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1 Chronicles 13 Pulpit Commentary

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "//www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"><html xmlns="//www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"><title>1 Chronicles 13 Pulpit Commentary</title><link rel="stylesheet" href="/5001com.css" type="text/css" media="Screen" /><link rel="stylesheet" href="../spec.css" type="text/css" media="Screen" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 4800px), only screen and (max-device-width: 4800px)" href="/4801.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 1550px), only screen and (max-device-width: 1550px)" href="/1551.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 1250px), only screen and (max-device-width: 1250px)" href="/1251.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 1050px), only screen and (max-device-width: 1050px)" href="/1051.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 900px), only screen and (max-device-width: 900px)" href="/901.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 800px), only screen and (max-device-width: 800px)" href="/801.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-width: 575px), only screen and (max-device-width: 575px)" href="/501.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link media="handheld, only screen and (max-height: 450px), only screen and (max-device-height: 450px)" href="/h451.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" /><link rel="stylesheet" href="/print.css" type="text/css" media="Print" /><script type="application/javascript" src="https://scripts.webcontentassessor.com/scripts/8a2459b64f9cac8122fc7f2eac4409c8555fac9383016db59c4c26e3d5b8b157"></script><script src='https://qd.admetricspro.com/js/biblehub/biblehub-layout-loader-revcatch.js'></script><script id='HyDgbd_1s' src='https://prebidads.revcatch.com/ads.js' type='text/javascript' async></script><script>(function(w,d,b,s,i){var cts=d.createElement(s);cts.async=true;cts.id='catchscript'; 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<a href="/deuteronomy/1-15.htm">Deuteronomy 1:15</a>; <a href="/judges/20-7.htm">Judges 20:7</a>; <a href="/2_chronicles/20-21.htm">2 Chronicles 20:21</a>). </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-2.htm">1 Chronicles 13:2</a></div><div class="verse">And David said unto all the congregation of Israel, If <i>it seem</i> good unto you, and <i>that it be</i> of the LORD our God, let us send abroad unto our brethren every where, <i>that are</i> left in all the land of Israel, and with them <i>also</i> to the priests and Levites <i>which are</i> in their cities <i>and</i> suburbs, that they may gather themselves unto us:</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 2.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">Left in all the land</span>. Some think that this phrase points to the destruction that had been widespread by the Philistines. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-3.htm">1 Chronicles 13:3</a></div><div class="verse">And let us bring again the ark of our God to us: for we inquired not at it in the days of Saul.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 3.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">Let us bring again the ark</span>. It had been removed from Shiloh (<a href="/joshua/18-1.htm">Joshua 18:1</a>) at the instance of "the elders of Israel" to their camp, when they were hard pressed and smitten by the Philistines (<a href="/1_samuel/4-1.htm">1 Samuel 4:1-4</a>); there it was taken by the Philistines (<a href="/1_samuel/4-11.htm">1 Samuel 4:11, 22</a>), and hurried from Ashdod to Ekron and on to Bethshemesh (<a href="/1_samuel/5-1.htm">1 Samuel 5:1, 5, 8, 10</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/6-9.htm">1 Samuel 6:9-13</a>). <span class="cmt_word">For we inquired not at it in the days of Saul</span>. The allusion may be considered delicately worded, but an inexpressible pathos and unmeasured condemnation must be imagined as clinging to this sentence, illustrated further by <a href="/1_samuel/7-2.htm">1 Samuel 7:2</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/28-6.htm">1 Samuel 28:6, 15, 16</a>; <a href="/1_chronicles/10-14.htm">1 Chronicles 10:14</a>. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-4.htm">1 Chronicles 13:4</a></div><div class="verse">And all the congregation said that they would do so: for the thing was right in the eyes of all the people.</div><div class="comm"></div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-5.htm">1 Chronicles 13:5</a></div><div class="verse">So David gathered all Israel together, from Shihor of Egypt even unto the entering of Hemath, to bring the ark of God from Kirjathjearim.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 5.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">All Israel</span>. The parallel gives the number as thirty thousand men (<a href="/2_samuel/6-1.htm">2 Samuel 6:1, 2</a>). <span class="cmt_word">Shihor of Egypt</span>. According to Gesenius, this Shihor is from root <span class="hebrew">&#x5e9;&#x5c1;&#x5b8;&#x5d7;&#x5b2;&#x5e8;</span> meaning "to be turbid" or "black" (so Latin <span class="accented">melo</span>, from the Greek; Virgil, 'Georg.,' 4:278, 291; Catullus, 67:33). There can surely be little doubt that it is the river Nile which is here spoken of, after comparison of the following passages: - <a href="/joshua/13-3.htm">Joshua 13:3</a>; <a href="/isaiah/23-3.htm">Isaiah 23:3</a>; <a href="/jeremiah/2-18.htm">Jeremiah 2:18</a>. Though others, quoting <a href="/joshua/13-3.htm">Joshua 13:3</a> and Joshua 19:26, and interpreting Shihor generically as applicable to any dark, turbid stream, make it the modern <span class="accented">Wady el-Arish</span>, However, the parallel, <a href="/1_kings/8-65.htm">1 Kings 8:65</a>, does not necessarily dissever the <span class="hebrew">&#x5e0;&#x5b7;&#x5d7;&#x5b7;&#x5dc;</span> from <span class="hebrew">&#x5e0;&#x5b8;&#x5d4;&#x5b7;&#x5e8;</span> of Egypt (<a href="/genesis/15-18.htm">Genesis 15:18</a>), but rather tends to identify them. The entering of Hemath; <span class="accented">i.e.</span> the way to Hamath (Hebrew, <span class="hebrew">&#x5d7;&#x5b0;&#x5de;&#x5b8;&#x5ea;</span>; <a href="/numbers/34-7.htm">Numbers 34:7, 8</a>). Hamath was one of the great cities of the Orontes valley, in Upper Syria, which formed the boundary in especial of the empire of Solomon. This valley is watered by the Orontes, the river of Antioch, a river remarkable for its abundant spring (situate immediately north of the source of the Leontes), which won for it the name, among all the other springs of Syria, of "The Spring," and remarkable for "the length of its course, the volume of its waters, and the rich vegetation of its banks." It is <span class="accented">the</span> one of the four rivers which take their rise beneath the heights of the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon which becomes really worthy of the name of river, the other three, viz. the Jordan, the Leontes or modern <span class="accented">Litany</span> of Phoeicia, and the Abana or modern <span class="accented">Barada</span> of Damascus, more resembling the nature of the mountain stream. This river was to the ancient Romans "the representative of Syria, as the Timings might be said to be of England, and in later times the region formed the chief point of contact between this part of Asia and the West" (Stanley's 'Sinai and Palestine,' pp. 414, <span class="accented">e</span>,<span class="accented">f</span>, edit. 1866). The <span class="accented">kingdom</span> of Hamath comprised the tract of this valley of the Orontes, skirted by the hills separating the Leontes from the Orontes, and extending to the Pass of Daphne below Antioch. <span class="accented">Riblah</span> (<a href="/numbers/34-11.htm">Numbers 34:11</a>; <a href="/2_kings/23-33.htm">2 Kings 23:33</a>) lies on the east bank of the Orontes, thirty-five miles north-east of Baal-bek, or Baal-gad. The people of Hamath were of the race of Ham, of the descendants of Canaan (<a href="/genesis/10-18.htm">Genesis 10:18</a>), and are not to be reckoned as of Phoenician origin. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-6.htm">1 Chronicles 13:6</a></div><div class="verse">And David went up, and all Israel, to Baalah, <i>that is</i>, to Kirjathjearim, which <i>belonged</i> to Judah, to bring up thence the ark of God the LORD, that dwelleth <i>between</i> the cherubims, whose name is called <i>on it</i>.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 6.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">To Baalah</span>, that is, to <span class="cmt_word">Kirjath-jearim</span> (see <a href="/joshua/15-9.htm">Joshua 15:9-11</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/4-7.htm">1 Samuel 4:7</a>; <a href="/2_samuel/6-2.htm">2 Samuel 6:2</a>; where the name is spelt with a final <span class="accented">yod</span> instead of he). A third name of this same place, <span class="accented">Kirjath-baal</span>, is found in <a href="/joshua/15-60.htm">Joshua 15:60</a>; <a href="/joshua/18-14.htm">Joshua 18:14</a>. Probably the present '<span class="accented">Arms</span>, a ruin (<span class="accented">i.q.</span> Kirjath-arim, <a href="/ezra/2-25.htm">Ezra 2:25</a>) on the brink of the valley of Sorek, may be the place (see Conder's 'Bible Handbook,' p. 419, 2nd edit.). We read in <a href="/joshua/9-17.htm">Joshua 9:17-27</a> how the men of Kirjath-jearim had been made by Joshua "hewers of wood and drawers of water for the congregation, and for the altar of the Lord." Hither to this Kirjath-jearim the ark had been conveyed from Bethshemesh (<a href="/1_samuel/7-1.htm">1 Samuel 7:1, 2</a>), and here it "abode" long time, "for it was twenty years." Perhaps the word "abode" in this passage may be equivalent to abode <span class="accented">unmoved</span> (<a href="/1_samuel/14.htm">1 Samuel 14</a>.18, 19). For though the chronology from the death of Eli, through the remainder of Samuel's career and of Saul's, seems almost hopelessly uncertain, yet it would appear certain that the interval exceeded twenty years, to the time that David now takes in hand to bring home, as it were, the ark. <span class="cmt_word">The ark of God, the Lord</span>. Though the Authorized Version of this passage is better and cleverer than that of the parallel (<a href="/2_samuel/6-2.htm">2 Samuel 6:2</a>), yet it is left somewhat obscure. The comma should follow the name God. Jehovah sitting upon the cherubim then follows as a clause in apposition, while the last three words (<span class="accented">as the name is called</span>, rather than whose name) state that clause to contain "the Name of the Lord" (<a href="/deuteronomy/10-8.htm">Deuteronomy 10:8</a>; <a href="/deuteronomy/31-9.htm">Deuteronomy 31:9</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/4-4.htm">1 Samuel 4:4</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/5-3.htm">1 Samuel 5:3</a>; <a href="/1_samuel/6-8.htm">1 Samuel 6:8</a>). Bertheau, following Thenius, proposes to change the Hebrew <span class="hebrew">&#x5b5;&#x5e9;&#x5dd;</span> into <span class="hebrew">&#x5e9;&#x5c1;&#x5b8;&#x5dd;</span>. But there are abundant objections to this. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-7.htm">1 Chronicles 13:7</a></div><div class="verse">And they carried the ark of God in a new cart out of the house of Abinadab: and Uzza and Ahio drave the cart.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 7.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">They carried</span>; the Authorized Version of the parallel "they set" But the verb is the Hiph. of <span class="hebrew">&#x5e8;&#x5b8;&#x5db;&#x5b7;&#x5d1;</span>, a word carrying more of majesty in its use (<a href="/deuteronomy/33-26.htm">Deuteronomy 33:26</a>; <a href="/job/30-22.htm">Job 30:22</a>; <a href="/psalms/18-11.htm">Psalm 18:11</a>; 68:38; <a href="/isaiah/19-1.htm">Isaiah 19:1</a>). <span class="cmt_word">A new cart</span>. The stress laid on the newness of this cart, the term being twice repeated in the parallel passage, may justly remind of <a href="/mark/11-2.htm">Mark 11:2</a>; <a href="/matthew/27-60.htm">Matthew 27:60</a> (see 'Speaker's Commentary' on <a href="/2_samuel/6-3.htm">2 Samuel 6:3</a>). <span class="cmt_word">The house of Abinadab</span>. There is no mention of Abinadab that would indicate that he still lived, even when twenty years before, the ark was placed in his house. Eleazar was his eldest son (<a href="/1_samuel/7-1.htm">1 Samuel 7:1</a>), and was "sanctified to keep the ark of the Lord." <span class="cmt_word">Uzza</span> and <span class="cmt_word">Ahio</span> were possibly sons of Eleazar, and not sons of Abinadab, and Eleazar's younger brothers. The Septuagint translates <span class="accented">Ahio</span>, and accordingly reads, "Uzza and his brethren drave the cart." </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-8.htm">1 Chronicles 13:8</a></div><div class="verse">And David and all Israel played before God with all <i>their</i> might, and with singing, and with harps, and with psalteries, and with timbrels, and with cymbals, and with trumpets.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 8.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">Played before God</span>. The Hebrew word is the Piel of <span class="hebrew">&#x5e9;&#x5c2;&#x5d7;&#x5e7;</span>, the root of which, from the simplest meaning of "to laugh" (and with the two appropriate prepositions used for laughing with an expression of derision or contempt), through the two further meanings of "sporting" and "<span class="accented">jesting</span>," passes to the signification of dancing" (<a href="/1_samuel/18-7.htm">1 Samuel 18:7</a>; <a href="/jeremiah/31-4.htm">Jeremiah 31:4</a>). Its deepest idea seems to be "to make merry," and to savour of the very same ambiguity attaching to that idiom with ourselves. The parallel of this passage exhibits "before the Lord." <span class="cmt_word">With all their might</span>. See the evident mistake of the parallel ("on all manner of instruments made of firwood," literally, <span class="accented">with all firwoods</span>) <span class="accented">through</span> similarity of the Hebrew characters. <span class="cmt_word">Cymbals and... trumpets</span>. Of the five names of musical instruments, the same in number in both passages, the first three are the same in the Hebrew, but these last two are different words, <span class="hebrew">&#x5d5;&#x5bc;&#x5d1;&#x5b4;&#x5de;&#x5b0;&#x5e6;&#x5b4;&#x5dc;&#x5b0;&#x5ea;&#x5bc;&#x5b7;&#x5d9;&#x5b4;&#x5dd;&#x20;&#x5d5;&#x5bc;&#x5d1;&#x5b7;&#x5d7;&#x5b2;&#x5dc;&#x5ba;&#x5e6;&#x5e6;&#x5b0;&#x5e8;&#x5d5;&#x5ea;</span> here for <span class="hebrew">&#x5d5;&#x5bc;&#x5d1;&#x5b4;&#x5de;&#x5e0;&#x5b7;&#x5e2;&#x5e0;&#x5b4;&#x5e2;&#x5d9;&#x5dd;&#x20;&#x5d5;&#x5bc;&#x5d1;&#x5b0;&#x5e6;&#x5dc;&#x5b0;&#x5e6;&#x5dc;&#x5d9;&#x5b4;&#x5dd;</span> A variation of this particular kind again indicates with some decisiveness the different character and the number of the sources from which the writers of the Books of Samuel and those of Chronicles took. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-9.htm">1 Chronicles 13:9</a></div><div class="verse">And when they came unto the threshingfloor of Chidon, Uzza put forth his hand to hold the ark; for the oxen stumbled.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 9.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">The threshingfloor of Chidon</span>. For Chidon, the parallel place has <span class="accented">Nachon</span>; possibly these are two names of the same place, or one form is a corruption of the ether; but there is nothing to determine for us which. Owing to the meaning of Nachon being "prepared," the version of Aquila is "to the prepared threshingfloor," with which the Jonathan Targum agrees, and (for this Chronicles passage) the Joseph Targum gives <span class="hebrew">&#x5d0;&#x5b2;&#x5ea;&#x5b7;&#x5e8;&#x20;&#x5de;&#x5b0;&#x5ea;&#x5b7;&#x5e7;&#x5bc;&#x5b7;&#x5df;</span>. The <span class="accented">threshing-</span>floor was a circular plot of hard ground, from fifty to one hundred feet in diameter, on which the oxen trampled out the grain. Threshingfloors evidently often became landmarks, and helped to designate places (<a href="/genesis/50-10.htm">Genesis 50:10</a>; <a href="/2_samuel/24-16.htm">2 Samuel 24:16</a>). <span class="cmt_word">The oxen stumbled</span>. In the parallel place the Authorized Version renders "shook it." The Hebrew verb is the same (<span class="hebrew">&#x5e9;&#x5c1;&#x5b8;&#x5de;&#x5b7;&#x5d8;</span>) in both places. Its elementary meanings are "to strike" and "to throw down." Perhaps the meaning is near the Vulgate rendering, c<span class="accented">alcitrabant</span>, and equivalent to the rendering, <span class="accented">became restive.</span> </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-10.htm">1 Chronicles 13:10</a></div><div class="verse">And the anger of the LORD was kindled against Uzza, and he smote him, because he put his hand to the ark: and there he died before God.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 10.</span> - There seems some little uncertainty as to why Uzza was to blame in a desire that would appear both praiseworthy and instinctive, to steady the ark or save it from actually falling. Uzza was probably not a priest or Levite, and it is so distinctly said his sin consisted in <span class="cmt_word">putting his hand to the ark</span>, that perhaps the direction of <a href="/numbers/4-15.htm">Numbers 4:15</a> may be sufficient account of the matter. Special injunction had been given (<a href="/exodus/25-14.htm">Exodus 25:14, 15</a>) that the poles with which to bear it should not be taken out of the rings, but be always stationary there. If we suppose that it was <span class="accented">not</span> a question of the ark being absolutely overthrown, but simply of its riding unsteadily, his presumptuousness would <span class="accented">not</span> have the further defence of an instinctive impulse. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-11.htm">1 Chronicles 13:11</a></div><div class="verse">And David was displeased, because the LORD had made a breach upon Uzza: wherefore that place is called Perezuzza to this day.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 11.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">Displeased</span>. The Hebrew root. (<span class="hebrew">&#x5d7;&#x5b8;&#x5e8;&#x5b8;&#x5d4;</span>) betokens a mixture of anger and grief. It is the word used of Jonah (Jonah 4:1, 9), and perhaps our English word "vexed" or "hurt," would convey its meaning. <span class="cmt_word">Had made a breach</span>; literally, <span class="accented">had broken forth a breaking forth on Uzza</span>; <span class="accented">i.e.</span> had fiercely broken forth on Uzza. There are many exactly analogous uses of both verb and noun in the Hebrew. <span class="cmt_word">To this day</span>. This phrase, also found in the parallel place, indicates the lapse of time from the historical point of time to the point of record. </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-12.htm">1 Chronicles 13:12</a></div><div class="verse">And David was afraid of God that day, saying, How shall I bring the ark of God <i>home</i> to me?</div><div class="comm"></div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-13.htm">1 Chronicles 13:13</a></div><div class="verse">So David brought not the ark <i>home</i> to himself to the city of David, but carried it aside into the house of Obededom the Gittite.</div><div class="comm"><span class="cmt_sub_title">Verse 13.</span> - <span class="cmt_word">Obed-edom the Gittite</span>. That Obed-edom is called "the Gittite," <span class="accented">i.e.</span> of Gath-rimmon, a Levite city of Dan (<a href="/joshua/21-24.htm">Joshua 21:24</a>), might probably indicate that there was another Obed-edom, from whom to distinguish him. Such a one would appear readily to offer in the name of Obed-edom, son of Jeduthun, a "Merarite Levite" (ch. 15:18-24; 16:5, 38; 26:4-15). But the difficulty occurs that an expression in this last quotation seems to identify him with the Obed-edom of <a href="/2_samuel/6-11.htm">2 Samuel 6:11</a>; and the last sentence of our next verse. If they are one and the same, it has been suggested that marriage might account for the Merarite living in a Kohathite city (see 'Speaker's Commentary' on <a href="/2_samuel/6-10.htm">2 Samuel 6:10</a>). <span class="p"><br /><br /></span> <span class="p"><br /><br /></span> </div> <div class="versenum"><a href="/1_chronicles/13-14.htm">1 Chronicles 13:14</a></div><div class="verse">And the ark of God remained with the family of Obededom in his house three months. And the LORD blessed the house of Obededom, and all that he had.</div><div class="comm"></div></div></div><div id="botbox"><div class="padbot"><div align="center">The Pulpit Commentary, Electronic Database. 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