Chapter 6:
| 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 1 Kings 1 Chronicles
2 Kings 6
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A further account of the wondrous
works of Elisha. 1. His making iron to swim (v. 1-7). 2. His disclosing to the
king of Israel the secret counsels of the king of Syria (v. 8-12). 3. His
saving himself out of the hands of those who were sent to apprehend him (v. 13-23).
II. The besieging of Samaria by the Syrians and the great distress the city was
reduced to (v. 24-33). The relief of it is another of the wonders wrought by
Elisha's word, which we shall have the story of in the next chapter. Elisha is
still a great blessing both to church and state, both to the sons of the
prophets and to his prince.
Verses 1-7
Several things may be observed here,
I. Concerning the sons of the prophets, and their condition and
character. The college here spoken of seems to be that at Gilgal, for there
Elisha was (ch. 4:38), and it was near Jordan; and, probably, wherever Elisha
resided as many as could of the sons of the prophets flocked to him for the
advantage of his instructions, counsels, and prayers. Every one would covet to
dwell with him and be near him. Those that would be teachers should lay out
themselves to get the best advantages for learning. Now observe,
1. Their number increased so that they wanted room:
The place
is too strait for us (v. 1)a good hearing, for it is a sign many are
added to them. Elisha's miracles doubtless drew in many. Perhaps they
increased the more now that Gehazi was cashiered, and, it is likely, an honester
man put in his room, to take care of their provisions; for it should seem (by
that instance, ch. 4:43) that Naaman's case was not the only one in which he
grudged his master's generosity.
2. They were humble men and did not affect that which was gay or
great. When they wanted room they did not speak of sending for cedars, and
marble stones, and curious artificers, but only of getting every man a beam, to
run up a plain hut or cottage with. It becomes the sons of the prophets, who
profess to look for great things in the other world, to be content with mean
things in this.
3. They were poor men, and men that had no interest in great
ones It was a sign that Joram was king, and Jezebel ruled too, or the sons of
the prophets, when they wanted room, would have needed only to apply to the
government, not to consult among themselves about the enlargement of their
buildings. God's prophets have seldom been the world's favourites. Nay, so
poor were they that they had not wherewithal to hire workmen (but must leave
their studies, and work for themselves), no, nor to buy tools, but must borrow
of their neighbours. Poverty then is no bar to prophecy.
4. They were industrious men, and willing to take pains. They
desired not to live, like idle drones (idle
monks, I might have said),
upon the labours of others, but only desired leave of their president to work
for themselves. As the sons of the prophets must not be so taken up with
contemplation as to render themselves unfit for action, so much less must they
so indulge themselves in their ease as to be averse to labour. He that must eat
or die must work or starve, 2 Th. 3:8, 10. Let no man think an honest employment
either a burden or disparagement.
5. They were men that had a great value and veneration for
Elisha; though they were themselves prophets, they paid much deference to him.
(1.) They would not go about to build at all without his leave, v. 2. It is good
for us all to be suspicious of our own judgment, even when we think we have most
reason for it, and to be desirous of the advice of those who are wiser and more
experienced; and it is especially commendable in the sons of the prophets to
take their fathers along with them, and to act in all things of moment under
their direction,
permissu superiorumby permission of their superiors.
(2.) They would not willingly go to fell timber without his company:
"Go
with thy servants (v. 3), not only to advise us in any exigence, but to keep
good order among us, that, being under they eye, we may behave as becomes us."
Good disciples desire to be always under good discipline.
6. They were honest men, and men that were in care to give all
men their own. When one of them, accidentally fetching too fierce a stroke (as
those that work seldom are apt to be violent), threw off his axe-head into the
water, he did not say, "It was a mischance, and who can help it? It was the
fault of the helve, and the owner deserved to stand to the loss." No, he
cries out with deep concern,
Alas, master! For it was borrowed, v. 5. Had
the axe been his own, it would only have troubled him that he could not be
further serviceable to his brethren; but now, besides that, it troubles him that
he cannot be just to the owner, to whom he ought to be not only just but
grateful. Note, We ought to be as careful of that which is borrowed as of that
which is our own, that it receives no damage, because we must love our neighbour
as ourselves and do as we would be done by. It is likely this prophet was poor,
and had not wherewithal to pay for the axe, which made the loss of it so much
the greater trouble. To those that have an honest mind the sorest grievance of
poverty is not so much their own want or disgrace as their being by it rendered
unable to pay their just debts.
II. Concerning the father of the prophets, Elisha. 1. That he
was a man of great condescension and compassion; he went with the sons of the
prophets to the woods, when they desired his company, v. 3. Let no man,
especially no minister, think himself to great to stoop to do good, but be
tender to all. 2. That he was a man of great power; he could make iron to swim,
contrary to its nature (v. 6), for the God of nature is not tied up to its laws.
He did not throw the helve after the hatchet, but cut down a new stick, and cast
it into the river. We need not double the miracle by supposing that the stick
sunk to fetch up the iron, it was enough that it was a signal of the divine
summons to the iron to rise. God's grace can thus raise the stony iron heart
which has sunk into the mud of this world, and raise up affections naturally
earthly, to things above.
Verses 8-12
Here we have Elisha, with his spirit of prophecy, serving the
king, as before helping the sons of the prophets; for that, as other gifts, is
given to every man to profit withal; and, whatever abilities any man has of
doing good, he is by them made a debtor both to the wise and unwise. Observe
here,
I. How the king of Israel was informed by Elisha of all the
designs and motions of his enemy, the king of Syria, more effectually than he
could have been by the most vigilant and faithful spies. If the king of Syria,
in a secret council of war, determined in which place to make an inroad upon the
coasts of Israel, where he thought it would be the greatest surprise and they
would be least able to make resistance, before his forces could receive his
orders the king of Israel had notice of them from Elisha, and so had opportunity
of preventing the mischief; and many a time, v. 8-10. See here, 1. That the
enemies of God's Israel are politic in their devices, and restless in their
attempts, against him.
They shall not know, nor see, till we come in the
midst among them, and slay them, Neh. 4:11. 2. All those devices are known
to God, even those that are deepest laid. He knows not only what men do, but
what they design, and has many ways of countermining them. 3. It is a great
advantage to us to be warned of our danger, that we may stand upon our guard
against it. The work of God's prophets is to give us warning; if, being
warned, we do not save ourselves, it is our own fault, and our blood will be
upon our own head. The king of Israel would regard the warnings Elisha gave him
of his danger by the Syrians, but not the warnings he gave him of his danger by
his sins. Such warnings are little heeded by the most; they will save themselves
from death, but not from hell.
II. How the king of Syria resented this. He suspected treachery
among his senators, and that his counsels were betrayed, v. 11. But one of his
servants, that had heard, by Naaman and others, of Elisha's wondrous works,
concludes it must needs be he that gave this intelligence to the king of Israel,
v. 12. What could not he discover who could tell Gehazi his thoughts? Here a
confession of the boundless knowledge, as before of the boundless power, of
Israel's God, is extorted from Syrians. Nothing done, said, thought, by any
person, in any place, at any time, is out of the reach of God's cognizance.
Verses 13-23
Here is, 1. The great force which the king of Syria sent to
seize Elisha. He found out where he was, at Dothan (v. 13), which was not far
from Samaria; thither he sent a great host, who were to come upon him by night,
and to bring him dead or alive, v. 14. Perhaps he had heard that when only one
captain and his fifty men were sent to take Elijah they were baffled in the
attempt, and therefore he sent an
army against Elisha, as if the fire
from heaven that consumed fifty men could not as easily consume 50,000. Naaman
could tell him that Elisha dwelt not in any strong-hold, nor was attended with
any guards, nor had any such great interest in the people that he needed to fear
a tumult among them; what occasion then was there for this great force? But thus
he hoped to make sure of him, especially coming upon him by surprise. Foolish
man! Did he believe that Elisha had informed the king of Israel of his secret
counsels or not? If not, what quarrel had he with him? If he did, could he be so
weak as to imagine that Elisha would not discover the designs laid against
himself, and that, having interest enough in heaven to discover them, he would
not have interest enough to defeat them? Those that fight against God, his
people, and prophet, know not what they do.
II. The grievous fright which the prophet's servant was in,
when he perceived the city surrounded by the Syrians, and the effectual course
which the prophet took to pacify him and free him from his fears. It seems,
Elisha accustomed his servant to rise early, that is the way to bring something
to pass, and to do the work of a day in its day. Being up, we may suppose he
heard the noise of soldiers, and thereupon looked out, and was aware of an army
compassing the city (v. 15), with great assurance no doubt of success, and that
they should have this troublesome prophet in their hands presently. Now observe,
1. What a consternation he was in. He ran straight to Elisha, to bring him an
account of it:
"Alas, master!" (said he)
"what shall we
do? We are undone, it is to no purpose to think either of fighting or
flying, but we must unavoidably fall into their hands." Had he but studied
David's Psalms, which were then extant, he might have learnt
not to be
afraid of 10,000 of people (Ps. 3:6), no, not of
a host encamped against
him, Ps. 27:3. Had he considered that he was embarked with his master, by
whom God had done great things, and whom he would not now leave to
fall into
the hands of the uncircumcised, and who, having saved others, would no doubt
save himself, he would not have been thus at a loss. If he had only said,
What
shall I do? it would have been like that of the disciples:
Lord, save us,
we perish; but he needed not to include his master as being in distress, nor
to say,
What shall we do? 2. How his master quieted him, (1.) By word.
What he said to him (v. 16) is spoken to all the faithful servants of God, when
without
are fightings and within are fears: "Fear not with that fear which has
torment and amazement,
for those that are with us, to protect us,
are
more than those that are against us, to destroy usangels unspeakably more
numerousGod infinitely more powerful." When we are magnifying the causes
of our fear we ought to possess ourselves with clear, and great, and high
thoughts of God and the invisible world.
If God be for us, we know what
follows, Rom. 8:31. (2.) By vision, v. 17. [1.] It seems Elisha was much
concerned for the satisfaction of his servant. Good men desire, not only to be
easy themselves, but to have those about them easy. Elisha had lately parted
with his old man, and this, having newly come into his service, had not the
advantage of experience; his master was therefore desirous to give him other
convincing evidence of that omnipotence which employed him and was therefore
employed for him. Note, Those whose faith is strong ought tenderly to consider
and compassionate those who are weak and of a timorous spirit, and to do what
they can to strengthen their hands. [2.] He saw himself safe, and wished no more
than that his servant might see what he saw, a guard of angels round about him;
such as were his master's convoy to the gates of heaven were his protectors
against the gates of hell
chariots of fire, and horses of fire. Fire is
both dreadful and devouring; that power which was engaged for Elisha's
protection could both terrify and consume the assailants. As angels are God's
messengers, so they are his soldiers, his hosts (Gen. 32:2), his legions, or
regiments, (Mt. 26:53), for the good of his people. [3.] For the satisfaction of
his servant there needed no more than the opening of his eyes;
that
therefore he prayed for, and obtained for him:
Lord, open his eyes that he
may see. The eyes of his body were open, and with them he saw the danger.
"Lord, open the eyes of his faith, that with them he may see the protection
we are under." Note,
First, The greatest kindness we can do for
those that are fearful and faint-hearted is to pray for them, and so to
recommend them to the mighty grace of God.
Secondly, The opening of our
eyes will be the silencing of our fears. In the dark we are most apt to be
frightened. The clearer sight we have of the sovereignty and power of heaven the
less we shall fear the calamities of this earth.
III. The shameful defeat which Elisha gave to the host of
Syrians who came to seize him. They thought to make a prey of him, but he made
fools of them, perfectly played with them, so far was he from fearing them or
any damage by them. 1. He prayed to God to smite them with blindness, and they
were all struck blind immediately, not stone-blind, nor so as to be themselves
aware that they were blind, for they could see the light, but their sight was so
altered that they could not know the persons and places they were before
acquainted with, v. 18. They were so confounded that those among them whom they
depended upon for information did not know this place to be Dothan nor this
person to be Elisha, but
groped at noon day as in the night (Isa. 59:10;
Job 12:24, 25); their memory failed them, and their distinguishing faculty. See
the power of God over the minds and understanding of men, both ways; he
enlightened the eyes of Elisha's friend, and darkened the eyes of his foes,
that they might see indeed, but not perceive, Isa. 6:9
For this twofold
judgment Christ came into this world,
that those who see not might see, and
that those who see might be made blind (Jn. 9:39), a savour of life to some,
of death to others.
2. When they were thus bewildered and confounded he led them to
Samaria (v. 19), promising that he would show them the man whom they sought, and
he did so. He did not lie to them when he told them,
This is not the way, nor
is this the city where Elisha is; for he had now come out of the city; and
if they would see him, they must go to another city to which he would direct
them. Those that fight against God and his prophets deceive themselves, and are
justly given up to delusions. 3. When he had brought them to Samaria he prayed
to God so to open their eyes and restore them their memories that they might see
where they were (v. 20),
and behold, to their great terror,
they were
in the midst of Samaria, where, it is probable, there was a standing force
sufficient to cut them all off, or make them prisoners of war. Satan, the god of
this world, blinds men's eyes, and so deludes them into their own ruin; but,
when God enlightens their eyes, they then see themselves in the midst of their
enemies, captives to Satan and in danger of hell, though before they thought
their condition good. The enemies of God and his church, when they fancy
themselves ready to triumph, will find themselves conquered and triumphed over.
4. When he had them at his mercy he made it appear that he was influenced by a
divine goodness as well as a divine power. (1.) He took care to protect them
from the danger into which he had brought them, and was content to show them
what he could have done; he needed not the sword of an angel to avenge his
cause, the sword of the king of Israel is at his service if he please (v. 21):
My
father (so, respectfully does the king now speak to him, though, soon after,
he swore his death),
shall I smite them? And, again, as if he longed for
the assault,
Shall I smite them? Perhaps, he remembered how God was
displeased at his father for
letting go out of his hands those whom he
had put it in his power to destroy, and he would not offend in like manner; yet
such a reverence has he for the prophet that he will not strike a stroke without
his commission. But the prophet would by no means suffer him to meddle with
them; they were brought hither to be convinced and shamed, not to be killed, v.
22. Had they been
his prisoners, taken captive by his sword and bow, when
they asked quarter it would have been barbarous to deny, and, when he had given
it to them, it would have been perfidious to do them any hurt, and against the
laws of arms to kill men in cool blood. But they were not his prisoners; they
were God's prisoners and the prophet's, and therefore he must do them no
harm. Those that humble themselves under God's hand take the best course to
secure themselves. (2.) He took care to provide for them; he ordered the king to
treat them handsomely and then dismiss them fairly, which he did, v. 23. [1.] It
was the king's praise that he was so obsequious to the prophet, contrary to
his inclination, and, as it seemed, to his interest, 1 Sa. 24:19. Nay, so
willing was he to oblige Elisha that, whereas he was ordered openly to set
bread
and water before them (which are good fare for captives), he
prepared
great provision for them, for the credit of his court and country and of
Elisha. [2.] It was the prophet's praise that he was so generous to his
enemies, who, though they came to take him, could not but go away admiring him,
as both the mightiest and kindest man they ever met with. The great duty of
loving enemies, and doing good to those that hate us, was both commanded in the
Old Testament (Prov. 25:21, 22,
If thy enemy hunger, feed him, Ex. 23:4,
5) and practised, as here by Elisha. His predecessor had given a specimen of
divine justice when he called for flames of fire on the heads of his persecutors
to consume them, but he have a specimen of divine mercy in heaping coals of fire
on the heads of his persecutors to melt them. Let not us then be
overcome of
evil, but overcome evil with good.
IV. The good effect this had, for the present, upon the Syrians.
They
came no more into the land of Israel (v. 23), namely, upon this
errand, to take Elisha; they saw it was to no purpose to attempt that, nor would
any of their bands be persuaded to make an assault on so great and good a man.
The most glorious victory over an enemy is to turn him into a friend.
Verses 24-33
This last paragraph of this chapter should, of right, have been
the first of the next chapter, for it begins a new story, which is there
continued and concluded. Here is,
I. The siege which the king of Syria laid to Samaria and the
great distress which the city was reduced to thereby. The Syrians had soon
forgotten the kindnesses they had lately received in Samaria, and very
ungratefully, for aught that appears without any provocation, sought the
destruction of it, v. 24. There are base spirits that can never feel obliged.
The country, we may suppose, was plundered and laid waste when this capital city
was brought to the last extremity, v. 25. The dearth which had of late been in
the land was probably the occasion of the emptiness of their stores, or the
siege was so sudden that they had not time to lay in provisions; so that, while
the sword devoured without, the famine within was more grievous (Lam. 4:9): for,
it should seem, the Syrians designed not to storm the city, but to starve it. So
great was the scarcity that an ass's head, that has but little flesh on it and
that unsavoury, unwholesome, and ceremonially unclean, was sold for five pounds,
and a small quantity of fitches, or lentiles, or some such coarse corn, then
called
dove's dung, no more of it than the quantity of six eggs, for
five pieces of silver, about twelve or fifteen shillings. Learn to value plenty,
and to be thankful for it; see how contemptible money is, when, in time of
famine, it is so freely parted with for anything that is eatable.
II. The sad complaint which a poor woman had to make to the
king, in the extremity of the famine. He was
passing by upon the wall to
give orders for the mounting of the guard, the posting of the archers, the
repair of the breaches, and the like, when a woman of the city cried to him,
Help,
my lord, O king! v. 26. Whither should the subject, in distress, go for help
but to the prince, who is, by office, the protector of right and the avenger of
wrong? He returns but a melancholy answer (v. 27):
If the Lord do not help
thee, whence shall I? Some think it was a
quarrelling word, and the
language of his fretfulness: "Why dost thou expect anything from me, when
God himself deals thus hardly with us?" Because he could not help her as he
would, out of the floor or the wine-press, he would not help her at all. We must
take heed of being made cross by afflictive providences. It rather seems to be a
quieting word: "Let us be content, and make the best of our
affliction, looking up to God, for, till he help us, I cannot help thee."
1. He laments the emptiness of the floor and the wine-press. These were not as
they had been; even the king's failed. We read (v. 23) of great provisions
which he had a command, sufficient for the entertainment of an army, yet now he
has not wherewithal to relieve one poor woman. Scarcity sometimes follows upon
great plenty; we cannot be sure that
to-morrow shall be as this day, Isa.
56:12; Ps. 30:6. 2. He acknowledges himself thereby disabled to help, unless God
would help them. Note, Creatures are helpless things without God, for every
creature is that, all that, and only that, which he makes it to be. However,
though he cannot help her, he is willing to hear her (v. 28):
"What ails
thee? Is there anything singular in thy case, or dost thou fare worse than
thy neighbours?" Truly yes; she and one of her neighbours had made a
barbarous agreement, that, all provisions failing, they should boil and eat her
son first and then her neighbour's; hers was eaten (who can think of it
without horror?) and now her neighbour hid hers, v. 28, 29. See an instance of
the dominion which the flesh has got above the spirit, when the most natural
affections of the mind may be thus overpowered by the natural appetites of the
body. See the word of God fulfilled; among the threatenings of God's judgments
upon Israel for their sins this was one (Deu. 28:53-57), that they should eat
the flesh of their own children, which one would think incredible, yet it came
to pass.
III. The king's indignation against Elisha upon this occasion.
He lamented the calamity,
rent his clothes, and had sackcloth upon his flesh
(v. 30), as one heartily concerned for the misery of his people, and that it was
not in his power to help them; but he did not lament his own iniquity, nor the
iniquity of his people, which was the procuring cause of the calamity; he was
not sensible that his
ways and his doings had procured this to himself; this
is his wickedness, for it is bitter. The foolishness of man perverteth his way,
and then
his heart fretteth against the Lord. Instead of vowing to pull
down the calves at Dan and Beth-el, or letting the law have its course against
the prophets of Baal and of the groves, he swears
the death of Elisha, v.
31. Why, what is the matter? What had Elisha done? his head is the most innocent
and valuable in all Israel, and yet that must be devoted, and made an anathema.
Thus in the days of the persecuting emperors, when the empire groaned under any
extraordinary calamity, the fault was laid on the Christians, and they were
doomed to destruction.
Christianos ad leonesAway with the Christians to
the lions. Perhaps Jehoram was in this heat against Elisha because he had
foretold this judgment, or had persuaded him to hold out, and not surrender, or
rather because he did not, by his prayers, raise the siege, and relieve the
city, which he though he could do but would not; whereas till they repented and
reformed, and were ready for deliverance, they had no reason to expect that the
prophet should pray for it.
IV. The foresight Elisha had of the king's design against him,
v. 32. He sat in his house well composed, and the elders with him, well employed
no doubt, while the king was like a wild bull in a net, or like the troubled sea
when it cannot rest; he told the elders there was an officer coming from the
king to cut off his head, and bade them stop him at the door, and not let him
in, for the king his master was just following him, to revoke the order, as we
may suppose. The same spirit of prophecy that enabled Elisha to tell him what
was done at a distance authorized him to call the king
the son of a murderer,
which, unless we could produce such an extraordinary commission, it is not for
us to initiate; far be it from us to despise dominion and to speak evil of
dignities. He appealed to the elders whether he had deserved so ill at the king's
hands: "See whether in this he be not the son of a murderer?" For
what
evil had Elisha done? He
had not desired the woeful day, Jer. 17:16.
V. The king's passionate speech, when he came to prevent the
execution of his edict for the beheading of Elisha. He seems to have been in a
struggle between his convictions and his corruptions, knew not what to say, but,
seeing things brought to the last extremity, he even abandoned himself to
despair (v. 33):
This evil is of the Lord. Therein his notions were right
and well applied; it is a general truth that all penal evil is of the Lord, as
the first cause, and sovereign judge (Amos 3:6), and this we ought to apply to
particular cases: if all evil, then this evil, whatever it is we are now
groaning under, whoever are the instruments, God is the principal agent of it.
But his inference from this truth was foolish and wicked:
What should I wait
for the Lord any longer? When Eli, and David, and Job, said,
It is of the
Lord, they grew patient upon it, but this bad man grew outrageous upon it:
"I will neither fear worse nor expect better, for worse cannot come and
better never will come: we are all undone, and there is no remedy." It is
an unreasonable thing to be weary of waiting for God, for he is a God of
judgment, and blessed are all those that wait for him.
Chapter 6:
| 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 1 Kings 1 Chronicles
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
