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Text -- 2 Samuel 24:15 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
24:15 So the Lord sent a plague through Israel from the morning until the completion of the appointed time. Seventy thousand men died from Dan to Beer Sheba.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Beer-Sheba a famous well, its town and district in southern Judah
 · Beer-sheba a famous well, its town and district in southern Judah
 · Dan residents of the town of Dan; members of the tribe of Dan,the tribe of Dan as a whole; the descendants of Dan in Israel
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Temptation | SAMUEL, BOOKS OF | SALVATION | Presumption | Plague | Nation | MEALS, MEAL-TIME | Jerusalem | GUILT | GOD, 2 | GAD | Destroyer | David | ARAUNAH | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: 2Sa 24:15 - -- Rather that morning when Gad came [2Sa 24:18], till the end of the three days.

Rather that morning when Gad came [2Sa 24:18], till the end of the three days.

JFB: 2Sa 24:15 - -- Thus was the pride of the vainglorious monarch, confiding in the number of his population, deeply humbled.

Thus was the pride of the vainglorious monarch, confiding in the number of his population, deeply humbled.

Clarke: 2Sa 24:15 - -- From the morning - to the time appointed - That is, from the morning of the day after David had made his election till the third day, according to t...

From the morning - to the time appointed - That is, from the morning of the day after David had made his election till the third day, according to the condition which God had proposed, and he had accepted: but it seems that the plague was terminated before the conclusion of the third day, for Jerusalem might have been destroyed, but it was not. Throughout the land, independently of the city, seventy thousand persons were slain! This was a terrible mortality in the space of less than three days.

TSK: 2Sa 24:15 - -- the Lord : Num 16:46-49, Num 25:9; 1Sa 6:19; 1Ch 21:14, 1Ch 27:4; Mat 24:7; Rev 6:8 from Dan : 2Sa 24:2 seventy thousand men : Isa 37:36

the Lord : Num 16:46-49, Num 25:9; 1Sa 6:19; 1Ch 21:14, 1Ch 27:4; Mat 24:7; Rev 6:8

from Dan : 2Sa 24:2

seventy thousand men : Isa 37:36

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Sa 24:15 - -- The time appointed - Perhaps "the time of the assembly,"meaning the time of the evening sacrifice, at three o’ clock, when the people asse...

The time appointed - Perhaps "the time of the assembly,"meaning the time of the evening sacrifice, at three o’ clock, when the people assembled for prayer, more commonly described as "the time of the evening oblation"Dan 9:21; 1Ki 18:29, 1Ki 18:36; Act 3:1; Luk 1:10.

Seventy thousand - It is the most destructive plague recorded as having fallen upon the Israelites. In the plague that followed the rebellion of Korah there died 14,700 Num 16:49; in the plague, on account of Baal-Peor, 24,000 Num 25:9; 1Co 10:8.

Poole: 2Sa 24:15 - -- To the time appointed either, 1. From morning to evening, which is here called the time appointed; or, the time of the convention , or, public mee...

To the time appointed either,

1. From morning to evening, which is here called the time appointed; or, the time of the convention , or, public meeting , as this Hebrew word oft signifies, i. e. till the time of the evening prayer and sacrifice, when the people used more solemnly to meet together. See Psa 141:2 Act 3:1 . Thus God mitigated his sentence, and turned three days into one; it being a thing not unusual with God to qualify his threatenings, and to take off the evil threatened sometimes wholly, as in Nineveh’ s case, and sometimes in part. And this God might do here upon the speedy and serious repentance of David, and of his people. Or rather,

2. From the morning (or rather, from that morning ; for the article seems to be emphatical, and to denote that very morning in which Gad came to David, 2Sa 24:11 , and that the plague did immediately ensue after Gad’ s offer, and David’ s choice,)

even to the time appointed to wit, by God, i.e. for three days, as God had set the time, 2Sa 24:13 .

Object . If it continued three days, how is it said that God repented him of the evil, and stopped the angel in his course? 2Sa 24:16 .

Answ . This he did in the beginning of the third day, whereas otherwise it should have gone on to the end of the day. Or it may signify no more but this, At the end of the third day God gave over smiting; for then is God said (after the manner of men) to repent, when he ceaseth to proceed as before he had done. Seventy thousand men ; so the number of his people, which was the matter of his pride and glorying, was diminished.

Haydock: 2Sa 24:15 - -- And. Septuagint insert, "And David chose death, (the pestilence, as they usually render it; Salien). And it was the time of the wheat-harvest. And...

And. Septuagint insert, "And David chose death, (the pestilence, as they usually render it; Salien). And it was the time of the wheat-harvest. And the Lord gave death in Israel, from morning till dinner-time." (Haydock) ---

Appointed , for three days; though before the end of the last, God took pity on the people, ver 16. (Calmet) ---

Bochart thinks the pestilence ceased to rage at some hour of the first day. Syriac and Arabic, "till the sixth hour."

Gill: 2Sa 24:15 - -- So the Lord sent a pestilence upon Israel,.... Upon the land of Israel, the people of the land, directly employing an angel to go through the coasts o...

So the Lord sent a pestilence upon Israel,.... Upon the land of Israel, the people of the land, directly employing an angel to go through the coasts of it, and empowering him to inflict a pestilential disease:

from the morning even to the time appointed: from the morning the prophet Gad came to David with a message from the Lord; that very morning the plague began, and lasted to the time set for it, the three days, or at least unto the beginning of the third, when reaching Jerusalem, the Lord repented of it, and stayed his hand; though many think a much shorter time is intended; some think it lasted no more than half a day, if so much; some say but three hours f; the Septuagint version, until dinnertime; and the Syriac and Arabic versions, until the sixth hour of the day, which was noon; and so Kimchi says, some of their Rabbins interpret it of the half or middle of the day; the Targum is,"from the time the daily sacrifice was slain until it was burnt;''and it is the sense of several learned men that it was only from the morning until the time of the evening sacrifice, or evening prayer, about three o'clock in the afternoon, and so lasted about nine hours:

and there died of the people, from Dan even to Beersheba, seventy thousand men; so that there was a great diminution of the people in all places where they were numbered; and David's sin may be read in the punishment of it; his heart was lifted up by the numbers of his people, and now it must be humbled by the lessening of them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 24:15 So the LORD sent a pestilence upon Israel from the morning even to the time appointed: and there died of the people from ( h ) Dan even to Beersheba s...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Sa 24:1-25 - --1 David, tempted by Satan, forces Joab to number the people.5 The captains, in nine months and twenty days, bring the muster of thirteen hundred thous...

MHCC: 2Sa 24:10-15 - --It is well, when a man has sinned, if he has a heart within to smite him for it. If we confess our sins, we may pray in faith that God would forgive t...

Matthew Henry: 2Sa 24:10-17 - -- We have here David repenting of the sin and yet punished for it, God repenting of the judgment and David thereby made more penitent. I. Here is Davi...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 24:10-18 - -- David's heart, i.e., his conscience, smote him, after he had numbered the people, or had given orders for the census to be taken. Having now come to...

Constable: 2Sa 21:1--24:25 - --VII. SUMMARY ILLUSTRATIONS chs. 21--24 The last major section of the Book of Samuel (2 Sam. 21-24) consists of s...

Constable: 2Sa 24:1-25 - --F. Pestilence from David's Sin ch. 24 This last section of the book records another occasion on which Go...

Constable: 2Sa 24:15-17 - --3. David's punishment 24:15-17 An angelic messenger from God again brought death to many people ...

Guzik: 2Sa 24:1-25 - --2 Samuel 24 - David and the Census David commands a census to be taken. 1. (1-2) David is moved to take a census. Again the anger of the LORD was...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) THE FIRST AND SECOND BOOKS OF SAMUEL. The two were, by the ancient Jews, conjoined so as to make one book, and in that form could be called the Book o...

JFB: 2 Samuel (Outline) AN AMALEKITE BRINGS TIDINGS OF SAUL'S DEATH. (2Sa. 1:1-16) DAVID LAMENTS SAUL AND JONATHAN. (2Sa 1:17-27) DAVID, BY GOD'S DIRECTION, GOES UP TO HEBRO...

TSK: 2 Samuel 24 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Sa 24:1, David, tempted by Satan, forces Joab to number the people; 2Sa 24:5, The captains, in nine months and twenty days, bring the mu...

Poole: 2 Samuel 24 (Chapter Introduction) SAMUEL CHAPTER 24 David, tempted by Satan, forceth Joab to number the people; who are thirteen hundred thousand fighting men, 2Sa 24:1-9 . David ac...

MHCC: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) This book is the history of the reign of king David. It relates his victories, the growth of the prosperity of Israel, and his reformation of the stat...

MHCC: 2 Samuel 24 (Chapter Introduction) (2Sa 24:1-9) David numbers the people. (2Sa 24:10-15) He chooses the pestilence. (2Sa 24:16, 2Sa 24:17) The staying the pestilence. (2Sa 24:18-25) ...

Matthew Henry: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Book of Samuel This book is the history of the reign of king David. We had in the foregoing ...

Matthew Henry: 2 Samuel 24 (Chapter Introduction) The last words of David, which we read in the chapter before, were admirably good, but in this chapter we read of some of his last works, which wer...

Constable: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) Introduction Second Samuel continues the history begun in 1 Samuel. Please see my comments regarding 2 Samuel's title, d...

Constable: 2 Samuel (Outline) Outline (Continued from notes on 1 Samuel) V. David's triumphs chs. 1-8 ...

Constable: 2 Samuel 2 Samuel Bibliography Achtemeier, Paul J., and Elizabeth Achtemeier. The Old Testament Roots of Our Faith. Phil...

Haydock: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) THE SECOND BOOK OF SAMUEL; otherwise called, THE SECOND BOOK OF KINGS. INTRODUCTION. This Book contains the transactions of David till the end ...

Gill: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 SAMUEL This book, in many copies of the Hebrew Bible, is carried on without any new title put unto it; the reason of it is, becau...

Gill: 2 Samuel 24 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO SECOND SAMUEL 24 In this chapter an account is given of David's numbering of the people, 2Sa 24:1; of the sense he had of his sin, ...

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