Chapter 5:
| 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 30 31 Ruth 2 Samuel
1 Samuel 5
Complete Concise
It is now time to enquire what has become of the ark of God; we
cannot but think that we shall hear more of that sacred treasure. I should have
thought the next news would have been that all Israel, from Dan to Beersheba,
had gathered together as one man, with a resolution to bring it back, or die in
the attempt; but we find not any motion made of that kind, so little was there
of zeal or courage left among them. Nay, we do not find that they desired a
treaty with the Philistines about the ransom of it, or offered any thing in lieu
of it. "It is gone, and let it go." Many have softness enough to
lament the loss of the ark that have not hardiness enough to take one step
towards the recovery of it, any more than Israel here. If the ark will help
itself it may, for they will not help it. Unworthy they were of the name of
Israelites that could thus tamely part with the glory of Israel. God would
therefore take the work into his own hands and plead his own cause, since men
would not appear for him. We are told in this chapter, I. How the Philistines
triumphed over the ark (v. 1, 2), and, II. How the ark triumphed over the
Philistines, 1. Over Dagon their god (v. 3-5). 2. Over the Philistines
themselves, who were sorely plagued with emerods, and made weary of the ark; the
men of Ashdod first (v. 6, 7), then the men of Gath (v. 8, 9), and lastly those
of Ekron, which forced them at length upon a resolution to send the ark back to
the land of Israel; for when God judgeth he will overcome.
Verses 1-5
Here is, I. The Philistines' triumph over the ark, which they
were the more pleased, the more proud, to be now masters of, because before the
battle they were possessed with a great fear of it, ch. 4:7. When they had it in
their hands God restrained them, that they did not offer any violence to it, did
not break it to pieces, as the Israelites were ordered to do by the idols of the
heathen, but showed some respect to it, and carefully carried it to a place of
safety. Whether their curiosity led them to open it, and to read what was
written with the finger of God on the two tables of stone that were in it, we
are not told; perhaps they looked no further than the golden outside and the
cherubim that covered it, like children that are more affected with the fine
binding of their bibles than with the precious matter contained in them. They
carried it to Ashdod, one of their five cities, and that in which Dagon's
temple was; there they placed the ark of God,
by Dagon (v. 2), either 1.
As a sacred thing, which they designed to pay some religious respect to, in
conjunction with Dagon; for the gods of the heathen were never looked upon as
averse to partners. Though the nations would not change their gods, yet they
would multiply them and add to them. But they were mistaken in the God of Israel
when, in putting his ark by Dagon's image, they intended to do him honour; for
he is not worshipped at all if he is not worshipped alone.
The Lord our God
is one Lord. Or rather, 2. They placed it there as a trophy of victory, in
honour of Dagon their god, to whom no doubt they intended to offer a great
sacrifice, as they had done when they had taken Samson (Jdg. 16:23, 24),
boasting that as then they had triumphed over Israel's champion so now over
Israel's God. What a reproach was this to God's great name! what a
disgrace
to the throne of his glory! Shall the ark, the symbol of God's presence,
be a prisoner to Dagon, a dunghill deity? (1.) So it is, because God will show
of how little account the ark of the covenant is if the covenant itself be
broken and neglected; even sacred signs are not things that either he is tied to
or we can trust to. (2.) So it is for a time, that God may have so much the more
glory, in reckoning with those that thus affront him, and get him honour upon
them. Having punished Israel, that betrayed the ark, by giving it into the hands
of the Philistines, he will next deal with those that abused it, and will fetch
it out of their hands again. Thus even the
wrath of man shall praise him;
and he is bringing about his own glory even when he seems to neglect it, Ps.
76:10. Out of the eater shall come forth meat.
II. The ark's triumph over Dagon. Once and again Dagon was
made to fall before it. If they designed to do honour to the ark, God thereby
showed that he valued not their honour, nor would he accept it; for he will be
worshipped, not
with any god, but
above all gods.
He owes a
shame (as bishop Hall expresses it)
to those who will be making matches
betwixt himself and Belial. But they really designed to affront it, and
though for some hours Dagon stood by the ark, and it is likely stood above it
(the ark, as its footstool), yet the next morning, when the worshippers of Dagon
came to pay their devotions to his shrine, they found their triumphing short,
Job 20:5.
1. Dagon, that is, the image (for that was all the god), had
fallen
upon his face to the earth before the ark, v. 3. God had seemed to forget
the ark, but see how the Psalmist speaks of his appearing, at last, to vindicate
his own honour. When he had delivered his strength into captivity, and all
seemed going to ruin,
then the Lord awaked as one out of sleep, and like a
mighty man that shouteth by reason of wine, Ps. 78:59-65. And therefore he
prevented the utter desolations of the Jewish church, because he
feared the
wrath of the enemy, Deu. 32:26, 27. Great care was taken, in setting up the
images of their gods, to fix them. The prophet takes notice of it, Isa. 41:7,
He
fastened it with nails that it should not be moved; and again, Isa. 46:7.
And yet Dagon's fastenings stood him in no stead. The ark of God triumphs over
him upon his own dunghill, in his own temple. Down he comes before the ark,
directly towards it (though the ark was set on one side of him), as it were,
pointing to the conqueror, to whom he is constrained to yield and do homage.
Note, The kingdom of Satan will certainly fall before the kingdom of Christ,
error before truth, profaneness before godliness, and corruption before grace in
the hearts of the faithful. When the interests of religion seem to be run down
and ready to sink, yet even then we may be confident that the day of their
triumph will come. Great is the truth, and will prevail. Dagon by falling
prostrate before the ark of God, which was a posture of adoration, did as it
were direct his worshippers to pay their homage to the God of Israel, as
greater
than all gods. See Ex. 18:11.
2. The priests, finding their idol on the floor, make all the
haste they can, before it be known, to set him in his place again. A sorry silly
thing it was to make a god of, which, when it was down, wanted help to get up
again; and sottish wretches those were that could pray for help from that idol
that needed, and in effect implored, their help. How could they attribute their
victory to the power of Dagon when Dagon himself could not keep his own ground
before the ark? But they are resolved Dagon shall be their god still, and
therefore set him in his place. Bishop Hall observes hence, It is just with God
that those who want grace shall want wit too; and it is the work of superstition
to turn men into the stocks and stones they worship.
Those that make them are
like unto them. What is it that the great upholders of the antichristian
kingdom are doing at this day but heaving Dagon up, and labouring to set him in
his place again, and healing the deadly wound that has been given to the beast?
but if the reformation be the cause of God, before which it has begun to fall,
it shall not prevail, but shall surely fall before it.
3. The next night Dagon fell the second time, v. 4. They rose
early, either, as usual, to make their addresses to their god, or earlier than
usual, being impatient to know whether Dagon had kept his standing this night;
and, to their great confusion, they find his case worse now than before. Whether
the matter of which the image was made was apt to break or no, so it was that
the head and hands were
cut off upon the threshold, so that nothing
remained but the stump, or, as the margin reads it,
the fishy part of
Dagon; for (as many learned men conjecture) the upper part of this image was in
a human shape, the lower in the shape of a fish, as mermaids are painted. Such
strong delusions were idolaters given up to, so vain were they in their
imaginations, and so wretchedly darkened were their foolish hearts, as to
worship the images, not only of creatures, but of nonentities, the mere figments
of fancy. Well, the misshapen monster is by this fall made to appear, (1.) Very
ridiculous, and worthy to be despised. A pretty figure Dagon made now, when the
fall had anatomized him, and shown how the human part and the fishy part were
artificially put together, which perhaps the ignorant devotees had been made to
believe was done by miracle! (2.) Very impotent, and unworthy to be prayed to or
trusted in; for his losing his head and hands proved him utterly destitute both
of wisdom and power, and for ever disabled either to advise or act for his
worshippers. This they got by setting Dagon in his place again; they had better
have let him alone when he was down. But those can speed no better that contend
with God, and will set up that which he is throwing down, Mal. 1:4. God, by
this, magnified his ark and made it honourable, when they vilified and made it
contemptible. He also showed what will be the end of all that which is set up in
opposition to him.
Gird yourselves, but
you shall be broken to pieces,
Isa. 8:9.
4. The threshold of Dagon's temple was ever looked upon as
sacred, and not to be trodden on, v. 5. Some think that reference is had to this
superstitious usage of Dagon's worshippers in Zep. 1:9, where God threatens to
punish those who, in imitation of them, leaped over the threshold. One would
have thought that this incontestable proof of the ark's victory over Dagon
would convince the Philistines of their folly in worshipping such a senseless
thing, and that henceforward they would pay their homage to the conqueror; but,
instead of being reformed, they were hardened in their idolatry, and, as evil
men and seducers are wont to do, became worse and worse, 2 Tim. 3:13. Instead of
despising Dagon, for the threshold's sake that beheaded him, they were almost
ready to worship the threshold because it was the block on which he was
beheaded, and will never set their feet on that on which Dagon lost his head,
shaming those who
tread under foot the blood of the covenant and trample
on things truly sacred. Yet this piece of superstition would help to perpetuate
the remembrance of Dagon's disgrace; for, with the custom, the reason would be
transmitted to posterity, and the children that should be born, enquiring why
the threshold of Dagon's temple must not be trodden on, would be told that
Dagon fell before the ark of the Lord. Thus God would have honour even out of
their superstition. We are not told that they repaired the broken image; it is
probable that they sent the art of God away first, and then they patched it up
again, and set it in its place; for, it seems, they
cannot deliver their
souls, nor say, Is there not a lie in our right hand? Isa. 44:20.
Verses 6-12
The downfall of Dagon (if the people had made a good use of it,
and had been brought by it to repent of their idolatries and to humble
themselves before the God of Israel and seek his face) might have prevented the
vengeance which God here proceeds to take upon them for the indignities done to
his ark, and their obstinate adherence to their idol, in defiance of the
plainest conviction.
Lord, when thy hand is lifted up they will not see, but
they shall see, Isa. 26:11. And, if they will not see the glory, they shall
feel the weight, of God's hand, for so the Philistines did.
The hand of the
Lord was heavy upon them (v. 6), and he not only convinced them of their
folly, but severely chastised their insolence. 1.
He destroyed them, that
is, cut many of them off by sudden death, those, we may suppose, that had most
triumphed in the captivity of the ark. This is distinguished from the disease
with which others were smitten. At Gath it is called
a great destruction
(v. 9),
a deadly destruction, v. 11. And it is expressly said (v. 12)
that those who were
smitten with the emerods were the men that died not
by the other
destruction, which probably was the pestilence. They boasted
of the great slaughter which their sword had made among the Israelites, ch.
4:10. But God lets them know that though he does not see fit to draw Israel's
sword against them (they were unworthy to be employed), yet God had a sword of
his own, with which he could make a no less dreadful execution among them, which
if he whet, and
his hand take hold on judgment, he will render vengeance to
his enemies, Deu. 32:41, 42. Note, Those that contend with God, his ark, and
his Israel, will infallibly be ruined at last. If conviction conquer not,
destruction shall. 2. Those that were not destroyed
he smote with emerods
(v. 6),
in their secret parts (v. 9), so grievous that (v. 12) the
cry
went up to heaven, that is, it might be heard a great way off, and perhaps,
in the extremity of their pain and misery, they cried, not to Dagon, but to the
God of heaven. The Psalmist, speaking of this sore judgment upon the
Philistines, describes it thus: God
smote his enemies in the hinder parts,
and
put them to a perpetual reproach, Ps. 78:66. The emerods (which we
call the piles, and perhaps it was then a more grievous disease than it is now)
is threatened among the judgments that would be the fruit of the curse, Deu.
28:27. It was both a painful and shameful disease; a vile disease for vile
deserts. By it God would humble their pride, and put contempt upon them, as they
had done upon his ark. The disease was epidemical, and perhaps, among them, a
new disease.
Ashdod was smitten, and the coasts thereof, the country
round. For contempt of God's ordinances,
many are weak and sick, and many
sleep, 1 Co. 11:30. 3. The men of Ashdod were soon aware that it was
the
hand of God, the God of Israel, v. 7. Thus they were constrained to
acknowledge his power and dominion, and confess themselves within his
jurisdiction, and yet they would not renounce Dagon and submit to Jehovah; but
rather, now that he touched their bone and their flesh, and in a tender part,
they were ready to curse him to his face, and instead of making their peace with
him, and courting the stay of his ark upon better terms, they desired to get
clear of it, as the Gadarenes, who, when they had lost their swine, desired
Christ to
depart out of their coasts. Carnal hearts, when they smart
under the judgments of God, would rather, if it were possible, put him far from
them than enter into covenant and communion with him, and make him their friend.
Thus the men of Ashdod resolve,
The ark of the God of Israel shall not abide
with us. 4. It is resolved to change the place of its imprisonment. A great
council was called, and the question proposed to all the lords was, "What
shall be we with the ark?" And at last it was agreed that it should be
carried to Gath, v. 8. Some superstitious conceit they had that the fault was in
the place, and that the ark would be better pleased with another lodging,
further off from Dagon's temple; and therefore, instead of returning it, as
they should have done, to its own place, they contrive to send it to another
place.
Gath is pitched upon, a place famed for a race of giants, but
their strength and stature are no fence against the pestilence and the emerods:
the men of that city were smitten,
both great and small (v. 9), both
dwarfs and giants, all alike to God's judgments; none so great as to over-top
them, none so small as to be over-looked by them. 5. They were all at last weary
of the ark, and very willing to get rid of it. It was sent from Gath to Ekron,
and, coming by order of council, the Ekronites could not refuse it, but were
much exasperated against their great men for sending them such a fatal present
(v. 10):
They have sent it to us to slay us and our people. The ark had
the tables of the law in it; and nothing more welcome to faithful Israelites
than the word of God (to them it is
a savour of life unto life), but to
uncircumcised Philistines, that persist in enmity to God, nothing more dreadful
nor unwelcome: to them it is
a savour of death unto death. A general
assembly is instantly called, to advise about
sending the ark again to its
place, v. 11. While they are consulting about it, the hand of God is doing
execution; and their contrivances to evade the judgment do but spread it. Many
drop down dead among them. Many more are raging ill of the emerods, v. 12. What
shall they do? Their triumphs in the captivity of the ark are soon turned into
lamentations, and they are as eager to quit it as ever they had been to seize
it. Note, God can easily make Jerusalem a burdensome stone to all that heave at
it, Zec. 12:3. Those that fight against God will soon have enough of it, and,
first or last, will be made to know that none ever hardened their hearts against
him and prospered. The wealth that is got by fraud and injustice, especially
that which is got by sacrilege and robbing God, though swallowed greedily, and
rolled under the tongue as a sweet morsel, must be vomited up again; for, till
it be, the sinner shall not
feel quietness in his belly, Job 20:15-20.
Chapter 5:
| 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 30 31 Ruth 2 Samuel
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