Verse 1-2
1 Kings 9:1-2. And it came to
pass when Solomon had finished,
&c. — Or rather, according to 2
Chronicles 7:11, Thus Solomon
finished the house of the Lord,
&c., and concluded all with the
foregoing prayer, and the great
festival which he kept. That the
Lord appeared to Solomon the
second time — That is, the
second time in a dream or
vision; the divine message,
mentioned 1 Kings 6:11, having
been imparted unto him by some
prophet or messenger sent from
God on that errand. Accordingly
this appearance, like the former
at Gibeon, is said (2 Chronicles
7:10) to have been made by
night, and in all probability
the very night after he had
finished the solemnities of his
festival, as the other had been.
God had given a real answer to
Solomon’s prayer, and tokens of
his acceptance of it,
immediately, by the fire from
heaven which consumed the
sacrifice, (2 Chronicles 7:1,)
but here we have a more express
and distinct answer to it.
Verse 3
1 Kings 9:3. The Lord said, I
have heard thy prayer — This
shows that the first verse is to
be understood as we have just
stated: for otherwise we must
suppose this appearance of God
to Solomon to have taken place,
and this answer to have been
given to his prayer, eleven
years after he had finished the
house, and addressed that prayer
to him at the dedication of it;
which is very unlikely. I have
hallowed this house — By my
glorious presence in the cloud,
and by my acceptance of thy
sacrifices. I have sanctified it
to my proper use and service.
Solomon had dedicated it, but it
was God’s prerogative to hallow
or consecrate it. Men cannot
make a place holy; yet what we
in sincerity devote to God, we
may hope he will graciously
accept as his. To put my name
there for ever — As long as the
Mosaic dispensation lasts:
whereas hitherto my worship has
been successively in several
places. And mine eyes — My
watchful and gracious
providence. My heart — My true
and tender affection. Shall be
there perpetually — Shall be
toward this place and people,
upon condition of your
obedience, as it here follows.
Apply this to persons, to God’s
living temples: those whom he
hallows or sanctifies; whom he
sets apart for himself, in
consequence of their repentance
and faith in Jesus, have his eye
upon and his heart toward them;
they have his love and his care,
and this perpetually.
Verse 4-5
1 Kings 9:4-5. If thou wilt walk
before me, &c. — He shows him
that he and his people were for
the future upon their good
behaviour: Let them not be
secure now, as if they might
conduct themselves as they
please, having the temple of the
Lord, the temple of the Lord
among them, Jeremiah 7:4. No:
this house was designed to
protect them in their allegiance
to God, not in their rebellion
against him, or disobedience to
him. As David thy father walked
— Who, though he foully
miscarried in some things, yet
in the general course of his
life was upright and faithful,
especially in things relating to
the worship of God and civil
government. Then will I
establish the throne of thy
kingdom — Upon that condition,
and not otherwise; for my
promise to David was
conditional, Psalms 132:12. If
we perform our part of the
condition, God will not fail to
perform his. If we improve the
grace God has given us, he will
confirm us to the end. Let not
the children of godly parents
expect the entail of the
blessing, unless they tread in
the steps of those that are gone
before them, and keep up the
virtue and piety of their
ancestors.
Verse 6-7
1 Kings 9:6-7. If you shall at
all turn from following me —
Hebrew, If in turning you turn
from me; that is, if you
assuredly, and indeed, or, as
some understand it, altogether
turn from me; if you forsake my
service, desert my altar, and go
and serve other gods; (for that
was the covenant-breaking sin;)
if you or your children break
off from me, and knowingly and
wilfully violate my laws, this
house will not save you. Then
will I cut off Israel — By one
judgment after another, till
they become the most despicable
people under the sun, though
they be now the most honourable.
This implies the destruction of
the royal family, though it is
not particularly threatened; for
the king is of course undone if
his kingdom be destroyed. And
this house — will I cast out of
my sight — I will not regard it,
but will take away my presence
and protection from it: it shall
be abandoned and laid desolate.
And Israel shall be a proverb —
Their calamities and miseries
shall be mentioned proverbially,
to express extreme affliction
and distress. And a byword among
all people — Who would mock at
their calamitous and deplorable
state.
Verse 8-9
1 Kings 9:8-9. And at this
house, which is high — Exalted
in its privileges, and renowned
for its riches and splendour,
and the great resort of people
to it. They gloried in the
stateliness and magnificence of
the structure; but God here lets
them know it was not so high as
to be out of the reach of his
judgments, which should
assuredly fall upon it and them,
if they vilified it so as to
exchange it for groves and
idol-temples, and yet, at the
same time, most inconsistently
and absurdly magnified it, so as
to suppose it would secure the
favour of God to them, although
they ever so much corrupted
themselves. Every one that
passeth by it shall be
astonished — At its unexpected
and wonderful ruin. As they who
now pass by it are astonished at
the bulk and beauty, the
richness, contrivance, and
workmanship of it, and call it a
stupendous fabric; so, if you
forsake God, its height will
make its fall the more amazing,
and they that pass by will be as
much astonished at its ruins.
And shall hiss — By way of
contempt and derision; and shall
say, Why hath the Lord, &c. —
What is the reason that this
famous place, which boasted so
much of the favour and
protection of God, is thus laid
in ruins? And they shall answer,
Because they forsook, &c. — The
guilty, self-convicted,
self-condemned Israelites will
be forced to acknowledge with
shame, that they themselves were
the ruin of it. See Deuteronomy
29:24. Their sin will be read in
their punishment. They deserted
the temple, and therefore God
deserted it; they profaned it
with their sins, and laid it
common; and therefore God
profaned it with his judgments,
and laid it waste. Of this God
thus gave Solomon fair warning,
now he had newly built and
dedicated it, that he and his
people might not be high-minded,
but fear.
Verses 11-14
1 Kings 9:11-14. Solomon gave
Hiram twenty cities in the land
of Galilee — Or, near the land
of Galilee, bordering upon it;
in those parts which were near,
and adjoining to, Hiram’s
dominions: with the cities,
understand the territories
belonging to them. These cities,
though they were within those
large bounds which God fixed to
the land of promise, (Genesis
15:18; Joshua 1:4,) yet were not
within those parts which were
distributed by lot in Joshua’s
time. It is probable they were
not inhabited by Israelites, but
by Canaanites, or other heathen;
who having been subdued and made
tributary by David or Solomon,
those cities became a part of
their dominions; and afterward
were reckoned a part of Galilee,
as Josephus notes. They pleased
him not — Were not suitable to
his desire, and the genius of
his people. He called them the
land of Cabul — A Phenician
word, says Josephus, which
signifies displeasing. But Rabbi
Salomon writes that the land was
so called because it was “quasi
compedita, id est, argillacea,
tenax, et infrugifera,” bound,
stiff, clayey, and unfruitful.
Hiram did not like it, because,
though it might be very good,
yet being a thick and stiff
clay, and therefore requiring
great pains to cultivate and
manure it, it was very
unsuitable to the disposition of
the Tyrians, who were delicate,
and lazy, and luxurious, and
wholly given to merchandise.
And, on his returning them,
there is no doubt but Solomon
gave him an equivalent, more to
his taste. And Hiram sent to the
king — Or rather, For Hiram had
sent, &c. And this seems to be
here added, both to declare the
quantity of the gold sent, which
had been only named before, (1
Kings 9:11,) and as the reason
why he resented Solomon’s
action, because so great a sum
required a better recompense.
Verse 15
1 Kings 9:15. This is the reason
of the levy, &c. — That the
raising of a great tribute upon
the people, and employing so
many men in his works, might not
seem strange, the sacred writer
here shows the cause of it;
which was, his great and
numerous buildings, suitable to
the high dignity to which God
had advanced him. The Hebrew
word, מס, mass, here rendered
levy, as Mr. Selden hath shown,
by many instances, is not only
used for pecuniary tribute, but
also for bodily labour; it means
a levy of men as well as a levy
of money. And he thus interprets
this clause: This is the cause
of requiring the labour of so
many men; it was to build, &c.
Having thus declared the cause,
the historian proceeds (1 Kings
9:20) to relate who they were
that he employed in this
service. And Millo — David had
built round about Zion, from
Millo inward, (2 Samuel 5:9,)
but had left the structure of
Millo itself imperfect, which
Solomon now completed, with a
particular respect to Pharaoh’s
daughter, whose house was near
it, 1 Kings 9:24. It seems, from
1 Kings 11:27, and 2 Chronicles
32:5, to have been an eminent,
large, and strong fort, or
castle, in that part of
Jerusalem termed the city of
David, where the fortress which
David took from the Jebusites
anciently stood. Here, it is
thought, the people of Israel
assembled when there was any
consultation to be made about
public affairs. The name מלוא,
Millo, appears to be derived
from the word מלא, malee, which
signifies full. Kimchi thinks it
was so called because it was
frequently full of people, being
“locus amplus et latus, comitiis
et conventibus publicis
destinatus,” a large and open
place, appointed for holding
public courts and assemblies.
And the wall of Jerusalem —
Which was a great structure: for
there were three walls, one
within another, as Abarbinel and
Joseph Ben-Gorion explain it;
the inner wall encompassing the
house of God and the house of
the king; the middle wall
encompassing the houses of great
persons; (termed the College, 2
Kings 22:14;) and the third the
houses of all the people. And
Hazor — Which had been a very
eminent city, and the head of
some kingdoms before the
conquest of Canaan, (Joshua
11:10,) and was given to the
tribe of Naphtali, Joshua 19:36.
Megiddo — A city in the tribe of
Manasseh, Joshua 17:11. And
Gezer — In the tribe of Ephraim,
Joshua 21:21.
Verse 16
1 Kings 9:16. For Pharaoh had
gone up and taken Gezer, &c.,
and slain the Canaanites — For
the Israelites did not
dispossess the Canaanites, but
they continued to dwell in Gezer
in Joshua’s time and after,
Joshua 16:10; 1:29. And, it
seems, neither David nor Solomon
expelled them, but only kept
them under tribute; till
Pharaoh, upon some provocation
which is not recorded,
extirpated them, and burned
their city. This, Sir John
Marsham thinks, was the first
expedition which the Egyptians
made out of their own country.
Verses 17-19
1 Kings 9:17-19. And Beth-horon
the nether — The lower
Beth-horon, which was in the
tribe of Benjamin, Joshua 18:13.
Baalath — A city in the tribe of
Dan, Joshua 19:44. And Tadmor in
the wilderness — The name of
this city signifies wonderful,
or admirable, and it was so
named, probably, from the
singularity of the thing, in
finding here springs and wells
of water, and other conveniences
to subsist a city, among such
horrid and parched sands, with
which it was on all sides
surrounded. It is probable that
Solomon built this city among
the deserts to hinder the
communication between the
Syrians and the inhabitants of
Mesopotamia, that they might not
join their forces in confederacy
together against the Israelites,
as they had done in the time of
David. This city appears to have
been the same which was
afterward called Palmyra by the
Greeks, the ruins of which still
remain. Some English gentlemen
of credit and fortune visited it
about the year 1750, who have
published such a description of
the exceeding magnificence and
beauty of its ruins, at this
day, as is astonishing. We refer
our readers to that publication,
not only that they may receive
great pleasure, but great
improvement; since it is not
possible to conceive higher
ideas of Solomon’s magnificence
than these ruins present, nor
more humiliating ideas of the
vanity and weakness of all human
splendour. See Messrs. Dawkin’s
and Wood’s Ruins of Palmyra. In
the land — Of Hamath — Zoba, a
part of Syria, as is said 2
Chronicles 8:3-4, which country
Solomon had conquered. And all
the cities of store that Solomon
had — Where he laid up corn
against a time of need; or arms
and ammunition in case of war.
And cities for his chariots and
— his horsemen — Which he had in
great numbers.
Verse 20-21
1 Kings 9:20-21. All the people
that were left of the Amorites —
Who, it is likely, by this time
were become proselytes to the
Jewish religion, as the
Gibeonites were, or at least
renounced their idolatry. Upon
those did Solomon levy a tribute
— He used them as bond-men, and
imposed bodily labours upon
them. “But why did not Solomon
destroy them, as God had
commanded, when now it was fully
in his power to do so?” The
command to destroy them,
(Deuteronomy 7:2,) did chiefly,
if not only, concern that
generation of Canaanites who
lived in or near the time of the
Israelites entering into Canaan.
And that command seems not to
have been absolute, but
conditional, and with some
exception for those who should
submit and embrace the true
religion, as may be gathered
both from Joshua 11:19, and from
the history of the Gibeonites.
For if God’s command had been
absolute, the oaths of Joshua,
and of the princes, could not
have obliged them, nor dispensed
with such a command.
Verse 22-23
1 Kings 9:22-23. Of the children
of Israel did Solomon make no
bond-men — He spared them, and
did not employ them in any
servile labours about his public
works, but put them into nobler
offices, as it here follows.
They were men of war — Which was
accounted an honourable
employment. And his servants —
Officers in his court. And his
princes — Governors of
provinces. And his captains, &c.
— Commanders of his guards. Five
hundred and fifty — In 2
Chronicles 8:10, they are said
to be but two hundred and fifty.
But perhaps the meaning there
is, that there were two hundred
and fifty set over those that
wrought in the temple; the rest
probably being employed in
overseeing his public works in
other places. And it must be
observed also, that there were
far greater numbers employed
when the temple work was carried
on with great speed.
Verse 24
1 Kings 9:24. Pharaoh’s daughter
came up, &c. — In 2 Chronicles
8:11, we learn the reason why
she did not continue in the
house where David had dwelt;
which was because it was a kind
of holy place, where it was not
fit she should remain, the ark
of God having dwelt there.
Verse 25
1 Kings 9:25. Three times in a
year did Solomon offer burnt
offerings — That is, at least
three times, namely, at the
three solemn feasts which God
had commanded to be observed by
till the people. Then he offered
sacrifices suitable to those
great mercies which were at
these seasons commemorated, and
to the great blessings which God
had bestowed on his family. But
undoubtedly he also offered at
all other appointed times. And
he burned incense upon the altar
— In the holy place, before the
ark. The meaning is not that he
burned it himself, but only that
he gave it to the priests at his
own charge, to be offered with a
particular respect to him. This
he probably did every morning
and evening. So he finished the
house — This, though said
before, is now repeated,
because, after he had kept the
three great festivals there, the
temple was not only consecrated,
but all divine offices had been
performed in it, and nothing
more was to be added.
Verse 26-27
1 Kings 9:26-27. King Solomon
made a navy of ships — Not now,
in the order in which it is
placed in the history, but in
the beginning of his reign; as
appears from this consideration,
that the almug-trees, used in
the work of the Lord’s house,
were brought in this navy from
Ophir, (1 Kings 10:11-12; 2
Chronicles 9:10-11,) which was a
three years voyage, 1 Kings
9:22. And Hiram sent in the navy
his servants — The navy was
Solomon’s, who had servants of
his own on board the ships, to
manage the traffic; but as they
had no skill in navigation,
Hiram sent as many sailors as
were necessary to man the ships,
the Tyrians being in general
bred at sea, and famous for
their knowledge in maritime
affairs.
Verse 28
1 Kings 9:28. They came to Ophir
— A place famous for gold, which
was found there in great plenty,
and peculiarly fine. It is
highly probable that this place
was in India, but in what part
of it is not easy to determine.
Bochart thinks it was Taprobana,
now called Ceylon, and shows
that the account which the
ancients give of the former,
answers to that which the
moderns give of the latter. It
is certain that this island
affords gold, ivory, and
precious stones. The authors of
the Universal History after
confuting at large those
opinions which seemed to them
less probable, observe as
follows: “Ophir appears most
likely to have been in some of
those remote, rich countries of
India beyond the Ganges, and
perhaps as far as China or
Japan; which last still abounds
with the finest gold, and
several other commodities in
which Solomon’s fleet dealt, as
silver, precious stones, ebony,
and other valuable sorts of
wood, to say nothing of spices,
peacocks, parrots, apes, and
other such creatures; and by its
distance best answers to the
length of the voyage.” Gold,
four hundred and twenty talents
— It is said (2 Chronicles 8:18)
that they brought four hundred
and fifty; but we may well
suppose that thirty talents
might be partly spent in the
charges of the voyage to and
fro, and partly allowed to Hiram
and his men; so that only four
hundred and twenty came clear
into the king’s treasury. This,
however, was a prodigious sum,
being calculated to be above
three millions two hundred
thousand pounds sterling. How
they obtained this vast quantity
of gold, whether by exchanging
various merchandises for it, or
by finding out mines, or
procuring it from the natives,
does not appear. |