Verse 1
2 Kings 5:1. Naaman — was a
great man with his master — In
great power and favour with the
king of Syria; and honourable —
Highly esteemed, both for his
quality and success; because the
Lord by him had given
deliverance unto Syria — He had
been victorious in such battles
as he had fought, which coming
to pass through the permission
or appointment of the Divine
Providence, the sacred writer
would have the Israelites to
look upon it as the Lord’s
doing. Let Israel know, that,
when the Syrians prevailed, it
was from the Lord. He gave them
success in their wars, even with
Israel, and for Israel’s
chastisement. But he was a leper
— This did not exclude him from
the society of men in that
country, where the Jewish law
was not in force. But it was a
great blemish upon him, and also
likely to prove deadly; there
being no cure for this disease,
a disease very common in Syria.
Verse 2
2 Kings 5:2. The Syrians had
gone out by companies — Making
inroads into the land of Israel,
to rob and plunder, after the
manner of those times. And had
brought away captive a little
maid — The providence of God so
ordering it for very important
reasons. And she waited on
Naaman’s wife — Was preferred
into Naaman’s family, where she
published Elisha’s fame, to the
honour of Israel and Israel’s
God.
Verse 3
2 Kings 5:3. Would God my Lord
were with the prophet that is in
Samaria — In the kingdom of
Samaria; or, rather, in the city
of Samaria; where Elisha was
when she was taken, and where he
commonly resided, though he went
to other places as need
required. For he would recover
him of his leprosy — She had
heard of the wonderful things
which he had done, and therefore
was confident he could work this
cure. Children should betimes
acquaint themselves with the
wondrous works of God, that
wherever they go they may speak
of them, to the profit of
others. Yea, and servants, like
this little maid, may be
blessings to the families in
which Providence casts their
lot, by telling what they know
of the glory of God, and the
honour of his ministers.
Verse 4
2 Kings 5:4. And one went in and
told his lord — One of Naaman’s
servants, hearing this, told it
to Naaman, and he to the king of
Syria, begging his leave to go
to the prophet in Israel. For
though he neither loved nor
honoured the Jewish nation, yet
if one of that nation can but
heal him of his leprosy, he will
gladly and thankfully accept the
cure. And he hopes that one can,
from the intelligence he has
received, which he does not
despise because of the meanness
of her that gave it. O that they
who are spiritually diseased
would hearken thus readily to
the tidings brought them of the
great Physician!
Verse 5
2 Kings 5:5. The king said, I
will send a letter to the king
of Israel — It was very natural
for a king to suppose that the
king of Israel could do more
than any of his subjects. He
took with him ten talents of
silver, &c. — That he might
honourably reward the prophet,
in case he should be cured by
him. But it was a vast sum that
he took for this purpose; for if
they were Hebrew talents, the
silver only amounted to four
thousand five hundred pounds
sterling.
Verse 6
2 Kings 5:6. Now when this
letter is come unto thee, &c. —
The beginning of the letter,
which, it is likely, contained
the usual compliments, is
omitted, as not pertinent to the
matter in hand. That thou mayest
recover him of his leprosy — Or,
That, by thy command, the
prophet that is with thee may
cleanse him; for kings are often
said to do those things which
they command to be done: in
which view, there is no
ambiguity in this letter of the
king of Syria. But this not
being plainly expressed, the
king of Israel apprehended that
the intention of this demand was
only to pick a quarrel with him,
and seek an occasion, or rather
a pretence, for a war with him.
Verse 7
2 Kings 5:7. The king of Israel
rent his clothes — Either as one
in great affliction and trouble,
or because he looked upon it as
blasphemy, to ascribe that power
to him which belonged to God
alone. Am I God, to kill and
make alive? — He expresses
himself thus, because the
leprosy is a kind or degree of
death, Numbers 12:12; and he
thought it as impossible to cure
it as to raise the dead. Every
body can kill; but when a person
is killed, to make him alive
again is the work only of the
Almighty. See how he seeketh a
quarrel against me — For not
doing what he requires, which he
knows to be impossible for me to
do. Though he had seen what
miracles Elisha had done, yet he
either had forgot them, or
thought this to be beyond his
power. Or, it may be, he was
loath to see still further
demonstration of his power with
God, and therefore did not send
to him on this occasion.
Verse 8
2 Kings 5:8. Elisha sent to the
king, saying, Wherefore hast
thou rent thy clothes? — There
is no just occasion for thee to
do so. Let him come now to me —
It was not for his own honour,
but for the honour of God and
his people, that he desires the
leprous Syrian to be sent to
him. And he shall know there is
a prophet in Israel — One who
can do that which the king of
Israel dares not attempt, and
which the prophets of Syria
cannot pretend to: and it were
sad with Israel if there were
not. As the word prophet
commonly signifies a man who
declares things which none could
know but God, and those to whom
he revealed them, so here it
signifies a man endued with a
divine power, and who thereby
could do what no man could
effect, unless God were with
him.
Verse 9-10
2 Kings 5:9-10. Naaman stood at
the door of the house of Elisha
— Waiting for Elisha’s coming to
him. And Elisha sent a
messenger, &c. — Which he did
partly to try and exercise
Naaman’s faith and obedience;
partly for the honour of his
religion and ministry, that it
might appear he sought not his
own glory and profit, but only
God’s honour and the good of
men; and partly for the
manifestation of the almighty
power of God, which could cure
such a desperate disease by such
slight means.
Verse 11
2 Kings 5:11. Naaman was wroth —
Supposing himself to be despised
and insulted by the prophet. And
said, Behold I thought, &c. —
Herein he gives us an example of
the perverseness of mankind, who
are prone to prefer their own
fancies to God’s appointments.
Big with the expectations of a
cure, he had been imagining how
this cure would be wrought: and
the scheme he had devised was
this: He will surely come out to
me — That is the least he can do
to me, a peer of Syria; to me,
who am come to him in all this
state, with my horses, chariot,
and retinue; to me, who have so
often been victorious over the
armies of Israel. And stand and
call on the name of his God — On
my behalf. And strike his hand
over the place — Wave it over
the afflicted part, where the
leprosy is: without which it
seemed ridiculous to him to
expect a cure.
Verse 12
2 Kings 5:12. Are not Abana and
Pharpar — better than all the
waters of Israel — How
magnificently doth he speak of
these two rivers, which watered
Damascus, and how scornfully of
all the waters of Israel! May I
not wash in them and be clean? —
Is there not as great virtue in
them to this purpose? But he
should have considered that the
cure was not to be wrought by
the water, but by the power of
God, who might use what means
and method of cure he pleased.
Verse 13
2 Kings 5:13. His servants came
near–Though at other times they
kept their distance, and now saw
him in a passion, yet knowing
him to be a man that would hear
reason at any time, and from any
one, they drew near, and made
bold to argue the matter with
him. Happy they who have such
servants as these, who both had
the courage to speak the truth,
and prudence to order their
speech with skill, submission,
and reverence. My father — Or,
our father; a title of honour in
that country, and a name by
which they called their lords,
as kings are called the fathers
of their people. They use it to
show their reverence and
affection for him. If the
prophet had bid thee do some
great thing — Had ordered thee
into a tedious course of physic,
or enjoined thee to submit to
some painful operation, suppose
blistering, or cupping, or
salivating, wouldst thou not
have done it? No doubt thou
wouldst. And wilt thou not
submit to so easy a method as
this, Wash and be clean? It
appears they had conceived a
great opinion of the prophet,
having probably heard more of
him from the common people, whom
they had conversed with, than
Naaman had from the king and
courtiers.
Verse 14
2 Kings 5:14. Then went he down
and dipped himself, &c. — Upon
second thoughts he yielded to
make the experiment, yet
probably with no great faith or
resolution. However, God was
pleased to honour himself and
the word of his prophet, and to
effect the cure, notwithstanding
his evil reasoning and unbelief.
His flesh came again like the
flesh of a little child — No
doubt to his great surprise and
joy. And he was clean — Fresh
and pure, free from every the
least mixture or mark of the
disease. This he got by yielding
to the will of God, and obeying
the injunction of his prophet,
which he at first despised as
unreasonable and foolish: and it
is in the way of observing, not
in the way of contemning and
neglecting divine institutions,
that we must expect the cure of
our spiritual diseases.
Verse 15
2 Kings 5:15. He returned to the
man of God — To give him thanks
and a recompense for the great
benefit which he had received. I
know there is no God in all the
earth but in Israel — By this
wonderful work I am fully
convinced that the God of Israel
is the only true God, and that
other gods are impotent idols. A
noble confession! but such as
speaks the misery of the Gentile
world; for the nations that had
many gods, really had no God,
but were without God in the
world. He had formerly thought
the gods of Syria gods indeed,
but now experience had rectified
his mistake, and he knew
Israel’s God was God alone, the
sovereign Lord of all. Had he
merely seen other lepers
cleansed, perhaps it would not
have convinced him; but the
mercy of the cure affected him
more than the miracle of it.
Those are best able to speak of
the power of divine grace, who
have themselves experienced it.
I pray thee take a blessing of
thy servant — A thankful
acknowledgment, or token of
gratitude. The Hebrews called
every gift a blessing.
Verse 16
2 Kings 5:16. He said, As the
Lord liveth, I will receive none
— Not that he thought it
unlawful to receive presents,
which he did receive from
others; but because of the
special circumstances of the
case, it being much for the
honour of God that the Syrians
should see the generous piety
and kindness of his ministers
and servants, and how much they
despised all that worldly wealth
and glory, which the prophets of
the Gentiles so greedily sought
after.
Verse 17
2 Kings 5:17. Two mules’ burden
of earth — Wherewith I may make
an altar of earth, as was usual,
Exodus 20:24. He desires the
earth of this land, because he
thought it more holy and
acceptable to God, and proper
for his service; or because he
would, by this token, profess
and declare his conjunction with
the Israelites in the worship of
God, and constantly put himself
in mind of his great obligation
to that God, from whose land
this was taken: and though he
might freely have taken this
earth without asking any leave,
yet he rather desires it from
the prophet’s gift, as believing
that he, who had put so great a
virtue into the waters of
Israel, could put as much into
the earth of Israel, and make it
as useful and beneficial to him
in a better way. And these
thoughts, though extravagant and
groundless, yet were excusable
in a heathen and a novice, who
was not yet thoroughly
instructed in true religion.
Verse 18
2 Kings 5:18. When my master
goeth into the house of Rimmon —
Or rather, went, or hath gone,
namely, formerly; for the Hebrew
text of the whole verse may be
properly rendered in the past
time, thus: In this thing the
Lord pardon thy servant, that
when my master went into the
house of Rimmon to worship
there, and he leaned on my hand,
and I bowed myself in the house
of Rimmon; when I bowed myself
in the house of Rimmon, the Lord
pardon thy servant in this
thing. Rimmon, it must be
observed, was a Syrian idol,
called here by the Seventy
Remman, and Acts 7:43, Remphan.
And as Naaman, in the preceding
verses, had declared that he
would worship no other God but
Jehovah, this translation seems
evidently the true one, and is
approved by many learned men, as
Mr. Locke, Dr. Lightfoot, Lord
Clarendon, and others.
Certainly, as Dr. Dodd observes,
“‘the incongruity would be
great, if Naaman, who had just
before declared his renunciation
of idolatry, should now confess
his readiness to relapse into
the same crime, and desire God’s
pardon for it beforehand;
whereas to ask pardon for what
he had done amiss, and to desire
the prophet’s intercession with
God in that behalf, argued a
mind truly sensible of his
former transgression, and very
much resolved to avoid it for
the future; and accordingly it
is supposed that upon his return
home he refused to worship
Rimmon any more, and was
thereupon dismissed from being
general of the king’s forces.”
Verse 20
2 Kings 5:20. Gehazi, the
servant of Elisha — One would
have expected that Elisha’s
servant should have been a
saint; but we find him far
otherwise. The best men, the
best ministers, have often had
those about them that were their
grief and shame. My master hath
spared this Syrian — A stranger,
and one of that nation who are
the implacable enemies of God’s
people. As the Lord liveth — He
swears, that he might have some
pretence for the action to which
he had bound himself by his
oath; not considering, that to
swear to do any wicked action,
is so far from excusing it, that
it makes it much worse.
Verses 21-23
2 Kings 5:21-23. He lighted down
from his chariot to meet him —
Thereby testifying his great
respect to the prophet his
master, He said — My master hath
sent me, &c. — This story of
Gehazi was a very unlikely one:
Naaman, however, was not willing
to question it, but glad of the
opportunity of showing his
gratitude to the prophet. And he
— Naaman, urged him — Who at
first refused it upon a pretence
of modesty and obedience to his
master’s command.
Verse 24
2 Kings 5:24. When he came to
the tower — A safe and private
place, which he chose for the
purpose, and where possibly he
hid and kept other things, which
he had got by such like frauds
and artifices. And let the men
go — Before they came within
sight of his master.
Verse 26
2 Kings 5:26. Went not my heart
with thee? &c. — Was not I
present with thee in mind, when
the man, &c. Is it a time to
receive money? &c. — Was this a
fit season for this action? I
had but just refused his gifts,
and that obstinately, for
important reasons; and now thou
hast given him cause to think
that this was done in mere
vain-glory, and that I inwardly
desired, and sought only a
fitter place and opportunity, to
take secretly in private what I
refused in public; thus bringing
reproach on our religion, and on
the God we worship. And
olive-yards, &c. — Which Gehazi
intended to purchase with this
money; and therefore the prophet
names them, to inform him that
he exactly knew, not only his
outward actions, but even his
most secret intentions. What a
folly is it to presume upon sin
in hopes of secrecy! When thou
goest aside into any by-path,
doth not thy own conscience go
with thee? Nay, doth not the eye
of God go with thee? What then
avails the absence of human
witnesses?
Verse 27
2 Kings 5:27. The leprosy of
Naaman shall cleave unto thee
and thy seed for ever — That is,
for some generations, as the
expression is often used, and as
may be thought by comparing this
with Exodus 20:5; Exodus 34:7.
This was a sentence which Gehazi
justly deserved, for his crime
was aggravated by a greedy
covetousness, which is idolatry,
profanation of God’s name, a
downright theft, in taking that
to himself which was given for
others, deliberate and impudent
lying, a desperate contempt of
God’s omnipotence, justice, and
holiness, a horrible reproach
cast upon the prophet and his
religion, and a pernicious
scandal given to Naaman, and
every other Syrian who should
chance to hear of it. We are
taught from hence that God knows
our sins, though committed in
secret, and will punish them;
and particularly that his wrath
pursues, not only the
unrighteous, but all those in
general who are given to
covetousness and dishonest gain;
and that goods acquired by
wicked means carry a curse with
them, which often descends from
parents to their children. He
went out from his presence a
leper as white as snow — Which
is the worst kind of leprosy,
and noted by physicians to be
incurable. Those who get money
by any way which is displeasing
to God, make a dear purchase.
What was Gehazi profited by the
two talents of silver, when he
lost his health, if not his
soul, for ever? |