
Text -- 2 Chronicles 34:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> 2Ch 34:12
Wesley: 2Ch 34:12 - -- All these here named, were skilful in instruments of musick. Which may be here mentioned, to intimate, that as they were skilful, so they were exercis...
All these here named, were skilful in instruments of musick. Which may be here mentioned, to intimate, that as they were skilful, so they were exercised in both employments, and did successively oversee the work, and praise God with their voices and instruments.
Clarke -> 2Ch 34:12
Clarke: 2Ch 34:12 - -- All that could skill of instruments of music - Did the musicians play on their several instruments to encourage and enliven the workmen? Is not this...
All that could skill of instruments of music - Did the musicians play on their several instruments to encourage and enliven the workmen? Is not this a probable case from their mention here? If this were really the case, instrumental music was never better applied in any thing that refers to the worship of God. It is fabled of Orpheus, a most celebrated musician, that such was the enchanting harmony of his lyre, that he built the city of Thebes by it: the stones and timbers danced to his melody; and by the power of his harmony rose up, and took their respective places in the different parts of the wall that was to defend the city! This is fable; but as all fable is a representation of truth, where is the truth and fact to which this refers? How long has this question lain unanswered! But have we not the answer now? It is known in general, that the cities of Herculaneum and Pompeii were overwhelmed by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, about the seventy-ninth year of the Christian era. It is also known that, in sinking for wells, the workmen of the king of Naples lighted on houses, etc., of those overwhelmed cities; that excavations have been carried on, and are now in the act of being carried on, which are bringing daily to view various utensils, pictures, and books, which have escaped the influence of the burning lava; and that some of those parchment volumes have been unrolled, and facsimiles of them engraved and published; and that our late Prince Regent, afterwards George IV., king of Great Britain, expended considerable sums of money annually in searching for, unrolling, and deciphering those rolls. This I record to his great credit as the lover of science and literature. Now, among the books that have been unrolled and published, is a Greek Treatise on Music, by Philodemus; and here we have the truth represented which lay hidden under the fables of Orpheus and Amphion. This latter was a skillful harper, who was frequently employed by the Theban workmen to play to them while engaged in their labor, and for which they rewarded him out of the proceeds of that labor. So powerful and pleasing was his music, that they went lightly and comfortably through their work; and time and labor passed on without tedium or fatigue; and the walls and towers were speedily raised. This, by a metaphor, was attributed to the dulcet sounds of his harp; and poetry seized on and embellished it, and mythology incorporated it with her fabulous system. Orpheus is the same. By his skill in music he drew stones and trees after him, i.e., he presided over and encouraged the workmen by his skill in music. Yet how simple and natural is the representation given by this ancient Greek writer of such matters! See Philodemus, Col. viii. and ix. Orpheus, and Amphion, by their music, moved the workmen to diligence and activity, and lessened and alleviated their toil. May we not suppose, then, that skillful musicians among the Levites did exercise their art among the workmen who were employed in the repairs of the house of the Lord? May I be allowed a gentle transition? Is it not the power and harmony of the grace of Jesus Christ in the Gospel, that convert, change, and purify the souls of men, and prepare them for and place them in that part of the house of God, the New Jerusalem? A most beautiful and chaste allusion to this fact and fable is made by an eminent poet, while praying for his own success as a Christian minister, who uses all his skill as a poet and musician for the glory of God: -
Thy own musician, Lord, inspire
And may my consecrated lyr
Repeat the psalmist’ s part
His Son and thine reveal in me
And fill with sacred melod
The fibres of my heart
So shall I charm the listening throng
And draw the Living Stones alon
By Jesus’ tuneful name
The living stones shall dance, shall rise
And Form a City in the skies
The New Jerusalem
Charles Wesley.
||&&$
TSK -> 2Ch 34:12
TSK: 2Ch 34:12 - -- faithfully : 2Ch 31:12; 2Ki 12:15, 2Ki 22:7; Neh 7:2; Pro 28:20; 1Co 4:2
all : 1Chr. 6:31-48, 1Ch 15:16-22, 1Ch 16:4, 1Ch 16:5, 1Ch 16:41, 1Ch 23:5, 2...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> 2Ch 34:12
Poole: 2Ch 34:12 - -- Or, all these here named were skilful in instruments of music ; which may be here mentioned, either to their commendation, that they were fit for a...
Or, all these here named were skilful in instruments of music ; which may be here mentioned, either to their commendation, that they were fit for and careful and diligent in this employment, wherewith they were now intrusted, no less than in their own proper work; or to intimate, that as they were skilful, so they were exercised in both their employments, and did successively oversee the work, and praised God with their voices and instruments for his gracious and powerful help in carrying on the work.
Haydock -> 2Ch 34:12
Haydock: 2Ch 34:12 - -- Of music is expressed in Heb. and Sept. H. ---
These Levites were chosen, because they were not so constantly employed in the temple, (C.) and they...
Of music is expressed in Heb. and Sept. H. ---
These Levites were chosen, because they were not so constantly employed in the temple, (C.) and they were not hired barely to inspect the works, and hence the expense was diminished.
Gill -> 2Ch 34:12
Gill: 2Ch 34:12 - -- And the men did that work faithfully,.... The labouring men, as also their inspectors, see 2Ki 22:7.
and the overseers of them were Jahath and Obad...
And the men did that work faithfully,.... The labouring men, as also their inspectors, see 2Ki 22:7.
and the overseers of them were Jahath and Obadiah, the Levites, of the sons of Merari; the third son of Levi:
and Zechariah and Meshullam, of the sons of the Kohathites; who had their name from Kohath, the second son of Levi:
to set it forward; to urge and animate the men to their work, to keep them constant to it, and see that they did it well:
and other of the Levites, all that could skill of instruments of music; these, when they were not employed in singing in the temple, attended this service, to look after the workmen at the repairs of it; and perhaps they might play, as some think, on their instruments of music, while the men were at work, that they might go on in it the more pleasantly and cheerfully.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ch 34:1-33
TSK Synopsis: 2Ch 34:1-33 - --1 Josiah's good reign.3 He destroys idolatry.8 He takes order for the repair of the temple.14 Hilkiah, having found a book of the law, Josiah sends to...
Maclaren -> 2Ch 34:1-13
Maclaren: 2Ch 34:1-13 - --Josiah
Josiah was eight years old when he began to reign, and he reigned in Jerusalem one and thirty years. 2. And he did that which was right in the...
MHCC -> 2Ch 34:1-33
MHCC: 2Ch 34:1-33 - --As the years of infancy cannot be useful to our fellow-creatures, our earliest youth should be dedicated to God, that we may not waste any of the rema...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ch 34:8-13
Matthew Henry: 2Ch 34:8-13 - -- Here, 1. Orders are given by the king for the repair of the temple, 2Ch 34:8. When he had purged the house of the corruptions of it he began to fit ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ch 34:8-18
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ch 34:8-18 - --
The cleansing and repairing of the temple, and the finding of the book of the law . Cf. 2Ki 22:3-10. - In the eighteenth year of his reign, when he...
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 34:1--35:27 - --P. Josiah chs. 34-35
Like Amon's death, Josiah's was unnecessarily premature. However unlike Amon Josiah...
