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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Kings 2:19

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Kings 2:19

Bath-sheba therefore went unto king Solomon, to speak unto him for Adonijah. And the king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself unto her, and sat down on his throne, and caused a seat to be set for the king’s mother; and she sat on his right hand.

19. caused a seat to be set for the king’s mother ] For ‘seat’ we should have throne. The word is the same as that which occurs earlier in the verse for Solomon’s own ‘throne.’ In Eastern nations the queen-mother was a very important personage and treated with the same sort of reverence as the king. This we may see in the case of Maachah (1Ki 15:13) who held authority and was called queen, even during the reign of her grandson Asa. Compare also the influential position of Athaliah, which enabled her to destroy nearly all the seedroyal (2Ki 11:1).

and she sat on his right hand ] This being the place of greatest honour, cf. Psa 45:9.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

A seat – Or, a throne. We have here a proof of the high dignity of the Queen-mother. Compare also 1Ki 15:13; 2Ki 11:1-3. In the Persian court the Queen-mother had often the chief power.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

1Ki 2:19-20

Bathsheba therefore went unto King Solomon, to speak unto him for Adonijah.

What mothers can do for their children

Nearly twenty times the Book of Kings makes mention of the names of mothers as connected with the good or evil deeds of their sons. We are not always told what was the character of these mothers, nor how far it was due to their influence that their sons turned out as they did, but the introduction of their names in such close connection with the good or evil, is sufficiently significant. His mothers name was Jecholiah; and he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord. The sacred penman adds no more, and yet we can scarce restrain the natural exclamation of the heart, Blessed art thou among women! so certain are we that the youth who honoured God had enjoyed the care of a good mother. In contrast, what unenviable notoriety is given to Abijahs name when the mention of it is accompanied with the painful record, he walked in all the sins of his father (1Ki 15:2). Maachah, the mother, may have been a good woman herself, in spite of her husbands evil ways; yet what volumes are expressed in that embalming of her name–and only hers–in connection with the wrong-doings of her son! Alas! the agonies of the wretched parents heart, in this world and the next, concerning whose offspring the record must be made, he did evil all his life; he did evil because of his mothers neglect to teach him better! St. Augustine, and Gregory of Nazianzen, are striking examples, which cry aloud, Christian mothers, pray on in faith! Theodoret, and Basil the Great, and Chrysostom were instances almost as remarkable. General Harrison, not long before taking his place at the head of the Government, visited his old home in Virginia, and turned his steps at once to his mothers room, where, as he said, he had seen her daily reading her Bible, and where she had taught him to pray. Fame and glory became dim before him as the pleasant light burst forth from the scene of his earliest and best impressions. Where is the son so wayward and so cruel, who would not promptly answer, like Israels king, when besought by her who had nursed him in helpless infancy, Ask on, my mother, for I will not say thee nay? My mother asked me never to use tobacco, remarked Senator Thomas H. Benton, and I have never touched it from that time to the present day. She asked me never to gamble, and I never have. She admonished me against hard drinking, and whatever usefulness I have attained in life, I owe to my compliance with her pious wishes. The Christian mother who thus loves her children may be sure of their sincerest affection in return. An old man, wasted with disease, was struggling feebly with death. His family and friends stood by, rendering every kind office which they could, but still there was one thing which he longed for, and which all their tenderest affections failed to supply. He rolled his head in agony, and faintly whispered, I want mother! She had been dead for fifty years! As a child, he had carried his little sorrows to his mother, and she had always proved his ready comforter, and now, after all this lapse of time, forgetful, for the moment, that wife and children and grandchildren were with him, he remembered no one but his mother! A noted infidel was once suddenly brought under religious influences, and cried aloud, in his agony, God of my mother, have mercy on me! When a lady once told Archbishop Sharpe that she would not trouble her children with instruction about religion until they had reached the years of discretion, the shrewd prelate answered, If you do not teach them, the devil will! (J. N. Norton.)

The power of mothers

The power of mothers is a fertile theme for contemplation and one most fascinating. It has been said that the greatest moral power in the world is that exercised by a mother over her child. Can you name any force which you dare call equal to it? Is it not true, as Douglas Jerrold put it, that she who rocks the cradle rules the world? In the first place, note the fact that–


I.
The early years of a child belong to the mother. These are the years which give shape and colour to all the rest of life. And in these the natural guide and companion of the child is the mother. Her presence and her varied teachings are the most potent force brought to bear upon it in the fresh and dewy morning of its existence. As soon as the child begins to comprehend language and to ponder ideas it conveys, what priceless opportunities are the mothers for inspiring and leading it! It learns its words from her lips and pronounces them after her methods. A mispronunciation acquired in childhood often clings to one all his days. The child thinks its mothers thoughts as well as speaks her words. Its views of things are largely derived from her. She can teach the child to be observant of what is within him and without him, upon notice of which wisdom so largely depends. She can develop in it the habit of thought, which so enhances the power of thought. She can elevate its thinking. She can teach it to be affectionate, aspiring, loyal, and brave. In short, she can mould her child well-nigh as easily as the sculptor shapes his plastic clay into the statue of faultless beauty.


II.
The example and the teachings of the mother are permanent influences. This from their very nature, not simply because she has the control of the years of youth. A mothers life is one of the regulating and animating forces of that of her children as long as they live. There is a sacredness in that example which time increases rather than lessens in the bosom of every right-minded child. Even those who are wayward admit its power, and it is always one of the most invincible agents in their restoration. The same is true of the precepts she has given him. Not merely do they start him in the course he takes, they remain with him as elemental factors of his being and his conduct. They were the warrant of his early actions, and he unconsciously makes appeal to them all his life. Charles Reade, the famous novelist, when near the end of his life, declared: I owe the larger half of what I am to my mother. And John Ruskin, nobly eminent as he is, cannot be disloyal to the memory of her who gave him birth. He wrote in this strain: My mothers influence in moulding my character was conspicuous. She forced me to learn daily long chapters of the Bible by heart. To that discipline and patient, accurate resolve I owe not only much of general power of taking pains, but the best part of my taste for literature. And this is the testimony of an author whose facile pen has traced some of the most superb and exquisite sentences to be found in our English speech.


III.
Affection for mothers is enduring. It is this, in large measure, which lends power to their example and instruction. Still, it is a force by itself beyond these, in all the life of the child. If there is no love on earth like a mothers love, it calls forth in response an affection that many waters cannot drown. And this affection is a purifying, uplifting, gladdening element in the life of one who shares it. It spurs him to labour and self-denial. It kindles patience, zeal, hope, courage. It elevates, and quickens all his nature by its silent yet persuasive influence. When he is tempted, that love nerves him for victory. When he is despondent it clothes him with fortitude. When he is weary he rests upon it. When he is lonely its sweet presence enlivens his soul. When he is strong he rejoices for her dear sake. When he is successful he exults because she will be happy. Said Lord Macaulay: I am sure it is worth while being sick to be nursed by a mother. One of the most pathetic elements in the sensitive spirit of William Cowper was his affectionate regard for his mother, who died when he was in his sixth year. To a niece who sent him her picture he wrote: Every creature that bears an affinity to my mother is dear to me . . . The world could not have furnished you with a present so acceptable to me as the picture which you have so kindly sent me. I kissed it and hung it where it is the last object that I see at night, and, of course, the first on which I open my eyes in the morning. Who can doubt the healthful charm of that beautiful portrait over the life of the son? A mothers face–what beauty in its outlines, what sweetness in its expression, what inspiration in its presence in the mind only! No wonder that Napoleon said the greatest need of France was mothers. It does not appear strange that in the early centuries of our era Christian matrons should have been held in high esteem. The names of the mothers of not a few heroes of the Church are inseparably linked with their own. Emmelia with Basil; Nonna, who died while praying, with Gregory Nazienzen; Anthusa, whose noble character led the heathen to exclaim: Ah, what wonderful women there are among Christians! with Chrysostom, the golden-mouthed; Monica, who died in the arms of her son, with Augustine, the great theologian; Aletta, of whom an eloquent orator has recently said, I cannot but feel that that saintly mother who died eight hundred years ago in Burgundy has modified the civilisation of the age in which we live–that she has left the touch of her hand immortal on your heart and mine! with Bernard of Clairvaux. And in modern times the mother of the Wesleys is called also the mother of Methodism, such was her impress upon her sons. John Quincey Adams doubtless gave utterance to the sober truth when he said: All I am, or ever have been, in this world, I owe, under God, to my mother. And there is no flower in all the field that owes as much to the sun aa multitudes in the lesser walks of life owe to their mothers. The glory of motherhood has been strikingly set forth by some one who said: God could not be everywhere, and therefore He made mothers. Theirs is the post of honour in the world. They sit upon thrones most regal. Sceptres of unbounded empire are in their hands. O mothers, realise the proud eminence you have attained! Aim to meet well its immense responsibilities, its limitless possibilities. Your children are, in a large degree, at your own disposal. Charles Dickens did not err when he thought that it must be written somewhere that the virtues of mothers should be visited, occasionally, upon their children as well as the sins of fathers. (A. W. Hazen, D. D.)

The king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself unto her.

A mothers noble recognition

The story is told that not long ago President Loubet paid a brief official visit to a town near his birthplace. A triumphal procession was formed through the town, and the President, seated in the magnificent four-horse state carriage, was driven between long lines of enthusiastic people towards another part of the town, where his old peasant mother patiently awaited his coming. She had a special seat, from which she could have an uninterrupted view of the passing procession. When she caught sight of the magnificent carriage approaching, surrounded by a brilliant cavalry escort, notwithstanding her eighty-six years, she rose quickly to her feet in order to get a better view of her boy, as she always calls the President. The latter, who had been privately told where his mother was, noticed the movement. Seized by a sudden impulse, he ordered the carriage to step, and, turning to the general in attendance, said hastily: For the moment I cease to be President of France, and become a son. Then, springing quickly to the ground, Monsieur Loubet hastened by the garden, which he well knew, to the little stand, caught the quivering old mother in his arms, and embraced her long and silently, while copious tears streamed down her wrinkled cheeks. The large crowd that witnessed this scene of filial affection was so touched as not to be able at first to signify their approval, and it was not till the President was in his carriage again, and the procession was moving once more, that the spell was broken, and the people cheered the dutiful son as he deserved.

A rulers regard for his mother

President Roosevelt, in his life of Oliver Cromwell, tells us how devoted the mother of Cromwell was to her great son, and how he loved her. When he was young, he followed her counsel. When he became Dictator of England, he placed her in the royal palace of Whitehall; and when she died, he buried her in Westminster Abbey. This care for our mothers is one element of greatness which we may all possess.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

The most honourable place next to the kings. See 2Ch 18:18; Neh 8:4; Psa 45:9; Mat 20:21.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

19, 20. Bath-sheba . . . went untoKing SolomonThe filial reverence and the particular act ofrespect, which Solomon rendered, were quite in accordance with thesentiments and customs of the East. The right hand is the place ofhonor; and as it expressly said to have been assigned to “theking’s mother,” it is necessary to remark that, when a husbanddies, his widow acquires a higher dignity and power, as a mother overher son, than she ever possessed before. Besides, the dignity of”king’s mother” is a state office, to which certainrevenues are attached. The holder has a separate palace or court, aswell as possesses great influence in public affairs; and as thedignity is held for life, it sometimes happens, in consequence ofdeaths, that the person enjoying it may not be related to thereigning sovereign by natural maternity. Bath-sheba had evidentlybeen invested with this honorable office.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Bathsheba therefore went unto King Solomon, to speak unto him for Adonijah,…. She went from her own house to the palace; for she might not live at court; or however had an apartment to herself, from whence she went to the king with her suit in favour of Adonijah:

and the king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself unto her; upon her entrance into the presence chamber, in honour to her as a parent, he rose up from his throne, and made his obeisance to her, as a dutiful son:

and sat down on his throne, and caused a seat to be set for the king’s mother; a magnificent seat or throne, as the word is, was ordered to be set for her:

and she sat on his right hand; where he placed her in honour to her as his mother; so Nero a placed Tiridates king of Armenia at his right hand, to do him honour.

a Suetonius in Vit. Neron. c. 13.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

B. THE PETITION MADE BY BATHSHEBA 2:1921

TRANSLATION

(19) Then Bathsheba went unto King Solomon to speak to him on behalf of Adonijah. And the king arose to meet her, bowed himself to Her, and sat upon his throne; then he had a throne set for the mother of the king, and she sat on his right hand. (20) And she said, One small favor I am about to ask from you, do not deny me. And the king said to her, Ask, my mother, for I will not deny you. (21) And she said, Let Abishag the Shunammite be given to Adonijah your brother for a wife.

COMMENTS

When Bathsheba entered Solomons throne room, he rendered unto her the respect due the queen mother, rising to meet her, bowing to her and placing her throne[119] on the right side of his own (1Ki. 2:19). Casting herself in the role of Cupid, and with a twinkle in her eye, Bathsheba got right to the point of her visit. She referred to her petition as a small favor, and so it seemed to her. She thought she held the threads of a love story in her hands and that it would be a small thing for Solomon to make these handsome lovers happy.[120] Solomon expressed willingness to fulfill whatever request his mother might make, never dreaming that she would ask for anything which he could not grant (1Ki. 2:20). Being thus reassured, Bathsheba stated her request on behalf of Adonijah (1Ki. 2:21).

[119] Most commentators assume that Solomon ordered his servants to so arrange the thrones, but the Hebrew suggests that he did it with his own hand.
[120] Hammond, PC, p. 37.

Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

19. The king rose up to meet her Here we see with what respect and honour the “queen mother” was treated. Bathsheba now, as mother of the reigning king, has more power and influence in court than she had while David lived. See note on 1Ki 15:13.

Caused a seat to be set The word here rendered seat is the same as that rendered throne in the preceding sentence. It was evidently a royal seat, and placed on the king’s right hand the place of honour.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

1Ki 2:19. And she sat on his right hand Nothing can be more respectful than the behaviour of Solomon to his mother; nor could he have shewn her more honour than to seat her on his right hand: for in those times to seat a person on the right hand, was to equal them with one’s self, and to make them partakers of the same rank, dignity, and power. See Psa 110:1.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

1Ki 2:19 Bathsheba therefore went unto king Solomon, to speak unto him for Adonijah. And the king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself unto her, and sat down on his throne, and caused a seat to be set for the king’s mother; and she sat on his right hand.

Ver. 19. And bowed himself unto her. ] Sir Thomas More, Lord Chancellor of England, would in Westminster Hall beg his father’s blessing on his knees.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

seat = throne.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

rose up: Exo 20:12, Lev 19:3, Lev 19:32

she sat: Psa 45:9, Psa 110:1, Mat 25:33

Reciprocal: Gen 31:35 – rise up Gen 48:12 – he bowed himself Exo 18:7 – went Pro 31:28 – children Mat 20:21 – the one

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

1Ki 2:19. The king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself For the high dignity to which he was advanced, did not make him forget the honour due to a parent: an amiable example this, to teach all children to continue to show respect to their parents, how much soever they may be advanced above them in wealth, dignity, or honour. She sat on his right hand The most honourable place, next to the king.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

2:19 Bathsheba therefore went unto king Solomon, to speak unto him for Adonijah. And the king rose up to meet her, and {k} bowed himself unto her, and sat down on his throne, and caused a seat to be set for the king’s mother; and she sat on his right hand.

(k) In token of reverence, and that others by his example might have her in greater honour.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes