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  1. In 1 Chronicles 3:6 it is remarkable that a son of Jehoiakim's son Jeconiah is mentioned, named Zedekiah, while the sons of Jeconiah follow only in 1 Chronicles 3:17 and 1 Chronicles 3:18.

    • 17 Commentaries

      The sons of Jeconiah, Assir — The word אסר, Assir, means...

    • Clarke

      The sons of Jeconiah - Jeremiah has said (Jeremiah 22:30)...

    • Kelly

      1 Chronicles Chapter 3 Then comes the third chapter - the...

    • Mhcw

      Bible > Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible > 1...

    • Sermon

      Sermon Bible. 1 Chronicles 3:1. Now these were the sons of...

    • Gaebelein

      3. The sons of Jeconiah (1Chronicles 3:16-24) Six sons were...

    • JFB

      18. Malchiram also—As far as Jeconiah, everything is plain;...

    • MacLaren

      Now these were the sons of David, which were born unto him...

    • Cambridge

      17. the sons of Jeconiah; Assir, Salathiel] R.V. the sons of...

    • Benson

      1 Chronicles 3:21-22. The sons of Shechaniah — All these,...

  2. And Josias begat Jechonias and his brethren—Jeconiah was Josiah's grandson, being the son of Jehoiakim, Josiah's second son (1Ch 3:15); but Jehoiakim might well be sunk in such a catalogue, being a mere puppet in the hands of the king of Egypt (2Ch 36:4).

  3. The sons of Jeconiah, Assir — The word אסר, Assir, means captive, or prisoner, and does not appear to be a person’s name here, but to be added to signify that Jeconiah begat his son Salathiel when he was a captive in Babylon, according to Matthew 1:12. Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary. 3:1-24 Genealogies.

    • Matthew Henrylink
    • Matthew Poolelink
    • Jamieson, Fausset & Brownlink

    First, probably the most famous evangelical whole-Bible commentary is Matthew Henry’s commentary on the whole Bible. Matthew Henry was a British pastor who wrote his commentary between 1704 and 1714. He died when he’d only gotten through the Old Testament and up through Acts in the New Testament, and some friends completed it by using his notes. Ch...

    But here are the other two. The first is Matthew Poole’s — P-O-O-L-E — commentary on the whole Bible, published in 1685. Its original title, typical of those old guys, is Annotations Upon the Holy Bible, Wherein the Sacred Text Is Inserted, and Various Readings Annexed, Together with Parallel Scriptures, the More Difficult Terms in Each Verse Are E...

    Number three is Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible by Robert Jamieson, A.R. Fausset, and David Brown, usually abbreviated to Jamieson, Fausset & Brown. Now, don’t let the word critical in the title — Commentary Critical— put you off. It doesn’t mean negative criticism. It means that among these three commentaries, this one would...

  4. What the Bible says about Jeconiah. (From Forerunner Commentary) Jeremiah 28:1-4. Previously, God told Jeremiah to make a number of wooden yokes for himself and for various neighboring kings (Jeremiah 27:1-11), which symbolized servitude to Nebuchadnezzar. Through this, God was instructing to submit to Babylonian rule.

  5. Here ended the race of kings of the house of David, until the King Messiah came; for though there were of his line that were governors of Judah, as Zerubbabel, yet not kings. Moreover, Jeconiah was the last of the house of David in the line of Solomon.

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  7. Jeconiah's Release From Prison (2 Kings 25:27-30; Jeremiah 52:31-34) March 10-12. Jeconiah, known also as Jehoiachin, was just 18 when he reigned over Judah for a mere three months. Nebuchadnezzar had carried the young man away to Babylon where he remained imprisoned for 37 long years—until he was 55!

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