Text -- 2 Kings 13:20 (NET)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> 2Ki 13:20
Wesley: 2Ki 13:20 - -- The mentioning this immediately on the death of Elisha intimates, that the removal of God's faithful prophets, is a presage of judgments approaching.
The mentioning this immediately on the death of Elisha intimates, that the removal of God's faithful prophets, is a presage of judgments approaching.
JFB -> 2Ki 13:20-21; 2Ki 13:20-21
JFB: 2Ki 13:20-21 - -- He had enjoyed a happier life than Elijah, as he possessed a milder character, and bore a less hard commission. His rough garment was honored even at ...
He had enjoyed a happier life than Elijah, as he possessed a milder character, and bore a less hard commission. His rough garment was honored even at the court.
JFB: 2Ki 13:20-21 - -- That is, the spring, the usual season of beginning campaigns in ancient times. Predatory bands from Moab generally made incursions at that time on the...
That is, the spring, the usual season of beginning campaigns in ancient times. Predatory bands from Moab generally made incursions at that time on the lands of Israel. The bearers of a corpse, alarmed by the appearance of one of these bands, hastily deposited, as they passed that way, their load in Elisha's sepulchre, which might be easily done by removing the stone at the mouth of the cave. According to the Jewish and Eastern custom, his body, as well as that of the man who was miraculously restored, was not laid in a coffin, but only swathed; so that the bodies could be brought into contact, and the object of the miracle was to stimulate the king's and people of Israel's faith in the still unaccomplished predictions of Elisha respecting the war with the Syrians. Accordingly the historian forthwith records the historical fulfilment of the prediction (2Ki 13:22-25), in the defeat of the enemy, in the recovery of the cities that had been taken, and their restoration to the kingdom of Israel.
Clarke: 2Ki 13:20 - -- And Elisha died - The two prophets, Elijah and Elisha, were both most extraordinary men. Of the former, it is difficult to say whether he was a man,...
And Elisha died - The two prophets, Elijah and Elisha, were both most extraordinary men. Of the former, it is difficult to say whether he was a man, or an angel in a human body. The arguments for this latter opinion are strong, the objections against it very feeble. His being fed by an angel is no proof that he was not an angel incarnate, for God manifest in the flesh was fed by the same ministry. Of him the following from Ecclesiasticus (chap. 48:1-11) is a nervous character: -
1. Then stood up Elias the prophet as fire, and his word burned like a lamp
2. He brought a sore famine upon them, and by his zeal he diminished their number
3. By the word of the Lord he shut up the heaven, and also three times brought down fire
4. O Elias, how wast thou honored in thy wondrous deeds! and who may glory like unto thee
5. Who didst raise up a dead man from death, and his soul from the place of the dead, by the word of the Most High
6. Who broughtest kings to destruction, and honorable men from their bed
7. Who heardest the rebuke of the Lord in Sinai, and in Horeb the judgment of vengeance
8. Who anointedst kings to take revenge, and prophets to succeed after him
9. Who wast taken up in a whirlwind of fire, and in a chariot of fiery horses
10. Who wast ordained for reproofs in their times to pacify the wrath of the Lord’ s judgment, before it brake forth into fury; and to turn the heart of the father unto the son, and to restore the tribes of Jacob
11. Blessed are they that saw thee, and slept in love; for we shall surely live
Elisha was not less eminent than Elijah; the history of his ministry is more detailed than that of his master, and his miracles are various and stupendous. In many things there is a striking likeness between him and our blessed Lord, and especially in the very beneficent miracles which he wrought. Of him the same author gives this character, Ecclus. 48:12-14: Elisha was filled with his spirit: whilst he lived he was not moved with the presence of any prince; neither could any bring him into subjection. Nothing could overcome him; and after his death his body prophesied, i.e., raised a dead man to life, as we learn from the following verse. He did wonders in his life, and at his death there his works marvellous; perhaps referring to his last acts with Joash
TSK -> 2Ki 13:20
TSK: 2Ki 13:20 - -- am 3167, bc 837
buried him : 2Ch 24:16; Act 8:2
the bands : 2Ki 5:2, 2Ki 6:23, 2Ki 24:2
the Moabites : 2Ki 3:5, 2Ki 3:24-27; Jdg 3:12, Jdg 6:3-6
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Ki 13:20
Barnes: 2Ki 13:20 - -- The bands of the Moabites invaded the land - The Moabites had been increasing in strength ever since their revolt from Ahaziah 2Ki 1:1. The def...
The bands of the Moabites invaded the land - The Moabites had been increasing in strength ever since their revolt from Ahaziah 2Ki 1:1. The defeat which they suffered at the hands of Jehoram and Jehoshaphat 2Ki 3:24 did not affect their subjugation. They spread themselves into the country north of the Arnon Isa 16:2, and thence proceeded to make plundering expeditious year by year into Samaria, in Spring. This was the natural season for incursions, as then in Palestine the crops began to be ripe.
Poole -> 2Ki 13:20
Poole: 2Ki 13:20 - -- They buried him in or near Samaria.
At the coming in of the year in the spring, when the fruits of the earth grew ripe.
They buried him in or near Samaria.
At the coming in of the year in the spring, when the fruits of the earth grew ripe.
Haydock -> 2Ki 13:20
Haydock: 2Ki 13:20 - -- Buried him, near Samaria. (Menochius) ---
He had been chosen by Elias sixty-eight years before, and had lived eleven with him. His perfect charact...
Buried him, near Samaria. (Menochius) ---
He had been chosen by Elias sixty-eight years before, and had lived eleven with him. His perfect character is given, Ecclesiasticus xlviii. 13. His double spirit represents the plentitude of grace in Jesus Christ; as his raising the child to life, in such a wonderful manner, denotes his incarnation. The waters of Jericho made sweet, and the healing of Naaman, set before us the virtue of baptism: as the widow's oil shews the great graces which are bestowed by Christ upon his Church. The children devoured, and the Syrians struck blind, remind us of the perversity and blindness of infidels, who will not acknowledge the truth, Matthew xiii. 14. We must now see how the bones of Eliseus prophesied: 1. By raising the dead to life, as a confirmation of all his former predictions; 2. as proof of a future resurrection, of the virtue of relics, and of the influence of the saints in heaven, whose souls were formerly united to their bodies, and were filled with the Holy Spirit; (St. Cyril of Jerusalem, cat. xviii. Illum.) 3. in as much as this miracle was a figure of Christ's resurrection, who raised himself to life, and those who believe in him: (Calmet) while Eliseus, in the like state of death, had only raised another. (Haydock) (St. Max., hom. i. de pasc.) ---
Same. Septuagint, Hebrew, and Syriac, "at the coming in of the year;" (Haydock) or, "the next year." (Pagnin)
Gill -> 2Ki 13:20
Gill: 2Ki 13:20 - -- And Elisha died, and they buried him,.... In Samaria. Epiphanius says n, in Sebastopolis of Samaria, Samaria itself was called Sebaste in later times;...
And Elisha died, and they buried him,.... In Samaria. Epiphanius says n, in Sebastopolis of Samaria, Samaria itself was called Sebaste in later times; though the Jews say o he was buried in Mount Carmel, in the cave of Elijah; according to the Jewish chronology p, he died in the tenth year of Joash, and he prophesied more than sixty years; sixty six, as Abarbinel, since he began to prophesy in the nineteenth year of Jehoshaphat; and, according to Clemens q of Alexandria, when he was forty years of age; but it seems rather, as Kimchi observes, that he died in the beginning of the reign of Joash, and even before his father's death, when he was a partner with him in the throne, and before any salvation or deliverance from the Syrians was wrought:
and the bands of the Moabites invaded the land at the coming in of the year; at the spring of the year, when there was fruit on the earth, those troops of robbers came to plunder and spoil; several of the Jewish writers observe, that in the word for "coming",