
Text -- 2 Kings 15:19 (NET)




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JFB: 2Ki 15:19 - -- This is the first Assyrian king after Nimrod who is mentioned in biblical history. His name has been recently identified with that of Phalluka on the ...
This is the first Assyrian king after Nimrod who is mentioned in biblical history. His name has been recently identified with that of Phalluka on the monuments of Nineveh, and that of Menahem discovered also.

JFB: 2Ki 15:19 - -- Elsewhere it is said "Ephraim [Israel] went to the Assyrian" [Hos 5:13]. The two statements may be reconciled thus: "Pul, of his own motion, induced, ...
Elsewhere it is said "Ephraim [Israel] went to the Assyrian" [Hos 5:13]. The two statements may be reconciled thus: "Pul, of his own motion, induced, perhaps, by the expedition of Menahem against Thapsacus, advanced against the kingdom of Israel; then Menahem sent him a thousand talents in order not only to divert him from his plans of conquest, but at the same time to purchase his friendship and aid for the establishment of his own precarious sovereignty. So Menahem did not properly invite the Assyrian into the land, but only changed the enemy when marching against the country, by this tribute, into a confederate for the security of his usurped dominion. This the prophet Hosea, less concerned about the historical fact than the disposition betrayed therein, might very well censure as a going of Ephraim to the Assyrians (Hos 5:13; Hos 7:1; Hos 8:9), and a covenant-making with Asshur" (2Ki 12:1) [KEIL].

JFB: 2Ki 15:19 - -- Equal to £262,200. This tribute, which Menahem raised by a tax on the grandees of Israel, bribed Pul to return to his own country (see on 1Ch 5:26).
Equal to £262,200. This tribute, which Menahem raised by a tax on the grandees of Israel, bribed Pul to return to his own country (see on 1Ch 5:26).
Clarke: 2Ki 15:19 - -- Pul, the king of Assyria - This is the first time we hear of Assyria since the days of Nimrod, its founder, Gen 10:11
Dean Prideaux supposes that th...
Pul, the king of Assyria - This is the first time we hear of Assyria since the days of Nimrod, its founder, Gen 10:11
Dean Prideaux supposes that this Pul was father of the famous Sardanapalus, the son himself being called Sardan; to which, as was frequent in those times, the father’ s name, Pul, was added, making Sardanpul of which the Greeks and Latins made Sardanapalus; and this Pul is supposed to be the same that reigned in Nineveh when Jonah preached the terrors of the Lord to that city

Clarke: 2Ki 15:19 - -- That his hand - That is, his power and influence, might be with him: in this sense is the word hand frequently used in Scripture.
That his hand - That is, his power and influence, might be with him: in this sense is the word hand frequently used in Scripture.
Defender -> 2Ki 15:19
Defender: 2Ki 15:19 - -- Except for Jonah's mission to Nineveh, this is the first mention of contact between Israel and the great Assyrian empire."
Except for Jonah's mission to Nineveh, this is the first mention of contact between Israel and the great Assyrian empire."
TSK -> 2Ki 15:19
TSK: 2Ki 15:19 - -- am 3233, bc 771
Pul : Prideaux supposes that this Pul was the father of the famous Sardanapalus, who was called Sardan with his father’ s name Pu...
am 3233, bc 771
Pul : Prideaux supposes that this Pul was the father of the famous Sardanapalus, who was called Sardan with his father’ s name Pul annexed, as was frequent in those times, making Sardanpul: thus Merodach, king of Babylon, was Merodach-Baladan, because he was the son Baladan. This Pul began to reign according to Usher, am 3237, the fifth year of Menahem; and he is supposed to be the same that reigned in Nineveh, when Jonah preached in that city. 1Ch 5:25, 1Ch 5:26; Isa 9:1
Menahem : 2Ki 12:18, 2Ki 16:8, 2Ki 17:3, 2Ki 17:4, 2Ki 18:16; Hos 5:13, Hos 8:9, Hos 8:10, Hos 10:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Ki 15:19
Barnes: 2Ki 15:19 - -- This is the first distinct mention which we find in Scripture of Assyria as an aggressive power. From the native monuments we learn that she had bee...
This is the first distinct mention which we find in Scripture of Assyria as an aggressive power. From the native monuments we learn that she had been for above a century pushing her conquests beyond the Euphrates, and seeking to reduce under her dominion the entire tract between that river and Egypt. Jehu had paid tribute. Some - arguing from the use of the phrase "confirmed the kingdom"(here, and in 2Ki 14:5) - think that Jehoahaz had acknowledged Assyrian suzerainty, and consented that her monarchs should receive their investiture from the hands of the Ninevite king. But hitherto there had been no hostile invasion of Jewish or Israelite soil by an Assyrian army. Now, however, the Assyrians are at last formally introduced into the history. A series of aggressions is related in this and the four following chapters, culminating, on the one hand, in the destruction of the northern kingdom, on the other, in the complete failure of Sennacherib’ s attempt upon Judaea and Egypt.
With respect to the present expedition, there are certain difficulties. The name of Pul does not appear among the Assyrian monumental kings, and it is absent from the copies of the Assyrian Canon, containing the entire list of monarchs from about 910 B.C. to 670 B.C. Assyria Proper, moreover, appears to have been in a state of depression for some 40 years before the accession of Tiglath-Pileser 2Ki 15:29. It is probable that, during the depression of the Ninevite line, Pul, a Chaldaean and not an Assyrian king, established a second monarchy upon the Euphrates, which claimed to be the true Assyria, and was recognized as such by the nations of Syria and Palestine. His invasion was probably provoked by Menahem’ s conquest of Thapsacus, which he would view as a wanton aggression upon his territory.
A thousand talents of silver - Compared with the tribute of Hezekiah soon afterward 2Ki 18:14, this seems a large sum; but it is not beyond the resources of such a State as Samaria at the period. The tie which had bound Samaria to Assyria from the reign of Jehu to that of Jeroboam II, had ceased to exist during the period of Assyrian depression. Menahem now renewed it, undertaking the duties of a tributary, and expecting the support which Assyria was accustomed to lend to her dependencies in their struggles with their neighbors. Hence, the reproaches of Hosea (marginal reference "n").
Poole -> 2Ki 15:19
Poole: 2Ki 15:19 - -- Pul the king of Assyria called by heathen authors Pulbelochus, who by the help of Arbaces the Mede vanquished Sardanapalus the last monarch of Assyri...
Pul the king of Assyria called by heathen authors Pulbelochus, who by the help of Arbaces the Mede vanquished Sardanapalus the last monarch of Assyria, and translated the kingdom to Chaldea, and was the first king of Babylon and Assyria; Arbaces being made king of the Medes and Persians.
Against the land to wit, of Israel, as the context shows.
Menahem gave i.e. agreed or promised to give, as the next verse explains it.
That his hand might be with him to confirm the kingdom in his hand; that he might assist him against all that did or should oppose him. By which it appears that his cruelty to Tiphsah was so far from establishing him, as he expected, that it weakened and endangered him so far, that he was forced to call in a foreign prince to his aid.
Gill -> 2Ki 15:19
Gill: 2Ki 15:19 - -- And Pul the king of Assyria came against the land,.... The land of Israel, he invaded it; a Jewish chronologer u calls him Pulbelicho; and he is gener...
And Pul the king of Assyria came against the land,.... The land of Israel, he invaded it; a Jewish chronologer u calls him Pulbelicho; and he is generally thought to be the same with Belochus or Belesis, governor of Babylon, who, with Arbaces the Mede, slew Sardanapalus, said to be the last of the Assyrian kings, and translated the empire to the Chaldeans; he ruling over Babylon and Nineveh, and Arbaces over the Medes and Persians; but Pul was not a Babylonian, but an Assyrian w, and the first king of the Assyrians, at least, the Scriptures speak of: we read no more of him; but one Metasthenes, a Persian historian, feigned and published by Annius, and so named by him instead of Megasthenes, calls him Phulbelochus, and says x he reigned forty eight years:
and Menahem gave Pul a thousand talents of silver; and a talent of silver, according to Brerewood y was three hundred and seventy five pounds; but Bishop Cumberland z calculates it at three hundred and fifty three pounds eleven shillings and ten pence half penny; 1,000 of them made a large sum of money, according to the former 375,000 pounds; and this he gave to him, not only to desist from the invasion of his land, but
that his hand might be with him; and not against him:
and to confirm the kingdom in his hand; which being got by usurpation, and supported by cruelty, was but tottering.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ki 15:1-38
TSK Synopsis: 2Ki 15:1-38 - --1 Azariah's good reign.5 He dying a leper, Jotham succeeds.8 Zachariah the last of Jehu's generation, reigning ill, is slain by Shallum.13 Shallum, re...
MHCC -> 2Ki 15:8-31
MHCC: 2Ki 15:8-31 - --This history shows Israel in confusion. Though Judah was not without troubles, yet that kingdom was happy, compared with the state of Israel. The impe...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ki 15:8-31
Matthew Henry: 2Ki 15:8-31 - -- The best days of the kingdom of Israel were while the government was in Jehu's family. In his reign, and the next three reigns, though there were ma...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ki 15:19
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 15:19 - --
In the time of Menahem, Pul king of Assyria invaded the land, and Menahem gave him 1000 talents of silver - more than two and a half millions of tha...
Constable -> 2Ki 9:30--18:1; 2Ki 15:17-22
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...
