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												Verse 12 Samuel 5:1. Then came all the 
												tribes to David — That is, 
												elders, deputed as ambassadors 
												from every tribe, sent by a 
												common agreement among them; 
												saying, Behold, we are bone of 
												thy bone, &c. — Abner and 
												Ish-bosheth being dead, whose 
												authority had swayed the 
												Israelites against their duty, 
												they now acknowledged David’s 
												divine right to the crown; they 
												remembered that he had every 
												qualification requisite for a 
												rightful king of Israel, 
												according to God’s own 
												limitations, Deuteronomy chap. 
												17.; that he was one of their 
												brethren, and that he was chosen 
												of God. They called to mind his 
												valour, and various merits 
												toward Israel, the many 
												deliverances which he had 
												wrought out for them, and God’s 
												express declaration in his 
												favour, that he would make him 
												the shepherd and captain of his 
												favourite people. And when they 
												had thus considered his 
												undoubted title and merits, and 
												their own duty, they immediately 
												came together to crown him.
 
 Verse 2
 2 Samuel 5:2. The Lord said, 
												Thou shalt feed my people Israel 
												— The learned Bishop Patrick 
												very justly observes here, that 
												this is the first time we meet 
												with any ruler, or governor of a 
												people, characterized under the 
												idea of a shepherd; and it 
												cannot but be thought remarkable 
												that the first man so 
												characterized was at first in 
												fact a shepherd; and when we 
												find him, after his advancement 
												to the throne, still 
												characterized by God himself 
												under the same idea, what can be 
												a clearer inference, than that 
												God’s raising him to be a king 
												was but exalting him to a nobler 
												office of the same nature with 
												his first? How fine a document 
												is this to princes, that they 
												are not, in the intention of 
												Providence, the tyrants, but the 
												guardians of their people! that 
												their business is the 
												preservation and well-being of 
												the flock, from the duty they 
												owe to the great Lord and owner 
												thereof! And how fully is this 
												document confirmed to us, when 
												we find bad princes set forth, 
												in the prophetic style, under 
												the characters of roaring lions, 
												hungry bears, and devouring 
												wolves. It was a truly noble and 
												princely maxim of Cyrus, that 
												“every man that aspired to the 
												government of others should take 
												care to be a better man than 
												those he ruled.” — Delaney.
 
 Verse 3
 2 Samuel 5:3. King David made a 
												league with them — It is not 
												said what the contents of this 
												league or covenant were. The 
												Jews think it was an act of 
												oblivion and indemnity for all 
												injuries done on either side, 
												whether of Judah against the 
												other tribes, or of all the 
												other tribes against Judah. But 
												in that case the league would 
												rather have been between the 
												tribes than with the king. It is 
												therefore probable that it 
												included a great deal more, and 
												that David obliged himself to 
												rule them according to God’s 
												laws, and that the people 
												promised obedience to him 
												agreeably to the same; and that 
												both the king and the people 
												ratified their engagements by 
												solemn sacrifices, and appeals 
												to God for the sincere 
												performance of them. All this, 
												being done as in the presence of 
												Him who fills heaven and earth, 
												and to whose all-seeing eye the 
												hearts and ways of mankind are 
												without a covering, is properly 
												said to have been before the 
												Lord, although it was not before 
												the ark, that symbol of the 
												divine presence, for that 
												certainly was not now at Hebron. 
												They anointed David king over 
												Israel — That is, they desired 
												the high- priest to anoint him, 
												whose office it was; and thereby 
												expressed their consent that he 
												should reign over them. David 
												was anointed in all three times; 
												first by Samuel in his father’s 
												house, 1 Samuel 16:13; then when 
												the tribe of Judah owned him for 
												their king, 2 Samuel 2:4; and 
												now, when all Israel did the 
												same.
 
 Verse 4-5
 2 Samuel 5:4-5. David was thirty 
												years old when he began to reign 
												— At this age the Levites were 
												at first appointed to begin 
												their ministrations, Numbers 
												4:3. About this age the Son of 
												David entered upon his public 
												ministry, Luke 3:23. And it is 
												the age when men come to their 
												full maturity of strength and 
												judgment. In Jerusalem he 
												reigned thirty and three years — 
												By this it appears it was 
												immediately after his third 
												unction that he made the attempt 
												upon Jerusalem, mentioned in the 
												next verse, otherwise he could 
												not have reigned there so long.
 
 Verse 6
 2 Samuel 5:6. The king and his 
												men went to Jerusalem — His 
												first warlike enterprise, after 
												he was made king of all Israel, 
												was against that part of 
												Jerusalem which was still in the 
												hands of the Jebusites, namely, 
												the strong fort of Zion, which 
												they held, although the 
												Israelites dwelt in the other 
												parts of the city. Which spake 
												unto David — When he came with 
												his army to attack the fortress; 
												saying, Except thou take away 
												the blind and the lame, thou 
												shalt not come hither — In this 
												translation the order in which 
												the words stand in the Hebrew is 
												not observed, nor are they 
												exactly rendered. They are 
												literally, The king and his men 
												went to Jerusalem unto the 
												Jebusite, inhabiting the land, 
												and he (the Jebusite) spake to 
												David, saying, Thou shalt not 
												come hither except thou remove 
												the blind and the lame; or, 
												rather, as כי אם הסירךְ, chi im 
												esihreka, may be properly 
												rendered, For the blind and lame 
												shall keep thee off, which is 
												the sense given to the words in 
												the English Bible of Coverdale, 
												printed in 1535, where they are 
												translated, Thou shalt not come 
												hither, but the blind and the 
												lame shall drive thee away. The 
												Seventy render the passage, ουκ 
												εισελευση ωδε, οτι αντεστησαν οι 
												τυφλοι, &c. Thou shalt not come 
												hither, for the blind and the 
												lame resist, or, have resisted, 
												thee, saying, That David shall 
												not come hither. They confided 
												in the strength of their 
												fortifications, which they 
												thought so impregnable that the 
												blind and the lame were 
												sufficient to defend them 
												against the most powerful 
												assailant. And probably they 
												appointed a number of blind and 
												lame people, invalids, or maimed 
												soldiers, to make their 
												appearance on the wall, in 
												contempt of David and his men. 
												There is another interpretation 
												of these words which Dr. Delaney 
												and many others prefer, namely, 
												that they imagined their 
												fortress to be impregnable and 
												secure under the protection of 
												their gods, whom the Israelites 
												were wont to despise, and to 
												call them gods who had eyes, but 
												saw not; feet, but walked not. 
												As if they had said, Our gods, 
												whom you call blind and lame, 
												shall defend us, and you must 
												overcome them before you 
												overcome us. “These blind and 
												lame,” says a learned writer, 
												“were the idols of the Jebusites, 
												which, to irritate David, they 
												set upon their walls, as their 
												patrons and defenders. And they 
												as good as said, Thou dost not 
												fight with us, but with our 
												gods, who will easily repel 
												thee.”
 
 Verse 8
 2 Samuel 5:8. David said on that 
												day — When the assault was made; 
												Whosoever getteth up into the 
												gutter — That is, whosoever 
												scaleth the fort, or getteth up 
												to the top of it, where the 
												gutter was. Or, as some 
												understand it, cuts off their 
												pipes of water, or their 
												cisterns into which the water 
												fell. Dr. Kennicott observes 
												that “the Hebrew, צנור, zenur, 
												gutter, occurs but once more in 
												the Bible, and does not seem 
												commonly understood in this 
												place. The English version calls 
												it, the gutter; the Vulgate, 
												fistulas, pipes; Vatablus, 
												canales; Junius and Tremellius, 
												emissarium, a common sewer; 
												Poole, tubus aquć, a pipe for 
												water; and Bochart, alveus, a 
												bed or channel of a river. Most 
												interpreters agree in making the 
												word signify something hollow, 
												and in applying it to water.” It 
												may mean, he thinks, “a 
												subterraneous passage, or great 
												hollow, through which men could 
												pass and repass for water. That 
												this zenur, in the text, was 
												such an under-ground passage, 
												might be strongly presumed from 
												the text itself; but it is 
												proved to have been so by 
												Josephus. For, speaking of this 
												very transaction, he says, ‘The 
												citadel being as yet in the 
												possession of the enemy, the 
												king promised that he would make 
												any one general of all his 
												forces who should ascend into 
												the citadel, δια υποκειμενων 
												φαραγγων, through the 
												subterraneous cavities.’ Here 
												then we have subterraneous 
												cavities most remarkably 
												answering to zenur, and putting 
												this interpretation upon a very 
												solid footing.” Kenn. Dissert., 
												vol. 1. p. 42. And the lame and 
												the blind, that are hated of 
												David’s soul — This, some think, 
												plainly shows, that by the lame 
												and the blind must be meant the 
												idols of the Jebusites; because 
												David certainly abhorred 
												idolatry, but could never detest 
												men for mere unblameable 
												infirmities. But two things may 
												be said in answer to this: 1st, 
												That the lame and the blind 
												Jebusites had probably 
												themselves insulted David, and 
												blasphemed God, and David might 
												hate them in the same sense in 
												which he often speaks of hating 
												the wicked in his Psalms; that 
												is, he might hate their ways, 
												their dispositions, and actions. 
												But, 2d, The original words may, 
												and certainly should be 
												rendered, as they are by the 
												Seventy, who hate David’s soul. 
												He shall be chief and captain — 
												These words are not in the 
												Hebrew here, but are fifty 
												supplied from 1 Chronicles 11:6, 
												where they are expressed. 
												Wherefore they said — That is, 
												it became a proverb, or common 
												saying, used by David and 
												others: The blind and the lame 
												shall not come into the house — 
												Or, into this house; that is, 
												into the fort of Zion. The blind 
												and lame Jebusites were set to 
												keep that fort, and to keep 
												others from coming into it; but 
												now they themselves are shut out 
												of it, and none of them was to 
												be admitted to come into it 
												again; which David might resolve 
												to ordain, to keep up the memory 
												of this great exploit, and of 
												the insolent carriage of the 
												Jebusites, and their unhappy 
												success. Or, the blind and the 
												lame shall not come into my 
												house; namely, into the king’s 
												palace; which, though a general 
												rule and decree of David, yet 
												might be dispensed with in some 
												special cases, as in that of 
												Mephibosheth. But it is not 
												necessary to understand this as 
												a proverb; for the words may be 
												rendered, as they are in the 
												margin of our Bibles, Because 
												they had said, Even the blind 
												and the lame, he (that is, 
												David) shall not come into the 
												house; or, because they (the 
												Jebusites) had said, The blind 
												and the lame shall hinder him. 
												They who understand, by the 
												blind and the lame, the idols of 
												the Jebusites, consider this 
												clause as meaning, that from 
												this time it became a proverb, 
												Let not the blind and lame come 
												into the house; that is, do not 
												trust in idols, who have eyes 
												and see not, &c.; and who are 
												not able to do more for you than 
												the lame and the blind.
 
 Verse 9-10
 2 Samuel 5:9-10. From Millo — 
												Which seems to have been the 
												town-hall, or state-house, near 
												the wall of the city of Zion; 
												or, as some think, a tower or 
												armory. The Lord God of hosts 
												was with him — This was the 
												cause of his great prosperity, 
												that God, who commands all the 
												armies of heaven and earth, 
												directed and blessed him in all 
												his enterprises.
 
 Verse 11
 2 Samuel 5:11. Hiram sent 
												messengers to David, &c. — 
												Hearing that he intended to 
												settle in the fort he had taken, 
												Hiram sent him both materials 
												and artificers to build him a 
												palace. For the Jews, being 
												given to feeding cattle and 
												husbandry, were not very skilful 
												in mechanic arts. The accounts 
												left us of this king of Tyre are 
												short; but it appears from them 
												that he was a magnificent and a 
												generous prince, and a believer 
												in the true God. See the form of 
												his congratulation to Solomon 
												upon his accession to the 
												throne, 1 Kings 5:7. And this 
												character well fitted him to 
												enter into and to cultivate an 
												alliance with David, as he did 
												with uncommon friendship and 
												affection as long as David 
												lived, and continued it to his 
												son for his sake. — Delaney.
 
 Verse 12
 2 Samuel 5:12. For his people 
												Israel’s sake — Well would it be 
												for mankind if all kings had the 
												same view of the design of their 
												exaltation to the sovereignty; 
												if they considered themselves as 
												being raised to their high 
												station for the good of their 
												people; that this is the great 
												end of their appointment; the 
												pursuit of this end their great 
												duty; and the attainment of it 
												their true glory. Certainly 
												great and good kings of all ages 
												have been of this way of 
												thinking: they have believed, 
												not that the people were created 
												and ordained by God for the 
												king, but the king for the 
												people.
 
 Verse 13
 2 Samuel 5:13. David took him 
												more concubines and wives — This 
												may well be reckoned among 
												David’s miscarriages, the 
												multiplication of wives being 
												expressly forbidden to the kings 
												of Israel, Deuteronomy 17:17. It 
												may however be observed, perhaps 
												in extenuation of this fault of 
												David, that it has always been 
												looked upon as a piece of 
												political wisdom in princes to 
												endeavour to have many children; 
												that by matching them into 
												potent families, they might 
												strengthen their interest, and 
												have the more supporters of 
												their authority. And this seems 
												to have been the reason why 
												David took so many wives. Some 
												of his first wives had no 
												children, and he was induced to 
												take others that he might obtain 
												an issue, enlarge his family, 
												and thereby strengthen his 
												interest. But the many wives and 
												concubines he took did not 
												preserve him from coveting his 
												neighbour’s wife. On the 
												contrary, they inclined him to 
												it; for men who have once broken 
												the fence, will wander 
												carelessly.
 
 Verse 17
 2 Samuel 5:17. All the 
												Philistines came up to seek 
												David — They raised all the 
												forces they were able, to come 
												up to David, and fight him 
												before he was settled in his new 
												kingdom. While the civil war 
												subsisted between the partisans 
												of David and Ish-bosheth, the 
												Philistines contented themselves 
												with being calm spectators of 
												their mutual ravages and 
												conflicts, which naturally 
												tended to their mutual 
												destruction; but when all these 
												were ended in their unanimous 
												election of David to the throne, 
												and that election was succeeded 
												by those beginnings and omens of 
												a prosperous reign which have 
												been mentioned, they began to be 
												alarmed, and thought this the 
												fit season to crush the growing 
												power of this prince before it 
												rose to a greater height. And 
												David heard it, and went down to 
												the hold — To some fortified 
												place, to which his people might 
												conveniently resort from all 
												parts, and where he might 
												intrench his army.
 
 Verse 19
 2 Samuel 5:19. David inquired of 
												the Lord — Though David went 
												into a strong hold, he did not 
												trust to that, nor intended 
												merely to stand upon his 
												defence. But yet he would not 
												give them battle till he had 
												asked counsel of God, and was 
												encouraged by him to do it.
 
 Verse 20
 2 Samuel 5:20. David came to 
												Baal-perazim — For thither the 
												Philistines marched from 
												Rephaim, where they first 
												pitched; as appears from 1 
												Chronicles 14:11. Hath broken 
												forth upon mine enemies as the 
												breach of waters — Hath 
												overpowered and scattered them, 
												as waters, when they make a 
												breach in a bank, overflow and 
												carry all before them. Therefore 
												he called the name of that place 
												Baal-perazim — That is, The 
												master of the breaches. Thus 
												ascribing all to God, and giving 
												the place this name, that it 
												might put him and his posterity 
												in mind of God’s great power and 
												goodness shown in that place.
 
 Verse 21
 2 Samuel 5:21. And there they 
												left their images — Their gods, 
												which they had brought into the 
												field with them to be carried 
												before their host. Such was the 
												consternation into which they 
												were thrown. Thus we read, 2 
												Chronicles 25:14, that the 
												Edomites had their gods along 
												with them when they fought with 
												Amaziah. And perhaps they 
												learned this from the 
												Israelites, who carried the ark 
												(the symbol of God’s presence) 
												in their army when they went to 
												fight with the Philistines; who 
												saw it, and took it, as the 
												Israelites now did their images, 
												1 Samuel 4:4-5, &c. But behold 
												here the difference between the 
												ark and these images! When the 
												ark fell into the hands of the 
												Philistines it consumed them; 
												but when these images fell into 
												the hands of the Israelites, 
												they could neither hurt them, 
												nor save themselves from being 
												consumed.
 
 Verse 22-23
 2 Samuel 5:22-23. And spread 
												themselves — The expression 
												intimates, that they were very 
												numerous, and made a very 
												formidable appearance. So we 
												read, Revelation 20:9, of the 
												enemies of the church going up 
												on the breadth of the earth. But 
												the wider they spread 
												themselves, the fairer mark they 
												are for God’s arrows. And when 
												David inquired of the Lord — 
												Though he had been successful 
												before, yet he would attempt 
												nothing further without God’s 
												direction; to whom he knew he 
												owed his former victory. He 
												said, Thou shalt not go up — 
												That is, not directly, to fight 
												in a pitched battle as before. 
												So the following words explain 
												it. But fetch a compass behind 
												them — Where they least expect 
												thee. God’s purposes and 
												promises do not exclude or 
												render unnecessary men’s 
												endeavours.
 
 Verse 24
 2 Samuel 5:24. When thou hearest 
												the sound of a going in the 
												tops, &c. — The Hebrew, בראשׁי, 
												beroshee, here translated tops, 
												may properly be rendered, in the 
												beginnings, or, among the first 
												of the mulberry-trees; that is, 
												in the very entrance of the 
												place where these trees were, or 
												among those which were first in 
												order, and by which the grove 
												was entered. So that God gives 
												David for a sign, the sound of 
												many men’s feet walking, not on 
												the tops of the trees, (for men 
												do not walk there,) but on the 
												ground amidst the trees, though 
												nobody should be seen among them 
												by any in David’s army. Probably 
												the sound was to be heard by the 
												Philistines, to whom it might 
												appear as if a vast number of 
												men were marching to fall upon 
												them. The Hebrew, however, may 
												be rendered, When thou hearest 
												the sound of a moving in the 
												tops, &c. And it may imply 
												nothing more than a rushing and 
												extraordinary sound among the 
												trees, which was to be a signal 
												for David’s attack. Then bestir 
												thyself — Fall upon the 
												Philistines. For then the Lord 
												shall go before thee — By making 
												such a noise either of a mighty 
												host coming to assault them, or 
												of something very extraordinary, 
												that they shall be amazed, and 
												confounded, and put to flight.
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