
Text -- 1 Chronicles 9:1 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> 1Ch 9:1
Wesley: 1Ch 9:1 - -- In the publick records, wherein there was an account of that kingdom, and of the several families in it.
In the publick records, wherein there was an account of that kingdom, and of the several families in it.
JFB -> 1Ch 9:1
JFB: 1Ch 9:1 - -- From the beginning of the Hebrew nation, public records were kept, containing a registration of the name of every individual, as well as the tribe and...
From the beginning of the Hebrew nation, public records were kept, containing a registration of the name of every individual, as well as the tribe and family to which he belonged. "The book of the kings of Israel and Judah" does not refer to the two canonical books that are known in Scripture by that name, but to authenticated copies of those registers, placed under the official care of the sovereigns; and as a great number of the Israelites (1Ch 9:3) took refuge in Judah during the invasion of Shalmaneser, they carried the public records along with them. The genealogies given in the preceding chapters were drawn from the public records in the archives both of Israel and Judah; and those given in this chapter relate to the period subsequent to the restoration; whence it appears (compare 1Ch 3:17-24) that the genealogical registers were kept during the captivity in Babylon. These genealogical tables, then, are of the highest authority for truth and correctness, the earlier portion being extracted from the authenticated records of the nation; and as to those which belong to the time of the captivity, they were drawn up by a contemporary writer, who, besides enjoying the best sources of information, and being of the strictest integrity, was guided and preserved from all error by divine inspiration.
Clarke -> 1Ch 9:1
Clarke: 1Ch 9:1 - -- Were reckoned by genealogies - Jarchi considers these as the words of Ezra, the compiler of the book; as if he had said: I have given the genealogie...
Were reckoned by genealogies - Jarchi considers these as the words of Ezra, the compiler of the book; as if he had said: I have given the genealogies of the Israelites as I have found them in a book which was carried into Babylon, when the people were carried thither for their transgressions; and this book which I found is that which I have transcribed in the preceding chapters.
Defender -> 1Ch 9:1
Defender: 1Ch 9:1 - -- This verse, among others, confirms that Israel's leaders placed great importance on keeping genealogies, for reasons of maintaining definitive records...
This verse, among others, confirms that Israel's leaders placed great importance on keeping genealogies, for reasons of maintaining definitive records of the respective inheritances given to the various families when they conquered the land. It also shows that the two books of Chronicles (originally one book) were written after the tribes had been carried away into their Assyrian and Babylonian captivities (2Ch 36:20-23, shows they were completed during or after the return from the Babylonian exile). Comparison of the latter with Ezr 1:1-4 indicates that the compiler and writer of Chronicles may well have been Ezra."
TSK -> 1Ch 9:1
TSK: 1Ch 9:1 - -- am 2804, etc. bc 1200, etc
all Israel : Ezr 2:59, Ezr 2:62, Ezr 2:63; Neh 7:5, Neh 7:64; Matt. 1:1-16; Luk 3:28-38
carried : 2Ch 33:11, 2Ch 36:9, 2Ch ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Ch 9:1
Barnes: 1Ch 9:1 - -- Rather, "So all Israel were reckoned ... the kings of Israel. And Judah was carried away captive to Babylon for their transgressions."
Rather, "So all Israel were reckoned ... the kings of Israel. And Judah was carried away captive to Babylon for their transgressions."
Poole -> 1Ch 9:1
Poole: 1Ch 9:1 - -- In the book of the kings of Israel and Judah not in that sacred and canonical book so called, but (as hath been oft observed before) in the public r...
In the book of the kings of Israel and Judah not in that sacred and canonical book so called, but (as hath been oft observed before) in the public records, wherein there was an account of that kingdom, and of the several families in it, according to their genealogies. Who were carried away i.e. which tribe or people of Judah last mentioned.
Haydock -> 1Ch 9:1
Haydock: 1Ch 9:1 - -- Israel. These registers were preserved by those who fled from the arms of Salmanasar, into the kingdom of Juda. Such records were preserved with th...
Israel. These registers were preserved by those who fled from the arms of Salmanasar, into the kingdom of Juda. Such records were preserved with the utmost care, and were collected by the author; who could give an account of what happened during and after the captivity, as he was an irreproachable eye-witness; not to mention the divine inspiration, which places his testimony out of the reach of criticism. (Calmet) ---
And Juda; perhaps by some historian. (Menochius) ---
Babylon, while Israel was removed elsewhere, by the Assyrians. (Haydock) ---
The genealogies of Israel being hitherto recited, now those who came back from captivity appear. (Worthington)
Gill -> 1Ch 9:1
Gill: 1Ch 9:1 - -- So all Israel were reckoned by genealogies,.... Not now by the writer of this book in the preceding chapters; for two of the tribes are not reckoned a...
So all Israel were reckoned by genealogies,.... Not now by the writer of this book in the preceding chapters; for two of the tribes are not reckoned at all, and the rest but in part; but there had been kept an exact account of them:
and, behold, they were written in the book of the kings of Israel; not in the canonical book or books of Kings, but in the annals, journals, and diaries, which each king took care to be kept with some exactness, often referred to in the preceding books; out of which this writer, under a divine direction, had taken what was proper to be continued, and had carried the genealogy down to the captivity of the ten tribes; but the genealogy being lost with them, he could proceed no further, nor say anything more concerning them:
but Judah; for so the word should be stopped, and read according to the Hebrew accents:
who were carried away to Babylon for their transgression; their idolatry, and were now returned again; of them the writer proposes to give a further account.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> 1Ch 9:1
NET Notes: 1Ch 9:1 The Hebrew text has simply “Judah,” though the verb הָגְלוּ (hoglu, “carried away”) ...
Geneva Bible -> 1Ch 9:1
Geneva Bible: 1Ch 9:1 So all Israel were reckoned by genealogies; and, behold, they [were] written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah, [who] were ( a ) carried aw...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ch 9:1-44
TSK Synopsis: 1Ch 9:1-44 - --1 The original of Israel and Judah's genealogies.2 The Israelites;10 the priests;14 and the Levites, with Nethinims, which dwelt in Jerusalem.27 The c...
MHCC -> 1Ch 9:1-44
MHCC: 1Ch 9:1-44 - --This chapter expresses that one end of recording all these genealogies was, to direct the Jews, when they returned out of captivity, with whom to unit...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ch 9:1-13
Matthew Henry: 1Ch 9:1-13 - -- The first verse looks back upon the foregoing genealogies, and tells us they were gathered out of the books of the kings of Israel and Judah, not ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ch 9:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ch 9:1-3 - --
1Ch 9:1-3 form the transition from the genealogies to the enumeration of the former inhabitants of Jerusalem in vv. 4-34.
1Ch 9:1-2
"And all th...
Constable -> 1Ch 1:1--9:44; 1Ch 8:1--9:44
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...
