Verse 5
1 Chronicles 6:5. Bukki begat
Uzzi — In whose days it is
supposed that the high-
priesthood was translated from
Eleazar’s family to Ithamar’s,
for some cause now unknown, in
whose line it continued for some
successions.
Verse 10
1 Chronicles 6:10. He it is that
executed the priest’s office,
&c. — So did all the rest: but
it is implied that he did it
worthily; he filled his place
well, and valiantly discharged
his office. For it is supposed
this was that Azariah who boldly
opposed the presumption of King
Uzziah, when he invaded the
priest’s office, 2 Chronicles
26:17. This remark may, however,
relate to Johanan, otherwise
called Jehoiada, who is so
highly commended for the good
service which he did to the
house of God, and of the king;
of whom see 2 Kings 11. In the
temple that Solomon built — In
Solomon’s temple; so denominated
to distinguish it from the
second temple, which was built,
or in building, when these books
were written.
Verse 16
1 Chronicles 6:16. The sons of
Levi, Gershom, &c. — This he
repeats as the foundation of the
following genealogy of those
Levites who were not priests.
Verse 19-20
1 Chronicles 6:19-20. The
families of the Levites
according to their fathers —
That is, these were the heads of
the families which sprang from
them. And it is thought the
following catalogue contains the
successive heads or chiefs of
their several families until the
times of David, by whom they
were distributed into several
courses. Zimmah his son — His
grandson by his son Shimei, as
appears from 1 Chronicles
6:42-43; the names of father and
son being often used in
Scripture of more remote
progenitors or successors.
Verse 26
1 Chronicles 6:26. As for
Elkanah, &c. — This was another
Elkanah, son or grandson of the
former Elkanah, and either the
son or brother of Ahimoth, last
mentioned, or of Amasai. Nahath
his son — Called also Toah, 1
Chronicles 6:34, and Tohu, 1
Samuel 1:1. The Elkanah
mentioned in the next verse was
the father of the Prophet
Samuel, whose name therefore
follows.
Verse 31
1 Chronicles 6:31. And these —
Whose names follow, are they
whom David set over the service
— Appointed to minister to God
by singing songs of praise in
his house; after that the ark
had rest — After David had
brought it from the house of
Obed-edom, and settled it in
Jerusalem, 2 Samuel 8:17.
Verse 32
1 Chronicles 6:32. They
ministered before the
tabernacle, &c. — Which David
had prepared for the ark when it
came to Jerusalem. According to
their order — The order which
David himself had constituted a
little before his death, as we
read in the latter end of this
book.
Verse 39
1 Chronicles 6:39. His brother
Asaph — Asaph is here called
Heman’s brother, according to
the Hebrew phraseology, by which
all near relations are brothers;
and because he was of the same
office and employment.
Verse 44
1 Chronicles 6:44. The sons of
Merari stood on the left hand —
The children of the next son of
Levi are here mentioned, who had
the lowest place assigned them,
because they were of the
youngest family. So there were
three principal singers, who
were masters and governors of
the whole choir: Heman,
descended from Koath, was the
prime, who, together with his
sons, stood in the middle:
Asaph, descended from Gershom,
with his sons, stood on his
right hand: and Ethan, (called
also Jeduthun, 1 Chronicles
9:16; 2 Chronicles 35:15, and in
the title of divers Psalms,)
descended from Merari, on the
left.
Verse 48
1 Chronicles 6:48. Their
brethren were appointed, &c. —
Such of them as had no skill in
singing were otherwise employed;
being porters, keepers of the
vessels of the sanctuary,
occupied in preparing the
sacrifices, and such like
things. It is observable, that
in all the genealogies of the
Levites, there is not a word
said of the sons of Moses and
their posterity, he having no
ambition to prefer them unto any
great office.
Verse 49
1 Chronicles 6:49. But Aaron and
his sons offered upon the altar
— The noblest part of the
ministry was reserved for them.
Aaron alone, and his successors
in the high-priesthood, made
atonement and ministered in the
most holy place. But his sons,
the other priests, offered on
the altars of burnt- offering,
and of incense.
Verse 50
1 Chronicles 6:50. These are the
sons of Aaron — Having mentioned
the work of the high-priests, he
here briefly rehearseth the
names of the persons who
successively performed it.
Verse 54
1 Chronicles 6:54. Throughout
their castles — So called, not
only because walled and well
guarded by the country, but
because they and their
possessions were in a particular
manner the care of Divine
Providence. As God was their
portion, so God was their
protector. And a cottage will be
a castle to those that abide
under the shadow of the
Almighty. Theirs was the lot —
Or, the first lot.
Verse 60
1 Chronicles 6:60. All their
cities were thirteen — Of which
eleven are here numbered, and
two more are mentioned Joshua
21:16-17, namely, Jattah and
Gibeon; which, perhaps, were in
ruins when this book was
written.
Verse 66
1 Chronicles 6:66. Had cities of
their coasts — Or, of their
borders, that is, of their
country contained within its
borders: these cities were
assigned the families of the
sons of Kohath, though they were
not priests, for their support
in a lower ministry.
Verse 67
1 Chronicles 6:67. They gave
unto them of the cities of
refuge — That is, the children
of Israel, as it is expressed 1
Chronicles 6:64, gave to the
residue of the Kohathites the
following cities, part out of
Ephraim, and part out of the
half-tribe of Manasseh. As to
the names of these cities,
divers of them differ from those
mentioned as given to them
Joshua 21:15. Nor is it strange
that the names of places should
be changed in so many hundreds
of years as had intervened
between Joshua and this time.
And as to the cities themselves,
it is further to be observed,
that they were dispersed among
all the tribes, partly that
Jacob’s prophecy might be
fulfilled concerning the
scattering of the tribe of Levi,
Genesis 49:7; and partly that
every tribe might have teachers
among them by whom they might be
directed in, and quickened to,
the observation of God’s laws,
upon which their safety and
happiness wholly depended. |