
Text -- 2 Samuel 11:11-27 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Sa 11:11 - -- This it seems, was now carried with them for their encouragement and direction, as was usual.
This it seems, was now carried with them for their encouragement and direction, as was usual.

Wesley: 2Sa 11:11 - -- In tents which are in the fields. His meaning is, now, when God's people are in a doubtful and dangerous condition, it becomes me to sympathize with t...
In tents which are in the fields. His meaning is, now, when God's people are in a doubtful and dangerous condition, it becomes me to sympathize with them, and to abstain even from lawful delights.

Wesley: 2Sa 11:15 - -- So far is David from repenting, that he seeks to cover one sin with another. How are the beginnings of sin to be dreaded! For who knows where it will ...
So far is David from repenting, that he seeks to cover one sin with another. How are the beginnings of sin to be dreaded! For who knows where it will end? David hath sinned, therefore Uriah must die! That innocent, valiant, gallant man, who was ready to die for his prince's honour, must die by his prince's hand! See how fleshly lusts war against the soul, and what devastations they make in that war! How they blind the eyes, fear the conscience, harden the heart, and destroy all sense of honour and justice!

Wesley: 2Sa 11:27 - -- Which was seven days. Nor could the nature of the thing admit of longer delay, lest the too early birth of the child might discover David's sin.
Which was seven days. Nor could the nature of the thing admit of longer delay, lest the too early birth of the child might discover David's sin.

Wesley: 2Sa 11:27 - -- By which it appears, That David continued in the state of impenitency for divers months together; and this notwithstanding his frequent attendance upo...
By which it appears, That David continued in the state of impenitency for divers months together; and this notwithstanding his frequent attendance upon God's ordinances. Which is an eminent instance of the corruption of man's nature, of the deceitfulness of sin, and of the tremendous judgment of God in punishing one sin, by delivering a man up to another.
JFB -> 2Sa 11:14-15
JFB: 2Sa 11:14-15 - -- The various arts and stratagems by which the king tried to cajole Uriah, till at last he resorted to the horrid crime of murder--the cold-blooded crue...
The various arts and stratagems by which the king tried to cajole Uriah, till at last he resorted to the horrid crime of murder--the cold-blooded cruelty of despatching the letter by the hands of the gallant but much-wronged soldier himself, the enlistment of Joab to be a partaker of his sin, the heartless affectation of mourning, and the indecent haste of his marriage with Bath-sheba--have left an indelible stain upon the character of David, and exhibit a painfully humiliating proof of the awful lengths to which the best of men may go when they forfeit the restraining grace of God.
Clarke: 2Sa 11:11 - -- The ark, and Israel - abide in tents - It appears therefore that they had taken the ark with them to battle
This was the answer of a brave, generous...
The ark, and Israel - abide in tents - It appears therefore that they had taken the ark with them to battle
This was the answer of a brave, generous and disinterested man. I will not indulge myself while all my fellow soldiers are exposed to hardships, and even the ark of the Lord in danger. Had Uriah no suspicion of what had been done in his absence?

Clarke: 2Sa 11:13 - -- He made him drunk - Supposing that in this state he would have been off his guard, and hastened down to his house.
He made him drunk - Supposing that in this state he would have been off his guard, and hastened down to his house.

Clarke: 2Sa 11:14 - -- David wrote a letter - This was the sum of treachery and villany. He made this most noble man the carrier of letters which prescribed the mode in wh...
David wrote a letter - This was the sum of treachery and villany. He made this most noble man the carrier of letters which prescribed the mode in which he was to be murdered. This case some have likened to that of Bellerophon, son of Glaucus, king of Ephyra, who being in the court of Proetus, king of the Argives, his queen Antia, or as others Sthenoboea, fell violently in love with him; but he, refusing to gratify her criminal passions, was in revenge accused by her to Proetus her husband, as having attempted to corrupt her. Proetus not willing to violate the laws of hospitality by slaying him in his own house, wrote letters to Jobates, king of Lycia, the father of Sthenoboea, and sent them by the hand of Bellerophon, stating his crime, and desiring Jobates to put him to death. To meet the wishes of his son-in-law, and keep his own hands innocent of blood, he sent him with a small force against a very warlike people called the Solymi; but, contrary to all expectation, he not only escaped with his life, but gained a complete victory over them. He was afterwards sent upon several equally dangerous and hopeless expeditions, but still came off with success; and to reward him Jobates gave him one of his daughters to wife, and a part of his kingdom. Sthenoboea, hearing this, through rage and despair killed herself
I have given this history at large, because many have thought it not only to be parallel to that of Uriah, but to be a fabulous formation from the Scripture fact: for my own part, I scarcely see in them any correspondence, but in the simple circumstance that both carried those letters which contained their own condemnation. From the fable of Bellerophon came the proverb, Bellerophontis literas portare , "to carry one’ s own condemnation".

Clarke: 2Sa 11:17 - -- Uriah the Hittite died also - He was led to the attack of a place defended by valiant men; and in the heat of the assault, Joab and his men retired ...
Uriah the Hittite died also - He was led to the attack of a place defended by valiant men; and in the heat of the assault, Joab and his men retired from this brave soldier, who cheerfully gave up his life for his king and his country.

Clarke: 2Sa 11:20 - -- If - the king’ s wrath arise - It is likely that Joab had by some indiscretion suffered loss about this time;; and he contrived to get rid of t...
If - the king’ s wrath arise - It is likely that Joab had by some indiscretion suffered loss about this time;; and he contrived to get rid of the odium by connecting the transaction with the death of Uriah, which he knew would be so pleasing to the king.

Clarke: 2Sa 11:25 - -- The sword devoureth one as well as another - What abominable hypocrisy was here! He well knew that Uriah’ s death was no chance-medley; he was ...
The sword devoureth one as well as another - What abominable hypocrisy was here! He well knew that Uriah’ s death was no chance-medley; he was by his own order thrust on the edge of the sword.

Clarke: 2Sa 11:26 - -- She mourned for her husband - The whole of her conduct indicates that she observed the form without feeling the power of sorrow
She lost a captain a...
She mourned for her husband - The whole of her conduct indicates that she observed the form without feeling the power of sorrow
She lost a captain and got a king for her spouse; this must have been deep affliction indeed: and therefore: -
Lachrymas non sponte cadentes Effudit
gemitusque expressit pectore laeto
"She shed reluctant tears
and forced out groans from a joyful heart.

When the mourning was past - Probably it lasted only seven days

Clarke: 2Sa 11:27 - -- She became his wife - This hurried marriage was no doubt intended on both sides to cover the pregnancy
She became his wife - This hurried marriage was no doubt intended on both sides to cover the pregnancy

Clarke: 2Sa 11:27 - -- But the thing that David had done displeased the Lord - It was necessary to add this, lest the splendor of David’ s former virtues should induc...
But the thing that David had done displeased the Lord - It was necessary to add this, lest the splendor of David’ s former virtues should induce any to suppose his crimes were passed over, or looked on with an indulgent eye, by the God of purity and justice. Sorely he sinned, and sorely did he suffer for it; he sowed one grain of sweet, and reaped a long harvest of calamity and wo
On a review of the whole, I hesitate not to say that the preceding chapter is an illustrious proof of the truth of the sacred writings. Who that intended to deceive, by trumping up a religion which he designed to father on the purity of God, would have inserted such an account of one of its most zealous advocates, and once its brightest ornament? God alone, whose character is impartiality, has done it, to show that his religion, librata ponderibus suis , will ever stand independently of the conduct of its professors
Drs. Delaney, Chandler, and others, have taken great pains to excuse and varnish this conduct of David; and while I admire their ingenuity, I abhor the tendency of their doctrine, being fully convinced that he who writes on this subject should write like the inspired penman, who tells the Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing But The Truth
David may be pitied because he had fallen from great eminence; but who can help deploring the fate of the brave, the faithful, the incorruptible Uriah? Bath-sheba was probably first in the transgression, by a too public display of her charms; by which accidentally, the heart of David was affected wounded, and blinded. He committed one crime which he employed many shifts to conceal; these all failing, he is led from step to step to the highest degree of guilt. Not only does he feel that his and her honor, but even their lives, are at stake; for death, by the law of Moses, was the punishment of adultery. He thought therefore that either Uriah must die, or he and Bath-sheba perish for their iniquity; for that law had made no provision to save the life of even a king who transgressed its precepts. He must not imbrue his own hands in the blood of this brave man; but he employs him on a service from which his bravery would not permit him to shrink; and it which, from the nature of his circumstances, he must inevitably perish. The awful trial is made, and it succeeds. The criminal king and his criminal paramour are for a moment concealed; and one of the bravest of men falls an affectionate victim for the safety and support of him by whom his spotless blood is shed! But what shall we say of Joab, the wicked executor of the base commands of his fallen master? He was a ruffian, not a soldier; base and barbarous beyond example, in his calling; a pander to the vices of his monarch, while he was aware that he was outraging every law of religion, piety, honor, and arms! It is difficult to state the characters, and sum up and apportion the quantity of vice chargeable on each
Let David, once a pious, noble, generous, and benevolent hero, who, when almost perishing with thirst, would not taste the water which his brave men had acquired at the hazard of their lives; let this David, I say, be considered an awful example of apostasy from religion, justice, and virtue; Bath-sheba, of lightness and conjugal infidelity; Joab, of base, unmanly, and cold-blooded cruelty; Uriah, of untarnished heroism, inflexible fidelity, and unspotted virtue; and then justice will be done to each character. For my own part, I must say, I pity David; I venerate Uriah; I detest Joab, and think meanly of Bath-sheba. Similar crimes have been repeatedly committed in similar circumstances. I shall take my leave of the whole with: -
Id commune malum; semel insanivimus omnes
Aut sumus, aut fuimus, aut possumus
omne quod hic est
God of purity and mercy! save the reader from the
"Where many mightier have been slain
By thee unsaved, he falls.
See the notes on the succeeding chapter, 2 Samuel 12 (note).
TSK: 2Sa 11:11 - -- The ark : 2Sa 7:2, 2Sa 7:6; 1Sa 4:4, 1Sa 14:18
my lord : 2Sa 20:6; Mat 10:24, Mat 10:25; Joh 13:14; 1Co 9:25-27; 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:4, 2Ti 2:12; Heb 12:1,...

TSK: 2Sa 11:14 - -- wrote a letter : It was resolved in David’ s breast that Uriah must die - that innocent, valiant, and gallant man, who was ready to sacrifice h...
wrote a letter : It was resolved in David’ s breast that Uriah must die - that innocent, valiant, and gallant man, who was ready to sacrifice his life for the honour of his prince; and, worse than all, by being himself made the bearer of letters to Joab which prescribed the mode by which he was to be murdered. This was the greatest treachery and villany on the part of David; while Joab appears to enter as fully upon the execution of the murder, being perhaps pleased to have this opportunity of further enthralling his king, and thus increasing his own power. 1Ki 21:8-10; Psa 19:13, Psa 52:2, Psa 62:9; Jer 9:1-4, Jer 17:9; Mic 7:3-5

TSK: 2Sa 11:15 - -- Set ye : 2Sa 11:17; 1Sa 18:17, 1Sa 18:21, 1Sa 18:25; Psa 51:4, Psa 51:14; Jer 20:13
hottest : Heb. strong
from him : Heb. from after him
and die : 2Sa...

TSK: 2Sa 11:16 - -- he assigned : 2Sa 11:21, 2Sa 3:27, 2Sa 20:9, 2Sa 20:10; 1Sa 22:17-19; 1Ki 2:5, 1Ki 2:31-34, 1Ki 21:12-14; 2Ki 10:6; Pro 29:12; Hos 5:11; Act 5:29
he assigned : 2Sa 11:21, 2Sa 3:27, 2Sa 20:9, 2Sa 20:10; 1Sa 22:17-19; 1Ki 2:5, 1Ki 2:31-34, 1Ki 21:12-14; 2Ki 10:6; Pro 29:12; Hos 5:11; Act 5:29

TSK: 2Sa 11:21 - -- Abimelech : Jdg 9:53
Jerubbesheth : Jdg 6:32, Jdg 7:1, Jerubbaal
Thy servant : 2Sa 3:27, 2Sa 3:34; Psa 39:8; Isa 14:10; Eze 16:51, Eze 16:52

TSK: 2Sa 11:25 - -- displease thee : Heb. be evil in thine eyes
for the sword : Jos 7:8, Jos 7:9; 1Sa 6:9; Ecc 9:1-3, Ecc 9:11, Ecc 9:12
one : Heb. so and such, What abom...
displease thee : Heb. be evil in thine eyes
for the sword : Jos 7:8, Jos 7:9; 1Sa 6:9; Ecc 9:1-3, Ecc 9:11, Ecc 9:12
one : Heb. so and such, What abominable hypocrisy was here! He well knew that the death of this noble and gallant man was no chance-medleycaps1 . hcaps0 e was by his own order thrust on the sword.
make : 2Sa 12:26


TSK: 2Sa 11:27 - -- And when : etc. The whole of her conduct indicates that she observed the form, without feeling the power of sorrow. She lost a captain, and got a kin...
And when : etc. The whole of her conduct indicates that she observed the form, without feeling the power of sorrow. She lost a captain, and got a king for her husband, and therefore, Lacrymas non sponte cadentes effudit; gemitusque expressit pectore laeto ; ""She shed reluctant tears; and forced out groans from a joyful breast!"
fetched her : 2Sa 3:2-5, 2Sa 5:13-16, 2Sa 12:9; Deu 22:29
But the thing : Gen 38:10; 1Ch 21:7
displeased : Heb. was evil in the eyes of, Psa 5:6, Psa 51:4, Psa 51:5; Heb 13:4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Sa 11:11 - -- The ark - Perhaps there was a double purpose in taking the ark; one, to excite to the utmost the enthusiasm of the people for its defense and a...
The ark - Perhaps there was a double purpose in taking the ark; one, to excite to the utmost the enthusiasm of the people for its defense and against the Ammonites; the other, to have the means at hand of inquiring of the Lord, which David had found so serviceable.

Observed the city - In the sense of besieging it closely.

Barnes: 2Sa 11:17 - -- The men of the city went out - i. e. they made a sally and attacked the troops which were blockading the city on that side, chiefly to entice t...
The men of the city went out - i. e. they made a sally and attacked the troops which were blockading the city on that side, chiefly to entice them to pursue them, and so come within shot of the archers who lined the wall 2Sa 11:20, 2Sa 11:24.
There fell some of the people ... - They, too, as well as the brave and faithful Uriah, were victims of David’ s cruel artifice.

Barnes: 2Sa 11:21 - -- Who smote Abimelech ... - This reference indicates the existence in David’ s time of the national annals of that period in an accessible f...
Who smote Abimelech ... - This reference indicates the existence in David’ s time of the national annals of that period in an accessible form, and the king’ s habit of reading, or having read to him, the history of his country. (Compare Est 6:1.)

Barnes: 2Sa 11:26 - -- Bath-sheba’ s mourning, like that of Abigail 1Sa 25:39-42, was probably limited to the customary time of seven days.
Bath-sheba’ s mourning, like that of Abigail 1Sa 25:39-42, was probably limited to the customary time of seven days.
Poole: 2Sa 11:11 - -- The ark it seems, was now carried with them for their encouragement and direction, as was usual: see Num 10:35 1Sa 4:4 .
In the open fields to wit,...
The ark it seems, was now carried with them for their encouragement and direction, as was usual: see Num 10:35 1Sa 4:4 .
In the open fields to wit, in tents which are in the fields.
And to lie with my wife: he might possibly add these words, to insinuate his apprehension of the king’ s design, and to awaken his conscience to the consideration of his sin, and of the injury which he had done him. His meaning is, Now when God’ s people are in a doubtful and dangerous condition, it becomes me to sympathize with them, and to abstain even from lawful delights. Whereby he might possibly intimate how unworthy it was for David in such a season to indulge himself in sinful and injurious pleasures. But David’ s ear was now deaf, his heart being hardened through the deceitfulness of sin.

Poole: 2Sa 11:13 - -- When David had called him i.e. being invited by David.
He made him drunk or, he made him merry , as the word oft signifies. He caused him to drink...
When David had called him i.e. being invited by David.
He made him drunk or, he made him merry , as the word oft signifies. He caused him to drink more than was convenient.
He went out to lie on his bed which it doth not appear that he did the night before; but now his excess in eating and drinking might make it more necessary for him.
With the servants of his lord i.e. in some chamber in the king’ s court, where the king’ s servants used to take their repose.

Poole: 2Sa 11:15 - -- So far is David from repenting upon these just and great occasions, that he seeks to cover one sin with another; and to hide his adultery with murde...
So far is David from repenting upon these just and great occasions, that he seeks to cover one sin with another; and to hide his adultery with murder, even the murder of a most excellent person, and that in a most malicious and perfidious manner.

Poole: 2Sa 11:16 - -- Placed there to defend it, because that part of the city was supposed either the weakest, or the place designed for the assault. Joab having formerl...
Placed there to defend it, because that part of the city was supposed either the weakest, or the place designed for the assault. Joab having formerly committed a base murder upon Abner, was ready to execute this wicked command of the king; that so he being involved in the same guilt with him, might the more willingly receive him into favour.

Poole: 2Sa 11:21 - -- Jerubbesheth called also Jerubbaal , Jud 9:1 . See Poole "2Sa 2:8" . Thy servant Uriah the Hittite is dead also; which he knew would be acceptable ...
Jerubbesheth called also Jerubbaal , Jud 9:1 . See Poole "2Sa 2:8" . Thy servant Uriah the Hittite is dead also; which he knew would be acceptable news to the king, and therefore allay his wrath. This indeed might make the messenger suspect that David had a hand in Uriah’ s death; and possibly Joab might say so for that very reason, that these matters by degrees being known, David might be hardened in sin, and so Joab might have the greater interest in him.

We beat them back, and pursued them even to the gate.

Poole: 2Sa 11:25 - -- Let not this thing displease thee be not dejected or discouraged by this sad occasion.
Encourage thou him i.e. Joab, to proceed in the siege.
Let not this thing displease thee be not dejected or discouraged by this sad occasion.
Encourage thou him i.e. Joab, to proceed in the siege.

Poole: 2Sa 11:27 - -- When the mourning was past which was seven days, Gen 1:10 1Sa 31:13 . Nor could the nature of the thing admit of longer delay lest the too early birt...
When the mourning was past which was seven days, Gen 1:10 1Sa 31:13 . Nor could the nature of the thing admit of longer delay lest the too early birth of the child might discover David’ s sin.
David sent and fetched her to his house, and she became his wife by which it appears that David continued in the state of impenitency for divers months together, and this notwithstanding his frequent attendance upon God’ s ordinances; which is an eminent instance of the corruption of man’ s nature, which is even in the best; and, without Divine assistance, is too strong for them; of the deceitfulness of sin, and of the tremendous judgment of God in punishing one sin, by delivering a man up to another.
The thing that David had done i.e. his adultery and murder, as is evident from the next chapter.
Haydock: 2Sa 11:11 - -- Ark. Most people suppose that the ark and the priests were before Rabba, as they seem to have been present in all expeditions of consequence. (Meno...
Ark. Most people suppose that the ark and the priests were before Rabba, as they seem to have been present in all expeditions of consequence. (Menochius) (Calmet) ---
but, at any rate, the ark was covered with skins or veils, even in the tabernacle at Gabaon, or at Sion. (Haydock) ---
Thing. He binds himself by an oath not to gratify his natural inclinations, that the king might desist from pressing him any farther. (Salien) ---
But David resolves to endeavour to make him forget his oath, during the moments of intoxication. The valour and temperance of Urias, and divine Providence, render all his craft useless; and a concatenation of crimes cannot hide the original offence. (Haydock)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:13 - -- Couch. It seems he was one of the guards. Josephus says he was Joab's armour-bearer, (Antiquities vii. 7.) and one of David's heroes, chap. xxiii. ...
Couch. It seems he was one of the guards. Josephus says he was Joab's armour-bearer, (Antiquities vii. 7.) and one of David's heroes, chap. xxiii. 39.

Haydock: 2Sa 11:14 - -- Morning of the fourth day, as Urias staid three nights at Jerusalem. It is not clear that he was intoxicated the last of them. On that night David ...
Morning of the fourth day, as Urias staid three nights at Jerusalem. It is not clear that he was intoxicated the last of them. On that night David permitted him to act as he should think proper; and finding that he obstinately persisted in the resolution of not going to sleep with his wife, he had recourse to the last and most barbarous expedient of making way for his own marriage with the woman, as he saw this was the only method left for him to save her honour. The utmost expedition was requisition, as many days must have elapsed before she perceived her situation; (Haydock) and if many more should pass over, it would be manifest to the world that she had been guilty of adultery, and must either be stoned, or, if David spared her, he must bear the blame. (Salien) ---
Urias. The fable of Bellerophon being sent by Prœtus to Jobates, king of Syria, with a letter, desiring the king to put the bearer to death, seems to have been copied from this history. Their letters have become proverbial. (St. Chrysostom) Aha Bellerophontem jam tuus me fecit filius,
Egomet tabellas detuli ut vincirer. (Plaut. Bacchide.)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:15 - -- Die. We no longer behold the genius of that David who would not hurt his persecutor. What a change does a shameful passion introduce in the whole c...
Die. We no longer behold the genius of that David who would not hurt his persecutor. What a change does a shameful passion introduce in the whole conduct of a man! and how does one false step conduct from one abyss to another! Proprium humani ingenii est odisse quem læseris. (Tacitus) ---
David could no longer bear the sight of a man whom he had injured so grievously. (Calmet)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:17 - -- Also. Hence David prays with reason; Deliver me from blood ( sanguinibus ) of many slain. He was answerable for all (Cajetan)
Also. Hence David prays with reason; Deliver me from blood ( sanguinibus ) of many slain. He was answerable for all (Cajetan)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:21 - -- Jerobaal? Hebrews write Jeroboseth, to avoid the mention of Baal, as they also do with respect to the name of Isboseth, who was probably called Isba...
Jerobaal? Hebrews write Jeroboseth, to avoid the mention of Baal, as they also do with respect to the name of Isboseth, who was probably called Isbaal. (Calmet) See Judges, ix. 57. ---
Joab supposed that David might probably adduce this instance, to shew the danger of approaching too near the wall, as it had proved destructive to part of his army, and had been fatal to Abimelech. But it seems the messenger did not allow him time to express any resentment, before he told him the agreeable news, which he desired so much to hear, ver. 24. (Haydock)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:26 - -- For him. We may apply to her tears those words of Lucan: -----Lachrymas non sponte cadentes
Effudit, gemitusque expressit pectore læto.
"None af...
For him. We may apply to her tears those words of Lucan: -----Lachrymas non sponte cadentes
Effudit, gemitusque expressit pectore læto.
"None affected more sorrow for the death of Germanicus, than those who rejoiced the most at that event." (Tacitus, An. ii.) ---
The mourning for the dead usually lasted seven days; (Ecclesiasticus xxii. 13.) and after that period, David seems to have married Bethsabee. (Abulensis, q. 21.)

Haydock: 2Sa 11:27 - -- Lord; not that David had married the woman, but on account of his former conduct towards her and her husband. (Menochius) ---
The canon law forbids...
Lord; not that David had married the woman, but on account of his former conduct towards her and her husband. (Menochius) ---
The canon law forbids the marriages of those who have been accomplices in the death of their former partner; and some have thought that this marriage of David was null. But this is inaccurate; and the fruits of it were (Calmet) all deeded legitimate. See 1 Paralipomenon iii. 5. (Haydock) ---
The Rabbins even pretend that David was guilty of no sin in marrying Bethsabee during the life-time of Urias; as the latter, they say, must have given her a bill of divorce when he went to war. (Grotius) ---
But why should we excuse an action which was so severely condemned and punished by God? (Chap. xii. 1., &c., and Psalm l.) (Calmet) ---
In David's conduct, we here behold a complication of the basest passions of lust and cruelty; which make David neglect the sanctity of an oath, (ver. 11) and attempt to ruin, by drunkenness, the soul of one to whom he was much indebted; and, afterwards, to expose him to an untimely death, perhaps without repentance; if indeed Urias exceeded the bounds of moderation. This however is not certain; as the word drunk is often used to denote a degree of blameless conviviality, Genesis xliii. 34. Yet the design of David was equally criminal. How soon may the man according to God's own heart, fall from his elevated station into the depth of the abyss! Wherefore let him that thinketh himself to stand, take heed lest he fall, 1 Corinthians x. 12. (Haydock)
Gill: 2Sa 11:11 - -- And Uriah said unto David,.... As an apology for this conduct:
the ark, and Israel and Judah, abide in tents; meaning not the people of Israel and ...
And Uriah said unto David,.... As an apology for this conduct:
the ark, and Israel and Judah, abide in tents; meaning not the people of Israel and Judah in the land of Canaan; for they did not now dwell in tents, though indeed the ark of the Lord did, 2Sa 7:2, which some think is here referred to; but the armies of Israel and Judah besieging Rabbah, with whom it seems the ark was, which sometimes was carried with them when they went out to war, 1Sa 4:4, though Abarbinel thinks this was not the ark in which were the two tables of stone, and therefore is not called the ark of the covenant, but an ark which was made to put the ephod, and Urim and Thummim in that they might upon occasion inquire of the Lord by them:
and my lord Joab, and the servants of my lord are encamped in the open fields: around Rabbah they were besieging; he calls Joab his lord, because he was the chief general under whom he served and the rest of the commanding officers he calls the servants of his lord as distinguished from the common soldiers. The Jews, who are for excusing David from blame in the case of Uriah, observe l, that he was guilty of rebellion against David, and so worthy of death not only because he disobeyed his command, in not going to his house when he ordered him but by calling "Joab my lord" in his presence: but this was only a respectable character of his general and no overt act of treason to his king; nor did David so understand it, nor in the least resent it: now seeing such great men, who were far superior to him in rank and office were obliged to lie on the bare ground, he argues:
shall I then go into mine house to eat and to drink, and to lie with my wife? if he had any suspicion of David's crime, he might purposely add the last clause; and if not, it was enough to awaken the conscience of David, and cut him to the quick had he not been greatly hardened through the deceitfulness of sin to observe, that a faithful subject and a soldier of his would not allow himself the enjoyment of lawful pleasures, when his fellow soldiers were exposing their lives to danger for their country; and yet he under such circumstances indulged to sinful lusts and criminal pleasures:
as thou livest and as thy soul liveth I will not do this thing; he swears to it for the confirmation of it; this he did to prevent any further solicitations from the king, or his wife unto it, who were both anxiously desirous of it; for though no mention is made of his wife, yet no doubt she did all she could to prevail upon him to come to his house but all to no purpose; his mind was so bent to the contrary through the overruling providence of God to which it must be ascribed.

Gill: 2Sa 11:12 - -- And David said to Uriah, tarry here today also,.... In his court, when he found he could not persuade him to go to his own house:
and tomorrow I wi...
And David said to Uriah, tarry here today also,.... In his court, when he found he could not persuade him to go to his own house:
and tomorrow I will let thee depart: after he had tried one method more with him:
so Uriah abode in Jerusalem that day and the morrow; not in his own house, but the king's palace.

Gill: 2Sa 11:13 - -- And when David had called him,.... Invited him to sup with him:
he did eat and drink before him; very freely and plentifully:
and he made him dr...
And when David had called him,.... Invited him to sup with him:
he did eat and drink before him; very freely and plentifully:
and he made him drunk: this was another sin of David's, done in order to make him forget his oath and vow, and that being inflamed with wine, desires might be excited in him to go home and lie with his wife; but even this scheme did not succeed:
and at even he went out to lie on his bed with the servants of his lord: in the guard room, where he had lain before:
but went not down to his house; for he was not so drunk but he remembered his oath, and kept his resolution not to go down to his own house; the Lord no doubt working upon his mind and disinclining him to it.

Gill: 2Sa 11:14 - -- And it came to pass in the morning,.... When David was informed that Uriah did not go to his own house, but slept with his servants, Satan put it into...
And it came to pass in the morning,.... When David was informed that Uriah did not go to his own house, but slept with his servants, Satan put it into his head and heart to take the following wicked and cruel method:
that David wrote a letter to Joab, and sent it by the hand of Uriah; to have him cut off by the sword of the enemy. If Uriah suspected David's criminal conversation with his wife, he was so true and trusted a servant to him, that he would not open his letter to Joab, which had he, it would have betrayed the base design. No one that knows the story of Bellerophon can read this without thinking of that, they are so much alike; and indeed that seems to be founded upon this, and taken from it with a little alteration. Bellerophon rejecting the solicitations of Sthenobaea, who was in love with him, she prevailed upon her husband Praetus to send letters by him to Jobates (a name similar to Joab), the general of his army, which contained instructions to take care that he was killed; who sent him upon an expedition for that purpose m.

Gill: 2Sa 11:15 - -- And he wrote in the letter, saying,.... Giving the following orders to Joab:
set ye Uriah is the forefront of the hottest battle: over against that...
And he wrote in the letter, saying,.... Giving the following orders to Joab:
set ye Uriah is the forefront of the hottest battle: over against that part of the city where the enemy was strongest, and the battle the fiercest, and the stones and arrows were cast the thickest:
and retire ye from him; leave him to himself to combat the enemy alone; who seeing him deserted, would sally out upon him, and the few that might be with him, and slay him:
that he may be smitten, and die; thus he sought to add murder to adultery, and that in the basest manner, and which he accomplished; and this is often the case, that murder follows adultery, either by way of revenge for it, or in order to cover it, as here.

Gill: 2Sa 11:16 - -- And it came to pass, when Joab observed the city,.... Where lay its greatest strength, and where it was best defended; or besieged it, as the Targum:
...
And it came to pass, when Joab observed the city,.... Where lay its greatest strength, and where it was best defended; or besieged it, as the Targum:
that he assigned Uriah unto a place where he knew that valiant men were; who would not easily give way, and when they saw an opportunity would sally out, Joab cannot be excused from sin, unless he thought that Uriah had been guilty of death, and that David took this way of dispatching him for some political reason; however David was king, and to be obeyed.

Gill: 2Sa 11:17 - -- And the men of the city went out,.... Made a sally out, as Joab expected they would, when they appeared before them at that part of the city where val...
And the men of the city went out,.... Made a sally out, as Joab expected they would, when they appeared before them at that part of the city where valiant men were:
and fought with Joab; at least with part of his army posted with Uriah:
and there fell some of the people of the servants of David: which made David's sin the more heinous, that several lives were lost through the stratagem he devised to procure the death of Uriah; who could not be placed in a dangerous post alone, and therefore others must be sacrificed with him, as were:
and Uriah the Hittite died also; which was the thing aimed at, and the end to be answered by this scheme.

Gill: 2Sa 11:18 - -- Then Joab sent,.... Messengers to David, as soon as Uriah was killed:
and told David all the things concerning the war; how the siege had been carr...
Then Joab sent,.... Messengers to David, as soon as Uriah was killed:
and told David all the things concerning the war; how the siege had been carried on; what success they had had, good or ill; what their advantages and disadvantages; what men they had lost, and especially in one sally of the enemy upon them, for the sake of which the express was sent.

Gill: 2Sa 11:19 - -- And charged the messenger,.... Gave him a particular direction and instruction what he should say at the close of his narrative, according as he shoul...
And charged the messenger,.... Gave him a particular direction and instruction what he should say at the close of his narrative, according as he should observe the king's countenance to be:
saying, when thou hast made an end of telling the matters of the war unto the king; giving an account of all the events that happened since the siege was begun to that time.

Gill: 2Sa 11:20 - -- And if so be that the king's wrath arise,.... Which might be seen in his countenance, or expressed in his words:
and he say, wherefore approached y...
And if so be that the king's wrath arise,.... Which might be seen in his countenance, or expressed in his words:
and he say, wherefore approached ye so nigh unto the city when ye did fight? as to expose the king's troops to the enemy on the wall, who by stones or darts greatly annoyed them, or sallied out on them, and killed many of them:
knew ye not that they would shoot from the wall? they must have known that, and therefore should have kept out of the reach of their shot.

Gill: 2Sa 11:21 - -- Who smote Abimelech the son of Jerubbesheth?.... The same with Jerubbaal, who was Gideon, Jdg 6:32; Baal, one part of his name, was the name of an ido...
Who smote Abimelech the son of Jerubbesheth?.... The same with Jerubbaal, who was Gideon, Jdg 6:32; Baal, one part of his name, was the name of an idol, and sometimes called Bosheth or Besheth, which signifies shame, being a shameful idol; Gideon had a son called Abimelech, who was smitten, and it is here asked, by whom?
did not a woman cast a millstone upon him from the wall, that he died in Thebez? which should have been a warning not to go too near the wall of an enemy; the history is recorded in Jdg 9:52,
why went ye nigh the wall? exposing your lives to so much danger, and by which so many lives were lost:
then say thou, thy servant Uriah the Hittite is dead also; the whole has not been told, the worst of all is, as the messenger was to represent it, that brave gallant soldier Uriah is dead; this Joab ordered to be told last, as knowing very well it would pacify the king's wrath, and was the agreeable news he wanted to hear.

Gill: 2Sa 11:22 - -- So the messenger went,.... From Joab, from the army before Rabbah:
and came; to David in Jerusalem, a course of sixty four miles:
and showed Dav...
So the messenger went,.... From Joab, from the army before Rabbah:
and came; to David in Jerusalem, a course of sixty four miles:
and showed David all that Joab had sent him for; all the events of the war hitherto.

Gill: 2Sa 11:23 - -- And the messenger said unto David,.... The particulars of his account follow:
surely the men prevailed against us; the men of the city of Rabbah, t...
And the messenger said unto David,.... The particulars of his account follow:
surely the men prevailed against us; the men of the city of Rabbah, the besieged there, in one onset they made upon them:
and came out unto us in the field; the besiegers that lay encamped there; they sallied out upon them:
and we were upon them, even unto the entering of the gate; rallied upon them, and drove them back, and pursued them to the gate of the city.

Gill: 2Sa 11:24 - -- And the shooters shot from off of the wall upon thy servants,.... Arrows out of their bows, or stones out of their engines; the Israelites following t...
And the shooters shot from off of the wall upon thy servants,.... Arrows out of their bows, or stones out of their engines; the Israelites following them so closely to the gate of the city, came within the reach of their shot from the wall:
and some of the king's servants be dead; killed in the sally upon them, and by the shot from the wall:
and thy servant Uriah the Hittite is dead also; the messenger did not entirely obey the orders of Joab to wait and observe if the king's wrath arose, but was in haste to tell him the last piece of news; perhaps he had some suspicion, from the manner of Joab's telling him what he should say, that this would be acceptable to the king.

Gill: 2Sa 11:25 - -- Then David said to the messenger,.... Whom he dispatched again to Joab upon the delivery of his message:
thus shall thou say to Joab; in the name o...
Then David said to the messenger,.... Whom he dispatched again to Joab upon the delivery of his message:
thus shall thou say to Joab; in the name of David:
let not this thing displease thee; be not grieved, and cast down, and intimidated at the repulse he had met with, and the loss of so many brave men, and especially Uriah:
for the sword devours one as well as another; officers as well as soldiers the strong as well as the weak, the valiant and courageous as well as the more timorous; the events of war are various and uncertain, and to be submitted to, and not repined at, and laid to heart. David's heart being hardened by sin, made light of the death of his brave soldiers, to which he himself was accessory; his conscience was very different now from what it was when he cut off the skirt of Saul's robe, and his heart in a different frame from that in which he composed the lamentation over Saul and Jonathan:
make thy battle more strong against the city, and overthrow it; more closely besiege it, more vigorously attack it; assault it, endeavour to take it by storm, and utterly destroy it, razing the very foundations of it: and encourage thou him; which words are either said to the messenger to encourage and animate Joab in David's name, which is not so likely that a messenger should be employed to encourage the general; or rather the words of David to Joab continued, that he would "encourage it", the army under him, who might be disheartened with the rebuff and loss they had met with; and therefore Joab is bid to spirit them up, to carry on the siege with vigour.

Gill: 2Sa 11:26 - -- And when the wife of Uriah heard that Uriah her husband was dead,.... The news of which were soon sent her by David, though it is very probable she kn...
And when the wife of Uriah heard that Uriah her husband was dead,.... The news of which were soon sent her by David, though it is very probable she knew nothing of the plot to take away his life; and, besides, David chose to have his death published abroad as soon as possible, the more to hide his sin:
she mourned for her husband; expressed tokens of mourning by shedding tears, putting on a mourning habit, seeing no company, and this continued for the space of seven days, it may be, 1Sa 31:13; as little time as possible was spent in this way, and the marriage hastened, that the adultery might not be discovered.

Gill: 2Sa 11:27 - -- And when the mourning was past,.... The seven days were at an end, or sooner; for he stayed not ninety days from the death of her husband, which the J...
And when the mourning was past,.... The seven days were at an end, or sooner; for he stayed not ninety days from the death of her husband, which the Jews in later times enjoined n, that it might be known whether with child by her former husband, and so to whom it belonged; and because David did not wait this time, Abarbinel charges it upon him as an additional sin:
David sent, and fetched her to his house; took her home to his palace to live with him:
and she became his wife; he married her according to the usual form of marriage in those days:
and bare him a son; begotten in adultery:
but the thing that David had done displeased the Lord; or "was evil in the eyes of the Lord" o; for though it was not done in the eyes of men, being scarcely or very little known, yet was in the eyes of the Lord, which run to and fro throughout the earth, and sees all things that are done: the adultery he had been guilty of with another man's wife was abominable to the Lord, and for which, according to the law, both he and she ought to have been put to death, Lev 20:10; the murder of her husband, which he was accessory to, as well as the death of many others, and the marriage of her under such circumstances, were all displeasing to God, and of such an heinous nature, that his pure eyes could not look upon with approbation: the Jews p endeavour to excuse David from sin; from the sin of murder, by making Uriah guilty of rebellion and treason, as before observed; and from the sin of adultery, by affirming that it was the constant custom for men, when they went out to war, to give their wives a bill of divorce; so that from the time of giving the bill they were not their wives, and such as lay with them were not guilty of adultery; but for this there is no foundation: it is certain David was charged with it by the Lord; he himself owned it, and bewailed it, both that and his blood guiltiness, and the following chapter abundantly proves it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


NET Notes: 2Sa 11:16 Heb “the valiant men.” This refers in context to the strongest or most valiant defenders of the city Joab and the Israelite army were besi...



NET Notes: 2Sa 11:21 The upper millstone (Heb “millstone of riding”) refers to the heavy circular stone that was commonly rolled over a circular base in order ...


NET Notes: 2Sa 11:24 The translation follows the Qere (“your servants”) rather than the Kethib (“your servant”).

NET Notes: 2Sa 11:25 The Hebrew text does not have “with these words.” They are supplied in the translation for clarity and for stylistic reasons.


NET Notes: 2Sa 11:27 Heb “and the thing which David had done was evil in the eyes of the Lord.” Note the verbal connection with v. 25. Though David did not reg...
Geneva Bible: 2Sa 11:11 And Uriah said unto David, ( f ) The ark, and Israel, and Judah, abide in tents; and my lord Joab, and the servants of my lord, are encamped in the op...

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 11:13 And when David had called him, he did eat and drink before him; and he made him ( g ) drunk: and at even he went out to lie on his bed with the servan...

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 11:15 And he wrote in the letter, saying, ( h ) Set ye Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and retire ye from him, that he may be smitten, and die...

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 11:21 Who smote Abimelech the son of ( i ) Jerubbesheth? did not a woman cast a piece of a millstone upon him from the wall, that he died in Thebez? why wen...

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 11:25 Then David said unto the messenger, ( k ) Thus shalt thou say unto Joab, Let not this thing displease thee, for the sword devoureth one as well as ano...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Sa 11:1-27
TSK Synopsis: 2Sa 11:1-27 - --1 While Joab besieges Rabbah, David commits adultery with Bath-sheba.6 Uriah, sent for by David to cover the adultery, would not go home.14 He carries...
MHCC -> 2Sa 11:6-13; 2Sa 11:14-27
MHCC: 2Sa 11:6-13 - --Giving way to sin hardens the heart, and provokes the departure of the Holy Spirit. Robbing a man of his reason, is worse than robbing him of his mone...

MHCC: 2Sa 11:14-27 - --Adulteries often occasion murders, and one wickedness is sought to be covered by another. The beginnings of sin are much to be dreaded; for who knows ...
Matthew Henry -> 2Sa 11:6-13; 2Sa 11:14-27
Matthew Henry: 2Sa 11:6-13 - -- Uriah, we may suppose, had now been absent from his wife some weeks, making the campaign in the country of the Ammonites, and not intending to retur...

Matthew Henry: 2Sa 11:14-27 - -- When David's project of fathering the child upon Uriah himself failed, so that, in process of time, Uriah would certainly know the wrong that had be...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Sa 11:2-27
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 11:2-27 - --
David's Adultery. - David's deep fall forms a turning-point not only in the inner life of the great king, but also in the history of his reign. Hith...
Constable: 2Sa 9:1--20:26 - --VI. DAVID'S TROUBLES chs. 9--20
Chapters 9-20 contrast with chapters 2-8 in that this later section is negative ...

Constable: 2Sa 10:1--12:31 - --B. God's Faithfulness despite David's Unfaithfulness chs. 10-12
These chapters form a sub-section within...

Constable: 2Sa 11:1--12:31 - --2. David's unfaithfulness to God chs. 11-12
These two chapters form a unit as is clear from thei...

Constable: 2Sa 11:6-25 - --David's murder of Uriah 11:6-25
David compounded his sin by trying to cover it up rather...
