
Text -- 2 Chronicles 13:19-22 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Ch 13:20 - -- He escaped the sword of Abijah: but God struck him: there is no escaping his sword.
He escaped the sword of Abijah: but God struck him: there is no escaping his sword.

Wesley: 2Ch 13:21 - -- Not after this victory, for he died presently after it, but in the whole time of his life.
Not after this victory, for he died presently after it, but in the whole time of his life.
JFB: 2Ch 13:19 - -- This sanguinary action widened the breach between the people of the two kingdoms. Abijah abandoned his original design of attempting the subjugation o...
This sanguinary action widened the breach between the people of the two kingdoms. Abijah abandoned his original design of attempting the subjugation of the ten tribes, contenting himself with the recovery of a few border towns, which, though lying within Judah or Benjamin, had been alienated to the new or northern kingdom. Among these was Beth-el, which, with its sacred associations, he might be strongly desirous to wrest from profanation.

JFB: 2Ch 13:20 - -- The disastrous action at Zemaraim, which caused the loss of the flower and chivalry of his army, broke his spirits and crippled his power.
The disastrous action at Zemaraim, which caused the loss of the flower and chivalry of his army, broke his spirits and crippled his power.

JFB: 2Ch 13:20 - -- That is, Jeroboam. He lived, indeed, two years after the death of Abijah (1Ki 14:20; 1Ki 15:9). But he had been threatened with great calamities upon ...
That is, Jeroboam. He lived, indeed, two years after the death of Abijah (1Ki 14:20; 1Ki 15:9). But he had been threatened with great calamities upon himself and his house, and it is apparently to the execution of these threatenings, which issued in his death, that an anticipatory reference is here made.
Beth-el - "Beth-lehem."- Targum

Jeshanah - We know not where these towns lay.

Clarke: 2Ch 13:20 - -- The Lord struck him, and he died - Who died? Abijah or Jeroboam? Some think it was Jeroboam; some, that it was Abijah. Both rabbins and Christians a...
The Lord struck him, and he died - Who died? Abijah or Jeroboam? Some think it was Jeroboam; some, that it was Abijah. Both rabbins and Christians are divided on this point; nor is it yet settled. The prevailing opinion is that Jeroboam is meant, who was struck then with that disease of which he died about two years after; for he did not die till two years after Abijah: see 1Ki 14:20; 1Ki 15:9. It seems as if Jeroboam was meant, not Abijah.

Clarke: 2Ch 13:21 - -- Married fourteen wives - Probably he made alliances with the neighboring powers, by taking their daughters to him for wives.
Married fourteen wives - Probably he made alliances with the neighboring powers, by taking their daughters to him for wives.

Clarke: 2Ch 13:22 - -- Written in the story - במדרש bemidrash , "in the commentary;"this, as far as I recollect, is the first place where a midrash or commentary is ...
Written in the story -

Clarke: 2Ch 13:22 - -- His ways, and his sayings - The commentary of the prophet Iddo is lost. What his sayings were we cannot tell; but from the specimen in this chapter,...
His ways, and his sayings - The commentary of the prophet Iddo is lost. What his sayings were we cannot tell; but from the specimen in this chapter, he appears to have been a very able speaker, and one who knew well how to make the best use of his argument.
Defender -> 2Ch 13:22
Defender: 2Ch 13:22 - -- The Hebrew word here for "story" is midrash. It originally meant something like a commentary. In more recent times, it came to be applied to a collect...
The Hebrew word here for "story" is
TSK: 2Ch 13:19 - -- took cities : Jos 10:19, Jos 10:39, Jos 11:12; 1Sa 31:7
Jeshanah : Jeshanah, according to the Talmud, was not far from Sephoris. Perhaps it is the Mig...
took cities : Jos 10:19, Jos 10:39, Jos 11:12; 1Sa 31:7
Jeshanah : Jeshanah, according to the Talmud, was not far from Sephoris. Perhaps it is the Migdal-Senna of Eusebius, eight miles north of Jericho.
Ephrain : Ephrain, or Ephron, a city of Benjamin, is placed by Eusebius, eight miles north of Jerusalem, near Bethel. Josephus calls Ephrain and Bethel two little cities; and places the former in the tribe of Benjamin, near the wilderness of Judea, in the way to Jericho. 2Ch 15:8; Jos 15:9, Ephron, Joh 11:54

TSK: 2Ch 13:20 - -- did : Psa 18:37, Psa 18:38
Lord : 1Sa 25:38, 1Sa 26:10; Eze 24:16; Act 12:23
he died : 1Ki 14:20, 1Ki 15:9

TSK: 2Ch 13:21 - -- waxed : 2Sa 5:12, 2Sa 5:13
fourteen wives : 2Ch 11:21
begat : Jdg 8:30, Jdg 8:31, Jdg 9:5, Jdg 10:4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Ch 13:19 - -- Jeshanah is probably identical with the "Isanas"of Josephus, where a battle took place in the war between Antigonus and Herod; but its situation can...
Jeshanah is probably identical with the "Isanas"of Josephus, where a battle took place in the war between Antigonus and Herod; but its situation cannot be fixed. For Ephrain, see Jos 18:23 note.

Barnes: 2Ch 13:20 - -- Jeroboam’ s death was a judgment upon him for his sins. Chronologically speaking, his death is here out of place, for he outlived Abijah at lea...
Jeroboam’ s death was a judgment upon him for his sins. Chronologically speaking, his death is here out of place, for he outlived Abijah at least two years (compare the marginal reference and 1Ki 15:9); but the writer, not intending to recur to his history, is naturally led to carry it on to its termination.
Poole: 2Ch 13:19 - -- Beth-el which Jeroboam recovered afterwards, as appears by the course of the history, though it be not particularly mentioned, which is the case of m...
Beth-el which Jeroboam recovered afterwards, as appears by the course of the history, though it be not particularly mentioned, which is the case of many other considerable things. And in the mean time it is very probable, that when Jeroboam’ s host was discomfited, and he expected that Abijah would pursue his victory, he removed the golden calf from Beth-el, which lay near Abijah’ s kingdom, to some safer place.
Ephrain a city so called, possibly the same which is mentioned Joh 11:54 , or that which is called Ophrah, Jud 8:27 .

Poole: 2Ch 13:20 - -- The Lord struck him i.e. Jeroboam, as appears from the contrary condition of Abijah described in the next verse. Him God might strike, either with ve...
The Lord struck him i.e. Jeroboam, as appears from the contrary condition of Abijah described in the next verse. Him God might strike, either with vexation and horror of mind; or with some painful and lingering, but incurable, disease, like that of Jehoram, which tormented him two years together, and at last killed him, 2Ch 21:19 .
He died not presently, but a year or two after this time.

Poole: 2Ch 13:21 - -- Not now after this victory, for he died presently after it; but in the whole time of his life, before he was king and afterward.
Not now after this victory, for he died presently after it; but in the whole time of his life, before he was king and afterward.
Haydock: 2Ch 13:19 - -- Bethel, the head of the calf worship; though Abulensis thinks it was another city, otherwise it would not have been spared. The calf continued there...
Bethel, the head of the calf worship; though Abulensis thinks it was another city, otherwise it would not have been spared. The calf continued there till the reign of Jehu, 4 Kings x. 29. (Menochius) ---
Jesana; perhaps Senna, (Numbers xxxiv. 4.; Calmet) seven miles north of Jericho. (Eusebius) ---
The versions read differently. ---
Ephron. The Masorets have Ephraim. (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "Ephraim, with the towns thereof." (Haydock) ---
Josue (xv. 9.) places Mount Ephron between Juda and Ephraim; and we find a town of the name, (1 Machabees v. 46.) but on the other side of the Jordan.

Haydock: 2Ch 13:20 - -- Him. Some think Abia, as Jeroboam survived him two years: but others, (Calmet) with greater probability, (Du Hamel) suppose that the latter is here ...
Him. Some think Abia, as Jeroboam survived him two years: but others, (Calmet) with greater probability, (Du Hamel) suppose that the latter is here specified, and that he fell a victim to the divine wrath, as the prophet Ahias had foretold. (Calmet) ---
(Salien, the year of the world 3081.)

Haydock: 2Ch 13:22 - -- Works. Protestants, "sayings are written in the story of the prophets Iddo." (Haydock) ---
Modross properly means "researches," and was the tit...
Works. Protestants, "sayings are written in the story of the prophets Iddo." (Haydock) ---
Modross properly means "researches," and was the title of the genealogical work of this prophet, from which this account is probably taken, chap. xii. 15. (Calmet) ---
The entire work is not extant. (Menochius)
Gill: 2Ch 13:19 - -- And Abijah pursued after Jeroboam,.... As he and his army fled:
and took cities from him; the following ones:
Bethel with the towns thereof; the...
And Abijah pursued after Jeroboam,.... As he and his army fled:
and took cities from him; the following ones:
Bethel with the towns thereof; the villages adjoining to it; here one of the calves was set up, which either Jeroboam took care to remove before this place fell into the hands of Abijah, or Abijah let it remain, and did not destroy it:
and Jeshanah with the towns thereof; which Reland x thinks is the same that is called by Jerom y Jethaba:
and Ephraim with the towns thereof; a city so called, thought to be the same that is mentioned in the passage; see Gill on Joh 11:54; it is here called, in the Targum, Ephron; so Jerom z calls it, and says it was Sichem.

Gill: 2Ch 13:20 - -- Neither did Jeroboam recover strength again in the days of Abijah,.... So as to bring an army into the field against him, and fight him:
and the Lo...
Neither did Jeroboam recover strength again in the days of Abijah,.... So as to bring an army into the field against him, and fight him:
and the Lord struck him; by some Jewish writers a, this is interpreted of Abijah; and the reason of his being stricken, they say, was because he did not destroy the calf when he took Bethel; but it is best to understand it of Jeroboam, since Abijah is afterwards said to wax mighty:
and he died; not immediately, for he lived two years after Abijah, 1Ki 14:20, but continued under a lingering disease he was smitten with, and which issued in his death.

Gill: 2Ch 13:21 - -- But Abijah waxed mighty,.... In his kingdom, increasing in riches and numbers, power and authority, and in his family:
and married fourteen wives, ...
But Abijah waxed mighty,.... In his kingdom, increasing in riches and numbers, power and authority, and in his family:
and married fourteen wives, and begat twenty and two sons and sixteen daughters; not after the above battle, nor since he began to reign; for he reigned but three years; but he, no doubt, married wives and had children before he came to the throne, as he might have others after.

Gill: 2Ch 13:22 - -- And the rest of the acts of Abijah, and his ways, and his sayings,.... Not only his warlike actions, and his course of life, but some remarkable sayin...
And the rest of the acts of Abijah, and his ways, and his sayings,.... Not only his warlike actions, and his course of life, but some remarkable sayings of his, he being a man of wisdom and eloquence, as his above speech shows:
are written in the story of the prophet Iddo; who might write the history of his own times; see 1Ki 15:7.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ch 13:1-22
TSK Synopsis: 2Ch 13:1-22 - --1 Abijah succeeding makes war against Jeroboam.4 He declares the right of his cause.13 Trusting in God, he overcomes Jeroboam.21 The wives and childre...
MHCC -> 2Ch 13:1-22
MHCC: 2Ch 13:1-22 - --Jeroboam and his people, by apostacy and idolatry, merited the severe punishment Abijah was permitted to execute upon them. It appears from the charac...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ch 13:13-22
Matthew Henry: 2Ch 13:13-22 - -- We do not find that Jeroboam offered to make any answer at all to Abijah's speech. Though it was much to the purpose, he resolved not to heed it, an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ch 13:3-20; 2Ch 13:21-22
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ch 13:3-20 - --
The War between Abijah and Jeroboam . - היתה מלחמה , war arose, broke out.
2Ch 13:3
Abijah began the war with an army of 400,000 valia...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ch 13:21-22 - --
Wives and children of Abijah. His death . - 2Ch 13:21. While Jeroboam was not able to recover from the defeat he had suffered, Abijah established h...
Constable -> 2Ch 10:1--36:23; 2Ch 13:1--14:2
Constable: 2Ch 10:1--36:23 - --IV. THE REIGNS OF SOLOMON'S SUCCESSORS chs. 10--36
"With the close of Solomon's reign we embark upon a new phase...

Constable: 2Ch 13:1--14:2 - --B. Abijah 13:1-14:1
Abijah generally did not please God (1 Kings 15:3). However there was the instance t...
Guzik -> 2Ch 13:1-22
Guzik: 2Ch 13:1-22 - --2 Chronicles 13 - King Abijah and a Victory for Judah
A. King Abijah speaks to King Jeroboam.
1. (1-3) The two armies gather for war.
In the eight...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask: 2Ch 13:19 2 CHRONICLES 13:4-22 —Was Abijah a wicked or a righteous king? PROBLEM: According to 1 Kings 15:3 , Abijah was a wicked king who “walked in a...

Critics Ask: 2Ch 13:20 2 CHRONICLES 13:4-22 —Was Abijah a wicked or a righteous king? PROBLEM: According to 1 Kings 15:3 , Abijah was a wicked king who “walked in a...

Critics Ask: 2Ch 13:21 2 CHRONICLES 13:4-22 —Was Abijah a wicked or a righteous king? PROBLEM: According to 1 Kings 15:3 , Abijah was a wicked king who “walked in a...
