
Text -- 2 Samuel 10:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Sa 10:4 - -- To fasten this is a reproach upon them, and to make them ridiculous and contemptible.
To fasten this is a reproach upon them, and to make them ridiculous and contemptible.

Wesley: 2Sa 10:4 - -- This was worse than the former, because the Israelites wore no breeches, and so their nakedness was hereby uncovered.
This was worse than the former, because the Israelites wore no breeches, and so their nakedness was hereby uncovered.
JFB -> 2Sa 10:4
JFB: 2Sa 10:4 - -- From the long flowing dress of the Hebrews and other Orientals, the curtailment of their garments must have given them an aspect of gross indelicacy a...
From the long flowing dress of the Hebrews and other Orientals, the curtailment of their garments must have given them an aspect of gross indelicacy and ludicrousness. Besides, a knowledge of the extraordinary respect and value which has always been attached, and the gross insult that is implied in any indignity offered, to the beard in the East, will account for the shame which the deputies felt, and the determined spirit of revenge which burst out in all Israel on learning the outrage. Two instances are related in the modern history of Persia, of similar insults by kings of haughty and imperious temper, involving the nation in war; and we need not, therefore, be surprised that David vowed revenge for this wanton and public outrage.
Clarke -> 2Sa 10:4
Clarke: 2Sa 10:4 - -- Shaved off the one half of their beards - The beard is held in high respect in the East: the possessor considers it his greatest ornament; often swe...
Shaved off the one half of their beards - The beard is held in high respect in the East: the possessor considers it his greatest ornament; often swears by it; and, in matters of great importance, pledges it. Nothing can be more secure than a pledge of this kind; its owner will redeem it at the hazard of his life. The beard was never cut off but in mourning, or as a sign of slavery. Cutting off half of the beard and the clothes rendered the men ridiculous, and made them look like slaves: what was done to these men was an accumulation of insult.
TSK -> 2Sa 10:4
TSK: 2Sa 10:4 - -- and shaved : The beard is held in high respect and greatly valued in the Eastcaps1 . tcaps0 he possessor considers it as his greatest ornament; often...
and shaved : The beard is held in high respect and greatly valued in the Eastcaps1 . tcaps0 he possessor considers it as his greatest ornament; often swears by it; and, in matters of great importance, pledges it; and nothing can be more secure than such a pledge; for its owner will redeem it at the hazard of his life. The beard was never cut off but in mourning, or as a sign of slavery. It is customary to shave the Ottoman princes, as a mark of their subjection to the reigning emperor. The beard is a mark of authority and liberty among the Mohammedans. The Persians who clip the beard, and shave above the jaw, are reputed heretics. They who serve in the

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Sa 10:4
Barnes: 2Sa 10:4 - -- In 1Ch 19:4, more concisely "shaved."Cutting off a person’ s beard is regarded by the Arabs as an indignity equal to flogging and branding amon...
In 1Ch 19:4, more concisely "shaved."Cutting off a person’ s beard is regarded by the Arabs as an indignity equal to flogging and branding among ourselves. The loss of their long garments, so essential to Oriental dignity, was no less insulting than that of their beards.
Poole -> 2Sa 10:4
Poole: 2Sa 10:4 - -- Shaved off the one half of their beards partly that he might compel them to bear a part in their mourning, and that in such a way as was usual with t...
Shaved off the one half of their beards partly that he might compel them to bear a part in their mourning, and that in such a way as was usual with them, but forbidden to the Israelites, Lev 19:27 Deu 14:1 ; which probably was not unknown to them; and partly to fasten this as a reproach upon them, and to make them ridiculous and contemptible. Compare Isa 20:4 47:2 50:6 .
Even to their buttocks: this was worse than the former, because the Israelites wore no breeches, and so their nakedness was hereby uncovered. Compare Isa 20:4 .
Haydock -> 2Sa 10:4
Haydock: 2Sa 10:4 - -- Away, having forced them as it were to go into mourning for the deceased king. These nations adopted the same customs as the Hebrews: they cut their...
Away, having forced them as it were to go into mourning for the deceased king. These nations adopted the same customs as the Hebrews: they cut their hair, and rent their garments, to express their deep affliction, Isaias xv. 2. The Arabs would deem it a great insult, and a piece of irreligion, to shave their beard. (Darvieux vii. p. 175.) Plutarch (Agesil) observes, that the Lacedemonians obliged those who acted in a cowardly manner in war, to wear only one wisker: and Herodotus (ii. 121,) takes notice of a person who, in contempt, cut off the beard on the right cheeks of some soldiers, who were placed to guard the body of his brother, who had been gibbeted, having first made them drunk, that he might take away the body. The garments (Aquila says, "the tunic," Septuagint, "the cloak, or mandua," which is a military garment used in Persia) were cut (Calmet) for the same purpose, like our spencers, (Haydock) that the ambassadors might be exposed to derision, as breeches were not usually worn, (Calmet) except by priests officiating. (Du Hamel) ---
This was in contempt of circumcision. (Menochius) ---
Yet we cannot suppose, but that the ambassadors would procure something to cover themselves before they arrived at Jericho, where they remained till their beard and the hair of their head (1 Paralipomenon xix.) were grown. The city was not rebuilt, but there were some houses in the territory of that devoted place, Josue vi. 26. (Haydock)
Gill -> 2Sa 10:4
Gill: 2Sa 10:4 - -- Wherefore Hanun took David's servants,.... His ambassadors:
and shaved off one half of their beards; that is, he ordered them to be shaved off; tha...
Wherefore Hanun took David's servants,.... His ambassadors:
and shaved off one half of their beards; that is, he ordered them to be shaved off; than which a greater indignity could not have been well done to them and to David, whom they represented, since the Israelites shaved not their beards, and were very careful of preserving them; for had it been the custom to shave, they might have shaved off the other half, and then they would not have appeared so ridiculous; and with other people it has been reckoned a very great punishment as well could be inflicted, and as great an affront as could well be offered, to mar a man's beard, or shave it off in whole or in part p. The Lacedemonians, as Plutarch q relates, when any fled from battle, used, by way of reproach, to shave off part of their beards, and let the other part grow long; and with the Indians, as Bishop Patrick observes from an ancient writer, the king used to order the greatest offenders to be shaven, as the heaviest punishment he could inflict upon them; but what comes nearest to the case here is what the same learned commentator quotes from Tavernier, who in his Indian Travels tells us, that the sophi of Persia caused an ambassador of Aurengzeb to have his beard shaved off, telling him he was not worthy to wear a beard, and thereupon commanded it should be shaved off; which affront offered him in the person of his ambassador was most highly resented by Aurengzeb, as this was by David:
and cut off their garments in the middle, even to their buttocks; and as they wore long garments in those countries, without any breeches or drawers under them, those parts by these means were exposed to view which modesty requires should be concealed r; so that they must be put to the utmost shame and confusion:
and sent them away; in this ridiculous manner, scoffing and leering at them no doubt; that since they came with compliments of condolence, it was proper they should appear in the habit of mourners, with their beards shaved, and their garments rent; cutting of garments, and standing in them from morning tonight, was a punishment of soldiers with the Romans, when they offended s.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Sa 10:1-19
TSK Synopsis: 2Sa 10:1-19 - --1 David's messengers, sent to comfort Hanun the son of Nahash, are villanously treated.6 The Ammonites, strengthened by the Syrians, are overcome by J...
MHCC -> 2Sa 10:1-5
MHCC: 2Sa 10:1-5 - --Nahash had been an enemy to Israel, yet had showed kindness to David. David therefore resolves gratefully to return it. If a Pharisee gives alms in pr...
Matthew Henry -> 2Sa 10:1-5
Matthew Henry: 2Sa 10:1-5 - -- Here is, I. The great respect David paid to his neighbour, the king of the Ammonites, 2Sa 10:1, 2Sa 10:2. 1. The inducement to it was some kindness ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Sa 10:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 10:1-5 - --
This war, the occasion and early success of which are described in the present chapter and the parallel passage in 1 Chron 19, was the fiercest stru...
Constable: 2Sa 9:1--20:26 - --VI. DAVID'S TROUBLES chs. 9--20
Chapters 9-20 contrast with chapters 2-8 in that this later section is negative ...

Constable: 2Sa 10:1--12:31 - --B. God's Faithfulness despite David's Unfaithfulness chs. 10-12
These chapters form a sub-section within...
