. 20. See
how God
takes away the spirit of princes, and makes himself
terrible
to the kings of the earth. Now where are the silver and gold he demanded of
Ahab? Where are the handfuls of Samaria's dust? Those that are most secure are
commonly least courageous. Ahab failed not to improve this advantage, but
slew
the Syrians with a great slaughter, v. 21. Note, God oftentimes makes one
wicked man a scourge to another.
Verses 22-30
We have here an account of another successful campaign which
Ahab, by divine aid, made against the Syrians, in which he gave them a greater
defeat than in the former. Strange! Ahab idolatrous and yet victorious, a
persecutor and yet a conqueror! God has wise and holy ends in suffering wicked
men to prosper, and glorifies his own name thereby.
I. Ahab is admonished by a prophet to prepare for another war,
v. 22. It should seem, he was now secure, and looked but a little way before
him. Those that are careless of their souls are often as careless of their
outwards affairs; but the prophet (to whom God made known the following counsels
of the Syrians) told him they would renew their attempt at the return of the
year, hoping to retrieve the honour they had lost and be avenged for the blow
they had received. He therefore bade him strengthen himself, put himself into a
posture of defence, and be ready to give them a warm reception. God had decreed
the end, but Ahab must use the means, else he tempts God: "Help thyself,
strengthen thyself, and God will help and strengthen thee." The enemies of
God's Israel are restless in their malice, and, though they may take some
breathing-time for themselves, yet they are still
breathing out threatenings
and slaughter against the church. It concerns us always to expect assaults
from our spiritual enemies, and therefore to mark and see what we do.
II. Ben-hadad is advised by those about him concerning the
operations of the next campaign. 1. They advised him to
change his ground,
v. 23. They took it for granted that it was not Israel, but Israel's gods,
that beat them (so great a regard was then universally had to invisible powers);
but they speak very ignorantly of Jehovahthat he was
many, whereas he
is one and his name one,that he was
their God only, a local deity,
peculiar to that nation, whereas he is the Creator and ruler of all the world,and
that he was a God
of the hills only, because David their great prophet
had said,
I will lift up my eyes to the hills whence cometh my help (Ps.
121:1), and that
his foundation was in the holy mountain (Ps. 87:1;
78:54), and much was said of his
holy hill (Ps. 15:1; 24:3); supposing
him altogether such a one as their imaginary deities, they fancied he was
confined to his hills, and could not or would not come down from them, and
therefore an army in the valley would be below his cognizance and from under his
protection. Thus vain were the
Gentiles in their imaginations concerning
God, so wretchedly were
their foolish hearts darkened, and,
professing
themselves to be wise, they became fools. 2. They advised him to change his
officers (v. 24, 25), not to employ the kings, who were commanders by birth, but
captains rather, who were commanders by merit, who were inured to war, would not
affect to make a show like the kings, but would go through with business. Let
every man be employed in that which he is brought up to and used to, and
preferred to that which he is fit for. Syria, it seems, was rich and populous,
when it could furnish recruits sufficient, after so great a defeat,
horse for
horse, chariot for chariot.
III. Both armies take the field. Ben-hadad, with his Syrians,
encamps near Aphek, in the tribe of Asher. It is probable that Asher was a city
in his own possession, one of those which his father had won (v. 34), and the
country about it was flat and level, and fit for his purpose, v. 26. Ahab, with
his forces, posted himself at some distance over against them, v. 27. The
disproportion of numbers was very remarkable.
The children of Israel, who
were cantoned in two battalions, looked like
two little flocks of kids,
their numbers small, their equipage mean, and the figure they made contemptible;
but the Syrians filled the country with their numbers, their noise, their
chariots, their carriages, and their baggage.
IV. Ahab is encouraged to fight the Syrians, notwithstanding
their advantages and confidence. A man of God is sent to him, to tell him that
this numerous army shall
all be delivered into his hand (v. 28), but not
for his sake; be it known to him, he is utterly unworthy for whom God will do
this. God would not do it because Ahab had praised God or prayed to him (we do
not read that he did either), but because the Syrians had blasphemed God, and
had said, He is
the God of the hills and not of the valleys; therefore
God will do it in his own vindication, and to preserve the honour of his own
name. If the Syrians had said, "Ahab and his people have forgotten their
God, and so put themselves out of his protection, and therefore we may venture
to attack them," God would probably have delivered Israel into their hands;
but when they go upon a presumption so very injurious to the divine omnipotence,
and the honour of him who is Lord of all hosts, not only in hills and valleys,
but in heaven and earth, which they are willingly ignorant of, they shall be
undeceived, at the expense of that vast army which is so much their pride and
confidence.
V. After the armies had faced one another seven days (the
Syrians, it is likely, boasting, and the Israelites trembling), they engaged,
and the Syrians were totally routed, 100,000 men slain by the sword of Israel in
the field of battle (v. 29), and 27,000 men, that thought themselves safe
under
the walls of Aphek, a fortified city (from the walls of which the shooters
might annoy the enemy if they pursued them, 2 Sa. 11:24), found their bane where
they hoped for protection: the wall fell upon them, probably overthrown by an
earthquake, and, the cities of Canaan being walled up to heaven, it reached a
great way, and they were all killed, or hurt, or overwhelmed with dismay. Ben-hadad,
who thought his city Aphek would hold out against the conquerors, finding it
thus unwalled, and the remnant of his forces dispirited and dispersed, had
nothing but secresy to rely upon for safety, and therefore hid himself in
a
chamber within a chamber, lest the pursuers should seize him. See how the
greatest confidence often ends in the greatest cowardice. "Now is the God
of Israel the
God of the valleys or no?" He shall know now that he
is forced
into an inner chamber to hide himself, see ch. 22:25.
Verses 31-43
Here is an account of what followed upon the victory which
Israel obtained over the Syrians.
I. Ben-hadad's tame and mean submission. Even in his inner
chamber he feared, and would, if he could, flee further, though none pursued.
His servants, seeing him and themselves reduced to the last extremity, advised
that they should surrender at discretion, and make themselves prisoners and
petitioners to Ahab for their lives, v. 31. The servants will put their lives in
their hands, and venture first, and their master will act according as they
speed. Their inducement to take this course is the great reputation the kings of
Israel had for clemency above any of their neighbours: "We have heard that
they are merciful kings, not oppressive to their subjects that are under their
power" (as governments then went, that of Israel was one of the most easy
and gentle), "and therefore not cruel to their enemies when they lie at
their mercy." Perhaps they had this notion of the kings of Israel because
they had heard that the God of Israel proclaimed his name
gracious and
merciful, and they concluded their kings would make their God their pattern.
It was an honour to the kings of Israel to be thus represented, as indeed every
Israelite is then dressed as becomes him when he
puts on bowels of mercies.
"They are merciful kings, therefore we may hope to find mercy upon our
submission." This encouragement poor sinners have to repent and humble
themselves before God. "Have we not heard that the God of Israel is a
merciful God? Have we not found him so? Let us therefore rend our hearts and
return to him." Joel 2:13. That is evangelical repentance which flows from
an apprehension of the mercy of God in Christ;
there is forgiveness with him.
Two things Ben-hadad's servants undertake to represent to Ahab:-1. Their
master a penitent; for they
girded sackcloth on their loins, as mourners,
and
put ropes on their heads, as condemned criminals going to execution,
pretending to be sorry that they had invaded his country and disturbed his
repose, and owning that they deserved to be hanged for it. Here they are ready
to do penance for it, and throw themselves at the feet of him whom they had
injured. Many pretend to repent of their wrong-doing, when it does not succeed,
who, if they had prospered in it, would have justified it and gloried in it. 2.
Their master a beggar, a beggar for his life:
Thy servant Ben-hadad saith,
"I pray thee, let me live, v. 32. Though I live a perpetual exile from
my own country, and captive in this, yet, upon any terms,
let me live."
What a great change is here, (1.) In his condition! How has he fallen from the
height of power and prosperity to the depths of disgrace and distress, and all
the miseries of poverty and slavery! See the uncertainty of human affairs; such
turns are they subject to that the spoke which was uppermost may soon come to be
undermost. (2.) In his temperin the beginning of the chapter hectoring,
swearing, and threatening, and none more high in his demands, but here crouching
and whining and none more low in his requests! How meanly does he beg hi life at
the hand of him upon whom he had there been trampling! The most haughty in
prosperity are commonly most abject in adversity: an even spirit will be the
same in both conditions. See how God glorified himself when he
looks upon
proud men and abases them, and hides them in the dust together, Job 40:11-13.
II. Ahab's foolish acceptance of his submission, and the
league he suddenly made with him upon it. He was proud to be thus courted by him
whom he had feared, and enquired for him with great tenderness:
Is he yet
alive? He is my brother, brother-king, though not brother-Israelite: and
Ahab valued himself more upon his royalty than on his religion, and others
accordingly.
"Is he thy brother, Ahab? Did he use thee like a
brother when he sent thee that barbarous message? v. 5, 6. Would he have called
thee brother if he had been the conqueror? Would he now have called himself
thy
servant if he had not been reduced to the utmost strait? Canst thou suffer
thyself to be thus imposed upon by a forced and counterfeit submission?"
This word
brother they caught at (v. 33), and were thereby encouraged to
go and fetch him to the king. He that calls him
brother will let him
live. Let poor penitents hear God, in his word, calling them
children (Jer.
31:20), catch at it, echo to it, and call him
Father. Ben-hadad, upon his
submission, shall not only be honourably conveyed (he
took him up into the
chariot), but treated with as an ally (v. 34): he
made a covenant with
him, not consulting God's prophets, or the elders of the land, or himself,
concerning what was fit to be insisted on, but, as if Ben-hadad had been
conqueror, he shall make his own terms. He might now have demanded some of Ben-hadad's
cities, when all of them lay at the mercy of his victorious army; but was
content with the restitution of his own. He might now have demanded the stores,
and treasures, and magazines of Damascus, to augment the wealth and strength of
his own kingdom, but was content with a poor liberty, at his own expense, to
build streets there, a point of honour and no advantage, or no more than what
the kings of Syria had had in Samaria, though they had never had so much power
as he had now to support the demand of it. With this covenant he sent him away,
without so much as reproving him for his blasphemous reflections upon the God of
Israel, for whose honour Ahab had no concern. Note, There are those on whom
success is ill bestowed; they know not how to serve God, or their generation, or
even their own true interests, with their prosperity.
Let favour be shown to
the wicked, yet will he not learn righteousness.
III. The reproof given to Ahab for his clemency to Ben-hadad and
his covenant with him. It was given him by a prophet, in the name of the Lord,
the Jews say by Micaiah, and not unlikely, for Ahab complains of him (ch. 22:8)
that he used to
prophesy evil concerning him. This prophet designed to
reprove Ahab by a parable, that he might oblige him to condemn himself, as
Nathan and the woman of Tekoa did David. To make his parable the more plausible,
he finds it necessary to put himself into the posture of a wounded soldier. 1.
With some difficulty he gets himself wounded, for he would not wound himself
with his own hands. He commanded one of his brother prophets, his
neighbour,
or
companion (for so the word signifies), to smite him, and this in God's
name (v. 35), but finds him not so willing to give the blow as he is to receive
it; he refused to smite him: others, he thought, were forward enough to smite
prophets, they need not smite one another. We cannot but think it was from a
good principle he declined it. "If it must be done, let another do it, not
I; I cannot find it in my heart to strike my friend." Good men can much
more easily receive a wrongful blow than give one; yet because he disobeyed an
express command of God (which was so much the worse if he was himself a
prophet), like that other disobedient prophet (ch. 13:24), he was presently
slain
by a lion, v. 36. This was intended, not only to show, in general, how
provoking disobedience is (Col. 3:6), but to intimate to Ahab (who no doubt was
told the story) that if a good prophet were thus punished for sparing his friend
and God's, when God said,
Smite, of much sorer punishment should a
wicked king be thought worthy, who spared his enemy and God's, when God said,
Smite.
Shall mortal man pretend to
be more just than God, more pure or more
compassionate
than his Maker? We must be merciful as he is merciful, and
not otherwise. The next he met with made no difficulty of smiting him
(Volenti
non fit injuria
He that asks for an injury is not wronged by it)
and did it so that he
wounded him, v. 37. He fetched blood with the blow,
probably in his face. 2. Wounded as he was, and disguised with ashes that he
might not be known to be a prophet, he made his application to the king in a
story wherein he charged himself with such a crime as the king was now guilty of
in sparing Ben-hadad, and waited for the king's judgment upon it. The case in
short is thisA prisoner taken in the battle was committed to his custody by a
man (we may suppose one that had authority over him as his superior officer)
with this charge,
If he be missing, thy life shall be for his life, v.
39. The prisoner has made his escape through his carelessness. Can the chancery
in the king's breast relieve him against his captain, who demands his life in
lieu of the prisoner's? "By no means," says the king, "thou
shouldst either not have undertaken the trust or been more careful and faithful
to it; there is no remedy
(Currat lex
Let the law take its course),
thou hast forfeited thy bond, and execution must go out upon it:
So shall thy
doom be, thou thyself hast decided it." Now the prophet has what he
would have, puts off his disguise, and is known by Ahab himself to be a prophet
(v. 41) and plainly tells him,
"Thou art the man. Is it
my
doom? No, it is
thine; thou thyself hast decided it. Out of thy own mouth
art thou judged. God, thy superior and commander-in-chief, delivered into thy
hands one plainly marked for destruction both by his own pride and God's
providence, and thou hast not carelessly lost him, but wittingly and willingly
dismissed him, and so hast been false to thy trust, and lost the end of thy
victory; expect therefore no other than that
thy life shall go for his life,
which thou hast spared" (and so it did, ch. 22:35), "and thy
people
for his people, whom likewise thou hast spared," and so they did
afterwards, 2 Ki. 10:32, 33. When their other sins brought them low, this came
into the account. There is a time when
keeping back the sword from blood
is
doing the work of the Lord deceitfully, Jer. 48:10. Foolish pity
spoils the city. 3. We are told how Ahab resented this reproof. He
went to
his house heavy and displeased (v. 43), not truly penitent, or seeking to
undo what he had done amiss, but enraged at the prophet, exasperated against God
(as if he had been too severe in the sentence passed upon him), and yet vexed at
himself, every way out of humour, notwithstanding his victory. He who by his
providence had mortified the pride of one king, by his word cast a damp upon the
triumphs of another.
Be wise therefore, O you kings! and be instructed to
serve the Lord with fear and rejoice with trembling, Ps. 2:10, 11.
Chapter 20:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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