John Trapp Complete Commentary - 2 Samuel 19:6 - 19:6

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John Trapp Complete Commentary - 2 Samuel 19:6 - 19:6


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

2Sa_19:6 In that thou lovest thine enemies, and hatest thy friends. For thou hast declared this day, that thou regardest neither princes nor servants: for this day I perceive, that if Absalom had lived, and all we had died this day, then it had pleased thee well.

Ver. 6. And hatest thy friends.] This was not true: neither did David love Absalom as an enemy, but as a son, through a nimium excessively of natural affection.



Then it had pleased thee well.
] But what, then, would have become of good David? and how would his darling son have served him? would he not have been forced, if he escaped with life, to supplicate Absalom in like sort as old Andronicus, the great emperor, to this effect did his young nephew? ‘Reverence my miserable old age, which of itself promiseth unto me shortly death, but unto thee a rest after long cares; reverence the hands which have oftentimes most lovingly embraced thee, yet crying in thy swathing clothes; reverence those lips which have oftentimes most lovingly kissed thee and called thee mine other self; have pity upon a bruised reed cast down by fortune, and do not thou again tread upon it. And seeing thou art thyself a man, be not too proud of thy present condition, but consider the uncertainty and variety of worldly things, taking by me example. See in me the end of long life, and marvel how one might, having received me an emperor of many years, leave me now subject unto another man’s power for ever.’ {a} Thus he, and much more to the same purpose.



{a} Turk. Hist., fol. 172.