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The Adam Clarke Commentary

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Chapter 19

David sends a congratulatory message to Hanun, king of Ammon, 1,2. He treats the messengers with great incivility, 3,4. David is exasperated, but condoles with the degraded messengers, 5. The Ammonites prepare for war, and hire thirty-two thousand chariots, and besiege Medeba, 6,7. David sends Joab to attack them; he defeats the Syrians and Ammonites, 8-15. The discomfited Syrians recruit their army, and invade David's territories beyond Jordan; he attacks them, kills Shophach their general, seven thousand charioteers, and forty thousand of their infantry, 16-18. The Syrians abandon the Ammonites and make a separate peace with David, 19.

Notes on Chapter 19

Verse 1. Now it came to pass
See the same history, 2 Samuel 10:1,

Verse 4. And cut off their garments in the midst
Usque ad eorum, pudenda. So the Targum, Jarchi, and others; leaving exposed what nature and decency require to be concealed. See on 2 Samuel 10:4.

Verse 6. Chariots and horsemen out of Mesopotamia
These are not mentioned in the parallel place in Samuel; probably they did not arrive till the Ammonites and their other allies were defeated by the Israelites in the first battle.

Verse 7. Thirty and two thousand
The whole number mentioned in Samuel is, Syrians, of Beth-rehob, and of Zoba, twenty thousand; of King Maacah, one thousand; of Ish-tob, twelve thousand; in all thirty-three thousand. Of chariots or cavalry there is no mention. These could not have been the whole army.

Verse 13. Be of good courage
See Clarke on 2 Samuel 10:12.

Verse 18. Forty thousand footmen
See this number accounted for in Clarke's note on "2Sa 10:18".

Verse 19. They made peace with David, and became his servants
See on 2 Samuel 10:19, and the concluding note in that place; and see for omissions in Chronicles, the preface to these books.


Copyright Statement
The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative of an electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.

Bibliography Information
Clarke, Adam. "Commentary on 1 Chronicles 19". "The Adam Clarke Commentary". <http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=1ch&chapter=019>. 1832.  

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