Verse 3
2 Chronicles 35:3. That taught
all Israel which were holy —
That is, the Levites were holy
unto the Lord. And therefore it
may be rendered, and were holy,
&c., that is, peculiarly
dedicated to this service, of
ministering to the priests, and
instructing the people. Put the
holy ark in the house, &c. — It
appears from this that the ark
had been removed from its place;
but by whom or when cannot now
be said. It shall not be a
burden upon your shoulders —
That is, hereafter. For they
were to carry it to a settled
place, there to remain: and then
they would be obliged to bear it
no further on their shoulders,
as they had done before it was
fixed in the temple. Serve now
the Lord, &c. — Ministers must
look upon themselves as servants
both to Christ, and to the
people for his sake. They must
take care and take pains, and
lay themselves out to the
utmost, both for the honour and
glory of God, and for the
benefit of his people, not as
having dominion over their
faith, but as helpers of their
holiness and joy.
Verse 5
2 Chronicles 35:5. And stand in
the holy place — Or minister (as
that word is frequently used) in
the court of the priests.
According to the division of the
families — According to the
several families, both of the
people, whom he calls their
brethren, lest they should
despise them, or grudge to serve
them, and of the Levites. For
the passover was to be eaten by
the several families according
to their numbers, and therefore
he commands these persons, that
when the paschal lambs were
brought to them to be killed,
they should so order the matter,
that they might be distributed
to the several families, whether
of the Levites or other tribes.
Verse 6-7
2 Chronicles 35:6-7. Prepare
your brethren — By purifying
them, and exciting them to fit
themselves for so great and
solemn a work. Josiah gave to
the people lambs and kids — For
either of these might be used
for the paschal- offering. And
three thousand bullocks — Which
were to be offered after the
lambs upon the several days of
the feast of unleavened bread.
Verse 8
2 Chronicles 35:8. And his
princes gave willingly — Not the
political, but ecclesiastical
princes, or the chief of the
priests and Levites, whose names
here follow. Unto the people,
priests, and Levites — For the
use of any of the families of
them, as need should be. For
they supposed the thirty-
thousand, which the king had
given, were not sufficient for
all the families.
Verse 11
2 Chronicles 35:11. And the
Levites flayed them — Which they
did, (though properly that work
belonged to the priests,)
because the priests, who were
sanctified, were not sufficient
for it, there being so many
thousands of the cattle; and
they were fully employed in the
killing of the sacrifices, and
the sprinkling of the blood,
which was more properly the
priests’ work than the other.
Verse 12
2 Chronicles 35:12. And they
removed the burnt-offerings —
That part of the paschal lambs
which was to be burned, which
they despatched as soon as
possible, that they might give
that part which was to be eaten
to each family. And so they did
with the oxen — All of which
were not given for
peace-offerings, but some for
burnt-offerings: which they also
offered as fast as they could,
that they might give to each
family a portion sufficient for
them to feast on.
Verse 13-14
2 Chronicles 35:13-14. But the
other holy offerings sod they in
pots — Those from which the
burnt-offerings were removed, (2
Chronicles 35:12,) namely, the
peace- offerings, part of which
fell to the share of the offerer,
who was Josiah, and, by his
gift, to the people. Afterward
they made ready — To wit, the
paschal lambs, and their part of
the peace-offerings.
Verse 18
2 Chronicles 35:18. There was no
passover like to that — The
whole solemnity was performed
exactly according to the law,
whereas in Hezekiah’s passover
there were several
irregularities: likewise Josiah
furnished the whole congregation
with beasts for sacrifice at his
own charge, which no king ever
did before him.
Verse 20
2 Chronicles 35:20. After all
this, when Josiah had prepared
the temple — When he and his
people hoped that God was
reconciled, and the foundation
of a lasting happiness laid,
their hopes were quickly
blasted. So much are men often
mistaken in their judgments
about the designs of God’s
providence. To fight against
Charchemish — Which the Assyrian
had lately taken from the king
of Egypt, of which he boasts,
Isaiah 10:9.
Verse 21
2 Chronicles 35:21. I come not
against thee, but against the
house wherewith I have war —
Against the house of the king of
Assyria, between whom and me
there is war. For God commanded
me to make haste — Therefore,
give me no hinderance. Some
think he only pretended this,
because he knew Josiah had a
great reverence for God, and in
obedience to him might desist
from his purpose. And the Targum,
with some of the Jews, thinks he
called his own idol by the name
of God; though Kimchi thinks,
and the event makes it most
probable, that he spoke of the
true God, who perhaps admonished
him in a dream, as he did
Abimelech, or sent him a message
to go against the Assyrians by
the Prophet Jeremiah, many of
whose prophecies are directed to
foreign nations. Forbear thee
from meddling with God, who is
with me, &c. — It is at thy
peril if thou engage against one
who has both a better army, and
a better cause, and God on his
side.
Verse 22
2 Chronicles 35:22. Josiah would
not turn his face from him —
Being, peradventure, encouraged
to go out against him by a
misinterpretation of that
promise made to him, chap. 2
Chronicles 34:28, Thou shalt be
gathered to thy grave in peace.
Thus God overrules the errors
and miscarriages of men to the
accomplishment of his own
counsels. But disguised himself
— Changed his habit, that he
might not give his enemies the
advantage of aiming at his
person, which he wisely thought
they would do, that being a
likely course to end their
trouble, as indeed it proved.
And hearkened not unto the words
of Necho from the mouth of God —
Either, 1st, which Pharaoh sent
to him in the name of God; or
rather, 2d, which Pharaoh
received from the mouth of God;
who was pleased, some way or
other, to impart his mind to
him, and which Pharaoh
acquainted him with by the
command of God. And therefore
Josiah is here blamed for not
hearkening to this message:
although, if he sinned herein,
it was only a sin of ignorance,
for he did not know that God had
spoken this to Pharaoh, and was
not bound to believe his
testimony, which he had good
reason to suspect in this
matter. Yet, it seems, he ought
so far to have regarded it, as
to have inquired into the mind
of God about it, which he
neglected to do, and therefore
cannot be wholly excused. How
can we think to prosper in our
ways, if we do not acknowledge
God in them?
Verse 24
2 Chronicles 35:24. And put him
in the second chariot — It was
the custom of war, in former
times, for great officers to
have led horses with them in
battle, that if one failed they
might mount another. And, in
like manner, we may presume,
that when it became a fashion to
fight in chariots, all great
commanders had an empty one
following them, to which they
might betake themselves, if any
mischief befell the other. They
brought him to Jerusalem, and he
died — Bishop Sherlock observes,
that Josiah had so good a
character in Scripture, that
both Jews and Christians have
been at a loss to account for
his unfortunate end. The learned
Dr. Prideaux endeavours to
justify his conduct in opposing
the passage of the king of
Egypt, because it was a service
due to the king of Assyria, to
whom Josiah was a vassal. “Be it
so,” says Dr. Dodd, “yet his
duty to the king of Assyria
could not dissolve his
dependance on a higher Master.
He went to war as vassal of the
king of Assyria, but did he ask
counsel of God as king of Judah?
Or was he attended to the war
with such forces only as the
kings of Judah might lawfully
use? That he had chariots and
horsemen, appears plainly from
this account of his death. That
this was the true or only cause
of his misfortune, I dare not
affirm; for I have no express
authority to support me in
affirming it: but this I see,
that he was found in the day of
battle, not with the equipage of
a king of Judah, but surrounded
with forces which the law of his
God had forbidden him to trust
to, and which had often proved a
strength fatal to his
ancestors.” See Bishop
Sherlock’s Dissertation on the
Use and Intent of Prophecy, at
the end.
Verse 25
2 Chronicles 35:25. Jeremiah
lamented for Josiah — Sorrowed
much on account of the immature
death of this good king,
foreseeing that the utter ruin
of his country would follow upon
it. And as it was usual with the
Jews to make lamentations,
elegies, or mournful pieces upon
the death of great men, princes,
and others that had
distinguished themselves among
them, and deserved well of their
country, it is probable Jeremiah
wrote such a piece on the
occasion of Josiah’s death. If
he did so, the loss of it is
very much to be deplored,
because, as Dr. Dodd observes,
it was, no doubt, “a masterpiece
of its kind as there never was
an author more deeply affected
with his subject, or more
capable of carrying it through
all the tender sentiments of
sorrow and compassion, than
Jeremiah.” All the singing-men
and singing-women spake of
Josiah in their lamentations —
Among the Jews men and women
were usually employed to mourn
at funerals, and to sing the
praises of the dead. And so real
and great was the mourning for
Josiah, that for ages afterward
they always remembered it in
their lamentations for the dead,
saying of the person deceased,
Then art worthy to be lamented
for, as good Josiah was, or
words to the same purpose. Or,
as Poole thinks, the meaning may
be, that in all their succeeding
lamentations for their public
calamities, they remembered
Josiah’s death as their first
and fatal blow, which opened the
flood-gates to all their
following miseries. And made
them an ordinance in Israel —
Ordained that the mournful
pieces, penned on this sad
occasion, should be learned and
sung by all sorts of people.
And, behold, they are written in
the Lamentations — Not in the
book termed The Lamentations of
Jeremiah, which was written on
another occasion; but in some
collection of mournful poems,
now lost.
Verse 26
2 Chronicles 35:26. The rest of
the acts of Josiah, and his
goodness — His piety toward God,
and his benignity, clemency, and
kindness toward all his
subjects, being of a most tender
and mild disposition, both
toward God and toward men, 2
Chronicles 34:27. According to
that which was written in the
law — Which he made his rule in
all his actions. The revelation
which God has given us of his
mind and will is the only true
standard by which we can safely
walk. All other rules may
deceive us, and will often
either leave us in doubt or
uncertainty how to act, or will
lead us wrong. But the word of
God is a sure and unerring
guide, a lamp unto our feet, and
a light unto our paths. Let us
walk by this, and we shall
please God in time and enjoy him
in eternity. |