Verse 1
2 Chronicles 26:1. The people of
Judah took Uzziah — Called also
Azariah, 2 Kings 14:21; both
names signifying the same thing,
the strength, or help of God. Of
this and 2 Chronicles 26:1; 2
Chronicles 26:3-4, see notes on
2 Kings 14:21-22; and 1 Kings
15:2-3.
Verse 5
2 Chronicles 26:5. He sought God
in the days of Zechariah — Who
was probably the son of that
Zechariah whom his grand-father
Joash slew. Who had
understanding in the visions of
God — Either the visions with
which he himself was favoured,
or the visions of the preceding
prophets. He was well skilled in
prophecy, and conversed much
with the heavenly world; was an
intelligent, devout, and good
man; and had such influence on
Uzziah, that while he lived he
sought God, sought his favour,
direction, and aid; trusted in
him, cleaved to him, and
persisted in his worship, and in
the true religion. Happy are the
great men who have such about
them, and are willing to be
advised by them: but unhappy
those who seek God only while
they have such with them, and
have not a principle in
themselves to bear them out to
the end.
Verse 6
2 Chronicles 26:6. And brake
down the wall of Gath — Which
had been taken by Hazael, in the
days of Joash his grand-father,
chap. 2 Kings 12:17; but was
either relinquished by him,
because it lay so far from his
other dominions; or retaken by
the Philistines, who had now
repaired its fortifications and
kept it.
Verse 10-11
2 Chronicles 26:10-11. He built
towers in the desert — Partly to
guard his cattle from the
inroads and depredations which
the Arabians were accustomed to
make: and partly to give notice
of the approach of any enemy,
and to put some stop to their
march on that side. Uzziah had
an army that went out to war by
bands — Some bands at one time,
and some at another, as occasion
required.
Verse 11
2 Chronicles 26:11. Now
therefore deliver the captives —
Release your brethren, whom you
have made prisoners, and send
them home again with care. For
the fierce wrath of the Lord is
upon you — And there is no other
way of escaping it, but by
showing mercy.
Verse 16
2 Chronicles 26:16. When he was
strong — Strengthened in his
kingdom, and free from the fear
of any enemy; his heart was
lifted up to his destruction —
Thus the prosperity of fools, by
puffing them up with pride,
destroys them. He had done so
much business, and attained so
much honour, that he began to
think no business, no honour too
great, or too good for him; no,
not that of the priesthood. He
went unto the temple of the Lord
— Into the holy place, where the
altar of incense stood, and into
which none but priests might
enter, much less offer incense.
Verse 18
2 Chronicles 26:18. And they
withstood Uzziah — Hebrew, stood
up against Uzziah, not by force,
or laying hands upon him to
restrain him, for in the next
verse we still find the censer
in his hand; but only by
admonition and reproof, which
follows. Neither shall it be for
thine honour, &c. — Expect that
God will punish thee, or put
some brand of infamy upon thee
for this presumption. But this
they express modestly, because
they considered that he to whom
they spake, though an offender,
was their sovereign.
Verse 19
2 Chronicles 26:19. Then Uzziah
was wroth — With the priests.
While he was wroth the leprosy
rose up in his forehead — So
that he could not hide his
shame: though it is probable it
was also in the rest of his
body. From beside the
incense-altar — By a stroke from
an invisible hand, coming from
the altar; that he might be
assured this was the effect of
God’s displeasure.
Verse 20
2 Chronicles 26:20. They thrust
him out from thence — Not by
force, which needed not, for he
voluntarily hasted away, as it
follows; but by vehement
persuasions and denunciations of
God’s further judgments upon
him, if he did not depart.
Verse 21
2 Chronicles 26:21. Uzziah was a
leper unto the day of his death
— God would have this leprosy to
be incurable, as a lasting
monument of his anger against
such presumptuous invaders of
the priest’s office. Dwelt in a
several house, &c. — As he was
obliged to do by law, which he
durst not now resist, being
under the hand of God, and under
the fear of worse plagues, if he
did not so. For he was cut off
from the house of the Lord — He
dwelt in a several house,
because he might not come into
the temple and courts, nor
consequently into any public
assembly. So the punishment
answers the sin, as face does to
face in a glass. He thrust
himself into the temple of God,
whither the priests only had
admission: and for that was
thrust out of the very courts of
the temple, into which the
meanest of his subjects might
enter. He invaded the dignity of
the priesthood, to which he had
no right, and is for that
deprived of the royal dignity,
to which he had an undoubted
right. |