Verses 1–11
Commentary on Second Samuel - Chapter 6 cross-referenced with First Chronicles - Chapter 13, 15, 16
AUTHOR’S NOTE: First Chronicles, chapter 13:1-5, contains information pertinent to the subject of the ark’s removal found only in Chronicles, so it is considered in connection with the material found in II Samuel, chapter 6.
Plans to Move the Ark, 1 Chronicles 13:1-5
Not only did David have plans for making Jerusalem the center of government for his kingdom, but also the center of worship of God. The tabernacle had been erected in Shiloh during the early days of the Canaanite conquest (Joshua 18:1) and was still there when the ark was captured by the Philistines in the days of Eli (1 Samuel 4:11). After the ark’s sojourn in the country of the Philistines for seven months (1 Samuel 6:1), during which time the Lord severely plagued the Philistines (1Sa, chap. 5), they returned it to Israel (1 Samuel 6:10 ff). It was eventually removed and set up in the house of Abinadab at Kiriathjearim (1 Samuel 6:21; 1 Samuel 7:1).
David now consulted with the great men of Israel, captains and leaders, about the removal of the ark to Jerusalem. He proposed that they invite to Jerusalem all the people of Israel, with the scattered priests and Levites in their appointed cities, to plan for the removal of the ark. This would be a move to unite the people in their worship and to restore the ark, the symbol of God’s presence in Israel, to its proper respect among them. For the many years of Saul’s reign the ark had been all but forgotten and neglected by the people.
The people agreed with David to make this move to restore the ark. To them it seemed, with David, the right thing to do, so all Israel began to gather for the great occasion. The people came from as far south as Shihor and from as far north as the road to Hemath (usually Hamath). Shihor is one of the names given the Nile in Egypt, but probably refers here to a smaller stream on the road to Egypt. Hamath was a city of upper Syria, about half the distance from Damascus to Antioch. The entering in of Hamath refers to the road in the far north of Israel which led on to the city of Hamath.
First Attempt Frustrated,
2 Samuel 6:1-11 1 Chronicles 13:6-14
The Samuel account begins with the endeavor of David to bring the ark to Jerusalem without giving the preliminaries found in First Chronicles. Baale (or Baalah) was in the tribe of Judah, and was the Canaanite name of Kirjath-jearim. The ark had been kept in the house of Abinadab many years (1 Samuel 7:2). Its significance is emphasized, in that it was called by the name of the Lord, and actually represented the presence of the Lord in Israel, on the mercy seat, between the cherubim on the lid of the ark of the covenant.
The ark is also represented as being brought from the house of Abinadab in Gibeah. The word means "hill", and the translators should have rendered it "hill". Abinadab’s house was on a hill in Kirjath-jearim. They built a new cart on which to move it. This is the method by which it had been returned to them decades before by the Philistines. Someone seems to have felt that since it was so carried by the Philistines (1 Samuel 6:7 ff), it would be all right for the Israelites to move it that way also. Abinadab’s two sons, Uzza and Ahio drove the new cart as they conveyed it toward Jerusalem.
Everyone was happy, the air was filled with the joyful sounds of music from the harps, psalteries, timbrels, cornets, cymbals, and trumpets. They had not gone far, however, before the rejoicing was turned to sorrow by a tragedy due to their own carelessness and disregard of the Lord’s way. At the threshingfloor of Nachon (or Chidon); (It is not now possible to tell why two names are given in the two accounts. One may refer to the name of the owner of the threshing floor and the other to the name of the place itself before David changed it).
Here at the threshingfloor the oxen stumbled, and the ark was about to fall off. Uzza reached out to steady it on the ark and prevent its falling and possibly being broken. For touching the ark the Lord’s anger was kindled against Uzza, and He struck him dead there beside the ark. The Lord had long before instructed the Israelites how to convey the ark, on the shoulders of the anointed priests. It was to be carried in no other way, nor by any other ones (Numbers 4:15). Not only was it not to be carried on a cart, but Uzza and Ahio were not the proper people to convey it. These were things all the people of Israel should have remembered, and especially the Levites and David.
But David was highly displeased because the Lord had smitten Uzza, and renamed the place Perez-uzza ("the breach on Uzza"). The record says that David was afraid of God and began to wonder how he could bring the ark to him. When one fears the Lord it sets him to reasoning, and very soon his fear will become respect, whereby he will be able to honor the Lord in his deeds (Proverbs 1:7). So David halted his attempt to move the ark to Jerusalem and had it moved into the house of Obed-edom, a Levite, called "the Gittite," probably because he was born in Gath. Here the ark remained for three months, during which time the Lord blessed the house of Obed-edom.