Verse 1
2 Kings 9:1. And Elisha the
prophet called, &c. — The
Prophet Elijah was commanded to
anoint Jehu about twelve years
before this time; but, because
of Ahab’s humiliation, the
execution of the judgment
pronounced upon him and his
family was deferred. The office
of anointing Jehu therefore, it
seems, was left to be performed
by Elisha; who did not go
himself, either because he was
grown old and unfit for such a
journey, or because he was a
person too well known to be
employed in an affair that
required secrecy. Go to
Ramoth-gilead — The kings of
Israel and Judah were both
absent, and Jehu, it is
probable, was left
commander-in-chief of the king’s
army which lay there.
Verse 2-3
2 Kings 9:2-3. Make him arise up
from among his brethren — From
the other officers of the army,
2 Kings 9:5. Carry him to an
inner chamber — This he orders,
partly that the work might not
be hindered, and partly for the
security of the young prophet’s
own person. And say, Thus saith
the Lord, I have anointed &c. —
This was not the whole message
he was to deliver: but the rest
of it is particularly declared 2
Kings 9:7-10, and is to be
understood here. “According to
the Jews, none of the kings of
Israel were anointed but those
of the house of David, and these
only when there was a question
about their succession; as
Solomon, they say, needed not
have been anointed, had it not
been for the faction of Adonijah.
But in the case of Jehu, in whom
the succession of the kingdom of
Israel was to be translated out
of the right line of the family
of Ahab into another family,
which had no right to the
kingdom, but merely the
appointment of God, there was a
necessity for his unction, in
order both to convey to him a
title, and to invest him in the
actual possession of the
kingdom.” — Dodd.
Verse 4
2 Kings 9:4. So the young man
went to Ramoth-gilead — It
argued great faith in this young
prophet that he undertook so
readily the execution of this
command. For there was no small
danger in anointing a new king,
as Elisha himself plainly
intimated, when he ordered him
to flee away as fast as he
could, as soon as he had
performed his office.
Verse 5
2 Kings 9:5. Jehu said, Unto
which of us all? — It does not
appear that Jehu aimed at the
government, or that he ever
thought of it, but the
commission given him was a
perfect surprise to him. Some
indeed think he had been
anointed before by Elijah, but
privately, and with an
intimation that he must not act
till he received further orders,
as Samuel anointed David long
before he was to come to the
throne. But this is not at all
probable.
Verse 6
2 Kings 9:6. He arose and went
into the house — That is, into
an inner chamber in the house.
And he poured the oil on his
head — Thereby giving him, in
God’s name both a right to the
kingdom and the actual
possession of it. The
Israelites, it must be observed,
were still by right and
profession the people of God,
though they worshipped other
gods with him. And it belonged
to him to appoint what ruler he
pleased over them; which he now
did by his prophet. Without this
authority, if Jehu had taken the
government upon him, he had been
a usurper.
Verse 7
2 Kings 9:7. And thou shalt
smite the house of Ahab — Thou
shalt execute my judgment upon
them, pronounced long ago. That
I may avenge the blood of my
servants the prophets, &c. —
That they were idolaters was bad
enough, and merited all that was
brought upon them; yet this is
not mentioned here; but the
controversy God has with them is
for their being persecutors.
Nothing fills up the measure of
the iniquity of any prince or
people so much as this doth; nor
brings a surer or sorer ruin.
This was the sin which
principally brought on Jerusalem
both its first and its final
destruction, 2 Chronicles 36:16,
and Matthew 23:37-38. Jezebel’s
whoredoms and witchcrafts were
not so provoking to God as her
persecuting the prophets and
other faithful worshippers of
God, killing some, and driving
the rest into corners and caves,
1 Kings 18:4.
Verse 8
2 Kings 9:8. For the whole house
of Ahab shall perish — That is,
all his posterity and all his
kindred. Jehu, therefore, having
received such a charge, is to be
considered, in what he afterward
did to the house of Ahab, as
acting not out of a spirit of
revenge, for he had no quarrel
with the house of Ahab; but, as
the minister of God, who, by his
prophet, authorized and enjoined
him to do what follows.
Verse 10
2 Kings 9:10. In the portion of
Jezreel — In that portion of
land, in or near the city, which
belonged to Naboth. There shall
be none to bury her — That is,
none shall bury her, or she
shall not be buried; for it
appears from 2 Kings 9:34, that
Jehu gave orders to have her
buried, sending out persons for
that purpose, but they could
only find some small remains of
her carcass, the dogs having
eaten the rest.
Verse 11-12
2 Kings 9:11-12. Wherefore came
this mad fellow to thee? — What
business has he with thee? And
why wouldst thou gratify him so
far as to retire to converse
with him? They perceived him to
be a prophet by his air, habit,
and manner of speech, as well as
by his accosting Jehu so boldly,
and so suddenly vanishing when
he had done his business. And
these profane soldiers accounted
the Lord’s prophets madmen,
judging their neglect of
themselves, and their contempt
of temporal wealth and honours,
which the wise men of this world
so eagerly seek, with their
rigid and obscure course of
life, to be a kind of
infatuation: and considering the
holy exercises to which they
devoted themselves as the
effects of a religious phrensy.
Indeed; those that have no
religion commonly speak of those
that are religious with disdain,
and look upon them as
crack-brained. They said of our
Lord, He is beside himself, and
of St. Paul, that much learning
had made him mad. The highest
wisdom is thus represented as
folly, and they that best
understand themselves, as
persons beside themselves. He
said, You know the man, and his
communication — You know him to
be a prophet: why then do you
call him a mad fellow? And,
being a prophet, you may guess
what his business is with me;
that it is to teach me my duty.
Thus he thought to have put them
off; but they said, It is false
— We do not know, and cannot
conjecture, what was his errand:
but that there is something
extraordinary and of great
importance in it we plainly
perceive, by his calling thee
into an inner chamber, by his
great expedition, and by his
gesture and carriage. Tell us
now — His concealing the matter
made them the more eager to know
it.
Verse 13
2 Kings 9:13. Then they hasted —
Being well pleased with the
thing; partly from the advantage
which hereby they expected;
partly from that desire of
change which is in the nature of
most men; and principally by
God’s providence inclining their
hearts to Jehu. And took every
man his garment, and put it
under him — In token of great
reverence for his person, that
they would not have his feet to
touch the ground, and that they
put themselves and their
concerns under his feet and into
his disposal. It was a ceremony
used in the eastern countries
toward superiors: see Matthew
21:7. On the top of the stairs —
In some high and eminent place,
whence he might be seen and
owned by all the soldiers, who
were called together on this
great occasion. Saying, Jehu is
king — They proclaimed him by
sound of trumpet to be appointed
by God to the kingdom of Israel.
Verse 14-15
2 Kings 9:14-15. So Jehu
conspired against Joram —
Contrived with the rest of the
captains how to destroy Joram:
for which they had the fairer
opportunity, because he was gone
from the army to Jezreel. Now
Joram had kept Ramoth-gilead —
That is, kept a strong garrison
there, upon the frontiers of his
kingdom, it having been taken by
him before this time, although
the taking of it be not
mentioned. He and all Israel,
because of Hazael, &c. — He left
an army also there, or in the
neighbouring parts, to watch
Hazael’s motions; so that Jehu
had the army with him which
Joram had left, being gone home
to Jezreel, ill wounded. Jehu
said, Let none go forth out of
the city — Or, from the city:
that is, from within it, or from
before it; from the siege or
army; to go tell it in Jezreel —
For he knew how necessary
secrecy was to the execution of
such great designs as he had in
hand.
Verse 17-18
2 Kings 9:17-18. There stood a
watchmen on the tower — For
watchmen were set on high places
in time of peace as well as war
wherever the king was, that he
might not be surprised. Let him
say, Is it peace? — Inquire who
it is that comes, and if he
comes on peaceable terms. For he
feared lest either the Syrians
had prevailed at Ramoth-gilead,
or some sedition or rebellion
was raised against him, which
the example of Libnah, and his
own guilty conscience, made him
fear. Jehu said, What hast thou
to do with peace? — It is not to
thee, but to him that sent thee,
that I will give answer. Turn
thee behind me — Join thyself to
my followers, if thou wishest
for safety. This order he did
not dare to disobey, seeing such
a company of soldiers with Jehu.
Verse 21
2 Kings 9:21. They went out
against him — Or rather, to meet
him, that they might know his
intention, and, by their
presence, repress any seditious
inclinations which might be in
Jehu or his followers. And met
him in the portion of Naboth —
The very sight of that ground
was enough to make Jehu triumph,
and Joram tremble. The
circumstances of events are
sometimes so ordered by Divine
Providence as to make the
punishment answer the sin, as
face answers face in a glass.
Verse 22
2 Kings 9:22. Is it peace, Jehu?
— Dost thou come to me with a
peaceable mind, or in a way of
hostility? For now, when it was
too late, he began to suspect
some treachery, God hiding it
from him before, in order to his
destruction. And he answered,
What peace, &c.? — What cause
hast thou to expect peace, when
thou hast so long abetted, and
dost still abet, thy mother in
her abominable practices? So
long as the whoredoms, &c. —
This may be understood, either
literally or spiritually;
spiritual whoredom, which is
idolatry, being often punished
with corporal, and witchcraft
being often practised by
idolaters; or rather,
spiritually, of her idolatry,
which is often called whoredom,
because it is a departing from
God, to whom we are tied by many
obligations; and witchcraft,
because it doth so powerfully
bewitch men’s minds; and because
it is a manifest entering into
covenant with the devil. He
mentions not Joram’s, but his
mother’s sins, because they were
more notorious and infamous; and
because they were the principal
cause why God inflicted, and he
was come to execute these
judgments. The way of sin can
never be the way of peace.
Verse 23-24
2 Kings 9:23-24. Joram turned
his hands — Or the reins of his
chariot; and said, There is
treachery, O Ahaziah — Jehu is
our enemy: it is time for us to
shift for our safety. Jehu drew
a bow and smote Jehoram between
his arms — Or shoulders, when he
was turned or turning back, the
chariot being probably open
behind, as many times they were.
The arrow went out at his heart
— It was one of God’s arrows,
which he ordained against the
persecutor, and it killed him on
the spot. Cast him in the
portion of the field of Naboth —
He died a criminal under the
sentence of God, which Jehu, the
executioner thereof, pursues in
the disposal of the dead body.
When I and thou rode together
after Ahab, &c. — Probably when
Ahab went in his chariot,
attended with his nobles or
chief officers, of which these
were two, to take a formal and
solemn possession of Naboth’s
land: for then the Prophet
Elijah met him, and denounced
this judgment against him, (1
Kings 21:17-21,) which was
extended to his son. The Lord
laid this burden upon him — This
predicted punishment: prophecies
of calamities to come upon
individuals or nations are
frequently termed burdens in the
Scriptures.
Verse 26
2 Kings 9:26. And the blood of
his sons — Who, many
commentators have thought, were
killed by their father, by
Jezebel’s advice, to make the
possession of the vineyard more
sure to Ahab. Some however, are
of opinion, as we have no
account in the history of
Naboth, (1 Kings 21.,) that his
sons were killed with him, that
Jehu does not here repeat the
exact words of God by Elijah,
but exaggerates the matter, and
represents the sons as slain
with their father, because, by
their being deprived of him and
of his estate, they were, in a
manner, in as bad a condition as
though they had been destroyed.
I will requite thee in this plat
— That very piece of ground,
which Ahab, with so much pride
and pleasure, had made himself
master of, at the expense of the
guilt of innocent blood, now
became the theatre on which his
son’s dead body lay unburied and
exposed, a spectacle to the
world, and a prey to the dogs or
fowls, according to the
prediction, 1 Kings 21:19. Thus
the Lord is known by the
judgments which he executeth.
The son justly deserved the
punishment due to the father,
because he gave his approbation
to the deed of his father, by
continuing to keep possession of
Naboth’s vineyard, and taking no
care to repair the injury done
to Naboth and his family by the
false accusation which had been
preferred against him.
Verse 27-28
2 Kings 9:27-28. He fled by the
way of the garden-house — By
some secret way, hoping to
escape while they were busy
about Joram. Jehu said, Smite
him also — As you have done
Joram, for he also is of the
house of Ahab, chap. 2 Kings
8:18. And they did so — They
wounded him, but not mortally;
being the more remiss in
executing Jehu’s sentence
against him, either because they
were not so much concerned in
his, as in Joram’s death; or
because they had some regard for
him for Jehoshaphat’s sake. He
fled to Megiddo, and died there
— The account of his death is
briefly and imperfectly given
here, and the defects are
supplied in the book of
Chronicles, (which was in a
great part written to supply
things omitted in the book of
Kings,) and out of both, the
history may be thus completed.
He fled first to Megiddo, and
thence to Samaria, where he was
taken, and thence brought to
Jehu, and by his sentence was
put to death at Megiddo. And his
servants carried him to
Jerusalem, &c. — Which they did,
by Jehu’s permission, out of
respect to Jehoshaphat’s memory,
2 Chronicles 22:9.
Verse 30
2 Kings 9:30. Jezebel heard of
it, &c. — She had heard that
Jehu had slain her son, and
slain him for her murders,
idolatries, and other crimes,
and thrown his dead body into
the portion of Naboth, according
to the word of the Lord; and now
she learned he was come to
Jezreel, where she could not but
dread falling herself next a
sacrifice to his revenging
sword. Here we see how she meets
her fate. She painted her face —
Rendered in the margin, put her
eyes in painting. The word פוךְ,
puch, translated painting,
signifies a mineral substance,
stibium, otherwise called
plumbago, or black- lead, a kind
of ochre of very fine and loose
parts. The word occurs again,
Jeremiah 4:30, and both there
and here is mentioned as
somewhat with which women
coloured their eyes. It made
them look black, and also
larger, by dilating their
eye-brows; both which
circumstances were thought to
give them additional beauty. At
this day the women, in many
parts of the East, tinge their
eyes with black to heighten
their beauty. And tired her head
— That is, dressed and adorned
it, as the word תישׂב, theteb,
here used, signifies. These
things she did, hoping that, by
her majestic dress and
demeanour, she should strike
Jehu and his followers with such
awe, that they would be
intimidated, and thereby
prevented from offering her any
personal injury; or rather,
because, perceiving her case to
be desperate, and that she would
not be suffered to live, she was
resolved to die with honour and
gallantry. And looked out at a
window — She placed herself at a
window at the entering of the
gate of the king’s palace, to
affront Jehu, and set him at
defiance.
Verse 31
2 Kings 9:31. Had Zimri peace,
who slew his master? — Remember
that thy brother traitor, Zimri,
had but a very short enjoyment
of the benefit of his treason,
and was speedily and severely
punished for it by my
grand-father Omri, (see the
margin,) and expect thou the
same treatment from some of my
posterity. She took no notice of
the hand of God gone out against
her family, but flew in the face
of him who was only a sword in
that hand. Thus men are very
apt, when they are in trouble,
to break out into passion
against the instruments of their
trouble, when they ought to be
submissive to God, and angry at
themselves only. The cases of
Zimri and Jehu were not at all
parallel. Zimri, who had come to
the throne by blood and
treachery, and who, within seven
days, was constrained to burn
the palace over his head, and
himself in it, had no warrant
for assuming the government, but
was incited to do it purely by
his own ambition and cruelty;
whereas Jehu was anointed to be
king at the express command of
God, given to Elijah, (1 Kings
19:16,) and in all he did
against the house of Ahab, acted
by divine direction. In
comparing persons and things, we
must carefully distinguish
between the precious and the
vile; and take heed, lest in the
fate of sinful men we read the
doom of useful men.
Verse 32-33
2 Kings 9:32-33. He said, Who is
on my side? — He had been called
out by God to the work of
punishing those who had
corrupted the land, and he here
calls out for assistance in
doing it. And there looked out
to him two or three eunuchs — Or
chamberlains, for such used to
attend upon queens in their
chambers. “And by their great
fidelity and obsequiousness,
they generally gained the
esteem, and were admitted to the
confidence, of those they
served; and so, very often, into
places of great trust and
profit. It is remarkable,
however, of Jezebel’s eunuchs,
that they were far from being
faithful to her; to let us see
how suddenly courtiers are wont
to change with the fortune of
their masters.” He said, Throw
her down. So they threw her down
— Being mercenary creatures,
they quickly comply with Jehu’s
command, sacrificing her life to
save their own. “Thus, as she
had done, so she suffered. She
had commanded Naboth to be
stoned, and now she is stoned
herself: for there were two ways
of stoning among the Hebrews,
either by throwing stones at
malefactors till they were
knocked down and killed, or by
throwing them down from a high
place, and so dashing them to
pieces.” — Dodd, who refers to
Patrick and Calmet on the
punishments of the Jews. And he
trode her under foot — Houbigant
renders it, they, that is, the
horses, trod her under foot,
after she had been dashed
against the wall and pavement,
which, with the horses, were
besmeared with her blood.
Verse 34
2 Kings 9:34. Go see now this
cursed woman — She had been the
greatest delinquent in the house
of Ahab. She had introduced
Baal; slain the Lord’s prophets;
contrived the murder of Naboth;
excited her husband first, and
then her sons, to do wickedly.
She had been a curse to her
country, and one whose memory
all who loved their country
execrated. Three reigns her
reign had lasted, but now, at
length, her day was come to
fall, and meet with the due
reward of her deeds. And bury
her, for she is a king’s
daughter — He does not say,
because she was a king’s wife,
lest he should seem to show any
respect to that wicked house of
Ahab, which God had devoted to
ignominy and destruction. When
Jehu gave this order about
burying Jezebel, he seems to
have for gotten the prediction
of the prophet, and the charge
given, 2 Kings 9:10. But though
he had forgotten it, God had
not: while he was eating and
drinking, the dogs had devoured
her dead body; so that there was
nothing left but her bare scull,
(the painted face was gone,) and
her feet and hands. The hungry
dogs paid no respect to the
dignity of her extraction: a
king’s daughter was no more to
them than a common person. It is
probable, when the horsemen were
gone, who trod her under foot,
the footmen stripped her, and
left her in her own blood
exposed to the dogs, that came
out of the city in great
numbers, by the ordination of
Providence, and with a more than
common hunger, otherwise they
could not have devoured the body
in so short a time.
Verse 36-37
2 Kings 9:36-37. He said, This
is the word of the Lord — He now
calls to mind the words of the
Prophet Elijah, which before he
had forgot, or did not regard.
And the carcass of Jezebel, &c.
— These words are not extant in
the place where this prophecy is
first mentioned, 1 Kings 21:23;
but are here added by Jehu, by
way of explication and
amplification. So that they
shall not say, This is Jezebel —
No memory of her, nothing
whereby it might be known there
had been such a woman as
Jezebel, should remain of her,
as a picture or effigies, to
which men might point and say,
This is Jezebel. No monument was
made of her, and she had no
sepulchre but in the belly of
dogs.
Upon the whole, what is recorded
in this chapter shows that the
divine threatenings are never in
vain: that the curse of God
pursues princes and families
where impiety reigns. Let it be
observed, likewise, that Ahaziah
king of Judah, because he
imitated the kings of Israel in
their idolatries and other sins,
and was united with Jehoram king
of Israel, perished with him.
Those who become the companions
and imitators of the wicked, are
involved, sooner or later, in
the same judgments with them. |