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Text -- 2 Samuel 2:20-32 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 2Sa 2:21 - -- _If thou art ambitious to get a trophy or mark of thy valour, desist from me who am an old and experienced captain, and go to some young and raw soldi...
_If thou art ambitious to get a trophy or mark of thy valour, desist from me who am an old and experienced captain, and go to some young and raw soldier; try thy skill upon him, and take away his arms from him.
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Wesley: 2Sa 2:23 - -- So Asahel's swiftness, which he presumed on so much, only forwarded his fate! With it he ran upon his death, instead of running from it.
So Asahel's swiftness, which he presumed on so much, only forwarded his fate! With it he ran upon his death, instead of running from it.
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Wesley: 2Sa 2:26 - -- By nation and religion: whom therefore they should not pursue with so fierce a rage, as if they were pursuing the Philistines.
By nation and religion: whom therefore they should not pursue with so fierce a rage, as if they were pursuing the Philistines.
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Wesley: 2Sa 2:27 - -- _Unless thou hadst made the motion that they should fight, 2Sa 2:14. It was thou, not I, that gave the first occasion of this fight. Abner was the sol...
_Unless thou hadst made the motion that they should fight, 2Sa 2:14. It was thou, not I, that gave the first occasion of this fight. Abner was the sole cause of this war; otherwise all things had been ended by an amicable agreement: which might have been made that very morning, if he had so pleased.
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Wesley: 2Sa 2:32 - -- The rest they buried in the field of battle, but Asahel in the sepulchre of his father. Thus are distinctions made upon earth, even between the dust o...
The rest they buried in the field of battle, but Asahel in the sepulchre of his father. Thus are distinctions made upon earth, even between the dust of some and of others! But in the resurrection no difference will be made but between good and bad; which will remain for ever.
Clarke: 2Sa 2:21 - -- Take thee his armor - It seems Asahel wished to get the armor of Abner as a trophy; this also was greatly coveted by ancient heroes. Abner wished to...
Take thee his armor - It seems Asahel wished to get the armor of Abner as a trophy; this also was greatly coveted by ancient heroes. Abner wished to spare him, for fear of exciting Joab’ s enmity; but as Asahel was obstinate in the pursuit, and was swifter of foot than Abner, the latter saw that he must either kill or be killed, and therefore he turned his spear and ran it through the body of Asahel. This turning about that he might pierce him is what we translate "the hinder end of his spear."This slaying of Asahel cost Abner his life, as we shall find in the next chapter.
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Clarke: 2Sa 2:27 - -- And Joab said - The meaning of this verse appears to be this: If Abner had not provoked the battle, (see 2Sa 2:14), Joab would not have attacked the...
And Joab said - The meaning of this verse appears to be this: If Abner had not provoked the battle, (see 2Sa 2:14), Joab would not have attacked the Israelites that day; as his orders were probably to act on the defensive. Therefore the blame fell upon Israel.
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Clarke: 2Sa 2:29 - -- They came to Mahanaim - So they returned to the place whence they set out. See 2Sa 2:12. This was the commencement of the civil wars between Israel ...
They came to Mahanaim - So they returned to the place whence they set out. See 2Sa 2:12. This was the commencement of the civil wars between Israel and Judah, and properly the commencement of the division of the two kingdoms, through which both nations were deluged with blood.
TSK: 2Sa 2:21 - -- and take thee : It seems that Asahel wished to get the armour of Abner as a trophy.
armour : or, spoil, Jdg 14:19
and take thee : It seems that Asahel wished to get the armour of Abner as a trophy.
armour : or, spoil, Jdg 14:19
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TSK: 2Sa 2:23 - -- the fifth rib : 2Sa 3:27, 2Sa 4:6, 2Sa 5:6, 2Sa 20:10
stood still : 2Sa 20:12, 2Sa 20:13
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TSK: 2Sa 2:26 - -- Shall : 2Sa 2:14; Act 7:26
sword : 2Sa 11:25; Isa 1:20; Jer 2:30, Jer 12:12, Jer 46:10, Jer 46:14; Hos 11:6
it will be : 2Sa 2:16; Pro 17:14
how long ...
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TSK: 2Sa 2:27 - -- As God : This was spoken in allusion to the proposal of Abner (2Sa 2:14), which led to the slaughter of twelve young men of each party, and thus provo...
As God : This was spoken in allusion to the proposal of Abner (2Sa 2:14), which led to the slaughter of twelve young men of each party, and thus provoked the battle. It is probable, that Joab had orders simply to act on the defensive, and would not have attacked the Israelites that day unless compelled; therefore the blame lay upon Abner and Israel. 1Sa 25:26; Job 27:2
unless : 2Sa 2:14; Pro 15:1, Pro 17:14, Pro 20:18, Pro 25:8; Isa 47:7; Luk 14:31, Luk 14:32
in the morning : Heb. from the morning
gone up : or, gone away
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TSK: 2Sa 2:29 - -- Bithron : Bithron or Bether is probably the same as Betarus , which is placed in the Antonine Itinerary between Caesarea of Palestine and Diospolis ...
Bithron : Bithron or Bether is probably the same as
Mahanaim : 2Sa 2:12
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TSK: 2Sa 2:31 - -- three hundred : The slain of Israel, though greatly exceeding those of Judah, were not great. This might be owing to the directions given by David, t...
three hundred : The slain of Israel, though greatly exceeding those of Judah, were not great. This might be owing to the directions given by David, to be as lenient as possible; but the death of Asahel seems to have stopped the pursuers, and greatly favoured the escape of the vanquished. 2Sa 3:1; 1Ki 20:11
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 2Sa 2:21 - -- His armour - Rather, as in the margin; i. e. content thyself with the spoil of some inferior soldier for a trophy.
His armour - Rather, as in the margin; i. e. content thyself with the spoil of some inferior soldier for a trophy.
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Barnes: 2Sa 2:23 - -- With the hinder end ... - i. e. the wooden end, which was more or less pointed to enable the owner to stick it in the ground 1Sa 26:7. The...
With the hinder end ... - i. e. the wooden end, which was more or less pointed to enable the owner to stick it in the ground 1Sa 26:7.
The fifth rib - The word so rendered here (and in marginal references) means the abdomen, and is not etymologically connected with the Hebrew for five, as the translation "fifth rib"supposes, but with a verb meaning to be fat, or strong.
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Ammah ... Giah - Local, and otherwise unknown names.
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Barnes: 2Sa 2:27 - -- Joab’ s speech means either "unless thou hadst spoken (challenged us to fight, 2Sa 2:14), the people would have returned from the pursuit of th...
Joab’ s speech means either "unless thou hadst spoken (challenged us to fight, 2Sa 2:14), the people would have returned from the pursuit of their brethren (many hours ago, even) this morning;"or, "If thou hadst not spoken (asked for peace, 2Sa 2:26), surely the people would have returned, etc., in the morning, i. e. would not have ceased the pursuit until the morning."The latter interpretation is the more accordant with Joab’ s boastful character.
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Barnes: 2Sa 2:29 - -- Through the plain - See 1Sa 23:24. Bithron is unknown. From the expression all (the) Bithron, it seems likely that it is a tract of country, in...
Through the plain - See 1Sa 23:24. Bithron is unknown. From the expression all (the) Bithron, it seems likely that it is a tract of country, intersected by ravines lying on the east side of Jordan.
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Barnes: 2Sa 2:32 - -- Joab, having stopped the pursuit, passed the night with his army on the field of battle; the next morning he numbered the missing, and buried the de...
Joab, having stopped the pursuit, passed the night with his army on the field of battle; the next morning he numbered the missing, and buried the dead; they carried the body of Asahel to Bethlehem and buried him there, and then joined David at Hebron. Hebron would be about 14 miles from Bethlehem, or about five hours’ march.
Poole: 2Sa 2:21 - -- Take thee his armour: if thou art ambitious to get a trophy or mark of thy valour, desist from me, who am an old and experienced captain, and go to s...
Take thee his armour: if thou art ambitious to get a trophy or mark of thy valour, desist from me, who am an old and experienced captain, and go to some young and raw soldier; try thy skill upon him, and take away his arms from him.
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Poole: 2Sa 2:22 - -- He was loth to enrage Joab too much against him, because his guilty conscience told him that his cause was bad, and herefore he presaged ill success...
He was loth to enrage Joab too much against him, because his guilty conscience told him that his cause was bad, and herefore he presaged ill success, and that he might need such a friend as Joab to make his peace with David.
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Poole: 2Sa 2:23 - -- The hinder end of the spear was sharp-pointed, after the manner.
Under the fifth rib the seat of the liver and bowels, where wounds are mortal.
In...
The hinder end of the spear was sharp-pointed, after the manner.
Under the fifth rib the seat of the liver and bowels, where wounds are mortal.
In the same place upon the spot, not being able to go one step further.
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Where, being upon the upper ground, they might better defend themselves.
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Poole: 2Sa 2:26 - -- It will be bitterness in the latter end it will produce dreadful effects, and many bloody slaughters, if by a further prosecution thou makest them de...
It will be bitterness in the latter end it will produce dreadful effects, and many bloody slaughters, if by a further prosecution thou makest them desperate; which is against all the rules of policy.
Their brethren by nation and religion; whom therefore they should not pursue with so fierce a rage, as if they were pursuing the Philistines.
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Poole: 2Sa 2:27 - -- Unless thou hadst spoken unless thou hadst made the motion that they might fight, 2Sa 2:14 . It was thou, not I, that gave the first occasion of this...
Unless thou hadst spoken unless thou hadst made the motion that they might fight, 2Sa 2:14 . It was thou, not I, that gave the first occasion of this fight. Withal, he intimates that Abner was the sole cause of this war; and that if he had not given commission and command, the war had never been undertaken, but all things had been ended by an amicable agreement; which might have been made that very morning, if he had so pleased.
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Either, first, at that time; or rather, secondly, in any pitched battle.
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Poole: 2Sa 2:29 - -- Bithron otherwise called the mountains of Bether , Son 2:17 , which were beyond Jordan; or some other country now not known by that name, which is t...
Bithron otherwise called the mountains of Bether , Son 2:17 , which were beyond Jordan; or some other country now not known by that name, which is the case of hundreds of places.
Spoils. Attack one who may be a more equal match for thee. (Haydock)
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Haydock: 2Sa 2:22 - -- Brother. It seems they were great friends, though they had espoused different parties. (Calmet)
Brother. It seems they were great friends, though they had espoused different parties. (Calmet)
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Haydock: 2Sa 2:23 - -- Stroke, ( aversa. ) Hebrew, "with the hinder end of the spear, under the fifth rib. " Septuagint, "in the loin."
Stroke, ( aversa. ) Hebrew, "with the hinder end of the spear, under the fifth rib. " Septuagint, "in the loin."
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Wilderness, or land which was not ploughed, though fruitful.
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Haydock: 2Sa 2:26 - -- Destruction. Septuagint, "till thou hast gained a complete victory?" Chaldean, "to separation?" Must we come to an eternal rupture? ---
Despair...
Destruction. Septuagint, "till thou hast gained a complete victory?" Chaldean, "to separation?" Must we come to an eternal rupture? ---
Despair? Hebrew, "that it will be bitterness in the end?" Abner insinuates that they had commenced in a sort of play, but the consequences had already proved too serious; and if Joab continued to pursue, his men would be rendered desperate. (Calmet) ---
Despair makes people perform wonders, to revenge themselves. (Menochius)
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Haydock: 2Sa 2:28 - -- Trumpet. It was not dishonourable for a general to do this himself, chap. xviii. 16. But among the Hebrews, the priests generally performed this of...
Trumpet. It was not dishonourable for a general to do this himself, chap. xviii. 16. But among the Hebrews, the priests generally performed this office. (Calmet)
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Haydock: 2Sa 2:29 - -- Beth-horon. Septuagint, "the extended plain." Hebrew Bithrun, (Haydock) or the country towards the Jordan. (Calmet) ---
Thus the battle ended i...
Beth-horon. Septuagint, "the extended plain." Hebrew Bithrun, (Haydock) or the country towards the Jordan. (Calmet) ---
Thus the battle ended in his disgrace; (Haydock) and many from all Israel began to flock to the standard of David, 1 Paralipomenon xii. 22. (Tirinus)
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Day, after a march of ten hours. (Adrichomius) (Menochius)
Gill: 2Sa 2:20 - -- Then Abner looked behind him,.... Perceiving one at his heels, and making haste up to him.
And said, art thou Asahel? for it seems he knew him per...
Then Abner looked behind him,.... Perceiving one at his heels, and making haste up to him.
And said, art thou Asahel? for it seems he knew him personally, being well acquainted with his family:
and he answered, I am; so that they were very near to each other, as to discourse together, and be heard and understood by each other.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:21 - -- And Abner said unto him,.... Having a respect for him, and consulting his good, and however fearing his brother Joab should he slay him:
turn thee ...
And Abner said unto him,.... Having a respect for him, and consulting his good, and however fearing his brother Joab should he slay him:
turn thee aside to thy right or to thy left; he does not advise him to go back, which would have been to his disgrace, having engaged in the pursuit, but to turn to the right or left, as if pursuing some other person and not Abner:
and lay thee hold on one of the young men, and take thee his armour; one of the common soldiers, or an attendant on Abner, a young man like himself, whom he might be able to cope with, and take him a prisoner and disarm him, when he was not a match for such an old experienced officer as he was; and this Abner seems to speak as a friend, consulting the young man's safety and his honour too.
But, Asahel would not turn aside from following him; fired with the ambition of taking him, and not content with any prey short of him; and perhaps was the more animated by what he said, as supposing it arose from fear of him.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:22 - -- And Abner said again to Asahel,.... Being loath to dispatch him:
turn thee aside from following me, wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? wh...
And Abner said again to Asahel,.... Being loath to dispatch him:
turn thee aside from following me, wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? which was giving him fair warning, and letting him know what he must expect, if he did not desist from his pursuit:
how then should I hold up my face to Joab thy brother? the general of David's army, a stout valiant commander, a man of spirit and resentment, whom Abner knew full well, and that should he slay his brother, he would never be friendly with him, or look pleasantly on him; he would never forgive him, but seek ways and means to avenge his blood on him and by this it seems as if Abner was conscious to himself that he was in a wrong cause, that the kingdom was of right David's, and would be his, and he must be obliged to make peace with him; when he should stand in need of Joab as his friend, which he could not expect, if he slew his brother, nor to live in favour and friendship with him hereafter.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:23 - -- Howbeit, he refused to turn aside,.... Determined on making him his captive if possible.
Wherefore Abner, with the hinder end of the spear; he had ...
Howbeit, he refused to turn aside,.... Determined on making him his captive if possible.
Wherefore Abner, with the hinder end of the spear; he had in his hand, which seems to have had a pike at both ends; so that with the hinder end of it, next to Asahel, he thrust it at him, without turning to him: and
smote him under the fifth rib; the place where hang the gall and liver, as the Jewish commentators from their Talmud i observe. There are twelve ribs, seven of which are called true ones, and five spurious; if this was the fifth of the seven, the spear must pierce the breast k, and strike the seat of life, the heart and lungs; if the fifth from the eighth and first of the spurious ones, then wounding the hypochondria, it must pass to the vital bowels of the abdomen, which seems to be the case here l: according to some m this is meant of the inferior ribs, which we call the short ribs, and any of these five are called the fifth rib; and Abner must strike him in the right side, because he was behind him, and which stroke must be deadly, because he struck him through the liver:
that the spear came out behind him: the thrust was so violent that the spear went through him, and came out at his back:
and he fell down and died in the same place; he fell at once, and died on the spot immediately:
and it came to pass, that as many as came to the place where Asahel fell down and died stood still; that is, such of David's men who were in the pursuit after the Israelites, when they came to the spot, and saw Asahel dead, they had no power to proceed in the pursuit, being so troubled and grieved at the death of him.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:24 - -- Joab also and Abishai pursued after Abner,.... Or rather but Joab, &c. n. They stood not still as the rest, but, filled with indignation and resentmen...
Joab also and Abishai pursued after Abner,.... Or rather but Joab, &c. n. They stood not still as the rest, but, filled with indignation and resentment, pursued after Abner, to be avenged on him:
and the sun went down when they came to the hill of Ammah; a hill by the side of which was a pool of water, as Kimchi thinks, and from thence so called:
that lieth before Giah; a place near Gibeon, but nowhere after mentioned:
by the way of the wilderness of Gibeon; very likely not far from the city from which it had its name.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:25 - -- And the children of Benjamin gathered themselves together after Abner,.... Either those that were with him before, who upon the battle were dispersed,...
And the children of Benjamin gathered themselves together after Abner,.... Either those that were with him before, who upon the battle were dispersed, but now got together again; or others of that tribe, who, hearing of the defeat of Abner, went out of the several cities after him, to strengthen his hands, and renew the fight with Joab:
and became one troop; were united together in a body, and became a regular troop:
and stood on the top of an hill; which was some advantage to them, and from whence they could take a view of Joab's army, and observe its motions.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:26 - -- Then Abner called to Joab,.... For having now a troop of men with him, he could stop with the greater safety; and being on an hill, and perhaps Joab o...
Then Abner called to Joab,.... For having now a troop of men with him, he could stop with the greater safety; and being on an hill, and perhaps Joab on one opposite to him, could call to him, so as to be heard:
and said, shall the sword devour for ever? slay men, and devour their blood. See Jer 46:10. That he was not thoughtful of, nor concerned about, when he set the young men to fighting before the battle, and called it play to wound and shed the blood of each other; but now the battle going against him, he complains of the devouring sword; and though it had been employed but a few hours, it seemed long to him, a sort of an eternity:
knowest thou not that it will be bitterness in the latter end? since it might issue in the death of himself, or of Joab, or of both, as it had in Asahel, or, however, in the death of a multitude of others; and which at last would cause bitter reflection in the prosecutors of the war:
how long shall it be then ere thou bid the people return from following their brethren? he pleads relation, that the men of Israel and the men of Judah were brethren; so they were by nation and religion, and therefore should not pursue one another to destruction; but who was the aggressor? It was Abner, that brought his forces against Judah; the men of David acted only on the defensive.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:27 - -- And Joab said, as God liveth,.... Which was the form of an oath, swearing by the living God:
unless thou hadst spoken; that is, these words in 2Sa ...
And Joab said, as God liveth,.... Which was the form of an oath, swearing by the living God:
unless thou hadst spoken; that is, these words in 2Sa 2:14; "let the young men arise and play", that he had not given the challenge to fight:
surely then in the morning the people had gone up everyone from following his brother; they would have gone away and never fought at all; they were not desirous of shedding their blood, and following after them to slay them: thus he lays the blame upon Abner, and makes him to be the cause and beginner of the war. Some render the particle by "if", and give the sense, that if he had spoken what he last did sooner, the people would long before this time have desisted from pursuing them; for it was not from a thirst after their blood, and a desire to luke vengeance on them, that they pursued them, but to bring them to submission, and lay down their arms; for they could not in honour retreat until they desired it; but the former sense seems best, and is the general sense of the Jewish commentators.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:28 - -- So Joab blew a trumpet,.... Or caused one to be blown as a signal of a retreat:
and all the people stood still, and pursued after Israel no more; a...
So Joab blew a trumpet,.... Or caused one to be blown as a signal of a retreat:
and all the people stood still, and pursued after Israel no more; as soon as they heard the trumpet sound, the meaning of which they understood, they stepped at once, and left off their pursuit:
neither fought they any more; that day, and perhaps no pitched battle afterwards; for none we read of, though the war continued after this a long time, and there might be often skirmishes, which greatly weakened Abner's party. See 2Sa 3:1.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:29 - -- And Abner and his men walked all that night through the plain,.... The plain of Jordan. He marched with his men all night, lest Joab should return, an...
And Abner and his men walked all that night through the plain,.... The plain of Jordan. He marched with his men all night, lest Joab should return, and pursue him, and take vengeance on him for the death of his brother:
and passed over Jordan; at one of the fords of it:
and went through all Bithron; the name of a province or country, as Jarchi, called so perhaps from its being separated from the rest of the tribes of Israel by the river Jordan; some think the mountains of Bether were in this country, Son 2:17. From Gibeon, where the battle was fought, to Bithron, according to Bunting o, was twenty eight miles, the which he says was in the tribe of Gad, twenty eight miles from Jerusalem northeastward, lying between Dibon and Jordan:
and they came to Mahanaim: from whence they came, and where they had left Ishbosheth, 2Sa 2:8. From Bithron to this place, according to the same writer p, was sixteen miles.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:30 - -- And Joab returned from following Abner,.... It being in his commission from David to shed as little blood as he could:
and when he had gathered all...
And Joab returned from following Abner,.... It being in his commission from David to shed as little blood as he could:
and when he had gathered all the people together; who had been pursuing the Israelites, some one way and some another:
there lacked of David's servants nineteen men, and Asahel; who is particularly mentioned, because a very honourable man, valiant and courageous, a relation of David, and brother of Joab the general, and the loss of him was greater than all the rest. This has made some think that the twelve men of the servants of David were not killed in the duel, or otherwise there must be but seven slain in the battle; though that is not more strange than that in the battle with Midian not one should be slain, and, yet a terrible slaughter was made of the Midianites, Num 31:1. So in a sharp battle between the Spartans and Arcadians, ten thousand of the latter were slain, and not one of the former q. Stilicho killed more than an hundred thousand of the army of Rhadagaisus, king of the Goths, without losing one of his own men, no, not so much as one wounded, as Austin affirms r. At the battle of Issus the Persians lost an hundred ten thousand men, and Alexander not two hundred s. Julius Caesar killed in the three camps of Juba, Scipio, and Labienus, ten thousand men, with the loss of fifty men only t. After these instances, not only the case here, but that between the Israelites and Midianites, cannot be thought incredible, for the sake of which the above are produced. This account, according to Josephus u, was taken the day following.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:31 - -- But the servants of David had smitten of Benjamin, and Abner's men,.... Of those of the tribe of Benjamin that joined him, and of those that he brough...
But the servants of David had smitten of Benjamin, and Abner's men,.... Of those of the tribe of Benjamin that joined him, and of those that he brought with him from Mahanaim; so many of them were smitten, as appeared by their bodies lying on the field of battle:
so that three hundred and threescore men died; the number of the slain on each side was very unequal.
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Gill: 2Sa 2:32 - -- And they took up Asahel,.... From the place where he fell; that is, Joab and Abishai, his brethren, as Josephus w relates; after they had buried the d...
And they took up Asahel,.... From the place where he fell; that is, Joab and Abishai, his brethren, as Josephus w relates; after they had buried the dead in the field of battle, they took up him:
and buried him in the sepulchre of his father, which was in Bethlehem: not in the city of Bethlehem, but without it, on the south side of it; so says Fuller x,"southward, i.e. of Bethlehem, we find Asahel's sepulchre, who was buried in the grave of his father.''What was his father's name is not known, only his mother's name, Zeruiah, is mentioned in Scripture, a sister of David, and daughter of Jesse the Bethlehemite. Bethlehem was sixteen miles from Gibeon, according to Bunting y.
And Joab and his men went all night; not the night following the battle, but the night following the next day, after he had been to Bethlehem, and buried his brother there; wherefore, lest David should think it long before he came, he travelled all night:
and they came to Hebron at break of day; where David was, which, according to the same writer z, was twenty miles from Bethlehem.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: 2Sa 2:27 The Hebrew verb נַעֲלָה (na’alah) used here is the Niphal perfect 3rd person masculine singular of ...
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NET Notes: 2Sa 2:29 Heb “and they went, all the Bitron.” The meaning of the Hebrew word “Bitron,” which is used only here in the OT, is disputed. ...
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Geneva Bible: 2Sa 2:22 And Abner said again to Asahel, Turn thee aside from following me: ( l ) wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? how then should I hold up my fac...
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Geneva Bible: 2Sa 2:23 Howbeit he refused to turn aside: wherefore Abner with the hinder end of the spear smote him under the ( m ) fifth [rib], that the spear came out behi...
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Geneva Bible: 2Sa 2:26 Then Abner called to Joab, and said, Shall the ( n ) sword devour for ever? knowest thou not that it will be bitterness in the latter end? how long sh...
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Geneva Bible: 2Sa 2:27 And Joab said, [As] God liveth, unless thou hadst ( o ) spoken, surely then in the morning the people had gone up every one from following his brother...
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Geneva Bible: 2Sa 2:31 But the servants of David had smitten of Benjamin, and of Abner's men, [so that] three ( p ) hundred and threescore men died.
( p ) Thus God would co...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Sa 2:1-32
TSK Synopsis: 2Sa 2:1-32 - --1 David, by God's direction, with his company goes up to Hebron, where he is made king of Judah.5 He commends them of Jabesh-gilead for their kindness...
MHCC -> 2Sa 2:18-24; 2Sa 2:25-32
MHCC: 2Sa 2:18-24 - --Death often comes by ways we least suspect. We are often betrayed by the accomplishments we are proud of! Asahel's swiftness, which he presumed so muc...
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MHCC: 2Sa 2:25-32 - --Abner appeals to Joab concerning the miserable consequences of a civil war. Those who make light of such unnatural contests, will find that they are b...
Matthew Henry -> 2Sa 2:18-24; 2Sa 2:25-32
Matthew Henry: 2Sa 2:18-24 - -- We have here the contest between Abner and Asahel. Asahel, the brother of Joab and cousin-german to David, was one of the principal commanders of Da...
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Matthew Henry: 2Sa 2:25-32 - -- Here, I. Abner, being conquered, meanly begs for a cessation of arms. He rallied the remains of his forces on the top of a hill (2Sa 2:25), as if he...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Sa 2:20-22; 2Sa 2:23; 2Sa 2:24; 2Sa 2:25-26; 2Sa 2:27-28; 2Sa 2:29; 2Sa 2:30-31; 2Sa 2:32
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:20-22 - --
Then Abner turned round, asked him whether he was Asahel, and said to him, "Turn to thy right hand or to thy left, and seize one of the young men a...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:23 - --
But when he still refused to depart in spite of this warning, Abner wounded him in the abdomen with the hinder part, i.e., the lower end of the spea...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:24 - --
But Joab and Abishai pursued Abner till the sun set, and until they had arrived at the hill Ammah , in front of Giah , on the way to the desert of...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:25-26 - --
The Benjaminites then gathered in a crowd behind Abner, and halted upon the top of a hill to beat back their pursuers; and Abner cried out to Joab, ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:27-28 - --
Joab replied, "If thou hadst not spoken (i.e., challenged to single combat, 2Sa 2:14), the people would have gone away in the morning, every one f...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:29 - --
Abner proceeded with his troops through the Arabah , i.e., the valley of the Jordan, marching the whole night; and then crossing the river, went th...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:30-31 - --
Joab also assembled his men for a retreat. Nineteen of his soldiers were missing besides Asahel, all of whom had fallen in the battle. But they had ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 2Sa 2:32 - --
On the way back, David's men took up the body of Asahel, and buried it in his father's grave at Bethlehem. They proceeded thence towards Hebron, mar...
Constable: 2Sa 1:1--8:18 - --V. DAVID'S TRIUMPHS chs. 1--8
The first 20 chapters of 2 Samuel are divisible into four uni...
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Constable: 2Sa 1:1--3:6 - --A. The Beginning of David's Kingdom 1:1-3:5
The present section begins with Yahweh's destruction of Saul...
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