| 
												
												Verse 12 Kings 15:1. In the twenty and 
												seventh year of Jeroboam — After 
												an interregnum of twelve years 
												in the kingdom of Judah, either 
												through the prevalency of the 
												faction which cut off Amaziah 
												the father, and kept the son out 
												of his kingdom; or, rather, 
												because Azariah was very young, 
												it is thought only four years of 
												age, when his father was slain, 
												and the people were not agreed 
												to restore him till he was in 
												his sixteenth year: see on 2 
												Kings 14:21. Began Azariah to 
												reign — Solely and fully to 
												exercise his regal power.
 
 Verse 3-4
 2 Kings 15:3-4. According to all 
												that his father had done — Like 
												him beginning well, but not 
												persevering. Save that — It 
												should rather be read, howbeit, 
												or nevertheless, (as in 2 Kings 
												14:4,) the high places were not 
												removed — That irregularity, in 
												the mode and place of worship, 
												still continued.
 
 Verse 5
 2 Kings 15:5. The Lord smote the 
												king, so that he was a leper — 
												The cause of this stroke is 
												related at large, 2 Chronicles 
												26:16-21. And dwelt in a several 
												house — Separated from 
												conversation with others by 
												virtue of the law, recorded 
												Leviticus 13:46, which, being 
												the law of the King of kings, 
												bound kings no less than 
												subjects. The Jews, by the term 
												several house, understand a 
												house in the country; where he 
												might have liberty to take his 
												pleasure, but not to meddle with 
												public affairs. Jotham, the 
												king’s son, was over the house, 
												&c. — That is, he lived in the 
												palace, and managed all the 
												affairs of the court and of the 
												kingdom, governing in his 
												father’s name as his vicegerent. 
												It was in the twenty-seventh 
												year of Azariah’s reign that he 
												was smitten with the leprosy, 
												and he continued a leper 
												twenty-five years, during which 
												time Jotham administered the 
												government, his father being 
												incapable of it.
 
 Verse 7
 2 Kings 15:7. They buried him 
												with his fathers, &c. — Not in 
												the very sepulchre of the kings, 
												because he was a leper, (2 
												Chronicles 26:23,) but in the 
												same field, and very near to the 
												same place, where his ancestors 
												lay interred.
 
 Verse 10
 2 Kings 15:10. Shallum the son 
												of Jabesh — Probably one of his 
												chief captains; conspired 
												against him — On what pretence 
												is quite uncertain. And smote 
												him before the people — Openly 
												and impudently, which, it is 
												likely, he presumed to do, 
												either because he remembered 
												that the promise of the kingdom, 
												made to Jehu, was confined to 
												the fourth generation, (2 Kings 
												10:30,) which he observed to be 
												now expired; or because he 
												perceived the people were 
												generally disaffected to their 
												king, and favourable to his 
												attempt.
 
 Verse 11
 2 Kings 15:11. The rest of the 
												acts of Zachariah, &c. — We read 
												of nothing that he did; 
												therefore the meaning is, that 
												his behaviour during the six 
												months in which he reigned, how 
												he managed things, and provoked 
												this conspiracy, are recorded 
												elsewhere.
 
 Verse 12
 2 Kings 15:12. This was the word 
												of the Lord, Thy sons, &c. — How 
												unfaithful soever they proved to 
												God, he faithfully performed the 
												promise which he made to Jehu, 
												whose sons, to the fourth 
												generation, succeeded him in the 
												throne of Israel. But this 
												Shallum put an end to that 
												family, and fulfilled the 
												prophecy of Hosea, (Hosea 1:4,) 
												I will average the blood of 
												Jezreel upon the house of Jehu, 
												and will cause to cease the 
												kingdom of the house of Israel. 
												For though Jehu had a command 
												from God to destroy the house of 
												Ahab, yet because he did it not 
												so much in obedience to God, and 
												with a view to his glory, as to 
												satisfy his own private 
												ambition, and in a way of 
												cruelty quite abhorrent to the 
												divine nature, God cut his 
												family short, as soon as he had 
												fulfilled his promise, and 
												avenged that blood by this man, 
												who slew Zachariah, and the rest 
												of his posterity, if there were 
												any. At least, he made the 
												kingdom to cease in his family, 
												and, not long after, it ceased 
												in all Israel, who were rooted 
												out, and never restored to their 
												own country, as Judah was.
 
 Verse 13-14
 2 Kings 15:13-14. He reigned a 
												full month — That dominion 
												seldom lasts long that is 
												founded in blood and falsehood. 
												Menahem, either provoked by his 
												crime, or animated by his 
												example, soon served him as he 
												had served his master: he went 
												up from Tirzah — A city in the 
												tribe of Ephraim, where Jeroboam 
												first dwelt; and smote Shallum — 
												Probably he was general of the 
												army, which then lay encamped at 
												Tirzah, and hearing of Shallum’s 
												treason and usurpation, he 
												hastened to Samaria to avenge 
												it, as Omri acted, in a like 
												case, with regard to Zimri.
 
 
 Verse 16
 2 Kings 15:16. Then Menahem 
												smote Tiphsah — Either that 
												Tiphsah mentioned 1 Kings 4:24, 
												or another city of the same 
												name. And the coasts thereof, 
												from Tirzah — All the people 
												dwelling between those places. 
												Because they opened not to him — 
												Refused to open the gates of 
												their city, and submit to him as 
												conqueror. All the women that 
												were with child he ripped up — 
												That by this example of severity 
												he might affright all the rest 
												of the people into obedience. 
												The frequent mention of this 
												kind of cruelty, shows how 
												inhumanly barbarous the eastern 
												people were in those ages.
 
 Verse 19
 2 Kings 15:19. Pul the king of 
												Assyria came against the land — 
												This is the first time that we 
												find any mention of the kingdom 
												of Assyria, since the days of 
												Nimrod, who erected a small 
												principality there, Genesis 
												10:11. And they were no great 
												people, one would suppose, when 
												the eighty-third Psalm was 
												written, in which they are 
												mentioned as auxiliaries to the 
												children of Lot, against the 
												Israelites, together with other 
												small nations. But now they were 
												become very powerful. This Pul, 
												or Phul, was the first monarch 
												of that nation that invaded 
												Israel, and began their 
												transportation out of their 
												country. Some have been of 
												opinion, with Bishop Patrick, 
												Poole, and others, that he was 
												the same with Belesis, the 
												governor of Babylon, who, 
												together with Arbaces the Mede, 
												slew Sardanapalus, the last of 
												the Assyrian monarchs, and 
												translated the empire to the 
												Chaldeans. But, according to Dr. 
												Prideaux, Belesis was one 
												generation later. It is 
												supposed, therefore, that this 
												Pul was the father of 
												Sardanapalus, and the same king 
												of Assyria who, when Jonah 
												preached against Nineveh, gave 
												great tokens of his humiliation 
												and repentance. See Prideaux’s 
												Con. A. 747, and Bedford’s 
												Script. Chronology. Menahem gave 
												Pul a thousand talents of silver 
												— A very considerable present 
												indeed, being no less than 
												f450,000 sterling. This sum he 
												gave, not only with a view to 
												turn away the army of Pul from 
												him, but also to purchase his 
												friendship and assistance 
												against those of his own 
												subjects who opposed him, and to 
												confirm the kingdom in his hand. 
												By which it appears, that his 
												cruelty at Tiphsah was so far 
												from establishing him as he 
												expected, that it weakened and 
												endangered him, so that he was 
												obliged to call in a foreign 
												power to his aid.
 
 Verse 20
 2 Kings 15:20. Of all the mighty 
												men of wealth — By exacting the 
												money only of the rich, it is 
												likely, he thought he should 
												ingratiate himself with the 
												common people, upon whom he laid 
												no tax. Fifty shekels of silver, 
												demanded of each man of wealth, 
												were a sum equal to f7. 10s. of 
												our money.
 
 
 Verse 24-25
 2 Kings 15:24-25. He did that 
												which was evil, &c. — He was the 
												wicked son of a wicked father, 
												and so perished by such a 
												conspiracy as his father formed 
												against Shallum. With Argob and 
												Arieh — It does not appear from 
												the text whether these persons 
												were Pekah’s partners in this 
												treason, or Pekahiah’s courtiers 
												and officers now slain with him. 
												With fifty men of the Gileadites 
												— Who, it is probable, were 
												Pekahiah’s body-guard.
 
 Verse 27
 2 Kings 15:27. In the two and 
												fiftieth year of Azariah Pekah 
												began to reign — This is the 
												fifth king that reigned over 
												Israel during the reign of 
												Azariah king of Judah. Pekah, 
												however, reigned much longer 
												than any of the preceding four. 
												For though he also, like Shallum 
												and Menahem, got the kingdom by 
												treason and blood, he kept 
												possession of it twenty years. 
												So long it was before his 
												violent dealing returned upon 
												his own head. And he made 
												himself more noted abroad than 
												any of these usurpers; for even 
												in the latter part of his time, 
												in the reign of Ahaz, (which 
												began in his seventeenth year,) 
												he was a great terror to the 
												kingdom of Judah, as we find, 
												Isaiah 7:1. Mr. Locke justly 
												observes, that the prophecies of 
												Hosea, Joel, and Amos, come in 
												here, who all prophesied about 
												this time.
 
 Verse 29
 2 Kings 15:29. In the days of 
												Pekah came Tiglath-pileser, king 
												of Assyria, &c. — He is supposed 
												by some to have been the son and 
												successor of Sardanapalus, who 
												restored the kingdom of Assyria, 
												and possessed it after it bad 
												been dismembered by Belesis and 
												Arbaces: but our learned 
												Prideaux, who begins his 
												valuable connection of the Old 
												and New Testaments at this 
												period, makes him to be the same 
												with Arbaces, who, together with 
												Belesis, headed the conspiracy 
												against Sardanapalus, and fixed 
												his royal seat at Nineveh, the 
												ancient residence of the 
												Assyrian kings, as Belesis fixed 
												his at Babylon, and there 
												governed his newly-erected 
												kingdom for nineteen years. And 
												took Ijon, &c., and Gilead, and 
												Galilee, and all Naphtali, and 
												carried them captive to Assyria 
												— Thus Pekah lost a great part 
												of his kingdom. And by this 
												judgment God punished him for 
												his attempt upon Judah and 
												Jerusalem. For it was then 
												foretold by Isaiah, that within 
												two or three years after he had 
												made that attempt, before a 
												child then born should be able 
												to cry, My father, and my 
												mother, the riches of Samaria 
												should be taken away before the 
												king of Assyria; and here we 
												have the accomplishment of that 
												prediction. It may be proper to 
												observe here, that the kingdom 
												of the ten tribes was not 
												destroyed at one time. The first 
												invasion of their country, and 
												prelude to their destruction, 
												was made by Pul, who took away 
												an immense booty, and drained 
												them of their wealth; probably 
												also carrying captive some of 
												the people that dwelt on the 
												east of Jordan. The second was 
												by this Tiglath-pileser, who 
												carried away the inhabitants of 
												the northern parts, with the 
												Reubenites, Gadites, and 
												half-tribe of Manasseh, 1 
												Chronicles 5:26. The third and 
												last was by Shalmaneser, who 
												took Samaria, and carried into 
												captivity the rest of the 
												Israelites, 2 Kings 17:1-23.
 
 Verse 30
 2 Kings 15:30. Hosea made a 
												conspiracy against Pekah, and 
												smote him — It is probable that 
												the people were provoked at him 
												for leaving them exposed to a 
												foreign enemy, while he invaded 
												Judah; and that Hosea took 
												advantage of their discontent 
												and disgust to seize and slay 
												him. Thus Pekah’s treason and 
												violence returned upon himself 
												at last. And reigned in his 
												stead in the twentieth year of 
												Jotham — The meaning is, that he 
												began his reign in the twentieth 
												year after the beginning of 
												Jotham’s reign; or, which is the 
												same thing, in the fourth year 
												of Ahaz, son of Jotham.
 
 Verse 32
 2 Kings 15:32. Began Jotham the 
												son of Uzziah to reign — Why he 
												should be called all along 
												Azariah, and here, and 2 Kings 
												15:34, Uzziah, no account can be 
												given, unless it was to show 
												that he had two names. And it 
												appears by the book of 
												Chronicles, that the name Uzziah 
												was as much used, when that book 
												was written, as the other.
 
 Verse 33-34
 2 Kings 15:33-34. Five and 
												twenty years old was he when he 
												began to reign — Namely, 
												properly and alone; for he had 
												reigned before this as his 
												father’s deputy. And he did that 
												which was right in the sight of 
												the Lord — Josephus gives him a 
												very high character; that he was 
												pious toward God, just toward 
												men, and laid himself out for 
												the public good; that whatever 
												was amiss he took care to have 
												it rectified; and, in short, 
												wanted no virtue that became a 
												good prince. And though the high 
												places were not taken away, yet, 
												to draw the people from them, 
												and keep them close to God’s 
												holy place, he showed great 
												respect to the temple, and 
												built, or rebuilt rather, the 
												higher gate, not indeed of the 
												temple itself, but of one of its 
												courts, probably that which led 
												to the king’s palace, 2 
												Chronicles 23:20. “If 
												magistrates,” says Henry, 
												“cannot do all they would for 
												the suppression of vice and 
												profaneness, let them do so much 
												the more for the support and 
												advancement of piety and virtue, 
												and bringing of them into 
												reputation. If they cannot pull 
												down the high places of sin, yet 
												let them build and beautify the 
												high gate of God’s house.”
 
 Verse 37
 2 Kings 15:37. In those days — 
												That is, toward the end of 
												Jotham’s reign; the Lord began 
												to send against Judah, Rezin and 
												Pekah — As he bid Shimei curse 
												David, when he gave him an 
												opportunity of doing it, without 
												fear of punishment. Wicked men 
												are the sword, the rod in God’s 
												hand, which he makes use of as 
												he pleases, to serve his own 
												righteous counsels, though they 
												be unrighteous in their 
												intentions. This storm was 
												gathered in the reign of pious 
												Jotham, but he came to his grave 
												in peace, and it fell upon his 
												degenerate son Ahaz, whose 
												heart, upon notice of it, was 
												moved, as were the hearts of the 
												people, as the trees of the wood 
												are moved by the wind, Isaiah 
												7:2.
 
 Verse 38
 2 Kings 15:38. Jotham slept with 
												his fathers, and was buried in 
												the city of David — He died in 
												the midst of his days, being 
												only forty-one years of age. He 
												was too great a blessing to be 
												continued long to such an 
												unworthy people. His death was a 
												judgment, especially considering 
												the character of his son and his 
												successor.
 |