| Douay RheimsDouay-Rheims Bible -- The New Testament was published at Rheims (1582), the Old Testament at Douay (1609). The Douay Rheims served as the main English bible for the Catholic world for centuries. Bishop Challoner updated it extensively mid-18th century. Biblical scholar Rev. George Haydock compiled a Catholic commentary mid-19th century. This text set is from an approved 1914 U.S. printing. | Haydock CommentaryHaydock Catholic Bible Commentary - based on the Douay-Rheims Bible; originally compiled by Catholic priest and biblical scholar Rev. George Leo Haydock (1774-1849). |
| 1 And the Philistines fought against Israel, and the men of Israel fled from before the Philistines, and fell down slain in mount Gelboe. | Fled. They make but a feeble resistance, as God was not with them. H. --- The first onset was made by the archers, and Saul's three sons fell, while the king himself was dangerously wounded. C. --- The death of his sons would increase his anguish. M. --- He seems not to have told them of the divine decree, as he might deem it irrevocable and unavoidable, so that flight would have been of no service to them. H.
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| 2 And the Philistines fell upon Saul, and upon his sons, and they slew Jonathan, and Abinadab and Melchisua the sons of Saul. | Jonathan. Ven. Bede, &c. doubt not of his salvation. Salien.
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| 3 And the whole weight of the battle was turned upon Saul: and the archers overtook him, and he was grievously wounded by the archers. | Overtook. Heb. "attacked, found, or hit him." He was running away. H. --- Wounded. Some translate Heb. "terrified," as they believe the words of the Amalecite, "my whole life is in me." But that wretch deserves no credit; and Saul would probably not take the desperate resolution of killing himself, till he saw there was no possibility of escaping. Sept. "the archers find him, and they wounded him in the lower belly." Theodotion, "in the part near the liver."
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| 4 Then Saul said to his armourbearer: Draw thy sword, and kill me: lest these uncircumcised come, and slay me, and mock at me. And his armourbearer would not: for he was struck with exceeding great fear. Then Saul took his sword, and fell upon it. | Bearer. The Rabbins say he was Doeg. They were not yet come to a close engagement. --- Mock at me, as was then customary. See Jos. viii. 29. Judg. i. 7. He might recollect the treatment of Samson. C. --- Fear. "To spill the royal blood's a direful thing." Homer.
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| 5 And when his armourbearer saw this, to wit, that Saul was dead, he also fell upon his sword and died with him. | With him. Thus to avoid a little shame and temporal punishment, they rushed into those which are inconceivably geat and eternal. H. --- The Jews in vain attempt to excuse Saul, as they deem suicide in such cases lawful, though in others they deprive those of burial, who have been guilty of it. Joseph. Ant. vi. 14. --- This author applauds the behaviour of Saul; and indeed, his courage called forth the praises of David. But even the pagans have deemed those no better than cowards, who have killed themselves to avoid misery.
Rebus in adversis facile est contemnere mortem:
Fortiter ille facit, qui miser esse potest. Martial. The civil laws deny suicides the rites of burial, as they are also guilty of a crime against the state, which they deprive of their labours. They unjustly abandon what God has only committed to their care. Saul seems to have been afraid of receiving any insult himself, rather than to have been desirous of preventing the blasphemies of the infidels against God, as the Jews pretend. He gave no signs of repentance, and the spirit of God pronounces his condemnation. So Saul died for his iniquities, because he transgressed; (C. Heb. and Sept. in his iniquities, by which he prevaricated. T.)... and moreover consulted also a witch, and trusted not in the Lord: therefore he slew him. 1 Par. x. 13, 14. Saul prefigured those, who having yielded to temptations, persist and die in their evil ways. S. Greg. W.
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| 6 So Saul died, and his three sons, and his armourbearer, and all his men that same day together. | His men. Paral. his house fell together. The hopes of his family were at an end, (H.) though Isboseth, Abner, and some few survived him, (M.) who had fled, (C.) or had not been in the engagement. H.
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| 7 And the men of Israel, that were beyond the valley, and beyond the Jordan, seeing that the Israelites were fled, and that Saul was dead, and his sons, forsook their cities, and fled: and the Philistines came, and dwelt there. | Beyond, or about "the passage" or fords of the Jordan, as the Heb. means. M. --- The Philistines did not pursue after them, as God set bounds to their ambition. It might otherwise have proved very fatal to his people, who were now so much divided and terrified. In the parallel passage, in Chronicles, it is only said, When the men...that dwelt in the plains (of Jezrahel) saw this, they fled. 1 Par. x. 7. The Philistines seized the abandoned cities, particularly Bethsan, (v. 10. H.) which had been retained by the Chanaanites in the days of the judges, and which David took back. Judg. i. 27. 3 K. iv. 12.
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| 8 And on the morrow the Philistines came to strip the slain, and they found Saul and his three sons lying in mount Gelboe. | |
| 9 And they cut off Saul's head, and stripped him of his armour, and sent into the land of the Philistines round about, to publish it in the temples of their idols, and among their people. | Head, as David had treated that of Goliath. C. xvii. 54.
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| 10 And they put his armour in the temple of Astaroth, but his body they hung on the wall of Bethsan. | Astaroth. The like custom was observed by the Hebrew, (C. xxi. 9,) and by the Greeks and Romans, (C.) to acknowledge that victory was granted by God. The Philistines insulted Saul's body, and blasphemed the true God, as much as if they had taken the king alive. He only avoided the mortification of hearing them while he was forced to attend to the furies below. --- Body, with those of his three sons, v. 12. H. --- Saul's head was hung up in the temple of Dagon, at Azotus; (1 Par. x. 10,) his body was suspended on the wall or street of Bethsan; (2 K. xxi. 12,) or in the most public place, near the gate of the city.
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| 11 Now when the inhabitants of Jabes Galaad had heard all that the Philistines had done to Saul, | Jabes, in gratitude for the deliverance which he had procured for them. C. xi. 11. C. --- They are also deserving of praise for shewing mercy to the dead, as well as for their bravery. W.
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| 12 All the most valiant men arose, and walked all the night, and took the body of Saul, and the bodies of his sons, from the wall of Bethsan: and they came to Jabes Galaad, and burnt them there: | Burnt them, or the flesh, reserving the ashes and bones to be buried, as was customary among the Greeks (Homer, ψ. ) and Romans:
Sed cænam funeris hœres
Negliget iratus quod rem curtaveris; urnæ
Ossa inodora dabit. Persius. vi. See Amos vi. 10. Jonathan insinuates, that they burnt over the bodies aromatic spices.
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| 13 And they took their bones and buried them in the wood of Jabes: and fasted seven days. |
Wood.
Par.
under the oak.
---
Days,
at their own option. David fasted one day, (C.) as he did for Abner. Salien. --- There was no obligation of mourning for the kings, though it is probable that those near the royal city, would shew this mark of attention to the deceased monarch. See Jer. xxxiv. 5. 2 Par. xxxv. 25. The usual term of mourning was seven days. Eccli. xxii. 13. C. --- It is very difficult to ascertain the length of Saul's reign. Sanctius and Tirin allow him only 2 years; Petau 12; Calvisius 15; Salien 18; Bucholeer, and probably Josephus, 20, though most copies of the latter have 38; S. Aug. Serarius, Usher, &c. 40, which is the term mentioned Acts xiii. 20. But most chronologers suppose that the time of Samuel's administration is there also included. H. --- Sulpitius thinks that Saul only "reigned a very short time," as "the ark was brought to Cariathiarim before the appeared on the throne, and was removed by David, after it had been
there twenty years."
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