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Text -- 2 Kings 6:30 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> 2Ki 6:30
JFB: 2Ki 6:30 - -- The horrid recital of this domestic tragedy led the king soon after to rend his garment, in consequence of which it was discovered that he wore a peni...
The horrid recital of this domestic tragedy led the king soon after to rend his garment, in consequence of which it was discovered that he wore a penitential shirt of haircloth. It is more than doubtful, however, if he was truly humbled on account of his own and the nation's sins; otherwise he would not have vowed vengeance on the prophet's life. The true explanation seems to be, that Elisha having counselled him not to surrender, with the promise, on condition of deep humiliation, of being delivered, and he having assumed the signs of contrition without receiving the expected relief, regarded Elisha who had proved false and faithless as the cause of all the protracted distress.
Clarke -> 2Ki 6:30
Clarke: 2Ki 6:30 - -- He had sackcloth within upon his flesh - The king was in deep mourning for the distresses of the people.
He had sackcloth within upon his flesh - The king was in deep mourning for the distresses of the people.
TSK -> 2Ki 6:30
he rent his clothes : 2Ki 5:7, 2Ki 19:1; 1Ki 21:27; Isa 58:5-7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Ki 6:30
Barnes: 2Ki 6:30 - -- Sackcloth - Jehoram hoped perhaps to avert Yahweh’ s anger, as his father had done 1Ki 21:29. But there was no spirit of self-humiliation,...
Poole -> 2Ki 6:30
Poole: 2Ki 6:30 - -- If I do not this day take his head and life. This wretched and partial prince overlooks his own great and various sins, and, amongst others, his obs...
If I do not this day take his head and life. This wretched and partial prince overlooks his own great and various sins, and, amongst others, his obstinate cleaving to the idolatry of the calves, and the whoredoms and witchcrafts of his mother Jezebel, 2Ki 9:22 , and the wickedness of his people, which was the true and proper cause of this and all their calamities; and lays the blame of all upon Elisha; either supposing that he who had the spirit of Elijah resting upon him, had brought this famine by his prayers, as Elijah had formerly done, 1Ki 17:1 ; or because he had encouraged them to withstand the Syrians, by promising them help from God in due time; or because he would not, by his intercession to God and the working of a miracle, deliver them from these calamities, as he easily could have done. But he did not consider that the prophets could not work what miracles and when they pleased, but only as far as God saw fit, whose time was not yet come; otherwise it was Elisha’ s interest as well as theirs to be freed from this distress.
Haydock -> 2Ki 6:30
Haydock: 2Ki 6:30 - -- Passed by, without punishing such a horrid crime, as he esteemed his own sins the occasion of it. (Menochius) ---
Flesh. Behold the advantage to ...
Passed by, without punishing such a horrid crime, as he esteemed his own sins the occasion of it. (Menochius) ---
Flesh. Behold the advantage to be derived from afflictions! They make the most hardened enter into sentiments of humility and penance. (Calmet) ---
Abulensis thinks that God was pleased to cause the siege to be raised, to reward this act; as a similar one of Joram's father had merited a delay and mitigation of punishment, (Haydock) 3 Kings xxi. 27. (Salien)
Gill -> 2Ki 6:30
Gill: 2Ki 6:30 - -- And it came to pass, when the king heard the words of the woman, that he rent his clothes,.... At the horror of the fact reported, and through grief t...
And it came to pass, when the king heard the words of the woman, that he rent his clothes,.... At the horror of the fact reported, and through grief that his people were brought into such distress through famine:
and he passed by upon the wall; returning to his palace:
and the people looked, and, behold, he had sackcloth upon his flesh; which, in token of humiliation for averting the calamities he was under, he had put there before, and now was seen through the rending of his clothes.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> 2Ki 6:30
NET Notes: 2Ki 6:30 Heb “the people saw, and look, [there was] sackcloth against his skin underneath.”
Geneva Bible -> 2Ki 6:30
Geneva Bible: 2Ki 6:30 And it came to pass, when the king heard the words of the woman, that he rent his clothes; and he passed by upon the wall, and the people looked, and,...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ki 6:1-33
TSK Synopsis: 2Ki 6:1-33 - --1 Elisha, giving leave to the young prophets to enlarge their dwellings, causes iron to swim.8 He discloses the king of Syria's counsel.13 The army wh...
MHCC -> 2Ki 6:24-33
MHCC: 2Ki 6:24-33 - --Learn to value plenty, and to be thankful for it; see how contemptible money is, when in time of famine it is so freely parted with for any thing that...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ki 6:24-33
Matthew Henry: 2Ki 6:24-33 - -- This last paragraph of this chapter should, of right, have been the first of the next chapter, for it begins a new story, which is there continued a...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ki 6:24-33
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ki 6:24-33 - --
After this there arose so fearful a famine in Samaria on the occasion of a siege by Benhadad, that one mother complained to the king of another, bec...
Constable -> 2Ki 2:1--8:16; 2Ki 6:24--8:1
Constable: 2Ki 2:1--8:16 - --4. Jehoram's evil reign in Israel 2:1-8:15
Jehoram reigned 12 years in Israel (852-841 B.C.). Hi...
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