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												Verse 12 Kings 8:1. Then spake Elisha — 
												There is nothing in the Hebrew 
												for this particle of time, then. 
												It is literally, And Elisha 
												spake, or, as Houbigant renders 
												it, had spoken. So 2 Kings 8:2, 
												The woman had arisen, and done, 
												&c. He conjectures, from 2 Kings 
												8:4, that this event happened 
												before Gehazi was struck with 
												the leprosy: this, however, is 
												by no means certain. On the 
												other hand, most commentators 
												seem to be of opinion that it 
												took place in the order in which 
												it is recorded in the history, 
												after the events related in the 
												former chapter, and some think 
												several years after. Unto the 
												woman whose son he had restored 
												to life — Manifesting his 
												gratitude for her former 
												kindness, by taking special care 
												for her preservation. Go thou, 
												and sojourn, &c. — In any 
												convenient place out of the land 
												of Israel. For the Lord hath 
												called for a famine — Hath 
												appointed to bring a famine upon 
												the country, or a great scarcity 
												of provisions. The manner of 
												speaking intimates that all 
												afflictions are sent by God, and 
												come at his call. Seven years — 
												A double time to the former 
												famine under Elijah, which was 
												but just, because they were 
												still incorrigible under all the 
												judgments of God, and under the 
												powerful ministry of Elisha, who 
												confirmed his doctrine by so 
												many astonishing miracles.
 
 Verse 2
 2 Kings 8:2. The woman arose, 
												and sojourned in the land of the 
												Philistines — Which, though 
												bordering upon Israel, was free 
												from the famine: by which it 
												appeared, that the special hand 
												of God was in that calamity, and 
												that it was a judgment from him 
												upon the Israelites for their 
												idolatry, and abuse of the means 
												of grace, which they now enjoyed 
												in such abundance through Elisha 
												and many other prophets.
 
 Verse 3
 2 Kings 8:3. She went to cry 
												unto the king for her house and 
												land — Which, having been 
												forsaken by her, were possessed 
												by her kindred or others, who 
												probably had obtained a grant of 
												them from the king, and now 
												intended to keep possession of 
												them.
 
 
 Verse 4
 2 Kings 8:4. The king talked 
												with Gehazi, the servant of the 
												man of God — Or, who had been 
												his servant formerly. The law 
												did not forbid conversing with 
												lepers at a due distance, but 
												only the dwelling with them. 
												Thus Naaman conversed with 
												Elisha’s family at a distance; 
												and the lepers called to our 
												Lord, as he went along the 
												highway.
 
 Verse 5-6
 2 Kings 8:5-6. As he was telling 
												the king, &c., the woman cried 
												to the king, &c. — By the order 
												of Providence she came to 
												present her petition, and 
												brought her son with her, in 
												that very instant of time when 
												Gehazi was telling the story of 
												Elisha’s restoring him to life, 
												that the king might be more 
												fully satisfied of the truth of 
												what he related from her own 
												mouth, and that it might make 
												the deeper impression upon him. 
												Providence ought to be carefully 
												observed, and devoutly 
												acknowledged, in ordering the 
												circumstances of events; for 
												sometimes, as here, those that 
												are minute of themselves, prove 
												of great consequence. And when 
												the king asked the woman, she 
												told him — That is, she 
												confirmed what Gehazi had said. 
												Thus did God even force him to 
												believe, what he might have had 
												some colour to question, if he 
												had only had Gehazi’s word for 
												it. So the king appointed, 
												saying, Restore all that was 
												hers — Not only her house and 
												land, but all the profits that 
												had been made of them, and 
												brought into his treasury. This 
												was a high act of justice, and 
												an argument of some goodness 
												left in a bad man.
 
 Verse 7
 2 Kings 8:7. Elisha came to 
												Damascus — Either to the city so 
												called, or rather, as it seems 
												from 2 Kings 8:9, to the kingdom 
												of Damascus; as Samaria, which 
												properly was the name of a city, 
												sometimes means the kingdom of 
												which that city was the capital. 
												Some have thought that Elisha 
												went thither to avoid the 
												famine; but it is more probable 
												that he was sent by God, on the 
												errand following. Ben-hadad, the 
												king of Syria, was sick — For 
												neither honour, wealth, nor 
												power will secure men from the 
												common diseases and disasters of 
												human life: palaces and thrones 
												lie as open to the arrests of 
												death as the meanest cottage. It 
												was told him, saying, The man of 
												God is come hither — Which 
												doubtless had rarely, if ever, 
												been the case before; and his 
												having cured Naaman had raised a 
												great opinion of his power with 
												God in that country.
 
 Verse 8
 2 Kings 8:8. The king said, Go, 
												meet the man of God, and inquire 
												of the Lord, &c. — In his health 
												he bowed down in the house of 
												Rimmon, but now he sends to 
												inquire of the God of Israel. It 
												is not long since he sent a 
												great force to seize and treat 
												Elisha as an enemy; yet now he 
												courts and inquires of him as a 
												prophet: thus affliction brings 
												those to God, who, in their 
												prosperity, made light of him: 
												it opens men’s eyes, and 
												rectifies their mistakes: and 
												among other instances of the 
												change it produces in their 
												minds, this is one, and not the 
												least considerable, that it 
												often gives them other thoughts 
												of God’s ministers, and teaches 
												them to value those whom they 
												before hated and despised. 
												Affliction, however, has not 
												this good effect upon all: it 
												only blinds and hardens some. We 
												lately saw even a king of Israel 
												sending, in his sickness, to 
												inquire of the god of Ekron, as 
												if there had been no God in 
												Israel. How does the conduct of 
												this heathen, in similar 
												circumstances, reprove and 
												condemn the idolatrous and 
												incorrigible Israelite! Thus 
												does God sometimes fetch that 
												honour to himself from 
												strangers, which is denied him, 
												and alienated from him, by his 
												own professing people.
 
 Verse 9
 2 Kings 8:9. And took a present 
												with him, forty camels’ burden — 
												By this noble present, 
												consisting of every good thing 
												of Damascus, the king testified 
												his affection to the prophet, 
												bid him welcome to Damascus, and 
												provided for his sustenance 
												while he was there, and the 
												sustenance of those that were 
												with him: for some have 
												inferred, from the king’s 
												sending him so very large a 
												quantity of provisions, beyond 
												measure too much for a single 
												person, that Elisha, besides his 
												servant, had several of the sons 
												of the prophets with him. It is 
												probable he accepted this 
												present; for if he had refused 
												it, it is likely his refusal 
												would have been noticed.
 
 Verse 10
 2 Kings 8:10. Say unto him, Thou 
												mayest certainly recover: 
												howbeit, &c. — Here is no 
												contradiction: for the first 
												words contain an answer to Ben- 
												hadad’s question, Shall I 
												recover? To which the answer is, 
												Thou mayest, notwithstanding thy 
												disease, which is not mortal. 
												The latter words contain the 
												prophet’s addition to that 
												answer, which is, that he should 
												die, not by the power of his 
												disease, but by some other 
												cause. But it must be observed, 
												that this is according, not to 
												the Hebrew text, but the 
												marginal reading of the Jewish 
												rabbins, who have substituted 
												the pronoun לו, lo, to him, for 
												the adverb לא, lo, not. In the 
												text it is, Go say, Thou shalt 
												not recover; or, as Dr. 
												Waterland renders it, Thou shalt 
												certainly not live; for the Lord 
												hath showed me that he shall 
												surely die. Dr. Kennicott is 
												clearly of opinion that this is 
												the true reading and sense of 
												the passage. See his first 
												Dissert., p. 163. Houbigant, 
												however, prefers our 
												translation, and thinks that the 
												words contain a silent reproof 
												from Elisha, who well knew that 
												a courtier, like Hazael, would 
												certainly flatter his king: he 
												therefore understands the 
												meaning to be, “Go thou, and, 
												courtier-like, say to him, Thou 
												wilt certainly recover; howbeit, 
												the Lord hath, shown me very 
												much the contrary; he will 
												surely die, and die by thy 
												traitorous hand.”
 
 Verse 11
 2 Kings 8:11. He settled his 
												countenance steadfastly — Elisha 
												fixed his eyes on Hazael, and 
												looked upon him so earnestly, so 
												long, and with such a settled 
												countenance, that Hazael was 
												ashamed, as apprehending that 
												the prophet discerned or 
												suspected something of an evil 
												and shameful nature in him. The 
												Hebrew words, however, rendered 
												till he was ashamed, are 
												ambiguous, and may be 
												indifferently referred either to 
												the prophet or to Hazael: but 
												they seem more properly to 
												belong to the latter, because it 
												follows by way of distinction, 
												The man of God wept.
 
 Verse 12
 2 Kings 8:12. I know the evil 
												thou wilt do unto the children 
												of Israel — It was not in 
												Hazael’s countenance that Elisha 
												read what he would do; but God 
												did at this time reveal it to 
												him, and gave him such a clear 
												and full view of it, that it 
												greatly affected him. The sins 
												of Israel provoked God to give 
												them up into the hands of their 
												cruel enemies: yet Elisha wept 
												to think that ever Israelites 
												should be so abused as he 
												foresaw they would be by Hazael. 
												For though he foretold, he did 
												not desire, the woful day. Their 
												strong holds wilt thou set on 
												fire, &c. — See what havoc and 
												destruction war makes! what 
												destruction sin makes! and how 
												the nature of man is changed by 
												the fall, and stripped even of 
												humanity itself! Wilt dash their 
												children — That dashing young 
												children against the stones was 
												one piece of barbarous cruelty 
												which the people of the East 
												were apt to run into, in the 
												prosecution of their wars, is 
												plainly intimated Psalms 
												137:8-9. Nor was this inhuman 
												practice out of use among 
												nations pretending to more 
												politeness; for, according to 
												the remains of ancient fame, the 
												Grecians, when they became 
												masters of Troy, were so cruel 
												as to throw Astyanax, Hector’s 
												son, a child in his mother’s 
												arms, headlong from one of the 
												towers of the city. The ripping 
												up of women with child is the 
												highest degree of brutal 
												cruelty; but there is reason to 
												believe that Hazael, in his war 
												with the Gileadites, (2 Kings 
												10:32-33,) verified this part of 
												the prophet’s prediction 
												concerning him; for, what Amos, 
												complaining of his cruelty to 
												this people, calls thrashing 
												Gilead with thrashing 
												instruments of iron, both the 
												Seventy and Arabic versions 
												read, He sawed the pregnant 
												women with iron saws. — Le Clerc 
												and Calmet.
 
 Verse 13
 2 Kings 8:13. Hazael said, But 
												what, is thy servant a dog? &c. 
												— The expression is used in 
												Scripture to signify vile and 
												unworthy, as in 2 Samuel 3:8; 2 
												Samuel 9:8; and fierce, 
												barbarous, and inhuman, Psalms 
												22:16; Psalms 22:20; Psalms 
												59:6. That he should do this 
												great thing — So he terms it, as 
												being, 1st, A thing that 
												supposed great power, and not to 
												be done but by a crowned head: 
												as if he had said, It must be 
												some mighty potentate that must 
												prevail thus against Israel, and 
												therefore not I. Accordingly, 
												the Hebrew may be rendered, 
												What! thy servant, a dog! that 
												he should do this great thing! 
												2d, An act of great barbarity, 
												which could not be done but by a 
												person lost to all honour and 
												virtue. This is the sense in 
												which Hazael’s words have been 
												generally understood; and it 
												seems evidently the true sense. 
												He felt, at this time, no 
												inclination to be so barbarous 
												and cruel as the foregoing words 
												of Elisha implied, and he 
												wondered that the prophet should 
												suppose him capable of ever 
												acting in such a manner. Is thy 
												servant a dog, to rend, and 
												tear, and devour? Unless I were 
												a dog I could not do it. He was 
												evidently startled at the 
												mention of the cruelties which 
												the prophet foretold he should 
												perpetrate, and thought it 
												impossible he should ever be 
												guilty of them. Thus we are very 
												apt to think ourselves 
												sufficiently secure against the 
												commission of those sins which 
												yet we are afterward overcome 
												by, and practise. The Lord hath 
												showed me that thou shalt be 
												king over Syria — And then, when 
												thou shalt have the power, thou 
												wilt have the will to commit 
												these enormities and 
												barbarities, and actually wilt 
												commit them. Those who are 
												little and low in the world, 
												cannot imagine how strong the 
												temptations of power and 
												prosperity are, to which if they 
												ever arrive, they will find how 
												deceitful their hearts were, and 
												how much more corrupt than they 
												suspected.
 
 Verse 14
 2 Kings 8:14. He told me that 
												thou shouldest surely recover — 
												This was abominably false. He 
												told him he should die, 2 Kings 
												8:10; but Hazael unfairly and 
												unfaithfully concealed that, 
												either because he was loath to 
												put the king out of humour with 
												bad news, or because he thought 
												he should thereby the more 
												easily put in execution the 
												design which he had already 
												formed against his life, finding 
												he was to be his successor, and 
												which he was eager to see 
												accomplished. Elisha’s 
												prediction might give Satan an 
												occasion of suggesting this 
												villany to his mind; but, as Mr. 
												Scott justly observes, “it was 
												not the cause of his crime, and 
												forms no excuse for it. Had he 
												been of David’s disposition, he 
												would have waited in the path of 
												duty till the Lord had performed 
												his word in that manner which 
												pleased him.” Thus he soon began 
												to manifest the rapaciousness 
												and cruelty of the dog, of which 
												he desired to be thought 
												incapable.
 
 
 Verse 15
 2 Kings 8:15. And spread it on 
												his face — Pretending, it may 
												be, to cool his immoderate heat 
												with it, but applying it so 
												closely that he choked him 
												therewith; the king being weak, 
												and unable to help himself, or 
												perhaps asleep. By this artifice 
												he prevented his crying out, and 
												his death would appear to be 
												natural, there being no signs of 
												violence upon his body. Such a 
												bubble is the life of the 
												greatest men, and so exposed are 
												princes to treachery and 
												outrage. We found this haughty 
												monarch (1 Kings 20:1-10) the 
												terror of the mighty in the land 
												of the living; but now he goes 
												down slain into the pit, with 
												his iniquity upon his bones, 
												Ezekiel 32:25. And Hazael 
												reigned in his stead — Being, it 
												is likely, in great favour, both 
												with the people and the 
												soldiery, and not suspected of 
												the murder of Ben- hadad; and he 
												leaving no son to succeed him in 
												the government.
 
 Verse 16
 2 Kings 8:16. Jehoram the son of 
												Jehoshaphat began to reign — 
												Jehoram was first made king or 
												viceroy by his father, divers 
												years before this time, at his 
												expedition to Ramoth-gilead, 
												which dominion of his ended at 
												his father’s return. But now 
												Jehoshaphat, being not far from 
												his death, and having divers 
												sons, and fearing some 
												competition among them, makes 
												Jehoram king the second time, as 
												David did Solomon upon the like 
												occasion. See note on chap. 2 
												Kings 1:17.
 
 Verse 18
 2 Kings 8:18. And he walked in 
												the way of the kings of Israel — 
												That is, after his father’s 
												death. For the daughter of Ahab 
												— Namely, Athaliah, 2 Kings 
												8:26; was his wife — By whom he 
												was seduced from the religion of 
												his pious father and 
												grandfather. This unequal 
												marriage, though Jehoshaphat 
												possibly designed it as a means 
												of uniting the two kingdoms 
												under one head, is here and 
												elsewhere noted, as the cause 
												both of the great wickedness of 
												his posterity, and of those sore 
												calamities which befell them. No 
												good could be reasonably 
												expected from such a union. 
												Those that are ill matched are 
												already half ruined.
 
 Verse 19
 2 Kings 8:19. To give him always 
												a light — A son and successor, 
												until the coming of the Messiah: 
												for so long, and not longer, 
												this succession might seem 
												necessary for the making good of 
												God’s promise and covenant made 
												with David. But when the Messiah 
												was once come, there was no more 
												need of any succession, and the 
												sceptre might and did without 
												any inconvenience depart from 
												Judah, and from all the 
												succeeding branches of David’s 
												family, because the Messiah was 
												to hold the kingdom for ever in 
												his own person, though not in so 
												gross a way as the carnal Jews 
												imagined.
 
 
 Verse 20
 2 Kings 8:20. In his days Edom 
												revolted — After they had been 
												subject to Judah one hundred and 
												fifty years, ever since the time 
												of David, who subdued that 
												country. This was a great 
												dishonour to him. Hereby, 
												however, the prophecy of Isaac 
												(Genesis 27:40) was fulfilled.
 
 Verse 21
 2 Kings 8:21. Joram went over to 
												Zair — This word is written 
												differently from Seir, and 
												therefore, it seems, does not 
												signify any part of the country 
												of Edom, but some city near to 
												it. And smote the Edomites which 
												compassed him about — The 
												Edomites were not wanting in 
												their own defence, but had 
												surrounded him with an army; 
												through which he broke in the 
												night, and routed them. And the 
												people fled, &c. — The common 
												soldiers of the Edomites herein 
												following the example of their 
												captains. Yet Edom revolted — 
												Notwithstanding this victory, 
												Joram could not recover his 
												dominion over this country; 
												probably because he was recalled 
												by the revolt of some of his own 
												subjects, who had taken the 
												occasion of his absence to 
												rebel, and he feared that others 
												would follow their example if 
												they had the like opportunity. 
												So that Edom continued a kingdom 
												under its own king. Unto this 
												day — When this record was 
												written. Indeed, they were not 
												brought again under the power of 
												the Jews till after their return 
												from the captivity of Babylon. 
												Then Libnah revolted — A 
												considerable city in Judah 
												belonging to the priests. For 
												the reason why they revolted, 
												see 2 Chronicles 21:10-11. It is 
												probable they returned to their 
												obedience, because those words, 
												unto this day, which are added 
												to the former clause, are 
												omitted here.
 
 Verse 26-27
 2 Kings 8:26-27. Two and twenty 
												years old was Ahaziah when he 
												began to reign — How this agrees 
												with 2 Chronicles 22:2, see on 
												that place. The daughter of Omri 
												— That is, his grand-daughter, 2 
												Kings 8:18. He walked in the way 
												of the house of Ahab — He not 
												only worshipped the calves, but 
												also Baal. For he was son-in-law 
												of the house of Ahab — And so 
												was corrupted in his religion by 
												his connection with that 
												idolatrous and wicked family. He 
												was the proper son of Athaliah, 
												daughter of Ahab, and the 
												grandson-in-law of Ahab, his 
												father Joram being properly 
												Ahab’s son-in- law.
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