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Text -- 1 Kings 13:29-34 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
13:29 The old prophet picked up the corpse of the prophet, put it on the donkey, and brought it back. The old prophet then entered the city to mourn him and to bury him. 13:30 He put the corpse into his own tomb, and they mourned over him, saying, “Ah, my brother!” 13:31 After he buried him, he said to his sons, “When I die, bury me in the tomb where the prophet is buried; put my bones right beside his bones, 13:32 for the prophecy he announced with the Lord’s authority against the altar in Bethel and against all the temples on the high places in the cities of the north will certainly be fulfilled.”
A Prophet Announces the End of Jeroboam’s Dynasty
13:33 After this happened, Jeroboam still did not change his evil ways; he continued to appoint common people as priests at the high places. Anyone who wanted the job he consecrated as a priest. 13:34 This sin caused Jeroboam’s dynasty to come to an end and to be destroyed from the face of the earth.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Bethel a town of Benjamin bordering Ephraim 18 km north of Jerusalem
 · Jeroboam son of Nebat; first king of Israel after it split away from Judah; Jeroboam I,son and successor of Joash/Jehoash, King of Israel; Jeroboam II
 · Samaria residents of the district of Samaria


Dictionary Themes and Topics: WAY | Sin | SAMARIA, COUNTRY OF | Prophecy | PROPHECY; PROPHETS, 2 | OLD PROPHET, THE | Minister | KINGS, BOOKS OF | Jeroboam | JADON | IDDO | HIGH PLACE | Disobedience to God | Conscience | CONSECRATE; CONSECRATION | CHRONICLES, BOOKS OF | CARCASS; CARCASE | CALF, GOLDEN | BETHEL | AH; AHA | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: 1Ki 13:30 - -- So that threatening, 1Ki 13:22, was fulfilled; and withal, the memory of his prophecy was revived and preserved among them, and his very carcase resti...

So that threatening, 1Ki 13:22, was fulfilled; and withal, the memory of his prophecy was revived and preserved among them, and his very carcase resting there, might be a witness of their madness and desperate wickedness, in continuing in their abominable idolatry, after such an assurance of the dreadful effects of it.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:30 - -- The old prophet and his sons, and others, whom common humanity taught to lament the untimely death of so worthy a person.

The old prophet and his sons, and others, whom common humanity taught to lament the untimely death of so worthy a person.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:30 - -- Which was an usual form of expression in funeral - lamentations.

Which was an usual form of expression in funeral - lamentations.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:31 - -- Tho' he was a lying prophet, yet he desired to die the death of a true prophet.

Tho' he was a lying prophet, yet he desired to die the death of a true prophet.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:31 - -- el, but with this man of God: Because what he cried against the altar of Beth - el, shall surely come to pass. Thus by the mouth of two witnesses was ...

el, but with this man of God: Because what he cried against the altar of Beth - el, shall surely come to pass. Thus by the mouth of two witnesses was it established, if possible to convince Jeroboam.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:32 - -- That is, of the kingdom of Samaria; as it was called, though not when this fact was done, yet before these books were written. Samaria was properly th...

That is, of the kingdom of Samaria; as it was called, though not when this fact was done, yet before these books were written. Samaria was properly this name of one city, 1Ki 21:1, but from hence the whole kingdom of Israel was so called.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:33 - -- That is, after all these things: the singular number put for the plural; after so many, and evident, and successive miracles.

That is, after all these things: the singular number put for the plural; after so many, and evident, and successive miracles.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:33 - -- He abated not so much as a circumstance in his idolatrous worship.

He abated not so much as a circumstance in his idolatrous worship.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:33 - -- Without any respect to tribe or family, or integrity of body, or mind, or life; all which were to be regarded in the priesthood.

Without any respect to tribe or family, or integrity of body, or mind, or life; all which were to be regarded in the priesthood.

Wesley: 1Ki 13:34 - -- Either, an occasion of sin, and means of hardening all his posterity in their idolatry: or, a punishment, for so the word sin is often used. This his ...

Either, an occasion of sin, and means of hardening all his posterity in their idolatry: or, a punishment, for so the word sin is often used. This his obstinate continuance in his idolatry, after such warnings, was the utter ruin of all his family. They betray themselves effectually, who endeavour to support themselves by any sin.

JFB: 1Ki 13:31 - -- His motive in making this request was either that his remains might not be disturbed when the predicted events took place (see 2Ki 23:18), or he had s...

His motive in making this request was either that his remains might not be disturbed when the predicted events took place (see 2Ki 23:18), or he had some superstitious hope of being benefited at the resurrection by being in the same cave with a man of God.

Clarke: 1Ki 13:30 - -- Alas, my brothers - This lamentation is very simple, very short, and very pathetic. Perhaps the old prophet said it as much in reference to himself,...

Alas, my brothers - This lamentation is very simple, very short, and very pathetic. Perhaps the old prophet said it as much in reference to himself, who had been the cause of his untimely death, as in reference to the man of God, whose corpse he now committed to the tomb. But the words may be no more than the burden of each line of the lamentation which was used on this occasion. See instances of this among the Asiatics in the note on Jer 22:18 (note).

Clarke: 1Ki 13:31 - -- Lay my bones beside his bones - This argues a strong conviction in the mind of the old prophet, that the deceased was a good and holy man of God; an...

Lay my bones beside his bones - This argues a strong conviction in the mind of the old prophet, that the deceased was a good and holy man of God; and he is willing to have place with him in the general resurrection.

Clarke: 1Ki 13:32 - -- In the cities of Samaria - It is most certain that Samaria, or as it is called in Hebrew Shomeron, was not built at this time. We are expressly told...

In the cities of Samaria - It is most certain that Samaria, or as it is called in Hebrew Shomeron, was not built at this time. We are expressly told that Omri, king of Israel, founded this city on the hill which he bought for two talents of silver, from a person of the name of Shemer, after whom he called the city Samaria or Shomeron; (see 1Ki 16:24); and this was fifty years after the death of Jeroboam. How then could the old prophet speak of Samaria, not then in existence, unless he did it by the spirit of prophecy, calling things that are not as though they were; as the man of God called Josiah by name three hundred years before he was born? Some suppose that the historian adds these words because Samaria existed in his time, and he well knew that it did not exist in the time of the old prophet; for himself, in the sixteenth chapter, gives us the account of its foundation by Omri. After all, it is possible that God might have given this revelation to the old prophet; and thus by anticipation which is the language of prophecy, spoke of Samaria as then existing. This is the solution of Houbigant, and is thought sound by many good critics.

Clarke: 1Ki 13:33 - -- Jeroboam returned not from his evil way - There is something exceedingly obstinate and perverse, as well as blinding and infatuating, in idolatry. T...

Jeroboam returned not from his evil way - There is something exceedingly obstinate and perverse, as well as blinding and infatuating, in idolatry. The prediction lately delivered at Beth-el, and the miracles wrought in confirmation of it, were surely sufficient to have affected and alarmed any heart, not wholly and incorrigibly hardened; and yet they had no effect on Jeroboam

Clarke: 1Ki 13:33 - -- Made - the lowest of the people priests - So hardy was this bad man in his idolatry that he did not even attempt to form any thing according to the ...

Made - the lowest of the people priests - So hardy was this bad man in his idolatry that he did not even attempt to form any thing according to the model of God’ s true worship: he would have nothing like God and truth. In his calves, or rather oxen, he copied the manner of Egypt; and in the formation of his priesthood, he seems to have gone aside from all models. Amongst the worst of heathens, the priesthood was filled with respectable men; but Jeroboam took of the lowest of the people, and put them in that office

Clarke: 1Ki 13:33 - -- Whosoever would, he consecrated him - He made no discrimination: any vagabond that offered was accepted even of those who had no character, who were...

Whosoever would, he consecrated him - He made no discrimination: any vagabond that offered was accepted even of those who had no character, who were too idle to work, and too stupid to learn.

Clarke: 1Ki 13:34 - -- And this thing became sin - These abominations were too glaring, and too insulting to the Divine Majesty, to be permitted to last; therefore his hou...

And this thing became sin - These abominations were too glaring, and too insulting to the Divine Majesty, to be permitted to last; therefore his house was cut off, and destroyed from the face of the earth

A Holy priesthood, a righteous ministry, is a blessing to any state, because it has a most powerful effect on the morals of the community; inducing order, sobriety, and habits of industry, among the people: on the contrary, the profligacy of the clergy, and false principles of religion, are the most likely to unsettle a kingdom, and to bring about destructive revolutions in the state. This is the principle on which all national establishments of religion were originally formed. The state thought proper to secure a permanency of religion, that religion might secure the safety of the state; because it was supposed from the general aversion of men from good, that, if left to themselves, they would have no religion at all. Where the religion of the country is pure, founded solely on the oracles of God, it deserves the utmost sanction of the state, as well as the attention of every individual. A Christian state has surely authority to enact, The Christian religion is and shall be the religion of this land; and, prejudice apart, should not the laws provide for the permanence of this system? Is the form of Christianity likely to be preserved in times of general profligacy, if the laws do not secure its permanence? What would our nation have been if we had not had a version of the sacred writings established by the authority of the laws: and a form of sound words for general devotion established by the same authority? Whatever the reader may do the writer thanks God for the religious establishment of his country. For abuses in church or state, he is the last to contend.

Defender: 1Ki 13:32 - -- Samaria was not built or recognized as a city or province until many years later, when Omri was king (1Ki 16:24), so this modifying clause must repres...

Samaria was not built or recognized as a city or province until many years later, when Omri was king (1Ki 16:24), so this modifying clause must represent an editorial explanation inserted later by the unknown compiler and editor of the historical narratives now preserved in 1 and 2 Kings"

TSK: 1Ki 13:30 - -- mourned over : 1Ki 14:13; Jer 22:18; Act 8:2

mourned over : 1Ki 14:13; Jer 22:18; Act 8:2

TSK: 1Ki 13:31 - -- lay my bones : Num 23:10; Psa 26:9; Ecc 8:10; Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23

TSK: 1Ki 13:32 - -- the saying : 1Ki 13:2; 2Ki 23:16-19 the houses : 1Ki 12:29, 1Ki 12:31; Lev 26:30 in the cities : 1Ki 16:24; 2Ch 25:13; Ezr 4:10; Joh 4:4, Joh 4:5

the saying : 1Ki 13:2; 2Ki 23:16-19

the houses : 1Ki 12:29, 1Ki 12:31; Lev 26:30

in the cities : 1Ki 16:24; 2Ch 25:13; Ezr 4:10; Joh 4:4, Joh 4:5

TSK: 1Ki 13:33 - -- am 3030-3050, bc 974-954 Jeroboam : 1Ki 12:31-33; 2Ch 11:15, 2Ch 13:9; Amo 6:11 made again : Heb. returned and made, Psa 78:34; Jer 18:4 *marg. 2Ti 3:...

am 3030-3050, bc 974-954

Jeroboam : 1Ki 12:31-33; 2Ch 11:15, 2Ch 13:9; Amo 6:11

made again : Heb. returned and made, Psa 78:34; Jer 18:4 *marg. 2Ti 3:13

whosoever : Num 1:51, Num 3:10, Num 17:5, Num 17:12, Num 17:13

consecrated him : Heb. filled his hand, Exo 28:41 *marg. Jdg 17:12

TSK: 1Ki 13:34 - -- became sin : 1Ki 12:30; 2Ki 10:31, 2Ki 17:21 to cut it off : 1Ki 12:26, 1Ki 14:10, 1Ki 15:29, 1Ki 15:30; Pro 13:6

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Ki 13:30 - -- He laid his carcase in his own grave - As Joseph of Arimathaea did the body of our Lord Mat 27:60. The possession of rock-hewn tombs by familie...

He laid his carcase in his own grave - As Joseph of Arimathaea did the body of our Lord Mat 27:60. The possession of rock-hewn tombs by families, or individuals, was common among the Jews from their first entrance into the holy land to their final expulsion. A sepulchre usually consisted of an underground apartment, into which opened a number of long, narrow "loculi,"or cells, placed side by side, each adapted to receive one body. The cells were 6 or 7 feet long, 2 feet wide, and 3 feet high. They were commonly closed by a stone placed at the end of each. Many such tombs still exist in Palestine.

Barnes: 1Ki 13:32 - -- Against all the houses of the high places - i. e., more than the two high places at Dan and Bethel. There were many lesser high places in the l...

Against all the houses of the high places - i. e., more than the two high places at Dan and Bethel. There were many lesser high places in the land, several of which would be likely to be in Israel 1Ki 3:4.

In the cities of Samaria - The word Samaria cannot have been employed by the old prophet, in whose days Samaria did not exist 1Ki 16:24. The writer of Kings has substituted for the term used by him that whereby the country was known in his own day.

Barnes: 1Ki 13:33 - -- Whosoever would, he consecrated him - i. e., he exercised no discretion, but allowed anyone to become a priest, without regard to birth, charac...

Whosoever would, he consecrated him - i. e., he exercised no discretion, but allowed anyone to become a priest, without regard to birth, character, or social position. We may suspect from this that the office was not greatly sought, since no civil governor who cared to set up a priesthood would wish to degrade it in public estimation. Jeroboam did impose one limitation, which would have excluded the very poorest class. The candidate for consecration was obliged to make an offering consisting of one young bullock and seven rams 2Ch 13:9.

Barnes: 1Ki 13:34 - -- This persistence in wrong, after the warning given him, brought a judgment, not only on Jeroboam himself, but on his family. Jeroboam’ s depart...

This persistence in wrong, after the warning given him, brought a judgment, not only on Jeroboam himself, but on his family. Jeroboam’ s departure from the path of right forfeited the crown 1Ki 11:38; and in that forfeiture was involved naturally the destruction of his family, for in the East, as already observed, when one dynasty supplants another, the ordinary practice is for the new king to destroy all the males belonging to the house of his predecessor. See 1Ki 15:29.

Poole: 1Ki 13:30 - -- So that threatening, 1Ki 13:22 , was fulfilled; and withal, the memory of his prophecy was revived and preserved among them, and his very carcass re...

So that threatening, 1Ki 13:22 , was fulfilled; and withal, the memory of his prophecy was revived and preserved among them, and his very carcass resting there might be a witness of their madness and desperate wickedness, in continuing their abominable idolatry after such an assurance of the dreadful effects of it.

They mourned over him the old prophet, and his sons, and others, whom common humanity taught to lament the untimely death of so worthy a person.

Alas, my brother! was a usual form of expression in funeral lamentations. See Jer 22:18 .

Poole: 1Ki 13:31 - -- That I may be secured from that judgment threatened 1Ki 13:2 .

That I may be secured from that judgment threatened 1Ki 13:2 .

Poole: 1Ki 13:32 - -- Of Samaria i.e. of the kingdom of Samaria, as it was called, though not when this fact was done, yet before these books were written. Samaria was pro...

Of Samaria i.e. of the kingdom of Samaria, as it was called, though not when this fact was done, yet before these books were written. Samaria was properly the name of one city, 1Ki 20:1 ; but from hence the whole kingdom of Israel was so called, Jer 31:5 Hos 7:1 Hos 8:5 Amo 3:9 ; and the king of Israel is called the king of Samaria, 2Ki 1:3 Hos 10:7 ; and (as here) we read of the cities of Samaria, Ezr 4:10 .

Poole: 1Ki 13:33 - -- After this thing i.e. after all these things; the singular number put for the plural; after so many, and evident, and successive miracles; which is n...

After this thing i.e. after all these things; the singular number put for the plural; after so many, and evident, and successive miracles; which is noted to aggravate his infidelity and apostacy.

Made again of the lowest of the people priests he abated not so much as a circumstance in his idolatrous worship.

Whosoever would without any respect to tribe or family, or integrity of body, or mind, or life; all which were to be regarded in the priesthood.

He consecrated him Heb. he filled his hand ; of which phrase see Exo 28:41 29:9,33 .

Poole: 1Ki 13:34 - -- This thing became sin either an occasion of sin, and means of hardening all his posterity in their idolatry; or, a punishment , for so the word sin...

This thing became sin either an occasion of sin, and means of hardening all his posterity in their idolatry; or, a punishment , for so the word sin is oft used. This his obstinate continuance in his idolatry after such warnings was the utter ruin of all his family.

Haydock: 1Ki 13:30 - -- Brother. Such titles were customary, Jeremias xxii. 18. (Menochius)

Brother. Such titles were customary, Jeremias xxii. 18. (Menochius)

Haydock: 1Ki 13:31 - -- Bones. Septuagint add, "that my bones may be saved along with his." The conduct and faith of this man would lead us to conclude that he had done wr...

Bones. Septuagint add, "that my bones may be saved along with his." The conduct and faith of this man would lead us to conclude that he had done wrong, without any malicious design, ver. 18. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Ki 13:32 - -- Samaria. The city was built by Amri, fifty years after the death of Jeroboam, chap. xvi. 24. But the sacred writer speaks of places by the names wh...

Samaria. The city was built by Amri, fifty years after the death of Jeroboam, chap. xvi. 24. But the sacred writer speaks of places by the names which they bore in his time. (Calmet) ---

If this man was a prophet, he might easily mention Samaria, which would give its name to the kingdom of Israel. There was also probably a village of this name long before, on the mountain Samir, where one of the judges was buried, Judges x. 2. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Ki 13:34 - -- Earth. Hebrew, "to destroy it from the face of the earth." The Vulgate insinuates that it had taken place before the author wrote. In the third ...

Earth. Hebrew, "to destroy it from the face of the earth." The Vulgate insinuates that it had taken place before the author wrote. In the third year of Asa, 22 years after this revolt, Bansa slew the whole family, chap. xv. 29.

Gill: 1Ki 13:29 - -- And the prophet took up the carcass of the man of God,.... The lion perhaps made off as soon as he came, or, if he stayed, the prophet was not afraid ...

And the prophet took up the carcass of the man of God,.... The lion perhaps made off as soon as he came, or, if he stayed, the prophet was not afraid of him, seeing he did not attempt to devour the carcass, nor touch the ass, nor do any hurt to those that passed by:

and laid it upon the ass, and brought it back; to his own city:

and the old prophet came to the city to mourn, and to bury him; to perform the funeral rites, according to the custom of the place.

Gill: 1Ki 13:30 - -- And he laid his carcass in his own grave,.... Which he had prepared for himself; for, as he came from Samaria, it could not be the sepulchre of his fa...

And he laid his carcass in his own grave,.... Which he had prepared for himself; for, as he came from Samaria, it could not be the sepulchre of his fathers; and this was showing all the respect, and doing all the honour to him, he well could:

and they mourned over him; the prophet and his sons: saying,

alas, my brother; which was an usual form of lamentation at funerals in later times, see Jer 22:18.

Gill: 1Ki 13:31 - -- And it came to pass, after he had buried him, that he spoke to his sons, saying,.... He gave them the following charge: when I am dead, then bury m...

And it came to pass, after he had buried him, that he spoke to his sons, saying,.... He gave them the following charge:

when I am dead, then bury me in the sepulchre wherein the man of God is buried; as it was his own, it might be reasonably thought they would bury him in it without such a charge; but, lest they should not, he gives it:

lay my bones beside his bones; his view in this was, that when Josiah came to burn the bones of the priests, he would spare the bones of this man of God; and so his, lying by them, and mingled with them, would be spared also, and so it proved, 2Ki 23:18.

Gill: 1Ki 13:32 - -- For the saying which he cried by the word of the Lord against the altar in Bethel,.... That the priests should be offered on it, and men's bones be bu...

For the saying which he cried by the word of the Lord against the altar in Bethel,.... That the priests should be offered on it, and men's bones be burnt upon it; for as for its being rent, and the ashes of it poured out, that had been done already:

and against all the houses of the high places which are in Samaria, shall surely come to pass: by which it appears that there were temples, and high places, and altars built in other parts of the kingdom besides Dan and Bethel, of the destruction of which the man of God prophesied, though not before mentioned; all which the old prophet gave credit to, and firmly believed would be accomplished. The kingdom of Israel, in later times, had the name of Samaria, from the chief city of it, Isa 7:9, here spoken of by anticipation, for as yet it was not in being, see 1Ki 16:24 and either it has its name here by way of prophecy, or else given by the writer of this book, as what it went by in his time.

Gill: 1Ki 13:33 - -- After this thing Jeroboam returned not from his evil way,.... From the idolatrous practices he had started, and was establishing; though he had seen h...

After this thing Jeroboam returned not from his evil way,.... From the idolatrous practices he had started, and was establishing; though he had seen his altar rent, and the ashes poured out as the man of God predicted, his own hand withered, and that restored again upon the prayer of the prophet; and though he had heard of the death he died for his disobedience to the command of God, and the several marvellous things that attended it; these were so far from reforming him, that he seemed to be the more hardened thereby:

but made again of the lowest of the people priests of the high places: and officiated there, and indeed those of the tribe of Levi would not serve there, and therefore were expelled their cities; see 2Ch 11:14.

Gill: 1Ki 13:34 - -- And this thing became sin unto the house of Jeroboam,.... All the above things were sins in themselves, as building high places, and putting priests i...

And this thing became sin unto the house of Jeroboam,.... All the above things were sins in themselves, as building high places, and putting priests in them, whoever would; but the sense is, that these were the causes of punishment, or of evil things being inflicted on Jeroboam's family; sin is put for the punishment of sin, as it often is:

even to cut it off, and to destroy it from off the face of the earth; so that it become utterly extinct; and the next thing we hear of is the sickness and death of his son.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:29 Heb “the man of God.”

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:30 “They” is the reading of the Hebrew text here; perhaps this is meant to include not only the old prophet but his sons (cf. v. 31).

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:31 Heb “the man of God.”

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:32 Heb “Samaria.” The name of Israel’s capital city here stands for the northern kingdom as a whole. Actually Samaria was not built and...

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:33 Heb “and one who had the desire he was filling his hand so that he became [one of] the priests of the high places.”

NET Notes: 1Ki 13:34 Heb “house.”

Geneva Bible: 1Ki 13:30 And he laid his carcase in his ( m ) own grave; and they mourned over him, [saying], Alas, my brother! ( m ) Which he had prepared for himself.

Geneva Bible: 1Ki 13:33 After this thing Jeroboam ( u ) returned not from his evil way, but made again of the lowest of the people priests of the high places: whosoever would...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Ki 13:1-34 - --1 Jeroboam's hand withers,6 and at the prayer of the prophet is restored.7 The prophet departs from Beth-el.11 An old prophet brings him back.20 He is...

MHCC: 1Ki 13:23-34 - --God is displeased at the sins of his own people; and no man shall be protected in disobedience, by his office, his nearness to God, or any services he...

Matthew Henry: 1Ki 13:23-34 - -- Here is, I. The death of the deceived disobedient prophet. The old prophet that had deluded him, as if he would make him some amends for the wrong h...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ki 13:27-32 - -- He thereupon had his ass saddled, and went and found the corpse and the ass standing by it, without the lion having eaten the corpse or torn the ass...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ki 13:33-34 - -- But this did not lead Jeroboam to conversion. He turned not from his evil way, but continued to make high priests from the mass of the people. וï¬...

Constable: 1Ki 12:25--14:21 - --2. Jeroboam's evil reign in Israel 12:25-14:20 Jeroboam was the first of 20 kings who ruled the ...

Constable: 1Ki 13:1-32 - --The prophecy of judgment on Jeroboam's religious system 13:1-32 God sent a young Judahit...

Constable: 1Ki 13:33-34 - --Jeroboam's continued apostasy 13:33-34 The prophecy of God's judgment on Jeroboam and it...

Guzik: 1Ki 13:1-34 - --1 Kings 13 - The Man of God from Judah A. A prophecy from a man of God. 1. (1-2) The coming destruction of the altar in Bethel. And behold, a man ...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) THE FIRST AND SECOND BOOKS OF KINGS, in the ancient copies of the Hebrew Bible, constitute one book. Various titles have been given them; in the Septu...

JFB: 1 Kings (Outline) ABISHAG CHERISHES DAVID IN HIS EXTREME AGE. (1Ki 1:1-4) ADONIJAH USURPS THE KINGDOM. (1Ki. 1:5-31) SOLOMON, BY DAVID'S APPOINTMENT, IS ANOINTED KING....

TSK: 1 Kings 13 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Ki 13:1, Jeroboam’s hand withers, 1Ki 13:6, and at the prayer of the prophet is restored; 1Ki 13:7, The prophet departs from Beth-el; ...

Poole: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) FIRST BOOK OF KINGS COMMONLY CALLED THE THIRD BOOK OF THE KINGS THE ARGUMENT THESE two Books called Of the Kings, because they treat of the kings of...

Poole: 1 Kings 13 (Chapter Introduction) KINGS CHAPTER 13 A prophet of Judah prophesieth against the altar at Beth-el: Jeroboam offering him violence, his hand withereth; and, at the praye...

MHCC: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) The history now before us accounts for the affairs of the kingdoms of Judah and Israel, yet with special regard to the kingdom of God among them; for ...

MHCC: 1 Kings 13 (Chapter Introduction) (1Ki 13:1-10) Jeroboam's sin reproved. (1Ki 13:11-22) The prophet deceived. (1Ki 13:23-34) The disobedient prophet is slain, Jeroboam's obstinacy.

Matthew Henry: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Book of Kings Many histories are books of kings and their reigns, to which the affairs of the...

Matthew Henry: 1 Kings 13 (Chapter Introduction) In the close of the foregoing chapter we left Jeroboam attending his altar at Beth-el, and there we find him in the beginning of this, when he rece...

Constable: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The Books of 1 and 2 Kings received their names because they docume...

Constable: 1 Kings (Outline) Outline I. The reign of Solomon chs. 1-11 A. Solomon's succession to David's throne 1:1-2:12...

Constable: 1 Kings 1 Kings Bibliography Aharoni, Yohanan. "The Building Activities of David and Solomon." Israel Exploration Journ...

Haydock: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) THE THIRD BOOK OF KINGS. INTRODUCTION. This and the following Book are called by the holy Fathers, The Third and Fourth Book of Kings; but b...

Gill: 1 Kings (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 KINGS This, and the following book, properly are but one book, divided into two parts, and went with the Jews under the common na...

Gill: 1 Kings 13 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 KINGS 13 In this chapter is an account of a man of God being sent to exclaim against Jeroboam's altar, and threaten its destructi...

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