Verse 1
1 Kings 20:1. Gathered all his
host — To war against Israel:
wherein his design was to
enlarge the conquest which his
father had made; but God’s
design was to punish Israel for
their apostacy and idolatry.
There were thirty and two kings
with him — Petty kings, such as
were in Canaan in Joshua’s time,
who indeed were no more than
governors of cities or small
territories: these were either
subject or tributary to Ben-hadad,
or hired by him. He were up and
besieged Samaria — He did not
actually besiege it; for his
army was routed before he could
do it. But the sense is, He went
up in order to besiege it.
Verse 3-4
1 Kings 20:3-4. Thy silver and
thy gold is mine — I challenge
them as my own, and expect to
have them forthwith delivered,
if thou expect peace with me.
The king said, My lord, O king,
I am thine — I do so far comply
with thy demand, that I will own
thee for my lord, and myself for
thy vassal, and will hold my
wives, and children, and estate,
as by thy favour, and with an
acknowledgment.
Verse 5-6
1 Kings 20:5-6. Thus speaketh
Ben-hadad, saying, &c. —
Although I before demanded not
only the dominion of thy
treasures, and wives, and
children, as thou mayest seem to
understand me; but also the
actual possession of them,
wherewith I would then have been
contented: yet now I will not
accept of those terms, but,
together with thy royal
treasures, I expect all the
treasures of thy servants or
subjects; nor will I wait till
thou deliver them to me; but I
will send my servants into the
city, and they shall search out
and take away all thou art fond
of, and this to prevent fraud
and delay; and then I will grant
thee a peace.
Verse 7
1 Kings 20:7. The king called
all the elders — Whose counsel
and concurrence he now desires
in his distress. See how this
man seeketh mischief — Though he
pretended peace upon these terms
propounded, it is apparent, by
those additional demands, that
he intends nothing less than our
utter ruin. I denied not — I
granted his demands in the sense
before mentioned. In this Ahab
showed some sparks of virtue
remaining in him; in that while
Ben-hadad desired only what he
had in his own disposal, that
is, all his private goods, he
complied with his demands; but
when all the people and the
public good was concerned, he
would do nothing without their
consent.
Verses 9-11
1 Kings 20:9-11. This thing I
may not do — If I would do it, I
cannot; because my people will
not suffer it. If the dust of
Samaria shall suffice for
handfuls, &c. — If I do not
assault thy city with so potent
and numerous an army, as shall
turn it all into a heap of dust,
and shall be sufficient to carry
it all away, though every
soldier take but one handful of
it. See the like boast, 2 Samuel
17:13. The king of Israel said,
Let not him that girdeth, &c. —
Do not triumph before the
victory, for the events of war
are uncertain.
Verse 13
1 Kings 20:13. And, behold there
came a prophet unto Ahab — One
of those, probably, that had
been hid, but was now commanded
of God to appear and carry a
message to Ahab; which the
prophet did not fear to do, as
he brought him such good news as
those which follow. Thus saith
the Lord, Hast thou seen this
great multitude, &c.? — God,
though forsaken and neglected by
Ahab, prevents him with his
gracious promise of help; that
Ahab and the idolatrous
Israelites might hereby be fully
convinced, or left without
excuse; that Ben-hadad’s
intolerable pride, and contempt
of God, and of his people, might
be punished; and that the
remnant of his prophets and
people, who were involved in the
same calamity with the rest of
the Israelites, might be
preserved and delivered. I am
the Lord — And not Baal, because
I will deliver thee, which he
cannot do.
Verse 14
1 Kings 20:14. By the young men
of the princes, &c. — The Hebrew
word נערי, nagnaree, here
rendered young men, is
ambiguous, and may mean either
the sons or the servants of the
princes of the provinces. It was
not by old, experienced
soldiers, but by those young
men, who had lived delicately,
and perhaps had never seen a
fight, that this battle was to
be won; in order that it might
appear that the victory was
wholly due to God’s gracious
providence, and not to the
valour or worthiness of the
instruments. Then he said, Who
shall order the battle? — Or, as
some understand the words, Who
shall begin the fight, they or
we? Shall we make a sally, or
wait till they assault us? He
answered, Thou — The prophet
bids the king begin and lead
them on, partly to encourage the
young men to fight courageously,
as being in the presence of
their prince; and partly to try
whether Ahab would thus far
trust God, or not.
Verse 15
1 Kings 20:15. He numbered all
the men of Israel — All in
Samaria and the neighbourhood
that were fit to go out to war;
all except those whom their age,
or infirmity, or other
sufficient causes excused; but
certainly not all the men of war
in Israel, who must have been
far more than seven thousand.
Verses 16-18
1 Kings 20:16; 1 Kings 20:18.
And they went out at noon — When
they knew the Syrians were at
dinner, if not also drinking to
excess, as their king was. And
he said, Whether they be come
for peace, take them alive, &c.
— It was against the law of
nations to apprehend those that
came to treat of peace: but he,
in his insolent pride, told his
people not to trouble themselves
to examine what they came for,
but to take them alive, which he
thought they might easily do,
these Israelites being so few in
number, and not able, he
supposed, to stand the first
brunt.
Verse 20-21
1 Kings 20:20-21. They slew
every one his man — Who came to
apprehend him. And the Syrians
fled — Amazed at the undaunted
and unexpected courage of the
Israelites, and struck with a
divine terror. And Ben-hadad
escaped on a horse — That proud
boaster durst not face them; but
mounted immediately, drunk as he
was, and made the best of his
way to escape. And the king of
Israel went out — Proceeded
further in his pursuit of them.
And smote the horses and
chariots — The men that fought
in them. And slew the Syrians
with great slaughter — Improving
this advantage to the utmost.
Thus ended Ben-hadad’s proud
boastings; and thus does God
often make one wicked man a
scourge to another!
Verse 22
1 Kings 20:22. Go, strengthen
thyself, and mark, and see, &c.
— Consider what is necessary for
thee to do by way of
preparation, and take care that
nothing be wanting to oppose the
designs of the Syrians against
thee, who will certainly return
and renew the fight next year.
The enemies of the children of
God are restless in their
malice, and though they may take
some breathing-time for
themselves, they are still
breathing out slaughter against
the church: it therefore
concerns always to expect our
spiritual enemies, and to mark
and see what we do.
Verse 23
1 Kings 20:23. Their gods are
gods of the hills, &c. — The
heathen, in general, had no
notion of the God of the
universe, but only worshipped
local and tutelary deities; who,
they thought, ruled over
particular countries, and
distributed the several parts of
those countries among them, some
being gods of the woods, others
of the rivers, and others of the
mountains: and the Syrians
fancied the gods of the
Israelites, whom they thought to
be no better than their own
gods, to be of the latter kind,
gods of the hills, because the
land of Canaan was a mountainous
land, and the great temple of
their God, at Jerusalem, stood
upon a hill, as did the city of
Samaria, where they had received
their last blow; or because the
Israelites did generally choose
high places for the places of
their worship. It is observable,
that the Syrians do not impute
their ill success to their
negligence, and drunkenness, and
bad conduct, nor to the valour
of the Israelites, but to a
divine power, which was indeed
visible in it. Let us fight
against them in the plain — In
this counsel there was not only
superstition, but policy;
because the Syrians excelled the
Israelites in horses and
chariots, which were most
serviceable on plain ground.
Verse 24
1 Kings 20:24. Do this — take
the kings away, &c. — He had
made the thirty- two kings, who
were his tributaries, chief
commanders in his former army;
which his counsellors represent
to him as a great error, and
therefore advise him to displace
them, and put his own captains
in their stead, who would fight
better. The kings, they thought,
had had a softer education; and,
being less inured to hardships,
and less experienced in military
matters, were less fit for
service: besides, being many of
them mercenaries, and therefore
less concerned in his good
success, they judged they would
be more cautious in venturing
themselves, and risking their
lives in his cause, and not so
obedient to discipline, as
captains from his own subjects
would be. These latter, they
supposed, would faithfully obey
the commands of their general,
to whom the kings would not
readily yield, and would use
their utmost skill and valour
for their own interest and
advancement.
Verse 26-27
1 Kings 20:26-27. Ben-hadad
numbered the Syrians, and went
up to Aphek —
A city in the tribe of Asher;
which, it is probable, was one
of those that Ben-hadad’s father
had taken from the king of
Israel, (1 Kings 20:34,) not far
from which was the plain of
Galilee, where he intended to
fight. And the children of
Israel went against them — Being
encouraged by the remembrance of
their former success, and an
expectation of assistance from
God. And pitched before them —
Probably upon some hilly ground
where they might secure
themselves, and watch for
advantage against their enemies;
which might be the reason why
the Syrians durst not assault
them before the seventh day, 1
Kings 20:29. Like two little
flocks of kids — Few and weak;
being also, for convenience of
fighting, and that they might
seem more than they were,
divided into two bodies.
Verse 28
1 Kings 20:28. Because the
Syrians have said, &c. — What
they had said, this man of God
knew, either from common report,
strengthened by their present
choice of plain ground for the
battle; or rather, by revelation
from God, to whose inspection
their secret counsels lay open,
2 Kings 6:12. His omnipotence
being disputed, he sent his
prophet to predict the vengeance
coming on his enemies; and their
defeat in the plains was a
singular and undeniable
confirmation, both of his
omnipotence and veracity. Ye
shall know that I am the Lord —
Namely, the universal Lord of
all places, persons, and things.
Verse 29
1 Kings 20:29. They pitched one
over against the other seven
days — It may seem strange that
they should look one another in
the face so long, without coming
to any action; for the Syrians
had so much advantage in their
numbers, that one would have
thought they would have
immediately encompassed the
Israelites, and have destroyed
them all: but perhaps the
Israelites continued all these
days on the rising ground, and
the Syrians did not dare to
attack them till they came down
into the plain. Israel slew of
the Syrians a hundred thousand
footmen in one day — In all
probability they surprised them
by a sudden, unexpected attack;
and God dismayed them, and
struck such a terror into them,
that they could make no
resistance.
Verse 30
1 Kings 20:30. A wall fell upon
twenty and seven thousand — The
wall of the city under which
they lay, ready to defend it; or
the walls (the singular number
being put for the plural, than
which nothing is more frequent)
of some great castle or fort, in
or near the city in which they
were now fortifying themselves;
or of some part of the city
where they lay. This might
possibly happen through natural
causes; but most probably was
effected by the mighty power of
God, sending some earthquake, or
violent storm, which threw down
the walls upon them: and if ever
a miracle was to be wrought, now
seems to have been the proper
season for it; when the
blasphemous Syrians denied the
sovereign power of God, and
thereby in some sort obliged him
to give a proof of it; and to
show, that he was the God of the
plains, as well as of the
mountains; and that he could as
effectually destroy them in
their strongest holds, as in the
open fields; and make the very
walls, to whose strength they
trusted for their defence, to be
the instruments of their ruin.
But it may be further observed,
that it is not said, that all
these were killed by the fall of
this wall; but only that the
wall fell upon them, killing
some, and wounding others.
Verse 31
1 Kings 20:31. We have heard
that the kings of Israel are
merciful kings — More merciful
than others, because that
religion, which they professed,
taught them humanity, and
obliged them to show mercy. Let
us put sackcloth upon our loins,
and ropes, &c. — As a testimony
of our sorrow for undertaking
this war; and that we have
justly forfeited our lives for
it, and shall submit to any
punishment he may be pleased to
inflict. This, it seems, was the
habit in those times, in which
supplicants presented
themselves, when they petitioned
for mercy. Peradventure he will
save thy life — This
encouragement have all poor
sinners, to repent and humble
themselves before God. The God
of Israel is a merciful God; let
us rend our hearts and return to
him.
Verse 32
1 Kings 20:32. Thy servant
Ben-hadad saith, I pray thee,
let me live — He now as humbly
petitions Ahab, as Ahab a little
while ago had petitioned him,
and begs of him his life. What a
change from the height of
prosperity to the depth of
distress! Such is the
uncertainty of human affairs!
Such the strange turns which are
continually taking place! The
spoke of the wheel which is
uppermost now, may soon be the
lowest of all. And he said, is
he yet alive? He is my brother —
I do not only pardon him, but
honour and love him as a
brother. This was rather folly
than mercifulness, or good
nature; to treat a man thus, who
had so lately used him with such
extreme haughtiness, and brought
so much confusion, terror, and
damage, into his kingdom.
Verse 33
1 Kings 20:33. The men did
diligently observe, &c. — They
were wise persons whom Ben-hadad
employed in this embassy; who
watched attentively to hear
whether any kind word would drop
from Ahab’s mouth, on which they
might lay hold, and make their
advantage of it, before he could
retract it. And they catched
hastily at the word brother, and
said, Thy brother Ben-hadad
lives, and implores this favour,
that he may live. They repeated
the word again, to try whether
the king would own it, or
whether it had only dropt
casually from him; or whether he
spoke this from his heart, or
only in dissimulation and
design; for it seemed too good
news to be true.
Verse 34
1 Kings 20:34. The cities which
my father took from thy father —
Either from Baasha, (1 Kings
15:20,) whom he calls Ahab’s
father, because he was his
predecessor in the government;
or rather, from Omri, in whose
time he probably made a
successful invasion into the
land of Israel, and took some
more of the cities, and Aphek
among the rest, though it be not
elsewhere recorded in Scripture.
And thou shall make streets in
Damascus — Bishop Patrick tells
us, that some suppose the word
to signify market-places, where
things were sold, the toll of
which should belong to Ahab:
others think he meant courts of
judicature, where he should
exercise a jurisdiction over the
Syrians; others, what we now
call a piazza, or rather, what
by Rauwolff is called a
caravansera, and by others a
kane, that is, a great house,
built like a cloister, round a
great court-yard, and full of
warehouses and apartments, in
which foreign merchants are wont
to live, or travellers to repair
to, as to an inn, and of which
Ahab was to receive the rents.
It is probable, it was a quarter
for his subjects to live in, and
which he should possess, and
over which he should enjoy the
same jurisdiction, as he did
with respect to the rest of his
kingdom. Such a power granted in
Samaria, and such a making over
a part of it, to the father of
Ben-hadad, and annexing it to
the kingdom of Syria, with a
right of building such idol
temples as he thought fit, was a
sufficient disgrace to the
father of Ahab; as the proposing
to give Ahab now a like honour
in Damascus, was an expression
of a very abject adulation in
Ben-hadad.
Verse 35
1 Kings 20:35. A certain man
said to his neighbour — Hebrew,
אל רעהו, eel regnehu, to his
companion, as St. Hierom
translates it, that is, to a
prophet bred in the same school
with himself, who well
understood the importance of
obeying the command. In the word
of the Lord — In the name and by
the command of God, whereof,
doubtless, he had informed him.
Smite me, I pray thee — So as to
wound me, 1 Kings 20:37. He
speaks what God commanded him,
though it was to his own hurt;
by which obedience to God, he
secretly reproacheth Ahab’s
disobedience in a far easier
matter. And this the prophet
desires, by God’s appointment,
that, looking like a wounded
soldier, he might have the more
free access to the king. And the
man refused to smite him — Not
out of contempt to God’s
command, but probably, in
tenderness to his brother.
Verse 36
1 Kings 20:36. Because thou hast
not obeyed the voice of the
Lord, a lion shall slay thee —
If the punishment seem too
severe for so small a fault, let
it be considered, 1st, That
disobedience to God’s express
command, especially when
delivered by a person known by
the party disobeying to be a
prophet, was a great sin, and no
less than capital, Deuteronomy
18:19. 2d, This fault was much
worse in a prophet, who very
well knew the authority of God’s
commands, and this way of
publishing them. 3d, This man
might be guilty of many other
heinous sins unknown to us, but
known to God; for which God
might justly cut him off: which
God chose to do upon this
occasion, that by the severity
of this punishment of a
prophet’s disobedience,
proceeding from pity to his
brother, he might teach Ahab the
greatness of his sin, in sparing
him through foolish pity, whom,
by the laws of religion, and
justice, and prudence, he should
have cut off.
Verse 38
1 Kings 20:38. And disguised
himself with ashes upon his face
— As a man in a very sorrowful
condition. Houbigant reads it,
He had his eyes covered with a
bandage, supposing that the
genuine, reading of the text is,
not אפר, apher, but אפד, aphed,
which signifies a bandage;
whence comes the Hebrew word
ephod; something bound round.
Several of the versions render
it, with a veil: and thus the
Hebrew doctors understand it. It
is probable, it was a cloth or
bandage of some kind, wherewith
he bound up his wound, which
probably was in his face: for it
was made in a conspicuous place,
that it might be visible to Ahab
and others.
Verse 39
1 Kings 20:39. And he said, Thy
servant, &c. — This relation is
a parable; a usual way of
instruction in the eastern
parts, and most fit for this
occasion, wherein an obscure
prophet was to speak to a great
king, impatient of a downright
reproof, and exceeding partial
in his own cause. A man turned
aside and said, Keep, &c. — His
commander said this unto him, as
the manner of expression shows.
The king of Israel said, So
shall thy judgment be — Thou
hast pronounced thy own
sentence. According to your
agreement; so shalt thou suffer.
Thou shalt lose thy life, or pay
the talent or silver. Ahab had
forgot how he had dismissed a
greater person willingly, or
else he could scarcely have been
so hard-hearted as to condemn
one that had offended
unwillingly. But the prophet
soon brought it to his
remembrance.
Verse 41
1 Kings 20:41. And he hasted,
and took the ashes away from his
face — Threw off his disguise
immediately, by pulling off the
cloth or bandage wherewith his
face, or a part of it, had been
concealed. And the king of
Israel discerned him — Either by
his face, which was known to the
king, or to some of the
courtiers there present: or, by
the manner of his address to
him, which, being changed, was
now such as the prophets
generally used.
Verse 42
1 Kings 20:42. Thus saith the
Lord, Because, &c. — “What was
the great sin of Ahab in this
action, for which God so
severely punished him?” The
great dishonour hereby done to
God, in suffering so horrid a
blasphemer to go unpunished,
which was contrary to an express
law, Leviticus 24:16. And God
had delivered him into Ahab’s
hand, for his blasphemy, as he
promised to do, (1 Kings 20:28,)
by which act of his providence,
compared with that law, it was
most evident that this man was
appointed by God to destruction.
But Ahab was so far from
punishing this blasphemer, that
he did not so much as rebuke
him, but dismissed him upon easy
terms, and took not the least
care for the reparation of God’s
honour. And the people were
punished for their own sins,
which were many and great;
though God took this occasion to
inflict the punishment. The
former part of this decree of
God, Thy life shall go for his
life, was fulfilled three years
after, when Ahab was killed in a
battle against the Syrians, 1
Kings 22:1-40. But the latter,
And thy people for his people,
was deferred till the reign of
Hazael, who fulfilled it by the
wars he had with the Israelites,
and the slaughter he made of
them, 2 Kings 10:32-33.
Verse 43
1 Kings 20:43. The king of
Israel went to his house heavy
and displeased — This
distressing sentence turned all
their joy, for their late
victory, into mourning; Ahab
being much troubled for what he
had done, and for what, it
seems, he now believed he must
suffer. |