
Text -- 1 Chronicles 11:26 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> 1Ch 11:26
JFB: 1Ch 11:26 - -- This was the third degree of military rank, and Asahel was their chief; the names of few of those mentioned are historically known.
This was the third degree of military rank, and Asahel was their chief; the names of few of those mentioned are historically known.
TSK -> 1Ch 11:26

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Ch 11:26
Barnes: 1Ch 11:26 - -- etc. The list of names here given corresponds generally with that in 2 Sam. 23:24-39, but presents several remarkable differences. (1) the number in...
etc. The list of names here given corresponds generally with that in 2 Sam. 23:24-39, but presents several remarkable differences.
(1) the number in Chronicles is 47; the number in Samuel is 31.
(2) Four names in the list of Chronicles are not in Samuel.
(3) five names in Samuel are not in Chronicles.
(4) many of the other names, both personal and local, vary in the two lists.
It is quite possible that the two lists varied to some extent originally. The writer of Chronicles distinctly states that he gives the list as it stood at the time of David’ s becoming king over all Israel 1Ch 11:10. The writer of Samuel does not assign his list to any definite period of David’ s reign, but probably delivers it to us as it was constituted at a later date. It is quite possible therefore that the names which occur only in Chronicles are those of persons who had died or quitted the army before the other list was made out, and that the new names in Samuel are the names of those who had taken their places. See the 2Sa 23:39 note.
Haydock -> 1Ch 11:26
Haydock: 1Ch 11:26 - -- Moreover. Nothing particular is here recorded of Asahel, and therefore he is barely mentioned with the rest. But the Book of Kings had been more pa...
Moreover. Nothing particular is here recorded of Asahel, and therefore he is barely mentioned with the rest. But the Book of Kings had been more particular in determining their rank, and had said, "Asahel, brother of Joab, was over the Thirty," being the last of the second ternary. The preposition b (Kennicott) frequently means, "over." (Nold., &c.) ---
Arabic, "head of Thirty, whose names are these." (Kennicott) ---
Elchanan; probably the son of Jair, 2 Kings xxi. 18. (Calmet)

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ch 11:1-47
TSK Synopsis: 1Ch 11:1-47 - --1 David by general consent is made king at Hebron.4 He wins the castle of Zion from the Jebusites by Joab's valour.10 A catalogue of David's mighty me...
MHCC -> 1Ch 11:10-47
MHCC: 1Ch 11:10-47 - --An account is given of David's worthies, the great men who served him. Yet David reckoned his success, not as from the mighty men that were with him, ...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ch 11:10-47
Matthew Henry: 1Ch 11:10-47 - -- We have here an account of David's worthies, the great men of his time that served him and were preferred by him. The first edition of this catalogu...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ch 11:21-42
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 11:21-42 - --
1Ch 11:21 should be translated: honoured before the three as two; i.e., doubly honoured-he became to them prince, leader. With regard to בשּׁנ...
Constable -> 1Ch 10:1--29:30; 1Ch 11:10--13:1
Constable: 1Ch 10:1--29:30 - --II. THE REIGN OF DAVID chs. 10--29
In all of Chronicles the writer assumed his readers' acquaintance with the ot...
