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												Verse 12 Samuel 11:1. After the year 
												was expired — Hebrew, at the 
												return of the year: when that 
												year ended, and the next began, 
												which was in the spring-time. 
												When kings go forth to battle — 
												Which is, when the ground is fit 
												for the march of soldiers, and 
												brings forth provision for man 
												and beast. David sent Joab and 
												all Israel — All his soldiers. 
												And they destroyed the children 
												of Ammon — Laid waste their 
												country, and killed all the 
												people they could meet with. But 
												David tarried still at Jerusalem 
												— He committed the care of this 
												war to Joab, and did not himself 
												go out to fight, as he had done 
												against Hadarezer: had he been 
												now on his post, at the head of 
												his forces, he had been out of 
												the way of temptation.
 
 Verse 2
 2 Samuel 11:2. David arose from 
												off his bed — Where he had lain 
												down to sleep in the heat of the 
												day, as the manner was in those 
												countries; and where he had 
												probably slept for some time. 
												The bed of sloth often proves 
												the bed of lust. And walked upon 
												the roof of his house — To take 
												the fresh air, for the roofs of 
												the houses in that country were 
												flat for this purpose. He saw a 
												woman washing herself — In a 
												bath, which was in her garden; 
												probably from some ceremonial 
												pollution.
 
 Verse 3
 2 Samuel 11:3. David sent and 
												inquired after the woman — Thus, 
												instead of suppressing that 
												desire which the sight of his 
												eyes had kindled, he seeks 
												rather to feed it; and first 
												inquires who she was; that if 
												she were unmarried he might make 
												her either his wife or his 
												concubine. And one said, Is not 
												this Bath-sheba? — This seems to 
												have been an answer given by 
												some one to David’s inquiry. 
												Uriah is called a Hittite, 
												because he was such by nation, 
												but a proselyte to the Jewish 
												religion; and for his valour 
												made one of the king’s guards 
												among the Cherethites and the 
												Pelethites; which was the 
												reason, perhaps, that he had a 
												house so near the king’s.
 
 
 Verse 4
 2 Samuel 11:4. David sent 
												messengers and took her — — From 
												her own house into his palace, 
												not by force, but by persuasion. 
												And he lay with her — See how 
												all the way to sin is down hill! 
												When men begin they cannot soon 
												stop themselves. And she 
												returned unto her house — With a 
												guilty conscience, and oppressed 
												with terror, no doubt; for she 
												had committed a sin for which 
												the law condemned her to be 
												stoned. She returned, it is 
												probable, early in the morning, 
												to prevent discovery. But how 
												little did it avail to conceal 
												from man a crime, of the 
												commission of which the holy and 
												sin-avenging God, who is no 
												respecter of persons, had been a 
												witness. Alas for poor 
												Bath-sheba! Her confusion and 
												distress were doubtless 
												unutterable. But, in the mean 
												time who can describe the 
												wretched state of David’s mind, 
												when the tumult of passion was 
												subsided, Bath-sheba departed, 
												and reason and reflection 
												returned! “The calm reflections 
												of a spirit truly religious,” 
												says Dr. Delaney, “will best 
												imagine the horrors of so 
												complicated a guilt on the 
												recoil of conscience; when all 
												those passions whose 
												blandishments, but a few moments 
												before, deluded, seduced, and 
												overset his reason, now resumed 
												their full deformity, or rushed 
												into their contrary extremes; 
												desire, into distraction; the 
												sweets of pleasure, into 
												bitterness of soul; love, into 
												self-detestation; and hope, 
												almost into the horrors of 
												despair. The wife of one of his 
												own worthies, apparently an 
												innocent and a valuable woman, 
												abused, and tainted, and brought 
												to the very brink of ruin and 
												infamy! A brave man basely 
												dishonoured! and a faithful 
												subject irreparably injured! The 
												laws of God trampled under foot, 
												of that God who had so eminently 
												distinguished, exalted, and 
												honoured him! Well might he cry 
												out, in the anguish of this 
												distracted condition, 
												Fearfulness and trembling are 
												come upon me, and horror hath 
												overwhelmed me. In one word, his 
												condition was now so dreadful 
												that it was not easy to bring 
												himself to the presumption of 
												even petitioning for mercy! And 
												this I take to be the true 
												reason why we find no psalm of 
												David penned upon this 
												occasion.” Here we may observe, 
												that any other historian but the 
												sacred would have endeavoured to 
												draw a veil over the conduct of 
												the admired hero of his story, 
												that his reader might not see 
												him falling into such crimes as 
												would shock us even in the most 
												abandoned of men. But the 
												Scriptures are divine. They were 
												written by persons whom divine 
												inspiration had raised above the 
												low thoughts of the mere human 
												mind, and they therefore proceed 
												in another manner. They give us 
												a faithful account of things, 
												without any false colouring, 
												without partiality to any one, 
												without concealing the blemishes 
												or vices of the most favoured 
												characters. For they were 
												intended as well to instruct us 
												by the sins of these persons as 
												by their virtues, and therefore 
												set forth their example in all 
												its parts, that we may as well 
												learn to shun the former as to 
												imitate the latter. We have in 
												this crime of David with Bath- 
												sheba as strong a picture 
												represented to us, as ever was 
												set before the eyes of men, of 
												the true nature and progress of 
												vice, how it insinuates itself 
												into the corrupt minds of men, 
												how easily it overcomes them, if 
												not resisted, and how it 
												proceeds from bad to worse, 
												till, it may be, it plunges them 
												into the greatest depth of 
												iniquity and misery, even, as we 
												see here, into adultery and 
												murder!
 
 Verse 5-6
 2 Samuel 11:5-6. The woman 
												conceived, and sent and told 
												David — She was afraid of 
												infamy, and perhaps of the 
												severity of her husband, who 
												might cause her to be stoned. 
												And therefore she prays David to 
												consult her honour and safety. 
												Send me Uriah the Hittite — It 
												is likely David ordered an 
												account of the state of the war 
												to be sent by him, as a colour 
												for having sent for him home.
 
 Verse 8-9
 2 Samuel 11:8-9. David said, Go 
												down to thy house — Not doubting 
												but he would there converse with 
												his wife, and so hide their sin 
												and shame. There followed him a 
												mess of meat from the king — In 
												token of David’s peculiar favour 
												and kindness to him; and that, 
												eating freely of good cheer, he 
												might be the more desirous of 
												enjoying the company of his 
												wife. But Uriah slept at the 
												door of the king’s house — Like 
												a true soldier, he lay all night 
												in the guard-chamber, and did 
												not go home to his wife. This he 
												did by the secret influence of 
												God upon his mind, and the order 
												of his wise providence, that 
												David’s sin might be brought to 
												light notwithstanding all his 
												contrivances to conceal it.
 
 Verse 10
 2 Samuel 11:10. David said, 
												Camest thou not from thy 
												journey? — Wearied with hard 
												service and travel; nor did I 
												expect or desire that thou 
												shouldest now attend upon my 
												person: or keep watch among my 
												guards. He still artfully 
												pretends kindness to him, and 
												great care of him.
 
 Verse 11
 2 Samuel 11:11. The ark, and 
												Israel, and Judah, abide in 
												tents — It appears by this that 
												the custom which we read of, 1 
												Samuel 4:4, of carrying the ark 
												with them into the field, was 
												still continued. It was done, no 
												doubt, both for the 
												encouragement of the army, who 
												were taught to consider it as a 
												token of the divine presence 
												with them, and favour to them, 
												and also for their direction, 
												that they might consult God in 
												any difficult case. My lord Joab 
												and the servants of my lord are 
												in the open field — In tents 
												which are in the fields. His 
												meaning is, now, when God’s 
												people are in a doubtful and 
												dangerous condition, it becomes 
												me to sympathize with them, and 
												to abstain even from lawful 
												delights. What a generosity of 
												temper does Uriah show in these 
												words! David’s heart, one might 
												have expected, would have been 
												deeply touched to think how he 
												had abused so brave a man, and 
												how vilely he had indulged 
												himself in sinful pleasures, 
												while this man, and the rest of 
												the brave army, were gloriously 
												enduring all manner of 
												hardships, and refusing the most 
												innocent gratifications, for his 
												service and the service of their 
												country. But, alas! he was at 
												present in so corrupt a state of 
												mind, that he was rather grieved 
												than rejoiced to find Uriah so 
												true a soldier.
 
 Verse 12-13
 2 Samuel 11:12-13. Tarry here 
												to-day — He pretended still more 
												kindness to him in giving him 
												time to rest himself after his 
												journey; and perhaps pretended 
												also that he could not sooner 
												finish the despatches which he 
												intended to send by him to Joab. 
												When David had called him in — 
												Invited him to supper the night 
												before he went away. And he made 
												him drunk — He made him merry, 
												as the Hebrew word often 
												signifies. He caused him to 
												drink more than was proper. What 
												mean and shameful contrivances 
												did David employ against this 
												brave man! How base is sin, how 
												low it will make men stoop, and 
												what vile and unworthy things it 
												will induce them to do! This was 
												a great addition, to David’s 
												sin, that by one evil he 
												endeavoured to effect another; 
												by intoxicating Uriah he strove 
												to make him forget his oath 
												before mentioned.
 
 Verse 15
 2 Samuel 11:15. Retire ye from 
												him, that he may be smitten and 
												die — Thus swift is the progress 
												of vice! thus does it lead from 
												bad to worse! thus does it 
												corrupt man’s whole nature, and 
												bring him to such degeneracy as 
												he could not before have thought 
												himself capable of! So far is 
												David from repenting, that he 
												seeks to cover one scandalous 
												and wicked action by another 
												still more scandalous and 
												wicked; to conceal the great 
												crime of adultery by the still 
												greater crime of murder! How are 
												the beginnings of sin to be 
												dreaded! for who knows where 
												they will end? David hath 
												sinned, therefore Uriah must 
												die. That innocent, valiant, 
												gallant man, who was ready to 
												die for his prince’s honour, 
												must die by his prince’s hand! 
												See how fleshly lusts war 
												against the soul, and what 
												devastation they make in that 
												war! How they blind the eyes, 
												sear the conscience, harden the 
												heart, and destroy all sense of 
												honour and justice! See the 
												shameful and deplorable change 
												which they have made in David. 
												Is this the man whose heart 
												smote him because he had cut off 
												Saul’s skirt? who more than once 
												generously saved the life of his 
												most bitter enemy when he had it 
												in his power; but who is now 
												using the basest contrivances to 
												take away the life of a most 
												worthy and faithful servant? Is 
												this he that executed judgment 
												and justice to all his people; 
												and that exercised himself in 
												God’s laws day and night, 
												conscious what extraordinary 
												favours he had received from 
												him, and the infinite 
												obligations he was under to him; 
												the just, the generous, the 
												pious David? Yes, this is the 
												very man. Alas! how can he do 
												such unjust and base actions? 
												How can he be so ungrateful to 
												his heavenly benefactor, as thus 
												to transgress and trample under 
												foot his law in the most capital 
												of all its articles? How can he 
												give such scandal and cause of 
												stumbling to his subjects, whose 
												piety and virtue he was 
												appointed to promote? And how 
												can he thus expose to contempt 
												and reproach the true religion 
												among the idolatrous nations all 
												around? Alas! sin, through its 
												deceitfulness, has gained 
												entrance, and re-established its 
												empire in his soul! Sin has 
												produced this horrid 
												transformation in the mind and 
												heart of one of the bravest and 
												worthiest of men. Reader, take 
												warning, and withstand the first 
												assaults of evil, lest, if they 
												once prevail, they deprive thee 
												of all religious and moral sense 
												and feeling, and plunge thee 
												into the greatest depth of guilt 
												and baseness, to the present 
												dishonour of God and religion, 
												and thy own everlasting ruin and 
												misery!
 
 Verse 16-17
 2 Samuel 11:16-17. Where he knew 
												that valiant men were — He 
												ordered him, with others, to 
												attack a part of the city which 
												he knew would be valiantly 
												defended; or out of which he 
												knew the best men they had in 
												the city would issue forth 
												against them. Joab also was 
												herein very guilty in complying 
												with David’s wicked command; 
												unless he supposed that Uriah 
												had committed some great crime, 
												for which David consulting his 
												honour, chose to punish him in 
												this manner, rather than openly. 
												The men of the city went out —
 
 They seem to have made a sally 
												out of the city upon the 
												Israelites, when they saw the 
												latter were preparing for an 
												assault. There fell some of the 
												servants of David — This was a 
												further aggravation of David’s 
												sin, that he not only exposed an 
												innocent and a valiant faithful 
												servant to be killed, but other 
												persons also with him, who might 
												otherwise have lived to have 
												done good service to their 
												country. For it is not to be 
												imagined that David meant Uriah 
												to be set alone in the 
												fore-front of the battle, where 
												the service was hottest, but 
												that there was to be a party 
												with him, whom he was to lead 
												on. This was accordingly ordered 
												by Joab, and those men fell with 
												Uriah.
 
 Verse 25
 2 Samuel 11:25. Let not this 
												thing displease thee — Be not 
												disheartened by this loss. David 
												showed no sign of grief or 
												displeasure at these tidings, as 
												he heard the news, which he 
												desired, of Uriah’s death. The 
												sword devoureth one as well as 
												another — Makes no distinction 
												between good and bad. Make thy 
												battle more strong, &c. — 
												Assault the city with greater 
												force, till thou art made master 
												of it. And encourage thou him — 
												Joab and his soldiery.
 
 Verse 27
 2 Samuel 11:27. When the 
												mourning was past — Which 
												commonly continued only the 
												space of seven days, 1 Samuel 
												31:13; nor could the nature of 
												the thing admit of longer delay, 
												lest the too early birth of the 
												child should discover David’s 
												sin. Bare a son — By which it 
												appears that David continued in 
												the state of impenitence for 
												divers months together, and this 
												notwithstanding his frequent 
												attendance upon God’s ordinances 
												— which is an eminent instance 
												of the corruption of man’s 
												nature, of the deceitfulness of 
												sin, and of the tremendous 
												judgment of God in punishing one 
												sin by delivering a man up to 
												another.
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