The Expositor's Bible: The Second Book of Kings. Farrar Frederic William
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The following genealogy may help to elucidate the troublesome identity of names: —
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Jotham ben-Uzziah was not the colleague of his father, but his public representative.
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The only other king of Judah whose mother's name is not mentioned (perhaps because his father Jotham had but one wife) is Ahaz.
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2 Kings xi. 18; 2 Chron. xxi. 11, xxiv. 7.
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Vulg.,
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2 Kings viii. 21. "The people" (
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Josh. x. 29-39.
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Jos.,
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1 Kings xix. 15, 16.
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2 Kings viii. 12, 13.
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The name was not uncommon, 1 Chron. ii. 38, iv. 35, xii. 3.
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2 Kings xiii. 20, xxiv. 2; Jer. xlviii.
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2 Kings vi. 8-23.
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2 Kings vii. 6.
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Jehoram = Jehovah is exalted. Ahaziah = Jehovah holds.
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Vial (
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"His habit fit for speed
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Inner chamber, 1 Kings xx. 30.
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Perhaps, if Elisha had gone in person, suspicion might have been aroused. He was not more than fifty at this time, and lived forty-three years more.
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It seems as though they were
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The expression is remarkable, as showing how completely the prerogative of the Chosen People was supposed to rest with the Ten Tribes, as the most important representatives of the seed of Abraham.
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"Him that is shut up, and him that is left at large in Israel" (2 Kings ix. 8; 1 Kings xiv. 10, xvi. 3, 4).
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The A.V. has, less accurately, "in the
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1 Sam. xvi. 4: "Comest thou peaceably?"
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2 Kings ix. 11, הַמְּשֻׁנָּצ LXX., ὁ ἑπίληπτος. Comp. ver. 20, "he driveth
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Ver. 12, a lie! (שֶׁקֶר).
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What is meant by the
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2 Kings ix. 14: "So Jehu
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2 Kings ix. 15, R.V.: "If this be your mind."
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So far as we know, he never returned to Ramoth-Gilead, of which indeed we hear no more.
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Tristram,
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Heb.,
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Clearly the rendering "he driveth furiously" is right. The word "furiously" is
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Jehu, the son of Jehoshaphat, is named from his grandfather Nimshi, who seems to have been the founder of the greatness of his house.
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2 Kings ix. 23: "Turned his hands." Comp. 1 Kings xxii. 34.
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Ver. 24. Vulg.,
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LXX., reading צַל בּרְכָּיו.
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Bidkar, perhaps Bar-dekar, "Son of stabbing." Comp. 1 Kings iv. 9.
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Heb.,
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2 Kings ix. 26: "Saith the Lord." Ephraem Syrus omits these words. He says that the night before Jehu had seen the blood of Naboth and his sons in a dream. Comp. Hom.,
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A.V., "By the way of the garden-house." LXX., Βαιθγάν.
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The text is a little uncertain.
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Thenius supposes "Gur" to mean "a caravanserai." Comp. 2 Chron. xxvi. 7,
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The account of the Chronicler (2 Chron. xxii. 9) differs from that of the earlier historian. It may, however, be (uncertainly) reconciled with it as in the text, if we suppose the words "he was hid in Samaria" to mean in Megiddo, in the territory of Samaria. Obviously, however, the traditions varied. There are difficulties about the story, for Ibleam is on the west towards Megiddo, and not between Jezreel and Samaria.
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פּוּךְ, "Lead-glance." A mixture of pulverised antimony (