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1 Kings 20:43

And the king of Israel went to his house sullen and displeased, and came to Samaria.
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Ephrem The Syrian

AD 373
In the course of these events Ahab’s indulgence toward a man who was notoriously impious and an open and arrogant despiser of divine majesty fully deserved to be condemned, just as Saul’s clemency toward the king of the Amalekites was reproached with good reason by Samuel; this is especially true if, as some commentators assert, the same prophet who had promised the victory in the name of God prescribed that a punishment was to be inflicted on Ben-hadad. On the other hand, a mild punishment should have been inflicted on Ahab and his subjects, if they were completely unaware of the will of God. But they could not ignore God’s will at all, because the prophet had told them ahead of time that the Arameans would be handed over to them, after the Arameans had violated the majesty of God with their impious insults. - "On the First Book of Kings 20.1"

George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Raging, (furibundus) full of indignation. Hebrew, "went to his house, heavy and displeased. "Septuagint, "confounded and fainting "through rage; eklelumenos. (Haydock) "Vexed at the prophet, he ordered him to be kept in prison; and confounded at what Micheas had said, he went to his own house. "(Josephus, viii. 14.)

John Chrysostom

AD 407
After the second man had struck and wounded him, the prophet bound his own head with a bandage, covered his eyes and disguised himself. Why did he do this? He was going to accuse the king and condemn him for saving the life of the king of the Syrians. Now Ahab was an impious man and always a foe to the prophets. The prophet did not wish Ahab to recognize him and then drive him from his sight; if the king drove him away, he would not hear the prophet’s words of correction. So the prophet concealed his face and any statement of his business in the hope that this would give him the advantage when he did speak and that he might get the king to agree to the terms he wanted. When the king was passing by, the prophet called aloud to him and said, “Your servant went forth to the campaign of war. Behold, a man brought another man to me and said to me: ‘Guard this man for me. If he shall leap away and bound off, it will be your life for his life, or you will pay a talent of silver.’ And it happe...

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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