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Text -- 2 Samuel 18:18 (NET)

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Context
18:18 Prior to this Absalom had set up a monument and dedicated it to himself in the King’s Valley, reasoning “I have no son who will carry on my name.” He named the monument after himself, and to this day it is known as Absalom’s Memorial.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Absalom the son of David and Maacah


Dictionary Themes and Topics: VALE, VALLEY | Shaveh | Rebellion | Pillar | King's Dale | KING'S VALE | Joab | Israel | David | Dale, the king's | DALE, KING'S | Chronicles, Books of | Burial | Ambition | Absalom | ABSALOMS PILLAR, OR PLACE | ABIJAH | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: 2Sa 18:18 - -- To preserve his name; whereas it had been more for his honour if his name had been buried in perpetual oblivion.

To preserve his name; whereas it had been more for his honour if his name had been buried in perpetual oblivion.

JFB: 2Sa 18:18 - -- Literally, "hand." In the valley of Jehoshaphat, on the east of Jerusalem, is a tomb or cenotaph, said to be this "pillar" or monument: it is twenty-f...

Literally, "hand." In the valley of Jehoshaphat, on the east of Jerusalem, is a tomb or cenotaph, said to be this "pillar" or monument: it is twenty-four feet square, dome-topped, and reaches forty feet in height. This may occupy the spot, but cannot itself be the work of Absalom, as it evidently bears the style of a later architecture.

Clarke: 2Sa 18:18 - -- Reared up for himself a pillar - There was a marble pillar in the time of Josephus called Absalom’ s pillar: and there is one shown to the pres...

Reared up for himself a pillar - There was a marble pillar in the time of Josephus called Absalom’ s pillar: and there is one shown to the present day under this name; but it is comparatively a modern structure

Clarke: 2Sa 18:18 - -- Absalom’ s place - Literally Absalom’ s Hand. See the note on 1Sa 15:12.

Absalom’ s place - Literally Absalom’ s Hand. See the note on 1Sa 15:12.

TSK: 2Sa 18:18 - -- reared up : 1Sa 15:12 the king’ s : Gen 14:17 I have no son : 2Sa 14:27; Job 18:16, Job 18:17; Psa 109:13; Jer 22:30 he called : Gen 11:4; 1Sa 15...

reared up : 1Sa 15:12

the king’ s : Gen 14:17

I have no son : 2Sa 14:27; Job 18:16, Job 18:17; Psa 109:13; Jer 22:30

he called : Gen 11:4; 1Sa 15:12; Psa 49:11; Dan 4:30

Absalom’ s place : Josephus says there was in his time, about two furlongs from Jerusalem, a marble pillar called Absalom’ s hand, as it is in the Hebrew (see note on 1Sa 15:12); and there is one shown to the present day, in the valley of Jehoshaphat, which, though comparatively a modern structure, probably occupies the site of the original one set up by Absalom. Gen 11:9; Act 1:18, Act 1:19

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Sa 18:18 - -- The king’ s dale - Anciently the "valley"of "Shaveh"(marginal reference), and apparently in the near neighborhood of Sodom; but the exact ...

The king’ s dale - Anciently the "valley"of "Shaveh"(marginal reference), and apparently in the near neighborhood of Sodom; but the exact site is not known. It quite agrees with Absalom’ s preference for Hebron 2Sa 15:7, that his monument should be reared by him in the south. If Absalom’ s monument be placed in the ravine of the Kedron, the "king’ s dale"here is a different place from the "dale of Shaveh."

Absalom’ s place - literally, "Absalom’ s hand."(1Sa 15:12 note.)

Poole: 2Sa 18:18 - -- A pillar to preserve his name in memory; whereas it had been more for his honour if his name had been buried in perpetual oblivion. But this was the ...

A pillar to preserve his name in memory; whereas it had been more for his honour if his name had been buried in perpetual oblivion. But this was the effect of his pride and vain-glory.

The king’ s dale a place near Jerusalem so called. Gen 14:17 .

He said, I have no son

Object. He had three sons, 2Sa 14:27 .

Answ Either they were all now dead; or if one of them was left alive, he thought him unfit and unworthy to keep up his name and honour; or he erected this pillar before his sons were born. But the first opinion seems most probable; and it was a remarkable judgment of God, that he who struck at his father’ s life, should be punished with the death of all his sons.

Absalom’ s place Heb. Absalom’ s hand , i.e. his work, made though not by his hand, yet for him and his glory, and by his procurement.

Haydock: 2Sa 18:18 - -- No son. The sons mentioned above, chap. xiv. 27, were dead when this pillar was erected; unless we suppose he raised this pillar before they were bo...

No son. The sons mentioned above, chap. xiv. 27, were dead when this pillar was erected; unless we suppose he raised this pillar before they were born: (Challoner) or meant this pillar to perpetuate his memory, when they should be no more. (Josephus, [Antiquities?] vii. 9.) ---

This author says that it was a pillar of marble; so that it is different from that which Doubdan (15) mentions, observing , that all who pass throw a stone at it. Thus was his vanity chastised! ---

Hand, work. So Martial (viii. 51.) says of a vial! Mentoris hæc manus est an, Polyclete, tua? (Menochius) ---

The same word is translated, triumphal arch, 1 Kings xv. 12. (G.[Calmet?])

Gill: 2Sa 18:18 - -- Now Absalom in his lifetime had taken,.... Had taken it into his head, had of himself devised it, as Kimchi explains it; he contrived the following sc...

Now Absalom in his lifetime had taken,.... Had taken it into his head, had of himself devised it, as Kimchi explains it; he contrived the following scheme to perpetuate his memory:

and reared up for himself a pillar, which is in the king's dale: or valley, the valley of Jehoshaphat; this pillar was of marble, as Josephus o says, and stood about two furlongs or a quater mile from Jerusalem. The author of Cippi Hebraici p places it at the bottom of the mount of Olives: this is observed to show how vain are the devices and contrivances of men's hearts; Absalom intended to have been buried under or by this monumental pillar near Jerusalem, and, lo, he was buried in a pit, under an heap of stones, in a wood on the other side Jordan; whether his bones were ever removed hither it is not certain, though a notion has obtained that his grave was near this pillar. Rauwolff q says, that as you go from the valley of Jehoshaphat r to the Mount of Olives, you see below, towards your left hand, near unto the bridge of the river Kidron, an old square building like unto a steeple; this, although it is believed to this day, not only by Christians, but also by Turks and Moors, to be the grave of Absalom, as you shall see them fling stones into it as they go by, to revenge his unfaithfulness to his father, yet was he not buried there. Sandys s says, at the east end of the bridge (over Kidron), and a little on the north, stands the pillar of Absalom, being yet entire, and of a good fabric, rising in a lofty square, below adorned with half columns, wrought out of the sides and corners, of the Doric form; and then changing into a round, a good height higher doth grow to a point in fashion of a bell, all framed of the growing stone; against this there lies a great heap of stones, which increaseth daily, by Jews and Mahometans throwing stones as they pass by; so that the frontispiece of it, which faces the road, as Le Bruyn t says, looks like a mountain of stones; but as to the fabric itself, he says, there is not a finer piece of workmanship to be met with in all those parts; it takes up a compass of ground of eighty two feet and an half square; the body, which is square, with its moulding, is one entire piece; and the coping, which is an ornament to it, and runs up into a point, taken with the rest of the work, is above thirty feet high; twenty columns, cut out of the same rock, add to the beauty of this pile; one sees through a broken window a great many pieces of antiquity that hang up in a chamber. Adrichomius also relates u, from travellers, that in the king's valley is now a tower, and a large heap of stones, which is increased every day more and more; for Heathens and strangers passing by there have a custom to cast everyone a stone at it, as it were revenging, according to the law, Absalom's rebellion against David his father, and curse him after this manner; let Absalom the parricide be cursed, and whoever unrighteously persecutes their parents are cursed for ever:

for he said, I have no son to keep my name in remembrance; for though he had three sons, it seems they were all dead, see 2Sa 14:27,

and he called the pillar after his own name, and it is called unto this day Absalom's place; or his "hand" w, the work of his hand; some wrongly think it was in the form of an hand; it was an obelisk, or monument, erected to preserve his name; but since it became so infamous, it would have been better to have had it buried in oblivion. Such sepulchral monuments were used in other nations; so Minerva advised Telemachus x to go in quest of his father Ulysses, and if he could not find him, but was assured of his death, then to raise a signal or monument in memory of him, which he resolved to do.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Sa 18:18 Heb “a pillar.”

Geneva Bible: 2Sa 18:18 Now Absalom in his lifetime had taken and reared up for himself a pillar, which [is] in the king's dale: for he said, I have no ( f ) son to keep my n...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Sa 18:1-33 - --1 David viewing the armies in their march gives them charge of Absalom.6 The Israelites are sorely smitten in the wood of Ephraim.9 Absalom, hanging i...

Maclaren: 2Sa 18:18-33 - --2 Samuel 18:18-33 The first verse of this passage and the one preceding it give a striking contrast between the actual and the designed burial-place o...

MHCC: 2Sa 18:9-18 - --Let young people look upon Absalom, hanging on a tree, accursed, forsaken of heaven and earth; there let them read the Lord's abhorrence of rebellion ...

Matthew Henry: 2Sa 18:9-18 - -- Here is Absalom quite at a loss, at his wit's end first, and then at his life's end. He that began the fight, big with the expectation of triumphing...

Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 18:18 - -- Absalom had erected a monument to himself in the king's valley during his lifetime; "for he said, I have no son to preserve the remembrance of my na...

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 13:1--20:26 - --C. David's Rejection and Return chs. 13-20 This is the longest literary section in the Court History of ...

Constable: 2Sa 15:1--20:26 - --2. Absalom's attempt to usurp David's throne chs. 15-20 Absalom was never Yahweh's choice to suc...

Constable: 2Sa 18:1-18 - --The end of Absalom 18:1-18 "In the overall structure of 15:1-20:22, the story of Absalom...

Constable: 2Sa 18:9-18 - --Absalom's death 18:9-18 "The mule was a royal mount; losing his mule [v. 9] Absa...

Guzik: 2Sa 18:1-33 - --2 Samuel 18 - The Defeat of Absalom A. Absalom's defeat and death. 1. (1-4) David puts the army under three captains. And David numbered the peop...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) THE FIRST AND SECOND BOOKS OF SAMUEL. The two were, by the ancient Jews, conjoined so as to make one book, and in that form could be called the Book o...

JFB: 2 Samuel (Outline) AN AMALEKITE BRINGS TIDINGS OF SAUL'S DEATH. (2Sa. 1:1-16) DAVID LAMENTS SAUL AND JONATHAN. (2Sa 1:17-27) DAVID, BY GOD'S DIRECTION, GOES UP TO HEBRO...

TSK: 2 Samuel 18 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Sa 18:1, David viewing the armies in their march gives them charge of Absalom; 2Sa 18:6, The Israelites are sorely smitten in the wood o...

Poole: 2 Samuel 18 (Chapter Introduction) SAMUEL CHAPTER 18 David viewing the armies in their march, giveth them charge of Absalom, 2Sa 18:1-5 ; whose men are smitten: he hanging by his hai...

MHCC: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) This book is the history of the reign of king David. It relates his victories, the growth of the prosperity of Israel, and his reformation of the stat...

MHCC: 2 Samuel 18 (Chapter Introduction) (2Sa 18:1-8) Absalom's army defeated. (2Sa 18:9-18) He is slain. (2Sa 18:19-33) David's over-sorrow.

Matthew Henry: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Book of Samuel This book is the history of the reign of king David. We had in the foregoing ...

Matthew Henry: 2 Samuel 18 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter puts a period to Absalom's rebellion and life, and so makes way for David to his throne again, whither the next chapter brings him bac...

Constable: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) Introduction Second Samuel continues the history begun in 1 Samuel. Please see my comments regarding 2 Samuel's title, d...

Constable: 2 Samuel (Outline) Outline (Continued from notes on 1 Samuel) V. David's triumphs chs. 1-8 ...

Constable: 2 Samuel 2 Samuel Bibliography Achtemeier, Paul J., and Elizabeth Achtemeier. The Old Testament Roots of Our Faith. Phil...

Haydock: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) THE SECOND BOOK OF SAMUEL; otherwise called, THE SECOND BOOK OF KINGS. INTRODUCTION. This Book contains the transactions of David till the end ...

Gill: 2 Samuel (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 SAMUEL This book, in many copies of the Hebrew Bible, is carried on without any new title put unto it; the reason of it is, becau...

Gill: 2 Samuel 18 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO SECOND SAMUEL 18 In this chapter is an account of David's review of his army, preparing it for battle with Absalom, and those with ...

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