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Verse Takeaways
1
The Language of Grief
Commentators note that the Shunammite woman doesn't explicitly say, "My son is dead." Instead, her profound grief expresses itself through anguished, rhetorical questions. Scholars like Albert Barnes and Charles Ellicott explain that deep sorrow often "shrinks from putting itself into words," and her reproach of the prophet was her way of communicating the unbearable news.
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2 Kings
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5
18th Century
Theologian
Great grief shrinks from putting itself into words. The Shunammite cannot bring herself to say, “My son is dead,” but by reproaching the prophet fo…
19th Century
Bishop
Then. — And; so in 2 Kings 4:29; 2 Kings 4:35.
Did I desire (ask<…
19th Century
Preacher
Then he learned what her trouble was, and understood that the child was dead. Before she had said as much as that, he read the news in the tones of…
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17th Century
Pastor
Then she said, did I desire a son of my lord ?
&c.] It was not at her request she had one, at least the first motion…
17th Century
Minister
Here is the sudden death of the child. All the mother's tenderness cannot keep alive a child of promise, a child of prayer, one given in love. But …