2CH 13

2 Chronicles 13:19

WEB

Abijah pursued Jeroboam, and took cities from him: Bethel with its villages, Jeshanah with its villages, and Ephron with its villages.

BSB

Abijah pursued Jeroboam and captured some cities from him: Bethel, Jeshanah, and Ephron, along with their villages.

KJV

And Abijah pursued after Jeroboam, and took cities from him, Beth-el with the towns thereof, and Jeshanah with the towns thereof, and Ephrain with the towns thereof.

Matthew Henry

Verses 13–22

2 Chronicles 13:13–22

We do not find that Jeroboam offered to make any answer at all to Abijah's speech. Though it was much to the purpose, he resolved not to heed it, and therefore he heard it as though he heard it not. He came to fight, not to dispute. The longest sword, he thought, would determine the matter, not the better cause. Let us therefore see the issue, whether right and religion carried the day or no.

I. Jeroboam, who trusted to his politics, was beaten. He was so far from fair reasoning that he was not for fair fighting. We may suppose that he felt a sovereign contempt for Abijah's harangue. "One stratagem," thinks he, "is worth twenty such speeches; we will soon give him an answer to all his arguments; he shall soon find himself overpowered with numbers, surrounded on every side with the instruments of death, and then let him boast of his religion and his title to the crown." A parley, it is probable, was agreed on, yet Jeroboam basely takes the advantage of it, and, while he was treating, laid his ambushment behind Judah, against all the laws of arms. What honour could be expected in a servant when he reigned? Abijah was for peace, but, when he spoke, they were for war, Psa 120:7.

II. Abijah and his people, who trusted in their God, came off conquerors, notwithstanding the disproportion of their strength and numbers.

1. They were brought into a great strait, put into a great fright, for the battle was before and behind. A good cause, and one which is designed to be victorious, may for a season be involved in embarrassment and distress. It was David's case. They compassed me about like bees, Psa 118:10-12.

2. In their distress, when danger was on every side, which way should they look but upwards for deliverance? It is an unspeakable comfort that no enemy (not the most powerful or politic), no stratagem or ambushment, can cut off our communication with heaven; our way thitherward is always open. (1.) They cried unto the Lord, Ch2 13:14. We hope they did this before they engaged in this war, but the distress they were in made them renew their prayers and quickened them to be importunate. God brings his people into straits, that he may teach them to cry unto him. Earnest praying is crying. (2.) They relied on the God of their fathers, depended upon his power to help them and committed themselves to him, Ch2 13:18. The prayer of faith is the prevailing prayer, and this is that by which we overcome the world, even our faith, Jo1 5:4. (3.) The priests sounded the trumpets to animate them by giving them an assurance of God's presence with them. It was not only a martial but a sacred sound, and put life into their faith. (4.) They shouted in confidence of victory: "The day is our own, for God is with us." To the cry of the prayer they added the shout of faith, and so became more than conquerors.

3. Thus they obtained a complete victory: As the men of Judah shouted for joy in God's salvation, God smote Jeroboam and his army with such terror and amazement that they could not strike a stroke, but fled with the greatest precipitation imaginable, and the conquerors gave no quarter, so that they put to the sword 500,000 chosen men (Ch2 13:17), more, it is said, than ever we read of in any history to have been killed in one battle; but the battle was the Lord's, who would thus chastise the idolatry of Israel and own the house of David. But see the sad effect of division: it was the blood of Israelites that was thus shed like water by Israelites, while the heathen, their neighbours, to whom the name of Israel had formerly been a terror, cried, Aha! so would we have it.

4. The consequence of this was that the children of Israel, though they were not brought back to the house of David (which by so great a blow surely they would have been had not the determinate counsel of God been otherwise), yet, for that time, were brought under, Ch2 13:18. Many cities were taken, and remained in the possession of the kings of Judah; as Bethel particularly, Ch2 13:19. What became of the golden calf there, when it came into the hands of the king of Judah, we are not told; perhaps it was removed to some place of greater safety, and at length to Samaria (Hos 8:5); yet in Jehu's time we find it at Bethel, Kg2 10:29. Perhaps Abijah, when it was in his power to demolish it, suffered it to stand, for his heart was not perfect with God; and, not improving what he had got for the honour of God, he soon lost it all again.

Lastly, The death of both of the conquered and of the conqueror, not long after. 1. Jeroboam never looked up after this defeat, though he survived it two or three years. He could not recover strength again, Ch2 13:20. The Lord struck him either with some bodily disease, of which he languished, or with melancholy and trouble of mind; his heart was broken, and vexation at his loss brought his head, probably by this time a hoary head, with sorrow to the grave. He escaped the sword of Abijah, but God struck him: and there is no escaping his sword. 2. Abijah waxed mighty upon it. What number of wives and children he had before does not appear; but now he multiplied his wives to fourteen in all, by whom he had thirty-eight children, Ch2 13:21. Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of those arrows. It seems, he had ways peculiar to himself, and sayings of his own, which were recorded with his acts in the history of those times, Ch2 13:22. But the number of his months was cut off in the midst, and, soon after his triumphs, death conquered the conqueror. Perhaps he was too much lifted up with his victories, and therefore God would not let him live long to enjoy the honour of them.

Cross-references: Ps 120:7 · Ps 118:10 · 2Chr 13:14 · 2Chr 13:18 · 1John 5:4 · 2Chr 13:17 · 2Chr 13:19 · Hos 8:5 · 2Kgs 10:29 · 2Chr 13:20 · 2Chr 13:21 · 2Chr 13:22

Hebrew interlinear

H7291

רָדַףrâdaph/raw-daf'/

v — run after, gone by

Derivation: a primitive root;

to run after (usually with hostile intent; figuratively [of time] gone by)

KJV: chase, put to flight, follow (after, on), hunt, (be under) persecute(-ion, -or), pursue(-r).

רָדַף

vb — pursue

רָדַף 141 vb. pursue, chase, persecute

Qal 128

1.

a. pursue

b. lit. put to flight, chase

c. lit., the pursuers

d. chase, hunt

e. pursue

f. fig. persecute, harass

g. pursue, dog

2. fig. follow after, aim to secure

Niph. upon the neck (i.e. closely) we are pursued

Pi. pursue ardently

Pu. it shall be chased away like chaff of the mountains

Hiph. usu. they chased him

H29

אֲבִיָּהʼĂbîyâh/ab-ee-yaw'/

n-pr-m — Abijah

Derivation: or prolonged אֲבִיָּהוּ ; from 1 and 3050; father (i.e. worshipper) of Jah;

Abijah, the name of several Israelite men and two Israelitesses

KJV: Abiah, Abijah.

אֲבִיָּ֫הוּ

n.pr.m — Abi

אֲבִיָּ֫הוּ n.pr.m. & f. (Yah(u) is (my) father)—so † 2 Ch 13:20, 21 = אֲבִיָּם1 K 14:31 15:1, 7, 7, 8 (𝔊 Ἀβιου, Ἀβια); = אֲבִי2 K 18:2 (𝔊 Ἀβου, Ἀβουθ); = אֲבִיָּה 1 S 8:2 22 t.—

1. king of Judah, son & successor of Rehoboam

2. 2nd son of Samuel

3. son of Jerob.

4. son of Becher, a Benjamite

5. head of a priestly house

6. id.

7. wife of Hezron

8. mother of Hezekiah

H310

אַחַרʼachar/akh-ar'/

adv a — the hind part, after

Derivation: from 309;

properly, the hind part; generally used as an adverb or conjunction, after (in various senses)

KJV: after (that, -ward), again, at, away from, back (from, -side), behind, beside, by, follow (after, -ing), forasmuch, from, hereafter, hinder end, + out (over) live, + persecute, posterity, pursuing, remnant, seeing, since, thence(-forth), when, with.

אַחַר

adv — the hinder

אַחַר prop. subst. the hinder or following part

1. adv.

a. of place, behind

b. of time, afterwards

2. prep.

a. of place, behind, after

b. of time, after

3. conj. after that.

אַחֲרַי

adj — backwards

אַחֲרַי adj. Pr 28:23 a man that turneth backwards.

H3379

יָרׇבְעָםYârobʻâm/yaw-rob-awm'/

n-pr-m — Jarobam

Derivation: from 7378 and 5971; (the) people will contend;

Jarobam, the name of two Israelite kings

KJV: Jeroboam.

יָֽרָבְעָם

n.pr.m — Jeroboam

יָֽרָבְעָם 104 n.pr.m. Jeroboam

1. 90 leader of revolt of N. Isr. (10th cent.), and first king

2. son of Jehoash of N. Isr. (8th cent.) and 13th king

H3920

לָכַדlâkad/law-kad'/

v — catch, capture, choose, cohere

Derivation: a primitive root;

to catch (in a net, trap or pit); generally, to capture or occupy; also to choose (by lot); figuratively, to cohere

KJV: × at all, catch (self), be frozen, be holden, stick together, take.

לָכַד

vb — capture

לָכַד 121 vb. capture, seize, take (by lot)

Qal

1. capture, seize

2. fig. of entrapping men

3. of taking by lot

Niph.

1. be captured in war

2. of men, be caught

3. be taken by lot

Hithp. they grasp each other, and cannot be separated

H4480

מִןmin/min/

prep — part, from, out of

Derivation: or מִנִּי; or מִנֵּי; (constructive plural) (Isaiah 30:11); for 4482;

properly, a part of; hence (prepositionally), from or out of in many senses

KJV: above, after, among, at, because of, by (reason of), from (among), in, × neither, × nor, (out) of, over, since, × then, through, × whether, with.

מִן־

prep — out of

מִן־, and מִ, before יְ, prep. expressing the idea of separation, hence out of, from, on account of, off, on the side of, since, above, than, so that not

1. with verbs expressing (or implying) separation or removal

a. from, against

b. מן also, without a verb of similar significance, sometimes expresses the idea of separation, away from, far from

c. of position, off, on the side of, on

2. Out of, Gk. ἐκ, Lat. ex

3. Partitively

4. Of time

a. as marking the terminus a quo, the anterior limit of a continuous period from, since

b. as marking the period immediately succeeding the limit after

c. towards, to

5. (וְעַד) עַדמִן from … even to

6. In comparisons, beyond, above

7. מן is prefixed to an infin.:

a. with causal force, from, on account of, through

b. after verbs implying restraint, prevention, cessation, etc.

c. with a temporal force, since, after

8. Once as a conj. before a finite verb. that

9. In compounds:

מֵן

n. [m.] — portion

[מֵן] n. [m.] portion

H5892

עִירʻîyr/eer/

n-m — city, waking, encampment, post

Derivation: or (in the plural) עָר; or עָיַר; (Judges 10:4), from 5782

a city (a place guarded by waking or a watch) in the widest sense (even of a mere encampment or post)

KJV: Ai (from margin), city, court (from margin), town.

עִיר

n.f — city

עִיר 1092 n.f. city, town

1. city, town, abode of men

2. of fortress in a city

3. appar. fortified place, of any size

עִיר

n.[m.] — excitement

עִיר n.[m.] excitement;—of terror; of rage

H853

אֵתʼêth/ayth/

prt — self, even, namely

Derivation: apparent contracted from 226 in the demonstrative sense of entity;

properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)

KJV: [as such unrepresented in English].

אֵת

mark of the accusative

אֵת the mark of the accusative, prefixed as a rule only to nouns that are definite

H1008

בֵּית־אֵלBêyth-ʼÊl/bayth-ale'/

n-pr-loc — Beth-El

Derivation: from 1004 and 410; house of God;

Beth-El, a place in Palestine

KJV: Beth-el.

בֵּֽיתְאֵל

n.pr.loc — Beth-el

בֵּֽיתְאֵל 71 n.pr.loc. Bethel

1. ancient place and seat of worship in Ephraim on border of Benjamin, identif. with Luz (former name)

2. place in south country of Judah, not far from Beersheba & Ziklag

H1323

בַּתbath/bath/

n-f — daughter

Derivation: from 1129 (as feminine of 1121);

a daughter (used in the same wide sense as other terms of relationship, literally and figuratively)

KJV: apple (of the eye), branch, company, daughter, × first, × old, owl, town, village.

בַּת

n.f — daughter

בַּת 587 n.f. daughter

1. daughter, female child

2. young women, women

3. with name of city, land, or people, poet. personif. of that city or inhabitants

4. pl. = villages, after name of city

5. in phrases denoting character, quality, etc.

6. ostrich

7. fig.

8. of vine = branch

9. as n. relat.

H3466

יְשָׁנָהYᵉshânâh/yesh-aw-naw'/

n-pr-f — Jeshanah

Derivation: feminine of 3465;

Jeshanah, a place in Palestine

KJV: Jeshanah.

יְשָׁנָה

n.pr.loc — Jeshanah

יְשָׁנָה n.pr.loc. town on southern border of N. Israel, near Bethel

H6085

עֶפְרוֹןʻEphrôwn/ef-rone'/

n-pr-m n-pr-loc — Ephron

Derivation: from the same as 6081; fawn-like;

Ephron, the name of a Canaanite and of two places in Palestine

KJV: Ephron, Ephrain (from the margin).

עֶפְרוֹן

n.pr — Ephron

עֶפְרוֹן n.pr.

1. m. Hittite, Abr.’s time

2. loc. Kt

3. mont. on N. border of Judah

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