collapse all  

Text -- 2 Kings 10:9 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
10:9 In the morning he went out and stood there. Then he said to all the people, “You are innocent. I conspired against my master and killed him. But who struck down all of these men?
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Zeal | Jezreel | Jehu | JEHONADAB | Homicide | Government | FACT | Ezion-geber | Enthusiasm | Decision | Assyria | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

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

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: 2Ki 10:9-11 - -- A great concourse was assembled to gaze on this novel and ghastly spectacle. The speech which Jehu addressed to the spectators was artfully framed to ...

A great concourse was assembled to gaze on this novel and ghastly spectacle. The speech which Jehu addressed to the spectators was artfully framed to impress their minds with the idea that so wholesale a massacre was the result of the divine judgments denounced on the house of Ahab; and the effect of it was to prepare the public mind for hearing, without horror, of a similar revolting tragedy which was soon after perpetrated, namely, the extinction of all the influential friends and supporters of the dynasty of Ahab, including those of the royal house of Judah.

Clarke: 2Ki 10:9 - -- Ye be righteous - Another irony, intended partly to excuse himself, and to involve them in the odium of this massacre, and at the same time to justi...

Ye be righteous - Another irony, intended partly to excuse himself, and to involve them in the odium of this massacre, and at the same time to justify the conduct of both, by showing that all was done according to the commandment of the Lord.

TSK: 2Ki 10:9 - -- Ye be righteous : 1Sa 12:3; Isa 5:3 I conspired : 2Ki 9:14-24; Hos 1:4

Ye be righteous : 1Sa 12:3; Isa 5:3

I conspired : 2Ki 9:14-24; Hos 1:4

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Ki 10:9 - -- Ye be righteous - i. e., "Ye are just, and can judge aright."Jehu unfairly keeps back the fact that he had commanded the execution.

Ye be righteous - i. e., "Ye are just, and can judge aright."Jehu unfairly keeps back the fact that he had commanded the execution.

Poole: 2Ki 10:9 - -- To all the people either, first, To the promiscuous multitude met there to gaze upon this sad and strange spectacle. So the sense is, Be not ye troub...

To all the people either, first, To the promiscuous multitude met there to gaze upon this sad and strange spectacle. So the sense is, Be not ye troubled nor affrighted with these unusual and dismal occurrences: if any thing be amiss in these actions, I do here publicly and solemnly acquit you as righteous and innocent; do not you therefore fear any vengeance from God or men for it: if there be any guilt, it is in me, and in those who cut off these heads. Or, secondly, To those who cut off and brought the heads; for the same persons did both, and were here present, as Jehu commanded them, 2Ki 10:6 : to them he speaks in the audience of all the people; or by all the people may be meant all those who brought the heads, and were there waiting for Jehu, according to his order. So the speech is in part ironical, to this purpose,

You are righteous in your own eves, and you look upon me as a traitor, and rebel, and murderer, because I have risen against and slain my master, which I acknowledge I have done. But if I am guilty, you are not innocent, and therefore cannot accuse me; for I have killed one, but you a great number. This explication seems probable; only the Hebrew word ham being generally used of the common people, may seem not so fitly to agree to these rulers and great men, who had brought the heads; and that expression, to all the people, implies that Jehu did not direct his speech to some particular persons, but to the whole body of the people then present, whom he clears from all blame, and to whom he appeals as witnesses between him and these persons.

Haydock: 2Ki 10:9 - -- Just executioners of the divine wrath. (Du Hamel) --- You know what is right. (Menochius) --- You are now in the same predicament with myself. (...

Just executioners of the divine wrath. (Du Hamel) ---

You know what is right. (Menochius) ---

You are now in the same predicament with myself. (Haydock) ---

All the chief men had thus rendered themselves odious to the people, who could not choose them for leaders. He captiously infers, from his astonishing success, (Calmet) that his conduct is pleasing to God. (Menochius) ---

All the people seeing that so many had armed (Tirinus) against the house of Achab, might conclude that what they did was just. (Haydock)

Gill: 2Ki 10:9 - -- And it came to pass in the morning, that he went out, and stood, and said to all the people,.... Who were gathered together to this shocking sight, or...

And it came to pass in the morning, that he went out, and stood, and said to all the people,.... Who were gathered together to this shocking sight, or on the above accounts:

ye be righteous; having had no concern in taking off the heads of those men:

behold, I conspired against my master, and slew him; I own it, and some may blame me for it, and charge me with treason and murder:

but who slew all these? not he, but the chief men of Samaria, and therefore must be more guilty than he, having shed the blood of so many persons, who had not offended against God and man to so great a degree as Joram; this he said to lessen his own sin, and wipe off the reproach of it, that his character might appear fairer in the eyes of the people, concealing, at the same time, his orders for the slaying of them.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: 2Ki 10:9 And it came to pass in the morning, that he went out, and stood, and said to all the people, Ye [be] ( d ) righteous: behold, I conspired against my m...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Ki 10:1-36 - --1 Jehu, by his letters, causes seventy of Ahab's children to be beheaded.8 He excuses the fact by the prophecy of Elijah.12 At the shearing house he s...

MHCC: 2Ki 10:1-14 - --In the most awful events, though attended by the basest crimes of man, the truth and justice of God are to be noticed; and he never did nor can comman...

Matthew Henry: 2Ki 10:1-14 - -- We left Jehu in quiet possession of Jezreel, triumphing over Joram and Jezebel; and we must now attend his further motions. He knew the whole house ...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 10:8-10 - -- When the heads were brought, Jehu had them piled up in two heaps before the city-gate, and spoke the next morning to the assembled people in front o...

Constable: 2Ki 9:30--18:1 - --C. The Second Period of Antagonism 9:30-17:41 The kingdoms of Israel and Judah continued without an alli...

Constable: 2Ki 9:30--11:1 - --1. Jehu's evil reign in Israel 9:30-10:36 Since the writer did not record Jehu's coronation, we ...

Constable: 2Ki 10:1-17 - --Jehu's purges of the royal families 10:1-17 Jehu challenged the nobles of Samaria and Je...

Guzik: 2Ki 10:1-36 - --2 Kings 10 - The Reforms of Jehu A. Jehu executes the house of Ahab. 1. (1-11) Ahab's descendants are executed at Jezreel. Now Ahab had seventy so...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

JFB: 2 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: 2 Kings (Outline) MOAB REBELS. (2Ki 1:1) AHAZIAH'S JUDGMENT BY ELIJAH. (2Ki 1:2-8) ELIJAH BRINGS FIRE FROM HEAVEN ON AHAZIAH'S MESSENGERS. (2Ki 1:9-16) AHAZIAH DIES, A...

TSK: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) The events detailed in these books (Kings) are highly interesting and important. The account of the wisdom, magnificence, and extended commerce of So...

TSK: 2 Kings 10 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Ki 10:1, Jehu, by his letters, causes seventy of Ahab’s children to be beheaded; 2Ki 10:8, He excuses the fact by the prophecy of Elij...

Poole: 2 Kings 10 (Chapter Introduction) KINGS CHAPTER 10 Jehu by his letters causeth seventy of Ahab’ s sons to be slain: the fact is excused by Elijah’ s prophecy, 2Ki 10:1-11 ...

MHCC: 2 Kings 10 (Chapter Introduction) (2Ki 10:1-14) Ahab's sons and Ahaziah's brethren put to death. (2Ki 10:15-28) Jehu destroys the worshippers of Baal. (2Ki 10:29-36) Jehu follows Jer...

Matthew Henry: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Book of Kings This second book of the Kings (which the Septuagint, numbering from Samuel, ca...

Matthew Henry: 2 Kings 10 (Chapter Introduction) We have in this chapter, I. A further account of Jehu's execution of his commission. He cut off, I. All Ahab's sons (2Ki 10:1-10). 2. All Ahab's...

Constable: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) Introduction Second Kings continues the narrative begun in 1 Kings. It opens with the translation of godly Elijah to hea...

Constable: 2 Kings (Outline) Outline (Continued from notes on 1 Kings) 3. Ahaziah's evil reign in Israel -1 Kings 22:51-2...

Constable: 2 Kings 2 Kings Bibliography Ackroyd, Peter R. "An Interpretation of the Babylonian Exile: A Study of 2 Kings 20, Isaia...

Haydock: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) THE FOURTH BOOK OF KINGS. INTRODUCTION. This Book brings us to the conclusion of the kingdom of Israel, (chap. xvii.) and to the captivity of ...

Gill: 2 Kings (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 KINGS This, and the preceding book, are properly but one book divided into two parts, because of the size of it, as the book of S...

Gill: 2 Kings 10 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 KINGS 10 This chapter gives a further account of the destruction of the house of Ahab by Jehu, or his orders, even of all his son...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


created in 0.31 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA