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												Verse 22 Kings 16:2. Ahaz did not that 
												which was right in the sight of 
												the Lord — Contrary to what 
												might have been expected, 
												considering the good education 
												which, doubtless, Jotham, his 
												pious father, gave him, and the 
												excellent example he set him. 
												Like David his father — Or 
												progenitor. It was his honour 
												that he was of the house and 
												lineage of David, and it was 
												owing to God’s ancient covenant 
												with David, that he was now upon 
												the throne: but he had none of 
												that concern and affection for 
												the instituted worship and 
												service of God, for which David 
												was so remarkable. He had no 
												love for the temple, made no 
												conscience of his duty to God, 
												nor had any regard to his law, 
												and therefore was a reproach to 
												that honourable name and family, 
												to which he was under such great 
												obligations, and which, of 
												consequence, was really a 
												reproach to him, showing his 
												wickedness in a more aggravated 
												point of view.
 
 Verse 3
 2 Kings 16:3. He walked in the 
												way of the kings of Israel — Who 
												all worshipped the calves, and 
												were therefore idolaters. He was 
												not joined in any affinity with 
												them, as Jehoram and Ahaziah 
												were with the house of Ahab, but 
												of his own accord and voluntary 
												motion, and, without any 
												instigation, he walked in their 
												way. The kings of Israel pleaded 
												policy and reasons of state for 
												their idolatry; but Ahaz had no 
												such pretence: in him it was the 
												most unreasonable and impolitic 
												conduct that could be. They were 
												his enemies, and had manifested 
												that they were enemies to 
												themselves too by their 
												idolatry; yet he walked in their 
												way. And made his son to pass 
												through the fire — By way of 
												oblation, so as to be consumed 
												for a burnt- offering, which was 
												the practice of heathen, and of 
												some Israelites in imitation of 
												them. Thus 2 Chronicles 28:3, it 
												is said, He burned his children 
												in the fire, that is, some of 
												them, first one, as is here 
												mentioned, and afterward others, 
												as is there observed. See on 
												Leviticus 18:21, and Deuteronomy 
												18:10. According to the 
												abominations of the heathen, 
												whom the Lord cast out — It was 
												an instance of his great folly 
												that, in his religion, he would 
												be guided by and imitate those 
												whom he saw fallen into the 
												ditch before his eyes; and of 
												his great impiety, that he would 
												conform to those usages which 
												God had declared to be 
												abominable to him.
 
 Verse 4
 2 Kings 16:4. He sacrificed, 
												&c., in the high places — If his 
												father had but had zeal enough 
												to take them away, it might have 
												prevented the corrupting of his 
												sons. They that connive at sin, 
												know not what dangerous snares 
												they lay for those that come 
												after them.
 
 Verse 5-6
 2 Kings 16:5-6. But could not 
												overcome him — Because God, of 
												his own mere grace, undertook 
												the protection of Judah, as he 
												promised to do, and disappointed 
												the designs and hopes of their 
												enemies, Isaiah 7:1-9. At that 
												time Rezin recovered Elath — 
												Took it from the Jews, who had 
												not long been in possession of 
												it, having but lately recovered 
												it, with the rest of Edom: see 
												on 2 Kings 14:22. So that, 
												though the confederate kings of 
												Syria and Israel failed, through 
												the interference of Divine 
												Providence, in their attempts on 
												Jerusalem, the former made 
												himself master of this 
												considerable and very commodious 
												port on the Red sea.
 
 Verse 7
 2 Kings 16:7. So Ahaz sent 
												messengers to Tiglath-pileser — 
												Having forsaken God, he had 
												neither courage nor strength to 
												make head against his enemies, 
												and therefore made his court to 
												the king of Assyria, and 
												endeavoured to prevail on him to 
												come to his relief. But was it 
												because there was not a God in 
												Israel that he sent to the 
												Assyrian for help? The truth is, 
												he could not with any confidence 
												ask help of God, being conscious 
												he had abandoned his worship, 
												and in the grossest manner 
												violated his laws. Observe, 
												reader, they whose hearts 
												condemn them will go any whither 
												for help, in a day of distress, 
												rather than to God. Saying, I am 
												thy servant and thy son: come 
												up, and save me — I yield myself 
												to thee as thy vassal, to serve 
												and obey thee, and pay thee 
												tribute, upon condition that 
												thou wilt assist me against my 
												enemies. Had he thus humbled 
												himself to God, and implored his 
												favour, he might have been 
												delivered upon easier terms, 
												might have saved his money, and 
												needed only to have parted with 
												his sins. Out of the hand of the 
												king of Syria, &c. — For though 
												they were now gone from 
												Jerusalem, yet he justly 
												concluded they would return 
												again, and, from time to time, 
												molest and vex him.
 
 Verse 8
 2 Kings 16:8. And Ahaz took the 
												silver, &c. — The treasures of 
												the house of the Lord, and of 
												the king’s house, had been sent 
												some years before by Jehoash to 
												the king of Syria, 2 Kings 
												12:18. It seems, however, they 
												had been well replenished again 
												by the piety of his successors, 
												Amaziah, Azariah, and especially 
												Jotham. But what authority had 
												Ahaz to dispose thus of the 
												public money, and exhaust the 
												treasures of both church and 
												state, to gratify his new patron 
												and guardian? We can only 
												answer, that it is common for 
												those, who have brought 
												themselves into straits by one 
												sin, to endeavour to extricate 
												themselves by another. And those 
												that have alienated themselves 
												from God, will make no 
												difficulty in alienating from 
												him any other of his rights. In 
												this instance, the sin itself 
												was its own punishment; for, 
												though the king of Assyria 
												hearkened unto Ahaz, and, for 
												his own ends, made a descent on 
												Damascus, and took it, thereby 
												giving a powerful diversion to 
												the king of Syria, and obliging 
												him to forego his design against 
												Jerusalem; yet Ahaz made but an 
												ill bargain, seeing he not only 
												robbed the temple, and expended 
												his own treasures, but enslaved 
												both himself and his people to 
												the king of Assyria.
 
 Verse 9
 2 Kings 16:9. And carried the 
												people of it captive to Kir — 
												Not Kir of Moab, (Isaiah 15:1,) 
												but a part of Media, which was 
												then subject to the king of 
												Assyria. It is remarkable, that 
												this taking of Damascus, and 
												carrying the inhabitants of it 
												captive to this place, nay, and 
												the slaying of Rezin the king, 
												was expressly foretold by Amos 
												some time before it happened. 
												See the margin.
 
 Verse 10
 2 Kings 16:10. And King Ahaz 
												went to meet Tiglath-pileser — 
												To congratulate his victory, 
												acknowledge his favour and help, 
												and to beg the continuance of 
												it. And saw an altar that was at 
												Damascus — Of an excellent 
												structure, as he supposed, upon 
												which the Syrians used to offer 
												to their idols, 2 Chronicles 
												28:23. Ahaz sent to Urijah the 
												priest the fashion of the altar 
												— That a pattern of it might be 
												taken immediately. He could not 
												stay till he should return to 
												Jerusalem himself, but sent it 
												before him, in all haste, with 
												orders to Urijah, to get one 
												made exactly according to this 
												model, and have it ready against 
												he came home. The pattern God 
												showed to Moses in the mount, or 
												to David by the Spirit, was not 
												comparable to this pattern sent 
												from Damascus!
 
 Verse 11-12
 2 Kings 16:11-12. And Urijah 
												built an altar, &c. — He 
												complied with the king’s command 
												against his own conscience, and 
												against the express command of 
												that great God to whom the king 
												and he both were subject. The 
												priest made it against Ahaz came 
												from Damascus — He made haste 
												and delayed not to do it, to 
												please the king, and advance 
												himself. The king approached to 
												the altar, and offered thereon — 
												Namely, a sacrifice, and that 
												not unto God, but unto the 
												Syrian idols, (2 Chronicles 
												28:23-24,) to whom that altar 
												was appropriated. A wonderful 
												blindness, to worship those 
												gods, and expect help from them, 
												who could not preserve their own 
												country from ruin! Whether Ahaz 
												offered this sacrifice himself, 
												or by a priest, is not certain.
 
 Verse 13-14
 2 Kings 16:13-14. And he burned 
												his burnt-offering, &c. — For 
												the heathen, and Ahaz, in 
												imitation of them, offered the 
												same sorts of offerings to their 
												false gods which the Israelites 
												did to the true. He brought also 
												the brazen altar — Namely, the 
												altar of burnt-offerings made by 
												Solomon, and placed there by 
												God’s appointment; from before 
												the Lord — That is, from before 
												the Lord’s house, Leviticus 1:3. 
												From between the altar, &c. — 
												Urijah had placed Ahaz’s altar 
												behind that of the Lord, namely, 
												between it and the east gate of 
												the court of the priests: but 
												when Ahaz came, taking this for 
												a disparagement to his altar, he 
												impiously and audaciously 
												removed the altar of the Lord to 
												the north side of the court, and 
												set his own in the place of it. 
												A bolder stroke this, than the 
												very worst of the kings had 
												hitherto given to religion.
 
 Verse 15
 2 Kings 16:15. Ahaz commanded, 
												Upon the great altar burn the 
												morning burnt-offering, &c. — He 
												made a solemn injunction, that 
												all the public sacrifices, of 
												what sort soever they were, 
												whether made by himself or by 
												the people, should be constantly 
												offered upon his altar, which he 
												calls the great altar, because 
												it was much larger, it is 
												probable, than the altar of God. 
												The command, probably, referred 
												principally, if not only, to 
												sacrifices to be offered to the 
												true God, whose service, it 
												seems, he had not yet utterly 
												forsaken, but occasionally 
												worshipped idols with him. The 
												brazen altar shall be for me to 
												inquire by — That shall be 
												reserved for my proper use, at 
												which I may seek God, or inquire 
												his will, by sacrifices joined 
												with prayer, when I shall see 
												fit. He says only, לבקר, 
												lebakker, to seek, or to 
												inquire; not to seek the Lord, 
												or to inquire of the Lord, as 
												the phrase is more largely 
												expressed elsewhere: for, says 
												Poole, “he would not vouchsafe 
												to mention the name of the Lord, 
												whom he had so grossly forsaken 
												and despised.” Thus, having 
												thrust out the altar of God from 
												the use for which it was 
												instituted, which was to 
												sanctify the gifts offered upon 
												it, he pretends to advance it 
												above its institution, a 
												practice common with 
												superstitious people. But to 
												overdo is to under do. The altar 
												was never designed for an 
												oracle, but Ahaz will have it 
												for that use. Some, indeed, put 
												a different sense on Ahaz’s 
												words, and understand him to 
												mean, As for the brazen altar, I 
												will consider what to do with 
												it, and will give orders 
												accordingly.”
 
 Verse 16
 2 Kings 16:16. Thus did Urijah 
												the priest, &c. — Having once 
												begun to defile his conscience, 
												he could not now make an 
												honourable retreat, and 
												therefore proceeds to execute 
												all the king’s commands.
 
 Verse 17
 2 Kings 16:17. Ahaz cut off the 
												borders of the bases, and took 
												down the sea from off the brazen 
												oxen, &c. — Probably that he 
												might dispose of them, or of the 
												brass of them, in some other 
												way; perhaps that he might turn 
												them into money, either by 
												casting them into such pieces as 
												were current, or by selling them 
												as they were.
 
 Verse 18
 2 Kings 16:18. The covert for 
												the sabbath, turned he from the 
												house of the Lord — There is a 
												great variety of opinions 
												concerning this מוסךְ השׂבת, 
												musach hahsabbath, or covert of, 
												or for the sabbath, here spoken 
												of, and why it is so called. Mr. 
												Locke says, It was something 
												made for the purpose of covering 
												the people from the injuries of 
												the weather on the sabbath days, 
												when more were wont to assemble 
												at the temple than the porch 
												could contain: and Houbigant 
												supposes it was something of the 
												same kind. It is, indeed, 
												generally understood to have 
												been some building, either where 
												the priests, after their weekly 
												course was ended, abode until 
												the next course came, which they 
												did upon the sabbath day; or in 
												which the guard of the temple 
												kept their station; or some 
												canopy, or other covered place, 
												under which the king used to sit 
												to hear God’s word, and see the 
												sacrifices, which might be 
												called the covert of the 
												sabbath, because the chief times 
												in which the king used it for 
												those ends was the weekly 
												sabbath, and other solemn days 
												of feasting or fasting, (which 
												all come under the name of 
												sabbaths, in the Old Testament,) 
												upon which the king used more 
												solemnly to present himself 
												before the Lord than at other 
												times. “And the reason,” says 
												Dr. Dodd, “why the king ordered 
												this to be taken away was, 
												because he intended to trouble 
												himself no more with coming to 
												the temple, and by this action 
												to express his hatred and 
												contempt of the sabbath, as his 
												removing the bases, the laver, 
												and the brazen sea, was probably 
												with a design to deface the 
												service of God in the temple, 
												and thence to bring it into 
												public disesteem.” The king’s 
												entry without — The passage by 
												which he used to go from his 
												palace to the temple, and which 
												had been made for the 
												convenience of the royal family; 
												turned he — Another way, and for 
												other uses, from the house of 
												the Lord — To show that he did 
												not intend to frequent the house 
												of the Lord any longer. For the 
												king of Assyria — To oblige him, 
												who probably had returned his 
												visit, and found fault with this 
												entry, as inconvenient, and a 
												disparagement to his palace. 
												Thus, to ingratiate himself with 
												this heathen king, he expresses 
												his public contempt and 
												rejection of that religion which 
												had been the only partition wall 
												between the kings of Judah and 
												other kings.
 
 Verse 20
 2 Kings 16:20. And Ahaz slept 
												with his fathers — Resigning his 
												life in the midst of his days, 
												at thirty-six years of age, and 
												leaving his kingdom to a better 
												man, Hezekiah his son, who 
												proved as much a friend to the 
												temple as Ahaz had been an enemy 
												to it.
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