Verse 1
2 Chronicles 2:1. And a house
for his kingdom — A royal palace
for himself and his successors.
The substance of this whole
chapter is contained in 1 Kings
5., and is explained in the
notes there, and the seeming
differences between the contents
of this and it reconciled.
Verse 3
2 Chronicles 2:3. And Solomon
sent to Huram — Or Hiram, as he
is called in the first book of
Kings where we learn that he
first sent to Solomon to
congratulate him on his
accession to the throne, and
then Solomon sent to him.
Verse 4
2 Chronicles 2:4. To dedicate it
to him — To his honour and
worship. For the continual
show-bread — So called here and
Numbers 4:7, because it stood
before the Lord continually, by
a constant succession of new
bread, when the old was removed.
See Exodus 25:30; Leviticus
24:8.
Verse 5
2 Chronicles 2:5. The house
which I build is great — Though
the temple, strictly so called,
was small, yet the buildings
belonging to it were large and
numerous. For great is our God
above all gods — Above all
idols, above all princes. Idols
are nothing, princes are little,
and both are under the control
of the God of Israel. Therefore
the house must be great; not
indeed in proportion to the
greatness of that God to whom it
is to be dedicated, for between
finite and infinite there can be
no proportion; but in some
proportion to the exalted
conceptions we have of him, and
the great esteem we have for
him.
Verse 6
2 Chronicles 2:6. But who is
able to build him a house — No
house, be it ever so great, can
be a habitation for him. Behold,
the heaven and the heaven of
heavens cannot contain him — Nor
does he, like the gods of the
nations, dwell in temples made
with hands. When, therefore, I
speak of building a great house
for the great God, let none be
so foolish as to imagine that I
mean to include or comprehend
God within it, for he is
infinite. Who am I, then, that I
should build him a house — He
looked upon himself, though a
mighty prince, as utterly
unworthy of the honour of being
employed in this great work.
Save only to burn sacrifice
before him — As if he had said,
We have not such low notions of
our God as to suppose we can
build a house that will contain
him: we only intend it for the
convenience of his priests and
worshippers, that they may have
a suitable place wherein to
assemble and offer sacrifices
and prayers, and perform other
religious duties to him. Thus
Solomon guards Hiram against any
misapprehension concerning God,
which his speaking of building
him a house might otherwise have
occasioned. And it is one part
of the wisdom wherein we ought
to walk toward them that are
without, in a similar manner
carefully to guard against all
misapprehension which anything
we may say or do may occasion
concerning any truth or duty of
religion.
Verse 7
2 Chronicles 2:7. Send me
therefore a man cunning to work
in gold, &c. — There were
admirable artists, in all the
works here referred to, at Tyre;
some of whom Solomon desired to
be sent to him, that they might
assist those whom David had
provided, but who were not so
skilful as those of Tyre.
Verse 10
2 Chronicles 2:10. Behold, I
will give thy servants twenty
thousand measures of beaten
wheat, &c. — Solomon would not
feed his workmen with bread and
water, but with plenty of
provisions, and of the best
kind. They that employ labourers
ought to take care that they be
not only well paid, but well
provided for, with sufficient of
that which is wholesome and
proper for them. Let rich
masters do for their poor
servants and workmen as they
would be done by it the tables
were turned.
Verse 11
2 Chronicles 2:11. Huram
answered, Because the Lord loved
his people, &c. — Thus he
congratulates the happiness of
Israel in having such a king as
Solomon was. And certainly a
wise and good government is a
great blessing to a people, and
may well be accounted a singular
token of God’s favour. He does
not say, Because he loved thee
he made thee king, (though that
also was true,) but because he
loved his people. Princes must
look upon themselves as
preferred for the public good,
not for their own personal
satisfaction, and should rule so
as to evidence they were given
to their people in love, not in
anger.
Verse 12
2 Chronicles 2:12. Blessed be
the Lord that made heaven and
earth — It seems Huram was not
only a friend to the Jewish
nation, but a proselyte to their
religion, and that he worshipped
Jehovah, the God of Israel, (who
was now known by that name to
the neighbour nations,) as the
God that made heaven and earth,
and the fountain of power as
well as of being.
Verse 14
2 Chronicles 2:14. The son of a
woman — of Dan, and his father a
man of Tyre — A good omen of
uniting Jew and Gentile in the
gospel temple. With the cunning
men of my lord David — So he
calls David here, and Solomon in
the next verse, either out of
singular respect to their
greatness and worth, or because
he was indeed tributary to them:
or, at least, his country was
nourished by their country, as
it was afterward, Acts 12:20.
Verse 17
2 Chronicles 2:17. Solomon
numbered all the strangers — For
David had not only numbered his
own people, but afterward the
strangers, that Solomon might
have a true account of them, and
employ them about his buildings.
Yet Solomon numbered them again,
because death might have made a
considerable alteration among
them since David’s numbering.
Verse 18
2 Chronicles 2:18. To be hewers
in the mountain — He would not
employ the free- born Israelites
in this drudgery, but the
strangers that were proselytes,
who, having no lands, applied
themselves to trades, and got
their living by their industry
or ingenuity. |