Verse 1
2 Kings 25:1. Nebuchadnezzar
came, and all his host, against
Jerusalem — To chastise Zedekiah
for his rebellion and perjury:
for, contrary to the solemn oath
he had taken, he had been
contriving and endeavoring to
revolt from the king of Babylon,
and shake off his yoke. They
built forts against it round
about — To keep all supplies of
men and provisions from entering
into the city, and that from
thence, by such arts of war as
they then had, they might batter
the walls, shoot arrows, and
throw darts or stones into it.
Formerly Jerusalem was compassed
with the favour of God as with a
shield, but now their defence is
departed from them, and their
enemies surround them on every
side. The siege lasted two
years. At first the besieging
army retired for fear of the
king of Egypt, who came to help
Zedekiah; and then Jeremiah
endeavoured to get out of the
city, to go into the land of
Benjamin, but was hindered,
seized, and imprisoned, Jeremiah
37:11. The Chaldeans, finding
that Pharaoh was not so powerful
as they at first supposed, soon
returned, as Jeremiah had
foretold they would, with a
resolution not to quit the siege
till they had made themselves
masters of the place.
Verse 3
2 Kings 25:3. The famine
prevailed in the city — So that
for a long time they ate their
bread, as Ezekiel foretold they
should do, (Ezekiel 4:16,) by
weight and with care, and drunk
their water by measure and with
astonishment, perceiving the
quantity of it lessening fast
every day, and having no hope of
a fresh supply. Thus they were
punished for their gluttony and
excess, their fulness of bread,
and feeding themselves without
fear. At length there was no
bread for the people of the land
— For the common people, who,
upon the approach of the
Babylonian army, had flocked
from all parts of the country,
to secure themselves and their
families, but only for the great
men. Now they eat their own
children for want of food, as
had been foretold by one
prophet, (Ezekiel 5:10,) and is
bewailed by another,
Lamentations 4:3, &c. Jeremiah,
in this extremity, earnestly
persuaded the king to surrender,
but his heart was hardened to
his destruction.
Verse 4
2 Kings 25:4. The city was
broken up — It was taken by
storm, the besiegers having made
a breach in the wall, at which
they forced their way into it.
All the men of war fled — Being
unable any longer to defend the
city, they endeavoured to quit
it, which many of them found
means to do by the way of the
gate between the two walls —
That is, between the inward and
outward walls of the city, or
between the wall and the
outworks, by a private way,
having the advantage of the
darkness of the night, and
possibly of some vault under the
ground. Many however, no doubt,
were put to the sword, the
victorious army being much
exasperated by their obstinacy.
To account, in some degree, for
the besieged making their
escape, Josephus observes, that
as the city was taken about
midnight, the enemies’ captains,
with the rest of the soldiers,
went directly into the temple,
which Zedekiah perceiving, took
his wives, children, commanders,
and friends, and they all
slipped away together, by a
narrow passage, toward the
wilderness. But what this narrow
passage was, is still a
question. The Jews think there
was a subterraneous passage from
the palace to the plains of
Jericho, and that the king and
his courtiers might endeavour to
make their escape that way. And
we learn from Dion, that in the
last siege of Jerusalem by the
Romans, the Jews had covered
ways, which lay under the walls
of the city, to a considerable
distance into the country, out
of which they were wont to
sally, and fall upon the Romans
that were straggling from the
camp: but since neither Josephus
nor the sacred historian takes
notice of any such subterraneous
passage at this siege, it is
most likely that the Chaldeans
having made a breach in the
wall, many of the besieged
escaped through it, proceeding
privately between the wall and
the outworks, by a passage which
the Chaldeans did not suspect.
The king went toward the plain —
Of Jericho, as it follows.
Verse 5
2 Kings 25:5. The army of the
Chaldees pursued after the king
— Intelligence was soon given of
his flight, and which way he was
gone, so that they soon overtook
him. And all his army — His
guards; were scattered from him
— Every man shifting for his
safety. Had he made his peace
with God, and put himself under
his protection, he would not
have failed him now. It seems to
have been the design of the
king, and of those with him, to
escape into Egypt through Arabia
Deserta.
Verse 6
2 Kings 25:6. And brought him to
the king of Babylon, to Riblah —
Where Nebuchadnezzar stayed,
that he might both supply the
besiegers with men and military
provisions, as their occasions
required, and have an eye to
Chaldea, to prevent or suppress
any commotions which might
happen there in his absence.
They gave judgment upon him —
The king’s officers appointed
thereunto examined his cause,
and passed the following
sentence against him.
Verse 7
2 Kings 25:7. They slew the sons
of Zedekiah before his eyes —
Though they were but children,
that this spectacle, the last he
was to behold, might leave a
deep and durable impression of
grief and horror upon his
spirit. And in slaying his sons
they in effect declared that the
kingdom was no more, and that
neither he nor any of his breed
were fit to be trusted:
therefore not fit to live. And
put out his eyes, and carried
him to Babylon — Thus two
prophecies were fulfilled, which
seemed contrary the one to the
other. Jeremiah foretold, That
he should be delivered into the
hands of the king of Babylon,
and should speak with him mouth
to mouth, and his eyes should
behold his eyes, and that he
should go to Babylon, Jeremiah
32:4; Jeremiah 34:3; and Ezekiel
prophesied, That he should never
see Babylon, though he should
die there, Ezekiel 12:13. This
seeming contradiction, Zedekiah
the false prophet could not
reconcile, and therefore
concluded that both prophecies
were false, and, if we may
credit Josephus, Zedekiah the
king stumbled at this
difficulty. Both, however, were
literally accomplished. The
reflection which Josephus makes
on this event, is worthy of the
reader’s attention: “This may
serve to convince even the
ignorant, of the power and
wisdom of God; and of the
constancy of his counsels
through all the various ways of
his operations. It may likewise
show us that God’s foreknowledge
of things is certain; and his
providence regular in the
ordering of events; and besides,
it holds forth a most exemplary
instance of the danger of our
giving way to the motions of sin
and infidelity, which deprive us
of the means of discerning God’s
judgments, even though ready to
fall upon us.” — Antiq., lib.
10., cap. 11.
Verse 8
2 Kings 25:8. And in the fifth
month, &c. — Though we have
reason to think the Chaldeans
were much enraged against the
city, for holding out with so
much stubbornness; yet they did
not, therefore, put all to fire
and sword as soon as they had
taken the city, which is too
commonly done in such cases; but
about a month after (compare 2
Kings 25:8 with 2 Kings 25:3)
Nebuzaradan was sent with orders
to complete the destruction of
it. This space God gave them for
repentance after all the
foregoing days of his patience;
but in vain; their hearts were
still hardened, and therefore
execution was awarded to the
uttermost.
Verse 9
2 Kings 25:9. And he burnt the
house of the Lord — The king of
Babylon, it appears, did not
design to send any colonies to
people Judea, and therefore
ordered Jerusalem to be laid in
ashes, as a nest of rebels. “At
the burning of the king’s
house,” says Henry, “and the
houses of the great men, one
cannot much wonder, the
inhabitants had by their sins
kindled the fire of God’s wrath
against them; but that the house
of the Lord should perish in
these flames, that that holy and
beautiful house should be burned
with fire, (Isaiah 64:11,) is
very strange; that house which
David prepared for, and which
Solomon built, at such a vast
expense; that house which had
the eye and the heart of God
perpetually upon it, (1 Kings
9:3,) might not that have been
snatched as a brand out of the
burning? No, that will not be
fireproof against God’s
judgments; this stately
structure must be laid in ashes,
and it is probable the ark in
it; for the enemies, probably
having heard how dear the
Philistines paid for the abusing
it, durst not seize it; nor did
any of its friends take care to
preserve it; for then we should
have heard of it again in the
second temple.” The temple was
burned four hundred years after
the time that it was built, says
Sir John Marsham; four hundred
and twenty-four years three
months and eight days, says
Archbishop Usher; four hundred
thirty years, says Abarbinel and
other learned Jews; but Josephus
computes the matter still
higher; for he tells us that the
temple was burned four hundred
and seventy years six months and
ten days after the building of
it; one thousand and sixty years
six months and ten days from the
time of the Israelites coming
out of the land of Egypt; one
thousand nine hundred, and fifty
years six months and ten days
from the deluge; three thousand
five hundred and thirty years
six months and ten days from the
creation; and he mentions it as
a very remarkable circumstance,
that the second temple was
burned by the Romans in the same
month and on the very same day
of the month that this was set
on fire by the Chaldeans, and,
as some of the Jewish rabbis
say, when the Levites were
singing the very same passage,
namely, He shall bring upon them
their own iniquity, and shall
cut them off in their own
wickedness: yea, the Lord our
God shall cut them off, Psalms
94:23. By the burning of the
temple, God would show how
little he cares for the external
pomp of his worship, when the
life and power of religion are
neglected. The people trusted to
the temple, as if that would
protect them in their sins,
(Jeremiah 7:4,) but God by this
let them know that when they had
profaned it, they would find it
but a refuge of lies.
Verse 11-12
2 Kings 25:11-12. Now the rest
of the people that were left in
the city — Whom neither the
sword nor famine had destroyed,
who were eight hundred and
thirty-two persons, (Jeremiah
52:29,) being members and
traders of that city: for it is
likely that there were very many
more of the country people fled
thither, who were left with
others of their brethren to
manure the land. And the
fugitives that fell away to the
king of Babylon — That is, all
that fled to him, and put
themselves under his protection;
with the remnant of the
multitudes — Of the inhabitants
of the country. For the captain
of the guard left of the poor of
the land — So while the rich
were prisoners in a strange
land, the poor had liberty and
peace in their own country! Thus
Providence sometimes humbles the
proud, and favours them of low
degree.
Verse 13
2 Kings 25:13. The pillars of
brass, &c., did the Chaldees
break in pieces — Because they
were too cumbersome to be
carried away whole. And carried
the brass of them to Babylon —
As was foretold Jeremiah
27:21-22.
Verse 18-19
2 Kings 25:18-19. The captain of
the guard took Seraiah, the
chief priest — The high-priest,
grandson of that Hilkiah
mentioned 2 Kings 22:4, and
father of Jehosadak, who, it
seems, was taken with his
father; and when his father was
slain, (2 Kings 25:21,) was
carried away to Babylon, as is
observed 1 Chronicles 6:13-14.
And Zephaniah the second priest
— Who was the high-priest’s
deputy, when he was by sickness,
or any other means, prevented
from the execution of his
office. And five of them that
were in the king’s presence —
Who constantly attended upon the
king’s person wheresoever he
was, and were his most intimate
counsellors. And threescore men
of the land that were found in
the city — These were some
eminent persons, who had
concealed themselves in some
private place; but before
Nebuzar-adan left Jerusalem,
were discovered.
Verse 20-21
2 Kings 25:20-21. Brought them
to the king of Babylon — That he
might dispose of them as he
thought fit, they being not
vulgar persons like those whom
he had ordered to be carried
captive or left in the land. The
king of Babylon smote them —
Ordered them all to be put to
death, when in reason they might
have hoped that surely the
bitterness of death was past. He
probably looked upon them as
persons that had been active in
opposing him; but divine
justice, we may suppose, viewed
them as ring-leaders in that
idolatry and impiety which were
punished by these desolations.
So Judah was carried away out of
their land — This completed
their calamity, about eight
hundred and sixty years after
they were put in possession of
Canaan by Joshua.
Verse 22
2 Kings 25:22. Over them he made
Gedaliah, the son of Ahikam,
ruler — A righteous and good
man, and a friend to the Prophet
Jeremiah, Jeremiah 26:24.
Ahikam, his father, was a person
in such credit in all the latter
reigns, that he had been able to
screen Jeremiah from the
resentment of the king and the
fury of the people; so that it
is very probable the prophet, in
gratitude to the father,
obtained this favour for the
son, from Nebuzaradan. Or, as
some think, Gedaliah, by the
advice of Jeremiah, had gone
over to the Chaldeans, and had
approved himself so well, that
on that account the king of
Babylon judged it proper to
intrust him with the government.
Gedaliah’s good conduct,
together with the obligations
which Jeremiah was under to his
father, was probably the motive
which induced the prophet to
live with him in Judea rather
than go to Babylon, when the
Chaldean general put it to his
option, not without some
considerable encouragement to
invite him to the latter,
Jeremiah 39:11.
Verse 23
2 Kings 25:23. When all the
captains of the armies — Who
escaped when Zedekiah was taken;
heard that the king of Babylon
had made Gedaliah governor — One
of themselves, and that things
were put into a good posture:
there came to Gedaliah to Mizpah
— A place in the land of
Benjamin, famous in Samuel’s
time; Ishmael, Johanan, &c.,
they and their men — To put
themselves under his protection.
Gedaliah, though he had not the
pomp and power of a sovereign
prince, yet might have been a
greater blessing to them than
many of their kings had been,
especially having such a privy
counsellor as Jeremiah, who was
now with them, and interested
himself in their affairs,
Jeremiah 40:5-6.
Verse 24
2 Kings 25:24. Gedaliah sware to
them — Assured them by his
promise and oath, that if they
would be patient and peaceable
under the government of the king
of Babylon, and would conduct
themselves properly, they should
be kept from the evils which
they feared. This he might
safely swear, because he had not
only Nebuchadnezzar’s promise,
and interest too, but also God’s
promise, delivered by Jeremiah.
And it might seem that a fair
prospect was now again opening
for them. But, alas! this
hopeful settlement was soon
dashed to pieces, not by the
Chaldeans, but by themselves.
The things of their peace were
so hid from their eyes that they
neither knew when they were
well, nor would believe when
they were told so even by God
himself.
Verse 25
2 Kings 25:25. Ishmael, of the
seed royal, came — Moved with
envy at Gedaliah’s advancement,
and the happy settlement of the
people under him; and ten men
with him — That is, ten captains
or officers, and under each of
them many soldiers. And smote
Gedaliah, and the Jews and
Chaldees, &c. — Resolved to ruin
him and them. Nebuchadnezzar
would not, could not, have been
a more mischievous enemy to
their peace than this degenerate
branch of the house of David
was! We have a fuller account of
this affair in the fortieth and
forty-first chapters of
Jeremiah, where we read that
Gedaliah was admonished of this
intended conspiracy against him;
but, like other good men, who
are commonly void of suspicion,
because they have no design to
hurt others, he did not believe
what was told him.
Verse 26
2 Kings 25:26. And all the
people arose, and came to Egypt
— Contrary to the persuasion of
Jeremiah, who pressed them to
stay in the land, that it might
not altogether lie uncultivated,
(seeing they were to be settled
in it again, according to the
word of the Lord by the Prophet
Isaiah, chap. Isaiah 44:28, and
Isaiah 45:1,) assuring them that
they should be safe if they
would stay in the land of Judah,
but should perish if they went
into Egypt. See Jeremiah
42:9-10, &c. But they would not
hearken. Thus this populous and
fertile country was laid waste
and desolate, part of the people
being carried captive to
Babylon, part of those who were
left in the land being slain
with Gedaliah, and the remainder
fleeing into Egypt. So that it
was left to be overrun with
briers and thorns, and to be
inhabited by wild beasts. Only
some of the neighbouring nations
seem to have settled themselves
in some parts of it. And from
hence the Jews found much
greater difficulty when they
came to be restored than they
would have done if some of them
had continued in their country
and cultivated it. For they were
afraid of the Chaldees —
The Chaldeans had reason enough
to be offended at the murder of
Gedaliah; but, if those that
remained had humbly remonstrated
to them, that it was only the
act of Ishmael and his party, we
may suppose they who were
innocent of it, nay, who
suffered greatly by it, would
not have been punished for it:
but, under pretence of this
apprehension they all went into
Egypt, where, it is probable,
they mixed with the Egyptians by
degrees, and were never heard of
more as Israelites. Thus there
was a full end made of them by
their own folly and
disobedience, and Egypt had the
last of them, that the last
verse of that chapter of
threatenings might be fulfilled
after all the rest, (Deuteronomy
28:68,) The Lord shall bring
thee into Egypt again. For a
more particular account of these
events see the prophecy of
Jeremiah, from chap. 40. to
chap. 45.
Verses 27-30
2 Kings 25:27-30. Evil-merodach,
king of Babylon —
“Nebuchadnezzar, the father of
Evil-merodach, died in the year
of the world 3442, and before
Christ 562, after he had reigned
from the death of his father,
according to the Babylonish
account, forty-three years. He
was certainly one of the
greatest princes that had
appeared in the East for many
years before him; and, according
to Megasthenes, as he is cited
by Josephus, both for his
enterprises and performances,
far excelled even Hercules
himself. The same historian, as
he is quoted by Eusebius,
informs us, that a little before
his death he foretold to his
subjects the coming of the
Persians, and their subduing the
kingdom of Babylon, which he
might gather from the Prophet
Daniel, and especially from the
interpretation of his dreams.” —
Dodd.
In the year that he began to
reign did lift up the head of
Jehoiachin, &c. — He released
him out of prison, where he had
lain thirty-seven years, and was
now fifty-five years old. And he
spake kindly to him — Paid more
respect to him than to any other
of the kings his father had left
in captivity, gave him princely
clothing instead of his prison
garments, maintained him in his
own palace, and allowed him a
pension for himself and his
family, some way agreeable to
his rank; a daily rate for every
day as long as he lived. This
was a very happy change of
Jehoiachin’s condition. To have
honour, liberty, and plenty,
after he had been so long in
confinement and disgrace, and
compelled to endure the straits
and miseries of a prison, was
like the return of the morning
after a very dark and tedious
night. Let none say they shall
never see good again, because
they have long seen little but
evil: the most miserable know
not what blessed turn Providence
may yet give to their affairs,
nor what comforts they are
reserved for, according to the
days wherein they have been
afflicted, Psalms 90:15. It is
likely Evil-merodach thought his
father made the yoke of his
captives too heavy; and,
therefore, with the tenderness
of a man, and the honour of a
prince, he made it lighter. The
Jews tell us, he had himself
been imprisoned by his own
father, after the latter was
restored from his insanity, for
some mal- administration at that
time, and that in prison he
contracted a friendship for
Jehoiachin; and, therefore, as
soon as he had it in his power,
showed him this kindness as a
sufferer, and as a
fellow-sufferer. It should seem
that all the kings he had in his
power were favoured, but
Jehoiachin above them all.
Perhaps, as some have suggested,
he had learned from Daniel and
his fellows the principles of
true religion, and was well
affected to them, and upon that
account favoured Jehoiachin.
This undoubtedly happened by the
good providence of God for the
encouragement of the Jews in
captivity, and the support of
their faith and hope concerning
their enlargement in due time.
Thirty-six of the seventy years
of their captivity were now
past, and almost as many yet
remained, when now, in this
midnight of their bondage and
misery, they see their king thus
advanced as a comfortable
earnest to them of their own
release at the appointed season.
We are now come to the dreadful
end of the Jewish monarchy,
after it had stood four hundred
and sixty-eight years from the
time that David began to reign
over it; three hundred and
eighty-eight years from the
revolt of the ten tribes from
it; and one hundred and
thirty-four years from the
excision of the Israelitish
commonwealth; and would have
still continued under the
sunshine of the divine
protection, had it not been for
the almost constant and horrid
ingratitude of the people, and
their invincible itch of
imitating the idolatries and
witcheries of other nations:
crimes which, though abominable
before God, were but too
generally practised by mankind,
through the amazing degeneracy
of the human nature.
Having now gone through the
history of the Jewish state,
from its first beginning to its
total captivity in a foreign
land, we must acknowledge it to
be a history of such remarkable
particulars, as distinguish it
from all other histories: a
history of a state founded upon
such principles, governed in
such a manner, concerned in such
extraordinary circumstances,
distinguished by such wonderful
facts, and its condition, from
the beginning to the end, so
corresponding to its obedience
or disobedience to the
principles upon which it was
first founded, that it cannot be
paralleled by the history of any
people in the world. |