1 Chronicles 11 - Albert Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • 1 Chronicles 11:6-8 open_in_new

    The narrative here given fills out a manifest defect in 2 Samuel 5:8 where something has evidently dropped out of the text.

    The prowess of Joab on this occasion, and the part which he took in the building of the city of David 1 Chronicles 11:8, are known to us only from this passage of Chronicles.

  • 1 Chronicles 11:10 open_in_new

    Strengthened themselves - Or “exerted themselves” - “strenuously assisted with all Israel in making David king.” This list of David’s principal heroes belongs, therefore, to his reign at Hebron. In Samuel the list is not given until nearly the end of David’s reign 2 Samuel 23:8-39.

  • 1 Chronicles 11:26 open_in_new

    etc. The list of names here given corresponds generally with that in 2 Samuel 23:24-39, but presents several remarkable differences.

    (1) the number in Chronicles is 47; the number in Samuel is 31.

    (2) Four names in the list of Chronicles are not in Samuel.

    (3) five names in Samuel are not in Chronicles.

    (4) many of the other names, both personal and local, vary in the two lists.

    It is quite possible that the two lists varied to some extent originally. The writer of Chronicles distinctly states that he gives the list as it stood at the time of David’s becoming king over all Israel 1 Chronicles 11:10. The writer of Samuel does not assign his list to any definite period of David’s reign, but probably delivers it to us as it was constituted at a later date. It is quite possible therefore that the names which occur only in Chronicles are those of persons who had died or quitted the army before the other list was made out, and that the new names in Samuel are the names of those who had taken their places. See the 2 Samuel 23:39 note.

  • 1 Chronicles 11:34 open_in_new

    The sons of Hashem - It is impossible that this can be the true reading, since an individual warrior must be spoken of. Comparing 2 Samuel 23:32, perhaps the most probable conjecture is that the “Beni-Hashem” of Chronicles and the “Beni Jashen” of Samuel alike conceal some single name of a man which cannot now be recovered.