John Gills Exposition of the Bible Commentary - 2 Chronicles 5:1-14
See Chapter Introduction read more
See Chapter Introduction read more
Brought in all the things - See the note on 1 Kings 7:51 . read more
The feast - "That is, the feast of tabernacles, which was held in the seventh month." - Targum. See 1 Kings 8:2 . read more
They drew out the staves - As the ark was no longer to be carried about, these were unnecessary. read more
There was nothing in the ark save - The Chaldee paraphrases thus: "There was nothing put in the ark but the two tables which Moses placed there, after the first had been broken on account of the calf which they made in Horeb, and the two other tables had been confirmed which were written with writing expressed in the Ten Words." read more
The things that David … had dedicated ; literally, Hebrew, the holy things; i.e. the dedicate or set apart things of David. The temple-building, which had been commenced in Solomon's fourth year, had occupied seven years in construction ( 1 Kings 6:1 ), but another thirteen years in furnishing ( 1 Kings 9:1 , 1 Kings 9:2 ). The record of Chronicles is, of course, in some respects somewhat more sketchy than that of Kings; and the correct view of the chronology has in both writers to... read more
Conclusion. "Thus all the work that Solomon made … was finished." Better is the end of some things than the beginning, though there are other things in which the beginning is better than the end. It is matters of achievement in which the end is so honourable and so desirable. I. IT IS GROUND FOR CONGRATULATION . We may congratulate ourselves and receive the felicitation of our friends that we have been spared long enough in health and strength; that we have had patience... read more
(latter part ) . Dedication, permitted and desired. We have here— I. THE DEDICATION WHICH GOD PERMITTED . God did not allow David to build the temple, because he had been "a man of war, and had shed blood" ( 1 Chronicles 28:3 ); it was fitting that the house of the Lord, the "God of peace," should be built by a sovereign whose very name spoke of peace, and whose reign was pacific. But God permitted David to dedicate to the service of the temple the spoils he had taken... read more
Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary - 2 Chronicles 5:1-10
This agrees with what we had 1 Kgs. 8:2-10, where an account was given of the solemn introduction of the ark into the new-erected temple. 1. There needed no great solemnity for the bringing in of the dedicated things, 2 Chron. 5:1. They added to the wealth, and perhaps were so disposed as to add to the beauty of it; but they could not add to the holiness, for it was the temple that sanctified the gold, Matt. 23:17. See how just Solomon was both to God and to his father. Whatever David had... read more