Verse 1
1 Kings 13:1. Behold, there came
a man of God — A holy prophet;
for none are called men of God
in the Old Testament, but
prophets. By the word of the
Lord — By divine inspiration and
command. “There is no foundation
for so much as conjecture who
this prophet was. His prophecy,
however, is one of the most
remarkable which we have in
sacred writ. It foretels an
action that exactly came to pass
above three hundred and forty
years afterward. It describes
the circumstances of the action;
and specifies the very name of
the person who was to do it; and
therefore every considerate Jew,
who lived in the time of its
accomplishment, must have been
convinced of the divine
authority of a religion founded
on such prophecies as this;
since none but God could
foresee, and consequently none
but God could fore-tel events at
such a distance.” — Le Clerc,
Calmet, and Dodd. Jeroboam stood
by the altar to burn incense —
Upon the feast day which he had
instituted.
Verse 2
1 Kings 13:2. He cried against
the altar — And consequently
against all the worship
performed at it. O altar, altar
— He directs his speech against
the altar, because the following
signs were to be wrought upon
it. Behold, a child shall be
born, &c. — This prophecy is the
more wonderful, because it
foretels of what family the
child should spring, and what
should be his name; and in the
accomplishment of it we see the
absolute certainty of God’s
providence and foreknowledge,
even in the most contingent
things. For the particulars here
mentioned, namely, the having a
child, and the giving it this
name, were in themselves things
as uncertain, dependent on man’s
will, and contingent as any
events can be: and yet God
exactly foretold them, and they
came to pass accordingly. God
therefore can foresee how the
will of man, and of numbers of
men, whose wills are dependant
on each other, will be
influenced in all possible
circumstances, and that for ages
to come; or, he can certainly
and effectually, and yet without
infringing or violating man’s
liberty, overrule his will which
way he pleaseth; otherwise it
was possible this prediction
might have been false, which it
would be blasphemy to assert.
Upon it shall he offer the
priests — The meaning is not
that he should offer or burn the
priests alive, but that he
should slay the priests of the
high places, and then burn their
bones, as he did the bones of
those that had been buried, and
thereby should defile this
altar. How bold was the man that
durst thus attack the king in
his pride, and interrupt the
solemnity in which he gloried!
Those who are sent on God’s
errand, must not fear the faces
of men. Although it was so many
ages ere this prophecy was to be
fulfilled, the time is spoken of
as sure and nigh at hand. For a
thousand years are with God as
one day.
Verse 3
1 Kings 13:3. He gave a sign the
same day — That is, he then
wrought a miracle to assure them
of the truth of his prophecy.
Saying, this is the sign, &c. —
A proof that I speak from God,
and not from myself. The altar
shall be rent, &c. — This could
not be effected but by the power
of God, who hereby demonstrated
that he had sent this prophet to
speak these words which were
presently fulfilled.
Verse 4-5
1 Kings 13:4-5. He put forth his
hand — To point out the man on
whom he would have the people to
lay hands. From the altar —
Where he stood, and where his
hand was employed in offering
something upon it. And his hand
dried up — Or withered, the
muscles and sinews, the
instruments of motion, shrinking
up or becoming relaxed. This God
did, not only to give another
token, besides those which the
man of God had mentioned, that
his words would be fulfilled;
but also to chastise Jeroboam
for offering violence to the
Lord’s prophet; to secure the
prophet against further
violence, and that in this
example God might show how
highly he resents the injuries
done to his ministers for the
faithful discharge of their
office. The altar also was rent,
&c. — This train of miracles,
instantly wrought, and
confirming so evidently the
prophet’s mission, so amazed all
the people, that we do not find
any of them attempted to lay
hold on him. And Jeroboam
himself, for the present, was
astonished and confounded at the
sight of the effects produced by
God’s miraculous power.
Verse 6
1 Kings 13:6. The king said,
Entreat now the face of the Lord
thy God — Of him who hath
manifested himself to be thy God
and friend in a singular manner;
and therefore will hear thy
prayers for me, though he will
not regard mine, because I have
forsaken him and his worship.
The man of God besought the Lord
— This he did to assure Jeroboam
that what he had said was not
from ill-will to him, and that
he heartily desired his
reformation, not his ruin. And
the king’s hand was restored —
God showed him this mercy, 1st,
Because he repented of the
violence intended against the
prophet, for which his hand had
been dried up: 2d, To assure him
that the stroke was from God:
and, 3d, That this goodness of
God to him might lead him to
repentance, or if he continued
impenitent, might leave him
without excuse.
Verses 7-9
1 Kings 13:7-9. I will give thee
a reward — He desires to requite
the instrument, but takes no
notice of God, the chief cause
and author of this wonderful
mercy. The man of God said, I
will not go in with thee, &c. —
In obedience to God, he refuses
to eat, or drink, or have any
familiar society with him,
against whom he had pronounced
God’s indignation. For so it was
charged me — My refusal of thy
favour is not from any contempt
or hatred of thy person, but in
compliance with the just command
of my God, who hath forbidden me
all further converse or
communication with thee. Saying,
Eat no bread, nor drink water —
Namely, in that place, or with
that people. Hereby God showed
his detestation of their
idolatry, not because it was as
bad as that of the heathen, but
because they were vile apostates
from the true God, and embraced
this idol-worship against the
light of their own consciences,
merely to comply with the king’s
humour and command; and because
their vicinity and relation to
Judah, exposed that tribe to the
danger of being infected by
their idolatry. God also
intended hereby to teach his
people in all ages to have no
fellowship with the unfruitful
works of darkness, lest they
should either give encouragement
to, or receive infection from,
them. Nor turn again by the same
way thou earnest — That by
avoiding the way that led him to
Beth-el as execrable, although
he went by God’s special
command, he might teach all
others how much they ought to
abhor that way, and all thoughts
of going to that place, or to
such idolatrous people, upon any
unnecessary occasion.
Verse 11
1 Kings 13:11. There dwelt an
old prophet in Beth-el — One to
whom and by whom God did
sometimes reveal his will, as is
manifest from 1 Kings 13:20-21;
and one who had a respect to
God’s holy prophets, and gave
credit to their predictions. But
that he was not a truly and
uniformly good and pious man is
certain, because we here find
him guilty of a downright lie, 1
Kings 13:18. And, although a
holy prophet, who had lived
there before, might possibly
have continued in the kingdom of
Israel after its separation from
Judah, and defection from the
true worship of God; yet such a
one would not have chosen to
reside at Beth-el, the chief
seat of idolatry, unless with a
design to preach against it:
this, it is evident, he did not;
for his sons, it appears, were
present when Jeroboam stood at
the altar, and therefore joined
in that idolatrous worship, and
yet their father was too
timorous to reprove them. He was
probably somewhat like the
famous Balaam, who was
commissioned to utter divers
true prophecies, but
nevertheless loved the wages of
unrighteousness, and was a
wicked man.
Verse 14
1 Kings 13:14. And found him
sitting under an oak — Being
faint and weary with his
journey, and possibly with the
heat also, (which made him
choose to rest in this shady
place,) and especially with
hunger and thirst, 1 Kings 13:9.
And the old prophet might easily
guess that this was the prophet
from Judah, by his age and
carriage, and, it may be, by his
prophetic mantle, and by the
character which his sons had
given of him.
Verse 18
1 Kings 13:18. But he lied unto
him — And yet, probably, not
with any evil design, but out of
curiosity, to know from his own
mouth the truth and all the
particulars of the message which
he had just delivered to
Jeroboam; and to express his
kindness to him, and relieve his
hunger and weariness, whereby,
possibly, he thought he should
please God. In this, however, he
greatly erred, and involved both
himself and the prophet from
Judah in guilt and wrath.
Verse 19
1 Kings 13:19. So he went back
with him — Too readily
hearkening to his words, and not
considering that what God
himself had expressly commanded,
nothing but the express command
of the same God could set aside:
otherwise the commands of God
might be made of none effect by
any one who should feign to have
a divine commission.
Verses 20-22
1 Kings 13:20-22. The word of
the Lord came, &c. — God obliged
the prophet, who had caused him
to sin, to denounce a punishment
against him for it, that it
might the more affect him;
nothing being more piercing than
to be reflected on by those who
have caused us to err. And he
cried unto the man of God — With
a loud voice, the effect of his
passion, both for his own guilt
and shame, and for the prophet’s
approaching misery. Forasmuch as
thou hast disobeyed the mouth of
the Lord — That is, the word of
command coming out of his mouth;
thy carcass shall not come into
the sepulchre of thy fathers —
Thou shalt not die a natural,
but a violent death, and that in
this journey, before thou
returnest to thy own habitation.
Verse 23-24
1 Kings 13:23-24. He saddled for
him the ass — But it is
observable, he does not
accompany him: his guilty
conscience making him fear to be
involved in the same judgment
with him. A lion met him by the
way, and slew him — There was a
wood not far from Bethel, out of
which the two she-bears came,
mentioned 2 Kings 2:24; and, it
is not unlikely, that out of the
same wood came the lion that
slew this prophet. His carcass
was cast in the way — His dead
body fell to the ground, and lay
in the place where the soul left
it. The lion also stood by the
carcass — Which plainly showed
that he was sent by God to
execute only what God had
threatened, and not to move one
step beyond that commission,
otherwise, agreeable to his
nature and fierceness, he would
certainly have devoured the
carcass and torn the ass. “Some
have thought,” says Dr. Dodd,
“that this prophet’s was a small
offence to have met with so
severe a punishment: but the
true state of the case is this:
the prophet from Judah had
sufficient evidence of the truth
of his own revelation; had
sufficient cause to suspect some
corrupt ends in the prophet who
came to recall him; and had
sufficient reason to expect, an
interposition of the same power
that gave him the injunction to
repeal it; and, therefore, his
crime was an easy credulity, a
complying with an offer merely
to gratify a petulant appetite,
which he knew was repugnant to a
divine command. It argued a
great levity, if not infidelity,
of his own revelation, to listen
to the pretended one of another
man.” It must be acknowledged,
however, to be strange, that the
lying prophet should escape,
while he, who, notwithstanding
this error, was truly a man of
God, is so severely punished.
But judgment must begin at the
house of God: God must correct
his own children first. And
there is a judgment to come,
when these things shall be
called over again, and when
those who sinned most and
suffered least in this world,
will receive according to their
works. This punishment of the
prophet was a very striking
admonition to Jeroboam of what
he might expect, since God
spared not a less guilty
offender. And we may all learn
from God’s severity, in this
instance, 1st, Not to suffer our
faith to be perverted by any
suggestions made against a
revelation of uncontested divine
authority; and, 2d, Always to
pay a strict regard and
obedience to all the known
commands of God.
Verse 25-26
1 Kings 13:25-26. They came and
told it in the city — As a
wonderful thing that the lion
should neither fall upon his
prey, nor hurt them who passed
by, but suffer them to go on
quietly, Who was disobedient
unto the word of the Lord —
Which was the true reason why he
was so severely punished, in
order that other prophets might
not, upon any pretence or
excuse, neglect punctually to
attend to, and observe all the
divine injunctions; for, had
they not been deterred from
neglecting and disregarding
them, the authority of prophecy
would have been soon lessened,
and consequently the people have
sooner or more readily fallen
into idolatry. Which hath torn
and slain him, according to the
word of the Lord — God had not
expressly said that a lion
should tear him; but, that he
should suffer a violent death in
some way, was implied in the
threatening that his carcass
should not come into the
sepulchre of his fathers.
Verse 28
1 Kings 13:28. He found, &c. —
Here was a concurrence of
miracles: that the ass did not
run away from the lion,
according to his nature, but
boldly stood still, as waiting
to carry the prophet to his
burial; that the lion did not
devour his prey, nor tear the
ass, nor meddle with the
travellers that passed by, nor
hurt the old prophet, when he
came to the spot, nor his ass;
nor yet go away, when he had
done his work, but stood still,
as if, 1st, To preserve the
carcass of the prophet, whom he
had slain, from other wild
beasts or fowls: 2d, As an
evidence that the prophet’s
death was not casual, nor the
effect of a lion’s ravenous
disposition, but of God’s
singular and just judgment, who
had directed the lion, by a
supernatural power, how far to
go, and where to stop; and,
consequently, that the prophet’s
prediction was divine, and would
be infallibly accomplished in
its proper time: and 3d, As a
token of God’s favour to the
deceased prophet, of whose very
carcass he took such special
care; thereby signifying, that,
although for wise and just
reasons he thought fit to take
away his life, yet his remains
were precious to him.
Verse 29-30
1 Kings 13:29-30. The prophet,
(namely, the old prophet,) took
up the carcass of the man of God
— “If there were any truth,”
says Henry, “in the vulgar
opinion, sure the corpse bled
afresh when he touched it; for
he was, in effect, the
murderer.” He laid his carcass
in his own grave — A poor
reparation this of the injury
done him in deceiving him, and
persuading him to disobey the
command of God to his ruin.
Hereby, however, the divine
threatening, (in 1 Kings 13:22,)
was fulfilled; and withal, the
memory of his prophecy was
revived from time to time, by
the sight of his grave, and
preserved among them; and even
his carcass, resting there,
might be a witness of their
madness and desperate
wickedness, in continuing to
practise their abominable,
idolatrous worship, after such
an assurance of the dreadful
effects of it. They mourned over
him — Namely, the old prophet
and his sons, and others, whom
common humanity taught to lament
the untimely death of so worthy
a person. Saying, Alas! my
brother — Which was a usual form
of expression in funeral
lamentations. “The case, indeed,
was very piteous,” says Henry,
“that so good a man, so faithful
a prophet, and one so bold in
God’s cause, should, for one
offence, die as a criminal,
while an old, lying prophet
lived at ease, and an idolatrous
prince in pomp and power. Thy
way, O God, is in the sea, and
thy path in the great waters! We
cannot judge of men by their
sufferings, nor of sins by their
present punishments. With some
the flesh is destroyed, that the
spirit may be saved; while, with
others, the flesh is pampered,
that the soul may ripen for
hell.” The reader will be
pleased to see a similar
reflection by Dr. Dodd. “Upon a
review of this narrative, who
can fail to admire the
unsearchable secrets of the
divine justice? Jeroboam revolts
from his lawful sovereign,
forsakes the worship of the true
God, engages the people in gross
idolatry, and is himself
hardened by the menaces and
miracles of the prophet, who
wits sent to him; a false
prophet deceives an innocent man
with a lie, and draws him into
an act of disobedience, contrary
to his inclination; yet this
wicked Jeroboam, and this
seducing prophet, escape
immediate punishment, while the
other, who might mean no ill,
perhaps, in turning back, is
slain by a lion, and his body
deprived of the sepulchre of his
fathers! We must acknowledge,
indeed, that the depths of the
judgments of God are an abyss
which our understandings cannot
fathom; but nothing certainly
can be a more sensible proof of
the certainty of another life,
and of the eternal recompenses
or punishments which attend it,
than to see the righteous so
rigorously treated here, for
slight offences, while, sentence
not being speedily executed
against evil men, we have an
assurance from thence that God
will bring every work into
judgment, with every secret
thing, whether it be good or
evil, Ecclesiastes 12:14.”
Verse 31-32
1 Kings 13:31-32. When I am
dead, &c. — Though he was a
lying prophet, yet he desired to
die the death of a true prophet.
Gather not my soul with the
sinners of Beth-el, but with
this man of God: because, what
he cried against the altar of
Beth-el shall surely come to
pass — Which he might easily
conclude, both from the miracles
wrought by the prophet of Judah,
and from the wonderful
particulars of his death. And
against all the high places
which are in the cities of
Samaria — That is, of the
kingdom of Samaria, as it was
called, though not when this
fact was done, yet before these
books were written. Samaria was
properly the name of one city;
but, as it became the capital of
the kingdom of Israel, that
whole kingdom was so called from
it. The prophet of Judah had not
indeed threatened as much as the
prophet of Beth-el here
mentions, (unless he said more
than is related 1 Kings 13:2,)
but it might easily be inferred
from what he had predicted.
Thus, by the mouth of two
witnesses, was it established,
if possible, to convince
Jeroboam.
Verse 33
1 Kings 13:33. After this — That
is, after all these things; the
singular number being put for
the plural; after so many
evident and successive miracles;
Jeroboam returned not from his
evil ways — He was not at all
changed in his principles or
practice, but continued in his
idolatry. Made again of the
lowest of the people, &c. — He
abated not so much as a
circumstance in his idolatrous
worship. Whosoever would he
consecrated him, &c. — Without
any respect to tribe, or family,
or integrity of body, or mind,
or life; all which things were
to be regarded in the
priesthood.
Verse 34
1 Kings 13:34. This thing became
sin to the house of Jeroboam —
An occasion of sin, and a mean
of hardening all his posterity
in their idolatry; or, rather,
it became a punishment, as the
word sin often signifies. This
his obstinate continuance in his
idolatry, after such warnings,
brought dreadful punishments
upon his family, and these not
of an ordinary kind; but such as
effected its utter extirpation.
We may reflect here with
Ostervald, on the astonishing
blindness and ingratitude of
Jeroboam. “Instead of relying on
the promises which God had made
him, to preserve the kingdom in
his family, if he continued
faithful, fearing lest his
subjects should forsake him, if
they went to worship at
Jerusalem; out of a false policy
he set up an idolatrous worship
in his kingdom, which occasioned
the ruin of his family, and at
last the ruin of the kingdom of
the ten tribes. Thus men,
instead of trusting to God, in
the faithful discharge of their
duty, for security, have
recourse to ill methods, whereby
they draw upon themselves, at
length, those very misfortunes
they mean to avoid.” Indeed, all
those betray themselves
effectually, who endeavour to
support themselves or families
by any sin. |