By Joseph Benson
ARGUMENT.
THE two books of Samuel, as they
relate the original of the royal
government in Saul, and of the
royal family in David, are an
introduction to the two books of
Kings. These two books give us
an account of David’s successor,
Solomon; of the division of his
kingdom, and of the several
kings of Israel and Judah, down
to the captivity, including the
space of 417 years. It cannot
certainly be determined who it
was that collected the history
of these two books, as they are
now come to our hands. The
opinion of those learned men who
ascribe this work to Ezra, as it
is, indeed, without any absolute
objection against it, so has it
not any clear demonstration to
raise it above a probable
conjecture. But however that be,
what is sufficient for us, these
books plainly appear to have
been collected out of the
ancient and undoubted records of
the two kingdoms of Israel and
Judah. That such records, or
annals, were really written in
every king’s reign, is not only
highly credible, as it was
agreeable to the general usage
of the eastern monarchies, but
is very evident also, from
innumerable passages in these
books themselves, compared with
those of the Chronicles, and
other parts of Scripture;
wherein (besides what might be
written by historians or
record-keepers appointed by the
several kings themselves) we
find the chief transactions of
many particular reigns drawn up
by such prophets as lived in,
and were witnesses of them.
Thus, the acts of David were
written by Samuel, Nathan, and
Gad, 1 Chronicles 29:29; the
life of Solomon by Nathan,
Ahijah, and Iddo, 2 Chronicles
9:29; that of Rehoboam by
Shemaiah and Iddo; that of
Uzziah, and a great part, if not
the whole of Hezekiah’s, by
Isaiah. And, to name no more,
the principal matters relating
to Jehoiakin and Zedekiah stand
incorporated in the prophecy of
Jeremiah. These several larger
memoirs are what go under the
name of The Books of the
Chronicles of the Kings of
Israel or Judah, so often
mentioned and referred to in
these writings of the kings. For
that those chronicles are not
intended of the two books of
Chronicles which we now have, is
most clear even from this alone,
that many transactions referred
to in the books of the Kings,
are so far from being found more
fully related in our Chronicles,
that most of them are more short
than those in the Kings, and
some of them not found there at
all. But the books of both Kings
and Chronicles do refer us, for
several larger accounts, to
these writings of the seers or
prophets; which were the
original large Chronicles,
whereof those which we now have
are but abbreviations. It is
sufficient, therefore, to
establish the authority and just
esteem of these books, that by
all circumstances compared
together, we find them to have
been collected by persons of
unsuspected ability, care, and
honesty, and handed down to us
with as much purity and
uncorruptedness in the copies,
as the nature of such things
could possibly bear. And,
undoubtedly, we owe the handing
of them down to us in this
uncorrupted manner to the
especial providence of God, as
being intended for our
instruction. |
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