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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Samuel 2:6

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Samuel 2:6

The LORD killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up.

6. the grave ] The Heb. word Sheol, variously rendered in the E. V. grave, hell, pit, denotes the mysterious unseen world, the abode of all departed spirits, righteous and wicked alike. Hell, from A. S. helan, to cover, hide, would be a fair rendering if we could strip the word of all the associations with which it has been invested; but as we cannot do this, it is best to retain the Heb. word Sheol, or take its N. T. equivalent Hades.

There is no direct allusion here to the resurrection: death and Sheol are figuratively used for the depths of adversity and peril: life for deliverance and prosperity. See Psa 71:20; Psa 86:13.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

6 8. In Jehovah’s hand are the issues of life and death, prosperity and adversity. All history illustrates this truth. Hezekiah is recalled from the gates of the grave: Job is tried by affliction: David is taken from the sheepfolds to be king: Nebuchadnezzar sinks to the level of a beast: Haman is degraded, Mordecai honoured: and chiefest example of all, He who “was despised and rejected of men,” was “highly exalted, and given a name that is above every name.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

1Sa 2:6

The Lord killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up.

Killed, then made alive

We must be emptied of self before we can be filled with grace; we must be stripped of our rags before we can be clothed with righteousness; we must be unclothed that we may be clothed; wounded, that we may be healed; killed, that we may be made alive; buried in disgrace, that we may rise in holy glory. These words, Sown in corruption, that we may be raised in incorruption; sown in dishonour, that we may be raised in glory; sown in weakness, that we may be raised in power, are as true of the soul as of the body. To borrow an illustration from the surgeons art: the bone that is set wrong must be broken again, in order that it may be set aright. I press this truth on your attention. It is certain that a soul filled with self has no room for God; and like the inn at Bethlehem, crowded with meaner guests, a heart preoccupied by pride and her godless train, has no chamber within which Christ may be born in us the hope of glory. (T. Guthrie, D. D.)

From death to life

This sentence has its own plain and natural meaning, which lies upon its surface like dust of gold; it has, moreover, a spiritual meaning, which needs to be digged for like silver in the mine.


I.
In reference to its first and most manifest meaning, The Lord bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up. Here the agency of God, in life and death, is clearly revealed to us. How well it is to discern the Lords hand in everything. We ascribe events to second causes, to the laws of nature and I know not what. I think it were better far, if we could go back to the good old way of talking and speaking of the Lord as being in everything. While we donor deny the laws of nature, nor decry the discoveries of science, we will suffer none of these to be hung up as a veil before our present God.

1. First of all, it should awaken gratitude. What a mercy it is that we are here this evening!

2. While it causes gratitude, it should compel consideration. The Lord bringeth down to the grave, and it is his rule never to do anything without a purpose. He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men for nought. There is always a needs be.

3. The Lords bringing us law and raising us up again, should cause great searching of heart. Suppose I had died when last I was sick: was I then prepared to die?

4. To those of us who are believers in Christ, restoration from sickness, and the privilege of again coming up to Gods house after an absence from it thorough illness, should suggest renewed activity. Haste thee! for behind thee are the flying wheels of the chariot of death, and the ashes thereof are growing red hot with speed. Fly, man, if thou wouldst accomplish thy life work, for thou hast not a moment to sparer Be watchful, brethren, for tits Lord bringeth down to the grave, and from that grave he bringeth us not up again to work, though he will bring us up to the reward and to the rest which remain foe the people of God.


II.
Our text seems to indicate a state of heart through which those pass who are brought to God. I shall speak new experimentally, for if there breathes one soul on earth that can speak experimentally here, I am that man.

1. The sinner is led, first of all, to hear his own sentence pronounced.

2. Further than this: the convinced sinner is often made to feel, not only the sentence and the justice of it, but the very horror of death itself. You may have read in the narrative of the old American war, of the execution of deserters. They were brought out one bright morning, while yet the dew was on the grass, and were bidden to kneel down each man upon his coffin, and then a file of soldiers stepped forth; the word was given, and each man fell upon his coffin in which he was to be buried. Such things as the punishment of deserters are common in every war, but what must he the horror of the man who stands there, knowing that the bullet is waiting to reach his heart? In the old wars, they used to have a black heart sewn on the mans breast, and all the soldiers were to take aim and fire at that. Why, the man must suffer a thousand deaths white he stood waiting for the word of command. I have stood there, spiritually; and there are hundreds here who have thus faced their eternal doom.

3. Then there is a yet further death which the convinced sinner is made to feel, and that is the death of inability. He feels himself brought into a perfect state of death, as if a stupor had gone through every nerve, and frozen every muscle rigidly in its place, so that even the lifting of his little finger to help himself appears to be beyond his power. The climax of your disease is just the dawn of my hopes; your direst poverty is the time when I expect to see you enriched, for when you are completely emptied and have nothing, then Jesus Christ win be your strength and your salvation.

4. No doubt, the man now sees death written upon all his hopes. There was a door through which I had hoped to enter eternal life. I had spent much time in painting it, and making it comely to look upon. It seemed to me to have a golden knocker, a marble threshold, and posts and lintels of mahogany, and I thought it was the door of life for me. But now what do I see? I see a great black cross adown it, and over it there is written, Lord, have mercy upon us. This door is the door to heaven by my own good works, which I thought full sure would always be open to me; but lo, I see that all my best works are bad, and Lord, have mercy upon us, is the highest thing my works can produce for me. The death of legal hope is the salvation of the soul. I like to see legal hope swung up like a traitor. There let him hang to rot before the sun, more cursed than any other that was ever hanged on a tree. No more, then, concerning this death–The Lord bringeth down. But now a word or two of comfort for any of you who are brought down to this spiritual grave. There are many precious promises for such. Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light. Though ye have lien among the pots, yet shall ye be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow gold. Remember the experience of Jonah. Let the hope of Jeremiah be your consolation: But though he cause grief, yet will he have compassion according to the multitude o(his mercies. For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men. And now notice that where God has thus killed and brought down, we may rest assured He will certainly bring up again. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 6. The Lord killeth] God is the arbiter of life and death; he only can give life, and he only has a right to take it away.

He bringeth down to the grave] The Hebrew word sheol, which we translate grave, seems to have the same meaning in the Old Testament with , hades in the New, which is the word generally used by the Septuagint for the other. It means the grave, the state of the dead, and the invisible place, or place of separate spirits. Sometimes we translate it hell, which now means the state of perdition, or place of eternal torments; but as this comes from the Saxon [Anglo-Saxon], to cover or conceal, it means only the covered place. In some parts of England the word helling is used for the covers of a book, the slating of a house, c. The Targum seems to understand it of death and the resurrection. “He kills and commands to give life he causes to descend into Sheol, that in the time to come he may bring them into the lives of eternity,” i.e., the life of shame and everlasting contempt, and the life of glory.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Killeth, and maketh alive; either,

1. Diverse persons; he killeth one, and maketh another alive. Or,

2. The same person whom he first killeth, or bringeth very nigh unto death, he afterwards raiseth to life. Me, who was almost overwhelmed and consumed with grief, he hath revived. The name of death, both in sacred Scripture and profane writers, is oft given to great calamities; as Isa 26:19; Eze 37:11; Rom 8:36.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

6. he bringeth down to the grave,and bringeth upthat is, He reduces to the lowest state ofdegradation and misery, and restores to prosperity and happiness.

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

The Lord killeth, and maketh alive,…. Which is true of different persons; some he takes away by death, and others he preserves and continues in life; and of the same persons, whom God removes by death, and restores them to life again, of which there are instances both in the Old and New Testament; and be they which they will, both are of God, he is the great Disposer of life and death. Death is of him; it is by his appointment; it is sent by his order; and when it has a commission from him, there is no resisting it; and let it be brought about by what means it will, still it is of God: and life is of him; it is first given by him, and it is preserved by him; and though taken away, it shall be restored at the resurrection of the dead; of which some interpret this clause, as Kimchi and Ben Gersom observe: and what is here said is true, in a spiritual sense; the Lord kills by the law, or shows men that they are dead in sin, and in a legal sense; and he makes alive by his Spirit, through the Gospel, quickening such who were dead in trespasses and sins; which is his own work, and the effect of divine power and grace; [See comments on De 32:39].

he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up; he bringeth some very near to the grave, to the very brink of it; so that in their own apprehensions, and in the opinion of their friends, they are just dropping into it, and no hope of recovery left; when he says to them “Return”, and brings them back from the pit, and delivers them from going into it, Job 33:22 and even when they are laid in it, he brings up out of it again, as in the case of Lazarus, and which will be the case in the resurrection, Joh 5:28.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

(6) The Lord killeth, and maketh alive.Death too and life come from this same omnipotent Lord: nothing in the affairs of men is the sport of blind chance. The reign of a Divine law administered by the God to whom Hannah prayed is universal, and guides with a strict unerring justice what are commonly called the ups and downs, the changes and chances, of this mortal life. The following lines of the 7th, 8th, and 9th verses enforce by varied instances the same solemn truth.

The Babylonian Talmud on these words has a curious and interesting tradition:Three classes appear on the day of judgment: the perfectly righteous, who are at once written and sealed for eternal life; the thoroughly bad, who are at once written and sealed for hell: as it is written (Dan. 12:2), And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt; and those in the intermediate state, who go down into hell, where they cry and howl for a time, whence they ascend again: as it is written (Zec. 13:9), And I will bring the third part through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried; they shall call on my name, and I will hear them. It is of them Hannah said (1Sa. 2:6), The Lord killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to hell, and bringeth up.Treatise Bosh Hashanah, fol. 16, Colossians 2.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

6. Kills and makes alive In his hand is the power of life and death. Sheol here evidently means the grave, as in Gen 37:35; Gen 42:38; but with the word is ever associated a dim and shadowy idea of a separate disembodied existence, the under-world, into which all the dead have gone.

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

(6) The LORD killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up. (7) The LORD maketh poor, and maketh rich: he bringeth low, and lifteth up. (8) He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes, and to make them inherit the throne of glory: for the pillars of the earth are the LORD’S, and he hath set the world upon them.

These are all so many beautiful repetitions of the same important doctrine, in asserting God’s sovereignty over all things, both in the kingdoms of providence, and of grace. And it is sweet when the heart finds a cordial assent, in all the circumstances of our own warfare. Reader! what can afford more solid joy, than the contemplation of the Lord Jesus, in the character which John saw him in, and which corresponds to what is here said: He hath the keys of hell and death. Rev 1:18 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

1Sa 2:6 The LORD killeth, and maketh alive: he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up.

Ver. 6. The Lord killeth, and maketh alive. ] He layeth men for dead, and then reviveth them, as 2Co 1:9-10 . That great apostle was “in death often”; and those ancient confessors cry out, “For thy sake are we killed all the day long.” Rom 8:36 The Hebrews say that Peninnah’s children died all but two, and that those were saved alive by Hannah’s prayer for them, at their mother’s request.

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

the grave. Hebrew. Sheol. App-35.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

grave

Heb. “Sheol,” (See Scofield “Hab 2:5”).

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

killeth: Deu 32:39, 2Ki 5:7, Job 5:18, Psa 68:20, Hos 6:1, Hos 6:2, Joh 5:25-29, Joh 11:25, Rev 1:18

he bringeth: 1Sa 20:3, Psa 116:3, Isa 26:19, Jon 2:2-6, Mat 12:40, 2Co 1:9, 2Co 1:10

Reciprocal: Gen 30:2 – Am I Lev 14:34 – I put the plague of leprosy 1Ki 17:22 – and he revived Job 33:22 – his soul Pro 24:12 – that keepeth Ecc 3:3 – time to kill Ecc 5:14 – and he Isa 38:9 – he had Eze 37:3 – O Lord God Luk 1:52 – put Luk 7:7 – but Joh 11:44 – he that 1Ti 6:13 – who quickeneth

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

1Sa 2:6-7. The Lord killeth and maketh alive The power of life and death is in the hands of God; whom he pleaseth he takes out of the world, and whom he pleaseth, he preserves in it; raising men even from the brink of the grave, when they are ready to drop into it. The Lord maketh poor, &c. Here she acknowledges the power of God, in frequently changing the conditions of men, reducing the rich to extreme poverty, and exalting the poor to great riches.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments