Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Kings 20:27
And the children of Israel were numbered, and were all present, and went against them: and the children of Israel pitched before them like two little flocks of kids; but the Syrians filled the country.
27. were all present ] The R.V. has adopted the marginal rendering of A.V. were victualled. This is the rendering of the Vulg. cibaria exceperunt. The passive form of the verb occurs only here, but the active ‘to supply with victuals’ is found, Gen 45:11; Gen 50:21 and in several other places.
and the children of Israel pitched [R.V. encamped ] before them ] The R.V. is a very frequent translation of this word, and seems best when there is no object after the verb. When ‘their tents’ or some such expression is supplied, then ‘pitch’ is the more appropriate. The R.V. makes the same change in 1Ki 20:29.
two little flocks ] The rendering ‘little flocks’ is from the Vulg. ‘duo parvi greges’. The LXX. has . The Hebrew word does not occur elsewhere.
The Israelite army had adopted a division into two parts, perhaps from the arrangement which had been so successful in the previous attack.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Were all present – The marginal rendering is adopted by almost all critics.
Like two little flocks of kids – The word translated little flocks does not occur elsewhere in Scripture. It seems to mean simply flocks. Compare the Septuagint, who render hosei duo poimnia aigon.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Ki 20:27
And the children of Israel pitched before them like two little flocks of kids.
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The coming religion
1. With thirty-three kings intoxicated in one tent this chapter opens. They were allies plotting for the overthrow of the Lords Israel. You know that if a lion roar a flock of kids will shiver and huddle together. One lion could conquer a thousand kids. The fact that throughout Christendom there are hundreds of printing-houses printing the word of God without the omission of a chapter or a verse, proves that the Bible is popular; and the fact that there are more being printed in this decade than any other decade proves that the Bible is increasing in popularity. I go through the courtrooms of the country; wherever I find a judges bench or a clerks desk I find the Bible. By what other book would they take solemn oath? What is very apt to be among the brides presents? The Bible. What is very apt to be put in the trunk of the young man when he starts for city life? The Bible. Voltaire predicted that the Bible during the nineteenth century would become an obsolete book. Well, we are pretty nearly through the nineteenth century, the Bible is not obsolete yet; there is not much prospect of its becoming obsolete; but I have to tell you that the very room in which Voltaire wrote that prediction, some time ago, was crowded from floor to ceiling with Bibles for Switzerland.
2. Our antagonists say that Christianity is falling back in the fact that infidelity is bolder now and more blatant than it ever was. I deny the statement. Infidelity is not near so bold now as it was in the days of our fathers and grandfathers. There were times in this country when men who were openly and above board infidel and antagonistic to Christianity could be elected to high office. Now let some man wishing high position in the State proclaim himself the foe of Christianity and an infidel, how many States of the Union would he carry? How many counties? Infidelity in this day is not half so bold as it used to be. If it comes now it is apt to come under the disguise of rhetoric or moral sentimentality. Do you suppose such things could be enacted now as were enacted in the days of Robespierre, when the wife of one of the prominent citizens was elected to be goddess, and she was carried in a golden chair to a cathedral, and the people bowel down to her as a Divine being, and burned incense before her, she to take the place of the Bible, and of Christianity, and of the Lord Almighty? And while that ceremony was going on in the cathedral, in the chapels, and in the corridors adjoining the cathedral, scenes of drunkenness and debauchery and obscenity were enacted such as the world had never seen. Could such a thing as that transpire now? No, sirs. The police would swoop on it, whether in Paris or New York. Infidelity is not half as bold now as it used to be.
3. But, say our antagonists, Christianity is falling back because science, its chief enemy, is triumphing over it. Now, I deny that there is any war between science and revelation. There is not a fact in science that may not be made to harmonise with the statements of the Bible. Joseph Henry, the leading scientist of America, better known and honoured in the royal societies transatlantic than any other American, lived and died a believer in the religion of Jesus Christ. He knew, Joseph Henry knew, all the facts of geology, and yet believed the Book of Genesis. He knew all the facts of astronomy, and yet believed the Book of Joshua, the sun and moon standing still. Joseph Henry knew all the anatomy of man and fish, and yet believed the Book of Jonah. If the scientists of the day were all agreed, and they came up with solid front to attack our Christianity, perhaps they might make some impression upon it; but they are not agreed. Agassiz saw what we all see, that there are men who talk very wisely who know but very little, and that just as soon as a young scientist finds out the difference between the feelers of a wasp and the horns of a beetle, he begins to patronise the Almighty, and go about talking about culture as though it were spelled c-u-l-c-h-a-r–culchar!
4. But my subject shall no longer be defensive; it must be aggressive. I must show you that instead of Christianity falling back, it is on the march, and that the coming religion of the world is to be the religion of the Lord Jesus Christ ten thousand times intensified. It is to take possession of everything–of all laws, all manners, all customs, all cities, all nations. It is going to be so mighty, as compared with what it has been so much more mighty, that it will seem almost like a new religion. I adopt this theory because Christianity has gone on straight ahead, notwithstanding all the bombardment, and infidelity has not destroyed a church, or crippled a minister, or rooted out one verse of the Bible, and now their ammunition seems to be pretty much exhausted. They cannot get anything new against Christianity, and if Christianity has gone on under the bombardment of centuries, and still continues to advance, may we not conclude that, as the powder and shot of the other side seem to be exhausted, Christianity is going on with more rapid stride? Beside that the rising generation are being saturated with Gospel truth as no other generation by these international series of Sunday-school lessons. Formerly the children were expected to nibble at the little infantile Scripture stories, but now they are taken from Genesis to Revelation, the strongest minds of the country explaining the lessons to the teachers, and the teachers explaining them to the classes, and we are going to have in this country five million youth forestalled for Christianity. Hear it! Hear it! Beside that you must have noticed, if you have talked on these great themes, that they are finding out that while science is grand in secular directions, worldly philosophy grand in secular directions, they cannot give any comfort to a soul in trouble. Talking with men on steamboats and in rail-ears, I find they are coming back to the comfort of the Gospel. They say, Somehow human science dont comfort me when I have any trouble, and I must try something else; and they are trying the Gospel. There is another reason why I believe that the religion of Jesus Christ is going to conquer the world, and that is, the Bible in fifty different places sets forth the idea that Emmanuel is to take possession of this whole world. If He is going to conquer the whole world, that means also this country, the greater including the less. (T. De Witt Talmage, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Were all present, i.e. all the forces of the Israelites were here gathered together to oppose the Syrians; so if these had been conquered, all had been lost.
Went against them; being persuaded and encouraged so to do; partly to invent the mischiefs of a siege in Samaria, and the waste of all the rest of their country; and partly by the remembrance of their former success, and an expectation of the same assistance from God again.
Pitched before them; probably upon some hilly ground, where they might secure themselves, and watch for advantage against their enemies; which may be the reason why the Syrians durst not assault them before the seventh day, 1Ki 20:29.
Like two little flocks of kids, i.e. few, and weak, and heartless; being also for conveniency of fighting, and that they might seem to be more than they were, divided into two bodies.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
27-31. like two little flocks ofkidsGoats are never seen in large flocks, or scattered, likesheep; and hence the two small but compact divisions of the Israeliteforce are compared to goats, not sheep. Humanly speaking, that littlehandful of men would have been overpowered by numbers. But a prophetwas sent to the small Israelite army to announce the victory, inorder to convince the Syrians that the God of Israel was omnipotenteverywhere, in the valley as well as on the hills. And, accordingly,after the two armies had pitched opposite each other for seven days,they came to an open battle. One hundred thousand Syrians lay dead onthe field, while the fugitives took refuge in Aphek, and there,crowding on the city walls, they endeavored to make a stand againsttheir pursuers; but the old walls giving way under the incumbentweight, fell and buried twenty-seven thousand in the ruins. Ben-hadadsucceeded in extricating himself, and, with his attendants, soughtconcealment in the city, fleeing from chamber to chamber; or, as somethink it, an inner chamber, that is, a harem; but seeing no ultimatemeans of escape, he was advised to throw himself on the tendermercies of the Israelitish monarch.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And the children of Israel were numbered, and were all present,…. The same as before; the two hundred and thirty two young men of the princes of the provinces, and 7000 of the people, not one was missing:
and went against them; out of Samaria, towards Aphek:
and the children of Israel pitched before them like two little flocks of kids: being few and weak, the two hundred and thirty two young men in one body, and the 7000 in another:
but the Syrians filled the country: with their men, their horses, and their chariots.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The Israelites, mustered and provided for ( : supplied with ammunition and provisions), marched to meet them, and encamped before them “like two little separate flocks of goats” (i.e., severed from the great herd of cattle). They had probably encamped upon slopes of the mountains by the plain of Jezreel, where they looked like two miserable flocks of goats in contrast with the Syrians who filled the land.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
(27) Were all present.The marginal reading were victualled, or, perhaps, more generally, were supplied, with all things necessary for war, seems correct. The comparatively small number of the Israelite forces, even after the great victory of the year before, appears to show that, previous to the siege of Samaria, Ahab had suffered some great defeats, which had broken the strength of Israel.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
27. Were all present Rather, as in the margin, were victualled, supplied with necessary provisions.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
1Ki 20:27 And the children of Israel were numbered, and were all present, and went against them: and the children of Israel pitched before them like two little flocks of kids; but the Syrians filled the country.
Ver. 27. And were all present. ] All the last year’s army that had been so victorious, not a man of them was missing; and that was very much. Ahab had the same promise, and therefore maketh use of the same forces as before.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
were numbered = enrolled themselves. flocks = newborn kids. Hebrew. hasaph. Occurs only here.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
were all present: or, were victualled, Jos 1:11, Jdg 7:8
like two: Deu 32:30, Jdg 6:5, 1Sa 13:5-8, 1Sa 14:2, 2Ch 32:7, 2Ch 32:8, Ecc 9:11
Reciprocal: 2Ki 3:6 – numbered 2Ki 13:7 – fifty horsemen 1Ch 27:28 – the sycamore trees 2Ch 14:11 – nothing Psa 33:16 – no king Pro 14:28 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
20:27 And the children of Israel were numbered, and were all {l} present, and went against them: and the children of Israel pitched before them like two little flocks of kids; but the Syrians filled the country.
(l) All those who were in the battle of the previous years, 1Ki 20:15.