Verse 1
2 Samuel 12:1. The Lord sent
Nathan unto David — When the
ordinary means did not awaken
David to repentance, God takes
an extraordinary course. Thus
the merciful Lord pities and
prevents him who had so horribly
forsaken God. He said — He
prudently ushers in his reproof
with a parable, after the manner
of the eastern nations, that so
he might surprise David, and
cause him unawares to give
sentence against himself.
Verse 2-3
2 Samuel 12:2-3. Many flocks and
herds — Denoting David’s many
wives and concubines, with whom
he might have been satisfied.
One little ewe-lamb — It appears
by this that Uriah had but one
wife, with whom he was well
contented. Which he had bought —
Or, had procured. Men frequently
purchased their wives in those
days, giving to their parents a
sum of money for them. It did
eat of his meat, &c. — These
words express the exceeding care
which the poor man took of his
one sheep, and the value he put
upon it, as being, in some
manner, his chief substance,
furnishing him with milk for
food, and wool for clothing; and
they are intended to signify how
dear his wife was to Uriah, and
the high estimation in which he
held her.
Verse 4
2 Samuel 12:4. There came a
traveller unto the rich man —
This aptly signifies David’s
roving affection, which he
suffered to wander from his own
home, and to covet another man’s
wife. The Jewish doctors say it
represents the evil disposition
or desire that is in us, which
must be carefully watched and
resisted when we feel its
motions. But took the poor man’s
lamb — Nathan, in this parable,
omits touching the murder
committed to cover the adultery,
perhaps in order that David
might not readily apprehend his
meaning, and so be induced,
unawares, to pronounce sentence
of condemnation upon himself.
Verse 5-6
2 Samuel 12:5-6. David’s anger
was greatly kindled, &c. — So
many base and aggravated
circumstances appeared to him to
attend it, that he thought it
deserving of capital punishment.
The man shall surely die — This
seems more than the fact
deserved, or than he had
commission to inflict for it.
But it is observable that David
now, when he was most indulgent
to himself, and to his own sin,
was most severe, and even
unjust, to others, as appears by
this passage, and the following
relation, (2 Samuel 12:31,)
which was done in the time of
David’s impenitent continuance
in his sin. He shall restore the
lamb four-fold — This was
agreeable to the law, Exodus
22:1.
Verse 7
2 Samuel 12:7. Nathan said to
David, Thou art the man — Though
he took such a mild, gentle, and
prudent manner to bring David to
a proper view and just sense of
his sin, yet he deals faithfully
with him at the last, and sets
his iniquity before him in all
its aggravations. Thus, in a
similar way, by most appropriate
and striking parables, our Lord
set the sin which the Jews were
about to commit in crucifying
him before them in so clear a
light, and showed it to be so
inexcusable, that they were led,
before they were aware, to pass
an equally severe sentence
against themselves. See Matthew
21:28-46. The Jews, however,
when they perceived that Christ
referred to them in his
parables, were only exasperated
the more, and sought the sooner
to lay hands on him. But David
being, although greatly fallen,
of a different spirit, was
brought by Nathan’s words to
deep and lasting repentance. O,
how did Nathan’s application of
his parable, Thou art the man,
pronounced in all the dignity
and authority of the prophetic
character, sink into David’s
soul! especially when he
proceeded to a further
explication of the greatness of
his iniquity, which he does in
the following words. Thus saith
the Lord God of Israel — Nathan
now speaks, not as a petitioner
from a poor man, but as an
ambassador from the great
Jehovah, I anointed thee king
over Israel, &c. — Thus he
aggravates David’s sin, from the
obligations he was under to God,
who had raised him to the
highest dignity from a very low
condition, and had extricated
him from the greatest dangers
and distresses.
Verse 8
2 Samuel 12:8. I gave thee thy
master’s house — All that
pertained to him as a king,
which came, of course, to David,
as his successor. Thy master’s
wives into thy bosom — For the
wives of a king went along with
his lands and goods unto his
successor, it being unlawful for
the widow of a king to be wife
to any but a king, as appears by
the story of Adonijah. The
expression in the text, however,
does not necessarily signify
that David married any of them;
nor have we any proof that he
did. Indeed, it is doubtful
whether he could consistently
with the law of God. See
Leviticus 18:8; Leviticus 18:15.
The meaning seems only to be,
that God put them into David’s
power, together with Saul’s
house and other property. And
gave thee the house of Israel —
Dominion over the twelve tribes.
And if that had been too little,
&c. — He needed but have asked,
and God would have given him all
he could have reasonably
desired.
Verse 9
2 Samuel 12:9. Thou hast killed
Uriah — David’s contriving his
death was as bad as if he had
killed him with his own hand.
With the sword of the children
of Ammon — This was an
aggravation of his crime, that
he caused him to be slain by the
professed enemies of God, who
doubtless triumphed in the
slaughter of so great a man.
Hast taken his wife, &c. — To
marry her whom he had defiled,
and whose husband he had slain,
was an affront upon the
ordinance of marriage, making
that not only to palliate, but
in a manner to consecrate such
villanies. In all this he
despised the word of the Lord;
(so it is in the Hebrew;) not
only his commandment in general,
but the particular word of
promise, which God had before
sent him by Nathan, that he
would build him a house: which
sacred promise if he had had a
due value for, he would not have
polluted his house with lust and
blood.
Verse 10
2 Samuel 12:10. The sword shall
never depart from thy house —
During the residue of thy life.
As long as he lived, at times
there should be destruction made
in his family by the sword,
which was awfully fulfilled in
the violent deaths of his
children, Amnon and Absalom,
and, about the time of his
death, Adonijah.
Verse 11-12
2 Samuel 12:11-12. I will raise
up evil against thee out of
thine own house — Which was
notoriously fulfilled in
Absalom’s conspiracy against
him. I will take thy wives
before thine eyes — Openly, so
that thou shalt know it as
certainly as if thou didst see
it, and yet shalt not be able to
prevent it. For Absalom had a
tent spread upon the house-top,
and there went in unto them. And
give them unto thy neighbour — I
shall, by my providence, give
power over them to one who is
very near unto thee. But God
expresseth this darkly, that the
accomplishment of it might not
be hindered. I will do this
thing before all Israel — It was
made notorious to all, that
David fled in haste from his
son, and left his wives and
concubines behind him.
“Whoever,” says Dr. Delaney,
“considers the predictions of
divine vengeance now denounced
against David, must surely find
them to be very extraordinary.
His family to continue beyond
any other regal race in the
known world, and yet the sword
to continue as long — never to
depart from it! A king, the
greatest of his time! his
dominion thoroughly established,
and his enemies under his feet:
highly honoured and beloved at
home, and as highly awful to all
the neighbouring nations! — Such
a king threatened to have his
wives publicly prostituted
before the face of all his
people! And, what is yet
stranger, more shocking, and
more incredible, by one of his
own race! and, as a sure proof
of this, the darling offspring
of his guilt to perish quickly,
before his eyes! He alone who
fills futurity could foresee
this. He alone who sways the
world, and knows what evil
appetites and dispositions,
unrestrained, will attempt and
perpetrate, could pronounce it.”
Verse 13
2 Samuel 12:13. David said, I
have sinned against the Lord —
Overwhelmed with shame, stung
with remorse, and oppressed with
a dreadful sense of the divine
vengeance, impending, and ready
to fall upon himself and his
family, he could only give
utterance to this short
confession. How sincere and
serious it was, what a deep
sense he now had of his guilt,
and from what a softened,
penetrated, broken, and contrite
heart, his acknowledgment
proceeded, we may see in the
psalms he penned on this
occasion, especially the 1st.
The Lord also hath put away thy
sin — That is, so far as
concerns thy own life. Thou
shalt not die — As, according to
thy own sentence, 2 Samuel 12:5,
thou dost deserve, and mightest
justly expect to do from God’s
immediate stroke; though
possibly thou mightest elude the
law before a human judicature,
or there should be no superior
to execute the law upon thee.
There is something unspeakably
gracious in this sudden sentence
of pardon, pronounced by the
prophet in the instant of
David’s confession of guilt and
humiliation before God, even if
we consider it as only implying
exemption from the stroke of
temporal death, and the granting
him space for repentance, and
for making his peace with God,
with respect to his spiritual
and immortal interests. And this
seems to be the true light in
which we ought to view it. If
the psalm we have just mentioned
was written after the event of
Nathan’s coming to him, as the
title of it signifies, and as is
generally allowed, it is evident
David did not yet consider
himself as pardoned by God, or
in a state of reconciliation
with him. For, in that psalm we
find not any thanksgivings for
pardon actually obtained, but
several most fervent
supplications and entreaties for
it as a blessing not yet
granted. It may, therefore, be
true enough, as Dr. Delaney
supposes, that David’s pardon
was not obtained by the
instantaneous submission which
he expressed, when he said, I
have sinned; but that a long and
bitter repentance preceded it;
and yet that able divine may be
mistaken, as it seems evident
from the whole narrative he is,
in supposing that repentance
took place before Nathan was
sent to him. The sacred
historian gives no intimation of
David’s being awakened to a
proper sense of guilt, or of his
being made truly penitent for
it, till the application of
Nathan’s parable. Then, and not
before, it appears, he began to
feel the compunction and
distress expressed in that and
the 32nd Psalm, during the
continuance of which, day and
night God’s hand was heavy upon
him: his moisture was turned
into the drought of summer, and
his bones waxed old through his
roaring all the day long. Some
time after, but how long we are
not told, he was made a partaker
of the blessedness of the man
whose transgression is forgiven,
and whose sin is covered; and
that on his own certain
knowledge and experience: for he
says, I said, I will confess my
transgressions unto the Lord,
and thou forgavest the iniquity
of my sin.
Verse 14
2 Samuel 12:14. Great occasion
to the enemies of the Lord to
blaspheme — To reproach God and
his people, and the true
religion. For, although these
were not concerned in David’s
sin, but the blame and shame of
it belonged entirely to himself,
yet heathen and wicked men
would, according to their own
evil hearts, endeavour to throw
the reproach of it upon God and
religion; as if God were unholy
because the man whom he had
termed a man after his own heart
was so; and partial in conniving
at so great a crime in him, when
Saul was cast off for an
apparently less sin; and
negligent in the government of
the world and of his church, in
suffering such wickedness, as
even heathen have abhorred, to
go unpunished; and as if all
religion were but hypocrisy and
imposture, and a pretence for
villanies. The neighbouring
nations in particular might well
take occasion to object to the
Israelites, that they had no
room to boast much about the
purity of their religion; since
he whom they acknowledged to be
their best king, and the great
favourite of their God, was
guilty of such atrocious crimes.
And the Ammonites, upon their
success against Uriah and his
party, would, doubtless, magnify
and praise their idols, and
blaspheme the God of Israel. The
child that is born unto thee
shall surely die — David seems
to have been much taken with
Bath-sheba, and very desirous of
having a child by her, otherwise
it is hardly to be supposed that
he would have been so distressed
at the denunciation of its
death; especially, as its life
must needs have been a standing
monument of his adultery, and of
the murder of Uriah. It must be
observed, that the immediate
infliction of this punishment
was a certain token that Nathan
was sent by God, and that the
other threatenings which he had
denounced would be executed.
Verse 15-16
2 Samuel 12:15-16. The Lord
struck the child — With some
sudden and dangerous distemper.
David besought God for the child
— Supposing the threatening
might be conditional, and so the
execution of it prevented by
prayer. And went in — Namely,
into his closet to pray,
solitarily and earnestly. Or,
perhaps, into the sanctuary,
where the ark of God was; where
he lay all night on the earth —
Humbling himself, mourning,
repenting, weeping, praying,
with all the agonies of the most
bitter grief.
Verse 17
2 Samuel 12:17. The elders of
his house — The chief officers
of his kingdom and household. He
would not — This excessive
mourning did not proceed simply
from the fear of the loss of the
child, but from a deep sense of
his sin, and the divine
displeasure manifested herein.
Verse 18
2 Samuel 12:18. On the seventh
day the child died — The seventh
from the beginning of the
distemper. “Thus was the first
instance of the divine vengeance
for David’s guilt speedily and
rigidly executed; other
instances of it were fulfilled
in their order, before his own
eyes, as will abundantly appear
in the sequel of this history;
and the most dreadful of all the
rest, The sword shall never
depart from thy house, sadly and
successively fulfilled in his
posterity; from the death of
Amnon, by the order of his own
brother, to the slaughter of the
sons of Zedekiah before his own
eyes, by the king of Babylon.”
We may learn from hence,
therefore, that God is no
respecter of persons, for
David’s guilt was as signally
and dreadfully punished in his
own person, and in his
posterity, as perhaps any guilt
in any other person since Adam.
“The Jews are of opinion that
his own decree of repaying the
robbery four-fold was strictly
executed upon him. The
deflouring of Tamar by her own
brother; the death of four sons,
three of them before his own
eyes, and one by the hand of his
brother; the unnatural rebellion
of one son, which brought him
almost to the brink of ruin; the
prostitution of ten wives in the
sight of all his subjects; and
the successive and signal
massacre of his posterity;
besides the distress of his own
public shame and infamy, added
to at least one cruel disease.”
These are surely awful proofs
that God did not connive at sin
in David any more than in any
other. Why then are the scoffers
so fond of urging and dwelling
on the heinous crimes of David?
Do the Holy Scriptures deny
them? No, they set them forth
with all their aggravating
circumstances, but at the same
time they assure us they were
followed by such a train of
calamities as is enough to make
every sinner tremble; since it
affords an indubitable proof
that the ALMIGHTY GOVERNOR of
the world is of purer eyes than
to behold iniquity without
detestation, and that every
species of vice and wickedness,
in whomsoever it is found, will
certainly be punished under his
government. Let the reader
consider these things, and then
say, whether David’s example be
an encouragement to sin? Who
would incur his guilt to go
through such a scene of sorrow
and suffering? See Delaney.
Verse 20
2 Samuel 12:20. David arose from
the earth and changed his
apparel — Put off the habit of a
mourner, and prepared himself to
appear before God. And came into
the house of the Lord — That is,
to the tabernacle, to confess
his sin before the Lord, to own
his justice in this stroke, to
deprecate his just displeasure,
to acknowledge God’s rich mercy
in sparing his own life, and to
offer such sacrifices as were
required in such cases.
Verse 23
2 Samuel 12:23. Wherefore should
I fast — Seeing fasting and
prayer cannot now prevail with
God for his life. I shall go to
him — Into the state of the dead
in which he is, and into heaven,
where, I doubt not, I shall find
him. Or, as Mr. Saurin
paraphrases the words, “If I
cannot have the consolation to
partake with this infant the
temporal happiness wherewith the
divine goodness hath blessed me,
I hope to rejoin his soul one
day in heaven, and to partake
with him eternal felicity.” As
David undoubtedly believed in
the immortality of the soul, and
even in the resurrection of the
body, it would be quite
unreasonable to leave out this
latter idea, and suppose, with
some commentators, that he only
meant he should die and go to
the grave like his son, which
would be a very poor
consolation. But, considered in
the light here stated, his words
convey the most satisfactory
comfort, and “are the noblest
lesson,” says Delaney, “upon all
that is reasonable and religious
in grief that ever was penned.”
Verse 24-25
2 Samuel 12:24-25. And David
comforted Bath-sheba his wife —
Who, no doubt, was deeply
afflicted for the loss of her
child, and dejected for her sin.
It is observable, however, that
there is not one word said to
her in all this relation, either
concerning her guilt or her
punishment. She was punished in
the calamities that befell
David; who enticed her, and not
she him, to commit the foul sin
of adultery, and was innocent in
the murder of Uriah. She bare a
son, and he called his name
Solomon — Probably his mother,
with the consent of David, gave
him this name as soon as he was
born. And the Lord loved him —
That is, the Lord declared to
David, probably by Nathan the
prophet, that he loved this his
son, notwithstanding the just
cause which David had given to
God to withdraw his love from
him and his. Perhaps after his
great humiliation, Nathan was
sent to comfort him with this
good hope, that God would have a
peculiar regard for this son,
and make him very famous. Such
is the wonderful goodness of God
to truly penitent sinners, who
manifest the sincerity of their
repentance by an humble
submission to whatsoever
punishments God sees fit to
inflict upon them, (as David did
to the death of the former
child,) and thereby induce that
goodness to show them still
further mercy, He sent — Namely,
God did; by Nathan, and he
called his name Jedidiah — That
is, beloved of Jehovah. Because
of the Lord — Either because of
the Lord’s love to him, or
because the Lord commanded him
so to do. This name, however,
was merely significative, being
only intended to express to the
child’s parents what they might
expect; for we find him always
called Solomon in the
Scriptures.
Verse 26-27
2 Samuel 12:26-27. Took the
royal city — That is, that part
of the city where the king’s
palace was; though now, it
seems, he was retired to a
strong fort. It is not to be
supposed that Joab had continued
the siege so long as till David
had two children by Bath-sheba;
this was done soon after the
death of Uriah, when David
commanded them to assault the
city with greater force. The
city of waters — That part of
the city which lay open, or was
encompassed with the water; the
other part, which was the upper
city, and probably much
stronger, was not yet taken.
Verse 28
2 Samuel 12:28. Encamp against
the city, and take it — For,
having taken one part of the
city, he concluded the remaining
part of it could not long stand
out. Lest I take the city — Lest
I have the honour of taking it;
and it be called by my name — As
from the conquest of Africa, the
Roman general Scipio, many years
after, was called Africanus. By
this it appears that though Joab
had many faults, yet he loved
his prince, and endeavoured to
raise his glory. “There is a
magnificence in this proposal
capable of creating admiration
in the meanest minds. The man
that could transfer the glory of
his own conquests upon his
prince, needs no higher eulogy.
And it is but justice to the
character of Joab to declare
that he is supreme, if not
unrivalled, in this singular
instance of heroism. Rabbah, it
must be observed, was a royal, a
large, and a populous city, the
metropolis of Arabia Felix,
watered, and in some measure
encompassed by the river Jabbok.
It had its name from its
grandeur, being derived from a
Hebrew word which signifies to
increase and grow great, and was
now in the height of its glory.”
— Delaney.
Verse 29
2 Samuel 12:29. David gathered
all the people and went — The
reader will naturally observe
that this was an expedition
which came very seasonably to
relieve David in his distress,
and to revive his glory in arms.
And if Joab considered it in
this light, as in all
probability he did, the praise
of his generosity is still more
ennobled in this view.
Verse 30
2 Samuel 12:30. He took the
king’s crown from off his head —
This was the king’s part of the
spoil. The weight thereof was a
talent of gold — Or, rather, the
price or value of it, as the
Hebrew frequently signifies, and
not only weight; and so it is to
be taken here; for who could be
able to carry on his head such a
weight as a talent; which is
computed to be one hundred and
twenty-five pounds. With
precious stones — Which made the
value of it so great. Josephus
says that there was a stone of
great price in the middle of the
crown, which he calls a
sardonyx. And it was set on
David’s head — To show the
inhabitants that they were to
submit to him as their king.
Verse 31
2 Samuel 12:31. He brought forth
the people — The words are
indefinite, and therefore not
necessarily to be understood of
all the people, but of the men
of war, and especially of those
who had been the chief actors of
that villanous action against
David’s ambassadors, and of the
dreadful war ensuing upon it;
for which they deserved severe
punishments. Indeed, since David
left Shobi in the government of
Rabbah, (2 Samuel 17:27,) it
must be presumed that he left
some besides female subjects
under his dominion; and it is
most likely that the bulk of the
people were received to mercy,
and only the king, and the
accomplices and instruments of
his tyranny, suffered the
chastisements due to their
guilt. And put them under saws,
&c. — The Hebrew, וישׂם במגרה,
vajasem bammegeerah, &c., may be
literally and properly rendered,
and he put them to the saw, and
to iron harrows, or mines, and
to axes of iron, and made them
pass by, or to, the brick-kilns;
that is, he made them slaves,
and put them to the most servile
employments, namely, sawing,
harrowing, or making iron
harrows, or mining, hewing of
wood, and making brick. The
version of the Seventy, though
not very clear, may be
interpreted to the same purpose.
The Syriac and Arabic versions
render the passage, He brought
them out, and threw them into
chains, and iron shackles, and
made them pass before him in a
proper measure, or by companies
at a time. If the parallel
place, 1 Chronicles 20:3, which
our version renders, He cut them
with saws, and with harrows of
iron, and with axes, be
objected, it must be observed,
the Hebrew, וישׂר, vajasser, may
be rendered, He separated to the
saw, &c.; or, He ruled or
governed by the saw, harrows,
mines, and axes; made them
slaves, and condemned them to
these servile employments. Thus
the words are rendered by
Schmidius. And “this
interpretation,” says Dr. Dodd,
“is far from being forced, is
agreeable to the proper sense
and construction of the words,
and will vindicate David from
any inhumanity that can be
charged upon the man after God’s
own heart. The Syriac version
is, He bound them with iron
chains, &c.; and thus he bound
them all. And the Arabic, He
bound them all with chains,
killing none of the Ammonites,
This interpretation may be
further confirmed by the next
clause: Thus did he unto all the
children of Ammon — For had he
destroyed all the inhabitants by
these, or any methods of
severity, it would have been an
almost total extirpation of
them; and yet we read of them as
united with the Moabites, and
the inhabitants of Seir, and
forming a very large army to
invade the dominions of
Jehoshaphat. It may be added,
that if the punishments
inflicted on this people were as
severe as our version represents
them, they were undoubtedly
inflicted by way of reprisals.
Nahash, the father of Hanun, in
the wantonness of cruelty, would
admit the inhabitants of
Jabesh-Gilead to surrender
themselves to him upon no other
condition than their every one
consenting to have their right
eye thrust out, that he might
lay it as a reproach upon all
Israel. If these severities of
David were now exercised by way
of retaliation for former
cruelties of this nature, it
will greatly lessen the horror
that may be conceived upon
account of them, and, in some
measure, justify David’s using
them; and as the sacred writers,
who have transmitted this
history to us, do not pass any
censure on David for having
exceeded the bounds of humanity
in this punishment of the
Ammonites, we may reasonably
conclude, either that the
punishment was not so severe as
our version represents it, or
that there was some peculiar
reason that demanded this
exemplary vengeance, and which,
if we were acquainted with it,
would induce us to pass a more
favourable judgment concerning
it; or that the law of nations,
then subsisting, admitted such
kind of executions upon very
extraordinary provocations,
though there are scarce any that
can justify them.” See Delaney
and Chandler, p. 178. But in
whatever light we view these
severities exercised upon the
Ammonites, they ought, in no
manner, to be proposed as an
example to Christians, nor be
pleaded as a precedent for any
people to do the like. For the
divine laws are the rules of our
conduct, and not the actions of
any men whomsoever. |