
Text -- 1 Chronicles 7:20-29 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Ch 7:21 - -- This history is not recorded else where in scripture, but it is in the ancient Hebrew writers. The Philistines (one of whose cities Gath was) and the ...
This history is not recorded else where in scripture, but it is in the ancient Hebrew writers. The Philistines (one of whose cities Gath was) and the Egyptians were next neighbours; and in those ancient times it was usual for such to make inroads one into another's country, and to carry thence what prey they could take. And as the Philistines had probably made such inroads formerly into Egypt, and particularly into the land of Goshen, which was the utmost part of Egypt bordering upon the Philistines land; so the Israelites might requite them in the like kind: and particularly the children of Ephraim, to their own loss. And this seems to have happened a little before the Egyptian persecution, and before the reign of that new king mentioned Exo 1:8. And this clause, that were born in that land, may be added emphatically, as the motive which made them more resolute in their fight with the Ephraimites, because they fought in, and for their own land, wherein all their wealth and concerns lay.

Wesley: 1Ch 7:23 - -- Thus the breach was in some measure repaired, by the addition of another son in his old age. When God thus restores comfort to his mourners, he makes ...
Thus the breach was in some measure repaired, by the addition of another son in his old age. When God thus restores comfort to his mourners, he makes glad according to the days wherein he afflicted, setting the mercies over against the crosses, we ought to observe the kindness of his providence. Yet the joy that a man was born into his family could not make him forget his grief. For he gives a melancholy name to his son, Beriah, that is, in trouble: for he was born when the family was in mourning. It is good to have in remembrance the affliction and the misery which are past, that our souls may be humbled within us.
JFB -> 1Ch 7:21
JFB: 1Ch 7:21 - -- This interesting little episode gives us a glimpse of the state of Hebrew society in Egypt; for the occurrence narrated seems to have taken place befo...
This interesting little episode gives us a glimpse of the state of Hebrew society in Egypt; for the occurrence narrated seems to have taken place before the Israelites left that country. The patriarch Ephraim was then alive, though he must have arrived at a very advanced age; and the Hebrew people, at all events those of them who were his descendants, still retained their pastoral character. It was in perfect consistency with the ideas and habits of Oriental shepherds that they should have made a raid on the neighboring tribe of the Philistines for the purpose of plundering their flocks. For nothing is more common among them than hostile incursions on the inhabitants of towns, or on other nomad tribes with whom they have no league of amity. But a different view of the incident is brought out, if, instead of "because," we render the Hebrew particle "when" they came down to take their cattle, for the tenor of the context leads rather to the conclusion that "the men of Gath" were the aggressors, who, making a sudden foray on the Ephraimite flocks, killed the shepherds including several of the sons of Ephraim. The calamity spread a deep gloom around the tent of their aged father, and was the occasion of his receiving visits of condolence from his distant relatives, according to the custom of the East, which is remarkably exemplified in the history of Job (Job 2:11; compare Joh 11:19).
Clarke: 1Ch 7:21 - -- Whom the men of Gath - slew - We know nothing of this circumstance but what is related here. The Targum paraphrases the whole thus: "These were the ...
Whom the men of Gath - slew - We know nothing of this circumstance but what is related here. The Targum paraphrases the whole thus: "These were the leaders of the house of Ephraim; and they computed their period [or boundary,

Clarke: 1Ch 7:24 - -- His daughter was Sherah - That is, remnant; "called so,"says the Targum, "because she was the remnant that escaped from the slaughter mentioned abov...
His daughter was Sherah - That is, remnant; "called so,"says the Targum, "because she was the remnant that escaped from the slaughter mentioned above."

TSK: 1Ch 7:21 - -- because they came : Or rather, ""when כי [Strong’ s H3588], (kee ) they came down to take away their cattle;""for it does not appear that t...
because they came : Or rather, ""when


TSK: 1Ch 7:23 - -- Beriah : that is, In evil
because : Many similar instances of the naming of children from passing circumstances, occur throughout the sacred volume. ...
Beriah : that is, In evil
because : Many similar instances of the naming of children from passing circumstances, occur throughout the sacred volume. See those of a similar character with this verse: Gen 35:18, where Rachel, while dying, names her new-born son Ben-oni, or, the son of my sorrow. So in 1Sa 4:21, the wife of Phinehas, on being apprised of the death of Eli and her husband, and that the ark was taken by the Philistines, while in the pains of travail, and dying, named her son I-chabod, or, there is no glory. So also in 1Ch 9:4 of this book, we read that Jabez, or, sorrowful, had that name given to him, because his mother ""bare him with sorrow.""2Sa 23:5


TSK: 1Ch 7:27 - -- Non : Num 13:8, Num 13:16, Nun, Oshea
Jehoshuah : Exo 17:9-14, Exo 24:13, Exo 32:17; Num 11:28, Num 14:6, Num 27:18; Deu 31:23, Joshua, Act 7:45; Heb ...

TSK: 1Ch 7:28 - -- Bethel : Gen 28:19; Jos 16:2; Jdg 1:22
Naaran : Naaran, or Naarath, Eusebius says was a town in his time called Νοοραθ , Noorath , five mile...
Bethel : Gen 28:19; Jos 16:2; Jdg 1:22
Naaran : Naaran, or Naarath, Eusebius says was a town in his time called
towns : Heb. daughters

TSK: 1Ch 7:29 - -- Manasseh : Jos 17:7-11
Bethshean : 1Sa 31:10, Bethshan
Taanach : Jdg 5:19; 1Ki 4:12
Megiddo : Jdg 1:27; 1Ki 9:15; 2Ki 9:27, 2Ki 23:29; 2Ch 35:22; Zec ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Ch 7:20 - -- The sons of Ephraim - The genealogy is difficult. It is perhaps best to consider Ezer and Elead 1Ch 7:21 as not sons of Zabad and brothers of t...
The sons of Ephraim - The genealogy is difficult. It is perhaps best to consider Ezer and Elead 1Ch 7:21 as not sons of Zabad and brothers of the second Shuthelah, but natural sons of Ephraim. The passage would then run thusly:
"And the sons of Ephraim, Shuthelah (and Bered was his son, and Tahath his son and Eladah his son, and Tahath his son, and Zabad his son, and Shuthelah his son) and Ezer and Elead, whom the men of Gath slew"(i. e. the settled inhabitants, as contrasted with the nomadic Hebrews, Amalekites, etc.).

Barnes: 1Ch 7:24 - -- Sherah could scarcely herself have built the Palestinian cities here mentioned, which must belong to a time not earlier than Joshua. By "she built"w...
Sherah could scarcely herself have built the Palestinian cities here mentioned, which must belong to a time not earlier than Joshua. By "she built"we must understand "her descendants built."
Poole: 1Ch 7:20 - -- Bered his son either,
1. The son of
Shuthelah and so Tahath the son of Bered ; and so the rest, which make up seven succeeding generations. Or,
...
Bered his son either,
1. The son of
Shuthelah and so Tahath the son of Bered ; and so the rest, which make up seven succeeding generations. Or,
2. The son of Ephraim ; and so Tahath is the son not of Bered, but of Ephraim , and so forward. And thus all these were brethren, and sons or grandchildren of Ephraim, living together at one time with their father.
Object. This cannot be, because then Ephraim had two sons called Shuthelah , and two called Tahath .
Answ That might easily happen, either because the first Shuthelah and Tahath were dead before the other two of those names were born; or because two of them were Ephraim’ s sons, and two of them his grandchildren, called after their uncle’ s names. For this is certain, the name of sons is promiscuously used concerning immediate children, and grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

Poole: 1Ch 7:21 - -- This history is not recorded elsewhere in Scripture, but it is in the ancient Hebrew writers, though mixed with many fables. The Philistines (one of...
This history is not recorded elsewhere in Scripture, but it is in the ancient Hebrew writers, though mixed with many fables. The Philistines (one of whose cities this Gath was) and the Egyptians were next neighbours; and in those ancient times it was usual for such to make inroads one into another’ s country, and to carry thence what prey they could take, as we find both in Scripture and in profane writers. And as the Philistines had probably made such inroads formerly into Egypt, and particularly into the land of Goshen, which was the utmost part of Egypt bordering upon the Philistines’ land; so the Israelites might requite them in the like kind: and particularly the children of Ephraim, either presuming upon their numbers and strength, or having possibly received the greatest injury from the Philistines in their last invasion, might make an attempt upon the Philistines to their own great loss, as is here related. And this seems to have happened a little before the Egyptian persecution, and before the reign of that new king mentioned Exo 1:8 . The Philistines are here called
the men of Gath either because they were subject to the king of Gath, as afterwards that people were, or because they lived about Gath. And this clause,
that were born in that land may be added emphatically, as the motive which made them more resolute and furious in their fight with the Ephraimites, because they fought in and for their own land, wherein all their wealth and concerns lay, and against those that unjustly endeavoured to turn them out of their native country.

Poole: 1Ch 7:22 - -- Ephraim their father either,
1. That Ephraim of whom he speaks, 1Ch 7:20 , whose sons are here named. But that to many seems hard, especially if the...
Ephraim their father either,
1. That Ephraim of whom he speaks, 1Ch 7:20 , whose sons are here named. But that to many seems hard, especially if these several sons, named 1Ch 7:20,21 , be understood successively, so as each man be the son of him who is named next and immediately before him, which seems most probable; for so here are seven successive generations of Ephraim, which it is not likely that Ephraim lived to see; for then he must have been near two hundred years old. Although it is not necessary that the persons here said to be slain should be that generation which was last mentioned; but the particle whom may belong to the other sons of Ephraim of the fourth, or fifth, or sixth generation. Nor is the word whom in the Hebrew text, which runs thus, and the men of Gath slew them , i.e. the sons of Ephraim in the general, as they are expressed in the beginning of 1Ch 7:20 , without respect to this or that particular generation. And the relative particle them may be referred not unto the persons last named, but unto some of the other and more remote persons; this being a common observation of Hebricians, that the relative oft belongs to the remoter antecedent. Or,
2. Zabad the father of the three persons and families last named, who might possibly have two names, and be called both Zabad and Ephraim. Or rather, the name of Ephraim may be put patronymically (as the learned speak) for the son and successor of Ephraim; who being now in Ephraim’ s stead the head of the tribe, as old Ephraim was in his time, might well be called by the same name. Thus Isaac is put for his son Jacob or Israel, Amo 7:9 , and Moses for the sons of Moses, Psa 90:1 , and David for his son Rehoboam, 1Ki 12:16 , and for Christ, Jer 30:9 Eze 34:23 , and (as many think) Abraham for Jacob, Abraham’ s grandchild, Act 7:16 . And these words,
their father seem to be added by way of distinction, to show that he meant not this of the old Ephraim, but of another, who was father to the three persons said to be slain, 1Ch 7:21 . For if he had understood this of the first Ephraim, having called these the sons of Ephraim, it might seem superfluous and tautological to tell us that Ephraim was their father. His brethren , i.e. his kinsmen, as that word is frequently used.

Poole: 1Ch 7:24 - -- His daughter i.e. his grandchild, or great-grandchild, for such are oft called sons or daughters in Scripture.
Who built Beth-horon i.e. rebuil...
His daughter i.e. his grandchild, or great-grandchild, for such are oft called sons or daughters in Scripture.
Who built Beth-horon i.e. rebuilt or repaired, which possibly she did in Joshua’ s time. And this work may be ascribed to her, because these works were done either by her design or contrivance, or by her instigation and influence upon her husband and brethren who did it.

Poole: 1Ch 7:28 - -- Their possessions i.e. the portion allotted to the tribe of Ephraim.
Beth-el ; which stood in the border of Benjamin, but belonged to Ephraim.
Unto...
Their possessions i.e. the portion allotted to the tribe of Ephraim.
Beth-el ; which stood in the border of Benjamin, but belonged to Ephraim.
Unto Gaza not that of the Philistines, which belonged to another tribe, and was remote from Ephraim; but another of the same name. Or rather Adasa, as it is in the margin of our Bible; the particle ad , here rendered unto , being a part of the name; for why should unto be put to this town, which is not put to any of the other?

Poole: 1Ch 7:29 - -- The children of Joseph i.e. of Ephraim, Joseph’ s eldest son, who is sometimes called Joseph , as hath been noted before.
The children of Joseph i.e. of Ephraim, Joseph’ s eldest son, who is sometimes called Joseph , as hath been noted before.
Haydock: 1Ch 7:20 - -- Bared, Thahath, probably called Becher and Theken, in Numbers. Three alone are there mentioned, though the other thirteen, whose names are given...
Bared, Thahath, probably called Becher and Theken, in Numbers. Three alone are there mentioned, though the other thirteen, whose names are given, seem to have been all the immediate sons of Ephriam, (Calmet) since he mourns for them, (ver. 22.; Menochius) and his other children afterwards. (Haydock) ---
The dreadful slaughter made them, is perhaps the reason why only three are mentioned in Numbers, and none in Genesis.

Haydock: 1Ch 7:21 - -- Son, Ezer. Hebrew, "and Ezer and Elad." His son, after each, seems to be twice omitted, as these were in the same degree as the rest. Septuagint...
Son, Ezer. Hebrew, "and Ezer and Elad." His son, after each, seems to be twice omitted, as these were in the same degree as the rest. Septuagint agree with the Vulgate. (Haydock) ---
Because they, the sons of Ephraim, (Calmet, &c.) or the men of Geth. (Syriac and Arabic) (Du Hamel) (Menochius) (Tirinus) ---
The text is ambiguous, but the former supposition seems more rational, (Haydock) and more generally received. (Calmet)

Haydock: 1Ch 7:23 - -- Beria. This name signifies, in evil, or in affection. (Challoner) ---
Briae, "in howling." (Menochius)
Beria. This name signifies, in evil, or in affection. (Challoner) ---
Briae, "in howling." (Menochius)

Haydock: 1Ch 7:24 - -- Daughter, or great grand-daughter, repaired these three cities. (Calmet) ---
The last, probably, was called after her. (Haydock) ---
But its situ...
Daughter, or great grand-daughter, repaired these three cities. (Calmet) ---
The last, probably, was called after her. (Haydock) ---
But its situation is unknown. (Calmet)

Haydock: 1Ch 7:25 - -- Thale. Hebrew, "and Thale, his son, and Thaan, his son." These seem to have been the sons of Ephraim. The following were their descendants. (Hayd...
Thale. Hebrew, "and Thale, his son, and Thaan, his son." These seem to have been the sons of Ephraim. The following were their descendants. (Haydock) ---
At least Elisama was prince in the wilderness, (Calmet) under Moses; (Numbers i. 10.; Haydock) and Josue, the sixth from Ephraim, was 54 years old, when the Israelites left Egypt. (Calmet)

Haydock: 1Ch 7:29 - -- Daughters. Septuagint, "villages." ---
Joseph, by Ephraim and Manasses, west of the Jordan. (Haydock)
Daughters. Septuagint, "villages." ---
Joseph, by Ephraim and Manasses, west of the Jordan. (Haydock)
Gill: 1Ch 7:20 - -- And the sons of Ephraim,.... A son of Joseph, and father of a tribe of this name, whose genealogy through five generations follows: Shuthelah, Bered, ...
And the sons of Ephraim,.... A son of Joseph, and father of a tribe of this name, whose genealogy through five generations follows: Shuthelah, Bered, Tahath, Eladah, Tahath; the second.

Gill: 1Ch 7:21 - -- And Zabad his son,.... Not the son of Tahath the second last mentioned, but the son of Ephraim, a second son of his:
and Shuthelah; his son, the so...
And Zabad his son,.... Not the son of Tahath the second last mentioned, but the son of Ephraim, a second son of his:
and Shuthelah; his son, the son of Zabad, called after his uncle's name, 1Ch 7:20.
and Ezer, and Elead; two other sons of Zabad:
whom the men of Gath that were born in that land slew: that is, Zabad and his three sons; these the men of Gath slew, who were Philistines that dwelt there, and were originally of Egypt, and were born in that land, but had removed into Palestine, which had its name from them, of which Gath was one of its cities; and this bordering upon the land of Goshen, or being near it, where the Israelites dwelt, they made inroads upon them, and plundered them:
because they came down to take away their cattle; and the sons, the grandsons of Ephraim, resisted them, and so were slain: and that the aggressors were not the Ephraimites, who went out of Egypt before their time, and fell upon the men of Gath, born in the land of the Philistines, in order to dispossess them of their land and substance, and were slain by them, which is the sense of the Targum and other writers, both Jewish and Christian; but the men of Gath, as is clear from this circumstance, that they
came down, as men did when they went from Palestine to Egypt, not when they went from Egypt to Palestine, then they "went up"; which would have been the phrase used, if this had been an expedition of the Ephraimites into Palestine; besides, it is not reasonable to think, that the Ephraimites, addicted to husbandry and cattle, and not used to war, should engage in such an enterprise; but rather the men of Gath, or the Philistines, who were a warlike people, and given to spoil and plunder; this, according to a learned chronologer l, was seventy four years after Jacob went down to Egypt, and one hundred and forty years before the children of Israel came from thence.

Gill: 1Ch 7:22 - -- And Ephraim their father mourned many days,.... For the loss of his son and grandchildren for the above fact was done while the Israelites were in Egy...
And Ephraim their father mourned many days,.... For the loss of his son and grandchildren for the above fact was done while the Israelites were in Egypt, and Ephraim the patriarch yet alive; nor is there any need to suppose another Ephraim, different from him:
and his brethren came to comfort him; some of the heads of the other tribes of Israel, particularly Manasseh, with some of his family.

Gill: 1Ch 7:23 - -- And when he went in to his wife,.... After his grief and sorrow in part at least had subsided:
she conceived and bare a son; which in some measure ...
And when he went in to his wife,.... After his grief and sorrow in part at least had subsided:
she conceived and bare a son; which in some measure made up for the loss he had sustained:
and he called his name Beriah; which signifies being "in evil" or calamity, he being born in an evil time:
because it went evil with his house; or evil was in his house, as Noldius m, in his family; a great calamity had befallen it.

Gill: 1Ch 7:24 - -- And his daughter was Sherah,.... That is, the daughter of Beriah; not an immediate daughter, but a descendant of his, otherwise she could not have rea...
And his daughter was Sherah,.... That is, the daughter of Beriah; not an immediate daughter, but a descendant of his, otherwise she could not have reached the times of Joshua, as she did by what follows:
who built Bethhoron the nether, and the upper; which were cities on the border of the tribe of Ephraim; which the Israelites having taken from the Canaanites, and destroyed, she rebuilt, see Jos 16:3.
and Uzzensherah; which was called after her own name, and to distinguish it from another place called Uzzen; though of neither of them do we read elsewhere.

Gill: 1Ch 7:25-27 - -- And Rephah was his son,.... The son of Beriah, whose genealogy from him is traced down to Joshua in this and the two following verses, and stands thus...
And Rephah was his son,.... The son of Beriah, whose genealogy from him is traced down to Joshua in this and the two following verses, and stands thus: after Rephah, Resheph, Telah, Tahan, Laadan, Ammihud, Elishama, who was prince of the tribe of Ephraim in the wilderness, Num 1:10, then Non or Nun, whose son was Jehoshua or Joshua.

Gill: 1Ch 7:28 - -- And their possessions and habitations,.... That is, of the sons of Ephraim, when come into the land of Canaan:
were Bethel, and the towns thereof; ...
And their possessions and habitations,.... That is, of the sons of Ephraim, when come into the land of Canaan:
were Bethel, and the towns thereof; the villages belonging to it, which was formerly called Luz, and was the border of Ephraim, Jos 16:7.
and eastward Naaran: the same with Naarath, Jos 16:7.
and westward Gezer, with the towns thereof; of which see Jos 16:3,
and Shechem also, and the towns thereof; which was a city of refuge in Mount Ephraim, Jos 20:7
unto Gaza, and the towns thereof; not Gaza, a city of the Philistines, for the tribe of Ephraim did not reach so far; the Targum calls it Aiah; it may be read Adaza, as in the margin of our Bibles.

Gill: 1Ch 7:29 - -- And by the borders of the children of Manasseh,.... Of the half tribe of Manasseh on this side Jordan: near to them the Ephraimites dwelt, even near t...
And by the borders of the children of Manasseh,.... Of the half tribe of Manasseh on this side Jordan: near to them the Ephraimites dwelt, even near to
Bethshean and her towns, Taanach and her towns, Megiddo and her towns, Dor and her towns; of all which places see Jos 17:11,
in these dwelt the children of Joseph the son of Israel; the Ephraimites, in those mentioned in 1Ch 7:28, and the Manassites, in those that are here mentioned; who were both the children or posterity of Joseph, the beloved son of Israel.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Ch 7:23 Heb “because in tragedy there had come to his house.” The preposition prefixed to רָעָה (ra’ah) should...

NET Notes: 1Ch 7:25 The Hebrew text has simply “Resheph,” but the phrase “his son” has probably been accidentally omitted, since the names before ...

NET Notes: 1Ch 7:27 Heb “Non” (so KJV, NASB; cf. Exod 33:11, where the more familiar spelling “Nun” occurs).


Geneva Bible: 1Ch 7:21 And Zabad his son, and Shuthelah his son, and Ezer, and Elead, whom the men of ( i ) Gath [that were] born in [that] land slew, because they came down...

Geneva Bible: 1Ch 7:25 And Rephah [was] his ( k ) son, also Resheph, and Telah his son, and Tahan his son,
( k ) That is, of Ephraim.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ch 7:1-40
TSK Synopsis: 1Ch 7:1-40 - --1 The sons of Issachar;6 of Benjamin;13 of Naphtali;14 of Manasseh;15 and of Ephraim.21 The calamity of Ephraim by the men of Gath.23 His posterity by...
MHCC -> 1Ch 7:1-40
MHCC: 1Ch 7:1-40 - --Here is no account either of Zebulun or Dan. We can assign no reason why they only should be omitted; but it is the disgrace of the tribe of Dan, that...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ch 7:20-40
Matthew Henry: 1Ch 7:20-40 - -- We have here an account, I. Of the tribe of Ephraim. Great things we read of that tribe when it came to maturity. Here we have an account of the dis...
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 7:20-23 - --
The families of Ephraim. - 1Ch 7:20. Among the Ephraimites, the descendants of Shuthelah, the founder of one of the chief families of this tribe, N...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 7:24-25 - --
"And his daughter Sherah,"the daughter of the above-mentioned Ephraim, "built Beth-horon the nether and the upper,"the present Beit-Ur-Fok and Tacht...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 7:26-27 - --
Elishama the son of Ammihud was a contemporary of Moses, Num 1:10, and prince of the tribe of Ephraim, Num 7:48; Num 10:22. נון (Non) is so pron...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 7:28-29 - --
In 1Ch 7:28 and 1Ch 7:29 the possessions and dwelling-places of the tribe of Ephraim (and as we learn from the superscription, 1Ch 7:29), also those...
Constable: 1Ch 1:1--9:44 - --I. ISRAEL'S HISTORICAL ROOTS chs. 1--9
"The fact that the author of 1 and 2 Chronicles devoted nine chapters out...

Constable: 1Ch 4:1--7:40 - --B. The House of Israel chs. 4-7
The writer's next concern was to trace the line of people to whom and th...
