![](images/minus.gif)
Text -- 1 Chronicles 19:7 (NET)
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> 1Ch 19:7
Wesley: 1Ch 19:7 - -- Thirty two thousand men, who fought partly from chariots, and partly on foot with chariots, or attending upon the chariots, as the ancient manner of f...
Thirty two thousand men, who fought partly from chariots, and partly on foot with chariots, or attending upon the chariots, as the ancient manner of fighting was.
JFB -> 1Ch 19:7
JFB: 1Ch 19:7 - -- Hebrew, "riders," or "cavalry," accustomed to fight either on horseback or in chariots, and occasionally on foot. Accepting this as the true rendering...
Hebrew, "riders," or "cavalry," accustomed to fight either on horseback or in chariots, and occasionally on foot. Accepting this as the true rendering, the number of hired auxiliaries mentioned in this passage agrees exactly with the statement in 2Sa 10:6 : twenty thousand (from Syria), twelve thousand (from Tob), equal to thirty-two thousand, and one thousand with the king of Maachah.
Clarke -> 1Ch 19:7
Clarke: 1Ch 19:7 - -- Thirty and two thousand - The whole number mentioned in Samuel is, Syrians, of Beth-rehob, and of Zoba, twenty thousand; of King Maacah, one thousan...
Thirty and two thousand - The whole number mentioned in Samuel is, Syrians, of Beth-rehob, and of Zoba, twenty thousand; of King Maacah, one thousand; of Ish-tob, twelve thousand; in all thirty-three thousand. Of chariots or cavalry there is no mention. These could not have been the whole army.
TSK -> 1Ch 19:7
TSK: 1Ch 19:7 - -- hired : 1Ch 18:4; Exo 14:9; Jdg 4:3; 1Sa 13:5; 2Ch 14:9; Psa 20:7-9
thirty : Thirty-two thousand soldiers, exclusive of the thousand sent by the king ...
hired : 1Ch 18:4; Exo 14:9; Jdg 4:3; 1Sa 13:5; 2Ch 14:9; Psa 20:7-9
thirty : Thirty-two thousand soldiers, exclusive of the thousand sent by the king of Maachah, are mentioned in the parallel passage (2Sa 10:6); but of chariots or cavalry there is no mention; and the number of chariots stated here is prodigious, and beyond all credibility. But as the word
the king of Maachah : This variation exists only in the translation, the original being the same in both places,
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Ch 19:7
Barnes: 1Ch 19:7 - -- They hired thirty and two thousand chariots - The reading is corrupt. Such a number as 32,000 chariots alone was never brought into battle on a...
They hired thirty and two thousand chariots - The reading is corrupt. Such a number as 32,000 chariots alone was never brought into battle on any occasion. Compare the numbers in Exo 14:7; 1Ki 10:26; 2Ch 12:3. The largest force which an Assyrian king ever speaks of encountering is 3,940. The words "and horsemen"have probably fallen out of the text after the word "chariots"(compare 1Ch 19:6). The 32,000 would be the number of the warriors serving on horseback or in chariots; and this number would agree closely with 2Sa 10:6, as the following table shows:
Men | |
Syrians of Beth-rehob and Zobah | 20,000 |
Syrians of Ish-tob | 12,000 |
Syrians of Maachah | 1,000 |
Total | 33,000 |
1Ch 19:7 | Men |
Syrians of Zobah, etc. | 32,000 |
Syrians of Machah ( number not given) | 1,000 |
Total | 33,000 |
Poole -> 1Ch 19:7
Poole: 1Ch 19:7 - -- Thirty and two thousand chariots i. e. thirty-two thousand men fighting from or with chariots, as that word is elsewhere used; of which see my notes ...
Thirty and two thousand chariots i. e. thirty-two thousand men fighting from or with chariots, as that word is elsewhere used; of which see my notes on 1Sa 13:5 . And this interpretation seems the more probable by comparing this place with 2Sa 10:6 , where this army is said to consist of twenty thousand footmen , and twelve thousand men of Ish-tob ; which make up these thirty-two thousand men, who fought partly from chariots, and partly on foot with chariots, or attending upon the chariots, as the ancient manner of fighting was. And here, 1Ch 19:6 , this army is made up of chariots and horsemen ; where, except the chariots be understood of footmen, there were no footmen in the army, which is unusual and incredible.
Haydock -> 1Ch 19:7
Haydock: 1Ch 19:7 - -- Chariots. This number seems excessive, and it may have been put for infantry; the number of which, specified [in] 2 Kings, was 33,000. But the troo...
Chariots. This number seems excessive, and it may have been put for infantry; the number of which, specified [in] 2 Kings, was 33,000. But the troops of Mesopotamia are not there mentioned, and this supplies what was left defective. (Calmet) ---
The chariots may signify those who fought upon them, (Menochius) ver. 18., and Isaias xxi. 7. (Tirinus) ---
Sometimes the whole number is specified; at others only a part.
Gill -> 1Ch 19:1-19
See Chapter Introduction
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ch 19:1-19
TSK Synopsis: 1Ch 19:1-19 - --1 David's messengers, sent to comfort Hanun, the son of Nahash, are villainously treated.6 The Ammonites, strengthened by the Syrians, are overcome by...
MHCC -> 1Ch 19:1-19
MHCC: 1Ch 19:1-19 - --The history is here repeated which we read 2 Samuel 10. The only safety of sinners consists in submitting to the Lord, seeking peace with him, and bec...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ch 19:6-19
Matthew Henry: 1Ch 19:6-19 - -- We may see here, 1. How the hearts of sinners that are marked for ruin are hardened to their destruction. The children of Ammon saw that they had m...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ch 19:1-19
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 19:1-19 - --
The same phenomena are met with in the detailed account of the Ammonite-Syriac war, 1Ch 19:1-2; 1Ch 20:3, as compared with 2 Sam 10:1-11:1, and 2Sa ...
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...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: 1Ch 17:1--29:30 - --E. God's Covenant Promises to David chs. 17-29
The dominating theme in 1 Chronicles is the Davidic Coven...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: 1Ch 17:1--21:30 - --1. The first account of God's promises to David chs. 17-21
In some particulars the promises God ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)