
Text -- 2 Chronicles 16:11-14 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Ch 16:12 - -- He did not humble himself before God, but put his confidence in the skill and faithfulness of his physicians. His making use of physicians was his dut...
He did not humble himself before God, but put his confidence in the skill and faithfulness of his physicians. His making use of physicians was his duty, but his trusting in them, and expecting that from them, which was to be had from God only, was his sin and folly. The help of every creature must be used, with an eye to the creator, and in dependence on him, who makes every creature that to us which it is, without whom the most skilful and faithful are physicians of no value.

Wesley: 2Ch 16:14 - -- Of precious spices; thereby testifying their respect to him notwithstanding his miscarriages.
Of precious spices; thereby testifying their respect to him notwithstanding his miscarriages.
Probably the gout.

JFB: 2Ch 16:12 - -- Better, "moved upwards" in his body, which proves the violent and dangerous type of the malady.
Better, "moved upwards" in his body, which proves the violent and dangerous type of the malady.

JFB: 2Ch 16:12 - -- Most probably Egyptian physicians, who were anciently in high repute at foreign courts, and who pretended to expel diseases by charms, incantations, a...
Most probably Egyptian physicians, who were anciently in high repute at foreign courts, and who pretended to expel diseases by charms, incantations, and mystic arts. Asa's fault consisted in his trusting to such physicians, while he neglected to supplicate the aid and blessing of God. The best and holiest men have been betrayed for a time into sins, but through repentance have risen again; and as Asa is pronounced a good man (2Ch 15:17), it may be presumed that he also was restored to a better state of mind.

JFB: 2Ch 16:14 - -- The tombs in the neighborhood of Jerusalem were excavated in the side of a rock. One cave contained several tombs or sepulchres.
The tombs in the neighborhood of Jerusalem were excavated in the side of a rock. One cave contained several tombs or sepulchres.

JFB: 2Ch 16:14 - -- It is evident that a sumptuous public funeral was given him as a tribute of respect and gratitude for his pious character and patriotic government. Bu...
It is evident that a sumptuous public funeral was given him as a tribute of respect and gratitude for his pious character and patriotic government. But whether "the bed" means a state couch on which he lay exposed to public view, the odoriferous perfumes being designed to neutralize the offensive smell of the corpse, or whether it refers to an embalmment, in which aromatic spices were always used in great profusion, it is impossible to say.

JFB: 2Ch 16:14 - -- According to some, for consuming the spices. According to others, it was a magnificent pile for the cremation of the corpse--a usage which was at that...
According to some, for consuming the spices. According to others, it was a magnificent pile for the cremation of the corpse--a usage which was at that time, and long after, prevalent among the Hebrews, and the omission of which in the case of royal personages was reckoned a great indignity (2Ch 21:19; 1Sa 31:12; Jer 34:5; Amo 6:10).
Clarke: 2Ch 16:12 - -- Diseased in his feet - He had a strong and long fit of the gout; this is most likely
Diseased in his feet - He had a strong and long fit of the gout; this is most likely

Clarke: 2Ch 16:12 - -- He sought not to the Lord - "He did not seek discipline from the face of the Lord, but from the physicians."- Targum
Are we not taught by this to ma...
He sought not to the Lord - "He did not seek discipline from the face of the Lord, but from the physicians."- Targum
Are we not taught by this to make prayer and supplication to the Lord in our afflictions, with the expectation that he will heal us when he finds us duly humbled, i.e., when the end is answered for which he sends the affliction?

Clarke: 2Ch 16:14 - -- And laid him in the bed - It is very likely that the body of Asa was burnt; that the bed spoken of here was a funeral pyre, on which much spices and...
And laid him in the bed - It is very likely that the body of Asa was burnt; that the bed spoken of here was a funeral pyre, on which much spices and odoriferous woods had been placed; and then they set fire to the whole and consumed the body with the aromatics. Some think the body was not burned, but the aromatics only, in honor of the king
How the ancients treated the bodies of the illustrious dead we learn from Virgil, in the funeral rites paid to Misenus
Nec minus interea Misenum in littore Teucr
Flebant, et cineri ingrato suprema ferebant
Principio pinguem taedis et robore sect
Ingentem struxere pyram: cui frondibus atri
Intexunt latera, et ferales ante cupressa
Constituunt, decorantque super fulgentibus armis , etc
Aen. vi. 214
"Meanwhile the Trojan troops, with weeping eyes
To dead Misenus pay their obsequies
First from the ground a lofty pile they rea
Of pitch trees, oaks, and pines, and unctuous fir
The fabric’ s front with cypress twigs they strew
And stick the sides with boughs of baleful yew
The topmost part his glittering arms adorn
Warm waters, then, in brazen caldrons born
Are poured to wash his body joint by joint
And fragrant oils the stiffen’ d limbs anoint
With groans and cries Misenus they deplore
Then on a bier, with purple cover’ d o’ er
The breathless body thus bewail’ d they lay
And fire the pile (their faces turn’ d away)
Such reverend rites their fathers used to pay
Pure oil and incense on the fire they throw
And fat of victims which their friends bestow
These gifts the greedy flames to dust devour
Then on the living coals red wine they pour
And last the relics by themselves dispose
Which in a brazen urn the priests enclose
Old Corineus compass’ d thrice the crew
And dipp’ d an olive branch in holy dew
Which thrice he sprinkled round, and thrice alou
Invoked the dead, and then dismiss’ d the crowd.
Dryden
All these rites are of Asiatic extraction. Virgil borrows almost every circumstance from Homer; (see Iliad, xxiii., ver. 164, etc.); and we well know that Homer ever describes Asiatic manners. Sometimes, especially in war, several captives were sacrificed to the manes of the departed hero. So, in the place above, the mean-souled, ferocious demon, Achilles, is represented sacrificing twelve Trojan captives to the ghost of his friend Patroclus. Urns containing the ashes and half-calcined bones of the dead occur frequently in barrows or tumuli in this country; most of them, no doubt, the work of the Romans. But all ancient nations, in funeral matters, have nearly the same rites.
TSK: 2Ch 16:11 - -- am 3049-3090, bc 955-914
the acts of Asa : 2Ch 9:29, 2Ch 12:15, 2Ch 20:34, 2Ch 26:22
Judah : 2Ch 25:26, 2Ch 27:7, 2Ch 32:32, 2Ch 34:18, 2Ch 35:27; 1Ki...

TSK: 2Ch 16:12 - -- am 3088, bc 916
diseased : Mat 7:2; Luk 6:37, Luk 6:38; Rev 3:19
in his disease : 2Ch 16:9, 2Ch 28:22; 1Ch 10:14; Jer 17:5
physicians : Gen 50:2; Job ...

TSK: 2Ch 16:14 - -- his own sepulchres : 2Ch 35:24; Isa 22:16; Joh 19:41, Joh 19:42
made : Heb. digged
sweet odours : Gen 50:2; Mar 16:1; Joh 19:39, Joh 19:40
the apothec...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Ch 16:12 - -- Yet in his disease he sought not ... - Rather, "and also in his disease he sought not."Not only in his war with Baasha, but also when attacked ...
Yet in his disease he sought not ... - Rather, "and also in his disease he sought not."Not only in his war with Baasha, but also when attacked by illness, Asa placed undue reliance upon the aid of man.

Barnes: 2Ch 16:14 - -- The explanation of the plural - "sepulchres"- will be seen in 1Ki 13:30 note. The burning of spices in honor of a king at his funeral was customary ...
The explanation of the plural - "sepulchres"- will be seen in 1Ki 13:30 note.
The burning of spices in honor of a king at his funeral was customary (compare the marginal references).
Poole: 2Ch 16:12 - -- He did not humble himself before God, nor earnestly desire his help, but put all his confidence in the skill and faithfulness of his physicians, of ...
He did not humble himself before God, nor earnestly desire his help, but put all his confidence in the skill and faithfulness of his physicians, of whom, it seems, he had great experience.

Poole: 2Ch 16:14 - -- Laid him in the bed which was filled with sweet odours as the manner of those nations was. See Gen 50:2 2Ch 21:19 .
They made a very great burning ...
Laid him in the bed which was filled with sweet odours as the manner of those nations was. See Gen 50:2 2Ch 21:19 .
They made a very great burning to wit, of precious spices; thereby testifying their thankfulness for many benefits which they enjoyed under his government, and their respect to him notwithstanding his miscarriages.
Haydock: 2Ch 16:12 - -- Most, &c. Heb. "till his disease got upwards," (C.) to the head (T.) and heart, (H.) when the gout generally proves fatal. Cornelius a Lapide ---
...
Most, &c. Heb. "till his disease got upwards," (C.) to the head (T.) and heart, (H.) when the gout generally proves fatal. Cornelius a Lapide ---
Sept. "till he was very ill:" (H.) a just punishment for his having confined the prophet in fetters; but of a temporal nature, as he sinned through passion, and died penitent, his heart being perfect (chap. xv. 17.) all or the most part of his days, particularly in the last. W. ---
Rather. Heb. and Sept. simply, "physicians." H. ---
Yet it was not the having recourse to them, with some degree of confidence, that is here reprehended, but the placing too much trust in men, (C.) and too little in God, the sovereign arbiter of life and death. H.

Haydock: 2Ch 16:14 - -- Sepulchre. Heb. "sepulchres," as there were many separate apartments in the same cavern. C. ---
Asa had prepared one cell, as David and Solomon ha...
Sepulchre. Heb. "sepulchres," as there were many separate apartments in the same cavern. C. ---
Asa had prepared one cell, as David and Solomon had done. M. T. ---
Odoriferous ( mertriciis. ) Such as harlots delight in, (Proverbs vii. 16,) to entice the sensual. D. ---
Heb. zenim, may be derived from zana, fornicari. It denotes a mixture of perfumes. M. ---
But here the Vulgate read zunim. D. ---
Heb. and Sept. "they laid him on a bed, and filled it with aromatical spices, and with various sorts of perfumers' ointments, and they made him a very great funeral, or (H.) burning." Protestants ---
It is not clear whether the body was placed on a bed of state, and these perfumes were used to remove every disagreeable smell, or the body itself was rather consumed along with them, a practice which seems to have become more common since the days of Asa, Jeremias xxxiv. 5., 1 K. xxxi. 12., and Amos vi. 10. Joram was deprived of this honour, C. xxi. 19. C. ---
Sanctius adduces many examples, to prove that the spices were burnt only near the body; (T.) and the Hebrews generally preferred to inter the corpse. Corpora condere quam cremare e more Ζgyptio. Tacitus, Hist. v.
And, behold, the acts of Asa, first and last,.... See Gill on 1Ki 15:23.

Gill: 2Ch 16:12 - -- And Asa in the thirty ninth year of his reign was diseased in his feet,.... This was about two years before his death, and his disease is generally th...
And Asa in the thirty ninth year of his reign was diseased in his feet,.... This was about two years before his death, and his disease is generally thought to be the gout in his feet, and a just retaliation for putting the prophet's feet into the stocks:
until his disease was exceeding great; it increased upon him, and became very severe and intolerable, and the fits were frequent, as well as the pain sharper; though the sense of the Hebrew m phrase may be, that his disease got upwards, into a superior part of his body, head, or stomach, which, when the gout does, it is dangerous. A very learned physician n is of opinion, that not the gout, but what he calls an "aedematous" swelling of the feet, is meant, which insensibly gets up into the bowels, and is successively attended with greater inconveniences; a tension of the abdomen, difficulty of breathing, very troublesome to the patient, and issues in a dropsy, and death itself:
yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord; his seeking to physicians for help in his disease, perhaps, would not have been observed to his reproach, had he also sought unto the Lord, whom he ought to have sought in the first place; and when he applied to the physicians, he should have implored the blessing of God on their prescriptions; but he so much forgot himself as to forget the Lord: this is the first time we read of physicians among the Jews, and some think these were Heathens, and a sort of enchanters: the Jews entertained a very ill opinion of physicians; the best of them, they say o, deserve hell, and they advise p men not to live in a city where the chief man is a physician; but the author of the book of Ecclesiasticus gives a great encomium of them, and exhorts to honour and esteem them,"1 Honour a physician with the honour due unto him for the uses which ye may have of him: for the Lord hath created him. 2 For of the most High cometh healing, and he shall receive honour of the king. 3 The skill of the physician shall lift up his head: and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration. 4 The Lord hath created medicines out of the earth; and he that is wise will not abhor them. 5 Was not the water made sweet with wood, that the virtue thereof might be known? 6 And he hath given men skill, that he might be honoured in his marvellous works. 7 With such doth he heal men, and taketh away their pains. 8 Of such doth the apothecary make a confection; and of his works there is no end; and from him is peace over all the earth,'' (Sirach 38)Julian q the emperor greatly honoured them, and observes, that it is justly said by the philosophers, that the art of medicine fell from heaven.

Gill: 2Ch 16:13 - -- And Asa slept with his fathers, and died in the forty first year of his reign. See 1Ki 15:10.
And Asa slept with his fathers, and died in the forty first year of his reign. See 1Ki 15:10.

Gill: 2Ch 16:14 - -- And they buried him in his own sepulchres which he had made for himself in the city of David,.... Where was the burying place of the kings of Judah; h...
And they buried him in his own sepulchres which he had made for himself in the city of David,.... Where was the burying place of the kings of Judah; here Asa had ordered a vault to be made for himself and his family, and therefore called sepulchres, because of the several cells therein to put separate bodies in:
and laid him in the bed; not only laid him out, as we express it, but laid him on a bed of state, where he lay in great pomp; or the funeral bed, which, with other nations r, used to be strowed with sweet smelling flowers and herbs, as follows:
which was filled with sweet odours, and divers kinds of spices prepared by the apothecaries art; or rather confectioner or druggist; for it is a question whether there were then any such we call apothecaries; this bed was strowed with spices, myrrh, aloes, cassia, cinnamon, &c. and which perhaps might be made up into a liquid, which was sprinkled over the bed and shroud in which he lay:
and they made a very great burning for him; not that they made a great fire, and burned his body; for burning was not used with the Jews; but they burnt spices and other things in great quantity, in honour of him: See Gill on Jer 34:5, and this custom continued to the times of Herod, at whose funeral there were five hundred of his domestics and freed men bearing spices s.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 2Ch 16:11 Heb “Look, the events of Asa, the former and the latter, look, they are written on the scroll of the kings of Judah and Israel.”

NET Notes: 2Ch 16:12 Heb “unto upwards [i.e., very severe [was] his sickness, and even in his sickness he did not seek the Lord, only the healers.


Geneva Bible -> 2Ch 16:12
Geneva Bible: 2Ch 16:12 And Asa in the thirty and ninth year of his reign was diseased in his feet, until his disease [was] ( e ) exceeding [great]: yet in his disease he sou...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ch 16:1-14
TSK Synopsis: 2Ch 16:1-14 - --1 Asa, by the aid of the Syrians, diverts Baasha from building Ramah.7 Being reproved thereof by Hanani, he puts him in prison.11 Among his other acts...
MHCC -> 2Ch 16:1-14
MHCC: 2Ch 16:1-14 - --A plain and faithful reproof was given to Asa by a prophet of the Lord, for making a league with Syria. God is displeased when he is distrusted, and w...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ch 16:7-14
Matthew Henry: 2Ch 16:7-14 - -- Here is, I. A plain and faithful reproof given to Asa by a prophet of the Lord, for making this league with Baasha. The reprover was Hanani the seer...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ch 16:11-14
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ch 16:11-14 - --
The end of Asa's reign; cf. 1Ki 15:23-24. - On 2Ch 16:11, cf. the Introduction.
2Ch 16:12-13
In the thirty-ninth year of his reign Asa became di...
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 14:2--17:1 - --C. Asa 14:2-16:14
Chronicles gives much more attention to Asa than Kings does. That is because Asa's exp...
